HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-04-29 - Orange Coast PilotYlll lllDlll llllY 1'11111
l HI Jn SD A Y A PH II .-· 1 1 ·Iii.' <JH ANC f < r111 N' 'I C ALIFOH N IA 2 5 CENTS
Hot Cor..wette. lanil8 d.Pi-ver.'in.cooler
lb JUI' PAMER or .. ...., ........
SomeUm.. luck .. the belt de-
tadive.
JUlt uk David P. Sbennan of
8uM)'JD89d, Who Wll lltt:iNI ln
Oranp Count}' jail today alter
h.ia arreet Wedne9day attemoon
on 1u1plclon of auto theft, ~
m,hway Patrol ottJcer UTelted
him ln Irvine after a 120-mtle
d-..
Sherman, 24, walked into Nero Moton of W..,,, .... Wectne.:.
day at about 12:30 p.m. and Mked
to teat drive a lllver 1914 Cor-
vette, the CllP NpOl1ld.
S.l 1 IM Brant T81111naw aot
behind the wheel ancl 1av•
Shitrman a brief tour ot UM dty.
When the ln--.cl buyer Mked
to ·drive the Corvette hlruelf,
EAVES-DROP PE R -When the days warm up in Hun-
tington Beach, Koyauk, aq eight-year-old Siberian Husky,
guards the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jed Donahoe from a rooftop
perch. Koyauk reaches hla rooftop spot through a second-
story window.
County's Fed Mart
stores to he shut
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of'"tMO.-, ..........
The cloaure of 46 Fed Mart
store• in Southern Callfomla,
Arizona and Texu; announced
Wedneaday by the San Dtego-
bued diacount IUpennarket and
general rnerchandiae chain, will
affect Orange County FedMart
stores in Huntington Beach ,
Garden Grove, Anaheim and La
Habra.
The corporation, which blamed
the deterioraUng economy for ita
dedlf.on. Mid it Ia aeeldna ~ven·
for lta ltDl'el. The fate of Fed.Mart's Or~!
County 9utlet1 could nol ~
diately be determined. Local
Fed.Mart managers declined to
comment on the company~• ded-
lion to abut down or llqU.klat.e all
of itl atorea. ·
FedMart em~-~000 people, inchMU~ about 3,uoo ln Soutlie-
m Cali ~rnta. The corporation
aald tt ~ to aell all of i1I retail 1tore1 ' with i n the next few·
mcntbl."
FedMart president Jan W.
NATION
Heydom aald of the llbutdown ln
a letter to employeet, "Under
current economic conditiom, it
WU the only cllOice pomlb}e."
Fed.Mart rePOl't.ed W-. of $11
million ln 19?9, $6.3 milllon ln
198Q and $8 million in the tint
quarter of 1981 -itl lut public
flnancial statement before West
German mult1mllllonaire Hugo
Mann bought up an outstanding
stock and took the company pri-
vate.
Early last year, the United
Food and Commercial Worken
Un.ion. which repreeent FedMart
!employees, agreed to accept a
meager three-year contract and
work with the company to in-
Cl'ellle productivity In an effort to
a.il out the firm.
Isra elis kill two
JERUSALEM (AP) -Iafaell
troopa shot and killed two Pa-
leatlnlan demon1tratora and
wounded four othen today on
the occupied Weat Bank of the
Jordan.
What Beasan. reatfs
• A letter from Ronald a.on to l'Ol'bel Mapzine atvn a 1Umpme at IObMt of die pN1ldent'1 readlna
'habUa. P.,e BO. .
..
Sale.men 1urlaci1J6
Many worken who have been lald off or had
tbllr hauntut. a ~ilf the 111 1d= ...... a. CllW
doar·to-cloar ·-·-,... Cl. ' . .I
Twtnaer re£."::i 1ot out of
the Cllr and Fl °" the pa and aped away.
An hour later, Sherman dnwe
into Newport Importa on Cout
Hi1hway in Newport Beach,
where he told .u..m.n Jim Ga-
rdy that the Corvette 1imply
wun't the car he wanted and
would tnde it lp to &et a Ferani
308, priced at $56,000.
But Newport lmporta owner
Lee Wmt. not MIN of WMt the
car'1 value w11, eat on the phone
and called bll fitendl at -you SU-CS it -Neto Motion to find
a aood price. When he dMclibed
the Corvette, the Nero Motors
people put two and two tosether ancf came up wtth one ltolen car.
But the 1u1pect wu 1one by
the time West huna up.
At 3 p.m., CHP Officer Bruce
Lian •potted the Corv~tte hea-
d in1 north on the San Die10
Freeway a t Alicia Parkway. >..
he moved ln behind it to vttlfy
t he plates, th e Cor vette aped
north at 120 mph.
Office r L ian and s uspect
Sherman then raced th.rough the
Sand Canyon exit and In to the
•
OCTD Maintenance Yard~w ' they chued, bumped,
lnto each other twb and
came to re1t with the aua
staring down the bullnell end
Uan'1 revolver.
Sherman Wal take n to ucf
Medical Cent.er for treatment Ol
an injured leg, then to the county
jail. I •j
Edi~On High cleai-ed~
.in recruiting pr~he
Anaheim
facing
fire suit
A potential clua action lawsuit
that seeks $100 million in da-
mages -or $100,000 for each of
the 1,000 ~pie left homelell by
last w•k • devutating Anaheim
firestorm -WU filecfWedneed·
av ~ the City of Anaheim.
Also named u defendants in
the Orange County Superior
Court suit were Southern Cali-
fornia Edllon Co. and nine
apartment ownera, developers
and manaaen whoee buildln1•
were destroyed by fut-movinl
flames ln the early mornln1
houri of April 21.
More th-" ~ bulldinp were auttect by the wind-driven blue,
fncluding 524 apartment unUa in
a four-.quare block are1 near the
intersection of Ball Road and
Euclid Avenue. Dama1e eaU-
mat.es Mve been p1-l at about
$50 m1llion.
In1tlattn1 the le1al action in
Santa Ana -,vere Anthony Nun.,
26, and hi• wife Cynthia, 24,
former resident• of the Palm
Villa apartment complex on 12SO
S. Euclid Avenue. 'their apart-
ment and all their beJonglnp -
valued at $6,000 -were de-
stroyed.
The couple also filed a claim
againlt the dty, • step required
In legal actions agalMt public
agencies.
Santa Ana attorney Jerrold A.
Bloch, who repre9elltl the couple,
Mid the lawsuit waa fDed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellen routed from
their r91idences. Most of the fire
vtctima loet all their belonginp
and had no rent.en iDlurance.
Bloch Mid the cow1 must offi-
cially cerUfy the 1ep1 action • a
clau action auit before tenants
other than the Nuneaea can be elilU>le for .ettlement benefita, lf
any. .
Anaheim city apokelman Dena
Grme Mid offidah there bad no
comment on the matter since
they had not l8eft the lawadt.
"\Ve want to prevent a tnaedr,
like this from ~ .,.in.'
Cynthia Nunes i&ld. "Our lives
have been devastated at thl1
point," she uid. Mn. Nunes ii
aeven monthl pnpant.
. The laWIUlt, BIOch llld, a1lepe
there Wll nesliPnce in the con-
struction, ~t and mainte-nance of e power tran.
(See ANABEDI, Pap AJ)
COUNTY
~~
NEW DANCE STEP! -Venerable comedian Bob Hope
helped Flamingo Road star Morgan Falrchild with her golf
swing during recent tapi.r)g of Hope's upcomlng NBC special,
"Stars Over Texu." At least that's what Hope said he was
doing.
U.S. plan studied
Chances for · peace
in Falklands dim
By Tiie AllOdated Preti
Ar'entina and Britain were stud2 a llightly amended U.S. to head oU war over the ~ land 11land1, but the pro-
1pect1 for a diplomatic solution
aJ>peared lliaht ln both London
and Bueno. A1ra.
Argentina'• ruling three-man
junta said it eJtpecied a Britiah
attack on the disputed illand1
before the weekend, and a Fore-·
lgn Minlatry 1ource said the
American pc'opcml WU 1Ut.1ant-
ially unchanpd from the 1ut one
the ~ta reJect-l.
In London, Britain'• announ-
cement that it w• extendl.na ita
w blocbde of ~ FalklancJa to
air traffic at dawn Friday wu
seen u the deadline for diplo-
macy.
But Brltilh mllltary sources
said the -ult probably would
await the arrival ln two or three
days of patratroop r•lnforce-.
mentl beinf flown to joln the
1,500 Roya Marlnet with the
Brltllh war ~l "'
A. of Wednetday nl1ht, the
State Departrunt had received
no reepome from Britain or Ar-
1entina to Secretary of State
Alexander M . Haig's iatest peace
proJ)Olala, said U.S: offictala.
S'tate Department spokesman
Dean Fisher said Haig was pre -
pared to resume h1a shuttle bet-
ween Buenos A1ree and London
if that would help. The United
States believes the situation la at
a "critical stage." The time for
diplomacy la "very, very short,"
Mid Fisher.
U.S. offlcalala said the propo-
aala submitted to Argentina and
Britain Tue.tay made only alight
changes ln a previous U.S. plan.
The New York Times said they
call for (1) the withdrawal of
Argentine troops from the Falk-
lands; (2) an end to British mili-
tary threats; (3) brief restoratJon
of British rule over the Isla nd
colony followed by a joint
British-Argentine administra -
tion. and ( 4) neaotl.atlom on the
future atatua of the windswept
1a1anda 250 mile. eut of the Ar·
pntlne cout.
However, the paper said the
plan did not include a guarantee
of e9entual Ar1entlne 1ove -
relpty u demanded by Araen-
t1na or the btndm. referendum
(See p ALU.AND, Pap AJ)
INDEX
ArQJB sbow at El Toco A4
B3
A8 Some aoo,ooo are expected to attend the ...,.w
Armed f orcet Day C>1>ttft bouee aad 'air 1how tbla
w..a..d at MCAS, -~ Pait .U.
STATE
C8-7
Aa
88
B2·3 •
DIJM.'7 m
DI
DI M . Cl •
Coaches
'honest,
ethical'
By ROBERT BARKER OftM.,..., ...........
A state admlnlatratlve lafl
judge found no evidence of i~
proper recruiting of footb I
players by F.diaon High Sch 1
Coach Bill Workman or by
a nyone elae e mployed at th~
Hun~ Beach IChool
The findlnp were announc$:I
Wedne9day at a pre11 conference
called by School Superin::1 Frank "Jake'' Abbott. .
The~~ied three day• c1mecl early um~ in whtdi Jo A. Willd of t ..
State Office of Admin.iatratt
He.,..._. questioned 40 peoplij
under a.th.
''It need9 to be said loudly and
clearly that the admlnbtrati498
and coaches are honest and edit"
cal and we are proud to haft
them," Abbott declared.
''The cue ia ~ W~'ll nqt
run after our ta.Us any more." ·
Workman, who coached thf
:Edison Chargers to 32 victories fiQ
their laat 33 games, said Wed·
neaday he was bitter but ncri
Sll!f,rised.
• 1 knew what the r esulH
would be before the investiga-
tion. The results are no surprile,'•
he said.
Workman, head coach sin~
1973, said he has been "danglect
like a piece of meat foe everyone
to shoot at." •
He said F.dlaon has been th&
target of allegatlona "becauae wt
have won more than our abare o(
games.
"The kids move in, I can'
control that. When they're d
clared eligible 1 coach theme
That's my job." •
T riggering the investigatio,i
was an anonymous letter dilttt;
buted last November whicll
made a number of allegations ot
illegal rt!<:ruitlng and lmpropef
grade changes. ~
F.arlier internal inveatigatioM
a1ao were held wtth negative re-
sults, said Abbott. !
A d istrict official said th4
school hu been under fire bet
cawie of its auoc:eea and becau.e a(.
a number of talented transfer.
playing lmpori.nt roles in that
success.
Heartn1 offtcer Will~ aair=· hit report to tn<.ees that pla:
and/or their parents said they
not speak to coecllel or lnatrucS
ton prior to trander. •
(See EDISON, Pqe AJ)
82
C8
B2
C9 "a
A3
IM,BS.7
Cl..f c:t ca
C9
A2
Al
l!>!.~~~w~J.'!!.LE~~ 0:.,-• ~ q...uon.ct expr1•ed IUI• no evidence that 1radea were
plclon that Edllon boolten and lmproperly changed 10 that
1upporten contacted playen at fonner 1tar runnlng back Kerwin
other aohoole. Bell could receive a achoi.nhlp at
Wllld lndklated that the ~bli-the University of KanaN.
•1t"•tlty 1urroundinl the team I IUC· Abbott 1aid the arade WH ceu had cauaed parenu of changed two to three month•
' , j:>layera to be attracted to the after Bell's graduation from ht&h.
' tehool becauae of 11tremendou1 achool but that Wllld found no
· pottlble financial rewards" in-evidence of coercion.
1t volvlna colle1e acholar1hJp1 or · Willd's recommendation• ln-
the po.ibWty of 10\nl into pro-eluded: '•'te.ional 1port1. -The school board should
•·• · Wllld al.lo aaJd that informa-define what activities or confactl
•'' t1on "strongly 1u1geet1" that are prohibited and permitted
Edison had attrected lta ahatt of wlth outside athle\ics and their
• booatera and 1upportera who parents. placed a very high emphaaia -It should prepare a code of
, .. "pon winnina. ethics which would define beha-
1., "Thia entnualum," he sald, vior on the part of all athletic
"~uld ea1lly be pa11ed on to booltera. .
1, Y.QUn1, impreuionable athletes -Trustees should reauure
a nd there by influence their faculties that every student, in-., ehok:e of a blah tehool" eluding high school athle te•.
'
1
• WUld a1lo noted that umtance should be judged equally upon ~ "1\as been ottered to footba11 his scholastic performance. players in malntainlng their ell--Trustees should review po-
ftibWty. licy on transfers with a view \o
He said advice has been given diacouraging transfers except for
about easier teachen and easier "highly persua~ive and n on -
•" COUJ'9eS, athletic" reasons. ',~: Abbott said the advice did not School ch ief Abbott said the f th hl i d district will be taking a hard look
!• QOme r om e at etc epart-.Into suspicions that beor•e in·
ment. volved in youth foot al prog-
.' Willd also said that it is con-rams outside the achool may be
'• tended that some F.<il8on fnstruc· ellffaged in recruiting activities.
" $Ors feel intimidated in that they _ ' It wUl not ~ tolerated," he
•are reluctant to award grades ~d. "I.f there is an influen<:e, we
which would jeopardize the ell· will disassociate from those
1 gibility of a star football player. programs," he said.
•
~-FALKLAND ISLANDS .. •
l\ sought by Britain-to allow the tish government, but later it
'•1 ,800 Wanders, moet of them of hedged, saying only that the re-
' British ancestry, to decide their port was speculation.
' future. CBS News said 95 British com-
: "The plan is under study and mando frogmen had landed on
1 '111 diplomatic channels reamin West Falkland Island on Tues-
1 open.' Public Infonnatlon Secre-day.
tary Rodolfo Baltierres said in British and Argentine officials
Buenos Aires. issued grim warnings.
~ "That is the official position," Argentine Foreign Minister ~d a Foreign Miniatry official. Nicanor Costa Mendez said the
~).Unofficially, the proposal ap· Falk lands could prove to be ~Jean to offer little new and "Brilaln's Vietnam.'
teems unacceptable." Rear Adm. John Woodward,
~ British government sources commander o f the British ar-
atso reported "no fresh opH-mada, predicted in a dispatch he
iuism" that a negotiated settle· sent to five British newspapers
• ment can be reached. that the campaign could become
·~ The TimH also reported that "long and bloody."
British military plannera confir-The admiral aent his dispatch
med that small uni ti of Britilh after he wu strongly criticized in
troopa landed on the Falldanda to London for saying in an Inter·
.Prepare for the a.ault. A similar view two days before he thought
report Tue.day in the Times of the "big match . . . should be a
,J...ondon wu denied by the Bri-walkover."
rifting vessel a false alarm
The report by th(' pilot of a
Navy fighter plane from Naval
Air Station Point Mugu lri~ered
an all-day heliL'oplN search over
160 square miles of ocean, said
Lt. (J.g.) Marie Jones.
ANAHEIM.
mlplon llnH near where lt 11
beu.wd the blue bloke OUt.
Th• apartment ownen, dev•·
loDet'I arid= .... ~ td of beiftl t in the con--
1trucUon an maint1nanc. ot
th1lr butldJnp, which did not
have flre·r•t•rdant roofln1•
materiall. rt.re offidall have placed much
of the ~ tot the bit tpnMt ot lut week'• blue on the pre-
tence of combUltible wood roofa •
atop the one and two·story
apartment.. The Anaheim Clty
Counctl Tueeday outlawed such
roofa on all future rw.tdenUal and cornmeniW ~.
Meanwhll•dn Sacramento,
Aatemblyman tw:hard Robl.rwon,
D-Santa Ana. introduced 1eclala·
tlon that wo"'1d require fire re·
tardant roofs.
Roblnlon Mid Wed.ne9d.ay: "It
would be irresponsible to wait for
another fire to take more pro-
perty and p<mibly rilk llle before
maklna fire-retardant roofing a
standard feature of new
buildin,p."
Roblnaon'1 A.B3797 would co-
ver retldentlal and commercial
structures built after Jan. 1, 1983,
and exiatlng 1tructurea when
more than half of their roofs are
replaced.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. had
recommended such a law.
Exemptions would be allowed
on application to the state Offia1
of Emergency Services, in con-·
sultatlon with the state Fire
Manha!. .
Ironically, the Nuneae1 are,
suing, among others, Ronson
Equity Management Co., pro-
prie10r of their apartment com-
plex, even though Mn. Nones
said the company had been
"extremely sympathetic" to the
plight of homeless fire victima.
Rowever, her buaband uid,
the couple decided within 48
hours after the blaze waa ex-
tinguished that they wanted to
do something to prevent what
they felt would be future trage·
dies If nothing was done.
Though Edi9on Co. la named as
a defendant in the auit, Bloch
said he ~t believe that oom·
pany's power lines were involved
in tbe initial blaze last week.
Power lines owned by the dty's
utility company were i:na1n ones
involved, he cl.aJ.med.
The lawsuit aaaerta that offi-
cials should h ave known the
danger of locating power lines
near foliage in heavily populated
areas.
According to the suit, failure to
take proper precautions showed a
disregard for the safety of resi-
dents in the area.
Grose, the city's spokesman,
said Wednelday that fire offidala
believe it wu a street light line
which may have snapped in the
heavy gusts of wind the morning
of the blaze, igniting a tree at
Loara and Juno streets.
However, Uroee said, it is not
known if that tree was responsi-
ble for the ~tlon of ~erything
else around it.
Partly sunny Friday
.Coaataf
• Partly cloudy 11111 •ll•rnoon
.. oqfl9 84 to N et lM bffctlee and
87 to 72 1n th• Inland 11eu
WHl«IV winds to 2!1 mph LOW
·Cloud• tontghl with Iowa In lh• :IOI. low doud1 conttnOe Frldey
morning. l>9CQ<nlng lalf and partly
·1unny In the tllernoon H1gh1
frld1y 88 to 75 Hunllnglon-
"'••POrl are• 11mp1rttur11
~ lrom • high of 85 10 1 tow
1 EIMWl!ere. from POint Conc41P·
Jton to th• M .. ~•n t>ordet tnd
out 80 mtlel Smelt crett .O~
through tonlglll OVet outer wlletl
bllwHn Point Cone.piton 1no
••n Clemenlt 111end. North·
w11terly wind• t5 to 30 knoll
with 8 to 8·1001 .... WHI 10
•outhwHt 1w1111 of 2·3 1111
Pertly cloudy tonight end Friday
oMI. 85 to 72 Inland
Intend v•ll•Y• cen ••P•c•
Mounl•ln1 wlll h•v• wHI 10
northwett wind• 20-40 mph to-
day, d•creutng Frt"•Y High•
bath cSay• 63 to 63. tows 28 to 38
01t•rt1 can ••P•tl west to
nl>ftllWHI wind• 20·40 mph to-
dey, ct«rHSlng tontgtll Northern
d11en high• In 701 10 low 801
IOWS 1n IOw 50I Southern deMtl
highl 83 to 92, lows •n upper 50s
0.11rt1 2 to 5 d•grHa warmer
Friday
Nofth«n and Cemrel Calltornt• wi" be eunny and • tmi. wllftnef
North to northw111 wind• 11009
eo11t end In norl,, 11•1• Sunny
ind wum Friday. •llll w1t•d•
continuing In Central \/alley and
along nor1h GOUt
( t' w •• -,..,IWlrl1 II ......... -= .. \ ••• \•,.• •"•t; Ottl.4t4
anmIJ ---===
Tem_1.neratures Memp1111
T M1eml
M1lw1111.1~11 NATION
HI Lo~ Mpl .. $1 P
NllllWllll
81 •8 H-0.INfll
41 33 New YO<k
1'l 50 0~11 City
50 44 Omaoe
61 •8 Plllildphl•
14 49 Phoenla. M 48 , PllltOl.lrull
Gt 41 Piland. Mt ~ 3 1 Plllllld, Or• 64 38 Provldenu
70 82 "-"<> 84 36 ~hmond
70 54 Sllll Ulle
87 M Sen Antonio M 31 S..ttle =~ ~ ::U-:'f.: 74 6t St Louil eo so et '·TtMPt
11 83 19c*1111 It 80 S~ec:we =~ :: ~tfl 88 17 WlCllll•
17 &I •
M 40 .. 30 87 40 &7 40 ei 70 eo oe 13 3t 1'I H
71 82 .. ...
92 82 ea · 51 ... ~1
72
80
52 84
87 79
5e er;
48
81
97
ff
51
58 52 M
81 71
71 as 75
51 Q
71 .. II
~
IO
... ..
IO 18 87 ... .. eo
= IO
71
71
77
7{1
78
80
74
{18
70
72 87
{17
77 eo
75
78
M 73
83
75 78
M 13 ..
12 ... u
58 5e
52
54
5e
51 51
Sii !le
51
52
82 !le
63
52 52
81 ... ...
81
52
82
50 ::
llO
1' ...
'° 45 f5
• --...
JANE H
. ., • .,....0
OBBLED -Academy Award-winning act;res., Jane
Fonda waa on crutches Wednesday as she headed for a pro-
F.qual Rights Amendment press conference in Los Angeles ~he ~urt her leg in a workout four weeks ago, then re-injured
tt skiing in Utah.
Lock box blamed
Irvine burglary • 1n
Irvine police taid today they.
suspect that a burglar who 1tole
$1,500 in jewelry from a Turtle
Rock home this week gained
entry through a real estate lock
box mounted on the exterior of
the home.
The daytime theft of a diamo-
nd necklace and earrings from
the home wu reported to police
Wedneaday.
Lt. Robert Lennert said the
burglarlzed home la up for sale.
Lock boxes, he added, are com-
monly uled by real estete agents.
A houle key ia 1tored inside the
box, and only the a1ent1 are
1uppoeed to have keys to the box.
No a1ent1 had shown the
houle on the day of the burglary,
Landing gear fails
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -The
nc.e of a United Airlines DC-10
tipped down onto the runway at
Newark International Airport on
Wednesday after landing gear
malfunctioned during routine
maintenance, authorities uld. No
one wu on boerd and there were
no injuries when mJ1hap occur-
red olfldala aald.
he said. and no signs of forced
entry were apparent.
Lock box burglaries are not
new to Irvine. Lennert said a
suspect was arrested last year
and charged with about 100 such
burglaries throughout Orange
County.
Yogurt suit
brings c~sh
MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) -A
woman who claimed her hair feU
out after she bit into a beetle in
the bottom of her yogurt cup
seven years ago has won a cash
settlement from the Dannon Yo-
gurt Co.
A Nassau county jury will de-
cide how much Arlene Zuck·
erman ol V"1)ey Stream la entit-
led to after {inding in her Cavor
in a civil suit against Dan.non.
Ms. Zuckennan was 17 on Jan.
6, 1975, when she ate a spoQnful
of yogurt and "fell a piece of
foreign matter In he mouth."
Court papers said she diacovered
it was a dead beetle and "became
hysterical, nauaeoua and ill."
Gasoline
• prices
• • r1s1ng
NEW YORK (AP) -Whole·
aale auollne pricft are lnchin1
up, and while analyai. are wwure
whet.her the tNnd wW lMt, tome
lndu1try offk1all believe pricet
will conUnue rillng M the oil aJut
leaaenl. M a re.ult, Amertcana.may aee
htaher prlcH at the pu.mp a•
aummet bet1N· The trend ln prices t<ow1 a
turnaround ln the price of crude
oil. which had fallen ltetldlly th.la
year until OPEC cut production
in Mardi.
"Retail price1 are certainly
1tabillzlnl, and dwina the coune
of the 1ummer coufd Increase
t0mewhat," aaJd Phil Chiaholl,
executive vice ~dent of the
National OU J n Council, a
wholaalera &nde ll'OUP· A nwnber of oU compallles this
week railed auoUne pricet to
wholelale d.ilttibuton.
Shell Oil Co., for example, in-
crewd wholesale IUOu;~ aa much u three Qentl a in
several Western i tatea. Lut
week it added a pthny a pl1on \o
pricet1 in much of the N"ortheaat
and Sou\heut.
"My feeling ls the fun ia ewer'
for motori1t1 who have watched
auollne prices twnble an aver111e
20 centl a 1allon in 13 montht,
said Robert Zelley, gaeollne sales manacer at Retnauer Petro.Jewn
Co., a dist:rlbutor of Odes Ser¥ioe
Co. guollne ln New Jeney .
The national avence price for
all grades of guoline at all ~
of outletl was $1.18 a p1lon in
mid-April, down a penny from
the flrlt week of the month. ac-
cording to Lundberg Survey Inc.,
which tracks pump prices. By
contrast, the average peaked at
$1.38 a gallon in March, 1981.
In Jacbonvllle, Fla., Walter
Nlckebon of U.S.A. Colonial
Corp. aaJd Wednesday hi.a com·
pany railed wholesale gasoline
prices a cent a gallon fdonday
and another cent Tuesday. A
week ago, it raised pricea a cent a
gallon.
Although demand for guoline
rematna generally weak, the oil
companiet are raising prices to
distributors in reaction to a recent
firmlng of crude oil prices. That
turnaround for crude oil la linked
mainly to the succesa of the Or-
ganlzatJon of Petroleum E:xpor·
ting CountrlH in llmiting pro-
duction and thereby eating away
at the oversupply on wo rld
markets.
Water leak
reported at
San Onofre
Non-radioactive water acci-
dentally waa released from the
cooling system of recently built
Unit 2 at the San Onofre Nuclear
power plant, Southern California
F.ciiaon offldala aald.
Water leaked out of the reac-
tor's cooling 1y1tem into the
unit'• containment area about
10:30 p.m. Wednesday, aaJd uti-
lity spokesman Frank Bello. He
called the accident "an unusual
e.vent," •tr::!:f that no radia-
uon was re .
Unit 2 still is undergoing low-
power testing and the fuel sto-
rage rods haven't yet been lrra-
d lated, Bello taid. No one was
injured.
Bello said he had "no infor-
mation" on how the accident
would affect testing but added
the company "wouJd have to find
t he reuons" before tettlng la
recumed.
otlier's ~ag ~raJAJiTJ~, ----
• Sign up for a chance to have
- \ a fully catered take .out gourmet dinner
for Yourself, your Mom, Wife or maybe even Grandma· ~\...-enough for a family of four from Showley·Wrightson. '
I
1"-·
You need
not be present to win,
drawing will tal<e place
Friday May 7th and
the winner will be
·notified by
phone that day.
,,_(.
Have a G,..t Mother'• Day
from all Of u• at
rol
flU .. r::
·~
In
nt
•B a
Sr
'" Jr
IS •· t-
)f
tt
·~
'h
d
)
I
l
I
\ ~-........ SEX SHOWPLACE SOLD -IRS agent Al
Thatcher, center, leads an auction in Pitts-
burgh at the Casino Royale, a tawdry theater
that offered nude dancing. The theater waa
closed in March for non-payment of back
taxes.
City offers to settle suit
South Tucson ordered to pay $3.6 million to victim
SOUTH TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)
-Offi.cia.ls of this dty, ordered
to pay a former policeman $3.6
mJllion after he was crippled by
another officer, are offering him
$1.9 mJllion in cash and property
over 30 years.
wyers to force full payment
through special taxes or other
means.
Garcia's attorney, Richard
Grand, said the offer will be ta-
ken to the former Tucson officer
"whenever they send it over."
City Manager Richard Kaf-
fenberger said the offer was a
demonstration of the city's "good
faith." He called Garcia "the
unfortunate victim of this whole
thing."
He said, "I don't see how Mr.
Garcia or anybody elae, even Mr.
Grand. could ask for any more, if
he sincerely is interested in the
best interest of his client."
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aprll 29, 1982 s
t
Soviets lead arms sales
U.S. sold only half as many during 1980
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Soviet Union
auraed ahead of the United States ln arma sales to
the Third World In 1978 and 1979 and aold more
than twice u many weapons u the United States
did In 1980, the lut year of the Carter ad.ministra·
tlon, offldall of the Arma Control and Diaarmament
Agency Mid todal.
The agency 1 annual arms aales report said
apending by all countries on military forces totaled
neerly f570 bllllon In 1979. ·
The report, which focused on arms sale deve·
lopmenta in the 1970., said the Soviet Union con -
cluded agreement.I with Third World nations in
1980 thiat more than doubled thoee of the United
States.
At a news conference, ACDA officials chal-
lenged the accuracy of recent private studies that
concluded the Soviet Union remains behind the
United States ln arms exports to Third World na-
tions.
The studies say the Soviets are closing the gap,
however, and may outpace the United States in
au.ch arms sales in the 1980s.
The report, which is based on an analysis of
arms deliveries, did not include sales after 1980,
when Ronald Reagan defeated Carter for the pre·
aidency. The Reagan administration has moved to
sharply lncrea1e weapons sales to confront what lt
considers a growing threat of Soviet expansionism.
"Thia document clearly demonstrates that the
Soviet Union in 1978 and 1979 became the world's
largest arms exporter and In 1980 the Soviet
Union's sales agreementa with the Third World for
military equipment were more than double those
for the United States," Robert T. Grey, ACDA's
deputy director-d esignate, told the news conferen-
ce.
The United States reportedly is prepared to sell
more than $24 billion in arms in fiscal 1982, eclip-
sing a record $1 5.8 billion in 1975.
The Reat;an admlnlatration's use of anns sales
as a major "'ehicle of foreign policy reverses the
Carter's administration's policy of attempting to h·
mJt and red~~ arms transfers.
Grey said at the news conference that while
the United States is "committed to restraint" in
arms tranafera, "w e must assist our allies and
friends in meeting the legitimate defense require-
menta which are in many euet lncreued by thia
growth ln Soviet annt tranafer1."
Eugene Rott.ow. director of the anm control
agency, said in a foreword to the study that the
averaae growth rate In military spending by all
countries In the study waa nearly 9 percent a year
since 1970.
"The report i. in fact a fever chart, recordi.ns
the disintegration of world public order and the
consequent srread of anarchy, fear and panic In
many part.a o the world," Ro.tow said.
"As a result, the arms industry has become the
leading growth industry in the world," he said.
"Large and small countries on every continent
have been scouring the world for arms, buying
from governments or Crom private merchants in a
desperate and often futile effort to guarantee their
security," he added.
But he said that "used judiciously'' the Reagan
admint.tration's arms transfer policy can help deter
aggression, Improve the ability of the United States
to respond to threat.I, demonstrate U.S. determlna·
t1on not to allow allies to be militarily disadvant-
aged and foster regional and Internal stability.
The new study said that "despite rufficulties of
measurement and analysis, it is clear that the Soviet
Union has become the principal suppll'1r to the
Third World of weapon s and weapons related
items."
"Soviet anns sales in the period 1977 through
1980 were focused primarily on strategically located
countries in North Africa, the Middle East and
South Asia -principally Litiya, Algeria, lraq, Sy-
ria and India," the study said.
It said U.S . sales of weapons to the Thjrd
World averaged about $6.6 billion a year in the
1977-1980 period, the Carter years.
Soviet anns sales to developing nations totaled
$9.5 billion in 1977. fell to $2.9 billion in 1978 and
then rose sharply to $8.8 billion in 1979 and $14.8
billion in 1980, averaging $9 billion a year for the
period, the report said.
These figures reflect the export to the Third
World of far greater numbers of tanks, artillery,
guided missile boats. supersonic combat aircraft,
helicopters and surface-to-air missiles than were
supplied by the United States, the report said.
The City Council voted unani-
mous ly Tuesda y after a
65-minute executive session to
offer Roy Garcia and his wife
three unspecified parcels of city
property worth about $400,000
and give them 30 annual $50,000
payments beginning in January
1983.
On Monday, the council voted
to rescind a resolution passed
April 16 enabling officials to file
for flnanclal reorganization be-
cause of the award. Such an
action would destroy future abi-
lity to float development bonds
or borrow.
He said the $50,000 pa~ts
over 30 years represent ' a very
small amount." Grand calculated
that the city. by investing a total
of $357,142 in U.S . government
bonds paying 14 percent interest
over 29 years, would receive
$50,000 annual interest.
"They obviously want the
jury's idea of justice dlacounted,"
Grand said. He added that Garcia
would gladly accept "IUlY and all
real property they want to sign
over' and credit the city toward
the judgment.
Rehearing denied
• • • • pot 1n1t1at1ve
Under the offer, Garcia would
agree to drop current legal pro-
ceedings and undertake no fu -
ture a ctions against the city.
South Tucson Is trying to fend
off a court action by Garcia's la-
Garcia lo8t the use of his lep
after being shot in 1978 by a
South Tucson officer during a
joint operation. Two appellate
courts have upheld the Pima
County Superior Court jury'•
1980 award, which totalJI more
than $4 million with interest.
Salesman pleads
guilty to fraud
RIVERSIDE (AP) -Roy
Randolph Erwin, a former
USLife financial consultant who
fled Riverside after aelling mil-
lions of dollars in phony invest-
m en ta, has pleaded guilty to
three count.I of fraud. according
to a federal prosecutor.
Erwin, 36, entered the plea
Tuesday in U.S. District Court in
Los Angeles, momenta before
jury selection was to begin for his
trial, according to Aaiatant U.S.
Attorney Frederic Jaoobeen.
Erwin faces a poasible max-
imum sentenc~ of 15 years in
federal prison L five years for
each count of fraud, Jacobaen
said. Jacobsen said he did not know
whether any of the money could
be recovered. "That'• an tuue
that will obviously have to be
resolved in civil actions," he said.
A federal grand jury had in-
dicted Erwin on 10 count.I of mail
fraud atemmlng from sales of al-
legedly bogus inveatments in
Security International Money
Market Trust. The other aeven
counts were dropped after the
guilty plea.
"The three counts represent
the thrust of what he dld," Ja-
cobeen said.
District Court Judge Cynthia
H. Hall set sentencing for June 7.
The indictment named 10 in-
vestors from western Rivenlde
County. The largest amount of
money missing was $1.5 rnilllon
from the trust of Liston Alumi-
num of Corona, according to Ja-
oobeen.
Altogether, federal investiga-
tors traced aome $4 million of
investors' money in the money
market, lnclud.lni an unspecified
amount from the 10 investors
named in the indictment.
Erwin'• guilty plea closed a
major chapter In the case. Still to
be settled la a clus-action auit by
a number of inveators again-t
USLUe Corp., which owned
USLife Savinga and Loan at the
time the phony investment.I were
aold. The investon contend that
top USLlfe oUldall knew Erwin
was touting investmenta that the
corporation had not authorized,
but did nothing about it.
CIHelfted ectwt11•11 7141142·1171
AH otMf d11u"'"9nt11142-4221
MAIN OFACI ....... -.. c;-. .... CA.
Mjtl4 .-....: ....... c....-... C.A.-
CopyrltN 1112 Or ... C:.... ........_ ~. ,.. _~,._ ........ ~.M.nw--
.....,, .. ,,_.. --"'" lie •• I CH ....... 9"(1el """'NIOft"llf"l'"111M-·
on
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Superior Court judge haa'refwred
to recons1der hit decision that the
atate Legislature has a right to
establish rules for verifying bal-
lot petition signatures, thus for-
cing proponents of the 1980 Cal-
ifornia Marijuana Initiative into
appellate court in their conti-
nuing effort to get the measure
before voters.
Judge Leon Savitch'• ruling
Tuesday was a reaffirmation of
hla decision a month ago suppor-
ting the Loa Angeles County
Registrar of Voters contention
that it is conatitut.ional to throw
out names of petltlon-aignera
whoee add.relle9 have chan8ed or
who don't match the Uat of re-
gistered voters.
Originally, the office of the
Secretary of State, and registrars
from eeveral other counties were
defendants In the 1ult filed by
the initiative spont0r, Bart Gil-
bert of Burbank, after a random
sample check of 400,000 signa-
tures didn't produce a high en-
ough percentage of valid aigna-
tures to qualify the measure for
the 1980 ballot.
"What we're aayi.ng ia that the
aignature checking procedure ta
unconstitutional," said Gilbert,
who decided Tueeday to appeal
Savitch'• ruling, in an attempt to
get the original 1980 initiative on
the fl.rlt available ballot.
"What we're saying 11 that
when someone shows an intent
and desire to be part of the elec-
tion proceu (by sign=n a
petition), instead of just
them out, the reglatrars aboul
aend them a voter reptratlon
card," Gilbert aald.
"U you lend ln your name and
addr9a on a piece of toilet J>9per,
they are reql.lired to tend you a
voter realatntion card," he II.id.
"A atpture on a petition lacer-
tainly a d9noiwtration of a belief
or intent to be a re1l1tered
voter."
He aald that moat of the vo-
lunteer atanature aatherera In
the 1980 cam.,.acn were regf.at.e-rtna voters at the same time they
we11 '"kine lipatutee on the
petltJon. wtueh would have a1Jo.
wed California voten to dedde
whether penonal r•elllon of marijuana and cuUvatlon for
penonal u.. should be decriml-
nauaed.
"I find It hard to believe that
125,000. petition 1l1nen didn't
--r:=9r':"
=-~~. ~ ~:.. '::...":1 ...... """'~ ............
....., ... ~"/":,*"°'
What do )'OU llke about tbe DallJ Pilot? What don't you llkt'
Call tM number below and your m-••• wUI be reeorded,
traaacribld and dettvend •the approprtato editor .
Tbe Nme Mot.our a~ Mntee may be -.d to record let·
t•TS to the editor on ~-Cl llallbn· contrtbutora mUlt include
their name 8M te..,_. """"*'for vertficaUoa. No circulltion
~:....,..:; .. c::
calla,pleaM •
Ttll U1 wtaat'a on your mind.
bother td register if they knew
they weren't reglatered when
faced with a volunteer who had
voter registration forms," Gilbert
said.
He said that the petition sig·
ners probably were confuted
about whether they were re-
gistered voters and the Secretary
of State s h ould have helped
them, by mailing them a regi-
stration card, instead of simply
dropping their names from the
petition.
Gilbert said he hopes through
his suit to have a signature on a
petition automatically qualify as
regiatration for voting.
He aaid that the only legal re-
quirements for registration are a
name, address, and a signature
under penalty of perjury that the
signer la ualng his right name,
and ia a citizen. over 18 and
qualified to vote. Those are the
same requirements for signing a
petition, Gilbert said.
A 1982 marijuana initiative is ~ing circulated. GUt>ert said he's
not part of that movement, al-
though he supports it. The 1982
measure would exempt doctors
from· proeecution for prescribing
marijuana for medical reasons,
and would order convictiona for
peraonal use or cultivation of
marijuana removed from crimi-
nal re<X>rds.
,,,..,.,._,...
MEAN MUTT? -The sign is far more intimidating than the
peeking puppy i{ cautions about. Duke's owners, Richard and
Judy Weiss of Little Rock, Ark .. put up the sign to poke fun
ai their landlord who banned the cuddly canine from the
couple's apartment.
• • • 1n arr1v1ng
a, PAT aoaowrrz · or ... ...., ........
D&il PAT: Lut A1plt I ordered a warm1p mat tnm tie = 0.81 c.. by .... la& a tlt.H claec:ll ... I CM,. fnm.
wnl c.n.l bos. My daec:ll w11 ca1becl promptly. btlt I .W.'t, ncet•• uJtMaa except a postcard la late October tbt bllormed
• .. tM mat w..-W be delayed dH to 'upply problems. Tbt'I die
lut I've a...N. Cu yH llelp me set a refuel?
-C.H., Newport 8eada
Edith Dexter at Quaker Oats' Chicago headquartert will
check the recorda recardlng your order and issue a refund to you.
In the future, try to contact the company which sponsors pre-
mium often when there ia a delayed delivery or other problem.
Quaker O.ta Company'• address is 345 Merchandise Mart Plaza,
ChJcaao, m. 60654.
Kit monitors formaldehyde
DEA.ft PAT: WHa we boapt oar bome years a10 tbe pre-
YMu oWHr told u It bad blown-la W"ea formaldehyde foam
lanladoa. At tat time tbere wa1 no known danger from &Ma
type of tualatloa, bit now Ural It baa been banned by tbe Coa·
tamer Prod11et Safety CoDUDJ11lon, I am worried. It tbere uy
wa, a MIDMwaer cu clteck tbe formaldehyde level la a lloate
wlMa ..it lualadoa bas been uaed? -D.G., Costa Mesa
There are a number of methods used to monitor formalde-
hyde levels, but many require expensive equipment and hlghly
trained penonneL There is a kit on the market. however, that
homeownen can use themselves. It includes formaldehyde mon-
itors, instructions and an lnformation sheet describing the health
effects of exposure to formaldehyde. After sampllng, the ho-
meowner returns the monitors In the enclosed, postage-.,aid
envelope to the teatins laboratory for analysis and a written
evaluation. The cost is $35 for the first morutor and $25 for each
additional monitor. For more information, write to Clayton En-
\rlronment.al Consultants Inc .. 257 11 Southfield Road, Southfield,
Mich. 48075.
Benefits still available
DEAR PAT: Are per1on1 entering military service eltg.lble ·
for uy ed1eatlon beaeflt1? I've beard tbat benefits ceased once
die G.I. bW expired.
-J .P., Newport Bea~
Education benefits are still available. The Post-Vietnam Era ·
Veterans' Educational Assistance Program was started when the
GI bill expired. New service mem bers initially entering active
duty on or after Jan. 1, 1977, may parttcipate. Under this plan,
the member eontribut.es to a special training fund each month
while in aervice. The government later contributes $2 for each $1
invested. For details, contact the Veterans Administration or ar-
med .ervicel.
. • "Goe • prUbJern? Then write to Pat Hauwttz. Pat will :cut red tape, getting the answel'S and action you • 1 .need to fOI~ i.DequitJe. 1n /lOVemment a1)d bumlem.
Mail yoor qCJt!StJons to Pat Horowiu, At Your Servire, n. ·Orange Cout D•ily PUot, P.O. Box 1$60, Co.ta · . · M-. CA g2616. A.s tDMJY letters,.. po8ble wU1 br
,wwa~
675-1171
3295 Newport Boulevard
Newport Beach Calltornla
ton Peninsula AcroN f'rom City Hall)
PAPPAGALLO
• comics
pro Bed
BllU<.'IL.EY (AP) -The 1'Bl
hM bM\ Mk.cl to ln\ltlttaate an
lnwna~ riNr ~:.~ a rare and valua6le
com1c book about an UNICl'UpU·
loUI Cl'UMdlna aardvark.
Tom Walton. co-owner of~
.Berkeley booutore Comics and
Comlx, tald he unknowlnaly
bou1ht 13 bo1u• copies of the
first edition of "Cerebu1 the
Aardvark" for $30 elCh lut week
and then sold llx to collec1on fol'
$100 ..ch.
Cerebua. a 1poof of "c.onan the
Barbarian" and other mystical,
sword-wielding comic book cha-
racters, bu become a cult hero
who tendl to drink and debauch
after a hard day on the battle-
field.
The 2,000 copies of the first
edition in the Cerebus aeries,
created by Canadian artist-writer
Dave Sim, sold for $1 a book in
1977. Collectors pay aa much aa
$200 for a copy ln mint condition.
The counterfeiting scheme,
which has hit Calilomia, Texu,
England and parts of the East
Coast, waa diacovered at a comic
convention in Long Ialand over
the weekend when dealers dis-
covered thei r supposedly
authentic Cerebua comlca w ere
fakes.
Sub's name
changed
WASHINGTON (AP) -P re-
sident Reagan haa ordered the
Navy to change the name of the
attack submarine Corpus Christi,
which aroused controversy be-
cau.e of critics' protests that it
derogated t~ name of Christ, a
White House spokesman said.
The president instructed the
Navy to change the name of tht:
submarine to City of Corpus
Christi. In Latin, Corpus Christi
meana "body of Christ."
Many church leaders and aev-
eral members of Congress had
objected to giving the name Cor-
pus Christi to a warship.
-.
'-' wn,hoto ~MPERO~'S ~IRTHD~ Y -Emperor Hirohito of Japan
is celebraung his 8 lst birthday today as the longest reig-
ning monarch in t he world. The 124th occupant of the
~~:e~e thro!le• see~. here.!n a secluded garden at h is
, lB descnbed as genki -Japanese for vigorous.
Skutnik given gold medal
Lennie Skutnik, the man
who leaped into t he frigid
Potomac Riv er to rescue a
survivor of an Air Florida jet
crash, has been honored with
a gold medal by Transporta-
tion Secretary Drew Lewis.
Skutnik, whose sister lives
Retire d Adm , Hyman
IUcllover ga.ve a San Diego
reporter a lesson in seeking
that which is unattainable.
"I hope you are not aspi·
ring to an interview," he said
to Kip Cooper of the San
Diego Union who had waited
three hours for him.
The 82-year-old nuclear
Navy pioneer went on: "You
in Ne wport Beach, was dri-
ving home from his Congres-
sion a l Budget O ffice job
when the jet crashed J an. 13.
Three others al.so were cit·
ed for heroic deeds following
the crash.
know what Robert Brown.lng
said a bout a man's aspira-
tions? He said a man 's as-
pirations should always ex-
ceed his grasp. Now, if I gave
interview s, t hen re porters
w o uld h ave no m o r e
aspirations."
"But," Ric kover added
with a small s mile, "you
should keep on trying."
hallan director Praaee
Ztlflrtllt HY• ht• mm of
Oluaeppe Verdt'1 opera "La
Travtata" will re-creai. th•
opera exactly u performed
onatap.
''I am nol 1ooklnc for a new
lnterpretatton,'' he told a
rte~• conference In Rome.
"My intention is to tell the
"°!)' ex.actl ...
2'.efflreW ~ filml.nc the
'6 mlllion project lui week at
Rome's CUiecftu. He uJd the
film, atarrlna tenor Plaet•o
Doaala10 and soprano Teresa
8trata1, should be flnlahed by
October and wlll be previe-
w e d in Venice before lts
·general release. ·
Wllllam C. Marcil, rresl-_
dent and J>Ubll1her o The
Fargo (N .D .) Fo rum, waa
elected chairman and preai-
dent of the American New-
spaper Publlahen Amociation
at ita San Francisco conven-
tion.
Marcll auccee<h Katllarlne
Graham, chairman of the
board of th e Waah lngton
Post.
Pre1ldent Reagu will ad-
dress the West German Bun-
destag during hia European
trip in June, the White House
announced.
The president will speak to
the parliament June 9, before
a meeting of North Atlantic
Treaty Organization members
and a brief stop in West Ber-
lin. He will also confer with
West German Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt.
Erno Rablll h as earned
more than $1 million from hb
puzzle. "Rubik's Cube," a
Belgian newspaper said.
"With my cube I've earned
at least $1 million," the daily
He t Laatate Nieuws quoted
t he Hungarian inventor aa
saying. "But I'm so busy I
haven 't had time yet to count
all that lovely money. I'll get
to t hat later whe n public
interest ln my penion has died
down a bit "
Rubik was in Brussels to
judge a "Rubik's Cube" con-
test won by Lac van Lae-
tbem, 24, who rearranged the
cube's colors in 33 seconds. He
will participate in the world
championship in Budapest in
June.
· •'TERRI"
The petfect npodrllle that will
dfela up any outfit. Available in
natural, white, navy, r.d ond block
COfWOI uppers with w0ven wedge.
nardstram
NOT AU stZES N AU CQlOltS W£ BUY THIS SHOE
IN THESl SllfS
N • 6-10
M .•• &-10
FUR &AU.ERV wants to do something nice for your fur. It's time to protect your
fur lrMStment, so let N«dstrom store It for you. SCientlflcally controlled
temperatures protect your fur from '*'· twmdlty and l'fbw. And wt* In ( .
storage, it Is safeguarded against moths, fire and thlftr
NOW THROUGH MAY'31, SAVE 20% WHEN YOU ~YOUR FUR
At the bme you bring your fur In toi storage, you'M SM on our m«:tusMI
Klendltlon fur cleaning service. W9'" enhlnce your fur and l'IStOnl It to Its
natural beauty. Also ask abOut our fur l'9PIW and rtmOdeling 98tvtces. South
Coat Plaza only. Outside our IOCal dialing nas In Los ~ and Orange
Counties, call toll free 1~32·7175.
'
Mar.inCs on display
El Toro base giving air show, open house
When the Marine Corpe putl
Oft lta annual Armed rorc. ~y
I oplt\ ho\.-and air lhow, lt pWll
out all the ltOpl. wtth ctilplays ot
modem and old warplanet, the,
Blue Ana•la fJ.laht team, tank.I,.
dlmoMtratkn and lky d1ven.
It all hap~na tht1 weekend,
wtth ptee to Marine Corp AU
Station. El Toro ~ from 0:80
1 .m . to 5 p .m. Saturday and
Sunday.
Marin• 1pokeamen aay they
expect 350,000 to attend th11
YMl''I two-day air lhow.
The mWtary aircraft that will
be on dllplay both daya ii a IOrt ot a what'• what of aviation bJa..
~ere will be modem Marine
aircraft like the F-4 Phantom•
and the A-4 Skyhawka -the
ones you aee 9Cl'eaming overhead
every day near El Toro.
include a P·I Orlon and 1'·14
Tomcat. a Ro~al Alr J'orce Vul-
can bomber-a SUnlon V-71.
Marine Infantry equipment
will allo be on review lndudinc an M-80 tank, an am;hib6ow 11-
aault vehicle ind a towed 105
mllllmeter howitler.
But the hJ.ahllcht of the wee-
kend activities II the air lhow,
featurina the a1eek Blue Anaela Fllaht DemonatraUon Team. The
lhow betzinl at noon a.ch CS._y.
The 11'ow be1ln1 wlth Sky-
ha wk•, Intrudera and l'-4
Phantoms 1ereamln1 acrou the air' field tn formation.
A demonstration of the
KC-130 Hercules refuelen, loa-
d.ing two jetl with fuel in the air
abo, "planned.
Adm.laaion to the open hou.e ii
free. Access to the El Toro Ma-
rinl bMI II VS. the Sand C.Oyon
e>elt from the San Dteao 1'?"-
way. ·
9:80 1.m. -Gate. open to pu~
bUc
Noon -Marine tactical air-
craft belln takeofts
Noon to 12:.40 p.m. -Mplne
Air-pound team demonltratiocw
12:40 to 12:55 p.m. -Harrier
hover jet demonltratlon
12:55 to 1:15 p.m. -Aerobadc
fllaht demomtratlon
l :U to 1:4~ p.m. -lntermll-
lllon
1:45 to 2:05 p.m. -lntenervioe
precision parachute team de-
rncntratlon
2:06 to 3 p.m. -Blue Angela
1982 Air Show
~ p.m. -Open house end1.
gates cloee
And there will be heUcopten,
ranging from the CH-43 Sea
Knight to the huge CH-53 Sea
Stallion -the ones you 1ee
!')overing over the Tustin hell-
cop\er bue.
Nudity on ballot
The Marine Corp1' newest jet
-the A V-8 Harrier, which can
take off vertically and hover like
a helicopter -will ~tao be on
dlaplay.
Measure targets bar dancers
Some of the Marines' older
aircraft also will be on exhibit,
lncluding P-51 Mustangs and an
F-4U Coruir -dubbed
"Whi.atling Death" by the Japa-
ne.e in World War ll.
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -Bay County will vote on
an anti-nudity ordinance aimed at cleaning up bars that fea-
ture scantily clad male and female dancers, Bay County
commissioners decided.
The commisaloh already has amended and adopted a
version of the so-called "morality ordinance" proposed by
Sheriff Lavelle Pitts.
Other historic warr.lanes at
Saturday and Sunday 11 display
County Attorney Les Burke said he would meet with the
sheri(f and representatives of the state attorney's office to
produce an ordinance to put on the June ballot.
Space source of
Inineral treasure
By JOEL C. DON
O(lfleD81yll'tlo41e.ft
Natural reaources are dwindling on Earth. Ci-
tlea are bunting with people.
Aatronomer Brian O'Leary sees a aolution in
1pace, where he aaya unlimited mineral and enerp
resources Ile to replenish 'he planet's lnflntte
storehouse of foasil fuels, metala and rare elements.
O'Leary, who tea-
ch ea at Princeton Un-
1 veraity , spo ke at a
Town Hall lecture In
Newport Beach hosted
by the Auiatance Lea-
gues of Laguna Beach
and Newport Beach. '
He said the re are
vast, untappecl re90W'Cel
that can be mined from
the moon and ast.erolda.
Lunar material.a could
be u1ed to con1truct
O'LEARY orbiting aolar aatellitet
that could beam unJ1mi.
ted amountl of electrl-
dty to Earth via microwave a1gnals.
The flnt major hurdle to auch project.I, he aid,
has been overcome with the successful test flightl
of the apace shuttle, a reusable spacecraft that can
ferry satellites, sdent.ific experimentl and building
equipment Into space.
"The shuttle in spite of its bugs and problems
has a capacity to permit ua to get to the moon and
atteroida," he said. ''My favorite deaUnatlons are
the asteroids.
c >-"The moet exciting thing about the asteroids la
they contain a 'Heinz 57' amount of materlala -all
the raw materials needf'd to make an industrialized
center in space."
O'Leary aaid he has w"lrked with Dr. Gerard
O'Neill, the Princeton ph1tndst who outllned the
practical mearui of apace exploration and coloniza-
tion in the book "The High Frontier," published in
1977. .
Advocates of apace colonization propoee min.lng
the moon for all matertala needed to construct ana
run an orbiting apace station with a population in
the thouaanda.
Lunar materiala, which contain oxygen, metala
and sllicon, would be propelled toward Earth by
devices called mue driven. A working model of a
m&11 driver baa been developed at Prtncetnn.
O'Leary said la.rge space colonies and uteWtes
would have to be conatructed from lunar 80il and
Mteroidl becau.e of the coat of tranaporting auch
material from the planet.
"We here on the Earth lit at the bottom of a
1ravity well," he 1ald. "Even u1lns the apace
1huttle it would coat $1,000 to haul one kilosram
(2.2 pounds) of material into 1peoe."
B
Staning May 3rd, when you open
our 91-Day Money Market Account,
~give you a $20 cash bonus.
High Rates for just 91 Days!
Soon, you won't have to tic up your money
for long periods to get high money market
interest. With our new 91-Day Money Market
Account, you enjoy high rates when you invest
a minimum of 17500 for only 91 days at a
time. At the end of the term your funds will
be automatically reinvested for you, at the
'Rau: (CK May j rd only
'·Annual Yleld bucd on dq>osl• and lntcrnt bcll18 rclnvatcd
It umc raic at cacti maturtry 10 complrtc one full )'CU
Falcral rqp.ilarJon pmhfblt:5 thc.-rnmpoundll18 of lntnnc
00 lhcK accounu.
•Ratt la M1bfect to ~ but 19 ftxcd 11 tlmc of an·oum
openll18 b the tcnn ol rhc.-trwn1mc:n1
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, AptN 29, 1882
Interest
ceiling
nix urged
,
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Reapn edminilVaUoa •YI ln•t
reat celllna• on U .8, eavlnC•'
bondl are too low and h&I tor·
mally aaked a~ ooanittee
to repeal· the lntereet '*line on
1uch obUaattoN and on Iona"
tenn tlUIW')' bondl.
Deputy AHl1tant TreHury
Secretary Mark E. Stalnecker
urged puaase of le1l1latlon tO
allow in~ on •vinll bonds to
"automatically lnqai1e and de-
crease with rnarke.-tee."
Stalnecker told the HouH>
Waya and Means Committee that.
increaaea in the aavin11 bond
interest rate u pennlllllble under
current law have not been
"sufficient to at.em the aavlnp
bond cub drain from the trea-
sury" because higher interest
rates are available elaewhere. r
The rate on aavtnaa bonds hal
not been increued since May l,•
1981, when the rate for Series l!!E
bonds was set at 9 percent. At
that time, the department an·
nowleed It would seek legl.alation
to permit changes in the aavinp,
bond rate to reflect market inte-1
rest rates fluctuations. 1
0..., ........... bf Gery,.,,._
LONG LINES -Harriet Shaffer, one of the victims of last
week's disastrous Anaheim fire, wrote letters to pa&'I the time
while waiting for assistance Wednesday at the Federal Di-
saster Center at Anaheim's Trident Junior High School. After
four hours, she was close to the door.
Stalnecker uid the Treuury,
Department rejected the idea of,
raising the savlnp bond interest,
rate, as allowed within llmltl by
current law, becauae that could.
mean such bonda would earn a ,
higher Interest rate than other 1 savings instrume nts if market
rates declined.
-rate in effect on your maturity date. Or you
may withdraw your money if you prefer.
12.219% Annual Rate•
12.977% Annual Yield. • •
Bank of America'~ rate on this account b
the highe t the law aJlows us to pay. And
remember, Bank of America gives you a S20
bonus, too!
Safety and Convenience.
Only Bank of America can offer you the
safety and convenience of California'~
largest financiaJ instimtion. In fact, there\
,. Annwl Yit'ld I• lu'oCd on dally 1.ompoun<ltfll( •1f Intl rc..c
whc:n dc:poNt and lntac"' n:nuln In 1hc :1<.'toun1 for ~ 'car
'luhtiunrlal pmalty few carlr withdnw:al
... \~·)TV lmocMmcnl ahu w.Ubhk with 1 S'WICI minimum
c.lcpo!il• IN1 ~• a loW\'r ra1e
probahly a Bank of America branch nealby.
So come in on or after May 3rd and open
your 91 -Day Account al Bank of Amcric..-a
Also New: 31/l-Year Investments.
14.250% Annual Rate t
15.312% Annual Yield. tt
On May 3rd Bank of America will also offer
a new inveMmc:nt that let~ you lock up
this high rare for 3 ~ years, wilh a S2000
minimum dc:posit.ttt It's our 3Yz·Year
High Yield Plus Investment.
A.-;k u~ about it!
BANK
OF AMERICA
I
')
I
l
i
He a1ao l8id there are about 200,000 asteroids
within relatively euy reach of Earth. The raw
materlala from such ctWtial bodies could be made
into rocket fuel as well • comtructlon materiala for •s-:e colonlea. r-----------------1 You'll beiri the money. Spece colonliatlon 11 not aclence fiction, he
'1tre•ed. 1Ack of aupport for the apece program ii
the only major problem thwarUna the re.earch d -
f0111 ot tdentilta and encm-n. ""
"lf thl1 country won't do I~ eomebody elae WW." be .... notinl a... and Jepul .,.. deveJo.
ptnc plarw for apaoe eolamel.
I 91-DayMoney MarketAccouot.
I
1bls coupon" good for a '20 ~ bonwl when you ~u
open a 91·Dly Money MaricL1 Aca>unt al Sri ol Amerio LJ ( Q1UpOftl allo IWJ1lblc ..... ol Amma branchel.)
I ~~------~~----~ I 1ioCWS«urity•, __________ _ I A4'C:Ounf • (l-*WllU In): _________ _
I
I
I
I
I
. I
{,
Oranot co.et DAILY PILOT IThUreday. AprN tt. 1182
..
' Behind the bell. Behind th'e
flmOUI 8Moout ttlcklf'. Behind
aN the atat•of.tht art proteotlon deVloee we mike .00 lnttall, II
Seacoeat central atltton.
When an alarm go•• off on
• your property, we get the llgnal
In a nearby, 24-hour-a-day oen-
tral station, ff the algnal lndlcetff
fire, burglary or holdup, we call
. the police or fire department.
Since our central station 11 U.L. rated, our central station customers
can queNfy for a llzeable discount on their Insurance.
! And to Increase our reach, make r~nse time even faster. and
Improve ettlclenoy, we're computerizing our station.
But fmprovementa aren't new to Seacoast. We've been getting lbetter for 21 years. And today we're the leaders In the security.business
.~n the Harbor area with over 10,000 customers Including a wide range of
! big and small retell, Industrial and commercial establishments.
To find out more about our Seacoast central station write or come
by our new facility at 2488 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
® . .
' SEAC~T l · 2488 NEWPORT BOULEVARD· COSTA MESA,·
8ECURJTY SY_81E.MS ' ,CALIFORNIA• 92627 • (714) 642·3490
JCPenney
Garden Shop Sale
Aprll 30th, May 1st, May 2nd
Friday -Saturday -Sunday
-----ril~~-----·
Star
Jasmine
1 gal.
reg. $2.99
Sale 11.99
10" Houseplant•
..... Choose from ficus.
palms & various !
dracaenas
reg. $24.99
4" Hybrid
Tomatoes
reg. ggc
NOW 88•
1 gal.
'Geraniums
reg. $2.99
NOW 11.99
~~~ NOW 818~99
Meyer
Lemon
8"
Fuachlaa In
hanging basket•
reg. $14.99
NOW 110.99
....
•
,,:.~.r.1; :.r. .
' . .......
. ••
5 Gallon Dwarf Fruit Tree•
Varieties Include Bonanza Peach and
Meyer Lemon.
Speclal From
$8.49-$11.99
Sale Only: Aprll 30th -Friday
May 1at -Saturday
J.C. Penney's
22" ~~!!~.: BBQ
Nowfi2.99
J.C. Penney's
18" Kettle BBQ
reg. $44.99
Now$39.99
Weber Smokey
Joe BBQ 0350 35hp (Black Only)
reg. ~.99
NOW ~6(i;~. $28.99
2 h.p. Mclane
E~r
reg. $199.99
NQW '189.99
22 Power Propelled
Side Dlacharg•
reg. $219.99
NOW 1199.99
Show goes belly up
Art display in saloon 'final final'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -When aovemon and leaWatW'ft move on,
they're lmmedlately replat'ed. Not eo
another capital fixture, Sllppera
Murphy'• Eleventh or Twelfth An-
nual Art Show.
Or more predlely, the Ftnal-J'lnal
Invitational Antl·r.IUibl.lahment Exhi-
bit and Spoof. ·
The hoet, veteran Capitol it.after,
SqtalaUve c:omWtant, amateur ~ter
and art collector Jack "SUpptr."
Murphy pulled up In an enonnoua U-
moullne and bean lf'eet.lna arrival.I
outside the Torch Club -there wu
ICAJ"Cely room for him l.naide.
Fettooned with the blue ribbon of
"Supreme Judge," Murphy explained
why th.la would be the lut.
"They're 1oing to tear down the
building. In any other place, I l
wouldn't go acroa. Thl1 11 the lHt
one," he said.
Ke al10 had a run-In with the
1pon.on of a bli •t.ate a>mptdtlon.
Mur.Phv vowed to prove that an an
1how Ln f•the wor1t aaloon In town"
could demonatrate a thine or two to
hl1 ant.a1onl1ta. He thlnlta lt hu, ln
the cuatomary overflowtna crowdl of
leaialaton, lobbyllta and local luml·
narles for one t.hlna· W for another, there'• no way an
eetablllhmentarlan gallery or mW1eum
could recruit the talent of Murphy's
faithful.I.
Example: Amon& the two dozen
entrl• thll year, B.T. Colllna, guber-
natorial chief of 1taff whose right
hand 11 a 1teel hook, exhibited a
flnaerpalnllna entitled "Buttermllk
and V.O.''
State Sen. John Schmitz, R-Cor-
ona dei Mar and ultraconservative
candidate for U.S . Senate, hung
"Super Schmitz," which looked sus-
piciously like lut year'• "Kellyman"
with a different face. ,, ... .,. ... The Torch Cub, 1WTOunded by the
bus 1tatlon, adult book store and other
deUghta of doWJ\town Sacramento,.~
just the k1nd of place Murpt;iy ~
to get even with a major California
mu1eum that accepted hi1 loan of a
palntlng by a major We1tern artl1t,
and then stored it ln the basement.
"Kellyman'•" creator, lobbyiat and
co-hoet Dick Kell[ of Redding, pre-
.ented a portrait o Aalembly Speaker
Willie Brown, D-San Francia::o, enti~
led, "The Wllket-Baahlord Ltd. Suit,
with Unidentified Model."
BIG BULLY -Judy Oates, a California Rodeo
official, checks the damage to a 40-year-old
steer head mounted on a pickup truck after a
brahma bull saw red and attacked it while
bucking at a Clovis rodeo.
Dr. Lou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
842-0720
1124 lrvlne Ave.
Newport Beach
Where The
Smart Money
Stays.NEWPORT
t"'1ii BALBOA J~ Savings
Wrotr:U Pt.a, I 100 1...IM A-w, P 0 ._'Ml),
Newpun lleoicA,Oa/lfornl.t 92663 (114) 64)-65«>
.. Mar, '°'11 ,_ c-c •• ..,_,,
C.-c1tJ M•,C.llfamM 9'262) (114) 61,.._
t ~Monda) tMI Thunday. t I Friday, t I Saturday.
i
Cuisinart
DLC lOE $130 s99tt
DLC BE $185'149" I
DLC 7E $260 '19999~,-.., .~ dc .. _,_,........7'.
f ' I
Crown
Hardware
• Westclff Plaza • Harbor View Center
• Anahein tlls • Corona def Mar
THE FREIHEIT
AND llEIT
QUALITY SEAFOOD
FOR LEIS
FRIENOL Y SERVICE
H11lth lull! Quench
Your Thirst!
•We now have available a variety of
freshly squeezed Escondido Juices.
Speolal this week, Carrot J1 r,e, pt. ... ,
qt. 11.11.
•Fresh squeezed Oranae Jule Dally.
(Localed ... Ptoducl °"Pt ,
Newport Be.ch Sto1 ''• Only
Two Newport Loca1• ne
3100 Balboa Blvd., NeY .,ort 8Mch
1150 lrvlne Ave .• NeWDOtt llHch Oller eapir• Mey •: .1'12 ..
Beef Stlc·k ®
Sale
Save •1.00
per lb. on a whole atk*
Save so•
per lb. on • cut piece
otter 90C>d thN Mey 9, 1982
FASHION I ISLAND ............. ..... OPllll DAILY
.r
..
;.i!
; I
!k
...
• I
D.., fltlot ,_.. bf Lee ,._,,..
R AISING FUNDS -Mickey Mouse and
5-year-old Christy Mitchell, poster child of the
,. Leukemia Society of America, Tri-County
• 1 Chapter, get ready for a dive. The society will
; 1hold its first annual Super Swim Classic in 10
~ Orange County pools May 8 to raise funds.
J Prizes will be awarded to swimmers based on
• amounts of money raised. For information, call
· 539.gs11. l
~,~ ederal tax
tiJ1ite g rowin g
I l By fte .UIOdated Pre11
t.J A hypothetical family of four with an income
I' 'of $~.000 faces a federal tax bill of almoet $7 ,000 ~.,.for the current fiacal year, a study shows.
• ' The figures come from the Tax Foundation
c., a non-profit research gruup in Washington,
.C., which keeps track of taxes Americans pay.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
ederal budget and calculate how the government
pends an individual taxpayer's dollars, using a
hYPothetical family ~ith one working ipouse, two
• -ciiil~ and an annual income near the median for
-~ U.S. families. There are lots of numbers involved, but it's
worthwhile to wade through them to learn where
k;our money goes. f Por the lastest study, the economi.lta used a ~mily with an annual income of $25,000. They
ound that such a family would have a federal tax
of te:916 for fi9cal 1982 -the year that~
)ct. 1 . FedeNI income taxes would accoun' for $2,-
j77l of the tax bill, Social Security for $1Jj75 and
}ndirect taxes like excite levies and C'Cll'pOrate in-
.xime for $2,470.
Five years ago, the economists Ulled a family
with an income of $15,000 and found that such a
family had a federal tax bW of $3,975. Federal in-~me taxes accounted for $1,459; Social Security
' ;axes for $878; and indirect taxes for $1,635. 1 In 1977, the federal tax bill for the lower-
,ncome family equaled 26 ~ percent of income; for
'1982, the federal bite on the higher-income family
· Naa 28 percent.
, The hypothetical income level used for the
~tion1 was increued 66 percent between 1977
md 1982, allowing for an increase in earnings of
nore than 10 percent a year. That produced an lncre..e in the tax bill of 74 percent. Income levies ~ied for 37 percent of the tax bill in 1977 and
lO pen:ent in 1982; Social Security taxes accounted
' 'or 22 percent ln 1977 vs. 24 percent ln 1982; and
< lndtnict taxes accounted for 41 percent in 1977 and
percent in 1982.
Most people think of taxes in terms of the
endar year -from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
~ fCOOOmlsta based their calculations on the fiBcal
..(e8r -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -since that is the
:>eriod used by the government for budgetary pur-
~The biggest chunk of the money -then and ~w :.._goes for what ii called income aecurity, in-udinl Social Security payments, welfare benefita,
tc. Income eecwity accounted for about 32 percent
the family's tax bill in 1977 and about 33 percent •• tn 1982.
National defeme was the leCOl'Xl biggest spen-~ eat.egory ln both yean. It accounted for 33~
>ereent "1 the tax bW in 1977 and just under 25 .0 ttoday.
'nlere have been ahifta ln other areas of spen-
ing over the past five years. Interest on the
tioaal debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
. y'I tax bill in 1977 and WU in fourth place. Oday, interest ii in third place, accounting for 13
. I t of the tax bill.
Health, which waa third on the llat five years
bu .Upped to fourth place; in both 1977 and
It aaiounted for a little more than 9 percent of
tax b'11. fa dollar tenm, income leCW'ity accounted for
1,281ofihetaxbillln1977 md $2,291 today, a Ne
f 78 J*C*I\. The defeme portion of the tax bill
ent from $934 to $1,712, up 83 percent. and the
tAtr..t portion went from $363 to $905, up 156
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, AptM 29, 1912
Hefner passes torch
Daughter new Playboy president •
CHICAGO (AP) -Chrlatie Hefner,
28, dau1hter of Huch Hefner, haa
been named prealdent of Playboy
l'llterpctlm Inc.
• 11Havtna worked at pol.Icy levela ln
many areu of the ocmpany, Chrlat.ie
hu certalnly been well prepared for
Ulla move," her father, chief executive
officer, Mid Wedneeday.
Ma. Hefner hu been a corporate vtce prt!llident at Playboy four years.
The direct rnanagement of Playboy
F.nterprilel will be under the control
of Ma. Hefner and Marvin L. Huston,
executive vice premdent.
Rates%
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75
13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75
12.50
12.25
12.00
11.75
11.50
11.25
11.00
10.75
10.50
10.25
Ma. Hefner will report dlrectly to
her father.
"Our flnt talc LI to complete the
tranlit.ion Qf Playboy from a broedly
hued corporation to a clearly foc:wed
communicationa company,'' aald Ml.
l;fefner. "In eddltion to lta a~ul
magazine pubU1hln1 l>uelneu and
entrance into the lucrative pey cable
bualnem, Playboy a1ao hu profit op-
portuniU. by capltallzlna on the va-
lue of lta rwne through magazine and
product llcenatna and c lub
franchiling."
TAKES OVER -
Chrlatie Hefner 111
new preaiden t of
Playboy Enterprises
Inc.
vs.
Ready Acas and
Money Market Fund Yields
Dinosaur deaths
tied to caiaracts
LONOON (AP) -Eye cataracta mJant have
wtped out many of the 800 apec:MI of dlnouun that
roamed the earth untJl about 85 m1Jllon B.C., .c-cordinc to L.R. Croft, a Salford Un!venlty bk>~.
Vuioua theor1el have been put forth for the
dernble of the aiat creatures, which were believed
c:oJd-blooded Uke modem reptlles. But Croft 1u1-
geetl they dled out becau.e thelr eyee lacked the
protein to make them rnl•tant to an lncreue in
solar radiaUon.
In hll new book "The Lut Dlnouun," Croft
aaid the species that diaappeared flnt dld not de-
velop a thickeninl of the brow of the eye IOCket or
aome other protection, 1uch u a horny cre1t bet-
ween the eyes.
s
10.00 ___________________________________ .....___.
-S? 2 ~-~ ~ -M C -~ --~ N ~ ~ N ~ ~ N ~ -M N ~ ~ N 0 - -·~ 0 0 -N N 0 - -N 0 0 -N 0 0 -
ito - -
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 0 - - - -N N N N N - - - -N N N N M ~ M
I
J - ---------
Ready Access wa s designed to beat the
money funds ... and it does! The money
funds may think h 's almost "unfair com-
petition," because of its unique combination
of features : jnsured safety, easy
accessibility, and high money-market
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and sec
if you don't agree .
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above shows. a person who
opened a Ready Access account last fall. on
October 10, would have earned a guaran-
teed yie ld of 14.468% fo r the following
26-week period. Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%. it dropped to
a low of 11.8%-and averaged only 13.5% for
the same period. That put the average
money fund yield almost a full percentage
point below Ready Access. When you look
Annual Effective Yield*•
Aaaaal Rate••
13 • 0'1 ~5 O/o rn~um • .
No
at the tr.ack record, Ready Access has a
decided edge.
Easy Access
When you open your account, you get a spe-
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, Sl,000 or·
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have to do is write a check for at least
$500-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds, provided the account is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account 1s
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan In surance Corporation.
Money fund investments are not insured.
And, as an article in the Wall Street
Journal-points outt the risk of money funds
increases as short-term interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance Requiremeot
Only $5,000 is needed to open a Ready
Access account. ~nd there is virtually no
minimum balance requirement to maintain
the account.
Services
An interest-earning checking account is
offered each Ready Access account holder-
/ree o( monthly service charges. And thi s
o pens the door to 24-H OUR TELLER
(AT M) service as well as TELE-PAY", th e
uniq ue service that allows regular monthly
bill s to be paid with a telephone call. No
money fund provides so many special
services.
Convenience
With 100 offices throughout California
(soon to be expanded to 145) the Associa -
tion is easily accessible for a variety of
services-from making deposits and with-
drawals to cashing checks. using a safe de-
posit box, obtaining money orders or trav-
elers checks, applying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
CALL THE FINANCIAL LINE
(714) Dl-4023
Call Direct or Collect
8 1.m. till 9 p.m .
Get further information, the answers to
your questions, or arrange an appoint-
ment with a Money Management
Specialist at any Association office ...
and do it all by phone, si mply by calling
our Financial Linc .
R~ady A cau-A110tlwr Protblct of Ow Cat"'Y of Succus ill MtHWy M111111.,,.at
Reaching new heights of service and performance takes the kind of strength that, at Great
American Federal, comes from nearly a hundred years of success in money mana,ement. Today,
· with resourcts soon to surpass S4 billion, Great American FederaJ is one of the naoon's largest and ---·-----·-
strongest financial institution&. Come share this strength, this century of succes
at Great American Federal.
. ., , .
i OrMOe CoMt DAILY "LOT,,,__. Apfl II. 1HI
Fairview mini-park ,.
... hit by fund shor.tage
~·
Tax time hai Just barefy
rolled by and Chri1tmu la eight
month• away, makln& it next to
lmpomtble lt aeema to ralle funds
for a park at Fatrvlew State HOl-
pltal tn Coeta Mesa.
Hospital officials and com-
munity members who have dona-
ted time and money to establish
the Enid Lathrop mini-park at the
hoepital found that out for them-
selves.
Two years ago Newport
Beach busineaaman Al Douglas
took out an ad at Christmas asking
for community support.
He figured it would take
$30,000 to tranaf omi the half acre
of bare ground into an area of
sloping sidewalks and private pic-
nic spots for the kids and their
families.
So far $13 ,000 has been
raised. But a lack of money has
brought work to a grinding halt.
About $15,000 worth of do-
nated shrubbery remains in cans
.
until they can pay 1omeone to
plant them.
Pam Healy, a rehabllttatlon
therapist who has been helpln'
get the~!cJ>lana off the ground,
said ffliTrhpouTine to aet state
funding for the park. That'• why
Douglas has turned to the com·
munity.
Many of the mentally dtaa-
bled youngsters between 8 and 21
are forced to go without any play
area becauae the awing aeta are too
difficult to muter, ahe aald.
In the9e hard econom1c tlm8
it'• difflcult i. atnale out one pro-
ject aa more deservtn1 than an-
other. But since almoet halt the
money hu been ratted, it would
seem a shame to let the other half
go undone and unWN!d.
Anyone interested ln maki"I
a donation to the Lathrop park can
write Ma. Healey at Fairview
State Hospital, Program V, 2~01
Harbor Blvd., Coeta Meu or call
957-5228.
Center can aid budget
During the recent council
campaign and earlier, Fountain
'Valley's recreation center at Mlle
Square Park has been a popular
target of those suggesting solu-
tions to the city's budget problems.
The criti~ have pointed out
this center, which lncludes an ac-
tivities building, tennis and bas-
ketball courts and ball fields, has
been costing the city at least
$100,000 annually.
They complain that Fountain
Valley has been subsidizing rec-
reation programs used by many
residents from other cities.
Others, however, have point-
ed out that most cities, including
Fountain Valley, established their
recreation programs in the pre-
Propoai tion 13 era, when such
programs often were viewed as a
public service and did not have to
pay for themaelves.
The gradual conversion of
Fountain Valley's recreation oen~
er to self-sufficiency may take
several yean.
The City Council last week
approved two measures aimed at
moving le that direction.
The cound1 decided to permit
the serving of alcoholic beverages
in the center's IOdal hall when it
is rented out for private parties or
wedding receptions. 'J'his is ex-
pected to add $3,000 or more to the
city's recreation coffers.
Also, the councll approved
installation of three video game
machines at the center. This is
expected to bring the dty an extra
$5,000 annually.
Under ideal circumstances,
the city might have wanted to re-
strict alcohol and video games
from the center. But with proper
supervision, the9e activities lhould
not interfere with the traditional
recreation programs.
These steps, combined with
some changes in program fees,
should help the recreation center
move toward .elf-sufficiency.
Linguistic missionary
Huntington Beach-based Wy-Wycliffe and ill academic af-
cliffe Bible Translators ia mour-filiate, the Summer lnatltute of
ning the loss of the group'• foun-Linguistics, have provided mla-
der, William Cameron Townaend, sioriaries who have tranalated the
known as "Uncle Cam" to his fol-Bible into 160 languages for pri-
lowen. mitive cultures worldwide. The
Townsend died last week in a group is currently working on 7~
hospital near his home in Wax-other tranalatlona.
haw, N.C. He was 85. Beyond ill work ln apreading
Towmend found hi.a calling as r-eligioua meuagea, Wycliffe hu
a young Bible salesman ln Guate-also given written alphabet• to
mala. ~ the organization tells it, primitive people who previously
an Indian asked Townsend why • had none.
God didn't speak ln the lanpage , of h1a people. Townaend 1 vialon was
Townaend then spent aeveral praiMd by evanaeliat Bllly Gra·
years learning the Indians' ham ln a tribute for "Uncle Cam"
language and translating the Bible held lut year ln Anaheim.
·for them. This set a pattern his Of Townsend, Graham aaJd,
organization has followed ever "He's touched the world ln a way
since. I never could."
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex· pressed on tnls page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Cos~ Mete, CA 9'l626. Phone (71-0
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd/ Acting trick
Moviemaken know that how they
direct. an actreu to deal with 1tain
c:onveya whatewr they want to lhow
: about .her. Poiled and dipWed: SM
declndl &lowly. Younc and friendly:
She 8'tl on the bottom NI' 1rith her
anna cr011ed In front of her kneee.
Tired and overworlled: She climt., bOldinl the handnil. Ill: She maka
her way down, 1rlppln1 the rail.
Dn.mk 7Jp, down the bennisttt.
In the~n of Blncbe ~ retinaary, throw a.tume
belll wtlh badl, ltreetdml-
cm, end much to Oalm .. the
ftllM of that pa.. .,... • our word
~:·
Q. What'• ·~photUr'
A. TM~ awnloo to the
weartn1 of clothn. Claim ii aome
people ., cUal1ke the eaftftn. of cJo.. ·
thine that tbey throw off all their
pnnenta M 800ft .. they aet lnto the
privaq of their homes. And othen,
it111Uct, don't Wait.
How do you r.nk the llHtrM of the
'J.r In order of your OWD preference?
Pollaters 1ay mo11t cttlsena reply: 1.
Sprin1. 2. fjummer. 3. Autumn. 4.
Winter.
Q. Hu anybody ever climbed Mt.
Everm~-A. Only Relnhokl M-.. of Aua.-
trla. In 1880. He dtd It without oxya-n
tanb, inddlntally.
People In China outnumber the
ln the United Staw .-.oy
to one. t..wyen tn die Vnltail
outnumber the law1ere tn
Cblna by 00 to ...
a;,, ... .... __ -~ ----'l'M mPAR£1>TO G01'1~MILi ... 1 SAJD-rJI ~DENT
Tax system demands ref or.~·~ 1
NEW YORK -Lewie Lehrman, a
candidate for the !Wpubllcan nomtnadon
for pemor of New York, ilNed a 1tate-
ment on hll ~ taxel lMt week. He
doea pr~tt w~ll -·b11 money comn
from a y-owned ~chain -
and h1a 198 lnoome (adjusted arc. in-
come) wu llated u $920,6!H.
THAT, ACCORDING to my ploddJ.na
calculationa, J>U':' him 1n the 50 percent
bracket, the highelt Income tax bracket.
After all, accordlfll to the lawe and re-
gulationa govemina the Internal Reve-
nue Service, every dollar earned over
$60,000 is taxed at 50 percent on a joint
retum. Riaht?
Wrong. Lew Lebnnan, whoee honesty
la unquestioned, WU 1n the 13 percent
bracket lut year. He paid $121,706 In
federal income taxee on that Income of
almost S l million.
Lehrman'• income, according to his
1tatement, came from a salary of S76,626,
dividends of $672,~, interest Income of
$71,626 and capital Pini of $238,368. He
had enouch ded~ and cred.lta to cut
hla tax to a lower rate than the 14 per-
cent paid by a ularied employee who
ea.ma $100 a week.
Not bad for a guy who ll1ta hla net
worth at $24,827,339.
But then the tax ''lawa'' -that almost lndedpherable code of laws, resuJ.atlonll,
rullnp, preoedenta and tnterpretaUona
-are not bad for any American who
aeta hia money tn any way other than a
regular paycheck complete with wlth-
holdlna. Honestly (loopholea) or ctilho-
neatly (hidden income), the rich are
llCllll 111111
setUac rtct.' thin you would aue-ln •
country with a pl'Ollemiw tnecme tax.
In fs:t, wt1hout conaalttnc Ltbnnan's
lawyen and ~i., 1 would lue9 that be ooWd haw peAd even 1aa tax if
he rally wanted to pwh through more
loopholes. Like many affluent Amer-
icana. he may have dedded to pey eome
more that be had to -eiU.-bee.au.
one believ9 everyone sbou.1d S-Y 90lne
arpbly biU lhare oc bee.a..-one would
like to minimize the chances of beln1
audited. Some of the ~ IUYI just S-Y
r.en> Income ta.xa -Ronald Relpn ln
the pelt WM one eumpJ.e.
The "pro1re11ive' Income tax -"-.ld.na the rich." the rich haw called It
since Karl Marx propmed It 1n 1847 u
pu't of the CanmuUt Manifesto -Just
lllll't workina the way it WM IU~ to.
There jmt don't seem to be enoup rich
~ -« people ""'!d"I pod mone>:
are damnably good at hJdlng lnoome. of .
the 93.6 million 1980 tax returna OW.
only 547,590 reported adjusted Jl"C * a !
above $100,000. The total number ~
»0,000 WU under 2.6 rnil.Ueft. Of ...
billion paid tn taxee that yew hy fMM·
duala, $37.9 billion -leas than 16 peirJ
cent -WH paid by the me1nben el
over-Sl00,000 f.amilies. •
That total of $284 btllion •• .-N by
all taxpeytta on total reportell _.~
gro11 income of $1.6 trillion. 80, lhl'
average income tax rate for all 1'mtflr-,
lcana was aomethina like 17 pen:eiMJ
Which mean• that if there •en a
ainale-me lncome tax <~oei•W"> and the current level of feidenl ~
were maintained, each taxpayer WouW
pay 17 percent of hia or her td~ ere-. which is more than Lew ~
peya now. U deductionl and cretBll w.e
ellmlnated at the same time, Ge .,. l
rate would drop toward 10 pa eeM. ~
SOMETHING LIU a ai.naJe rate, or fl
"zero-hue" reform of the tale •Yltem:t
baa to be conaidered -now. Becw tM rich can so easily avoid pro1re.,ive
tAxatJon, the poor and everyone ea. are
now doing it too. That's what the un-
derground economy is all about thew
daya.
Americans have alw'ys pekt tql!ll ,..
latively willingly. We thou1ht th~
ayatem waa essentially fair. Jlro ~
~
Eventually U.S. must support BritaiJi:
To the Editor:
Thia ls to expreu my sudden alarm
and ooncem that, tn the attempt of the
~ admin1a1ration to play the roJ.e at
honest broker in the AncJo-Araentlne
dlapute, it la runnlna arave rlalu of allenattr.c the most vital and reliable ally
the Uni~ Statel hu had in this cen·
tury. The l"elUlt of this alienation, lhouJd
It occur, will p_redlctably be dlltllualon
~the NATO putnen of the United Statet with lta reliability u the major
power 1n the western alliance In ita ef-
forta to preeerve free ~t and
the rule of law In the world. Such ~
tllumon would. of coww, c:on&rtbut.e to a
flaccid alliance and the 1pread of the
commwmt evil in ~ and probably
ei.where. In 1hort, the failure of the United
Stata to IUpp:ll't ~lain In the J'aJktand
b1mds dispute wt1J.. If It bM not done .:>
alrmdy, leed to the concndktion of the
central valuea th.Iii country bal stood for
tn this oentury, and In the more epedflc
8el'we guarantee the denial of the wry
p.11 of Reaon'• own polley In l'A.arope
-the creatlon of a •table balance of
power and throuf}l it the creation of
incentives for the U.S.S.R. to take ee-
rioualy propoeall for anm llmitation,
force reducdon, and~ ~t.
I FEAR that the statement at the
outeet of the crl1l11 ~hat the United
States wu equally inendly wlth both
the United K1n&dom and ArpnUna, Wal
lll·lldvilled, tn tliat It pve Chi lmpr mDft
that this countr)'!-hU no preference aa
between the WOl'ld'a oldeet CUlldtuUonal
democncy, a country with a m.lplftcent
NCOl'd in the de--and npmllon of
dvil freedom. and a country that la at
)wt llt'Di·fwilt. GM with In abyllnU
NCOl'd with .l'llplCt to thole dvU UblrUll which. one bopel, .,.. adll • cencnl to
the Unli.d Statee • at the dn'9 of I•
bUtb.
It ii tmpenU~ in the ln_._ of thll
country that the Mlminlltndon "=:l publidy 1 by bodr lUtlimlftt and . ' um the tJntt.9CI ..._do. Mm up wtth
ltlrtWn In Che .,._ °' ,,.. wWld ,,._
lu", laeluclla1 Mlf·d•teralaatloa
(which ... cmm an.......,..",._._
........... palkt1 domiui), .. rull Of
law, the Njidloe al ,.._ ID ~ .......... lrnJ' I , ttreCii
....... poll01, -..... ~ ., ..... • .. ...,.. •• nditli'Mti., ... of ....... .,...,
wrtdal thla ...... 1 ...... ,...
Ml ¥tewl Which do llOt ....-..HlJ ·N·
..-.tdMmal .............. alJ'P' I W, MD,I d
Pl I 1 lrlUr' ...._. ~ Clllll c:w.
• j
wen fliled for that ~· If they only a.tt about their own peta,
what kind of pet owners aft they?
I do not 'wilih to be cured of a ~
or have pain d1mln1ahed becau.ee IOIDe
MAILBOX
Tlueat 10 freedom
• •
To feel free and worthwhile 19 IOllllc iii
meaning ln America.
lf thete men are pun1ahed then ,...._
dom does not exist. People 1n ldtharity
lhould not u.. their power to~ ta.
vo6cee of thme in the eame .,_ ol ._.
or members of the MllW' frell ~
Sut:.ervimce leeds to alawry wt.re de
powerful ahow their OCXTU.Pti911.
CHARLES L . HOJILDt:RLDf
Beachfront 'slum'
To the l'.dit.or. • •
In reply to your AJ»ril 22 .ctJtof1al, • "Partdnc t.n -.uu." I._.. .. tit
COIDIDIDt on two..... • ~would auppart the a., Q < ~ ~=r::.~::u
vud to the Senta Ana Btwr. ..... -area eeven day• a week and then~~ ~~~:-.:..~== acxMent.
, r
I RAVE ALWAY85 bee~n to be aomewhat like You know
they exiat, indeed e>dl num~
-but other people haV. Not )':JU.
You would aee a man a=• ft9. tawant, and suddenly a . llQund
would come from the gtneiiil
of hla chest, and he woukl ~ IUlt jacket to silence hi.a'~. pa
he VIM a doctor reoelvtnCa c8lL /lu· rfna the climactic acene of a movie ttiere
. W\)Uld be a beeping behind you, and lomeorn! would leave his seat and hurry
from the theater. Perhaps he was a ball
bondsman.
I always felt vaguely aorry for theat
people, and I always was silently
• ~ul I wu not.. one of them.
And now, alas, my beeper sat before
me.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Aprll 29, 1982
can t~ke the ·roy o.tit of a free life -·-
l 1 called the perlOI\ who ll!rlt It to me.
"You are always wlndina up in placel
you're not aupsx-d to be,"ne ~· '"Ibe
only solution to flndlna you when we
need Y°'4 la for you to carry the beeper."
A word of explanatJon ii ln order. l do
In fact, aomeUmea find mytelf In odd
·111 Clllll
places. ThJt ii a pMt of the w•y I live my
life. And-I~ that~ are J*>-
ple who feet a need to find me.
The way I have always dealt with this
ls a telephone anawering 981'V1ce. I am
very good about checking with the aer·
vice. It la not unu.aual for me to call the
aervice once every 15 minutes or IO. Thia
annoys the people I am with, but It al-
lows me to know If aomeone la trying to
find me.
So I decided ~t -since I waa wed-
ded to ~ ~w~ .,i-vice ~yw~y -
the beeper might not be so bad alter all
I was wrong. •
In the less than a week I have had it,
the beeper haa taken over my life.
Wherever I ao. whomever I'm with, the
beeper la there, too. It doesn't beep that
often. It doem't have to. The beeper la
like a clenched fiat: lt'a the potential ttlat
la IO dJaturbtng, not the rMJJty.
I will be ta1Jdnc with ~. and I
wlll lnvoluntarUr. lla"'9 over at the
beeper. l will be ~ ... arch for a
column. and I will ~ Jt the beeper
la about to gQ QU; ., ·
I WU ha~• driai'~t the bar of D.B.
Kaplan'• wh41t-~ went off. RJck
Helland, 1tb., buiendft, aald, ''What'•
that?"
I tried to~
11YOUU ~ to carry that thing
arouncl,'' ~ aa.ld. "Beeper-canien are
the saddett pe0ple In the world. They
don't owa elr lives. They're on a te ...
ther. Tb6Y'"'llke the aw.per attach·
ment • a Hoover vacuum cleaner: Thel
ca.n·8lwaya ho reeled in on a moments
notke.'' H.e la ., right. Never ln my life have I
felt leas llke my own man. With the
telephone anawe1ing aervtce, I wu in
control. Granted, I was nervous enough
about lm~t calla that I waa always
checlc;l ng In. But at least if I felt like
having half·an·hour to myself, I could
do it.
With ~e beeper the~ la no auch. lux-
u r y . I cannot enjoy a meal; I know
that thJna may atart beeping. I cannot
take a quiet walk; I know the beeper
may, yank me baok &t> a telephone . I
cannot fall uleep; I know U\at I may be
awakened ~y the beeper.
For years I have clone everythtn8 In
my power to make my life my oWJ\, In Je11 than a week. the beeper has wiped
• all f that out.
ON THE SURF ACE there would aeem
to be aomethlrur vaguely flattering about
being glvert a beeper. It would seem to
mean that tomeane out there conaiden
you 10 Important that they want you
available to them at all times.
No. There la noth.lnc OaUering. U you
think in terms of masters ana alaves,
then you· understand the relatlonahlp
b•tween beeper·slve ra and beeper·
wearers. 11\e beeper-giver Is not trying
to make you feel good. He is merely
trying to make the point that he oWn5
you.
And the terrible thing la, it only takes
a few days for: you to forget what life
was Uke before you had your beeper.
There i8 an "off" switch on the beeper ,
but you begin to feel that to turn the
thing off would be an act of unthinkable
tttuon. There la a clip on the beeper;
but If you uncllp it and leave 1t ln a
drawer, you feel u lf you have just left a
hµngry puppy at the city dump. The
reladonahlp la clear: the ~ Ir more
important than you are.
' I I KNOW WHAT mutt be done. 1 un
jwt trying to work up the oow.&e to do
It. The beeper ii going off n,ht now; 1
ab2'pJ01, and lt la beeping, and my
b preMUte la IOflring.
I am not golng to pre91 the little button
that temporarily allencet the beeper. I
am limply going to walk outaide, find a
nice patch of earth, and dig a hiale.
Then I am gotng to put the beeper -
alill beeping -into the hole. I am gotna
to shovel the dirt back on top of It. 1be
beeper will continue to give off lta beepa,
bu t with every shovelful of dirt, the
noise will grow aofter. Finally, when the
wt bit of sod la ln place, there will be
allence. If I bend down and put my ear to
the ground, I may be able to hear the
beeper faintly beeping away down
there. I may, in fact, even do that once.
But when I walk away, that will be
the end of It. Because, once and for all.
my beeper will be gone. Burying some-
thing alive is never a pleasant task. But
nobody said freedom was easy.
~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ii ~ • "$
ii ...
\ .
~
~
J.
:· A~tique
! · Show /Sale
• ' T odoy thrv $\in., May 2 ot
· the Huntingt9"1 C.nter moll.
a,( CNttt~ tol.ctions from
50 ..L..Ja.s. Also frM .. ... --__,... i ,valuotlon clinic. 405 Fwy.
·, , ot Beoch Bl., H.8.
. IS YOUR~woon
ROOF PROTECTED
FROM FIRE??
BY THE TIME YOU CALL THE FIRE DEPARTMENT IT'S
TOO LATE! ... 1 WOULD YOUR INSURANCE COMPANY
REPLACE ALL Ol= YOUR VALUABLES?
SHINGLE PROTECTlON. SY.S.TEMS INST ALLS A LABO-
RATORY TESTED FIRE RE~~DAN!f SPRAY•PROCES
ON THE AVERAGE ROOF FOR-171'2~ A FOOT .
CALL IOW Fii FREE OllTE llY DAY DI EVEllll
(114) 730·1~.15
'
ICA . , ..... ........... ., .. ..,._, ............. I Hour • ff .... ,._,.
It 4 ..... , ... ....
°""' 5499'5
...1 ......... ......... c...
•C ... ......,
•Ale
.._..,_
OMLY'llr
J
''"' ......... MM 6 tll..-:;tj
•'Miff~ ..... ~ ... , ...
C I k
. MOWSAVl'IO"
NEW ! 3-MO~lH CERTIRCATE
13.2.55 ~AlaID~aD 12.469~ALRATE
Effective May 1-3. 1982
We pay .25% more than any bank. Unlike Money Market funds, your savings
are Federall y insured. Minimum $7500. The rate is pased on the current 13-week
T ·Bill discount rate and remains fixed for entire 91 ·day period. Compounding
of interest not permitted. Yield assumes that all funds are reinvested at same rate
though rate may change. Get in on a Rock Solid'" investment.
erm.
LOCK IN OUR HIGH 30-MONTH RATE . '* . Dh 15.365 ~AL~aD 14.100 ~IALRATE
Effective thru May 10. 1982
We pay .25% more than any bank. And interest is compounded daily.
Savings are Federally insured -unlike a Money Market fund . Minimum is
only $500. Above return is fixed for entire 21/i-year period. Ideal for IRA
or Keogh retirement accounts or a.ny longer term goal.
By !Aw, urly w11hdr1w1l lrom ~rtllic11t 1Cc01tnts mulu In JUb.llntial lntftttl pm1hy
Every dollar up to $100,000 is Federally insured.
•
I
I , .
Ale Orange Cout p AtLY PILOT/Thunday, Apttt 29, 1982
.i.
OF THE
•
FORD** CHRYSLER GM
WHOLE CAR WHOLE CAR
WHOLE CAR COVERAGE COVl;IJAGE
WORKMANSHIP WARRANTY* COVERAGE · 1 YEAR 1 YEAR
2YEARS SOME PARTS POWERTRAIN
SYEARS 2 YEARS
·COMPLEIE FREE SCHEDULED COMPLETE NO MAINTENANCE . 2YEARS SYEARS
COVERS EVERY WEAR rrEM YES NO NO (BLADES, BELTS, BATTERIES, ETC.) .
COVERS EVERY ADJUSTMENT YES NO NO FOR TWO YEARS
FREE OF CUSTOMER-PAID YES NOt NO tt DEDUCTIBLES ON WARRANTY .
.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE YES NO YES
I
HUNDREDS IN CASH DIRECT TO CUS-YES NO NO TOMER FROM THE MANUFACTURER
I . '
CASH PAID RIGHT NOW YES NO NO
,,.
I ,,
CASH WHETHER YOU PURCHASE .. YES NO NO OUTRIGHT OR FINANCE
I
BOTH CASH AND COVERAGE YES NO NO AVAILABLE AT EVERY DEALER ' , .
I
THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1882
.CAVALCADE 82-3
The Orange County
Perlorming Arts Center is
in top financial shape.
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: In our coastal univenlty
community of Irvine, you have to suffer enormous ·fas-'
cination with the method by which airrent City Cotmeil
candidates are campaigning. Some clear novelties exist.
Consider candidate Ed Doman. an E:ngllsh prof, who
seeks one of the o~n Irvine council seats in the UJ>CO~
· · has announced four fund-
. ~ June 8 balloting. Doman
. • .. ' raisers.
r-\ This usually means
TD •• URPHl.I ~~ jam'!ling a gaggle of tlte ~ ' candidate's faithful into a
• ' small, smoke-filled back'
room at some cut-rate pizza hut and serVing them up di-
luted drinks, with half an ice cube floating therein, at $5
each.
NOT CANDIDATE DORNAN. He is clearly campaig-
ning on a higher plane. He is going to hold poetry readings.
Perhaps the poet articulators will modify the wording a bit
in the effort to subliminally swaY._ the voters. Somesuch line
as:
"Only Dornan Can Save a Tree ... "
• Irvine Council campaigning depends on high levels
of entertainment
The traditional Americana of local politics usually Calls
for one dr more of the flush candidates to toss a heavy bash
in the public park. rolling out barrels of beer. The suds are
expected to loosen up the multitudes just before the can-
didate mounts the podium to expound his virtues for office.
More beer sloshes among the multitudes. Cheers greet
the candidate.
Incumbent Irvine Councilman Larry Agran is follo-
wing in this grand tradition in his bid for re-election.
Only there isn't going to be any beer.
It's going to be an ice cream social at the park.
Agran must figure he's running for Boy Scout com-
missioner. He's not going to have any riot& at his rally, by
golly.
U fisticuffs break out, it'll be because somebody spilled
tl,ltti-frutti on some other guy's tie. .
MEANWHILE, CANDIDATE Barbara Wiener, who
once headed the Irvine Historical Society, got her council
campaigning off to a roaring start just last Friday. She held
a tafent show. E. Ray Quigley sang, warbling a few notes in
her favor.
One of the gentlemen entertainers was a magician. But
I understand when one of the Irvine leasehOklttS asked
him to make the Irvine Company disappear, he declined.
Clearly, Irvine council campaigning is 80 upbeat that
the town might as well go dry. Beer dealers will need to
give away a poetry volume with each six-pack to gather
any trade.
DESPITE ALL TRIS, there are some things about
current Irvine campaigning that have a ring of the tradi-
tional to them. Take for ex.ample candidate Bill Pozzi, who
is a moving company executive. You guess if you're an
executive in a moving company, you get the light end of
the piano. , _
Anyway, Mr. Pozzi reports hes f{~clng his own
campaign and will be politicking in Irvfue door-to-door,
asking for votes. Like that stockholder on TV says, that's
doing it the old-fashioned way.
But who knows? In this day of computeriz.ed election
telegrams and letters, Pozzi's return to the basics ~ might
work.
. MEANWRILE IN THIS non-~ local election. the
South Coast Republican Forum has invited a couple of
candidates to speak.
See? The partisans pt can't keep their noses out of it.
It's a compulsion. They've got to leap into it.
They'll probably give av/ay beer rather than poetry or
sundaes.
Page B6.
Dlllly Pflot St.ti ~
SECRET STRATEGY -Joan Hill of Costa Mesa likes the .. would just love to see what everyone else is planning" for
fun of racing and companionship of other pilots, but she the risky part of flying over water.
Pilots~ strategies up • Ill • air
By STEVE TRIPOLI M'tlleo.IJNee .....
There's $10,000 in prize money at stake,
but local women involved ln the second
annual Baja California All Women's Air
Race say that's not the ~ reason they're
flying. '
Fun, oornpanionahip and a test of skills
wm spur their takeoff from Long Beach
Airport Friday, they say.
"lt's a whole different type of flying,"
said bther. Krauth of Newport Beach, who
fpenda a !Qt of time aitbofne u a first of·
fJcer on Air Cal ru,hte "It takes concen-
trated effor1. ..
Ma. Krauth will pllot a plane with Ellen
Appel of Llcuna BHch, •navigator.
In air racing, where charts must be
plotted, routes followed with precision, and
dedliona made on everything from altitude
to fuel stops to achieve the fastest time,
teamwork ia ementlal.
Ms. Appel and Ma. Krauth, one ol aev-
eral Orange Coast teauu ln the 30-plane
field, say they've spent a lot of time buil-
ding the necesaary rapport.
They met ln a beauty salon about two
yean ago, when Ma. Appel overheard Ms.
Krauth say she needed a new partner for
air racing.
Since then, it's been all work, for in-
stance, a year preparing for this race be-
cauae they want to excel in lt.
"When you've been with 10mebody that
many hours, that manr days, you really get
to know each other,' said Ma. Appel, an
independent publicist.
U houn flytna were the key to victory,
Irvine's Maureen Motola and her partner
would have the race 1ewn up.
Ma. Motola Is a seven-year veteran of
flying with 10me 2,000 hours to her credit,
but partner and navigator Clair Walters baa
loaged a hefty 30,000 hours in ne.arly 40
yean of flying.
Like her companions, al.molt all of whom
know each other aa members of the Orange
County 991 women'• n,mg club, Mn. Mo-
tola uys ahe is racing "just for the clajlenae. ,,
Flytna in Baja, where abe and husband
Dan 'haw a vacation home, is a challenge in
it.elf, lhe uid.
READY FOR RACE -While Maure-
en Motola checks her instruments, El-
len Appel and Esther Krauth chart
their route to Baja California.
"They have no weather forecasts (for
flyers) ~ 10 you're r.11.y on your own.
You have to play with the plane and 1ee lf
its drifting to the left or riaht."
But the test doesn't fue Mn. Motola, a
red-haired real estate agent who often flies
her own plane for buslne91.
"It sharpens your proficiency." she says
with a smile.
Joan Hill of Costa Mesa says she will be
most interested in the strategies of oppo-
nents, though they may never be comple-
tely revealed even after the finish.
The decision to fly a portion of the race
near shore or a quicker route over-water,
which is considered somewhat risky for
single-engine planes, intrigues her the
most, she said.
'Td just love to 1ee what everyone else is
planning to do about that," she says with a
grin. The three-day, 1,000-mile race will stop
lnSan Felipe and Loreto before its finlsh in
San Jose del Cabo at the tip of Baja.
,Special preparations go beyond charung
routes. Small details like waxing the out-
side of the plane thoroughly -anything
that will lessen wind resistance and speed
the trip -also are attended to.
It's not all open space and camaraden e
for some of the competitors, Mrs. Hill said.
"Some of them can be really cutthroat.
They'll really bold you to the rules," s;Ud
the seuoned Baja pilot, who has led severaJ
multi-plane excursions onto the peninsula
where she has a vacation home.
But for her and moat others It's not that.
way.
Newport Beach pilot.s Jill Crane and
Lynn Newton say they'll gain experience
and enjoy themselves in the race.
Ms. Crane, at 21 one of the youngest
competitors, said the fliers "learn from each
other" in a race.
.. You can get more experience in a week
of racing than in a year of flying," added
her partner.
The two have been paired for only one
month, and they've been separated most of
that time while Ms. Cr{lne attends aero-
nautical achool in Arizo'ha, but they feel
they've done enouch preparation to be se-
riou. contenders.
Referring to the low altitude the planes
must fly owr checkpoints on the route, Ms.
Newton added with a mischievous grin.
"Besides, where elae can you legally buzz
an airfield?"
. . .
Houseman brings Shakespeare to life at U(Jl
. .
the belt thinp Sbak_,..re ever
wrote.
''l'be atom bomb mlde 'Leu'
reltwnt. When min ..-Ulld that
he could d9ltroy hlnwlf, 'lAar'
became terrtl1tn1ly appro·
priate," be Slid.
In hf.I ,niff MVeN and dra-
matic voice, Houseman then.
~:=:.~tt:-~~
Paper Chue~n':ad
mounted a lon1 and dia-tt.ncuJlbed c:ar.r • a film and
,... ••• llid wn•. He ....... wrhlDI In 1931. In
th• early 1910., trou.man dl-
two Emmy Awanis for hill Wark
on "Playhou8e 90.''
HouMman allo •rved u cll-
rectar' ol the Jul.Ward School of
Drama for 10 yun. He waa a
fnquent contributor to ....-.
maaaalnH on tbe subject ot
~ and the tbeeter. At the ace of 70, he won an o.c:.r f« his
S!!:.~mance ln ''The Paper
,..._the~e..-
~ WU praented with a 8'ft Of
ap~tlon from UCI Chancel~
lor Daniel Aldrich -tbe allk-
.:nm orlllftal fOC' the past.er tbat ···-~·
announced Hou.man'• vllit to
thaUll&Ywlety.
>.. Aldrich remarked before
Hou.eman took the ttap, "It'•
appropriate that he's back wtth
us tanlOt. After all, be belped
put ,UC( into modon." ''Tiie a tom bomb ma"de 'Leu'
relevut ••. 1errll1Ji16l1 approprlate. 'i-
~~~~--.-..------ioim!illiiiiiimi--""!""" .... -.------..... iiiiiiiim ...... ~--! Three local students
----· -l an1 ll i p s
I ' • • .
..
'
•ANN LAND!AI
•
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
Girdle fan says labeling has no foundation
.1
,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I µIUa1Iy 881W wt.th you, but we puted company when you
called a man a tranlvetUte becaUlle he wore
a lifdle 8lld atockinp. I can tell you from experience that
atocldnp are nece8l8I')' to bep a atrdle from ridinc Up and bunching around ihe middle.
Support atock1np allo nelp clrculation.
-Yeara ago I bad back problems. I
couldn't afford a surgical conet. My wife
:
gave me an old girdle and a pair of nylons.
She said I'd need the nylons to keep the
girdle down .
In a matter of days I was amazed at
how much better my back felt. It really was
miraculous. .
I would also suggest the man wear
nylon panties under the girdle. It will help
the girdle slide on more easily.
A great many people have faith in you,
Ann, ao please don't go tossh:ig labels around
irresponsibly. You could hurt some innocent
people. -STRAIGHT IN BALTIMORE
DEAR STRAIGHT: O.K. All tboae gays
wbo are weartn1 ladies' girdles, nylons and
anderpant1 (ilacll garter belts, too,
maybe?) are straight fellas witb back
problems. If you believe tltat, I have an
igloo ln Flnland I'd like to sell yod.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My brother
and his wife were divorced 10 years ago.
They had three children under eight years
of age. Warren thought it would be best for
all 00nce~ lf he ltayed out of their livee. ·
He moved to a town 2&0 miles away, eent
the support checka on ~ but never called
or wrote.
Lut week Warren went to aee his kids
-just walked ln unexpectedly. They were
colcl and indifferent. Se is crushed. He la
sure hla ex bu po'8oned their minds against
hlm. What can he do? -SAD 6IS IN
SHELBY
DEAR SIS: ClalldffJll wllo llave llad DO
coaiaet widt dtelr clad for 18 yean llardly
can be expected to llerald Iii• reappearance
wUll trumpets and flylag banners. They
need time to adjaat. Tile beat lie can expect
at tbil point l1 polite lndJfference. He mis-
led die Love Boat 10 years ago.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your answer
to "Ticking Away," who was d.i8tressed by
her company's insistence that she see a
psychiatrist and bring a note every week to
prove she had kept her appointment -or be
fired -was revolting and dehumanizing.
The company may have a legal right to
do this, at least under current laws, but
there is no reason to assume those laws are
fair or that the woman is "lucky to be kept
on."
Such a response reinforces the image of
the "mentally ill" held by not only the
public, but by mental patients themselves, as
second-class citizens who have somehow
earned the humiliation and condescension
that are visited upon them. It also, by im-
plication, reinforces the myth that the psy-
chiatrist and his diagnosis are always right.
Would you have responded so conde-
scendingly to "Ticking Away" if she had
been suffering from diabetes? Are you sure?
-JUST ASKING
DEAR J.A.: Your comparing mental
J
' I Diplomacy Virgo key
f
,
Friday, April 30
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Dynamic
meeting with member of opposite sex high-
lights exciting scenario. Emphasis on initia-
tive, new contacts, fresh concepts and ability
to get to heart of matters. You imprint style
and find constructive outlet for creative en-
ergies.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on
security, family, home, ability to locate
needed material. Hunch proves accurate -
sense of direction is clarified. Some restric-
tions prove beneficial; delays actually could
work in your favor.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Social
activity increases, people call you, want to
see and hear you and you'll receive at least
one invitation to travel. Sagittarius and
another Gemini figure prominently.
I CANCER (June 21-July 22); Missing
linka are located -puzzle pieces fall into
/ place. By becoming familiar with routing,
ii you improve chances for profit. Money
comes from surprise source, cash flow could
1 resume. • 1 " LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Enthusiasm
' replaces indifference; cycle high and you'll i make correct decisions at right time. Member I of opposite sex desires to communicate and
,
' ' • ,
I
makes you aware of it. Gain indicated
through written word.
POT .SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
~ou bro+t somcthi.~
into m~ li.fe
~ ne.ver had. before:
~r mother.
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent dip-
lomacy, patience and realization that you
have yet to obtain story behind story. Dig
deep, reject superficial explanation and ob-
taJn backstage view.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on
illusion, romance, with fulfillment and op-
portunity to perfect techniques. You'll be rid
of superfluous material and you'll see
through one who is a pretender.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): .l'...,ocus on
promotion, responsibility; reward, intensi-
fied relationabfp. Lunar accent on business,
career, community and personal prestige.
Older individual la actually on your side,
although you may find it difficult to accept.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Em-
phasis on distance, reaching beyond current
expectations and gaining an international
view. Project can be completed, burden iB
removed and you can successfully articulate
aspirations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): New
approach brings desired results where
money 1a concerned. Avoid u-guing with one
cloee to you -seek, comproQliae, realiz.e that
error will be correCted. You'll have chance
to exerdae independence of thought, action.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Change
of plana lnc:Ucatedi lepl document plays key
role. You become aware of rights, permis-
sion. You under10 a learning experience.
Member of opposite sex ls fascinated, but
uncertain.
PISCES (Feb. HJ-March 20): Job op-
portunit1et expaJ\d, more people are attrac-
ted to your talents, tense your abilities.
Long-dlltance call affecta travel plans, in-
dividual who rellff upon your Judament
may want to rely upon your fln.anclal aid.
Tragedies trigger cauti~ri
Q. 1-.e read tUt foUowtaa tllle mllnler
.. , ... lAallOll ... die ................ •U• •f Pretlde•t Reapa, mu1 B•llJ-w ... 1tar1 1• ••t I• ,.-.ue •IJ wHk a ..., ..... ...,.,, Ba•ea't ...... ~
alM c .... e4 MW •••1 react ••• a fu ti'11i •..,...a diem fer a a ......... er .. tlllllli:-...1 -Brtu 0., Lu V.p..
A: Ya The1're much mare wary when
a !IU'aDpl' ~proachet tb ... daya. k'.10p P"tlllll..., Paul W·111nmn. hM even ... ., tar • to 9dvlll hie ollenta on .,.. .,.....
mlatkml eb9Y lhOuJd tab to be on the Mfe .... t "Dan't JoOk ~ ...... In lbte,e,''
be cautlaDI. ''Tl'Y to look. it.ra&pt AllMd,
....... ~,. .... to .. m ... ,.. ......... ~ .. dlmn. Md •• -.....
to fu whew.er fantuln t ..,a.
...... "
'
PllSOIAllrJ Q.&A.
SY MARILYN ANO HY't)ARONER
problem," w....,... told RolUQ'Stone mqu:tne. 0 You can•i tell who'• wnat. So
you try to _. • cool. and lndlfferent .. yuu
polllblJ -."
• •
lllaets to dJabetet II abtard. Dlabetet does
aot alter bebvloral patterns. Obvl09sly, tbe
dl1tarbed pertOD did 1ometbln1 Ile eoald
laave beea fired for. Hit Job wa1 spared wUb
tbe udentudlnl dtat lie get professional
belp. It •eem1 to me tlaat a note to verlf y
tbat be kept the appointment leaves bim
wUh more dJplty tban pbonlng tbe doctor'•
office and cb~lllng.
1 Granted, psychlatrl1t1 are· not always
rlgbt, but one of the difficult aspees1 of
doing my Job h formulating a real11Uc
plctare of a situation when I have limited
Information.
50% Off!
I
Motion Pant™ closeout
of selected colors.
Now
8.99
Orig. S18. Women's dress pants In
stretch poly. Red, buff,
It. blue, mauve and gray In stzes
6-20, average and short.
Ful-tigure sizes 32·42,
orig. $19, Now 8.99.
Ou.ntltl•• limited.
• •
'
' •
• ' t ..
f
Emptiness painful
TheYre one of the 1ut poope to come
out of the clmet.
'lbey're the men and women who are
unab» to have the baby they 10 dsperately
want. They number one out of every alx
couplea of chlldbearin& ap.
They're infertile and they've heard
man advice than people with bed back.I.
llMA IOMllCI
AT WIT'S END
"J~ relax. It'll happen. You're trying
too hard."
and dweWnc on what might have been.
"Adopt a baby and bingo!"
"Enjoy the freedom. You don't know
, ~ luclty you are."
WITHOUT CHILDREN, I became a
penon that even my belt friend was reluc-
tant to tell when 1he was "expecting." I
cried for a week, I went through a who-
cares period and luhed out with, "Thank
God, lt'I you and not me."
"BE GRATEFUL. You have a husband
(wife) who understanda."
"Hire a surrogate mother."
"Volunteer in the children's war,d .
I wanted to physically hurt any woman
who complained she had a bad day around
the kids. I did physically hurt anyone who
said, "How come you don't have k:ida? Don't
you want them?"
You'll pt your fill o1 k:ida."
They get about aa much sympathy as an
83-pound woman who is trying to gain
I vacillated between grabbing every
baby to my breast to ahoying them away and
saying, "You're a meas. Go to your mother."
wetaht. .
We live in an ignorant world where
people feel 11 you can drive a car you can
have a baby, which only adds to their fee-
ling of inadequacy.
. A support group for in1ertile couples in
Unle11 you have experienced the emp-
tiness, there is no deecribing the pain. Unless
, you have held a baby and despaired at ha-
ving to give it back, you cannot pos.sibly
know what it iJ like.
Iowa wrote that \hey suspected I had had a
mbcarrlage and asked me to write some-
thing in tlieir behalf if only to create a little
unde1"11anding and lure the rest of the peo-
ple out of the cloeet.
I had six years of marriage without
children, followed by two miscarriages. Af-
ter havlng three children, I still indulge
myself ln the sin of wallowing ln self-pity
Closets are without air. They cannot
sustain life. If you can't come out for your-
self, do it for the millions of unplanned,
llnwanted children in this world who h;lve
to know there are people like you who eXist.
Who truly want them. Just the knowing is
important.
GOif ii 011 lllDGf
BY a-tAALES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
Nortb·South vulnerable. w .. tdealt.
NORTH
•A5
(;;> AJlHH o AKZ
+cu
WEST EAST
• Qll7t • v.w
(;;>V.W (;;>l(Q8'7Z
O ITI O J9U4
+ IUU7U +·J84
SOUTH
• KJ9802 (;;>ta
O QIO
+Al
The blddill,.:
W• N_.. £aR S..tli
!NT OW. P .. S • ... 4 (;;> p .. 4. .... '0 , .. 5.
OW. P .. p .. P ..
OpeAIDC lead: Three of 0 .
Dur Cbarlle:
At. the riak of borin1 7ou,
here'• another hand from tbe
NatW .. t. Trophy event.. It
lllows you what a fine player
m1 p&rtner, Paul Chemla. I.a.
The auction uadoubt.edl7
ft"411 ao nplautlon. 1lnce It
confuMcl ue aa much •• It will
the reader. Weit'• two no
trump openlnc bid In theory
thew• five club• and a rive·
card major suit. I wu 1ure
that the 1ult had to be
1padu. 10 I thought
partner'• 1pade bld1 were
cu•blds-that le, until he bld
the tuft a third time. Who
can blame Weit for doubling?
Wnt. led a diamond, and
when dumm7 appeared Paul
1tlll couldn't be aure whether w .. t. had five hearu or
wheUI• he bad violated hit
1y1Cem. Had he known, be
coulcl bave won the queen of
diaJDODcl• and run the nine or
apaclff.
Aa It wu. he won the
queen or diamond• and, to
the dismay of the large au·
dlence watcbJng on Vu·
Graph, he continued with a
low apade to the ace. But the
spect.at.ort had not reckoned
on my partner's skill.
Paul cashed the ace·klng or
diamonds-West'• third·beat
opening lead had been
revealing-and diKarded a
heart from his hand. Next.
came the ace or heart.a. West
realized that, if he ruffed, he
would be end played, so he
di.tearded a club. But. ttfat
wu merely poatponlnc the
hour or reckoninc. Declarer
continued with a 1pade t.o the
king and another 1pade.
Weet could ec:ore hil two
trump trieb. but then he had
to lead a club away from hit
king Into Paul's combined
· A.Q t.enace. Paul Iott only the
t.wo trump trick.I for an al>
IOI u t.e t.op.
R•ltlter ltrl(s• el•ltt
&lin ...... t th eHllUy ... ............................ ,.
De &Mr U.w -~ Y•• dH't? ClaarlH Gere•'•
"FHr·Deal lrl•1•" will
Ceaclt ,.. ... •tn&eslH ...
t.adka ef tl"8 ~ K •
....... ta.at ,...vWe ......
ewe ._ ....... ,..... ....
,_ • .., .... NIM'• .....
.... 11.15 c.e --o...r ..
Deal," care ef tlalt
..,..,...., P.O. les Jlt,
,.,.,._., N.J 07141 ......
dtecb ,.,..w. Ce New•
,....t111la
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, Aprll 29, 1982 -
FAMILY AFFAIR -The Michael Burkholder
children -Diane, 10, Michael 4, Dawn, 7, and
Matthew, 6 months.-(from left) -are shown
with nurse Kathleen Yucha at North Penn
Hospital, Lansdale, Pa., before undergoing
,,, .. ,, ..
surgery for hernias, a rare condition for four
children in one family. The youngsters were
released the same day and are recuperating at
home.
or comp ete a copy an art services
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
)\
rely on
2 Days Only!
25°ooff
Our entire stock
of swimwear
for the family .
r
y
y
NEW J -Former A s-
semblwilna'tr Paul Priolo, a
Republican, hu been hired
by the Loa Angele1 County
Board of Supervl1ors as a '
$48,00~r£·~ear lobbyist in
Sacramento.
Ford
• • m1n1car
the plqg on the video habit sh elved
DETROIT (AP) -Ford Motor
Co. la shelving Indefinitely plana
Bv JAMES DtPESO ,, .. , .. ~... We both -jol "60 Minu•-," she looked forward to sell a mlnicar carryin1 the Of~.,..,,......., a..ucu ""~· ~ Ford nameplate in the United to " -A-S-H" while confessed a penchant for ''I Love Stawa, an industry trade journal
Lut Saturday, my wife and I embarked on an ex-Lucy" reruna. Aa tor alternatives to the usual VHF stations, says.
pertment many would find unthinkable, and some may our set was unable to pick up UHF signals and I'm too cheap American Metal Market'• Me-
oonalder downrl&ht un-American. ' to buy a pay-TV aervice. talworking News said plans for
We got rid of our televtaon eet. thf! smaller-t han-Escort car w, didn't diapoee of It aolely becauae many programs HOW HA VE WE HELD up after a week? Wendy and model were shelved because of
8"' d~t.. mlndlem or eome combination of both. Nor are we I admit we miss the box now and then, but more impor-c.·ommunications difficulties bet-
afflliatea with that Milaila1pp1 clergyman tantly, we have given more attention to many productive ween Ford and its Japanese
who has declared an economic blockade alternatives, such as spending time with Gideon and his' partner Toyo Kogyo Co. Ltd .. and an inability of both sides to
ap.inat apon10n of "un-Chrlstian" pfOI~ baby brother, reading booka that have lain untouched in agree on details of the venture
rarna. boxes and keeping the house as present.able as two small and a production timetable sw-
• Actually, the idea of got.na tubelal boys will pennit. table to Ford
arose from my wif.e WenaY.·a-de1lre to Aa for the 3-year--0ld TV addict, he is paying more at-Ford spokesman Bill Peacock
help her church's fund-raisfng drive by tention to his little friends in the neighborhood and re-said the compan y would not
donating something of value. diloovering the virtues of books, crayon and paper. comment on the report. Ford holds about a 25 percent
WE SE'M'LED ON the television for HE DOESN'T COMPLAIN too much and seems to :h'ty interest in Toyo Kogyo,
two reasons. The most important was that DtPHo understand why the church needed the donation. ich markets products under the Mazda trademark Toyo Ko-
our 3-year--0ld J:l· G{deon, had become disturbingly de-As the days pass by, I think we'll be able to do without gyo provides Ford with small Housing ordered pendent on a · Y fix of inane cartoon& and Supennan t~e tube indefinitely. Maybe sometime later we'll buy a front-and rear-wheel-drive
reruns. It was getting to the point where hia first act upon bigger, better set than the one we gave away, but it has low transm1ss1ons and other compo-
~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) returning home from pre-school was to flick the switch and priority. nents
ii Hu•' .. -College t the La has watch ANYTHING, be it a nauseating soap opera or some I'm not advocating that every household should place A~er1can Metal Market said
l
bee;'o~ered to p~de 37tmore dreadful old movie. their sets in a dumpster but I think my family is learning Toy Kogyo could have balked at
units of low-income howdng for The other reason was that Wendy and I took inventory there are many worthwhile alternatives to TV that in-the project because of increasing
poor and elderly residents dis-and discovered there were few programs we watched re-dividuals could enjoy if only they gave them a chance. protectionist attitudes in Con-
placed when ita Law Project gr ess that might have hurt center was built. Japanese production of the auto,
.=..:::=:._:..=....:.=:.::... ____ --i ______ ~========================================================================~====================::::::!L_~cod~ee~1nam~edM_1n_x_. ______ ~
~ Cou.T fW TNI
ITA'n CW CAU'OllMA '°" TNI COUNTY CW~ MO.AU-1
OMall TO IHOW CAUe1 '°"~"*...-'" the matter of th• appllcallon ol NORMA MllOflEO l VNCH. w ......... llMI pettllcn of HOflMA Mii. •
OREO l VNCH 11U ~ lllect Wllll the dertl
of Ihle eou<t IOf an Ofci.t eM1101110 P.il-
Uoner '1 name frOlft NORMA Mll~EO
l VHCH 10 NAOMI RUTH lYHN.
IT 18 HEllE8V OAOEllEO thel .. f'W·
-lntatelled In Mid .._.., ..... .,.
le•• "''' COUil •• IO:M '·"'·· ,,._ n .
1112. In .,,. --°' o.i--:I, to -cauM 'lltft 11111 ...,iic.uon tor -. ol -WIGIM llOC lie.,...._ IT' 18 f\Jf';JHPI Oll!DEND 11111 1 Ollpl'
ol ""'OfM/f. .. .,_ -be~ -..... lo<'-...cc...iw-.. p<iOf to Ille' dey ol Mid '-1nt In THE
OAIU PllOT,11 -ofee-11 c1rc111a11011 pWlll O '" lh• Co11nlJ of ~0 ... 7.1N2 AOt!ALO ... PftENHEfll
... olh ,....,Cowl
Puttllellef Or111199 co .. t Oa11J PllOI,
""' •. ~5. a. p~ ·~ -......
"THE FABULOUS "
A D ATHLETIC SHOE N
D
9594 HAMILTON•HUNTINGTON BEACH
(BETWEEN BROOIHURST AND BUSHARD)
SAU HOURS
THUIS., Fii. 10·1
SAT .. MON ., TUES., WID . 10-7
SUNDAY 10-S
"OUR SELECTION
IS ENDLESS''
HURRYll
I ... , I
SILE STARTS
FRIDAY, APRIL 30
1 0: 00 s:a~;1
BE HERE WHEN THE OOOIS OPEN!
FIRST COME -FIRST SERVED!
MOST lMTlll STOCK 4 PllClS
~ SAL£ ouuoss-1ou1GA\N .
1i11SSAUll WE HAYE IHN
CLOSED FOR 3
tt.y1, to ....,.down
,r1c .. on o.,r
entire Inventory I
• • • t
TOPS
503.753
LADIES' · MEN'S
Off
"SPECIAL
GIOU'''
OOTWEA
RUNllllG 5007 TllCI SPllES /0•
~'·753Clf1
....... t .... · .......
HURRY !
,
ALL
ACCESSORIES
SACRIFICED!
t. •
,
. •
r
,.
•
INSIGHT -Letter
reveals reading habits
' of Reagan.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, Aprll 20, 1012
R eagan writes letter to For!Jes magazine
•President'~ favorite reading inc~u~es newspapers, biogr aphies -and even comic strips
WASHINGTON (AP) -There lt provided with a 1ummary of 1torte1 in 1eries of rad.lo add..-to the nation. recently h1I wife, Nancy, Mid..,_ Md
waa, ln the middle of the letters majo.1 r newapape". But Rea1an also He aald, after perullna the real the praident were Meh rMdinc dlf-
column of Forbes ma1azine: a abort looks at the papen himself, and he estate leC'don of the Waahl.r\iton Post, ferent bk>lnr.hl• of Theodore Roo-.
commentary 11.gned "Ronald ~. bu at t1Jnll taken to exam1n1.ng the that mon,.c. 1enden are "really out aevelt ancf h: • family. She M.td •be
The White HOUie, Wuhlnaton, D.C." want-ads and real estate pages. there com~." • finiahed her readln1 tint and wu "Sir.'' the president wrote, "I spent eagerly waiting for the preeident to the weekend at Camp David with The want ad1 provided a handy The pretldent alto hu let it drop COCC, Edmund Monil' bk>craphy
Forbes. May 1 add the weekend was anecdotal reference for him to u.te in a that he looU at the oomica. At a con-of elt.
, enjoyable and interesting . . ." speech to point out th.at there are jobe cert featurln(_countr_y and western Mn. Reagan, commenttna on the
•The letter, ln the iuue of Forbe1 available for thoae who want them: linger Merle IUllU'd at a ranch in volume of work the prelident carries
dated April 26 provided a gllmpee at 33 ~ pages of want ads ln the Caflfornla ln March, the pretldent to the White Houle family quarten at
the president'~ readlns habits. The Washington. Poet and 4~ ~ pages in remark~ on the ,1!'teat development the. end of the day, bu omerved that
president, in public and private state-The New York Times, he said. ln the Peanut• comic atrlp that right alter dinner he slta down 1n h1I
menta, has shed additional light on The president's interest in the real Sunday. study and begin.a plowtna through the
what he reads. estate news came out last week, when He also takes more aubatantive papers he brought home from the
Each morning, the president la he prepared to make the fourth 1n a reading home from the office, and Oval Office.
...
TO PIC -Ted d y
Rooeevelt'a biography
on lilt.
TAKE THE "PAIN" OUT OF "PAINTINGI"
FLAT WALL PAINT
INTER-TONE ~~
For Interior surfoces, ploster,
wollboord, brick or metol. Soop
& water clean-up. In white ontv.
Comp. Aetoll 5. 99 Gallon
GUARANTEED 1 ·COAT
HIKAU.S unEX
lASTS 6 YEARSI
Scrvbboble llot point Guaran-
teed to cover In ooe coot White.
off-white ond 16 colors.
t!i)
comp Aeto11 9. 95 Gallon
HIOE~lle SEMl-Gl.OSS ..................... I." Got
LATEX R.AT PAINT
UlTRA-TEC
lASTS 4 YEARSI
lnter10f I exter10f point. Cleans
UJlth soap & woter. White, off.
white ond 8 colors.
c~. Aetoll 7.95
UlfM.TEC SEMl-Gl.OSS ..................... 5.95 Gal.
Dfl®
AMllCO~ or
ARMSTIIOHG~
11• z 11• A.OOft TR.ES
Ploln bock ftoor tJles ore durable
ond Inexpensive. Choice ol styles.
Comp.
Aetoll
25(
SM.El 'SOUHUAN'
NO-wRX A.oOA TIU
Fotnous Solooonqualltvond ~
In o no-wax 1 ~ I 12" floor tJle .
Selected patterns & colors.
GUARANTEED 1-COAT
VlfM.ACIMK
lA$TS 8 YEARSI
Guotwlteed one coot co..wog..
Soop & water d41on-up. White.
off-white ond 4 1 colors.
Comp. Aetoll 14.99
ARTIFIOAL GRASS
'SPRINGTIME'
CHEVRON POLYlOOM
This sturdy Oltlfklol grass hos on oil·
weather marine Oodclng thot resists
mlldsw ond elf)OS\Ke to me sun. In 6
ond 12 ft. widths In mist green color.
(omp. Aetoll J. 95
Gallon
Sq. Yd.
$q. Yd.
UNCONDITIONAL
Y·SACK GUARANTEE
WOOD COAT MDWOOD ANISH
Long. lostlng ftnlsn for fences.
shingles ond rough wood exter·
lors. E.osv soap & wotet dean-up. 9
Comp. Aetoll 5.98 Galon
TRlJ.WEAI LATEX MDWOOD
FOf extenor wood fences. skflng
ond grape stoke. Soop & water
clean-up.
Comp. Aetoll 5. 79
.
HllM-AU.S HOUst & TRIM '
LASTS 6 YEARSI ~ Ideal for trim. wood 5'dl ond
stucco. Not for ftoors or s.
1-1 e una: HOUst a T1'IM
LASTS 8 YEARSI
Soop & wot•~· '\ u .....
Comp.
Aet.oll
10.99
Gallon
3• x 5•
MEMO PADS
~st\jtes.
YOUR CHOICE
Comp. Retail 34(
40, 60, 75, 100 UM1T
UOHT•US
25~
SPECIAL PURCHAH
MIMTOwas
Orangt Coat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aprtl 29, 18f2
$23 milll~n in eof f ers
OC Perl orming Arts Center financially strong
Revenuea for the Oran1e
<:ounty Perforrni"I Arte Center
topped $23 mWlon 1ut year, llC· cor~ to an annual report re-
rele this week.
The $22 m1Won lncreue over
1980 reflects a 1ub1tantlal in·
creue ln contributions, interest
income and 1Ulld activltlea, Ed·
ward Sebek, vice president of
finance for the center, said ln the
report.
Nearly $1 m1Won wu spent on
the dealsn and planning of the
future $40 million center to be
built near South Coast Plaza.
Grouod breaking is 1eheduled
this fall.
Ardlitect.a for Caudill Rowlett
Scott In partnership with Blu-
rock Partnership of Newport
Beach are designing the two.
theater complex.
Calling the outlook for 1982
"encouraging" Sebek aaid that
~community support hu
enabled the center to enter the
year in a strong financial posi-
tion.
Highlights of the report in·
elude:
-The 40 guild chapters railed
$301,000 ln 1981.
doubled ln 1981 to $743,000.
Some of the major contribu·
Uona made in 1981 to the center
Included: U mUllon from \he
James Irvine Foundation, $2
million from the Fluor Founda-
tlon=and $1 million each from
the G. Steele Foundation
and the l'~tion.
Other liftl included: $6()0,000
from Tlmee Mirror Co., $M>O,OOO
from Robert P . Warmlng~on ,
$M>0,000 from the Reglater new-
spaper, $300,000 from James and
Al Baldwin, $300,000 from Mc-
Donnell Douglas and $2~0,000
from ITr Corp.
In 1980 the Segentrun family
pledged $6 mlllfon toward the
center and Jim Bentley donated
$2 miWon.
Named to the board of dlrec·
tora for 1982-83 were Stewart
Cate, Geor1e Mohr, Vincent
Jor1enaen, Elaine Redfield,
Georp Spooner, Dorothy Still-
well, Timothy Strader, Marcy
Mulvllle, Marylyn Pauley and
Nonna Hertzo1.
New officers include John
Rau, chairman; Jim Bentley,
president and chief executive of-
ficer; William Lund, executive
vice president; Sebek, vice presi-
dent finance.
Other officers are Georgia
Spooner, vice president mem-
bership; Marcy Mulville, vice
president 1peclal event.; Ray-
mond WatlOn, vice president fa.
dlltiea and Dorothy Stillwell. ae-
cretary.
Jury law excuses cops, judges
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Po-
lice and judges will have some-
thing in common next year -
they'll be the only two occupa-
tions in California to be exempt
from jury duty.
judges of Munici pal, Superior,
appellate and s tate Supreme
courts from jury service.
VOLUNTEER PUNCH -Actor Sylvester
. Stallone receives a solid punch from 6-year-old
Kendrick Roungsuriaviboom during recent
. "..,.,... .. festivities in which Stallone was namecs
chairman of United Way of America's Volun-
tary Action Program.
-Caah contributions to the
building fund topped $3 million.
-Contributions to the general
fund for day to day operation•
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said
Wednesday he had signed a bill,
SB1295 by Sen. Nicholas Petris,
D-Oakland, exempting active
Police officers are the only
caiegory now exempt. California
formerly excluded numerous job
classifications, ranging .from tea-
che rs to alms-house keepers,
from jury duty, but repealed all
the exemptions several yean ago.
\
ATARI®
. TM
VIDEO COMPUTER_GAME PROGRAMS
J •
ATARI ®
.MORE GM1ES.
MORE RIN. A Vbner~~·
Offers you many games and variations. Be a Race
Car Champ, a Football Star, a Golf Pro, a Bowling Champ,
a Chess Master. Atari,., makes It all happen with this excit-
ing collection of Game Programs for the Video System :"
Pi.ctured cartridges are only a part of a large selection .
.
FED-EJO
MEMBERSHIP·DEf?ARTMENT STORES
...
PIOCO conA MIU (114) 979-2660
' 3030 HARBOR BLVD . COSTA MESA 92626
P1DCO U1 -(11') 262-2411
~TM & EUCLID. SAN DIEGO 92105
PIDCO 1M •tt.lDllO (114) 818-4181
670 S MT VERNON AVE • SAN BERNARDINO 92'410
RUFFELL'S
urHOLSTlRY
l14hhl11 .... s..-
1922 HAJIOI I LVD.
COSTA MISA -541-1116-
Tnaload
Plm1t Sale
l1tiqu1 Show
Huntington Center
doily thru Sot.
Humlngton 4nt• mal
t thru Mov 2 lge. 6" pots Z'!
MUC NOTIC£
FICTITIOUI .u...-11
NA• ITATaMINT
The f Ollowing pet aona are d<Mng
bullneu u:
RJ DESIGNER PAINTING. 16820 Ml 1-Mc;hinga. Founlllln Val· Nolle• I• given under Section
ley. Calitorni. 112708 15035.5 of the CorporetloM COde
John D. Hiidreth. 18820 Mt lhel the Pertnerahlp compoMd of
Hutchings. Founteln Veney. Celllor-VICTORIA HART end DOUGLAS
nla 92708. end KAREN BURKE. HVlbend and
Rick L McO.motl. 16820 Ml Wlte. doing ~ under the firm HutohingS. Fountain Velley Calflor-name of .. INOIAN SUMMER
Oil 92708 • HOMES .. looatect ., 26471 Cedllec.
Tllll bolinnl 19 eonclucted t>y I Lagunl Hlb. Celitomia. II diaeot"9CI genereJ partnerlNp 11 of Aprll 13; 1882, by mutual
Riek L McOermoll cona.tt. This atalement w11 filed wilh the DOUGLAS and KAREN BURKE.
County Clerll of Orange County on Hu11>and and Wiie. ru ld lng at ~II 13. 11182 22071 Sund<>WMrl ~. EJ Toro.
F1f7tlt Cellornla. haw w!Uldra-l lrom end
Put>lllhed Orenge Coast Daily Pf. hs"9 OMMd to be~ In the
lot, April 15. 22. 29. Mey 8, 1982 cerrylng on of the ~ 1855-82 VICfORIA HART. rHldlng al
24042 &..non Drive. El Toro. Cell·
----------lornll. will e«ry on the~. le P18.IC NOTICE ent10ed to au of the ..... , o1 the ----.... ~"71~----~.end hM _,,.,and ..
FICTITIOUI eY .... 11 pey al out1tending ll9t>lotle9 of the NAMll ITAft•NT tH.llineU currently and lat• lnc:w· ~:,wing pereona er• doing r81>ATEO. ~II 13. 11182
SANTIS & COMPANY. 500 ~~
Newport C•nter Drive. Suite 700. ~ .:, Wiie
Hewp0<1 Belch. CA 92MO. Vlc1orll Hit'! CURTIS 0 BARNES 500 New· port Center Drive Suite ·100 N-· Publltll•d Orange CoHt Dally
port Belch, CA 92660. • PllOt, Ap<il 29. 1982.
SANORA M. BARNES. 500 1872-82
Newport Center Drlvf. Suite 700. .,._ .,. W'llftl'r Hewp0<1 Beach. CA 9~ "\ ,._ nutl\4
CUt1ll 0 Ber,_
Thil 1tetement W81 llled with the
Covnty Cl«k of Orenge County on
April t3, 1982.
ITATaMIWTCW ~WM.,_
"~ONMTINO UHDllt '1Cnnout
'1•11• I .u ..... NAMS Publlthed Orange Collt Dally PllOt. Th• followlng peraon hu wtth· ~II t5. 22. 29. Mey 8. 11182 drawn u I general partner trom Iha
. ' l709-t2 pertnerahlp operating under the 1----------hcll110ut bull,_.~ of CHAR-P18.IC NOTICE LES PAINTING COMPANY. 830 1---...,,..,~~==:---wut 19111 Str.eel. Coll• MaH. FICTITIOUI 8U ... ll Celllornie 92t27.
N.U. ITAft•NT The llC:tltloul ~ -It.
The loftowlno persona ere doing t-1 tor the pattnerlhlp -fled
bulinels" on December 30. 19l 1 In tlle SHREDOEAS. 234 Proapect. County of Orenge.
Newport BMctl. C1llfomt1 92ef3. Full N1me and Addreu of the
Stephen A. Tully, I C1lllornla Peraon Withdrawing: CAAIO WIL·
corpor1tton. 234 Proepect. Hewp0<1 LIAM BATLEY. 41 Montldto DrM.
Beech. Cellfomle 9Ma3. Cofone cMI Mar. Celfornlll ~.
Ann M. Pllilllp9. 204'.+ Antlbee ........ Cnlt W • ....,
Newport Beech. CalHomte 92M3 ,"'111
lhll ~ ii condUcted by I PUbllthed Orenge C0Mt Olly Pl-
genetal partnerlhlp. lot. Aprll 15, 22. 29, May 8, 1H2
Stephen R. Tully 1868-12
Tllll llatemellt WU flied with the ----------Coun7. Clerk ot Orange County on "8.JC N011C(
Apttl • 1912 ,_,. '1CTm0Ue _.. •
Pubfflhed Orange Coat OellY Pl-NAMa 8TA,._,-
lot, Aprtl 15. 22. 29. May 8. 1162 The followlng peraone are doing 1878-82 bUllntU M;
VICTOR ENOINHAINO. 1'872 "8..IC NOTICE Waterbury ~. Huntington 119d\, 1-~~~~~~=:::---CA9~ '1CTmOUe-U VOJEN KMOSEK, 11172
_.. ITATUmNT Weter1>ury Une. HunllnflOtl lledl,
Thi foltowlng peraon• Ir• doing CA 92944,
bu11nee1 a1: MAGGIE KMOHK. 1H72
AAUL DESIGNS, 1831 Iowa Wa1•bury lane,~ leldl.
Street. No. C, co.1a Meea. CelllOr· CA 92'4&
t2t2t. "*~•-·a.~· Aa111 CWda. 1831 towa StrMt. limited ,.,....,..
o C, Cotta MeH, C•lllornla ....... l(lftOMll
, 1 Thil918111M111Wflld .... Jim.._,, 113t low• Sweet, Co\#lty Clartl ot Or-. ewntr on
o. c. Co1t1 M•H. Calllornla .-t3, 11U.
2129. ·--Tiiie bullneal .. ~ by • P\lblleMd °'""' Coeat ~ ""· .. per11...... Apft 18. 22. tt. -.. 1111.. .... Garde 17t0-ll
Thie .....,,..,, .... "*' wettl .. '
Cltr1I ot Oranoe County on ---------
3, 1•2. ,.,. • flllC -
~ 0ranoe coeae Olilf ,.._ r---~'!"""-----""9'
~ 11,22.1t,M1¥•.1• , .....
•
c .
-1.
Orqe Oout DAILY PILOTIThureday, Aprtt .. , 1H2
! Chifto '" p~ison 'head removed
1 :·'.Flrlns .lollow1 probe lnto. laxlty ,scandal
..
I
(
t
•
•'
CHINO (AP) -The au~tendent and cbW deputy at QW)b
N~ prilon have been remowd
from their poat. followi~ • · of ~ty and •pedal vt-= for inmatea, lnclud n1 • convicted murderer, authoritlea
aaid.
Superintendent Bertram S.
Alto relieved In a cont1nutn1
ICaDda1 WM Grlal' rtlht·hand
1 man. ~te SUperlntendent
Fred Cardona, 81. .
The dlamhuh by Ruth
Ru1hen, d•rector of the 1tate
Department of Ccrrectiona. came u a 1tate Senate 1ubcommittee
prepared to hold an inWltiptlon
of milmanalement charps at the
Califorpla Men's In1Ututlon at
Chino. Two other prilon offidall
were attected.
Ayala, o.auno. laid the lnvelti-
••tlon of hnproprietle1 at the
prilon would IO on next month.
"We want to pt to the bottcm
of thla,t' Ayala declared. ••we
want to know what'• 1olna on
with a murderer pttlng all kinda
of apectal privilelea ...
Grflll, 61, who earned h1a place int.Ni mte record booka 11 yeen
ago by becomina·~e flnt black
warden In the 1tate'1 penal
l)'atem, wu replaced by Mldge
Carroll, a 45-year-old aaociate
superintendent from \he Sierra
Coruervation Center in James-
town.
U appointed b~emor, Mn. Carroll will the fl.rat
woman to run a men's priaOn In
state history.
"They're being removed be-
cawie the investigation reveeled
the lace isn't being run riaht,"
said -Philip Gutlirie, a apokesman
for the prison syste{D In Sacra-
mento.
Meantime, state Sen. Rubin
He referred to complaintl that
Enrique Jaime Sandoval, convic-
ted of a double murder in 1971,
had been eecorted by CIM oftl-
cera on shopping trip•, had a
number of 'lectlve 1urgerles ln
outaide hotpitall and wu given
private sleeping quart.era an0 his ..
own refrigerator stocked with
food.
Ayala aleo referred to reports
that a number of priaonera were
served T-bone ateaka laat Mo-
ther's Day.
CONCRETE STORAGE -Heavy equipment
operatora pr:l:re the earth around a new
1.92-milllon-g n reeeivoir in Laguna Beach
for landscaping. The reservoir, locate<! be-
tween Summit Drive and Summit Way, should
o.lr ........ ,,....
be ampleted next week, according to Laguna·~.,
Beach County Water Dlatrict officials. The ·!-
$917,999 project is being completed by KEC '
Constnaction of c.orona. ....
Newport to
Avalon
FIND YDUR NAME
•. 4 TICKETS WORTH $12
Gonion Bennett.
8e'loon Raee®
-ANO AV/A TION FAIRE -
Saturday, May 8
8 a.m. to dusl<
MILE SQUARE PARK
Fountain Valley
Adults $3.00 Children $1 .50
Und. 5 Fr"
MOftNING BALLOON RIDES e DISPLAYS
ANt SHOWS • ENTERTAINMENT
8 Winners In Today's ClassifiedsJ
. IT'S EASYl And your name and address In today's -
classified section, then call 642-5678 Ext. 272
to clalm your tickets. Winners each llllJPllll 1 day, 10 check the classtfteds In the ...
----------------------
CONSOLmATeD '1CTmOUl llU ... H REPORT Of CONDITION ..... STAft....,.
Consofldated Report of Condition of "CommerceBank' -~°'°"""'II ,,.._,. ••• OOln9 11ua1--
of Newport Beach, Orange County, and Domettlc Su ~o tc!. ==:·~1111111e
sldlarles at the cloM of businMS on Marcil 31, 1982. O.,.,w F-.m-..~.eo..
Stet• lenk No. 1211 ~ =-Ho<~,,:u. 2a» Mont«9Y
"*"-N Orlw, Corona. CallfOrnie I I 720.
'TlM*-mnclltl "* "'*'-.. oonouct.i by. oener1ll pert-.Np. AHETS 0 W Flll>e
Tl• eta---wffh IN CounlY
0er1< ot Oranve Coo.Illy on ""'9 •· ten Csah and due from banks ...................................... 7, 79 ,,.,., Investment securities Putt111Mc1 onnoe co .. 1 oa11y Piiot. ~ .•• 15 22. "· ftl2 llOll-82 (Market value 1,766) ........................................ 1.11Nt,,__ __ ........ __,__,._. __ _,
Federal funds sold and aecurltJM
purchaaed under agreements
to reaell In domestic offices .............................. 12,47 '1CTmOUS llUelMIH
a. Loans, Total (excluding _ lN ~ :!.~ ~
unearned lnconMt) ........................ 48,864 • b Len· Reserve for sonic SE11v1eu. 111eo 1ue11c1 • • ..,_, No '· Garden a.-. c.llloml9 poaalble loan losses .......................... 579 Aober1 wwre11 cw.y, 11160c ,lvc»d1
L t ..oa 285 8tr-.t. Ho. t . Oat-Qr-. ••llOl'llla o. oans, ne ...................................................... ~. ~·
Bank premises, F.F.& E. etc ... '. ............................... 1,55 ~,.,,.,,,., ,, COlld11C1aG DY.,.,,..
Other UMts ............................................................ 1,°"6 Aober1 w o.llliy I
TOTAL ASSETS ....... UABLffEi ......................... 72,953 O:-;ac:::;•~-:,.~~cs:
TOT AL DEPOSITS IN PublleMcl °'rf: Coatl Dall~,
DOMESTIC OFFICES ...................... 64, 151 ~-'· 16• 22• 8 • 812 '==y=.
Total demand depollta ................ 24, 128 ~ ..a Total time & .. v1ng1 depoalta ..... 40,025
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC PtCTTnOUt .,.. ..
AND FOREIGN OFACES ............................... 64, 151 MAMI tTATDmfT
Federel fund9 purctl...ct and -™-IOlloollllt .,.._ .,. *""' ........
aecurttlel 9otd under agreement• ~ ~ AUTOMOTIY!. ~21 wo. to repurc:hae In e.1.=E~~244 .....,,
dofneltlc Offtcea ...................................................... 898 ~L= CAC~MIHQ8, 100
Other KeblllUee ........................................................ 1.229 LLO'vo l.0GAUNrl~0IOOI WMI L• TOTAL UAINLmES v-. ..._-. Onnee. CA nt11. (ududlng tubordlnet• notee """"""-.. ~., .. ,_,...
a'td debenturel) ......... w ..................................... 88,278 ~ E. ==
IHAMHOLDD8 IQUrTY Cieri!:=~"':.. .. ~.~ Pr.rwrecs stod( • ,,_.
No. atw• outat.,,cSlng -None ~~J.'.f.'9~-1 o.i=~ co.non stod(
L Mo ...... 8Ulhaf1l9d 1,000,000 P\aJC M>1IC(
b. No • .._~ 811,813 5.973 HChi ... IUl•ll
TOTAL CONTMUTEO ~AL .......................... 5,873 MAm ITA~
f'lllalned W'*'Cll .............. _. ...................... -............. 702 TIMI'°!:"'"' peflOfl 11 dol119
TOTAL IHAAIHOlDEA8 E9lJITY ......................... 8,875 O"ANQI COUNTY O"NA• •TOTAL 'LIA8IUTll8 AHO , MINTAl IM>N. 1 ... ttlt\ ltreet,
8HWHOLD1M EQUITY .......... : ..................... 72,HI Coltad_!~~r'=r..u.lAND
The undefltgned, 8amantha D. Ketchum, Ir. Vloe t0t1111Wtt1 ltreet """"""°" Pr•tdlftt/C .... Md DeWI T. 8e1Menh«n, OtMf Ex· ewt1. CA....._ ' ........ Oflolr fil .. lbO'IM ,....... Mr* .... dlcl11191. TNI ~II OOI dtl Mid tly 9'I
lor ........ ~ ...e for the OllW: I._.. l*IOllial lldVl••Olllr ._ ..... ,..
knowted .. of tlle matters contained In tttlt report TNI •Jjll ,..,.. w .., """ ...
(1"Dll1*11 •,.... llde.....,.,. Md I Mlltw'I 1'81..,.. OoufttY ~ "'~ eowmy on IM11fl'lmt In 11111,.,., II true, liafl Of .. UIMla ...... , ~ fl, tlll. """9
W .......... Md NM W .......... Undlr ttt u r• Qr'llw c.-~
......., ., ....., ........... ~ ......... OOft'9Clt. .. , .. a. •• --.. ~:---Apfl ••• tlll. • ., .... rt ...... Cit-.... -----...... ...:...;.;.,;~.
,.,... .. 0, ~ ---,.,.,... T, .. *""-"
'
-.
SPECIAL .FAN ~ALE
SUPER MOTHER'S DAY SPECIALS QU9IZEL FANDELIER
A AL
LIGHTING FIXTURES, TRACK LIGHTING
FLOOR LAMPS, ETC. lN STOCK
. SA VE UP TO 70o/o
TEllPOED CLEAR GLAU II COLORFUL EARTHENWARE
RU,,LEO OR PLAIN FRUfT BOWLS From Japan
---~._.-From Spain Dellghtfully bright, molded bowls
Pwfect btlck· fOf Nlada, llde
grounds for dllh or fruit
_._,_~"°""'the repaat1 cockl Jll. of the d•Y· ~"1iiil~~f:!:rz:=P!"' ORANGE. ~ GRAPE,
STRAWBERRY
OR LIME.
All 1pprox.
&• dla.
111\" deep
2.39 NCh
;;:..s;;-------t HMOWOOO a CMVAI l'OLIMNG
IUMU CHAIR From 8'~1
Comfoftu .. otMl6c I• at home on the Nanh Of In •"-Jungle.
Nll•uret r!Ntlt fr.me With betge
or bfown otMll Of welnut flnlah
..... with .. ........... ~
ONLY AT
Fountain Valley Li£hting
989' Warner, ac BrookhurSt
Fountain Valley 968-1611
PINK SHELL ROSE e
PIN & PIERCED e EARRINGS
From Taiwan
•
EARRINGS
PIN y,• dla.
~.aa· 1.88 pair
Shiny graduated disc• form s
uniquely
~ant
'-"'-A3'ill11o. neck·
lace.
t.
,., ..... ~ ...
DINOSAUROID DISPLAY -A model of a
toothless, snake-eyed creature will be dis-
played at the Canadian National MUleum of
Natural Sciences as to how dinosaurs would
have evolved if they bad not become extinct.
According to an article in the May issue of
,Omni, the 4-foo~tall creature would have be-
come a dominant life fonn on earth if a catas-
trophe had pot destroyed the dinosaur.
Job-hunting
program told
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
It'• too aoon to tell if this year's market for
college tenion is eofter than it was in the mid-'70s.
Take steps: -IMMEDIATELY VISIT YOUR school's
career center and placement office. Enroll
in itl )?b-hunt programs.. George M.-on University
in Fairfax, Va., for instance, is conducting a 9efllin.ar
on "How to Job Hunt Without Going Crazy."
S~pport groups meet on campus each week. U your
college baa no such program. can you st.art one?
-DEVOUR BOOKS THAT TEACH job-eearch
atrategy and tactical maneuvers.
-USE ALL AVAILABLE REPERENCF.S f«
job 1-da. including a cloee daily radinl of your
newspaper for new company openlnp, late-brMld.na developmenta and )aelp-wanted a . Your
camp.is career center or ecbool llbrary lhould have
a ClOpb.11 coDecUon of IUCb refen!l)Ca • 1be CQl-
tece Placement Annual, the Career Opportunity
Index, Peterson's guides, Gale's Encyclopedia of
Amociations. the National Trade and Prole.ional
Amociation1 directory, the '82 Changing Times an-
nual IW'Vey of jobs for college graduates and a raft
of other books with titles that suggest "where the
jobe are.''
-DO N<YI' EXPECf YOUR IChool to do it all.
Take the initiative. Contact employers. Restater
with private employment agencies; even lf you pay
a fee f« a job, y~'ll be money ahead over months
of Wle!Dployme'l(. Read trade journals for stories
and help-wanted adl tn your field. '
-NOW THAT VIDEO CAMERAS are com-
mon, do a dress rehearaal of your interviewing
lkllll. Streta business-related course, internahipe
and working experience. Project your belief ln
work first, play later.
-UNLESS YOU ARE IN a major such 11
enstneerln1, compu~ience, accounting or fl-
nandal management,~ gloomiest daY' are apt to
be betweep no~ and falf. By then, many non-
technical graduates will have found Jobe and com-
petition should dimhiish. You may want to Ute the lean monthl 1o obtain sbort-tenn training to make
you more hireable. Examples: typing, word proca-
1ln1, budcettns. undentandlng ffnancial 1tate-
ment1, lalel t.echniqueS. J
-CONSIDER A SURVIVAL JOB, A woman
· on the r...t c.out two yean 1g<> took a position aa a
hoe.el c;atertng office ..wtant -not her dream job.
· :'lbree job chanael later. u director of catering Illes
for a luxury hotel. lhe earns belier than $40,000 per
ymr.
JI.CA.DER NCYt'E: Wrlctiw your own r.une II ~ U»n doUW • t«m fMD«'. Get uncluttered
advice In Joyce LIJn lCmnldY's booklet, "8-unel:
The Nltty G;arli." It 1-aw/Jable !or $2.50 plw • ~t .mni , -11-Mldl a Hd, ICJn6 white enve-
Jope. Mab pay.hie ro Sun FNcau. Inc, Md
"IDllSJ to: RMune1. Box 368C. CardJJI notl7.
Firemen ·beef cake
• t I
. J
Electric raJes ·go down as gas rates go ·up
, SAN FRAN~;,<?=> -Tbe Public UtWU. 1-mlde w wbopplns ~ in OaWomla
utility ratee, bUt afwr bend~ bU·
Uca of dollan around. the ... ettect.
on an •Yef'lll monlbly bd1 appnn~
wlll be abOut •1 to ii a month for
rtlkleJldal cuMmlr'f. The Puc.gutect ei.ctric rate re-
ducdcm W~y iota"°' $1.& bU· Hon a year for utiltdel. but cpuntered
that wlth ina"I-ln the cost of DA• tun! .. by $1.3 bUlicn • year. . n. nductialW In eJectrlc raw ah
due mainly to tncrewd availabWty of ·
hydroelectric power fJ'Oll) the unu-
1ually wet •Inter. Pacific G11 •
J:lectric C.O. electrk: ra• will ao down
I
•100 mUUon a year and Southern
California ~'I by f720 mil1lon I
~· Thia would mean the typ6ca1 POa.I
retidential cuatomer UIU\f' 600 kJJo.
watt houn per month wt11 ... • te.eo
drop ln a bill from $40.18 to tk.28 ~Southern Cal Edbon cuatomen
will r9Ce1ve •reduction to te,eo a
month mn t41.0& '° tae.90.
But PO.tel!'• Ill! raw wW inc:rr w '4.02 mWJon ~ Southern Calltomia GM. C.O. rat. wW IO up $834 mlllJon
annually, with •e~ millton of that Pl.-d to San °"IO G• and Electnc Co. in the fonn o1 whc1••le mcre...
The pl h1kel, reaalt!Jli IOlely from
tncr1ues ,ranted pa 1Upplien of Ute
/
utilldel by UM J'edtral Dwra -.U· lat~r_)' C"omft\l11to11, wlll mean 1
POU r..adlnUal CUltOmer'• IWNner
bUJ for 00 t.hemll of,_ wW 1Dcr1111
13.69 fl'CllD=to to .2e.14. For the wlnwr, a uetnc 108 thennl wUI
... •to.le • from ta7.36 to t42.72.
Southern Califom&a o .. reliMnUal
IH cu1tomert u1tn1 50 therm• a
month in tbt 1ummer wlll have a
t4.86 tncr1Mr from $19.82 to t24.28, whl.'9 In the ,wt.neer the omi for 100
therml a mont.h II* up '8.16 from $31.&8 to '39.74.
For San Dle10 011 and Electric
residential cwtamen """' 00 tbemw the coat lncreued $3.48 a month ftom
$23.55 to $27.03, while ln winter the
UMr of 100 tberm1 will be _palin&
.5.70 more or t48.81 hutead o the
cturmat $41.11.
The PUC llkt San DletO Gu and
Dacu1c'1 electric rai. will not be af-
tect.td by the chaaie-· It found ope-
raUont and expen1n of the utility we,. reasonable and t)\at current
rat.e1 lhould be malntalMd.
JOMph Bodovltz, PUC executive
direccor, lire.ed that the chanaes are
on the ba1l1 of fuel co1ia onf y and
noted the utruues·hav~ rate lncreue
requesu pending bued on other fac.
torl.
Ht alto predicted electric rates will
~ relatively unchanged for the
rt'St of the year.
nm ••i•• llll1 w
To keep up with
·all that's happening
in your eommunity
you need the
Dally Pilot
••• every day
AEASOns WHY •••
Bead all today's
news, every day
Jll Follow your team
'-r/ The sports action . at 15
Orange Coast high sohools, three
community col-
Enjoy your ~Sunday Local, county, state, national and
International events, come to
your doorstep In the
bright, llght and 11-,
vely Dally Piiot.
(/)) Keep an eye on
{6 loeal government
No other newspaper brings you
more news of your city councll,
plannlng commis-
sion , school and
college districts and
county government. ..
~ Laugh, ery or get <J smart ·
Advice from Ann Landers, humor
from Erma Bombeck, lntereetlng
features on people,
opinions, lnforma-,
tlve columns and
comics brighten
your world.
leges, UC Irvine and
Cal 51ate campuses •
Is reg\Jlarly reported
by the Dally Piiot
sports staff. Keep
up with nationally
ranked college and
pro teams, tool
8 Save money and 7J shopping time
Real values on Items from apple-
sauce to zippers are advertised
every day Jn the
Dally Piiot: B8C8U8"
the ads are from
firms In this area,
you save time, effort
and money.
W Family Weekly, color comics,
finance, .. Style" 'section and fea-
tures about you
highlight the inter-
est Ing ftadlng
packaged In your
, FAli(tL.y Sunday Dally Piiot. wcekL
Enough to read -
and enjoy.
'\iiJ Tune In to the
{/ latest TV logs
The latest, most accurate televi-
sion guide Is published each
weekday In the Dally
Pilot . On Fridays,
Piiot TV Log charts
the tube In a conve-
nient, easy-to-find
format.
I
°' .... f.NI• Deity ..... ... , ...
c....MIN,ca ....
I
I
4
•I
llllJPllll
THURSDAY, AP~IL 29, 1982
COMICS C5
BUSINESS C8
TELEVISION CS
Lakers ·thinking sweep
They head for Phoenix after two lopsided wins • By CURT SEEDEN OftN D.., Not lleft
INGLEWOOD -By the tJme
the Lakers get to Phoenix for
Game Three of·their Weatern
Conference aemifinal aeries with
the Suns, Magic Johnson should
have a pretty good indication of
how long the best-of-seven series
will go.
For several minutes Wednes-
day night, the Laker guard had
to be thinking he might not make
lt to Phoenix. When JohlUIOn col-
lided ~ Phoenix' Larry Nance
a few seconds before the end of
the first half, the pain in his left
knee was so severe it immedia-
tely brought back the memory of
last season's crippling knee in-
jury.
BUT MAGIC WAS back when
the two teams returned to the
court to begin the thlrd quarter.
His presence was quite evident as
the Lakers made It two straight
over the Sun1 with an easy
117 -98 victory before 15,558 at
the Forum.
"My knee just went numb and
dead for two or three minutes/
JohNIOn aaid after the game. "1t.
really scared me. When you've
had surgery and it (the knee)
hurts just as bad as lt did when
you (originally) Injured it, you're
scared.''
That's why trainer Jack Cur-
ran and team physician Dr. Ro-
bert Kerlan kept Johmon sitting
on the floor for nearly 10 mi-
nutes at the end of the first half
to assess the damage.
As it turned out, the only da-
mage suffered Wednesday night
was to the Suna' playoff hopes.
Johnson finished the night 19
points, 12 rebounds and 12 as-
sists, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
fared much be tter a~ainst the
John silences
Reggie, fans
NEW YORK (AP) -In one
fell swoop, Tommy John silenced
Reggie Jackson. the Angels and
25,498 fans.
Jack.son got another standing
ovation Wednesday night and a
few cries of "Reggie! Reggie!"
But he couldn't deliver as he did
the previous night when he ce-
lebrated his return to New York
with a single and his first home
run of 1982 and led the Angels to
victory.
In fact, none of the Ange ls
c ould do much with th e
38-year-old John. The veteran
left-hander baffled them on six
hits -including two bunts -
and p\tched New Y()f'k to a 6-0
Oiunu>h that ended the Anaela'
four-game winning 1treak and
gave Gene Michael hi.a first vic-
tory in two games slnce begin-
ning hi.a serond term aa manager
of the Yankees.
aaid bis alnker waa "brealdng so
well they probably thought it
was a spitte r , esp ecially the
wicked ones that broke into the
dirt.''
It wasn't Jackson'• night -he
also oonunitt.ed an error when he
bobbled a hit to right field -but
Ken Griffey. the man who took
his place in the Y an.kee lineup,
drove in two runs with a single
and d ouble . Griffey, Oscar
Gamble and Dave Winfield rap-
ped consecutive RBI doubles as
the Yank:ees chased Ken Forsch
in the thlrd inning.
"rm trying to adjust to all the
pitchers," said Griffey, who came
over from the Cincinnati Reda
lut winter. ''l haftll't aeen IDllftY
of them but tonight w• a diffe.
rent story -I'd aeen Forach in
the National League and I had an
ldee how he pltchea me.
"'The fans were all excited be-
cause Reggie did well yesterday,
but I haven't heard anything out
there. Besides, I try to block
everything out. Reggie'• not here
now, and I have to play right
field."
Phoenix defen1e to" score 24
points as the Lakers are now
thinking sweep heading into the
next two games in Arizona.
THE L~ltERS fini1hed the
night shooting 53 percent from
the.field, leaving Coach Pat Riley
anything but speechless.
"It looked like an instant. re-
play of last night. I'm amazed at
how well we're shooting," Riley
said. ''It's indicative of how well
we're movin8 the ball and look-
ing for the open man:•
Suns Coach John MacLeod
agreed, but he credits not only
the Lakers' hot shooting for his
team's current disadvantage, but
also Riley.
"I think Pat Riley took over at
a difficult time. He'1 given• that
team some direction. He really
has th e m playing with a
purpose," MacLeod praised.
He wu also at a U. for wordJ
to explain the Suns' purpose for
being in the Western Conference
semifinals.
"We'll have to come out and
play some quality basketball
now. I don't think we've given a
good effort the last two nighta.
We've had some guys working
hard, but collectively, we haven't
been able to get into it," Mac-
Leod noted.
Like Tuesday night's 115-96
Laker v ictory, Wednesdal
night'• triumph was the result o
the Lakers opening comfortable
mar,ins and the n thwa,rting
Suns comebacks.
The Lakers led nearly all the
way, but they allowed the Suns
to whittle away at a 14-potnt
Laker advantage to cut the lead
to four midway through the
third quarter (69-65).
"WE'D START to make a
move in the third quarte}' and
then we would falter," MacLeod
e xplained. "It seems like we
spent the whole night trying to
catch up."
The Lakers maintained a
10-point 1"d at the half behind
14 points from Jabbar and 10
points aplece from Norm J(blon,
Jamaal Wilkes and reMrve Ml-
chael ~r. .
CoOper finished the night with
16 pointa, and another reserve.
Bob McAdoo, turned in a aolld
25 minutes with 12 points and
seven rebounds.
Jabbar, meanwhile, held to
just 11 points in the series ope-
'
ner, aimply fought through the
double teaming by Surua center
Rich Kelley and forward Alvan
Adams to hit on 11 of 21 from the
field, finishing with 24 points.
THE LAJtERS needed every-
thing they could get from the big
guy to offaet the hot ahooting of
guard Dennia J-ohnaon who led
all acorera with 27 pointa. Despite
the lopsided scorea, Wilke• for
one, say1 the next two gamea
(Friday and Sunday) in Phoenix
won't be as easy. ''Theite games
weren't aa easy aa the acore
sounda. "It's going to be much
closer in Phoenix. We're juat
playing real well now and I hope
it can continue," Wilkes said.
"We've put It all tOS!th_er thi1
put month," added Magic. "It's
carried over into the playoff.a. It's
hard to stop ua right now. Our'
1hooten are, I gueu you could
aay, coming into their own.
"NORMAN, JAMAAL and
McAdoo are excellent shooters,"
Magic added. "I'm just happy rm
on their aide.'' The fast-breaking Lakera held
leads of up to 20 points on several
occasions. as the Suns' 44.8
shooting percentage from the
floor just couldn't match up.
"Our defense was very, very
good. It's good to win the first
two at h ome," added Riley.
"We're going to Phoenix hopinf.
to get one and trying to get two. ·
Dodgers get
Jose Morales
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -The
Los Angeles Dodgers traded
minor league third baseman Leo
Hernandez to the Baltimore
Orioles Wednesday for right-
handed hitting catcher-pinch-
hitter Joee Morales.
Morales 37, in his eighth major
league season, haa 99 career
plnch-hits. He is the leading ac-
tl ve pinch-hitter in the major
leagues.
To make room for Morales, the
Dodgers optioned outfielder Ron
Roenicke to their Albuquerque,
N.M ., farm club of the Pacific
Coast League.
Roenicke, 25, a switch hitter,
was hitless in six at-bats as a
pinch hitter this season.
CdM maintains
Sea View lead
over Irvine. C3.
I# Wlrepflote
TALL TASK -Rich Kelley (53) of Phoenix battles with
Laker Kareem Atxiul-Jabbar for possession during first-
half action of the NBA Western Conference playoffs at the
Forum Wednesday night. ~ers won to take 2-0 edge in
best-of -seven series.
"He kept the ball down on
me.'' said Jackson, who hit a Iona
fly t>..ll and grounded out three
times, bouncing into a game-
ending double play with two
cunners' on base. "1 just had a
couple of balls to hit. but nothing
to whale on, except the ball I left
out in center field.
"When he gets the lead, he's
not going to give you much. We
got beat by a guy who pitched
really well."
Barber gets his ' 'reprieve' Rose ties
NL record -;:
with 5 hits
John, who posted his first vic-
tory of the season and 224th of
his career -it was hi1 43rd
shutout -thought he pitched
just as well in dropping his first
three s tarts, two of them by
8COres of 2-0 and 3-1.
Former Oiler overjoyed to be leaving Houston and heading for Anaheim
"I lost two games you're goi.ng
to win nine games out of 10," he
sald. "I had the same stuff I had
in my first three starts -no
more, no le98."
The Angels repeatedly asked
plate umpire Ted Hendry to in·
spect the baseballs, but John baa
been around too long to aet ratt-
led by that ploy.
"Gene Mauch's got a fetish
about bueballs.'' he aald of the
Angela manager. ''He has them
check the balls every time I
pitch. I think it's great. t love It.
It keepe evtrybody thlnkina·"
John walked one and atruck
out five and catcher Rick Cerone
Bf JOHN SEV ANO C)('tMO..,NotlWI
It was referred to as "the other
trade" for much of Tuelday, but
while quarterback Bert Jones
and a posaible deal involving
Ruaa Francia grabbed most of the
headlines, tight end Mike Barber
was simply content with just
being one of the newest members
of the Rams.
"You have no idea how happy
I am," Barber aald enthusiasti-
cally from hia home in Houston
late Tueaday nlght. "I'm very
excited about lt. It'a going to be a
real pleasure to play for the ,
Rama. You have no Idea how bad
I wanted out' of Houaton."
U flat's the CMe, that makes
two prlaonerl the Rama have
aaved from hellholes. Jonea felt
aa if he'd received a new leue on
llfe aft.er s:apina the clutchea of
Baltimore owner Robert lraay.
And Barber'• the same way. al-
though hi1 problems weren't
with the owner of the Houston
Oilers, but with their coach and
how he used -or didn't uae,
rather -Barber'• talents.
"IT REALLY HURT me pro-
f esaionally to play in Houston
because they don't uae their tlght
ends." Barber admitted. "I would
have been an All-pro a1re8dyif I
had been playing with somebody
else.''
Of course the Rama haven't
been noted for using their tlght
ends much, either. But that'•
becauae their aucceslt at U!'at
poaltlon ha.n't been too great
recently.
BecaUM'ror tbe alow recovery
of tight end H*"1f)' Childs, who la
still Ilmping badly after aufferinl
a broken right foot last season,
Coach Ray Malavasi expressed
an urgent desire prior to Tues-
day's NFL drah to obtai n a
quality player to fill that posi-
tion.
Right up until the final 1e-
conda of the fi.rst round It looked
as If Francia was going to be that
player, too. But the Rama balked
at New England's demands at the
laat moment, leaving the door
open for Barber.
"It wasn't a C88e of money, It
waa a cue of them (the Patriots)
Just wanting too much," aald
Malav..t of the Francia deal.
'Ibe Patriots, aeoordlni to one
Rama aource, wanted "an unape..
dtied amount of draft piclu this
year: .a player or two (one of
them being running hllck Barry
'Redden, the Rama' top draft
Surprise! Beasley picks Arizona St8te
OCC basketball star changes his mind alter visiting ASU
pick); and the Rams' No. 1 p~ck in
1982." The Ram hierarchy appa-
rently said "no thanks" to New
F.ngland's tenna and San Franci-
sco finally got Francis by tradiJli
its No. 1, a No. 2, a No. 4, and by
swapping second round picks
with New England. .
"I DON'T WORRY about stuff
llke that," said Barber, referring
to the Rams' inteNe n'1otiations
surrounding Francis. 'I know
what I can do.''
What Barber can do is block
and catch passes. Last year the
6-3, 237-pound six-year veteran
hauled in 13 puaes for 190 y~
a 14.6 average. Throu.1hout his
car:eer, Barber has a r eception
average of 13.3.
Barber rt!<:elved news of his
trade juat prlor to atepplna out
h1a ~ in order to keep a aolf
da• with Pin.burgh q~
Tttry Brdhaw Tuelday mom-
~·H~n called me flnt and
told me to alt tJcht." ..w Berber, "~ the Rama called a few lni-
nutea later.
"It waan't really a aurpr,ae
because I had known about it
(the Rama' lntereet) for aome
time. I'm hopln1 to play five more yeera or .o. And l oOuJdn'l
be Mpplet' t.c.'* I'm 1CM1 to a wmn.."
. Berber, who heel been rumo-
red to have knee 9roblem1
=~=::=a:"~ OJtnl mlain .
... 1UIT ...,= ·---.... ...,.... .. ........
MD."-..llllW, 8119.AD ............ ., ... Mv.
'-••• ~l•'F• WIJ 01U of __ ..... ,"
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ever
the consummate team p1-yer. Phi-
ladelphia'• 41 -year-old Pete&.
refused to dwell on his nlnth
five-hit game Wednesday night
in the Phillies' 9-3 blitz of the
Dodgers.
Rather, he said he was ticltled
with his double in the eighth in-
ning that knocked in one rug and
put the tying run ob second ~.
''That 1ave us a chance to hit,"
he said.
Still, his ninth five-hit game
tied a National League r«ar:(I,
held by Max Carey (the ma~
league record la 14, held by
QK>b). • . ~
"Anytime you get five hits in a
game you're happy ... 1,Cl"
dream about pmea like that, • he
sakL It w• the ll8COnd .a. "°' formance by ROH qainat "-
Dodaen, with the fin\ bl 1971.
''Thia WM a bic pme far US.
come b.ck like that. The k
Julio Franco and Bob Dlmier
aome bla bl\1. And, the a
thtn1, we played IOOCI, fi
mental ht•hll."
The PhlWel b.dn't .....
much of \hat, Jo.lnl fCIW of ftrtt1e..-,=-. ... four-hlflhutout the
11~).'DIDDN djj
for aeven lnnln11 ••n W ... hllid Phhd' 'PM
onlbhhllndtMDA. a M .
.. ,
Cl Orang• Cont DAIL v PILOT /Thurtdey, Aprll 29, 1982
It's irrelevant: ,.
Washington last pick
the last selection In thl• year'• annual c • ' The San Franclaco 49era, with m·
NFL draft, picked Fresno State de-
fensive back Tim Washington Wed-· ·
~ netday, thua making Washington this year's ho-
nored celebrity at the annual Irrelevant Week.
Poor fella,
Washington, who has a brother playing for
the Pittsburgh Steelers, will be treated to a week
of froHc and total non.sense, thanks to the warped
sense of humor of Irrelevant Week host Paul
Salata.
There has been some discussion as to whe-
ther this is the fourth, fifth or sixth annual af-
fair. Nobody cared, however, to find out an ac-
tuaJ count.
• Other irrelevant facts about Washington are:
-He's single.
-His birth date is Nov. 7, 1959
-His height Is 5-11.
-His weight is 185 pounds.
-He played two years with the Bulldogs
after transferring from Cal.
-He had three intercept.ions in 10 games.
-He was a two-year starter at comerback.
-He played In the Blue-Gray all-star game.
-Hls hobby ls karate.
Final details of the week-long Irrevelant
Week bash have yet to be finalized , although
none of the past reci~ents have complained or
understood -what s going on.
Incidentally, no other prior player selected
last in the draft has ever made an NFL team.
OCC to face
~G olden West
~la te tournam ent b egins
Soy CURT SEEDEN .t:>'t Ille Deity f'tlot Ii.ff ~ Long Beach City College, with an overall 15-3
!re<.'Ord, may be the No. 1 seed in the s tate commu-
~Hy college volleyball tournament which be~i~s
:Friday morning at Golden West C.Ollege, but 1t ts
~tie flrat-round pairing that pits the host Rustlers
nd Orange Coast College which will attract much
f the attention.
) OCC, coached by Bob Wetzel, is seeded fourth
; OLLEYBALL-rsl
n the eight-team tournament. GWC is seeded fifth.
two teams square off Friday morning at 11:30.
• "Actually, El Camino (18-3) is probably the
~team Ln the tournament," notes Wetzel, who has ~ided his team into the state tourney ilie past four ~ears. "They went through a spell in which they
~ost three straight, but I think that helped them.
M'hey'rf awfully strong now." [.r El Camino, seeded second. will face Santa
vvioruca CC, seeded seventh, at 3:30 Fnday The day
pens with· the No. 1 Vikings facing either Santa
a or LA Pierce. the eighth seed.
At 1:30, Santa Barbara CC and Grossmont
uare off. Either GWC or OCC will !ace the win-
r of the Long Beach CC contest Friday evening at
30. The Santa Barbara CC-Grossmont winne r
eets the victor of the Santa Monica CC-El Camino
ut at 7:30 Friday night.
Wetzel's Pirates rolled up 10 victories against
o defeats to win the South Coast CoQfe ren ce
hrun~nship. Overall, the Bucs are 14-5.
h Lou Ann Terheggen -Selsky guides the
ustlers, who perennially adva nce to the s tate
..-n11 rn.HITI..-n t.
Wetzel says his team Ls ~ with maturity
depth. and h1a team la ooofident but not cocky.
"I lhink we're better prepared than last year
the PirateS finished second In the tourney to Santa
onica CC) and better in more areas of the game,"
etal afya. "Our ae~ la better and our bench
trength is much deeper.
Wetzel's squad is sparked by setters Greg.
ale and Paul Kubas, outside hitters Bill Mattias
d Scott Friederichaen and middle blockers Steve
riedman and Dennis Regan. .
But he aays he's comfortable with any com-
ination of th(' 16 players on his te81Q.
Wetzel says the key to his team ii lts·maturity,
Ith guys like 22-year-old Frlederichse n, Notre
ame grad Regan and former all-state standout Bob
eelock on the team.
Quote o f the day
Yost Berra , whllo watchtna a movie
•tanina th late Stev• ~een: "He muat
have made that befor9 he., died." .
Royals snap Boston winning streak
Dealanated hitter Hal McRae II
drove ln five rWll wlth a homer and a
double Wedneeday night u the Kan-
sas City Royalt packed all their eco. ·
ring Into the flrat two lnnlnp en route to an 8-~
victory over Boston, snapping the Red Sox's
elght-aame winning streak. McRae belted a
thretHun homer off the right-field foul ~ for
, his fourth this season. . . . Elsewhere 1ri the
American· League, Jobn Loweaateln and Eddie
Mur ray htt home runs and Scou McGre1or li-
mited Oakland to five hit.a to lead Baltimore to a ~-1 victory and gave the Orioles a split of a
double-header. Dwayne Murpby drove in three
runs with a homer and two-run single as Oak-
land won the flrat game, ~-2 . . . Jim Outner
singled home the tie-breaking run in the seventh
inning and reliever Rollle Fl11en tamed Chi-
cago on one hit In 2~ Innings as Milwauk~e
defeated the White Sox, 2-1 ... Rookie Randy
Johnson teamed with Gary Gaettl for a pair of
fourth-Inning homers as Minneeota stopped De-tr~it, 4-2 ... Cleveland erupted for six first-
mning runs and Leo Barker and Tom Breanaa
combined on a four-hitter In the Indiana' 6-1
v ictory over Seattle ... Pinch-hitter Rance
Mulllnlkt drilled a one-out, two-run single to
snap a 4-4 tie and lift Toronto to a 6-4 win over
· Texas.
Washington pulls even with Celtics
Rookie Frank Jobnsop't three-m point oal with three seconds left cli-maxe~ a 26-polnt performance and ·
gave the Washington Bullets a
103-102 victory over Boston Wednesday night,
evening their National Basketball Association
playoff at one game each ... Elsewhere. Phi-
ladelphia went two up on Milwaukee, as Andrew
Toney scored 31 points and Julius Erving added
24 points and seven assists '\o lead the 76ers to a
120-108 triumph ... Gus Williama notched 34
points and Jack Slkma chipped in with 26 to
power Seattle to a l 14-99 win over San Antonio
to even that series at a game apiece.
;
Meta atop Padres' streak In 15th
Mookle Wllaon hit a triple and II ecored on • sacrifice fly and Pete
Falcoae went the final five lJ'\nlnp to
plclt up tne victory u the New Yo.rk
Meta shaded San Diego Wednelday night, 5..-4 lp
16 lnninga to snap the Padret' 11 -game wlnnlng
at.reak. The win also knocked Sari Dluo out of
first place in the National Ceague
West ... Elaewhere, 1hortatop Dale Berra'•
error on a two-out bout)(.<er by pinch-hitter Bob
Wa tson brough homo Bob Horner from third
with the winning nan ln the 10th lnnlng to help
Atlanta snap a five-game loeing streak with a 7-6
victory over Plttaburgh ... Rookie rlght-
hander Biii Laaltey fired a three-hitter and
rapped an RBI single In his first major-league
start to lead San Francisco to a 7-0 win over
Montreal ... DlckJe Nolet tolled a one-hitter,
and Steve Headerton and Jerry Morales each
belted two-run triples to lead Chicago past Cin-
cinnati, 6-0 . . . David Green's hit through the
Infield drove In two runs to cap a four-run alxth
inning that rallied St. Louis to a ~-4 triumph
over Houaton ... The Pirates announced that
third baseman Kea Reitz, who was released by ·
the Cubs in spring training last month, will work
out with the team
Alzado, Pruitt head for Oakland
Three-time All-pro defenalve end •
Lyle Alzado was traded by the Cle-
veland Browns to the Oakland Rai-
ders Wednesday for the Raiders'
eighth-round choice In the NFL draft. The
Browns alJO swapped veteran running back Greg
PraJU, a leader in most all-time team offensive
categories, to Oakland for future draft conside-
rations. Meanwhile. New England made lta third
trade of the draft by sending· linebacker Rod
Sboate to Chicago for a fifth-rounde choice in
next year's draft . . . Iverson "Ivy" Wiiiiams,
an ofCensive backfield coach at the University of
Kansas the past three seasons, was hired Wed-
nesday ~as an assistant football coach at Arizona
State UnJversity. •
Television, radio
TV: No eventa echeduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Angels at New York, 5
p.m., KMPC (710); Philadelphia at Dodgers, 7:30
p.m., KABC (790).
San Diego CU@
has new format
Many of the yachtsmen returnln1 from the
Newport to Erwnada are rernaln1lli ln San ~
this week for a ahot at the San Dleao Yachth\i CUp
whkh thla year wlll be ll&lled under a new fonnat
For 10 years San Diego Yacht Club hotted the
regatta, along with Yacht1na Mapzlne, u a "level
raci111" event ln whkh handlcap yachta race~
each other on a bolt-for-boat buia. It wu aailed ln
four clasaes, the Quarter Ton, Half Ton, One Ton
and Two ton categories.
Under the new fonnat the two-day regatta will
be sailed on a handicap buls for International
Offshore Rule (IOR) and Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet (PHRF) and Midget Ocean Racing
Class ratinp.
Lff Aneetff-untl h ecll
Alamllo• Bay Yacht Club
Opening Day. Saturday
Long Beach Yacht Club
Opening Day, Seturdty. Opening
O•y Reg•tta. Sund•y
SHI 8HCh Ytcht Club -
Opet\ing Dey. Set1Hday
LOI Ang•IH Yacht Club -
Star1 Newport Htfbot YllCht Club
Opening day rac• from Lo• An-
gfles liatbot to N-Poft S.ni. Monica .. ,
Wtnd1ammeu Yacllt CluD
Wtndjamm«S JambotH {all c:IH-
se1J SaturO•y
0t9n09 County
Newport H•rbor Yacht Club
-()penong O•y r-. Lot Angelel lo Newport Saturd1y. Op•nlng
Day. Sunday
Balboa Yacnt Club -Derby
Metcalf Regatt• {Metcelfl Sunoay
Lido Ille Yacht Club' -Trt-
port Hano1c:ap r ac;•. Saturday,
Sunday
Saft Oteeo
San Diego YllCht Club -San
Diego Ytchtlng Cup (PHRF. IOR.
MORCI SallHday. Sundey Cotontdo Cll'fl Yach1 Club -
Cl9MIC a. .... Sat1Hday
Coronado Yac;hl Club -
A round Los Coronado• rac e
IPHRF SOHFI Sunday
M1111on Bay Yacllt Ctul> -'shOtt Course Regatta (all ctM-1
Sunday
Oc.an11de Y ac:ht Club -
YUtl}' S«les (PHRFJ s.inday.
Stiver Gate Y•Cht Club -Opening O•y Sunday
SouthwH lern Yacht Ctub -
Openll'IQ Day, Sunday
Salisbury named USC QB
LOS ANGELFS (AP) -USC football coech
John Robinson says sophomore Sean Salisbury will
be the Trojans starting quarterback Ln the u~
season.
Although Robinson praised quarterback John
Mazur e xte ns iv e ly, he said Salisbury has
"unlimited potential."
Salisbury, an all-around athlete from Orange
Glen High School in Escondido, had threatened to
leave use If he were not named •tarting quarter-
back
....
.. .-;fl.,
....
rtists top Mesa , ·
tourna:ment
~· There's a tradition at Anheuser-Busch. A tradition that -~ sa s never be satisfied until ou ve achieved the best.
Now, put ~tms tradition, comes a }jdlf beer worthy_ of the
Kingoi Beers. One with a dean, distinctive taste. BuawaiMnLight.
It took time. Patience. And a guest for qu,9j!_ty that led to Ute
proud list of Jnaredient~ and1Jhe BeechwoOd Aging proceas
made famous By·the King of Beers.
We know the beat never comat easy: Tliitt's why t.here 's
nOtNrw-...JJke It
--=-----=--
I
I j\
I
!.
r
... . .
I
\
_.. .. .
Sea Kings protect lead,
Corona del Mar HJch Maintained ltl ~ .... edp on Sea View Leaaue ru.nner .. up Irvine Wed-netdal. the la«« a 21-Cl vktor d'9d by the km of
one o ita key playen.
Here'• flow lt went Wednelday for Oranae
Cout area prep bueball teama:
CotoM del Mer I , II Toro 1
Mike Hem had a three-run homer and Dive
Rohde limited El Toro to three l1np. u the Sea
Ki.nal upped their Sea View Le~e record to 9.2.· llem got lt •tarted early after Ch.rll White and
Brent Melbon nwwcl two-o'-'' walU, alamm1na a
2-2 pltch 350 feet to left-a!nter.
Corona del Mar edded a marker ln the aecond
with the help of a wild pitch and aea1ed it ln the
fifth when Rohde ain&led and eventually acored on
a bue hit by Hem.
Rohde llrUck out five and walked \wo for the
Sea Kings.
IMne 21, Newport H8rbor o
The reaulta would indicate a laugher for the
Vaqueros, now 8-3 and a game behind Sea View
Leque leader Corona del Mar.
But no one'• too happy considering the 1088 of
Mike Tierney for the aeaaon. who was struck ln the
ann by a fastball, resulting in a broken arm.
A.a for the game, Mark Webster was 4-for-6
with 3 RBI; Jim Gasho and Jay Scott were 3-for-4;
Tierney had a double and triple before exiting; and
two Irvine pitchers limited the Sa.Uors to just two
hits.
"John Sallnaa can fill at BeOOnd base," said Ir-
vine Coach Bob Flint. "But on the mound, that
really hurts." Tierney had thrown 21 straight ln-
ningl of shutout ball before Wednesday.
Eetanct• a, Coeta Meu 0
Senior right-hander Jim Roachelle tamed the
Mustangs on four hits to improve his record to 2-1
for the season.
Oilers put lock
on Sunset title
Huntington Beach High's Oilers made it official
Wednesday afternoon in Sunset League track and
field competition, sweeping past Ocean View In
convincing style, 92-40, to claim the dual meet
championship with a 5-0 league record.
The Oilers got a double from Gus Quinonez ln
the mile (4:34.3) and 2-mile (9:47.0), along with a
third in the 880 (he cruised at 2:27.3), and combined
with Martin Van Dorselear's double in the hurdles
(a lifetime best in the lows at 39.6) and Richard
PREP TRACK . fJI
Brim's exploits in.the sprints, it was a big day for
Huntingion Beach.
Brim finished second to Ocean View's Rex
Brown in the 100 with a 10.08, just .04 behind the
Ocean View speedster, and won the 220 in 22.9,
along with a winning leap of 21-6 ln the Iona Jump.
Jeff Heise tripled for Marina aa the \i'ik:lngs
took care of West.minater, 76-59. Helle went 6-0 ln ·
the high jump, 20-10 1h ln the long jump and 42-8 ln
the triple jump, while teammate Stuart Lui dou -
bled with a victory ln the high hurdles (15.2) and
pole vault ( 13-6).
University Hlgh 's men and wom~n's teama
swept to their seventh straight dual meet victory ln
Sea View League circles, setting the Trojans up as
the team to beat in next week's final.a.
Celine Regalia doubled in the sprints and an-
chored the mile relay with a 59.7 spUt for the Un-
iversity women, who edged Irvine by a noee in the
event. while Latonya Oliver doubled in the weight
events and Laura Sauerwein, Teresa Barrios and
Polly Plumer breezed ln their specialties.
Marina's women'.s team swept past West-
minster with a 70-point margin, keyed by Wendy
Ward's double in the high jump (4-8) and triple
jump (32-7 'h) and Kerri Draper's double in the
diatance races (5:59.0 in the mile and 12:30.26 in the
two-mlle).
OCC women earn playoff
The Orange Coast College women's basketball
team earned the co-championship of the South
Coast Conference Wednesday night with a
vengeance: routing visiting Fullerton College,
76-55.
Fullerton had won the conference title the last
four years and had a 47-game South Coast winning
streak 1evered by the Pirates.
The two teams will play apln Friday after-
noon. 4 o'clock at Cypress College, to determine
which team will enter the 1tate playoffs as the
conterence's top teed.
Art Show
Huntlngtoo Center
deity thru Sun. .
_B_~_SE_B_~_L_L~~--~.,..
Roechelle, who i.ued no walkl and had two
.vtkeoutl, d.Jdn't al.low a Mustanc to pt •tar .. MCOnd bue.
The Jr.aclee ecored their fint run of the pme ln
the third lnn1na u left fielder Jaime Modett tripled
to ri1ht field and came home on 1hortatop Jeff
Gardner'• a1ngle up the middle.
The Eagle1 then added two more lneurance
M.lnl ln the fourth on two hita and two Must.arll
errora.
The victory improvea Z.tancla '• Sea View ~record to 8--4-1, iood for third place, while
NO DEALER SALES
AD STARTS THURS.
IDISTBOlli
SPRlllLER BEDS
snraa 29• PLASnC
BRASS 66• Gonna 1tart gettln • bot
now 10 It' a lmportant
to p.p the lawn
watered. You know
bow you entof a nlce
cool drlnk on a hot day.
right?
::Tic55t
BRASS 99t
RICBO 50 n. x ¥." ULTRA BOSE
9!!s
You can tab th11 baby
anywhere (now wb.,. you tab
lt la your bWll.n.H).
UgbtWelght. tough. and
O.xlbl• wt th 1tcmdard coupling•.
PURPLE YECETDLE
POIY PUS
49!
Just turn up the ol' eoU.
add eome f.rtUlMr. and
v-t lt ready for some
"ftM pla:at1. lib tomato.
eogpla:at. pepper and JDON,
2 GILLOI PLAITS
Spring ha• 1pnang and
.. '.-......... r-lt'1tlmetoplanteome ~·-r;., ' ,. 0• Ooweneoyoucc:mbcn-ea ../4£.~· .;;.:r=-,"" ;...,., '91Dlnder to 1top and
• 1• ~ • ; \ enJor. Uly ot the NUe. or
,.. ·,,.• • Auatrallcmu.etem. lfo
•· u.e fem at Cath.tdtal 1 • City .tore.)
' . -~EA~
BLICK • Df%1£.R
10" CU I I EB WITH
COIOlllD FEED
Made for contlnuou1 UM
(well. I abould hope eo) 2.5
Amps. luy now and get a 17
RDATEbymaUfromllack •Deck.,.
··~! BEIYY-DUTY DOUBLE
llSULITED EDliEllfi'BEll' .... CIEB ....
Cutaat'4' deeptreDCbalong
the walkordriHWCIJ. (Of
coune, fOU bcne to aklnd
behlnd It andglYe ~ IMtlp.)
5 ·9!!1
CUD-Gii UlllBEL•·I
at ... roueomegoodthacle
OD laot-claya(and
tbealD .. rcdDyMaeOll. '°" CIDd yow lrtnd.-COD go tor a
moll ad -.c1ry1. 2••
8!! ............. ~ ............ ...
0.1111•...,_. ................ ... _,...., ...... ., ..... ........
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtd8Y. Aptll 29, 1982
Irvine loses Tierney
c.o.ta ~'I DUf"berl dropped to 6·5·1.
lllCldlelNIOk 19, ""'""'". Blake Smith hlt a 1rand llam homer fn the
MOOnd ~and finllhed with five RBI to lead the
~attack.
Ruben Galvtn added two llnclet and four RBI
and tr.hman pitcher Leonard Damina doubled and
lln&led. ln addJUon to ltrtk.1na out etaht and wal-klftl only one ln aoln8 the dJllance.
Mlke Frei and ITlck Soren10n contrlbuted a
pair of 1ln1le1 apiece for Uruveretiy, but an 8-0
(lefidt after two 1nn1rtaa wu too much to overcome.
Fountam Veley 4, ...... 1
The Barone moved to wlthln one victory of cllnchJnc a flayoff •pot ln the Sunaet League by knoddnl of Marina, 4-1 at Blair Field.
SW'tlnc pttcher Rick LaMardM1 went a •tronc e ~ ln.nlnp to .earn hll ll«lOlld victory before livinl
way to Don Greaor, who retlred the final two
Marina betters.
Tim Martino had a pair of hita and IOORld twiat
while 1hortatop Steve Jonaewaard allo had two
hita, acored once and picked u$o RBI. Fountain Valley I. 7-6 ln play and 11-8
.overall, while Marina ls 6-7 and 0-9. ~
Laguna HW. 18, leaUNI .._ I
Brent Chappell lilt hla third and fourth homers
of the teAIOll and knocked ln four runa to. lead the
Hawu.
The victory improved LaJrUna HU.la' record to
6-6, while the Art1lta are wtnfe. ln 1~ pme.. Da~
mon Berryhill tripled to lead the Laguna Beach
a
SENTRY SAFES
(Safe Way? How'd they get inhere?). Tffted bytbe UL guy1to
tab the heat, up to 1700deg'1'Maforuptoanbour. All ban3
number cbongeable combination and'" loc:ldng bolt wt th 2
deadbolt1.
CADET
For your home •aluablH. Remo•able
abeU. 15"Hx12"Wx91/t''D ln1lde
d.Jm.oalona. 79!~~
94!~~ STllDIRD
A blt bigger. ha1 a 3"xS"xl l " deep
remo•able drawer. lnalde dlm•n1lona1
15"Hx12"Wx13"D. . MAJOR
Staab your 18" ledger boob and trays or
ca ab (efllater tJ'CIY•· lnalde dimen1iona:
15"Hxl2"Wxlll/s''D. 139!u7
Throw a few .. MDtlal tool•
ln theol' trunk fWlt lncaM.
You DeTer know wlwn you'll
IMMd 'Hl. better to be
prepared. a· ma Joy Scout.)
T-ILLEI
13Vz"
PLISDC
TOOL IOI
59~350B
DUPOIT TEFLOI WET
OR DRY
LUBRICAIT
2224 0?.
U It aUcb ouqu.ab, thl1 l• the 1tuH. LooMnl up
1tudl or ruated part• with f u1t a shot or two.
BLUE POLY OIE-STEP
POLY SEILDT
3 7 .7
102.
Say, jut one applkatlon of th111tutf will clean.
lhlne, and MCll your cCIJ'. Uquid or pa1te.
CASTBOL GTI 20/50 WT.
MOTOR OIL
Thl1 la the one the guy• at Caatrol
~apeclallylor amall
c:an. doeua't break down at high
rpma. 91~.
liOOP
BID CLEDEB
Ci.cm.tlle ...... mtt
oft yow llada1U.
pcdDt. tar ......... and
...nk.Wodtaoe
........ .t.ayl,
woodwodi. orOoor ecuft9,
a.oz. 77•
75 n. BEAYY DUTY 16-3 SIT
OUTDOOR
EITEISIOI CORD
wlTBCADDY .,.7
IAt' • ... , you could UH thla for the
el9Ctrlc lawn mower or trimmer.
the telm1lon on the patlo. or to plug
la yow electric rioll.n la th• backyard.
LUCE L_: ·. '.
T.Y. ~~~~
llTEllAS 1
••••
The more element• the
better the rec9ptioa
(tbi1doeenotapplyto 22•7
weddlng1. thank you.) 16 ELEMENT
22 ELEMENT 2 7t7 30 ELEMENT 3497
CLOSE-OUT BIRTCO OAK
PARQUET
FLOOR TILE
93!.n.
Okay. Jlm. no carp9t and
no tile. I wcmn.a tJy thl•
cmd that' lflna.l. T exturecl
Rk:b Earth Brown pattem
only.
CAllllOI cun BILF LOUYEBED .
BIFOLD DOOR PPELS
bffapaceandgt•ff you
prtYCrcy. too. Standard blade
(whidl l1 th1rmer than tbe wide
blade. rifbt?)cmd uofln•ahed.
12xl0 1677
15xl0 1777
18 x IO 19'"
llxlO 24''
MxlO 27"
PLYWOOD
Ye"UIKllmt
5•7
ICI
vl· '197
Yt" 11"
v.·· IS" ...... , ........................... . ................. _ ...... .,., ... ............ , .. , .. .... , ............
•
• . .
. . ,.
~ '. '' . ..
~ UAQUI ITANIMNG8
A.Martwt ........ ............... W L ...._Ge
14 •• 700
10 7 .NI 10 1 .au
10 11 .471
• 11 .. 50
• 13 ,)11 • 10 375 ....... ~
12 7 117
12 7 .132
II 7 .612 7 •• 431
7 •• 431
1 11 ·* 5 ,, .313
••• rt y.--...
..... Yortll ....... O
O.Mlld I-1, lllilllmore 2-4
T0tomol. T-4 ~ Clly I. 8oeton 5 ~l,a.t11e 1 ......... 2.0Nc-ao1 Mlnt*04a 4, o.crol1 2 T........,.ca-..
...... (Zafwl ll-01 •I ,.._ YOfk (RIOMttl
1·21 . SHiii• (t l1on 0 ·3) •• Clevel•nd iaor-o-1
O•lll•nd I alt~ 1-11 •t 891tlmore (0
M.nlMll 2·2) Detroit (Puhnlcll 1-0) It Cllie9QO (L.mp
t~oronto (9t1tb 0 ·2) •I K•n•u City
(Sptltlorft 1-0)
Only Olll'* ~
"=='~ W L ttvt. Ge
14 5 .737
12 5 708 • 10 474
7 ,, -• 13 311
7 12 * ........ °""96eft
Sl LOOM 14 I 700 Mon,,... t 6 eoo
.... Yen 10 I 556 Ptttmureh 7 • 431
CfllCeQO 7 12 .318 ~ '12 .2t4 .... "' ,. . ._... ..,,PNll111o1d..,l*IF""lf'lll .. I , .,.._. 3 CfllCeQO •• ClnclnMll 0
St. LOIAI 5. ltouMon 4 San Ft...m.oo 7, Monv.I 0 ~ 7, ...... =(10 IMlnOI) ..... YOf11 5, a.ii 4 (15 lnnlngl)
1
5
8\t 7
7
2'i'i
3
5
llt
7'"'
,..,..
Pllll•delpt\I• (Ruthven 0·2) •t 0 9d9er1
(Hooton 0-1), n
N•w York (Pul•o 2· 11 •• S•n Ol•go
(ElcNlbelger 2·2)
Hcw•ton (Knepper 1·21 •I P11t1burg11
(~0-2).11
CHcego (Jel*n 2· 1) •t Atlellta (COWy
(M)I. II
Montreal (8urrl1 0·3) 11 Si n Fr•nclteo
(FCMlll• 2·11. n
Only --KNduled
AmNCAN LUQUE
Y.,..._l,Aneef•O
CALWONU
• r 11111
OowNnglf 4 0 1 0 C...fti 4 010 o.cnc. 30 3 0 1 0
Gnc:tl 2b 4 0 1 0 a.,.o. dll 4 0 1 0
AeJc:kttlfl 4 0 0 0
Lynn cf 3 0 1 0
Follu 3000
&oonec 3000
Rncl1pll 2b 3 2 2 I
Mup/"Y ct 5 I 1 0
Gfllf4'Y rl 4 I 2 2
Gamble dll 3 I I I
Wlnllelcl It 4 0 1 2
SIMlley 3b 2 0 I 0
"9vmglt> 1000
-·b 1000 ~lb 1110
c.-c 4000
Dent• 4 000 .Tot• 32 0 I 0 TOI• 32 6 9 I
Ca/ff....J• .... bf-... .,.._ 000 000 000-0
New Yen 203 000 01•-e
E-F0<11Ct1, Jackton OP-C1hl0<ni1 1
New Yen 1 l09-calrfornia I , New York 9'
28-Lrnn. Griffey. Gamble Winfield Ran .:~ sa-eo.n1 . . .
C....... •H 11111 •SO
For.cfl (L2·21 2'i'i 5 5 5 2 O H...._ 2 1 0001
..,.,,_, l"'i I 0 0 I 2
8llncllU I 0 0 0 I 0
Ka.on I 21111 .._ YIWtl
I Jolln (W. 1-3) 9 8 0 0 1 5 HB~-by Fortcll (R•ndotpll). T-2 23
A-25.4t8. ... ,~
A'el,~t 0.11nct 020 020 110--e a 1
IW!lmor• too 000 000-2 5 1 Norlll 90d Heeth: FleMgen, Slanl>ow9 (7)
arid NoMn. W -Non11. 1-2, L -Flar'lag1n
0-3. Hiia -0 9111and, C. Jollnton 121. O ·
~{3).
•COllDGAMe o..... ..... , °'**'° 001 000 000-1 & 1 .....,_. 20 I '° 1 OOlt-5 • 0 Keo119h l llcl Nawrnal'; McGregor •nd
Oe.,,ptey. W -McOtetor. 1·2. l -
~ 2·2. ... -.......... .._.._,,
(t). E. ....,..,~ ·-..... . -.... -...4 T-001 010 200-4 10 2
TCM'-000 030 30ll-I I 2
T-o.wtn (1) mid 8ulldtlerG: C..q.
J. MCI • _. Ill Mel a. w.un.. WNt1 111.
W -Cllflcy, 14 .. L -T-1-3. 5 -Mcl•ll9flll11 (1). H"• -Te~e. Ball 1a1. ...__ 12). A -10.109. ................ "-City sao ooo 000-1 11 o
..... 221 000 000-6 • 1
~~1~arld~;~~~
::-.-J..t·l. l -TudOI, 3-1. HR-~
Clly, --(41-A -12,311. ............... ,
..... 000 001 000-1 4 I ~ 900000~8•0 M. .._., 8, Cliltc (I). ~ (I) and
e...n; ...... .,__':le:: "-Y· w -..,_, ~I. I. -M, , t-3. A -, .. .._. .......... , a-... 000 010 000-1 7 I ...... *• 000 100 fOll-2 4 0 ........ .,,. ... ~ ,.,.,.,. (1) arid
IMmlllO!lt· W -,....,_, Z·I. l -aurn•.
2-1. 14111 -....... ~·(I). A -9.· .,.,
." ..... , .,, .. ,.,
1 1 000 1 " o o·o 1 o 1~ 0 0 0 0 0
1~ t a • o a
"00010 • ,..,,,0 0
Tot' 10 , ............ .,...,
AMINCAN Ll.AOIM
MU<ray ~lmOte
Cooc>e< Mllwwkoe 10<9 T0<onto
Harrah. Cteveeand
Johnson, Minn
Yount Mllwaut<ee
CaDell. Oelro<I
fhO< nton CMMlllnd
Martin l<C
Q A9 II H
16 82 9 29
18 87 9 21 14 37 3 H\
Ill 80 16 24 18 54 9 23
11 38 5 14
19 74 a 29
18 81 14 23
17 $7 I 21
Wilson Oetr0tl 12 38 8 13 HofM"-
0 0
Pet.
484
·~.,,.
.400 3t7
319 378
3n :see 381
H<bek. M""-Ota. 8, 0.W-.. ~ 1;
MU<ray Balhmore. 5. YaatrHr'Mlll. ea.ton.
S Hartel\ Cleveland. 5. Tl\e><nton, Cleve·
tano. 5 OglMe MllwaukH, 5 Jol\nton,
M1nnMOla S
R11111 .. ltad In
Hrnet.. Mlnne9011 20, ()alMI ...........
18 TllO<nton. Clawland, 11. E Mur-rrt. U ·
twnore 16 M-. SNIUI. 18
"*""'8 (2 DldUoMI Hoyt. Cfllcago, 4.;c); z.11•, ........ ~
Bannister S..ttll. 3-&. Cewltl. S..ttte. 3-0: Aponte Boston l ·O Morgan. New Yori..
2·0 Sanc1'ez, ........ 2-0: Wttt, ....... M Wtlhams M1nne1011. 2·0. Darwin Te•u
2-0
NATIONAL L.IACMA!
OMllHPct.
w ooos Cllleego 12 42 e 11 ~
LlndtNMU, Oodeetl 19 78 17 29 312
Green SI loul• 19 37 4 14 371
Ga•denllte. NY 1& 49 7 11 317
MO<el&nd ClllCIQO 19 7 I II :ze .318
Lel.CllnO SO 17 el 13 24 .363
lllO<npaon. Plltabtg 18 83 14 22 .3-49 May San Franc11eo 12 33 4 13 .'42
Jones SO 14 « 111 15 .341 Concepctc>n C1n 18 611 11 23 333
Mn<Q8n San frane>aco 14 48 I 18 .333
"°"'9"""9
1(1ngman, H-Yorll. 7. Thornpton. Pllla-
b\JIQll 6. Moreland, ChoCIQ(>. S, HOrner, Al· lllnl• 5. MU<pl\y Allanll, S .._ ... tadlft
~urphy. Allallla. 20 Tl\ompeon. P1111-
l>U<Qh 18. KingmM. -Yorll, 17. LWCIOO, Sa n 01190, 16 Moreleno Chlc•go. 15. ~,_ CNCIQO. 15 Hernat>dtrl. SI l-.
Pttdllft9 (f 0.......1
f 0<acll SI LOUii 4.0 Wetcfl ~
).0: Sno. San Oteoo. 3.0. R..idon. Mon-'. treat 2-0 Fotc;one low. York 2.0 T•.-
P11ts1>utgn 2-4 ~ Alllnll, 2.0. Owller
San Ooego. 2·0. c..w-us San o.oo. 2-0
High ec:hool eor-del Iller S, El T-I El TOf'o 000 000 1-1 :S O
Cofone oet Mw 310 010 a-5 5 2
M ...... Lom.11 (l) llnd J9clOOO; Rohde llnd ~bon W-Rol\Oe l M•llet Hiii-Heu
lrftne 11, Newport ...,,_ o
Newport H"'bOI 000 000 0-0 2 3
1rwie oea 034 a-21 20 1
Par>IUSO So<tie< (2) ICOllnl (3) end Terry;
S1mme Zan9' 111 and Kwat Arme1rono (51 w
-Simms l -P•nluto 28 -Kiral II)
Tierney (I) 3B -fltrnay (I).
Ila~• i. c .. 11 ..... o
Co$11 M..a 000 000 0-0 4 3
Elttanela 001 200 a-:J e o
Goe1 llcil end Flelcl; Aoaclltk •ncl Riggi.
28-McC•hill (E). T•lley (El. 38-Morlell (El
8addteHdl 15, ""'"""'. un1-sity 000 023 1-e 12 3
Sad<llebaok 3SO 151 •-15 11 3
LarMn. ~ Frei (5) llnd J. Frei. OernlM llnd Ba~er w -u1m11n 1:1·1). l -l••••n
2B Alvarez ISi Smllll (81. O•mtan (SI
HR Smith ISi laellNI Hiiie 11, L..-9"ctt • l lQU"a Hllll 431 123 2-18 13 2
Laguna 8alCll 001 400 0-5 7 3
Plemel. Mart., (3~ Redldll (41. Label (7)
•nd Roman. M!Mey, SOIOfnan (3~ 8erryNI (51 and Crow! W-Plemel (8-21 l -Mlnney
2B-Raellela ILH) 3B-8erryhll (Lii). HA-
CllloOell (lHI 2
FounllM 11..., 4, ....... I Foun111n Vattey 100 030 0-4 & 3
~ .. ,,. 000 010 0-1 4 4
L•Ma<clle Gregor (7) llnd Pran . ..,,,...,
Ind Ftoraa W-LaMarelle (2· 1) L-lleMetl
(4-41 2B-W-(Ml Mlr1tno (f'V), St•
•111 (FV) 38-Petet'IOfl (M).
......,, V'9te I. ... C.._.... I
M-ViejO 003 020 0-5 7 2
SM Clement• 000 002 0--2 4 t M.Olgln Md Sautar. lllM, CaldWttl (6)
ano Puterbaugh W-Madloan (I-f). l -
Blles 28-RyhllC!k (Miii 2. lloUano (MV> HR-HOiiie (MV)
HIGH ICHOOt. 8T AHOINOI ... v.._~
CO<ona del Mar 9 2
T Ge
0
trvlne I 3 0
E.11anc1• e 4
Cosla MfS& 5 5 Unlverllty 5 e
Saddlet>ICk 5 8
El Toro 4 7 New!>Otl Hwbor 1 10 ..._.., .......
1
1
0
0 0
0
CO<on• Oii Mar 5. ti Tcwo 1
lrvtne 21. ~Harbor 0
Ea19"Cll 3, c-...... 0 Saddllbadl 15. urw.rw111 • ,,,... ...... <• ,.,...)
Corona del Mat 1M Newport HerMr
Intone •I El f oro
SlddlebadC at Coe!• ......
Ealancl9 al UtWetlily
1
2'A. 3'"' ..
4
& •
louth C...t "---
• I. -e.piw-v.., 10 2 .... Vleto 10 2 L..-... • • 4 o..... • 1 •
Ill' c:a.-te ' 1 • ....-e-tl 0 1l 10
... 11•1··-
MINIOtl V1tiO 5, 8M a.-M 2 Ceolltt-v.., •. 0.. ... .
Laguna HMt II, Llf\lflt ..... I ,,..,.. ...... Cl....,
San eie-ie • Lllfl#W ,.. · · o-Hlltll .. MII9lon ll"fO Caplel,_ v..., .............
~~'-T -'9M1e 1 ' I 819'!00 Arntl • • 0 1 ~ Met .. Oel 4 4 0 I
•• Pttul I ' 0 •
tlllltOp ~:r·..... • •111 hNI•••..... 4
8llil09 AINll •• ""'°' -~ •
f_..W.~~ Ille WI 11111 • ,_. °' .,,. HeflOtWll Fo04bll .........
llM dr'9'I ....... llllltd.,. PIOl*'Md by
"'I. ,__ llOl -I 0 1"'1 "-P4erM Ill
°*Oelt MM9
Joe ~ og, T .... Victor llrnmOf\e,
wr, 0190011 t\•tt. A J "J•m" J~. tb,
Tu ... Mlle ~. 0.-lb, OklllhOmL kb
8 pe10t!t, ot, eo.!Ofl Unlverllty. Ml'"~ l'll«tOn. d\l, ...,. Ha*i. flllcky ColfrMn, wr. UCV.. ~ C.V, di. Alabllrn1 AIM
A't&NITA 'P-.COM9 0.trld To!Ouflw, tb, HIW•ll Fltcky lti.f•
llln, db, t.1«119 9fOWI'\, We HOIWI, p, l..ont
tMefl It.,._ Cu«la 81-t, ICI, MIM*IPPI 8111a. Jell Keller, wr, Wt•lllngton 811le
0-L-wck. lb. ~1111. aAl ,..,... cou•
Fletch« Jenlclnt. cit. W"1111111ton. Tony Loi•. og. Arlion• 1••11. Tony lefryl'llll, n, a.mton. Tom OMry, db. WideMf. ~I
MMclhltl\, db, W•tern K.,,luCllty. Jol'IMle
Wrl9hf, rb. South ClrOllna. • ..,ALO ea.LI
Gary AnOtf-'• k, Srr-M. lllC'I T0U910· nMl .. qtl, fei<monl 8111e. o.ini9 fdwltdt,
di, 8ou1hern C•llfornl•. Vic J•mH i. db.
Colorado Frank 1(9111, og. Arizona Tony
SW.., di, Gardner ·W«ltl.
CMCAQOMAAS
He nry Wa•cllt•r, di, Nebruka J e rry
Ooerger, OI, Wl9conlin Miila Hllc:tlell, db,
Tex .. Joa TU<ner. c:lb, Sou1i-n Callloml9 Guy~. lb, W'-*" Riclty Y~. tb, Okiaho<n9 .....
CINCINNATI ....OAU Ben NHdham, lb, Mlclllg•n Ktrl Yll·
tlllnlto. 01, Clnc:lnn111 J-Bennett, Wf,
N0<1h-letn LOU11i9nl. l.,ry Hogue. db,
Ullll St•le Ru-H O.vl1. rb, ldmho. Dan
Ferrlldey, i~ ~=o
Marti K ..... til&. db, Haw•W Vin Hallin, le.
Vand«bil1 Bill Jadleon, db. North C.rollnl Miiion Bake<. le, WMI Tbll Sl•I• Rlc .. y
Ftoyd, rb. Soutlletll MlallN11>91 Sieve Ml·
Chui .. qb. Grand V911ey Sl•ll $coll Hleolll. lb. Miami, F19.
oAUAa coweoY• Biii Pv<lloy. d4t. Tulll Georoe P9Q9lel. rb.
Aubutn Owtghl Sulll•M. rb. No<lll Carolina
State. Joe 091Y, dl, UCLA. Todd Ecllereon.
01, North CatOllna St111. Gaoroe fhomc>ton.
wr, Atoany. 01 .• 'Stal•· Mike Whiling, tb.
Flolld• Slit• Rldl 8uflnaM, OQ, MonlMI '*"nll INIOM:Oa
AMn Ruben, de, Houflon Kalth Uecker,
01, Aut>urn Kan WOOdw•rd. lb, TuSlllQM.
Sluarl Ylllllo. og, OrlQOtl Btlan CIWll. og.
Ctemaon. DCT1'0IT UOHa
Ptlil B•I•. rb, IWl>rltlla. Marlin MoM. d4t. UCLA Din W8Q01*. Ob, .......... R--'1
81rnae. lb. Purdue Edward Lee, wr Sovtn
Catolln• St•ta Ricky P0<1w . rb, Sffppe<y
AOC* Roe Rubick ••. GrMd v.-y 81111
OMO MY PACKDI ~ Wllllley, c:lb, T-EJ P-. Thornel Boyd. lb, Al•b•m• Cllarlle Rlggln1, de. S.l~m•n Eddie Q91cf1. k Sou· tlllfn Metll0dl1t JOlln Macaul•y. c Sl•n·
lord Pllllllp Eppe. M . T eus Clw'9tiln HOUITON OtUJla Ml1t 8r9dtey, db. Penn Sl•te , ~ ~
..... qb, Tax•• Tech Jim Campbell ••
l( .. tudly. Donnie Crall. rt>, U>llt9.W.
KANaAa CITY C..US
Greg arnt111. dl, K.,.. c-de llNIJn,
P·~. Idaho St•I• lync:lla Byfe><d 01. Oki•·
homa Larry 8t~y. wr, Mt.,,.1. FIL 8oO
Carter, -. AtliOI\&_ Mwlt Miiiet. qb, Sootll-
-1 Te ... Sl9t1
MIAMI OOU'H9tS
Oan JOl'lnaon. 1e. 1ow1 St•t•. l ••ry Co-
wan, rb. Jackton 81111. Tile Randle. db. Teua Tech Steve Ct•rk, d•. Ut•l1 Mack
&oatner. rb. SouthMltern Lc>ulellr\a ROC>ln
Fleher, lb. Aork:I• Wayne .ion., 01, U1111.
G••Y Crum. 01. Wyoming. Mika Rodrique.
Wt, Mitltl'll, Fl• ..... SOTA Yl«INOI
SI-JofOan, 1e, Brown. Kn Harmon. lb.
Plll)lllC 8'yM Howard, db, lenM$Me Stale
Qarald Lucear. wr. Temple Curll• Rou11.
og. Ten""_.c11111anoog• Hobaon Mii-
ner. rb, Ctnc:innlll.
NIW l.NQUUC) PATRIOTS
J.n Roberti. lb, Tul-KM Colllnl. lb,
Sllta Kevin Mu<Ood<. wr. Troy Stale Brian
Clark. k, flotld• Sieve S•ndon. qb. Hor·
tllern IOwl Greg Taytot, -Vlrginl9 NIW OllUAM IAIN'fl
ChuClt Sllugnlet. 01. Soulll Carollnl
NIW YOM OIAHTI Jell Wl1ka, og Mlellgan Stile Robert
Hubble. I• Rice John H1991n1
dCl.Mav..Sa·lll Vegas Rleh.ard Blld!nQe<
04 Walle Foresl MW'! S.... Ot. Rclw..-
NIW YOM .IETS
Tom Coombe, 11. Idaho L9wrenc:1 Te·
aada, rb, Handetton Stale Rocily Ki.v.w,
rb Monlana O•rryl H•mpl\llt, db. W111 Tea11 Stata 3arry ParmalH, wr. S1n11 Clar• Torn Car1slrom. og. _ .....
OAKLMID ltAIOIM "-" Jacaaon. de. TQledo Rich O'AmlCO,
lb. Penn Stal• w ... T111ner. -Lo..Hlan• Stall Rancly Smith,""'· Eu1 TaJLU Siiia ~EAQl.ES
Harvey Arm11rong, dt, Southern Mell\O·
d11l Jim Frltncfle, 01, Pl.rove. Tony Woo-
druff wr, F111no Sl•te Ron Ingram, wr
Olllll\oml $lite. Rob TmylOf. ot, "'°'1-
lern
PfTT~STUU!M
Edmund '"'-1. dl. Aul>Ufn. Emil Bounll.
C, Piii. John ~. p, T-. Mike Hltrl.
te1. C_anlr•I MICl'llOln. Sii SunHrl, lb, Piii,
M-Mlt!W40r0bor, 09. Morpn Sl•1e. Al
Hugt>n, de. W•ler'n MJdllOM. aT. LC>Ula CAM>lNALI
Bob Sebto, c. Color.00. Cllr .. Und11rom. di, Bollon Unl...,alty. Darnell Oatley. lb,
Mlryiand E.ddll McOtn, I•. WMlern Caro-
llna Jame• w 11111m1, de, Nqrlh Carolln•
AIT Bob Allla. k, 0No Sl•le, IANOCOO~
Hottle Hall. db, ~ Maury 8utord. p,
Tu•• Tacl'I Warren Lyle•. di. s.,, D1190
Andte Young. dCI, LO\llllal\e Tadt. Anlllony
WSllOfO, db. Hew Mealco SWe IAlf RIAMCtec:O 4llEJtl
Aon ferrart, lb, ..... 8ty9n C11111. qb.
MlCfliOln Sllte Dena Mel-•. llr. H..,,.aU
Tim llartiian. Cit, WMlem llllnOta. 0wy Oll>-:"a~aAlttonl nm wuNnQ1on. db. Fr-
MATTLE MAHAWICa
Eugene Wllilrnl. It>. Tut.9 cne.ter Coo-pl•. wr. MlnnHol• O••ld Jallerton. lb.
Mleml, Fie. Cr91Q Austin. lb, Soull'I Oek04I
Sam Clancy. dl. Pitt. Frank Nay!Of. c. Rut·
11911 T.,_A M Y llUCCANUM
T'-Morrlt. db, Mtc:nlgan Slste. Ktlvln Allllne. tb, lllinola Bot> l-. qb, HortllMel
Lout1t1n• Mika Morion. -·· Nev•d• Lii Veoea
WA..-GTON MOU ...
Jol'ln kllM:Mner. lb. NO<lhetn ArlzonL R•lpll W•ttllen. di, Gardntr·W•bb. Ken Cott~. do, Soulllwaet Tax .. Stile. Randy
Troulmln, de, 80IM Stilt H9totd Smith
de. Kentuelly State. Tarry Oenlelt. db, T.,:
-· 09'\ Miiier, k, MIMI!, Fla. 8ob HOiiy qb, PrlneetOll. O•n Liiier, ot. Tennea..9
St1w. Jtrff Goll, lb, Arlt-
~ . '
• y
... heoMot HW!-llR ...... ti, 0-V\N 4t
100 -t .. OWll (OJ. 10 04. 2 •trn (HI. 10 OI, 3, Mltlttmeier (HI. 10)
HO -I trim (01, 22 t, 2. GuHI (01.
13 1, i_ M9"d01I (H~,. t4 a (H~':, i, •1 = (~t ~'i· a TllOMplon
NO -t ~I (01. '104 I: 2 Mw1tnei
(HI. a.o• 0, 3 ~ (H~ 2 27.3 Mlle -1 OulllOMl (HI. 4 34 3, a Joi-• on (MJ, 4'3t.I. II 8eugll (HJ. •·40 3
2omlle -1 OulnOMt (HI, 1147.0, 2 At·
c1'1beld IOI. 10.oe.o. 3 CU.Vi IHI, 10. 16 o 120HH I Ven Oot ...... (H~ 15.6; 2
M111911m 10), 16 0, 3 G11011 IHI, 1U 330LH -t Vtn OorHlear (HI, 39 8, 2
MltGlllll (0), 39 e. 3 G9tcl• (H), 42 1
,,.. telay I HunllngtOfl Baa.ch, u CS
Mlle r.i.., 1 Hvnllnglon e.ac11. 3 44 II
HJ -1 8Uf'n1 (0), 8·2, 2 Mllcl\ell (0).
G·O. 3 Morrleon IHI, 6·1
LJ -1 lrlm (H). 21·1; 2 Miiier ....... (H), 2().11. 3 Brigg•, .... lt-7.,.
T J -1 Bu•n• 10), 42·6\t, 2 Sall9tlleld (H), 42·2\t, 3 8riWt (M). 40-3
PV -1 Btc11um (H), 11.0, 2 no ..:olld or
ll\lld SP -t Moe><e (H), 52·2, 2 MlllNMIY
(HI. 48·4''-· 3 P9QMllllM (HI. 4'-11'-t
OT 1 Kandrkic (H). 1&2.0. 2 Smith (HI.
148-t 1 3 MMatVk9Y (H), 111-8
ltl9t'IN11,WMtfMMtertl
100 -1 Sanc:IMll (W), 10 I, 2 K9rmM
IML 10 e. a Wood (W). 10 7
220 1 Trltll IWI 23 7 2 Riel\ (M), 24 O.
3 Karman (M). 14 4
440 -I TrMI (W). 51 •. 2 8oalman IMI.
53 2, 3 8oellel (M). 54 3 aeo -I Morton (WI, 2 OS 8 2 R•mMy
(WI. 2 O& II, 3 Hartll (M). 2 07 6 Mlle -1 MOt10fl (WI. 4 &O 2, 2 GalH
1WJ. 4 u 5. 3 P11111er (Ml & 01 a 2·mlle -I Ole-(M~ 10 611 4. 2 Oar· o;•• IWI, I I 04 8. 3 Parker (M), I I 12 0
1201iH I Lui IMI. 15 2, 2 Ogawa (W),
1& 1,3 01¥1a(MI. tµ 330LH -1 Br-n (M). 41·2. 2 v ... 1a (M)
42 1. 3 Og-1 (W), 42·S 440 relay -I Mttln8, 45 5
Mite rll•Y -1 We1tm1n1ter, 3 37 6 HJ -1 HelM (Ml, 8-0, 2 Bingham (WI.
5-10, 3 Rodney !Ml, 5· 10
LJ -1. Haile (Ml. 20·IO'lr; 2 Nune. (Wf, 20·S'lr. 3 Davit (Ml, 10.8
T J -1. Hel .. (M). 42·8. 2 Oa•ll (Ml
41·11'-'• 3 Doud (Ml. 41·7'.lt
PV I Lui (Ml, 13·8 2 Hmutt• (Ml. 12·0.
3 no triird .
SP -I Brown (W), 44·4, 2 P•u IW).
42·8' •. 3 Roearlzwelg (M), 41.Q\,
OT I Georg .. eoe (Ml 131.J'I 2 Ro-
-.1we1g (Ml. 131·0. 3 Pau (WI I Ill· I 1',
""'-114J te. nw • 100 -I Hier IUI. 10 3, 2 T rummell (I).
10 5 3 Utturrum (I) 10 9
220 -I Hi9t (U). 22 8 2 Trvmmell (I~
23 0 3 Anelerwn (U). 73 0 "10 -I Homer tUI 52.0, 2 F111Wa (U).
52 S. 3 Somma (I). S3 0
8IO -1 Slmmt (II. 2 00 4 2 He&llevok
!Ul 2 02 8 3 l<1et>t (U) 2 07 I
Mile I Moor• (UI 4 39 8. 2 H"-' (U)
4 39 I , 3 Jedi (UI. 4 41 3
2-mlle -I ~ (II 10 O'il I 2 Sflulla
IUI 10 09 5 3 GreenberQI< IUI 10 23 9 126HH -1 811ellman IU), 16 3 2 luc· COie fUI 16 8, 3 Walkins IU). 16 9 330LH I Ande<lon (UI 40 7 2 W91·
k1n1 (U). 42 4 3 Bachman IV) 43 ~ 440 relay I Un-.. ly 44 8 '.lo
Mlle relay 1 ~IY 3294
HJ I M1rt11 (U) 5 10 2 e..cc:011 IUI s. a 3 Luciano 111 S-4
LJ I Stewttl (UI )(1 I 2 Her1<1n1111 19-3 3 Jen (UI 19.9
T J I Stawarl (UI 42.0 2 H•r"n• (II
4 1·2 3 Jen (UI. •O· I 1
PV I Hlldt fl). 17.0 2 Buck IUI 1 HI
3 Landry Ill I I 8
SP I Hill IUI 48 4 2 Stalely Ill 43-S
3 MllCl\ell (Ut 40 ·3
OT I Hiii IUI 145·2 2 Staleley (I)
126·5 3 l~ 111 I 15-S
Women
HIGH I CHOCM.
..._.... ts, WM1mlnt1er ZS
100 I Null (W), " 3, 220 I Null
(WI 28 s 440 I HellOfl (Ml I 05 0 880
-I Wllllller (Wt 2 26 4 Mlle I (lfaper
(MJ. S 511 0, 2-mlle 1 Drape r tMI
12 30 28, I IOLH I Nelbllng (Ml 20 0
330lH I Gullllaon IMI 5a l!i 440 relly
-1 Marone SJ 69 Mlle relay I Wnt-
rrwna1er 4 28 s. HJ I w w.,e1 (Ml. 4-1.
lJ 1 Am•y• (M), 14·5'1r T J -I VV
Ward (Ml 32·7'• SP I Wegetha IMI
27 ·4 OT 1 Wagttlla IMI 71-2
UNH<•lty "· ,,.._. 100 I ReQllta (UI I 1 A. 220 1 Re-
gaka (U) 26 I 440 I l • (II I 00 a 880
I s--(UI 2 24 6 Mile -I Bir·
riot IUI. S 30 0 2·mll• I Ptumar (UI
12 IS 8 I 10LH I l M (I) 15 I 330LH -
I ll9 (II 4& I, 440 relay I Unl-llly.
5 I 7 Mlle relay 1 Unl-llty. 4 10 4 HJ
I Hauc>. IUl 4°6 LJ I St,ele IUI I~ 8 SP I Oll•er IUI 31·S'• OT I
Oliver IUI 104..t
WCT toumefMt'lt
(et .... .,, HMd 1e1.-1, a .c .1
lee4llld AOUlld ........ Torn Cain def Jonn Sadri, 8·7. 1-3, 1-8.
Mark Edmondaon daf S1elan Slmon11on
11.4 2-6 7-6. AndrH Qomer del Roberi ven·1 HOI, M , 1-2, Car10t Klrmayr del JOM
OarCIL 8-2, 2-8. 8·2 Cllrlt L9Wls clef Tim
Wlllciaon. 6-3. 1 ·S. Edd .. Ectw .. 111 def Pal
OuPre 4-8. 8·2. 7-5, Va n Wlnllaky Oef
Marco Ottote 3.1. a.1 e-o
Gr.net Prf• toumem..,t
(•t Mldt1d)
lec...clll_......,....
Yannlck Noell 011 JOH ·loper M11eo
1-1 1-2. Henri Laconte clef "'.,, e111 Paqulef &·3, 2·1 6·2. Jot• Hl9uer11 Oel Tomei
Smid 8-3 M , Mitt Wlllndet def CIUio
Motta. 7·5. 8--4 Manuel Oran ... def 1111C:1
Tarocry, 1·2 6·0, Helnr Guntll•rdt del Cotr96o Blranum µ 8-4 •
Men'etou~t , .. ~ ... ,
Mlk• Et= H111k =r~ 8·3, 1·3,
Brian Golllrle<I rtel Jim llrown, 8-3, 8· t.
~otc:t SOiomon def Frllr Bua11n1ne. 0-1,
Women'•t~t (et~ .... , 9ecaftd "-'d ..,,....
M•rtln• N•••llllon dal Ballin• Bu~.
8-2, 3-4, 7..e: Mtma JIU-def DI.ill 11e4i
LM, 3-e, 1-1, 8·3, AndrM JMglf clef. Kt111y
Jord111. 8·4, 8·2. Bubara Pollet def. Sue
Batk9f, 1-3. 8-2. Liu Bonder def. L1ur• Afray•. 8-4, 8-2
Loa Alamltoe WIONllOAY'S MIUI.. Tl (51th o4 IO-ftltlll llar-_..,,,,
FlllST llACI. One mile P9Cle
G-•I 811-(Foley) I 20 4 C10 4 20
Bin Gle<IY•le (Gruntrl 22 40 13 00 1'911-1 Bay (llllOll) 11 80
Alto receo. Royal SIQnal, K•llln Jonn H• '.;:'.! Pine Halt SttU<n ColtabOfllll, Orar.oe
llma 2 01 316
12 llACTA (4-11) p.id Slit 80
•t c OHO llACI. One ...... lrOI
Or-St .. (0.--1 I I 20 3 80 3 40 No Bet l8alttargeon1 3 80 3 00 llorbon WNllc., (Co!>eiai\OJ 4 00
Alto racect. GellOn't Mfuy Top C.t HOiy
Cotd. o...t Ouclleas
T-2'0e 315
THllO II.ACE. One mile P1C1
Z9llldu 1s-n1 6 oo 3 80 3 oo
Alllltng (Campbeflf II 40 5 80
PrlCIOUI ChOtcl (S..n~ll 2 80 Alto ttieed H~t C l.Oy S1 .... a-·· Flrtt c. F1111 Glance
Time 2·06~. 12 UACTA 17·5) pllld 169 00
Foui.TH RACI . One tnlle lrOI Fab<ln (Perkln•I 22 40 10 60 5 60 e..1e Cotton• (M.ie.1 12 20 8 40 Denton (Sleelhl II 00
Alto raced· M""'"· S torm Meteenoer Smoi.y Roel. Major Markenjay Upper Crust
Fly1n9 Squad '
Time 2 04 116
f lA'H RACI. One mile pace
Mon119n0< Oele (SI-hi 4 80 4 00 3 00
Oulc:k L9rry (Grundy) 13 80 7 •O Howdy Scool (GrlQOfY) 3 40
Alto raeed Shemut R•lk Hume<o Uno
Andy'I Brenna, Mr Joe B. Whllk"'f Jim T1ma 2113~
12 IEllACT 4 (1·31 PllO S 102 00
llXTH RAC&. OM mite paca
Mk:neefa Tloer IStmrmn1 17 00 11 40 4 80
H~ Hero (Pltl<er) 5 00 4 20
Lynn a Eapr-(Oeaorne<J 4 60 Br Aleo raoec1: Lumber c11.,.....,, Mon1111y
.:-s.t Andr-. B;My For You, HowOy
Time 2:02 315 ..
..wWTH RACI . One ,.,,... Pace Artdf• Abe (Olaen) 7 80 3 80 2 80
HOI H kltl«ed (T 000 11 I 3 • 00 ;, llO Zi(>py Brl1 (HOIO 4 20
Alao raced R1sQue Lady Allwallnee Monterey. Ouelane T1m1 Laoy llHll• Cloudt>uei.r .
Time 21'2
12 UACTA t!.·21 P160$2080
12 l'tel( ant (5-7-4· 1· 1·51pa.cl'18 456 40
""'"one w4nNng 11C11e1 (II• llor-) S2 Po S•• consOlehon p•t<I $227 eo wllh 27 wtn-ntnQ loc;ketl (IMI llO<-)
EIGHTH RACE One mtle paca
Wenoto ICrognan) 8 20 4 00 3 20 Trlflely Tryu (Hyman) 3 60 3 40
F11r Truth (G•\Hldyl 4 00
-Aleo raoed. GolClllCO•etecl Bl1tney Way
GOiden C.,d, Dean 1 Stone
Time 2113••
12 EllACTA (3·21 p..O S26 80
..nM llACE. One mlle peu eon Blue (LongO) 11 40 4 oo 3 •o
Sledge Ham"* !K..-1 5 '0 5 80
Sultan Hanover IT odd) 3 8Q
Also raced Bryan. Cleat Hight, Dubiel A
Paf1•ng Ten Perc..nter. KIWl Betry
Ttme 2 02<,
12 UACTA 17-SI paid S69 80
TENTH RACE. One m•le pace
Big Spong (W11karnst 10 20 4 00 2 20
Maple Game (KU<:l>letl 3 20 2 40
M1n1~1er IRosenl 2 40
AISo 1 aced Podaroso Red Soil Ohva•
Win C1p111n Jam•• Armb10 J amel
l(n.Qlll s Honoui
Time: 2"02-415 12 UACTA (6-21 pllCI $211 60
Anenelanc» A 054
HaA L.aalera 111, lune ti
PHOCNIX -Adema 8, ROOlnlon e, K-.Y
15. 0 ~ 27, M-.;y 10. Scon 0. OIY19
15. ~ 11, Cook 2. Kr-2. 8tlelley o.
Oyk-2. Tolllt 43 12·14 91.
I.OS ANGU.IEI -RlrnbM 2, WNll• 19. Abdul.Jlbblr 24. E. Jollnaorl 19, Nl1ton 21,
Cooper 18, McAdoO 12, Bt-0, C. JoM•
aor1 2. LAndlb«get 0. McGee 2 Totlle· 62
13-15 117
a-..11y~ Phoenl1t 16 30 29 23-91
LOI A~ 18 28 35 28-117
Tllt .... polnl Q0111 -Hone. Foullel out -
Hone. Tot•l loul• -Pl'toenl• 18. Loe An·
gales 17 Tec:,,,,IClll -Phoenl• AMlllMI
Coach 8lanc:hl. Pl\oenlx Coedl Macleod.
N8A Dlarotts
COWUIEtKI IPWINALS
, ... to4S.-)
Weatenl CORl•-WedneedlJ'I ac.ee
llflera I I 7. Plloatll• 98 (liken 141ad
-2-01 s .. 111e 114, San AntonlO 1111 cs..-1iea
I II
Fl1daJ'• 0--
lalten II Phoerv•
Sealtte al San AnlonlO
'-"'"'~ ............ ._..
Phlladelphll 120 Mllweu k•• 108
(PlllllCMtpNI le.OJ --2.0)
• Wlllllftgton 103, eo.1on 10'2 tSarlae tied
1· I)
.. turdet'• 0-
eo.ton •• Wllellllloton Pl'lll~•tMlfwM•
COMMUNtTY COLl.IOE WOMEN occ,._,....._ ..
FUl.1.UITON -C•Me< 12, Hayea 20, Hit·
Cf\lnt 4, L91'1Mf 2. Wiiier 8. Dugan 7, KlllM
2 Totllt: 111 17· 19 6~. OflANoa COAIT -Effinger 12. C1t1otl
8. Matk 10, S•ocMken 2, Kr~ t8. Perkar
14, Berry 1• T041l1. 35 6a14 71.
H111t1Ma: Otanoe Cout, 42·'22.
T Otl l fOlllt. F'ullw1on 1:1. Onnge CoMf 19: Fouled out· Kroye< (OCC~
.... CONNM*lftNAl.1 ( .......... ,
C:...-.C•Alt-T~ ..... V--2.1.. 011i111ttO I (I 04, V~
IMda --l<VJ , ...............
VllllCCloMW •I~. 1:30 pm • .... c., ..... ,.,..... ....
HY tettnclt,. 4, Ollt ll>tO I (Htw Yo11t ttedll .... 1-0) T...._,.,_, ..
Ol-.c•HV ~
• >""·
,.t::our1a lllMll "' ,.,, .,.,_, 1•· 10 • . ,...
,i::911n• l t Mll Clef Coat• M•••· 11.i,
............ .... ,_.....11.,tl. ...... TI
'°°med~ telay-t !dllon. 1: .... t1. 2po ,,.. 1 Pettnon (E). 1:61 II; 2.
McCarthy (fVI, I 51 &r, :I lcl'l11IU (fll) 1.6212. •
fOOIM 1 T 8mllll IEI. 2.0UO; 2 8tnfly
('VI. 2 07.01, 3. ltlQlll cFV), 2:0t.Ot.
60 lrH-1 M Wan (FV), U .01: 2. Mii•
1"-' (fll. 2383. 3 Nornurl (FV), 23.M ,
Diving-1 Armour (FVl. 164 .. 5 poinll· 2
Goldstein (El. 162 70, a. Prior (f'V), 70.16~ .
100 nr-1 e. Sm«114e1. 54.34. :i. al!Mh.,
fF'I), 51 4t. 3 "°"""' (FV). ff.49 too lrM -1 Pe1eraor1 (fl. 5133: 2. No-mut• lf'VI, SI 11;_3. Mil~ (I). 52.14. 600 lrH-1 • 8 mllh (I!). 4.53.11; 2.
Bently (FVI. 6 03 02; 3 8c:l'llllU IM 8'°4.42.
100 back-1. 8rlgllt IFVI, 1 01.15. 2.
Fltller IE) 1 03 33. 3 AllOd (l!I. 1,o:i 53. 100 brH1l-I T Smith (l!j, 1.02.51; 2.
Hullllg (FV), 1 05 18 3 Young (F'I), 1-05.80
400 lree rel•y-I Fount••~ Valle~ 3 28 97 • ....,...,....
Hllllllf>eloa 9aecfl -0-View M 1 m2fl'ledley relay -1 HunlJOgCNI 9Mctl.
200 .... I FOiker (HB), I H .04, 2
Twelker IOVI. 2 04 ee· 3 Krlktey (HBI 2oeeo • ·
200 IM 1 Grtlhtl1 IHBI. 2 17 60. 2 ~~;gn (HS I 2 35 63, 3 WelH (H8J.
~ l•H I McGarrtgll (OVI. 23 90. 2
M-tOV) 23 82. 3 K-ney (HB). 24 43
100 fly I Petm•nller (HB). 69.81, 2
~ ~~o;se (HBI I 03 S4 3 H•n•on (HB),
100 ltff I Betro (HBJ 52 81, 2 Me·
Garrigh 1ov1 S3 06 3 Gr1111111 (HB). 53 40 500 ftoe t Parment ... (H8~ S·36 84 1
Mue41er IHBI. 6 04 59. no thltd •
100 back I lenote IHBI. 1 08 ea. 2 Hotton (HBI 1 12 117 3 WetH (HB), 1 14.8&
100 breul -1 F'olker (HBI. 1.0711, 2.
~~~r~~ey IHBI I 10 50 3 Meler (HBI,
~00 hee 1elay I Hun1tn9tOn Beuh. .) 36 00
Marine 90, WMtmlMtar 7•
1 ;~~ meOley relly I Wellmlnllar
200 "" 1 Pareon 1M1 1 ~S 18. 2 En-119n1 IMI I SS 62. 3 Odano (WI. 2 12 34
200 IM ' Hopk1n1 (M), 2 18 7', 2
Wilson (W) 2 17 29. 3 0.,. (8~ 2 24.59
50 lrM 1 Shuck (WI. 24 08, 2. Hayden
IWI 24 92 3 Ml1llf (M). 25 00
100 lly -1 Sm•lh (M). I 0151, 2 HQI>·
luns IM) I 03 14 3 lynch (Ml 1 0504 100 lree I Smolll (M). 53 80. 2 Sh<d
!WI SJ l4 3 lynch tM). 55 •I 500 lree I lynch (Ml. s 2 I 09 2 Day
tMI S3AM 3 Pllllr(M) SS340
100 oacti -I PatlOftl (M) n I 2 Ent!Qtll
(Ml nl 3 W"-(W) n t
100 bf..UI I W-(W) I 07 42 l
L)nch IMt I 11 12 3 P-1\an (WI. n I
400 Ir• rei.y -1 MWtna, n I
11'-'9 .... Coeta ..... 72 200 medley relmy I &lanc:la I 4A S
200 I•• 1 Sou1rvan IE). 1 50 3. 2 H~
ll9S 1CM1 I 53 4, 3 Ireland (El 1 54 1
2001M I Wet>aler tE) 2 05 O. 2 Prleicell
tCMI 2 07 3. 3 Be<g (El. 2 09 7
50 tree I B1lc:t1n9 (El. 22 8 2 Picken
tCMI '2 9 3 O.ei<a (El. 23 3
100 lly 1 Soulhr1n (El. S7 2. 2 CUI.ti<>
ICM1 t 0 I .2 3 Ireland !El. 611 4
100 lrH I Saruwll•rl (CMI. 50 0. 2
R'llQS IEI ~ 4 3 0.911• IE). 52 2
SOO tree I Su1llkoll (CM), 4 S4 9. 2 Web1ler !El 4 Ml 3. 3 Ptlll (CM), S oe 1
100 bacll I Po~l<ell tCMI. SS :l, 2 Betg IEI !19 3. 3 St-art (CMI 1 00 S
100 tHHll I S~in (El. 1 04 8, 2 RIQgs
IEI I 05 8. 3 Aanby (CM). 1 0611 400 lrM relay I Ellanctl. 3 24 6
Unl-reralty a . lrVIM 7J 400 medley 19f1y I UnlVerarty. I 48.38 200 hM I A>c'1 (II I 50 22. 2 CatllOfl
IVI I 50 4 I 3 Wllllbourne (UI. 1 S8 92
200tM t Ca<tson IUI 2 07 S2. 2 Mere·
O•lh 111 1 19 0 3 KMcl>net IUJ. 2 22 24 ~tree I 5cnw.,m (UI. 22 S •. 2 p_. II 23 64 J K•ngaman (t) 24 0 •
100 fly I Prender9UI tUI 54 2. 2 Bartlett (UI S8 4 3 WHllbourne IU)
t 00 &5 • 100 lrM I Schwarm (U), SO :;s 2 P•ce Ill SS 0 3 McCoy (UJ SS 83 '
SOO free t Roc:I\ fl) 5· 12114. 2 COHric:k
'"' S 40 19 3 Marelln ti). 5 42 94. 100 back-1 81111et1 (UI. 1 01 4 2 Ra-
nyn~e (II IOI 4 3 Wuhbourne IUI. 1·015
100 brHat -1 G•llrich IUI 1 03 0 ~ Tempi (II I 16 9 3 Marejjn (1). I 22 6
4()() tree telly I 1-. no lime
woei.N
F-lalft Y..., •Vt. tdla4MI 7'Vt
200 meell•r. relay I Founl•ln Valley.
2 0102 200 rM-I Schu!U (FV). 2 10 02.
200 1ndo medley -I Arm11ton9 (FVI 2 20 711 60 lrH I Clark (FV), 26 71,
Ooving I IC-(El. 237 05 poinll. 100 ny I Arm11rong (l'V), I 04 441. 100 lrae-1
Tt>eus (FVI SB 99. 500 lrM-1 Sch<llll (FV).. S 44 82, 100 t>ac:k-1 Clar~ (fV), 1.09 23,
100 brOHI 1 TlleUa lFV). 1 11.04; 400 Ir ..
relay I (Itel Founl• n 11•11ay •nd EOiton.
4 13 57,
1llarlN 1$, WMIMIMW • 200 medley relay -1 Marini. 2 08.03
200 Ir .. -I Affm (Ml. 2 06 82, 200 IM
1 Healey (Ml. 3'03 09; flO Ir• -1 9'ly (WI n I . O;ving -I Jile9 (Ml. 118 20, 100
ft• I Ream (M). I O'il 44, 100 Ir• -1
Qloria (W), S7 43. 500 ltM -I Sha11on
(WI 6 19 91 100 back -1 B.,rall (Ml.
1 18 3 I 100 b••UI -I Boehm fM),
I 11110 400 lrM relay -I w .. 1rnin11er.
n1
IE.._.. 11J. Coeta ..... 41
200 medley relay-1 E111nc11. 2.01 I .
200 lrM I Aver .. IEI. 2 07 5: 200IM-1
Crtam•n IE) ? 28 I , 50 lrM-1 Maddock
(El 26 0. 100 fly-I Cr-(El. 1-07 3. 100 lrH-1 Carpenter IEJ. 57.0. 500 lrM-I.
Maddock (El. s 30 I, too bid<-I Averll
(El I 08 3 100 bt-1-1 Gttry IE), 1.17 a 400 ,,.. retay-1 &lancil, 3 55.0 • .,...... ... .....,_.., .
400 medley r--I !Nine. 1:58 92. 200 lrH-1 RIClllll& (II. I 57 115, 2001M-1 Me><wooel (II. 2 13 28. $0 1rM-1 Rlcl'I (I)
27 81 100 fly-I Brown (U). 1«1 48. loO lrM-1 Sullle (II. 61 32. 500 Ir .. -I RI·
• c111t11 111. 5 09 ea. too blcll -1. Su111e 111,
1 OS 71: 100 br--1 Morwood (I). 1 tO '·
400 It• relay-1 lrvlne. no Orne.
,,
'I
. -AP W1repheto
REACHES TOP -Anne Macquarie, a ranger
at Yosemite National Park. tries out the boots
she wore in the Women's Himalayan Expedi-
tion. She was among four who reached the
summit of 22,494-foot Mount Arna Dablam in
Nepal.
Smoking hit
·by rabbis
KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (AP) -c.on.erva.
Uve rabbi.I repreeen=.~ million people have
W'pd Jew1 to qu.lt , 11ylna th• pracUce
thOuld be banned from pu lie plaoel.
The rabbia. at tbefr annuaf convendon1 became
the tint major Jewilh body to offidally aenounce
the habit.
Smokln& "11 proved danaerou. to health ln
violation of .Tewl1h law," the rJbbll nid, citln1
Deuteronomy 4:16, which 1111, 41Be very careful
about your llvs.''
Some Chrl1tlan 1roup1, 1uch a1 Southern
Baptiltl, have taken liril1lar posltlonl, but Wltil now
no Jewi1h group had do~e IO. Roman Catholic
bilhop 1Mt fall d.t.courapd mnoJcini.
The Rabbln1cal Amembly, repretentinc 1,200
Comervative rabbi.a .and 1.5 million members, de-
bated the 1-..e brilkly. A few rabl* who oppoeed
the raolution held pipe or clpn 1n hand.
"An anoken to have no more rlahtt?'' asked
Rabbi Selig Auerbach of Lake Plada, N.Y ., pro-
testing a .:tion advocating lePlation to ban smo-
king in publk placea.
Gesturing with his pipe, he added, "Smoking ll
a pleasure anCI. questiona of health lhould be left to
the individual."
Smokina "II dirty, harmful and anti-IOClal,"
said Rabbi Seymour Siegel of New York City'•
Jewish Theological Sem1nary of AJ'berica.
He said it abo is contrary to "a divine com-
mandment to pre.erve the health of your body and
spirit."
=~~. 1a·11y ..... udurivelt/ in thi ~I
....__-.. -·-.
HT
I -With The University Diet, you make no decisions about food -only
the commitment to follow our program and suooeed.
The University Diet is a protein-sparing.
modified fast that is clinically proven
and available onJy through licensed med·
ical offices.
Prescription supplements supply your
body's nutritional needs while unwanted fat
is burned off.
A Compleu ~· Unlike other pro-
grams, The University Diet includes a pre·
admission physical, preliminary ketogerUc
diet. fasting procedure, preecript.ion supple-
ments. regular lab tests, EKG's, refeeding.
behavioral counseling and maint.enance.
Medically Safe. You're under constant
supervision of physicians and weight-loss
specialists to protect your health.
Rapid Results. You can Jose an average
of 20 p0unds per month-every month -
until you reach your goal.
Exclusive Ket.ding and Maintenance.
You are re-introduced to food in a gradual
4·st.ep process and t.aught how to keep
weight off.
Individual Coun.9eling. Behavior modifi.
cat.ion and nutritional guidance are offered
to all patients by experts.
If you need to lose 20 pounds or more,
call our phone counselors for an appoint-
mentor infonnation. They're former patients.
They understand.
You1J find we cost less due to our sil.e
and experience. Your insurance may cover
it. And aft.er you complet.e The University
Diet. free counseling is available for the
rest of your life!
Call 1·800-432-8876, TuU Free. 8 AM
to 9 PM 7 days a week. Physician inqui·
rie8 welcome.
MasterCard and
Visa Attepted
COPYJUO llT 19fl2. UNIVERSITY
HEALTll CARE MANAGEMENT. INC
1lIE
UNIVERSITY DIEi:M
WHEN '1llJ'RE READV TO LOSE WEIGHT.
THE
PERFECT
'BLEND
OF MUSIC
24HOURS
ADAY
. ' •
Hett> Alpert
Johnny Mann
Manuel
Johnny Mathis
George Shearing
Chet Addna
Paul Robll l80n
Helen Reddy
Nannen Candler s.... & Crofts
Mlc:hll l.egrMd
Jll'9 Chor
Orange Coa1t DAil y PILOT /Thurlday, Aprll 29, 1082
, Tokai Bank will not only
take good care of your money,
we'll make It grow and
growl Our Individual
Retirement Accounts
(IRAs) are currently won 't be any
paying 16%" Interest, monthly maintenance
guaranteed for the fees for the 18 month
next 18 months!* term of your certificate.
And since IRA accounts That's a very good
are tax-sheltered, deal indeed.
the earned Interest is But there's still
tax-deferred. That's more. We will also
about as good an give you cuddly bears.
insured investment as •Current IRA rate 16°/o*. They'll watch over you
you 'll find. • FREE personal and let you know that
Our NOW checking checking account that everything's all right.
account lets you 5 r / o1 · .Just as everything's all
write checks and puts pays 114 10 mterest. right when your money
your money to work • FREE Bears. is growing and earning
earning interest. at Tokai Bank.
Many banks charge maintenance fees Call or drop in at the Tokai
for NOW accounts. But when you open office nearest you. And go home with
an IRA account for $500 or more, there new friends, and new financial security.
•Annual simple lnter"t • •SobStantial penalty for eerty withdrawal
Rates subject to change. This otter 1s good while supplies last.
Each dePo&•tor insured up to $100,000 Member FDIC.
•-· IDKAI BANK ~',, OF CALIFORNIA
NEWPORT BEACH OFF/Ce
3333 West Coast Highway• (714) 646-7121
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE
19006 Brookhurat Street• (714) 963·5651
Other offices
conveniently located m
Hermosa Besch, Plays de/
Rey, ln9lewood. Pasadena.
AJhamora, Temple City, Los
Angeles and Sen Francisco.
Fine quality ceramic tiles from around the world at wholesale pri ces!
2601 South Harbor Boulevard, Santa Ana. 540-0548
" •• Super savings on porcelain
mosaic tiles! These tiles are per-
fect for floors. counters. walls
and around the pool. J"x3" in
brown, white. gold.terra cotta
and some patterns. 4"x 4" in
white and gold. l"x 1" glazed
and unglazed. AJI on mesh-
backed sheets.
99e per 14. ft.
IZ'x12'9 Mexican unglazed
quany tiles are ideal for patio.
deck and entry. 'tbu won't see
tl1e5e tiles an)'Where else at this
low price.'" ...
l<Y'x l<Y' Italian quany tile.
Unglazed.™ adl
SPECIAL OFFER
This Italian 6"x6"
tile is an excellent
choice for cou nters.
floors and walls. They
are available in white. rustic
gold, brown and cream.
4 FREE dee• for every 10
94.ft.~at39e
eadt die! (4 pieces per sq. ft.)
·Esperago" from Spain. 6"x6"
Ooor and counter tile in white,
mottled brown and mottled
cream color1. a~ ...
( 4 pieces per sq. ft.)
Jttltw thll od't'nd ~ta frw
,,.,,,,.. grouJ lloaL chtaf
clollt and 35 ll l«k of grout
with a minimum S50 pun:/tati&
~·vc ~ot some ~reat ideas for
flo11rs and counters! AJI uf the
followin~ tiles can be set in her-
rin~hone and many other hrick·
ty~ rattems.
·Santa Rita" Italian 4"x8" floor
tiles in strikingly beautiful
oran~ and cobalt gl~es.
29e eadt (4.5 pieces per sq. ft.)
·wire Cuc 8"x 12" floor tile in
gold and brown: 89~ ucla
( 1.5 pieces per sq. ft.)
Japanese glazed stoneware.
2:wx9" floor. tile in dark brown.
golden brown and blue.
~~(6piecespersq. ft.)
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurtday, Aprll 29, 1982
'More sellers knockin'
Direct sales attractive i11 recession·
I •
By JOHN CUNND'P _._.........,..
NEW YORK -While the receaalon la 1hrln-
kln1 employment in moet industries It 11 addin1
worllen to the rolla of direct eelllna firms, nwle up
ot thOMt people who ring doorbeU. and throw aalee
partlea.
"We ba'Ye people who can do very well ln •
receulonary 1ituatlon," aald Charles E. Swan10n,
chairman of the Direct Selling Amodation.
; Same of them, he maintains, m1ght even earn
lix-filtW'e mcome..
Several years ago, according to aaociation fi-
gures, about 4 million people were involved ln di-
rect aala "It'• hard to estimate," aald SwaJ\IOn, "but 5
milllon now IOUnda like a true figure."
The filure expanda becau.e people loee their
regular jot», fear they will loee them, or have had
their houn cut back. Dlrect sales la easy to enter,
and eM'J to leave alao. And houn are flexible.
Some work "only a few houn a week and then
only when they can spare time from other activities.
Othera work almost all the time, day, night and
weekends.
"If you're will.lng to work, the rewards can be
great," says Swanaon, president of Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Inc.
Some work very hard. Industry sales are esti-
mated to be $9 billion a year.
Last year Kyu Jung Lee, a Korean immigrant
workiruz out of Falla ChurchJ. Va., earned $80,000,
making him the highest paid tsritann.ica salesman in
the United Stat.ea. But not in the world. A fellow in
Australia be.at him, selling more than 600 aeta at
roughly $1 .000 each, and earning as much as 26
, NEWS ANALYSIS .
~t pom axnmt..lon on etch ule. •
Such hl&h sales, neverthele., are amall com-
pared to the volume of 90IDe Aznway diltrlbuton of
hoUtehold productl and COIUM!tiC:. who, Swamon
says, may reach volumes ln the mllllona of dollan a
year.
At the other end of the pay ICale, IOl'Df! pan..
timel"ll who account for 90 percent of Industry em-
ployment, mJaht earn a few hundred dol.lan. A
good ulee party ln a private home mllht bring M1es
of $200 to ~$250, of which 16 percent to 20 percent
might go to the aalee penon.
>.. moe~le know, aales activities are per-
vasive. The tion estimate. that 76 percent of
U.S. home9 are contacted more than once.
The ability of sales people to irritate la well
known, but Swanson in.slats their ability to be of
service is also appreciated, regardless of jokes, car-
toons, and reports to the Better Business Bureau.
"The whole identity has changed a great deal."
Swanson claims. The old spiel of working your way
through college or conducting a survey la conside-
red pas1e now.
"We have done our share of that in the past, u
have moat companies, but moat companies h ave
abandoned it," he said.
Some braz.en practices of magazine salesmen
alao have become too well known. Buyers today are
usually more sophisticated than those of two de-
cades ago -more aware of deception, more aware
Qf their rights.
Knowing that the lady of the house was peek-•-•111111!11--------------•t Ing from behind the curtains but declining to
Constructioo .
av::=·at
·Heritage Bank.,
·~lal
. Commercial Buildings: ..
.nt1'eout COmm1fmmf ~ulred
along with leas«s.
c.on&act:
. Jdf Johnson
SOufh Orange Counfy/lrvlnt
714115M050
'
answer his knock, one oldtimer was accustomed to
walking off with the milk bottles, knowing the
ocrupant would instantly appear on the porch.
"Aha, there you are madam," he would intone
as he returned to the scene of hlS crime and began
his pitch.
4-1 R&D WRITE-OFF
Profits '°°" taxed ot long term . S50,oo0 GIVES
$200,000, '82 deduction or refund of '79, '80,
'81 taxes already paid. (714) 751-4824: Eves &
Wkends (714) 493-1153, (714) 552·7191
DID YOU KNOW:
You can own yow office space.
You can stop yow rent from &oinc IC>·
You can own the land -not lease.
AIRPORT WEST BUSINESS PARK
2A5 Flecher neer Red Hiii, C.M.
Call Mr. Davia 751-7400
Broker Cooperetlon
EXPO.
IT HISSOMRHING
FOR
ACCOUNTANTS
Grainger.
facility
slated
W.W. Gralncer, Inc., a
manufacturer and dlltrt-
butor of electrical equ.lp-
ment, haa purchased
three 8Cl'el in the 1rvlne
lndwitrial Complex-Ellt
for a HlH office and ~
warehoUl8 tacillty. ~
'Ibe Skokie, m., bMed •
company plana to 1tut •
corutructlon In Au1ust ·
on an Initial 30,000-':
square-foot building . •
which will eventually ;"
be expanded to 60,000 .~
square feet, according .~
to Paula Mathews aalea ~
1 manager In the i'rvine ;: I
Company Commercial/ .,
lndwitrial Division. ~! •
EXPANSION -Contract for internal construction of Rockwell Inter-
national 'a new facility (inset) in Newport Beach semiconductor proces-
sing plant is signed b y A.G. Lapierre, president of the firm's Electronic
Devices Division. Looking on are program manager Wayne Isles, left,
vice president Dan Sakett, second left, and George Morris, consultant
from U.S. Engineering, Inc., which won the contract.
W.W. Grainger, 1nc., ·:; i
which hu 16 wholesale • i
sales and warehouse ; j
operation.a in California, . •
manuf.actures and diltri-. !
butea electric motors, : i
heating and ventilating . j
equipment, lighting ·~:
equipment and power : :
tools. , :
The 1,200-acre indu-· l
stria! complex is on the ~ !
city of Irvin e's eastern ~. i
edge.
Rockwell eyes expansion
Rockwell International Corpo-
ration hat awarded a $3 million-
pl us contract to U.S. Enginee-
ring. Inc. of Loveland, Colo. for
an automated wafer fabrication
module within the Newport
Beach plant of its Electronic De-
vices Division.
The module is scheduled to
become operational in the fall. It
OVER THE COUNTER
MUTUAL FUND
will contain what officials call
tome of the moat advanced
eemkonductor processing equip-
ment available.
According to Al G. Lapierre,
divt.ion president. the module
could create approximately 300
jobs within the year.
Upon reaching full production,
the facility could employ nearly
500 in fabrication and testing
operations.
The facility is designed for
volume manufacture of high-
density microprocessor semicon-
ductors with a new Rockwell complementary-metal-oxide-.
i;emiconductor (CMOS) process.
~I • . . . ' . ' . . ·. i . ~ ' ..
'•' .. '' DCMNI 1~ =°:h l'ltt. .,
t \t-7 '·'
J\"I -.... t -\lo 't~ = 1.,. ;:: = ~
m -" -\lo -"' -\lo ,m _,_.. .... .... -"' l -\lo l -:: t -.... '•lt = 't
m -\lo -.. = ~
in .,.
fl. I~ I ~:, ·-3 ... -; ... .,. li ...
tJ 1.1 1.1 1.1 a 1.A 7.1 7.1 7.0
• ..
•
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
•vOTAflONi ·~"vo• t •aou ON, ... New YC>tUl, MIOWUt, 'A<ll•I(, , ••• eoifOte, 0•1•011 ANO C•NC•••an tTOC• lllC ........ ANO •l"C>tlTao .... TNI NA$0 ANO INUINU
u
" . ' Earnings decline
SAN ~CISCO (AP) -nu.ct
by a plunatna economy and ~
Interest ratea, BankAmerica Corp.
IUffeNd. Sl percent eem1no dip in
1981, but corpprate offlcTal• Hy
they're •t to .rep1n tbelr bet.nee.
'41n toup. competitive dme8, bu\ka
+ ~ -like bOxera -muat be lean and
" l~ht oo tbelr fe.t," uJd Pretldent ..... Simuel J. Anmilm&. who took over
.. , . the helm of the world'• ~ com-
mercial bank IMt y..-.
He told ....,~at the t.nk'•
umual mntfD1Tue.clQ_U..t1N1·
~ .. , ~ ... tiurt by .......... .....,
• tna.r.t ..._,... 11'm. •••wt -.................. , ' .. .....
. SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Dteao Gu & Electric
aay• tint-quarter profit• Increased 8! percent over
eaml!l81 ln the fint quarter of l.ut year.
Tfiomaa Page, pre8ident and chief executive offl.
cer of the utility company, made the annoul'MX'menC
Tuetday during the annual 1hareholden meetina.
Page said the profit increase wu due In part to
cott~tting effona within the company, and a general
rate 1.ncrease granted by the Public Utilities Cornmi.-
sion ln December.
'Slow time' challenging
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Keeping produ~tion llnes
moving during today'• "extraordinary slow" time9 ia
the major short-term challenge facing commercial
aircraft manufacturen, accordlng to the chainnan and
chief executive officer of McDonnell Douglu C.orp.
"Major airlines flnd themalves without the means
-and, in the ahort term 10metimes without the need
-for new aircraft we could expect them lO buy in
aubstantial quantJtiH in better times," Sanford N.
McDonnell said.
McDonnell told stockholders at the corporation's
annual meeting that civil aviation has gone through
periodic declines in the paat, and that he la optimistic
about an upturn.
Commerce chief speaks
Secretary of C.ommerce Malcolm Baldrige will be
the keynote speaker al the inauguration of the World
Trade Center of Orange County.
The $125 dinner will be held May 20 at the Dis-
neyland Hotel in Anaheim. The evening will com·
memorate locating the 29th and latest World Trade
Center at Warmington Plaza in Santa Ana.
For reservations, call 549-8151.
Computer for Italy
Aeritalia of Torino. Italy, ordered a Telefile T -85
computer system to modernize and expand it.a air
flight test iacility where special and general purpose
aircraft are tested and developed.
"The initial order exceeds $1.3 million," said Sa-
muel V. Edens, Telefile chairman. Delive ries are
acheduled to begin in November.
Telefile C.omputer Producu, Inc., headquartered
in lcvine, manufactures and markets minicomputers
and medium to large scale oomputer systems.
Bank leases Warmington site
Enterpri8e National Bank (in organization) enter·
ed into lease negotiatio~ for the bank's corporate
facility in the new Warmington Plaza office complex in
Santa Ana. near the John Wayne Airport.
Subject to approval by the Comptroller of the
Currency's office, the bank intends to occupy approxi-
mately 11,000 square feet of ground floor space in one
of the twin nine~stt>ry buildings under construction at
200 F..ast Sandpointe.
Fullerton firm dips
Wynn'• International. Inc. of Fullerton had net in-
come of $1 ,0M,000, or 30 cents a share, for the first
quarter ended March 31, u compared with $2,490,000
or 68 oenta for the comparable quarter a year earlier.
Sales were $48.5 mllllon vs. $48.4 million.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HIW W* :'ilKl<NI~_.. NEW YO~K !AP.I.; Selot. w,:.r·.c. ~· fJt.-ti. ~, 5ti~ i 1111aa
_._ ....................... 1 "' ···~ ::ii. .:· .......... :· -. . 1 •
Tg WHAT STOCKS DID
• l4t
I ~ NEW "°"It CA~I "-'· •
AMERICAN LEADERS ~
NEW YOAK lliPI • S-. Wed PfQ ~ "l:r=-e--r-...e1100
~,' .. , ~ '.'.... NEW "°"" CAP! "-'· • . i fi I ii 5 ~ l •
UPS AND DOWNS n~.:s!f.:ti if.t:~:p:-:
METALS
SILVER w~ . fti
+ I +
ii
H•"dY I H•r111M1, S1. '" P4lf lroy ownc..
GOLD QUITATilllS
l'= .i
-M•ll-w~w Ol'I~~ .... .. , .. _
----~ l wMrNltMOOW
ntl&IUdCINI
eHAWM~ l ••••i~ \llllUdi~
~19tAW»A IN==~· .., ...
lllllMI *. N*1" (111'ft Jolln
......... TOlfllro .....
NW h "°"*"8 al~
Hmrtlor, '°"'*" c..or-........ _,~ P91••111 ....... ~
...... to-of• ........... "'"'* OWft ......,_.., 'N '
... AU.•THl,N&Y
•.• ilLATWl'TH
ca.sq Nl I !18 I ·--·~ .....
MMIY .....
(Jl)NCJ .... ~
~-CMW.,e
Nof9Wn -.... to .,..
--,... wrteory _, ~ .... .,..'° .. Soulfl'• lllPPfY ..,., (Pwt •
&~THON
A OClfMdlefl ._. eftd tow
OOfnlc ~ ...,
compete 99elnet one
~-~ln-Ulalieor"ed oomedy OWN
"'°"· r•1<mNIWI .c ....
"""""Dll"t8 MAIN
I ::'* ... ,. .•. "
Frri --In .. -~ oMoer on/It to
'-•--CICM*lted ,,,., .......
I JOKalr8 MU>
0¥9'M8Y
<Milt: ~ Prtoe. (A)
i MAM: Oii OIL
l'AINTING Cll I' ..M. MMAZINI
An ....... -*-...... ~~ ofa*'lto._.....,,
..... ofc::Nlw.. 9 IN1'9fM .. IT
TOM8HT
.THI......,.
au.et: ~ Lant-
'-'-(J:)MCMI * * "Cllltle ,.,... Ntd IJl.. ........... 1•1> 9urt .
UncMeer, l'od .......
T-l'O'l"I orpfl9w .._..
up """ • Ol"I of ...... led by ........ oull9w.
'PO'
CD)MCMI *** "A F90e In Tiie
Ctowd'' ( 1N7) Andy Gnl-
lttll.,... Neel. A .....
let ... .._ .... Oii tD
nei11aM11ec 1u,.,, °" .. ..... of .. ...__, . ""'** telent. Cl) WHA1"1 UP 'Yi DC.Al
~·kldl•punc111ra fOf anll'llale;
blacll "-tcMe wtlo
,,..,... ~end
.oodoo; • .,,... of._... .......... (%) fllWfTOM NM
~-TM~ India"...._ .. ,,...
of ......, cMllilllon 11111
.. ~ In .. "'°°" emwwtd. 7:IO. I OM THI TOWM
F..u.t: ..... --°' the ...... ~tor·•
Ing In • -boott. ''The w-·• a.. To Tiie £11111* ....... Of Loe
~"; ..._, . .,..
_...... • UClA; • loc* • "°''' n•-. • NIWMll fll .,,...... In Tiie 1lww ii=..,...,
** * "Eartt1Q11alla"
AWARDS BOST -Mickey Gilley la a
h09t on the "~emy of Cowltry Mulic
Awards .. tonight at 9 on KNBC (4).
,,.,. .. , awtton ..........
AV9 o.dfler, Loe~
...... ~bytwo..... .,... ..........
IW¥OO Oft boll .. ~
... end .. """"' • IYIOML.A.
,....,,..: • NPCWt on ._
.......... hot tub --• ~wflo .... 0.-.
,... ..-i dr\11 p1:Uac1&4
• ooupll9 wflo -• '°""' ._,
• M•A•t•H l(lllglr _, , ... .....
Ollll't .. .... !Me to ,._.,...,..,.,...... .....,... .,_. ~
boneed out ldlool.
I (I) TIC TACaa..t
~I~
~
I :-.. '°"" ~·~At
Tiie O.ll Comr' end ''The
AINIW le An ,..,,._., ...
(B)THl~DM'TM
""'"' ~ fllC* ~ le9dlnf to tM
~. 19'4,dellillof
............. ln:ln "°"'"
mel -,..... ""°""" ,_...,..., ....
....,... end S*90Nll '-
tlr"°"Y by AolcwMll'• eon
...... end .....
o.MlnM;. ... (I) ....... ,.L
........,. .-dlM '°' •
-wttO ......... .., ..... .... "'°""" • cllannel trellltlonelly
,_..., .. "cuwd.'' O') •• ,Mm
o.wiy ...... '° .... _..., eo 1'9l l.aD(• "'°"* _.. _._ ....... end ..... .....................
enddlowie. • 8 NOeoNI, Mme>
Aoglf .............. -"-•'• .._.... ...... 1n • ..,.. ... _.... ........
•THlwtaiMfOI
..... DGIM TM,._...., .. _,._
lngol .. --~ Oorte--**I. . , .........
An .,.,.,. ""' ...... ...,__ Ha1l9)': ~
at • *" to .........
AliplMc of CNlw..
• A WOMM CALL.ID
80lM ....,..,..,,_ ...... ... "°" °' a... ..... .. ,,_ .. ...,. ... In
... *•IO IW tr'-..................
,,.. ......... fep-
tlM l'realcMm Anwet
....... ~1)
•L.Mfetwa MMm .................
... ...,._.. problMI ... ..................... end,,...at ....
• WflMVllWll
Aoglf Ebert end .... ...,,... .........
and ··1won1 And Tiie aon..."
(Jl)MCMI
.... ''The LaM a.-•· ''"'' i......,., aw Mell..-ce. In • wortd "' ... ~ . ..._,...
-*""-··~ ~ ............ '°"'"''*"'• p.wwwlpk:• of Mein DUii 'N '
(l)fltOV9 *** "Al TMI ~
(1t7t) "°>' ....... --.. Unfe. TM ._....,_
-.. at • p1 t la Ill dlol ...... ...... "°"' ..... Ofl .. ..... to pereon9 OliMa. .... .JO(JJgf A.,..,.._ __ loc*
........... ,...r.r
........ c.u..i. ,,...,.., v...-end "°" Turooete.
(J)MCMI *. * ''The car-"'*"" ("71) ~ TnMl&ut,
I .......... ,... ........ ._.. .... _,
of .. elm..,.,_ '°"" • ... ata....._ 'N ' ......... ...,,
Mottl --Or90ft • NPCWt ..... to...,......,
ftWTted on f.91fl.
• A&.L .. TMl,N&Y
... f006-bJe tD ... end Olone .,...,,.. ..., ..... '°'.__ .. In
Celb'ftla PfO¥M tralJMI• .. ,.,, ........... •w,..,,•• "°9er Ebert end 0.. ...,,... .. ~ ..
end "&word And TM
lorcerer."
.~ ..
l'MTB.a • .._ lfladow'' ..... ()) .........
A,J. 8lld Aidt heed -th o4
ti!• border to llnd the
deugllter of • San 0 199•
~-. • • ACMBff Oii
COUNl'RY...C
AWNDa
Tiie 17"' .,,,_, .... of
.,_ --. """*tno
• n www 1n t11e --*Y ....................... "°"' l<noft'• 8er'Y ,_
-Loe Anglllle; ....,.
OIR9)'. ~~end Dottle .... _....._
•• ......,111&&.8' c
·--~ INCIM. • .-v_...
<Milt: ....... H9111er. • _...,UNO
W• ~· ,,_ aecllenbeuer. wld•ly
regarded aa eocoer'e ....... ~ ... .. ~
• llMlt81 UI THIA.TM
"LAM In A Cdd Cln.-
H*~"TllefctOllt.
..... --.. Mir, Cedltc: ~ ..... ,_
.......... _,_.,..In
..... ,,.. low. (flwt I)
fe,MCMI
·~· ''The~ Of TM --.,. .._. .. ("90>
Mn Arnott, Gorllon
~.Tlle ........ of•
group fll oallge ........
~In .. protMt ,,.,_. _.,. durlftO tM ...
--far • ..and reunion.. ....
CD)MCMI ** "TM "'* CGNlot'' (tttf) ...............
..... In .. "*" "" °' ''T119°"'9ft" ...... ,....
Dllll6en. .. 111119! a.._ ..
tJA Ille Anllllwt&t. • now .. ........ WMed ....
tDtlle,,.......ofhU,I . w
• MOVm
CHAlllL LISTINGS-
••~ "Nlglltllawtla"
('911).,..... ........
_,. 0.-. A'°""' .... Yen Ole)' oop ,_NI
• KNXT (CBSI
8 KNllC (NBC)
• KTLA <Ind.)
.KAIC <ABC)
e KFM8 (CBS> e KHJ~TV (Ind.I
• KCST (ABC)
•KTIV (lnd.) : e KCOP·TV (Ind.)
• l(~ET (PBS)
•KOCE <NS>
'( .
<OJ On-TV
<ZJ Z·TV
Oil HBO
(CJ (CIMf'N•I
(J} <WOAI NY., N.Y.
GB <WTBSI
(I) IESPH>
<1> ·~•me>
• Stlof llttlt
• (CMlte ..... Networtl)
·'@olda':
WOltl out Giil -""" .._ .. "' .......... lllOll
den.-.ov• terrOfl•t•
..... i.. ... ., ••
1111•9TAJI Tiie ....... ,.. .. _. ...... ... .................
.._. .......... (flwt
iR. #80Dlllll ..,.. ..................... _...,...._..,_.. _ ............ .. ......... illl•• ... .
................ -:.a. .. f. ... ,. .. Of~
,,.., Ala! ..... .... ....... ,. ..... "'_ ................... .................... ................ .. .., . .._~ -·Cl) ..,,...,.we:. ... .. ,,.., ......... .... .............. ~. ... "'-" ....... . ... ......,_, ....... .
l,wr.-.,.
T01"llMMIR ....
~,...,., ,_ ---,.... ..... .................. ....,_ ...... _,,, ...... (JI)~ •••• "Gift" ,, ... ,
...... c::Mwllllr. Lalli
Cenlft. A~ ... ...... r.r .......... ....................
lwo.-to.-..a..-.. 10lll(I)~ ',..........._..,..
-1~
.......... to .... ..,IMo._ .. _...,. ......... -.. .... ·-·Ml"' .... ... ....... '°"*-· -~ "':af11r'a ..i1u ..,.....
(l)fltOV9 .... .....,.a.a ...
.... Jo ......... C.S...
Cemf>. A )OurnelMI ,,.,
....,... ....... of.
coflega cllHrle•dlng
equed to npoee tM
e11plo1tat1on of 1111
"-
1 'fl. by ... '°°'" MIMMl. 'A' 11••••C11•• .... ·IA~Y~
Hoet: "tcllard l'ryor.
~QI.Scott Henln.
•vou--~rr ~" .... CeldWOf
Tdl)lo" end .,,_.. Tell ,...., ..
.... A .. •H
Wllel't ,,.,. ...... to
lene, Hawk•)'• end T,..,._ 1nc1 It --..
.,.. duty tor --end .._.. • ..,. '° "*-'*' ...,. .
• .....,HLL
8Mny .,._. • tMlby --w11o-·t .............
I DICK CAWTT
THI LMWllUICW
CorrHpondefll• Linde
Wert....,_. and Coale
Aober'9 Join .... Duka for
an .,.........,.. -
1M1Y of Co191lll1Mll
accMlee.
(J:)MCMI
*** ...... A/ltd """'" (tNt) ,..._ ...._,
o.aar w..,.. "' ~
Wortd W• • Fnnoe, •
---)'OUfll ~ io-two men wttO -de-. ..... end ,...
tD .... 141 .... -. CD)MCMI * * .. ..._. At Oenltlf .... (1'71),,,.... ... _.., "°'*'~A
cr11Hd• tor re¥en,.
beglill .... "'" ... ........ _puled_ .... .......,......,...,, "°"" of boNd ...... eclflOOI ...........
.MCMI ···~ . .,... ........ (ttl1) 0.. Wallace, ,.,. ....... ,.W"'6W9
NPOl'W .. 1...-d by •
lckwtlo-tobe• ........ .,.. 11:IOI (I) GUICY .lOM9ff
Hoel: JoftMy Careon.
Gllele; ..........
•• MC ....
...mM .KOMK
~ ...... ........ .., ............ .. ..,. .. ,__ ....
•THl&:samm
.IAl&BMOD
·-ISIATWl'TH
Cl.ST9 Nl I iii -~MC -(J)fltOV9 ••'41 NA ,_ Of Or#'
( ttnt a.-Narrtl. .-.
... O'Nlll. A ~ ti .. _... .. ........
on • ,...,. ........ ... _.tor ....... al ...
...... ~·lllQ•
1•(Jl)MCMI **'41 ........ '""" .... Yorti" ('910 Kurt ........
Mn.tine ........ !ft
1111 •• .....-~ .. ~ ........ ..
_N911119 .. ......
olllWU.&."-.. ....... ........... , ... .._.... ....
,. .....;.;.;......, ..;..;.....:
\, . .. ... '
-·~ .... " TOl•fT "" .............. ...... . .....
A ....... -... .,_DMT ... lllW .. _.,., ... ..._ ...... ; ..
......... Of ..... , ........... a...a...
KNXT (2) 8:00 -''M.pum, P.l." Mla-
num eean:hel for a IMft who hu cliMP-
peartd while aallml .
°KCOP ~00 -"A Woman C•lletl
OoldL" ~ ~ tn the .-y of Go1da ; ~(Part I) ... .-y,
below.
KNXT (2). 9:00 -"Simon• Simon."
A.J . and Rick 10 to .Mexko to flnd the
dau1hter of a San Dieao new1ea1ter,
played by Peter Gravee. '
KNBC (4) 9:00 -"Aadena~C-ountry 'Mulic Awardl." Mickey , Conway
Twi~ and Dottie Wmt bomt from
Knott I Berry J'ann. See photo. left.
....C*tlr ............ ............. """"' .......... °'~
~~
• flOCX'8 OM IOC9TY
teOl(l)MOVm
••• "011 ... M And
CMftl't N41•1 lilcMe"
(*O) ........ "Cllladl"
Menn. Tiloftla ce.e.
Two potllHdl "'" ~---....... .......... ,....... ..
....... at Loe Mfllle In
.... "' .. "perfl&d ~ ......
11:11 e eLAl'W ..-.r wm4
DAVID Lil IC OUM
~ OAllllli ........
LAweL 1:::-** "TM Tll W-U" ,,...,,,,_...,, ....
~. 'Glowllle .. ~ ... ..._.. ..... .... """' ......... .. .... °' ....... .
.... pertou9 ..... ..... ........ ·=-......._._ ,..u .... ·•·
Alt •'11..-... ..... _.,.. . .,...... ..
llftOOW99 • murder _, •
trtMd of .. Uat81 • ............... ("1
(J:)MCMI
••• ~Trtdl ,,_,,.
(ttlO) ..... llMM. ..
er--. A~P91--.. .,,_.. ..,
~ _.., """ .. ..... ..,.. .......... ......... .,. ....
llMI Mdl IO 1119-40. 'W
1*»• MCMI **'41 •~N (1940)
Dor°"6)' l.Mlour, "°'*' "'-'°"-,.,.... .... ... ,.,, ......... ..
llnd of ......... ...
11641¢11:1Mlle,.., .MCMI
•• "Duo•-1r (1'14)
WSPet11 Ceq l 11, 1-
AIM9erl. A P9Jd4 1111• -...eo .. _.yf/11 .......... ,, ... , tor ...... _ ....... .. ...... ..... .llllCMI * •'41 "Out Of ._..
( 1t71} CM ":9! 11Mft, v._ ......,.._ ON
~ ........... ...__...,,......,. ........ ,, .. , ......
.-ort.
1:•• MOlllll ··~....,...'--DI.-Of ..... f.wtll" {1f71t
I t:•!=-CH;W
OMTMI ..... -._!:=-
•• "Goollbye.
""'-""""' ("11).,..... ICltMlll, UIMlerto OiWll. A ....................
tor .......... .....
... .......... tD.
~I S L1' I t:.«> ® ~ •• ~· ""*"' (1tt1) ... ~Mac
Ktln'-. nw.. ....., .....................
red ... enid llM _,
o1-.,11i&&.•f11Q'
1:AI (I) lllllMI ........ ,.,,. ,,..., ....... ~ ......
K~. nw .. ,....._ ..._ ......... ,_
•
~ ,.......... -
.~···· ..... ,, ... --••Cl>••• "Ollcaodl'' ("11) Geoff9 ...... Jofw\
0.-. God...._ en
-6 ··~ ..... _...._....,IO.,._ ........ ""°" .... ... .. IO .. ~
~ of .. lftOdem..dey
w.td.'PG' .. CJ:)•• ........ V"*'f' A
.... fll ,.,,.....,. try to
..... old -"'"' • .......... ""° • ....,,.
(£:· ••. .,..,,... ..
(ttlt) 90fte Kertoff, Tim
~. An .... llcw1or-......... '° ,_ ..... ....,,....,_..., .
~McMe .....
Nt(IZ). * "o.tton ~· (1t71) Cllnt Howerd.
a.... --........ A ... -........ .... Ml """' a ,.,.,... Mnd IO _,.... ..... lllllloof'• rs..,......_..
(JI) •• * ''The Ilg "9d OM'' (1"0) LM M&Mn,
Mertl *'6llR. A'°""' Almy ........... four )'Ollnl.
II 141 ti aid~ Into IN ... _ .... Irey of
Wortd W• 11 -.Mt. 'PG'
(I) ...... ·-n. Odd
~ff (ttlt) Jedi Lam-
rnofl, W...., ~Two ._...._ .... ~_
1ng ,.._,.....decide 10
....... ..,.nn.111n .....
Yen at)'.
7:41 Cl) • * .. ,..... .. (1tt0) '•vi MICllMI o•-. "'-' ...... A group flf
,,.,,.., .,.....,.. -wu-dllred llOOOI dll'9 •• .,..,
~ .........
..... ~ .. Any.......,
CM "91'' (1 .. t) CWtl
GIMe. ,.... """"· ,.,, ..... end ~ tam-
............... wl1h.
--of tr ......
... •••"TMl4ar'11c*.er"
C '"°') JofWI Wll)'M, V-...._ A '°"911 OOWtlo)'
~lzee a group of ,......,. to round up •
1!'19 -°'*'"· ~ ••• "Outlew--" (tt77) ,...., ,--., !MM
.... ...,__ Wflef'I •
eoufltty-..tern elnsr-
..... Ille eong. en e11-oon
trl•• deaperetely to
retrle\le Ill• recording
..,... .... lleMng ..
palOe.'PG'
Cl) *. ~ ''TM ..... Wtlo
1.0¥e11 Womet1" (1171)
~ Dennet. Laelle c.r-.. Dhcted .,, ~
OGie TN111911t. A -le eo ---..... ....,.,. __ ....... "~ ...................... .... 9lflJ......,.,,...... ....... "' -® •• "llM*ale"(tllO)
Dlotl ~ Unde ....
A .... , ... ..,..,._
.......... ,...at •
_.. ........ ._ •• lllQ'
(I) * • * "I'll Cly TOll'IOf-,.,... (1916) ..... ...,_
..,,, .. ldlatct Coftt• .
-.... LlmM "°"' *'9' ..... ---. .. and •
~C*'eer. tt•• ···~·'Mo1911'11o" (1N4) a.ti Gellle. ,..,.
Cler*'6'. Wllel't • .........
... ----.... In ..,__ ........ .,. ....
nes,aontlc'9.,....
tt9(C)•• .. -.-°" Tiie...., ..,. .. (1179) ...... ........ ,.four. --....,. °' ... ,.....,. eftd """' ....
s
Oflft09 0-.. DAILY PILOT /Thunday, Aprte 29, 1N2
12 MONTHS OR 15,000 Mll E8:-OR -24 MONTH& OR 24,000 MILl 8 OPTIONAL SERVICE CONTRACT .
AVAILABLE ON MOST USED CARS & TRUCKS AT WILSON FORD
6 cyllnder, tilt wheel, lug. rack
Lie. #815PKI
HORIZON
H
4 door, 4 speed, radio, aJr conditioning
Lie. #546YHF
Coupe, automatic transmission, air
conditioning. Lie. #1CAW152
TRUCKI wmt HARD TO PINO OPT10NI
WIW OOT •M
IUPEI CAaa • 4JIA • M ONCOI
• LOAMD • l~PID • TOW PACKAGel
IT'I LOADED
,
'19 CHEVROLET
MONZA
2 dr., auto, air, pwr. atr., radio. Uc.
#278YZB.
$
'81 FORD
FAIRMONT
'80 FORD
FAIRMONT GHIA
V8, 4 dr., stereo, AM/FM, auto
trans. Lie. #890ZEO.
'81 FORD
MUSTANG
V8, 4 dr., pwr. wtnd., radio, pwr. 2 dr., 4 cyl., pwr. brt<., stereo,
br., 2,562 ml. Lie. # 1CNF620. pd., 11,094 ml. Lie. # 1CHH273.
Dresel,
loaded.
1981 FAIRMONT
2 DOOR 81DAN
2 door, 4 cylfnder, radio, st ick
Lie. #886WRO
4 cylf nder, stereo tape, air conditioning
Lie. # 1 L43246
Sunroo , a r con t onlng, power
steering, turbo 4 cylinder, 4 speed
Lie. #637ZA Y
• ~11TlJI T ...............
lt'• unknown at thle
, Wr\t!9& w~ Oover-w · BtoWn wtlf ~k the :~ 8Mch Play·
..--for eq-. time, but
9"ttle anUwat vtew1 of
. Sep•t~ candld~ie Gore • Vidal Ne belna expoun--.ded there In. tlMl form of
• Ytdal'I three-det'ade-old
~ "Vlslf tO a Small
fJaneL" • The "'1QA11 ,Janet" la
~OW' own. and the vi&itor
I •
PutmanHque new-
acuter a blt more foolllh
than the role la written,
whtle N"atlel Anderaen
comea off equally va-
cuous as his wife an~
Stephanie Erixon Jacka
c haracter as their
daughter. E.L. Cousins la
acceptable as her bump-
kin boyfriend. while ... , ~TOAllMU~
A CO!Mdy• lly Gore Vldll. directed lly /.ft )Vin~. produ-~ 9y Au Dey, llege mlNQW OMnll 9111dlw.I, technlcal di· rMtot• Katen ~ 1nd John IJMw, Jound 1nd llQhtlng by
Todd StrlUC>, ~led Frida~ IN! I~ at t:IO tllfovgll
I M1y 22 11 th• Huntington 8HCh PlayhOUH, Main StrMt II
• ' VOl'ktown Avenu•. Huntington Beech. ~.-v•li>f\' 847-448~. THI CAIT
Kretc11 .. ... ........... •. . ..... w..,,.,. Me~ry
• 8eMr81 Tom P-. ............... ..... ... ...... MlctlMI AquNe
, " 1'GQlr Speldlne .•••... . .. ............ -............................ Jofln Shaw , , Re6a Speldlng •.......... ...................... .......... Nanci Anderson " 'Ellen Speldlng ......... .... ........ ......... .. .. SllPhanle Erlaoo Conrad Mayberry ... . . ... ....... ............... .... . E l Cousin•
Afde ... . . . . .. . .. .. ... ... ... RIClt OOI o.itClft 4/SP ..........• ....... ..... .. Xlornerl Suro
TV lchnldent ......................... NlnCM Coopw, 01ve Wotlt
AoNmaty ..................... • ........................................ RulJY
the 1ix-week worklhop
offert a eholct of pro1-
rama lb acUnc '°" •tace and camera or mu1lcal
~onn' -·'Aut ... ,:,. 0 ...._a... theater lkllla, and runt
..., -tf'i ,,_ .__ tto• J\.lly 6 throu1h
Vlmltory..:._ t!ru.J~~ Au1. '13 •.. call the ddlt.-.,ed uuvr-.ic1 Moulton at 4~·07•3 for and a young female further detalla.
aculptor. Mutln Benaon • Re•4in~t for ~be
will direct. melodrama 'The Dtun-
SCR'1 Stteo'1d Stage kard'' will be held Mon-
came ln for 1ome high day at•7:30 at the Weat-
laurela recently when mlnater'Communhy
the Loa aelea Drama Theater, 7272 Maple St., Cri~~ Cir e be1tob.lwed Weatmlr11\el' .. , dJrec-
118 'oµta in& ac ev~ tor Nicbael Aql.Ola will
men\ lb theater in 1981' need• 15 mep ~fld five
awari:I on the db~ women• fn various age playhouse. The Second ranges.
Stage waa cited for Auditions for the ae-
"fostering the produetion cond year of the San of oew plays and of ad-C l e me n t e, S um in er
venturou• plays.new to Theater will be held
the WestC.out." • May 15 and 16 ·in the * Triton CeMer ,at San
~=-~-r:r 1 :00 3: 10 1:20 '7:.0 t i& In 70MMI
CINE fl IOUND• Ou•I 10 .... , '"' 1.d10 O• 111'111l. * "'°"' b•tltrY -·"'" ........... •Oli•o• TUNl 10 a:n
Doultle TerrOfl ·~auu Graduation O•v CAI
·~· Murray 'r I ••1R • The OrOOft Tube 110
Julie Arwhwt In YIC'IOll YICTOlllA IPOI P1ttOnal'-tlAI
; is a goofy alien with'un-
earth l y powers who
thinks it would be "fun"
io watch a nuclear war.
Cyril Ritchard created
the title role on Broad·
way, but at Huntington's
lt'S played closer to the
riiovle's Jerry Lewis -
'whlcb helps to jazz up
director Art Winslow's
-otherwise Inert produc-
tiQn.
CALL 1ro A'fl D -Clemente High School
Interviews for the Sum-. . . director Bill Gekas
m e r P e r f o r m a n c e will cast t~ productions
Workshop at the Laguna of "Oklahoma'' and "The
Moulton Playhouse are Boy Friend" at the
now being held for stu-tryouts, scheduled for 2
Rick ~ill 1s genuinely _d~e~n~ts~1;7~a~n~d~o~l~~~r~·~·~·~P~·~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ funny as Aquila's trem---,
Wayne Mayberry un-
leashes some high comic
energy· in the central
role, eschewing satiric
subtlety for frenzied
characterii.ation. He and
Michael Aquila as the
blockheaded general in-
~~ng the UFO are the of the cast, both
reapin'g bountiful reac-
tion. Donn Shaw plays. the
l'O Jl -Mick liagger
of the Rolling Stones
h11$'announced the ~p will tour Europe
for the first time in six
')'s;ars.
~Evil Sun'
. l~w-key
~ • f mystery
'
bUng aide.
Bramwell Yo ung 's
t echnical effec ts a re
splendidly executed,
more so than much of
the show itself. "Visit to
a Small Planet" conti-
nues Fridays and Satur-
days through May 22 al
the Seacliff Village
playhouse, Main Street
at Yorktown Avenue,
Huntington Beach.
SOUTH COAST Re-
pertory has announced a
change in Its final pro-
duction of the season on
the Second Stage. Terri
Wagner's romantic
drama "The Man Who
Could See Thro ugh
Time" will replace "Of
the Fields, Lately." run-
ning June 2-20.
The new show, set in a
The oddest team·0n the squad
and the funniest cc>ps in America. ·
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS
AN AARON RUSSO PRODUCTION
RYAN O'NEAL ·JOHN H.JRT · PARTNERS
KENNETH McMILLAN ·ROBYN DOUGLASS
Executive Prod.Jeer FRANCIS VEBER
Written by FRANCS VEBER
Produced by AARON RUSSO
lj{-l -·-•• Directed by JAMES BUR~ .,,.. · _."_,_.... . .. ..
-"-• -· Mii!!!__ A Paramount Picture: / : ec.,.r.,,.• wc..w...•~'•"f...,....,.,,.'°ltv .. GorOO'~ .,.....,.,.....,... • -...:_ • •
STARTS TOMORROW
•BARGAIN MATIN81!S •
Monday tflru S.twday
All PertormancH Mfort 5:00 PM
(E•• .... Ent11t111111t1 tllCI ~)
-"9CTUM cw'"'.,...,, "CHAlllC>Ta Of l'N" !NI ...., ___ _
LAKEWOOD
CENTEQ WAL K IN
"tom KlND Of' HPO• '"l ._ ____ , ....
... YOU COULD ID
WMATf ....... (N)
t:tl.l:lt,UI, .. ..
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAI~ IN
... YOUCOUUI ...
WMAT I HEM'" (PQI · ____ ... "-'
.. Ol.41T POii l'N" 1111 --..... ..-. ... ,._,_
Foc1111y 01 Conotewooo
213/131•9110
-~--I ••T~--... "OM OOlomf POeO' CN1 "CHA.MOTS Of' ..... -----'"' _____ _ I
Ol ltoodwoY
-
lo11t11Coot1Htwoy )
~ 414-1514
IUT l'IClWI .. TMI ftAll "CHA91GTI Of' ,_. 4"I .._,,..._
M T,.. --"" -,
A ,_.Al!l tM
ANAHEIM ORIV E·IN
'-"otw-s•
•IT OfMCTOtl AND "'"'°"TINO ACTMM
~~ UT-----NI,-
'"'"&J"l
-SATUN>AY THI WTH" (N)
__ ___.;.;.,;;"~·f_l_IO ___ -r--· C~!'~ ---
'WCMARD "'YOfl UW OM "TAN" (l"O)
TMI .-T~ (l'Q) ....... ...::. ... "(PG)
"CU8tt Of' THI mAMe" CNI Clllt." IOUllO a.t." M)UliO
,._ I -.. A f'A"t
BUEllfA PARK Ol!IVI IN
u~..., ,.,,. .... Of •·"°" all·4070 -------
!-' • '· .. f ,. ~ ..
LINCO LN DRIVE IN
121-4070 -··
"Tt9 llDUCT10N ~Ill>
"ID MD THI lONaV
WOMM '"" t" fllll
-ecHOOLGML ~-·ft
.. IM9o""' ....... _ , .. ,
~--~-:..~,..-----,..---':P.. ....... ....;..~.;._~....;...;,...------.;._--.--~--..;..___;;.-.:.....~-m1 1 t61•i.11
.... '·
r \I Vt,"'., 't 1] ~ • ....
t ~)
I "IAT\1119AT THI MTM" (N)
C..·fl IOUllO
4 WMATIMIM"= ,.,_ "TMI IUOOV MOU 'f
nmY",..
Cl9 " lllUllO --
1 .~ HA~!< fl. ~ • • '•
NOW PLAYING
MIA ,.,. ... IH·t• ClltlDOMl
8ulM PMk 821 4010 011nge 834 2~53 NtWS*l lacll 144 0160
M&a. 1MA ,I.AU ITAOIUll NIYl·ll UA CM.IU 8'N 621 5331 OllflOI 119 1170 Wlitnwl"* 113 0~41
lOWWI IUll llAC• ll•JAllOS ltUITOl _, __ ,,,u
El TOIO Sil Sato Costa Mesi 540 1444 10.1,.___,
MUM. HOUtlNO
OPPO .. TUNITY
, ...... ,, ......
~I
PllllllaA •••
XLNT TUMS! Remodeled tndltlonal 3
bdnn, den, s beda, ,...... to tat&.000.
PrUe Wm ~)' beyfront.. 811.-f« 2 boeta,
remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 beth fl,200,000. •
()can & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3
bath, 3700 lq.ft Sl,38~,000. Oceanfront. ,
All real ettate ldYertlMd
In lhll ~la tub-...... 11111 '
Ject to the Federal Fair Prime Udo Nord ba"'-L .. bdrm a"'· .... th Housing Act Of 1 H8 wNc:n ;, .... ""' 11 , ii n .,. .
m1ke1 l t Illegal to adver-Lae L.R., 2 boat .u.-$1,500,000.
Ute "any preference, llml----
lltlon or discrimination Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + larae rec. nn. ~ ~ ~~-= :t bum ceillnp, fumiahed, i:i-Uoa. .. 20,000.
gin, or any Intention to 1 -• IM• ••ff Ill
make any 1uch prefer. .,_ ~ --
e n c • • II m It 1 t I o n o r Laaoon view from 6 bdrm. 5 beth, playroom.
dllCl'lmlnatlon." darlt rm. den, Boat alJp. $1,3M>,OOO.
Thi• new1p1per will not ••--._ knowingly accept any.ad--•.-5 .,....,
ven111ng tor real estate Spectacular bayfrcn\, view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, ~ II In violation Of the 2 ba dn. 2 boat alJ .. $1,900,000.
. . .
R&"Mt-X ......... , ..
Give yourteff M ... Vw-
,,. de In '82. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba := home w/many extru on
-Cul-de-MC. OWC lrg 2nd = T.D. Full pr1oa 1134,500.
-1 151-31111
--... ----------.. -------------------.. --ti .. ... -n• ... ... ... --
.. --
.. "'""" Then this neet & deer! 3
Bdrm home la Juat ror
you. E•cell. financing
with a fUll ueumAble lit
T.D. at 9%%. Fut! prtc.
1139,900. 751-31t1
What it
means hr
y<rur ad
fD be
"clossifwd"
:.": Moet of the peopj,a
~ in our oommwlity
~ with money to =~ -::: recuJarty.
::: 'nviu•nd1 ol
::: proepective buyere
:: riJ ... your lld.
Si ..., .... --claMffled .. ! M2-N71 =-------... '"' -........... ........ ,,
BILL GRUNDY. RE ALTOR
J.1 'l,,, .. "' D•" "~ t;l, 6 I,
••NIT--......... for the smart man looking for a
"good deal". Thia motivated seller '?f a great 4 BR family home has
JUSl reduced his price $45,000! :nu.
is undoubtedly the "best deal" in
town.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060·
.... ""°' A E N S I F 0 R M M A l E K A R R E S
R L P l A C I T P I l L E S l F C U
S L A T E 0 I 0 R M T P I 0 E 8
U S I E E T A L U T A A N R T U
8 P E R R A T E E M A G
U I 8 P E 0 R N 0 S D L R A 0 0 A
L P U U E L N S 0 B L 0 E G A E R T
A C A l A T E P G U E R N P L R E 0 E
C A S G 0 8 A N H F B I 0 L 0 T T C T
E 0 T N M T 0 M 0 N F U Y 8 U S 0 0 L
R L E 0 u A L R l 0 I R L s o·s I I E
ATELATME RAABE A IOO AO
T N A B S U 8 M 0 T P B 0 I T 0 R 0 C
E T C 0 A 0 A B E L P A L R A E N I L
ENTO~DBIOTLf P1LrosJ ............ ~ ................ . .................... ,..., ............. 111.! = =':: .... a =•I ~ ==· --Ellllflnw L~
T~?Pm
Thuraday, Aprlt 29, 1982
J I
Looking for a career in sales?
See today's Help Want ed ads,
classification 7100. ·
l'l"""~'I"'!'-'~--~··· ~ .. ~!:Y! •• ::!. ~.~~'! ....... !~~!!!.'!!.~It ... : ..
IJ81•111f•••••••••J.'!fl ~.f!l..~ •• J.'M l!:!!.!f/!! ••.••• }.~! !1!!.!.!1!!.~ ..••• !.fl~ ••••llillll••••••llllliili••• •-------· Houte on Begonle 1235, PAWAM YllW aST UIYllt 000, lot telul, prln. only. 3 bf, 2 be condo. Pool, PUI Pl.ICE Uf I --Bltr. (213~S8·6e23. 1pe. tennl1, MC. gated UTITIS -Dnpymt 06.000. FP
STEPS from tl>la 2 Bdrm 118ilf a.JS1 1137,500. Ag1 49&-5980. 4 Ill. 2!.-i IA.
houM & 1 8d"'1 ~on Duplex, 4 bdrm plu1 2 BETTER TH" .. 30Xf100' ... 2 lot. Only bdrm, 1 year new. Wiii ... ,,.,,.,, MODEL"" 125!~.. trade down. SH5,000. IHiA IHO HAS EVEAYTHING
CQl I':-'· l
-·---------~
..
.,..._ llf """ 7ot OroNct, Corone del ••••••••••••••{ ••••••• eut-cte-NIC 111..c
-•• -·-..,. ......... Mer. 851-9135 1121 .... fl 2!. la. SIJfl & SaN 11 Clob -••• • .,.,... •171-7.... Cozy cottage 2 br, 1 ba, Sharp 24QO IQ It 4 bdrm 20 min. to
4 Br, 21h Ba. View home overlooking~~~~~~~~ trplc. walk to buch. homeoncuf~aec. Newport Cent« Pavilion, Catalina and nite lites. We have Find out about the high Owner finance. R-2 lot. R.E Proleulonllt s210.ooo with IUI0,000
an Independent appraisal for $320,000. earning real "tate ..... 1215.ooo. 840-4778 eve.. N....,77 •t,~ =-= &
Try $20,000 down until you sell your ca1-oPP«tuNtiee With C..u •n.1 Jft4 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil No 1>01n1t or qualltylng. h THE ~EAL ESTATERS. •••••••••••••••••••••• SPLISHI SPLASH 770..()347 ome. Llcen1lng 1chool lee• Single 1tory ranch 1tyle; Owna</Agent
NEWPORT ISLAND-
CHEERFUL
i\rw on lh~ '"art.rt in • "wat,.r orirnlf"d•'
t'Otnmunhy. Rrl11h1 :l bt'd. homf' wilh flrxlhlf'
finaMln11. 124CJ,5(JC). f,...,
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
RfAL !STATE s. •. ~ ........ ,. ,...,...,.._
2'°" W COMt 1-t..y JIS M.tww Av. Nf'#DOf1 BHch 11.ibo,i ~
Hl·14M '7Mttt
llW IJIMI
IWlD
Balboa Peninsula -Well Kept Duplex
With Two 2-Bedroom Onita, 2-Car
Garage -One Block From Beach -
Good Winter, Summer R e ntals' -
Minimum Vacancy Factor. $389,000.
A Dion-Maria Listing .
·--..... ,_.,
759-91• ,uc..,. ...... . . ... .,..'c.e.r."
7366
t,Ae. a .. ..,
com!*telv refundable to 11~ MWI apectacular pool & ape, no ~~~~~-~~~
1choo1 oi your choice. .... IAM,,, qullifytng. Ju11 lt35,eoo. ::OWIE• IE•~un Extentlw Mlet trtllnlng. Bkr. 848-0709 n ..-~
For Information call Immaculate North Cotta ~=====~~~= Behind In paymenll 751.e1111 ' Mase 3 Bdrm, 2 full batht. ---------11 127,000 with 13% flnan-$220,000 In exl1tlng fl. Beaut. modern brick cingon1ttTD.Juttliated, OWNER DESPERATE nanclng 4 Bdr 3 Ba.
church. 1145,000, 10,000 need• tut ucrow. Call 5 Bdrm Beach giant In pool, IP• wlwllerlall. All
aq.f1. ~. nr P#k City .1!11 xec 8/'u. S&0.000 below lor 1279.600. Call Carol, Utah 2 t3-«3-8252 mkt. Must Mii now Sub· agt 559.9400 LWE OPTim ~;_,i,.:Uf,!Iff. I: ';4'll,"c;.r terms. bkr ~~,ft tt !.'!!r.!!.~~!! .. !.'!!
&ll)8f lharp 3 8drm, 1•·1~~~~!!~~~;1 For 11le by owner. Cliff mlly rm. den. formal dl·I: /m.., 1044 Haven 3 BR twnhH. 2
nlng. belUtltul pool, IP' 124,111 llWI •••••••••••••••••••••• Ba, powder room. comm
andpetlo. Exceli.rttqulet • * • pool. A11ume 30 yr
retldentlal loclMlon. SHI llMTll ..... L..... $120,000 111 at 13~-
11850 mo. $315,000 op-buy1 thla roomy • Be-218 Liiiian PL. $159,500 Prine only
lion price. droom tamlly hOme w/2 Costa Mase 645-4955 or 631-0360
lireplacee, a warm famlly You are the winner or Eilecutlve condo. ocean &
room w/wood beamed four free tickets ($1 2 00 bay vtew. Fplc, cathedral
celling• D1corator ac-value) to lhe clgs, etc 1+ den, s 10.
centa. $120,000. Prlncl---1•m ooo option money 0y1 pala only. Don't delay. ••• •--.,.,.R 558-9035;..,.. 673-48911
call Dlan1 today. ----Diana Pietenpol-Volpe Fountain Valley Mlle IEWPelf IDllT1
559-9'00 SQ u are Park· May 8 .. Owll9f need• cath. cleen 1982 antique type hOuM 2 Br To claim tickets. c all t Ba 50x117' lot. Large
642-5678, ext 272 detactieo garage S1711.
ABSOLUTE Tickets mutt be cta1mea 000. 548-6041 eves &
•II l 1N by Mey 5~ 1:8! wknas. 631-3520 wkdys
STEALll 3BR, 2BA, A-1 cond on 1----------1 llW.
.. large R-2 lot. Park like • • • I •take my reputation on yard. Eaatalde. By owner. LI. PWIHH CAUL FUil the FACT that lhl• 11 the lt39 ooo. 842•9125 or iurel ~ill Ftve bedrooma. 3 baths, BEST BUY In Newport 642•2741 atta< 5:30 PM 2200 Laurel lace hreplace home Redeco-
Beach. OCEANVU, LAO --------Newpo<1 Beach rated. Also Included 4 BDR. PROF. DECORA· 1 Br. 1 Be. hollM on large You are the winner or wooden patio and small
TED, pool-spa & like "4'll' SOK 175' 3 unit lot. 438 lour free tickets (S 12.00 bo11 doctt, 2 car garage .
111 for only 1378,500. A HamNton Do not di.turb value) to the 4 blks to Ocean 1265.
trade considered Call tenanta. $129,000. ...... llllm 000 Firm. 714-836-8542.
PATRICK TENORE DI· 5-48-5041 8YM & wknd1. llUlll UC( or 731-2811.
rect!/c 831·1268 or 831·3620 wkd)'1. FountalnValleyM1le
780-8 02 TOOAYI IWIEI IEEll Square Park -May 8.
WI 1982
IEWNIT CIUT
2 Bdrm. 2 bath. den. di·
nlng room, large double
garage Elect opener
Quiet end unit. Walk to the
beech I 185,000
2 Br. t ... + 1 Br 1 Be To claim tickets. call .,.. 842·56711. ext 272 72x 105' R2 lot. Do not TICkets must be ctalmed lliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill disturb ten1nta 1528 by May 5. 11182 Orange . S 1211 ,000.
548-5041 eves & Wl<nda, 1----*-"'-•----I 831-3520 wkdyl.
..,W...,lltr.
Ml-1721
~
Walker & lee
Wll-.-r --
tull 1'1111111
IUT-llY •11u.-.n BIDr Gives Euy Tenn1
Two lge muter 1ulte1. 2~ bathi: frplc, formal
din .. llcytltes. )'lfdt. bal·
oonlel, vaulted ceillf191 .
2 car gareoes. Prime EJ
side location lt20,000
to 1131.000. t.t·F, 9·5,
850-07111; Sat-Sun 12·5.
631-~05; 8VI 751-3297.
I Br 21/t Ba. Condo. By
Owner. Meny xtr11.
S105,000 In Htumable
financing Asking S 132.
500. 646-0790.
Luxurlout one of a kind W'# lrg home. OWr'8r will
**PRESTIGE
TERMS! OCUIFROIT
Woodbridge'• most pre-By owner Dr11tlc price
ttlgloue 1ddre11, the reduction tor lge down.
Landing by J.M Pe19fS. payment. 840-7090
Offered at en unbellev"· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ble 1239,000 This 3 lrll -... •R,._
Bd1m delight Is ~bly -· -located and ln\lltet your arid live only steps ew1y. 3 creative otter Bdrm 1¥• be. family home -1n prlvete community \\bodltrldte Veultect oel.llng. earthtone
Re h (;9tS S 192,000.
• • 171-1771
551-3800
lntfl•runn 1'1i1H,l rwltl<'
FOR SALE BY OWNER
2Br, 2Ba Condo. 2 car
garage, newly decorated.
111 upgraded, In Wood·
bridge
'145,0QO 551-2071
custom 3 bedroom home help finance. HURRY.
with 2 bedroom guest Thi• beeutlful home
querter1 or rentllf unit. wo n't last. $156,000. Located on waterfront 640·2980 Agt. A1k for i---S-Tll _______ ,
0#!1 h your own pier & 111p, Lori.
Thi• homa hu many, --------H•E
,. ............
3 ba S6S.OOO under MIA
eppralsal, no qualltylng.
Peyment1S1500 mo. Will
trede IOf anything. 2280
Golden Clrc:le. 645-1985
many extr11. $789,000 . .
R&IM~
USTsm ITAITll
Only &119,500 for thl• 2 If ....
Bdrm 2 Ba cutle. Nicely 110K BELOW MARKET
landacaped wit car g•-Sharp 4 br, 2 b1, ram.
rage & service porch. rm, IP9 home. 80% fin ,
Ataume 187,000 lo loen• 30 yr loan, 2 pt• unckw .
end owner.-8lde In II· 1142,000 97g_1139
nanc:lng. 631•737o --o"""RAN_D_O_P_E_N_IN_O __
TR \DI T 10\ \I
~I \I"
SAT • SUN 12·5 163 Monte Vista
8 Custom Condot, 1141,
000 to $154,000. Elegant
& dramatic 2 & 3Br llr
p11n1. ma111ve frplct.
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil wet ba "· 111' ve u It •d ceillngs, formal dirt. 3Ba,
... 2 c ar geragu, yda.
In Turt le Rock Glen
Townhomes. 2 bdrms.
2'/t ba .. dining area &
breakfast nook. Extrt
bonut 1p1ce could be
exp1nd1d to library or
office. End unit located
on two be1utllul green-
be It 1 Day end nlgtlt
vl1w1. Thia 11 an excep-
Uonal buy et 1274,500
~.~'.~ ... !.~
FORECLOSURE SALE
Under lender'• cost. So.
lffer..We
ADULT MOBILE HOME
PARK on the Bay. 1
bdrm, den. 1 ba $60,000:
2 bdrm, 2 ba 148.000. 2
bdrm 125.000 300 E. Cl1
Hwy Unit 113, Newport
Beech. Bkr 675-3347
"lf1 Ull"
High rlM condo, 81h fir
ocean & bay view
$950,000. Ellclutlve
Ao1 752-5710
.. US,_!
Spacloua 2400 1q, It. 4
Br. home In WHtCllll
8ergeln prlc:e. 1225.000.
Agt Joyce Weitze
631-129e In Seawlnd. Dramatic French dra, balconies,
Portolfno model wtth en-tOlld ou ltoor1ng & mud\
olosed entry, s .. thl• rnor9. 8'llder glwa ~ charmer with Mexican 18fm&. Wkdyl 860-97711,
pewr1, 9'\yllght & Frencti Wknd1 548-5270, Ev ..
doora. It WllT knock your _Ha_-648 __ 2_. -----eodee om Wei decorated
& owner Wiii help flnence.
Laguna pvt Hl1te. 180 IMAT .._ ••• ml 1111 deg. ooeen vu. S«:urlty. l200.000 loen a11atfet>te
•Br. 2.0001q ft home•-i5'_5_.ooo __ ._9_5s-_20_1_3_, __ 1 et 10%tor7yn.F"*"'
w/fonnal dlnlnQ & family BLUE RIBBON In :o::trt denelty.,.. In
rm & more. Call now 3 ~~.....1....•2 ~~LtiC ~ 8 fla. 3 Bdr cOftdo
1339,000.
...,K>l.Jl:ti()M
1!9-5370. _..... ..,,.., ,....,. Ht yra old w/3 lrg peb,
In wood & ..... DNetlo prtc. '""°"°"
\t .11I1t/'ttl view. beamed celllngt, BHt_buy It 1277,000 • :r~~~~ ~:.=.•M0-0020-
Rlvl«• co .. tUne. I H5, --===~:!:!!iii~
-..... OOOMlSSION REALTY .... , mlf Eutlldl beeutlful ,,... 494.0131 Thi• bHutlful CHdO .. • decOrated In the llnelC _,. Tr~ 110.000 down-very teate Fur~_. M
lmllOul ..._. atr ..... purcheMCS. 3 bdr,....,_
W"et Wl'fl dO On that relreat, 3 blthl. Cir.et ohat1nlng old •uoh ...._
hOUH Wfth ltudlo". 1111.000 '-:.!'ftl:U.
I ,
--~----------~~-~~~
Orange Collt DAILY PILOT/Thutldey, Apttl 29, 1M2
"No, I don't think they knew her . This was long
before Miss Piggy was even born."
~:\RMADl'IU .. : by Brad Anderson
"Don't you even feel a twinge of guilt?"
UPSTAIRS,
HAN<&IN<: THE:
NfW WALLPAPE~.
BIGGEOaGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
HTLt'f6-ARP. 1'H~E: ARE ~1SE~E 1FJ..IES 11\11HIS
PAR"f OF 1l4f WORL..'7! ARE: YOU SORE?
1/j'p SHOE
"It never t1ll1 to h1~n. Put th• food out, 1nd
he,. come the 1nt1.'
..,
' ' '(
-w 0 f
-EIZ.w1E-Ju~,.,..,._._,;c.. c--·-·--""
11%> ! GORDO
• 6EE' Mis. W1L~, 1M NOT '®LY 6~ .4t·f srim; ,4f.J • l
~. 6UT l 61.JC.SS 1WOOOT<J'IHPE£1~T~.''
t 't:Nk ,. "INkERBEAN
'XX.)'R£ R£AU.£; L.CO(I~
~.c.oACH !
BRABBLE
I
1
J
¥
M1 MTH \lA'$( ~ et 1\l&ttt'~ H01"1~ ~1'1'tR
C~ "fO ~ff~ ~t 1AAN 'OOCIM(, A HIC.£ ~~M
fl.Mf'EAAf~~ ~~t
by F-erd & Tom Johnson &"f ~.
~~
::=.-~r--• .....
M.._.: ·~ ,... 4fTlllMliMlr
IO irfflll Wlltff 41 ..._ _ ........ ...
•• SMOCK
IF l"f''S
SO GOOP FOFt YOU1
WHY POl!S A!Vl!!A.YONE! WHO '-'OGS L.OOK SO B.A.c> ~
·•· ""'
by Charles M. Schulz
by Tom K. Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
by Gus Amola
by Kevm Fagan
ON ~ o~o f~OU<M4f.
roRO£t 11! ~-
r----r,r 0'j
by George Lemont
", ......... 11 ...
waler ••• "'""" .. hllllHI Na•t llld M .. flet W9' IU .. lllld
lltef"u•11ll111 ....... .... ,, -.... '"'' "'' H"'ltetlefl 11 H dora .............. , ...
DAll.Y "LOT wlll .-.11 """ .. ..._flt t If t t e ,. I . 0 11 t
ltttllt~ ...._,IM
entire Oran .. CeHt
area ~M ..... ~· ..._. .. w. .. .-... •• 1 ..
etder le llllllMll r•11r 1 1 e t a111a11t 01 '"•rr~atto'lr .. n-~ ce,r 1111-1 ,hHk to THI DAIL 'I Pll.OT, ,,0, lo• IMO.
Cotti ftlleN. CA 12t2t.
We'll da !tie , .. 1. '••
ll'lfOrMMloft "°"' •••• 1 a-Yertlllfta fllelM Clll
M1.c121 & n2. NI.IC NOTICE
PtC:TmOUI llU ... lla ..._ITATl•Mf
Tlla following pareon 11 doing
bull,_ aa:
COAST AUTO RENTAL. INC ..
3510 lrvlne Aven11e , Newport ~ llU9IMKll 8Mcll. Cellfornla 92te0
..._ ITAftMINT Miiie Naval. 22•4 Port Carttala.
Tiie lollo•tng parton 11 doing Newpor1 BMch, Celilomla 92680 bllllfleu a ; Tllll bl-"-la condueted by 1
BIU'S DAY WALL, 33402 S.. atlon. 8riah1 OrM, Dena Point, c.frl()(noa Coelt Auto ,_,tal Inc. 92(29 Ml6le Naval,
William ROber1 Truoeau. 3~02 Prealdenl
S.. 8'lalll Drl¥e. Dane Potnl. Cell· Tlllt llal-1 -llteo wllll Ille fomla 9~29 ty eteni of Orenge County on
Thil buW-la COl\duclld by an Aprtt 27, 11182.
lndMdiuel. f 181t'11
William A. TNOMu P11bll11led Or1nge Coul Da lly
Tilil ... ,_, WU flleO '#1111 Ille Pilot. AprM 29. May 6. 13. 20, 1982.
County C.. Of Orln09 County on 19~2
Aptll 1. 11182 ,,_ Call 642-5678.
P11bll1"4td Orane-Co111 Dally Put a few words
Piiot, Apr1I 29, Mey e. 13, 20. 1M2 to work for 192$-12 OU.
PUBtlC HEARINGS
will . be held
at
WOOOlAJI> ElODTARY Set«>OL
2025 Gwden ln, COSTA EA
on May 10, 1982, .. M trll 1'1
NtPOSE ROOM, AT 7:30 P.M.
****
Llfl)8(RGH £l.DOTARY SCHOOL
220 East 23rd StrHt
COSTA MESA
on May 12, 1912, It M Ill. TI
PlltPOS( ROOM, AT 7:30 P Jl
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
-.!!?'a_. .... ...,...,.dolr\f ~fMX.Oltt~O .. °'r~'· LOllN .... CA •HA M LVIH It WHITITINL Ult1 C~nllo ltoobedo, L•n• w1111, OA t2tl3 .
PHYLLll fl . WHl!TSTINI IHll Clrnlnlto lloobedo, LagunA Hiiia, CA tHU.
Thia ~ .. OOlldllOtecl by • llmtl«I~. . Jilelvlll A; Wllettllne I'll-A. Whetltlne Tiiie llatemtnt waa !tied with Ille County ~ of Or-,.. _ _... on
April ~7. ttl2. -.,,.. """'"7 ,.,.
P11blltll•d Ortno• COHI Diiiy
PNol, Aprll it, May t , 13. IO, 1881.
183'·82
Mt.IC NOTICE
'ICTntOUI IUIMll NMmlTA,.._NT
The following perlOl\I ara doing
bull,_aa;
RESIDENTIAL DESIGN CElo'T.
ER, 23485 Vallarta Drive. Laguna
Nl;uel. c111toml• 928n JOMPh W. Sprung!. 23486 Val-
larta Ortw, ~ Nlgual, Clllfor·
nla 92877
J11dllll 0. Sprung!, 23'85 Val·
latla Drive. Lagun1 Niguel. Calllo<·
nla 92077 Tlllt ~ 11 conduclad by an
lndlvldllal.
JOMPh W. Sprungl
fllll 1111-1 Wat flted will\ lhe
County C1ertl of Orange County on
Apr1I 27. 1912 f'1., ..
P11bll1ll~ Orange Co11t Dally
Pllol, Aprll 29, May 8, 13, 20, 11182.
193&-12
FICTTTlOUI .U ... 11
NAMI ITAT'EmNT Tiie follo-#lng l*eOlll ate OOlng
t>u1i-u : PACIFIC FINE ART. 2800 Eut
CoN1 Hlgllw1 /, No. 4e, C«ona del
Mii, CaUlomla 92826
JamH Carter Tu1wlle1. 2800
EHi Coa11 Highway. No. 48, Co·
rona del Mat. Clllfomla 92825
Mlcllael Lawrence Bra nnon 2800 Eut Cout 'ilQllway, corona
del Mw, California 92'25
Thl1 bu"'-ii oonducted by a 11m11eo partnerlhlp
J Cer1er Tutwller
Tllil 11at-I ¥1U l'lled wttll Ille
°°"nly Cletlc of l)fange County on
April 27. 1N2
F1•,•
P11btl•ll•O Orange COall Dall) Piiot. Aprl 29. May 8. 13. 20, 1982.
1932-82
L•
Orange Oout. OAJL V PILOT IThuraday, Aprll 29, 1882 ..
nanmnn.r---==fta.1~1~111~11~a::--1~;-i;Ri,..ii ... i1e i111i'111s.....,; PlllJC ma
"lmftlall'lr 'Oii ":mmlllf' ~-"°"'*"-' Tiie totle.wl111 pertoll It dotn1 MO. A-t TM fOiltWlftt ~are dOlflf TM ;;;:;..;•;.,..._.,. Nl"I NAm tfAW ~ f ·A DUIQNt OIVU· ORIJ::.TO IMOW OAUll Mtneeua: ~r.:-00\INTV ,MTICTIOH, ~-II~ .. Mlt
0'MINT0 UO Ne'W1:or1 Center IN T .. I 1ru'lJlf:' c:nHI AP· OINOM~=·~~ 110 Warntf' Aven11•-=• t'•· AMUUCAH IAOK,AOf<INO ~'. ~~Nf0r~•.UJ · Newport ~~'U::~~IA 0t1va. N~Poft 8"ot1. ca11tor1111 ~:~~T·~tiAT ·aALt. :~~ ~~~.~ =~:.0~=
Mlef\MI Topllll~~· ._,,. 9'HlfllAJ .• AL''"o PIDf'OZA, ·~vetlOfl ~ Inc ..... 1t&'t THk Way. A1nc110 C11e•· Partc. c:.tlbnle toa, Ott .. C0.1• Meile. c t2t27 ntoner 1118 *d. Pt4JllOll wltll-ed '°" 11 v .. monea. CA t1730. ''"ICll. L•• TarJlan. 2ffll T'llll ~ta condUc*f by Jiii he Cieri!' ol lllle Coun1or an o1• ~ ~-=-,:.. .t111 dty VltW, JAMH DAYJO IALL. llt H, Allaneto, Mltlton VlefO, ~
indMd\111 der ollang!!'JI patllloner'• nam• Thli ~ le oonduC\ed MounU!ln. ~•. Us*nd. CA t11M ntf1 MIChMI TOC)llk., from ALFAay PEDAO?A to ALFA-OOtpotatlon by • ~ ~ oondllcl*9 by • lcotl Nelton Lot&keft, HON
Thie •l•lerMnl ., .. Iliad wttll Ille ED coc.e. Ill-OR AMlyll1 lnG 991* ~--· AIMflt Court, El Toto, CelN.,llle
County Clerk of ~ COunty on IT II IO ORDERED lllal alt per· Cllarlel A. Polley ' ' ,._ a.wt W 92t30 APf1I 27, tM2. aone lnttrottd In Illa above· Prealdanl. • ~ •:':1~ flled~ the Oennl• Jean H .. tll, 19141
,_.. tolltlild mat11« tOPMC bfiO<t Wt Thie tlaltm«\l wll.Jllecl wtu:UNI ADrit t7 etlOI ty on hecll Street, ~rllo1 Callfor*
P11bll1ll•d Orange Coaet 01Jly Couf1 at 10:30, on~• Junt t , 1te2, Co\inty Clettl Of OrlllOt County on ADrit • lte2 to701 '
PllOt. Apfll 29. May '9, u. 20, 1M2 Ill the COllrlroorn of Oe91ttrnenl lilo AprN 27 1M2 ,,.... Tllll ~ " ~ w • 1NCM2 3, •• 700 CMo c.n1. °""· hflta • • ,.. P11bllell•d Oreng• COHI 01111 gitn«ll ~-
____________ ,Ana. Callfornla, and ttlO¥I ~.If P11bll1hed Orang_a Co111 Dl lt PUO.. Aptll 2t, May ii, 13, ~~.~ Petrick LAie Tan!M
Pta.IC NOTICE any, '#hy tlle petition'°' Cllenot Of Piiot AprN 29 M•Y t 13 20 1N Tllll ·~ Wiii t11ec1 Mtl\ .. .. N:TmDU•_,..... ~18~;'"~.ri:~;i,.,... · · · · 1ie2-e2 P\lllC NOTIC£ ~;~7~a.°'°'.,.~on
MAMI ITATl•NT copy Of tllla «dtr to allOW ceuaa be "8.tC NO""'r ,..., Tiie following peraon 11 doing publllMd Ill 1119 J)elly Pilot,•,_. 1"4 MN•-P11bll1lled OrJn9• COM1 011~ butl""8 H : IC>4IC* of generll clfcullllon pl'lnl· MOnctl MOTICI °' Piiot, April 29, May •• 13. 10. '91.f •
c. HUNT, PERSONNEL SEA ed ,,, LM Angelea County, Ctll.I«· YOU AQ ... DDAUlT UNDIA A AVAJU84l,m °' 1m.a2
VICES. H51 Cfllll Palm• Orlva nl•. once .... IOf four IUCOaaillve DI.ID °' TMllT, DATID "'*' .. ....,~ MTUM H11nllnglon BNch, CllKornle 92t4 weak• prior 10 Ill• data H I for ............ YOU TAKI ACTION Purtuanl 10S«l11one104101 of I "8JC MOTIC[ Carolyn H. Hunt, ff51 Crlll llew1nQ on the ~ltton. TO ""°11CT YCM.M "°""TY, IT Internal Raven11e c.dt. notice Jt _______ ......;;_ __
Pa lma Drive. H11nllngton 9Hoh DATlD: Aptll 27. 1912. llAY • IOLD AT A "*.IC IA&.I. hereby given tlllt lhe annull ret11tn Cellfornla 92&47 9ruoe W. 9umMr W YOU •ID AN IXP&.ANATtoN for Ille c:alandar YMf 1911 of the ITATIMINT Of' wtTMDllAWAL
Tiiie bu11nn.t 11 condllCl1ed by JudOe of the~ Co\111 0' TH• NATUA• 0' TNI "'D· HIOH BLOOD PRESSURE RES-Motl lndM<Nal. CIGlAL.D W. NIWHOUtl CllDINQ AQAINIT YOU YOU EARCH FOUNDATION. a private 'AA,.,...ltW ~
CerOlyn H. Hunl 21001 La"-...._, Ma. -tMOU&..D CONTACT A LAwfttl loundallon, II available al the loun-UNDU
Tllll 1111-' -filed wttll 1 ...._ V-. CA _, -dltlon'I prlncipll offtca f« lniipec-ncTmoul 8U I ... MAim County C1erii of Orenge Count( ('tM) .. , .. 11 HOTtCI M llon during regular ~ llou<• Tiie lollo•lng Wffll llaa wttll•
"""'" 27. 1912 P11bll1lled Orange Coaet Dally TIWIT'la'I I.Ala from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 pm by any or1wn .. a generll .,.,._ ._ .. '1• Polo, Apt• 29. May I . 13, 20, 1912 T.I . No. 2·70a citizen wflo req11Hll ll wllllln 180 p1rlnet1lllp OjHrl11"0 uncNt tM
P11bll1h•O Or1ng• Coall Dall •t23-t2 On M-r 7, 11182. al 9 1~ o'Qodl dayt ''"'the d•I• of 11111 pu(>lic:I· llcllllOlll b111ln•U n1111• Of
Piiot. AprU 29. May I. 13, 20. 1912 •-.,. Mn'N'r ,_m .. on Frldey, at Ille front entren· lion I ORANGE COAST FONOIHO • tt, 1934-8 r~ "'",_ oe 10 the old Orange County Cour· . Tiie oundallon'• prlnc:lpal ofl~ E 18111 StrMI. Co1ta M-. ~
-----------u-. toceled on Santi Ana 9IYd "toc:ated II 1801 PO#t &arrnouth tornla 92927 •-"' NOftl'r be._ Sycemore Street & Broed-Pl., Newpor1 8eac:n. CA 92e&O Tiie liclitloul ~ -.._ ~ '""° l'ICTITIOUI Ml ... 11 wiy. Sin1a Ana. CA . WESTERN Tiie Prlnc1pal Mln~er of the 1-1 tor the pen,,.,... .... fled
--F-IC-TIT--IOU-1-IU-... --.. --Tll f::-. ITATl .. NT O MUTUAL CORPORATION. 1 C1ll· lo11nd1tlon It MlcllH I A Weber. on ~ember 4, 1N1In1M COuftty
N ... ITATl!•NT ~::no l*IOll• .,. Olng f()(nl• corporation. II Tru1IM. or M D or Orange FILE NO. F17022't.
Tiie lollO'#tng perlOnl ate doing G & K DEVELOPMENT 1102 S 1Ub1tol11led Tr1111 ... llf1det Ille Deed ...,.1 MITlc~~ TUCHWA Full ~1me and Addr ... of tlle bu*-u : -' · ol Tr1111 eJ1eculed by T H O. a tole -Clwlc ....,let Or., ~-Wltlldr9WlnQ:
V 1 l LA MIMOSA A p ART ~:.,.~::;:~n~~:;1• Sin Clemente, propr11101 . herein c1lleO T~u1tor, lenLa AN. CA tz102 F11nk Kevin McDonald, 242 I
MEN TS. 3823 w .. 1 Biii Road. Kent A KoepMll 181 w An. recoroeo J11ne 10, 19110 .•• lnstru· 9'Utl RICCI 181" Street. Apartment 15, ~ Anaheim. CA 92804. · C · ment No. 9089, In Book 13830 leo'J.•TreM. 9' Beac:ll, Callfomla t2ee3
A & M PROPERTIES, 15481 ;;~~;0· Sa n lemenie. C•llfornl• Page 592 of Offlcl•I R1cord1 oi IM l'oundatton Frank K Mc:Oonald
Cllemlc:al Lane. H11nllng1on Beach. Wllllam Guerene 1302 Cille Oranoe County, Ctlllornl1, Wiii tell y.-o.-L~C~ll P11bll1111d Orange Co111 Oalty CA 92&4<4 T led S Cle ' C I I II publlc 111cllon 10 Ille lllghHI ,.._ -:A t2lllil Piiot. Aprll 29, May I . 13, 20, ttl.t
Tiii• t1uiine1a 1a c:onductld by 1 J.672°· •n menle. •I lorn a bidder for c11h. payable In lawflll P11b11111eo Orange CoHI Dilly 1~
gentrll p.nnartlllp Thi ll money Of 11141 United Slllet 11 the Piiot, April 29, 1982 Alan 0:1:' I bu Mii 1• conduc:ted by I llrn. of .... 11141 1n11< .. 1 c;on.--t 1918·82 P\lll.IC NOTll'C ' ci-•1 pattneranlp, ' •VJ~ I f\4 G-al lflner Kent A •oec>Mll 10 1nd now held by H id Trultea ----------------------
Thll 1111_,1 wu filed '#1111 tlle Tlllt atal~I Wll llled wltll Ille under Hid Dead of Tr1111 In Ille P\lll.IC NOTICE FIC~IMU
County Cl1<k ol Orange County on County Ci.rtt of Orange County on Pfot>l<IY lltueled In talO County and .,.,_ IT ~NT APfll 27, 1982. APfll 27 1982 Slate dHcrlbed 11: All rl911t, !Ille FICTITIOUI 9UIMll Tiie f.............., !,_'°"' .,. ~ f1•111 · F1.,., 1nd lnlarMt Into lllat oerutln tease-..... --.... ,....... _,,,
P11blllh•d Orang• Co11t Dally P11bll1hed 0 c hOld ...... crHled by• I-deleo NAME IT.ATf.MfNT • l)UM--PllOt, AprN 29. May 8, 13. 20. 1982. Pilot AprN 29 ~!ng9e 13°~1 ~9~~ Novembef 13. 1978, more perllcll· Tiie following per1on la Oolng THE VILLAGE, 7tt 8'0WllC'ofl 1931·82 ' · y ' • • • !arty d-lbed In Exllibll "A" buSIMll u : Road. Laguna Beacll. CA 92e51. -----------1935·82 PARCEL 1· SUNDANCE STAMPS. 1380 CAROLYN M. TERRY, 71'
•-ir NOTICE Loll 1, 2. 3 1n<1 the Euteny 1 foot Galuy. N.wpor1 0..c;ll, Calllornla Browncroft Road. Leguna 8eedl ~1-1" ol Loi 4 In Block 3 ol the Belbol 92660 CA 9MS1.
FICTTnOUl IUIMll 8ay1lde Trecl, In the Clly ol New· M. C Horning. Jr 1380 Ga· STEPHEN K TERRY, 71'
FICTITIOUI IUSIHESS ...._ IT.ATl!Ml.NT port BHCll, County of Orange. luy, Ne¥tport BHCh. Callfornll ~ro¥tnerol1 Roed, l.eguna 8eedl
NAME STATEMENT I Tiie follow! Stele of Callf()(nl1, al more perti-92680 .,A 92651 Tiii following per1on It doing bulinell .._ ng peflOlll are Oolng c:uLarly !MacrlbtlO In EXHIBIT "A" Trua bullnell II conOllCted by an KHAOOLAH ESHTEHAADI
bullnell • A & G ELECTRIC INC 1952 11tacllltd hereto 1nd made 1 part WI01vtdull ~403 Wlllhlre Blvd • Loa Angetee.
P\B.IC NOTlCE
(1) CHARLOTTE S SITTERS p I p ' hereof M C Hom1n9. Jr :;A 90036, and/or (bl CHARLOTTE CODER'S e l ca n li ce. Colli MeH, CA 1.._-r "A" Thll llllarnenl WU hied wtlll Ille Thlt ~ II c:ondue1ed by I
f'tll.IC NOTICE BABYSITTING AGENCY 420 62nd 9242c?iL8ERT SCHOE.NBAUM 1952 All tight. lllle ano lnterelt Into lllal 'County Clar1< of Orange County on ~ .. pennerahl9 ~':;;,':TICE :~l Newport Buell Cehlornle :~~an Pli ce , Colla MHi . CA ~ie::. ~=;:,cr::1~7'1. Apl'd 27 1982 F1'81t0 Tllll .~ ~~ the
IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORE· Cllatlotle Coder. 420 &2nd ADA 8 SCHOENBAUM 11152 by ano ~ RoMnC Ft1nk Vil· P11bllslled 011nge Co111 Dall County Clerk of Orange CowllY on CLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE SlrMl, N-por1 e..c:11. Callfomla Peolcan Pl.ace. Colla MH'I CA i..IY and Vivian Muriel V1llely, his PllOI. April 29, May 6 •• 13, 20. 1912 "Pr• 16, 1982.
BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENTS, IT 928&3 929M • Wife. not lndMdUllly or pllflOlllJty, 1933-82 ,.,'1. MAY BE SOLO WITHOUT ANY Tlll9 bullne11 la condUCted by.,. Tiiis ttuslnMI le conoucted bu1 IOklly u Trua1 .. of Ille Vallely •-.IC NOTICE Publl•h•d Orange Coell Olil)'
COURT ACTION 11n<1 you may have lndlvldull COfPO'lllon. by a Famlty Tr1111. crNled by Tr11S1 In-... ._. Pllot, Apr1I 29. May t. 13, 20, 1982.
the legal 119111 to bring you• ac:counl Cllatlotte COdet A&G ELECTRIC INC Oent11re d1lfll Merell 3. 1972. 11 ncTTnOUI au.-st 11Ml-82
on good 111nd1ng by paying all ol Tlllt etllarnenl WU filed wltll the GKbafl aer-'*"'1, leMof. Ind Fun Zone ~l • N.uie ITATlMeNT you• past due p1ym1n11 pl111 per· County Clerk of Orange County on Prelldenl 11 IH-recorded O.Cember 13. Tiie following person 11 001ng --~~P\ll.JC=-"."'.·~NO--~----
mllled costs 1nd ••~"' wllllon Aprll 21. 1982. Thia llllarnent wu flied with Ille 11171. In Book 12981 p1ge 148. b\Jtl,,... 11 FICnnoul __,...11
lhrH months hom Ille Olla this F1ICJI County Clerk of Or1n91 County on Ofp•fidRCalELRec:orl· IJI. A· I SILVER CLIPPER DOG NA .. ITA-ru.NT Notice or Default wu reco10ed Publl1lled C11nge Coacl Da lly Aprll 27, 19112. " · GROOMING. 125·~ B1oedway, Tiii follo¥tlng pereon la.doing
This 1moun1 It S2.279 8" 11 of Aptll Piiot, .t,l)fll 29. May 8, 13, 20, 1912 F111212 LOtl 1, 2, 3 llld lhe E.allar1y 1 loot Costa MeM. Clllfoml1 92627 buSlnea u :
14, 1982,andwill lncre1Muntllyour 192J.-12 Pu1>ll1hed Orange Co111 Diii) of Lot 4 in Block 3 of Ille Belbo1 Terr1nc1 Lee OoOda t9'14 VICTOf' PAOOUC~S. 1103 account becOmn c:urr1111 You m1y Pltol. APl'I! 29, May 8, 13, 20, 1982. Blyllde Ttact. In lhe City of New-Whlltler A'WlllU9. Colle MeN. Call· W1fn11t Slfeet, Tlll11n, CA ll2t80.
not have to pay the entire unpaid PUBUC NOTICE un•-82 port B .. cll. Collnly of Orange. IOfnla 92827 VICTOR LeVAR PETERSON,
portion of you1 account, 1ven State Of Caltfornla. at per map rec. This buSlnees 11 conducteo by an 1103 Wllnul. T111Un. CA 92e80.
tllougll luN payment .,, .. dem1n<led. ncnnoot IUalMEll P\8JC NOTICE ord«I In booll • page 78 of Mlacal-lndlvid1.111I Thi ~ It oonduCt*' by bu1 you mutt PIY Ille lmOUnl 111190 NA• ITA~NT la~• Map1, In the oOtoe ol lhe . Tetrence L DoOdl inoov~llll en
above Aft« lll<M monllll from Ille The lollowlng petlOlll .,. doing NOTlCf cw TilUl'Ra'I IAUl County Recorder of Mid County. Thi• Sletemenl WIS meo Wllh the Vlc1or L.aV• P9ter90n O••• ol reco1d1tlon or 11111 docu· butlnet1 ea; T.L No.,_ PAROEL 2: ounty Cleftl of Or1noe County on Thie 1111-1 wu Ned wtltl Ole menl (which dlte of record1llon E R. 1 .. 110 Newport Center NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN. tllat Tllal potllon of 8locil 3 ol the Bal· APfM 13. 1982 County Claftl ol Orll\08 Cowity Clft ~hereon) . .,,,..., tile oblloa· Drive, • 150, Newport e .. c11, CA on Weonetday, M1y 12. 1982. 11 bo• Beyiloe T11ct, 1llown H •n Fmm M11c;t1 31, lt82 lion beH1G foreelOMd upon perml11 92e&O 9:00 o'dodl: a.m ol Mid day. In UM unnumbefed lot In Mid 8lock 3 on• PubliaheO Orll\Q9 Coaat Diiiy Pl-,_
• IOfl99f l*lod. you n1ve only Ille R. WYATT HYOAA, 311MI Vla room nt H IO• for cond11ctln9 "'89 recorded In Book •. P8G9 78 of t. i\c>(il IS. 22. 29, M8" 6, 1982 Publllhld Orange eoe.t Del)' Plot,
legll rlglll 10 llop Ille l«ecioture by Olo. TrlbuCO Canyon, CA 92971. Tnm .. ·1 Salel. ¥tllhill Iha olftol ol Mo1C141llineoua Mapt. Oe.:rlbed u 1676..a2 Apt~ IS, 22, 29, May 8. 1982.
peylng the ent~I atnOUnl d~ GABOR A. TOTH, 31111 P-REAL EST ATE SECURITIES SEA· folowe; 1102-«2
by yo11r cLediloc.. To find out tlla La BranzLS&n J11111 Ca pletrano. VICE. loca teo al 2020 Mort,, 8eglMllng •I• point on lhe E.uterly f1taJC NOTICE ------------amount you ll'lllSI pey, or to 11range CA 92875. Broed'#IY. ~· 208, In IN Ctty 01 lkw ol LOL23 In 8lodl Aol ""'!'P!'~l---_.;..;......;_~.;.;..;.;;:_ ___ I
for peyment 10 etop Ille forectoture. Thll bulinMe ta eonducted by 1 Santa Ana. Counry of Orange, Stat4 II •flown on • Map rKOrdeO In
or If Y°"' Pf°'*1Y 11 In lorecloeute __., partnerlhip. of Cellfomla. REAl EST AT£ SECU. 8ooll S. P999 38 of N.id Mlee.lla· ACTITIOUI eutMU
10# Wf'/ other reuon. contact Fet-R Wyatl Wyor1 RITIES SERVICE. a Cellfomla cor• MOUi M8P' wtllc;h point In 72.00 iu.-ITA~NT mera & W.dlanta TNll Compeny Thia ... wmen1 wu fMad lllf1h the pcwatlon, • "411'1 aj)pOlnled TrwtM fMI Nor11'1«1Y fr°'" Ille Northerly The lollowlng penon 11 doing ~ WM
Of Long 8Nch. TEE FBO LEOl.F M County C1at11 o1 Orange County on lincMr Ind purtlUMI lo Iha poww o1 tine Ol Bey A_._. ttlence W•tefty ~ M. 't T f A~ REESE. IRA S45-14-9. and Paul Ac>t1127. 1982 .. oonlarfed In tMI certain oeeo at rlglll ~ 30.00 f..C; thence SOLARTRON ENGINEERING.
11
• OllO¥tlng peraon •• doing
FllCMr Fruchbom, c/o WESTERN F11t1• Of TNll ell.c:utad by J-Rwea11 Nonllefty parallel ¥ll1tl Palm StlWI 508-A Ja.nine A--. COrona del ~ u · liiiiiiii;;l'.:ii--Miiiii•~-----------i LOAN SERVICES. t 130 I w Olym-P11bll•ll•d Orange Co11t Dally K-1 Ind e.n-a Gay K-1. tM-~ =•r• on Mid Map). Mat. Cllilomle 92825 Coat~=:c:,:.111= Way • • nm pie 8lllO • LOI Angelel. CA 90064 Piiot. April 29, May 8, 13, 20. 1882. b1nO ano Wife. 11 joint tenanl1, to comer of LOI 1 In M111t G1rdlner Q()(don. SOI'~ A .Anne Hovanc:., 3005 Fiii·
(2 1311120--07 I I Altn Forec:toeure 19»-e2 recoroeo September 4, 1981, In 8loc:I>. 3 of the Balboe Bayside Tract, Jumlne A-. Corona del M.,, w Col ..._ Dept eoott 14209 ol Offlclel Aeoofd• o1 11 1nown on the map recor~ In Ca11fo<rlll 92825 =:. ey.
1
• • CllUof'fU
,_. D-C-t.., ...... 1' •1 l IC
SIDI.JG
OTTO 0 . SHMIG, resi-
dent of Newport Beach, Ca.
PaHed away on April 28.
1982. Born November 27,
1892 in BrelNg, Germany.
Survived by hil ton William
0 . Ehmlg, grand.children
O.vkl William Eh.rnlg or Loe
Oatoo, Ca .• A1iMm Lynn Eh-
mlg of Tanana, C~. and 2
great-arandchlldren Jona-
than and Jennifer Ehmlg. In
lieu of flowers the fa mily
request.I memqrial contrlbu·
tiona be made to the Foun-
dation for the Junior Blind.
Pacific V iew Mortuary di·
reC'tOn.
If you hive 1ny QUHllon1. you PlklC l9J1C( teld Co11n1y, 11 page 577, Recor· bOOlt 4, page 71 of Nici Mi.cella-Tiiis bullnlta Is c:onduc:1ed by an Thit ~ 11 ~...,
snou10 con11c1 a l••y•r or tll• der'1 11111r11menl No. 1902. by neout ~:thence Soulheullf~ lndivlouat lndMdual VJ an government tgency WhlCll mty llave reHon of a brHcll or ~a111t In along the Nof1'-ttert)' ""-of MIO Matlt G. GordOn ;. ~
o f hi1 life was lived there, ln111red your !Oen RefMmb«. YOU NOncl CW TMl8Tla'I IAU P•Y~.nl or jHtformance ol the Blockp 1 3 lo the ~lert)' llne of Thia 1111emen1 wu flied w1111111e Thie 1t1l.rnant ::-::, ,.. ..
where he received moet of MAY LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU T ....... 11711 OOtlgaUOnl ~ed thateby lnefu. am Slr .. t: tllene• SOut"-lllfy County Cletk of Orange County on °°" Clet1c his education, but ........tuated DO NOT TAKE PROMPT ACTION. NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN. that ding that b<aacll or default. 'Mollee along Hid llne lo 111e Point ol Be-April 77. 1912 Apr'4"~7 11182 of Orange ~.,,
a--The 1011owln9 copy of "Notice" on Wadneaday. M-r 5. 1982. at 9:00 Of wttldl -recorOad January 11 olnnlng f1.. ' · from American High School. th• Oflg1nel or wlllcll w11 111~ ton o'clock a.m. of Mid d•r.. In Ille room 1982, • A««der'• "*'""*'' No'. ~ARCEL 3: P11bll1ll1d Orenge Coa11 Dall l'Wt7t C hicago, Illinois . He was rec:o10 on 4·22·82 In tll• olllc• of Mt aide f()( conduct no TNl1M'I 82-02t721 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC Tllal porllon of Lot 24 In 8lock A ol Pllol AprM 29 May 8 13 20 1982 p Pllbh•ll•d Orang• Coul Oelry
m arried to L ouise Marie 1111 recorder ol Orange County, Sal••· within tll• ofllc.1 of· REAL AUCTION 'ro THE HIGHEST BIO· B•yat<M. a1 lhOwn on • map recor-' • • ' 1ie3-1 · '
10
'-AP•ll
29
Mey I.
13
• 20,
1
1182
Ora F b l g3Q C1llf0fnl1, Is tenl to you 1na1much ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, lo-DEA FOR CASH. lawful money ol cl«! In booll 3. pege 311 of~· 1859-82 ger on e ruary • 1 · as an examination of Ille 1111e 1o 181c1 caled •I 2020 North Broadway, tll• United s111a1. or a clllller·1 neo111 M1pa. record• of Orange rta.IC NOTICC •-,,. llllftftl'r
H e was e mployed at Ne· trull P•OIMlt'IY .nows you may nive Sult• 208, In Ille City of Sante Ana. check drawn on 1 llat• or netlonel County. Celllornle. and that potllon · ~ ""'"4
braska Con solid ated Mills, an lntereat In th• 1ruatH'1 HI• County of 0rlfl09, 4tate of Caltfor· bank, a 11111 « fedll'll credit union Of LOI I In S.C:tlon 35, Townttllp 6 ·--------n ow known as ConAgra, proc:eed1ng1 nla , CALIFORNIA LAND TITLE or 1 •late or federal HYlngi ano 8011111, Rang• fO Wut, San Ber· CONIOUDATED
transferred to Grand Island, MO'flCl °'DEFAULT COMPANY,• C1lllornl1 cO#por ... loan 111oelitlon domlclled ln lhl• natdlno Bue end Meridian, detcr1· REPORT OF COHDmON N b ka in
1936
and Notice Is hereby given thll Lo• lion ... duly appointed TNllM 1111-1111e. 111 payable et tlle time of.... bed .. followl: Consolidated Report of Condition of "CITIZENS BANK
Pl
ee.reud
2 3
Jea rs' w
1
. thoothme-Angeles Tiii• and Tr1111 Deed Com· d1r and pu11uant to the po-r of en rtghl, 1111e ano lntarnt held by It Beginning 11 11141 Nonllea11 corner OF COST A MESA.. f C t M Or t pany 11 duly appointed TruSIM un· Nie conferred In 11111 certain Deed 11 TruttM In that 1811 j)foperty al· of Loi I In 8loc;lt 3 01 BatbOI Sey· 0 08 8 "8, ang8 County, 9rld
compa n y . e managed the oer •Deed or Tr1111 Oiled AprM 10. of Tr1111 Hecul•d by JAMES F. tu•I• 1n ..id County ano Sl•I•. c» Ilda Tract. u at>OWn on a map rec· Domestic Subsidiaries at the cioM of butlneee on Mwch
Andenon Elevator in South 1980 ueculld by P1rldlM lnvHI· CLARK.• ""Ille man Ind HUOH A. 1etlbed u toloWs: orOed In book 4. page 71 of Mi•· 31, 1982. menl. Inc .• Callfornil COfP()(lllon, MATHESON, • ""Ille men, .. joint ~ A' c.lleneoue Mape. ~of Orange • Carolina until 1952, when he 11 Truator. to MCure certain obll-tenan11. rec:0tded ~~etnl>ef 30, Tllat portion o f 1o1 u of lllt County. California. lll~c• N()(lh·
ll•te .... No. 10IO
moved to Hyattsville, Mary-g1t1ont 1n favor or Fermers 4 ~· 191 t, In 8oott t423t of Ofllcill Re-Newpof1 Height• tract u iecorded waatar1y llOl'G Ille NortMMtert)' line I a nd and w a a w it h ch1n11 Tru1t Comp1ny o r Long oordl of Uld County. It page 848 In boot! 4, pegel3 of mtacelaneout ol MIO 111oca 3 10 •point 1.00 toot Washington Flour Mill until 8"ch. TEE FBO LEOLF M REESE. Reeorci.r'• ln91r'lm*lt No. 39653. map1. rec:()(dl of Orange eounry, Hortll-lerly from Ille Nort"-1
late l9S'
2
when he went to IRA •45-4 1·9. 1110 an undivided by,._.. of • bf-" or d«aul1 In Siii• ol Callf()(nla, deacrlb«I a1 corner of LOI 3 of H id Block 3; s I ~8% tnlefell 1nd Paut Fltchef P•yment or performan~ of the followl· I~• Nortt1ee11erly along a tine
P'UNI Saginaw, Mkh!Jlan. and as-Frucllbom. as to an unOlvlded OC>llQellonl ~thereby. lndu· ~Inning al Ille ITIOlt nonllefl) parallel ""1111 Ind ,,00 fool Nor111·
HARRY C. FUNK, born sodated with Wickes Corp. O 454% lnterut. ALL AS TE· ding lllat ~or delault. NotlOa corner of Mid IOI 11. Mid point alee -tetty. meta&A"ed et rlgllt ~.
February 9, 1905, Fremont, Agricultural Division for 17 HANTS IN COMMON, .. beneflc:la-of wlllctl WH r-deel January 8, ~the ..tert)' comer Jf lrlCI no IYom Ille Hort~1ert)' PfOlonll9tlon N b>raak J d tiJ '-'-ry. reco<ded 4·21-80. at ln11rumen1 tM2. • Recordar'1 lnltrument No. 21so. a1 .,_on a""" rworded of the HortttMltert)' lne of Mid Lot e ra1 a , to ame1 an years un · rU.. retirement in no 27088. 1n book 135111, P•G• 12-008930. WIU SELL AT PU8 UC In book 61, pege 18 of mlec:ella· 3. Slocll 3. to 111 lnterMCtlon Wltll Mary Funk. and was now 77 1969. He then came to c.o.ta 1981, ol Off!Clal Reeord9 In Ille()!. AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BID-naou1 mapa, recordt of Or•RG• IN llne ol ordlnery lli!l"l llde of IN years of a,e. The early part Mesa. Ca. Callfomla. where flee of Ill• Recorder of Orang• OER FOA CASH. lewful m~ of County, Stet• of Cellfornll; INIQ Pac:lflc Oeean In Newport Say, u
he currently lived at the County, Callf«nla, deacrlblng 1ano Ille United StalM, or • euhler'a aoutll so degreae 01· 43" ..i ~.82 "ltblithed by• deer• reno.red In ------------time (his death WhU here therein N ' LOI 104 of Tract 5171. In chedc drlWI\ on . It.at• Of natlonll .... to Ille moet llOftllefly comar al Ille~ Court OI the State of
he
WOU e mployed. by eCe•~ Ille City of 0rlfl09, H ehown on a bank, I II ale or federal oredlt ttlCI no. 1583, u 9'IOW'l'I Oii I map Califomla In and for the Oounty of ~ m91> record«! In book 3et. Pe;. 27 llfllon, or • 1tate « ...,_., U\ltnOI recorded 111 book 48, page 41 of Orange In an Action entitled "City ol
W.Tl ... OM ...,,,..""*L
~CMAPIL 427 E 17ttt St.
CoetaMeM 8*9371
Corl>., and for over 3 ye.an to 31 lnc11111ve ol Ml1cellaneo111 and loen uaoc:latlon dornlcli.d ln ml1cell1neo111 rnap1, record• ol ~ 8Ndl Yettut Flrat Ntl~wltb Intel Security System Mepa, and lfTillllded by a c.rtlflc:ate 1111111•1•. 111 ~abta It Ille time of Orange County Stal• of C4111fOfn1a el Bank of San1• Ana and otllefl'. F d S H b of correcllonl recorded Aprll 14, ....... rtahl. tltle and lntafWI hald lllance IOUlll 4o degrff• oo• 27': (0.. No. nt79, • C*tllled COOY Of at e co to1'e on ar or 197& In Book f 1704, page 1730 by It, a1 frullM, In tll•I real pro-,..,, 1111.12 r..1 •IOnG tlle north· wlllClll ••• recOfded NoYMtt>« 9.
Blvd., and Baker St. He WU Offlclal Reeorcr.. In Ille offlc:a ol Ille petty •lllllled In Mid County and Mlterly 11ne of Mid ttact to tne true 1921 In booll 215 P9Q11 190 of om.
member for many years of County Recorder of H id County. Stai., dMClflbed • ~ Point of beQIMlno: tner-llOl'ltl so o1e1 Aecordl; ftlaflca Sollt'-tel'ly Uplted Commerical Trave-tnclUdlng no1e tor the prlnelpal 1Um A LEASEHO\.O ESTATE IN ANO degr"' 00' oo·r wtet •1.aa f"t: alc>nO Ille Mid 11de line lo lt1 Int«·
len and ai.o Ashlar M.onk or $-41.500.00 Mid oblfOatlont tllat TO: lllM!ce eoutll •O ff8'"' 00' 18" ~ -"" tfta ~ pro-• •breach of, and dalaull In, tll• Loi 12 lllook 114 of trtcl No. wHt 103.41fHl10 tl'l• IOllttl· !Ontllt!Ofl Of !tie Nof'tllwoMtert)' line
Lodae, 32. A.F. and A .M .. obllgation• fOf Wf\lcll 111ell OMcl 01 234. aa .nown on• M-.> r.corded 1n .,..,~ 11ne of aa1c1 IPt ,I. 1'** of flJllm 8--.. .._on tn. IMP rarid laland, Nebraska. He T111et •• HCUrlty 1111 accrued In look 13 PIOM St and 37 of M ... IOllll'll0---00'00" ..... 1.31 of Mid lttboe leya!Oa Trt1et: the-
WH a member of St. Mi-tllal peyment llat not been m8'M Of: 0111enac>ua Mapa In the ofllOa of tM '"'lllOllG Mid IOll1f't"'terty.,.. '° nee eoutflweM~ lll0"9 Mid pro-
b I nd All A ,_ -I THE INSTALLM£NT Of INTEREST County Aeclclfdtr of Mid Couft\Y, Ille fllOat -•eny OOfMt of Mid IOnOttlOll end ... Ncw1ttwttterty llne
ae .I • nge .. 6 P -WHICH BECAME DU! F!9RUAAY TN "'*" llddr9I Of °"*'com-trect no. 1111· "*-,... .0 .. Of '•'"' "'"' to 11• lnter.-cUon pal Chutth, Corona del s. 1N2 PLUS LATE CHARGE, ANO mo11 d"lgn1t1on of the real pro• 1'"'00' ar· ia.t 1~ . .-,_-.. wfttl tM ~·ertr IN Of lloClk Mar for owr 12 YHl'I. Al8o. ALL SUHEOllENT IN8l;ALL-'*"r.:=Y .. ~ deac:r1bed .. {ht llOlflA ... erty.,.,. Of...., tnll 3 of ••Id lllbOI l1y1lde TraClj
ember of the Orana• MENTSOflNTERE8T.,LUSL.\Tt tol>«~endlCM-.,.-to!MINe~of...-111tnoeNort11 ... 1et1y1tono•la
o unty P erformlna Art• CHARGE. AND Dl!LINOUEHCY 111 ,,,.., ""'*1 letefl, Cllll-.,.... .......... 0( * --!'fontlMalerfy llM 10 the P°"'t Of ~ tn ,..._._ M u-•-DUE ON PRIOA ENCUM8RANCH. fomloa. fl'IOn dealfnatlon ot &lie ,.., ptO-.... ••• • ...._.... ... """' • IF ANY tlltt by rteton thereof Ille . Tlla underalgned tlereby di•• ,.rty .. ...,......,_ ~ le lXClPT #IY pottlon tMfMf ~ Wld by hie wife Loui9e, PNMllt IM!ltfloWy 111\0tr M6d O..o cltll"8 al ~ fOf M'/ .._.,.,.. p11rporte4' to ••: 1110 -, 1111 .,... liotelfl LOw w...,. IWI c. l\ank,.,, /wlo-of Tr1111 .... d•J>O•lted wltll H id neea 111 N6d..,. ....... .,._ a.,...,....,.. 8'ad\ ~ T1W .............. tMIOt ~ cal .111\sinNr with Mc· :iJ ...,a'l"90 Trweea, audl.0.0 --u111 IMIOl1 The 11nderaltM4' ~•r9'r 4" .. OOlllMOrl • 11,......'.I. •""!.·II Pl"·
nMJl DOu•l1s Al-raft, OI "* and .. dooll-•• .,..,,_ ..., ... Wiii M MM8 wMttovt cMN .. ...., tot flllf .....,._ Hfled to be: JOI r'ttfll Awnue, "-'" Cl:J otlliOltlOne MOUred tllef•by • ..,remy, • ...,... or........, ,.. nam In _....,.....,... Ot...., ..... '91111....., ~ .....
l
lGll'ldlM!Beach, ta., U~n an IN 11nd9'~ doet 11ereoy te'~"O ltt ... PGH .. .,on. •en• OOIMIOll 11111 ...,~ ~ <JnMt, C.a., RaJ £. ~tare all Mnl ~ l'*.oy W•IOll. to ........ ':C: lelf .... wl" Ille 1NR Wlt"°41t -.. Wfll Ille Mede WlllMM k. an ~ • flftmediately IM and ,...._Ind MIMOltl -~~_.Heel!'! ..... ,.___~ wwra11ty, ..,, ... or ......... ,.. W'f•_.!! • to ~ ,. ... HM • wtthH u T-~ -..11ara11ytl9clto .... t11e""8t .. ._. __ ay_........,.or tardlfltlltte,_.1111•1111.er .. _.r••..,,_ .. ,..._ ~· • """·· Pt'Ol*tY to Ille aold t• .... ..., tN TNll. ......... -...... NI l ... , .. ..._ ................. •••ua•u ...... ~.v .... ct.t:n~,~ ~==mi~ :-:.=,-=:=-.: ... ~ :=-.:::CS"::..9'=.."=WllE=mrm':t.-.::1:. •tt• I 1randtons and 8 'MUITOllD~ANY, ~ ....... ., 1 ....... ,....., .. .....__. ... _ ... ....,., .... .., ~-""l MTr-.. ................ ti .. -~---==...,.,. .... _...,, -... t~ :ri-CHICMO TITLl ,,,._ ..... ~._ .... or If-.. INlr ·= ........ • =--=-
'
,_ --·~~ .. • .~COM,MN, !!!!,.!•.,e4 ... •f:=!·Tfl=•lelol ..,..e11-ta• ~ ... rJ-• .....,." -=·Ii< .......... ...-.... -,~..:.~ .. ;:s.. ir=-·.=...r ... !.i!!-:1.,.:rM
lllMMN J'rtedll w1·.Qan111J. MlllflM OtMt.O.,Nm II .... .................... ................. ...
•'1. 0 UllGll, ..... -., t---~~-""'"''!-.... _ ... . ., ...... .
ll:llllllllllie..
•
/
I
' -------~------------~----, ---
Orange Oout DAILY PtLOT IThuredey, ~rtl 29, 1982
the COrnpJete Oran e Coast Market Place
I
~~9'-'!'! ......... ~.~ ..... &!ft.~ •• l!t!m.~ •• ~.¥~ .. ""::~~ 1 ~ ~ ~ ........... ~~!*.!!.~~ ...,_... i..J """ e.M ar-. ,.._. ...._ ...., .,....,.,,., 1111 ••• ~:::::-:r:'el'e••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ lor rent. p_tot~ Prof M/F tl\tlrt lullury Jtw..tt.-••••••:r:Tr••••••r.TC' rnm•••••••••••l'lilJ •••••••••••••••••••••• Jllllt!.n• .,_. #14 lnlll• 1144 nt1 l'llalt In 301. b4tau1 turn Condo SC PW.a .!!!.~ .•••.••• !.{ff ••• "':':~ .......... •cteen 2 br dupt.Jl1.0"· lnwnec. eondel, Wooctbttet-HOME FOR RENT ,,..'11!!..~ ........ :;;-::.:i:::........... ...................... N.8 nome Kltcn.n pthl . $285 &41~825.
Newport hectl De Anaa 4 Urm, Caul Fr ont, •tr..C pt't(g. QuMt. -..1s. ge, 3 Ir 2'4 le, AJC, Will 2 Bdrm. '478. Gerage. 1 VMrly "1\all 1 Bf. Apt '°' 1 3 bdrm, 2 be. no pei. .. New 1 br tpt for leue. pool avail. S2150/mo &&e.9479
b eyfront Perk. Mint Newport for Big 8Hr u t ll• Incl. Ho 1.•t1. bar, ,,,P., J...-. oat· oh II d OK, no ~·'*· quiet adult, no peta. near aohoola and OCC, many ut raa, $860 1100 dep. 780·8242 i.N_on_•_mk_r-. _3_b_r _eond0--.
oond. '18 dbl Mcie, nr.. Pf09ertY Of 1 Mr. Ol•r1t 841--2474 M . M· · ::~0;~:0:~~1•;,~~· 545-2000· Agent, no f... 1425/mo . In old utlk good freeway acceu i!.•8°7°20• 9 5 5 • 18 3 3 • loom for ren1. prtv ant $200tmo + ,,.. utll $150
place . brlclt patio. H 1, '4~10 after 5 PM Ne'# 2 •If 3 er. wider! Ol 4 · • • HOMES FOR RENT 875·29'75. '496 + dep. 540-2245. .,_. 180 per w1i1 or I t7& per dep 964-3854 H.9
ooo. Aleo 2 br .. 2 ba.. Bf, 2\+ be, COndO. 2 '* 66M713. 3 a 4 ldfma. N 75'-t 700 OIJI exec 2 Br 8')t. ~ Large 1 Be. g11age. oaa1 1.1•.u.IHd JIU mo No Slcu<lty IOMI for s111oi. ~ io ~ • a d~ble wide, corner lot ... "11 auto gar. Many lllr'aa. HOME FOR A!NT Fenced Y91'dl' Oll'&OM• H 75: 208\t Pearl. No s.c. Pina. 1400/mo ••'••••••••••••••••••• llngle man Jey EVM "'° old glrl wowl(l flk9 10 S3t.OOO. 8111 orundy •••••••••••••••••••••• P.!>~~ Jao. LHH 11160. 4 Bdrm!.1750. '•need Kida I ptta welc ome. pell. Avail. Sat. M ey 111. Studio v. blk from main 881·9528 ahat• hQVllOQ In N-·
17M181, ..._, ru.I~ 5aci-o11e 0t UIC fOf Mr. yud & garage. Kida & 546·2000. Agent, no ,... 972-8181. baach 1385. Utll 1nc:t. " _, ., I poll Btecn/Coata M ...
*EXCITING* ........
Without or without furn,
24x84 Gfaenbflel' Home In
l.egune H ... ' nlOalt S ater
park. Young adult• wel· come. ............
BMutlful 24JC80 Keywest
""' • 28r. 28&. Thia la ltie bllt buy In town. .... ---ULll 2708 Harbor, Ste 208-A ••11rr
•••••••••••••••••••••• Lupla. r~~: &46-2000. C-'Mhl/ .. 1 J.IM 2 Br. 1 Ba. Beamed cl~•· GOOd kltch. 494-3044 ..... 1."!!c.'"!!.'!.! ••• !.~O!/ area 644 2564
C..u "' • •• " 1N2 .... -Waterfront To wnhouH l.J.nl~ 1411 ,,., ... i. JUT ~289 E Maple . 14 0. 03o:ooanlro,~tl 20bldl. M3 _r>_.a11' I HI a PUCU IF non-smlt.1 lo .,,, 2 br 2 ;9·,·.·29-.·.·~;·b~h.·;;;it 2Br. OOl'ner~Obi garage, Broad-oor 2 B .. Ba •••••••••••••••••••••• :•B•R••·2·a·:••••••1 ··,·rp·ic· .,40-4494 eq n ""' . Reas. woe111y Ra••• ba CdM apt w/aame. ... 8 11 ... 0 cpt , renovated kitchen, '" r. • · Near MNI adult condo nr "' · '"''year Y· • VIiia on ollll o'looklng Kltchenettea . Phone. S3t0 & ut111 644-9275 ..,ey-1ept. "" mo. gardener Incl. Vacent. frplo, wet bar, bbl gar, SC Plaza. Sec gate•. bll-lne. patklng. Clote to 2 br. 1'~ ba. frpic. OW. pvt ocean 3 trptoa. leaded "Z" channel Movtn
844·4896. 648-819' 1875 boat t llp poll, water-pool. Tract 11 emall b ay & ocean. 8rkr rt10,1iarage, No pl11 wndwa, huge beam•. Sandpiper, l~7 NOW· Sr CHlzen lo 1hr home w/ c.,,. .,,. 1114 Meaa. Wood• 3b tl2ba, ~7°;~1~~~lo. H 60/mo. friendly, reaort-llke. i 875·4912 525· 43·5478 deck. tlec. gate, dbl1 po<t aeme. mull be near 60'1
•••••••••••••••••••••• ., ope!* nexttop&l'k BR. din ing, air. patio. •••1 BR yrfy, tmmac. up· 18r. gated community. oar · many tte111. Step• Bl Coeta MMI 645-9137 ~dM _6_4o_._7_3o_o ___ _
New 3 Be. 3 Ba. Condo. C95 1053·Santa Cruz.· 1,, .... ...,. 1141 Secluded end unit. No per unit, aecure. View of pool. ape. ctbh11. "'So. to pvt beacr One o t SUUll .,.0_, Aa~p r 10 ahr 3 br. 2 bl
$1500/mo. turnlahed. 559-82211657-01$3 ••'•"•••••••••••••••• ptta.S495+135utll. bty.15551nclutll&ga1 Cit Pl1z1 Sharon mo1tdram1tc1pts on • 1M. I llOu&e C M rrp1c No
$1000 unfum. Mo. to Mo. Lowty 3 Br & den, 2i.. ea, 775-2580 311 Edgewater . Open 759·9100 Cont Cpl or sot prel Wkly rentals now 1va11 per~ 01 k1d1 $290 + ulils
rental.11t.&111t.Superb -QUIET HOME. 1 chHd. 2 no pell. 1150. Hana New 2 bd Sal. 1·3. 873-1943 $3500/mo yrly $105 & up Color TV Av•1I May 1 Kelly
locatlon, nut to ahop-Sr. cerpete. d r ape•. 66'-1858, Inga 494-8404 toe. C::·now. S'ft/=~ lllWNIT 640-5829 Phonec in room 227• 7f.0·0991 54fl·0626
P 1 n g & 1h 1111" • yard. garege. RV par· Charming beaohl ront For detlff• f!!~~.~!!.'!f! .. ~.. AP&ITIUTI ICUIFlln I Newpor~:~~~4.f: 2500 ~ It c:ondo BaY·
548-4"8. ~':~~~~~mo. home, apectaculer 'riew, 979·3378, 751-8184 Ottehelor. So. of Hwy. no 1 Br 1270/mo. Couplet Most e1eoant apt bldg 1n v1t1W pool o" beau
A111ll. 8 Mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 424 "B" Hamilton brick courtyard entry, 4 kitchen. quiet peraon, preferred, no pell. Laguna Beach, finest OCEANSIDE CA OrlH!nl>ell 557 7883 or
Ntwty decorated, Men · BR 3~ ba. IQ• LR. OR, Au.lf•l•ll ltnlMH utll. Incl. $325 mo 2450 N-port Blvd locallon In town. breath· Beachlront 640-6339
Verde. l 1000(mo. Sierra -a -beecti room, Iota ot ato-•'•••••••••••••••••••• 673-~15 Cotta Meaa tak1nq views all bu1t-1n1. New. Bt1u11tu1 & ..._1 Co u 1 t324 --•-F .___ ... 1 d I sec1Uded lmmoo avail furn rm wl flVt "'V'" ,.,... • 48drm2 B afa mlly rage. or ... M only.Cd C•'4#1M 31Z4 wetkto beaettAHutllapd .. eae pool.iub oa· 1Jath 1l'lat>eau1ttulhse1n c...-n.J ... ,1.,,,. home. Quiet ., ... Avail. Peggy Pattlaon, for an •••••••••••••••••••••• I rm w/Vt bfth, $300 mo mealiB.AU rage elevator Lease VILLA lllRllll Irv 73 1·8630
lmmedlatety. Manv ame-appt. 714 -955-2473. CW IE ORO Aefa. No k l tc111n TIWll lMU. only $850 & up 330Chll -----,,__,. Jlfl JHd 1141 nltles. 876-4912 BKR wtldyl 9•5 ALL UTILITIES PAID 549-9322 1213 .... 92-15921 Or 494•8083 11111 Nl-WPOAT BEACH ..... ~.-;..,_••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• '' ,., New Condo tor rent 2 Matur" M F shr 5 br h&e IPftl YAUIY 3 br, 2 ba, newly dee. 3 Br. J'..t Ba. gatage, len-Encllantlng 3 BR. 2 Ba, Unturn atudlo 9375. Utll1 8t 2• .. Bt $705/mo Obi Stu dio $380 • ., block lbr 2or k1tch1 0011 $100 1&1'11111 646·5356 Ta...... Cloat l o bet el\ a ced yard. $630/mo. + ocean view. ne•t to Compere btl ore you lncld. retrlge. No pel~ ger, lireplace. pool, ll)a beach, nr shopptng. ul•ls dock• rrom '3" I ---
Near,.,._ ""~ ....... x. 2 bdrm achootl. Good neigh~-$400 teCUfity. Sant• Ana Em«ald Bay. $1500 mo. rent. Cuatom dealgn lea· 875-8806. 688 W. l&lh 645•2739 Pa 1 d 4 9 4 • 3 8 6 2 or daily·$149 wti.·S650 mo Nt:oo l ,,rot 1oomma1es
2 bath •~unit with hood. 1~75. 1 yr min. He l g hta duple x . 494-7551 tur": Pool. BBQ. cov'rd 494-5401 2008 Harbor Or M F fi;r lrg Hgl1home 5
flr.....,ace. anctoeed """tlo, leaM. 96'-3181 833-1927. 20201·8 Birch , _ .., .,111 •e&>O garage. surrounded with C..I• lt•N 31Z4 L JI' I 3152 N Ocean1lde Stir $350. 28 35 Diana
g._.rage, 9.,,_ 11t • ...-Poa. '--'-II~~ st. -•• '.:••••••.,••'•••••••~··•.~.·. p luah 11nd1c1ptng. No •••••••••••••••••••••• E1111l de 1 bdr. pool. •1,••• 1•11 ca 92054 7141722 155 1 631 1;i66 ... UY,.• ww '• 0 E FOR pela llST&IT Ill laundry, 1du1t1, no pell. •• ••••• .. '••••••••••• --------
CUii flow. Now $169,500. •••••••••••••••••••••• E/Slda 3 br, dtn, 2 ba , 3 H M • 7 RENT 1 Br: tum. lrom $490 $525-..,""tmo. 2'Br. 1 '~ $375/mo 833-7890 1 Br upgraded. nearly ;,,,, Boat fl 50 Hs .. malo Lag Bch M/F, 8 111 Grundy , R ltr, Supervlew 2+1nTurtle-swlmmlng poot.1850 Bdrm .• 8 5.Ftnced 2 Br.turn. trom S580 ~ new . pool, tennis·••••••••••••••••••••• tin n1>at welktoocean 876-6181. rock Rldge.~lum. unfurn . 1950 furn. yard & garage. Kid• & 385 W. WlllOll.&42•1971 Ba. TownhouN. all built· 3 br. 1~. ba apt $.495 mo $550/mo 213/919·1161 SPECIAL CARE/FOOD plu• ~u '350 S100 sec
M ove In with a tooth· 557-2783 pet• welcome. 545-2000. Ins. balCOny, laundry rrn, No pell Avail now. Call alt 7PM 1n new home. ror sr la •, u111i. •97 6763 all 6
b, u 1h1 $ 135 0 . A g t. 3 Agent, no '"· Proftaalonally decorated covered parking. Nice Run, 642~ 153 .,1., rl Je•"'"' 3169 dies c M 642·3481
752•5888 br, lge yard. $550/mo. 1 e r. condo with all tocatlon ,., 'N •• Wunled rmmte Employed
1at, lut & dap. 185d l,,~:1 #llJ!ll 3111 amtnltlta. near S.C. TSL Mgmt 842-1803 $390. Vacant 1 BR. ger. ••••«"••••••••••••••••• fiaa tr Rtll•ll 4200 Ma1ure l1bernl male 2 br Wllllll• Placentia. 875-093e .................... Plaz a yearly leaae relrig. 136 E Bay WUTCUFF ...................... :> ''" dPI Lag Bch ---------Monarch Bay Terrace 4 1 • 7 541-5331, ev1 646-2328 Beaut 1 br & d 1 IC IAYFR09fT 494 62 16 Three bdrms. 1~ ba. For 3 er 1'Ai Ba. ltg yard, peta Br. 3 Ba. home. 32841 550/mo. 548-3 88 or ~BllU en. rp · leaH or 1ea11 opt. $750. OK. $850/mo. Joyce, agt S 1 111 n S 111 0 r . 553-1202 aft 5. lfe•u 2 Br living rm, dining rm, pool $550 640-7614 4 bdrm. 4 bath. sandy Mtr r1'5p yn~ odull non.
751-9905 831-1268 11275/mo. 875•8074 or Nice 1 Br. dpl•. Oulet. Sep H••n--s enclsd gar. n-carpet & 1 BA condo Versailles beach, pier & lloot ~mkr Mstr Br m beach
527 7408 ...--_,., drapea $450 No pell like new SS50 mo Cali
1
$8000 tor August Bill CdM S1 1 101 1 $285 ,,,.,..,. IHej 3141 Backbay. 3 & 2 Ba 1800 • · by gar. 1 emplyd adult Beautllully landacaptd Small Infant accepted Richard. 213•830•2323, Grundy. Altr. 675-6161 8AM 8PM Sharon or Te· ••'•••••••••••••••• ••• a q t t . $ 7 7 5 c 111 Eoc 4 er 3 e a ltw over 35. No pell. 1330. garden epts. Pool & Spa. 842-0735 rf'Sd 673 6 73:? FANTASTIC wood and 831-7370. Aak tor Jim •P• · 114oo/mo ·;oeni 548-1021 Covered parking Heat 213-823•7854 Vitalioa lt•l•li 4250 ----
gvlull•-hOme• e"'n'penord •amlcpa. 2BRnrSC Plza.Adull 495·1084or831~707. "-··•Alai •i'•~ pald.No peta Ea1tald12Br 1'1 8• 2Brtba,eatlnkltch Encl·••••••••••••••••••••• Fffn roommate 25 or ---Tw ~ 41" Bachelor $395 dlahwasher. anclad gar. patio & gar $535 nol >CEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br ov .. r 3 Br 'l Ba Bal l~I $2000/mo. 831·1400 condoa. Pool. )ac. aec. 3 BR 2ba, big y11d, clOM •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 er $4•<>-1455 patio $450. 111 & lut pers 642.2134 Avail now Weekly lhru 1>n •. s:>16 J~al'l•l'le
waterlront Homes gate. cerporl. No pell. 1 o 1chI1 /1 hop, Su~ 1 Br. V~a. belcony, 2250 vanguatd540·9826 646-1955 alt 6PM & ell summer 673-7873 __ RCJQrTtm&te cr<'atiw• i>e'l· ~;;9~~rf.'1~: ~~8~ $750/mo. 831~300 ~end ocean ;:~57~~: 1450/mo 2 Br 1•1, Ba day Sun No pets PARK NEWPORT I • • • pit! o11e111 .. d prol preh>r· ~!!!r.!!.~ .. !.~!! 775-2580 llhliM JIM.a 3111 548-6«6. 493-0803, apt • balcony, patio, EISldt 2br. 1ba. $500 bija C.atan <l!<I tv snr t Br w/!>tudy 1~.C:::r~. 1111' ft UY PW ···Ho0M£s"f~~hi9.T"00 Bu1u1t•• ~~;.dt~Y.~"C· .. f~;,P,~~· ~;·.;~:;,5;'5~~f,':~s. COl~~:Lll 5652 Ke-n 01 ~1~ •u;",5
12~;,~
hr uc. Garden view. Geta yOU llarwd In reel 3 & 4 BdnM. N 75-S700. IHei 3140 TSL Mgmt 842·1603 ._.. Sttti Bachelors 1 & 2 be· vouH~~~"Y::' :,~i:; 01 ., .. 8.J981 5S6 8_60_4 __
I 5 9 5 7 5 4 • 4 1 1 4 : eatatt ownerlhlp. Fenced yetdt & gatagee • ••••••••••••••••••••• II droom apts & rownhou-lour rree llcllets ($12 oo F tu stir 2 br house E side &42·9057, Kata 1 Br. Wu talde, C M. Kida & peta welcome. Two bdrm, pt'lvate ~atlO ses Fr~ $"•0·$1000 val·-J to 1 .. _ c • •
$37"'/ ., .. ·2000 ..,,....t no fee Obie gar W/hoo4up ~ .. ~ ~ '"' M ~250 Isl lao:.t" ' II' ... , SI.IP 1 B., ';'It E t Ide --.._.. . II.I.'• Fl•ST ~tfll!ld OIShwaaller. large lrpc 64"-1900 UIH I IHlm Uhl~ 6 .. 2 1•11 ~2 .all llDA Large 391 2•..tBa 2 atory CJ •• '!~1 x. 11 ' • #.-t J.Mj •zf• Spenlah Eatata LMnqt FdJU IPT$ Beem celling Lg bath NO FEE• Apr & Condo I*' 'H• ••CE C , I 4350 2200 aq.ft. bulldlnq, IUllll· · .,..'7V mo. ;-.-;r.;; ~. ~ euullful park·llke eur· • / k ""' "" l ll•fl 101 tl l ble tor bulldlng contrac-condo. Frplc. bltln kltch. 2 Br. Townllouu with ;.;bc,;•.;,;:;;.;,;39;~2 Beautltul garden apts w s yllghl, welk·ln cto-rentals Villa Reorals Fountain Valley Mile ····'·••••••••••••••••
I<><. upholal.ery, furniture )'Mfty. 875-8775. pool. H.B. $575/mo. .,_ tor IMae Ir ..... 2 ~-, roundlngs. Terraced Patloa/deeka. Hoat peid sets New cpts & drps I 875-<1912 Broker Squar4' Park-May 9 Doublf' garsg" 5t0<age '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I .• ,.. ' I .._t t .... • -· ...... pool Sunken gaa bbq. No pets Children Wtl Xlnl loc 1570 lnc:ls oaa. 982 Uhly 564 Plumer St nedr repalra, plumbing con· 11 '-' ge your n .... men garage. No peta. Avall sparkllng tountalns. • wtr 968•6565 Large 2 l><lrm. 1 ba. 4210 I tractor, etc. 2050 Cherie BIG CANYON EX.ECUTIVE Ila.fled. Agent 556-8518. 5 . 1. 5 4 9 . 8 7 5 5 0 r Spacious room,. Sepa· come. Seash0<e S750 mo Vrly To claim tdeta call W l 9th C. M '146-2277
St.. $17-4,500. HOME. View, privacy, Vacanti E/llcle lf'g quiet 3 844·7220. r•te dining atN. Walk-In ~ ~: ~ :: = Prifafe Paffe 646-4419 642·5678 8.<t 272 I DBL Sto;;;o; sp S100 142-12 u curlty. Ouallty lurnl-Br. 2 Ba. l rplc. dahwar. Lu•ury pool home. mar· cloHll, home like kltch· 398 w . Wiiton 1 bdrm. baam ceilings BEACON BAY Ticket!> must be claimed C M S'"ture gated ;;'~~~. :..~:1~P et. lndry. gar. no plllt. $750. wloua Weatctltt location. en & cabinet•. Vlalk to 631-5583 Of 842-3708 Ges. wtr pd New cpt, 1 6 r 1 Ba. ba yl ron t oy May 5. 1982 7~9 l!>O I CJ or
359 W oodland. 4 Bdr, micro, many U · Hunllnqton Cent«. drps Outstanding toe home. tennis crt. beach. • • • 645 2_8_J_4 ____ _
873-3800. traa. Vear or mora IH . 1 Bdrm.furn, $505 t••D. IOCIP&ICYl No pets Pk1ng. $450 all u111 incl. $675/mo s 101.ige 1'l-lra91: $tngle
.. HI Ullhral~ Cutt 1 Br.trglot,quletat .. 1 1495. Call Lota. agt 2 Bdrm -S5~urn from $365-1475/mo. 1 & 2 Br 966·6565 yrly 675-8669 Mrs."Mitt;ttilR 9ll20 Coi.la Me..a
•••••••••••••••••••••• gardener. $435/m o. 831-1288 apta, new carpet, patio•. Bachelor apt, $275. 2 Br cond o . upper , 2315 P L k Pl SSO IT•CI 642 4qo1 w1o.d~!> ~;;;;;~~;;; .,,,,,, Jiii 646-8817 aft 5. No peta, carpona Cit OK Ut111 Incl. rtlrlg. No pets. Weatcltll/Oover area. N t 11~w1c " 9) ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ··-u ·~ F TSL Mgmt &42-1803 May 1 642-9909 I b I I d lk ftWpofl eac Cotta Mete Townhouse 3 ELEGANT VIEW CONDO -tr-• t1111...., reel cu poo . aun ry, wa vou a•e the winner ol 01/itt Rtllll f fOO ~.!!!r.!!f.~ 81., den $750. 2
1 8
t>t
2
•
5
2•n b
5
e.
3
m1c
3
ro
3
, gar. 2 ttory.. 4 + bdrma. 2 LA QUINT .. HE"'MOSA c1a,~eBac'!,~90Tw. 0nrhp1tea.2dr~ E SIDE·3Br. 2ea. garage. 1Eov!.ll05P_.s8'6321157646-4844 tour rroe 11ct..ets St2 oo ••••••••••••••••••••••
CdM 3 Br. 1 .. _ S""" . • 4 O O. bathe. flraplace. g<><= "' " " ... ... children OK. no pet• v• .. • value1 to the COSTA M£SA 2 Pride of ownerlhlp Tri· IHl. . ..,., 87'"'1781 • ...._.. P'-_..,.. ellA 18211 Par1lllde Ln. 1 blk No pell . 875·8606 u 2« + d ll!AIHI IEllm • plexee tor Ille by own«. Ntwpor1 Halghte 5 Br. or ·-· -.. .., .. ..,. .., "mo MC ep, re· Very nice 38r. den. 2Ba. -Superb l71h St loc11ton
44e & 785 Hamilton Ave. $1450 E/llde 3 &. 1 8a. lfldad per mo. Aval!. Feb. 1. W. ot Beach, 3 bike S. of $500/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba up· fundabla Avail M 1y I yrly rental $875 mo IAUJt• UCE 1 room. •OO sq It $360
C.M. OWner wlll help wl AM are aY9llablt now. gar . l ar ge yard. N O Edinger. per apt . enclld garage. &46-9598 PlaJI R.E. Fountain Valley M•le mo 968 9477 da. ev
financing. cat1 76()..(17~ Diana. agt. e31·12ee PETS 1519 Redttnda pt, 141-1441 balcony/patio, laundry 2 bdrm lenced, quiet, llJ Square Park·Mty 8 wknd or~31-4402 Nk tor Jldt If---· ~.1 .. __ 9._ $845/n'fO. see&aa. I.I IH' 3741 cm.Avllll-5-5 ~ G411ag& $495 . -1111 \982 c M l ofltC.es 345 t11t1n
_or_Gerl ________ ~-..'!': •• ~ •• !.~ Cabin-Ilka hou11, Eaat· •• 'I!!~•••••~••••••••• TSL Mgmt. 842•1903 mo evee 714•594-tMl Newpor1 Heights private 1 To eta.Im tickera. call storage 1vau S250tmo
8UNITSCOSTA MESA. Xlnt2bt.2ba.·S850. lide,1br,clen,l""'~rm. Tl nyatudlo, 1blkto16r,+ Eslde.1st&latt 2Br newint,lncdyd,ga· Br w/gerage&pallo.all 642·5678 eKI 272 ! 548-3345 49•-3803 d k t (213)450-1960 Wkdya ·-• beach. $250. Utll Incl. + aecurity $500 Call & Tickets must be ctaunoo - -~!~ ;:>;oK.g~ PO· (714)640-9753 evs/Mnd 15~! ~~5 494-2769 548-4388 ~~ ~21~1~)~1e~P;2 $~~51J~rd:~~~ti;,c~do by May 5 1982 1~~~~::~1~~t N 1~0~:~·
&48-78e0 AGT '-"... 3Zl4 ...... Verde, beaut. 3 bl', 2 NwP' BMtt. 3 Br on chol· Furn. Ltgun• Beach IU· $500-1525/mo. 2 Br 1 Ba 2 Br 1 Ba, new carpet ' pell 752·2550 • • • 1. I 11 0 0 r A 9,." I
•••••••••••••••••••••• ba, kid or pet Oii, June 1. ct greenbelt. atlarp. •UIY atudlo. ape. Satellite 1 atory, shag, drapea. paint $500/mo Sharp garden guest nome. ln<l1an Wells Villa turn 31 54 t-5032 1121.-...... 2 BA Elltalde, 1575 mo. $850. 873-5050 $1125.144-5319. TV, IMJlll. maid -W:.. petlo. lrpic. d/w. beamed BrOker 851·8800 1Br quiet. WIO. pallo. BR 3 Ba 1 ---------
S350 ~~·Aval! now. OC-AENTALS ON THE WATERI ~&e~~1i. I 115/week. ~~Jtage &42·1603 Sharp 2 BR 2 Ba. lge S335 mo ~6-6333 Call 714"640·5548 Oceanfront duplex, New·
port Buch. Poaalblt
b reak even with 29%
down. Will trade tor any-thl,. Ownef, 988-9087.
141ml.IL
All 2 bdrma. 25% dn. or
trllde? PPLS ONLY. Mr.
Cfopper Aot.
752·1920. 493·3827
&45-29 ' 8 3-4399 1·5br'a 1200 to $2000 Great view of boall & rooms. all bllna incl O/W Su Clt•t•lt 311' lt•l•ls to 11'1• 43 Nevar before a rentel. 750-3314 open 7-<tays bayl Bri ck flr1pt1ct, Roomy 3 Br. Townl\<:uae gar, No Costa Men nr •••••••••••••••••••••• i••••••••••••••••••••••
Cuatom dtcorettd 3 . «>Unlry kitchen. 1 8dnn apt In quiet adult com-McOonalds $525 mo Studio apt, ocean view. Bdrm with gardener. Utll paid •rm be9utyl Penlnlula cottage. Aval· pleK. Newly decorated. Call 540· 1158. atk tor ulll lnci'd $375 mo. 332 ________ _,
!!~_?~mgto .. 558-034 7 oc~~J>ITatLloS. ""1~~14 81a71>,!'8=· 1875 mo. Ca• hreplace. enctad petlo & Larry or Pem Encino In San Clemente ROOlllllTE
,..,,, ... ,. ...,... " ~ _. Q olV garage. Sorry, no pell. (see the Mgr Apt C)
Airport u ea. back bay JUST ll•ted,~ THE REAl ESTATERS =~L~~:: 846-3381 or BHli•1I•• • • • fllDERS
view. lmmac. redec. 3br 2br, pttlo, kid NOW $430 3 br 2 ba frplc 2 cer Ind 3140 S Oldest & largest agency
2ba. garage, petlo, yard, OC~ENTALS 750-3314 gerige. Bike to beach. STUNNING large 1 Br. ;t .. ti"0 t••••c••••it A••t• ..,. Wn All c1ten11 screened with
grdnr, wtr, refrlge. $925. EASTSIOE 3br. dbl "'"r Nwpt Sl\Ofee. 5'48·8083 garden apt. pool & rec. un ng on ree P 1121 •M1Mf'ffl IYt. photos & references 842-9542 .,.. area. $425/mo. 710 W Deluxe 1 & 2 Br. Frpes, c.rta 4e1 I Credits Cosmo om 9 UNITS HUNTINGTON ·---------·· OC-bbq, patio,"" olt '485 X-LARGE-LUXURYI 18th. St. encl ad garages. TV • ., Good Mornl""PAm:nca BCH 10yranew,all28r, llMlf RENTALS 750-3314 31avet twnh•,2br,3 be, ucurtly. 848 -16 13. You are the winner ot .. ,. ·
'458,000. Bkr. 538--0123 llr 1-. flW Buli•ffM dt n, view. I 1100 m o. • 2 Br 1 ba Mela verde 8AM·5PM only. lour tree tickets ($12 00 The Tomorrow Show • ...,.., 844-9329 728-9098 upper. New decor. No vahJe)tothe · *'h ott • toannewcllo.nts l•i11tn1l Rent In Coata Meaa'• JHd 1140 · peta. Gar. 1 500/mo ....... a,ta. MUOI llllm wn1.:;.:::,a place1,.1_1111 ,,_,,. ZllO N E WE S T gated 20 ••••••••••••••••••••••JuatottBay.2 bdrm.Xlnt ~studeos.one 833-8974 Spacloua1 &2bdrm lautt•••"r "'""•n• ~ ..... ;.~;;r. ••••••••••• Townhomt VILLAGE 5 81ka toocean.Elegent 2 cond. Rat. $850/m o. rdtwobedroomapatt· among beaut lake """•
COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. Br. Femtty Rm &Oen. 831·5233. mtnls FU•NISHEO *3br. nr S.C. Plaza, S A. 11ream1 Pool jac and Fountain Valley Mile .. let II 12 I
11n. WSD
Quality Ult up bulldlnq In
prim• corner locatlon •
South Sanla An a. Air
conditioned olflcea, 2
unlla have 20 loot cetllnga,
only 4 yeara old. Owner
wtlt help flnenca. 11.132,
000.
21L 8 1•""' 1800 ft u 50 Mo ........ -p ... 2•.. " Carport. pool, ape $875 Square Park-May 8 .... a 0 • I w em. IPIC ,. a, ...,.,. aq. . .., . ,.....,, .... ... ,. Harbor Vu Hiiia home ___.. UNFU"'HISHEO. 7 22 rec •,.a N o Pe ta 1982 . Newport Shoree nome 2 ofpureluxury.Gatagea. Ba.Cedar &gl .... eun-t .............. _. ...__, .... " Petok. 52·58 o r &46-8591 I M 15 hydro-tuba In matte r dectc. dbl eat pry geirage. wan ..... ex.__. r .. a • ......, Oakwood also otters 841·1460. To claim t!Qleta call rooms avai ay
autte, dining room•. tulymelnt.rnd.Nopell. family. 7ao.9731 ....... ....._............ THE WHIFFLETREE 1-2·3 642-5676. IJtt . 272 Randy. 8-S. 752-085l
I I 27 8 S -., __ ,._, *2t>t. 2ba. "' S.C Plaza, Bdrm 6 pts Gym, Spa. T k t t .. _ ct 1---' P _, M d 3"' .. lg WOOd burning llrepiacM. ~u re 11 1 ttl. t. ._. .__. ...... S.A Pool 1550 No ,.. IC e I mus .,.., a .. ...., "" un er " 10 sure
I I 1 """""' -•111w1...... · • 191. sauna pool tennis etc by ••ay 5 1982 NB ...,. __ Xt $37 .. m cro-weve ovena, pr • • 2-3b<'a/l 950-$1000 mo. p 11 a. 7 5 2. 5 8 2 2 or • • · ... • ,..,.,.., raa "
vat t palloa & 4 & agl family quiet cul-Amenltlae. 831-0480 ()ocup9ncy 641•1460. &48·0819 • • • 631·6313 yud1,gardentr prov I-• • '11 Mlllorl In Del pool Id xt 1 1., 1---------1
dtd. Elegent llvlng only de-aac, bike to beach. VERSAILLES. 1 BR Pen· ~ *3bt. nr S.C. Plaza, S A. uu ' e, r • • • • Wanted Person 10 anr 3
15mlnutaa tromFufllon 1 800. 9 83·5 808, thou ae. 1825/mo. Gar, pool, 1p1 $750 gt 2 br, 2 ba. bltnl t-L.~ fi-N br 2 ba 14>8t ant In
I-•--... 7 -'-'"•to S.C. 982-8891. Dorothy. t atllut 1 -..... 1 """"' And Much More' Chlld ok. 752•5822 01 dswhr. 1~ mllll b .. cll -"' .. _.., ....... -..... ~ Adulll. no pell $500mo 3516 ecan St CdM Walk 10 beech
Plaza or O.C.Alrport. *BLOCK TO BEACH Wik to Bch, 2 BR, 2 ba, FQf I month. or a hie-&41·1480. 53e-8382 lrvtne $425/mo & ·~ ullts
Juat H i t ot New&:c! EMC.3 8df2 Bt.f.,.,rm, den 2 catgat fpC petlo tlrTle ModtlsCIOl'Q.~~ Eaatalde 2 BR. am yard You art the winner of Ron 833-48261675-4411
Btvd. & IO. of Sarr formal dining rm, fprlc, eomm Pool, ~ 182S 91wJ'i tofom No QSO-option al ettactl gar. Oeluu 2 Br. 1 Ba In lour free tickets ($12.00 Shr aharp hse, FV, mlnllo
Ffwf. Starting at 1900 • gar.age. ~5191 mo. N0-1235, '42-8915 $495/mo. too aq.ft. 4·plex. ow. hook-up•. value) to !tie twy M 22·35. 1290 ut1t
month. 831-~39. 2473 HOMES FOR AENT 548""345 enc11:.a,•r No pell .... IEllm Incl Big screen TV
Orange Ave .. Coat a 3 & 4 Bd'1'M. M764700. Waatctlff 28r . MSC> Olkwood 1 ... 2 ... a... $485 .4454 uu. UGI ~4-2788 Nick
Mela. Fenced yards I OltlOM· Eutbluft 38f • 11200 Qlrden ~ltl Newly decor. G•• pd 1 Br Crpt, drpt & refrlge. Fountain Valley Mile Roommate neecHd, Bal·
A Division or 1111 IAY Kid • & peta welcome. 8tuff1 381-famll)' ~ ............. , •net "•r. dwahr, nool, No pela. Square Perk-May 8, boa. $150 mo lhru June
If bor I Co a&.3 8&. T~""' 545-2000. Agent, no fee. CNna ~ 38r S Nlwpoft-vNo. " .. C•H 960·2675 1,.,.2 ar nv-tment vz 8 1 d C 2 .. an bbq. Adult a, no pet a. ..., 15 892·3551 .... · bebbllnQ broole, frplc, oo-RENTALS aye • o ve I den """"Irvine 1 842•5073, 2 Br. 1 Ba. nr BHch & To ct•lm tlcketa. call ---------1
d/W, poot, dbl gat, many 1.5bf'e S200 to s.:zooo 12200 IM ltltll Slater, enctld gar. $485. e42.5678, eKt. 272. 2 Aoommaln to shr 3Br
,,.,, -... Ziii •••••••••••••••••••••• •1111• ... .,."' .UPml m1K ... t o.r. ...,. ... 0t trade
t"'9 outetandtnQ ewtom
view lot nowl -You can own tNa tot tor wry ll1Ue
down •n41 .. callent
terma lrlCltldlne eubofdl·
nation tor qualified t>uyw, c.I MW fOf more t ntorm a llon .~t. MO-MOO Of ...
xtrae. No pell. MOO/mo, 750-3314 open 7-cltlp Weet Bey 681/dock 13250 (7M) ... 1* 2Br w/gar. 1420. Cp ta, No pell. 841·9348 dtye, Tlctlitta mYet be ctalmed 110use. Jacuu1. C M 1250
I e 1 a•, 1 at . a a t c , Waterlront Homaa. Altra ••••-rt ..:.......'lo. . f d d 1 d 2,.28 840· 1078 ev... by May 5, 1992 mo. 548-8410. 835·3171 848-8423. HEAR the bch 3br, 2be ••1-1• r·-~ -nc yr • w r P · "' --------alk tor Gary
frptc, -· kJ6.pet l500 ·~~~-!!!!!!~~~! 1700 *"St "A" Plaaentle. 836-4120 OO·AENTAlS 7&0-33141~ 3 2 COovtrll llltll 1·5Pm,
. 1nfM 1144 1124 p0 ,';f'aa::: (TM)t4N10 NiCe 2 Br. 1 Ba. In 4-plex.
•••
20et -=t~ Oro •••••••••••••••••••••• S1C>eo mo Phi .. " Pa1.11._ _______ • IUO. 879 #I Cen ter. Newport ~ 3 Bf 3 a.. EMc Home In . .... • ~.
You ,,. the winner of Noittiwooda. 2 eeory With "*• (213)42$-7301,
four,, .. tlclleta (112.00 xtr• i;t!::'· room. No Bia Cenyon, McUln AdUlt ... mTIU So. Coalt PlaU 1br 1be, VllUI) to tf't doVt . Qardenet & C"ondo, 2 bdr, 2==, Avallabl• now. UOO full MC. pool/'fla. $455 -I It water p aid. H OO/mo. tennla, MOUred '"9· w • • k up. A 9 •n1 lrlClktl DMIW\r. Agent, no NI'•.. 64WOOO, Afint, no,_ 1 1000/mo.131-MO 17Mt70. ... 951-0222
Founlaln 111111-v Miit UnlY. Pt!. 3 M 2 le, 1ge 2 It, 2 be QOl'ldo, encl untt, OOeenlrOftt wtlly, 2 & 3 bf, 11111 -Arri
lquare Parll·M•Y 1. tam rm, lptc, loe e«ner pool.IMlle to"9af\. 11'd. oo~. fUfn'd. Gar. Avt. Adutt 11¥1ng, 1 er .. o.r· tll2 tncd yd. Attle:fi .. ger, ...,9--t dllld .. Avel. now. MCM1" Pof't, poet a '9undry. No
To clelm ticket•. cell OCW1W11 poot l jlC. ao.. 1111112. MIO~,.._ ltudlo """"* °""" .-.,. 1410. 931 w. ttth.
'42·1111, Ht. 212. 10 actloota, ~. ahOp-u . aeo. dep. I HO. MOOimo • St. 541-04t2.
1'lc*4ltt"""' bt ollAINd ping, .. J6 mo. Call 113-m7. ,._, btadl 176.oe10
byMey9, 111t 71.f·I U ·IOOI or oc.MNTALI '
• • • 71~75-01'4 ,..,., -to llOOO
Nort"-OH Qn hr UNI 7__,,14 tl!!!l 1 ...
upetre 001ut e . AIO, ._., .. ._.W( c=:..ar,~;~· ..... :L ....... -•w-.nu ' ~Ma"'fl04IM
.... ·'='''"!.:I ·mA'·" .•... ~ ......... t w. Ni. ,.,. .• .,.,.
lt :t• -j hW "·. t ., iJ:lt ........ ..
'
L*V' s bdrm, 2 bt. s-tto.
yard. Enc ger. Of\ LIM
ln. Avlft May to. M60 per fftO, ..... 1 ..
'
HUCOOU
IEWPHT
E'l!•gc1nt Eltet suites 1n
prp,.1191ous loc lnc;I se-
cretarial. recept1onl6I.
telephone ans & more
Oles from $<136 mo On·
call oles S 165 mo. THE
HEADQUARTERS COM·
PANIES A protesslonal
environment (71 4)
851-0681
Near Sc1n 01ego Fw y &
Harbor 4 ott1ces suite &
lronl olllce & recept
area 2 b11lhs & kltche·
nelle 1111 & turn avail
$850 mo 549-2928
E~oc otltce. ~Int N B toe •
cop.er. S225
966-1779/640-6215
520 SQ It S 1 00 per sq
II 3975 Btrth N 8
Agenl 5• 1·5032
WESTCLIFF BLDG.
NEWPORT BEACH Coo"'"••*",.,.,,..,,,,,..•-• "'-,.,.
././•C--. '-,_ .. .1-./(1, ..... ./kilt, .......... , .1---,/ Mlfll ........
C1ll Mr How1rd
845 8101
*llU ll lfFllH*
From t room to 3 rooma
From $1 16 a sq. ft. No
leeae required. Adj, Air·
porter Inn 2 172 Oupoat.
Call AM 833·3223
-4 50 1q. f t. turn. office spaoe. $400/mo.
841--0763
BAYFRONT
Prime offlot. 87S.1003
execuplan
I •
U;,6.7A!e~~~1
101.
30 Clay 10
In the
t&tU
""'' II.VIOi
llHOTHY
00 IT HOWi
ltk ftr IH*• Your Delly Pilot
Se1vlce Directory
Repietentah\19
142·Hll, eat. 322
~~~!~ ............. .
D11vewavs. Perking Lot
Repa111, Sealcoattng
S&S Asphlt 631·4199Lte
ALLSTATE PAVING
Sealcoa1ing·St11p1ng
Repairs Comm /Res•d
Lie 397362 645·818 I
~~.i~!!'!!~I. ......... .
Careful & lovlng mama 01
21 mos to care tor yours
my home FI T 631·3787
Babysitting in our C M
hon;ies t yr & up Any
hrs 642·84821646-5759
~~.'!~!~t!!T •••..••••••
For all you need 10 know
aboul bankruptcy call
(714)835-9162
10111, ,,,,.,,.,.t,/
S1mt1 .....••...•••...••....
MARINE SERVICES
Mechanic paint. varnish
leak rub & wax
645-9766
1.;14,,, •....•••••••.........•
liEIWICI I SOI
Bullde<s Since t 94 7
Additions • RemOdeltng
Doors windows patto
covers Free est Reas
lie. -310942 549·2170
Get GREEN CUh '°' WHITE elephants with a CIUSllleO A<I
CaH M2·5678
Balboa Penln Sub lease 2
oflloes ot 1000 IQ ft. ea.
Utll. janttorlal & parking
Incl. 673-6610
f.•!f'!.~!!~ .•••••••••.•
CUSTOM SPA DECKS
Pollo~ gazebOs LIC'd
John or Rick 979-3218
£'!1!.1.1!.'r!!t........ f.~~'!:4!. !~!!~~~'· No Ste1m/No Stiempoo Ber1, m1ntel1, kll cebl·
Sllln 8!*=1all91 Fiii net1 .. 1alHd p1nettng,
dry FrM "' 83f.15'2 <Joora. bookcHH, ,,.
Crptl 1natill/repell.O mod. & add-one Xlnt
FIOOd demege. Stum refs. Lk:. 8348278.
clng. 5544510, 97345611 ..,.---5_38_·2_3_88 ___ 1
EXCEL CARPET CARE Crown moulding, ceder 11-
Cpl uphol area '"9 nld c:toae11. bookc:H ... clto~lng. work guar. m1nuea. entertainment
Fr" 911 M5-t77t ceblneta Wood IQlullone 10 wood problemll!
Shampoo & llHm clean 631·1528
Color brighttnera. wht
crpll • 10 min bleach. DHki•f Hall, tlv/dln rma S 16. avg •••• ••• • • •••• • ••• ••••
room $7 50 couch 110 RIVER ROCK ·perfect
chr $5 Gu~r. ellm pet OYef pool deck•. patlot.
odor Crpl iepllr 15 yra walkwtya. drtveweyt.
eKp Do work myself etc. 661·2371
1
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Thurtday. Aprll 29, 1982
a1t1....J n..,, -... ........... ft!.~ • •• 1.w. •••••••• ..... :~............ . ~~~ ••••••• 1'Jlr ••••••••••••••••••
PLASTER PATCHING Tll.E INSTAU.EO • AH Klnd1I OUMent..O. AHtucc:oa Int/ext. 30 ~• Jonn ..,.O.t2'1
Yll NHI Ptul 545,2977 1----------Tll .m •--HAAOWOOO l'LOOAS MllUfe llVl•lll hOuMkff· ..., p•-
-S..utlfully c:INMCI ' -•-Lawn-tr .... wub 1111191 anel wax.a. 832_.881 ptr, ••paral• qtr1,,-1n1 Rattdl lnduatComm'I
TrM trlm·rtmOYal "''· 84&-<t926 Low r1111. Fre• 111.
Lawn cer .. Aoro1111r110 B1tll•• I lllll 675-7109 I _u s,a .. eoe5 Of' caw ······"·············· .... i..1. ---------...... An. w., Ad • 5 4 7. HAULINO-atudent ha• ••••••••••• • • •••••••• *STEVENS PAIN TINO ········'······· •••••• RHp N B couple wlll ta bac:ill Now epec. In ext DAY OA NIGHT
842·4300 lg• truck. LOWHI rtll. hOUHlll July ' Aug FrM Ill. Char.... rt111 ClaH WOfk
Prompt. Call 759-1970. 84& 3908 (8 3()...5 wkel ) 1~ •M K&O Landec:ape Mtlnt. Thank you, JOhn. • : YI 0"6·3,.81548-45&1 • ut Ma.1121
**ALL TILE*'*
Ouallly wot11. 10 y11 ex·
'* o.o<ge a31·5'79
Custom C.amlc Tiit
Prompt FrM "1. Ctluc:tl
642..fJSM 975-1409 Reaid/Comm. C~an-up. ---------Semi.retired prof woman Lt Hauling 548•2489 DUMP J08S avail aummtr hou1talt· & Sman Mo~ng Job• ting. Low. pet• & p11nta
WIY IATU 1HI hnlN l1ul11 PAIN TINO 845·e383 •• •• ••••••••'•••"••••• ftH hJYI# UALITY commit••. 12 •••••••••••••••••••••• Gardening Wanted
Mowing, eOglng. reklng,
sweeping Free Htl
ma{H 845 ·43 72 o
Ctn MIKE Mll-1391 Xlnt rela. 8.46·5424 PAINTER NEEDS ~'' t•P Rep•irlremoo .llYI TIU 1111 W' al WORKt30yrae11p.1nt1 R1t1 Ftlier. heater & Compl aervlce. ...... ~~r.!f.......... Eat Acoulllc c.lllnge sweep aale 673·8184 840.9309 VANDENBERG Dav11 Palnhng 847~1881--...;__......., ____ ---------
LAWN CARE LANDSCAPING INT/EXT PAINTING •• -!!!~/. ..•........... r. .. ~ .. tJ~/. •••••••••••••
Comm/re11d NwptlCM Hauling, grading, demoll· Malnt, comm'l/r11ld. L•c:'o Rafa. Free Ml •tZtl UtflM ct. Mott 1ubJectt. K· 12 &
645-5737
Prole1tlonal Service
Hauling-yard clean up
OUICk & clean. FrM Eat.
673.05411
Reta 531·0101 Xtnl. rellablt WOl'k tlon Conc:rel1 & lrH ~;~ t.'1:·,~~~~. ___ &4_6_·_108_7 ___ Low ra1ee on repair & cOllegt 25 yre. l&/hr
we Care Crpt Ci.aner1 !'!7!!~!!.............. Onrlopr Barry 846•741 ~~:~.u~f.7~~ck. llc'd. FrM 1111 979·5146 C.... PMeti11 rerooling. He 389425 Mr Mo<gan. 645-5176
Steam clean & upllols DRYWALL TAPING THE GRASSHOPPER flt, 26 yrs exp Lie. 403'94 t 1-54_8_·3_809 ______ 1 Vi'H ·~,.,
Wor!rugcuk
8
rmoun
64
t u5~i3t716 F~!t:::~~ee~I~ :~t'~~8 Complete Lawn Malnl J~~~U~! ~or°~n':ty. ..~~~!T•••••••••••••• Bonded Ina Reis Color HUBER ROOFING ••••••••••••••• •••••• Dominic: 1142 ... 851 Ml·'427 3RICKWORK· Small )obi e•pert 963-0911 DICk All type1 & Firtproohng YOUf WEDDING on
• • • Why Pay Store Pricet? DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC TIEES Newpoft, Colla M.... Top Ouallty, to price, N-·Recover·Oeck• VIDEO TAPEI 11!,..
1
SfftJI Carpet layer wlll buy di· Repair• new & old. 11 Iii / 1 lrvltW Rel1 675-3176 prompt. Ext & 1n1 Spec:-LIC 411602 548-9734 EE~op :o:Y•t~..!~=
• r~t from wholesale mtll yrs exp Bud 552-9582 Toppedlremoveo. Clean •• ~~!!!.!~~.~'··•••••• ,811111 Rt1• & Comm'I F ~ """'
Cab1nell Remod
St.ytites • Room Add'ns
Grnhse wndw1 754-4420
20 ~ • I 75 3 7 Brvanl'• Land·~a"'"" ' r.,., ''"l J• (7 14'"58·7091 Fred 29 Pomona Ave 11 we do the labor Free up. awn rtnov 1· 4 Want 1 REALLY CLEAN , -,... .. ,. nl 714 739 0708 II • II 1•• ,., Costa Mesa tllt reti 851•9920 Eltdtit•I • HOUSE? Cell Gingham Brick, atone. blodt. con. ---·--·----•••••••••••"'••••••••• ~~~~~! .~{~!~f •.••. You are the winner of __ C_A_R_P_E_T_R_E_P_A-IR--E.i..ic"T°Ri°c·i;:N·:.:P;t·c·.·.: 0.•11'1 hmffl Girt Free etl. 845·5123 Crete frplCS, BB0'1. pa· OUAUTY PAINTING BUDGET RATES/Llc'd tour r ee tickets ($ t 2 oo " •••••••••••••••••••••• 1101 & drlvewaya Guar 10 yrs serYlng O C Low min Sml fObS OK
valut1lr 10 lhe & 1 N s TALL AT 1 D N . 1ra1grghet.
0
frre
5
me ae11s1t01mb~le on College Studen11: wndw ROBIN'S CLEANING Lia. & ins. 538-09 14 Reasonable. 848•5684 Free est Ins 641-758 t k 11 1 2 o clng. car wulng. od<I Service. 1 thc>foughly COllDOI IHlm squea Y rs l)(ed. 3 yrs uc 396621 673-0359 1 obs 6 4 2. 5 4 4 9 , clean nouae 540.0857 CONCRETE. Brickwork Bishop & Son Painting ttH•I
.lu ... Uc~ eJ:per . guaranteed & 10· 94c 7972 Dratn N"-'M. ---nup 30 yr• e•p "-~ch e1ea ••••••••••••••••••••••
" surtld (7141 493-9560 LIC D ELECTRICIAN ... SCRUB-A-DUB ... ,,............ . Fr~ est~ ..... u5·8·1029 Mobile Ser--. Doctor
Fountain Valley Mote R S CARPET Oual work-Reas. rates /l Prof. rea1, rt1111ble. 25 yrs exp 536•2066 -.. Repau/replace Custom.
Square Park-M ay 8. -,--------Free esl 631·5072 Tom •• ~~(!!~~•••••••••••• Role Jean 1131·5018 Jtli•i Ill•'• Oul'\Pailti'!fi Reas 631-6300 lvt1 msg
To claim 1~~~ets call .!!'!!!.'/.~!~!!!!!..... TOP OUAUTY CRaoorpenf1~:.v_·PMluamsob,nnrgy ••e1r••11 Mr°Nie"t;~~~··c··o0s01°p0iu0·s lnllext ayne Le lltlf S1-t ;.·••1 ti
THOMPSON'S ELECTRICAL WORK .. ., -~ llXOYEI 751·9103 ••• •.•.•.• •• IU•••'•"•••'······•• 64 2 -5678 e.<1 272 Drywall · Stucco . Tile C LEANING SERVICE tO"I• Coll Dt1borah, ". T1c~e1s must be claimed CONCRETE CONSTR Reas rates 53!-5055 Remodel J B 646-9990 Aeaaonable ratea. tree 640-5078 11Ntil• .lbl Clffl
by May 5. 1982 lie 393J83 642-8482 ELECT A I C 1 AN L 1c ettlmates ---------•·'·~••"'••••••••••••• $3 25 548-7949
Cement·Masonry-Block 233108-C-10 Small HOME IMPROVEMENT 720-0742 Jtlo~i•f. F'arthin9 lnte11ot Design
Walls-Cust work LIC 1obs Maint & repairs REPAIR·PLUMBING ·---------•••••• ••••••••••••••• HANGING SIO/ROLL Restcomt Rob 547.2683 548.5203 Heattng. carpentry, etec. Housecleaning. hone.I & ·ABC MOVING· Ovallty LIC/ina Str•p· ~~'!'~'! ............ . • • •
• • •• E. SawiH
2445 Etoen Ave Apt G Clli1' C111 .........••..••••..... Coste Mesa
You are uhll winner ol
~tour lree tickets ($12 00
value! to uhe ae••••u•m llUOH UCE
Fountain Valley Mile
Square PtH~·May 8.
1982
To ctaom tickets call
6 42-5678 ext 272
Tickets must be cle1me<I
by May 5, t982
8Jbys1ttong my home El
Sode C M 3 yrs & Olda.
S50 wk 631-7063
Co•t11t1111 0.•111/ ···········'·········· REMODEL/ ADD-ONS
ond Carpentry. Lic'd
25 years Irwin 548-27 t9
Aoo111ons 8 remodeling
bonded S tate Lie
202752
JG Allen 494· 1810
____ •_•_• ___ The IHtest drew In lh•
WHt .a Dally Piiot
Ctanlfteo Ad. Call Today
642-5678.
WANT ACTION?
Cl111slfed Ads 642·5878
---------tile. Free est No job too dependable Ouock Carelul Serv1Ce. ping Oise on paper
RESIOICOMM'L/INO small. 645-2811 962-2690 Free esumotes 552·04 to VISB·MC Scott 645-9325 * lkJticlttt * Free EISI 631·9255
20 yrs Do my own work E *l 1 It" H* Lie 278041 Al 846-8126 xpert home and apt re-HOUSECLEANING • ·' S•ti•kltn pair Carpentry. root IS OUR BUSINESS! Top quality Special care E •pert wattcoverong 1n· • .-;.•••••••••••••••••••
Fo,.it1/Tile plumb Etc 6•2 60t3 stallalion Reas p11ces • s k'-R * · .. • 10 "'• Janic:e'• Ra""e<IY 1n handling 25 yrs e•p p11n "" epair ,. "" C Consultant Assignment A / c we b1<1 all Jobs. lgetsml Ann 675-2514 ompe11t1ve Rates 58 t.8590 e6 comm ommerc1a1
FORMICA COUNTERS Ouahly exper. he'd E H < No ovett1me 730-1353 ---------Ldndscape Services rops/Cab1ne1s retaced Bill & Dave .,.4•9325 xpertise ouse .. eep•ng 957-8388 Free est 642·5357 ------""'---I Wo lurno&I\ vacuum & STARVING COLLEGE PINI h•1~1/ 1---------
......................
General Maintenance supplies. Kitty 641-4970 STUDENTS MOVING ··'·~••••••••••••••••• T1i/011 FH•l1i•1/ Repairs & Decorating CO Uc T124-436 *•BRYANT'S** SI.:•-~ Gllll Oualuy. Ray 040.5144 Ouality Houaecleanlng Insured 641-8427 Wal1Cove11ng Removol
•••• :: •• ":"............. w/a personal touch. CM WATCH us GROWi All lypes 642· 1343
ALL Al TERA TtONS
& Custom Leather Wear
t0078 Adams 962-6538 ONE OF A KIND JACK ot all TRADES trv HB Beth 850-0933
Espec:.ally lor you Call day or night, HOUSECLEANING
Cnrisunc & Ed 846-7825 *Jack 675•3014 * Aeasonabl«Hlependebte
G ~ • HiE HANDYMAN CAN Tonye 963·240 I '1•t•••f Repa1rltmprovemen1 • ••••••• • •••••• • • • • • • Lie d Rel 968-914 EXP HOUSECLEANER Ja,a1111 Canlttttr pn 5 Reliable. rel• Free est
Free est Ken 839-5035 Clutlfled Ada 842·5&78 Call 24 hrs. 955-2418
r.·J~l!~I. ............ .
flH Plllll•&
t>y Richard Sinor lie
280644 13 yrs or happy
local cuatomers
Thank you. 631-4410
r!~!!!!t~·J!'!~~ •••.•••
r'leet patcNta & texturn Tile ............••..•.....
frtt est. Hl-1CH CIST•-Clllll.
PLASTERING FREE EST 640.2062
Int & ext. Res1ucco. SELL Idle lleme with a
block walls 586-4892 Delly Piiot Clutlfled Ad.
Le• lhe Sunshine In"
Call Sunshine Window
Cleaning Ltd 548-8853
20"!. Monthly Olloount
*RESIDENTIAL*
Avg 1 sty S30. Avg 2 aty
$45 Chua 957-83811 .............
Irvine s best BaelC' 1 lly
$20. 2 sty $30.
559-1302
WINDOW CLEANING
7 YRS IN AREA
642-54491845-7972
fOlfl) ADS
ARE FREI
Cal:
142-llll
For ClallllleO Ad
ACTION
Cati a
Dtity Pilot
AD·VISOA
6"2·5678
''"',.,,., ... 11.fr.!!~~!!r ... !!.!¥ {!~!!~~'!.. .... !.~~~ !'.'l..!'!.'!!. •••• !.{!f !'.'1..'!e.'!!. •••• !.{!f
Hskpg In exch for rm & CIRCUS VARGAS ...UIEPll
Laguna Beach hall lnte·
rest In fabuloua oceen
view hme M i n caah
req'd 4M-6176
'
.......
board. rell1ble young needs temp postllf help Mature tor tldet1y lady.
French Canedlan. Lib•· Mutt have own ctr wlmd1. peJ"m. 5'8-3688
ral. Laguna. Cherl111. $4.10/hr. Homem1kere .,...0 495-6296 welcome. Call 960-6510 --'I'll
Pvt duty nurllng Hf Vice. Clerk· Typttt Full time. pt
LVN/RN '°' home/hoep. time Sal beneflta AvaJI to 24 hr1 7794500 631·5031 --------~ UVE·ln hspllr-compenlon Clerk. drugstore. meture
Niki perm pos. Ref's '*'°"·FIT or PIT. C<IM
836-1163 S.W-7576 --------~
•
-COMPANI~ tor eldefty
lady. MOfnlng drlw n.t
to Potter Wor111hop Md
to Sf. Cltt:ren Center for
lunch Afternoon •hop-
ping or movlt Live In.
Top utaty. Eve 897-6250
HOUSEKEEPER, exp'd.
wlref1. fc>f home In Lag.
8c:h 494-0751
-.,..
Orange Cout OAILV PILOT /Ttl\Jrtdly, April 29, 1982
.W .... 1.ttr MIMllC .... IAtr ldlMMtt........ ,.,,.., ....... lfblVIMl1 ... IJlr ...., ..., ""'c11w.,.. ...... .._.. ,_ ....... IM-W ·~ ...... -w ir:·--~ :.'1 ~ ~ """ •nTrn .. .,. ... 11111n.......... '""'" ,....... .... ~. mw.nwnm .. ~
I\ M••u!'f:~ct::& M~ ·.:r~~,= ::~ , .... ,., t• " "a1= 0~ld':.t. .. .ltiftll.... "J;" ,,,, I.~ 1::! r:~ ":~1~::~~·· ............. MC """" ......... .... ..,. 1 Women'• ...,._, "40. 6':1:r;' • ,,......, 1 • ' 1 Lift pretervtrt, rl111e, 9YI "9edY to •••-•.._
M y adl011 , lltlll'llMlr!I pen ..,. .QNtOADINi Dllltttt ttltle, ' ot111ft.1 U II Q oomittfttt=t•t llcl, ~ if:.l'f;,''' ~ ~ ~.,:. Tiie .... ..... __ , ... IOVlt'I...,.. ~ ~ .,_,pl ..... lmmtdltl•• l'ricllY-llt~ l>Utctw **>ok, 1100. 0111 ra•n 1 ., ... \ill tOll'O ~OM. rt ' Mlilll' pole Cf1tiw llt.U. aNt ':1.v ti klno you et th• ou ,.. • Y• 1P1••• Ill
ri1y ..... lfl '"'"· >Clnt. 148·J71' • Amtffeall Olk & "ne MM*. :".re n•r,~·U~'8~"8· NOO "'·., 11 121e1; '144111 pUmpf Automallo trtne., ... ......... 1171 H~~ ~:4U.°ortl'll . Call: S.ltl I'•~ Ooun~~ttm.h OUHN &L!!PIA SOl'A 111.eaee rM 210 (tvt ZOdlac 08d41, OOOd oond. M ""-'..., J.l . rc;:~·,~~:~~ ~t!~ LeMI ..... II , n ew olutoh and ne: ... =I llllllT .. ~ ~ 1Ac,T~u:,.,.t~A • & Ll~J57~110. mt0) 4 intn. ~ffal •• !•••••••••••••• •• (1WHOH), l'tnanctng ....... ~ interior. Pflvat• parw.
-• -~~:"::'."-=:-~-'""'":"---:·l~-~..:;.;.;;..;.::.:..;:;__ __ Jwheel chair, chrome. ,_ IUU 1vallablt. Call now, Hk .., tr...... ONLY U2'751 Cell •uAtt The Lo• AngetH TlmH ~A"HOQ; Chett: ~~"oot N
1
aw
80
f"l!:alt• Mahr....... good ahapt '75. Evlnr~ 9.e0 tono at1a1t. 3 '2t8 M5.e7'3 for .Dav• Jon ... Theo-Ir .. ..___ .. _1 1_154_.1_ae_5_. ____ _ "or~ N'ltf'l •t· Clrculatlon Otpt. cur· ' t:-r, very n -• .... 1w quten .ize, 1·714-973-285" yre old. ood cond. 1949 WhlZler,MllOftr•"-dort Robin• f'ord. .,._ ~ ·12 Honda Civic•. '4 dr. tOf!WY llW l'lNn In ll"MI renttv h .. poaltlOJ1• oPtn 1810 •Pine ••de table, $100. 760-5832 , ,. J500. 8'75·9961. .... 8'2·0010. (114 122·1111 $1 37.47 +tall.,_, mo.
1ndu1trlal oompte11. $a• In eatea. A•• fl~td r•· :g'J! :~~·!1 \~e:.:~ 8£0. Que n Size Matt/ 1gotlk:=1'~m~ OLD iVINRUD£ ~:~.Ufa.• 1500
firm. ·94 Chevy¥· ton PU. MW CloMd and 4t mo. lellet. terycornMtnaura .. wlth preatntatlv,youllearn Id oond ' 11 ... bo)landfttme.'1125, 19 '.t-71 .. •7°3 ..... 1P!-' 15HP,l400/orbttolr. bk•. all ..... &b ...... Mlllt'I All .Savtra (7 14) ..,.,, Ctll Ml', Sltnond• an hourly wage. gen· 1••91•5 . • ". 873·5483 ...... cv&4 875-.. 78<4 -I .I 'I r • • r.,,. atttty. .. --634-0189 "3-.312Z .,oua oQmmleilona. H,.: .,. .. Pltlt llr I ltlt "'' #q11#1 Needs 1 little body WC>tk, -• --------
4pm..Qpnl. For mott lnlo A-'l MJO 8' Couch, green, 11111 l I 1971 Mercury Outboard, ,,..,,,,. Ill :lac:fc'· •nr ru"·· ~ '79 Aoc.ofd Hatchblell
OR06" Ottk, Jn1ld1· pleaH oa11: 957-2381 •• 1'K'~MW. •••••• r.;.. sao. OOOd frame. I H 11er Will 80HP, 10 hra, 1 1.800. ~;;•.("•••;,••yi0•s•••• 8PM 01'· 54 • 142 '1 -. -w -$-99d, tltvtf/1Mee4H~t • .-.-.. Ml.lat haw •JIP. In ext. 1204. HARBOR A"!A ~9-3573 P1,tr I P1•rt••1111 842•0053 aft 8PM. .,000
1m1• a t' •8C1•k· amllm cu• .. 11r, 11lnt
n11r111e hardware & ac-PPLl~E SERVICE lie Ill 11 "' m ·warren y. • ·74 Ford·,,., ton 4WO new 8 '" .. -~--, -· cood. 16400. CHI. By appt. ooty SALES petson wanted A ,.,,...... · Patio tum, Tropltone aet. 'I ' Ill• IHtl ,..,, HIO Cltan. $2795, 141·3087 eog., clutch, brak"; duel • • .,., ...... _1ng 769-1122"'131.()4"
S"t·t871 Mr. Doata Sundial Fuhlooe, LI· We ... , recond .. 1.u•r. 2 chr1. 2 IOU"9ff, 2 loot ttrwart·l111s 11 '' •••••'•••••••••••••••• ev. t1ok1 4 •Pd radlllo ~CARVER E,Q.£, M1'/H guna Bch. Call (714) appllancn. 54 3077 rHtl,2tmlllleblea.S90. ltrltlh Olllll 11111 24' Seabird Swordlllh '73 VESPA Rallu. Black. $2200tolr. 842·9594 r. ,....._,, . '77 HONDA Civic h•tCh· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;"~9~7;--4~J:.;,74~----Relrlg. S225. Wa•her, Lgeoutdoor table, 125, 2 boll & trtr. Compl rig· 1 llll.5·~·~ back, good condition. Dryer, OlthWHher $125 outdoor bar 1tool11 S16 lllttr 11• trflfll gtd, ready to llsh. SIS. W/wlndshleld. Xlnt. '77 Toyota SR5 Pick up, M>..,,_1 ifl'fW'Cl/lf!""" 1 $2,300. 912·H25 aft., t PAIT Tm SALES ea. 848-5848 ea. Obi bookc•"· 1100, H•••• a-a..-&a... 000. 495-5185 cood. 845-3439 toogbed, camper. tool .. """"'•"'~''"'~i ..., p.m. Off1c1 Wortc Sales Representative to Heroulon 1ectton11 ...... , .. ,...-'74 Yamaha MX90 Olrt bOKea, H ,000 mllea. ..;.... ______ _
Mon-fr13:30 to 8!30PM 0•11 on read,•r,•d bdu•I· I .. , lPPUAltU coueh, !*ge. COit $900. .., ............ •1,9 20• ,sK7IP.JAOCOK 'cr',•,1• Bike, rebll eng., good $3300. 875-9358. '75 BMW 530! Mini Cond~ 1 .... , n•
neaa accoun 1 Of• ver-Lea 957·8133 sell $250, 2 brown etul· 1111. lthr •ht .. 999'.·~8,..' "11 SPM. • : ~"nd. 1200. 842·403<t -'·•••••••••••••••···· tit 1 n g Moo Fr I 1 .. .. ""a "" V.••• 18'l0 •w braku1 new trans, 1979 Jaguar XJS Coupe. 9am-5p~. Base a."com: New In carton delulle ed leather chalra, $SO ...... lZMlll '78 KAWA.SAKI KZIOOO ••••••••••••••••••••!~ ew head. 16500 080. (587Y80). The ulllMatt 'Clrculallon C>nio. ntedl I
rellable, mature and r••·
ponalble par90fl to IUpet•
vlae a buay clrcutaUon
night office. Appllcant
muat ~ve • 9000 pllOne persoHlllY and general
ofllc• tkllfa: Some Data
ProctHlng e11perleoce
Woutd be he!Pful. Training
wlll be provided. liWY In
pertoo·betwffn 2£00 &
5:00PM, Mon. • Thura.
Alie for a.n.
mission. company beoe-Whlrlpool dlshwuher :•o'.:,.~1~•tom"gl~• .. • •1 I'' 5~· VA.FCHT. pock•1 1" Gd cond. 12.200 ml. $2, 'N EOllllU• all before 5. 957-3222; V12 Jaguar Grand Turi-fits. wlll train: Neat •P· $295. 494-2895 PIP ' -• ron °0 99 1"' 1 "'·IOI •••H•I pt. or ta • on 1 me 5 o o . O 11 er , x tr a 1. Ruot,.,,,.,., ,.......... llr". alter 5 646-8772. •mo. So hard to find pearance & good apelllng le, 1100, 2 tlulfed ver~t. I W••IH "'' •haring bula only. Tax 847.3335 """"' """"' available for Hie ntw. HHnllaJ. Apply Penny-Magic Chef, atalnleaa gas White & blul ctlalra. S50 1•••••••••••••••••••••• btneflta alto ivall. $675/080. 536-9632 ·73 BMW 2002, parlect Current prlct·l 32.000.
uver. 1860 PlaceoJla. rao9e1op w/880. New. ea. Student deak, 125. S 1100·11500/mo. Doug '81 Virago 750 llke new. A•lll W.a•t--8 f•fO b 0 d y & P 1 1n 1 • Thi• "as new" Ham""'"' $250. PIP, 494-2895 custom wood & mirror • • !___ 875-3258 4500 ml. 38 mo. warr. .. ~ ....-C.M. picture. 135. A.uorted llft a-. S 9 •••••••••••••••••••••• $4000/080. Auna good.' on Nie at only St6.500t saw Super range top kltch ax-olllca Chllra S35 ea 123 c Melody Ln 7g 310 Wellcrafl Cabin 2•3 5 call 1<t6•4629 WI HO,. 559.4095 Sold a Hrvlced by Ut
hauat fan. new ISO. PIP 840-5521 , • 1 Coata Mell . Crar, atern rm. 31', two '77 Yamaha 750CC, wit .... ISO t&ll '78 530I. blk & loaded, xlot afnce new. Bau. Mdtore, Telephone sollcllor. no 494-2895 You are tha winner 01 330'a, loaded, 1lp1 6. drive. 5 -apd. 2925Harbo<Blvd.,COtta uper. nee. 9-5. Tuea. 1--ir ER I 8' coudl, lllnt corl<I, $250. lour free tickets (1 12 00 731-4332. 637-5340 $1100/080. 551-0859. Anyt9h71ng conald8!'ed: cood. $10,000 firm. PIP. Mesa. 979-2&00.
thru Fri. Gd. co. benefits. --ll I • or bat ofr,; 2 twn mall, & I . GOO<I cood. 1 7 thru 1960 875-5343 eva. Apply lo peraon: 1680 S75, e.t2-4618/631·2850 box 1prlog1, $25 both, vaJ--l-•m 41' lffS~ l ,f ·74 2002. air, 4 spd, ate-·72 XJ8• xlnt. lnveetmtrit.
Pfacentla. C.M. REFRIGERATOR Like Call alt 4PM, 846-8552 ····--":!'-811 In '71 byColonlal. Tw "''" ••n, 1111/ ~ reo. xlnt COOd. 15.000. ~:i~~Feoully~R.d~
S. I II II l Whl & ,..... .-.-_ 6-71'•, Ld w/eciect. 7112 I 11 .• 1 II 495-5882 , "· u · ..... ame req. u 1 , o • new, frost tree, 2 door. te _.d twin canopy Fountain V•lley Mlle kw ooao. a tlaherman·a ••"/.~' lllf.1 • tlrea, brka. Show oar. ~~:~gst~1. ~~~~82~01 S155, 893-9060 bed, S60.5Spread & ca-Square Park-May 8 dream, NB slip, O.W.C at RE.NT 28"1i.";,..;t;·~~ le C•1.ti ITIS _1_5_.900_._5_4_8..,._14_1 __ _ -== 330 WMt 8ay ·St.
Coal• Mtaa Etec blk glass door 1et1 nopy Inc. 51"4334 1982 ' 1~/t. she'I at our dodla Sips 8, fully loaded! •• ••••••••••••••••••• 1 9 7 9 J • g u a r X J 9 . SEOWUY clean bit-In ovens, new, 3 drawer woOden mates To claim tickets. call In Lido VIII. NB, uklog 645-8818 • '16·'17 Black Llltback. (185YAT). low mll" on
All Erl ore Emplyr for 1u lawyer wood $375. PP 494-2895 bed. spread & throw pll-842-5878, ext. 272. $94,500. Seller uya •1..,0r-,.C..ty Gd. cones. N-brlls, gd. thtt Immaculate, fuel-
proceulng, wlll train. 21 cu. II. Frigidaire. bron-low inc. $35. 551·4334 Ticket• mutt be c:11lmed ~~~Eal~~~;'~ACHTS ;t;,~,~ K~"J'.,~'. t~:do:~. 2925 Harb<>! Blvd. rads Sl,
895
· 645· l0
4
3 lnjec~ed econo~lcal 6 Pwt Tiiie 1-. Newport Beach Law OI· ze. bottom freezer, xlnt Beautlf4I Modero 8 ' by May 5· 1982 1575-9007, 960-l725 eve. clean, 28K, eaktng $12, COSTA MESA ·73 Capri. reblt eno .. new cylto e< eedan. rl,lntl
T1tephooe order clerk. ~~c!;.~'fZ~~.:f'1~ ~9o3n~803s2.oo. 548-6448, ~::~g~63 fond. 1125 • • • •••D •-•••• ~ .. 2_3659 pvt naitu 171-2111 :~~~~.~~~~· 11800
· ~·:~~~:.i'1~:;•f~~· o!~; Help ua conduct a P..'o--.. .., • -.... _ '"' .--, $13.9951 Bauer Motors.
motion for this araa a fl. 0 E A 1 1 1 d I' TW wu 1 lln 1 .......... • • 22' Chr11 Craft '58. M•· WE PAY Dali • •i:zo 2925 Hart>o< Blvd., Costa neat~· . Mon ... ,u • .. ,. ... ,,. /(i---"'--· · e 'gera or. goo .._ ..... hog. hull. E·'ery optlo". •11/l1t.1 •11-I 11" • " '" -1• ....,.. condition $90. MUST $150 ,, .. 8 9 .. 90 , • " 1' ;,, 1 ' ,... 1 1 •••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa. 979-2500. frl. 5:30 to 9:30PM, Flnanclal lnvestmeot firm SELL. 8~1-0411 . .,.. • ., momgs 1798 Creatmont Pl. Great cond. Dependable ••••••• •••••••••••••• TOP DOLLAR
Sat. mornings 9:30 to tor educators. SO F /4. Apt.8 6 cy1lnbrd180 hip He<· 18' RAINBOW #•U• n#
1:30. communlcatiorta/ adminl-Whirlpool gas dryer avo-Very good ~o~d. brown, I Costa Mesa cules eng. Full lnetru-11::J1g:i;: alr84~579 FOii ISEI 11••1 ••••••••••••••••••••••
$8'.00 a week to start. strallve dept. sec'y. Ex· cado gro, $75. Washer $30, 642-•616/63l-28SO I You are the winner of mentatton and rldlO plua ---------1 """
Alter llrat wetk ahare In cell. typing & S/H req'd. free, need• repair. lour free ticket• ($12.00 dock space. Comp I. f. Ji UtlUhr 11 AlAll IAW
pertnet'lhlpa proflta. Exec. secretarial exp. 8 844-1487. King size bed set, i<lot value) to the summer pkg. 14500 •• !~ .. !~•••••"'••••••• P11111C/SllUI High earolnna,,oa1ual 1 N k c 11. cood. Coat 1450. Sell aaa-. IEllm 675 747.. Steel trailer 8 It x 8 ft 2~•" ., mus . oo-amo er. a . Amana 19 tide/side cop-$ 1 7 5 . 5 4 8. 6 4 .. 8 ' -• .. . ....., HarbOr Blvd. ::ie:~rlvate d"k. Call 640.-0123 pertone, gd cones. $100. 493-0803. .. IAU.HU MCI w·-· Heavy duty tire• plu• COSTA MESA
831-6287 after 6pm. Fountain Valley Mlle ... ,~ l apare. '475• 494·2"5 MMIM Management Opportunl-SERVICE Station atten-_____ ....;. ___ ,Couch & loveaeat. good Sq are Pa k Ma 8 42' Glau Grand Bank•. •••1•s.7
ties daot. Eve. shift. Apply: Caloric double oven. gaa cond Gold & white. u 19;2 • Y • CASH or trade for equity A•I• hrriff, 1.m _ _. ••
HI. 312. 842-5878 Shell $tatlon. 17th & Ir· range & oven. good 1200. 642·5275 l o clalm tickets, call Eastbluffs Condo NB I ~..nn WE llY ~=esual==Oppty==Em=p!y=r~ vine Npt Bch cones. S100. 548--0910. 642 5878 t 272 plua cash. Prine. only. ••••••••••••••••••••••
HIUI f:i • • -· · · ear room slate pool table. • • ex · · Pvt pty. 714/875-8651 LITE SOOY WORK J ClUI CMS liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii As new Tappan Gurney comp. w /acceuorlea Tickets must be clalmed pelnt/up 10 60% off 'f04K 1979 Datsun 280ZX with
au1om111c trana .. air
oond. & AM/FM tape. A
very clean ca r .
(1AIHZ34). Kelley Blue
Book 19210. Robins
price 17295. Financing
available. Call now: aak
~I YOUI
PAIT tm Stlldeol Jobs elect 1tove, dble. Cheap $400/080. 548-9227 1 by Mey 5. 1982 Wiii take over g1ymeo11 body ahop •l 536-9832 UI TRICIS
8 • ....-, fw .... ndl"" .,A ... h· IEJI lor caat •. 681-9528 ffV • • • on your 25' laatron. ---------1 ........ ...... ... ,...... Kg R waterbed, complete, Searay. Must be In good 'N mn HI -r....
NUT MAIDA.
"""' ...... counaalllng firm has ope. ltft-llllS IJnrJ11 lfZO Wood frame. SI 50. 0 U IL TS ; We bu Y o Id coo d . Ca 11 Br I a n • ...-
olnga for 3·5 aharp out-How would vou Ilk• to ••0'0••••••••••••••••• 548-9227 Patcnwork Oullls. 566· 13l-2589
I t ' Beach Cruiser. very llttle 873-1388 or 650-1324 iiii~:!!:::!!iiii~ gong Matute P4!0P e to earn as much as $50.00 a 640.-224t motivate ambitious 10-13 week? Do you Ilk• drive-kl uae. llke brand new. Swedlth smoked glau di· ·-14' GLASPAR w/trlr & ·79 &hU1iN
yr old s. C ail 2·5pm . movies, plcnlc1. plua $150. eau evenings. nette ut.1 cane back hM Fatllilwt elec. Evin. 15ho. $1195. .. 1--•
e.42·4321, Ht. 343. A•k ptrllea. beach partlea, 557-8393 ~~~~ ~350/080 • .......... Wiii Mii sep. 815-1050 TONNEA~OOvER
fOf·Andre plue many other things? SchWlnn 10ap 24" fr 27" 968-5037 alter 6 '78 27tn It. 814.YLINER Flis MG'a, '71·'81
Th'eo you would probaby quick release wheel•. Sptld pecan eottee & end "Victoria:· Fly bridge. Ne¥ef uaed. 175 PUf9 ,_ probably enjoy working trap p e d 111 s t 5 o . tablet w/wlll unlla. $775, OIDn Fsn.Jl111 I VHF radio, ball tank. Marla 831-7797 1v m
Now acc.ptlng aP9flca· for us. ~-3836 Wiii MP· 850-1880 ~al.f!!!I MJll depthfloder. outriggers. ~~~~~~~~
tlOnt 3 dtys • wtt .. Tuet. QUALIFICATIONS: Year old Schwinn cruiser Neturel oak 8 pc: bdrm set, ••• • •••••••••••••• with trail«. 122,000.
frt & Set. Wiii train. Art 1· ev.r 12 years of age. w/elloy ......... ,, 1150 Firm. dble/queen bed, near SCM COPIER 641-2843 •-1 • •-•-. 2. Neat. honest and de-..-• Eltcellent condition. See----------1-N Ill .._. ~~= ~::.;.."::. peodable. 642-3253 -new. '400. 850-1860 r111ce 1500. 84s-11n . For Sale or trade for ••iMPORTANTNOTice ..
JMO Ptaoentla c M. 3. WOfk alter IChool and Peuoeot PBN10 12 spd Custom contemporary pickup truck, 181t Trf..hall TO REAOERS AND _____ .;.•_· __ Saturdays. 2411' frame. pe~rl white'. sole & loveHal, orig. 1111 Ill walk thru, very good ADVERTISERS
N-· .. _. CALLTODAYI w /access. S225 . S1300, llC $450 .•••••••••••••••••••••• eond.S1.100. Th I t i t d r-. -537-593e or 531-5257 650 1660 Nenday Conure, 111\ Y" 556-1233 or 993-9748 •pr ce 0 em• a • The JdJy Roger Inc., an , ..:64..:.4:..·.:5:.:25:.:9:.._ _____ t:::---·---.::---r---I old w/lg wrought Iron vertlsed by vehicle de•· eatabllahed re•t1ur1nt 8AM •0
1 IOPM •· El 1 b 21' -...&.. 'II ~ left In the ._..,_,_ c•~·•. r Dirt Bike excellent con-egant uous I ed. standing c age S 100. -......... -
c:Nll't, hu an °'*"ng for I~~~~~~~~~ ditlon $35 Or bellt Offer. mini cood, orig, $850. 540--0117 Good n.tonlng coodl ton. tied advertlllog columns '"entry level peyroll/flle 1: 644-5785 sac. $400. 850-1880 Twin V8'1. wood Hull. does not Include any ap-cltftt to wort! lo a 4 P8'· ~ Cu Pln'tf Sleeps 4. Newport slip. pllcable taxea. llceott.
eon cttpt. Payroll •llP8f. SIUOITllS l•illl•I ••• !l.~.~!~ ..... Y.!~ GREV CHEEK. 4 month• Aaking $ l l ,500. Wiii transfer feea, floaooe
helpful. but wm train an WOfk lo the 9Yelli"" NI· .. ,111:.1, •""S Garage Sale: 811 hahld old Very gentle . $100 consider tradea. SKIP· ch«gea, feea for alr pol-lndlvlduat wtlo haa llml-. .., "'' ,. _,. 1 G 831-1744 PER vs. 173-5200 lutlon control device ted expw. & a dellf• 10 ting •fcP" for my Nwp1 •••••••••••••••••••••• teme must 01 Thurs. certification• or dealer
ltarn .. s.tary commenau-8ctl o c. for a major ho-IOW 310/FT 3-8:~. Fri. l l-8:30; S.t NANDY CONDOR Parrot ltill I.ii documentary prepara-
rat-Wlth ppet. Af1f/kf In tel. Hrly-commlsaloo-Redwood 2x6 decking 10-3.30. 24202 La Her· 8 lg. c•oe. $150 Of belt •••••'·••••••••••••••• llon cflarges uoleu
person between bonua. 833-3740 aft 4·20' long; 8180 redwoodi;mmoiisai.iLi8i11Jiiniai Nilgiuetiii.iiiil o1r. 548,..228 41' Ketteoberg Sloop, otherwise specified by
8AM·5PM or aend re-lPM fencing. Lowest price Ill a: a A 142,000. the ICMWtlMr.
aµmt to: ~ UUS guar. Jim or Keo eoy-SWAP IDT !!~~!!.!'!.!!f~!'...... R ndy 645-9723 dys. lt•fl•I Ill ~LY~, INC. A.ggrea~lve computer lime. 646-9485. Every Sunday, 8•m·3pm. Console French Proven-16' femlly aallboat & tral-••••••••••••••••••••••
1 042 te Aw. PfOdoc:tl c:o. ~ 11·--u a Orange Coast Collage. clal piano, mint cood. ler. new NII, good cond. WANTED lrvfnt. CA. 9271"4 temaleOfmaMI "-·· • Fairvi ew & Arlington. $1500. 64&-3045 $600. 5"45·3112
Yl4-546-033I uleaperaon. Prev. tele· r.,,;_.., IOJO Costa Mell. Admiulon Oak upright piano. beau-Laser, 2 aet1 of sells. all
PttlUon Ctrcul1tor1, f/T, phone ..... ew-r, tve-••• ":1.0ll»•··········· tree IO buyers. Sellar TO BUY ..... -,.. *• ~•• •u•t* Reaerv tlon /I 1 tllul finish 8 spin-top equipment & dollle. $650. PfT, dally P'Y· Euy ,IOI> I'd. but not nee: wlll train. ~ ~ 8 s no, stOOI. must Mii. $1375 or 645·01&4
16410 IW. 840-&9t2 Prime cooslderallon wilt New a uHd. fan111tlc 559•5860 offer. 639-9109 ---------1 Ult -EL be aggreaalveness. Eatty prloff. Large aelectlon. 14' MZ Marine Flberglau
Ptant lolltoernalnteMoce. hr• .. pltlme. atralghl aa. Perry's Camera, 380 E. harlty Garaner. bikes. Hammond Console Chord Lapstrake sailboat w/ ISO CMS Interior 1 exterior. E•· t t T 11 63"' ""'"''" 1 • "" '-a h I I S per'd JOO.l'8e lary. Call: Jim Caoger, a , ua o. """"""· 1k 1. furniture, every-.,.~n. vvnc • muse n-lrailer. 750. 645--0164 WILSON f()RO
71"4•963-5500 Dark room equlptnel11. All thing. Friday 2·5• Sal cl' 1375• 5-45-2296 VENTURE 22'. Lots ot
Plant Matntenanc.. lnte· TIW -professlonal quality. Incl e-4. 19141 Sltrra Mana. WURLITZER Baby Grand xtras. $4950. trallefable. 18255 Stach 81vd. , ''°' & ••t.not ~tloM •-eolarg•r. Nlkkor ten•. Turtterock, Irvine. Jutt reflnlthed. Ebony 848..0709 & 96"4·1148. Huntington Be9ch
avail. Full time Mon-Fri. ...,.. timer & much more. New GA.RA.OE (;ALE. b' k • A. k Ing • 2 3 0 0 142-1111
Must l'lavt good drMng Experience preferred. $850. UMc:I 6 ttmea. Sec. Many different hems. 842..,.975 HOBIE 16'. colored .._111. tecofd, 5'5-6252. Good driving record. $350 bat otr. 873-5483 Call 842•2257 cat box. trailer. $3500.
• ·-....._ Sttoold live nettby. Larry 1-------·1--..:.;..._:_:...::.:.;._ __ Jl-'lat, c.M. #ff _833_-o_so_3 ____ -1 Aatlpn/ n..•-..... Hunt Auto Center. 1825 c.1. "''Furn .. household good• •• r.-:;~. :.:.:.:..:...·1········ •1• ........... , ........ , Cludtl I! .... Tll Laguna Canyon Rdf Lag. •• •••••••• ••• ••• ••••• • toys, c101he1. misc. Je--_, • ...-....... •..-••••••••. •••••••• •••••
to rnlll adhetlVH, coa· S c h . 833 -8986. Siamest/Hlmalayao weJry, d ishes. misc. 10 epeed. Ellcellent 811. by Chris Craft lo ~ "A"al Unga & ...-.ms. Ptnn•· 497.2030. kitten, 6 wks, M ChOco-541-6498 • • 0 0 d . I 1 5 o. 8 f1 er 1963. glasa. oent. cock· Shay repltcaa: plclcups & lite~ Cofp .. ,1537 late point, $50. 495-4874 ARAGE SALE . Furn, 675-7079 pit. Aft. cab. sloop. coupes. 4 to chooH
MonrcMa A.vt., N. 8. .,..Yll.11111' _S_14 ________ 1 bed1pread1, clothes, St ... hea"" dutu w~-out 6~HP, aull. Great crul-from! (006788) (Stk, Mlrt.3yrsellp.comm'l.8 I h hid ., ., I ng boat . needs CO· A.3093).PrlcetatartJnnat •••El vac. sabre trained. Har-~ •11UO m •c. • goOdt. Set bench w/uprlght weight 1met101. Divorce forces •Y ., .... 1··• .. ., b T I 875 13 _,, May 1, 9.4 only. 1728 auf port, Ilk• new StO. aela 0 W C 50"' ot • 1<nowlad~• of resld. & or rave • • 1 t, •• •••• •••••• •••••• ••• L k S H 8 ( · · · · ,. Mlnle PETS "R" PEOPLE a 9 t. · • around 96 ·3482 $29,000. TIU ODORE comM1. wt be veraa-Exotic vacatlona, hair bacil) 980-2837 TRADE WINO YACHTS
life In other tradu. nftlT •tylel & loY• at Stwry'a. HUMMELS, Fiesta dllhea, 5'7"x~o~Y:.,:T,~rd 875-9007, 960-1725 8V9
_13;;i1ij;.2$46;c.:;;;;· ;;rn;;::;~:+-;~;._~'P°" e..cti CPA firm Poodle klda 4 ule. T-antqs. & misc. 10.5. Fri. 541-1005 •t• .... •--• Ouellty Controj . tqQ 1YP1at wtth •IC$*· cup. toy, min. 5-48-2848 Sat. 428 32nd St. N.8. • -.,_ time. Enollah epe•klog & matllre attitude. Typing 22 SnubooH revolver, 1978, VHF, A.IP. fatho,
prllf'd,OryMalCr•tlona. 80wpm. SalarySl.000 OliiMlelhrPtl Sat. 9:30-4:00. Furn. oewS125.flnn, ROF.lowhra.5bagl,hae
ROBINS
FORD
20'i0 HAQ&OA IHVO
(0\TA MgA f,~1 0010
COMMEU
CHEVROLET
>-.."I l.1 rr . • I' . '
·I' I\ .,H ,
S4l>-I 200
fMlllTI
141S •a.*' a .....
tor Dave Jones. Theo----------
do re Rob i ns Ford . 1111 llZll 642..0010. -Im.I Ill CIWI Top dollars tor Sports '75 8210, auto. am/Im. Thia la a lo.aded, hetd to
Cara, Bugs, Campers, red, 4 dr. xlnt cood, 1 find "Eaatem lone" ootd
914'•• A.ucll'a owner, $1750/bat ofr. exterior with br own
Ask for U/C MGR 548-3018 I ,. M ll<lt '"'·1_1_o_a-ta_u_n_12_0_0_.-.-u-10-. ~~ :~r, t~.'.,1C:u; r=
YUSW&IU Am/Fm c11sette, good moonrool. Blauput1kt
18711Beact)Blvd. cond. $1300 080 . AM /FM CllUlle .
HUNTINGTON BEACH 631-2529 °' 631-7358 equalizer. air coodltlo-••2 --olog. raar window d•· -.,_ '80 200SX Hatchback. 5 1ro1te<, leather armrest,
spd, SL package, air. f l"'ht b wamD! stereo & e.111. Suor1, 1~ &ogONL ~ /~:~'o°f'::
Late model Toyotu. ml, lmmtc. 17.500. D•vs; mlleal Mutt setl...ONLY
Volvoa, Pickups & Vans. 673• 7 2 7 2 • eves $9.9991 Call 974·4111
Call us todayl 1--75_1_·_02_8_5_____ day• or 499-2530 alter
'77 280Z, beaut cond, 7:00 weekdays a wee-
loaded. mags, 37.000 ml. _k_end __ •·------
ll'!MiillilAl .. lllllM• 1-S6600 __ , e_1_a._2_1_2_e ___ ·74 Mazda ata. wgn. ,_
t-..-~..,."'""'ww..-_. ·n 8210 4-dr, must sac-paint. ale. new tlrea.
rlflce. $2400. 540-5505 $15501080. 494-824~
d)'I. 1978 GLC ~ /UAIRll
~==~======~ ·79 280 ZX 2 Plus 2, blk, cau. Custom stripes. -WE •-gold trim pack. PI S, 5 XJnl cond. 13500. Ev•
-· spd. AC. AM/FM lape. nioo• 833-2282 USED CARS & TRUCKS Wire whit. $7995 -. 7_9..;...G_L_C_W_a_g_o_n_._X_l_o_I
COME IN OR CALL FOR d 8 8 4 8. 125 s . ev cond. 5 speed, rack. FIR &PPUIUl 979-1340 $3500 Obo. caH Mon thrU
Cormler,OeLlllo '78 810. 6 cyt., air. am/Im Fri 714-972-2824. .vllLrf cass. 4 speakers. cloth •·------~-----.,.-111 18211 BEACH BLVD. uph. good mpg, lllnt "'llnwn •o n-HUNTINGTON BEACH cood. $4950. 963-8082. ••••••••••••••••••••••
Nl ... ll, 141-SU1 ...,.....15_2-_8_11_5.____ ;: ,..,_ •
'10 DATSUN 510. 4 dr, .........
Top Dolar
Paid
For Your Catt .......... u. .. 1 • ......,
2826 HarbOr Blvd.
Coate M-540-5630
Premium prleea
paid lor any used ear
(fOfelgn or domestic)
lo good condition. S.. U1 Finl! .. _
MT. Very nice machine. It I ..
S 1800 f'IAM 845-7589 ..,..... ... ,
,._, ""•H• l"'Zl Compare Houae ef Im·
--·· '' POfl• Direct IN• lftd 80 •••••••••••••••••••••• rnos.sensfbtepymtLDiat IEW 213 or 714; MERCEDES DELOREAN I• 213 ()( 714/637-2333
(#06057)
$24,111 ••• UITI All
301 w. Warnet
141-1411
n.1 1m ~;;·isc;s·;;d~·,-~~·r:;.~
looks sharp, rune great.
$2000/080. 645-0953
..... 2
*3000
TIIBOS* Special Limited Of*
CHOICE OF COLORS
PURCHASE OR LEASE ..............
1198·1340 (213)42+7197
71U31·5'1o4 plu1. Non-1mkg. ofc. M pupa, 4 mo. 546-1395 book•. mat· mllc. gear. 875-7834 fl\lefY option, snowa bet-
752-5400 Ooblemale,2yra,topllne, 2231 Donn Ad .. N.B. 30 caliber Ml rllle w/35 ter than new. O.W.C. '67 BMW CS ep., a.My '69 850Spld«. Newllr•, 11M 411 a M.... liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil guard trained, nd1 tov• 3 yard aalea-frl PM-Sat shot cllp. S275 Firm. 1:~~':~vACHTS trosp . Must aell. BoQ .'888 llurb11r Hh·d AM/FM cau. Great Beau white. bl.Ck lthr,
----
t•n•rnr• ,...... attention a a nrm hand. M11garet Dr. X Tustin Av. Consider 38 p111o1. Par· US-llOOY 960-1725 Eve. 752-2286. 955-3264 l'o~tu .\ll-1'11~O03:1Cl cond. S1100. 551~55. Snrf. Many 11tr1. 17,000
Nted 2 txperlenced .... _. .... ,_. Gorgeous. $275. 2blkea,klngbed.2 tllltrade.87S·7834 •54 p p 1 m1631783e ~In COMMERCIAL -.._ 73 1.22« dryer1. 8' camper •hell 5•7 .. H--"u K~..__·d Leaar w/lrlr, lllnt cond.. _ __Jr·_!.•k11J.!~'or' t>ouft A•t# bl~ · 0~ F•IAnT !~~,spec1M 81
1·
4
d0'· •92 ·MBZ. 2 S l INDUSTRIAL rttl H • T ... ltlis .... Metal top. carrier. Honda •1v ,......,._ c ell or 1ee aft 5PM , ,....., _.., • •..vv • ..... 1 ... r.;".-."tt....... 9 • "m F!M sere · 20 • Jllnt lnl.
tat• f« a succ .. aful & We're aeetltng 10 bulld a LhaH Apao puppy, A.KC 70 00 mtr. Xlot oond. 1180. 541.,e1130 left Tom,~. c,,,.,11 1111 11500 obo. 64"4· 1742 xtnt running, $1800 or
Ofowlfte firm. e.at WOI'· lab.or pool of quallfled mate, 1150/080. 54&·1005 648-5724; 9* 141·2876 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1J 1 l1U beat offer. 145--9510 fllno condltlOn• 111 New· Of..,tlle art• peftonnel for 64&-5e05 BllNI "" -•• -81 c.~ Lu M 81 A 2 3 w I '55 T·Blrd. Black, 2 tops. JEEPS CARS PICKUPS •• !!.~................ '73 MB 450SEL
porl 8eao ti-on-oall work In the pre· A.KC SILKY TERRIER •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 "' _,, , ... oor~go Largbe P•rtoer. •tick, low mlleage. ><Int from S3~. Av1ll1ble •t '78 Flett•. very clean . >Cini cond. Mon-Frl aft 1.
71' ••• 8061 prMI area At leaat one p 1 • k h WU1'lll aa.I aJrl I.__ •-• 11 • O or eat olr · oond. 111,&00. ~~1449 '°"1Gov 1 Auction•. FOt' eunroof. atn/fm stereo, to ..... 243~ ... 2·5532 -.,.---------' uppes,vw •.camp w/1tartdt150 a.40-em •••••• :r •• :::!":' ••• ~ 873·3630 Olreot:._r c all ml,."""".87'""..... -..-... .... yeer'e experience In type. aired. 1250, 1·827-8263 19 7 9 2 8 2 Coto r I •·--805 .a•7 Ex -~ ...... ,o Mttlog, pule up, caMefa 18' ullboet. built lo ·75 by ~II, _, -vv I 1590. #C 1141 operation or plattmaklng Free to good home 2 yr ... ,.."' 11#11"' TVt.-0-hrs, Aal< fOf Jim Lagurta Yachta. MotOf & •.J. H Cell r91uncle B..a 1111 ................ ,.,,,.
11 nteeeNrY· You '""9t be old M . 11ot100 Frlae. •••••••••••••••••••••• 982-5593, 875-2734 allp. S3300. •••~•••••••••••• •• ll-M -•••••••••••••••••••••• • • ••••
1v1ll1ble to work on 1 Good w/kld•. good Dbra,ue.,_tr~akb. '21~0• ~,•oe,. ~111 BeaullfUI 26" color ""n· 213-351-81"45 Corftll T'l.ll't>O ~ -~il1 WE'RE liiMIW
t wat""""" 973-3707 •~ " ' ds. " """ I t 11 t 11 • • • • • • •• •• • •• •• ••• • • •• • II I aubt1 tute °' cd-ln btlla. -.......,. or P •rt . 7 5 • Yr d . •of• tv, ~k walnut oabl· 13' Lapatrake, llJnt cood. w ra er. IC rt ,... ·79 Audi 5000 •• -
Stllry dtptndt on e)lpe-frH II fflll lffl 94a.3232 ott, 1195. 850-1880 S400/btst offer. $1800. 842-8447. ~ TONNE.AU COV1A
rleoct. <?ontaot Peraort• •••••••••h••••••••••• MAONAVOX AM/F 875-8l92 Corvalrpowered-"'tall· 562·213t DEALIN' F~;:;J,1.;!1
... -'iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;r-ntl. 'A Shepherd, .,. Ttftl«, 1 '11 VW bubbletop cam-M Nels tOme wort( llOO. .._ ••v ..... yeara old, tMall matt. P•r • fluah tollet, Air· combo. Tradltlonal, gd. 876-2142, 952-2378 Maria ISi·!?!? 1¥. Ntt Child ... otc. loYel kldl. $4000. 538-1919 cond. $225. 644·1487 lllUrNll( - -
330 Bay St. 1157-0~ 11.a..ll-I01. Toyota m 0Hh Am/Fm ~ .. ....
Cotta MMe M~. 2 vr. *· a ,.., P~::!·······-··· ~.!!'.!°·1t>r100'"'?.~ ... 12,50., nr1 wrny tw ·············-·.:.-.;r
Ari E IOVtr !:• ·ro • OOJ>d AINTEA'o Spec:lal, .,, .... _. • _.,. llU.ll"' "" *"-* ~~~~~~~jlJ11ome~~.1~~..0~30~_:: leaa, UMd ~. Wagnef Munl'• got to ... ~ .. WAITAHl/W~tTEA wt LOVABLE Stt»erlao _saoo __ ._&41-__ 2-17-1---1 MOST togoodliofM..,.._.
ctr for wicker baaktt Hueky/ Stmoyed. tyr. Low ml,.. 'ow t'M lier
hMdl llflfV. •=30-1:~. * "*' 175-54-47 MODELS ..... .,. a ... .. Mon-fr1. Eltn l150-t1151---·-----or.-n ......... ..... .in.
MO-N10lllO-t•1
SAVE
AT ,..
HONDA
SANTA
ANA
Orano• Cont DAILY PILOT/Thursday. Aprll 29. 1082 07
A• ... ,___,.,,. ,.,.. ,._,.,, .... 'I '---'*' ,.,., 1-wMI L A.,,, -~.. .... ~~'!..,~ ........... M~.l!!ft ........... f!!~~!~t .... /m ~ ... '!!..,ft4 ........... M~'!..~tft ......... .. • ...... ~;";";' ............... ;(';";;";";' ........ ri•u,;::T.':"··~.,;;; ...... znrr.;n....... ........ .. •• • . ,, "' n• n C11Y1ll1 '''' '"' ' IHf OU.aMIJI ''''
,.,,,h '''' ''",. '''' •• ~ •.•••••••••••••.• ,~ '"' r.• I!.'' ~z;ltr ••••••••••••• f ~ ••.••••••••••....•............•......... •····•·••••·•·•····•· .•..••.........•..•... •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••:,•••• ···~·,·,·~.=.::.•:,•_.• ••• •••••••••••••••• •••• • 7 • Et.. c tlbl 1 •n 1980 Ch4WI01tl Corvette '79 fe1tmont a/c:, 8m.tm 70 Cullen C1la1t Dal urlSTER SalM·Swvte.·L ..... "9 • * • -& # 1 , .. ..., .. ..o onver •• • iii ( 18CC782) Liii• NEW In aterao Pl trlr hitch '.lO 000 ml Wini c:onCJ 28
K. IUIUUll 1 ..... Y..... 4 •Pffd· Brown 28,000 II lrllct .....,! loOll• gr;~ r.ir R 1112 white with red IHthar, eherp S299S 042-9538 ' mpy Compl 10 red ,.scll/allAI lllAll 1118 The Maettt• Circle ml S4500 Ot 14000 caetl • LOl!d«I. QIN• lope, ate low mllH. T. Top, CH· Op11011a $~800 bat 011 .....,. 111 2Mt .-... .... , Coet• MIM 873·8457 •••-• .-'lt letllt aer. 414017217 Mitt crufff coqpOI, 1111 M11t•n llSO 640 72~ ltoave mtg 13831 Ha.rbof BIVO • "'~ Vou are lh• winner of d _., -·-•t 118 4ttt wt-i & morel P~ to •••••·•~· •••••••••••••
Garden Grov. >acrltlce 10t2 2-<tr, 4-wN toYr grM llck•ll tS12.00 ~!~':n:/:i~. ~:~~fr~•' AMI WI• Liii• MW 18500 .... ..:. tlet 8111 11 only I IZ..150. 1960 Mercu•y lec>hy• wa ~11C~Mi":~'t!'(;::,9 llltt-ltntM-UM61& csrive, pay olf & s 100. value) to the S2HO or but otter OVERSEAS DELIVERY 640-9<159 " Bauer Motora, 2925 oon 4 cyl ttandaro, ~45·1335
114 131 2•-.e 548·2517 tl1 3PM. --1.-n EXPERTS '70 CIUllc El Ootaoo, low Dow/Quall 811. H1rbor Btvd., Qoala cream color wllh llghl • ••• IAU.111 UOI 549•0439• mll11. Jtlnt cono. white/ NEWPORT BEACH Meio 979-2500. 1n111ior & low mll•• Old• 70 Cut1u1 CrulH• 80 3568. no ru11. nHdt 1'1r..t1 1111 F 73 Bua, 59,000 orig ml, WU Ill red Int 11800 OBO llMHI Rud¥ 101 aummor Wyn ""Y t ltu.n mull
no work S7500/parllal ieit "rc).;()T";:o~·;;lj; Sq~~l~~~::?M~I~ 8, ~~~n~'l'\~r:~·8~'J~ """ 54·-t.448, 403--0803. ' 'et Cl\tYelle, 4 dOOf Nlee ~~nbd.~ l~~~ •• ~1:.:o"ou ~6d~~ 1'~3;:11~yo~:~: ~b~ ~:~a lm1C1ed '3995
t1adt 848-8028 SRS Llltb1c:k 5 1peed 1982 118l·3982 1118t Hart>or Blvd. 'lt 1tti11 '800. Call 498·0282. Dtvid price $4476 financing ---
'80 Porache 924 Turbo & tren1 power brakes. elr To clelm tlckei.1 cal COSTA MESA Black with black IMllW. 640.1579 av11labl8 Call now ils'-'ll Cwtlau
'80 Porache 92-'. Both cond , AM/FM attteo & • 842·5878, UI. 272. O ConV91't-tloreo 3 yr1. Ml-IW 141--Mll Moon roof. All tlllfl" •81 Caprice Ealato w 1• Co•.(11 1111 101 Dive Joo9' Thvo PS 1111 whl AM FM sto
1oadtd.ilkeoverl1t 1pot11uyellowllnl1h Tickt11mu1tbtolelrMd Only2800ml Arareooe x1n1 cond. $8 ,09<f. """,D'--',Lo· .. ..,.wllh •9••77 c•••••••x•A•7••j000•• Clore Ro1>1n1 r o rd 11o0 c.1&s~•lll' $4200
80 I h bl k b k I I by May 5, 1983 101 lht bug lover I S 10. A I n.-6 .,,.... -""""" 1 ouoar · mmac. 6•2.0010 • paymentt 714/825·1 8 wl ac uce Mii. •11 .,,_ 494·6904 evaryChevrolelxlra tull pwr .. A C,cruiae,loml, "' _ lilJ/ltllvos ...;._-'---------LOW mlltt l381962). • *"* 500. 1·528-4719 •••••"•••••••••••••••• 8 •· • • 0 800 $ 4 0 0 0 '80 Turbo Porache Show s5399. Earle Ike Toyota· AlfC lfO 'll lntle f:t .. 11 nuto .• 1 . o r I g own• r • 1976 C~11 11 4 cyl. 4 spd ll•to 9957
Cu All E4rOpHn. Call Fine used Ctr Sale•. 73 Toyota HILUX, 7' long *'ll IOlllOCI* •••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent cond. Brown/ 8 3·4817. 559-0166 AMIF toas111111 1111100. •••••••·•••••••••••••·
857·1442 Richard l986· 1970 Harbor Blvd., bed · overalze 20 gal. UH Lo ml, ahowroom new, '75 AMC Matador. Low brown, wholtHlt 1 10• ,78 Chev. Concoull, 411r, D·J 9931 look11 gooll. meet\ xlnt /4 1>11110 n"oda work, Qt 1
.78 924. blk on blll. tnrl. Costa Mesa. 646-9303 tank. automatic, Targa most opt $5800. Maxine mites, clean $1300. 450. vlnyl lop. air. t1eroo .•• ~.f~•••••••••••••••• $2400 551·6449_ tu• pro111~1 rn1ndod BIB
AIC, lo m1, like brand nu. 540·9467 top, air, radio, 10 ml, Pl· 840•5270/850· 1801 494·7194 Eves. wknda 875·3909 alerm, lop conn 1 owner 78 Doctpe 4 dt .. good '78 ZEPll't'R Vlllogor Wgn ·S :.> 5 0 v 0 u r • S 19 !>
$ 8 9 5 o . 6 75. 2 o 8 5 , relll tires Complete Hf· 'll YW lllO S2295, 1!48· 1326 cond .. new irans SJ800 V8. aulo A/C, PIS. 11e ~56 761111 P\/oa • vlc:e recorda. Xlnl cono. l•lrk CAD '81 SEVILLE 080 pp 63l 5086 J 91< 845·5333. Laurie * * $2500/bst otr CnarlH otlYUTIIU •••••••••••••••••••••• $18,500, Lt yellowllthr '79 ChtVtllt 4 door, air • reo la~. aupo1 cln Id P1n10 62K mites 'l11111 . 2211lc~n2 !!~Blvd. (714) 675·2377 alt 8PM Xln1 cond. $7500 Good old 1970 Bui ck-lnt,mlnt~.1111,crulM. cond., radio, deluxe F11d 9940 mi. S4.100 1!48 8200 ,,:d~3o
or bfr 8AM .. 46•4161 Electre 225. Xlnt cond. or lock•. 8 way •Diii. 1t. Interior. Ilk• new. le•• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••I••• 99SZ Comple1ely rettoreo lop Cosio Mesa v S700/bst ofr 499-1260 000 ml. PP. 873-1334 then 9,000 miles $4.100. 1961 rono Escort Hatch-•••••••"•·•••••••••••• to botlom end interior You are the wlnn• o! 8.Q..Supra. 5 Speed, lo•· '78 vw Convertible, whit• •73 RIVIERA xlnl mecn 646-0500 after 5 PM bock Au10 trans .. air '80 Mu11anq ,.u10 lb.000
Engrebltleaa than3000 lourgreeuckell (St200 ded,xlnlcooo.S9995or on white, 13,000ml, • b C.Vt 1111 -cond .pwr s1..s1eelr1· mt S!!OOO!b,l lo tr
m1. Bleupunkt h1 power value) to Iha best oller 7S4·4062 goo cs con d S 7 5 O O. cond. Ndt. 1.!m• :d'I •••••••••••••••••••••• Cind11 99ZS 01111 11res like new Juat 760•6000 96• l58'f evea stereo •v•tem. Racaro 111111 11-..-640·3215 dys. 720·0303 work s750. 4...-498 '69: Auto. 20.000 mllet on .... ,.-••••• •••••••• • • • • 7 o o o 11
r!r!'!~~!~ ........ !.~~¥
78 Ply ~UlllOn 52"4 m1
$3200 01 besl Catt
979 '.I 17) Diane seat 754..0301 ····-· u-cE'' '81 {ercelLlltbactl evea Jeckle ,. Jl/•· Hll new engine. $1500. Cl918YlllVtrmelalhc 1976 over m •• T•na .__ A1r. sutlfoof, canette. "'•' ,., ' 640·1579 Chryaler New 't'orkor 2 ( ICNY 1861 $5499. Eat1e 1--------,-U-·50 PORSCHE 358B Fountain Valley Mile $6500 M·F 956·0900 · 7 5 S U p ER Be a 11 t •••••••••••••••••••••• door w/pluah re<! leather Ike Toyo1a Fine Ueed 'If C81111UTI "7: 7b Volarc l odOed, 1.un·
No rust needs no work Square Park ·May 8, (Andy). e'ls 548·9591 (LeGrand) sunroof. lie· CHTlllPL&TIM ·79 Camaro Berllnetta. Interior. Lotdtd wllh all Car Sales 1966·1970 V6 auto olr ps •lnl ~';'~":,~~; i~~ ~~m
$7500/part 1rade 1982 reocau.Jtlnl cond Xlnl ••-••-19,000 mllet. air, am/Im· option.. Hll,...... 54.000 Hll•bor Blvd . Colla cOnd 14900 1·5J3 4242 6•68028 II '79Supraliflback I _.......,, tie ' *6800 ..,. .. , M rsa 6 46 9303 -p . 9965 ., · To claim t ickets. ca Blue. xlnt cond, wire pn1 xlnt llres, xlnl m • we specialize In 1ea..a1 ca11e • ml* Tnt drive & make ~40•9A67 01'iao)i/i 9955 oalllC I U I 91Sf 642 5678. exl 272 whls. am/Im slereo tape, leage S3.550 OBO tor the bualnesa execu-499-4501 offer One o l e lo.ind •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • .' •• !..!T.t! ••••••••••• Ticke1smus1becta1med atc.newradials.40500 720·0566eves.540.1t33 uve&profnalonal. g•zo (184PJY) Financing Absolute1y1mmaculate 198101dsmob1l11 Cu11om WANTED
t>y Mav 5. 1983 mo warranty avatl davs 631-5550 anytime Larat leltetite £~~~~!~'.. ........ ~ .. 1v1llable Call now ask 1981 Fo•O f-111tmon1 4 C1u1ser 9 Passen~ 1 Ee *1 DEALER IN U.S.A. • ..,. 16500 Mariy M·F l0·5. 67 Beetle Navy. beau If ltw lll! SEE US f1RSTI tor Da'le Jones Theo· doo1 4 cyl . au1om1t1c tate Wagon I 100HJ38l TO BUY ruCARVER 973·1345 clean bodv ltlnl mech•· dore Robins Fo1d tr.in~ (IW• st a11 cond Ltlo.e new 1n whlle w11ti 1981 TOYOTA Starlet Se-nical. inienor Mull see c.-... We have a good Hlec· 642·0010 & only •1000 m1le1 Cool wood gra•n & blue v~ -~ ~~01~~~~ns;~~~ocs~~ Tti••ti 91f1 S2450497·1597 ~ 'c1~.oo11 N,Ew & USED '75COl'dobe.blk,360V·8. sommm hhlt!1CRGeaXd3y811or1 Pdowor sears odn 1'o t&h UTE MODEL 1'1rv'l\...C ,,.,,,.. . •••••• ••••••••••••••• N ,,..r elf loaded lo m1 •Int. vai;at1 011 ( s1 es P<>Wer win ows USED CARS ......,_, ~'""""·"Ml"'1 brakes This one IS lulty 78 Spltllre Conver-I · 72 BUS. tunrl. w/calm •290(). 957•0330 Curreol Kelley Blue Book locks cru1so conllol 1111 ~""'" 11w _,.,.,.... lactory equipped & gets Xlnl aml fm. $2850. top. prof pnt. & whl CA • $6905 Ru1>111!. p1 oc e wheel cu111111e only 18 WILSON FORD
• CLOUOSUNOAYS grea1 gas mileage. Call831·2991 wellS. IYPtl 2 eng. Teak Ct•ll•••lil 9930 S5895 Fin1111c1119 ava11a. 000 mtles 6 t:Jasllable
(lBJD283) S4999 Earle u,•L•eri •• 91.,0 int
1
Must Mii 631-6003 li.OOH.ttlll<w llllitl ••••••••••••••••••••·• ble Call 11ow t1slo. 101 d1<>sl'I economy f>rice<J Sid 91f0 llo.e Toyota· Fine Us.ad "' ,.. • I ' A---..&11.1. r .... ~, , .. ,.,, '>40 •llOO 1976 Lincoln Contlnenlal Dave Jon•~ Tlwodore 10 ~ell al only S99!JO •••••••••••••••••••••• Car Salea 1966· 1970 ••••••··"••••••••••••• 12 -•..-1 Classy whtte wllh red Robin!> FortJ 642·0010 Oau .. r Molor a 2925 THE 1912s . Harbor Blvd . Coate 1980VWVanagon.(5820). $2000/0BO 1145.7579 leather Interior, moon ttJit>or Blvd ( 01111
M es a 6 4 6. 9 3 0 3 The ultimate In vw spa· '74 Conv Excellent con. TIE UlllST root & lull powo1 55 000 WANTED M1·~a 979-:1500 IRE HERE! 540·9467 clousneas & atyle Two . '14 um HI ...... low mllea Tosi drtVli & ---
900 series 3 doors. 4 tone paint and whitewall dltlon Blue w/whlte top SWCTlll S65. 831~589 buy (825702) Kelley WANTED
doors & Turbo• available l•--------i tires. rlct1 10 sell at only & lnl 544.7577 of late model, low mllee· Blue Book $434~ Robin~ TO BUY
now! Come In & drive IPNITttlITT S8295 Bauer Motors, '73 Sunroof 8ug. new go Cadlllacs In Southern WANTED price $3795 Financing
Road & Track Maga· knocks often when you 2925HarborBIVd .. Costa palnl & lnl . rebll, ll1w· Calllornlal avalltblt. Call now, ask tATE MODEL TO BUY
zlne's choice of the BEST use result-getting Dally Mesa 979·2500. lest $2550 661·3982 lllERS TO BUY tor Dave Jono~ Theo-USED CARS LATE MIDEL
1port1 aedan ol the '80sl Piiot Clhellled Ads to 74 BUG gel cond . red. Vi I lllZ CUILUC do re Rob Ins F o 1 d .
IHCll IMPORTS ~:r~t;,.the Orenge Coaa1 AM/FM cass stereo $2, • .'.!.'••••••••••••••••• 2600 Harbof Blvd UTl llOHL 642·0010. WILSON FORD USED CARS
848 Dove Slree1, Ne Phone 642·5678 soo 499·4696 '74 STATION WON COSTA MESA USEI CMS IWhll. Wondertul World 1825!> Beach Hfvtl WILSON FORD
I HI'" Bfo,t< to Bf\M
llUlll&111.ll011 rl1,1d
842-6611
1f Gr.rntl •, ,, I 4 r ....
Wt.Jn Ht l 1 ._., I v.
St!.tt ) ~n J h 1!11"
$111•10 ,,, •ll'
lJ I .. t • t1 •
IUIO I 1 1
con,1 !.1' 112-1111 ·79 vw coov whtlwl'tl/wnl Great cond, extru 540 l l&O I ot Shopping, right at Hunungton Beach
1969 Harbor 81Vd ' C M <40.000 mi. $697 5 d• S2•95 494·8490 • WILSON FORD your flngertlps everyday! 842 6611 131-llll People who need People 760-6000 Mary Lou. evu i978 Volvo 242. aunrt. 79 s D 1 I Dally Piiot Ctaulfled -The 1as1es1 draw 1n lhe That'I what tha 675·0'469 . atereo. 15600. · edan eVllJe. om . t1!265 8-ch 8tvd Adi. To place your ad,
1825!J 8Po1Ch Blvd
Hunt111g1t>n Bri,t;h
The f11te~t draw In the
Wut ••. • Delly Piiot
Ctaulfted Ad. &42-5678.
842-6111 DAILY PILOT 5<46-373e xlnt cond. S899S/lakt Huntl1\9ton Beach call 842-5878 and let a Trade yow old atufl for Weat • D~ P1lo1
SERVICEDIRECTOAY our low pay lse 142-1111 Cl11tlfltdAd·VtSOrhetp new ffOOdlU with a i-------ClaullNKJAd Today ii all eboutl 631-0496 · you. . I Ctassl ied .cs. &42-5678 ________ 4 ._&1_2_._sa_1_a ____ _
• A TL.AS CHIYS&.&ft.YMOUTH
2929 Hatbor Blvd., Co•t• Me9a. Tet 546-1934. 3 bJocka
eouth of San 014190 Frww91 off Hlrbor 81VC$. Com~
body ahop. Sale•. S.,..,k;e, Peru. Service Dept. OP9n
Monday thru Friday 130 A.M.to5:30 P.M. end 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday -..1
llACH ....OUS
848 Dove StrHt. Newport Beech. Tel. 752-0900. C.11 ue.
we're the 1pec1all1l1 '°'Alfa Romeo. Peugeot. Saab l .
MaMratl.
•
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NIWPO.T DATSUN
988 Dove Stree.t, tMwport BMch. Tel. 833-1300. At the
tnangle ot Jamboree, MKArttM & Bristo! behind Vlct«la ::..'1· S ..... s.vtcie, LNltng & Part.I. We meke greet
..
HAIRS CAIMI LAC .
2800 Harbor Blvd .. Coal• Meu. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County'• Largest Cadillac dNler. s.i.. S.Vice. Le ... Ing.
• • IOI LOHGPll PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd ., Wntml,...,, Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County'• oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Sales.
Service. Perts
• SAA.CHIYaOUT
toO South Coast Highway
Laguna hec:h
"Qewy'e ... I ..... tw ,..1u
SALES HOURS: Mon.·Frl. IH, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 10-4
.....1131 546-9967
SANT A AMA DATSUM
2001 E. 17th Str .. t, hnta Ana. Tel. 551H81 1. Your•
Origfnal Dedlca~ Oattun o.tw.
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Hetbor Blvd .• ea... Mesa. Tel 540-6410. Sarv1n9 0r.nge County tor 16 YM11t 1 Mlle So 405
• SUMHr FOllD. IMC.
(Home of Wllfle the Whale~ 5'40 Garden Grove 81Vd.,
W.t11MMtitr. Tel '36;-4010. •
•
t
..
'"' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Aprll 29, 1982
• I /
/
..
· elming ~11(\jori.fy of MlfBITSQtokers
report taste bOOus at low tar: .
The most rigoro us MERIT
research to d ate h as just been
comple ted .
Result: MERIT sm o kers co nfirm
taste a m ajo r facto r in completing
the ir successful switch from
high er tar cigarettes.
MERIT Tukes 1aste H>nors:
Nationwide survey reveals over
90% of MERIT smokers are glad
they switched from higher tar
cip,arettes. In fact, 94% don 't even
miss their former brands. · ,
Further Evidence: 9 out of 10 .
former higher tar smokers report
MERIT an easy switch, that they ·
didn't give up taste in switching,
and that M~RIT is the best-tasting
low tar they 've ever tried.
•
•
I "
' l
]
vi
to
be la1
j
Dt
. hi•
un
UlJ
rel
J81
J
ro
co
ri@
im
to
faJ I
Th .. di
gai I
THURSDAY APRIL l9. 1Y82 OR AN GE COUN I Y ~/\l IFORNIA 25 CENTS
li:ootball nal' resolved . I
~dis·on High given 'clean hill'
R eJeets U.N. bid
Britain stands
tough on • cr1s1s •
B1 ne Auoctated Pren
Britain rejected today any new
aPl)l'OllCb to the United Natiorw to .Ofve the Falkland Ialanda crisla
and aald "the key to peece" 1.lel
with Afaentina. Argentina urged
the Brltiah to '"-a minimum of
good wtll" to avoid war.
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher noted in an emergency
debate in the House of Commons
in London that the United Na-
tions puled a raolutlon calling
on Argentina to withdraw troope
from the Falklands, invaded
April 2.
"If that reeolutlon were to be
implemented, there would be
very few l)l"Ob)eml le.ft in relation
to the Falkland Islands,'. she aald.
"There can be no doubt where
the lntranal1ence Hes in this
matter. The key to pe90e ii in the
· banda of the Ar1entlne govem-
men t . The responsibility is
thein."
In Buenoe Ai.res, Acting Fore-
ign Minister Alfredo Saint Jean
wu asked in a radio interview if
Argentina and Britain had rea-
ched a "point of no return" ln the
crisla.
Saint Jean replied, "At leut
Ar1entlna bu not." He added
that Argentina la ''more willina''
to seek a solution to the con1lX:t
. . . Our county baa mown u.eu
to be more than prudent and pa--
tient, not only over 150 ,_n ol JlelOUation, but e.pedally during this crilll. ••
However, Argent.lna~
three-man junta Mid it
a Brttiab attack on the disputed
lalanda before the weekend, and
a Foreian MtniJtry tource aald
the American propoeal WU SUb-
atantially unchan1ed from the
last one the junta rejected.
In London, Britain'• announ-
cement that 1t waa extend.lna ita sea blockade of the Falk1ancfa to
air traffic at dawn Friday was
seen as the deadllne•for diplo-
macy.
But British military aourcea
said the amault probably would
await the arrival in two or three
days of patratroop reinforce-
ments bein1 flown to join the
1,500 Royal Marines with the
British war fleet.
Aa of Wedneaday night, the
State Department had received
no response from Britain or Ar-
gentina to Secreiary of State
Alexander M . Haia's latest peace
proposala. said U .S: offidala.
-State Department spokesman
Dean Fisher said HaJg waa pre-
pared to resume hla shuttle bet-
ween Buenot Aires and London
if that would help. The United
States believet the situation ~t
a .. critical at.age." The time for
diplomacy ia "very, very ahort,"
said Flaber.
U.S. offic:aiaJa said the propo-
IU aubmltted to Araentlna and
Britain Tue.lay made only lli&ht
~in a prevtow U.S. plan.
The Yatk Tlmee IUd they
call for (1) the wltbdrawal of ArtmUne troope from the J'alk-
1.andl; (2) an end to Britl.ah mili-
tary threats; (3) brief reltontlon
of Britiab rule over the laland.
,__
WAB ZONE -Brlt11h Defente Min l1try announced
W'*'-lay total air and--bloc:kmde around Falkland kJ•rvta (an.td;: would c'ONkJer plum on ll'O'IDd at Stanley Air-
pcd ted at arrowa) • "bolUJe!•
NATION
..-.,.., ...............
NOT SURPRISED -FAiilon
High School football coach
Bill Workman said he wasn't
surprised by findings of an
administrative law judge.
Coaches
'honest,
ethical'
By ROBERT BARUR or ... .,..,,......,.
A state administrative law
' judge found no evidence of im-
proper recrultln1 of football
players by J!'.dbon H11h School
Coach Bill Workman or by
anyone else employed at the
Hunu.n,ton Beach 1ehool
The find1nCI were announced
Wedneeday at a ~ conference
called by School Superintendent
Frank "Jake" Abbott .
The~ollowed three daya of
cloeed earl~_ this month
ln which Jo A . Wllld of the
State Office of Adminlatrative
Hearings questioned 40 people
under oath.
One zoning
for mobile
''It needs to be aald loudly and
clearly that the administration
and OOllChet are honest and ethi-
cal and we are proud to have
them," Abbott declared.
"The cue la cloted. We1l not
run after our t.a1la any more.''
Workman, who coached the
F&aon CharQen to 32 victories in
their laat 3~ games, said Wed-
nesday he w .. bitter but not parks seen
Huntington Beach dty offidala
are moving to put identical zo-
ning on all mobile home parka in
the dty.
Thlrteen of the dty'a 19 pu'ka
carry mobile home park zoninl
while alx others are zoned for
other U8el.
Councilwoman Ruth Balley,
who iniUated the request, aaicl all
pMkl ellould have the -.me zo-
ning becaUle a new ordlnmce la
being prepared to deal with mo--
bile park oonwnklm.
"It la important that all tenants
would be treated the aame if
their parka are to be converted
Into other uaee,'' she aald.
A 12-month moratorium on the
conversion of mobile homes enda
June 5.
The propoeed ordinance would
addretl auch concema • reloca-
tJon expenses and sx-!ble pur-
cllUel o.f COIChes by perk ownen
lf tenants are unable to eell their
unlta.
A 365-day evlcdon notice al8o
la being propoted in the ordi-
nance.
Mn. Balley aaid that pn!9IW'eS
are mounting to change the perlca
to other uaea because some of
them are located on prime pro-
perty.
~~w what the results
would be before the Investiga-
tion. The reeulta are no surprt.e,''
he aald.
Workman, head coach since
1973, Mid be baa been "ctanpd
like a piece of meat foe everyone
to tboot at."
He .. 1d J!:dlaon hu been the
tarpt of alleptiona "becau.e we
have won lnoft than our aha.re of
pmet.
"The kida move in, I can't
control that. When they're de-
clared el!lble I coach them.
'lbat'a my .".
Trtue the lnveat11atton wu an anonymous letter diatrl-
bu ted last November which
made a number of alleoUona of
Wepl recruitlnl and Improper
~chanpl. Earlier internal invesU&atlona
al8o were held with negative re-aulta, Mid Abbott.
A district official said the
school hu been under fire be-
cauae of ita aucce• and becawie of
a number of talented tranafen
playing Important roles in that
IAIJCICela
Hearing officer Willd said in
hia repon to trustees that players
and/or their parentl MJd they did·
not speak to coeches or lnstruc-
(See EDISON. Pqe A!)
.,.., .... .._ ......
RELEASES FINDINGS -"It needs to be said loudly and c=r that the administration and coaches are honest and
e · and we are proud to have them." said echool Superint-
endent Frank "Jake" Abbott Wednesday.
~
;f F irm seeks buyers j
•
Fed Mart closures [° ' ,,,, !.
to affect county "' {'.
t
f.
By PHU. SNEIDERMAN or ... ~ .... •ta1t C1a.u.re of 46 Fed Mart stores in
Southern California. Arizona and
Texu, announced Wednesday,
will affect Oran•e Count~
Mart at.ores in Huntington ,
Garden Grove, Anaheim and La
Habra.
The aan Diego-hued corpora-
tiOft, whJch bla.med the deterio-
rating. economy for lta deciaion,
said it ii seeking buyers for ita
dia::ount" and general merchandi-
~ operations.
'lbe fate of Fed Mart's e>ran,e
County outlets could not ln:urie-
d.iately be determined.
Local Fed Mari managers de-
clined to comment on the com-
pany's·ded.aion to ahut down or
liQUldate all of its at.ores.
)°ed Mart corporate offlctala
alao declined to dlscuaa the
chain's Orange County opera-tions.
According to the Huntington
Beach dty building department,
the local Fed Mart at 9882 AcWnt
Ave. la about 102,000 square feet
in alze. Conatruction wu com-
pleted In November, 1970.
The oompany'a busine. Ucerwe
app~cation indicates the store
employs about 100 people,.cic;t
license supervisor Dan Brenn«
said. ·' "It's at a good location," ~.
nan aaJd of the Adams Aven~
and Brook.hunt Street In~
lion. "I would think aom:;:.~ could do well there. It
gets a lot of traffic.'' · . •:"
Among th~ companies tn~.
eated in buying Fed Mart'• ~ c ery operations is the L
Ange lea-baaed Ralphs cha'
Dayton Hudson'• Target chatil!
bas been mentioned • a potenlildi buyer of other Fed Mart openfpj
Uona. .• '
Fed Mart overall employs
. 000 people, lncludini about 3,089
in Southern CalifomJa. 'lbe CIOl"I
poration uid it hopes to tell all Cl,
its retail at.ores ''within the DielLt
few months.''
Fed Mart pr~sident Jan ._
Heydoin aa.Jd of the lhutdown In.
a letter to employees, 16Undet-
current economic conditions, t._
waa the only choice J)Olllble.'' •
Fed Mart reported loues •11 million 1n um, te.3 l\IWi-.
in 1980 and $8 million ln the
(See FED MART1 P~e Al)
Bot ear dr9i~er .in~;euo.le·
• . . : . . : . ... . .. . • ·. . " . ' . . , •.. ,.. • ·:·!..
By JEFF p ARKER 'vette, the CHP reported. · 308, ·pricl:d at ~.ooo. ., he moved in behina it ti> '. or111e Deir,....... Sa1-man Brant Telllnaer 90t But Newport Imports owner the plates, the Corvette •
Sometimel luck ii the best de-behind the wheel and aave Lee West, not au.re of what the north at 120 mph.
tectlve. . . _ Sherman a brief tour of the dty. car's value WU. aot on the phone OU leer Lian an~ aua_pe
Just uk David F. Sherman of When the lntereNd buyer asked and called his friends at -you Sherman then need ~
Sunnymeed. who w• alttinl in to drive the Corvette hbntelf,. guemed it -Nero MQton to find Sand ~:lion exit and Into
Orqe County jtil today al~r T...m,er reportedly pt out of a p>d ~.When he de8crtbed OCTD tenance Yard. w
hia U'l'elt Wedbelday afternoon the car and Sbenma IOt on.the tbe Cc:arvette, the Nero Moton they chued, bumped, .....
on auaplclon of auto t heft. A Pl and lp8d away. Peqple'pattwo and two toeetber' into each otbm-twfce and flnl•
fftahway Patrol officmo antat.ed An hour later. Sblrmln dloYe ~~up Vlith ~ atolel\ car. camie to reat with the au.
him in Irvin• after a 120-mlle into Newport lmporta on ~ · But the .U.P*t wu tone by ~ down the t.•.._ eDd
chale. · Hlcbway In N••port Beach, the Umit W-.t hunc up. -_\ · Ua'a rwolwr.
Sherman. 24, walked Into Nero wblere be told _,..,,,_ Jim Ge-Al a p.m., afP OUloer 8INce Sherman WU taken to u
Moton of Westminster Wectn. rdy that the Corvette atm:.!l Lian epotted the Corvette bee-Medk:al C-tet b .,_._.
day at about 12:30 p.m. and.._. wun•t the car he wanted diq north on th• San Dte10 an ~ ..,_ ~ to the
to test drive a ~ver 19'74 Cor-would tnde lt ID to Ill• JWuTt rr.eway at Alida Parkway. M JUL
) COUNTY
M • Al
Q.'7 ~
H/F Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Thureday, Aprll 29, 1082
DISON ATHLETES . . .
I • • tan prior to tranlfer.
1 He did aay, however, that : = qUllUcned expreaed aua-: that r.dilon boosters and i v-~tacted players at
' ~t.ed that the publi-
1 dty aarroundin; the team'a auc-
' ceaa had ~auaed parents of
• player• to be attracted to the '€001 becaUH of "tremendous ble financial rewards" in-
lvtn1 college achola~ships or
• h pcmlbWty of going into pro-
: fellkiml IP(ll1a.
. Willd ajlo .Mid that inforJl'.lA-~ tlon "atro~ly auggeats" that
• Ydilon had at1facteQ it.a share of
booatera and aupportera who
• placed a very high emphasis
• Upon wtnmna.
"Th la enthuaium," he said,
0 could eaally be passed on to • JOUJ\I, imprealonable athletes
--·and there~y_lnfluence their
ddce ot a hJ&h acbool." WWd alao noted that assistance
baa been offered to football
... yen in maintaining their eli-
·-bWty. i He aid advice haa been gjven
• ~t euier teachers and easier
~. Abbott aaid the advice did not
come from the athletic depart-
ment.
WWd abo aaid that it is con-
that eome F.ciison fnstruc-
eel intimidated in that they
luctant to award grades
would jeopardize the eli-
pbWty of a star football player.
Abbott announced that there ls
n o evidence that grades were
lmproper!;y c hanged so that
former star runninl back Kerwin
Bell could receive a tcholanhlp at
the University of Kansas.
Abbott said the grade was
changed two to three month•
after Bell's graduation from high
echool but that Wllld found no
evidence of coercion.
Wllld's recommendations in-
cluded:
-Th e school board should
define what activities or 1.'0nt'ac18
an prohibited and permitted
with outside athletics and their
parents.
-It shoulQ prepare a rode of
ethics which would deflne beha-
vior on the part of alt afhletic
boolters. .
-Trus tees should reassure ·
faculties that every student, in-
cluding high school nthletes,
should be judged equally upon
his scholastlc perfonnancc.
-Truslee9 should review po-
licy on transfers with a view to
discouraging trarufers except tor
"highl ~ persua$ive and non-
athletic' reasons .
School chief Abbott said the
district will be taking a tuu rt look
.into suspicions that peopte in·
volved in youth football prog·
rams outside the school may be
engaged in recruiting activfties.
_ "It will not be tolerated.'' he
said. "If there is an influence, we
will disassociate from those
programs," he said
FED MART CLOSING ...
quarter of 1981 -its last public
flbancia1 statement before West German multimillionaire Hugo
bought up all outatandirig
and took the company pn-.
• Early last year, the United
Food and Commercial Workers
Union, which represent Fed Mart
employees, agr<>ed to al'l·e pt a
meager three year l'Ontract and
work with the company to in-
crease productivity in an effort to
bail out th<' f1m\
Def ender's action . .
on Edwards 'proper'
~._PAED,t~ SCHOEMEHL ~hoc legal oornmittee has
declared proper the aotions of the
Orange County Public Defen-....,, office in intervening on be-
fi a lf of murder def e ndant
Thoma Edwards shortly after
bla arrest last year in connection
With the ahootlng d eath of a
Like Elalnore girl.
In a report t o the Cou nty
Board of Supervlaors, the com-attee aid the public defender's
· oWce behaved both legally and
etbkally in contacting Edwards
'°'1n after hi.a arrest in Mary-
land by sheriffs departni.ent in-
vestigators. :::>l'lenn nrao vates had con-
tended that the decisio11 by the
public defender's office to make
contact with Edwards and offer
legal services was not appropria-
te.
Gates said the act.Jon hampered
the investigation. Edwa rds, he
explained, had been talking to
investigators prior to the contact
with the pubhc defender''! office
Those conversationti stopped
after Edwards talked with De-
puty Public Defender Michael
Giannini, the sheriff said
~· ... ~
~'C9astal
Standard tnde• of S8 In tM San111
Ctarlla. San F•rnendo. San Ga
bfiet and Pomona varteya u ...-ell u 1n R1v~rtlde and San 941rna,.
dlno The PSI wtll ~ •2 f"Jorywnere
elMl
J Partly cloudy thlt afternoon
Hlafll 84 to 18 at the beaChM and
ff" to 72 In Ille Inland •••H E nd d IW"lef'ly Wlndt 10 25 mph. Low xte e l clo"d• tonight wllll low• In the
501. Low c:tOudt continue ~rlday • lo .ncas t momlng, becOmlno , .... and partly J ~ • ~
• nnny ln ti.. 11ternoon High• Friday fl 10 ,76. Huntlngto~ i Newport are• temperatu•u ~ range lrdm • h(gll of 115 to a low • ~
By JOEL C. DON Ot "'9 Delly ,..._. IWI
The current high level of lnte-
re&t rate• i• "d•n1erou1 to our
(economic) health, a UC Irvine
economist aaid Wedneaday du-
rl ng an annual UC bu1ineH
forecast for Orange County.
"We're not IOlna to set a good
recovery rate "Until thoee lnteren
rates come down," aaid Jerome
Baesel, uaoclate/rofeuor of fi-
nance at UCI an coordinator of
the forecast.
Mortgage rates might alao fall,
but prospective home buyera
1,000 sue
Anaheilll in
f irestor lll
A potential class action lawsuit
that seeka $100 million In da-
mages -or $100,000 for each of
the 1,000 ~ple left homele.. by
last week s devastating Anaheim
firestorm -was fUecfWedne9d-
av QRainst the City of Anaheim.
Also named as defendanta In
the Orange County Superior
Court suit were Southern Cali-
forn ia Edison Co. and nine
a partment owners, developers
and managers whose buildings
wPre destroyed by fast-moving
fla mes in the early morning
hours of April 21.
More than 50 buildings were
gutted by the wind-driven blaze
including 524 apartment units ~
a four-square block area near the
mtersection of Ball Road and
Euclid Avenue. Damage esti-
mates have been placed at about
$50 million.
Initiating the legal action in
Santa Ana were Anthony Nunes,
26, and his wife Cynthia, 24,
former residen ta of the Palm
Villa apartment complex on 1230
S. Euclid Avenue. Their apart-
ment and all their belongi.np -
valued at $6,000 -were de-
stroyed.
The couple also filed a claim
against the city. a step required
in legal actions against public
agencies.
Santa Ana attorney Jerrold A.
Bloch, who represents the oouple,
said the lawsuit was filed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellers routed from
tfieir residences. Most of the fire
victims loet all their belongings
and had no rent.era insurance.
Bloch said the court must offi-
cially certify the legal action aa a
class action suit before tenants
other than the Nuneaea can be'
eligible for settlement benefits, if
any.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO M OUNfAIN
AREAS -Nioht and morn1n9 low
cloud• '" 111e coat1111 and valley .of M.
---------llf!IH. otherwise .... Locally Win·
\ ..... S•111 ... ,,. O•(lwilut
dy In the mounlaJM Hlglla 1n the
coaeutt e•ea• 6S to 75 ...-nh '°'" •S 10 5S ._lovnt11n resort h1gh1
~ 10 64 with lowt 32 10 42
Heevy tllund«1tonne wtth hall ----------! and gutting wind• moved over . " ="9'"~°"':'::od-::. :~0.~ Te1nperatures
,...,,_ pefted ... tam T-. Ml Lo "c. ·~I llt rain ahowert apread . Atti.ny se 31
I aao. Ari!-and Mia-Alt>UqUe 81 48 MW , and there wH drlz.ile In ~ 72 39 .01
~ ~ AlheVllle 70 47 A ocMd frOflt Pf'oduced acatle· Attanta 73 52
'" ralfl aflowetl over th• nor· Atlelltc City 56 42 "oc:tl~ntalnt, With a Auatlfl M M
..... of ...:,: Ula higher =:-;! :l
.,...,....._ -e rtipOfi.d l!llrmir1ohrl'I 74 41" ,..., tM ...,..,. lip of Florida. Blamefok S6 40
Qaar .... ~ Kl'OH the 8o1H M 32 ,...._ No1•1 ... t, 1he toulhefn Bolton • 5f 40 00
,...... and Iha llPPet Ohio val· 1tOW11f1t111 82 ~ .oe
.... GrMI Lall• and mldclt el1d euttmo 56 3 I ~ A....-C ooeat atalel ~on &4 2t g:::,190 12 51 ~dii/omu. === =·= ~ ., 11
QllOaQO • 39 Clllclnnd 82 40 ~ 5214 Ollllllla IC 7' IO
Cot1W eo 'o °"'"" Wttt 78 .. ~ ~ .. 40 0..-t1 II
(llJlDl) -- -== =
0.. Molnt'S 53 45
Detroit 58 :i9
Oulu th 63 :w
El Paso 87 57
Fer90 ee 37
Fl9111tall ee 38
Gr•t Fatlt 87 35
HlftfOfd 57 38
Helena ee 3e
Honolulu 82 73
Houaton eo ee
lndnapllt 83 44
Jaca111 MS 77 68
Jtdlllvlle 71 llO
Kant City 63 47
LnVeou 92 11
Uttle Roell ee 41
LOUllVllle 84 4!I
Lubbock 74 49
Mefl'IPhlt 72 65
Mllml eo 72
Ml!W1tul!M 62 i1
"'919-tlt.P M 41
Nettl\1111 87 44
~OflNn• 71 " Nft YOftl 68 45
HOtWll eo ...
No. Piette 45 31 OldaClly f7 41 OMahl 11 41
~ .. 14
Phlledr.e
., ..
PtlOefl. 17 'fO
P'*'d, Mia. 112 ..
"111and, Or• .. ..
.05 Pr~ 52 41
~ .. 38
H 20
Salt Lalta 79 40 .21
San Anionic> 13 11
SeatUt 55 89 .OI
.oe ~-=: 76 641 ,07 ee 43
SI t.oula f3 52
St P·TM'lpe 7t 83
St Ste MM1e 81 28
Spotitne Ill S3 , 17
Syreicwe ee 32 TOpllla llO 44 ...
.71 Tuceon t2 5t
TIAM 12 llO .M
.29 WltllNngtll 13 42
Wletllt• eo ... •••
• ~4 CALWOMIA • 1 Bakertli.ld N IO 10 Blythe " • Eureka 80
Freeno ~
l.AlnOMMr IO ·A1l ~~ 11 71 • 1 Momerey IO .oe,,..... .. .n o.lc~ 72 .41p-~ 17 ~ lluft 71 ANwoodO"y ' .. 01=*",, 1' .. " .OI 19'1 Dllgo :: :: =~ 84 '1 Mette 17 =-: " " ..,.. IO ...... ., .... :: LaeAtr..,_.
•
abould not expect the ratea to
dfop to 1.he mon tolerable levell
of the '701, the bualnesa fore·
cuter aaid. Th.la \marka 1.he third yeu UC
economl1t1 have met to 8lv•
forecuta for the nation, atate and
county. The panellata who apoke
before county bu1lne11men at
UCI included Baea•l, Larry
Kimbel, director of economic
modela for UCLA'• BuaineH
Forecuting Project, and David
Shulman, a UC IUvenlde econo-
mllt. ''Oranae County look.I a little
better dian the atate and a lot
better than the nation aa a whole
but that hl1torlcally ha• been
true," aaid Bae•el. "But high houalr'8 prices in Oranp County
are making th1I an unattnctive
place and are alowing down job
grc>Wth.''
The forecaatera predicted
mortglge rates will hover around
the current averap of 15.7 per-
cent. The ratea are expected to
drop to U percent in 1983 and
then another full percentage
point by UHK.
The coat of homea i n the
county will rile 3.2 percent th.is
year. But when inflation i8 ave-
raged in, houlinC pricea actually will ahow a 5 percent reduction,
the forecuten aaid.
The high coat of housing is
expected to tum away potential
busfneews from relocating in the
county. And there llCtUafiy may
be an exodus of assembly-line
workers to the "new Orange
Counties of the '80." in Bakers-
field, Fresno, Riverside, San
Bernardino and other inland
locationa, the economists aid.
'"There are many people who
would like to buy a home, but
jult can't make the payment.a,"
a&e.el aald. "Prices will drop for
houses, but that w i ll make
Orange County more competitive
becauae it will attract new jobs."
Emerge ncy
declared at
San Onofre
A low-level emergency wu
declared Wedne9day night at the
San Onofre Nuclear GeneraUna
Station when a amall leak of
non-radioactive water ~as dl8co-
vered ln the cooling system of
newly built Unit 2.
Edison apokeamen said the
leak WH discovered at about
10:30 p.m. during routine testing
for the 1,100 megawatt reactor,
which was issued a low-power
teat license earlier this year by
the federal Nuclear Regulatory
Commillion.
Thou1h uranium-laden fuel
roda have already been loaded
into Unit 2's reect.or veaeel. utility
offid.ala aald. the fuel has not yet
been irradiated.
A ao-caUed "unulual eyent,"
the lowest of four emergenc y
cla.tficationa, waa declared and
local off-site emergency responae
agencies were notified. No action
wu needed, however, because
the declaration waa a fonnallty,
Edi.an spoke9man David Barron
said.
The powerful new reactor
unit, located Ut.r. milee aouth of
San Clemente, bM been under-
going "hot functlonal teattna."
Coolant water 61 fluabed through
the ayatem to Pimulate a ctual
operation oondltionl.
Barron •kid the leak in the
r~actor coolant ayatem wu dia-
oovered when it wu tested under
pre11ure of 2,000 pounda per
square inch. -
0.., ..... ..,, f'Mto
~AVES· DROPPER -.Whe n the days warm up in Hun-
tington Beach , K oyauk, an eight-year -old Siberian Husky,
guards the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jed Donahoe from a rooftop
perch. Koyauk reaches his rooftop spot through a second-
story window.
, Children trade
toys at FV park
''Trade A Toy" Day will be
held Sunday from 1 to 3 p.m .
at M ile Square Park i n
Fountain Valley.
Parents are invited to bring
a child with a toy he or she
has outgrown.
The toy will be placed in
one of five groups, according
•Ocean View High School
In Huntington Beach is hol-
ding its flnt spring activities
nigfit Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the CYm·
The purpose is to present
• The Huntinston Beach
Community Services Depart-
ment will begin registration
Monday for the Summer
Funtime Day Camp and
Sunshine Day Camp.
Signupe will be held from 9
a .m . to 6 p .m . at Ediaon
Community Center, 21377
• Regjstratlon i8 being ta-
ken lor the Wet Orange
County YMCA's sports camp
for boys and gjrla ases 8 to 13.
The camp will be held June
to value and children can
choose angther toy Crom the
same or a lower value group.
Trade A Toy is sponsored
by the Family Study Group
of Orange County. It will be
held near the duck pond and
play equipment in the north-
east section of the park.
information regarding the
athletic department, pepsters,
the band programs, the pa-
rent teacher student uaocia-
tion and bool1er clubs.
Magnolia St. and Murdy
Community Center , 7000
Norma Drive.
The camps, for children 6
to 12, will be held Monday
through Friday at Htµlting-
ton Central Park. More in-
formation can be obtained by
calling 536-5486.
26 to July 3 near Julian.
Soccer, gymnastlca, dance
and eelf defenae will be oil ..
red. For more information,
call the YMCA at 847-9622.
otlier1s fl)ag !J)r<mJi
-
You need
not be present to win,
drawing will take place
Friday May 7th and
the winner will be
notified~
phone that day. .
•
.
Hijackers hold"irig 27
EiglJt Americans among hostages of leftists
By TM AIMCl8&ed Preti
TEGUCIGALPA. Honduru -Flve Jefu.t.bl-
Jacken held 27 hoatagea at aunpolnt aboard a
Honduran airliner ~t Tegudplpa airport today al·
ter the gowmment rejected their demand fOf' $1
million and the releue of ~2 political prl8onera.
The hoatagea Included eight American men,
the U.S. fmbMly laid. One of them, GrefOl'Y S.-
aoom ol the Stanclard l'ru.lt and Steamlhip Co •• told
the control tower by radio: "The hl.ilckera say that
lf you don't ftte the priaonera, I will die."
Another American reported amon1 the cap-
tives wu NBCTV correspondent Brian Rom.
U .N. demands PLO control
UNITED NATIONS -The U.N. General As-
sembly demanded that Israel give control of the
occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and the
Gaza Strip to the Palestine Liberation Oraanization
aa a prelude to Palestinian statehood and condem-
ned U.S. support for the Jewish State.
Poland freeing
WARSAW, Poland -Authorities began
freeing 1,000 interned Solidarity unionists, tanners
and acbolara today in the largest easing of martial-
law restrictions since the December crackdown.
At Wanaw's Bialoleka prison, where nearly
200 internees were held, 35 Solidarity members,
aome wearing red and white union badges, boarded
Despite bitter U.S. and Iaraell protests, the
pro-Palestinian re90Jut1on WU adopted Wednaday
by a vote of 86-20. F.al>t, larael'a partner in the
U.S.-sponeored Camp 'David peace proceaa. Joined
36 nations in abstaining. ~hose oppoeed included
the United States and meet West.em nations.
• internees
regular city buses for their trip home after 4 'h
months of internment.
They were among the 800 internees to be
freed, and another 200 placed on parple by the ru-
ling milit .ry council which alao announced lifting of
the 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew and other concessions
Wedne9day night.
\
Inmate's testimony queried
SOLEDAD -A prison inmate who says con-
victed aasass1n Sirhan Sirhan confided he had plans
to kill Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy has
been attacked as a liar and con man by Slrhan'a
lawyer.
Convicted murderer Lawrence Eugene Wilaon
resumes his testimony today before the parole
board considering reclaion of Sirhan'• echeduled
parole date in 1984.
The assassin's lawyer, Luke McK.iasick, la ex-
pected to continue his assault on Wilaon's credibi-
lity.
AQMD seeks more authority
EL MONTE -The Air Quality Management
District would be allowed to move in whenever a
highway apilJ sends hazardous material into the air
under a plan approved by a citizens advisory panel.
"There have been a lot of truclu apllling ha-
zardous materials or contaminants that eometimes
result in airborne substances," AQMD Director
James Bira.kos said Wednesday.
"The responsible agent has been the CHP or
the local police or local fire department. But we
want to set up a policy where we would routinely
respond to advile and recommend on monitoring air
quality for contaminants in the air, project a dia-
penion pattern and identify the substance."
The policy, which also would allow prosecu-
tions, will be preeented to the AQMD board at its
May 7 meeting.
Judge stalls deportations
LOS ANG~ -Aa a week-long nationwide
roundup of suspected ille&al immigrant workers
continued, attorneys from outraged immigrant
rights groups won a federal court ordel' prohibiting
imminent deportation of l~ Mexicans.
They were among 425 arrested in the Loa
Anaelea area a1nce Monday u pa.rt of "Operation
Jobe." The Inunigration and Naturallzation Service
hopes the operation will allow unemployed dtbena
-whose numbets rival thoee of \he-Great De-
preaalon -acceu to decent-paying jobs held by
aliens.
Raids in eight other cities bring nationwide
arrests to about 3,500.
Reagan to talk on TV tonight
WASHING TON -Congrem has no cl\06ce but
to try to draft a tJud&et "a piece at a time" after the
failure of President Reagan and Houae Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. to l'e90lve their differences on
"dollana and philoeopby'' during a three-hour ber-
galninl'-seesion.
The president acheduJed a natklnally ~
addrels tonight (5 p.m. PDT) to dilcull the after.
math of his unprecedented Capitol Hill meeting
Wednesday with O'Neill and other congreasional
leaden.
Hinckley jury picks resume
1 WASHINGTON -John W. Hinckley Jr. re-
mained in his buement courthouae cell today u
lawyen and a federal Judae, workin« tn a nearly
CleMllM ......... 71......,. Al.....,,,,,,.. ..... MMll1
MAIN OPfllCa ......... e.... ..... CA. .......... : ..... c-....._CA. ...
~-0... .... , ... , •• ~. __ ..._ ...... , ...... ...., ... -·· .. ·---··-...... ...... 2 5 .......... ...,.
I ' '
'O.S. weapon•
'jeopardized'
WA811DfO'laf -A nUmt. o1 a,,,_, .... tu..,.. u.a. ..,_ ................ ~
pAl'Cly" becaUM of lnlon.-.UOD .,_.sa.,ad C • ......,,._
Clar ... -to• Palilll 1p1, eo ---~ .... ··•lisa,m 1~ Tbe:NDOl't ....... b, the, CL\ ..a .... -fUilrtlde ,..._
~ .................. ....
mw B-1 tiadn m ... r.i1 Jal ~·ha• dlw9lll1atda•11 ................. .,,, .
,
~ ...
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thur9d•y. Aprll 29, 1882
DeltJ,... ............ .., Lee ......
CHANGE OF COMMAND -Coast Guard Lt.
John Zantek (left), shakes hands with Lt. Pete
DtNicola during change of command ceremo-
nies Wednesday in Newport Beach while Coast
Guard Admiral William Manning looks on. Lt.
Zantek took over as commanding officer of •
Newport Coast Guard division and Lt. Dil'ji-
cola, the outgoing commander, was aasigned'fo
the guard's Long Beach headquarters. "'
HB mortgage suit aired
1.,
Trust deed arguments taken to high court :{
From AP 1&aff clJ1pa&dles
WASHINGTON -States
cannot shield people from having
to pay off mortgages when they
sell their mortgaged property,
Ole U.S. Supreme Court has been
told.
The court heard arguments
Wednesday in a Huntington
Beach cue of enormous impor·
tance to the nation'• housing and
lendJn1 induatrlea and to ho-
meowners and buyers. At stake is
the future availablllty of so-
called ..... nable mortgages.
The case, de la Cuesta vs.
Fidelity Federal Savinp & Loan
Amo .. involves the purchase of a
Huntington home by Reglnald
and Margaret de la Cuesta.
Fidelity held the finrt trust deed,
which carried a 9,JA percent
interest rate. Fidelity began
foreclosure proceedings after
payment for the outatandina ba-
lance wu not made.
A trial ju~ supported Fi~
lity but the fornia 4th District
Court of Appeal reversed the
deda6on.
'n,e California Supreme Court
declined to hear the case, and
Ftdellty ~peeled to the U.S .
Supreme Court, which agreed to
bear the cue.
There was no indication when
the high court would announce a
dedaSon.
Justice Lewis P owell baa de-
cllned to sit on the case. Should
the julticel deadlock 4-41 the ru-llna of the appellate court in fa-
vor of the de la Cuestas normally
would remain in eUect. But there
would be no national precedent.
Even the high court ju1tlce1
araued among ~em.elves Wed-
neadey u questioning became apUited..
A 1976 federal regulation allo-
wina federal aavinga and loan
~tlona to uee "due-on.-aie"
claute1 ln mortgage contracts
''aupenedea state law that con-
flicts with it," Justice Depart-
ment lawyer Stephen Shapiro
contended.
,
But Robert Boehmer, a lawyer
representing borrowers, said
California and many other states
with similar laws are entitled to
protect coruumen.
That's what the California
courts ruled in upholding the
state'$ ban bn due-on-sale clauses
'Badly f lawe d '
If a savings and loan len in its Wellenkamp decision. ~
cannot collect on an existi
mortgage whe n the proper
ownership changes handa,J
misses an opportunity to re-
that money at higher inter~
rates.
Joint Chiefs' hea~
raps 'freeze' idea •s
By C.W. MIRANKER
AeMdMed "'-W,.._,
SAN FRANCISCO -A nu-
clear weapons freeze and a "no
first use" policy are very seduc-
tive to a growing number of
Americans but are "badly fla-
wed" strategies for preventing
war, the chairman of the Joint
ChJeCs of Staff said Wednesday.
The m ore Americana talk
about refusing to use nuclear
weaporu, the greater the danger
that we may create lncentivee for
conventional aggJ'etllon and even
preemptive nuclear attack, said
Air Force Gen. David C. J ones.
Jn a speech pre pared for the
American Newspaper Publishers
Association, Jones analyzed the
two most prominent anti-nuclear
proposals, described his own
views on arms reduction, urged
support for the defense budget
and the need to expand and
modernize U.S . forces and criti-
cize d the joint inter-secvice
system.
In Washington, the House Ar-
med S ervices Investigations
Subcommittee heard testimony
earller Wednesday o pposing
Jones' proposal to make the JCS
chairman 'the final arbiter of po-
licy and the primary military
adviser to the president. <.h
Jones told the QUbllshen at ue
final day of their 96th annutl
convention that a "no first uaelt
policy of nuclear weepont fails•tf
account for a conventional forwl
imbalance that Lavon the SoYil9t
Union. 1J
If the Soviets believe they
could launch a successful collll
ventional attack against NATQ
"without fear of possible nucledo
response," their incentive to dllt
so, and the probability of ~
con!Hct, would be great!:~ creased, Jones said.
He said a nation under a
might still tum to nuclear wea
pons despite a declaration not
do so.
A policy that c8lls for no first
use of military force is more
"effective ... credible a workable than a promlae not
use nuclear wea~na after an a
tack has begun,' Jones said. \
As for a total freeze on deve
lopment and deployment of nu
clear weapons, Jones aaJd tha
strategy would put the U.S. at
disadvantage and exacerbate
already "serious vulnerabilities'
of many of our strategic ayatema
And verification of a comple
freeze would be "extremel
difficult," he added.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Aprtt •• 1H2
• • • ID arr1v1~g
By PAT HOROWITZ or .. IMlllr,......., __
DEA.ft PA'l'i La1t A•1•1t I ordered a warmap mat from die
Qmtw Oats Ce. by tn41D11 tl0.95 cbeck Qd 1 co1poa from 1
Natual Cel'MI box. My clteck wa1 cubed promptly, b9t I dJcla't
recetn uytMQ except 1 po1tcarcl la late October tht laformed
· me u.e mat wMld be delayed due to 11pply problem1. Tut'• th
la1t I've Mani. Cu yoa llelp me get a refund? -C.H., Newport Beacll
Edlth Dexter at Quaker Oats' Chicago headquarters wlll
check the records regarding your order and ~ue a refund to you.
In the future, try to contact the company which sponaon pre-
mium oilen when there is a delayed delivery or other problem.
Quaker Oats Company's address Is 345 Merchandise Mart Plaza,
Chicago. DJ. 60654.
Kit monitors formaldehyde
DEAR PAT: Wilen we bougbt oar bome yean ago tbe pre-
viou owaer told •• lt bad blown-In uea formaldehyde foam
iualadoa. At tUt time there w11 no known clallger from WI
type of lanlatloa, bat now that It lla1 been banned by tile Con·
1amer Prod.et Safety Comml11lon, I am worried. II tltere uy
way a lllomeowaer can clleclt tbe formaldebyde level ID a ltoue
wllea tMI lD1alatloa baa been ased? -D.G., Costa Mesa
There are a number or methods used to monitor fonnalde-
hyde levels, but many require expensive equipment and highly
trained personnel. There is a kit on the market, however, that
homeowners can use themselves. It includes formaldehyde mon-
itors, instructions and an infonnation sheet describing the health
effects of exposure to formaldeh yde. After sampling, the ho-
meowner returns the monitors in the enclosed. postage-J-aid
envelope to the testing laboratory for analysis and a written
evaluation. The cost is $35 for the first monitor and $25 for each
additional monitor. For more information, write to Clayton En-
vironmental Consultants Inc., 257 11 Southfield Road, Southfield,
Mich. 48075.
Benefits still available
DEAR PAT: Are persona entering military service eligible
for uy education benefits? I've beard that benefits ce11ed once
die GJ. bill expired. ·
-J .P., Newport Beacll
F.ducation benefits are still available. The Post-Vietnam Era
Veterans' F.ducational Assistance Program was started when the
GI bill expired. New service members initially entering active
duty on or after Jan. l , 1977, may participate. Under this plan,
the member contributes to a special training fund each month
while in aervice. The govenunent later contributes $2 for each $1
invested. For details, contact the Veterans Administration or ar-
med serviL'eS.
Bogus
• comics
probed
~(AP)-The FBI
hM been llked to lnveltipte an
lntemadonal rlna counterf=l a ~ and valuab1e under ·
comic book about an Un.1Crupu-
loua cnaudlna aardvark.
Tom Walton, co-owner of. the
Berkeley bookatore Comics and
Comix, aaid he unknowingly
bou1ht 13 bogu1 copie1 of the
first edition of "Cerebua the
Aardvark" for $30 each lut week
and then eold aix to collecton for
$100 each.
Cerebua, a spoof of "Conan the
Barbarian" and other mystical,
sword-wielding comic book cha-
racters, haa become a cult hero
who tends to drink and debauch
after a hard day on the battle-
field.
The 2,000 coplet of the first
edition in the Cerebus series,
created by Canadian artist-writer
Dave Sim. 10ld for $1 a book in
1977. Collecton pay aa much aa
$200 for a copy in mint condition.
The counterfeiting scheme,
which haa hit California, Texas,
England and parts of the East
Coast, was discovered at a comic
convention in Long Island over
the weekend when dealers diB-
c over e d the i r supposedly
authentic Cerebus comics were
fakes.
Sub's name
changed
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan has ordered the
Navy to change the name of the
attack submarine Corpus Christi,
which aroused controversy be-
cause of critics' protests that it
derogated the name of Chriat, a
White House spokesman said.
The president instructed the
•
"Got a problem? 'Then write to Pat Horowitz. Pat will Navy to change the name of th~ """l ·cut red tape, getting the answers and action you submarine to City of Corpufl
• .Med to solve inequltler in aovernment and b&.lllinss. ~~-.. ~1;:~~ Chriatl
, • !tf.ail ~questions to Pat Horowitz, At Your Seniice, n Orange COaat Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1'60, Co.ta Many church leaders and sev-
. . Me., CA 92628. Aa many letters as poestble wQ1 be eral members of Congress had ,~.. objected to giving the name Cor-~======================~~~p:us~C~hrlsti to a warship.
675-1171
3295 Newport Boulevard
Newport Beach Callfornla
(on Peninsula Across ~rom City Hall)
·PAPPAGALLO
· "TERRI"
The petf.d espadrille thot will
dreu up ony outfit. A¥Oiloble in
nolurol, wh; .. , navy, red ond block
comot "PP.9"' with woven wedge.
,.,.~
EMPEROR'S BIRTHDAY -E;mperor Hirohito of Japan
is celebratlng his 8lst birthday today as the longest reig-
ning monarch in the world. The 124th occupant of the
Japanese throne, seen here in a secluded garden at his
palace, is•described as "genki" -Japanese for vigorous.
Skutnik given gold m edal
Leonie Skutnik, the man
who leaped into the frigid
P otomac River to rescue a
survivor of an Au Flonda jet
crash, has been honored with
a gold medal by Transporta·
tlon Secretary Drew Lewis.
Skutnik, whose sister lives
Retired Adm. Hyman
Rickover gave a San Diego
reporter a lesson in Jetking
that which is unattainable.
"I hope you are not aspi·
ring to an interview," he said
to Kip Cooper of the San
Diego Union who had waited
three hours for him.
The 82-year-old nuclear
Navy pioneer went on: "You
in Newport Beach. was dri-
ving home from his Congres-
sional Budget Office jo b
when the jet crashed Jan. 13.
Three others also were cit-
ed for heroic deeds followmg
the crash.
know what Robert Browning
said about a man's aspira-
tions? He said a man 's as-
pirations should always ex-
ceed his grasp. Now, if I gave
interviews, then reporters
w ould have no m o r e
aspirations."
"But," Rickover added
with a small smile. "you
should keep on trying."
Italian director Fraace
Z•fflrelll 11y1 hie film of
Oluaeppe Verdi'• opera "La
Travlata" wUJ re-create the
opera exactly u performed
onatqe.
"lam not look.In, for a new
lnterpretatlon ," he tpld a
new1 conference in Rome .
"My Intention 11 to tell the atory exactl .••
ZefflreW ~ filming the
$6 million project lut week at
Rome'1 Clilec{tta. He aa1d the
film, •tarrlna tenor Placido
Doml•10 and eoprano Teresa
Strata1, should be flniahed by
October and will be prevle-
w ec;t In Venice before Its
general release.
William C. Marcil, rresi-
dent and publisher o The
Fargo (N.D.) Forum, was
elected chairman and presi-
dent of the American New-
spaper Publishers Aasociation
at its San Francisco conven-
tJon.
Marcil succeeds Katbarlne
Grabam, chairman of the
board of the Washington
Post.
President Reagan will ad-
dreta the West German Bun-
destag during his European
trip in June, the White House
announced.
The president will speak to
the parliament June 9, before
a meeting of North Atlantic
Treaty Organization members
and a brief stop in West Ber-
l.in. He will also confer with
West German Chancellor
Helmat Schmidt.
Erno Rablll has earned
more than $1 million from his
puzzle. "Rubik's Cube," a
Belgian newspaper said.
"With my cube I've earned
at least $1 million," the daily
Het Laatat.e Nieuws quoted
the Hungarian inventor as
saying. "But I'm so busy I
haven't had time yet to count
all that lovely money. I'll get
to that late r when public
interest in my person has died
down a bit "
Rubik was in Brussels to
judge a "Rubik's Cube" con-
test wo n by Lac van Lae-
tbem, 24, who rearranged the
cube's colors in 33 seconds. He
will participate in the world
championship in Budapest in
June.
FUR ULLEIY wants to do IOmethlng niCe t« your fur. It· s time to prrAICt ~
tUr lrw9slmlnt, IO let Nardstrcm SUW't It tor you. Sdllllfally controlled
llmp«IUt;I protect your fu( trom hell. turdy Ind rnbw. And wt\ile In
... ~ Is ~ --moths, ""Ind thlft.
N1R1 ~ UY i1, IAVI 20% WHIM YOU~ YOU11 PUii
.·
HF • Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Thurldey, April 28, 1ot2
Mobile home parks .
need zoning r ules
Wheels have been put in mo-
tion to put the same zoning on all
19 mobile home parks in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Thirteen of the parks pre-
sently have mobile home park zo-
ning but six do not. They carry
other zoning.
The zoning, advocates say,
will become important should an
ordinance now under study be
approved that would permit con-
versions of the parks to other uses.
The mobile home zoning
would spell out certain obligations
to owners of the parks. many of
which are located in prime beach
areas.
It would deal w ith such
things as relocation coats, pur-
chaaes of coaches by park owners
if displaced tenants couldn't sell
them and time periods of notif ica·
tion.
There are about 6,000 tenants
living in 3,000 mobile homes in the
city.
And many have expressed
concern for their futures if forced
to move.
The ordinance and new zo-
ning are still taking shape and it is
too early to know the specifics.
But if all mobile homes are
zoned identically, it apparently
would ensure equal treatment for
all coach dwell~rs. Thi~ is as it
should be.
1Center can aid budget
During the recent council
campaign and earlier. Fountain
Valley's recreation center at Mile
Square Park bas been a popular
target of those suggesting solu-
tions to the city's budget problems.
The critics have pointed out
this center, which includes an ac-
tivities building, tennis and bas-
ketball courts and ball fields, has
been costing the city at least
$100,000 annually.
They complain that Fountain
Valley has been subsidizing rec-
reation programs used by many
residents from other cities.
Others, however, have point-
ed out that most cities, including
'Fountain Valley, established their
recreation programs in the pre-
Propos ition 13 era, when such
programs often were viewed as a
public service and did not have to
pay for themselves.
The gradual conversion of
Fountain Valley's recreation cent-
er to self-sufficiency may take
several years.
The City Council last week
approved two measures aimed at
moving in that direction.
The council decided to permit
the serving of alcoholic beverages
in the center's social hall when it
is rented out for private parties or
wedding receptions. This is P.X-
pected to add $3,000 or more to the
city's recreation coffers.
Also. the council approved
installation of three video game
machines at the center. This is
expected to bring the city an extra
$5,000 annually.
Under ideal circumstances,
the city might have wanted to re-
strict alcohol and video games
from the center. But with proper
supervision, these activities should
not interfere with the traditional
recreation prograrm.
These steps, combined with
some changes in program fees,
should help the recreation center
move toward self-sufficiency.
Linguistic missionary
Huntington Beach-based Wy-
cliffe Bible Translators is mour-
ning the loss of the group's foun-
der, William Cameron Townsend,
known as "Uncle Cam" to his fol-
lowers.
Townsend died last week in a
hospital near his home in Wax-
haw, N.C. He was 85.
Townsend found his calling as
a young Bible salesman in Guate-
mala. AA the organization tells it.
an Indian asked Townsend why
God didn't speak in the language
of his people. ·
Townsend then spent several
years learning the Indians'
language and translating the Bible
for them. This set a pattern his
organization has followed ever
since.
Wycliffe and its academic af-
!iliate, the Summer Institute of
Linguistics, have provided mis-
sionaries who have translated the
Bible into 160 languages for pri-
mitive cultures worldwide. The
group is currently working on 750
other translations.
Beyond its work in apreading
religious messages, Wycliffe has
also given written alphabets to
primitive people who previously
had none.
Townsend's vision wa1
praised by evangelist Billy Gra-
ham in a tribute for "Uncle Cam"
held last year in Anaheim.
Of Townsend, Graham said,
"He's touched the world in a way
I never could."
Cha1npion for seniors
Mike Rodgers, Huntington
Beach's "Mr. Senior Citizen,"
recently was honored as the city's
outstanding citizen for 1982 by the
Ch8mber of Commerce.
Rodgers, 79, has been active
in a number of city and county
activities for people of all ages.
But it is in the area of aenior
citizen improvements that he is
most known. •
Rodgen was out in the fore-
front when the facility at 17th St.
and Orange Ave. was designated
as the aenior citizen center.
He also was a leading voice in
development of outreach and re-
f err al programs and for getting
senior citizen housing at Wycliffe
tow en.
The honor is well deserved.
He's done a lot of good for a lot of
people.
Opinions •~pressect In the space above are thoSe of the Dally Piiot. Other views u .'
pressed Ot1 this paoe are those of their authors •nd •rtlsts. Rt.cMr comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Boll 1S60, Costa fMsa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
6'2-4321.
L.M. Boyd/ Acting trick
~ know that bow they.
d1reet an tlCtrfta to deal with ltaln
COftW1I whatewr they want to lhow t about her. Palled and cUp.Wed: She --.. IPrlJ. Youns wt trt.ndly:
&be ... Gii tbe ~ llllp wttb ...
.,_ cn••ll bl fnnt of her kDMI.
'nred Md ovwwwbd: lbe climbe. ... ,,. ........ D1: 8bl ....
her ••I_ dowa, plpp!n1, Cb• rail.
Dnilk: ~ ilDiwa tht •• .r1r.
,_.WT, ....... m1a1 ...... Eaoll .... ...,
a.Dlwltlt ......... uw-
ms, MCI JDUda to drink. a.Im iii lht name of that pi.a pw \II our word
''birtp.''
:;::: "\---~.::~
41~ .. ._
'l'M m PAREP To GOThE acr~ MILE ... / SAJo ~ f'!Str>£MT
Tax system demands reform·
NEW YORK -Lewis Lehrman, a
candidate for the Republican nomination
for governor of New York, lasued a state-
ment on his income taxes 1alJt week. He
does pretty well -hia money comes
from a family-owned druptol'e chain -
and his 1981 income (adjusted gross in-
come) was liated aa $920,651.
THAT, ACCORDING to my plodding
calcu.lations, ~~ him in the 50 percent
bracket, the highest lnoome tax bracket.
After all, according to the laws and re-
gulations governing the Internal Reve-
nue Service, every dollar earned over
$60,000 la taxed at 50 percent on a joint
return. Right?
Wrong. Lew Lehnnan, whoee honesty
is unquestioned, was in the 13 percent
bracket lut year. He paid $121,706 in
federal income taxes on that income of
almoet $1 million.
Lehrman's income, accordine to hia
statement, came from a salary of $76,626,
dividends of $672,006, interest lnoome of
$71,626 and capital p.lna of $236,358. He
had enough deductiona and credits to cut
his tax to a lower rate than the 14 per-
cent paid by a salaried employee who
earns $100 a week.
Not bad for a guy who Hau hla net
worth at $24,827 ,339.
But then the tax "laws" -that al.most
indecipherable code of laws. regulations,
rulings, precedents and interpretation.a
-are not bad for any American who
geta hia money in any way other than a
regular paycheck complete with wlth-
holdJ..na. Honestly (loopholes) or di.tho-
neatly (hidden Income), the rich are
llCUll 111111
getting richer than you would 1ue91 in a
country with a progremive income tax.
In fact, without consulting Lehnnan'a
lawyen and aooountanta, I would guem
that he could ha-..e paid even ie. tax if
he really wanted to push throulh more
loopholes. Like many affluent Amer-
1.cana, he may have decided to pay some
more that he had to -either becaUle
one believes everyone ahould pay 10me
arguably fair ah.are or beca....e one would
like to minlmli.e the chances of being
audited. SGme of the big guys just pay
zero income taxes -, Ronald Reagan in
the past w• one example.
The "progreaaive' income tax -''aoaklna the rich," the rich have called it
since Karl Marx propc.ed it in 1847 u
pert of the Ccmmunist Manifesto -just
Isn't working the way it w• aappoeed to.
There just don't teem to be enouch rich
people -er peop1-making good money
are damnably good at hiding income. Of
the 93.6 million 1980 tax retuma filed.
only 547,590 reported adjusted~
above $100,000. The total nwnbet' aboYe'.
$50,000 waa under 2.6 million. Of t28' ~
billion paid in taxes that year by indM·
duals, $37.9 billion -less than 15 per-.
cen t -was paid by the memben of
over-$100,000 families. •
That total of $284 billion w ~ _
all taxpayen on total repor1ed Id ~
gross income of $1.6 trillion. So, n,,
average income tax rate for all A.mitt-J '
leans was something like 17 perc .. \. ,
Which means that if there were a
lingle-rate income tax ("un~ve") ,
and the current level of federal inoome
were maintained, each taxpayer would
pay 17 percent of his or her adjusied
gross, which i.a more than Lew Lehrmu
pays now. U deductions and credita wen
eliminated at the same time, the_,.
rate would drop toward 10 percent.
SOMETHING LIKE a single n1te, or a
"zero-base" reform of the tax system.
haa to be conakiered -now. Becau.e 1lile
rich can so easlly avoid progressive
taxation, the poor and everyone ei.e U'9 1 now doing it too. That's what the un-
derground economy is all about lhne
days.
Americans have always pakt tax.el re-
1 a ti ve l y willingly. We thou1ht th•
system was essentially fair. No more.
Eventually U.S. must support Britain ·
To the Editor:
Thla la to expreu my sudden alarm
and concern that, in the attempt of the
Reagan administratiGn to play the role of
honest broker in the Anglo-Argentine
dispute, it 11 running grave ri1k1 of
allenattnc the most Vital and reliable ally
the United Statea hu had in thia cen-
tury. The result of this alienation, ahould
it occur, will predictably be dillllualon
among the NA "rO partnen of the United
Statea with its reliability u the major
power ln the western alliance in ita ef-
forta to preserve free government and
the rule of law ln the world. Such di.t-
ill4S{on would, of ooune, contrtbute to a
flaccid alliance and the spread of the
communist evil in n.&rope and probably
elsewhere.
In short, the failure of the United
States to support Britain in the Falkland
Ia1anda d.l.apute will, lf lt baa no\ done 80
.ue.dy, lead to the contradk:Uon of the
central values thia country baa stood for
in thit century, and in the more specific
aeme guarantee the denial of the very
goals of Reagan'• otln policy ln narope
-the creation of a stable balance of
power and through it the creation of
lncentivea for the U.S .S.R. to take •-
rloualy propoeala for arms limitation,
force reduction. and general .. ttlement.
I FEAR that the statement at the
outset of the cr.lal1, that \be United
Statea WU equally friendly with both
the United Klnadom and AraentiN. W• w...av11ec1, tn tfiat it pve the tmp r n
that thJa coun\ry hu no preference •
between the wld'1 oldelt comdtutianal
democ:ncy, a country wttb a ,.,...,.fkwn\
record in the defmee and expemkm of
dvU fnledom. and a country thlit 19 a\
lelll llml-f~ OIW 1ritb an ebymna1
reoord wttb r..pect to thole dvU liberUM
which, one ltiopel. an ltlll • cmtnl to
tbe Unia.d Stai. • a\ tbe time ol Jtll
bU1b.
lt " bnDlnUw ln the ...... of tbll
OOUDU'y that the edmln4wtrdoa .-tly
publicly, by both ......... t aad-...S. that the Unl111d ltatll ._ ... ue wltb
Brtatn In the ...... "a._... .. lun, tnc:hacllq Mlf-d~Ua :..~ ;:,-::c·= :.:·:;
law, .... , ... ,." ... \: ......
.. ...... 'a .. , ..... Uillli ,...._ ...,, lllid .. .. "" .. e .. '1 ~ .. :-2 ....
Ml .... It: =· ':::~ .... .. =:: ..
were rai8ed for that j)W'pClle.
U they only care about their own peta,
what kind of pet ownen are they?
I do not wish to be cured of a di9eMe
or have pain dlminJahed becau.e eome
MAILBOX
medication « procedure WM dilcovered
by torturtna animala.
Much of the animal teaUnc today la
unneceaary, and much of the pain in-
flicted on animala in the name ol testing
is unjultifiably .vere.
INtead of enacUnC laws to let anima1a
other than )'OW' own be tol'tUnd, why
not pu1 lawt to require unannounced
inap«Uon of the9I! experimental labe?
Precedent set
To the l'.dtt.or:
J . COLLINS
That the Cout Community Collep
Dlttrtct crltidzel outatandi.q teachen
for merely tf)'lnl to maintain 10me
•mblaace of excellence la dJat~ enGUlb. but that tbll dilCrtct .. COOllde-rinl M8ll ac:don aplnlt the four II an
ouu-..-and a wute of the taxpeyera' ....,.
Admlaliltnton in the diltrk1 tbou1d ,.am that ....,.smt bM bem llt tn the
John Pww ~ _cma.
P&'l'&R 8NETSINGD
, 1 , J : .' ' I I I f '
• ' ' 11 • • i ' .. , ~· .. I ' l
To feel free and worthwhile is tcmn, 1's
meaning in America.
U thew men are puniahed then free-
dom does not exist. People in authority
should not U1e their power to equelch the
voices of thoee in the same area of wortl •
or members of the same free country.
Subeervtence leads to Uavet')' where tM
powerful abow their corruption.
CHARLES L. HOl!LDERI.JN
B eachlront 'slum'
To the Editor.
In reply to your April 22 editbrial,
"Parldnc ban 91e!ltial." I wouW UD to
comml!'llt on \Wo --.
One, I would aappart the Qty Ouril
~u;.:::ti~t'Z:
vard to the &nu An.a Rtwr. I trawl .._.
area aeven daya a week and th.,.. II ,
hardly a day aneone cloa nit~
the flow of traffic and almolt ---aicddent.
Da9J ,... ll'Mto lllf Lee ,..,,..
AISING FUNDS -Mickey Mouse and
-ear-old Christy Mitchell. poster child of the
eu emia Society of Ame rica, Tri-County
hapter, get ready for a dive. The society will
old ita first annual Super Swim Classic in 10
ge County pools May 8 to raise funds.
· will be awarded to swimmers based on
1UD1JU1Jts of money raised. For information, call
39-~511.
ederal tax
• • 1te growing
y fte AllOclated Preti
A hypothetical family of four with an income
· f $25,000 faces a federal tax bill of almost $7,000
oc the current filcal year, a study shows.
The figures come from the Tax Foundation
c., a non-profit research group in Washington.
.C., which keeps track of taxes Americans pay.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
ederal budget and ca1cu.late how the government
pends an individual taxpayer'• dollars, using a
ypothetical family with one working lspouae, two
hildren and an annual income near the median for
U .S. families.
There are lots of numbers involved, but it's
orthwhile to wade through them to learn wbett
our money goes.
For the laatest study, the econoiru.ta used a
amily with an annual income of $25,000. They
ound that such a family would have a federal tax
ill of $6,~16 fQr fiacal 1982 -the year' that beaan
' . 1. !i'ederal i.ooome taXes would 8CCOUnt for· $1,-
71 of the tax bill, Soda1 Security fot $1,675 and
direct taxes like exciJle levies and corporate in-
for $~,470.
Five years ago, the ecoocmllta u.ed a family
'th an income of $15,000 and found that such a
amily had a federal tax bill of P,9'15. l'ederal in-
me taxes accounted for $1,459; Social Security
es for $878; and indirect taxes for $1,635.
In 1977, the federal tax bill for the lower-
tnaime family equaled 26 'ri percent of income; for
982. the federal bite on the higher-income family
aa 28 percent.
The hypothetical income level used for the
tiona was increued 66 percent between 1977
1982, allowing for an i.ncreaae in earnings of
ore than 10 percent a year. That produced an
ln the t.aX bill of 74 percent. Income levies
ted for 37 percent of the tax bill in 1977 and
0 percent in 1982; Soda! Security taxes account.ed
r 22 percent in 1977 vs. 24 percent in 1982; and
· taxes aa.-ounted for ~ 1 percent in 1977 and
percent in 1982.
Most people think of taxes in terms of the
endar year -from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
nomista baaed their calculations on the filca.l
ear -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -since that is the
used by the government for budcetarY pur-
'lbe biggest chunk of the money -then and
-goes for what la called income 9flCW'ity, in-
uding Social Security payments, welfare benefits,
tc. InCome eecwity accounted for about 32 percent
f the family's tax bill in 1977 and about 33 percent
1'112.
Rational defenle WU the 8eCXlOd tMaesl spen-
category in both years. It llOOOWltea for 33 ~
t of the tax bill in 1977 and just under 25
t today.
There have been shlftl ln other .,.. of apen-
n1 over the past five yeara. lntere1t on the
timMl debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
'• tax bill in 1977 and waa in fourth place. Odaf, lnter'fllt 11 ln thJ,.rd place, accounana tor 13
t of the tax bill.
llealth, wbJch waa third on the UR five years
.. allpped· to fourth piece; In bod\ 1977 and
2 ft accounted for a little more than 9 percent of t ~ tema, Income -=urity ICL'OUllted for
.. of the tax bW In 1977 and '2,281 today, ...... . 1* perml\t. The defww pardon of tbe tu bOl
from '"4 to tl,712, up 81 percmat, md d)e
--pardon went from ~ to ''°°· up lM
If
\
Ortnge Coat DAILY PILOT /Thutlday, April 29, 1882
Hefner passes torch
Daughter new Playboy president
CHICAGO (AP) -Chrlltie Hefner,
29, daqhter of Huah Hefner, hu been named prffldent of Playboy
Jl:h•Prlw Inc. • UffavlnC worked at policy leve}a in
many arw of the ~peny, Ch.riltie
hu certainly been well prepared for
thls move," her father, chief executive
officer, Mid Wednmday.
M1. Hefner hu been a corporate
vice prelident at Playboy four yeara.
The direct management of Playboy
Enterpci8es will be under the control
ol Ml. Heb\er.and Marvin L. Huston,
executive vice pres.tdent.
Rites~
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75 13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75 12.50
12.25 12.00
11.75
11.50
11.25
11.00
10.75
10.50 10.25 .
Ml. Hefner will report directly to
her father.
' "Our f lm tuk II to complete the
\l'Wltion of Playboy from a = bued corporation to • dearly
communlcatlona company," aald Ma.
Hefner. "In addition to ftl IUCCellful
magazine publi1hln1 bualneu and
entrance Into the lucrative P'Y cable
bualne91, Pia~ ai.o hu profit op-
portunfU. b)' capltalJ.sina on the va-
lue of ltl name through magazine and
r o.d u ct 11 c e n 1 l n I a n d cl u b .. .
TAKES OV~R -
Christie Hefner la
new president of
Playboy Enterprises
Inc.
vs.
Ready Access and
Money Market Fund Yields
.
Dinosaur deaths
tied to cataracis
LONDON (AP) -Eye cataracts miaht h.ave
wiped out many of the 8001pedel of dinoeaun that
roamed the earth unUl about 65 milllon B.C., ec-COfdinc to L.R. Croft. a SalfOl'd Univenity bWoPt·
Variow tbeoriel have been put forth fOI' the
deml9e of the great c:ratu.rel, which were belJeved
cold-blooded like modem reptllet. But Croft sui-
gettl they died out becaUM thelr eye1 lacked the
protein to make them retistant to an increase ln
solar radiation.
In his new book "The Last Dlnouura,'' Croft
said the 1pecte1 that dlaappeared first did not de-
velop a thickening of the brow of the eye 10Cket or
aome other protection, such aa a horny crest bet-
ween the eyes .
s
10.00 '---'----'-__..---'L...--...J--....L-__..--l,__.,,___,____,____..._..__...J.---'---.1..-'----'---!---'--.JL--J
-, s~~@s=~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ s g: ~ M N ~ '° N 0 0 -
t
-~ 0 ~ -~ ~ ~ N N ~ ........ ....... ........ ....... ....... ....... ..... ........ ....... ....... ....... ....... .......
0 - - --- - - - - -
N N - -----N N N NM MM
Ready Access was designed to beat the
money funds ... and it does! T he money
funds may think it's almost "unfair c~m·
petition," because of its unique combination
of features : insured safety, easy
accessibility, and hig h money-market
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and see
if you don't agree.
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above shows, a person w,ho
opened a Ready Access account last fall, on
October 10, would have earned a guaran-
teed yield of 14.468% for the following
26-week period. Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%, it dropped to
a low of 11.8%-and averaged only 13.5% for
the same period. That put the average
money fund yield almost a full percentage
point below Ready Access. When you look
AaHal El.nl.e YteW••
No
at the track reco rd, Ready Access has a
decided edge.
Easy Access
When you open your account, you get a spe-
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, $1,000 or
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have to do is write a check for at least
$500-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds, provided the account is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account is
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
Mency fund investments are nol insured.
And , as an article in the Wall Street
J~wrna/• points out, the risk of money funds
increases as short-term interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance Requirement
Only SS,000 is needed to open a Ready
Access account. And there is virtually no
minimum balance requirement to maintain
the account.
Sen Ices
An interest-carnin.t:::king account is
offered each Ready aocount holder-
/r'' of monthly service charges. And this
opens the door to 24 -HOU R TELLER
(ATM) service as well as TELE-PAY", the
unique service that allows regular monthly
bills to be paid with a telephone call. No
money fund provides so many special
services.
Convenience
With 100 offices throughout California
(soon to be expanded to 145) the Associa-
tion is easily accessible for a variety of
services-from making deposits and with-
drawals to cashing checks, using a safe de-
posit box, obtaining money orders or trav-
elers checks, applying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
CALL THE FINANCIAL LINE
0
(714) 231-4023
C1tl Direct or Collect ..... t111,,. ..
Oct further information, the answers to . , . your questions, or arrange an appomt-
ment with a Money Management
Specialist at any A~iation oflk:e •..
and do it all by phone, simply by calling
our Financial Line.
•ANN LANO!RS
•!AMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
1
Girdl e fan .sars··1~b eling has no foundation
' DEAR AN?< LANDERS: I uaually ql'ee all <imcemed if he stayed out of their llvee. lllne11 to diabetes ls absard. Diabetes does wltb more dlplty tban pbonJa1 *'e doctor'• I. With you, but we parted ccnpany when you .· He moved to a town 260 milee away, ll!nt not alter behavioral patterns. Obvloasly, the office and checking.
called a man a tranlvettlte beca1.11e he wore the 1Upport checka on time but never called dl1tane.t ~rtOD dll 1ometbhlg 1be coald Granted, p1ycblatrt1t1 are not always
' a lh'dle and ~· or wrote. bve beea fifed for. Her Job was spared with rlgbt, bat one of the dlfflcalt aspects of
· I can tell you fro~ experience that r.ut week Warren went tQ 1ee h1I kids *'e adent&Ddlq tbt 1tae 1et profe11l0Dal doing my Job 11 formalaUn1 a realistic
1tocldna are nece111ry to keep a alrdle trons -jUat walked ln unexpectedly. They were belp. It seems to me that a note to verify picture of a 1ltuatlon wbea I laave limited
, rjdina iip and bunching around the' middle. cold and indifferent. Ile ii crushed. He la that be kept tbe appointment leaves lier Information. l SuPIJIOll't.ltocldnca allo nelp-drculation. . sure htl·ex bu poi8oned their minda aga,inat
I -'Yeara ~10 I had back problems. I him. What can he do? -SAD SfS IN + couldtl't' ,af,ford a aurlfcal. ~~t. My wife ·SHELBY ..
~ . . ..
• t ., •
:~"uiloi• .···' . . . . . . . ..
.,,., . . . . ' ... . . .
pv~ ~ an::~id .. ~ ~d a 'pair of ·~)17.om~ .
She Uid I'd need the nylons to keep the
girdle down. · · · · Ir In a·matter bf days I was amazed at
1 how much better my back felt. It really was
I miraculoul.
I would also suggest the man wear L nylon panties under the girdle. It will help
the girdle slide on more easily.
A great many people have faith in you.
Ann. 10 pleaae don't go toesing labels around
irralpansib. · ly. You could hurt some innocent
people. -STRAIGHT IN BALTIMORE
DEAR STRAIGHT: O.K. All those gays
wbo are wearta1 ladles' girdles, nylou ud
anderpanh (black garter belts, too,
maybe?) are 1tral1bt fellas witb back
problems. If yoa believe that, I bave an
l&loo ID FIDlud I'd like to sell yoa.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My brother
and his wife were divorced 10 years ago.
They had three children under eight years
Qf age. Warren thought it would be best for
. DEAR SIS: Cblldren wbo bave bad ao
con&act wltb . tbelr dad for ·tO yean bardly
cu be expected· to herald Id• reappearan~
· . with ttampet1 and llyh11; banners. They
n~me to.adjust. Tiie best be can expect
· af · DOtnt l•· pollte lndlfl,erence. Be ml•·
. : ~ ~~ lAye·Boat lO·fear1. ago. · ..
· · D.EAR ANN LANDERS:· Your answer
to ''Ticking Away,0 who was distresaed by
her company's insistence that she see a
psychiatriat and bring a note every week to
prove she had kept her appoil')tment -or be
fired -was revolting and dehumanizing.
The company may have a legal right to-
do this, at least under current laws, but
there is no reason to asswne thoee laws are
fair or that the woman is "lucky to ~ kept
on."
Such a response reinforces the bnage of
the "mentally ill" held by not only the
public, but by mental patients themselves, as
second-class citjzens who ttave somehow
earned the humiliation and condescension
that are visited upon them. It also, by im-
plication. reinforces the myth that ~ psy-
chiatrist and his diagnosis are always right.
Would you have responded so ,conde-
scendingly to "Ticking Away" if she had
been suffering from diabetes? Are you sure?
-JUST ASKING
DEAR J.A.: Your comparing mental
Diplom a cy Virgo k ey
t
Friday I April 30
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Dynamic
meeting with member.of opposite sex high-
lights exciting scenario. Emphasis on initia-
tive, new contacts, fresh concepts and ability
to get to heart of matters. You imprint style aJ'\d find constructive outlet for aeative .en-
( ergies. .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on
security, family, home, ability to locate
needed material. Hunch proves accurate -
sense of direction is clarified. Some restric-
tions prove beneficial; delays actually could
work in your favor.
nEMINI (May 21-June 20): Social
activity increases, people call you, want to
see and hear you and you'll receive at least
one invitation to travel. Sagittarius and
another Gemini figure prominently.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Missing
links are located -Crarieces fall into l place. By becoming with routing,
·1 you improve chances for profit. Money
comes from surprise source, cash flow could
{ resume.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Enthusiasm
' replaces indiff.erence; cycle high and you'll
make correct decisions at right time. Member
of opposite S'ex desires to communicate and
makes you aware of it. Gain indicated
through written word.
POT.SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent dip-
lomacy, patience and realization that you
have yet to obtain story behind 21tory. Dig
deep, reject superficial explanation and ob-
tain backstage view. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on
illusion, romance, wish fulfillment and op-
portunity to perfect techniques. You'll be rid
of superfluous material and you'll s.ee
through o~ who is a pretender.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Focua on
pro,notion, l'e8J>OnaibWty, ·reward, intensi-'
fied relatlonahip. Lunar accent on business,
career, community and penonal prestige.
Older individual la actually on your side,
although Y9U may find It difficult to accept.
SAGITrARIUS '(Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Em-
ph.aail on 'distance, reaching l>eyond current
ex~tions and gaining an international
view. Project can be completed, burden is
removed.and you can auccesafully articulate
aspirations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): New
approach brings desired results where
money is concerned. Avoid arguing with one
cloee to you -seek compromise, realize that
error will ble corrected. You'll have chance
to exerci8e independence of thought, action.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Change
of plans i.ndfcated; legal document plays key
role. You become aware of rights, permis-
sion. You undergo a learning experience.
Member of opposite 1ex ii fascinated, but
uncertain.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Job op-
portunities expand, more people are attrac-·
ted to your talents, sense your abilities.
Long-distance call affects travel plans, in-
dividual who relles upon your judgment
may want to rely upon your flnanc:ial ald.
Trage dies trigger caution
'Pl1S01A11n a;u ·.·
av MARILYN ANO HY1iAADNER
I I
·problem," WllMl'JDAD told Rollinl StoM
mapllne, oy OU can't tell who'• wnat. So
you ·~ 1ID be • cool and lndittennt • you
~bl7 can." .
·50.% off!
Motion Pant~ closeout
of selected colors.
Now
8 .99
Orig. 118. Women's dreaa pants In
stretch pofy. Red, buff,
It. tSlue, mauve and gray In sizes
6 -20, average and short.
Full·flgure sizes 32·42,
otiQ. $19. Now e.n.
Qu1ntftlH limited.
THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1982
CAVALCADE 82-3
Tlie Oranse County
Perlormins Arts Center is
in top financial s hape. ·
Page B6r-
J
RICKY TICKY POLITO:: .In our coastal univez:sity
comrpuniiy of Irvine, you have to suffer enormous fas-·
clnation with' the method by which current City Council
candidates are campaigning. Some clear novelties exist.
Consider candidate F.d" Dornan, an English prof, who
seeks one of the open Irvine council seats in the upcominJl
. ~ June 8 balloting. Dornan
· hu announced four fund-
-• ._ ' raisers.
r-\ This usually means
~r jamming a gaggle of the TIM MURPHINI ~ f candidate's faithful into a. , small, smoke-filled back
room at some cut-rate pizza hut and serving them up di-
luted drinks, with half an ice cube floating therein, at $5
each.
NOT CANDIDATE DORNAN. He is clearly campai~
ning on a higher plane. He is going to hold poetry readings.
Perhaps the poet articulators will modify the wording a bit
in the effort to subliminally sway the voters. Somesuch line
as:
"Only Dornan Can 'Save a Tree ... "
• Irvine Council campaigning depends on high levels
of entertainment
The traditional Americana of focal politics usually calls
for one or more of the flush eandidates to toss a heavy bash
in the public park, rolling out barrels of beer. The suds are
expected to loosen up the multitudes just before the can-
didate mounts the podium to expound bis virtues for office.
More beer sloshes among the multitudes. Cheers greet
the candidate.
Incumbent Irvine Councilman Larry Agran is follo-
wing in this grand tradition in his bid for re-election.
Only there isn't going to be any beer.
It's going to be an ice cream social at the park.
Agrail must figure he's running for Boy Scout com-
missioner. He's not going to have any riot& at his rally, by
golly.
If fisticuffs break out, it'll be because somebody spilled
· tutti-frutti on some other guy's tie. · •
MEANWHILE, CANDIDATE Barbara Wiener, who
once headed the Irvine Historical Society, got her council
campaigning off to a roaring start just last Friday. She held
a talent show. E. Ray Quigley sang, warbling a few notes in
hei-favor.
One of the gentlemen entertainers was a magician. But
I understand when one of the Irvine leaseholders asked
him to make the Irvine Company disappear, he declined.
Clearly, Irvine council campaigning is so upbeat that
the town might as well go dry. Beer dealers will need to
give away a poetry volume with each six-pack to gather
any trade.
DESPITE ALL THIS, there are some things about
current Irvine campaigning that have a ring of the tradi-
tional to them. Take for example candidate Bill Pozzi, who
is a moving company executive. You guess if you're an
executive in a moving company, you get the light end of
the piano.
. Anyway, Mr. Pozzi reports he's financing his own
campaign and will be politicking in Irvine door-to-door,
asking for votes. Like that stockholder on TV says, that's
doing it the old-fashioned way.
But who knows? In this day of computeri.z.ed election
telegrams and letters, Pozzi's return to the basics just might
work.
. MEANWHILE IN THIS non-~ 1ocal election~ the
South Coast Republican· Forum has fnVited a couple of
candidates to speak.
See? The partisans ~t can't keep their noses out of it.
It's a comrrulsion. They've got to leap into it.
They 11 probably give aw•y beer rather than poetry or
sundaes.
Dally Pltot Slaff '9wltoe
SECRET STRATEGY -Joan llill of Costa Mesa likes the "would just love to see what everyone else is planning" for
fun of racing and companionship of other pilots, but she the rlsky part of flying over water . ..
Pilots' strategies up • Ill • air
By STEVE TRIPOLI or .. DellJ Noe ..,.
There's $10,000 in prize money at stake,
but local women involved in the second
annual Baja California All Women's Air
Race say that's not the main reason they're
flying.
Fun, companionship and a test of skills
will spur thelr takeoff from Long Beac.h
Airport Friday, they say.
·~It's a whole different type ot flying,''
.l&id Father Krau\h of Newpott Beaeh, who
1penda a lot of time airborne u a first of-
ficer on Air Cal fiighta. "It takes concen-
trated effort."
Ms. Krauth will pilot a plane with Ellen
Appel of Laauna Beach, as navigator.
In air racing, where charts must be
plotted, routes followed with precialon, and
decisions made on everything from altitude
to fuel stops to achieve the fastest time,
teamwork ia eseentiaL
Ma. Appel ancS Ms. Krauth, one of sev-
eral Orange Coast teams in the 30-plane
field, say they've spent a lot of time buil-
ding the necemary rapport.
They met in a beauty salon about two
yean ago, when Ma. Appel overheard Ma.
Krauth say she needed a new partner for
air racing.
Since then, It's been all work, for in-
stance, a year pre~ for thia race be-
cause they want to Jn 1~
"When you've been with 1<>mebody that
many hours, that manr days. you really get
to know each other,' said Ms. Appel. an
independent publicist.
. U houra flying were the key to victory,
Irvine's Maureen Motola and her partner
would have the race sewn up.
Ms. Motola Is a seven-year veteran of
flying with some 2,000 hours to her credit,
but partner and navigator Clair Walters bas
logged a hefty 30,000 hours In nearly 40
years of flying.
Like her companiQN, almoet all of whom know each other aa anembers of the Orange
County 99s women's flying club, Mn. Mo-
tola aaya sh e I• racing "just for the
challenge."
nytna in Baja, where ahe ,and husband
Dan have a vacation home, ia a challenge ln
ltlelt, lhe ukl.
READY FOR RACE -While Maure-
en Motola checks her instruments, El-
len Appel and Esther Krauth chart
their route to Baja California.
"They have no weather forecasts (for
flyers) there so you're really on your own.
You have to play with the plane and see if
Its drifting to the left or right."
But the test doesn't fue· Mrs. Motola, a
red-haired real eetate agent who often flies her own plane for buldnels. -....--,.
"It sharpens your proficiency," she says
with a smile.
Joan Hill of Costa Mesa says she wil\ be
most interested in the stra tegies of oppo-nents, though they may never be comple-
tely revealed even after the finish.
The decision to fly a portion of the race
near shore or a quicker route over water,
which is considered somewhat risky fo r
single-~ngine planes, intrigues her the
most; ahe said.
"I'd juat love to see what everyone else Is
planning to do about that," she says with a
grin.
The three-day, 1,000-mile race will st.op
in San Felipe and Loreto before its finish in
San Jose de1 Cabo at the tip of Baja.
Special preparations go beyond charting
routes. Small details like waxing the out-
side of the plane thoroughly -anything
that will l~n wind resistance and speed
the trip -also are attended to.
lt'.s not all open spaoe and camaraderie
for some of the competitors, Mrs. Hill said.
"Some of them can be really Cutthroat.
They'll really hold you to me rules," said
the seaaoned Baja pilot. who has led several
multi-plane excursions onto the peninsula
where she has a vacation home.
But for her and most othen it's not that
way.
Newport Beach pilots Jill Crane and
Lynn Newton say they'll gain experience
and enjoy themselves in the race.
Ms. Crane, at 21 one of the youngest
competitors, said the fliers "learn from each
other" in a race.
"You can get more experience ln a week
of racing than in a year of flying," added
her partner.
The two have been paired for only one
month, and they've been aeparated most of
that time while Ma. Crane attends aero-
nautical school ln Arizona, but they feel
they've done enough preparation to be ae-
rioua contenders. "
Referring to the low altitude the planes
must fly over checkpoints on the route, Ms.
Newton added with a mischievous grin.
"Besides, where elee can you legally buzz
an airfield?"
Houseman brings Shakespeare to life at UCJ
. . " "'
the belt thlnp Sbakelp8are ever
wrote.
"The atom bomb made 1Lear' relevant. When man rellbed that
he couJd deltroy biamelf, ·Lear'
became terrtfylnaly appro-
priate .. he Mid.
In hfa sJiiff, eevere and dra-
matic voice, HouHman then
~ elther to IJh•lrelpeere or
the~~ .. n:at•rtty
• Kl~ '"lbe Paper Chw," u-man had
mo_uated a Iona and dil-
ti~ ........ filtn and ..,....._ .... wrs •.
He ...... wrttlQI ID 1931. In
the eul1 lllOI, lfouleman di·
"The atom bomb made 'Lear'
relevan1 ••• 1errlf yill.Blr appropriate."
two Emmy Awards fol' his work
on "Play~ 90."
HoUMman alto 1erved u dl-
rectol' of the Jullllard School of Drama for 10 y..,.. He wu a
freqmnt COD~ to Yteioul ma1u1ne1 on the aubject of
drama and the theater. At the
ap of. 70, he won an Olar' fat hil
dormance in .. The Paper
" . l'ollowtnl the ........ JIOUii.
man wa1 preeented with a llft of
appndatlon from UCI Chancel-
lor Dutel Aldrich -the 1Uk·
.:reen ~ for the po1t.er that annouDC.'llCI HoUMmaD'I vialt to
the unlwn&ty .
M Aldrich remarked before
HoUMIDall took the ataae. 0 lt'a
appropliaa. &bat he'• blCk wtth
UI .... t. After all. be helped
put UCI Into modoD."
¥
f
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~OTATIC*llllC~UO• HAOUO• TMa ••W'fOttll. MIOW .. T, .. AC .. IC, ,.., eotTO.., OtHOl'f' AHi ClltCl•lllA'f'l l'f'OCM I lCMAMll ue ..... 'f'IO e 'I TMI lllAH AlllO lllllTINaT •
~ ... , .... '* c; .... Cllt '
NEW YORK (AP) -!'.utern AJr-
ll n e 1, which dominate• the
Northeut-to-Florlda mark.et, aid it
posted a $$1.4 million net Jo. in the
llnt :J.uarter, larply becawie of the
ret9IN'.m and fare wan.
The tint-quarter la., after pay-
ment of preferred •tock divtdendl,
amounted to $2.27 per eommon lhare. ·
In the 1981 flrat quarter, Eaatern
earned $4. l million but •bowed a
4-ceni.a..tme -after peylrc ...... !erred l&ock dtvidendl.
Lear income down
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Lear
SieCler, Inc. reJ)Ol'Md third q\W'Cer
net .lncolDe of Jle mllllan., down 17
pt!'Omt lramtlU imlUan a y.r ..,_ . Prtmary~ ...............
centa compend to tl.18_•_~·--.
the """"P"'13' ...... while fUD7 clDuted earnin&a decllMCI co 82 cente fJ'OCD
fl.12. I
HF CT'
. ' 1
'4emuy Savinp, Huntinaton Be.ch beeed f.cl·
era! stock •vtnp and Joen amodat:lon, announced tta
unaudited aft.er.tax acl.Jua1ed ic. f« the tint quarter
\ WM f4,229,000, Of' $1.<$ per ah.are. •
Leonard Shme, chairman and ~ officer, , eald the loa wu the laraeat tn the hl1tory of the
company and resulted t.W.Uy from the "oontlnuadon
of extremdy h.l&h oosta of fundS, the virtual halt in the
normal real eatate marketa, a.nd the u.ual aeuona1
alowdowna experienced during the f1nt quarter of any
year." .
A year ago, Mercury had a $938,000 W.. Of' U
centa per ahare.
TM revenue up, profit down
Revenuee of the Tunea Mirror Co. for the firlt
quarter lncreued to $522.3 rrillllon from the $~00.7
million reported in 1981.
However, net income decreued to $20.2 mill.Lon
from $26 million while earninga per ahare were 59
centa compared to 76 centa in the prior year.
The continued deprewd wood products market
waa a major contributing factor to tne earnlnga de-
cline.
Ttmea M1mJr publiahed the Los Angeles Times.
Dallas 'nmel-Herald, NewDy (Long Wand), Denver
Post, the Sporting News, Hartford Courant and two
papers in Connecticut and the Daily Pilot, plus
broadcast cable t.elev1.llon and publishing properties.
Baker earnings increase
Baker IntemaUonal Corp. of Oranae announced
eamingl for the three montha ended March 31 were
$1.08 per lhare, an increue of 42.1 percent over the 76
centa per lhare in the year-earlier period.
Revenues for the three montha were $678.4 mil-
lion, an increue of 32.3 percent over the comparable
. quarter.
Earnings per share for the six month.a ended
March 31 lncreued 52.9 percent to $2.14 competed to
the $1.40 lut year. Revenues for the six months were
$1,302.9 bllllon. up 35.5 percenL
Revenues reported
San/Bar Corp. of Irvine bad improved operating
• results for the first nine months of the fucal year but.,
lower third quarter results.
For the nine montha ended March 31 total reve-
nues roee to $18,841,550 from $13,481,138. Net income
advanced to $1,156,243, equal to 64 cents per share,
from $374,982, or 27 cents per ah.are one year ago.
San/Bar Corp. la a major supplier of electronic
· equipment and components, Microwave radio systema
and aervicie to the t.eleoommunicationa industry.
Dividend declared
1
• "
The board of direct.on of Swed.low Inc., Garden ~
Grove, declared a regular quarterly cuh di~nd of 5 ~
cents per ahare, payable June 4 to shareholders of
record May 14.
Swedlow is a manufacturer of proprietary acrylic'
and armor products utW..zed for a variety of military
and commerda.l applicationa.
PR banquet scheduled
'lbe Public Relationl Society of America, Orange
County chapiet-, will hold ita 8eVenth annual PBCYl'OS
awarm banquet May 14 at 6:30 p.m. at The Newporier
Hotel.
For information call 720-2224.
STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT DOW JONES AVWCES
1f£'# YOAKIAI'~ U... W~.._ .. ~-s;;.s;;;.,.._ ~ $.] LI ~:~:@..~
trw ... • . .................... .
AMERICAN LEADERS
WHAT STOCKS DID
METALS WN .... ,
C..,. 1e,..11 cen11 • pound, U.S. ' Htti!wllonl. ~ 29-27 oent9 • pGUfld. ... 35 oentl • ~. d911¥efed. • TllllM.IHSMet•w..ei~e lb. . •rs l 1e-11 _..a~. N.Y. ~ 1375.00 ... lllMll • ........ ~00 If~ OL, N..Y.
SllYEI
Handy & Harmait. H .t .. o par troy ounoe.
..,.,
Hij!'jiliii~ .... ......
~m ........ ,...
pn :11.1 F-. ::-HP~ HH~~: ~ r~ ;!iJ!m1n1M 1n:!i1Ju:m h1i~1 n 1ii111 = ~1 i 1 h~i 1111 ihhi t11H 1 1 1 1 11i~!i1 1 11 1; 111d1•il1 1i 1
14.f.1 f!" ··~>. . • ~ ihh1i1J! hH luh 1Hh1 fhff~ f m a I!, _I hm ~itJ: ~ r!Ohh s fU
1 ... nr ·~... 11 8e~8~~9s ~ "
il(j~Jig~~ I -------------
1'1~·--z! ! ! 1' -
z z s . I :< ,,
-
'HHt! ~ t I I -rn -----------------•• ______ !_ ____ u--~----... t .... -.nmnmm~ 8!~ ~Y U§
-!( ..... ~ nu_;; LI I f;iif!:h~!!!ii~;·1 iHJi:r~I !~;!:~:rn !l!a:nim;; flJI :i~iiil; mnm 1!eB~rt;m!1i;;!1i :!Hl~P~:mm:n Pl~O I -"'*'.~---' .:J 1 (
~
---. -"~ ---.. ~ --. . -i ._ _v , . &i~' , ~ ----------- ------------------. ----- --. -. --.
' I ~ll&il-i ·_' . . . -I I ~ ' -i . . i i I I 1-I I i ~!n1 -~ [I!! -·I' · ~·. n·u1:rr I· ri'ijml!l11~1 tii8l•s•111:1•pu::1•1m•n 1 1w~~§;nmH§J!Hli•11••fff H~Hru:1:1 1u!•i~~1T'lf 1t 1 •;il•11r1:1!ljff)Jl::lli1!l:Uj1P~~ . ....... •• '{fd~r '.' :L~.; J!1 n.• 1 I: .. ~i1 1!!ii11 1~id1 ~n 1
111111:11
1 1H 11~!H;:1 !1liim1 1Hiii!:~1 1~ii!!iH11 Hm~ 11lm 1\:iti111
1
11luHIPt1!:ii1!1
111! pn~1!1n11itHifi
I ., al ,11 .• r ; ..... " fl hi r J 11 ,Ur u t-~ § • ~ !!I.~ '!tH.fl lsLH~ hh Jt nfi. ~2~ ~ Jm!d ' 1m ,iJi~ ti. I ' tJI l!.hl J .
.... !h'B.12D. 2• ·. -· ~~ ~ nnfu1u1~t11:111:f.~~·~i1:111~~ii!1 111n 1::1:m:imnu~~1!1~1t 1l1r1m1w~:;m~1!1 1;n!~h~r,,1,n !JU 11;~ f~~~-IU l~.1 -• "'8~ z Iii! i!11! lstll-=. 11; ~~1 fl1ri! 1~.1~j 1 J1:1il 1 ;?J~!=~~1 irii I i I,l~i!~·~ I~: :i~1:lf1~1 ! 1 J! rl~~ .f~~ ~-e ~~ !i• c ~i§ ~ nu n11~ ·mm -~ ! tthH nm~ 1;m ~n::t1( "l!d -u;n11. 1 ! i=;mn~ ~ ·•m J~f ~ i~~ ~ ~i i! ', I=:
~ I I I -: i Ii I II ffl ! 11 ~~ ~ ~I;.; !
~~1111::::::;~~ t 1 1 11l1,1~.1 ;t,1 111 ·i:~!lt1 ~1 ;1~ , ,,ii :1 ~;ill•'i!1f l14 11a 1 ~,:,1 ~1 1 ~11i! tlf1<1,111 ,~1 :11:1 , ~'~
:ihU •n i:tU1a U.iii IHI;~ HU:!i HUmlh If in; ~n!l!;J: f !hi Hm "!imii m I JU j f~, $!i ''
111wl•••11;Jlf!~~1 1 ·ilJ•'•1•~~i~Jt~~lii~~iffl~l!li~;111rt;i!'(Ji~i'ji''~~11•1e~li!l~i~ll•i;llll.IJf~i ·I '·(~-J811,11!f'!~l•!1!'1 I • '·r1 -. • . .,.,11r J'. r· . -! ,; ·tf• -.t, "l! •• ·§!1 ·~··1 ,.,. Ht•-~'1•" : ,!t~ .t, . i: 111 ·•,11111as1111· ~ ~ :!~l11,1!!!jf 1 11ij~,i 1 i!~l 1 i 1 i!J!i~J;Ji~:Jiiiiiiilii:1j!!!~;!']1 !flii 1 1ltfi 1 ~~i::Jlt!iii !:fJ~t'?i!iisi I ri l ~,iJ 1 :i1~ ~le 11
1
~ i nu hh . ~lhh~h· tMat;I 2!.aiJ~ !~h~ !h~ i! •. i~ '·'i' ~:ihJ 1 t,~~ ·' .nJ H~-llfi!• : ' ' nft u
~a I -I ; i I I i ~ i I ~ i f !f 11 1~~! llfjl!I 'ii ~J<!!if'I' If I if (l~Jl•1~1'1 ~ i1il 1~' '1~'111 it~J 1 ~j'll f~I~' l(i If !'ir' 1 11i~l' 'i ~~~· iil!f 1f f~~ 11 11·1~~111 I!~• ·•~!f'i'i(i~':I 11 !l .1 .. , ,.. ·'1·' -·r '!If ·i• 1!1.•1i ·-t'il~~ '!1· •zll !t ,.1. i ·1trll · . lf .. i-•Ji: • I =· 11il • I ~·J•t1-• 1•11·!1 11 1lliiJ.fll~i! ll· ~1z 7 tf();f~i; 1~1f !}~iltr~I !iotfllfflJ!!1!!;(~IJ!!iti~.if ·!'i!~1!i~l!i1,l!~!,f;r :! !irii 1f!!;.1_:~~1l1~ llt
.. ....-~-_..,.,,..,.~~ ~ ~ ..... --..-...._-.............. ----:-.--..... ~---------~---..... ----..... -~.,....,,.....--.... -..... -
OrMQ9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur9dlly, Aprll 29, 1082
f'!l!l!!!tl."19.'1 ......... !!< ....... l!ftr.~ft!f .. llftr.fr/Jnita.!f_ ~.~ •• ~~ . ........ ,,.,....,, 1.9.~.............. ......... . .. .. ..
#eMlt -~ IMI,,,.,, ~ J1.u _.... ...,.. ~ .,.,.,.., 1111 ••• mnnis;-. .......... ~ ....... •••~••••••• \oom fOf rent, P!of..elo-Prof. M1' aflaf• IWtury lw .. ._ J JM 6.Aiw r.;n'.rm ...... m nim ........... r.nr ...................... ~ J1.u MM ltftlW #ff nal male In 30 a, beeut. f\Wn. Condo. 8,C. ,...,._
•.• _ ... ~ ........... tr ........ 00 .......... •a...n I br duoleJt. Off."""*· oondO, Woodbtldo HOM&,~ MNT ..,... ~ Jiii z::no.rm ...... ~ ...................... N.8. home. l<ltdlen pt'IY.. '215. 9"1 ..... 25, """"°" 1wf1 De Ann 4 bctrm, Cenal Front, ..,_ Pf'lcO. ~. '475, ga, 3 Ir 2~ ... NO,• 28dtfn,1'71, Qerliga. 1 y··-·1•i, •Aj,t;0:1 I bdrm 1 ba no peta New 1 br apt for leHe, PoOI tvall. ti&Otmo. *""" >
beyfroflt ttark Mint Newport for Big leat utll1 lflOI. No peU. bar, ,.P., JepenMeW• otllld 01<. no pett. quiet adUll' no peta neer eOl'tool .. and occ' ma"Y .-,itrH, 060. a100«Mp. 7eo.8242. Non-tmllr &bf oondO
oond, '71 dbl wtcie • ..,.. t= Of? Mr. Olartt ..._2474 M. M.,. den.'" poolltennla. 14-2000. Agent, no,.., 1425/mo. i'notd urn: good trttway acoe•1'. Joanna tU· 1133, '°°"' fOf '91\t !)(IV ent t2001mo'. + ~ utll. 11.0
oi.o.. brlOk 1Ntto..1. M1. o.,.., a PM Nel#aaeyi.,, w/denor4 U:.!~~0• •n-euo. HOME& FOR MNT e1~211e. "'" + oep. 540-W5. 53&-f720 MO per w1t « s11a,,.; o.p. "4·)15.4. H.B.
l>OO. -Aleo I l>r .. • b•·· It. l\t ba. Condo. 2 oat • '.'<:: 3 & 4 ldmle. N7M700 L 1 8r u..-•~ ... a. .aa mo. No 1ecw1ty ldMll tor 1 309 a doub,. ~ cotw 1crt ,_fall auto ~~' Many xtraa HOW. FOR RENT• Fenced '/9"11 a oweoee. D4X •'* 2 Br •· v-rtY •r~ · GV:ro n,t1r ::'I'.':'::', -,,._ ""'" "*' J4.y ewe Sl"Ole Mothet n 1
aat.000, 8111 Orundy •••••••••••••••••••••• POOl,t/o'. LHM tteoi 4 Bdrm. 1750. Fenoed l<lda~eta welcome. H 75. 208~ PHrl: No :vill~I;~~·. t./f!t siudi~~:/:blk'f,;·~·,;,~~ &ef•t528 . • ::r~t!'!.~ Ilk~-·-
11M111. ...... ,__,.Ml ~ e or Mk tor Mr. ?.!!1 ~g~:.~t2000d1 a 94&. • Agent, no.... ..,pet" 912.ae1. bo•ooc1•chk.ttcaaha~.o..U!~.'!'e1. ._._,_ Mi••ll ~Ill port a..cn1~ta Meta •.•••..• ·.::::::=.... -· ...... -. ......... . If--~ I I 2 ••. 1 .......... ___. ~· ... _ • ...,.... .. ,., .. 1 ,.,, ... ., ... 94 ... 2 .....
* *
e.., Agent, no.... -•J W --.,_,,... ............... ,...... .,_. EJCfTIG ........ '!l'..'hf .. !.t. 1MI ._..... Wat rf nl T h •~'--'•"-' 1411 1Mhl.M J#1 2289 E Maple. 14 o. deHntront 2 br. 3 b•. .U l PUllf F non..mkr to..,, 2 br 2 38r 28• nr beh avall 211', conWit~Clit Gltl09, • ro own ou•• •••• ::::~••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 54M4M 3100 eq It In Old Medll. Aeea. Weekly Rat" ba CdM apt w/tMM. .... .. M • S • 111550 cpt, renovated tcltcllen, Broadmoor 2 Br. 2 Ba. ,...,. MW .sun oondo nr 48R. 2BA. yearly. Frplc, VIII• on cllff o'looklng l<ltc:henettM . Phon4le 1310 & U1ltl. 944•9275•
Without or Without furn, ...24.:f'&....ette mo. gardaner Incl. Vacant~ frplc:, wet bar. bbl ger, so Plaza. Seo gatH, bH·lnt, parking. CloM to 2 br, 1~ ba, ffplc:. OW, P"t ocean. 3 lrplc1, leaded '"Z" cn.nnei MOlllM 2Axt4 GNenbtterHomeln · • M75. boat allp poaa, water-pool. Tract 11 •mall bay & ocean, Bric r patio. garage. No pet1. wndwa, huge baam1, 8andplpet, 1987 New· Sr. cltlan to ahr home w/
Laguna Hiia' nlceat 5 ..., ..,.11.u '11 front patio. 1950/mo. frl•ndly retort Ilk• 1 875-4912 $525. 543"<5478 deck, elee. gate, dbl• POf1 earne, m~t be new eo·a.
perk. Youno edulta w.I· •••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Woods Sbr/2ba. e7s.7111. BR, dining, air~ patio. • • • 1 SR yrty, lmmao, up. 18r, gated community, ger •• many ., .... Steps 81. Colt• Mee& 945-9137 CdM. 840•7390
oome. New 3 er. 3 81. Condo. 1:'96~o;·=~·~· L--~ n41 Secluded end unit. No pel' unit, MCUl'e. view of pool, epe, clbtlM, nr So. to pvt bueh. One Of IUI .. ll1U Reep. F to enr 3 br, 2 be lrelllllf M 11~000500/"!~ fMurnlehMo•d. 55M22_ 11557--0133 ::'A-:::" ••••••••••••••• pet1. t495 + '38 utll. bay. $555 Incl utll 6 gar. Cit Plaza. Sharon mco•t Clrcamallc apta on ·-houM, C.M. Frplc. No IMutltul 14al0 Keyweet un ....... o.to • Lovely38r&den 2'tt8a '175-2580 311 Edgewater. Open 759-9100. out. pl or agl pref, Wkly rental8 now ava11. pet10Jkkt1.$290+ut1i..
Hm . 28r, 28a.' Thia la tfle '91\181. tat. a lalt, SUperb oQtJleT HOME. 1 cNld. 2 no pet1, IHO. Hant .._.~ 2.... t Sat. 1·3. 873-1943 111W,,..lf I 3 5 0 0 I mo. yr I y . $105 & up. Color TV. Avail. May J. Kelly be9t bUy In toWn. location, next to aflop-et. ear pet a, drapH, 551-1851, Inga 494-9404 ._...comp. ...,rm, grN 940.~829 Ph<>nea In room. 2274 7eo.-0991. 549'-0820
••
-
ping & theatere. yard. garage. RV par· loc. ~~-now. 1795 mo. tw. "'"" IP&IWJI -·-NeWport B!Yd. CM. _ --541-4tea. king No Peta $550/mo Che rm Ing beactlfront For.,,..,_. •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 8 $2701 C pl --• 948-7445 2500 tci tt condo. eay. _. -ULD water paid, Mo-3989 • home, epectaeular view, 979-3378, 751-8184 Baehek>r .. So. Of Hwy, rio r. mo. ou " Mott elegant apt. bldg. In view, pool on t>eeu
27oe Helbor, 8'e 206-A Avail. 8 Mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 424 "B" Harnl"on brick courtnrd entry, 4 kitchen. quiet pareon, preferred, no pet1. Lagune BHch. tlnut OCEANSIDE CA· Greenbelt. 557·7183 or T Newly decorated, M... · BR son ba, lg• LR. OR, ~-,.,_..,. lwlalaM utll. Incl. $326 mo. 2450 NeWport Btvd. loc:1tlon In town, breath· BMdltront MO.a339 .....a Verde. $1000/mo. Sl4lrTa mA Yim beach room, lots of ato-;r.;-.-;:r.'............. 873-3415 Cotta Me,11 tailing vleWI, all bull-Int, New, BMuUM & l-lm-med--av_a_H_fur-n-rm_w_/ _ _,.-
Mgmt. Co. 941-1324. 4 Bdrm 2 ea fam~I ....... FOf llaM-"'. Call ,, __ ,, .. ___ in~ heated pool, 1ub. g•-l8CIUded .... , ·--p ~"' .,.. ,.... T Walklobelc:h.Allutll9pd. YILU MAB Ill beth lna beauUfulhMln 0.-•rrdll •utia,,.. home. Quiet.,.._ Av . Peggy attleon, for an ...................... trmw/V.balh,l300mo. 9'ellti8#18 rage, elevator. Lease ...... Irv. 731-8630 h ,.,, 1._ lmmedlately. Many arne. appt. 714-955·2473, CW H •I Reta. No kitchen . • • only. $850 & up. 330 Cliff !J ~ ' _.. ...,. 3141 nltlM. 875-4912 BKR wl<dYt 8·5 ALL UTILITIES PAID 549•9322, (213~92•1592 TIWl•lll Or. 494-8083. Ill NEWPORT BEACH •••• .. ..::. t"iiin•••• •0 •••••••uuuu•••• E " N•w CondoJor rant. 2 S Mature M/F th< 5 br hae. _...._ 3 br, 2 ba, newly dee. 3 Bt. 1'tt Ba. garage,,.,,_ nehantlng 3 8n, 2 Ba, Untum. studio. 1375. Utile Br. 2,_.. S., l7ll5/mo. Obi Studio 380. '"block 1br, 2br. kltcha, boat $300. 1at11aet. 848-5355 T•....., Close to beach & ead yard. 11130/mo. + ocean view, next to Compare before you lnold, refrlge. No pets. fl..,.,.,.. .. ....,.. beach. nr ahooc>lng, utlt• doeka from $3'4 Hear MW 4-plell 2 bdrm ICl'loola. Good neighbor· $400 aec:urlty. Senta Ana Emerald Bay. 11500 mo. rent. Cu.tom cs..ion f... ~ r......_.., ....,..., ~· Pa Id . 4 9 4 ~ 3 8 6 2 or dalty-S 149 wk·Sl50 mo. Need 3 prof. roommat•.
2 bath each u~lt with hood. $975. t yr min. Ha I g ht, du p 1 u . 494-7551 tur11: Pool, BBQ, cov'rd e75-860I. w. 18th. 945-2 39 494-5401. 2001 Hafbo< or. M/F, fOf lrg Hgta home. 5
flreplaoe, tfldceed petlo, leue. 964-3181 833-St 1927. 20201-8 Birch " .,,,. -•• garagai IUl'rounded with C..ll #a. m4 r _ .,,. J •••• N. Oceanside Bdt. $350. 28-35. Diana, ,..,_ 1 t p 1..u au.a -" plush andacaplng. No •••••••••••••••••••••• Eaatelde 1 bdr. pool. wn•• •1•11 _w., ca. 92064 7141722-1661 831·12IWI gata9_•. i.70-• • oa. lnillt llH · ••'•-...••••••••••••••• per.. -·-111 laundry, adults. no peta. ••'•0•••••'•••••••--••• .=:..:.::.:.:~..,;.;,,:...:..:.::...:.:.:..:...1-----:----:::--".'"-:-~
cut\ fklW. NowS15t,500 •. •••••••••••••••••••••• E/Slda 3 br, den, 2 ba, HOME F°" RENT 1 Bt tum from $490 -•-• $375/mo 833-7190 I Br. upgreded, nearly ;•nl B•I 4150 HMmete. Lag. BQh. MIF. 8111 Grundy, Rltr, Super view 2 +In Turti. swimming pool. $850 3 Bdrm. 1075. Fenced 2 er: tum: from $680 $525-$800/mo. 2 Br. 1'h · new. pool . tennis. •••••••••••••••••••••• cln. nMt. walk to ocean t7M181. rock Ridge. comp1e furn. u n furn . s 9 5 0 f urn. yard a garage. I< Ida & 3t5 w. Wlteon, 942-1971 Ba. TownhOUM. all bullt· 3 br. w. ba ept. 1495 mo. $550/mo. 213/919· 1 tt1 SPECIAL CARE/FOOD plUI V\I. $350, 1100 MC.
Move In with a tooth· 557-2783 pets welcome. 645-2000. In•. beloony. leundry rm, No pets. Avl.ll. now. Cati alt 7PM. In new home. fOf ar. 14. 'h utlla. 497-6783 aft 6
bruahl s 1350. Agt . 3 b 1 d 15501 Agent, no.... Profeaalonally decorated covered parking. Nice Run, 842.at53. 11~ •--.-L .... , diet. C.M. 842-3481 Wented rmmte: c-... .--. 752-5868 r, ge yar · mo. 1 er. condo with all locetlon ., ....... -• ~·..,...•-1et. IHI & dap. 1856 w .... 111 ... 1 mz amenities. near S.C. TSL Mgmt M2-1803 1390. Vacant 1 BR, gar. •••• ••••••••••••••••• r ... 11 ll•WI 4J# Mature llberal male. 2 br ·WlllH•• Placen. tla..075-0938 ••'•"••••'""•••••••• Plaza yearly teasel----''-------refrlg . 138 E. Bay. WUTCllFF •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba. apt. Lag. Bch.
Thr bd 1,... F Monarch Bay Tarraea 4 • 541-5331, evt 648-2320 <>-a t 1 b & .. _ 1 pie I&.-494-6218 ae rme ... ba. Of 3 Br 1~ Ba, lrg IJlll'd, peta Br. 3 Ba. home. 32841 $550/mo. 548-3788 or .n ...... u . r """''• r • 1r-• 1 ____ . -----teue Of ..... opt. $750. OK. ta50/mo. JoyGe, agt S • v • n See 1 0 , 553-1202 aft 5. lle8'iBn8 2 Br. living rm, dining rm, pool. $550. 640.7814 4 bdrm, 4 bath, sandy M/F resp. r,i •dutt. non-
751•9905 831-12&8 :~r7~~o. 075-801'4 or Nice 1 Br. dplx. Quiet.~ IP&lfllli11 =·~·;r. ==: 1 BR condo, Veraalllet. ==· tt-'AU:utt."°:,~ ~';;~: ~~~-1~it = ,,,..,,.. ..,,. '141 Bed!bay, 3 Br 2 Ba 1800 • • by gar. 1 emplyd adu t Beautifully landeeaped Small Infant accepted. llke new. '550 mo. Cell Grundy. f\ltr, 07s.6181. 8AM-8PM Sharon Of Te-
••'•""••••••••••••••• 'q ft. $ 7 7 5 . Ca I I Exac 4 Br 3 Ba view over 35. No pets. $330. garden apta. Pool & Spa. M2--0735. Richard. 213-830-2323; resa 073-6732 F!!"..!~!!.!.Cw/w~Ofd ~!:!. 831-7370. Aak tor Jim •P•: s14ooi mo .. Agent 548-1021 Covered parking. Heat 21S-823-7854 V1till .. li•llll 4ZSO -,...,,.. ...-· _ .. .., ---------• 4es-10l4 or 831-e707 paid. No pets. Eaatalde 2 Br. 1 '~ Ba. 28r 1ba, eat In kltch. Encl ·•••••••••••••• ••• •••• Fem. roommate. 25 Of
views and apa. 2BR nr SC Ptza. Adult · Du. 1.i.t 3nl Bac:nelor $395 dllhwaaher, enclad gar, patio & gar. 1535, no JCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br. over. 3 Br 2 Ba. Bel 191.
$2000/mo. 831-1400 eondoa. Pool .. Jac, sec:. 3 BR 2ba. big yard. c1oea •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 er. W0.$455 patio. $450. 11t & laat. Avail. now. Weekly thru 675-5216 Jeanine.
Waterfront Hornet gate, carport. No pets. to a eh f 11 ah op a Supar1 1
1 Br. VIiia, belconl/, 2250 van .... •••d 5-4-0-9828 846-1955 aft IPM & all pet.a. 842•2134 aommer. 673-7873. Mo\l9lne09tneg $520+ 17501"'° 83 1-0300 · m n ocean view, water-•-da s No-• Roommate. creative peo-.,__, ,,.,, 11n $35 utll. 55e:1020. . bed. $4 25/mo . $450/mo. 2 Br. tv. Ba. y un. ...--· PARK NEWPORT •• * pie oriented prof. prefer· .. -.-;r.-;;.............. 775-2580. Ill.a. flial• 3111 ~-6440. 493-0803. ept.. balcony. pallo. E/Slde 2br, 1ba, 1500; E.ia IHten red to lll'lr 2 Br w/atudy.
1 BR, condo, pool,jaouaj, _ 1' -.. •• ••••••••••.-1•••••••••• .,c&:~_, laundry rm. carport. 1br, tba, $400. No peU. OlllTIY Clll sesi Kem Or. lutty furn.. 1285/mo.
rrn:·blltlarde.aauna.24 -• -•"--HOMESFORRENT Uu.11.N C1otetoall.Cellforappt. 945-9181,752-4911MJ UV1M C.M. 5115. Oeb<e.
He. Garden view. Get• you atM1ed In reel 3 & 4 Bdrma. M75-S700. ,,,d 3140 TSL Mgmt. 842-1803 • ...........__ lettlM Bachelors. 1 & 2 be· YouH~~~ny~n =~ of 548-3981. SS6-8804
I 5 9 5 . 7 5 4 • 4 1 1 4 ; "tate owntll'ahlp. Fenced yarda & garagea. •••••••••••••• ••••••• • -wlv.-ta li droom apta & townhou· F to shr 2 bf hoUM, E/alde 942-9057, Kate 1 Br. Wutalde, C. M. Kida & pet1 welcome. Two bdrm, prlvata ttlo. .... From 15•n.s1000 v'ouatuer f)reeto t~eta ($t2.00 c •• $250 1 t I st & u. $375/mo 545-2000, Agent. no fee I I' n.r-.., flleld Obie gar W/hookup. "" ,.,. ...... • • • a ,.. •-•-a-• 11' •TU e • • · • •I r-..1 •VC!&l Olahwaaher. large trpc. 84't·l900 -llllm util1. 642-7471 -• -• -Lar 38r 2 e. 2 1 r. duplex, EHttlde, II •--,L •••f Spanllh Eatate LMngl r•-y ·-2200 eq.ft. bUtldlng, tulta-ga 'tt story C.M. $460/mo. ·~ -~· .,_ 8 tlf 1 k Ilk -_..,.. Beam celling. Lg bath NO FEEi Apt. & Condo IAUMI IAIE ~!~/!!.fa.!.~~!!.~~ ble for building contrac-condo. Frple, bfttn kltdl, 2 er. Townhouae with H;tx;•.;.;;;~·39;~2 eau dlu par T • aur-eeautlful garden apta. w/akyllght. walk-In clo· rentals. VIiia Rentala. Fountain Valley Mlle
tor, upholatery, furniture v-r!J. 07M775. pool, H.B. $575/mo. _ Ba for ..... lrplc 2 car pr~~~ S~~:en g·=~·;i:qd, Patloa/dlcka. H .. t paid. aeta. New cpta & drpa. 675-4912 Broker. Square Park-Mey 8.
repairs, plum bing eon-liiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil let'• get your lnveatrnant · • • No pet•. Chlldren wel· Xlnt loe. $570 lnela gas, 1982
tractor, ete. 2ot0 Char1e BIG CANYON EXECUTIVE ataned. Agent 558-6518. g~r:~•5 ~~ ~~15 ~v~lr ~~=~~~~~o~o~:.·:!~:: come. wtr. 986-6565 L~~~V·~ ~~. 4:~ To c:lalm tleketa. cell
St .. $174,500. HOME. View, privacy, Vacanti Elalde trg quiet 3 94._7220. rate dining., ... Walk-In 2 Br. 2 Ba. 1535 Prtw"9 Piiie 646~419 642-5678, ext. 272. •.a2-1..,. aeeurlty. Quality furnl· ... 2 8 f 1 d h t---'a .. ___ Ilk kl'-h 3 Br. 2 Ba. S800 Tlcketa must be c:lalmed .. -•-ahln~• & carpet. ""· •· rp e, • war, Luxury pool home, mar· c ..... , ........... • "'· 398 W. Wiiton t bdrm. beam celllnga. BEACON BAY by May 5, 1982
j PETE BAAR[IT
REALTY
... 500 lndrY gar no peta 1750 ·-'--w tff en & cablne\11. Walk to 631 5...... • .. 2 .. 708 Gas. wtr pd. New cpt, 1 8 t B --mo. 840-4518 3 5 tf 'wood j and· ~ •tel ioe.t1on. Huntington Center. • ~or .,.. ~ drpe. Outatandlnj toe. r •' be Y 1r 0 n t * • *
87 ...... ,... · 4 Bdr, micro. many••· 1 Bd .. _ SS05 -....,._1 home, tennis crt. beactt. ~. tru. Year or more IM. rm-• .,.... • -• No pets. Pklng .• 450. all utll. Incl. $875/mo * *. ...,,11.i.r.ilW Cute1Bt,ll'glot,quletet., $1495.CallLole.agt 28drm-unfurnfrom $385-1475/mo.1&28r. 966-6565 yrly.075-8669
•••••••••••••••••••••• gardener. $435/mo. 631-1280 S5e5 epta . ._carpet. patlol, ea ....... -· apt, $275. 2 B 846-18 p0rt c IOI< .,.,.....,. r. condo. upper . ~~~~~~~~~ ,_,,,, 3111 17 aft 5. No pete. ~ •· • • Utlls Incl. refrlg. No peta. Wettctlff/Oover area. ~t;·~·r~·; ELEGANT VIEW CONDO l&Yfmf UUllt1411 Free! L Mgmt 842•1803 May 1. 942·9909 club pool. laund~welk ~.!!?f!!!f.~ Bt .• den $750. ,2,br. 2'n be,3~0, gar. 2 story, 4 +bdrm•. 2 LA QUINTA HERMOSA c:.!~~:ow. ~hp•.:.~,~~: E. SIOE-38r. 28a, garage, Eto~ .... 312157. 64 844. 2 Pride of ownatlhlp .Tr1-CdM 3 er. 1 Ba. $800 2 5 . 5 "· 4 300, baths, flrepece, gorgeoua ...-children OK, r.o pet•. _·_v•_.,.._.,. _____ _
,,...._ fOf Nie tiy owner. Newport Height• 5 Br. 875-1781 'f'leW. Pier anct lllip. $3000 18211 Parklide Ln. 1 blk No pets. 875-ae06. 1825 mo. + sec: dip, re-Very nice 3Br. den. 2Ba.
448 & 785 Hamlfton /llve. $145-0 E/alde 3 Br. 1 Ba. eilCtld per mo. AYllll. ~eb. 1. W. of Beech, 3 blka S. of $500/mo. 2 Br. t Ba. up. fundable. Avail May 1. yrty rental. $875 mo.
C.M. Owner wllt helo w/ Al at• avallabla now. gar. large yard. NO Edinger. per apt .• enclad garage. 048-9598 Pia II E fSn~Call 780-0734 Diana. agt, 831-1280 PETS. 1579 Redlands Pl. Ml-1441 balcony/patio. laundry 2 bdrm. fenced, quiet, JI • •
: ~I Ulc fOf Jaclc C... .i,,,, 1llt $645/mo. 548~. ,,, .... JHd__ 31fl ~L A~~t5. 842-1803 ~aac:71~3tt~5 173-1111
---------•••••••••••••••••••••• Cabln·llke houee, Eatt· ··A•••••••••••••••••• mo. vea • NewPOf1 Height• private 1 a UNITS COSTA MESA, >Ont 2 bf, 2 be, $850. tide, 1 br, den, fndrt rm, Tiny studio. 1 blk to 1 Br.+. E.llde. 1st & tut 2Bf ,_Int fnc:d yd ga. Br w/garage & patio all need• work. great po-(213)450-1te0 wtldYt $525/mo. Pd utile. · beach. S250. Utll Incl. + aeeurlty. $500. Cati rege. 2228 Rutgeri Or. utiia_ & gardener lnctd.
tentlat. '310K. John (714)640-9753 ~nd ~or 494-0395 494-27119. 548-4388 1465 mo. (213) 87M132 $375/mo. Adu I ta, no
048-7MO AOT 2 Br. 1 Ba. ,_ carpet & pet1. 752-2550.
ln.•--2315 Pt. Lerwick Pl.
Newport Beach
You are the winner of
lour free tlclleta 1112.00
value) to the
lllllllEllETT
UU.UOI
Fountain Valley Mlle
Squar• Pat11·M•Y 8.
1982
To cJelm Uckata, call
642-5678, ext. 272.
TIOkets muat be claimed
by May 5, 1982
***
Double garage. atOfage
only. 564 Plumer St. near W. 19th, C.M. S48-22n.
DBL StOfage sp. S tOO.
C.M Secure. gated .
759-1501 C.J. Of
64S-283A
Storege gara,ge, ting ...
9>120. Costa Mela.
$50/mo. M2-49e7 wkdyt
9-5.
Ol6e1 lnt•l HIO ......•.•.•..•••..••••
OllTl •W
Superb 17th St. location.
1 room, 400 sq ft. $380
mo. 988·9477 da, ev,
wknd
C.M. 2 offloea. 345'. beth.
storage avall. S250Jmo.
548-3345. 494-3803.
1617 Westcllff. N.8. Want
flnanclal Inst. 70001.I.
1st. floor . Agent
&41-5032 paint. $500/mo. Sharp garden ~t home, lndlen Welle VUta. tum. 31
Broker 851-8800. 1Br, quiet. W/D. patio, BR. 3 Be, , ---------
$335 mo e.c• '"""'3 Ca.It 714--040..5548
11nLUl8
Quality ti" up building In
prim• corner locatlon •
South Santa Ana. Air
conditioned olflea1. 2
unite hew 20 toot oelllnga,
only 4 years old. Owner
Wiii help fln•nce.
11. 182,000.
A Dlvislon of
Harbor Investment ~ ..
llU lllTD Sharp 2 BA 2 Be, lge ____ . __ .,......., ____ -------_;_---J
1--------:i----=;.__----l room•. d bltne Incl DIW. Sa CJi•t•lt 3171 l1•llll1 It lhr1 4 ~,,,._, ,,.,j 11n Roomy S Br. T ownhouae gar. No. Costa M"e nr • ••................ •• • • •••••••••• ••. ••• ••• •• ••Pllf •.·-•!h-•••••••·~·!~~.. apt In quiet adult eom· McDonald•, $525 mo. Studio apt. ocean view. ·-.-------111 plax. Newly decorated. Call 540-1 158, ask for utll tncfd. $375 mo. 332 •
Elegant Exec: aultu In
preatlglous loc. Incl ae-
cretarlel, receptionist.
telephone an• a more.
Otes from 1436 mo. On·
call otca $165 mo. THE
HEAOOUARTERS COM·
PANIES: A profffalonal
environment. (714)
851-<>681
......,. studios. one
.,,., two bedroom apart.
m•nts. FURNISHED
and UNFURNIHD.
Oakwood alto offers
• M Utfllllel '* •1111T 111111
Oocupanoy
• ., ... In
....... 1)1.
And Much More'
fir~. endld patio & Larry or Pam Encino In San· Clement.• garage. Sorry. no pet1. ( ... in. Mgr Apt C) ROOMllTE
FlllEIS S575 Mo. 045·3381 or But'-"''
675-6949. ,,.,. 1141
STUNNING large 1 Br. •••••••••••••••••••••• garden apt. pool a rec. Huntington Creek Apt.
area. $425'/mo. 710 w. OeluJCe 1 & 2 Br. Frpea.
tlth. St. enelad garages, TV
l·.-2-e_r_1 __ ba_M_•_•_•_v_a_rd-e-• :~~·a!;. 8. 16 13.
upper. New decor. No ------'----t
peta. Gar. $500/mo. • ...... a.ti.
833-8974 Spacloua 1 & } bdrm
*3br. nr S.C. Plaza, S.A.
Cerport. pool, epe. $875. Pet ok. 752-5822 or
among beaut lake
1treama. Pool, Jae and
ree area. No pets.
848.a591.
.....• • ... • Oldelt & lafgeat agency. .. All c:tlenta ICf'aened with 11H ......... ltt. ,photos &-references. hnu ... lar CredJl1: Cosmopolitan
You are the wtnnef 01 Good Morning America. IOUJ..J k:k ($. The T omoo'oW Show. value,':~ ea 12·00 'iff'ii off* to •11 n.w cllenta
--IDlm Wllo need • place. Nl'Ml llll llWNIT M1·111t
Near San Diego Fwy I
"Hatbol' 4 offic.e l4Jlte & front office & racept.
eree. 2 baths & kltehe·
nette. elr, a furn. avell .
1850 mo. 549-2928 Fountain Valley Mlle Square Pet11-May 8, Male to ahr w/2 fem, spec Exec:. offlee, Jdnt N.B. loc., 1982 Newport Shor• home. 2 eQ9lef $225
To c:talm tk:kata. call roome avall. Mey 15· 966'..1779ie4M215
•2br. 2be. nr s.o. Plaza, THE WHIFFLETREE 1·2·3 642-5678, ext. 272. Randy, 8-5. 752-0ISl
8.A. Pool, spa. $55-0. No Bdrm. Apta. Gym, Spa. Tickets muet be otalmed Prof M. und« 35 to stire lg 520 ·~·~ts$ t.OOh per sq.
p •ta. 7 5 2. 5 8 2 2 or Sauna. pool. tennl•. etc. by May 5, 1982 NB home. Xtraa. $375. ft.. 9 Btrc .. N. 8 .
Mt-1480.
941-1480. _34e-oe ___ 1_9 ____ -1 ____ *:.....:*:...:.* ___ .1-63--1.a_31_3 _____ -1 __ Aoen __ t _54_1_-503 __ 2 __ _
*3br s.o Plaza s A Deluxe pool•ld•. xtra lar· • nr · ' · · g• 2br. 2ba , bltna, Oar, pool, spa. 1750. d .. 1,L 11 h ChllCI ok. 752·5822 or IWnr, ,. m H beac . M 1· 1480. Adults, no peta. S500mo. 536-8362
WESTCLIFF BLDG
Nf WPQIH Af t.U• . "". . ~ ..
( ,, .... .,~ rw,1'..,
fJ4 ~ t, • r_, ~
'I
" '"' lie.. Mt " ... rot lllW "•Utlnt ..... ,. ...... , ... .,..
Mwt Mt rtt ~ef It •• , 1111Wl11tleft, ,.. ...
....... ftf .. I tllat '"'
1111111•"'" ''. H dar• tttM Ult If llllf'I, T"'
OAILY ~ILOf w ltt
,u...iell ~ et11el'lltnt
f et I• I , t I . 0 II r
;lrcul1tl0ft IMllldt• tll•
entire Or•l'lt• Co11t
erH llld ..... ~· .,,.., IA all ...iona. 111
erder to 1111Nftll your
llllallllll l IOI
pullllc1 1to11 1e nd .,,r•PfMI'• QOfJ)' •Ml •
cllull to THI DAI~ y Pl~OT, ,.0 . lo1 IMO.
Cotti Mffll. CA t2t2t.
We 'll do Ille re•I, for
ll'llor1111tlon el>Out la91I
1dvertlll119 p4H•• cell
••2·4321 (111. 332. Ml.IC NOTICE
PICTTTIOUI IUIMH
NAMI 1un•NT
Tiie lotlowlng pereon 11 doing
bolinell u : COAST AUTO RENTAL, INC ,
510 lrvtne Av1nue. Newport
'ICTITIOUI IU-11 Beedl. Callfornia 92teO NA.Ml ITATEMENT Miii• N ....... 22'44 Pon Cw11161.
Thi lollowtng person 11 doing Newport Beac;fl, C~nll 12860 bullMSI 11. Tllll bu"'-le conducted by I
BILL'S ORV WALL. 33402 Sa• corpor111on. Brjgllt Dllve, 01111 Potnl, C1111orn11 Coast Auto Aenlll tnc: 92421 Mika NIVal,
Wllllam Rober1 Trudeau, 33402 Pretldent See Brighi Dnve. Dana Potnt, Clll· Thlt 1t1ternenl wu llled witll Iha
f0<n11 92829 County Clark ol Or•noe ~nty on
This bullneu It conduc:te<I by en April 27. 1982
1ndlvldual Fllal1 Wiiiiam R Trudeau Publl1lled Or1n11• Co11t 01lly
Thia ltllemenl WU llled with lhl Piiot, April 211. May 6. 13. 20. 1982
County Clerk of Orenge County on 11n-82
AprW 1 1982 ,, ... Call 642-5678.
Pllblllll•d Or1nga CoHI Delly Piiot, AfKM 29. May e, 13, 20, 1112
1926-82
Put • fe:.ir word a
to work for ou.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
will be held
at
WOOOlArt> EUMEHTAJtY sctro..
2025 Garden lane, COSTA KSA
on May 101 1982, It Ttl Jilli
MPOSE ROOM. AT 7:30 P.M.
****
LN>BERGH ELOEfTAJtY SCHOOl
220 East 23fd Street
COSTA KSA
on May 12. 1912, It Ttl tllTI
NtPOSE ROOM, AT 7:30 P.M.
f M Ttl cmmcs ADVlSORY CCllllJ1(( TO IECOVE
MUC RECOMMErt>ATIONS REGMOIMi POSmE
Al TERNATE US[S.
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT -· °''"'' c..,1 o"" ,... ...,. n w., ' 1t11
11111 llTlal
ltl/D
Ml.IC NOTICE
'ICT'ITIOUI IU .... 11 HAMI ITA1'MINT
Tiie following pereon1 lfl doing
bUllMNU RESIDENTIAL DESIGN CENT·
ER. 23•85 Vell1rt1 Dtlva, L1gun1 Nlgvet, C1ttfornll 92e77 JOMPh W Sprung!, 2~ VIJ.
ten1 Oflve. Lagoni Nlgvet, Clllfor·
n1a nen
Judllh 0 Sprungl, 23•85 Val•
tan• Dfl-fa. Lagun1 Ntgvet. Cllllor·
1111 92177 Tiiie bullnatl 11 conducted by 111
Individual JOMPh W. Sprung!
Thia lllltmenl WU med wtlll Iha
Counly Clark ot Or1nga County on
AtKM 27, 1912. ,1.IM
Publl1hed Or1nge CoHI Di iiy
Plk>t. April 29, May 8, 13. 20. 1912 1934-82
Nil.IC NOTICE
Orange CoUt DAILY PIL.OT/Thur8dey, Aprll 29, 1882 ••
• MUC ID1lll MUC Diii 'lmrrr.... , ~---w.m•
Tiit le:wlllf ltltHll le delnt a;., The feliOWlllt ~ dolnf ..!!:.. ~ ,.,..,.. we dolnt "!!m"JIA~I ~ & A 0111eN101vu.-onG,•~:,,,w MIMM,~ tllfTl"OOUHTY'fmlCTION ~~p.,.... .. dolnt
O
OhHNT .1.. llO Ntw»Ott Qenler ... '" •• , I 0, TMI .,. C>IHOMu.~~~::· .. ~~!.'L't 11•1 War"" Avenue, lu1te 1u: AMl~OAfll IAOOACl<tHO rive. P.O. IOI uu fllewporl PUCA °' AL.nlD ~ 0 I • -·-H1.1nllnaton 9Moll CA t2Mt Al~O IUIWIVAL .... o hecll, Celltornia 121'3 • '" CMANGC OI MAML . , ve. Newport IHoh. 0 1llfornl1 LA"Wf'll NCe 'atL.!RT IALL 1905 Otlo tr U"Cll,
Mlotl ... TOOi.iker, 2237•1 "ul• WHl"IAI, AVMO PIDROZA. n~v.elort Anelyele 1 Ne-'TH'T Teel! W1~ • .-a11c110 Cuoa• P8'11, ~ntao=s.i~lle J, Ille\•
gert, 00tte ~ Cellfomll tlta'T P911ttonet 11414 111911 a P91lt4on ~ •d ti e ' nc .. • rnonQI. CA tt73Q, Petri k L T jl 2U Thie.,... .. oondllGted by fin II• Cltrk' Of 1111• Court for •n O(" ~.~Jr~:~2;,,ve11ey Vlft, JAMii OAVID BALL .... H. All.,.O. ~.-.= vt10~C....or~
lndMdull. der c11angln9 ptlltloner'• name Tlllt l>llelnMe 11 oorwNoted Mounltllll, #M , Up6end, CA t17M. t2tt1
Tio.I. MldlMI T~., from AL,AlD 'f~OZA lo ALl'A· COfl)OttllOll by a nilt ~ .. oonclUoted by a 8cou Nellon Lokken 2'012 •,.. tlalolfnenl WM llled wtlll lM l!D C0La. •· 9411*81 '*1r*INC> A1mjtl C I El T C '11
Ccunty C*1I of °'tnoe COUnty on tT IS 80 0.-DERlD 111411 •U c>et• e:=~ ~=· tno. JamM Ot¥ld .... t:!t30 our • OfO. • fornl• ~ 27, 1812 eon• lnle rH ted tn Ille above• ,rttldtnl ' Thie Ital-I WU llltd wttll Ille Denni• JH n Heall\ 136"3
,ublltlled OrlnQ• Coe:.~~ ~i.:t r;i;.:' :tr'~:·,~~ Thie 1talement WM llltd wltll the =11~1 of Oftn09 County OI\ :0:8~ S11 .. 1, Ct rr1101. c'1llfotnl1 ~I. Al)flt 2t, MIY I , 13. 20, 1182 In tnt oourvoOm of ~I Ho' Coun~ Cletk Of Ortnge Coullty Oii ,,.._ Thie IN0-12 3. II 700 CWIO c.rtltf Oflve. Santa Apfll 7• 1812· ,,... Publltlltd Or1ng1 COHI 01tly ger>eral ~~ coMUCl«I by •
------------tAl'la. C .. ilornla. Md lhOw ~.If Publtellad Ot1ng1 Co11t 01tly Piiot, AprM H . May t , 13• 20, 1882. P1trlcll L .. Ttnlan "8.JC NOTICE llllY· why Ille ~lllon tor change ot Piiot. Aprtt 29, May 1 13 20 11t2 1"'°"82 Tllil 1111arM11t wu llted w1111 the
flCTmOU• .u...... nm.~~~ .. ~ror .. 'tt •II•' • • • 1"2"'2 PUBUc NOTIC£ ~r~, ~2 of °'.,. County Of1
NAMI ITATWMINT C09Y of thl• order to tllow CWUM be rta. . P1•m Th• 1otlowlng pereon 11 doing publllhad In Ille Dally Piiot, a new· IC NOTICE ......_ PuDH1heo Or1ngt Co111 Delly oullnat• ... epeptt ol 9411*• droulatlon print• NOTtCI NOTICI Of' Piiot. April 21. M•y e. 13, 20. 1N 2.
C. HUNT, PERSONNEL SER ed In Loe A~ County, C1llfor· YOU AM IN Ol'AUU UNDeR A AVAIU.HJTY Of' 11137·82
VICES. 8151 Crltla Palm• Drive, nt1, once I week for lour IUCC9llMI O.ID or TMllT OATID JUN1 I AlllHUAL MTUNf Hunllnglon Betoh, CallfOlnla 82&4 w .. k• prior to Ill• d1ta •ti lot 1tl0. UNL.111 YOU T.UCI ACTION Purtueni to 8actl0n I t04jd) 011 Carolyn H Hunt, tH1 Crltt llMrlng on Iha ~Ilion TO MOTICT YOUA "'°"'"'y tT tn1arn1I Rev1nue Code nouee It
P1lm1 Drive, Huntington BHCll DAT"ED· AfKll 27, 19'2. MAY II IOU> AT A "'*'9C 1.\L.&. llet'eOy given 11111111e enftual return Caillornll 12647 Bruoe w Sumnw "YOU NllO AN llC"-ANATION tor 1111 c11end1r Y•" 1981 ol Ill• •TATllHNT 0, WITHDRAWAL
Thlt bu--II ~ed by Judge of Illa SllC*lor Coun O' THI NATUAI OP THI HO· tflGH BLOOD PRESSURE RES· fllC)ll lndM<Jull ~ALO W. NIWHOUN CllDING AGAINIT YOU YOU EARCH FOUNDATION, e prlvtle PARTNalt•Hlf' ONAATING
Cltotyn H. Hwlt ••-· La ~ .. "-'• No.• IHOULD CONTACT A LAWYlll. lound111on, I• evlll•ble at Ille louo-UMOIR ·
Tllll 111tam.n1 w .. nled wltll ' ........ v ..... CA .. , --dl llon'• prlndpel ofllee for lntl)ee· PlCTtTIOUS "' ..... NAli9 County Clafk of Otange County (114) M1..011 NOTtCI cw llOll c1ur1ng reQUilt bu*-!lour• The lollowin
April ?7, 1982. Pubtltllad Or1ng1 Co11t Di lly TMllT'la'I IAUI'. from 9 00 • m to 5 00 p.m by any dr1wn u 1 oan:,:~riar":~·:~ '1•1 Pllo, Al)fll 29, Mey 8, 13, 20. 1912 T.S. No. 2·70N elllzen wllo requHll II within 180 p1r1ner1lllp operating under Ill• •
Publlahed Or1nge Co11t 0111 •923·82 On M•y 7, 1982, 11 9·16 o'ctoctc d1y1 •lier the d•I• ol 1111• publlca· tle111lou1 1>u11neu n•m• ol
Piiot, Alifll 29. MIY I, 13, 20. 1912 a m , on Frld1y, et Ille front entr1n· lion OR.ANGE COAST FUNDING 11 19t 183'4·8 PUBUC NOTICE ce to Iha old Orange County Cour· Th• lound111on'1 prlnctpel oll~ E 18111 StrHI, Co111 MIH, Call·
------------1hou11. loe•ll'd on s1nti Ana Blvd •• 1oc1ted 11 110 t Port Bermouth 1omt1 92627 "CTIT10UI IUMNIES• bel..efl S)'C8ITIOll StrM t & Broad· Pl • "ewport Beleh. CA 92860. The llc:tlllOus buslneM neme st ..
NAMI ITATIMl!NT w1y, Sanll Ana, CA , WESTERN The Prlnclpel M1neger ot Ille lemetll for the partnar9"1p wu tlled
FICTITIOUS •UllNl!88 The lollowlng petl<>nll ere doing MUTUAL CORPORATION. a Clll· lound111on II MIChH I A Weber, on S.Otember '4, 1911 In the County
NAMe •TAttMPCT bullnete 11 lornll eoroo1a11on, 81 Truttee. or M 0 ol Or~ FILE NO. F170229.
The IOllowlng per.on1 ere doing G & I( DEVELOPMENT. 1102 S MJbllllUled Tru1IM, und¥ Ille Deed RUTAN 6 TUCKER Full N1me I nd Addreu ol 1111 bu~ u · El Cimino RHI Sen Clemente Of Troll H etuled by T H O , a aote 401 Civic Center Ot., W P9fton Wlllld<eW1n9
PtalC NOTICE
MOC NOTICE
Vt LL A Mt M 0 S A AP ART Celllornle 12872 · · prop11e1or herein ulled Trustor, Senta Ane. CA t2702 Fri nk t<evtn MeOoneld. 2'421
MENTS , 3823 WHI Bell Ro1d Kent A KoepMll 181 W All• recorded June 10, 1980, 11 lnatru· KL.II RtCCI 16th SllMI Al)81'1menl 15. Nawp011
ftCTITIOOI IUllNlll Anel'latm, CA 9290'4. u ndro. Si n Clement• Celllornl• ment No 9089 1n Book 13830, lec'y.-Tr-. of BMcll, Cll1lorni. 9*3
Iii.Am ITAft•NT A & M PROPERTIES . 15461 92872 P1ge 592 ol Ot11c11I Reeord1 of tlla if~ Frllltl I( McOonlld
The following persona ire dOlng Chem1c11 Li ne, Huntington e..teh, Wllllem Gueren• 13-02 Calle Ounge County, Cllllornla. witt Mii 1lal llwtetgll Publl1had Orange CoHI 0•1ly bullnau u . CA 92644 Toledo, Si n Clement~ Calltornl• at publlc euellon to tlle hlg11e11 P bl Yort>a0 Uncla. CA ea. Pilot, APfll 21, Mey a. t3. 20. t992
PACIFIC FINE ART. 2800 fut Thlt bullMll It conducied by a 92672 ' bidder lot CH ll, p1y1ble 1n.f1wlut u llhed rll'lge Colll Daily 1928-87.
Co.11 HIQllwr
1
, No 48, Carone det generel par1ner1hlp. This buslneti 11 conducted by 1 money of the United Stites al the PllOI April 29, 1982
Mir, Cllllornl• 92825 Alen Dinger, g-r•I per1nerthlp. lime ot 1111. the 1nterffl conveyed 1918·82 P\aJ( NOTICE J1mH C1rter Tutwiler, 2100 G-•ll P1rtner Kent A t<oepMll to and now lleld by aeld Trustee ------------l·-----------
E111 CoHI Hlgllwiy, No. 41. Co· Ttlll 1t1temtnt wu flied with the Tiii• llllemenl wu rited witll the under Hid DHd ol .Trust In the l'\8.IC NOTICE Ftem~-:=IMll ion. det Mar, Clllfomla 92825 County Cl«k of Ortnge County on County Clafk of Orenoe County on property 11tu1tea In said County end NA.Ml ITATUlllENT
MICllHI L1wrence Brannon, APf1I 27, 1982 Aprll 27 1992 Stile dHCrlbed II All right, !Ille 2900 Eut Coast ~rw.,-, Coron• F1•111 · ,,.,., 111<1 1nteret1 1n10 that certain lease-FtCTITIOU• IUllNEIS Th• following person• are dot"'
def Mer. Clltlorl'>le 9 625 p IOPub!l•h•!, Or•ng• CoHI Di iiy Publlah•d Orenge Coast Datl)I ll04N d .,., ... t •H led by a ..... dlled Th• t~~=lnlgTAPTE•r-1onNTll doing DUtt~E ~LLAGE. 719 ar--"
Thll bualnMa 11 condueted by 1 1 t, ... prll '""Mey 6, 13, 20, 1912 PilOI .. _II 29 May 8 13 20 l"I" °"ember 13, 1978. more pertlcu· ~·-"'' km<led 1)¥1nerelllp 11131-82 ......., ' ' ' ' • & terty aetcfll>ed In Ellhtbtl "A"' buttnMI U Roed. Legun1 BNcll. CA 92651
J Clrtet TulWll« 1------------1935-82 PARCEL 1 SUNDAN CE STAM PS, 1380 CAROLY N M TERRY, 7 H
Thi• llltement Wll liled with Ille PtalC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTIM' Loi• I 2 3 and the usterty , 1001 G•laJty Newl)Ol'I Beech Cal1l0<n1a Brownerol1 Rold. L1gun1 Be.eh
County Clertt of ')r111ge County on 11~ ot Loi 4 tn Bloci. 3 ol the BalD01 92UO CA 92651 APftl 27, 198 2 FICTTT'IOUl IUltNESI B1y11de Trect, tn Iha City of New-M C Horning. Jr 1380 Ga· STEPHE N K TERRY. 7 1'
,,.
1
.. FICTITIOUS •USINESS N.._ STAttMENT port e .. cll County o l Oringe teay Newport Beach Ca11lorn11 Brownc:rolt Road , Lagunl ee.c11
Publllhld Orang• COHI D•ll~ NAME STATEMENT I fhe lotlowlng l)a(IOlll ••• d Sl•I• ol Calllorn11, .. m0<• pertl·l92860 :A 82651 Piiot, April 21. May 8, 13, 20, 1982 The following perton II doing bullneea.. otng cutarly dHCtlblld In EXHIBIT ··A·· Thia bvt•nell II conducted by an l(HAOOLAH ES HTEHARDI
1
93
2
.9
2
Dutt,_" A & o ELECTRIC INC 1962 1111chad hereto 1nd mede a part 1nd1V1dv•l 5403 Wll1lltre Blvd . Los Angetat.
------------(81 CHARLOTTE'S SITTERS Pelle•n Pl1ce Cott• M•a• CA herool. M c H0<n1ng, Jr :A 90038 PtJBl.IC NOTICE und/or llll CHARLOTTE CODER'S 92829 · • UHlllt'T "A" Tlllt s11temenl waa hied witll the Tt111 bulOnffl 11 conducted by • BABYSITTING AGENCY. 420 62nd GiLBERT SCHOENBAUM 1952 All rlQhl, title and tnternt into that County Clerk or Orange County on ~eral pa11nerthlp.
CPP·11293 S1ru111 Newport Beach Ca111orn10 Pallein Pl•e• Coat• Mesa CA certain ... ,.hOld estate created by Apr11 27. 1982 Khadottll Ethtellerdt IMPORTANT NOTICE 92663 92821 ' ' I lelM dated NOvembflf 13 1978 F1 .. 190 Thll llllement wu filed wllh Int
IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORE· CherlOlle Coder. 420 82nd ADA B SCHOENBAUM 1952 by Ind be'-> Ao111nd Frank Val: Publllh•d Or•ng• Coast Dally' County Claf'k ot Otenge County Of1
CLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE StrMI, Newport Beith, C1Jllornl1 Petlci n Pli ce. Costa MH'• CA tely end Vivian Mu11el Vallely 1111 PllOI Apr~ N . May 6. 13, 20. 1982 April 111, 1982
BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENTS IT 926&3 92828 ' wile. not lndiVldullly 0< pereonally, 1933·82 F117474
MAY BE S OLO WITHOUT ANY Thlt ~IS conducted by an Tlllt ......,,_ 11 conducted b but IOlely 11 Ttutlee 01 Ille Vallely ,__IC MnTICE Publlahed Orenge Co11t 0111) COURT ACTION ana you may hev• lndMdual ~por•llon Y 1 Family fruit creeled by Trust In· n-. ""' Pilot AprW N . May 8, 13, 20. 1982
the M!Qill rlghl 10 brn>g your eecounl ChllrlOlle Coda-A&G ELECTRIC INC denture deted Merell 3 1972 e1 FICTIT'IOUI •US*EIS 11M 1-82
in good 1t1ndln9 by paying all ol Thll 1111-1 wu fried Wllll the Gllber1 Senoenbeum fff.or Ind Fun Zone Devetopmenl NAMI ITAT'l!M€NT your pest due p1ymen11 plus per County Clenl ot Or~ County on Prllltdenl as lallM recorded December 13 . fhe tollowing person 15 doln
m111ed t:otla end ea~aes within Ap111211 1912 Tn1111a1-1 wu flied with Iha 1978 on Boot. 12981 page 148, bu1tnets 11
9
lhree month~ from the data lhlS F1112l1 County Clertt of Ot•noe County on Olftelll Rec0<us A· I SILVER CLIPPER DOG
Nollet ol Oetaull wes recorded Publl1hed Crenge Col tl Delly Ap<M 27. 1982 PARCEL I GROOMING 125 •, Broidway lh1' amount 11 S2.279 8o4 as ol April Piiot APfll N . M1y 8, 13, 20. 1982 ,111212 Loi• 1 2 3 Ind the Euter1y 1 toot Cotta Mesa Cehtornia 92627
14. 1992. and will lncreaae until your 1927-82 Publlslled Oringe COHI 0•11~ ot Loi 4 In Block 3 ot the Balboa Terren'ce LH Dodds 1944
account t>eeomes curren1 You may P11Q1, Aprll 29, Mey 8, 13. 20, 1962 Paysioe frect, In th• City of New· WMtter Avenue Co111 Mesa Call·
not have to P•Y the entire unpaid PUBUC NOTICE 192,._82 port Bo eri. County of Orange. lo•n•e 92627 ·
por11on ol your account . even State of C1lllorn1a. as POI m11p rec· Thll oosineH 15 c.onducte<I by an
lhough lull 1>1yment wa5 demande<I. FICTITIOUS ltUltNEll P\8.IC NOTICE ordad In book 4 page 78 ol Mlscel· individoe!
but you mu•I pay ine amoun1 lllled NA• STAft•NT taneoua M1p1, In the ot11ce ot the Terrance L Dodds
•t>ove Aller three month• from the The lollowlng persons are dOlnQ NOTICI 0' TitUSTafi'I t.AU Counly Recorder ol said County l h11 s111emen1 w11 llled With Ille
d•t• ot record111on or th11 docu· bullnest u T.I . Mo. J.so PAACEL 2 c Cle of o ment Cwh1ch dlle ol 1ecord1llon E R I , 10 Newport Center NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, tllll Tllll portion of BIOdt 3 OI Iha B••· A~~·r3. 1;:2 ••noe County on ~hereon) unlesl Ille obltga· Or1ve. •ISO Newport BHch, CA on WednHdly, M1y 12. 1982, 11 Do• 8ay11de Tr1ct. 1hown H an Ftf11«1 tJon being l0<ecloled upof'I pertn1t1 826e0 9 00 o·clOClt • m of Mid <My. In the unnumbered lot In Mid Blodl 3 on• Publilhed Orang• Coall Dally p1•
1 lonoer period you have only the R WYATI HVORA, 31941 Vie room H I U ldl tor eonduetlng map recorded In Book '4, page 78 of tot A.pol 15 22 21 May 6 t982
legal rtQhl to stop Ille loreCllolule Oy Oeo Trlbuco Cenyon, CA 921178 Trua1 .. ·1 Selel. wltllln the ofliCla 01 MlteallanaOue M1pe, deat1•bed H . 1676-a2
paytng the en1we amount de<Nlnde<I GABOR A TOTH. 31811 PINO REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SEA· tolows Dy your creditor To find out Ille L• Br Intl , San Juan C1pt11r1no, VICE . loc11ed 11 2020 Nor111 8agoMlng al • point on Ille Easterly pt&fC NOTICE
amount you mutt Ply or 10 arranoe CA 92875 &oedWly. W t• 206. In the Oty of fine of LOI 23 In Bloek A of 8-ytid•. ------------
P\8..IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 94.11*111 NAME ITA TIMI.NT Tne lollow1ng peraon ii doing
t>us>neu ..
VICTOR PRODUCTIONS, 1103
Welnut Sl•Ml. Tueun, CA 92680
VICTOR LaVAR PETERSON.
1103 Wllnot. Tustin. CA 92680. Th11 1>ulineu 11 conaueted by 111
lndlVldual VtC:IO< u Ver PeterlOl'I
Tiii• 111•-· ... llled with Ille County Clerk ol Orange County on
Merell 3 1 1992 ,, ..
Publt"'8d Ot~ Cout Diiiy Pilot.
April 15. 22 21 Mrf 15. 1982 1702·112
'°' P•vment to stop the lorecloture, This bu11neu 11 conducied by 1 Santi AN. County or Ofange. Slit• 11 11\own on • Map recorded In °' II your property 11 1n loreclOSure ~al per1ntfahlp of c.iuom11. REAL ESTATE SECU· Book 3. PIQe 38 ot H id Mlaeelll · FICTITIOUS IUllHllS
:.:nI ~~;:=~~.;;'~:,,':;; Thl1 11:1~:1::S0~8tad wltll the ::,!~~,!,.~~~·~~~~~~u~~ ~::.u~~::;,;~i~~~~~'~r~h2~~ The l~~:'!1!:~~~~0En~s doing F~~:A~S
of Long Beach, TEE FBO LEOLF M County Clefk of OrlllOI County on under end pur-nl to tlle power ot hne of Bey Awnoe. tnene• Wff1erly buslne11 H ~.~~~.~)~u~h~~~.1:i!·~EgT~~';.l April 27. 1982 ,1•1• ~~~~~e;;:t!:, ~'.,='~= ~~;:~',y";,t~~~Ow~ ';:.',ni~~;:i 5081!~~~i~~~~~!~~Nd~ bv~~~.wlng parson 11 doing
LOAN SERVICES. 11301 W Olym· Published Orange Co111 Dilly t<nrl and Batba11 Gey Keat1, Hua-(shown II Main Street on said Map). M11. C11tirorni1 92625 C GENU
9
•
3
oo
5
Fillmore Wly,
Pl<: Blvd Los AngeleS. CA 90064, P110t. AtK" 29, M1y 8, 13, 20, 1982 bend 1nd Wiie, u joint 1en1nt1 lo the Northllll corne< of Loi I In Miik Gerd1ne1 Gordon, 501'h °''! ~~-c:~~~:. 92
, 31~065 Fiii·
(2 1311120.01.11, Alln Foreclosure 1939-82 recorded September 4, 1911, In Bloek 3 ol Ille e.lbol B•yside Trect. JH mlne Avenue. Coron• det Mar. o.i>t Book 1'4208 of Ollle1al Records ot as 1hown on the m1p recorded In C.lll0<n11 92625 ~~;8 Wl'f, Coll• Meta. Celitoml•
11 you have any ques11ons you PlllJC •net 11ld County. 11 page 577, Recor· book • pega 78 of u 1d Mlscall•· Th11 butlness is conducted by en
EBMJG
OTTO G . EHMIG, re11·
dent of Newport Beach. Ca.
P a11ed away on April 28,
1982. Born November 27,
1892 In Brelaag, Germany.
Survived by hie aon WGliam
0 . Ehmlg, gra ndch ildre n
D.vid William Ehmig of Loa
Gat.oa, Ca., All.son Lynn Eh·
m ig o f Tanana, C;,. and 2
great-gran d c hildren J o na·
than and Jennifer Ehm.ig. ln
lieu of flowers t h e famil y
requesu memorial rontnbu·
tions be made to the F o un-
dation for the Junior Blind.
Pacific View Mortuary d i·
rectors.
ahould eon1ec 1 • lawyer or the der'• tn1tromant No. 6902, b y neou1 M•PI thence Sou1tie.1terty indl'llouel" Th••~ 11
conducted by en
government agency whlcll ,,,.Y hive rH1on of 1 brHcti OI default In ~ the Northeestetly tine of Hid Mwk G Gordon •ndlllldvat
W
ofhehr1se lh1fee r~1·vledivedm~teroef, ~~:~oyovsE rLIOEG11f!LRRemem1GH"''*S1F' YYOouu NO~ TO:~·• SAl.E p1yman1 or perlorm1nee of tlla P ' s3 to ,,,. ~~-Sout"'Y Mne ot Thil s111emen1 wu llled with Ille Th.s ,,:,:, =~ With Ille ~"' ..... .. ', • • -·-obllgtlttont lf(:Ured ttwe«>y, lnelu· • m trMI, 1,,..,_ thWfft•r1Y County Clark ol Orange County on Cou Clerk ol
h is education. but graduated 00 NOT TAl(E PROMPT ACTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, lhet ding lhll bfeeell Ot defautl, Notlea along ... d Hne 10 Ille Potnl of Be-AfKll 27. 1912 A ;~, 1912 Orange County on
f American H'gh Sc The lollow1ng eopy ol · Nollet' Of1 Wedneeday, Mey 5, 1982, 111.00 of wNcil wu recorded Janu.ry 19 ginning F1"201 P' ' rom l hool. the or1g1n11 of wllleh wH hied ror o'doc:k • m of Mid d1y, In tlla room IN2. 11 Ree«der'• 1nitrucnent No PARCEL 3 Publl1hed Or1ng• cout Dall F1atn
FUNlt
C hicago, Illinois . H e was record on 4·22-82 1n the otnee ol Ht H id• for conducting Trull"'' 82-02172!, WIU SEU AT PUBLIC Th•t J>Ofllon ot Lot 24 1n Blocll A of PllOt. Aprtl 29. Mey 6. 13, 20, 198 Pub1t1110d Or1nge Co111 Dally
m,;irrled lo Louis e Marie 1111 recorde1 ol Orange County, s ..... wllllln Ill• 0111<:41 of REAL AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO· Baytlde, .. alloWn on. map re<:or· 1183'8 Pilol Apt•I
2
9 M•y 6. l3. 20. 1982
Drage r on February 1, 1930. Celll0<ma .•• sent to you JnHmuch ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE. IO-OEA FOR CASH 11wful money OI ded In boot< 3, p.ge 38 of Mlsclll•· !859·82
11u11 property show. you m11y htve Suite 20e, In Ille City of Sent• Ana, eheCll dr•wn on 1 ital• or nellonll County, Caltlornta, 100 11111 ponlon ----"" "'-rWK-""''~ H e was e mplodaed at N e · Hon ••emln11lon of the tttle to seldl cited 11 2020 Nortll Bto1dw1y, th• Unlt•d States. or 1 ()Hhler't neoua Maps. record• ot Or1ng• PUBUC MnTI~ .. -IC Mnl'll'C
b r aska Consoli ated Milla, en lnle•ell In the 1rua1ee·1 ut• COunly of Ofenge, S111a ol Cllifor. benll.•ll•l•0ti.oetalaedll.un10o ot Lot 8 In Section 36. Townlhlp 8 --------
n o w kno wn as ConAgra, proc~chngs nl1, CALIFORNIA LAND TITLE or 1 ilete or tederel H vtngs and South. Ainge 10 Wttt, &en Ber• C0N80LIDAT£D
transferTed to Grand Island NOTICE OF DEFAULT COMPANY,• C1lllorn1a coroor•· loan 111oe1111on domlclled ln 11111 natdlno BeM •nd Meridian,~•· REPORT OF CONDITION
Nebraska m 1936, and com: Nolte• 1• 11er•by given thll Los lion. 11 duly appotn1ed Trull""°" 1111e. Ill payable 1t tt1e ttme Of .... Deel u ro11owt Conaolldated Report of Condition of "CITIZENS BANK
I
Angetea Title end Trust Deed Com· der ind porau1n1 to the power ol eM right. Utll 111<1 intereat held by 11 Beginning 11 Ille Norlllelll e0<ner OF COSTA S P ete d 23 years with the peny 11 duty ul)90tnted Tru1tee un· .... conferred In 11111 oerteln OMd 11 Troet ... 1n 11111 rMI propeny _., of Lot 1 In B•Odl 3 of B•lbol B•Y· ME A'" of Costa Mesa, Orange County, and
compa ny. H e managed the oer •Deed ot Trust dated APf~ 10 of Trust u1cuted by J AMIS F 1u11e 1n MJa COUnty 100 St•t• oe-llOe Tritt." ahoWn on•~ rec:· Oomestk: Subsidiaries at the c lose of busklesa on Maren
Andenon Elevator in South 1980 e1u1cu1ed by Pared•M tnvHI· Cl.ARI(. 1 llnQle man lltld HUGH A tettbed u fallowl • orded tn book •. page 71 ol Mii· 31, 1982. Carolina uJ 1952 INJl'll ltte • Calllorntl c:orpor1oon, MATHESON. a~ rnaft, .. )Olnl ........ A' Qfllllneoul M1pe. record• Of Orange St.t Be k No 1 un •when he H Tru11or 10 secure certain obit· ten1nl1. recordecfS99temb8' 30, Tll1t po rtion ol tot 11 of Ille County C1lllorn11. tllanc;e Nortll· • n · OIO
moved to Hyaltaville, Mary· ga110n1 1n ta\'Of Of Flmllf& & Mer· 1981, In Booll 14231 of Oftldll RI-Hewpor'1 Haight• trlCI .. recorded Wfttlirty alOnO the Northeeelerty llne
I and and w a a w i l h eh1n11 Tru11 Compeny of Long ~di of Mid County, 11 peo-&48 1n bool< 4 peoe 13 of m1eoe11aneou1 ol M id Blocl< 3 to • point 1.00 loot Washington Flour Mill until BeKh. TEE FBO LEOLF M REESE. Recorder·• ln11rumant Ho. 395&3, m1p1, reeordl of Orange County, NorthWfflerly from Iha NottllWHt
late 1952 when he went lo IRA • 45.4 1 ·9, H to an undivided by reuon of • btaecll or dafatlt In Slit• ol C1lllornle, dHcrlbed 11 corner ot Loi 3 or H id Block 3; S 61 5~8'1. 1ntetH I 1nd P1u1 Flteher p1yment or perform11)t• of I he tottowa. lllenee Nortllautarly •tong • tine a~inaw, Michigan, and Ill· Fruchbom. as 10 an undivided obllg1t1on1 MCurtd the<at>y, lnclu-Beginning 11 Ill• moll notlll«I) p1re1111 with end 1.00 loot Nonll-
3,678
soc1ated with Wickes Corp. O HO'• 1n1erut. ALL AS TE· ding 11111 t>reac:ll or dafeutt. l'IO'loe earner of .. Id lot t8. Mid point 11tJo ...,..t«ty. meuured •I rlgllt lllQIM,
Agricultural Div ision for 17 NANTS IN COMMON. 11 t>eneflcl•· ot wlllell w11 rteordad Janu1ry e. belnil tlle ... 1erty comer .if tract no. lrorn the Northaallerly prolonoetlon years tll h is r' lire ry. recOlded 4-21·80, u tn1trurnen1 1182. as Recorder'• tn111Vment No. 21!>0, u .nown on• map reoorded ot the Nortll...,..tlffy tine of uld Lot
1969
H e menl in no 27068, In book 13581, p•g• 82.ooeg30, WIU SILL AT PUBLIC In book &e. pig• 18 of mltt•lt•· 3. Btoc:lt 3, to 111 Intersection with
· e then came to Costa t981, 01 Offlelel Records 1n the Of. AUCTION TO THE HIOHE8T BID· neou• m1p1, record• o f oring• the line of ordinary 1118" tide of the
Mesa, Ca. California, where ltce ol the Record•• of o rang• DER FOR CASH. lawful money of Coullty, Stat• Of c.llfomil; tnence P1clllc Oc•1n In Newport B1y, 11 -----------~he curre ntly lived at the Coul)ty, C11H0<nl1. describing t1nd Ill• Unlled Stain, or • eHfllar'1 eou111 &o dagr-01' 43·· ... 1 ts.32 •t•bllltled by• daa.e rendered In time of his death. While her'9 therein u Lot 104 ol Tract 5871, 1n elltdl df...,... on • .Ute or NlllOnal feet to the moat northerly comer of the SUc>ertor COUf1 ot the Siii• Of
h e wu employed by Cet-111e City of 0<11199. u .,_ on 1 b1nk. • 11111 or ledat1I cr1dll trac:t no. 1583. 11 "'°""on1 mep eeutornle In Ind tor Iha County of ... , mep recorded in book 368, pege 27 union, or • ll•t• or ledtr., MWIQs recorded In book •8, pega '46 of Ofenge In 1n Action entitled "City of
HARRY C . FUNK, bor n
February 9, 1905, Fremont,
Nebraska, to James and
Mary Funk, and was now 77
years of ace. The early part
,_Claof ... S
m&.lmO .. WAY
MOllTVA.IY
110 Btoedway
Cotta Mesa
642-9150
llDI l•MDnWI ~':r" .... _ -
Corp., and for over 3 yean to 3 1 1netu11ve ot M11cat11naou1 and loan auocl•tlon dOtnleli.cl ln rn11cett1neo111 m1p1, record• 01 Newpot1 8elcll --Arlt Net1c>n-
w1 th lnlel S ecurity System Map1, end •mended 0y a eertlflc11e Int. 1111e, 111peya!Me 11 the llrM Of Df•l\Q9 COUnty, s11te of c.lffornla; II Bank of Senti Ane Incl otllerl",
al Fedco Store on Harbor of correction recorded April 14 ...._ 1111 tloht, 00. end lnterMl lleld tllence •outll '40 deg'"' oo· 27" (CeM Ho. 23679, • cerlltled COf1'I OI
Blvd., and Baker St. Hew"• 1978 tn Book 1110•. peg• 1130 by 11. a• frutt ... In 111a1 tH l PfO--• 1H.72 feet elong 1,,. nonn.. which w11 rec:ord«t November t , -Offlc:lel Rac:orda, tn the otltca of Ille party tlhllled In Mid County ind WMlerty tine of Mid trlitl to"" trve 1928 In book 215 peoe 1llO of Offl.
member for many years of County Reeord1r ot uld Counly, Stet•. ci-tl>ed • lollowlt CIO!nl of begltii1lncr Ul9tlC9 nor111 so clll Record•; ltlenCe SOolheUterty
United Comme r lcal Trave-Including noll for the prlnelpll wm A LEASEHOLD ESTATE IN ANO dtO'"' 00' 00" -1 "8 32 tMI' 1long Ille Nld llde lint to lt1 ln11f·
len, and al.IC> Aahlar MMonlc of ~1.500 00 llld obllQatlon• that TO: t11anc1 aoutll •o degr"•' oo· 11·1
MC11on w1t11 1M Nortllee11erty II'°'"
Lod 32
• btHCll ol, •nd det1uft In, lllt LOI 12 ltock 114 of Tt1CI No. WHI 103.0 ,,., 10 Ill• IOUlll· long.ellon ol llle NOftl\wetterly tin•
ge, • A .F . and A .M ., obllg11lon1 tOf wrlllell lllOh Ottd ot U•. lltl'IOwnOll •Map recorded In "91.rl)' tint Of Mid lot 19. thtnee Of Pllm Str .. UUlltoWn Ott Ille ma.,
rand Ial&nd, Nebruka. H e Tru1111Hcurlly 11 .. eccrvtd In l ook 13 ptgtt H tnd 37 of Ml'" tOUtfl IOdegfMIOO' oo·• wt41.lt of tlld Blll>Oe lt~lde Tr*t: tlle-
WH a member of St. M l· tNit peymtnt 11 .. not "911 rnac:1e ot: ceew-Mtp1 In tile oftloe Ol IM *'Ilona Mid~ 11na 10 nee aou111-1er1Y •tone Mid P'C>-
haela and All An ·-E I THE t~TAU.MENT OF INTEREST County Aeaordef Of Mid~-1111 moat -t•rlY COtft9f of H id longltlol\ and Illa Motlhw91ttlfiy tint ge.. ;p • WHICH BECAME OVE FEBRUARY Tiit ttrMt lddr.-or 04tllt COM-tract ftO. tSla; "*'°' flOt1tl "° .. Of P•lm 91, .. 1 to ,,. lnllfMCtlOft
opal C hurc:h , Corona del 5, 1182 PLUS LATE CHARGE. ANO mon cftelgntllOft ot Illa, ... pro-or .. oo· 2T'WI 1oa ........ alofta """"'Illa~ lint of lllodl Mar (obr CYVtt 12 ye.are. Allio. ALL 8UISEQU!NT INSTALL· ~l*IY .......... iebo¥1 deeol'tMd .. the ri0ilh•••-1Y llM of teld vld 3 of H id ltlboa lat•ld• Tract;
mem er of the Ora nae MENTS OF INTEREST, PLUS LATE to M' IO".,. 2CM-" -10 Ille""' point Of blgllwlll19. tllfftC• HottllWffl•rty along Hid
ounly Performing Art• CHARGE. ANO OELINOUENCY 111 ,,, .. ,, ~ IMdl. Celt· Tiit--...... or°"* OOfft-NOr111••18fly tint to Illa'°'"' of
ter ln Costa Meu Ke 1• OVE ON PRIOR ENOUM8RANCE8, lorlll&. tnOft d..._tton Of the rMI pro-.......... • • .. tF ANY 11181 by leuotl u..of. Ille Tiit und1nlgn1d llertb'( di•· ,...,, .. lletatMM'9 "90lt"41 .. VIClltT M~ porllOll lllareot tytne
rvlved by tu. wlfe t.out.. pr9Mftt ~under Hid Ottd cWllt .. lllbllty for any~-~11rpor1td I• II•: UH -11111 IMllOw ~ L-W••·
Kary C. Funk. an A«o-ol Trutl llH dtOO•tttd wllll ttld w 111..icr ~ addrw °'°"* Sir .... ,.....,, leMfl. ClellDr* Tiie .... , tddteel lftdlor otl'tef •ll~l tn11neer with Mc-C1w1v lllCIOintM Trwea.t, ll.ldl Deed common dU·I ~.. Tll• u11d.,•ltllff Mrti.y •••· --~-.... 11 ""'t· .. our• Donn 11 Do 1 Al Of tr\111 llnd a11 doeumtnl1 ~ Satct .... Wttl "m.-w1111ovt OlllrlW .. ...-, '°' ""Y lftoorrec1· i>orted 10 l>t 301 ,.aln'I "'~"· • u11•• rcrah, 01110 01>11o•t1on~ ~ur.O ttltt.e>y. Wllft9fttY. ••Pf ... or ,,...._, ,.. ""' 111 _.. ..... ....,_ ot .._ ~ Ptlftll\•. ~t '"°"·
Lon ~acb, Ca •• Uvi~ln eftd 1"9 undarllOned doee htrtllr tttdt110 tit ... pOIMMton • ., eft• ~di •It IM!Oft, c.lflOnlle. Grow, C.., Ral &. dect•1e Ill IUlll• MCUfed tl'Mlftlly GWt'Of•IOel. lo...., tlW ~ lald 1819 ri1 M lllade WllftOIR .. Id .... wtll M made WIUIOUI unk, an l:lectronk:a ,_ tmmedltttly dllt encl peyallte 8ftd .,....... Of lfle NOlll., ......... werNMtty •• ,,.... ., ....... ,.. -IMIY ........ ,......,Oft Of
wr with ffonevwell Inc: dW ,_..,, tllCt '°oil*.,..'""' 1•tloft_!!9Vref "' .... DMCt ef tefdtflt tide, ,11Ht110ft, .,·""' ii:;-....,J::..,•111 ~ of
• __ n. .. __._.~ .. ·u.,....:! pro...,1y1oi.e101010 .. ttety111e ~~----ws111w-.•~ .. ,...... ·-J ~·--.. -.----.. ...... ~----~ .,.. ____ ...._. ................... ~ ... . ~ W...Ch\&-LOI ANOLLU tlTL&.6HO I.,.,..., ......... _. .,.._ ....,_, •r ..,_ OMd et -.... ., .. IM etta, • 1ralMhon1and8 ""'9T~C~. ~., ............... .,,..,._......, .. ..__ T.._.,.___._,_DeA llll'*~IMlih~ ... -•--MTl\lllle • _ .......... ..,_., ... .,.......~•••-. ruac ...... , • ..,....., ... •-lrCMOAOOTITl.I ~ .............. -............................. ,....... .... ... w. AJlo IUM· ....uMNc. CC*tJNtf Htf et,,.. •. flte .. 111 =:=--A -. ...... _,....,,,._ .. .,.....fl
.. • Prank I . = . -... !!If '";;! ... ---.......... ,....,.Int~ .... =Mlt•11& I 0. ll(liilf,.,tlla .... ._ ...... , ......... 11
f JOll[l!a, in, wl 4 OA"I&.....,., =.-,, fl Hff .. T~vt~. fN tetal ·OAftD Ma OON' .., .=. -~4.=i;a "DI -'=JU'~ ~:'ti .
L I ef a.'=. e1.flilliiilii-.IM IOll!I,.
I
·.
By ITBVE MITCllELL °' .. Deir ........
A fJedalina lfOUP call.in& lwelf
the LaaUna ~ Doc Owners
Guild (DOG) la barking at the
City Couqcll to end confu.ion
over operatin8 houri of the dty'a
animal lhelter.
, In a letter to the council, DOG
chairman BW Harnevioua aaid
'new hours at the Lacuna Canyon
animal facility "deprive the ani-•
Mexicans
protest
jobs unit
By PRBDEBI~ SCBOEMEM. °' .. .,.., ........ "Operation Jobe" -the con-
trovenial roundup of undocu-
mented workers employed in
Southern Califomla -moved
into Crance County tod!tl' ~ protests from leeden of HilpuUc
orpnlzationa.
According to Amin David of
the League of United Latin
American Citizena. one furniture
manufacturer wu raided near
the Santa Ana-Tustin border.
It wu later identified aa B.P.
John Co., of 2001 E. Dyer Road.
Santa Ana. The firm report.edly
employs 3M people. The number
taken Into custody wu not de-
termined.
One man, who wu unidenti-
fied, WU distraught in ttl>Of11na
hla 1i1ter, who nad lived widi
him in the United State. for 10
years, w• one of the employees
taken fnto custody.
· INS officiau ln Loa An•elea
rehlled·U. morning to cmfinn'
or deny ·Neb a raid took plac:e.
«We will have more Information
thla afternoon," a spokeswoman
said.
David WU amonc 1a dozen Hi-
t panic and civil rtghg leaden
wbo spoke to repcnen at a mor-
nina news conlerence held in
froot of the INS office in Santa
Ana. _ ()pention Jobi, according to
the lNS, la d .. igned to remove
undocumented workers from
'employment IO that tbQee pom-
tiona may be filled by Pft90Q1
l:::!:~. within the U.S. or U.S.
d The operation -been under way In Lm AnaeJa ma
Monday. •
'"lhe political acapeaoat of um
operation whkh f.allely teekl to
blame-the-undocumented for the
chronic unemployment milllonl
of Americana have experienced
for more than a decade ii
al~deroua ," David aald.
" 'Uperatlon Jobi' la actually
'Operation Hou.. and a cruel ODe
at that ... "
Bev. A1lm Deck, of the office
of HilpuUc mlnlstry, Diocae of
Ora.nae. aald the roundupe are
dlvidln& famtllea; au.ckina the
dlanlty of workers: resulUna in
"flairant" violations of lndlvi-
dual rigbtl.
Lagunan injured
in Niguel crash
Robert Orem ot 1AIUM s.cb
... fepalted tn ..... ooaditioll
today after hll auto went out of
control and overturned Wed-
needay momtnc ln Lacuna Ni·
~ GNeDc.!!;,. wu admitted to
M..... mtty I~ welt
injmtll to the cMll • bW>
WNd elbow f~ the ecd-
clmt GD Clown Valley~.
NATION
mall and the public of a vital d ty
service.''
Earlier this month, the city
1"Mtrided public hours of opera.-
tiall at the lhelter to five days a
week. The shelter la currently
open ~ day e>a:ept Tuetdays
and Wednadaya, from 11 un. to
4 p.m.
Hamevioua 1ugaest1 the shel-
ter-be open eeven days a week.
He :l! that would akl dtbena ln
clal_g lost peta, thua keepina
down the aniiDal pe>pulatian and
brtn11n1 add1tloriaf revenue to
the dty.
He said the v olunteer Pet
BetponaibWty Committee "and
many other or1antsat1ona stand
ready to. provide the cit}' with
volunteers to akl in the ~lter'•
operation," addlna the faclllty
ahould remain open from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. every day of the week.
But Police Chief Neil Purcell.
who oveneea operations at the
,,,...,.,.....
NEW DANCE STEP? -Venerable comedian Bob Hope
helped flamingo Road star Morgan Fairchild with her golf
swing during recent taping of Hope's upoom.ing NBC apedal,
"Stars Over Texas." At least that's what Hope said he was doing. •
Financial picture
uncertain in Laguna
One word deteribea Laguna
s.cb'a finmdal pictUre for the nmn fllcal yeu-: Uncertain.
Qty Man,... Ken Frank bu
outlined a propOted spending
peckap for 1982-83, painting a
picture of P""mflm, Jong-range
cmta and a dip in munldpal ear-
ninp for the next year.
In a budget me8Ulge to the new
Cit)' Council, Frank said the
city's financial posture la ditticult
Laguna OKs
lighting, for
• tennis courts:
Lapna Beach City Councll
memben have approved spen-
ding up to $4,,000 to install
llghting on four tennil courta at
the high ICbool campus.
B & D Contractors, of Inale-
woocl, presented the lowest of
four bida. It offered to inatall the
llghUng for $4(),027. The hiahest
bid Wiii $63,lOQ.
Coundl members Tueeday ad-
ded another *'•000 for con-~ for the llahUnc pro-ject will come from the city'•
Tennil ~e Accqunt, which
cu.rrently contalna n.rly $28,-
000. The rematnd«·-$19,000-
wlll come from fees set aside
from developers for park deve-
~!.n will be atramplilhed
ovwr a ~week Dllriod tn early
June to aw6d oonlUctil with La-
1\111A 8-:ll Hilb 8c:hool we, the
city's recreatlon depar.tment
,lll"Glnlm and taurmmenta.
to aaseu, and he cites several
not~IO-Optimlltic projections:
-Inveatment~arnin 1 will
decline becau.e of drops
in interest rats, a depletion
of city Investment money for
project.I that must be undertaken.
-Property tax revenues will
remain "relaUvely ltatic" due to
the lack of home aalea In lAl\&na
Beach. Higher uaeumenta on
homes take pl8ce only when the
untta chante hands, Frank ex-
plained.
-A b'l·ran&e multi-million
dollar llonD drain pnJll'am will
aoon come before the Oty Coun-
dl for approval, meaning an ad·
dltiona.Ldecreue in lnve.tment
money.
-Money mUlt allo be spent
on cap11al projects Ione neglected
in LaQuna Beech.
-The dty could be at much
a t2M,OOO In state money under
the governor'• budaet propoaal. .
Added to that are two tn1tiaUve1
on the June ballot that would
decrease state revenues to the
dty.
-Federal revenue sharing -
~~be cmtinued beca•• of cu · at the national 1eYeL
Income to the dty next year ii
expected to be $7 .9 miWon, u
compared to $7.12 in thia year's buclcet. Frank's~ propcw spen-
ding t7. 79 mllllon, leavin1 a
balance of about $1,7,700. LMt
year'• expendituns tot.a.Jed $8.58
m1ll1on.
With the exception of.J polkw
officer poetlon that will be eli-
minated beeauee of a federal •·
fety crant rum out. Frank anUc-1.,.-DO reduetJon 1ia city pel'•
IOllnel in hil ~ m F #·
Over the pest few ,.... ---~ ... LAGUNA. ..... Al)
COUNT~·
cify shelter, aald the city was
formd to c:lme two day. a week
beclla.-ot buqet ccncraina
He den* the dol&ln will be
detrimental to animala, or ow-nen. eddl~, "If eomeone needs to claim their animal, they can
call the lhelter OI' the po1Jce de.
p_artment on Tueacfaya and
WednMdlya."
And, he aaJd, the abelcer re-
malm lfl operadoo seven days a
week • tar u care and malnte-
I
I
nance of the animal.a la concer-
ned.
Reaarding volunteer work to
keep the shelter open. the police
chief said the Pet Respomfbility
c.ommtttee chairwoman hu told
him it would be dlffk:ult to find
volunt.een willlng to work until 6
each evening.
He said the shelter wl~:
open seven days a w• -
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. -be«lnn1na in
Ju.ly when the ,..w ettibudeit adOpWd.
fl r
"But at tbla point, with~ money we have tMedt I 11 ~.
probably resume the five
e>pention atarttnc nm Octablr.
Purcell said.
And while the budeet for amJ
mal aervice8 bu been inc.Te••
steadily foe the pMt tbr.
City Manager Ken rrank
(See SHELTER, Pqe Al)
$175,000 sought
Jury deliberatill
·Sycamore lawsuit
By DAVID ltUTZMANN
OftMo.IJNotltaff
An Orange County Superior
Court jury WU to begin delJbe·
raUolw today in a lawsuit which
charges the former owners of
Sycamore Hilla in ~ BeP.ch
with maUcioua pl'C*CUtion ~six
leading Laguna citizens eight
yean-ao.
In closing statements to the
six-man, aix-woman jury Wed-
needay, Claremont attorney John
McCarthy asked for general da·
maaea of $175,000 lor his s ix
cllenta.
'They are Arnold Hano, writer
and forme!' cha1rman of vm.,e
Laguna; Bea Whittletey, a long-
time environmentalist and
activiat; attorney Ralph Beman.
now a resident of San Frandlco;
Michael Schley, former city
board of adju.tment member;
Victor Bellenae, hwband of La-
IU.DA Mayor Sally Bellerue, and '
Paul 1'4ly, a retired Lm Anplel
County superior court Judie and
Greenbelt member.
ML<Mtby asked for ~.000 in damaa-for Mm Wblttleeey and
Emergency
·declared at
San Onofre
A low-level emer1ency wu
declared Wednaday night at the
San Onofre Nuclear Genera~
Station..when a small leak oL
non-radioec11ve water was diaco-
vered in the cooling system of
newly built Unit 2.
Edison apokearnen said the
leak wu discovered at about
lCUO p.m. durtna routine tstina
fOf'/ the 1,100 mepwatt n.ctor,
which wu l11ued a low-power
tat llceme earlier thta year by
the federal Nuclear ReauJ.atory
Commieicn,
· Thouah uranium-laden fuel
rods have already been loaded
into Unit 2'• react.or ~ utWty
ofticlall taSd, the fuel baa not yet
. been imldiated.'
A to-<:alled "unusual event,"
tbe lo•ett of four emer1ency
c1w'flcatiam. w• declared and
local ott-llte emera-cy , .....
..,.... wen notified. No adkJll
'Wal needed, bowner, becau..
the dldaration WM a formality,
lldilan .. MJW\ David Bamin
tUd.
Tbe powerful new reactor
amit, located three iaM9 IOUth ol San Clemente, hat ....., . undel'-
..... "hot functional tlltiftl."
$25,000 each for the other five
plaintiffa.
He alto asked the J!!!Jt° Superior Court Judge AU e
Stotler 's court room to return
with a punitive da~ge award,
but he did not specify a figure.
McCarthy has accuaed Rancho
Palal Verd~ Corp. and ltl parent
ISLANDS
...
WAR ZONE -British Defenae Ministry announced
Wedneeday total air and eea blockade around Falkland lalalm
(lmet), and would consider planes on ground at Stanley Air·
port (Jocated at arrows) as ''ho.tile.••
Britain rejects
• U.N. peace bid
;
w .
Just Mk Davtd J'. ShenDan of ~ who ... atdna in
Ora.nee County jail today alter
bll arrelt Wed!Mimday afternoon
: on 1u1ptcloo of auto theft. A ~ ff11hway Patrol officer UTel1ed
, him ln Irvine after a 120-mph
chMI. Sherman. 24, walbd Jato Nero
Moton of W..tmlnlter wecm..
day It about 12:30 p.m. and 8ik*9
to t•t drive I lilver 197' Cor.
v.tte, the CHP ~.
Sa1-nan Brant T..maw tot
behind th• wheel ancJ c•v•
Sherman a brief tour of the dty.
When the intere9t.ed buye aaked
to drive the Corvette 'himtelf,
~\ .
I ft' Continued stories
l suELTER HOURS HIT ... I
: recent county dictatel have rea-
r
ulted in increased maintenance
009ts.
i For one thing, he aaid, each
1 cage mu.et be deaned and dlsin-
' lected every day. And, he said,
,,spere ar!' mor!! anima.la held at
the 1he1ter than in previou1
years.
The shelter budget in~1979 wu
$72,286, compared wlth thl1
year's $102,622 fliure.
"And we're expecting next
year's budget to be somewhat
over $110,000," Frank aid.
~.SYCAMORE HILLS ...
{ &ach dtiz.ena for alleged conspi-
racy through political action to
deny the firm's right to develop
-Sycamore Hilb.
McCarthy told juron Wednes-
that the only purpoee of that
4 suit was to 1Uence and In-
date critic. of the company'•
development plalll. In effect, he
said, the defend.ants in that suit
were being held "hostage"
through litigation.
He urged juron to return with
a punitive damage judgment
i against the firm to ensure that
(.~ivlc-minded citizens in the fu-
'ture would not be haraaaed.
; ' Attorneys for Rancho Palos
:'Verdes, however, said that la-. . .
wyen for the company honeauy
believed they had a good cue in
1974 when the $28 million legal
action wu filed agalnat the 43
~ Beech attorney John
Pollock, they laid, WU correct in
believing there wu reuonable
1uspiclon that a conapiracy
against the company'• develop-
ment plaJll wu in J)J'08rt!91. Pol-
lock wu one of three attorneys
who represented Rancho Paloe
Verdes. He ii a co-defendant in
the cue.
The city of Laguna Beach
purchued the 322-acre Sycamore
Hilla site in April 1978 for $6.7~
milllon to end the flurry of law-
suits.
LAGUNA BUDGET. • •
puaage of Prop. 13, the city hAa
su!fered a 1088 of 1 ~ positions in
various departments.
Major projects and expendl-
ture1 scheduled for next year
include a $2~0,000 payment to
Rancho Paloa Verdea Corp., the
former owners of the 522-acre
Sycamore Hilb property pure.ha-
led by the city in 1978.
Other projects targeted for fi·
nancln' next year include the ..
resurfacing of El Toro Roed; de-
veloping Moulton Meadows Park
(Uluming the land la tranlferred
to the city by the AU8o Viejo C.o.);
repairing a portion of the Main
Beach Park boardwalk; lnltalJ.1ng
new handrail& in Helaler Park;
replacing 1ewer l1nes; renovating
a portion of Qty Hall; and payina
for the completion of the regiOnal
.ewage treatment plant in Aliao Creek-.
,._...,... NDortedly pt out ot
tbe CS Ind 8bmnaft to' OD the
.. and IPed a .. 1. .
AD boUr law, 8hennan drove
tnto Newport lmpona OD Cout
Hlchway in Newport Beach.
w!Mn he told •IMntn Jim a.~
rdy that the CorveUt 1tmpl~
wun't the cu he wanted and
would tnide It in to pt a l'e.rarri
..808, .IJdoed at f?.000.
#ft .....
CHINO CHIEF -Midge
C•rroll warden
ifornla Institute for Men at
Chino after former superint-
endent and chief deputy were
removed in probe of laxity
and sped.al treatment of some
irunates. Story, faae 87.
Edison High
cleared of
• • • 1m propr1et1es
By ROBERT BARI.ER O{lfle o.itr ...... ...,
A atate admintatrative law
judge found no evidence of Im-
proper recruiting of football
players by F.diaon High School
Coach Blll Workman or by
anyone elae employed at the
HWlUnfton s.cb ICbool.
'The fincU.naa were announced
Wedneeday at a Prell conference
called by School Superintendent
Frank "Jake" Abbott.
$olon changes • d The~ollowed three daya of cloeed eerl thla month min ln which Jo n A. lrmd of the
Westminster Aaaemblyman
Chet Wray ia regretting a recent
vote that permitted a bill allo ..
wing off-track hone reoe betting to clear its first legialative hurdle.
., The local Depar1ment aaid he
'\'Oted in favor of the bill, AB
~U77, by mt1take and aaked
Wednesday that the Govern-
mental Organitation Committee
reconsider ita action. However,
oornmltt.ee memben refwled.
A..emblyman Frank Vicencia.
I)..Bellflower, the bill'• 1porwor, •uuestect Wray "•tate your fee-lino" when the bill reaches the
full Aleembly.
The meuure preeently la pen-
din.r before the A.embly Ways and"Meana Committee.
~\'
:Coastal
1 Pertly clo110y 11111 efternoon
HIQl\e 64 lo 88 el Ille ~Ind
ef to 72 In 11\e lnl1nO erHI WHterly wtnoe to 25 mp!\ Low I clOYO• tonlgl\I wit!\ low' In 11\1 50I L4W clollde eot11lnu, Fr!Oly
rnomlna. ~ lelr Ind pertly
111nny l n th• elternoon. High•
FrlOey 98 lo 75. Hunllnglon·
N1wpor1 1r11 11mp111111r11 range from 1 high or 65 10 • low
of ff.
Slencl110 lnOlx of 68 In Ille S1nta
C11111e. San Fernenoo. Sen 0•·
bfle4 Ind Pomone Valleyt 1t well
" In Rlv«lld• end Siii e.rner·
dlno.
The PSI will bl 42 ~· .....
Extended
forecaat
SOUTHERN CALIFORNI A .
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AREAS -Nighl eno morning low
cloud• 1n 1ne co11111 eno vall•Y
---------1r .. 1. Oll'llrwlM lllr. LOC811y win· dy In Ille mounlllne. High• In ttll U.S. •ummary coutll .,._ 85 lo 75 wltll kiwi
45 10 55 Mounleln rMor1 l\lgne
54 10 94 with lows 32 '° 42. Del MoNI
D.wolt
DUiuth llft..,
""'° *se'--,,..,., :r•
• 1 ... Hertford
12 ..• 01 .....
TO 4T HoNMu 13.. ....... .. .., ....
.... • JIOUll .. ea 41 .......... 14, .. ic..aer T4 41 • LAJV-11 40 utll ..... .... ~ ..... )~ ea• .OI ...._ ... , ..... ... ,, ::m:·
I ; tl ........
Ji :r ==:-" M ....... .. .. ....,..... :" g. ii_· ==
State Office of Administrative
Hearin1• questioned 40 people
under oath.
"It needa to be said loudly and
dearly that the admJniatratlon
and co.ches are honest and ethi-
cal and we are proud to have
them," Abbott declared.
"The cue la cloeed. We'll not
run after our taJ!8 any more.''
IS 41 .OI ~IOI 52 41 ·--.... : = ~· .. 20 17 17 lelt Like 71 40 .21 .. 87 ..,, Antonio 13 11
M M a..ttte et 9t .OI :::.oe~ ::·01
II N It LOUii 83 52 ea Tl It ,. Tlmfl9 Tl a
10 .. II lt8 Mllte • 11 It U 44 ..,._. M U .17
nu ~--•• Tl to T.-. IO 44 ·"
.. 4T .n !~ " " ti 11 ,_ U IO ....
" 41 .a w.f*lflr! a .a ... ._ ~ eo · .... u
14 41 • 14 CALM'OMIA ,.. .. .11 ..... lfllld '° ?I .10 ~ :: :~ ~· 11 u ,,..,. a: .n$'i :#~=:1
" 4' ·" OtMtlld ,, ., ..............
11~==-
But Newport lm)>Ol'tl qW'1*'
Lee w-. not an of what tbe
Cll"1 val'--w-.. tot on the phone.
and calJed hie trles)dl at -you l'..w..d it -Nero Moeol'I to find
a ~ price. WMn he ct.crtbed
the Corvette, the Nero Moton
people put twQ and tv.:o toðer
and came up w(th one ltokia "91'.
But the auapect wu gone by
the time West hunc up.
Interest
rates
assailed
BY JOEL C. DON or .. o.-,,.......,
1be c:ummt hJah level of int.e-
reat ratee it "dan~eroua to our
(eoonomic) health,' a UC Irvine
economiat aaJd Wedneaday du-
rin1 an annual UC bualneaa
forecut foe Orange County.
0 We're not IOh\8 to ,et a good
recovery rate Witif thoee interest
rates come down," aald Jerome
Baetel, a.uoclate prof"80r of fi-
nance at UCI and coordinator of
the forecast.
Mortgage rat.el might alao fall,
but prospective home buyers
drop to the more tolerable levela
of the '701, the bu1ine11 fore-
caster said.
Thia 'mark.a the third year UC
economlsta have met to give
forecuta for the nation, It.ate and
county. The paneliata who spoke
before county bu1ine11men at
UCI included Baeael, Larry
Klmbel, director of economic
model• for UCLA'• Bu1ine11
Forecasting Project, and David
Shulman, a UC IUve.ralde econo-
mlat.
''Oranae C.Ounty loolu a little
better tlian the state and a lot
better than.the nation u a whole
but that historically has been
true," said Baeael. "But high
housing prices in Orange County
are maldng this an unattractive
place and are slowing down job
growth."
The forecasters predicted
mortgage rat.el will hover around
the current average of 15.7 per-
cent. The rates are expected to
drop to l~ percent 1n 1983 and
then another full percentage
J>O!!'t by 1984.
.From Page. A 1
FALKLANDS
ign M.1nister Alfredo Saint Jean
waa asked ln a rad.lo interview if
Argentina and Brltain had rea-
ched a "point of no return" in the
crtaia .
Saint Jean replied, "At leut
Argentina hu not." He added
that Argentina la "mc>R willing"
to .eek a aolution to the oonflict
... Our county haa ah.own itaelf
to be more than prudent and pa-
tient, not only over 160 yean-1>f
~!T!,~ but eapedal.ly during
However, Argentina'• ruling
three-man junta laid it expected
a Brtti.ah attack on the dllputed
ialandl before the weekend, and
a Foreip Ministry aource aald
the American propoaal waa sub-
• atantlally unchanged from the
Jut one the junta rejected.
-·in London, Britain'• announ-
cement that lt WU extendJna ita
w blockade of the FallclanJa to
air traffic at dawn Friday wu
aeen u the deadline for diplo-
macy.
But Britiah mllltary aourcea
aald the ... ult probably would
await the arrival in two Of' three
days of patratroop reinforce-
ments beln1 flown to joln the
1,500 Royal Marlnea with the
Brltilh war fleet.
I
At 1 '1>.m., CHP Of&er Bruce LiU •pot~ the'Corv•U• h .. -
dlnC north on the San Dl•10
J'Niway at Alicia Parkway. Aa
M moved ln beh1nc:\ It to vetUy
the plat.!1. th• Corv•tte a~d
north at 1~ mph.
OUlcer Lian an~ •uapect
Sherman then raced through the
and Canyon exit and into the
Oranae County Tran.it I>Utrict
Ma1ntena.1¥le Yard, where they
ch~1 bumped, arnacked into
NCh om.er twice and finally came
to retl with the 1U1pect •taring
down the~ end of Uan's
revolver.
· Sherman waa taken to UCI
MedJcal Center for treatment of
~ injured leg, then to the county Jail.
New Niguel CofC
elects directors
Eleven Laguna Niguel bu-
alneaamen and women have
been named to the first board
of directors of the fledgllng
Laguna Niguel Chamber of
C.Ommerce.
Board members, elected
earlier this month by the
memberahip, lnclude:
David Black, Copymade
Copy Centera; Carole Zevin
Bowman, Monarch Bank;
Steve Davldaon, Brais Bal·
loon Enterprises: Cheryl For-
• A free aernin.ar to teacn
f!articlpanta h ow to refine
their personal financial stra-
tegies will be held Tuesday at
South Coast Medical Center
in South Laguna.
The cente r 's foundation
and the American Heart As-
sociation are aponaorlng the
worluhop, whkh will feature
• The Dana Niguel Friends
of the Library will sponsore
its thi~d annual used book
sale Saturday from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. at the llbrary, 33841
Niguel Road, Laguna Niguel.
A pre-sale, for members
F~re damages
rest, CG and Associates; Ri·
chard 0 . Frazee, attorney; T.
Powers Griffin, optometrist;
James F . Krembas, Capi-
strano Unifed School District;
David Rusaell Ohm, Pageant
Real Estate; Elizabeth Pequet·
Regent ReaJ Estate; Mkhaei
Pollock, Monarch Bank and
Rl'ck Van Alstine-. Great
American Federal Savings
and Loan.
Officers will be elected
from among the board mem-
bers at a meeting April 28.
retirement planning under
President Reagan's new tax
policies; use of tax-saving
tru1ts; and the new ground
rules for tax rates and ex-
emptions.
The seminar will run from
6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the hos-
pital, 31872 Coast Highway.
only. begins at 9 a .m. and
prospective members can join
the organization for a $2
membership fee. A buck-a-
bag special sale begins at 2:15
D.m.
1 ~000 bring suit
against Anaheim
A potential clua ac1:1on lawsuit
that 1eek1 $100 mlllion Inda-
mages -or $100,000 tor each of
the 1,000 ~pie left )>anelew by
lut week 1 devutating Anaheim
firestorm -wu fllecfWednftd-
ay ~ the City of Anaheim.
Alao named as defendant& in
the Orange County Superior
C.ourt auit were Southern Call-
fornta Ediaon Co. and nine
apartment ownen, developera
and managers whOff bulldlnga
were destroyed by fut-moving
flamea in the early morning
houri of April 21 .
More than 00 buildinp were
sutted by the wind-driven blue, lncludfnC 624 apertment units in
a four..-quare block aree near the
lnteraectlon of Ball Road and
Euclid Avenue. Damage eati-
mat.. hew Meri plaeed at about
$60 mllllon.
Initiating the legal action in
Santa Ana were Anthony Nunes,
26, and his wlfe Cynthia, 24,
former rutd-enta of the Paltn
Villa apartment complex on 1230
S . Euclid Avenue. Their apart-
ment and all their belongings -
valued at S6 ,000 -were de-
stroyed.
The couple alao filed a claim
againlt the dty, a atep required
in legal actions againat public
agenciea.
Santa Ana attorney Jerrold A.
Bloch, who repre9ent. the couple,
said the laW1uit WU filed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellen routed from
their reaidencea. Moo of the tire
victima loet all their belonlflnp
and had no rent.en lnaurance.
Bloch aaid the court mult offi-
dally cerUfy the lepl action u a
clau action au1t before tenanta
other than the Nun.ues can be'
eligible for aettlement benettta, U
any.
otlieF's •g.f)rciwiTJ
Sign up for a chance to have
- \ a (uJly catered tdke out gourmet dinn r •
for Youreelf, vour Mom, Wife or maybe Mn Grandma;
~~ e\~ for a family m four n-;~;£:~~~
Friday May 7th and
the winner will be
notified~
phOrle that dlw.
I t
Al L Orange CO..t DAILY PILOTIThurad.y, Apt11 29, 1982
' 6ompremise i n . order
to rescue business
Classic car dealer Don Racke-
mann faced the Laguna Beach
, City Council last week, fully ex-
pecting that panel to tum down
his request to park cars outside his
North Coast Highway busines&.
He was delighted, therefore,
· when an apparent compromise was
broached on the~ issue. Had
he failed, he said, he would have
had to close up his Laguna C}as.,ic
Motors shop.
Rackemann was seeking a
variance that would allow him to
' di$play his shiny automobiles out-
side. The commercial zoning for
· the area calls for interior display
of autos only.
That would leave him with
only three cars on display, and
force hlm out of business, he said.
And, while the council was
reluctant to grant a variance to
allow cars to be parked on the
driveway fronting his business, it
did seek an alternative plan.
Council members asked the
city to study the possibility of
granting Rackemann a Conditional
Use Permit, which would allow
the outdoor parking, but place
controls on the business that can-
not be transferred to potenda.l fu-
ture operators of the used car
dealership. ·
Rackemann will return in two
months to hear the results of the
city staff's study, ·and, indications
are, the city will be able to work
out some form of compromise on
the issue.
The new council majority ap-
pears to realize that a ban on
exterior display will force a busi-
nessman out of town -and with
the businessman, the sales tax de-
rived from profits he earns.
The council could not legally
justify issuing a variance to Rack-
emann, but a conditional uae per-
mit might be in order, and the
panel·ordered a study on that
possibility.
Both sides in th.: zoning ilaue
should be lauded for "giving a
little." The city and the dealer win
in the end.
Student discipline
Laguna Beach school trustees
will meet tonight to consider
abandoning the practice of impo-
sing corporal punishment on
school youngsters.
The district has had a corpo-
ral punishment policy since 1977
that stipulates a child may not be
swatted without the consent of his
parents or guardians.
Prior to 1977, the district
allowed swatting by administra-
tors in a policy dating'back to
1960.
School officials say there has
only been one paddling admi-
nistered in the past two years in
the district, and none at the high
school level since at least the
mid-1970s.
With that data in mind, it's
obvious to anyone the district baa
not been abusing the corporal pu-
nishment policy in Laguna Beach.
In some instances, it would
appear a swat would be preferable
to suspension, which does little
good, other than offer the pu-
nished child the opportunity to hit
the beach during school hours.
Swatting also offers the di-
strict an alternative to detention or
suspension and eliminating that
for:m of punishment only closes
another door to student discipline.
Administrators should be
aware. however, that abusing the
corporal punishment policy would
be frowned upon by the commu-
nity. .
Past history of swatting in
Laguna Beach shows that to be an
unlikely circumstance.
There ia no compelling reason
to change the district's policy on
corporal punishment.
Board applicants needed
Dan Kenney's recent election
to the Laguna Beach City Council
leaves a vacancy on the Board of
Adjustment and Design Review
Board upon which he sat.
Kenney's term runs through
next December and City Council
members will be interviewing ap-
plicants for the dual post May 4.
Board of Adjustment mem-
bers serve a three-year term and
are compensated in the amount of
$40 per month. The regular mee-
tings of the board are every
Thursday beginning at 6:30 p .m.
in council chambers.
The five-member panel is
appointed by the City C.ouncil to
conmder variances from the Wiling
•
code and the board also sits as the
city's Design Review panel. which
oversees buildin~gns propoeed
within Laguna b.
In addition to the weekl y
meetings, board members are ex-
pected to visit the sites and review plans ror potential projects prior to
the meeting.
Lagunans interested in ap-
plying for the position should
present a letter or resume to City
Clerk Verna Rollinger by noon
this Friday. It should cover work
experience, any experience which
relates to the position and the
reasons for applying.
For more infonnation, call the
City Clerk'at 497-3311, ext. 209.
Opinions expressed in the space •bove are thoSe of the Dally Pilot. Ott.er views ••·
pressed on this page are those of their author s and artists. AHder comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7U)
642·4321.
L.M. ~oyd/ Acting trick
Moviemaken know that how they
direct an actrea \0 deal with atain
conveys whatever they w•t te> ahow
about her. Poa.ed and dignified: She
d«ehdl slowly. Y ounc and friendly:
She aft.a on the bottom step with her
arma crOlled in front of her meea.
Tired and overworked: She cllmbl,
holdlna ~-she male.el
her wa y down, 1rippln 1 the rall.
Drunk; 7Jp, down the bemUNr.
'
In~~mof Blnche~ rebruary, throw ~
balll with -~ ......... (Ill, Ind mUeh to . .. the
-. of that ,._ pw •our ~ .,... ...
prmenta u 800f1 u they get into the
pri':t{ of their homes . .And othen,
it'I I don't Waif..
Q. Hu anybody ever cllmbed Mt.
J:lwerelt alone? •
A. ODly Reinhold Mt!91Dtt of Aua-
tria. In 1980. He did it without oxypn
tanb,. inddeneally.
A "LObM?co road" le called that,
~cmebly bec9t• what movw on lt
11 tiDb.cco, iallldy. But that'• not quite
tb9 .... ol It. liach roedl ......... :=\~~::z.o1.=
'l'M mPARtP TO GO Tht txr~ MILE ... / SAID~ fftStP£NT l
Tax system demands reform .i
NEW YORK -Lewis Lehrman, a
candidate for the Republican nomination
for governor of New York, ilsued a state-
ment on hil income taxes last week. He
does pretty well -his money comes
from a family-owned drugstore chain -
and his 1981 i.ncome (adjusted gross in-
come) was listed as $920,651.
TH.AT, ACCORDING to my plodding
calculations, puts him in the 50 percent
bnicket, the highest income tax bracket.
After all, according to the laws and re·
gulationa governing the Internal Reve-
nue Service, every dollar earned over
$60,000 is taxed at 60 percent on a joint
return. Right?
Wrong. Lew Lehrman. whoee honesty
is unquestioned, was in the 13 percent
bracket last year. He paid $121,706 in
federal income taxes on that income of ·
alrno8t $1 million.
Lehrman's income, according to his
statement, came from a salary of $76,626,
dividends of $672,006, interest income of
$71,626 and apital gains of $236,358. He
had enough deductions and credits to cut
hU tax to a lower rate than the 14 per-
cent paid by a salaried employee who
earns $100 a week.
Not bad for a guy who lists his net
worth at $24,827,339.
But then the tax "laws" -that almost
indecipherable code of laws, regulations,
rulings, precedents and interpretations
-are not bad for any American who
gets his money in any way other than a
regular paych~k complete with with-
holding. Honeslly Ooopholes) or disho-
nestly (hidden lncome), the rich are
RICHARD RllVIS
getting richer than you would guess ln a
country with a progressive income tax.
In Cact. without consulting Lehnnan's
lawyers and accountants, I would guess
that he could have paid even less tax if
he really wanted to push through more
loopholes. Like many affJuent Amer-
lcaM, he may have decided to pay some
more that he had to -either because
one believes everyone should pay some
arguably fair share or because one would
like to minimize the chances of being
audited. Some of the big guya just pay
zero income taxes -Ronald Reagan in
the past was one example.
The "progressive" income tax -
"soaking the rich," the rich have called it
since Karl Marx propoeed it in 1847 as
pu:t; of the Conununist Manifesto -just
tsn't working the way it was supposed to.
There juat don't eeem to be enough rich
people -or people making good money
ace damnably good at hiding i.noome. OI
the 93.6 million 1980 tax retuml filed,
only 547,590 reported adjusted aro1re1
above $100,000. The total n~r above
$50,000 was under 2.6 milllan. Of $284
billion J>!lld in taxes that year by indirl-
duals, $37 .9 billion -Jess than 15 per-
cent -was paid by the mem bers of
over-$100,00-0 families.
That total of $284 billion wu pQl by
all taxpayers on total reported ad;.t.ed
·gross income of $1.6 trillion. So, the
average income tax ra~ for all Artter-
icans was something like 17 percent.
Which means that if there wer e a
single-rate income tax ("unp~ve")
and the current level of federal income
were majntalned, each taxpayer would
pay 17 percent of his or her ad justed
gross, which is more than Lew Lehrman
pays now. U deductions and credit.I were
eliminated at the same time, the single
rate would drop toward 10 percent.
SOMETHING LIKE a single rate, or a
"zero-base" reform of the tax system,
has to be considered -now. Becawie the
rich can so easily avoid progressive
taxation, the poor and everyone elae are
now doing It too. That's what the un·
derground economy is all about th~
days.
Americans have always paid taxes ~
latlvely willingly. We thought t he
system was essentially fair. No more.
•
Eventually U.S. must support Britain
To the Editor:
This ls to expreu my sudden alarm
and concern that. in the attempt of the
Reagan admlnistratioo to play the role of
honest broker ln the Anglo-Argentine
dispute, it la rUgJ>ing grave risks of
.Uenatinl the most vital and reliable ally
the United States hu had in this cen-
tury. The result of this alienation, should
it occur, wW predictably ~disWuaion
among the NA'IO part.Den of the United
States with It.I reliability u the major
power in the western all.lance in ita ef-
forta to preserve free government and
the rule q/. law in the world. Such dis-
illusion would, of coune, contribute to a
flaccid alliance and the spread of the
communist evil in Europe and probably
elsewhere.
In short, the failure of the United
Stata to support Britain in the Falkland
la1anda diapute will. if it bu not done so
'already, lead to the contnc:lictian of the
central valuee this country bu stood for
in th.la century, and in the more 1pedfic
le'llle guarantee the den1al of the very
goals of Re.pn'a own policy in ~
-the creation of a stable balance of
power and throuah it the c:reatlon of
incentives for the U.S.S .R. to take te-
rloualy propoeala for arms limitation ,
force reducUm, .nd pneral tettlement.
were raised for that purpose.
If they only care about their own pets,
what kind of pet owners are they?
I do not wi.ah to be cured of a dileue
or have pain diminished because eome
MAILBOX
medication or procedure was di9covered
by torturing animals.
Much of the animal testing today i.
unnecessary, and much of the pain in-
flicted on animala in the name of testing
la unjultifiably severe.
Imtead of enacting laws to let animals
other than your own be tortured, why
not pus laws to require unannounced
inspection of the. experimental labs?
· J. COLLINS
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Precedent set
To the J:dit.or:
That the Cout Community Colle1e
Dtttrict c:ri t.ld-outatandiftl teac:ben
for merely trytna to maintain eome
eemblahee of exc.llence It dlaturbtnc enGUlh. but that &a. dlllric\ la OONkle-
l'tDI llea1 8l:don ...... tM tour t. an
ouw.,e and a waate of the \Upelyen'
""%%iee1etraton In the dlltrtct lhoWd.
........ , prec.dmt ~ .... in the
JobD ..... ~~· Hi &k 1Niit81NOD
higher a~ thorl ty. District Chancellor
Norman Wal.sOn, threatened theee pro-
fessors for their effocts and what I ~
rather as concern for our community
which showed courage. •
Tak.Ing a stand on an issue and ~
an opinion has too often reeulted ill
threats and actions by tho8e in control.
To feel free and worthwhile t. lmlne ita·
meaning in America. _
If these men are punished then free-
dom does not exist. People in authority
should not use their power to aquelch tbe
voices of those in the same area of work
or memben of the same fr~ country.
Subservience leads to slavery where tbe
powerful show their corruption.
CHARLF.s L. HOELDEBLIN
People count
0.-, ........... .,, ~ hrM
AISING FUNDS -Mickey Mouse and
-year-old Christy Mitchell, poeter child of the
eukemia Society of America, Tri-County
hapter, get ready for a dive. The IOciety will
old its flrst annual Super Swim Clal8ic in 10
range County pools May 8 to raise funds.
will be awarded to swimmers baled on
piu1.1MJ11tl of money raised. For infonnation. call
39-9511.
ederal tax
• • ite ·growing
y fte Auoclated Preti
A hypothetlcal family of four with an lnoome
f $25,000 faces a federal tax bill of almost $7,000
or the current f.i8cal year, a study ahowt.
The figures come from the Tax Foundation
nc., a non-profit research group ln Washington,
.C., which keeps track of taxes Americans pay.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
ederal budget and calculate how the government
pend• an individual taxpayer'• dollan, using a
ype>thetlcal family with one working ipouae, two
hlldren and an annual income near the median for
U.S. families.
There are lots of numben involved, but it's
orthwhile to wade through them to learn where
our money goes.
For the wteat study, the economllta Wied a
amily with an annual lncome of $25,000. They
ound that such a family would have a federal tax
· of $6,916 for f.i8cal J~2 -the year that beon . l . tederal income taxes would llOCOWlt for $2,-
71 of the tax bill, Social Security for $1,675 and
direct taxes like excise levies and corporate ln-
me for $2,470.
Five yean ago, the economJsta Uled a family
th an income of $15,000 and found that such a
amily had a federal tax bill of $3,975. Federal in-
me taxes accounted for $1,459; Sodal Security
ee for $878; and l.nd.lrect taxes for $1,635.
In 1977, the federal tax blll for the lower-
family equaled 26~ percent of income; for
982, the federal bite on the h14lhel'-income family
.. 28 percent.
The hypothetical income level uted for the
~;umtlona was increaaed 66 percent between 1977
1982, allowing for an inc:reue in eam1np of
ore. than 10 percent a year. That produced an
ln the tax bill of 74 percent. Income levie9
ted for 37 percent of the tax bill ln 1977 and
0 percent In 1982; Sodal Security tax.el 81XXM.Ulted
or 22 percent In 1977 va. 24 peromt ln 1982; and
...... l'WW'I 1¥• accounted for 41 percent In 1977 and
percent In 1982.
Mott people think of taxes in terms of the
l:IUl~llC year -lrom Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
nomiata bued their calculationa on the filcal
ear -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -lllnce that is the
riod Wied by the government for budgetary pur-
1be biggest chunk of the money -then and
-1oe1 for what la called income leCUl'ity, ln-udina Sod.al Security payments, welfare benefits,
. lnCome eecwity accounted for about 32 percent
f the family'• tax bill in 1977 and about 33 percent
1812.
!fatiooal defeme waa the leCODd ~ tpen-
catepy In both years. It accounieG for 31~
t ol the tax bill In 1977 and jwt under ~
t today.
There have been ahifta In other .,.. of tpen·
lnl o~er the paat f Ive year1. lnternt on the
ticall debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
amily'I ta bill In 1977 and WM ln fourth P1fioe.
odaJ, lnterelt is In third pl.9ce, accounttnc !or 13
bel'c-.t of. the tax bill. a.1th. which WM th1rd on the lilt five ye9r1
... dpped to fourth plla; ln both 1977 ...
I& ~ted for a little mote than 9 pel'CllDt of
•bdl.
-dalllr terml, incoml llCUl'ity IOOOUDt.ed fGr 1.-a1 ...... bW tn tm llld ... , today, a -71 .,....,-. The defemt porUoq ot tbe tax bill hm '"4 to tl,712, up 83 ~t, and the
...._. portion went from PH to ttO&, up IN
Hefner passes torch
Daughter new Playboy president
CHICAGO (AP)-avt.u. it.fner,
H, claqbter of H~h Hefner, hu
been named prHJdent of Playboy
~~Inc. • Uffavb\I worked at poJJcy lewll In
many arw of the compeny, Chriltie
hM certaln1y been well prepared for
th.la move,'' her father, ch.let executive
ofticer, Mkt Wedneeday.
Ma. Hefner bu been a corporate
vice .,,..adent at Playboy four yeen.
The direct mana1ement of Playboy
Enterprilm will be under the control
of Ma. Hefner and Marvin L. Hutton,
executive vice pnsldent.
I
Ma. Hefner will report direc:tly to
her father.
"Out ftnt tuk ls to complete the
uamldon ot Playboy from a brWl1 bMed corporation to a dMrly fOCWICI
communicationl company," aa1d Ma.
Hefner. ''In lldditlon to itl 11uccwful
maaazlne publ11hln1 bu1lneu and
entrance lnto the lucrative pay cable
bUlllnell. Playboy a1lo hu profit op-
l)OC'tWUU. by capltallJ.ina on the va-
lue of tta name throuCh maps:lne and ~.~lcen1tn1 and club
TAKES OVER -Chri1tle· Hefner ii
new pre1ldent of
Playboy Enterprises
Inc.
vs.
Ready Acom and
Money Market Fund r1elds
Rites~
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75
13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75
12.50
12.25
12.00
11.75
11.50
11.25
11.00
10.75
10.50
10.25
-,/
Dinosaur deaths
tied to cataracts
LONOON (AP) -Eye cataraci. might have
wiped out many of thf 800 apedel of di.noMW"ll that roam.cl the earth until about 6~ mllllon B.C., ac-cardfna to L.R. Qoft, a Salford Unlvenlty b&olopt.
~ Variout theoria have been put forth for the
ctemile of the great cre.turell, which were believed
cold-blooded like modem reptiles. But Croft llUI· a-ta they died out becaUM their eyee 1ldted the
protein to make them retlttant to an increue In
llOiaJ' radiation.
In his new book "The Lut Dlnouun," Croft
said the apedea that disappeared first did not ae~
velop a thlckentna of the brow of the eye eocket or
some other protection, such as a horny crest bet-
ween the eyet.
10.00 ..__....._....._ __ __..___..._~ .............. __..___..._~----__.____..__....__~__.,__..._____._~
-s= io ~ 2 ~ a s= ~ ~ ' ........................ ' 00----------
Ready Access was designed to beat the
money funds ... and it d ocs! The money
funds may think it's almost "unfair com-
petition," because of its unique combination
o f features : insured safety, easy
accessibility, and high money-market
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and sec
if you don't agree.
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above shows, a person who
opened a Ready Access account last fall, on
October 10, would have earned a guaran-
teed yield of 14.468% fo r the following
26-week period. Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%, it dropped to
a low of 11.8%--and averaged only 13.5% for
the same period. That put the average
money fund yield almost a fUll percentage
point below Ready Access. When you ~ook
·~....-·. 13. 01 ~5 o/o :~um ;
at the track record, Ready Access has a
decided edge.
. Easy Access
When you open your account, you get a spe-
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, $1,000 or
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have to do is write a check for at least
SSOO-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds, provided the account is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account is
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav·
ings and Loan Insurance Corpo ratio n.
Money fund investments are not insured.
And, as an article in the Wall S1ru1
J ournar points out, the risk of money funds
increases as short-ter,m interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance R•lremeilt
Only SS,000 it needed to open a Ready
Access account. And there i1 virtually no
minimum balance requirement to maintain
the account.
Semeee
An intereat-earning checking account i5
off'ered each Ready Acceaa account holder-/r., of monthly service charges. And thil
opens the d oor to 24-HOUR TELLER
(ATM) service as well as TELE-PAY", the
unique service that allows regular monthly
bills to be paid with a telephone call. No
money fund provides so ma ny s pecial
services.
Convenience
With 100 o ffices throughout California
(s9on to be expanded to 145) the Associa-
tion is easily accessible fot a variety of
services-from making deposits and with-
drawals to cashing checks, using a safe de-
posit box, obtaining money orders or trav-
eiers checks, applying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
CALL THE FINANCIAL LINE
(714) 731-4023
Call ~t or Collect . ...... ,,...
Get further information, the answers to
your questions, or arrange an appoint-
ment with a Money Manqement
Speciflisl 1t any AllociadoA °'*c:e • , . '
and do it aJI '>1 pbone, simply by calling ·
our Financial Line.
I
I 1
THURSDAY. APHIL 2~1. 1'J82 OHAN G C. LOlJN I Y C AI IFORNIA 2~ CENT~
. ' u-c1 econoinist says rates 'd.angerous'
By JOEL C. DON or .. .,..,,... ....
Tbe current h'8h level of lnte-
rett rates l• 11dan1erou1 to our
(economic) M.lih. a UC Irvine
economltt ta.Id Wednffday du-
ring an annual UC bu1lne11
forecMt few Oranae County. . "We're not aotng to get a good
Hispanics
.protest
jobs unit
By FREDERJcg SCHOEMEHL or .... .,..,,...._
"Operation Joba" ~ the con-
trovenlal roundup of undocu-
mented worker• employed in
Southern California -moved
into Oranae County today amid
protest. from leaden of Hlapenk
organizationt.
According to Amin David of
the League of United Latin
American Otizens, one furniture
manufacturer was raided near
the Santa Ana-Tustin border.
It was later Identified u B.P.
John Co., of 2001 E. Dyer Road,
Santa Ana. The firm reportedly
employs 350 people. The number
taken into custody waa not de-
termined.
One man, who was unidenti-
fied, was dlatral.IQht in reporting
his aiater, who Lad lived with
him in the United Stat.es foe 10
years, was one of the employees
taken into custody.
_ lNS officials in Loa Angeles
refu9edtp11 momtng1 to confirm
or deny such a raid took place.
"We will have more information
thit afternoon," a spokeswoman
uld.
David wu among a doan Hi-
spanic and civil righta leaders
who spoke to reporten at a mot-
ning newa conference held in
front of the INS office bl Santa
Ana.
Operation Joba, according to
the INS, is designed to remove
undocumented workers from
employment IO that thoee pou-
tiona may be filled by persona
legally within the U.S. or U.S .
citizens. The operation haa been
under way ln Los Angeles alnce
Monday.
'"lbe political .capesoat of this
operation which fal8ely 1eeka to
blame the undoC\fmented for the
chronic unemployment millions
of Americana have experienced
foi: more than a decade la
slanderous," Davtd aaid .
" 'Operation Jobs'. ta actually
'Operation Hoax,' and a cruel one
at that ... "
Rev. Allan Deck, of the office
of Hispanic ministry, Dlooeae of
Orange, ta.Id the roundupe are
(See ALIEN, P .. e A%)
recovery rate until thme interest
rates come down," said Jerome
Baeeel. aaociate profeuor of fi-
nance at UCI and coordlnator 'Of
thef~.
Mortgage rat.ea might a1ao fall.
but prospective home buyers
~ to the more tolerable levels
of the '701, the buaine .. fore-
cut.er aaid.
Thia •marb the third year UC
economist• have met to 1lve
forecuta for the nation, state and
county. The paneU.ta wbo •poke
before county buatneumen ati
UCI included Baenl, Larry
Kimbel, director of economld
~-...... NEW DANCE STEP? -Venerable comedian Bob Hope
helped F1aruingo Road star Morgan Fairchild with her golf
swing during recent taping of Hope's upcoming NBC special,
"Stars Over Texas . ., At least that's what Hope said he was
doing.
Retarded housing
funds. running out
Thoe i1 run otn1 out tor a
group ~ to bowie famll1et
with mentally reiarded children
ln Irvine.
If an extension la not granted,
feden1 tunct. may be bl Satur-
day for a Housing and Urban
Development program detigned
to provide an alternative to in-
stitutional care.
In 1980, the Sutton Founda-
tion, a non-profit group that
1eeka homea for the develop-
mentally disabled, received
$750,000 ln HUD grants to build
homes on three altea In Irvine.
Under the program. the f ounda-
tion would provide matc hing
funds to construct the apeclally
desUEned units.
The homes would be occupied
by couples with three WU'elated
children in each hat:llehokt. The
foundation preferred the sit.es be
located in different residential
tractl.
But the Irvine Company,
which was asked by the founda-
tion to locate three alt.es, haa been
unable to find builders for the
homes. The «rant specifies new
construction and-the Irvine
Company owns virtually all new
land to be developed.
According to Irvine Aaaiatant
City Manager Paul Brady Jr .. the-
foundation can meet ill Saturday
deadline if it almply identifies
three sites for development.
Other alternatives, he taid, are
for HUD to grant an extenllion or
permit the group to purchase
exiaUng homes for remodifica-
tion.
"The builders I've talked to
have been u nwilling to go
throuff h sales of loll for theae
units,' Irvine Company senior
vice president Thomas Nielsen
told the City Council Tuesday
night. The council doem't have
power to carry out the founda-
tion 'a request, but asked for a
report bythe Irvine Company.
ln an interview, Nielsen said
the houalng lots already had been
committed to the builden prior to
the foundation request. The
builders had made specific plans
for the alt.es and apparently did
not want to ''take on the burden"
(See RETARDED, Pa1e A!)
models for UCLA's Bu1lne11 J'orecutina Project, and David
Shulman. a UC JUveniide econo-
mist. ''Oranae County looka a little
better tlian the •tate and a lot
better than the nation M a whole
but that hlttorically ha• been
true,'' Nld Baeael. "But hilh
hoUllnl prioel ln Oranae County
are making this an unattractive
place and are a1owtna down job
arowth."
The forecuten predicted morteaae rat.ea will hover around
the current average of 15.7 pe"-
cent. The rat.el are expected to
droo to 15 percent ln 1983 and
then another full percen
point by 1984.
The cott of home• ln t
county will me 3.2 penient
year. But when inflation ii•
naed ln, ,houllne pica 8ICWl1I will ahoW a 5 percent red
the forecuten said.
(See INTEREST, p ... Al) ' I
Irvine adniinistrators u
Trustees divided
on salary increas
Deaplte crltidsm from two of
itl memben and • claim the issue
WU improperly handled,_ the Ir-
vine Unified achool board Wed·
neaday approved a new salary
acbedule raising the pay of ad-
ministrators.
Trustees ratified the new sa-
lary plan on a 3-2 vote during a
private diacuaaion. The plan re-
p laces the d istrict'• former
system of providing rai8ea from a
merit pool
Trustee Gordon Getchel, who opJX*!d the plan, said today the
salary iltl.ie waa poorly handled.
"The entire diacuaaion was
held ln executive sesa.lon under
the gui9e that It was a penonnel
matter," he said. ''ln fact, no
d.i.8cuaaion about any one indivi-
dual was held at all.
''ln e11e1.:ie, we were making
policy decisions about the budget.
My feeling la the public should
have had 9CIDe input.''
Superintendent A . Stanley
Corey bad 1uggeated the new
aystelD, c1aimlna it WM needed W
ralle aalariea to levels comparable
with other d.istricta. He said the
pool ayttem didn't auffidently =:i the higb quality of the
··~ Getchel, however, ta.Id be be-
11 eve a the board tlmply
"rubber-stamped an admlnlstra-
tive propoea1 without thJnld.nc it
through.''
Another board member, John
Nakaoka. said today he opsx-d
the new plan because he is
"uncomfortable" throwing out
the previou1 arrangement. He
aaid the meri\ system should
have been redefilned inateec:I of
abandoned.
The new system goe. into ef-
fect Saturday and will booet pay
of 66 dist rict administrators
about 1 percent ~ tha rest
of the IChool year, said Delaine
Rlcha.r<U, auiatant superinten-
dent for pe.l'*)l'\De1 services.
Notln1 that the lowett ete-
. mentary principal pay hu been
$29,000, Richards said the plan
will give an immediate boost to
aome perlOl19 of aevera1 thouaand
dollart-while others will get $50
or $100 rai8ea.
Getchel said he th.l.n.ka the plan
will burden future school board
budgets because, "Practlcall'
every administrator in the dl;.
strict will be at the Uppe!" end of
the scale in a year."
-~ WAR ZONE -British Defen se Ministry a n nounce d:.
Wednelday total air and aea blockade around talkland la1andl
(inlet), and would consider planes on ground at Stanley Air-
port (located at arrows) as "hostile.'' .
Britain-rejects
U.N. peace bid
By 'ne AIMClaae4 Prea
Bot ear driver in cooler
Britain rejected today any new
approech to the United Natkinl to
aolve the Falkland Ialanda crilia
and said "the key to peace" lie
with Argentina. Araentina uraed
the Britilh to "use a mlnimwn of IOOd will" to avoMI war. BJ JmiF PARD!R or .... .,.., .......
Sometimel luck la the belt de-/
tective.
Juat Mk David F. Sbdnnan.of
SunnYme.d, who w• llttin& in
Oraqe County jail today alter
hit arre.t Wedne8day afternoon
on 1u1plclon of auto theft. A
ffi&bway Patrol officer al'l'9ted
him In Irvine after a 120-mph
chMe.
Sbennan. 24, walked into Nero
Moton of W~ Wednet-
day at Mlout 12:30 p.m. md Mked
to te.t drive a ttlver 1974 CQr-
NATION
•
Vette, the CHP reported.
Salesman Brant Tellinaer got
behind the wheel and 1ave
Shennan a brief tour of the dty.
When the inter9t.ed buyer Mked
to drive the Corvette himself,
•reatncer reportedly got out of
the car and Sherman aot on the pa and tped away.
An hour later, Sherman drove
inio Newport Importa on Cout
Hl1hway in Newport Beach,
where he tDld .....,, Jlln Q.-
rd y th at t he Corvette •Imply
wun't the cu be wanted and
would tiadi it in to get a Feran1
308, priced at ~.ooo.
But Newport Imports owner
Lee West, not sure of what the
car• .. value was, aot on the phcae
and called h1a friends at -you
~it -Nero Moton to find
a good price. When he de9cribed
the Corvette, the Nero Moton
people put two and two topther
and came up with one ltolerl car.
But the tUlpeet WU cone by
the time W..t ht.ma up.
At 3 p.m., CHP Offtcer Bnace
Lian •potted the Corve«e h•·
COUNTY
ding north on the San Diego
Freeway at Alida Parkway. A.
he moved ln behind it to verify
the J>latea, the Corvette tped
north at 120 mph.
Officer Lian an~ au1pect
Sherman then raced tJlrouCh the
Sand Canyon exit and Into the
Oranp County Tranait Dtatrtct
Maintenance Yard, where \hey
chued, bumped, llDllCked lnto
..:b oet.. twice md finally ....
to re9t with &he tu.peet llartq
down the ~ end of Lian'•
NYOlwr.
Prime Mini1ter Margaret
'nlatcher noted ln an emer11ncy
debat.e ln the HOUie of Commom
in London that the United Na-
dona puled a n!IOl.udon caUJnc
on Ar"9fttlna to withdraw troos-
fr om tbe Falkland•, rnva.-it
April 2.
''If that r.olutkln were to be
implemented, there would M
wry few zr= left ln relatkln to the,.. , ........... lbe .ad.
'"'lben mn be no doubt where
the lnkan•il •DC• llee in thi•
........ 'l'be Uy to ,_,. ii ln Che
~ i I
.,
I '
Orange. Cout OAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Aprtl 29, 1982
-----------.---~------------------.-----------------------------------------------------------
l FALKLAND I SLANDS . • •
: a Forel1n Mlnl1try aource aald
the American propoul wu 1ub-
1tantially unchan1ed from the
: lut one the junta n~.
} In London, Britain'• announ-
• cement that It wu extend.lna Its
IN blockade of the FalklandS to ! air traffic at dawn Friday was C,.u the deadline for dlplo-
• But British mHltary sources
• II.Id the uaault "probably would
: await the arrival in two or three
daya of patratroop reinforce-
' men ts being flown to join the t 1,500 Royal Marines with the
Brttl.ah war fleet.
As of WednHday night, the
State Department had received
no resporue from Briiatn or Ar-
gen tlna to Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig'• latest peace
proyosals.!. said U.S. officiala.
~tate LJeparlment 1pokesman
Dean Fisher said Haig wu pre-
pared to resume hia shuttle bet-
ween Buenos Airet and London·
if that would help. The United
States believes the situation la at.
a "critical stage." The time for
diplomacy Is "very, very short,"
said Fisher.
t1NTEREST RAT ES ... ,
1 The hl&h cost of housing is f expected to tum away potential
I businesae1 from relocating ln the
county. And there actuafly may
be an exodus of assembly-line
w.orkers to the "new Orange
counties of the '80s'' in Bakers-
field, Fresno, Riverside, San
Bernardino and other inland
i?ocations, the economists said.
''There are many people who
would like to buy a home, but
just can't make the payments,"
l3aesel said. "Prices will drop for
es. but that will make
e County more competitive
we it will attract new jobs."
The county unemployment
picture is expected to reach a
peak rate of 6.3 percent this year,
but will fall to 5.7 percent in 1983
and 4.9 percent in 1984. In 1981
4.7 percent of the labor force was
'Ol.lt of work.
· The availability of jobs will not
change much this year. However,
job growth will rise next year
and be boosted by 5.6 percent In
1984.
High housing prices and limi-
ted sites for new construction are
expected to add to the dee.line in
residential building permits.
Orange County reached a peak of
30,500 pennits in 1976. 'fhts year
the forecast calls for only 8,500
permits. The outlook ap~ to
improve fri the next few years.
·With 12,300 pennits in 1983 and
13,600 in 1984 seen by the UC
team.
"When the economy picks up,
Orange County will pick up, but
it will not go back to the good
days of the '70s," Baesel said.
"Happy days are not here again.
"I think we aren't going to be
worse off: we're going to be a
little better off because of the
(federal income) tax break in
July," he added.
:ALIEN ROUNDUP. . •
dividing families; attacking the
dignity of workers; resulting In
"flagrant" violations of indivi-
dual rights, and discriminating
~_Bains~ one ethnic group, the
ttµiparucs.
"They (the raids) are racially
inspired,'' Deck claimed. "If In-
deed, the INS were interested In
saving good jobs for citizens then
It should go after the hundn!ds of
thousands of Canadian and
European undocumented work-
ers who do have better jobs. Why
this inconsistency?''
The American Friends Service
Committee said it had received
Information from sources within
the INS that other Orange
County raids were planned In
Santa Ana, Orange and Fuller-
ton.
The committee didn't specify
exactly where the raids were
anticipated, other than to say
they would focus on "Industrial
areaa."
RETARD ED HOUSING .. •
of, designing special homes for
\t)eir production series of units,
... said.
Other land, Nielsen added, haa
not been subdivided into legal
lQts. H e said the foundation
.Ugbt be able to purchase custom
Jots.
Irvine Company attorneys are
looking into alternatives to HUD
guidelines, he said.
But council members Larry
Agran and Mary Ann Gaido said
the builders' unwillingness to
make three exceptions to their
plans smacked of diacrimination.
"I think it would be a serious
falling on all of the parties In-
volved including the City oC Ir-
vine if we slammed the door on
these folks," Agran said.
Ms. Galdo said she was "sad"
and "embarrassed" by the situa-
tion.
Standard ln<le• ol 511 lo the S11n1a
Clarita. Sen Fernando. San Oa·
1><iet and Pomona Valleys " we11 aa 1n Rlve<lld• and San Betner-
Coasial·
Partly cloudy tllls aflernoon
d•no
The PSI wl" be 42 everywhere
elM
Extended
forecast
· U Wltepfloto
JANE HOBBLED -Academy Award-winning actress Jane
Fonda was on crutches Wednesday as she headed for a pro-
Equal Rights Amendment press conference in Los Angeles.
She hurt her leg in a workout four weeks ago, then re-injured
it skiing in Utah.
Recruiting probe
clears Edison High
By ROBERT BARKER
of the Deify Pltet Staff
A state administrative law
judge found no evidence of Im -
proper recruiting of football
players by Edison High School
Coach Bill Workman or by
anyone else employed at the
Huntington Beach .chool.
The lindingll were announced
Wednesday at a press conference
called by School Superintendent
Frank "Jake" Abbott.
They followed three days oC
cloeed hearlno early this month
in which Jolin A. WlUd of the
State Office of Administrative
Hearings questioned 40 people
under oath.
"It needs to be said loudly and
clearly that the administration
and coaches are honest and ethi-
cal and we are proud to have
them." Abbott declared.
"The caae ts cloeed. We'll not
run after our t.af!a any more."
Workman, who coached the
F.diaon Chargers to 32 victories In
their lut 33 aames, said Wed-
nesday he was bitter but not
surpriled.
Fire damages
Anaheim faces:
·Stiit by 1,000
A potentJal cl.ua action law1uit
that aeeka UOO million In da-mages -or $100,000 for each of
the 1,000 ~ple left homeless by
lut week 1 devastattna Anaheim
flreetonn -WU filecf Wednetld-
ay uainat the City of Ana.helm.
Alto named u defendants In
the Orange County Superior
Court suit were South~rn Cali-
RELATEQ Pq0T9-A5
fornla Edison Co. and nine
apartment owners, developers
and managers whose buildings
were destroyed_ by fut-moving
flames tn the early morning
hours of April 21.
More than 50 buildings were
gutted by the wind-driven blaze,
fncludtng 524 apartment units in
a four-.quare bfock area near the
intersection of Ball Road and
Euclid Avenue. Damage esti-
mates h,Jve been placed at about
$50 rnilllon. .
Initiating the legal action in
Santa Ana were Anthony Nunes,
26, and hl1 wife Cynthia, 24,
former residents of the Palm
Villa apartment complex on 1230
S. Euclid Avenue. Their apart-
ment and all their belongings -
valued at $6,000 -we re de-
stroyed.
The couple alao filed a claim
agal.nat the clty, a ltep rt!qu.ired
in leaal actlon1 agaln1t public
agenctes.
Santa Ana attorney Jerrold A.
Bloch, who represents the couple,
said the lawsuit wu filed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellen routed f.rom
thelr residences. M09t. of the fire
vtcttm1 lost all their belongings
and had no renters Insurance.
Bloch said the court must offi-
cially certify the legal action as a
clan action suit before tenants
other than the N uneses can be(
eligible for settlement benefits, if
any.
Anaheim city spokesman 'Jena
Groee said officials tl1c::1t! had no
comment on the matter since
they had not seen the lawsuit.
"We want to prevent a tragedy
lilCe this from happening again,"
Cynthia Nunes said. "Our lives
have been devastated at this
point," she said. Mrs. Nunes is
seven months pregnant.
The lawsuit, Bloch said, alleges
there was negligence in the con-
struction, placement and mainte-
nance of electrical power trans-
mission lines near where it is
believed the blaze broke out.
Family workshops
s et in Irv ine
Irvine may have achieved
the ultlmate in planning for
any eventuality in its choice
of two "All in the Family"
free workshops scheduled
this month at Deerwood
Community Park.
For couples who find it's
more interesting to watch
television than each other, or
that the family dog is more
•An aerobic dancing class
for teen-agers is scheduled
from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
every Saturday In May by
Irvine city Youth Services
program.
Admission is $2 for the en-
empathetic and friendly than
their spouse, help is in sight
at the "Avoiding Burnout in
Your Marriage" workshop
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
If this one doesn't work. no
time is lost in dealing with the
unfortunate but probably in-
evitable upshot. "Coping
With Divorce" is offered just
two weeks later on May 18 -
same time and location.
tire month o f classes to be
held at Heritage Park Youth
Services Cent.er, 4601 Walnut
Ave., Irvine.
Regi.stratioo infonnation is
available by calling 754-3814.
Lock box blamed
Irvine burglary • 1n
, H1g11S 64. to ea at ttoe belleMs and
87 to 72 In th• Inland areas
W"terly winds lo 25 mpll Low qloudt tonight with lows In Ille
501. Low ctouds continue Friday
rnomlng, becoming fair and p8f11y
1unny In 1111 afternoon Hlgll1
l=riday 611 to 75 Hunllngton·
Newpor t are• camperetures renge from a lllgll 01 115 lo a low
of SI!.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AREAS -Night end mornino low
clouds 1n 111e contal and valley
areu 0111erW11e lak Lbc:elly win-
dy 1n the mountains HIQlll In lhe
coastal areas 115 10 75 wlltl lows 45 10 55 Mountain resort hlglls
54 lo 6' wit II IOWI 32 lo <I 2
.. " ~ ~ :..:::._ .. "I knew what the results
would be before the investiga-
tion. The re.ults are no aurprile,"
Irvine police said today they. monly used by real estate agents.
suspect that a burglar who stole A house key is stored inside a.he
$1,500 in jewelry from a Turtle box, and only the agents are
Rock home thla week gained suppoeed to have keYJ to the box.
entry through a real estate lock No agents had shown the
box mounted on the exterior of house on the day of the burglary,
the home. he said, and no signs of forced
The daytime theft of a diamo-entry were apparent.
nd necklace and earrings from \. Lock box burglaries are not
the home waa reported to police new to Irvine. Lennert said a
Wedne9d.ay. suspect was arrested lHt year
\he•"" J.•n1 •"'"'" 0Hlt;4•4
o:mtm ---=== ·v.s. summ ary 41
39
20 40 . 21
61
39 .oe
59 .01
43 62
63
2t 33 .17
32 ,, ·" 59
l!O .... 42
" .48
he aald. ·
Workman, head coach since
1973, aald he hu been "d.analed
like a piece of meet for everyone
to ahoot at."
Lt. Robert Lennert said the and charged with about 100 such
buralarfzed home is up for sale. burglarlea throughout Orange
Loclt boxes, he added, are com-County .
otlief 1s $Jag !iJrawiD
Sign up for a chance to have'
a fully catered take out gourmet dinner
\ for Yourself, your Mom, Wife or maybe even Grandma;
\.,\-.enough for a family of four from Showley-Wrightaon.
You need
• drawing will take piece
Friday May 7th and
the winner will 0.
notifMld by
/ • phone that ~Y·
•
~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, April 29. 1982
I
:·Cook-off was hBrdly
.
'family recreation '
Now that the South Coast
Chili Championships are history
and the dust has settled a bit on
the festive site at Irvine's Bommer
Car,iyon, it might be well for
sponsors and participants to pon-
der the ~neandcon~ntof the
cook-off.
It should be noted that the
day of cook-off festivities could be
fairly considered a success, in
terms of dollars taken in for the
Irvine Educational Found~tion
and the explorer unit of the Irvine
Police Department. This result in~
deed placed the cook -off in a
positive light.
There were, however, some
negatives that might well require
review by the sponsors.
The chili cook-off was billed
as a family kind of day with fun
and games for a ll. Some of the
entertainment, commentary and
antics that prevailed throughout
the afternoon, however, would be
more fairly characterized as "adult
entertainment.''
-Plainly put, as the afternoon
wore on, some of the hijink.s got
pretty raunchy.
Now, we don't want to sound
blue-nosed about all this. It is well
understood how other chili cook-
offs have developed as an oppor-
tunity for team participants and
spectators alike to sort of let thelr
hair down. This has been the or-
der of the day, for example, in
pas t chili cook-offs he ld at the
Balboa Bay Cub in N e wport
Beach. The people who show up
know pretty much what to expect.
If in future years, however,
the Irvine affair follows the same
pattern, we would suggest lt
might be best that it not be pro-
moted as a family picnic. Some
people who took their children to
Bommer Canyon were rather sor-
ry they did so.
Either the character of the
event should be modified in future
years or Irvine's chili cook -offs
should be billed as for mature
audiences only.
Design will be key
The Irvine Company's plan to
locate new neighborhood sh opping
cente rs adjacent to busy streets
rather than tucking them inside
clustered villages signals a major
change for Irvine.
If the concept is approved, it
means the main arterials which
until now have remained fairly
pleasant to drive could be impac-
ted b y more traffic-garbling
driveways and view-spo iling
storefronts.
The degree of change, howe-
ver, will depend on how well the
company and the city can come up
with plans t hat reflect the com-
munity aesthetics so n icely ac-
complished in the clustered cent-
ers.
Both company and city offi-
cials have found problems with
the past theory of burying shop-
ping centers within villages. Al-
tho ugh the system pro vided
charm, the centers don't generate
much shopper traffic. Thus, mer-
c hants don 't fare as w ell, the
company can't get the lease in-
come it would like and the city
doesn't earn the sales tax officials
hoped for.
Meanwhile. the big Heritage
Plaza shopping center located at
the busy intersection of Culver
Drive and Walnut Avenue has
become the leading center in sales
whiJe lacking the contribution to
community aesthetics made by the
village centers.
(Irvine Company executives
can only look with envy at that
center's business. They don't own . it).
So the d ilemma arises. Is it
better to put a shopping center on
a busy street where more people
will find it or continue with a
more refreshing atmosphere but
smaller profits and smaller sales
\ax income for the city?
With Heritage Plaza as a
precedent, there is a strong case
for locating some new centers
along major streets. But city offi-
cials should not approve this basic
change in planning philosophy
without carefully thought through
design standards that minimize
traffic congestion and maximize
aesthetics.
Business aid costly
Irvine, with its two major in-
dustrial complexes, prime South-
ern California location and mild
climate, seems the last place that
would need to offer special tax-
exempt bonding to attract ne w
industry.
But just as universities get
pulled into the outrageous compe-
tition to recruit young athletes, so
do cities such as Irvine wind up
offering perks to ensure that bu-
sinesses will settle w ithin their
boundaries, adding jobs, money
and taxes.
Irvine's Industrial Develop -
projects can qualify {or financing.
By transferring authority to the
city's charter, howe ver, a wider
range of industrial, commercial
and even retail businesses could
qualify for bonds. The switcti, fi-
nancial analysts say. would give
the city the flexibility officials
sought initially to attract new bu-
sinesses.
Since January, the city has
spent an estimated $5,655 in staff
and legal costs to administer its
new program. In the same time, it
has received $2,500 in processing
fees from two businesses, Subaru
of America Inc. and Republic
Electronics, interested in becoming
the first to add plants in Irvine
through the bond program.
. ment Authority is not a year old,
but it already is experiencing
growing pains as city leaders de-
termine whether its eoope should
be expanded to allow a wider
range of business a'nd industry to With more activity, city offi-
aa:ept tax-exempt bonds to build cia.IB may realize a need to lncreue
new facilities. fees to more accurately oover their
Under state law authorizing costs or they may find that staff
the tax-exempt bond program, time will become more efficient as
only a few kinds of industrial more applications are ~rooe..ed. . --.
Opinions expressed II) the spac'e above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ••-'
pressed on this pao• are those of their authors and lllrtlsts. Readet\commen~ Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9'1626. Phone <714)
642-4321.
L.M .. Hoya/ Acting tric~
February, J:wo~ throw ~
ba1la wttb ptndll, bandl, ttrwtdan· c.. and much to drink. Claim Ill the
MIM of Iba& p&llCI pYe UI OUI' word .,... ...
MaJH J OU didn 't know mo1t ....................... .
•
'l'M mPAR'ED TO .GOThE txr~ MILE ... / SAID THE ~f P£NT
Tax system demands reform
NEW YORK -Lewis Lehrman, a
candidate for the Republican nomination
for.governor of New York, issued a state-
ment on his income taxes last week. He
does pretty well -hia money comes
from a family-owned drugstore chain -
and hia 1981 income (adjusted gross in-
come) was li!ted as $920,651.
THAT, ACCORDING to my plodding
calculations, fu~~ him in the 50 percent bracket, the · est income tax bracket.
After all, according to the laws and re-
gulations governing the Internal Reve-
nue Service, every dollar earned over
$60,000 is taxed at 50 percent on a joint
return. Right?
Wrong. Lew Lehnnan, whose honesty
is unquestioned, was in the 13 percent
bracket last year. He ~id $121 ,706 In
federal income taxes on that income of
almost $1 million.
Lehrman's income, according to his
statement, came from a salary of $76,626,
dividends of $672,006, interest income of
$71,626 and capital gains of $236,358. He
had enough deductiona and credits to cut
his tax to a lower rate than the l4 per-
cent paid by a salaried employee who
earns $100 a week.
Not bad for a guy who lists h is n et
worth at $24,827,339.
But then the tax "laws" -that almost
indecipherable code of laws, regulationa,
rulings, precedent.a and int.erpretatioM
-a re not bad for any American who
gets his money in any way other than a
regular paycheck complete with with-
holding. Honestly (loopholes) or disho-
n estly (hidden income), the r ich are
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~-~
1'i .. RICHARD RllVIS
gemng richer than you would guess in a
country with a progres&ve income tax.
In !act, without consulting Lehnnan's
law~ers and accountants, I would guess
that he could have paid even less tax if
he really wanted to push through more
loopholes. Like many affluent Amer-
icans, he may have decided to pay some
more that he had to -either because
one believes everyone should pay some
arguably fair share or because one would
like to minimize the chances of being
audited. Some of the big guys just pay
zero income taxes -Ronald Reagan in
the past was one example.
The "progressive" income tax -
"aoak.lng the rich," the rich have called it
since Karl Marx proposed it in 1847 as par: of the Conununist Manifesto -just
Wl't working the way it was supposed to.
There jult don't .eern to be enough nch
people -or people making good money
are damnably good at hidJng income. Of
the 93.6 million 1980 tax returns filed,
only 547,590 reported adjusted grm1a
above $100,000. The total number above
$50,000 was under 2.6 million. Of $284
billion paid m taxes that year by indivi-
duals, $37 .9 billion -less than 15 per-
cent -was paid by the members of
over-$100,000 rammes.
That total of $284 billion was paid by
au taxpayers on total reported adjusted
gross income o f $1.6 trillion. So, the
average income tax rate for all Amer-
icans was something like 17 percent.
Which means that if ther e were a
smgle-rat.e mrome tax ( .. unprogrelSive'')
and the current level of federal income
were maintained, each taxpayer would
pay 17 pe rcent of his or her adjusted
gross. which is more than Lew Lehrman
pays now. If deductions and credits wett
eliminated at the same time, the single
rate would drop toward 10 percent.
SOMETHING LIKE a single rate, or a
"zero-base" reform of the tax system,
has to be considered -now. Becauae the
rich can so easily avoid progressive
taxation, the poor and everyone else are
now doing it too. That's what the un-
derground economy 1s a ll about these
days.
Americans have always paid taxes re·
latively willingly. We thought tht
system was essentially fair. No more.
Eventually U.S. must support Britain
were raiM!d for that purpoee.
U they only care about their own pets,
what kind of pet owners are they?
I do not wish to be cured of a disease
or have pain diminished because some
MAILBOX
medication or procedure was di.soovered
by torturing animals.
Much of the animal testing today is
unneceaaary, and much of the pain in-
fiided on anlmala ln the name of testing
is unjustifiably .evere.
Instead of enacting laws to let animals
other than your own be tortured, why
not pass laws to require unannounced
inspection of th~ experimental labs?
J . COLLINS
T EL E PHONE YOUR .
LETTE R TO THE E DITOR
See instr uctions below
CommiUees h elp
To the Zd.itor: >.. a former board member and presi-
d.nt of tht Irvine Rench Water Diatrict,
I found the comm.lttee IYltem an lnva·
luable tool enabll"I me to ltUdy complex
technical and fi1eal matters in depth. n-~ permlu.d tborouab ..
CUllloo of alternate,..,... with all of
the di1trlct 1td t 1"f0i ved in the
dr.Wan-meldnc .....-. .
l ..... that lt la 1JDproper to dilC\m
pbJlolophical, IOCial or environmental mai.w or ~ which ~ pl'Opie-
tary or tpKla1 1n...-ll'OUP9 In a com-
mltta ....UU,. ~ OD pol.J.cy OI
deala Weft not l1Ulde behind doeed doon.
Oclnlmltiee meetlnll were ldledu.led and
opm '° the public.
•
a ttend long board rneetingll.
The Irvine Ranch Water District a. a
utility responsible for providini reliable
tervice in a timely manner at reunnable
ooet to meet the needa of the community
as detennined by governmental...-. Board actJons consist primarily ol __._
ting the best of aeveral feMlble alterna-
tives and providing letidenhlp to ...,.
effective management of the d1strfe&'s
planning, construction and operatinf
responsibill ties.
ORVILLE REINHABI1f
Threat to freedo m
To the Editor:
Four Orange Coast College profemon
found TV courses for college credit were
not comparable to classroom work and
were an inequality.
These professors took the time and
effort to voice their opinions. TheCr
higher authorit y, District Chancellor
Norman Watson , threatened thne pro-
fessors for their effort.a and what I aee
rather as concern for our community
which showed courage.
Taking a st.and on an issue and wk'ing
a n op inion has too often resulted In
threats and actions by thcee in control.
To feel Cree and worthwhile is lo.t.na , ..
meaning in America.
U these men are PWUahed then free.
dom does not exist. "People ln au\hottty
should not uae their power to equeleh the
voices of thoee ln the same area of wod&
or member• of the same free co,un&r)'.
Subeervience leads to alavery where the
powerful show their corruption. .
CHARLES L . HOELI>l:RUN
Protesters
' . : I
i -· . .,, •• wi1~jli;id'Ai: _:.,;r •. ~ ~ ...
Delly Not "'°40 bJ lM .. .,M
RAISING FUNDS -M ick ey Mouse and
5-year-old Christy Mitchell, poster child of the
Leukemia Society of America, Tri-County
Chapter, get ready for a dive. The society will
hold its first annual Super Swim Classic in 10
Orange County pools May 8 to raise funds.
Prizes will be awarded to swimmers based on
amounts of money raised. For information, call
539-9511.
Federal tax
bite growing
By Tiie Associated Pre11
A hypothetical family of four with an income
of $25,000 faces a federal tax bill of almost $7 ,000
for lhe current fiacal year, a study shows.
The figures come from the Tax Foundation
Inc., a non-profit research group ln Washington,
D.C., which keeps track of taxes Americans pay.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
federal budget and calculate how the government
spends an individual taxpayer's dollars, using a
hypothetical family with one working ipouse, two
children and an annual income near the median for
all U.S. families.
There are lots of numbers involved, bur it's
worthwhile to wade through them to learn where
your money goes.
For the last.est study, the economists used a
family with an annual income c1f $25,000. They
found that such a family would have a federal tax
bill of $6,916 for fiacal 1982 -the year that bej{an
Oct. l . li'ederal income taxes would account for $2,-
771 of the tax bill, Social Security for $1,675 and
indirect taxes like exciJle levle1 and corporate in-
come for $2,470.
Five years ago, the eoonomista U9ed a family
with an income of $15,000 and found that such a
family had a federal tax bill of $3,975. Federal in-
come taxes accounted for $1,459; Social Security
taxn for $878; and indirect taxes for $1,635.
In 1977. the federal tax blll for the lower-
lncome family equaled 26~ percent of income; for
1982, the federal bite on the higher-income family
WU 28 percent. '
The hypothetical income level used for the
cakUlationa was lncreued 66 percent between 1977
and 1982, allowing for an lncreaae in earnings of
more.than 10 percent a year. That produced an
lncreaae ln the tax bill of 7 4 percent. Income levies
accounted for 37 pe1ce11t t>f the tax bill ln 1977 and
40 percent ln 1982; Social Security taxes accounted
for 22 percent in 1977 .vs. 24 percent in 1982; and
indirect taxes aooounted for 41 percent in 1977 and
36 percent in.., 1982.
Most people think of taxe1 in terms of the
calendar year -from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
economista baaed their calculations on the fiscal
year -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -slnoe that is the
period used by the government for budgetary pur-
poees.
The biggest chunk of the money -then and
now -goes for what ls called income lecWity, in-
cludiq Social Securlty payment.I, welfare benefita,
· etc. Income aecurlty accounted for about 32 percent
of the family'• tax blll ln 1977 and about 33 percent
in 1982.
National defen1e was the teCOl'ld bluest apen-
diq category in both years. It account.ea for 33 ~
percent ol the tax 'bill in 1977 and Ju-t under 25
pmlllll today.
1bere have been llilfta in other atea1 of ~
dtn1 ovec-the past five year1. Intere1t ori the
nati.onal debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
family'I tax bill ln 1977 and WU in fourth place,
Todaf, interelt la ln third place, accounting for 13
~t of the tax bill. .
llealtb. wbkh wu third on the Ult five yee.n
..... .Upped to fourth p1-ce; in both 1977 and
1882 It accounted for a little more than 9 percent of
the tax bill.
ID dollar t.emw, 1ncome leCUrlty accounted for
$1,281 of the tax bW in urn and $2,291 today, an.
of '78 penwnt. Th6 deten. portion of the tax bill
wmti tram '"4 to $1, 712, up 83 percent. and the
la~ portion went from '363 to $905, up 156
... & ...
OrMQe 00Mt DAILY PILOTIThurtday. April 29, 1982
Hefner passes tOr~h
Daughter new Rlayboy president
CIUCAGO (AP) -Ch.rtsde !Ufner,
28, dauabter of Hu1h Hefner, baa
been named pre1ldent oJ Playboy
EnterjJriw Inc.
• 0 Htivtnc worked at policy levell in
many .,.... of the company, Christie
hall oenalnly been well prepared for
ttu. move," her father, ch.let execut.ive
officer, Mid Wectn.day.
M1. Hefner hu been a corporate
vice president at Playboy four years.
The direct manaaement of Playboy
Enterpriles will be under the control
of Ml. Hefner and Marvin L . Huston,
executive vke prelldent.
Rates%
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75
13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75
12.50
12.25
12.00
11.75
· 11.50
11.25
11.00
10.75
10.50
10.25
Ma. Hefner will ,..., dJ.rectly to
her father.
"Our flnt tuk ii to complete the
tranlltlon Of Playboy from a broedly
bued corporadon to a dearly fOCUMd
communJcationt company," Mid Mt.
Hefner. "In addition to itl ~ful
magazine publl1bln1 bu1lne11 and
entrance into the lucrative P9Y cable T A It E S O V E R _
bultnetl, Playboy a1lo hu profit op-Ch i t I H t portunlt.1'9 by capltaliz1ni on the va-r 1 e e ner is
Jue of ttl name throuah mapzine and n e w pres 1 den t o f ~ .. ~t ce n1ing •J?d clu b ~yboy Enterprises
vs.
Ready Access and
Money Market Fund Yields
Dinosaur deaths
tied to cataracts
LONOON (AP) -Eye cataract.I mi&}lt have
wiped out many of the 800 1peciel of dinouW'I that
roamed the earth until about 65 mlWon B.C., ac-coC'dlna to L.R. Croft, a Salford Unlvenlty bloJoclR.
Varloul theories have been put forth for the
demlle of the .ll"e8t creatures, which were belleved
cold-blooded like modem reptiles. But Croft aug-
aesta they died out becal.19e their eye. lacked die
proteln to make them reslltant to an lncreue In
IOlar radiation.
In his new book "The Last Di.nolaW"I." Croft
said the 1pecie11 that disappeared flnt did not de-
velop a thickening of the brow of the eye IOCket or
10me other protection, 1uch aa a horny erst bet-
ween the eyes.
10.00.___.__._ __ ~...__,__.___.~_._-'-__._~...._--_.___,,~"'---'--'---"~"'---'----'---J
-2 2 ~ a 2 ~ ~ o ~-~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ •o - - - - - - --
-...... ~ N ~ ~ N ~ ~ N ~ -~ N ~ ~ 0 -N N 0 --N 0 0 -N 0 0 -...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
N N N N - - --N N N N ~ ~ ~
Ready Access was design e d to beat the
money funds ... and it does! The m oney
funds may-think it's almost '"'un(air com-
petition," because of its unique combination
of features : insu red sa fety, easy
accessibility, and high money-market
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and see
if you don't agree.
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above sho ws, a person who
o pened a Ready Access account last fall, on
October 10, would have earned a guaran-
teed yield of 14.468% for the following
26-week period . Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%, it dropped to
a low of 11.8%-and averaged only 13.5%· for
the same period. That put the average
money fun~ yield almost a full percentage
point below Ready Access. When you look
Anaual Effective VleW-•
13 • 63'3 DA. r.~um
-- --
No
at the track record. Ready Access has a
decided edge.
Easy Access
When you open your account; you get a spe-
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, Sl,000 or
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have to do is write a check for at least
$500-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds, provided the account is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account is
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
M oney fund investments are not insured.
And, as an article i n the Wall Street
Journar points out, the risk ofmoney funds
increases as short-term interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance Requirement
Only $5,000 is needed to open a Ready
Access account. And there is virtually no
minimum balance rcquireme~maintain
the account.
semces
An interest·earnin• checking account is
otrcred each Ready Xcccu account holdcr-
/ree »f monthly service charges. And this
opens the door to 24-HOUR TELLER
(ATM) service as well as TELE-PAY", the
unique service that allow~ regufar monthly
bills to be paid with a telephone call. No
mo ney fund provides so many specia l
services.
Convenience
. With 100 offices thro ughout Cali fornia
(soon to be expanded to 145) the Associa-
tion is easily accessible for a variety of
services-from making deposits and with-
drawals to cashing checks, using a safe de-
posit box, obtaining money orders or trav-
elers checks. applying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
CALL THE FINANCIAL LINE
(714) 231-4023
Call Direct or Collect
...... tUl9; ....
Get furlher information, the answers to
your questions, or arrange an appoint·
menl wilh a Money Managemcnl
Specialisl al any Association office ...
a nd do il all by phone, simply by.calling
our Financial Line.
Or .. Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurtday, April 29, 1982
AP Wlreplloto
DINOSAUROID DISPLAY -A model of a
tooth less, snake-eyed creature will be d is-
played at the Canadian ~ational Museum of
Natu ral Sciences as to how dinosaurs ~ouJd
have evolved if they had not become extinct.
According to an ar ticle in lhe May issue of
Omni, the 4-foot-tall creature would have be~
come a dominant life form on earth if a catas-
trophe had pot destroyed the dinosaur.
)ob-,hunting
program told
By JOY~E L. KENNEDY
It's too soon to tell If this year's market for
college aeruors is softer than it was in the mid-'70s.
Take steps: -IMMEDIATELY VISIT YOUR school's
career center and placement office. Enroll
an Its job-hunt programs. George Muon UnJvenity
in Fairfax, Va., for instance, is conducting a seminar
on "How to J ob Hunt Without Going Crazy."
Support groups meet on campus each week. Il your
college has no such program, can you start one?
-; DEVOUR BOOKS THAT TEACH job--search
strategy and tactical maneuvers.
CIRllRS
-USE ALL AVAILABLE REFERENCES for
job leads, Including a close daily reading of your
newspaper for new company openings, late-
brtaking developments and help-wanted ads. Your
campua career center or.school library should have
a copious collection of such references as The Col-
lege Placement Annual, the Career Opportunity
Index, Peterson's guides, Gale's Encyclopedia of
Associations, the National Trade and Professional
Associations directory, the '82 Changing Times an-
nual survey of jobs for college graduates and a raft
of other books with titles that suggest "where the
jobs are." ""
-DO NOT EXPECT YOUR school to do It all.
Take the initiative. Contact employers. Register
with private emplor,ncnt agencies; even if you pay
a fee tor a job. you ll be money ahead over months
of unemployment. Read trade journals for stories '
and help-wanted ads in your field.
-NOW THAT VIDEO CAMERAS are com-
mon, do a dress rehearsal of your interviewing
skilh. Stress business-related course, internships
and working experience. P roject your belief in
work first, play later.
-UNLESS YOU ARE IN a major such as
~ngineering, computer science, accounting or fi-
nand.al management, your gloomiest days are apt to
be between now and fall. By then, many non -
technical fV8duates will have found jobs and com-
petitlqn ahould diminish. You may want to use the
lean months to obtain short-term training to make
you i;nore hireable. Examples: typing, word pI'OC.'8-
slng, budget1ng, understanding financial state-
menla, eaies techniques.
-CONSIDER A SURVIVAL JOB. A woman
on the East Coast two years ago took a polition aa a
hotel ~terlJ\g office assistant -not her dream job.
Three jOb changes later, as di.rector of catering sales
for a l\.l>CUry hotel, she earns better than '40,000 per
yeM ..
READER NOTE: Writing your own rnume la
tou6J>er thMJ doing a fem> DaDer. Ckt uncJutta'ed
advice Jn Joyce Lain K~y'a boolcler. "ltesumes:
The Nltty'GGarll." It ia available IOI' $2.60 plU. a 40~t at.am , aeJJ~addretltltld, long whi~ enve-
lope. Mue c eckt pay•'"-to Sun l'MtUIW Inc. and
mail to: Re:tumet. Box 36llC. c.rdJlf noo1 ..
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
Public UtJUtiae Comm1lllon ha. made
IOIM Whopplna chanael ln <Alifornla
utility rate., but after bandyln& bll-
1.lonl of do1lan around, the net effect
on an averap monthlr bW apparently
Jt'lll be abOut $1 to '3 a month tor
l'llidenUal C\lltomel'I.
7he PUC aranted electric rate re-
duetionl Wednelday to&aUnc $1.5 bil-
lion a year for utilltles, but countered
that wlth incl'Mle9 ln the cost of na-
tural gu by $1.3 billlon a year.
The reductiona ln electric rates are
due mainly to lncreMed availability of
hydroelectric power from the unu-
sually we t winter. Paclflc Gaa &
Electric Co. eledric rats will go down
spred tt on Ille house
Glidden gon on "'Y· drln
quickly. Durable flat flnllh.
Resists busters. .,..11ng. lira' mildew. Eaey water c!Mn-
up. Reg. 17.99 GAL
..... , ,, .•.. ., .
Vaughan's profeealonal heevy duty beauty.
Forged and tempered eteel head. Ori~
nails with a vengeance. 240%. #506M.
• 22.25
I $750 mllllon a year and Southern
Callfomla Ecillon'• by $720 mi.Won a
year.
Thia would mean the typical PG&E
residential cuatomer ualnc 600 kUo-
watt houri per month wm ... a Je.65
drop ln a blll from $40.93 to $34.28
and Southern Cal Edl.on cuatomen
wltl rec~ve a reduction to $6.60 a
month from $43.55 to $38.~.
But PG&r1 ~ ratet wlll increw
$452 million and Southern Calltomla
Gu. Co. rata will r up $834 mUUon
annually, wlth $6 mllllon of that .
plaeed to San Dleao a.. and m.ctrtc
Co. in the tonn of wholelale lncreuel.
The 111 hlk.eS. resultina solely from
lncrn1e1 grant.id pa auppllen of the
flldaltlclly ............
Exterior spred le1ex glols House & Trim
paint from Glidden.
Goes on with .....
Oulek' drying. Alao recom· 11 •• mended for aluminum aiding.
Reg. 1Ut , GAL
utiUUee by the Federal Enerl)' ftelu-
latory Comml11toa, will mean •
PG&J: rw6dential cwtomer'• summer
bill for 60 lhennl ot pa wlll lncreue $3.~9 from $22.55 to •26.H . For the
wlnter, a family ualnl 106 thenna wW
aee a •&.16 hike, from $37.36 to $42.72.
Southern Calltomia Gu ttlfdentJal
aa• customers uatna 60 therm• a
month ln the summer will have a
$4.66 lncreaae from $19.62 to $24.28,
while ln the winter the cost for 100
thenna a month goes up $8.16 from
$31.~8 to $39.74.
For San Die10 Ga1 and Electric
residential cuatomera uling 60 thenns
the cost Increased $3.48 a month from
$23.:)5 to $27 .03, while ln wlnter the
user of 100 therms wlll be pa{lna
$5.70 more or t•6.8J lnatead o the
current $41. ll.
The PUC aald San Diego Gaa and
Electrlc"a el.ectrlc rate. will not be af-
fected by the changes. It found ope-
ra lions and expenses of the utility were reasonable and that current
rates should be maintained.
Joseph Bodovit~. PUC executive
director, attttsed that the changes are
on the basis of fuel costs onfy a nd
n~ the utilities 'tiave rate increase
requests pending baaed on other fac-
tors.
He also predicted electric rat.et will
remain relatively unchanged for the
rest of the year.
a grill for the
outdoor gourmet
~~~
frllJ 1rtaf ftlll I
Propane gas barbeque features heavy duty
contruction and high-domed lid. Tank in-
cluded. #9230 LP. Reg. 309.95.
26995 ·
feast JOUr eres. '
on this barbecue
Propane burning barbeque with tank. Easy to
clean stainless steel cooking grates. Durable
construction. #9240 LP. Reg. 369.95. ..
2999 ~
0•111 •f , ..... ..
True Tempert' Floral tool•. mini-cultivator
tGc .-.2. Hoe IGC-43, Shovel #GC-40. Ali
McCulloch # 140 gas chain saw features
2.0 cubic In. engine, muffler shield, safety
trigger. auto & manual bar & chain oiling have 4 foot handles. Reg. 6.29. 3"
EA. Rog.17999. .121•0
t
t
ll
I
I
I ,
I
I Chino prison ·heaa removed
'Firing follows probe into laxity scandal
' CHINO (AP) -The tu~i.
endent and chJef deputy at 0'1no
s&ate • prilon have been removed
from their po1t1 followlli! a · of laxity and 1pedal vi·
=for Inmate•, lnclud n1 a
convicted murderer, authorttJes
Midi
Superintendent Bertram S.
Grtaa. 61, who earoed hll place
in tfie •tate record bO<>u 11 Li':.': • by becom1n& the firlt
warden In the 1tate'1 penal
1yatem, wu replaced by Midge
A1IO relieved \n a cont1nl.lin1
9Candal WU Orfal' rt1ht-hand
man, Allociate SuperlnteQdent
Fred Cardona, 62.
The dilmlui k by Ruth Ru1hen, director of the 1tate
Department of Cornc:tiona, came
u a state Senate 1ubcommlttee
prepared to hold an inveltiptlon
ofmimnanaaementchargaatthe
California Men'• lnaUt\ltion at
Chino. Two other pNo.r\ offk:Ws
were affect.eel.
Ayala. D-Chlno, Mid.the invwd·
1at1on of lmproprtetie1 at the
prl8c:n would eo on next month. ••we want to pt to t.he bottom
e>f thl1," Ayala declared. "We
want to know what'• 1olnf -4D
with a murderer aettina all kinda
of aped.al prtvlleaea."
-....
..
Carroll, a 45-year-old uaoclate
1uperlntendent from the Sierra
Conservation Center In James-
town.
"They're belna removed be-
cau.e the investigation revealed
the ~lace iln't beinc run n,htt"
aald PhWp Guthrie, a IDOkeGnan
for the prbon system 1n Sacra-
mento.
lfe refefnd to complalntl that
Enrique Jaime Sandoval. convlc·
ted of a double murder ln 1971,
had been eteorted by CIM offl-
cera on 1hopptn1 trip•, had •
number of elective 1ur1enn in
outside holpitalt and WM given
private aleeptna quarten and his
own refrt1erator •tocked with
food. OONcRt'l'E STORAGE -Heavy equipment
oper•ton prepare the earth around a new
1.92-million·pllan reeervotr in Laguna Beach
for landacapina. The reservoir, focated be-
tween S~t Drive and Summlt Way, ahould
-~ ....,,.. ......... ;?
be completed next week. according to Lacuna
Beach County Water Diatrict official.I. The
t917 ,999 project is being completed by KEC
If appointed b~emor,
Mn. Carroll will the firlt
woman to run a men'• prt.on in
state hiltory. Meantime, state Sen. Rubin
FIND VDUR NAME
• 4 TICKETS WORTH $12
-ANO A VIA rlON FAIRE -
Saturday, May 8
8 a.m. to dusk
MILE SQUARE PARK
Fountain Valley
Adults $3.00 Chlldt-en $1.50
Undet 5 Fr ..
M~NING &AllOON RIDES • DISPLAYS
AIR SHOWS • ENTEJITAINMENT
Ayala al8o referred to reporta
that a number at pri8onen were
served T-bone 1teakt la1t Mo-
ther's Day. Construction of Corona. •
SPECIAL .FAN SALE
SUPER MOTHER'S DAY SPECIALS -QUOIZEL FANDELIER
N AL S
· LIGHTING FIXTURES, TRACK LIGHTING
FLOOR LAMPS, ETC. IN STOCK
SA VE UP TO 70%
TEMPERED CLEAR OL.All ea COlOR"'L l.ARTHEHWARE
RUFFLED OR PLAIN FRUrT BOWLS From Japan --~.-........ From Spain Dellghtfully bright, mold9d bowl•
hrfect *"· fOf ulada, aid•
groul)da fOf dl1h or fruit
the reputa coc:ktall. U-''""-'~,,.,"' of the Clay.
ONLY AT
Fountain Valle y Li£hting
989~ Warner. ac Srookhurst
Fountain Valley 968-1 611
FROM OUR JEWELRY SECTION
PINK SHELL ROSE •
PIN & PIERCED • EARRINGS
From Taiwan
PIN y,• dla. 8 Winners In Today's Classifieds!
. IT'S EASYI And your name and address In today's .....
ctasslfled HCtlon, then call 642-5678 Ext. 272 ~
~<iilfil-~~::C~~~ORANGE, ' GRAPE,
STRAWBERRY
OR LIME.
All approx. a· dla.
e EARRINGS
2.u· 1.88 pa)r
to clalm your tickets. Wlnnera each
day, so check the ctasalfled1 In the ... Illy Piii
------- ---------
TIN SUGAR OR
,LOURlttAK!R
From Taiwan
3• dla. , 25 a· tall •
RED CLAY INFUIU
TEUOT a TUCU,
From Ctllna
hrfect tM time MMn·
tlala In a handlome ---..
1v.· deep
2.39 each
KrTCHEN WITCH FEATHER
OUSTER From Taiwan
The tradltlonally lucky kitchen witch rid•• about-.,;. __ ,
on a bright f .. ther duster. Oflental deetgn. ~--~-·7 ~ti~ Plaallc, cloth and feath• lA------------1 conatructlon.
rattan
handle,
Incited '
whit•
detail and
t .. lnfueer. av.· tall
32oz.
5 .•
Aaaorted 13y,• long
Color• 1.39 llfii~1l\\
UQHT I DARK
ITAINED IAMIOO IWOOD
IEADED
CURT41NS
From talwan
Interior dfflgn ~~ .....
accent for
window,
ctoorw•y
or room
dMder.
Bamboo
tubel wit" wood*"' ==Ing I bef'dt and rlnge.
LIGHT WALNUT,
DAMWMMUT
~w:loe
.. .
'
111111 l:Ull am• m11111
THURSDAY. APRii. 29. 1982 OHA N GE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Bot Corvette lands ii.river · in cooleP
By JEFF PARKER or ... p.1r,...,...,
Sometimet luck la the belt de-
tectlve.
Just uk David F. Sherman of
Sunnymead. who WM littlna ln
Or&n1e County jail today alter
hil arrest Wednelday afternoon
on 1u1plclon of auto theft. A
ffiahway Patrol officer arretted
' him in lrvine after a 120-mph
chale.
Shennan, 24, walked lnto Nero
Moton of Weatminlter Wednet-
day at about 12:30 p.m. and uked
to teat drive a 11lver 1974 Cor-
'vett.e, the CHP reported.
Salesman Brant T~ got
behind the wheel ana gave
Sherman a brief tour of the dtv.
When the lnterett.ed buyer ~
to drive the Corvette hlmaelf,
•reainger reportedly 1ot out ot
the car and Sherman aot on the
gas and aped away.
An hour later, Shennan drove
Into Newport lmporta on Cout
Highway in New}>ort Beach,
where he told lalesman Jim Ga-
rd v that the Corvette 1imply
wi1n't the car he wanted and
would tilldii tt In to pt a Ferarri
308. priced at ·~~.ooo. But Newport Import. owner
Lee Welt, not IW'e of what the
car'1 value wu, aot on the phone
and called h.l.a friends at -you
guellfld lt -Nero Moton to find • aoocl price. When he de9Cl1bed
the Corvette, the Nero Moton
'Dangerous' to economy
Interest rate blasted
By JOEL C. DON
OfhDllfr ..... ltllll
The cummt high level of lnte-
re1t rate1 la "dan~erous to our
(economic) health,' a UC Irvine
economist aald Wedneaday du-
ring an annual UC buslne11
forecut for Orange County.
"We're not going to get a good
recovery rate until th0te lntere1t
rates come down.'' said Jerome
Student
scholars
honored
Thirty-two seniors from Co-
rona del Mar High School and
Newport Harbor High School
were honored Wednes:iay by the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce Commodores Club
for their acholaatic achievement.
Corona del Mar High School
students honored were: Steve
c.andan. Patricia Chapman, Gre-
1ory Czaja, Cbrutopher Finch,
Llaa Greenberg, Steve Holland
and Caroline Kelly.
Aho from CdM were: Cindy:
Kendall, Kerry Kim, Allen
Menton, Marpret ~ett. Sheryl
Radel, Scott Richman, Erik Rei-
der, Suzanne RuHo, Pamela
Willon and Mary Zaleski.
Scholars from Newport Harbor
High School included: Rebecca
Ann Browne, Catherine Quinn
Craychee, Thanhhuyen Thi Do,
Loul1e Anne Frova , Glen
Thomlll Kauffman, Gregory Eu-
gene Kay and Gavin Richard
Keith.
Al10 from Newport Harbor
were: Brian Gordon Kennelly,
Susan Elizabeth Kuhn, Cynthia
Kriatine Kulikov, Frank F.dward
Llvlnpton, Yvette Karrell Loh-
ee, Patrick Donald McCal.l.a, Irene
Cella Turner and Gordon Kent warua..
Corona del Mar aenior Marga-
ret NeU wu al.a the recipient of
the "Agnes Blomquiat Award"
given annually to a top female
1tudent for acholaatic achieve-
ment and community .ervice.
F..ch of the atudenta wu aiven
a certificate and a copy of New-
port Beach's 75th anniversary
book. -
Crash kills
truck driver
A 30-year-old Santa Ana man
wu killed thla momJna when be
l011t control of hil pic-~k
and at.ruck a pole on the r
Boulevard on-ramp to the we1t-
bound Rlvenlde Freeway, the
Califom1a Hl2bway Patrol aaid. Pronounced dead at the acene
wu Michael K. Detterich, offl-
cen aaid.
NATION
Baesel, aaaociate/rofeaaor of fi-
nance at UCI an coordinator of the forecast.
Mortgage rates might alao fall,
but prospective home buyers
drop to the more tolerable levels
of the '70s, the busineas fore-
caster said.
This marks the third year UC
economists have met to give
forecaata for the nation, state and
county. The panellata who spoke
before county bu1lnesamen at
UCI included Baesel, Larry
Kimbel, director of economic
models for UCLA's BusineH
Forecasting Project, and David
Shulman, a UC IUvenide econo-
mist.
"Orange County lookl a little
better tlian the 1tate and a lot
better than the nation u a whole
.,..,,... ..... ,.....
BOOKS AND MORE BOOKS -Marilyn Ostman and Anita
Ferguson (right) start books for upcoming Friends of the
Newport Beach Library book.sale as Jane Preis grat» a few
more from the shelves. The book sale, which benefits the city
libraries. is to be held May 6·8 from 10 a.m . to 5 p.m. at the
Newport C.enter branch library.
Britain rejects
U.N. peace bid
By 'ne Associated Presa
Britaln rejected today any new
approach to the United Nation.a to
aolve the Falkland Ialanda criaia
and said "the ker to peace" ues ·
with Argentina. Argentina ursed
the British to "ute a m1nlmum of
good will" to avoid WU.
Prime Mlni1ter Mar1aret
'Thatcher noted in an emergency
debate ln the HOUie of Corrimona
In London that the United Na-
tlona pated a l'ftOlution calllna
on Argentina to withdraw troopl
from the Falkland1, Invaded
Apttl 2.
"If that reeolutlon were to be
Implemented, there would be
very few sxoblema left ln relation
to the Falkland 111.anda," the laid.
"There can be no doubt where
the lntran1lgence Uea ln thl1
matter. The key to peace la in the
hands of the Argentine govem-
me n t. The reapon1iblllty 11
theln."
In Buenoe Aires, Acting Fore-
ign Min.later AltMo Saint Jean
wu uked in a radio lnt.ervtew lf
Ar1entlna and Britain had rea-
ched a ''point of no ret\U'n" in the
crisis.
Saint Jean replied, "At leut
Argentina haa not." He added
that Ar,entina ii ''more will1nl"
to .eek a IOlUUon to the conflict
... Our county hal thown ltlelt
to be more than prudent and pa-
tient. not only over i&0 r-n of
negotiation, but elp8dally durtnc
thJt crilll.''
However, Ar1entlna'1 ruUnc
three-man junta aa1d it expected
(See PALU.ANDS, P .. e At)
COUNTY
but that hl1torlcally haa been
·true," said Bae1el. "But hlgh houlinC prices ln Orange County
are mak1ni thil an unattractive
place and are alowlng down job
ll'Owth." •
The forecasters predicted
mortgage ratea will hover around
the current a~erage of 15.7 per-
cent. The rates are expected to
drop to 1~ percent in 1983 and
then another full percentage
point by 1984.
The colt of home1 in the
county will rlae 3.2 percent this
year. But when Inflation is ave-
raged ln, housing prices actually
will show a 5 percent reduction,
the forecasters said.
The high cost of housing i1
expected to turn away potential
bulinew!I from relocating in the
county. And there actually may
be an exodu1 of auembly-llne
workera to the ''new Orange
Counties of the '80s" in Baken-
fleld, Fresno, Riverside, San
Bernardino and other inland
locations, the ecooomists said.
'"'lbere are many people who
would like to buy a home, but
Juat can't make the paymenta,"
&.el aaid. "PriL'ea will drop for
houae1, but that will make
Oranp County more competitive
bec:awe it will attract new pt.."
The county unemployment
picture 11 expected to reach a
peak rate of 6.3 percent thia year, ~will fall to 5. 7 percent in 1983
. and 4.9 percent ln 1984. In 1981
(lee INTERF.ST, Pase AZ)
Signals work
slows traffic •
in 2 cities
A Caltrana official aaid today
that motor11ta can expect only
"minor delay1" along Newport
Boulevard after next week.
Harry Hopkins, who la SU(>8r-
villng the lnatallation of the Sl.3
million worth of new traffic Ila-
na.la alone Newport Boulevara,
said eome lanes have been cloeed
in recent weeka to i~tall new
undersround detectori for the
~.
One lane of Victoria Avenue
will be cloeed Friday from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m., he noted.
Allo, two lane1 of Newport
Boulevard near Finley Avenue ln
Newport Beech will be clOted fOf'
two daya be8f.nnlna M~y. Hooldna said no other lanes are
acbeduled for cloeure. The pro-
ject la to be completed by the end
of July.
New llpl1a alre8dy have been
1mtalled on both the north and
touth 1ldea of Newport Boule-
vard between 22nd Street to
Mela Drive ln a.ta Me..
Caltnrw offida)a aaid that the
new aymtem will better tynehro-
p.l.a l&palt alone the busy bou-
levard. SlpaJa will be tlmed to
Mncli. peak hou.n of n.tl hour tratac.
ArmB Bhow at El Toro
... U0,000 .,.. ape_atlll to attmd tbi 'ftl"IAl
Armed l'ol'Cft Day ~ b-. and alr 1bow tbll
.-r..nd at Mc.A& D Ten. .... Al.
people put two and two topther
and came up with one 1tolen car.
But the 1u1pect wa1 1one by
the time We1t huna up.
At 3 p.m., CHP Officer Bruce
Lian 1potted the corvette hea-
dln1 north on the San Die10
Freeway at Alicia Parkway. Al
he moved ln behind It to verify
the platea, the Corvette aped
north at 120 mph.
Officer Lian an~ 1u1puse Sherman then need~
Sand Canyon ext\ and into th
Oranse County T1'amit Dia
Maintenance Yard, where ther
chased, bumped, amacked lntO
each other twice and flnally ~
to rest with the 1uapect ltuinf
down L1an11t revolver. I
Deltr,... ,...... .., ,..,... O'aa al
JACKIE'S BACK -Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather
returned to city hall Wednesday for the first time since her
March 7 stroke and wast.ed little time getting down to busl-
nem. She talked about re-election, offshore oil drilling, John
Wayne Airport and her rehabilitation treatment. ~ •
Heather returns;
.. . . .
she'll run
By STEVE MARBLE orttie °"",... ...,, Jadde Heather, who suffered a -ltrob 1-than two montbl ...,,
moved back into her Newport
Beach mayor'1 office Wedneeday
and took care of first th.lnp ftnt.
She announced she'll nm for
re-election in NOYember.
The 52-year-old mayor nid
ahe wanta to quickly bruah Mlde
any ru.mon that her political ca-
reer la over.
"I talked It over with my
famlly,'' ahe explained, "and they
agreed this is the aort of goal I
need right now. My family
knows how much the council
means to me.''
Allde from a Unaerlng wea.k-
nea on her left ticfe and a Dal·
IPna feellna that she's on public
a11jilay, Mn. Heather aaid 1he
feels flt and wanta to duh spec-
ulation that the March 7 1troke
has left her changed.
"I just hope people give me a
couple more weeb to get Wf!r/·
thing put together. rm lt1ll '°"" throu1h rehabllltatlon on an
outpatient basis and need to work
on my fine motor lkilll."
Sklpplng over what lbe calla
the "gruesome detall1," Mra.
Heather said she made procrm
from day one and surprt.ed eve-
ryone but herself at the qulck-
nem of her recovery.
"I was lucky,'' 1he uid, wavtna
to city employees who 1tro11ea
paat her office. ''My 1peech
waan't wiped out or anythlna
like that. Each day ~t a bi& improvement. ••
She aaid doctors have told her
ahe'll have to leem to control her
hYJ)el"temlon, eomethlns abe aakl wfll be her "rou1he1t Mllanment. ••
uy have to learn not to take
thl.np 10 penona1ly. I ~ hurt by
thlnp wnen ~ don t 10 rtaht.
I'm not a worrier, but I do .. t m.tnt.ed beau.-I care 10 m\idi
about thlno.
•
• again c~
"The stroke hal foroed me ~
put things back ln penpective, ti]
judge what ii and lm't fm~
'l'he most Important thing, o)
courae, 11 to complete ~
r«:avery."
She ~ asked 9"era1 counc;i
partners to take aome of the e&o
remonial duties of her off.ice ~
her hands ao that abe can del~
back into ilauea llU John WayM
Airport, of&hore oU drilllnc ~
the likely referendum on tbt
Banning Ranch project.
"When I wu In the boapi~
she noted, "The FAA (Federt\
Aviation Admlnlattation) aent rm
flowers with a note promi11.n(
they wouldn't increue not.eat
the airport while I wu in the
hotpital. "It appears.'' ahe added, laUC-
hing, "that I wa. able to do more
from my hospital bed than here."
She reiterated her vow to puah
for a citywide election on the
Banning development.
"I'm willina to let th1a e1ectiolf
set the tone 1or developnent tn.
Newport. It will be •critical,
elf!Ction, a milestone. I jult hoJMil
citizens vote from an educated
point of view.
'There are two polnta of vtew
on thlnp of thll aort. I unde~
tand that and alway. have. lkat_~
ai.o undentand that it'• a lot ee~
1ier for 1ome people to tea
aornething down than to come
with poeltive ldet11.11
Flnlahed with her apeech, WI
leaned beck, ant.Una apln. :
"See," t.he-iaid.""f'l'm atU1 the
aame per1on. I haven't chanaed-1
News buy cancel
NEW YORK (AP) -Tex
mlll1ona1re Joe L. Allbrltt.on •
he canceled b1a b6d '° lllquiN alllna Dally New• after t
~·,.rent OCllDPM'I
formed him that all llclel-w
Wlllbly to l'MCb an eo-i-.
(
l
' J
4.7 pen:ent of the labor force WU permlta. The ~ apP.,. to I out of worllr improve tn the next few yean,
I """'-with 12,800 _pennita fn 1983 and u• avallabWty of Jobi will not 13,500 in 1984 aeen by the UC chanp much Ulil year. However,
t Job 1rowth will rlte next year ~When the economr pjcu up,
and be bocllted by 5.6 percent in Oranae Cou.nty will pci up, but
1984. J t wirt not 10 back to the 1ood 1 Hi1h houalna prices and UmJ-day• of the '701," Baeael aald.
aft for new conatruction are "Happy days are not here apln.
to add to the dee~ ln °1 think we aren't aolna to be
tlal butldlna permits. worae off; we're aotna to be a
County reached a peak of little better off because of the
1 , pennitl ln 1976. Thia year (federal Income) tax break In l:; ~~7~;~a.~0s~~~; ...
a British attack on the cliaputed 1,500 Royal Marines with the
laJanda before the weekend, and · British war fleet.
a ForellJl Ministry aource aaid
the American propoul wu 1ub-
; 11tantlally unchanaed from the
[
IMt one the junta re~.
In London, Britain'• announ-
.ament that it WU extending its
.,._ blockade of the Falklands to
~~;raffle at dawn Friday was ~.••the dead.line for diplo-
But British military sources
aaid the a.ault probably would
await the arrival ln two or three
'days of patratroop reinforce-
men ts being flown to join the
ant.In Dec .. res
War Zone
FALKLAND
;-._,ley
ISLANDS
A. of Wednesday night, the
State Department had received
no responae from Britain or Ar-
gen tlna to Secretary of State
Alexander M. Ha.la's latest peace
proposala, said U .S-: offid.all.
St.ate Department 1pokeaman
Dean Fisher said Haig wu pre-
pared to resume hia 1huttle bet-
ween Buenos Aires and London'
if that would help. The United
Stat.es believes the aituation I.a at.-
a "critical st.age." The time for
diplomacy ls "very, very short,"
said Fisher.
r u-.
'W AR ZONE -British Defense Ministry announced
Wednesday total air and sea blockade around Falkland Ialands
;(inset), and would consider planes on ground at Stanley Air-Port (located at arrows) as "hostile."
....._
DllrNet .... ,.....
NOT SURPRISED -F.d.iaon
High School football coach
Bill Workman said he wasn't
surprised by findings of an
administrative law judge.
Edison
cleared of
all charges
BY ROBERT BARKER
0( the DellJ Not .....
A state administrative law
judge found no evidence of .im-
proper recruiting of football
players by Edison High School
Coach Bill Workman or by
anyone else employed at the
Huntington Beach IChool
The findl.np were announced
Wedne9day at a pn!la conference
cal.led by School Superintendent
Frank "Jake" Abbott.
They followed three days of
cloeed hearinO early this month in which Jonn A. Willd of the
State Office of Administrative
Hearlnga questioned 40 people
under oath.
"It needl to be said loudly and
clearly that the administration
and coaches are honest and ethi-
cal and we are proud to have
them," Abbott declattd.
'"nle auie I.a cloaed. We'll not
nln after our tails any more."
Workman, who coached the
Edlaon Chargers to 32 victories in
their last 33 games, said Wed-
nesday he was bitter but not
1~ew what the results
would be before the lnveatiga-
tion. The resulta are no surprt.e,"
he aaid.
Workman, head coach since
1973, aaid he has been "dangled
like a piece of meat for everyone
to ahoot at."
He nld Edlaon has been the
target of allegations "becaU8e we
llave won more than our share of
game..
"The kid1 move in , I can't
control that. When they're de-1 clared eUs~ble I coach them.1
That'a my job." I
~~~ ~:."'~11:~.d·s1•~·F~~·~-:8-nd·1~-.. ~-a-~~~-~--------------------------...----. __ ...., ..... ..,...._ __ ~
brlel •nd Pomona llalleyt ., well
at In Rlvet11de and San Bernat·
dlno "Coasta l n ... PSI Wiii be 42 ~a ....
• P1rlly cloudy 1hl1 allernoon
Hlgl\9 &4 10 98 II lhe l>HC:hea and , e7 10 12 In lhe Inland UHi
We11erly wind• lo 25 mph low
•cloud• tonight wllh Iowa In the 509. low c:toud• continue Frioay
morning, becoming lau 8'\CI penty
tunny In lhe eflernoon High•
Friday ee lo 15 HunllnglOn·
Extemled
forecmt
.,Newport area temperature•
range lrom e high ol es lo e IOW
• ol 511.
lJ.S. aummary
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AREAS -Night lllld morning low
c1oud1 In the coutal end \lalley
., ... OlhefWIM leir locally win·
dy In lhe mountaln1. Hight In Ille
COISttl ., ... 65 IP 75 with kiwi
45 10 55 Mountain retorJ high•
5• 10 &4 wilh IOW'I 32 10 42
Heavy thunder11orm1 wllh hell -----------------end guiling wind• moved o'll'tr
llOfthetn Lou1t11n1 Ind Into -t1rn MltllHlppl today, •• 1 few
11orm1 pelted ... tam TeJtat
T emperaturea~
LI hi rain 1hower1 1preed . AJt>ttny aorou Arhnaat and Mia-AJbuQue
1ou , end there WH drlule In Amatlllo
-tltn Ke"... AlhlYllle
A OOld front proouced acalle-Atlanta
red r11n 1hower1 over lh• nor· Atllnto City
ttiern Rocky M puntaln1, wtlll • Aultln
,_ anow ahow1r1 In th• lllfh« ealOmore _...ttonl Of Montena. e1111ng1
Tllu11dlr1torm1 were r~ed lllfmlnghm
nett the IOllttlefn tip of Florld1. 8""*'* CtMr llclee Pl'evelied W ON Ille 8olM
Peclflc Nc>tttlwMt, the 1oothern lotton AoctllM and Ille upper Ofllo Vel• 8fC1Wne¥111
Illy. Gr•t I.Ml• and middle Ind 1uft9o
l\Orltlern AllentlG COMt ttat-. 9wtlnfloft
g:::.,IC
°*""' "" Clw'"9NC ~ g::::::... a.... a....ec ~ Dll-ftWll =·
.. Lo ,,..,
51 31
S1 48 12 at .01
70 47
73 52 .. 42 ·14 ee
12 41 ,. 44
14 ...
.. 40 .. 12 ee 40 .OI
t2 t2 .oe N It 14 II 11 11 10 ., ... . 10 .. 11 ,. .. .
• 40 N M 14 IO
.. 40 71 ..... .. 40 ., ..
52 ., ee 3t et 20 71 40 .21 ., e1
51 3t .OI 75 51 .01
SI 43
83 52 71 83 et 29 58 S3 .17
58 32
50 .... ·" 12 5t t2 50 .a.. 83 42 .... ,45
t
Hispanic~
protest
jobs unit
By FREDEIUm 8CBOEM..EHL or .. ....,,... ...
110peration Jobi" -the con-
troveralal roundup of undocu-
mented workera employed In
Southern California -moved
into Oranp County today amid
proteata from leaden of HlapanJc .
orpnlr.aUona. Accordln1 to Amin David of
the Lea1ue of United Latin
American Cttiz.ena, one furniture
manufacturer wu raided near
the Santa Ana-1\ast.l.n border.
It wu later identWed u B.P.
John C.o .. of 2001 E. Dyer Road,
Santa Ana. The firm reportedly
emp~ 350 people. The number
t.aken Into cuatody wu not de-
termined.
One man, who wu unidentl-
11 fied. WU cliat.rauaht in reportina
hi• 1l1ter, who liad lived wltfi
him in the United States for 10
yeara, wu one of the employees
taken into cuatody.
INS offlclat. ln Loa Angele•
this morning refuaed. to confirm
or deny auch a raid took place.
"We will have more lnfonnation
thia afternoon," a spokeswoman
said.
David waa among a doz.en Hi-
spanic and civil right• leadera.
who spoke to reporters at a mor-
ning news conference held In
front of the INS office in Santa
Ana.
Operation Jobi, according to
the INS, la dealgned to remove
undocumented workers from employment ao that thoee poei-
tion.a may be filled by persona
legally within the U.S. or U.S.
citizens. The operation baa been
under way in Loe Angeles lllnoe
Monday.
'"nle political .capegoat of this
operation which fa.bely eeekl to
blame the undocumented for the
chronic unemployment million.a
of Americana have experierwed
for more t han a d ecade is
1landerous," David said . .. 'Operation Jobs' la actually
'Operation Hoax,' and a cruel one
at that ... "
Rev. Allan Deck. of the office
of Hispanic minbtry, Dioce9e of
Orange, aaid the roundupa are
dividing famJllea; attacking the
dignity of workena; resulting in
"flagran t" violation.a of indivi-
dual rlghta, and di.crimiruatlng
agaln1t one ethnic group, the
Hispanics.
"'l'hey (the raida) are raclal..ly
inspired," Deck claimed.
Costa Mesa
fire blamed
• on cigarette
A cigarette smoldering lnalde a
llvlna room couch la being bla-
med today on a fire that cauaed
$15,000 c:Wll.aae to a Colt.a Mesa
apartment Wedneedav n.1.«iht.
Admin.l.atrative battalion chief
Jim Richey aald the fire at the
Plnecreek Apertment. complex at
2300 Fairview Ro.d Apartment P
104 apparently ltarted ln the li-
ving room.
Beverly Mutri told fire offl-
clall that 1he fell uleep in the
bedroom and woke up at about
8:30 p.m. to find the. ajm'tment
filled with amoke. Neichbon ex-
tlnaulahed the around floor
apartment blaze before officiala
arrived. Damaae to the bui.ldini ii esti-
mated at $10,000 and content.
$5,000. No other apartments were
Newport weighs
new trailer law
T he Newport Beach City
Council ii oonliderlnc a new
law that would make lt WeaaJ
to park recreational vehiclea
and detached trailen on pu-
blic slreetl in resldentlal areas
except to load or unload.
The propoaed ordinance
will be dlacuued by the
council May 10.
• DarlD Holt, a l~year-old
member of the Harbor Area
Boys Club in Newport Beach,
has been recognized as one of
15 o uts tanding Orange
County youths during the
First Annual Outstanding
Youth Awards Banquet at
Knotts Berry Fann.
Holt was picked from 800
Harbor Area youtha to repre-
sent the local Boy1 Club. Cri-
e A tOur of the Los Angeles
County Muse um of Art is
being offered Saturday at 1
by the Orange Coast College
Community Service office.
A bus will leave the C.OSta
Mesa college auditorium par-
Spedflcally, tbe ordinance
would prohibit the parldna of
any vehicle 84 lnchS or wider
and would ban the parking of
any detached trailer or ilm-
llar device.
Coplea of the pro~ or-
dinance can be picked up.In
the city clerk'• office, 3300
NeWPOrt Blvd.
terla for selection includes
service t o h ome. school,
church and the Boys Club.
Alo"'J with other winners,
Holt will be eligible for re-
gional and national Boys Club ,
awards. Regional wlnnera are
invited to the White House
where President Reagan
names the single national
winner.
king lot at Y a.m. and return
at 2:30 p.m. C.OSt ii $12.
Tickets are available at the
college Ticket office. For
more in f o rmatio n call
556-5527.
Couple bring suit
against AnaheinJ
A potential class action lawauit
that seeks $100 million in da-
mages -or $100,000 for each of
the 1,000 ~ple left homelem by
last week 1 devutating Anaheim
firestorm -was filed Wednesd-
ay aaainlt the City of Anaheim,
A.1ao named as defendant. In
the Orange Cou nty Superior
C.ourt suit were Southern Cali-
RELATEQ ~1!QT9-AS
fornia Edison Co. and nine
apartment owners, developers
and managers whose building•
were destroyed by fut-moving
fla mes in the early morning
houn of April 21.
More than 50 buildlnp were
gutted by the wind-driven blaze,
including 52-4 apartment units in
a four-aquare block area near the
intersection of Ball Road and
Euclid Avenue. Damage esti-
mates have been placed at about
$50 milllon.
Initiating the legal act ion in
Santa Ana were Anthony Nunes.
26, and hl1 wife Cynthia, 24,
former resident• of the Palm
Villa apartment complex on 1230
S . Euclid Avenue. Their apart-
ment and all their belongings -
valued at $6,000 -were de -
stroyed.
The couple also filed a claim
against the city, a atep required
in legal actlon1 against public
agenciea.
Santa Ana at1Dmey Jerrold A.
Bloch, who repre.entl the couple,
aafd the lawsuit WU filed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellers routed from
their residences. Most of the fire
victims lost all their belongings
and had no renters insurance.
Fed Mart closures
to affect county
By PHD. SNEIDERMAN
O(tfle DelY Plot l taft
Closure of 46 Fed Mart stores ln ~
Southern California, Ariz.ona and
Texu, announced Wednesday,
will affect Orange County Fed
Mart stores in Huntington Beach,
Garden Grove, Anaheim and La
Habra.
The san Diego-based corpora-
tion, which blamed the deterio-
rating economy ror lta dedlion,
aald it la aeeking buyen for lta
d.a.:ount and general merchandl-
aiJlR operations.
The fate of Fed M.art'1 Orange
County outleta could not imme-
diately be determined.
Local Fed Mart managers d~
cllned to comment on the com-
pany'• dedlion to abut down or
Ua uidate all of ita..stora.
Fed Mart corporate offlciala
also declined to di1cu s• the
chain's Orange County opera-
tions.
According to the Huntington
Beach city building ~partment.
the local Fed Mart at 9882 Adan:w
Ave. la about 102,000 equare feet
In size. Conatructlon wu com-
pleted in November, 1970.
The company'• bualne91 Uceme
application lndlcatea the 1tore
emp1oy1 about 100 people, city
Ucen.ae aupervt.or Dan Brennan
said .
"lt'a at a aood location,'' Bren-
nan aaid of the Adams Avenue
and Brookhunt Street lntenec-
tion. "I would think .. neone elle
could do well there. It certainly
geta a lot of traffic."
Sign up for a chance to have
, • -\ a fully catered take out gourmet dinner
for Yourself, Your Mom, Wife or maybe even Grandma;
'\.'--enough for a family of four from Showley-Wrightson.
You need
not be present to win,
drawing will take place
Friday May 7th and
the winner will '='e
notifiid by
phone that day . .
·Hijackers holding 2 1-
Eigh t A m ericans among ·hostages of l e ftists
By Tiie AIMcla ... Prest
TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras -: Five leftist hl-
jacken held 27 hostages at gunpoint aboard a
Honduran air!lner at TelUCflalpa airport today af-
ter the govenunent rejected thelr demand for $1
million and the releue of 52 political prt.onen.
The b09tagea included eight American men,
the U.S. J'mt..y laid. One of them, Grecory Ba-'°°"' of the Stanclard l'rult and Steelmblp Co., told
the CIOl>trol tower by redlo: "The hlJlcken •Y that
if you don't free the jJri8onera, I wtll die."
Another American reported among the cap-
tives waa NBC-TV correepondent Brian Rom,
U.N. demands PLO control
UNITED NATIONS -The U.N. General A.-
aembly demanded that Iarael give control of the
occupied West Bank of the Jordan River and the
Gua Strip to the Palestine Uberation Organir.ation
as a prelude to Palestinian statehood and condem-
ned U.S. support for the Jewish State.
Despite bitter U.S . and laraell protest.a, the
pro-PalestJ.nian .reeolution WU adopt.ed Wedne9day
by a vote of 86-20. F4YPt. larael's partner in the
U.S .-1ponlOl'ed C.amp n.lYid peace proce91, joined
36 nationa in abstaining. Thoee op~ included
the United States and moat Western nations.
Inmate's testimony queried
SOLEDAD -A priaon inmate who says con-
victed assassin Sirhan Sirhan confided he had plans
to kill Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy has
been attacked as a liar and con man by Sirhan's
lawyer.
Convicted murderer Lawrence Eugene Wilson
resumes his testimony today before the parolt!
board considering redalon of Sirhan'• 1eheduled
parole date in 1984.
The assasain's lawyer, Luke McKillick, is ex-
pected to continue his assault on Wilson's credibi-
lity. •
AQMD seeks more authority
EL MONTE -The Air Quality Management
District would be allowed to move in whenever a
highway spill sends hazardous material into the air
under a plan approved by a citizens adviaory panel
"There have been a lot of trucks spilling ha-
zardous materials or contaminants that aometimes
result in airborne substances," AQMD Director
James Birakoe said Wedne9day.
'"The responsible agent has been the CHP or
the local police or local fire department. But we
want to set up a policy where we would routinely
respond to advise and recommend on monitoring air
quality for contaminants in the air, project a dis-
persion p.ttem and identify the substance."
The policy, which ai.o would allow prosecu-
tions, wU1 be praented to the AQMD board at its
May 7 meeting.
Quake nudges Santa Monica
SANTA MONICA -A mUd eu1bquake cent-
ered in the ocean off Santa Monica joltled 80me
late-aleepen before their alarm clocb 1"11'lt off, but
no damage wu reported.
Kate Hutton of the eei8mololfic:al laboratory at
Caltech said the 8:32 a.m. temblor registered 3.9 on
the Richter .::aJe and WU the latest in a~ Of
"several dozen" such quakes that becan with a
temblor of 5.3 on Sept. 4, 1981.
c.altecb lmtrumenta lnd1cated the epicenter of
the tremor WU 40 m1Je9 IOUthwelt of SAnta Monica
in the Pac:Wc Ooeen.
Chrysler: reports ·profit
DETROIT -Ch.rya1er Corp. today reported a
profit of $149.9 million for the lint~ of 1982,
a turnaround from ita $289.3 mWJon in la.es for the
corresponding period a year aao.
Chrysler Chairmarl Lee A. Iacocca noted thia
year's quarterly profit included a one-time pin of S239 mil11on from the sale of the profitable deteme
subsidiary, Ch.rya1er Defeme Inc., to Oenfiral D)'-
namb ol St. LoWa. U-&om opera"'-in the
tint quarter amoy.nted to $89.1 Dill.Um. the com-
pany said.
•· Chrysler, whicb bl $f15.6 milllbft In 1981, lYl
-mowed a quarterly profit ha the ..xJlld ~ al
1961 -•ti.6 m1l1ioD.
Reagall tO talk on TV tonight
WASHINGTON -Congre. has no choice but
-to try to draft a budget "a piece at a time" after the
failure of President Reagan and House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. to raolve their.differences on·
"dollars and philoeophy' during a three-hour bar-
gaining ae.ion.
The ~t ICheduJeJ a nadorially broe&'Mt
address tonieht (5 p.m. PDT) to dilcull the after-
math of hia unprecedented Capitol Hill meeting
Wednelday wi~ O'NeW and other congretaional
leaden.
Woman sentenced to die
a.11•••••A•I ,n.....,. All ..... , ..... ......,
MAIN °"9m .......... c-.-..,CA. .... ..._! ..... Qmlt ..... CA. ..
~,_Or-. c.11 PAN U O ~. ----. ....................... .. -·· ..... ..., .. ,. . ......
..,..: ....... 9 -...-~.
•
'O .S. wea~m
'jeopardlZed'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, AptM 29, 1982
.., .... ._ ....... ., .........
CHANGE OF COMM.AND -C.oast Guard Lt.
John Zantek (left), shakes hands with Lt. Pete
Di.Nicola during change of command ceremo-
nies Wednesday in Newport Beach while Coast
Guard Admiral William Manning looks on. Lt.
Zantek took over as commanding officer of tbe
Newport Coast Guard division and Lt. DiMJ-
CJ>la, the outgoing commander, was 88ligned to
tbe guard's Long Beach headquartera.
.
HB mortgage suit .aire<J
Trust deed arguments taken to high court l!
From AP staff dl1patcllet
WASHINGTON -States
cannot shield people from having
to pay otf mortgages when they
sell their mortgaged property,
the U.S. Supreme C.ourt has been
told.
The court heard arguments
We dnesday in a Huntington
Beach case of enormous impor-
tance to the nation's housing and
lending industries and to ho-
meowners and buye.ra. At stake is
the future availability of so-
called aaswnable mortgages.
The case, de la Cuesta vs.
Fidelity Federal Savings & Loan
A.n .. involves the pu.rchaae of a
Huntington Mme by Reginald
and Margaret de la Cuesta.
Fklellty held the first trust deed,
which carried a 9 ~ percent
Interest rate. Fidelity began
foreclosure proceedings after
payment for the outstanding ba-
lance WU not made.
A trlal judge supported Fide-
lity but the California 4th Dlltrict
Court of Appeal reversed the
decision..
The Calllomia Supreme Court
declined to hear the case, and
Fidelity appef\led to the U.S.
Supreme Court, whlch agreed to
heal' the cue.
1bere wu no indication when
the high court would announce a
dedslon.
Ju.lice Lewis Powell has de-
clined to slt on the cue. Should
the jusUcel deadlock 4-4, the ru-linC of the appellate court in fa-
vor of the de la CueslaS nonnally
would remain in effect. But there
would be no national precedent
Even the high court ju1tice1
argued among themselva Wed-
nesday as questioning became
lpbited.
A 1976 federal regulation aJJo...
wtna federal savings and loan -natiolll to Ule ''due-on-Mle''
clauses in mortgage contracts
"1upenedes state law that con-
flicts with it,'' Justice Depart-
ment lawyer Stephen Shapiro
contended.
But Robert Boehmer, a lawyer
representing borrowen, said
California and many other states
with similar laws are entitled 1o
protect consumers.
That's what the California
courts ruled in upholding the
state's ban on due-on-sale clau.es
'Badly f lawe d '
If a savings and loan lend ln Its Wellenkamp decialon. ~·
cannot collect on an exl1tln
mortgage when the propert
ownership changes hands,
m1l8es an opportunity to re-~
that money at higher intere'f
rates. I
Joint Chiefs' hea
raps 'freeze ' idea. a
By c.w. MIRINuR ._ ...... ~.....,
SAN FRANCISCO -A nu-
clear weapons freeze and a "no
first u.e" policy are very aeduc-
tive to a growing number ol
Americans but are "badly fla-
wed" strategies for preventing
war, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff said Wednesday.
The more Americans talk
about refusing to use nuclear
weapons, the greater the danger
that we may create incentives for
conventional aggreesloo and even
preemptive nuclear attack, said
AJ.r Force Gen. Devid C Jones.
l,J\ a speech prepared for the
American Newspaper Publlahen
Association, Jones analyz.ed the
two most prominent anti-nuclear
proposals, described h is own
views on arms reduction, urged
support for the defense bud1et
and the nee d to expand and
modernize U.S. forces and cl"lU-
cized the joint inter-service
system.
In Washington, the House Ar-
med Services Investigations
Subcommittee heard testimony
earlier Wednesday opposing
Jones' propoaal to make the JCS
chairman the final arblter of po-
licy and the primary milltary
adviser to the president. ;/
Jones told the publilhen at m final day of their 96tb ann
convention that a "no tint u.'
' policy of nuclear w•pmw fail9
account for a oooventional I
lmb&1ance that favors the Sovie
Union.
If the Soviets believe th
could laun~h a successful con-
ventional attack against NATO
"without fear of pcalble nucie,r
respon.e," their incentive • dP.
llO, and the probability of armed
confllct. would be greatly in·
Cfta.ed, Jone. aaid. -~ He said a nation under a
might still turn to nuclear we.
pons despite a declaration lift
doao.
A policy that calla for no flnt
use of military force i• more
"effective . . . credible and
workable than a prom!.-not tOi
Ute nuclear weapons after an at.J
tack has begun." Jones said. I
A. for a total freeze on dev
lopment and deployment of nu
clear weapon1, Jones said tha
strategy would put the U.S. at II
disadvantage and exacerbate the
already ''lttloua vulnerabWtiee''
of many of our strategic ~
And verification of a compl~
freeze would be "extremely
difficult," he added.
. . ,
t
e
I. -
l t I ta
e-
ty
le
rk
y-. I
De
ni.
ban
• to
Tell,
• • •
By PAT HOROWITZ or ... ..., .........
Ill arr:1v1ng ·
DEA.a PAT: wt A•p1t I ordered a warm., mat from die = Oata Co. by MMli1 a ..... , cMek ......... froal.
ataral CenaJ bos. My dM!ek wu ea.W ,,..,cq, .. , I ..._'t.
' receive aaJdlla escept a pe1&eard la la&e OeteMr dlat ..,.,... · me tM mat wnld be delayed dee to HPPl~ .. m1. TU&~, &la. lalt I've Man. Cu yoe ltelp me 1et a re 1
-C.R., N...,.n Beeelll
Edith Dexter at Quaker Oau' Chicago headquarten wW ·
check the records reprdlnl your order and ~ a refund to you. .In the future, try to contact the company which 1pon10n pre-
mium offen when there ii a delayed delivery or other ~lem.
Quakec Oata Company's addrem la 34~ Merchandile Mart Plaza. Ch1caao. m. 60654.
Kit monitors I ormaldehyde
DEAR PAT: Wiien we botlpt oer Mme yean aa• dae pre-
vtoa OWMT told •a It laad blown-la vea formalddyde foam
lu ... tML At CU& time daere WU M bowa claqer frem &Ml
type of lu•ladota, b•t DOW CUt It UI beeD ltauei by tM C.-
1•met Pred11et Safety Comml11I•, I am worried. 11 daere uy
way a llemeowaer cu dleek tH formaldnyde level la a Mae
wltn WI tu.latloa u1 beea ued?
-D.G .. Cotta Mesa
There are a number of methods uaed to monitor formalde-
hyde levels, but many require expensive equipment and highly
trained pel'BOnnel There LS a kit on the market, however, that
homeowners can use themselves. It lncludee formaldehyde mon-
itors, inatructions and an lnfonnation sheet delC:rfbin(i the he.1th
effects of exposure to formaldehyde. After sampling, the ho-
meowner returns the monitors in the enclosed, poatage~J..&id
envelope to the testing laboratory for analysis and a written
evaluation. The cost la $35 for the first monitor and $25 for each
additional monitor. For more information, write to Clayton F.n-
vironmental Consultants Inc., 25711 Southfield Roed, Southfield,
Mich. 48075.
Ben el its still available
DEAR PAT: Are penoaa eaterta1mllltary1ervlce eligible
for aay edacatloa beaeflt1? I've ltearcf ~t beJleflta ceased once
tile G.I. bill expired.
-J .P., Newport Beacll
Education benefits are still available. Tile Poat-Vietnam F..ra
Veterans' Educational Assistance Progrcun was started when the
GI bill expired. New service members initially entering active
duty on or after Jan. l, 1977, may participate. Under thia plan.
the member contributes to a special training fund each month
while in eervice. The government later contributes $2 for each $1
invested. For details, contact the Veterans Adminlatration or ar-
med services.
• "Go< a probJem? Then write to Pat Horowitz. Pat wDJ
·cut ttd tape, getdn6 the .mwen and .cUon you
't 1 .Med to«>lve lnequJU. m ~t and~
M.aJ1 .)QD' ~ It> Pac Horowl~ At YOlD" Senib. n • · Oranp Cout D.J.Jy Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, eo.t.
. . MeM, CA 92826. Aa many letten • po9/bM wUl be
• comics
prolJed
Bl:llKJ:LEY (AP) -Tbe J'Bl
hlll a... MUd to lnWlll;ate an
tnW"natlonal rtna counterfeldnc
a rare and valua6le underpmd
comic book about an u.mcrupu-
~ crwadt"' aardvark.
Tam Walton, co-owner of the
Berkeley bookstore ComJcl and
Comlx, tald be unknowlnaly
bo\laht 13 boaua oople1 of the
flnt edition of 11Cerebu1 the
Aardvark" for f30 e11eh lMt week
and then 10ld llx to collecton for
•100 eech.
Cerebul, 1 lpOOf of "Conan the
&rbarian' and other mystical,
IWonl-wieldinc oomic book cha·
racten, hu become a cult hero
who tendt to drink and debauch
after a bard day on the battle-
field.
The 2,00Q copies of the first
edition In the Cerebu1 1erie1,
creeled by Canld1an artt.t-writer
Dave Slm. I01d for $1 a ~k in
1977. Collec1on pay u much u
$200 for a copy ln mint oondltion.
The counterfeiting 1eheme,
which bu hit California. Texu,
England and parta of the East
Cout, was dilcovered at a comic
convention ln Long bland over
the weekend when dealers dis-
covered their supposedly
authentic Cerebu.a comlet were
fakel.
Sub's name
changed
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan hu ordered the
Navy to change the name of the
attack submarine Corpua Christi,
which arouaed controversy be-
cau.e of critlet' proteau that it
derogated the name of Christ, a
White House spokesman said.
The prMident instructed the
Navy to change the name of tht
submarine to City of Corpus
CluUti. In Latin, Corpus Chrlati
meana "body of Christ."
Many church leaders and W!V·
eral members of Congress had
objected to elvlna the name Cor-
~=====================~~pua~~Chrlsti~ to a wanahip .
•
875-1171 '.
3295 Newport Boulevard
1 Newport Beach Callfornla;
(on Penlneula Acroaa ;!r<>!T' City H8'1) J
· ''TERRI"
The pert.ct .,,adrine that will
d,... up OW( Olutfit, Moilabte in
natutol, white, novy, .... ond blodc
COfWOI uppen with~ wedge.
'
I# Wlf.,tloto
EMPEROR'S BIRTHDAY -Emperor Hirohito of Japan
i8 celebrating his 81st birthday today as the longest reig-
ning monarch in the world. The 124th occupant of the
Ja.pa annese throne, seen here in a secluded garden at his
palace, is described as "genki" -Japanese for vigorous.
Skutnik given gold medal
Lenale Skutnik, the man
who leaped into the frigid
P otomac River to rescue a
survivor of an Air Florida jet
crash, has been honored with
a gold medal by Transporta-
tion Secretary Drew Lewl1.
Skutnik, whose sister lives
Retired Adm. Hymaa
Rickover gave a San Diego
repotter a lesson in seeking
that which is unattainable.
"I hope you are not aspi-
ring to an interview," he said
to Kip Cooper of the San
Diego Union who had waited
three hours for him.
The 82-year-old nuclear
Navy pioneer went on: "You
in Newport Beach, was dri-
ving home from his Congres-
sional Budget Office job
when the jet crashed Jan. 13.
Three others also were cit-
ed for heroic deeds following
the crash.
know what Robert BroWDing
said about a man's aspira-
tions? He said a man's as-
pirations should always ex-
ceed his grasp. Now, if I gave
interviews, then reporters
would hav e no more
aspirations."
"But," Rickover added
with a small smile, "you
should keep on trying."
Italian director Fra1ee
Zeffirelli HY• hl1 film of
01UMpJ>9 VerdJ'• oper• "La
Travtata" wlll re-create the
opera exactly a1 performed
~· "1 am not look.inc for a new
interpretation," h e told a
new1 conference in Rome .
"My Intention l• to tell the story exactl .•• Zeffirelli~ fllm1na the t6 m1ll1on project lut week at &me•• Cinecf tta. He laid the
film, 1tarrtn1 tenor Placido
Domta10 and soprano Teresa
Strata1, should be finished by
Oct-0ber and wilJ be prevle-
w ed i n Venice before Ila
general releue.
Wllll4m C. Marcil, freal-
dent and publisher o The
Fargo (N.D.) Forum, was
elected chairman and presi-
dent of the American New-
spaper Publlshens AaeodaUon
at its San Franclllco conven-
tion.
Marcil succeeds Katllarlae
Graham, chairman of the
board of the Washington
Post.
President Rea1u will ad-
dress the West Gennan Bun-
destag during his European
trip in June, the White HOUie
announced.
The president will speak to
the parliament June 9, before
a meeting of North Atlantic
Treaty Organization membens
and a brief stop in West Ber-
lin. He will aJ&o confer with
West German Chancellor
Helmat Schmidt.
Erno Rablk has earned
more than $1 million from his
puzzle, "Rubik's Cube," a
Beljtian newspaper said.
"With my cube I've earned
at least $1 million," the daily
Het Laaute Nieuws quoted
the Hungarian inventor as
saying. "But I 'm so busy I
haven't had time yet to count
all that lovely money. rn get
to that later when public
interest in my penon has died
down a bit"
Rubik was In Brussels to
judge a "Rubik's Cube" con-
test won by Lac vaa Lae·
them, 24, who rearranged the
cube's colors in 33 aeconds. He
will participate in the world
championship ln Budapest in
June.
AM MLURY wants to dO IOO'l9thlng niCe tor ~ fur. 1t'1 tme to prOlld your
hr lmlllnW!t, 10 let NordltrGm *"' M for you. Sdlr*blly c:ontrolld
~ P'*f your fur from hell, humlcMy .is n*91w. Md while In
' llDl'lgl, M II ..... ded lgllnlt mothl. fltt Ind thlft.
-~ llAY 11, IAVI ft ... "" um1t• .....
c Otenge COUt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, April 29, 1982
·-------------:-----------------------------------------_,..--------------------------------------------------------------------·, ~ rn~urnrn~roa ~illrna
·Fairview mini-park
i hit by fund shortage
Tax time has just barefy
rolled by and Christmas ls eight
months away, making it next to
• impossible it seems to raise funds'
for a park at Fairview State Hos-
pital in Costa Mesa.
' Hospital officials and com -
munity members who have dona-
ted time and money to establish
the Enid Lathrop mini-park at the
hospital found that out for them-
selves.
Two yea r s ago N e wpo rt
' Beach businessman Al Douglas
took out an ad at Christmas asking
for community support.
H e figure d it would take
$30,000 to transform the ha1f acre
of bare ground into a n area of
sloping sidewalks and private pic-
nic s pots for the kids and their
families.
S o far $.13,000 h as been
raised . But a lack of money has
1 brought work ,to a grinding halt.
About $15,000 worth of do-
nated shrubbery remains in cans
until they can pay someone to
plant them.
Pam Healy, a rehabilitation
therapist who has ~en helpins
get the park plans off the ifOWld,
said it is imposs!lVe to get state
funding for the park. That's why
Douglas has turned to the com-
munity.
Many of the mentally disa-
bled youngsters between 8 and 21
are forced to go without any play
area because the swing sets are too
difficult to master, she said.
In these hard economic times
it's difficult to single out one pro-
ject as more deserving thart an-
oth e r . But s ince almost h alf the
money has been raised, it would
seem a shame to let the other half
go undone and unused.
Anyone interested in making
a donation to the Lathrop park can
write Ms. Healey at Fairview
State Hospital, Program V, 2501
Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa or call
957-5228.
Limit needs review-
The Costa Mesa City Council
will consider a plan Monday night
that could rajse allowable building
heights south oC the San Diego
Freeway on Bristol Street from
the current two-stories to a high of
10 stories. I The Bristol Street Specific .
I Plan, as it ls known, will affect 89
acres mostly between the San
Diego and Corona del Mar free-
ways.
F or years Costa Mesa has
I operated with an arbitrary free-
way line to establish density and
l building heights north and south
of the freeway.
Buildings north of the free-
. way rise as high as 17 -stories in
I the Seger strom -owned South
I Coast Town Center complex loca-
ted acrog., from South Coast Plaza.
i But it's been anotner story
' south of the freeway where some
residential ne ighborhoods are lo-
cated . So far only the five-story
(soon to be 10) Holiday Inn and a
I three-story building have been
'
allowe d to exceed the 30-foot
height limit.
I
A company in partnership
with C.J . Segerstrom & Sons have
already unve iled plans for an
eight-story hotel and four high
rise office buildings to be built on
the 13.6 acre site formerly occu -
pied by Montgomery Ward & Co.
Officials of California Pacific
Properties were apparently un-
daunted by the failure of a nearby
property owner to win cit y ap-
proval for office d evelopments
ranging in height from five to 14
stories.
The rising value of land in the
area has made city officials take
another look at the arbitrary
freeway line.
To continue determining the
future of Costa Mesa bued on the
north verata the south side of a
freeway is hard to juatif y . Both
sides of a freeway are natural
commercial or industrial develop-
ment zones, from the point of view
of traffic handling and noise buf-
fering.
There are four plans unde r
oonsideration by the council, ran-
ging from doing n o thing t o
allowin~ 10-story buildings.
We are incline d to believe
that option 3, which would allow
buildings up to 110 feet or eight
stories and require a dis tance of
300 feet from the nearest residen-
tial neighborhood. is a workable
choice.
It is important to remember
that even if the Bristol Street plan
allows high-rise construction in
the area, molt major projects still
will h ave t o come before the
Planning Commission for specific
approval.
I Where were advisers?
Criticism was voiced this past
week whe n seniors a t Newport
Harbor High School were given
"champagne" glasses inscribed
with the song title jjLet The Good
Times R oll" as senior prom sou-
venirs.
Upset parents said the glasses
-which the school argued were
"parfait" glasses -were a less-
than-subtle encouragemen t for
students to drink.
S ome pare nts also felt the
glasses were a cruel reminder of
last year when a 17-year-old se-
nior was killed in a car accident
following a senior class luncheon.
The girl was a paaaenger in a
car being driven by a classmate.
P olice said the driver, who was
seriously injured, had been drtn~
king.
The girl's parents said the
school should have kept that tra-
gedy in mind before agreeing to
let aen1on order the 1J•xe1 with
the ''Good Times'' Jne1181e.
School offldala said 1tudeht.1
.elected the gl•ret and that there
was no thought of encouraging
drinking. And, they said, there
certainly was no intent to bring
back bad memories of last year's
tragedy.
We believe them. In fact the
district, in an effort to eliminate
drinking, sent home letters with
students warning that alcoh olic
consumption would not be tolera-
ted at the senior prom. School
officials even asked parents to sign
the letters.
Even without the unfortunate
connection to last year' a tragedy,
the tcbool exercised poor judg-
ment in okayina the glaaaes and
the aong lmcription. Even though
the itema were ordered with only
the beet intentions, it doem't take
.heavy th.ink1na to understand that
the gJ .. e1 and 90n& title could be
misinterpreted.
~ ~ult of this embarraMtng
experience, lt would seem the
echool officlala wW take extra care
to think llUnp of thAI IOl't throqh
ln the future.
L.M. Boyd/ Acting trick I
b•r ••I_ down, 1rlpl!!:1 the rail. Drunk: Zip, down the -......
--:::::.
(Jlh ... ........ __
'l'M PRiPAKEPTO GOTMe txfRA Mil.£ •.. I SAIDT~ m5tPENT
Tax system demands reform
NEW YORK -Lewis Lehrman, a
candidate for the Republican nominatidn
fo.r governor of New York, issued a state-
ment on his lnoome taxes last week. He
does pretty well -h is money comes
from a family-owned drugstore chain -
and his 1981 income (adjusted gross in-
come) was listed as $920,651.
THAT, ACCORDING to my plodding
calculations, puts him in the 50 percent
bracket, the highest inoome tax bracket.
After all, according to the laws and re-
gulations governing the Internal Reve-
nue Service. every dollar earned over
$60,000 i.s taxed at 50 percent on a joint
return. Right?
Wrong. Lew Lehrman, whoee honesty
i.s unquestioned, was ih the 13 percent
bracket last year. He paid $121,706 in
federal income taxes on that income of
a.lmoet $1 million.
Lehrman's income, accordinS to hi•
statement, came from a aa1ary of $76,626,
dividends of $672.006. interest income of
$71,626 and capital pins of $236,358. He
had enough deductions and credit.a to cut
his tax to a lower rate than the 14 per-
cent paid by a salaried employee who
earns $100 a week.
Not bad for a guy who list.a his net
worth at $24,827,339.
But then the tax "laws" -that almost
indecipherable code of laws, regulationa,
rulings, precedents and interpretations
-are not bad for any American who
gets his money in any way other than a
regula.r paycheck complete with with-
holding. Honestly (loopholes) or disho-
nestly (hidden Income), the rich are
RICHAll 11011
getting richer than you would guess in a
country with a progressive j.ncome tax.
In fact, without consulting Lehrman's
lawyers and accountants, I would gu~
that he could have paid even less tax iJ
he really wanted to push through more
loopholes. Like many affluent Amer-
icans, he may have decided to pay some
more that he had to -either because
one believes everyone should pay some
arguably fair share or becauae one would
like to minimize the chances of being
audited Some of the big guys just pay
r.ero income taxes -Ronald Reagan in
the past wa.e one ex.ample.
The "progressive" income tax -
"soaking the rich.," the rich have called it
since Karl Marx proposed it in 1847 as
part of the Communist Manifesto -just
isn't worklnj the way it was supposed to.
There just don't eeem to be enough rich
people -or people ma.king good money
are damnably good at hiding income. Of
the 93.6 million 1980 tax returns filed,
only 547,590 reported adjusted 8l"OIMS
above $100,000. The total number above
$5Q,000 was under 2.6 million. Of $284
billion paid in taxes that year by indivi-
duals, $37 9 billion -less than 15 per-
cent -was paid by the members of
over·$100,000 families.
That total of $284 billion waa paid by
all taxpayers on total reported adjusted
gross income of $1.6 trillion. So, the
average income tax rate for all Amer-
icans was something like 17 percent.
Which means that if th~:=,re a single-rate income tax ("un ·ve .. )
and the current level of federal income
were maintained, each taxpayer would
pay 17 percent of his or• her ·adjuste4
gross, which is more than Lew LehrmMl
pays now. If deductions and credit.a were
eliminated at the same time, the sm,s.
rate would drop toward 10 percent. •
SOMETHING UKE a single rate, « a •
"zero-base" reform of the tax syatetn,
has to be considered -now. Becau.e the
rich can so easily avoid progreasive
taxation, the poor and everyone else are •
now doing it too. That's what the un-
derground economy is all about theae
days.
Americans have always paid taxes re-
latively willingly. We thought the
system was essentially fair. No more.
Eventually V .S. must support Britain 1
To the Editor:
Thia is to expreu my sudden alarm
and concern that, in the attempt of the
Reagan ad.miniatraUon to play the role of
honest broker In the Anglo-Argentine
dl1pute, it i1 running grave risks of
alienating the mmt vital and reliable ally
the Unjted States hu had ln thil cen-
tury. The n!SUlt of this alienation, should
It occur, will predictably be disilluaion
among the NATO partnen of the United
States with its reliability u the major
power in the west.em alliance in it.a ef-
forts to preserve free government and
the rul~ of law in the world. Such dia-
Wusion would, of coune, contribute to a
flaccid alliance and the spread of the
communist evil in Europe and probably
elaewhere.
In abort, the failure of the United
States to eupport Britain in the Falkland
Wanda diapute wW, lf It haa not done 80
already, lead to the contradiciion of the
central values lhi9 country haa stood for
in lhil century, and In the more apedflc
RSwe guarantee the denial of the very
goals of Reagan'• own policy in Europe
-the creation of a 1table balance of
power and through It the creation of
incentives for the U.S.S .R. to take se-
rioualy propoula for arma limitation,
force reduction, and gewra1 1ettlement.
I FEAR that the 1tatement at the
outset of the cri1i1, that the United
States wu equally friendly with both
the United K1nadom and ArienUna. WU 111-advt.ed, in that it pve the lmpremion
that thla country hu no preference u
between the world'• oldelt ~tional
democracy, a couatry wttb a map.Wcent
record in the defenle and expuwioo of
dvtl ~ Ul!d a country thllt ii at
1eMt .sni-fllldati one with an abysmal
' record with rapect to ti.. dvO llbertlea
which, one ~ are ltill • oentral to'
the United Sta• • at the tbllle of ita bfnh. I
It bl lmDenUve in the tn.-of UUI
country that the ~deft 'f)«lb
publicly, by both ltatement and cs..d.
that &he Unlt..t Sta• doel line up wlth llriUdn in tbt .,._ ol fNe world ya..
lue1, lncludtn1 Hlf ·d•terminatlon
(wbicb WU onct an llD"'8Uft A:IMr· km ..._._ -it-....... ). .. nal9 °' -· -..~ °' ..... ,. .. ne ----=··· ..... .. ...... • ...... ltllMil ........................... ..., ... .............. =-= r:· ·~=:.r; w11:Ut1
were railed for that purpoee.
U they only care about their own pets.
what kind of pet ownen are they?
I do not wlah to be cured of a disease
or have pain diminished because some
.MAILBOX
medication or procedure was di.covered
by torturing anlmala.
Much pf the animal testing today is
unnecessary, and much of the pain in-
flicted on anlmals in the name of testing
la unjustifiably aevere.
Instead of en.actiJli laws to let anlmals
other than your own be tortured, why
• not pus lawa to require unannounced
inspection of theee experimental labs?
Precedent set
To the Editor:
J . COLLINS
That the Coast Community College
District critlcbee outstanding teachers
for merely tryln& to maintain some
semblance of excellence ia di1turblng elll>U8h. but that th1a dlstrict fa conaide-
. ring lep1 llCtkJr\ ap1Nt the four la an
out.raae and a wute of the taxpayen'
money.
Admin1atraton lD the diatrlct ahou1d
rea1be that pncedent Ma been •t ln the
John Peter ~_(9t.
PJl!TER SNETSINGER
Protesters
To the rditor:
I refer to Sunday'a vticle concem1nl
thep1tte1\er1 who vow to ke~e
Pr-'dent .......... In ~ White .
On tbe one bmd. how nke Jt m\.Wt be
to baw the_, to do~ but dos
the Pl ............. ...
On the om.-hand. bow ... it would
be lf the ~ dewted thltr ener·
... to ... CCllllltr'ucUw purpol9.
J . w. JU:lD
TIUut to freedom
To feel free and worthwhile la losing it.a
meaning in America.
If these men are punished then free-
dom does not exist. People in authority
should not use their power to squelch \he
voices of those in the same area of work
or members of the same free country. ,
Subservience leads to ala.very where the
powerful show their rorTUption.
CHARLE.SL. HOELDERLIH
S tudent drinking
!fo the Editor:
I am a senior at Newport Harbor KIO
School and refer to the April 23 artiae
by Steve Marble titled., "Grad IOUvenin
stir bad memories."
First of all, can 't you find anythtna
more amusing to place ln the ID09t pre-
minent spot in your headlinet tlwl that
article? Second of all, the Idea of com ..
plainin' about champagne or parfait • ~
glasses ts totally irrelevant to the pro-
blem at hand.
One mother was quoted aa uyiJll,
"The g1UleS are a taatele11 and !ell than
subtle encouragement for 1tudenta to
celebrate graduation by drinkin8·" Well,
Mom, guess what. you're rtaht.
lnltead of writing the article, I think
you should write another on alcohol
abuse by hi&h school children in the
Newport-Mesa area. You could call 9'
"Grad drlnktn1 aura 1tudent bodJ
stomach.''
Deir .... ,..... .., Ue ,., ...
RAISING FUNDS -Mickey Mouse and
5-year-old Christy Mitchell, poster child of the
Leukemia Society of America, Tri-County
Chapter, get ready for a dive. The aociety will
hold ita flrat annual Super Swim Claasic in 10
Orange County pools May 8 to raise funds.
Prizes will be awarded to swimmers based on
amounts of money raised. For information, call
539-9511.
Federal tax
lJitf growing
By fte Alsociat.ed Presa . /
A hypothetical family of four with an income
of ~.000 faces a federal tax bill of almost $7,000
for the current fi9cal year, a study shows.
The figure• come from the Tax Foundation
Inc., a non-profit research group in Washington,
D.C., whkh keepe track of taxes Americans pay.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
federal budget and calculate how the government
spends an individual taxpayer'• dollars, using a
hYJ>OthetJcal family with one working ipouae, two
children and an annw,J l.noome near the median for
all U.S. families.
There are Iota of numbers involved, but it's
worthwhile to wade through them to learn where
your money goes.
For the lasteat study, the economilts used a
family with an annual income of $25,000. They
found that such a family would have a federal tax
bill of $6,916 for filcal 1982 -the year that beftan
~ 1. Federal l.noome taxes would account for $2,-
771 of the tax bill, Soc:iaI Securfty for" $1,675 and
indirect taxes like excite levies and corporate in-
come for $2,470.
Flve years ago. the eoonomilta u.ed a family
I with an income of $15,000 and found that such a
family bad a federal tax bill of 13,975. Federal in-
1
come taxes accounted for $1,459; Social Security
taxee for $878: and l.ndlrect taxes for $1,635.
In 1977. the federal tax bill for the lower-
i.ncome family equaled 261h percent of l.noome; for
1982. the federal bite on the hi&her-incorne family
WM 28 percent. '
The hypothetical Income level used for the
calculations wu increued 66 percent between 1977
and 1982, allowing for an 1ncreale in eamingJ of
more than 10 percent a year. That produced an
incnue in the tax bill of 74 percent. Income levies
acoou.nted for 37 percent of the tax bill in 1977 and
40 percent in 1982; Social Security \aXel aa:ounted
for 22 percent in 1977 va. 24 percent in 1982; and
t.ndJ.rect taxes acxx>Unted for 41 percent in 1977 and
36 percent in 1982.
Moat people think of taxes in terms of the
caJeodar year -from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
economia1a baaed their calculation. on the fiscal
year -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -aince that ia the
period u.ed by the pernmmt for ~ pur-
~ nie tqgest chunk of the money -then and
now -goes for what la called l.noome leCUrity, in-
cl~ Sodal Security paymenta, welfare benefit.a.
etc. lnCome teCUrity accounted for about 32 percent
of the family's tax bill in 1977 and about 33 percent
ln 1812.
National defense was the lleCOnd biaest apen-
diq category in both yean. It accountea for 33 an
plftl9)t ol the tax bill in 1977 and just under 25
~tt!Jeiay. There have been ahifta in other areea of spen-
dln1 over the past five years. lntereat on the
nadasual debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
fmnily's tax bill ln 1977 and WM in fourth place.
Toct.J, interest la in third place, accounting for 13
pel'Clftt of the tax bill.
Beelth, which wu third on the l1at five :rean
.., -allpped to fourth place; in both 197 and
1982 tt tlCCDIWlted for a little more than '9 percent of
the.bill. ID dollar tM'm1. income IK'Urlty accounted for
.... of the tax bW in 1977 and $2.291 tloday,. rile
of 78 . ...-n\. ,,,. dtf9lm portion of the tax bOl
wmf from '834 to $1,712, up 83 perwnt. and the m..-. portion went from $1&3 to $905. up lN ...... .
• ,
OrMgt CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Aprtl 29, 1982
Hefner passes torch
Daughter new Playboy president
CHICAGO (AP) -Chrilde Hetn,r,
29, dauahter of Huah Hefner, baa been named prnldent of Playboy
l'.ntmjnel Inc.
Ma. Hefner will report cUrectly to
her Lather.
Dinosaur deaths ·
iied to cataracts
LONOON (AP) -Eye cataractl mlaht have
wiped out many of the 800 apecies of dinouun that
roamed the earth until abOUt 85 million B.C., ec-oordina to L.R. Ctott, a Salford UnJW1"9ty btoJopt.
Various theorla have been put forth for the
demUle of the ar-t a.tune, which were believed
cold-blooded Uke modem reptilea. But Croft aua-aesta they died out beceu.e their eyea 1aclced the
protein io make them resistant to an lncreue in
• 11Havtna worbd at policy levela ln
many ....., ot the company, Ouilde
hal Oer1alnly been well pnpared for
thll move," her father, chief .xecutive
officer, Mid Wednaday.
Ma. Hefner baa been a corporate
vice prelident at Playboy four yean.
The direct manaaement of Playboy
Enterprilea wW be under the control
of Ma. Hefner and Marvin L. Huaton,
executive vice president.
"Our tint talk II to compi.te the
tranlitlon ol Playboy fram • broedl1
bwd corporation to • clem'ly ~
commu.nicatlom compeny," l&ld Ma.
Hefner ... In addidcft to hi .. ~
maaazlne publl1htn1 bu1tn•N and
entrance lnto \he lucrative S-Y c.ble
bUllne9. Playboy tllo bu profit op-
portunltl.el by c.ptalb:lna on the va-
lue of lta name throulh mapz1ne and
product llcenslna and club
francau,ina."
TAKES OVER -
Chri1t1e Hefner is
new preslden t of
Playboy Enterprises
Inc.
solar radiation. -1
In hi.a new book '"The Lut Dlnouun," Croft I
aaJd the speclea that dilappeared firat did not de-
velop a thlckenJna of the brow of the eye socket or
some other protection, such aa a horny crest bet-
ween the eyes.
Rites'
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75
13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75
12.50
12.25
12.00
11.75 11.50
11.25 11.00
10.75
10.50
10.25
vs.
Ready Access and
Money Market Fund flelds
s
10.00 '--....__...___.___.._.__....__...___.___.._.__....__....._~----L-L---'---'---L...---L.----11....-.J...--J
0 0 ~ M 0 ~ --~ ~-N ~ ~ N-~-4oO ~ ~ ~-~ N ~ ·----N N ~ - -~ 0 N N -N -C ·-0 0 -' ...... ...... ...... ~ ' ...... ~ ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ......
-C C C - ---N N N N N -- - -N N N N M M M
0 -- - - - - - - - - -~
Ready Access was designed to beat the
money funds ... and it docs! The money
funds may think ifs almost "unfair com-
petition," because of its unique combination
of features : insured safety, easy
accessibility, and hjgh inoney-markct
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and sec
if you don't agree.
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above shows. a person who
opened a Ready Access account last fall, on
October 10, would have earned a guaran-
teed yield of 14.468% fo r the following
26-wcek period. Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%, it dropped to
a low of 11.8%-and averaged only 13.S% for
the same period. That put the average
money fund yield almost a full percen~age
point below Ready Access. When you look
13.68~3'/o :~um
•A1tra11 lltMy lbrtet fu4 Yilkls as rtpOrtecl wenly lly Tht Wall Street Jour111I
at the track record, Ready Access has a
decided edge.
Easy Access
When you open your account, you get a spe-
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, $ l,000 or
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have lO do is write a check for at least
SSOO-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds. provided the account is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account is
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav·
ings and Loan In surance Corporatio n.
Money fund investments arc not insured.
And, as an article in the Wall Strut
Journar points out, the risk of money funds
increases as short-term interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance Requirement
Only SS,000 is needed to open a Ready
Access account. And there is virtually no
minimum balance requirement to maintain
the acx:ount.
smtees
An intereat·eirnin~:lting ac:count is
olfered each Ready account holder-
/r~~ or monthly service charges. And this
opens the door to 24-HO UR TELLER
(ATM ) service as well as TELE-PAY", the
unique service that allows regular monthly
bill s to be paid with a tele phone call . No
money fu nd provides so many spe·cial
servic~s.
<;onvenience
Wit h JOO offices throughout California
(soon to be expanded to 145) the Associa-
tion is easily accessi bl e fo r a variety of
services-from making deposits and with -
drawals to cashing checks, using a saf c de-
posit box. obtai ning money orders or trav-
elers checks, appl ying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
CALL THE FINANCIAL LINE
(714) 231-4023
Call Direct or Collect
8 a.m. UH 9 ·p.m.
''
Oct further information, the answers to
your questions, or arrange an appoint·
ment with a Money Management
Specialist at any Association office ..•
and doh all by phone, simply by calling
our Financial Line.
Reachlna new heipta of eel'Yiw .nd perf'onauce taka the kind or atreajtli that. at Oreat
American Fedeial, &»me1 f'rOm _.ty a hDndred ~ or 1uccet1 in money mana,ement. .Today,
with raouR.'111 IOOft ao nrpaa 14 bUUoD, Oreat AmeriAri Federal is one or the nauon'• lar .. t and
IU'Oftpsl ftnand&J ·inldludou. Come IUft ilUs atrenath, this century Of IUCCCM
' It O,..a Amlrlcai Peclirlf. · ,
I
I
~\ ... ~,-.t.~ Irvine pols·
non-traditiona~
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: In our coastal university
community of Irvine, you· have to auf fer enormous ·fas-'
clhation with the method by which current City Council
candidates are campaigning. Some clear novelties exilt.
Consider candidat.e F.d Doman, an English prof, who
seeks one oft~ open Irvine council seats in the u_ocominJ{
June 8 balloting. Dornan
has announced four fund-
' raisers.
;-..\ This usually means
TD-1-1-0-1-P-Hl-11-f ~r jamming a gaggle of the n ,~ ' candidat.e's faithful into a.
, small, smoke-filled back
room at some cut-rat.e pizza hut and serving them up di-
luted drinks, with half an ice cube floating therein, at $5
each.
NOT CANDIDATE DORNAN. He is clearly campaig-
ning on a higher plane. He is going to hold poetry readings.
Perhaps the poet articulators will modify the wording a bit
in the effort to subliminally sway the voters. SomesuCh line
as:
"Only Doman Can Save a Tree ... "
• Irvine Council campalgnlng dependa on bjgh levels
of en tertainment
The traditional Americana of local politics usually calls
for one or more of the flush candidates to toss a heavy bash
in the public park, rolling out barrels of beet. The suds are
expected to loosen up the multitudes just before the can-
didate mounts the podium to expound his virtues for office.
More beer sloshes among the multitudes. Cheers greet
the candidate.
Incumbent Irvine Councilman Larry Agran is follo-
wing in this grand tradition in his bid for re-election.
Only there isn't going to be any beer.
It's going to be an ice cream social at the park.
Agran must figure he's running for Boy Scout com-
missioner. He's oot going to h&v~y riots at his rally, by
golly.
U fisticuf!s break out, it'll be because somebody spilled
•tuttl-frutti on some other guy's tie. :
MEANWHltE, CANDIDA~E Barbara Wiener, who
once headed the Irvine Historical Society, got her council
campaigning off to a roaring start just last Friday. She held
a talent show. E. Ray Quigley sang, warbling a few notes in
he: favor.
One of the gentlemen entertainers was a magician. But
I understand when one of the Irvine leaseholders asked
him to make the Irvine Company disappear, he declined.
Clearly, Irvine council campaigning is so upbeat that
the town might as well go dry. Beer dealers will need to
give away a poetry volume with each six-pack to gather
any trade.
DESPITE ALL THIS, there are some things about
current Irvine campaigning that have a ring of the tradi-
tional to them. Take for ex.ample candldat.e Bill Pozzi, who
is a moving company executive. You guess if you're an
executive in a moving company, you get the light end of
the piano. , . , Anyway, Mr. Pozzi reports hes financlng his own
campaign and will be politicking in Irvine door-to-door,
asking for votes. Like that stockholder on TV says, that's
doing it the old-fashioned way.
But who knows? In this day of comput.eriz.ed election
telegrams and letters, Pozzi's return to the basics just might
work.
. MEANWHILE IN THIS non-~ local election: the
South Coast Republican Forum haa fnvited a couple of
candidates to speak.
See? The partisans just can't keep their noses out of it.
It's a compulsion. They've got to leap into it.
They'll probably give away beer rather than poetry or
aundaes.
The Orange County
Performing Arts Center is
in top financial shape.
Page 86.
Delly "'lot ... ., l'tlotoe
SECRET STRATEGY -Joan Hill of Costa Mesa likes the · "would just love to see what everyone else is planning" for
fun of racing and companionship of other pilots, but she the risky part of flying over water.
Pilots' strategies up • ID • air
By STEVE TRIPOLI or ... 0.-, ..........
There's $10,000 ln prize money at stake,
but local women involved in the second
annual Baja California All Women'• Air
Race say that's not the main reaaon they're
flying.
Fun, companionship and a test of skills
will spur their takeoff from Long Beach
Airport Friday, they say.
"lt's a whole different type of flying,"
said F.ather Krauth of Newport Beach. who
spends a lot of time airborne as a first of-
ficer on Air Cal flight.. "It takes concen-
trated effort."
Ma. Krauth will pilot a plane with Ellen
Appel of Laguna Beach, aa navlgatOr.
In air racing, where charts must be
plotted, routes followed with precision, and
decisions made on everything from altitude
to fuel stops to achieve the fastest tlme,
teamwork is emential.
Ma. Appel and Ms. Krauth, one of sev-
eral Orange Coast teams in the 30~plane
field, say they've spent a lot of time buil-
ding the neawary rapport.
They met ln " beauty salon about two
years ago, when Ma. Appel overheard Ma.
Krauth say ahe needed a new partner for
air radng.
Since then, it's been all work, for In•
stance, a year preparing for this race be-
cause they want to excel ln it.
"When )'OU'Ve been with somebody that
many hours, that manr days, you really get
to know each other,' said Ma. Appel, an
independent publidat.
If hours flying were the key to victory,
Irvine's Maureen Motala and her partner
would have the race eewn up.
Ma. Motola la a seven-year .reteran of
flying with some 2,000 houn to her credit,
but partner and navigator Clair Walten hu
logged a hefty 30,000 hours In nearly 40
years of flyl.na.
Like her companions, al.molt all of whom know each other as members of the Orqe
County 99a women's flytna club, Mn. Mo-
tola says she la racing-" just for the
challenge."
FlYina 1n Baja, where she and huaband
Dan bave a v11eation home. la a challenae ln
Itself, ahe laid.
READY FOR RACE -While Maure-
en Motola checks her instruments, El-
len Appe l and Esther Krauth chart
their rout.e to Baja California.
"They have no weather forecaata (for
flyers) there ao you're really on YOW' own.
You have tO play with the plane and see if
its driftbli to the left or n,ht."
But the test ~·t faze Mrs. Motola, a
red-haired real estate agent who often flies
her own plane for ~.
"It sharpens your proficiency." she says
with a smile.
Joan Hill of Costa Mesa says she. will be
most Interested in the strategies of oppo-
nents, though they may never be comple-
tely revealed even after the finish.
The declalon to fly a portion of the race
near shore or a quicker route over water,
which it considered somewhat risky for
single-engine planes, Intrigues her the
moet, she said.
"I'd juat love to see what everyone elae is
planning to do about that," she says with a
grin.
The three-day, l ,000-mlle race will stop
in San Felipe and Loreto before its finish in
Sah Joee del C.bo at the tip of Baja.
Special preparations go beyond charting
routes. Small details like waxing the out-
side of the plane thoroughly -anything
that will lessen wind resistance and speed
the trip -also are attended to.
It's not all open space and camaraderie
for aome ol the competitors, Mrs. Hill said.
"Some of them can be really cutthroat.
They'll really hold you to the rules,'' said
the eeuoned Baja pilot, who has led 1evenl .
multl-plane excursions onto the penlnsula
where 9'-ie has a vacation home.
But for her and most others it's not that
way.
Newport Beach pilots Jill Crane and
Lynn Newton say they'll gain experience
and enjoy themselves in the race.
Ms. Crane, at 21 one of the younges t
competitors, said the fliers "learn from each
other" ln a race.
"You can get more experience in a week
of racing than in a year of flying," added
her partner.
The two have been paired for only one
month, and they've been eeparated most of
that time while Ma. Crane attends aero-
nautical school in Arizona, but they feel
they've done enough preparation to be 1e-
rioua contenders.
Referring to the low altitude the planes
muat fly over checkpoints on the route, Ms.
Newton added wlth a mischievous grin.
"Bealdea., where e1le can you legally buzz
an airlieldT'
House:tiian brings .Shakespeare to life at UCI
. BY JEFF PAUER Of .. Dllr ........
John~ the wnerable atar of the film "The Paper
ChMe" and of th• teleYWon ..
..... that followed, first lectured
at UC Irvine before the tehool
ewn hid a campuia. •
'!bat W• ln 1883 and the lite w. downtown a.rden Grow.
But the 90-,_,.o)d Hom-Mn recumed to the un&wmty -ru.;.
• receive
day ni,ht to ,Sve a eelecUon of
hi.a favorite readtno u put of ucr. Leona Ge!'arcl Lec:tUn ... ...... .
Aft« llvtnc a brief hiltory of ~-~~ the curmudllOftly
nu'VlllU law ~ on whom ~·,Prof_,, X.._..Jd
character 41 baaed, Houaeman
launched Into a one-hour N9dina
on tbe topbl ot death. Jovw ana mun.,..
' '
ltnnfer either to Shakapeare or
the ataae. Before hJ8 ~ty • Prof..or Kinofie '"lbe
Paper ChaH," 8ou1ernan bad
mounted a Iona and dh-·.
tl~h~ career u a Wm and
-.. dlNctDr and wrtw. . He bepn wrtdnl ln 1911. In
the early 1930., lfouteman dl·
two l'mmy Awards for bJI work
on "Playhowe 90.''
Houteman abo 1trveH u di-
rector of. the Juilliard School of
Drama for 10 year1. He wu a
frequent contributor to vartowa ma1utn•• on tbe 1ultject of
dnina encl the theeter. At the
•of 70, he won an Oar far hll
'The atom bomb made 'Lear'
relevant ••• 1errilylylx ·appropriate."
•
f ,
I .
DICAR ANN LANDERS: 1 U8UA11y aaz-
wtth you. but we parted oom.-ny when you
called a. man a tranlvwtlte beoa\m he WON
a ~ and ltocldnaia· I ~n tell you from experience that
~are w 1111ry to keep a O:'dle from ~ up and bunchina around ihe middle.
Support ltoddnp Ho Oelp drculaUcn. -Y eara a10 I had back problem1. I
couldn'• affoa:d a mrCical conet. My wite
gave me an old girdle and a pair of nylons.
She aaid I'd need the nylona to keep the
girdle down.
In a matter of days I was amazed at
how much better my back felt. It really was
~
I would also 1ugge1t the man wear
l ! nylon pantlee under the girdle. It will help
the g1rdle slide on more easily.
A great many people have faith in you,
Ann, eo pleue don't go tomng labels around
lrrapomlbly. You could hurt aome innocent
people. -STRAIGHT IN BALTIMORE
DEAR STRAIGHT: O.K. All~ guys
wlao are wear1D1 laclJet' glnllet, aylou ud
••derpaat1 (ilaek carter belts, too,
maybe?) are 1tral1lat fellas wltla back
pi:_oblem1. U yoa believe tllat, I llave u
l&JOO la FiDJud fd llke to sell yoa.
DEA.R ANN LANDERS: My brother
and his wife were divorced 10 years ago.
They had three children under eight. yeara
of age. Warren thought it would be best for
•
•ANN LANfJIA8
•ERMA BOMBECK
•HOROSCOPE
" DEAR SIS: CMlbea WM uve •• ao
eoa&act wldl dleir dad for H yean Unlly
co be expected to llerald llll reappearaaee
wltll trampet1 and Oyln1 banners. Tiiey
Deed dme fo adjaat. 'fte belt Ile CO expect
at dlll s>olat 11 polite bldlffereace. He mb·
1ed tile Love Boat 18 yean a10.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your answer
to 'Ticking Away," who was distressed by
her company's insistence that she see a
psychiatrist and bring a note every week to
prove she had kept her appointment -or be
fired -was revolting and dehumanizing.
Jbe company may have a legal right t,p
do ttiia, at le11t under current laws, but
there la no reaaon to aasume thoee laws are
fair or that the woman ia "lucky to be kept
on."
Such a reaponae reinforces the image of
the "mentally ill" held by not only the
public, but by mental pat1entl themaelves, aa
second-class citizena who have somehow
earned the humillation and condescension
that are visited upon them. It also, by im-
plication, reinforces the myth that the psy-
chiatrist and his diagnosis are always right.
Would you have responded so conde-
scendingly to "Ticking Away" if she had
been suffering from diabetes? Are you sure?
-JUST AS1tING
DEAR J.A.: Yoar comparing mental
Diplomacy Virgo key
Friday, April 30
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Dynamic
meeting with member of opposite aex high-
lighta exciting acenario. Emphasis on initia-
tive, new 'contacts, fresh conceptl and ability
to get to heart of matters. You imprint style
and find constructive outlet for creative en·
... ergies.
' TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on
security, family, home, ability to locate
needed material. Hunch proves accurate -
aeme of direction ii clarified. Some restric-
tions prove beneficial; delays actually could
work in your favor.
OEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Social
acUvity lncreaaes, people call you. want to
1ee and hear you and you'll receive at least
one invitation to travel. Sagittarlua and
another Gemini f.igure prominently.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): Miaing
1inka are located -puzzle pieces fall into
place. By becoming familiar with routing,
you improve chances for proftt. Money
comes from surp.rile IOU.ree, cub flow could
resume.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Enthusiasm
replaces lndi.fference; cycle high and you11
make correct "decisions at right time. Member
of opposite aex dstres to communicate and
makes you aware of it. Gain indicated
through written word.
POTSHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent dip.
lomacy, patience and realization that you
have yet to obtain story behind story. Dig
deep, reject superficial explanation and ob-
tain backstage view.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2%): Emphasis on
illusion. romance, wish fultillment and op.
portunity to perfect techniques. You'll be rid
of auperfluous material and you'll see
through one who ia a pretender.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Focus on .
emotion, retDOD8ibWty, reward, intenai-
relatlOmbfp. Lunar .a:ent on buainela,
career. community and penonal prestige.
Older individual ta actually on your aide,
althou,h you may find it difficult to acce,pt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Em-
phaail on d1-tance, reaching beyond current
expectationa and gaining an international
view. Project can be completed, burden ia
removed and you can IUCCellfully articulate
aspirations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22,.Jan. 19): New
approach brings desired re1ult1 where
money ia concerned. Avoid arguing with one
cl09e to you -teek comproml9e, realize that
error will be corrected. \'ou11 have chance
to exerme independence of thought, action.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Change
of p1aDI indicated; lepl document plays key
role. You become aware of rlghtl, permia-
aion. You~ rao_a leunina experience.
Member of oppo1tte 1ex ta f~ted, but
uncertain.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Job Op·
portunitSel expand, more people are attrac-
ted to your talenta, 1en1e your abilltiea. Lona-cltatance call affectl travel plan.I, in·
d lvtaual who relies upon your judpent
may want to rely upon your f1nandal aid.
Tragedies trigger caution
•
·-
50% off!
Motion Panf" closeout
of selected colors.
I
Now
8.99
Ortg. S1 I . Women's dress penta In
stretch pofy. Red, buff,
It. ~. mauve and gray In atzea
6·20. ~ and short.
Ful-flgure sizes 32·42,
orig. $19, Now I.ff.
Ou•ntltlH llmlted.
'
BY JEFF PARUR or-....., .........
Somedmel luck II the belt de-
*tive,.
Juat uk David F. Sherman of
Sunnymmd, who w• altt.lna in
Orance County jaµ today alter
his an.t Wednetclay afternoon
on 1u1plcion of auto theft. A
JliCbway Patrol officer~
THURSDAY. APRIL 2Y. 19112
blm In Irvine after a 120-mph
clui.e. '
Sherman, 24, walked into Nero
Moton ol Weatmf.nlter Weclnea-
day at about 12:30 p.m. and uked
to teat drive a ailver 1974 Cor-
'vette, the CHP reported.
Saleanwn ,Brant T~ got behind th• wheel an gave
Sherman a brief tour of dtv.
· '!Jangero~s .' t~ economy
When the lntereited buyer ~· to drive the Corvette hlmaelf
Tealnaer reportedly aot out o
the car and Sherman aot oo ~ pa and aped away.
An hour later, Sherman drove
into Newport Importl on Coui
Hlabway In Newport Bftch,
where be told aaJemnan Jim Ga-
rd v that the Corvette 1lmply
wua't th• car he wanted and
wauJd ..... ,, ln to -a J'.-arrt
-lll'tmd at N0.000. But Newport hnpor11 owner
Lee W• not IUN ol Whit the
car'• value WM. '°' Oft 'the phone and ailW bAI fNllda et -you ~it -Nero MQfon to find
• ~ prb. When be~
the Corvette, the Nero Moton
.. ·~··:.lnl,erest rate blasted
•\\!~,~· .. q . ·i~ .
.. ' ., eY'JOf.t C. OON '· · . Baete~ auoc:iate profeaor of fi-CM''91e ._ .... ~ nard at UCI and ooordinator of county. The panelilta who spoke
before county buaine11men at
UCI included Baeael, Larry
Kimbel, director of economic
models tor UCLA's Bu1lne11
Forecutlng Project, and David
Shulman, a UC Riverside econo-
mill.
but that historically has been
true," said Baeael. "But blah
houana pricel in Orange County
are maldng th!. an unattractive
place and 811 alowtna down job
growth."
I
'1
• The curnrn* ~ level of lnte-the forecast ..
rest rates i11 "d~ua ·~ our Mortgage raie:s might a1ao fall,
(economic) health, a. .• ![q ~ but. proq>ective home buyera economiat aaid WedneMJIY ~~.. ~ t6"the more tolerable ·1evela
rina an annual UC buaineii · .. of th-..~o11, the busine11 tore-
fdt'ec:llSt for Oranae County. CMt.ei: said:"~:
"We're not aotna to pt a good nu.~ihe third. ear UC
recovery rate Untif thole Interest economiail'iia\'e metlio give rates come down," aaid Jerome forecuta for the ,nation, state and
"Oranae County 1ookt a little
better tlian the state and a lot
better than the naUon u a whole
Student
scholars
honored
Thirty-two senion from Co-
rona del Mar Hlah School and
Newport Harbor High School
were hooored Wedneeday by the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Ccmmeroe Commodorea Club
for their ICholutic ach.levemelll
Corona del Mar High School
1tudent1 honored were: Steve
Cendan, Patricia Cbapnan. Gre-
gory Czaja, Chrtatopher 1'nch,
Lia Greenbera, Steve Holland
and Caroline Kelly. .
Ai.o from Cd.M were: Cindy:
Kendall, Kerry Kim, Allen
Menton, Mar~f, Sheryl
a.dot. Scott Erik Ba-
der, Suzanne Ru110, Pamela
Wll8on and Mary ZaJ Ir' I
Scholars from Newport Harbor
High School included: Rebecca
Ann Browne: Catherine Quinn
Craychee, Thanhhuyen Thi Do,
Loulae Anne Frova, Glen
ThomM Kauffman. Gngory Eu-
gene Kay and Gavin Rkhard
Keith.
Al•o from Newport Harbor
were: Brlan Gordon Kennelly,
Suaan Elizabeth Kuhn, Cynthia
Krilt.lne Kulikov, hank ~want
Livtnpton, .Yv•U. KarrellLoh-
•, Patrick Donald McCalla, Irene
Celia Turner and Gordon Kent
Wanlala.
~ del Mar lleD1or Marga-
ret NeU WU Do the rediMnt of
the ''Aanea Blomquilt Award"
given annually to a top female
student for acholaatic achieve-
ment -"' community eervtce.
Each of the atudenta w• .tven
a certlficate and a copy of folew-C, Beach'• 75th ann.i
1
venary
Crash kills
truck driver
A 30-year-old Santa Ana man
waa killed this momlna when he
loet control of hll plcfc'i&.!!:. : and atruck a pole on the
Boulevard on-ramp to the we.~
bound Rlveralde Freeway, the
c.I=!:f!way Pacrot aald. deed at the ecmw
WM Michael K . Detterich, offl-
, cen .ud.
NATION
~~~~~----~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~
...................
BOOKS AND MORE BOOKS -Marilyn Oltman and Anita
Ferguson (right) 1tart boob for upooml~.!"ienda of the
Newport Beach Library booklale as Jane grabs a few
more from the shelves. The book sale, which benefits the dty
libraries, ia to be held May 6-8 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Newport Center branch library.
Britain rejects
U.N. peace bid
BJ De .Uaoda&ed Pren
tain rejected today any new
to the United Nationl to
the Falkland la1anda crilit
and aald "the key to pmce'' liea
wtth Arpntina. Arpntina t.qied
the Britith to '"'-a minbnum of
good will" to avoid war.
Prime Mlnl1ter Margaret
Thatcher noted In an emeraency
debate tn the Howe of Canmont
tn London that the United Na-
tiona pu9ed a l"elOluUon cal11na
on Ar&en.Una to wttb4raw Jzoopl..
from the l'alldand1, invaded 1
Ap:il 2.
• 111f that raolution ~ to be
implemented, there would be
vwy f~left. in ntlation to the lllandl," lbe laid. •-n.er. can be DD doubt where
the intran1taehce lle1 in thla
matter. 'The key to pe.ce la tn the
handt of the Argentine pem-
ment. The reaponalbflity 11
thein.''
In Buenoa Aires, Act1na Fore-
lp Minister Alfredo Sahit Jean w• .u.ed In a l'9dlo interview if
Araentina and Britain ti.cl ru-
cbed a "polnt of no return" tn the
C'lilil.
Saint Jean replied, "At leut
Araentlna hu not." He added
that Afaentlna ia "more wtJ.linl"
to .-It a aoludon to the conflict
. . . Our county h89 shown itlelt'
to be more than prudent and pa-
Uent, not only r.:.:: y.n of
DelOtiadcn. but Uy clw1na
thil c:rilll."
However, Ara-Una'• = tJuoe9.man Junta -'cl it a
( ... PAL&LANDI, P ... Al)
COUNTY
The fore~aaten predicted
~rate.~ hover around
the current avera,e of 15.7 per-
cent. The rates are expected to
drop to 16 percent in 1983 and
. then another full percentage
point by 1984.
The coat of homea In the
county will rile 3.2 percent th1a
yur. But when inflation II aw-
rqed In, houalna pricea actually
· will lbow a 5 peroent reduction,
the fClftCUterl aid .
• Tbe hlah cott of bouaing 11
expeded to-tum away potential
bulrine.aes from relocatlna In the
county. And there actually may
be an exodua of uaemJ;>ly-llne
workera to the "new Orange
Countiea of the '80." ln Baken-
fleld, Freano, Riverside, San
Bernardino and other inland
locationa, the economiltl aald.
'"There are many people who
would like to buy a home, but
ju.at can't make the paymenta,"
Bee.el aa1d. "Pries will drop for
houaea, but that wJll make C>r8ftll County~ coqp.dUve
becaUile it will attnct new Jobe."
The county unemployment
picture ll expected to reach a
~ rate of 6.3 percent thia year,
but wW fall to 5.7 percent in 1083
and f.9 percent in 1984. In 1981
( ... IN'l'F.REST, .... .U)
Signals work
slows traf fie ·
in 2 cities
A Caltrana of fidal uld today
that motorlatl can exp'ect only
"minor delaya" alona Newport
Boulevard afW next week.
· Harry Hopktna, who II auper-villnl the lJWtallaUon of the ,1.3
milllOn worth of new traffic lia-
nala aJonar Newport Boulevara,
aald 8lllDI 1ln. have been cbed
In recent weeka to lnatall new
undersround deteciort for the
llpala.
One lane of Vlctorla Avenue
will be ckmd Friday from 9 ~.m.
to 3 .P.m.. be noted.
Alto, two lanea of Newport
Boulevard mar nnley Avmue in
Newport 8-cb will be ci..ct for
two daya bec1nninc Monday.
ffoDldm llid DO Other 1--are
acheduled ~=· The pro-jact • to be by the end
of July.
New atcna1t a1re.dy have been
1nataDed on both the north and
eouth atdea of Newport Boule-
vard between 22nd Strfft to
.... Drtve Inc.-. .....
Caltrw ottldale llid &bat the
new~willbMW~
nbe 8'lnall .... the bwy bou-
levard. 8fcnak will be Clmed to
..... peek boun °' nllh hour .....
~. lliow •I El Tom
.... _ .. 5 ......... ~..:
ArlMd r.... DaJ~ ........ * ........ Muh.,.. -' MCM; •flJ'cllo. .... Al.
people put two and two ~
and came up with one ltO&lrl cw.
But the 1uapect wu 1one by
the Ume Welt buq up. '
t..a~ 8 p.m., CHP Offkllt 8na. 1poti.d th• C.otvett9 .....
dtn1 north on the, Saa l>t•10 Freeway at Alida Parkway. Aa
he moved (n behind lt '° Wrtfy the plates, the Corvette 1
a.lf ........... _ ...... O'D I
JACUE'S BACK -Newport Beach Mayor Jldde Heather
returned to city ~ Wecme.day for the tint time ance= March 7 stroke and wasted little time down to
w . She talked about ~lection. o~ drill1n& J
Wayne Airport and her rebabilltaUon treatment.
Heather returns;
she~Jl run again
·, .. ,
By STEVE MARBLE OfllleDllr .........
Jadde Heather, who IUffend a
strolle -~ two mantM..,. mo\red back into her lf~t
8-tl mayor'1 office Wedriada.y
and took care of fil'lt thinca fint.
She announced abe'U nua for
~In November.
The ~2-year-old m.ayorfaald
lhe wantl to quickly brwb llllde
any nuncn that her ~tal m·
reer II tNf!r,
"I talked lt over with my
fmally,'' the explatned, ''and they
qreed this II the ..-t of pl l
need right now. My family
knowa how much the council
meam to me."
Alide from I linaerina WeU-
nell on her left atcfe ancl a naa-
l:lna feellna that the'• Cll1 publlc
a11play, ten. Heather aaid 1be
feell fit and wantl to dub tpee·
ulaUon that the Ma.rcb 7 ltroke
has left her cbanpd.
"I jult hope people pve me a
couple more weeks to pt every-thtnc put together. rm 1t111 some
throu1h renablllt•tlon on an
outpatient bMla and need to wwk
on my fine motor lldlla."
Slr.ipplna over what 1he calla
the "grueaome detail•," Mr1.
Heather aaki the made procrw
from day one and IW'priaed eve-
ryone but henelf at the qukk-
r.-of her reccwery.
"l w• lucky," the llid, wma.
to city employeea who 1trolW
pa11& her office. "My 1peech•
wasn't wiped out or anytblnt
lib that. kb day bnJucht a ~
lmprvyement."
Sbt llid ·docton hive toad lm
ahe'll hive to learn to control Ml'
~ aomedq lhe IUI
wfll be her 11r ou1b•lt
-'pmM\t." ;:Lbave to learn not to ~e
=~~~~ I'm not a worrier. but f do -tn.cratecl becal• l mre IO Jmiall aboUt tbln9. • ,_. ___ ... ..,,
NTERE ST RATES
I ! 4.7 percent of the labor force wu
: o\at of work.
I
: The avallabWty of jobt will not I chanee much thla year. However, l Job arowth wlll rise next year I and be boolted by 5.6 percent ln
: 1984. ! High hou.tna prices and liml-
' t.ed If tee for new con1tructlon are
: expected to add to the decl.lne ln
tealdential bulldlna permit•. ~anp County reached a peak of
: 30,500 pennlta ln 1976. Thll year ~ the forecaat calla for onlv 8,500
I .
permlca. 1'ht outkdt a.,P..,. to
lmpro\'e lft die not few yean, wi~ 12-,MC} ....... fn 1983 and U,~00 in 1"4 •n by the UC
~ ... When the ..,anomy l)icb up,
Ortftn Cou,nty will pick up, but
lt ~·n not '° uck to the &ood
dap of \t\~ '701," Baeael aald.
"Haoby dayit are not here ap.tn. "( ihJnk we a:ten't aotnl to be
. worae oft; wfre 1oln1 to be •
llUle better 9Jf becauae of the
(fe4nal incotJt~) tax break In
July'' be added. ~.
l~F ALKLAND ISLANDS . . .
• British attack on the dlaputed la1ands before the weekend, and
, a Foreign Mlniatry source aaid
the American propoul wu 1ub-
1 atantially unchanged from the
last ~ the junta rejectec\.
~ In London, Britain'• announ-
1 .cement that it waa extending ita
_. blockade of the Falklanda to
•air traffic at dawn Friday wu .r;:;,.u the deadline for dlplo-
h\ But British mllitary aourcea
aald the 811118ult probably would
awainhe arrival ln two oc three
daya of patratroop reinforce-
ments being flown to join the
FALKLAND
~~le . y
ISLANDS
1 ~~00 R01'a1 Marine• with the Jldttah war~ f • .... ·,.tt ..
. ·..u of lay nlaht, the · S\ate De' · t had received
· po ~~ Britain or Ar-
''tehtina te> • tjary of State
"Atexander J,J;· i. latst peace ~ ~~ , offidala.
. s"ta~ Oe~t apokesman
Dea6 Fiaber ..ia -Sail wu pre-
......... 'to resume lits -1\uttle bet-~~; BU~ ~''And London'
If that would ~IP!. T he United
States believes the"iJµation is at·
a "critical ata~e. "·'.Ifie time for
diplomacy is. ve~ ~abort,"
said Fi.sher. •• -.~ •
,,, ....
WAR ZONE -British Defense Ministry announced
Wedneeday total air and sea blockade around Falkland Islands
{in.set), and would consider planet on ground at Stanley Air-
'port (located at arroWI) as "hoetile.''
-..., ................
NOT SURPRISED -F.dilon
High School football coach
Bill Workman said he wasn't
surprised by findings of an
administrative law judge.
Edison
cleared of
all charges
By ROBERT BARKER
Of Ute Oa4fr "'°' 1'8ff A state adml~stratlve law
judge found no eVldence of lm-
prope r recruiting of football
playen by Ediaon High School
Coach Bill Workman or by
anyone elae employed at the
Huntington Beach achool.
The lindlnp were announced
Wedneeday at a pnm conf.erence
called by School Superintendent
Frank "Jake" Abbott.
Hispanics
protest
jobs • unit
BY PUDERJ~ SCROEMEBL or ... ....,,... .....
"Operation Jobe" -the con-
trover1lal roundup of undocu-
mented w orkera employed In
Southern Callfornla -moved
Into Oranae Co\41\ty today amid
protelta from l.eeders of H.llpan1c ,
oraanJ,utiona.
Accordlna to Am.Jn Davld of
the Leaaue of United Latln
American Qtir.ena, one furniture
mahufacturer wu raided near
the Sant.a Ana-Tuatin border.
It was later Identified u BP.
John Co., of 2001 E. Dyer Road,
Santa Ana. The finn reportedly
employa 350 people. The number
taken Into cuatody was not de-
termined.
One man, who wu unlden\i-
fied, waa diatrauaht ln reporting
hta 1i1ter, who liad lived wltfi
him In the United States for 10
yeara, waa one of the employee.
taken into cuatody.
INS offlciala In Loa Angeles
this morning refuted. to confirm
or deny auch a rald took place.
"We will have more information
this afternoon," a apokeswoman
said.
David waa among a dozen Hi-
spanic and civil rights leaders.
who spoke to reporters at a mor-
ning news conference held in
front of the INS off.Ice in Santa
Ana.
Operation Joba, according to
the INS, ii designed to remove
undocumented workera from
employment IO that thoee poai-
tiom may be fllled by penlOna
legally withln the U.S. or U.S.
citiz.ens. The operation hu been
under way ln Los Angeles since
Monday.
They followed three days of
cloled hearino early. thia month in which Jonn A. Willd of the
St.aie Office of Adminiatratlve H~queatloned 40 people ''The pohUcal a:apegoat of this • unCtitr .oad). , ~ operation which falaely seeks to ''it~ IO be Nfd· loudly and blame the undocumented for the
cturly)that the .,-jniatration chronic unemployment millions ~ ~~ ~ a)1d ethi-of Americana have experienced ~al .and we are pfoU.d toJ~•ve for more than a decade la them.'' Abbottdf.Clared'. . ·! ... slanderoua," David aald .
''The cue la cu.eel. We1l nOt'··· " •.Operation Jobs' la actually
run after our tai.JJ any more." . . •1~tion ~oa.x,' and a cruel one
Workman, 'who coach ed the-at th.it ...
F.dlaon Charfera to 32 victories In ..-Rev: Allan Deck, of the oUice
their laat 3 games, aald Wed-of.~ mJ.niltry, Dioce.e of
neaday he waa bitter but not Orange, 'Nld the roundupa are ~ew what the reaults dividing famUiee; attacklna the
would be before the inveatiga-dignity of worJtera; reaulti:1' ln uon. The resulta are no aurpriae.'' ''flagrant" vtot.tlona of in lvi-
h laid dual righta .. and d"°'1minatlng
e Wofkman, head coach since :Jf:~!~one •thnJ: atoup: the
1973, laid he hu been "dangled ..--
like a piece of meat for everyone '"They (the raid.a) are ractally
to shoot at." inspired," Deck claimed.
He Rid Edison baa been the
target of allegationl "becau.e we
have won more th.an our share of
games.
"The klda move in, I can't
control that. When they're de-1 clared ellJ~ble I coach them.1
That'I my Job." I
Costa Mesa
fire blame d
•
Newport weighs
new trailer law
The Newport Beach City
Council la conalderlna a new
law that would make lt We1al
to park recreational vehiclea
and detached trallen on pu-
blic st.reeta ln reeidential areaa
except to load or unload.
The proposed ordinance
will be dhcuued by the
council May 10.
•Dart. Holt, a 15-year-old
member of the Harbor Area
Boys Club in Newport Beach,
has been recognized as one of
15 outstandi ng Ora nge
County youths during the
First Annual Outstanding
Youth Awards Banquet at
Knotts Berry Fann.
Holt was picked from 800
Harbor Area youths to repre-
sent the local Boys Club. Cri-
e A tour of the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art is
being offered Saturday at l
by the Orange Coast College
Community Service office.
A bus will leave the Costa
Mesa college auditorium par-
Specifically, the ordiMnce
would prohibit the pe.rkina of
any vehicle 64 incbea or wfder
and would ban the parking of
any detached trailer or aim-
Uar device .
Copies of the pro~ or-dinance can be picked up in
the city clerk's office , 3300
NewPOrt Blvd.
teria for selection includes
ser vice t o h om e , sch ool,
church and the Boys Club.
AJong with other winners,
Holt will be eligible for re-
gional and national Boys Club
awards. Regional winners are
invited to the White House
where President Reagan
names the single national
winner.
king lot at Y a.m. and return
at 2:30 p.m. Cost ia $12.
Tickets are available at the
college T icke t o ffice. For
m o r e info rm a t ion call
556-:;527.
Couple bring suit
against Anaheim
A potential class action lawsuit
that seeks $100 million in da-
mages -or $100,000 for each of
the 1,000 ~pie left homeless by
last week a devastating Anaheim
firestorm -waa filed Wedne.d-
av 8'lainst the City of Anaheim.
Also named u defendantll In
the Orange County Superior
Court suit were Southern Cali-
RELATE~ ~HO'J'.9-A5
fornia Edison Co. and nlne
apartment owners, developers
and managers whose buildings
were destroyed by fut-moving
flames in the early morning
hours of April 21 .
More than 50 buildinga were
gutted by the wind-driven blaz.e,
including 524 apartment unita ln
a (<llu'-aquare block area near the
intersection of Ball Road and
Euclid Avehue. Damage esti-
mates have been placed at about
$50 million.
Initiating the legal action in
Santa Ana were Anthony Nunes,
26, and his wife Cynthia, 24,
former residents of the Palm
Villa apartment complex on 1230
S. EucUd Avenue. Their apart-
ment and all their belongings -
valued at $6,000 -were de-
stroyed.
The couple also filed a claim
against the city, a step required
in legal actions against public
agencies.
Santa Ana attorney Jerrold A.
Bloch, who repreeenta the couple,
aald the lawsuit was filed on both
their behalf and for all other
apartment dwellers routed from
their residences. Most of the fire
victima lost all their belonglnga
and had no renten insurance.
F ed1 Mart closures
~\'---~~::':'~.~--,~-~~~-~?-~ -su_n_n ___ y~-E---r_i_d.;...;.;.~-......y__,
on cigarette
A cigarette smoldering inside a
living room couch la being bla-
med today on a fire tha' cauaed
$15,000 damage to a c.o.ta Mesa
apartment Wednetdav ni"ht.
Adm.iniatrative battalion chief
Jim Richey aaid the fire at the
Pinec:reiek Apartment complex at
2300 Fairview Road Apartment P
104 apparently •tarted ln the li-
ving room.
to affect county
By P HIL SNEIDER.MAN
Oft"90Mlyl"letla.ft
Closure of 46 Fed Mart stores In
Southern California, Arizona and
Texas, announced Wednesday,
will affect Orange County Fed
Mart storee in Hunt.ingt.on Beach.
Garden Grove, Anaheim and La
Habra.
Fed Mart corporate officials
also declined to discuss the
chain's Orange County opera-
tions.
Co~tal·
· Parity cloudy lhit afternoon
Hight ~ lo ff at Ille t>eachM and 8f lo 72 In Ille Inland U H i
Weatarly wind• 10 25 mpll Low
cloud1 1on1gll1 wllll low1 In Ille
SO. Low cloud9 cootlnue Friday
MOfnlno t>eeomlng flllf 111<1 l*llY tunny 1n lh• afternoon 11111111
Friday 88 lo 75 Huntington·
Newport •r•• temperature• ;:f: from • lllgn ot 65 10 • low
brMI and Pomona Valley's aa well u In RlveflicM and San Befnat-
dlno.
Tiie PSI wlll t>e 42 werywllere ....
E xtended
forecast
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNT AIN
AREAS -N!Qtll lf'd morning IOw
ctovd• In the cou 111 and valley
areaa. otlle!WIM ••r Locally Win-
---------Oy tn Iha mountalna 1110ht In IN COltlal er ... 65 10 75 will! lows
45 10 55 Movnteln rea<wl hlgllt
5<4 10 84 With Iowa 32 10 42.
U.~. 8Ummary
HHvy lhund9t't10rm1 with llalt ---------• end guallng wl11d1 moved over
notlNrn Loullllalla and Into wea-.
tarn MIH l1tlppl today. ea • law 1torm1 pelled eutetn Taxu .
Light rein allowara apread llowf'r. ecroH ArkatlHI and Ml ..
1our • Ind lhtr• WU drlnl• In
Ht19t'n Kat11u.
A cold lro111 produced ac11te-
red 11111 111owera over 1n. nor-
Jll•rn Rocky Mo11nt•ln1, whh •
·-1now 11\0wera In the higMr
tlilYttlOfla °' MonUIM. Tl!u~atOl'ma -• rlt)Ofted Met IN toutMfn tip of f!loflda
CMet •IM pr«Otllliad acrote thia
Peclllo Nol'lllweM, lht to111i.11
Roctclea Ind lht llPPfr Ohio vlll-::n....°": Lall• end middle _, ~OOell ......
,
41
" 20
'° .21 81 3t .OI
51 .07
'3 62 83
2t as .17 n .... ·" 5t 50 .84
42
44 ,.46
IO
Beverly Mutrl told fire ofli-
clala that ahe fell uleep in the
bedroom and woke up at about
8:30 p.m. to find the. apartment
filled with amoke. Neiibbors ex-
tin"ulahed the "round floor
apartment blaze before offlciala
arrived. Damaae to the build!Jll ii eatl-
mated at $10,000 and contenta
~.000. No other apartmenta were
The aan Diego-hued corpora-
tion, which blamed the deterio-
rating economy for lta decialon,
said it is seeking buyera for lta
dianunt and general men:handl-
airul operation.a.
The fate of Fed Mart'a Orange
County outlet.I could not imme-
diately be determined.
Local Fed Mart managers de-
cllned to comment on the com-
pany'• decillon to abut down or
llauidate all of lta 1toree. ~
According to the Huntington
Beach city building d~partment.
the local Fed Mart at 9882 Adami
Ave. la about 102,000 9e1u.are feet
in size. Construction was com-
pleted ln November, 1970.
The oompeny'a bt•rwM 11aeme
application lndicatel the atore
employa about 100 people, city
license auperviaor Dan Brennan
said.
"I t'a at a good location." Bren-
nan aaid of the Adams Avenue
and Brookhunt Street futenec-
tion. "I would think a11neooe eble
could do well there. h certalnly
pta a lot of traffJc."
obier1s !iJag !i)r(JJA)f
Sign up for a chance to have
\
a fully catered take out gounnet dlhner
for Yourself, your Mom, Wife or maybe even Grandma· ~ en<Sugh for a family of four from Showley-Wrightlon. '
You need
not be present to win,
drawing will take piece
triday May 7th and
the winner will~
notiftld by
phone tt\at day.
JI
I ' ,,
Orange Cout DAILY ptLOT/Thur9d~. April 29, 1982
Fairview mini-park
· hit by fund shortage
Tax time has just barel'y until they can pay someone ~o
rolled by and Chrlatmaa ls eight plant them.
months away, making it next to Pam Healy, a rehabilitation
impossible it seems to raise funds therapist who has been helping
for a park at Fairview State Hos-get the park pJana off the ground,
) pital in Costa Mesa. said it is impossible to get state
Hospital officials and com-funding for the park. That's why
munity members who have dona-Douglas has turned to the com-
ted time and money to establish munity.
the Enid Lathrop 11)1ni-park at the , Many of the mentally disa-
hospital found that out for them-bled youngsters between 8 and 21
selves. are foreed to go without any play
Two years ago Newport area becausetheswingaetsaretoo
Beach businessman Al Douglas dilf icult to muter, she said.
took out an ad at Christmas asking In these bard economic times
for community support. it's difficult to single out one pro-
He figured it would take ject as more deserving than an-
$30,000 to translonn the half acre other. But since almost half the
of bare ground into an area of money has been raised, it would
sloping sidewalks and private pie-seem a shame to let the other half
nic spots for the kids and their go undone and unused.
families. Anyone interested in mak.ina
So far $13, 000 has been a donation to the Lathrop park can
raised. But a lack of money has write Ms. Healey at Falrview
brought work to a grinding halt. State Hospital, Program V, 2501
About $15,000 worth of do-Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa or call
nated shrubbery remains in cans 957-5228.
Time to compromise
Kings Road, a winding resi-
dential avenue on the bluff above
Mariners Mile that offers a sweep-
i ng view of Newport Harbor, is
once again the center of a neigh-
borhood dispute.
The dispute, which stretches
back three years, centers on views
of the harbor and the contention
by some residents on the inland
side of the street that they will
lose their views if height restric-
tions aren't placed on houses along
the bluff side of the road ..
Residents on the bluffside,
who went to court two years ago
to overturn a city imposed height
limit, said they've already won the
fight and want to avoid a replay of
it.
But the matter came up this
week in the Newport Beach City
Council cham~r when a group of
inland side residents asked the city
to pJace a building moratorium on
the bluffside of the street.
The group. calling it.self Save
Where were advisers?
Criticism was voiced this past
week when seniors at Newport
Harbor High School were given
"champagne" glasses inscribed
with the song title "Let The Good
Times Roll" as senior prom sou-
venirs.
Upset parents said the glasses
-which the school argued were
"parfait" glasses -were a less-
than-subtle encouragement for
students to drink.
Some parents also felt the
glasses were a cruel reminder of
last year when a 17-year-old se-
nior was killed in a car accident
following a senior class luncheon.
The girl was a passenger ln a
car being driven by a classmate.
Police said the driver, who was
seriously injured, had been drin·
king.
The girl's parents said the
school should have kept that tra-
gedy in mind before agreeing to
let seniors order the gluees with
the "Good Times" message.
School officials said studenta
selected the glulet and that there . . .
was no thought of encouraging
drinking. And, they Sflld, there
certainly was no intent to bring
back bad memories of last year's
tragedy.
We believe them. In fact the
district, in an effort to eliminate
drinking, sent home letters with
students warning that alcoholic
consumption would not be tolera-
ted at the senior prom. School
officials even asked parents to sign
the letters.
Even without the unfortunate
connection to last year's traJedY,
the school exercised poor JUdg-
ment in okaying the glUSH and
the song inacription. Even though
the items were ordered with only
the best intentions, it doesn't take
heavy thinking to understand that
the gluses and song title could be
misinterpreted. .
Al result of thil emba.n-ullng
experience, it would seem the
school oftidals will take extra care
to think thlnp of thia eort through
in the future.
Opinions expressed In the spKe above are thole of uw Dally Piiot. Other views tx.'
pressed on this p~ ire those of their authors and artists. Reider comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa MeN, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. · Boyd/ Acting trick
'Q. Om a hUlbirnd in ~ llPUY
.... -.,and wUeT
A. Wllb the eonMnt of the Hnt ..,.,,..
People ta Cbiu ouuau..-die mlnlblU ..............
ID W . ~ID diil 'Ullltiil
OUUIU..., IH liwr.,. Iii aa..."r IOID-. .
a If •'t'&:' .:•:;~ t:• ... ,
~ ... ...... __ 4~
'''M mPAREt>To GOTue txrf(A Mui ... / sAJoM ~1P£NT
Tax system demands ~.. . ,~,
NEW YORK -Lewis Lehrman, a
candidate for the Republican nomlnaUon
for governor of New York, lllued a state·
ment on his Income taxa last week. He
doea pretty well -his money comes
from a family-owned dn.tgstore chain -
and his 1981 lncorne (adjusted groes in·
come) was Uated as $920,651.
TUA T, ACCORDING to my plodding
calculationa, puf:S him in the 60 percent
bracket, the h1iJleSt income tax bracket.
After all. according to the laws ant! re-
euJattona govemi.ng the Internal )\eve-•
nue Service, every dollar earped ove,
-are not bad for any American who., ~ --~~bly good at hic;llng income. Of t
gets hi.a money ln any way other t~ e et3.'6 million 1980 tax retunu filed, ' •
regular paycheck comp!,ete wit}) WU}\...'. . 'f. 5A7,590 reported adjwl,ted gro.es ..,
holding. Honestly (looJtf\ol~) or dli~ • e $100,000. The total number above !
neatly (hidden income). the~6'..1it-e $60,000 was under 2.6 million. Of $284 , ..
billion paid ln taxes that year by lndivt· · -
dual.a, $37.9 billion -lea than 15 per-, ~
cent -was paid by the members of '~
over-Sl00.000 families. ·
That total of S284 billion wu paid by • • .j
all taxpayers on total reportA!d adjuated
gross income of $ 1.6 trillion. So, th.e
average income tax rate for all Amer·
icana was something like 17 percent ..
Whic h me ans that lf there were a
single-rate income tax ("unprog.reaive") •
and the current level of federal income
we re maintained, each taxpayer would
pay 17 percent of his or her adjusted
gross. which is more than Lew Lehrman
pays now. If deductlons and credita were
eliminated at the same time, 'the single
rate would drop toward 10 percent.
SOMETHING LIKE a single rate, « a · lir:
":iero-base'' reform of the tax system, ... --i
has to be considered -now. Becaute the
rich can so easily avoid progre11lve
taxation, the poor and everyone elae ate
now doing It too. That's what the un-
derground e<.-onomy is all about the.e
~~ ~
Americans have always J>aicf tans re-
latively willingly. We thought the
syste m was essentialJy fair. No more.
Eventually U.S. mUst support Britain
To the F.d.itor.
Thi• la to express my s\ldden alarm
and concern that, in the attempt of the
ae.gan adminiltration to play the role of
honest broker in the Anglo-Arcentine
dispute, It la running grave rlak1 of
allenattnc the most vital and reliable ally
the United States baa had ln thil cen-
tury. The result of th.ii alienation, should
it occur, will eredictably be dllllluaJon a.mona the NATO partnen of the United
Staie. with 1ta reliabUtty u 1he major
power in the western al1lance in lta ef-
fortl to preeerve free government and
the rule of law in the world. Such d.ll-
Wusion would, of coune. contribute to a
flaccid alliance and the spread of the
oommunllt evil in F.urope and probably
ellewhere. ·
In abort, the failure of the United
States to support Britain in the Falkland
Wanda dlapute will. if It bM not done 10
already, leed to the contradictioo of the
central value. th1a country bu stood for
ln th1a century, and in the more specific
9enle iuarantee the denial of the wry
pla of Reaon'• own policy In Europe
-the creat1on of a stable balance of
power and through It the creation of
lncentlves tor the U.S.S.R. to take M·
rloualy propoula for anm Umltatlon1 force reduction, and pnera1 lettlement.
J
I PEAR that the statement at the
outaet of the cr11l1, tbal the United
Stat.ea wu equally friendly with both
the United K.Ul&doin and A,pndna. W19 ill-advlled. in diat it pw the lmpr 11 lOll
that thit couniry hU no preference u
between the warld't oldllt CICllWUtudanll
demoer.cy1 a COUDU'y with a JDlllllflomt
record ln the •"-' and npeMon of dvU fl-..dorn. aml •country that II at
leMt .-ni·f-=ilt; CJD1 with an ~
NGOrd with NlplCt to thme d.u UblrUea which. one ~ .. aUD • calnl tD'
die Unit.I &tatm •at lhe tbDil of ..
T • .....,.i1w in ......... °'~ =r that the............._ .mb
~Jv:~-9 ••• -.... . ...... ..... ........ wllh
......... d1l1 •alflle ... .. lMi~ :&MhatHq •lf;:thtei'alaauoa = --~ri•= . .... .,!II!!
were raJ9ed for that purpoee.
U they only care about their own pets.
what kind of pet owners are Jhey?
I do not with to be cured of a dt.eaae
or have pain diminiahed because some
MAILBOX ·
medication or procedure was cliacovered
by tortUrtng animals.
Much of the animal testing today is
unnece11ary, and much of the pain in-
flicted on an1mala in the name of testing
la unjustifiably teVere.
Imteed of enacttna laws to let an.lmala
other than your own be tortured, why
not pua laws to require unannounced
inapectJon of thete experimental labe?
J . COLLINS
Precedent set
To the Editor:
That the Cout Community Colle1e
DlaUict criticizes outatandinc teachers
for merely tryln1 to maintain tome
semblance of excellence la dlaturbinl
enouch. but that th1a cliltrict .. ~ rtna i.pl aclkJn .-the fOur la an
ou&np and a wute of the t.axpayen•
~ton ln the dlatrlct ahould
lW11-tMt ...-dent hM beet) ltt ln the
John ...... 2'An191'. ~. .
P&'llik Sl'U!'l'SlNOr.R
Protesters
To the alitor:
I ...,... to Sunday's arddt concet nlftl
th!Ete1iera who vow to k•~e Pa--., ........ ill the Whti. .
Ori dlil aae llmld, bow nb It rDUlt be
............. ~butq
tlMt Pl a' t1 llfl~• .. 111-
0D -.............. ...,., .... it w.Rald ...................... -..r .....
~ tD -alllNdlW ...,.... . J. w. Ull>
To feel free and worthwhile is JoRnc its
mearung in America. ·
If these men are punished then free-
dom does not exist. People In authority
should not Ute their power to -aueJch the
volcet of thoee ln the ume area of work
or members of the same free country.
Subeervience le~ to slavery where the
powerful show their corrup11on. ·
. CHARLES L. HOELDERLIN
Student drinking
To the E:ditor:
1 am a aenior at Newport Harbor Hi8b
School and refer to the April 23 arU&1e
by Steve Marble titled. "Grad IOW8dn ·.ur b.ci memorla."
Flrat of all, can't you find anydUDc
more amualng to pJ.ce in the molt pro-
minent spot in your JwedUnes than tbat
article? Second of all, the Idea of ~
plalnlnf. about champacne or parfait
g1ule9 totally irrelevant to the pro-
6Iem at hand.
One mother w11 quoted N aaylftl,
''The glulee are a taste1-and ._ 1119
subtle encouragement for atudenta to
celebrate araduaUon b}: drinJdnc." WlllL
Mom, lfUell what, you re f1Cht. ,
1nsteed of wrtttna the arilde, I tMllk
you should write another on aleobel
at.use by h11h school children lD tM
Newport-Meu area: You could eall lt .
"Grad drl11kln1 1Ur1 1tudeat body
8'0l'Dlcb,,••
•
Delly ............ .., Lee...,..
RAISING FUNDS -Mickey Mouse and
5-year-old Christy Mitchell, poster child of the
Leukemia Society of America, Tri-County
Chapter, get ready for a dive. The society will
hold itl first annual Super Swim Classic in 10
Orange County pools May 8 to raise funds.
Prizes will be awarded to swimmers based on
amounta of money raised. For-information, call
539-9511.
Federal tax
bite growing
·By Tiie A11ociated Pre11
A hypothetical family of four with an income
of $25,000 faces a federal tax bill of almost $7,000
for the current filca1 year, a study shows.
The figure• come from the Tax Foundation
Inc., a non-profit research group ln Washington,
D.C., whkh keeps track of taxes Americana pey.
Foundation economists regularly look at the
federal budget and calculate how the government
apencb an individual taxpayer'• dollars, using a
hYJ>Qthetical family with one working llpouae, two
children and an annual income near the median for
all U.S. families.
There are lots of numbers involved, but it'•
worthwhile to wade through them to learn where
your money goes.
For the lastest study, the economiats used a
family with an annual income of $25,000. They
found that auch a family would have a federal tax
bill of $6,916 for fi8cal 1982 -the year that~
Oct. 1. Federal inoome taxes would .a:iount for $2,·
771 of the tax bill, Sodal Security for $1,675 and
Indirect taxes like exclae levies and corporate in·
con,. for $2,470.
Five years ago, the econonu.ta Ulled a family
with an income of $15,000 and found that such a
family had a federal tax bill of $3,975. Federal in-
come taxes accounted for $1,459; Social Security
taxes for $878; and indirect taxa for $1,635.
In 1977, the federal tax bill for the lower-
lncome family equaled 26 ~ pen:ent of income; for
1982. the federal bite on the higher-income f.amlly
Wat 28 percent.
The hypothetical income level UJed for the
cakulationa was increased 66 percent between 1977
and 1982, allowing for an .lncreue ln earnlnp of
more than 10 percent a year. That produced an tncreaae in the tax bill of 74 percent. Income levies
accounted for 37 perce11t of the tax bill ln 1977 and
40 percent in 1982; Social Security taxes accounted
few 22 percent in 1977 va. 24 percent in 1982; and
indlree1. taxee 11CCOUnted for 41 pen.-ent in 1977 and
36 percent in 1982.
Moat people think of taxes in terma of the
calendar year -from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 -but the
economists baled their calculations on the filcal
year -from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 -lince that la the
period URd by the government for budptary pur-
pmes.
The b6aest chunk of the money -tltill and
now -Car-what ts called income leCW'ity, in-cludJ.D8 Security peymentl, welfare benefits,
, etc. InCome lfJCW'ity accounted for about 32 percent
· of the family's tax bOl in 1977 and about 33 percent
in 1982.
National defeme wu the leCOnd biaest apen-dmc cateaiorY in both years. It account.eG for 33~
perelllt of the tax bill ln 1977 and just under 25
pel"Clnt today. • ,
Tbeie have been shifta in other areea of apen-
dtnc over the past five yeara. lntereat on the
nadOnal debt accounted for about 9 percent of the
family's tax bill in 1977 and WU in fourth place.
Todq, lnw.t ia in third place, accounting for 13 ~t of the tax bill.
lleahh, which WM third on the l1at five years
.., ... llipped to fourth pl.ce; in both 1977' and
1112 It .xOUnted for a little more than 9 percent of
theta bW. la doDlr t.enm, lnoome aecu.rity _ tlalOWlted f~
$1 .. of the IU bW in 197'7 and f2.211 today, a rise
of .,. ~ The defeme portion of dM tax bW
wmt ~ $834 to fl,712, up 83 percent, and the
lntlNll pordon went from $161 '° $905, up ue
P!l!I ••
I
.
u ·ef ner passes tore II .
flaughter n~w Rlayboy president
CHlCAGO (AP) -ChrtlUe Hefner>, 29, dau,hter of Huih Hefner, h .. be«i named pr"ident of Playboy
.... pl1lal Inc.
• 0 1Uvtni worked at policy Jevell in many .,... of the compeny, Ch.rtaUe
hal ~Y been well prepared for
t.h1I mow,'' her father, chief executive
of&er, llid Wedneeday.
Ma. Hefner will report dlNctly to Mr father. .
Mt. Hefner hu been a corporate
vice preaident at Playboy four years.
The direct manaiement of Playboy
Enterprilfl9 wW be under the control
of Ma. Hefner and Marvin L. Huston,
executive vice president.
110ur ftnt tuk ii to complete the
tnl)lidon of Playboy from a brody
bued corporadon to a dM.rly (oemed
communicadoN oompuy,•• aid Ml.
Heiner. "In lddldon to tta 11~
ma1aztne publlabint bualneu and
entrance lnto the lucrative pay cable
bualnell. Playboy abo hu profit op-
portunldee by cap6tallltnc on the va-
lue ot ita name throulh mapz1ne and
product Hcen1in1 and club
franchlaing."
TAKES OVER -
Chrlatle Hefner la
new president of
Playboy Enterpriaea
Inc.
Jn hJa new book "The Lut Dlnmaurs,'' Croft
said the species tha\ diuppeared first did not de-
velop a thlckenln.g of the brow of the eye eocket or
10me other protection, such u a horny crest bet-
ween the eyes.
Rates i
15.25
15.00
14.75
14.50
14.25
14.00
13.75
13.50
13.25
13.00
12.75
12.50
12.25
12.00
11.75
11.50
11.25 11.00
10.75
10.50
10.25
vs.
Ready Acam and
Money Market Fund Yields
10.00 .__..._ __ __.._...__,____.___._.___......___,____,_.....__.___.__.__.......____.___.__,__...__...___.
.. 0-C ~ ~ C--~ N. -• ~ N ~ ~ N ~ ~ N ~ ~ M N ~ ~ N ~ -0 0 -N N C - -N 0 0 -N 0 0 -i ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' -0 0 0 - ---N-N -N N N-- - - -N N N N M M M o-------......... •Awratt lloHJ lltrbt Fulld Yields as reported wtt•ly "r TM Wiii Street Jollrul
Ready Access was designed to beat the
money funds· ... and it docs! The mo ney
funds may think it's almost "unfair com-
petition,'' because of its unique combination
of features: insured ufety, easy
accessibility, and high money-market
yields. But Ready Access is more than fair to
its investors. Check the facts below and sec
if you don't agree.
Guaranteed High Yield
As the chart above shows, a person who
opened a Ready Access account last fall, on
October lO, would have earned a guaran-
teed yield of 14.468% for the following
26-weck period. Although the money fund
average yield started at 15.8%. it dropped to
a low of 11.8%-and averaged only 13.5% for
the same period. That put the average
money fund yield almost a full percentage
point below Ready Access. When you. look
Aaaual Eft'ectlve Yield••
AHulRac ... •
13 • 01 .. 5 '/o ~~um
No
at the trac~ record, Ready Access has a
decided edge.
Easy Access
When you o~ your account, you get a spc·
cial checkbook. To withdraw $500, $1,000 or
$2,000 or the total amount of the account,
all you have to do is write a check for at least
$500-and there is no penalty for writing a
check for funds, provided the acco unt is
continued.
Insured Safety
Money placed in a Ready Access account is
insured up to $100,000 by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
Money fund investments arc not insured.
And, as an article in the Wall Strut
Journa,. points out, the risk of money funds
increases as short-term interest rates drop.
Low Deposit
and Balance Requirement
Only SS~OOO is needed to open a Ready
Access account. And there is virtually no .
minimum balance requirement to maintain
the account
Services
An intcrest-earni~g checking account is
off'cred each Ready Acceu account holder--
fret of monthly service charges. And this
opens the door to 24 -HOUR TELLER
(ATM) service as well as TELE-PAY". the
unique service that allows regular monthly
bills to be paid with a telepho ne call. No
mo ney fund provides so ma ny i,pecial
services. ·
Convenience
With 100 offices throughout California
(soon to be expanded to 145 ) the Associa-
, lion is easily ~ccessible for a variety of
sef\'ices-from making deposits and with·
drawals to cashing checks, using a safe de-
posit box. obtaining money orders or trav-
elers checks, applying for an auto loan or
home improvement financing.
.
CALL T HE FINANCIAL LINE
(714) 231-4023
Call Direct or Collect
I a.m. till 9 p.m.
Get further information, the answers to
your questions, or arrange an appoint·
mcnt with a Money Management
Specialist at any Association office ...
and do it all by phone, simply by calling
our Financial Linc.
llMMly Att06-~llOt#ln 'l'ro4wt o/ O,,,. C-.,.y of Sllccaa .. Mwy M111111p.-1 •
Reaching new heip11 or service and performance takes the ki9'd or It~ that, at Oreat
American P-ederal, coma rrom aearly a hundred yean or sua:eu in money mana,emcnt. Today.
with l'dourcn soon to au~ 14 billion, Oreat American Federal is one of the nauon's largest and
, 1tronpst ftnancial lftlduadona. Come ahare ~ia 1uen1th. this century ofi •UCCett
at Oreat American Federal. .
' I
a
.
t
DoYI Jone& Final
OFF7.70·
CLOSING 144.IS
Mercury Savtn&a, Huntington Beach bued fed-
eral 1tock 1avtnp and loen amodation, ,,announced lta
unaudited after-tax ad)lated W. for the first quarter
waa $4,229,000, or $1.09 per ah.are. ·
Leonard Shane, cha1nnan and rnaNCing oUicer,
said the lou wu the largest in the hl1tory of the
company and resulted buically from the ''oontlnuaUon
of extremely high OOlta of funds, the virtual halt in the
normal real estate marketa, and the uaual aeuonal
slowdowns experienced during the fl.nt quarter of any ;
year."
A year .,o, Mercury had a $938,000 to., or 24
centa per ah.are.
T ·M revenue up, pro fit down
Revenue. of the nines Mirror Co. for the first
quarter lncreued to $522.3 million from the $500.7
million reported in 1981 ..
However, net l:ncome decreued to $20.2 million
from $26 million while eaminga per ahare were 59
cents compared to 76 oenta in the prior year.
The continued depnwed wood producta market
waa a major contributing factor to the eaminpcje-
cline.
'IUnel Mirror publlahea the Loe A.n4ieles Timea,
Dallas TiJDes,-Herald, Newaday (I...ong Ialand), Denver
Post, the Sporting News, Hartford Courant and two
papen in Connecticut and thi J?~il)' Pilot, and hu
broadcut, cable televiaion and publiahing properties.
Baker earnings ·in crease
Baker International Corp. of Orange announced
earnlJ18J for the three months ended March 31 were
$1.08 per ah.are, an lncreae of 42.1 percent over the 76
cents per 1hare in the year-earlier period.
Revenues for the three months were $678.4 mil-
lion, an increaae of 32..3 percent over the comparable
. quarter.
Earnlnga per ahare for the aix month• ended
March 31 increued 52.9 percent to $2.14 compared to
the $1.401aat year. Revenues for the llx months wett
$1,302.9 bUlion, up 35.5 percent.
Revenues r eported
San/Bar Corp. of Irvine had improved operating
. resulta for the first nine months of the ft.:al year but.
lower third quarter results.
For the ~ month. ended March 31 total reve-
nues nm to $18,841,650 from $13,481,138. Net income
advanced to $1,156,2'3, equal to 64 cents per aha.re,
from $374,982, or 27 cents per ah.are one year ago.
San/Bar C.Orp. ii a major supplier of electronic
equipment and components, Microwave radio l)'lteml
and 9eJ'Vice to the telecommunications industry.
Dividend declared
The board of directon of Swed.low Inc., Garden
Grove, declared a regular c:iuarterly cuh dividend of~
centa per 1hare, payable June 4 to shareholders of
record May 14.
Swedlow la a man~ of proprietary acrylic
and armor producta uti11Jed for a Variety of military
and commerctal appUcatlona.
PR banquet scheduled
The Public Relidom Sodety of America, ONn«e
County chapter, wW bold lta teYenth annual PROI'CiS
aw~ banquet May 14 at 6:30 p.m. at The Newporter
Hotel '
For information call 720-2224.
STOCIS IN THE SPORIGHT AMElttAN LEADERS
I I I' I' '.i • \' -M••-... ~m.e:-4 w ....,, .... °" ...... --1··---; CllWISa~ . . . \ ::-.:er.=. ~ f,
~· • .w.M..... . G=F ..,, .. F l =-'-NIC ...
fllCMI .... ,.., .. ,,..,., JoM ....._ T~--.... ,.,.. .. ....,.ae,_,
Hattlor, ........ Cel9or-
nla _..,,. and lllllWy
.,.,....... ,...... .. VllM-.......... -.
....... --In "'* • -~·'PG'
... ALL .. THI PNAY
• •eiZZATwmt
a.tmMI hi I ···-·~ ....
~ll&LJR
(Jl)MDWIMIJW Durtno tM CMI Wet, a
Northern -titea to $nll.. Irate ....,.. terrttory and
~·nw.111ta1toltle
Sollltl'• atippfy ..... (Pert
&LNM-THON
A~l!Oatandb#
colNo oonWtanta who
compete egaln1t OM
_,.,., -'-lurwd In W. ~l9Clled comedy 9llN
ll!Ow. NOie=-.... MIC ....
tWPY DA.YI NINl4 1=---• M"A"l0 H
Frri --In. -mending oMoer ant; to ,.,. . --~·-_,.held.
I JOIC8l'a Wk.O
OV..IMY av.: V1noanl ,,., (A)
i MAGIC Of' OIL ,AINTINQ
(I) P.M. MAGAZINI
Alt lnterMw ... llctr9ea .......,. Hal1lly....,...... °' • """ to .. ...,.,.. •• Alpllll4lc of CHn&. 9 llfTIRTM .. ff
TCINPCllHT 8 THI...,.,.,...
Queal: CM I~ &Mllt-
i-,
(C)MCME *. ''Calllle ,_.,,,.. Lit-
.. ..,..._.. ('91t) ~
LMoallilr, ...... .......
Two,._...,._ ....
UC1 wttll • Ol"I ol ....... lad~an.,.....~.
'PG'
(D)MOYll ••• H•• ,_ In Tiie
Cfowd" ( 1157) Alldy (Ml. 11tt1. Plllnella ....,_ A _...
1ct eoea "°"' • 1a1 .. '° ~1•111.-.i°" .. ..,.._. ol ......... and ,,........_.
(J)WHAT'IUP WZNCN
~ .........
ll"nct11re for animate:
black A-lcMa '-"°
prlOtloe ~ Md
\OOOCloO; • profla °' ......
alrlpper9. •
.!Z)PHMffOM INQIA
"lloinbey -Tiie "*"-
lndle'' ....... tlle*-
of Hlndll oMllllloi• and "'* Mabllty In Ille mod-em world. f:lt. I ON THITOWM ,....,.....,....°' ................
"" In • -...... The WOftlM'a CMda To The
~ ........ Of&..-. ,,,,.,.,,..; ....... *"""'
ilWalltlon .. UCLA: • look • ttaa; , ..... a,....,.. °' ..... In The Tina i&YNU> *'** "EartllQ11all.e"
e KNXT ICBSI e KNBC INBC)
• KTLA Clnd.)
• KABC (A8CI
etiF~CCBSI e i<.HJ-TV (Ind.I
air.en CABCI e KTTV Uno.I e ICCOP· TV llnd.I
eKCIT (P8S)
eKOCE CPe$1
A ARDS BOST ......, Mlckex ~11¥y. ta a
' bolt, on -the "~ dt COuntry Mu.ic
Awarda" tonight at 9 on kNBC (4).' ....
(tt74) awtton ......
Ave o.d!W. Loi~
lldlMro,ed~two
M ...............
iwvooon bodl ."'9~
111119and"'9 ......
• tv.ONLA. ~ • ,...,,. °" .. ........... llOt Ml._ •
~ wtlO .... Ollab-
rtu.a wtwl dr\111 Pl oOllmlC
• --wtlO -• tough twoeome. ........ "
Klinger and ,,,,,_ .....
_,, -..... ._to
l'900¥W lt4*n medlcal ....,.,... "°"' • ~ bM Md out adlool.
1(1) TICTAC~
flMCllml./ ~
~
I =---"°"IT ~ ''Stlootout At
TM OJ<. Cornl'' end .. The
...... All~" (ll)THl~DMTH
MTHI D8aT "'*
Ew.italMdlllttotlle
o.w. ""· ..., °' """' .......... .,,,..,.. ~
,... -NCll9d tlWOUlfl ....... toollQ8, .. pflo-
....... Md penonlll te.
*"°"Y ~ Aofnmaf'• aon
MenfNd end '*"' .... a.wt lntng,.
... (I) MMllNUM. p ..I.
........ -a. '°' • man wtlO dlMIJPMted ...... ...... tflrol.9t •
cllannal tradltlonally
...,. • "cunad." (A) .. , ...
'*'"Y.,... to,....~
ao llet l.Mo(a "'°"* OM _ .._ aon danOa. end Mr.
8Mlo1119cy .. ,....., ....
anoldtoo... •• ..oecwi. Mao
Aoear .._ ---!Uten'• _...,,. --...111 • .,... ... _.... ........
• THlilft81WW M
MDMADOllM n. ............ .....
... ........ Mdr99 Dort9 _ _.._
• p .... Ml'liMZINI
All ....... ..... ....... ......, ........... °' ... '° .. ,...,..,. ~ola...
• A WOMAN CM.LID
~
lngrtd ..,,._ ..... In ..
llOty °' G*8 ..... .. trOltllWa.ly .. . ....... '°"" ...... Pfllnt .......... ..... ,..,... .......... re.P-
llM Prealeleftt Anwar
..... (Pwtt)
.lMTCHNa
CINWM
~ .... ~out
an 1119"'*" l)fOblllll end
..,......~,.....
and modala °' .... ew,,.._•
Aoear Oert and ca.. .... ,...,...........,...
Md ''Sword Md Tiie
Soroerer."
(8) lilO'llE
·~ ''TM Lall ~ (ttlt) .......... Owta
... f'M09 In • wortd .,
IN "*"9. a '°'"* ,_.
cer*'-and•.._....
QllllllPIMr --' .... .. P'WIUl'*"·a PIOI0 ..... 1
ftl •Aotfl U 11 'PG'
Cl) lilO'llE
••• "All Thlll .-x·
101 Ort·TV
(l l 1·TV
"" H80 <C) ICl!*Nx)
(WOAI NY.,N.Y.
DJ CWTBSI
Ill (ESPN)
CJ) ( SflooNt lint I
• Sclo4 ...
• lc..l•'"-NetWOfll)
(,.11J~ ...... ~·· " .. Ufll& n..~ oua .. of a Ml' f 119
Cihoreogl ...... ......
lrolft 9l'°°9M on h ..... I
;r~crtaea.·w
.~ ..
.. taken .. llorM ,... ~
~ ...._. cautNn.
~V...-andlWI
~ (Z)MOYll • • • '"Tiie ~ ...,.,. ••
(1971) ~ T.,,...,._
HatNlla ... ,.,.....
ob.-ct ... "'9 fNIMIY °' .. dead lo"9d Of* '°"" • ... frilndlfllp.
'PG' l:IO. 8 MOM& ll9G¥
Moftl -*Oraon. ~
onMwtoliU!Y~ -"* on Earttl.. • AU. .. ntm fN&.Y ... ~'°-and 06ofte ...,. ""¥ ........ _ .. In
~ prowe .,...,...
le tor Ille ......
• .-AK PM'f1lwa Aoear Oert and a.. ..... ,... . ..,,,....
and "Sword Md Tiie
Sorcet9r."
• POR'TIWT8• ,..,....
~._.,,_ .....,... HO. (I) -..o.t & -..o.t
A,.J IAd Rid! head IOlltJI of th• border to llnd the d•uohl•r ol • San Diego ,_....,,
··N;NJ81'("' COUNTRY MUleC
AWNIOa
Tiie 17tfl --edition of .,.... ..... llOnol'lnO
~'"Ille -...y ,,.. ftlAd, .. be ......
frOfft Knott'• 8erTY ,an'ft
,., Loi Ar..-: .....,
Qllaf. ec-ey TWltty and
Do4lla w..t .. ,_,
··MIMY~ c
·---~ INCW. • .-.v ....... ca...: ..........
e...-ou.o
w.-~· Fflnl •acllenbauer. widely
rega.rdH N ~· ....... ...__. ...... ..........
• ..,.,. Jc.!
THIA'TM
"LAM In A Cdd ~ ....,....,...,.n.....,..
--......... "*· Cedrtc: Linda --,., ........ and .,...,.. In
.... ,., -love. (Pitt I)
fe>MOYll
• • • '"The AaturTI Of The
~ ..... " f'WDJ
M•f11 Arnott. Gordon
Clipp. .The ,,_..,.. °' • .°"' °' oolage ...... ~In .. protele -
IMftt dvftne tN •toe ....... '°' • weellMd .....mn.'flr
(D)MOYll
• • '"The "'* eon.ct''
(1111) ......... ~ ..a. In ... INrd pert of
''TM OfM/d' ..... ,...,,..
Dmlllen. .. .,., a• ••• -.. ~ ....... ... and.~.....,,
• ._,,....._of .. U.I. ·w
• MOYll
••~ "Nlglltllaw••" ,.,,~ .......
-0.. '#mMla. A ..... .... vortio.y••• _____ ........
OMof .. ..Va ....
da1ttet••• terrorlata
lrtMa In .... '"' .... , . n. ......... ..
..,.,.,,.. In .. ... ...... ............. .. ............. ~
~,. ....
~ .... ....,_.....,. ........... ._. ................... ............ ,. ......
............... -•.& ~· ·•--otL.Mll" ,_Am .......... ........... .,_ .................... ................... .......... _. .... ..,..
_;;,·~::..
~.._ ...... -·----ca.r. .... '---•·----~w-· RI!.~ .... 0...-,..,._ ..... .......... ,,,.,., .... ............. ~ .. ....,.., ....... ........, ........
Cll)MOYll •••• "Git!" ,, ... ,
....... ~. Lellll Ctr-. A ......, ... .,...... ......... .._ ., ................. ""
,.. OWll to_.. a !Mn.
-..Cl)JllNN .................
-1~ ......................... °*' ............ _,...
-------~ .................. e ........... .. ....,,U .. <:.> .. , .... --... ~· (I)--.. ·11
•• ..._...~ lscld .................. _,._
CM!p .............
...,.._ IN "'*8 tti •~
ooll•t• cll .. rleedlrit'
aquad to ••PoM U..
Hploltatlon of tll• •
..........,. ~ Ille toot.
bel....,__'R' 11••••<ll•• ....
• M~Y..atff
Hoat: llllcllerd ,ryor.
~ Qll..loott .....
• YOU AllCID PCM ff ,....,,. .. ,... CMdw Of
TOl!yO" and "~ Toe ,...,tt ........ "
Wll9fl ,,.,.. w..... '°
leave, Hawkeye end r,....., ancr 11 -de»-
• dlAy '°' ..... and .,_... • wy .., INlll.e Mm ...,,
•....vHU
._., ~ • belliy ..... ---'t be .... bee*. I C*:K CAVITT
THI LAWMIJCW
Corrffpondenta Linda
WerthMMI Md Coll»
~ )oln ..... CMle '°' an up-io.~-.
mwy of~
ectMtlaa.
(rJMOYll
• • • "Julee And """''
(tM1) ~ ~.
Oekar Warner. 11'1 ~
Woric.: Wet II Ffanoa, • car..,_ Yount -
iov.. two men .tio -... .,..and,...
to tll4 up...,_ one.
(D)MOYll ••• ..._.. Al c.ntr1ll
....... (tt71) ""*-....
,,..,., lllotlert ~ A
crvaad• for revenge
begll'8 .... ,,,.... ....
.... too .. -puled Oft ................ by. "°"' of bot9d .... ...,...,...R'
-~ •• •It ''TM Howlng''
(ttl1) 0.. Wallace, '*"*...._._ ,....., .. ,,....,~. ... ..., ...... ..,.,. . ........ ,. .
tt:IO. Cl) QU9CY
•• TGlllHT
Hoet: JoMny Canon.
Cluaal: ...... Eaaeoft.
•• MICNIWI
Mlltt'nM
• Ko.wt l<otlll ,... • dllld ,......,
off ........ ""' .. ordered to ......... .
• THl&ILJCINI ·-·----·-lllATwmt
CL.-n "°.hi -~MIC ....
(J)MOYll
··~ HA Foroa Of Ofwl' ,,.71) a.a ..... --
nl9r O'Nall. A .... of .. _... .. .........
°" ...... ..............
---.. -...of .. lllklpW -·•PG'
1t:tl(8)fllCMI
••M "f:IOllpeFt9ft ....
YOftl" (1tl1) IC.Wt ......._
AdneftM ,..._, In
tt11 ............. ......... ,.,..., ... ................... ..... u..a. ""' ... ,,__ dly .............. . ......,,..
--...;....-.er~: • •
,. -TUBE TOPPERS
KNXT (2) 8:00 -0 Mqnum, P .L" Mal:
num INl'Chea for a man who bu dilap-
peared while ..wn, .
'KCOP (13) 8:00 -.. A Woman Called
Oolda.'' Inarid Beraman l1an ln the ztory
of Golda '1eir'1 UCe. (Part'I). See ztory,
below.
KNXTJ2) 9:00 -"Simon & Simon."
A.J. an Rick 10 to Mexico to find the
dauahter of a San Diego new1caater,
played by Peter Grave. .
KNBC (4) 9:00 -"Academy of Country
Mualc Awarda." Mlcby Gllley, Conway
Twitt~ and Dottle Wm bolt i,lecut from .
Knott I Berry Farm. See photo, left.
. JOHN DAAL:ING
_., .... ......, _,,.,, .. ......
'N ' ....... ~u.o.
Tiie LtMlla _... -........... ~--,........
Ql)lllOW9
•• "tal Md 1(11 ....
('911) ...... "YM ....... ... ICIW. A ....,.... ar'8
~ .......... ......
of .......... ....... ............... -... ... • ,... ,,,..._ °"'"
~:;:,:·
""°""9 Mandel''
Fridaw'• •••• ••eo n • ., ....
-i.toltlNG-
• •11()) ••• "Oii Oodl"
111771o.cwoa11um1. JoM
Demer. God Mlecta an
~young 111"'9'·
nwti.t menaoar to dallYW ' ,....... °' llOl)e and tood .. tO Illa llllC)tlcal
~ of ... modar!Hley
wcwtct 'PO'
-{rJ * * "lecret v...;-· A
Cl'GUP of younoa*' try lo
help an old man turn • et*' town Into 4 IUl'IWNt
C8fn9 .
(%) ••• "Targeta"
(1MI) 8oflil KAlrlofl. Tim
O'Kaly. An 11Q1nt llofror-
movla atar trite to rauon
wttll • mutderoue Clfllper at • .,._..,, mcwta tMelar.
1:80 CC) * * "Cotlon Candy"
(10711 Clint Howard.
Cnartea Martin Smltll. A
group Of lllgll ad\OOI ...
.._ ~ • rode band to
~ wfftl HM acnool'1
~~~ .. "9d ~.(--~~ ~~~ C:--7 ' ............ ,~·"\ ~~wo·
Ille ~ ..... frflV °' WOtld War 11.dckllMI, •P.Q•
Cl) •• *'h ''The Odd.
Couo6a" (tMI) Jedi~ mon, Wallet Mettheli TMS
dlllofced men wltll conNct-
lnO .,.._.rftlea 6ac:ida 10
.... lln llC*IJMnl Ill ....
Ycwtc City.
7:41 CZ) * * "Pllot>le'' ( 1MO)
Paul M ICllHI OIH•r.
5_.. Hogan. A O'ouc> of
mental patlente .,. mtK •
dered -ding lo '"* lndMdl* ,_,. 'A' HO. * .... "Any Numbet
Can Pia(' (18-40) Clari!
Oabla, Alelclt Smltll An
"-1 and CMlftM gam·
blar'• llfe .. beMI with •
Nrlaa of tragadlea. 9:10. * * "Tiie Sfar Pacllet"
( 183-4) Jobfl Wayne, Varna
...._ A tougtl cowboy
dapull1N a group of
ranc:tl«I lo round up •
~of outiewe.
~ *. * "°""-BluM" (1177) 1>91• Fonda. Suean
Salftt Jamat. When a
counlry·wntern t lno••
...... hla eong, en ex-con
Ulel deeparataly to
retrieve hit recording
r1tllta wtlla befllltlg llla
polca. 'PO'
(%) ..... ''Tiie Men WhO
Loved-Women" (18711
Qlartea Denner, L..tie
Ceron. Olrcted by Fr.,..
cola Truftu A men le ao
~ wltll beeu111\11
-*' "'-' ... flnda" dlfll.. OUlt to ,.,.,., ... ......,
wlffleny~, ....
tlonlNp. 'A'
tO:OO (8) ** "Auc*w''( 1te0)
Olrtr Benedk:t, Linda 81.W.
A lllell-alloclted Vietnam
WC dlaturba Illa ~of a
11N11 ...,..,_town. 'PO'
(J) • * • "l'M CfY Tomor· row" (1955} ~ Hay·
ward, Alch•~d Conla .
Actt.a Ulllan Aotll atrug-
--wltll Cl6oOfldlam end • fading~. ., ... * •• ''Mop'nbo"
(1"4) aat1l Oeb6a, Ava
Gardner. When • planl•
lion -,... 11'1 lo"8 .... the ... of lln angl·
-· oonflct• .,.... 11:11 a:> •• "&heme,~ on TN &11111y ~ .. 111n1
MoMe Mar1lhafn A low·
~ lainly of ce111a
,..... and "'* ,..,_
.............. .._ .. .............. ..... ..,..,..
(J). *...,..A-.""" ............ (., ....
~ ............. ..................... .................. .... ........... ............ ,..
U!Ot ........ ••lftftia ..... ,._ .. DIN*. .... ................. , ........ .._
"*'"MW ......... -. .-.,,.....,. ......... ,,,.. ......
lfNttt" (tM t) Cefell LoM--
betd, 0.. ~. A
~ .... by ......
tflM .. ,,...,.... ....
......... 'TMC>..-
•111" (tHO) 01fta .... .......... ,..,...
A Nevy ,lat IMnilM ~,,.. ..,....... ... ~,.,..
aonel~ ..... _,
.... ..,.. ....... Of -onoo111lnt , .. ..,...,
&r:· ........... u..a.
Tlmea" (1NO) Qofdle
~.a_, a-, A
llOft"'-tad ..,.., .. ..,,. ...._ ...............
llu1ba11d-t11r11•d·ba11ll
robber and .._ ..........
pr ................
r11Mlnt fot c.lfotnla
at1om1y,....a 'N'
1dt CC> •• "Cottoll c.wtil'
(1871) Cllnt How111d,
' CNwlM M-*' ..... A tr• °' """ .._. .... 11111 '°"" • roc3l .... .. ~ .............. .
...... band.,
<Ill • *. ''Thi OfOeaf Of Patty HHrat" (1171)
Oann1a w-. u.. a
bactier. The ~
and~tor .............
ty ....... ,,..01 'Id "°"' ... ~ °' .. FBI agerlt In CINrp of ...
Ian~ ...... ······'T-"(ttnt ........... IQIW(.I, ,...,
FWI. The ...,..., of a
poor Entll•ll farM•t
~.,,.~ .. ...
hllllly'• ......... .. . --~·'fir ,f:11 (%) ..... ""'°"'Y ~ ........ ~.,.. Fftllfe"
"· (1111) .~ ~ ~ • M~e. • A IMftilft4-iM-. . ~. --......... .. ........... ""'!I' .. , .. .
-~-........... . "''~....--.,,.. ~ ,....,... lit
Monty~ ' 2:41 (%). * . ...,,...,. (~ ...
Paul •UcfiMI Gflter,
&.... Hogah. A •Ol4> ol
mental petltlnta -,....
dared aocorclnCI to ..
lndMduel .... 'R' a:oo. ··~ .'Tiie ......,...
( 1172) JMIM eotMft, lMI
• Nettleton. A rodeo CCN4loy
trlaa to regeln Illa ... and -· . a:ao <B> *lo\ "8'nolcey ...
Tiie [).,at" ( tM 1) JlrMly
McHlchol, Janet .lullaft, A
hith acflOOI ~
teta Illa Wll06a '-.. Illa tr .. .._ ... ,,... . ..,
wllll Ille llC>fMCOfNnt
~and.._._._.
.,,. ..... 11'1 ....... °'
atoMn automolllaL .a·
4-CC)*• "Secnt V...,.. A .oup of~ try'° "*" .. o6d -IWil • ti-' ._Into. --
CM!P· ·=-(%) * ·~ u,..., ....._ Alld The T ... Of ......
Poner'. ( 187t) Ffedertlk
Altlton, Ai. I ... Qr9llt.
Metnberw of London'• .... ...... ~'*· form~ of UPtgltlo
Bland," .. ..,.,,,,, ,....,, ..
"Jamlinil P. d di I OUClll," u....,.. NIMllll... 91'41 •
''Two'llMMlae." e:OOCB>••• .............. ..
' PHO) Mewt1Y"I
v~. Arrlta ,.._
ln 1~~·--Nttw'• cHld and an ~
r1Qlne ..-i travel IOoaa
the ~ In aMrdl °' ..
-'•loeltrtbe. ···~ ......... .... ..,. ... ........, .......
(1871) NcNrd ........
De\lld ....._. The ....
w•ldliW II a .,.. ............... ,.....,.
to .... ol cirtlM.
6:.IO(C) * * ...... -OnT'lle~ .. "(ttnt .
Mon ................
tlfotller ~ of ....
,.... and .. .....
c:hlllM;a .... --10 • 08ftlAN ........ ..
the o6d _,...'PG'