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1982-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot
10111 1:1111 . --·-----.. ·~ .~., YllR HDllTlll llllY PIPll THURSDAY. M AY 6. 1982 OHAN(~[ COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS 'Fear, suspici ~n' plague· trash plant By ROBERT BARKER MtM Delly Not ltlft The controversy over whether a trash and sewage-burning po- wer plant should be located In Hunting1on Beach has taken on the appearance of an irresistible force meeting an immovable ob- ject. City Council membe~lth the exception of Ron °Pattl~on -say they are adamantly oppo- sed to the project proposed at Hamilton A venue and MagnoJJa Street. Monday they voted to ref.One the propoeed site -the 38-acre Steverson Brothen Mud Dump -with the intent of maklna it more difficult to locate the fad.1- itv there. Pattin8on was abeent. Representatives of area reai- dents expressed ange11 at the project, voicing concerna about noise, odors and heavy truck tra!Cic. They also said they suspected I that the counc:ll may be mak1na it easier for backers of the 2,400-ton rubbl1h and aewage- bumlng fadllty. But Den RyUl,Jll"ftident of the Ryan Eneray Corp. of Costa Mesa, tee1n1 to be undaunted. He, said Tuesday that hla in- tentions are as strong aa ever to f(O ahead with plans. Ryan said he la anxiously awaiting reports from the county • which he said will show that the power plant la a way of retooving solid waste while producing eleci:ridty at the ume time. "My intention~ are to 10 ahead. ru do whatever la neces- sary. It ii fully ln my right." But C.ou.nctlwoman Ruth Fin- ley laid Ryan "bu performed a terrible dillervioe" to the dty. She said the propoul -which baa to come to dty offldall -haa cal&led fear and auspidon and hu forced the city to spend "time, money and effort." Causing uncertainty over de- velopmen t1 Is the question of whether the state or the city has authority to approve the power plant. State authorities say they have flnal authority if the plant pro- duces 50 or more megawaua. ll it produces less than 50, the city would have jurisdiction, they say. City officials maintain it ls a matt.er of local control. They a1ao say the state haa never approved such a project over city opposi- tion. The city, meanwhile, voted Tuesday to rezone the property to a limited use dl1trict, which they say will make it more diffi. c ult for Ryan to put a plant there. The n ew zon ing pe rmits hi~ king, picnicking, boating and other passive activities while permanent zoning is bein1 worked out. The property is now zoned for light manu~turing. Reagan agrees to budget plan W ASH.INGTON (AP) -Pres- ident Reagan said today a com- promiae budget plan drafted by Senate Republicans and endorsed by the White House "can put our country firmly on the road to economic proeperitY." if congres- -sional Democrats ~TIW:. . _ -• Al. a.~uestioll:aQd;»swer ses .. lion with reporten in the White Houae Roee Garden, Reagan said the new budget will "continue to protect" the basic benefits of .............. .,_.. ........ CUSTOMIZED PARKING SPOT -Driver of this Cadillac apparently did a bit at. a-eative parking leaving Newport Beach police to speculate the unknown driver wu either too quick on the gas pedal or too slow on the brake. The car wa spotted today ln a parking lot at 833 Dover Drive. The driver was nowhere to be fou.nd. A handicapped driver sign was stuck in a window of the car. Annex backers urged to act Sou th Laguna annexation h earings sla te d By STEVE MITCHELL O(ttw D811y Ptlot ltllff If Laguna Beach is ever to annex a portion -or all -of South Laguna into the city, sup- porters in that unincorporated community will have to Rel busy. That was the message of the Laguna Beach City Counci l Tuesday when it undertook the le ngthy, complex process of bringing South Laguna into the municipal fold. The council set public hearings on the proposed annexatiotu1 be- fore the Planning Commission May 26, and before the council in mid-June. But prior to those hearings, the council wants developers in South Laguna to have pre - annexation agreements from the city that will guarantee that current zoning on their parcels will remain unchanged for a t least three years. In addition, the council wants a report on the cost benefits to the city of bringing the entire South Laguna community into the city. And they want South Laguna supporters to find out ju9t how much support there is in their NATION community for such an annex- ation notion . By prezoning properties from Dumond Drive to Aliso Creek, the city would guarantee exiating county-impoeed iones would re- main the same when the annex- ation goes into effect. "In other word1, if a South Laguna parcel is designated for single family r~idential now, under county codes, we'd pre- zone the land for the same pur- p o a e so there 's a smooth transition," said city spokesman Rob Clark. Daze of judgment IA ~~ ffl ·~~J Dedliona. Dedslona. Dedaiona. Appellate Court Justice Robert Gardner bu made plenty in local and state cowtrooml llllOe 1938. Now that the C«ona del Mar jurist ls .mi-reUred be'• decided to apply hla wit, me.inory and arch ot.ervationa ln an editorial column f« the Daily Pilot. ) Hil commentary bu made him a popular muter of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he hu spent 62 of h1a 70 years. And he'• I~ well publilhed on such topics as juvenile jwiapnadence and body . aurflnc. ~ He 1\a!'U hit column in Sun-\~ \ day'• Daily Pllot. recalling the \ I thunderou s arrival of another· Barbell-Area ceJebri STATE Response due Friday by Landers By GLENN SCOTI' °' ............... Ann Landen la writin& a spe- cial column for publication Frid- ay to respond to recent dt.clo- 1ure1 that she recycled 15.yeu-old matertal in her syn- dicated advice column. the editor of Irvine-hued Field Syndicate aald . Miu Landen, who works in Chicago, told offidals ln the syn- dicate headquartered at 1703 Kaiser Ave. in Irvine that 1he wanted to spell out her pmition for her estimated 70 rnlllion ree- d era, aaid syndicate editor Leighton Mc:Lauahlln. "She aald she r. writing a col- umn to comment on all t.hia," aald McLaughlin. "I haven't aeen it yet, but it's planned for publica- tion on Friday." The A.uociated Ptets, in con- junction with the Pontiac (Ill.) Dally Leader, revealed Monday that Mlu Landen had for the past 18 months included 33 items that, with minor change•. had appeared in her columns in 1966 and 1967. Since that disclosure, one newspaper, the Idaho Falla (Idaho) Post-Register, has an- nounced it will drop the advice column. McLaughlin, however, said he had not yet received such word from that paper. AJ10, four other papen, the Daily NeW1 ln the San Fernando Valley , the Omaha (Neb.) World-Herald, the Louisville Times and the Denver Poet. an- nounced they would dilcontlnue the column unW editon had u - aurancea that all material was new, the AP reported. McLaughlin said today that syndkate employees have ldenU- (See ANN, Pa1e Al) EPA doctoring attempt a~leged Vidal snipes at Brown Jack Andenon reports that an oftidal at. the En- vironmental Protection ~ ordered doctorlna of technJcal papen IO that a~ Would be ll*M to appear lell harmful. Pqe AB. Washinston 's liner points What do EllubeUl Taylor , the aun lobby and rattl•nake meat have In common? T h ey are all WMhincton auperlatiwa. Pap AJO. Soap operas losl1J6 •um The tenn .. .,.P opera" hM a cllff-.t ~ theM dayt: the major 1pont0n are the makien ol toothpute, breath lreeb.nen and denture creuna. · Pace C5. J Senatorial candidate Gore Vidal calla Governor Brown a "political cor,.'' in Chicaao 1peech. Daily· Pilot editor Tom Murpb.lne reportl on Page Bl . Smith empire liquidated The em&'JU of C. Arnholt Smith, who once con- ,, trolled Air Omia, the San Dleeo Plldrel, • tuna cannery, reel eNte and taxiclat., ii DO men. Pap 83. Social Security recipients. The The president said the answer compromise budget plan was said on Social Security would come to include $40 billion in unspeci-ultimately from a bipartisan fied Social-Security cuts and tax L'Ommission studying the system. increases. The commission is expected to Reagan was questioned on that report by the end of the year. point, but did not explain ho w The presid ent said the spen· the'ceductiom could be ob!.S&aed -tJ.i.n~.~~"'8d ~-~, - w ith04.K lowe-rM'lg befte(ils. H"e" by-the Senate--Budget e.ommittee did say that the savings "could would "contmue to bring down come from a restructunng or the the growth an federal spending program," but didn't explam that ... It should reassure financial m detail. (See BUDGET, Page AZ) Britain won't halt Falklands action By TM Associated Preas Britain vowed today to conti- nue mtlitary activities to regain the FaJkland Islands while ac- cepting U .N . proposals as a framework for future talks. An Argentine Forei'n Ministry source said \he Briti1h position ruled out a diplomatic llOlutlon, for the moment. Prime Minister Margare t Thatcher t old the House of Commons in London tlult Britain accepted U.N. Secretary-Gene ral Javier Perez de Cuellar's pro- posals for settling the conflict as a "framework" for future talks, but said Britain will ''continue with our military act1 vi ties." Perez de Cuellar refused to make public his peace plan, but informed sources said it included a cease-fire, withdrawal of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falklands area and appoint- * * * ment of a U.N. administrator for the islands whale negotiations resume to def.ermine their future. The plan reportedly takes no position on the thorny sover - eignty issue. Brita.in said Wednesday it was working with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. on a plan from Perez d e Cuellar that in- cluded an early cease-fire and withdrawal. But the ideas were never spelled out and the latest statements clearly mdicated more fighting was likely over the South Atlantic islands that Ar- gentina seized from Britain on April 2. "It would be too easy to say no military activities during negotiations," Mrs . Thatcher said. "What would happen? We should be hamstrung. The people would still remain under the heel (See FALKLAND, Pa1e AZ) * * * U.S. losing ground in Latin America WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. backing for Britain in the Falk- lands crisis is producing a back- lash in Latin America that could hamper American efforts to re - sist communist expansionism in Central America. llWB ANALYSIS The hostile hemispheric reac- tion to the U.S. move Friday has raised doubts about American abllity to muster broad-based sup~ for its Central American poUaes. ted from its Laun neighbors than at any time in recent memory u virtually all governments from the region, spanning the political spectrum, have aligned them.sel· ves with the Argentine cause. Moreover, what appeared to be a new era in U .S-Argentine relations a few wee ks a~o haa (See U.S., Pqe Al) And the crisis baa left the Un· i t.ed Stat.es more politically IJlola· INDEX At Your Service A4 Ann Landen Erma Bambeck B2 Movia L.M. Boyd A8 Mutual Funda au.me. C6-7 National Newt Calif onda A6 PubUcNoctc. Cavalmde B2 rsteUaobn O ewffted 04-8 Camk:a D2 Siock MarbCa erc..wmd D2 TeleYtlion Deeth Notka D3 ,,. ... mdlt.orial A8 W•ther D\tertainment C8 Wcirld Newt ~ B2 SPORTS CdM cliaclJn tlile Ile B2 C8 OJ AS Be,B8.D3 Cl-4 82 C'1 C& Cl A2 A3 Carofta clel Mar c1lncbed at a..\ I de b the 9- Vlew ~ b•rt.11 ebtmpbwNp. .... Cl. s -~, . \\.t Continued stories FALKLAND ISLANDS • • • of the Invader while the Argen- tines Increased their activities on the mainland, increased their supplies and raerves ln order to attack ua at their will." Mrs. Thatcher said the U.N. propoula came with "no apeclfk: details" attached but linked a i'-', ceue-flre with ~'f:~tine with- 1 drawal from the ds, a basic ,\ British precondJtion for a truce. But Mn. Thatcher said it was ru "likely" that Argentina was see- ' king a cease-fire without with- •· drawal of its troops from the is- ~· lands. "That would be a very evident h ploy to keep them in possession . ~ of their ill-gqtten gains. We are rt right to be very, very wary of it.'' ;.... she said. , Meanwhile, no new military 11 action was reported in the South Atlantic battle zone Wednesday. ., Argentina drew the last blood Tuesday when one of its planes 11 fired a missile that set fire to the .... British destroyer Sheffield, for- • cing its crew to abandon ship, ~· and a British Harrier jet fighter ,. * * * wu ahot down and the pUot k.U· led in an attack on one of the Falkland alntrii:-. The Britlah government u.kl at least 30 of the Sheffleld'a 270 crewmen were kllled, and aov- ernment sources aaJd 67 more men were miaalng or wounded. The s hattered hulk of the de- stroyer was reported still afloat Wednesday. Two Argentine s hips and a C hilean craft continued the search east of the tip of South America for about 350 sailors missing from Argentina's only cruiser. the General Belgrano, which a British submarine tor· pedoed and sank Sunday. The Argentine government reported the rescue of 680 crewmen. Press Association. Britain's do- mestic ne ws agency, said two Argentine submarines were re- ported operating in the 200-mile war zone both nations declared around the Falklands. but It said the rest of the Argentine fleet was sailing back toward the mainland coast. * * * :~· U.S. POSITION SHAKY . • • given way to one of almost tot.al alienation. ln a protest note delivered to '" U.S. authorities Sunday, Argen-· tine Foreign Minister Nicanor Cost.a Mendez predicted th.at U.S. support for Britain will leave "lasting scars" o'h relations be- ... i .I ,, t ween the two countries. But the political cost to the United States would .be dim1- r\.i.SbedJ.f th~.N: m~iation ef- fort ends the fighting andTea<IS to a negotiated settlement. U.N. Secretary GeneraJ Javier Perez de Cuellar said Wednesday night both Britain and Argentma indi- cated interest in his proposals. One immediate beneficiary of the U.S . estrangement with Ar- gentina is Nicaragua. Before the crisis over the Falkland Islands. the United States looked to Ar- gentina as an ally In bringing an American ally in Central America. At an OAS foreign ministers meeting here last wee k, Vene- zuela captained a successful ef- fort to delete from a proposed resolution a laudatory reference to Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.'s mediation effort. More significantly, after Haig announced U .S . backing for Britain, Venezuela called for a "reorientation" of the OAS to - ensure Latin American -and not U.S . -interests are protec- ted .. Venezuela and the United States cooperated closely in opposing El Salvador's guerrilla movement and in promoting an evolution toward democratic rule in th.at country. It now seems li- kely Venezuela will find it more difficult to support U.S. policies ln El Salvador. ,,, .......... • ON THE TOWN -Advice columnist Ann Landers dances with Danny Kaye at a dinner party in New York Wednesday night. Miss Landers has promised to answer the "tremendous ou tcry" from her 70 million readers with a special colwnn about her use of recycled material. ANN LANDERS. • • fled five reused items within material already sent to aubecri- bers for use during the next two weeks. Substitute material has been sent , he said . Because no recycled items were labeled for use before Friday, McLaughlin said, no more recycled items should be published. Trial delayed; Bonin hack._ . on Death 'Row- Convicted freeway killer Wil- ham George Bonin, awaiting trial in Orange County Jail on four murder charges. will be sent back to San Quentin Prison's Death Row becauae of complaint.a by a defense attorney that his client's privacy and protection are inad- equate here. Syndicate executives didn't realiz.e Miss Landers had recycl- ed &Orne past letters and answers, the edit.or said, and they would have taken steps to end the practice lf they had known. Meanwhile, Miss Landers told The .Associated Press tha t she wilJ discontinue recycling old material even though sh e noted she had u8ed "very little" from past columns. Stle al.9o said abe has been buoyed by responses from friends and admirers. "People have been calling sin- ce last Aiahl Uking me what the fJae i!_aft about, telling me to ca rr~ on," sh"'eiaid ~Ul!Tday . - "Still others have called and said, ·we don't care if the material was written 20 years ago. 30 Jears ago or yesterday,'" she sa1 . One of the three largest syn- dicates in the U.S .• Field handles about 45 columns and an equal number of comic strips, said McLaughlin. pressure against Nicaragua's lef- tist Sandinista government. According to reports this year, the administration cited Argen- tina for a ~ible role in a covert operation aimed at disrupting al- leged Nicaraguan arms ship- ments to leftist rebels in El SaJ- vador. Mexico, Ecuador and other • countries also have publicly cri- ticized the U.S . position on the Falklands. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth E . Lae also agreed Wednesday to delay the start of Bonin's triaJ from July 6 to Aug. 9. Truck yields •• mar11uana . '. ' . ' " .. . , . ,. Ir ; ! Any s uch cooperation now would leelD highly unliltely, par- ticularly m view 01 tne enthu.s.1- a s tic backing Nicaragua haa shown for Argentina since the early days of the crisis. The Falklands debate also may have strained relations between tht! United Stat.es and Venezuela. Even before the United St.at.es staked out the pro-British st.and Friday, Haig angered the Latin Americans in his speech to the OAS foreign ministers meeting 10 days ago. Argentina requetted the mee- ting unde r terms of a Western Hemiaphere self-defense treaty but Haig, in effect, told the del- egates that hemispheric backing for Argentina's strategy could actually prolong the conflict Bonin was convicted in Los Angeles last February for the torture-murders of 10 young men whose bodies were dumped near freeways. He was sentenced to die in San Quentin's gas chamber but was later transferred to Or- ange County Jail in preparation for his trial here. If convicted of murder and special circumstances in Orange County, Bonin could receive an- other death sentence. Hazy sunshine due Clw'ltln SC 78 62 CtwlSln WV 84 4• ThrnS<lay M.1v r, Charllte NC 82 65 • Cocutal Cheyenne 47 34 Ch1e9<10 811 81 Clnctnnall 112 51 Cleveland 83 51 Clmt>ta SC 113 411 haul in SC San Clemente Border Patrol agents found 180 pounds o f marijuana ln the back of • pkkup truck during a routine search early Wednesday morning. The marajuana -tightly packaged and hidden in the type of compartment often checked by the Border Patrol for ahens - was estimated to be worth some $250,000 on the street. Randall Bloom. 35, of Mission Viejo was a rreste d and later booked in San Diego on suspicion of poaseaing marijuana for sale. According to Ag~nt Al Gordon, the bust was the first si?.eable marijuana seizure at the San Clemente checkpoint in a year . ;: ... --................. ,.... ..... ,. ____ _ An Orange County Superior Court Jury'• dedslon to award a Newport Beach man $5.97 mil- lion In damages agalrut Upjohn Pharmaceutical Co. was upheld Wedneadity by the j. udge who P"ftkled over the trial. Attorneys for the Mlchagan- bued drua flnn were unsuccess- f ul in either convincing Judge Phillip A. Petty to order a new trial In the case to reduce the amount of damages. The company'• lawyers argued that the damage verdict was ex- ce9Slve. Petty. however, disagreed and said that 23-year-old Erk" Bark- an, a pre-med student at UC San Diego. faces huge medical bills for the remainder of his life. ln a decl.alon last January. the superior court jury found that Barkan was entitled to damages for suffering kidney and spleen injuries after using an antib1ouc medication manufactured by Upjohn. Barium's kidneys were removed and he must undergo blood clearuing dialysis treat- ments regularly. The f ull judg ment again st Upjohn was increased from $5 97 million to $6.15 million by Petty in March. The judge added the extra $189,000 to cover past medical expenses related to the dialysis treatments. Upjohn officials have said they will appeal the judgment. Pot grandma out on bail HOUSTON (AP) -An 82-yeAr-ollt-grandmother-char• ged with marijuana possession says an arresting officer has promised to give her "something even better" to ease the pam m her stJH joints. Laura Ethel Clark. grandmo- ther of five, was freed on a $1.- 000 bond Wednesday after nar- cotics officers found plants bea- ring nine pounds of the illegal weed in her backyard From Page A 1 BUDGET. • • markets by 1harply rt>ductng projec:ted deficit• In the yean beyond . . . . lt will preserve our com m l tmen t to a stronaer def9Qll.!' He la.Id the tax lncreue9 1n the budget compromise, totaJ.1.na $95 billion over three yean, would not unp nge upon the incentiveJ he expects from th~ tax-<:Ut pro- gram he propoeed and Congrete enacted Jut year. Standin~ with Reagan as he began the informal sealon with reporters were congre11ional GOP leaders. Reagan said the burden would be on the Democrat.a to explain how they would ref we to agree to a plan that wo uld reduce budget deficit.a to $106 blllion in fisal 1983, $69 billion In fiscal 1984 and $39 bilJion the year af- tt-r Speaker of the House Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said this morning the Republican spending plan "provides for walloping defense expenditures and fails to correct the mequ1tles and excesses of the Reagan-Kemp-Roth tax bill. At the same lime, it proposes deep cuts in Social Security and other vital programs" The plan. h e said. "retains some of the major defects of Reaganomics." Earlier, Senate Democrattc· leader Robert C Byrd of West Virginia said the c:omm1ttee ac- tion amounted to "mortgaging tht.· economic futurt of the el- dt-rly of this country to ft· nant.-e tht.· econom1t· folly o{ the K e mp-Hoth tax sche me" of across-tht.'-board tax rate cuts. On Social Security. Reagan assured recipients the committee budget plan would not affect the 7 4 percent cost-o!-IJvmg increase they an: to receive in July. The committee approved the plan Wednesday after months of pubhc bickering between Senate Republicans and the president: • "; -.• "I hope_you can pass it," Rea- gan told S<m,,ete V. Dornetl'R-i. R-N.M .. the comrruttee chainnan, by telephone Wednesday night after the compromise was worked out swiftly in privatt- negouations between administra- tion 0Cfic1als and Senate GOP leaders A short time later, the com m1ttee dtd gave te ntative ap- proval. Hamburglar caught .Suspected thief stuck in oven duct LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bungling burgfar alfuos made it to the. ov:en of a McDonald's restaurant today before he got stuck ms1de ductwork. where he stayed screaming until passersby called for help. City fire spokesman Jim Wells said firefighters pulled a semi-conscious Carlos Naranja. 23, of Echo Park from a vent a~ut 6:20 a .m .. just before the Egg McMuffins started coo- king. He apparently had tried to scramble inside from the roof of the McDonald's just north of downtown. Naranja's plight was reported about an hour earUer by someone who heard him crying. "Get me out!" Wells said. Naranja suffered first-degree burns, "nothing more than a sunburn," said Bernie Quintero. spokeswoman for Queen of Angels Hospital where he was transported. "He's awful greasy," she added. Police Officer Gen e Akesson said Naranja .,..as arrested for investigation of burglary. ., Ltghl veroeble w1noa well 1c aoutl1west 10 lo If> knots aller noof1 Wnl 10 llOUlh-t swells 2 10 3 feet Partly s;,nny aflHnoon COlumbua Oal·FI Wl11 D•ylon Oenve< Des llAOtne5 Our Season Opener ' 82 47 78 ea 114 51 41 33 78 ~ V.S. summary A guaty storm o&mpeO sno• o ver mucn o r Colorado on Wednesoay, closing a l•o-mlle alretch or Interstate 25 1n Coto- redo Springs and torclng aoma SGhoola to ctose The Felc«t Kll<>OI d1Slr1CI in El P110 County waa cloaed all•• 1herllf'1 dec>utles reooneo 2·1oot Orlfta on highway• School waa also calle<I ofl In the county"a Peyton 10<1 Mt•m1-Yoder <111-lrlCts Skies were lair ovet mot1or11\e •HI OI th• nallon For loday 111e Na11ona1 WH· lher Service torecaals showers and lhunderstorma from the up- per Great lakes to Arllona, New Mexico eno wellern T eut and 11\owet's ewer eeale<n Mon1ana Sunny •• ere P<edieted from PMw England to the eaalem end oen1111 Gulf Cou1, u well ea o\lef the P9Cillc Coaat end m<ldl of lhe pletMU California Soutllem Clllf«nta wit! be felf ttwougll Friday but 1o11r doudlMM can be expected In COMtal .,_ dur'lng ntohl end morning houf._ Warmt11 dav-. Orenge County c;en upecl hlgfl9 todey ee 10 72. 1owt a.. 10 80 Fr1day. lljgtla In upper 809 91 beed!M, ,_ 90 lnl81'<1 ., ... Inland valleya wlll heve highs today eround 75, IO Fr1day. LOln In ""'* 509. Nor1h 10 notlheul wlnda 15-30 mph upeCled In moun11ln1 II 1im.. HlgM '4 lo 74, loww 44 10 5o4 HOttlltm 0ea«1 Nphe n 10 17. tow• 41 10 H 8out"-1n 0.-1 ~ .. to N . IOwt &110 es. ~h«n end Centrll CallfOMlt _. N llllr llvougll Friday ·~ for cOHlll IOQ and low c:lovde •PfMdlnt ~nland lonlQht M'ICI Fl1d4'Y Local dftDle on "°"" c:omt. Te"!perature1 llCAT'ICMe .. Le ~ ta •1 Oe1ro11 S2 Oululh 61 Et PalO 71 Favbltll<s S4 Fargo 65 Flags11tt 58 or .. 1 Falls 54 Hanford 73 Helena 51 Honolulu 90 Hout ton 711 lndneptl• as Jeclc111 118 Jack 111vlle S2 l(ana City 111 Las Veou 111 U111e Rock 85 Loulav\lle 115 Memphlt lie MIAIN 711 Mllwauk .. 77 Ms>K-SI P 112 Nutwjlle 85 New Orleerlt 117 PMw "°"' ea NorlOlll 77 Okla City 80 Omahe 85 Orlando 13 Plliledptq 74 Ptloenlx 90 Plllll>Uft". 77 Pllend, oe Piiand, Ore 70 Pr~ 11 =~ IO 70 RICtwnond '° Salt Lall• M Sen Antonio 78 Seellle 63 Stir~! 112 Slou• .... 58 SI Louil .. St P·Tamoe 11 ~-83 Syrecuee 72 Topelle 77 T-.. TUiie 77 w~ n Wlcllh• 77 CM.1'0f!MA .. ~ 7t 11 Bar9'ow M 411 52 50 29 45 37 3-4 N •• w,. .... Wewn•-. ""'<ftt•• 37 N(')AA tJ ..,_ Ot1.tf of {.t.mf1""'' •· 34 Fronts Cold .,.. 71 " 54 BMUmont ea 51 58 Big Beer 81 31 SI 8lthop 81 4() 59 Blythe 117 63 59 C.tallna 12 6-4 04 Cullle< City 711 57 52 Euretca 117 42 117 Fr-ee 96 74 l llnCMter 82 48 82 Long 8"ofl .. 57 49 Lot "r' ea eo 50 Monr ea 58 111 Montebelo 72 eo 50 Heedlae 85 e.4 4e ~BMctl ee 60 ea 71 65 47 Ontetto 111 &8 •1 Palm SC)f ltlge " 511 11 p....-ne 85 !WI 82 PMO Roblee 71 48 40 ~ ee 55 M A9dwOOd Clty 72 55 40 -..cra1M11to 115 50 ... ..... es 53 46 Sen Bamerdltie 111 57 " ""'Dlloo 71 04 .. Sen ,l'MCleOG 04 52 n 8en Jote 11 52 .. ,Senta Ant 70 58 42 lent• Bert>et• 64 53 12 Seftte CNi es 58 ... lante Marie 113 53 • • .,,.. MoNce 111 57 61 TtNe V*'J M 30 30 T'-'INll 17 82 31 T«r.,_ ea 57 83 'fume ae eo 60 Smog 72 82 8t Tiie to11th OoHt Air Quellby M•n:11•m•nf Dlttrlct predlctt Le 11nt1e thlul air quellty for Mn!M· •2 t!W PWIOfll 1odey In OOMtll 811C1 .. lnlend ., ... M'ICI good • quality .. .......... A ~ent ltMdetd lnde• Of Artdtorege IO ..... Mllnt.a • • Atelnfc Ccy 80 12 """'" 7t .. ... .... .... .... ...._,. 72 42 ...... ... ... -°" .... """' • IO """""* 11 .. Z""'9 ' I 11 ..... IO 22 ... ........ a " 10 90llkln IO '7 ~ ' ' '° ...... .,. .. =. c:?iWl!y; ........ c:Nflp. " """""*' 7t "' . i) c 6 • 125 wH predlcled for coHt•I areaa, a PSI ol 1311 for metropot. 1ten L os Angele•. 111e S•n Fernendo·Sante Clarlle velley1 and the Rtvetlide-Sen 8em81'dM areas. and a PSI of 150 for the San O•briet-Pomon• 1r .... Good elr quallly with a PSI ol 42 '' predicted lor the Hemel· Etatnore, BlO Bear Lake. Benning 1nd inlano Otenoe Coun1y ., .... elong with the hlg11 end low dM· etll l'AN AM HI Lo Acapuk;o 8erblldoe Sefmud• Bogoll Curecao FrMC>Ol'I Ouldalajat • 04 ildelol lpe Ktngtlon ~onteoo Bay Mtutliln Met IOI Mexico City Mont~ Extended weather 91 77 II& 77 75 96 54 60 95 711 111 8' ae. 64 12 11 " 17 115 11 12 11 75 71 79 64 75 61 Seturdey-Mondey: Petehy l•te night and urly morning low CIOu<la neer the OOMI. otlleNtla felt 1..oca1 •trono ov-'Y n(l(I~ wlndt lfl the rnoun1ell\1 8llturdey. Hight In tilt contal ., ... renglno from the 11ppet 801 et the l>M-011 .. 10 mid 10• Inland ., .... LO'!Wt 13 to 13 Mountlln rMOft ~· H 10 71. lo,wt 409 to tow We 've teamed up a couple of winning looks to ~et your spnng and summer off to a great start 100% cotton madras pleated walk shorts. and an all cotton crew neck sv.1eater From our ladles department. naturally , 1 HINCKLEY AND CARTER -This still photo taken from a videotape shows then President Carter, center, bending over, and accused presidential assailant John W. Hinckley Jr., upper right corner of photo. The tape was AJJ Wlf.,t>oto made during a campaign stop by Carter in Dayton, Ohio, Oct. 2, 1980 and was shown during Hinckley's trial. Hinckley is charged with the shooting of President Reagan. Soviets mute :nr~paganda ' SOiith-Ail3ntiC dispute . , ID MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union is trying to make propa- ganda gains Crom the Falklands crisis, but ideology and pragma- tism deter it from deeper invol- vement in the Argentine-Brittsh conflict. Strong support for Argentina's right-w ing leaders could com- prorruse the Soviets ideologically, alienate West European countries backing Britain and set a dange- ro~ precedent in the case o( the Kuni Islands, which the Soviet W ornan compensate for job . 'anxiety' SACRAMENTO (AP) -A w orker who honestly thought she was being harassed at work can collect state compensation for emotional damage, whether she was actually being harassed or not says a state appeals court. A unammous three-member panel of the 3rd District Court of Appeal said a subjective test must be used to decide whe ther an employee 1s entitled to work- ers' compensation payments for stress or o ther psycho logical harm. "The proper focus of inquiry . . . 1s not on how much stress should be felt by an employee in his work environment, based on a 'normaf reaction to it, but how much stress is felt by an individ- ual worker reacting uniquely to a work environment," Justice Col- eman Blease wrote m the ruling last week. "His perception of the circum- stances (e.g., crowded deadhnes, mountains of paper, a too-fast assembly line) i.s what ultimately determines the amount of stres,, he feels." The court upheld workers' compensation for a woman who worked as a cake decorator for a Albertson's s upe rmarket in Redding. During a dispute with her superviaor in 1978 and 1979, the woman's hours were reduced and she was laid of{ briefly. She also said she overheard the supervisor rid.icullng her and talking about getting rid of her, and de9cribed various inatances of h.aralllanent. After leaving the job in 1979, the woman waa hospitalized for a week with anxiety, began slut- tering severely and suffered from periods of depression, the court said. Her psych1atriBt testified that she had a prior mild psychologi- cal condition that had been ag- gravated by her e xperience at work. The supervisor acknowledged that her layoCf was improper, but denied harassmg the woman, the court said. A psychiatrist who testified for the supermarket concluded the woman had not actually been harassed but had ·•subjectively perceived" haras- sm ent, and said he r condition might have had nothing to do with work. Without deciding whether the woman was actually harassed, a workers' compen sation judge awarded her benefits for total tempo rary disability, and the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board agreed. In upholding the award. the court said there was evidence that the woman's employment played an "active role" in her "tremendous distress." Her lawyer, Thomas Plumb, said Tuesday that the woman took her harassment claim to the National Labor Re lations Board and got a settlement that inclu- ded back pay. W ives soug ht TOK YO (AP) -About 25 Hokkaido dairy farmers will tra- vt•I from Japan's agricultura l northern island to Tokyo llOOn in search of marriage partners. Kyodo News Servke reported. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHtlfled adffftl1ln9 1141642-5678 All other department• 642·4321 Kuy $chull1 v ..... ,~, '°''~ f,..~ tf'f OI A1IW. t .. +nq I om ll.4urpn1ne l\.41ke Harvey ()Hw t'w ut M•1 ~f'1tnu Ken Goddard nu~,, .... ()pfw ... h ... ,, Ray l\Aacleon ,-.0 .. .,,,... Char In Loot Maoq•t CO.Ill' MAIN OFFICE JJO W~\I RAY ~I ""'-......... C A Mflttf •00•~\\ Roe 1\te ( 0"111 ~"wt ( A 9'Jti1- (OP't'lQM t"'7 Q,~ COti't't Putther.h1nq (0tnp • .,t• HO n.w,--.tot1 .. , tllv'ff,.t•on' ,..dUm1'9t n•~l•r or .tcJ "''''W""""h ""'"'" mAY bfio r•t)f'fMtvC'"' Wtfhiou4 'PP< ••I oirtrr.'H,,tfM oft ot>Ytt-Qh·t OWIW'r \1-10"rt 'I~ f)fl'·fJtQ11 ,,,.,ct ... t (O'\tA Mft.,,,. (AhfftrfU~ HIP\ .... IDO, , .. .,,_., 11f\t1~ tt1 f Art1f"1 i. I\ ttwmthh nv "''"' "f.tl ,......,,~-. ftw ')r.,., l o.4\1 [Md• t'1tof with •"ff" f\ (Of'n b•nfl"d tfW ~' Pr~' " DUbft\Md IJ¥ th• Ot'•• (N •t PU011""1'Q Com-y Sf>P"••I• •O•llOM ••• ov&u'Nid Miorw:Mv "''°"°" , uef•Y tor ,._.,. MP'-l H#W00#"9 fWio.Ml\1 HMntWtqtOl'I ~Ml\ ,~1Afl't \t•tN, ftYfM l AQyf\llt f4f'M h \au"' ( Qt\f 4 ''f\0 .... ,...,,... ttttlt1on ., °""'''""'l1 \Aturd'9"t"' '9nd \unG•Y" fM ., ir'W ,,., pUbh~•nQ Ofi'l'tf " Al )lO w.,, tt•v \hNt P 0 llo• IWI f ..... ¥-"' t .ol•I•'"'"' _,.,_, VOL 11. NO. 111 Union seized from Japa n near the end of World War II Instead of supportmg the Ar- gentine seizure of the British colony in the South Atlantic, the Kremlin assails what 11 de9Cl'lbes as "neocolonialist" British de- signs and "U.S.-backed British aggression against Argenlma ." This e nables Moscow to dis- tance ttselt trom Argentina's rightist junta. which strongly opposes left-wing movements al home and abroad. ll also provides the Soviets with a forum to reit- erate their anti-coloruallst dogma and W-contnst the Sovilt-posi· tion with U.S . support for Brit- ain. Pragmatically. the Soviet pro- paganda machine over the past year has sought to divide West- e rn Euro pe and the United States. Because of West Europe- an suppo rt for Britain in the dispute. the Kremlin ts stepping gingerly so as not to undo the li- mited gains it has made in Eu- rope on the issue 0£ nuclear ar- mament. Another factor dictating Soviet restraint is the Soviet occupauon of the Kurils. The Japanese claim sove reignty over the isla nds which str etch from Hokkaido, the northernmost mam Japaneee island. to the southern llp of the Soviet Union's Kamchatka Pen- insula. Despite these restraints. Soviet propagandists ('OUld not ignor e fighting between two American friends, Britain and Argentina. Despite incr easingly heated media attacks against Britain and the United States. the Soviet government has not swerved from ita official position of neu- trality in the Falklanda crisis. British diplomata h ere ha ve told news correspondents that Soviet officials. in talks at the Foreign Ministry, have been far more r eserved than the government-run media. The Bri- tish diplomats said Foreign Min- istry officials assured them Mo- scow would steer clear of the dispute. M09e0w's interest in the con- flict, aside from the obvious op- portun i ty to sour U .S .-Latin American relations while increa- sing ita own stature in the region, la to insure the continued flow of Argentine grain to the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union. having 1uf- fered three poor grain harveata in a row, buys U.7 billion worth of gain from ArgenUna annually and la 1t1 leading partner In trade. A commentary laat week in the Communl1t Party newspaper Pravda Indicated concern \hat the conflict ml&ht interrupt grain ahlpmenta. The paper said the dllput.e'a "ne1atlve Influence al- ready makes ltaelf felt, dlarup~ ting normal 1hlppln1 In the 1outhern Atlantic and w orld trade in general." ...., ........ .,, .......... We're Listening ••• Whal do you like about lM Dally Patot? Whal don't you lib" Call the number below and your met111e will bf recorded. tran1crlbed and delivertd &.o the approprilte editor. The same 24·hoUr an1werin1 aervke ma)· be uied to record let· lera to lM editor on any topic. Mailbox contrtbutora mu1t Include their name and telephone number for vertflutlon. No circulation calla. pleue. Tell u.a what'• on youl"mlnd. Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thur9day, May 8, 1982 8 Israeli friction looms Sinai withdrawal brings doubts, forebodings TEL AVIV, hrael (AP) - Painful u It wu, urael'a Sinai withdrawal was only one 1trand in a tapestry of doubt.I and fore- bodino th.at haunt t.hla na lion in lta 3151.h year of 1tatehood. A mood of grumpy cynlclsm pervades large segments of the populace. The country ls expe- riencing a widening split down the middle on Ideological, reli- gious and aodal lines. The turning back of the Sinai to Egypt April 25 was a giant step into the unknown. Few Is- raelis will say with certainty that they trust Egypt to k eep its commitments under its peace treaty with Israel, and they will watch every crate of Cairo-bound apples, every buaload of inco- ming Egyptian tourists, to gauge whether Egypt is making good on its promise of normal re la- tions. The pullback also entailed the uprooting and destruction o f flourishing Jewish settlements in Sinai, reversing Zionism's pivotal article of faith :.... the peopling of the land with Jews. With the withdrawal behind it, Israeli attention is shifting to the rest of the Arab land captured in the 1967 war and here the split looks widest. To Prune "Minister Menachem Begin. the overriding priority is to transplant thousands of Jewa into the West Bank of the Jordan River and ensure that iL.Jli>""'r again-comes undes-Arab.rule. To the Labor Party o pposition. this policy endangers another basic tenet o f Zionism -that Israel mus t remain a J ewish state, undiluted by a large and inevitably underprivileged Arab class. Thus the Labor Party has re- f used to join Begin in pushin& a resolution thro ugh the Knesset NEii AlllYlll (parliament) barring th~ disman- tlmg of J ewish settlements. It reasons that nobody can guaran- tee such a ban. The growing militancy of the Jewish settlers, dramatized by their s truggle against the army which e vacuated them from Sinai. has prompted a warning by the attorney general, Yluhak Zamir, that unless the ultra- nat1onalists are checked . they will jeopardize Israeli democracy. T o most Israelis, the spectacle of bulldozers d emolishing the Sinai town of Yamit JUSt before the withdrawa l was far more horrifying than the e v'1ctaon of the squatters. Three newspapers have advanced the suspicion - strongly denied by ofricials - that the government enco4faged the nationalists lo put up a fight 1n Yamit and manufac ture a national trauma that would dlS- pe l any noti('e of dis mantling West Bank settlements. Meanwhile, the West Bank has erupted in Palestinian rioting. and young Isr aelis know t hat when they joan th e a rmy they stand lus chance o f fighting a war than of having to put down demonstrations with the ir guns and truncheons. The friction, claims author S. r-u nds r~lea e --· Wl\SHINGTON (AP) The Edul'allon [)\,.partm<•nt ha1> rt.'lt·a- S("(J $1!1 7 mtllton 1t hud bt--t.'n a<·- l'U~C'd of 1mpound1ng 1ll1•gall y from tht• nation's pub lit· libraries And another $91 msllton for r('- habil1tat1on Sl•rv1t·t·~ will bt• re- leased shortly. Wlar, a leading dove, "will turn the West Bank into another Northern Ireland." Independence Day on April 28, traditionally a sea1on of soul searching, evoked tome somber assessments this year. David Hacohen, the Grand Old Man of the Israeli labor move- ment, said he was haunted by the fear that Israel might one day cease to exist. EUmelech Rimalt, a founder of what is today Begin's Likud Bloc, said he used to trust "Jewish genius" to make Israel work. Now he sees an Israel whose economy runs o n cheap Arab labor from the West Bank. "Never in my blackest dreama did I foresee this," he said. The national mood has been further soured by the conce111iona Begin made to the tiny ultra- religious Agudat lsrael t'arty to lure them into his coalition after last June's election. One conces- sion -a pledge lo stop El Al, the national airline, from flymg on the J ewish Sabbath -has pro- voked national uproar. The e thnic cauldron 1s also heating up. following the C.'OUrt conviction of Cabinet Minister Aharon Abu-Hatze1ra for stea- ling from a state-subsidized charity fund. To the Sephardis, Israel's nu- merically superior but politically under-r e presente d Oriental J ews, ~bu-Hat;eira is not a cri- minal but a S'epnardi whO'TI -- being vil'timized for pfaylnli a f - system invented by the Alihke- nazi (European) establishment. · All these issues -West Bank, religion, ethnic fnction -are li- kely to come to a head late this year 1( Begm heeds calls to hold an early election and bolster his wafe r -thin majority in the Knesset. SLIDE FOR LIFE -Don Engle, 23, of Dow- ney. slides down a cloth tube dangling from a four-story building, during an Earthquake Planning Conference in Los Ange les. The demonstration on the use of the fabric chute, .,.,,....._. designed by French inventor Gerard Zephanie. illustrated the relative safety with which peo- ple can be evacuated from a tall building du- ring a fire or earthquake. MOTHER'S DAY. "MOTHER AND CHILD" BY LLADR6. All tt\e beouty of a mother's love is captured in thl1 enchanting piece. A perfect gift to make Mother'~ Doy 1pecial. Crafted in the Lladr6 Studios in Spain, available In matte or glaze finish . 13" high, $195. SLAVICK'§ nne .-..en SIMt 1t11 Whlrt rht btsr surpnSts begin. ,llNCltl.....,., (714) 144-t• • ....,.,...,, Mio Gt..w "°'Moe-. Sf!).DllvD. ~ ~ Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thureday, Maye, 1812 ,,,, • Contact statio n or sp9nso r BY PAT HOROWITZ or-.....,,......... ••••• tllat "oaly OH ...... rter mllJIH DEAR PAT: La1t aJpt my ~•rea ... I Amta1cu1 laave yo1r aame!' It'• tne tat watelaed a televl1loD pro1ram tlaat I foHd I've .... Mme auul aames • &MM eaNI, offH1lve. Sll01ld I write to tlle Federal Mt MW I am see ...... wl~ very comm• Commaicatlou Comml11lon (FCC) to e.m· la1t umet -1Ull 1tatlq tbt .. oaly oae la a plata? qurler mUUoa Amerleu1 ... etc." It doeu't -T.L., Coroaa del Mar 1oucl rtpl to met No. The FCC does not have the authority -S.M., Butta1toa Beacll to regulate program content. You lhou1d voice Me neither. Thia and many "family hil· your concema directly to the station or net-tory" offers appeal to vanity rather than work. Even better , contact the corporate sound economic benefit from hard-earned • 4 headquarters of the commercial aponaors of family money well spent. • the program that offended you. Compare '81 tax tables DEAR PAT: l lleard laat aammer tllat my fe4eral laceme tu wHld be redaced by 5 perceat. After comparta1 laat year'• tax ta- •tes wltll tMa year's, I 11.Dd tlaat tkJ1 laa1 aot laappened. Wllf? -S.F ., Newport Beach SI.nee the F.conomic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 was in effect for only the laat three months of 1981, one-quarter of the 5 percent reduction was effective for 1981. This reduc- tion of approximately 1 1,i percent has been built into the 1981 tax table. Another reaaon that the tax tables do not appear to reflect the tax reduction ls that this year you must subtract the $1,000 for each exemption from your income before you go to the tax table. U you compare this g.ar's and 1aat year's tables after doing this you will see the reduction. Offer sounds suspicious DEAR PAT: I wuled to tell E .T., Balboa aad yoar other readers that I am a postal service worker ud 1 aee many poatal carcla wltll "Tlae (laat name) Family Heritage Book" offer coming tbroagla tlae maJl. ftey Refund forwarded? DEAR PAT : l'\'e moved 111M:e I filed my tu retva, Mt I did pet la a cllu&e of addret• wltla tlle po1t office. Will my refud be for- wanled to my aew add.rest? lt.W., Cotta Mesa The Internal Revenue Service haa no re- gulationa that prevent the forwardlna of re· fond checks, but some poet offices cfo have special ~ulrementa. Check with the post of. ftce whJch handles mall for your old addrets to make sure that the change of addreas will be sufficient. The IRS a1lo advt.ea that when a taxpayer moves that IRS be advlaed of the cl1anp of addre98. nu. can prevent unneces- sary delays ln the receipt of refund checks or correspondence. • Got a problem ? Then write to Pat Horo- • ~ witz. Pa t will cut red tllpe, 11ettlng the ill answel'll and action y ou need to solve in· equities in government and bua.lnas. Mall your que•tiom to Pat Horo witz. At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box lMJO. Costa mesa, CA. 92626 . .As 111JUJY letters u poaible win be ans- wered, but phoned inqwries or Jeuers not including the reader's t un name, addrell!I and businea hours' phone number cannot be co11S1dered. ,~ -1Re RObinsCfh~S-Gif t FOR PETITES: RUFFLES IN 2 PARTS. VERY SOFT AND SUMMERY. Our answer to what a smart Mom should wear 1f she's 5' 4 • or under 1 From Private Affa1re a first look at the tender pieces tharll make this summ&f-her 9reatest yet. TA&-i.uttled top. Slim and sleeveless. $28. The newest skirt. Shaped for a full sweep. $36. White or khaki polyester I cotton. 4 to 14 Aobinaire Petites Sportswear. 74 To order, call toll·free 1 ·800·345·8501 Last of .·Rangers dies at 97 TUCSON, Art.I. (AP) -John R. Clarke, ukl to have been the laat o f the famed Arl1ona Rangera of territorial daya. will be burled ln Whittier. Clarke died Monday at hla home in Roeemead, Calif. ffe WU 97. John D. Gllchrieee, an Arizona hlatorlan, called Clarke'• death the "endina of· m era." In 1965, Gllchrie.e document- ed Clarke'• membership In the 26-member Artz.ona Ranaera, ba- sed on record& ln the Slate Ar· chlvea. He aald there la ltttle doubt Clarke was the 1aat of hls breed. "He was a fine old gentleman," said GUchriese. In Inte rviews over the years with the Tuc9on Citium, Clarke recounted how he joined the Rangers July 13, 1906. The Ter- ritorial Legislature, irate about c attle rus tling, forme d the rangers in 1901 and gave them broad powers to roam the state look.in& for desperadoe. ., ... ._. The Range rs quic kJy go t a reputation for helping clean up much of the terr~tor -often not bothering with · · or t.fials. "In thoee days, we had was dangerous wor~" Clarke told the Cltiz..en in 1979. FOR MRS. ONLY -Mrs. America contestants lounge near Las Vegas Hilton pool. From left, clockwise, Susan Combs, Mrs. Illinois; Kristin T olson, Mrs . Monta na; Rhonda McGeeney, Mrs. Tex as; Tara Clark, Mrs. Nevad a; Mona Harnett, Mrs. Florida; Geri Pauline, Mrs. New Jersey; Nancy Hook. Mrs. Michigan, and Janet Horvath, Mrs. New York. Clarke le ft the Range rs for good soon after re-enlisting in July 1907, about the time h e heard politics were ge tting in - volved. .. _.. .::: People all along the Orange coast D ·1 p·ID A rely on the II J I 1 642-4321 The Robinson's . Gift RECEIVE A BONUS OF BILL BLASS CHOCOLATES WHEN YOU SURPRISE MOM WITH A '10 BQX. Gitt wi111 purchase The 3.5 oz. box of Bill Blass assorted chOcolates. regularly $4, Is your reward for treating Mom to the chic-est gourmet chocolates ever. Purchase suggestions: assorted chocolates (available now In the new fuohela box for Mother's Day as well aa the signature allver) 14 oz. •12. 28 oz. 124. Minaret creams, 8'A oz. •10. Cherry cordials, 8~ oz. S10. ' Aoblnaon·a candy. 66. To order, call toll·free 1·100-Ml·ll01. New playmate unveiled in LA .... Tweed, the tallelt ever Playmate of the Year, and the second Canadlal) to receive the title, wu introdu- ced at a luncheon at the Playboy Mansion in Loa An-gela. Miaa Tweed, 26, a blue- eyed blonde, is a native of St. Johna, Newfoundland, and was a fashion model In Toronto and Montreel before traveling to Loa Angeles to •rpear ln lhe November ilaue o the magazine. The 5-foot-10, 128-pound former Mias Ottawa is fea- tured on the front cover and ln a 14-page pictorial spread in the JOne issue ff Playboy. Former President Rlcbrd Nixon made a return visit to Disney World where eight years ago he told the nation: "I am not a crook." "You haven't seen the world until you've seen Disney World," Nixon said, as k'e toured Dis- neyland's East Coast version with his wife, Pat, daughters J.Ue Elsealtower and Tricia Cox, two grandchildren, and friend Bebe Reboto. On Nov. 17, 1973, Nixon made his declaration of inno- cence while visiting the park during the Watergate scandal. Nine months later he res- igned. THUR., MAY 6 ancl HONORED -Jazz pianist Dave Brubeck will become the first person to receive an honorary doctor of mu- sic degree from the Uni- versity of Bridgeport in Connecticut. Prime Minister Menaclllem Begin, of Israel, got a visit from an odd couple -Jack Lemmon and Walter Mat- tlllaa. The movie stars, leading a Hollywood group on a visit sponsored by the United Je- wish Appeal, spent 20 min- utes with the Israeli premier just after he had a stormy . session in parliament dealing with Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank. Also in their group were Mark Rydell, director of the Oscar-winning movie, "On Golden Pond"; TV yame - show host Monty Ha l and 20th Century-Fox President Sberry La..uiJlg. I The kins of l'Wtna. a .. , Good.mu, Celebrate<fhla 73rd birthday at a Lons bland radio ltation with friends. Suffolk C.ounty Executive Peter Co~alu, had proclai- med the day "Benny Good- man Day." Goodman, who lives ln Stamford, Conn., said he plays mottly ln comboe now but aald it was poaalble he would get hllck into tq banda .,.in. He noted there wu an in- c re aae d interest ln jaiz. "People are get~ out on the dance floor apin,' he said. Mattt.ew J. Slevl.l.D Jr., an executive vice president of Avco Corp. of Greenwich, Conn., has been named chairman aDd chief executive officer of the Imperial Corp. of America, based In San Diego. G. Keanetll Bandley, 75, ia retiring chainnan. Kate Jackaoa, the former Charlie's Angel moat recently seen in the movie "Making Love," has been married in a private ceremony to New York business executive David Grunwald, says a spokeswoman for the actress. The marrlage was held in Mias Jack.son's Beverly Hills home, spokeswoman Ronni Chuea said. She said the two had known each other about a year. The couple will maintain residences in Los Angeles and New York. h was the second marriage for Miss Jackaon and the tint for Greenwald. She was di- vorced two years ago from actor Andrew Stevena. FRI., MAY 7 •••••••••••• 7:30 p.m! SAT., MAY I ••••••••••• 11:00 a.m.1' 3:00 p.m., 7:30 p.m! SUN., MAY 9 •••• 1:00 p.m., 4:30 p.m! All Seats Re .. rved at '7.50, 16.50 'SI SO off on choldrenl1 year' ond unde< or oroups of 2S or "'°"e -----TidretsOn Sole----- Anoh.lm Convention ~ter All n ct..tron locations Ordet' By Phone Ordet' By Moil CAU (714) 999..ftOO FOR ALL T1CKET INFOtlMAJION A mt•rica ·!'I fa\'orile !'lanclal. The.• )llledP lirwd innen-olll l\rul/ dii'lint'tin• i.1.~·lin)C hl\\'t• mttcl(• Ba.~ Sunjun~" •l 11ncler lhl''<lln. •bet S to 10 N-M When you open a new 91-Day Money Market Account at Bank of Americ~ we11 give you a $20 cash bonus. High Rate for Just 91 Days! The 9 1-0ay Money Markl't Accoum is a great new investment. You don't have to tit' up your money for long period~ to ~et hi~h money market intl'reM. A high rJtt' is your.. when you inn::st a minimum of 5""7500 for only 9 1 days at a time. At rhe end of the term your fund~ will ht· automatically rdm·t'stt·tl 'lUll' dfn IM ' lhnllljlh .\IJ) 10. l•JKl • · Allow l Yld<l h.1."'11Hl Ot'fl'NI Jo<l illll'rl--4 hl·inl( n·ooH-.1< J :.ii ..amt-rJll' JI l'ac:h m.11un1~ 111 lompll'll' o n1.· f\111 \l'Jr Fl:tk·ral l'l.'l(lllJIKIO r>ruh1hlt' tile' l lllllflloUndirlj( of 10lt0rl0'>1 00 lhl'"'l' Jl'lllllllll\ 'IUll' j, '41h1n 1 111 d \Jlljlt'huf 1, liwJ JI llm c: ol JllOUnt llfll'llillj( for 1ht-tl·m 11.ofthc: ll'lH ·..irnc.'1lr Orange 0out DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Maye, 1982 I J Obledo backing Arg,entina SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~ Mario Obledo, a fonner 1tate of ficial who'• running for gover nor, 1ays he's "for Ar1entina very much ao" in that country' battle against Great Britain ove the Falkland Iala.nda. "We ought to 1Uck together this hemisphere," Obledo sai here. AP W\11Jt 111 MUSCLING IN -Bodybuilder turned actor Arnold Sch- warzenegger and co-star Sandahl Bergman do their bit for the photographers in Los Angeles during promotion for their movie "Conan, the Barberian." Schwarzenegger held the Mr. Universe title five times and the Mr. Olympia title seven times. Obledo, who was at.ate Heal and Welfare Department secre tary, seek.a the Democratic nomi nation for governor. He says ArgenUna was ju.ti fled in invading the Falkland Ia lands because British officW.s di not listen to warnings to re linquish control of the temtory. SF gay savings firm will expand Atlas firm plans to acquire new branch off ice J SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -assets since opening Nov. 16. The institution was crea financial institution to cater to million. They were $7.3 million homosexuals, who Flanagan say Atlas Savings & Loan, the first Assets then were about $3 to help fill the financial needs o~ homosexuals. re ported it will May l and will reach $12 million suffered from a "hesitancy and soon double its sue by acquiring a after the planned acqutBitton of reluctance" on the part of tradi branch in the heart of this city's the United Federal Savings and ttona l banks to loan to gay couJ large gay commlmity. Loan branch on Castro Street, pies. The announcement came Flanagan said. Wednesday during the S&L's Savings dollars have climbed T he United acquisitton ha ·first annual meeting, where from $928,000 on opening day to already been approved by thei president Jerry Flanagan told $4.52 million, he said. The United Atl.as board of directors. Flana1 shareholders the institution has acquisition will add another $5 gan said he expects United di] already more than doubled its million in savings, he noted. rectors to approve the deal soon. for you. al lht' r.Hc in dft·cr on your maturityd:ttl'.Or you ma~ wirh<lra\-v your mont·y if you prdt'r. 12.425% Annual Rate• 13.206% Annual Yiet<t:• Bank of Amt·rica·~ rJtc (JO thi~ at'l'<>llnt b the hight·~t lht· law allow~ u~ IO pay. And rcmt·mht'r. Bank of A1m.-rka gi\'t'~ you a s.w honus. too! Safety and Convenience. Only li:mk of Amt·rit:a can offer you tht· safctY and con\'t·nit·lll.'t' of California\ largt:~t finandal irhtirution. In fact . tht-rt'\ AnnuJI \ 1dll '' h.t'4'd • 111 ti.uh l • Hllllf 11111<h11~ 111 11111 rl '' "'"'"<kl""" .mtl rtll• n '' n ·m,1111111111< .tlllt11111 tor .1 ,,·,1r 'c1ho.IJ1lltJf fl< 11.11!1 Ii or 1 Jrh \\ 11htlr.l\1 .cl i 1 • Yt".1r 1111 t"•' tlll'lll .11 ... , ·" .11l.1hl1 "11 h ,1 '""Mr 111111111111111 1.kfll "" hrn .11 .1 lo ""·r r;oll' N prohahl~ a Bank of A1m:rica hr.111t h lll'.trln ri~ht no\\: ~ 1 "hat arc ~·ou w;111 mg lnri Opt·n al) f .J )a\ At't'Olllll .ll Bank,,, r\llll'rit .I HK.la\: • Also New: 31'i ·Year Investments. 14.25% Annual Ratet 15.31 % Annual Yield.tt Bank ot America abo olkr' ;1 nt'\\ inn--.t mt·nt that kt~ you lock up thi' high ratt· l(>r V .! yt·ar!'I." llh a ~1000 minimum tlcpo~it:ttt l t\our 5 ~2·'C...-arl lighYidd Plu-. lm·t·~rnwnt A!'ll-. u~ m ahout ii' BANK . OF AMERICA 0 5 . . --. ~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday. May e, 1082 -Gi theb s: Short-term NEW! 3-MONTH CERTIFICATE 13.485 :~"""II 12.675 !~ ~I-All f 11,, t•\ 1 1hru \I.ii 10 1<>112 Wt' pay 25•, nwrt< lhJn Jfl\' b.inl. l nl1l..t' Mont')' MJrl...-1 tun<b your ...ivtn>1,~ are lt.Jt•rJllv in'un,J tl.l1n1mum S7SOJ fht' ratl' ,., b.1.....J ,m 1h.-currl'nl IJ "'''t'I. f ·Bill d1'o(11unt rJlt .ind rl'tnJIO> h~t.J lllr t'f'lllrt' 111 tWy pt'n,,J tumpvunJin>: l•I intert">t m•I J1'!n111ttt.J ) ... Id as.um..., !hat .ill tunds ar~ rr11w..,,i,.J at 'Nim<' r.1tt· tlwu>:h r.11\' m.il' t h.H\Kt' < '"' in cm J Hoc:I.. Sol1J 0 lnve1ment and Long-term. LOCK IN OUR HIGH 30-MONTH RATE -IS.3-~5 ~ _14.lOQ :~ 'I f ltt--.' ' t> ru \t,,\ J JJ:'~ \Vr pJ\ !_<,• n11•11 thJn JO\ b.ml. AnJ tnlt'lt">I 1-ct•mpoundt-J J..1h 'i.J, In!(' Jt1 f ,,Ju.111\ 111,u11·J unl1l..t J \I"""> \IJrl..t'I lund ~11n1mum 1' ""I>$'\\.)) \ho" 111urn I' hwJ lur l'nllrt' 2'. ·)t'Jr p..nnd IJ.•.J Im IRA 111 ~t'\•):h1tl1rt·1111 nl .icc11un1' nc ""v ltmp-r ll'nTI i;••al Every <lollar up to $100,000 is Federally insured . § ~~.!.l!...~~~8~ " - .. Hv,'Tt"l(,1!11'.BIA<H """' nr ~I• t" 7H Aot.cio SANJUAN (APISTlA.'«J llK""l>rlUl"'i• '-t 1 4 Wl'•-'11 lAGV'IAHltl' •t'"re"'lttrlta ..,4''"1~ ~AANA ~~ llr!<rt<IV"ljr-~ MLLRTCJN !' \y I ....... ..,.. ,, • ""14 n olOI H ........ """'~.,n.. .. ._....... "14 tl'M <l717 'TWl'Olll Ill A( 11 l:ol\ \\ t '"' oft,,, 1 4 1>11 lbll . . . • I' ,, ... i t ... " \ 1·•4 . ,Jf ... '· •• t ; I• !.1 .,J# t • • I ,J 1.. ..,. ' • !° V"V "),... \.......... ' , .... _, . . . ~ -""-· ~ . ' -,. .. \. • ,, ., , • • 9 • '°'I j • • • l \ ,. '.: ~ • •• • tt.. • , ,, . ,. • •' ' '.l '•I , llJJ,1 ..,, ~·· • ·•ll ·"" · · '·' " ·,rfi.\;..,.·" -r!11o '1r"I· ~·.'>',. ~, .... Now O.,.n '°' areaktaet At ... Vetde Only ·'ill• ........ tt.1 ............ . ,..,, .... td Also Located On Balboa Island ENTERTAINMENT NfTEL Y COCKTAILS & CASUAL DINING 11 A.M . 'TIL 9 P.M. 545-1718 Gun sale raisets '60 Minutes' flayed in FloriJa FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -CBS newaman Mlke Wallace hu l'fKted indignant!>-' to local crltldam of fllin.Ii\c ata,.~ eun lhow for an upcoml.ng "60 Minutes" 1egrnent. Police respondln8 to a dilturbance call Saturday at the Wildcat Gun and Knife Show at Fort Lauderdale Ar· mory found a ruckua lnvoJvlng Wal- lace's camera crew, the show organi- zer and a man who had been leCl'etly filmed selling two handguns lo an 18-year-old recruited earlier by "60 Minutes." • Patrolman F.dward K . Lahey aaid Wallace, who arrived later1 was ana;ry that the dealer fiJmed by "60 Mln- u tea'' wa.sn 't aJTeSted. Wallace on Monday said that the flap, repqrted in Fort Lauderdale pa- pers, "was much ado about little." He explained that he and "90 Min-. . . ut.et" producer St@ben Olauber hir- ed an 18-jear-old &Nl, Chari. Allen Muon,_~~uy ~from ~gi at the mow. • • lt was only a(ter the filming, he Mid, that \hey lea.med that ln Florida, l:J:ar-olds can buy gun.a and that d rw •t ehow apparently didn't need lice , Howev , W'1laoe Mid the fllm!ng demonatr ,d th• ~Int of th e "60 Mlnutes"Jll\0!1 -'the o•sy avail- abWty of ~ to almost myone. at m~" ' Wallace iaAct the pol.ice ~t of the d.latW'bance wu "rlfe-wlth inac- curacies ... There waa no distur- bance. We had a Uvelr, convenation on the subject of gun.a, ' he said. He aald he didn't know whether any of the film would be uaed. ANNIVERSARY SALE sale joyce-selby style! ENTIRE STOCK 20°/o OFF SAU ENOS SUN., MAY 16 joyce·selby shoes Sevlll Casi l'lan -·---c. c...-11141 756.tllt ~~~ .............. -·---L-~'-C:-----·-(21JI Jt4->4U (714 ) 4H.tl47 YJM/!MlltfCMG/ ~<Ill f Af)f "6 u Wlrepfwl4o FRIENDSHIP SEALED -A baby harbor seal relaxes in the arms of Pat Quinn, Monterey County SPCA wildlife direct.or. The five-day- old seal was found deserted in low tide at Pebble Beach. Polaroid turning to 35mm film WELLESLEY, Mass. (AP) Polaroid Corp, stung by a steep drop m eammgs from 1ts UlStant camera empire, 1s moving into the 35 m1lhmet.er camera market, stockholders were told at their an- nuaJ meeting at Wellesley College. The Cambndge-based firm demonstrated sev- eral prototype color and black-and-white 35mm "transparency films," commonly referred to as slide5, dt:rnng-the meeting ----· The "35 Autopress System" film is being de- signed to be used in any e xl.!tmg 35rnm camera or instrument, company offictab said. The product will include "a specially designed lightweight low-cost processor, and a simple. low cost-slide mounter," said Wilham McCune Jr., Po- laroid president. The film and accessor ies will be ready for marketing by the 1963 stockholders meeting, Mc- Cune said. The film is not inst.ant developing, but "w1U not require a dark roorri, washing or precise tem- perature control," McCune said. "The processed film w ill be dry and can be handled and projected immediately." he said. The mood of the meet.mg, where the festive unveiling of new products is almost a traditition. was less upbeat thLS year because of gloomy ear- Jlings.fig:w:es stre.tchrn.g back. through.198L Polaroid founder Edwin Land. now chairman, gave an emotional speech asking stockholders to support "creative" ventures an the face of depressed profits. Mother's Day Special WELCOMES TO Cameo Miniature s995 Choose From 5 Different Poses WEDDING SPECIALS NOW BOOKING FOR SUMMER photography by jeffrey "CREATIVE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY" THEIR SALON: CORRY SUPER NORMA CRUZ From DelEONS OPEN MONDAY THRU SAT. 540-0600 641·3112 ldii~ of diamonds . fhatsays you'd marry her all over egain. RAFF ievVeirr · S2 , ......... ~ 'Wwport h.n • 144-2040 .. 3 oei-11119ft• ot ..,,~,, ,..,._ ... -1ce erything must go up to 70Wo OFF! FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH A ROSE HAS A SPECIAL MEANING ... Pin a Rose on your Lady Fair In the language of flowers, to give a rose Is to say "I Love You." The rose in full bk>om has come to mean beauty at Its fulleet, while the unopened rose signlfle6 un-awakened love. One or both of these beautiful emblems of love from Slavick's will tell her more than many bouquets. Rose Bud Pin In WC Gold ..... $69.95 In \Almlel .... $19.95 In S19ftno . . . . . s 9.95 FUI Rose Pin In WC Gold. . . . . Se9.95 In \Almlel . . . $19 .95 In S19ftno . .. . $ 9 .95 Both.l4lC Gok:S Roses are mdable lillfth a damond. SLAVICK·s ~t ~ btst surpn.sts btgin , F_.,,, IJa.nO (71~ 644-1380 • ~ a.c:t1 Abo GrMW Los~• Sin 06e90 • LM \llgM for spring hikiaj, boa.ting, Walking ... thcz. sportif ~ ehort in khaki or whit<z.. with it, our shorts1'lew. trddi- tional ~id shirl arxl~bi1t makq. it at-eaecz. ... ePfincd and summer. JCPenney FABRICS! Entire Stock Reduced 503 off Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley .Luggage Travable catalog coming Wednesday, May 12 In fhe Daily Pilat ~ 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach, CA near Bullock's Wiishire 92660 714/759-9101 Sunday, May 9th MOTHER'S DAY j oin us f or luncb or dinner Great Drinks Delightful Lunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion lstand Newport Beach 6«-2030 500 N. Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772·2130 I 1 · I _.._ _ _.__. ___ __ I ., ". 8 Orenoe Oollt DAILY PILOTIThur'lday, May 8, 1982 Bispu·te threatens f.ine college system An unhealthy 1chi1m be-more atudenta (and receive more tween the Coast Community Col-state funds), with reduced clau- .• lege District administration and its room and faculty expenaea. full-time i nstructors seems to be The instructors, on the other growing wider each day. hand, believe increasing uae of In a campuawide poll, Orange television may jeopardld their Coast Colle ge instruc tors this jobs. They a1IO say they have ae- week indicated by a large margin rious concerns about how well that they l~ck confidence in students learn in the telecouraes. Chancellor Norman Watson and Regarding the Luskin ap- the district's board of trustees. pointment, the teachers felt dis- The teachers also voiced ob-enfranchised when trustees ;ections to the manner in which a turned away from the applican~ new Orange Coast College presi-suggested by a screening cornmit- dent, Bernard Luskin, was selec-tee and named Luskin, who had ted. not even applied, to the Orange This vote comes on the heels Coast presidency. of anothe r quarrel regarding the Trustees argued that they are district's use of te levision courses, the people elected to make s uch offered through Coastline College, decisions. which Luskin currently heads. Both camps seem to be stand- F ou r Orange Coast College ing firm. The district clalms the professors questioned the quality unrest is related to current teacher of television courses in a letter contract bargaining. The instruc- sent to officials of four-year col-tors say the trustees have ignored leges throughout California. them for too long. Officials of the junior college The dispute is diverting ~t- district then demanded that the tention from the more important professors retract their letter and question of how to maintain edu- threa tened legal action if they cational quality at a time whe n . didn't. state aid to community colleges is The academic senates of Or-being reduced. ange Coast and Golden West Col-The present s plit between lege. countere d by unanimously· .professor s and administrators approving resolutions echoing the must be closed before it tears the concerns voiced by the authors o f basic fabric of what has ~n one the telecourse letter. of the nation's finest community Emotions are running high on college systems. . both eides~me.cases, seeming .. __ -'to.begin.with. the con~~ ly to the point of paranoia. parties s hould start cornrnunica- Wi th television instruction, ting with each other in less hys- the dis trict believes it can reach terical tones. Speed might not pay It certainly was no surprise to hear the president of the Taub- man Company ~ure Irvine City Council members recently that the long-awaited Irvine Center shop- ping mall probably will be built soon. All of this has been h eard before. In fact, frequent claims in past years that the center is im- minent have bred a certain skep- ticism among folks in Irvine. Bob Larsen, president of the shopping mall developme nt finn did his best to dispel the skepti- cism by suggesting that increased urbanization of the Irvine area has made the center even more pro- mising than in the past. Where it was once conceived as a suburban location, now it is an urban center. To retailers, that means a bigger, more affluent market. Larsen noted once again that the center's location within the still-undeveloped triangle formed by the intersecting San Diego, Santa Ana a nd Laguna freeways gives it the potential for a magnificent layout. Given de- cent economic conditions, he said. construction of the first phue (75 t of the mall) will begin in ~983 or early 1984. For now, even the skeptics would be better advised to focus on the key elements of the Irvine Cente r plan. Will, for e xample, large -scale developme nt of adja- cent office buildings overload road capacities? Can the freeways be saved from congestion? Those who c hide d evelopers for tardiness might be sorry if they allow the proposal to be rushed through approval process- es. It is better to be meticulou s now, even at the cost of more de- lays, than to be mired in traffic jams later. Schoolbooks get priority Huntingto n Beach Union High School trustees have an- nounced their intention to upgrade eligibility requir e ments for stu- dents who want to participate in extra-curricular activities. The district curre ntly abides by the CIF eligibility requirement that allow s students to participate in sports as long as they are pass- ing in four or more subjects. Huntington Beach Superin- tendent Frank "Jake" Abbott is recommending that the new re- quirements apply to a ll extra- curricular activ ities, not just sports. Trustees say they want to in- crease standards despite the rec- ommendations of an eligibility committee. That panel found stu - dents engaged ln extra-curricular activities (band, drill team, drama, • debate, etc. as well as athletics) are doing better in school than non- participants. However, the board majority said it believes there is a particular need to upgrade requirements for athletes. (The standard for grade point averages h as n o t been determined.) Trustees expressed concern about athletes graduating without learning to read and write prop- e rly. They en:iphasized that ath- letes, as w e ll as others, need to master basic skills before receiving a diploma. If nothing else, higher re- quirements would sh ow that in the Huntington Beach Union High School Di111ict, students must hit the books before hitting the playing flelda. Opinions expres~ed in.the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Otner views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit· ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. L'.M. Boyd/ School bells · No blaring bel.la lip! clul 1W18 and stops at the high 1ehool in Ellr.a· beth, Colo. Instead, currently ~p\llar music does to over the mchool s public addreu 1yttem. So? Nothlnj lrnpor- tant. maybe. But even af~r au the8e yeen, if I cloee my eyes, I can hear thOM jan,ling bell• rattle the hall- ways. Cari t you? ORANGE COAST llilJPilat Q. Didn't all the Japane1e kamikaze pllota of World War II wear bead- bendl to keep their-hair out of their eyn? A. Headbenda yes, but not to keep the hair out of their c!fi: Thoee ce· remonial bends were M6h1maJd and they aymbollied 1tren1th and oouraae. Thomll P. H•ley Pub II sher ........ -,.. _ Two-house legislature best The litany for a unicameral legislature started by former Speaker Jesse Unruh and continued by Common Cause has now been taken up by Sen. Barry Keene. He has proposed a consututional amendment which would r('place the present Legislature with a senate of 67 members. Arguing the present system which is Cl()Sting over $100 million annually is "too duplic-.1tive and fa;-too expensive.'' he conte nds the "checks and bala nces'' contemplated with a tw<>-houae Legisla- ture have been e liminated by the "one-man. onc-vot.e" court decisions. He says his plan would sa~·..$2.3 million yearly. WHILE HS IS t:orrect in the view that the Legislature 1s ''far too expensive," his remedy is akin to throwing the baby out with the bathwater. For 1t is essen- tial that the Legislature remain a strong branch of the government and its ne- c-essary <.'OSts should not be an argument for weakening its powers. The rt'ason the I....egislature LS now too ('OStly is due to the self-indulgence of the members. Far more than $23 million can be saved in current legislative operations by eliminating the so-called field offi<'es. a euphemism for the year-around cam- paign headquarters maintained by each member in his district, cutting the out- rageous payroll with its more than 2,200 staff workNs whos(.· main function 1s llll WITllS •' . partisan politics, and dtSContinuing the furnishing of autos and unlimited sup- pfu.s oL gasoline.for £act.unernber. __ It 1s true that the changes brought about by the court ruling on the one- man. ont•-vote issue have weakened the c.·heck and balance of the two-house system. It is not true tha t 1t has been eliminated. On the same day that Keene was ex- pounding to the press on his plan. As- sembly Speake r Willie Brown told the press the Assembly would not pass any new tax bills this session bec.·ause the members didn't believe the Senate would agree, thus demonstrating that the chec-ks and balan<.'eS of the two house system IS alive and working. Unde r thl• c·urrent legislative plan each bill antrodul·ed must d ear one or more c·omm1llees an each house. This provides the public with more than one chanc·e at tl'Stifytng for Or against pro- posals. Under a one-house system the bills would only lx· sub,l(.'(·l to one public hearing bt.·fore passage. thus reducing the time the• public would have to learn of the proposals and present 1ts views. Propont•nts l'On tC'nd that thi.s would mak<· the· L<.·gtSlature more efficient. But 1f eHtc·1tmc·y means thl· quick passage of n(.•w laws 11 wt.II not lx:neh t the public. The Leg11\laturr is !'upposed to be a de-h~rauv~ ~ 111 wb1ch aUJ>roPQ8alurL._: carefully weigh<.'CI. THE WORST feature of the Keene one-house proposal is that it would ine:- vitably place far too much power in the hands or one man, tht· speaker or. under Keene's proposal, the president of the senatf' A mut·h better plan for reducing legi- slative <."OSlS and making the legtSlature more effk1ent is that of Sen. H L. "Bill" Richardson who would return the Legi- slature to the people by hm111ng the length of sessions and providing for its meeting only every otht'r year. Foundations can help rescue schools To the Editor: In a recent article, a UC law professor, John C.oons, and our state Superinten- dent of Public Instruction . Mr. Wilson Riles bemoan the sprouting phenome- non of educational foundations. They discredit the formation of th~ founda- tions as perpetrators of inequality in the funding of the public educational system. It is my opinion that foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu- cation as Mr. Riles suggests, but rather MAILBOX symptomatic of a society that is fed up with being told that they can't provide their children with whatever level of ' public education they deem adequate in their own community after they have paid the billa to educate everybody else's child in the public school system. Many of the 1ame voices that wring their hands and cry for "equal" funding of the public educational system are the same people who pay litUe, if any, of the taxes that provide for that funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles are much more inte rested in pulling down tj'le educational level of the so- called affluent segments of our IOCiety, rather than bringing the less a muent segments up to a predetermined level of educational competency. What they propose is nothing less than a headlong rush to educational mediocrity. And this doesn't appear to bother them in the 1Ughtest as Jong as everyone is "equal" at the lowest poesible common denominator of educaUonal competence. that 1s being urgently applied to our hemorrhaging public school system whose financial life-blood is being bled white by the court-impoaed sanctions of the Serrano-Priest decision. The ultimate cure for the peril that we now find our public education system m IS through public supported legislation that will set a pred etermined level of excellence in public education for all of our public schools. At the same time, this legislation should encourage communi- ties to exceed this predetermined level of educational excellence through their own additional financial sacrifices if they are willing and able to do so. TOM WILLIAMS Director of "Parents for a Responsive Board of Education" Backing baffles To the F.d.itor: In the April 26 Pilot I noted a news story datelined Burlingame, stating the CTA (California Teachers Assn.) repre- senting 197,000 members, endorsement of Tom Bradley and Jerry Brown for governor and U:S. Senator respectively. On the editorial page, Earl Waters' column graphically describes Gov. Brown's underhanded raid on the Public Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of $180 million to help balance his budget. This is the employees' own money, held in trust for their pensions. If the CT A endorses. a can~idate of that ilk, and their endor9ement reflects their idea of intellleent thlnktng I c~ now more easily undef1ttand one of the reasons why students are reportedly not learning more In 9Chool. P.S. WILLS Medicare fraud FORTUNATELY, an ever-lncreasil}g majority of people in th1a state refu.e to aucxwnb to this call for public educaUo- nal mediocrity. And thut we are wit· nesaing an exploeion ln the fonnaUOn of To the Editor: the public achool foundations; What the My subject lt Medicare ftau~. l en.,. foundaUona can con\rlbute ian ta drop in countered it lut year when. I wu hoa- the bucket In comparlaon to the tot.al pitallzed for a ~ hip. l Wiii charaed budaet. At $."00,000 tt NpteRntl about 1 for thinp I nevw received. w. $2.00 for percent of our local Newport·Meta Di-a sample of tood\pute. I wrotie to both atrlct'• budget. But on the other hand, my aenaton· fnnl them I NCJtftd a re- thll 1um equates to about 20 teachen' ply that ~ they milllCI Che point. I llAlariea. And 20 \eaChera can~lol\C WU not complalnlnC about What f Md to ~ay to teaching rernedLal , etc., 1?9>'· My CQmplalnt wu what they are or whatever a pArUc:ular di.trict doiJ1I to Medbre. I wrote to the Pft!ll· ta beln& deprived of by the state'• dent and Neelwd no reply. la thl1 an "equallllnt' fu.ndlnc formulu dkt.ated tllUe that le too hot to handle? Do you by the court'• Sernno-Prillt dldllon. believe thla may account for the near Ou very important function that dernile of SocW Security? theee foUnda1lona are performlftc la to aound the clarion to our dtl.w &Mt OW' NOW TBm D ~ new. A public tducatlanal ~ 11 In.....,~ medleal ... .., bu been M\ up for 1uccumblnp to the IC>clal •nclne.tq Nec1mN ,_.. .. Whln the dcdal't ~ exce1H1 o our liberal ataM judlclal c.wpt what .._. n ,.,.. Tbe firli dme ay1tem; and~ the people Nnd up l ..,...., I"""'° •w tbt bOl. at111 don't and demand of their leafalaton that know whet lt ,.. •. ~ l w• 811\t to• eomethlq be don• aboul ltt we will ctezMalalla' "-¥ aleo .._ti what wUw -~ _ _..._,.,GUI' Mee-A..,._ ~ .................... u-. ~· • ,..... ..,.... ...... °' ......... .:J.ila, ... =.: --~ .. m -.-; ........ --~!!!'~ -· matewwwtolhePlllll&tl_,._ ~..-. ~~ ~ .-~ .a.. howe\w mw ........ • . uttwt-. .. am" • • ..-· .....,_ -1-~ "' ' .. _... ~-.. ,~ ........... u •• c.fnlM\{HY ll e·Mvlnl toumlquet , -If~,..,.... II He charged Medicare $695 for a pro- cedure (exactly) that I had done a few months ago for $80 a nd couldn't un- derstand why I was shocked, when I didn't have to pay for it. Some people may not care but I do. I refused to sign the bill and have reported it to Health Care Administration. I have written to both m y senators and told them of thousands of dollars the hospitals are cheating: they also nussed the point, or is it a no-no subject? It is bigger than the defense budget and it's killing Social Security. I feel I must give it one more try to wake somebody up. JANE M. KERR Bolsa Chica plan To the Editor: While the text of your April 23 article, "Coast Unit Rejects Bolsa Chica Plan," was generally accurate, the headline, which "S uggests that the Coastal Com - miaaion denied approval of the Orange County Bolsa Chica land use plan, was in error. The fact is that the Coastal Commis- sion ruled for another hearing to once again look at th e plan. This will be scheduled sometime between June 15-18. In the interim, the commission staff is to review scientific evidence introduced by a team of nationally rec- ogni7.ed 9C'ientist.s cdmmisaioned by Sig- nal Landmark, private owner of most of the Bolaa Chka property. The ldentista show that 453 acres ol the 1,600-acre parcel, including the existing 200-acre ecological reserve, i.8 wetlands. Thia is a contradiction to the Department of Fish and Game report which ttaies that 1,000 acres la wetlands. ln the meantime, the Coa1tal Com-"""'°" ataff ii to be In commW\k'.ation with Oranae County plannen to dmcu. difference.. A Spedal Area Manaeement Pttlcw (SAMP) -plannlna lnvoMnc a mix of (ederal and atate iowmment.al ~es and coocemed dtben groups - ii ICheduled to meet at county officel on ~y 10. Thole who have communicated tup--JOrl for \he worthwhile well-though~ out county plan lhcMIJd be eDCOW'aaed to omtlnue their dfot11. WAYNS CLARK Rep"1 !ltaUw s~ Land.maril. Inc. ,. Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Thurldey, May 8, 1982 Advice on the Unpleasa.nt task of firing people With the unemployment rate IOU'l.na In the nation. the newspapers are filled with sad at.oriel about men and women who have juat lost thel~ Jobt. Not tut"· p rlsingly, readen often (eel sympathy toward theee people who have been fi- red. No one seems to feel any sympathy toward the people who are doin1 the firing, though -the boaea. AT LEAST, no one you have heard of does. But there is one fellow who apec· lalizes ln teachina executives ho w to fire t.helr employees. Hia name la James E. Challenger, and he is president of Chal- le nger, Gray and Christmas, Inc. The firm deals in something called outplace- ment, which means it is hired by com- panies to help find new jobs for people thoee companies have fired. Challenger, 56, discovered that execu- tives of those companies were coming to him with a dilemma. They had the un- pleasant task o( Ciring their workers, but they weren't sure how to do it. No one teaches courses on how to fire people. So Challenger started dispensing how-to-fire advice. He says that no one really enjoys firing another human being, but that it's a necessary task. I talked \o him about all this, and here are hla guldellnea f or h ow an executive should fire a subordinate. l. "Do it quickly. You dOn't want to alt there and go throu1h how you went about making the declalon. There's no uae areulng. 1t you say he'a no good. he'U IDB GRllll tell you he's good. U you say he's not needed, he'll say he's needed . By the time you've decided to fire a peraon, the two of you probably have nothing to say to each other anymore anyway. & jUBt get it done." 2. "Do it in a place where you're ln control. Which means your office. If you go to his office to do It, then he's behind the desk and he's in control. If you do it outside the building at a restaurant, he may break down during the meal. And then there are the questions: Do you do it at the beginning of the meal? Do you finish the meal after you've fired him? Jutt do lt ln your offl.ce." 3. "The best lime to fire 10meone ta on a Friday. That way you won't start• new .week oU havinl hlm aiWnC there waiting for it to happen. And you don't have \o lit and worry about h all week· end. We had one man who fired an employee on Chriltmaa Eve becawie the boa didn't want to ruin hll own Chriat· mas by worrying about what he waa going to have to do." 4. "THE BEST TIME of the d•y to fire someone la 4 p.m. That way he can leave work with the rest of the people. Plus, he won't have the opportunity to go out to lunch and tell other people at the company what a hlld BUY you are." 5. "Find out what he haa that belonp to the company. Credit cards, keya. re- ports -you 've got to get all of them back before he leaves. The way to ac· compllsh t})is is to assign aomeone to help hlm pack his stuff. Have the person loqk for property t h a t 'belongs to the company." t>. "Don't offer him an office that he can use to look for a new job. Many companies do this, and it's wrong. It doesn't cut the cord. AB Jong as the per· son is coming into your building every day, he atlll h o lds out th~ ho pe that you'll admit you made a mistake, and that you'll rehire him. h 's best to make the separation t'Omplttte." 7. "Don't tell hla cu-workers that he's leaving. They're going to know anyway, but If you tell them direc!tly they'll want an explanation from you, and there's no reuon you have to provide an explan.a-· tion to your other employees. Having to explain w'hy you flred a pe rson can make you look weak." 8. "Do it youself. If you glVe the pb of firing someone to your asa1stant, some- where down the line the person you've fired ia going to demand to talk to you a nyway . So you're going to end up face-to-face with him in the end. Save time and do it yourself m the first plat-e." lO"SIT DOWN . Make the pe rson you're firing sit down If he's towering over you, then he's psycho log1cally in control. IC you're both standing up, it'.s awkward -plus he may break down e motionally when you fire him. so it's better if he's seated. If he criL-'S, it's easier for him 1f he's sHling down We had one case when two people were standing up, and the person who got fired punched his employer. This 1s not good." 11. "Don't bolster your coura,e with a rouple of drink.a before you fire 90meo- ne The drink• will tend to mak~ you more garrulous, and the firing will take lo nger. You think h makee you leaa ~nse, but 1t actually lengthena the ter- mination prcx.-edure. and that'll one thing you don't want " U . "DON'T TALK to his fanuly. You may be tempted to break the newa to the fired man's wife, but that's not your re- sponsibility. It may aeem humane to tell the wife to be nice to the man when he comes home that night. But you can't do that It sounds as If you're apologizing, and what are you gaining? Stay out or ll." Challl'nger said that he realizes many pt·oplt' may find it l'Old -blooded: The idea of a man who actually tries to mak~ 11 easier for bosses to fire their workers. "But somcont' has to give these ex- t.'<:utives adVlli.'," he 8a1d . "No one likes to fin" anyunt•. you're playing with so- meone's wholl• hfl' And since a boss doc'Sn't like thl' idea of firing 110meonl' anyway, thl' ll•ast I can do IS help cut duwn thl' trauma of the s1 tua t1on and makl' 1t as easy on evt·ryom· l"OnC<.'rned as ~ible " Dress up your mom's car tor Mother's Day with a Supermom's License Frame $1.49 -~at-- 4D CROWN . HARDWARE Weatclltf Plaza 1024 Irvine Ave. Newport 8eact'I 842-1133 Coronedelller 3107 E. Cou1 Hwy. 673-2800 • en.ov Somo Sold State PlotlNI 1gnttton • Gb'norous Jet Glow Oven Ooof wtth wndow • Energy Sovi'lg ENlex Va'lclbMt Heat • ~oc• lkmef1 • lnlUot9d Oven Bottom For Even B<*ng All Stores open 7 Deya Westcllff TIM 8:00 Harbor View Center 1614 San Miguel Or. Newport Beach 644-8570 Auhelm Hiiia 5620 Santa Ana Canyon Rd. (at lmperlat Hwy.) 998-5282 •C..... C1u1111 .. • tll"" , ... "' 1111 ht· 1 ..... .. Alt the big features at a gift-away price! Clock has Cut 47sa hi/lo display dimmer. LEO PM/Wake indicators. sleep and snooze oontrols. Radio features twin 3" speakers for excellent stereo. FM-AFC, stereo indi-320~0 Reg. 69.95 cator. stereo headphone 1ack. #12·1530 7'' ;{Y.· ·' ~··· , ,· FMNHF-TV Sound/ Weather Radio Pocket PortaVlslon,. by Reallstlc ~:~ 179~21.95 ?JJ Hear audio from TV channels 2-13, and info from VHF weather stations, plus FM. #12-e12 4-Key-Memory calculator EC-270 by Redto Sheck ~~ 7~.95 Features front-oanel metric con- vetaion chart. Percent, square root keys, ftoetlng decimal. With carry pouoh. #fJ6.en a..n.n.e11tr• "FrenCh Continental" PhOne 1tr Recio Sheck Save •10 Talking Clock "Tells" You The Time! VoxClock ·by Micronta Save 5 10 4995 rgis No hands. no dial. no d191ts1 Set hidden controls once. then tap button on top-a speech-synthesis c1rcu1t con· verts lime to talk! #63-902 Portable Cassette Recorder CTR-37 by ReallstJc Cut 3188 360/o Reg. 49.95 Built-In mike and Auto- Level for easy record- ing. AC/battery operation. #14-806 &ettenee utr ~·· SEXIEST -Eliza- bet h Taylor was picked as the sexiest W ashingtonian - ev en though she no longer lives there sin- ce separatang from husband, Sen. John Warner, R-Va. Orange Cout O~ILY PILOT /Thunday, Mey e, 1982 Liz, Marines, snakes R e porters pick Washingto n supe rlatives •WASHINGTON (AP) -Sawl1Jak, political reporter for Oomin1que'1 fell lnt.o the new1 Wuhlntton'• best restaurant ii Unlted Pre11 lntern&Uonal. ttt dwina the Caner admlniatratlon one that aervea up rattlesnake out to provide ephemeral an-wliii'l an lnterlor Department and buffalo meat, ita finest mon-awera to Waahlnaton'1 eternal envlronmentall1t dl1patched a wnent ii the little-known Navy-que9tlon: Who'• on t.op7 letter noting that a rauletnake on Marine Memorial and lta moat Not, they think, that Waah-the menu l>elonaed to an en- effectlve lobbyist works for the in.gt.on II really worth the ef fort. dangered apeclea and ahouldn't National Rifle Association, two The capital's mode.ty la well be there. joumallata fay ln their book. juatifled, they. wrlte, noUna that All for monwnentl, Kilian and And in this political town, it was "built Sawialak find moet to prat.e ln a when it comes t.o picking these-in a peatilen-1934 memorial to aallora and xlest Washingtonians, "plump tial swamp, Marines lost at aea ln World War but s till gorgeous'' Elizabeth burned by the I. They like the way flying aea- Taylor of suburban Middleburg, Br It la h and gulla evoke the 1plrtt1 of the lolll Va., has to take a back seat to left for dead, men and the danger of the ~a. "hand!Ome, rich and charming" for decadea a The beloved Llncoln Memorial Edward M. Kennedy, "the sub-ramshac kle comes ln aeoond. ject of more sexual gossip and Southern Ronald Reagan ii lilted u the speculation than any regiment or town n oted moat per1uulve man In Waah- Hollywood leading men." most for I ts Ing ton, but when ll com et to Of course, Miss Taylor no bawdy houses KINNRY fulltime lobbyi1ta t he authors longer qualifies as a Washingto-and s lave markets, a crude pick Harlo n B . Carter, the nian -not since her separation h1cksvllle that, until the Ken-National Rifle A.oclatlon'a top last year from her seventh hus-nedysC-ame along, lacked even gun. The NRA'a atrength comes band, Sen. John Warner, R-Va.. one first-class restaurant ... " in persuading Its 1.li m illion whose est.ate in Middleburg she Now, the authors think , members to write Congreu no longer shares. Washington has more than one whenever It begins to doubt that In their book, "Who Runs first-class restaurant. Aa first gun ownership is t.o be equated Washington," Michael Kilian, among them, they lis t Domini-with "patriotism, nationalism, ---Washington columnist for lhl' que's, where the meals are "very masculinity, Christianity and Chicago Tribune, and Arnold French, yet Light and healthful." invulnerability," they write. R e tired o fficer s to m eet The May meeting o f the rounty chapter of tht• Retired OUicers Associa- tion will take place Sat- urday at the Officers Club, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. star- ting with a 6 p.m. social hour. A film of the Coast Guard sailing bark F.agle will be narrated b¥ reti- red Coast Guard member Harold Baker. · Retired or acuvt. duty o f ficers, wives and friends. including any person who ever held a ronunission in the armed forces of the U.S ., are invited to attend. For reservations call Forrest Vick at 546-9858. Thomas to sp eak Robert Lee Thomas, first vice president or the regional d evelopment divi.aion for Century 21 International will speak af the May 19 meeting of Southern California Chapter 12 of Certified Commercial Investment Members. The 9 a .m meeting will be held a l the A1r- porter Inn in Irvine ·~ . THI .Jjf !!.!!-:,! ._ ...... "_ ..... • SI Loe; ~l79S7 Sllt•oc.e !""" ~taott 81 YOUI l.loof le.ti St0te -•nt Y<M ,., .. , COlfA 111.UA 641-1289 1SJ6Newp-•tw4. ''"""* ¥11.10 495-0401 H9'11~c-... ... -I-0...-,....,. et Avwy ~~wy.) Truddoad Plmt Sale Huntington Centef' doily thru Sot. Lge. 6" pots 2~~ Delight Mom with . U@iquegold 'lt'Welr.y. Darzte her with a Krugerrand gold pendant. An afford able gift that's simply stunning. And nothing short of sheer elep nce. Give her the Krugerrand gold pendant. In all the World, there's notfiing quite like It. But then, there's no one in the world quite like your mom. ~an-= ••llT --·· mfiiii*t.•< .. .,.> NEWPORT BEACH (714) 545-6931 • f CAR BUYERS DRIVE HOME A BARGAIN WITH GM/Cs LON FINANCING RATE ON NEW GM CARS, LIGHT-DUTY TRUCKS AND VANS .. Yes, now is the time to really save on a great new GM car, light-duty truck or van with GMAC financing. Qualified buyers can finance any new Chevrolet, Pontiac, O ldsmobile, Buick, Cadillac, GMC or Chevro let light-du ty truck or van** at a low, low 12.83 rate and save. But hurry, time is running out on this special 12 .8% rate offer. Your participating GM D ealer is ready to help you se lect the stylish GM model of you r ch o ice and the n offer you substantial savings on financing costs. Remember, to drive home your b argain , you must take d eli very by May 31, 1982. CHILDREN Mother's Day Is supposed to be a rememberance of your mother. Big Deal. Right! It Is reported In the newspapers, mentioned on T. V. BUT THINK ABOUT IT! What Is Mother's Day? And why should you care? You are busy with your own llves - have to work -more Important things to do. · Mother's Day Is the most PERSONAL and Important day In your llves. We celebrate Christ- mas, Christ's birthday -that's Important. Do you really know what Mother's Day Is all about? It celebrates every birth of yourselves! It's the remembrance of carrying YOU through 9 months In her body and the pain of delivery. But that's just the beginning. Mother's Day Is a re- membrance of all the problems, joys, help, and what she went through and In fact what she Is still going through with you. Your mother is strength, understanding, banker, band-alder. In other words -the most Important of all. Out of 365 days Mother 's Day Is the most Important day of YOUR LIFE! DAD OFFER ENDS MAY 31. 'Ca/1/11ri11.1 hu-vc" /1rk1rll lllJ.! "H"'J.." l1t.1\(·.I ""GMAC .1t1w /m Fdm1t1r-v /9H2 un11/11111•d jiw oll ,,_./11dl'' m1J /1J/. m1J m1d·<i:l· C1J1/1'i. 1•c/11d(•\ Aw.ul 1t.1tU1J.,I\ 11·1/l dt•fH'ncl 1m tht• modt:I '4.'it'l lt•d. tht• <11noun1/tr111m1•<1 anrl 1h1• /,•n>:tl1 1 ( 111•ltT<111 D.x1it'T 111r1mh11n1111 111<1-v 11J/n 11 "n(11m1.,. (11\1 .. E-<d1u.l«., t't•ludt'~ mderc:cl /""" 111 Af'r1/ I 1~2 "/111 h <If<' d1s:r/>le fur 1h1• G1'lwrc.1/ M111111' I t'I' Ger Munn.I(°' w <h /io111u pla11 ,mJ fln:r "'k' untl /1·aw1l 11111f\ \ .! . . THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1982 A federal study suggests that heavy viewing of violence on television can lead to aggression in children. Page B6. 0 D CAVALCADE 82 ln:-home child care center network proposed B,>; GLENN SCOTr Dittctor Donna Tille{i u~ la the 0 .... .,.., ,... ..... first of its kind n range Concerned about a shortage of County. child care facilitiee in Irvine, or- gani.zers of a non-profit day care Irvine currentllt baa 71 licen- aed in-home faci lties, but thla center are propoein\a network plan differs becawie lt would In-of centers in private omes. volve a local non-profit umbrella The new shstem comes from group to standardiz.e prooed~. officials at C ild's World Chil- dren's Center, ~nsored blt and Mrs. Tilley expects it to satisfy located at the nlversity eth-the gro~ demand for epece at odist Church. 18422 Culver the centers full-tlme day care Drive. facility, with a capacity of 47, and ·1 Organizers have~scheduled a its part-time pre-school, which meeting at the center at 7 p.m., handles as many aa 315 children Monday for interested parents each week. and potential child care providers "It's not unusual for me to get to discuss the proposaf, which as many as eight CAlla a day from Vidal snipes at Brown Chicago • ID By THOMAS A. MURPHINE EdltOf of the Ollly Piiot C HICAGO -Author Gore Vidal brought his California road show campaign for the U .S . S enate here to Chicago, forsa- king an ap~arance in Fresno. 1 -Speaking 0erore a luncheon of the American Society of News- paper Editors, Vidal spiced his remarks with his usual quips, puns, one-liners and joshing of Gov. J erry Brown, one of his Democratic primary opponents in June. "I'm now in second plaoe in the polls to Jerry Brown, lord of the flies," Vidal quipped. "Brown just looms up like some kind of Zen Buddhist on the horilon. "He's a political corpse, you know. The polls show 67 percent of the people do not like him. In politics that's like a one-way ticket to Molokai." Vidal told the assembled edi- tors, "so here we have Brown a political corpse worth $2 million. I don't know quite how to handle it. Do 1 walk around it? Do 1 call attention to it? "It's really difficult to compete against him when you know Brown is absolutely dead in November." Delly Not IUft "'°'o BARNSTORMING -Gore Vidal criticiz.ed opponent Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr. as he took campaign for U.S. Senate to Chicago editors' meeting. ~ Vidal's contention here was that any one of two or three Re- publican senatorial candidates would defeat Brown in the No- vember general election voting. Here are 90l'De of Vidal's other bits of wiLand~.wWdom given.as he addressed the editors' confe- rence: -"I have one great virtue as a politician -I am not a lawyer. "Alas. we have a country of lawyers, by lawyers, and for lawyers. Did you know there are more lawyers in California than there are engineers in all of Ja- pan'! Brood on that one awhile." . -"Henry Kissinger was in Los Angeles a week ago pumping up hia new book and he was as- ked what he thought of me as a political candidate. ffe WU very diplomatic and aid 'Gore VIdal la a sreat novelist.' "Now that I have read his memoirs I can r eturn the compliment.'' -"l wu recently on the~ Philbin show in Loa Angeles. There'• nothing of a cultural na- ture that I do not do." -"A. a peace cahdidate I am interested in the movement to obtain a nuclear freeze. The last time we had a movement of this significance it was during the abolition of slavery and that was the last time we had a Republi- can party. We now onJr, have one party wtth two wings.' Relative to the crisis on the Falkland Islands, Vidal said he felt strongly the United States should stay out of the crisis. "I didn't take it serious!{ at first and I was wrong. But think as for the United States. we should ab9olutely cool it." Expanding on his peace c.andi- dacy, Vidal called the U.S. de- fense budget "madness" and suggested that it went back to the 1947-50 era when the coun- try made a decision to keep up its huge anns business. To do that, he amened. It was nece.ary to continually tell the American people there waa the lmminent threat of war. "Nobody under 45 yean of age knows what it's like to live in a peacetime America,'' Vidal sug- gesled. "We have been a garriaon state. We should shift over our efforts to repairing our own so- ciety." ~ple eeeking child ca.re," Mn. 1tep1 to earn licenaea from the ley e:ftlained. "It's really a etate Social Servicm Department. difficult tuation In Irvine." The 'center would ecreen facili- Demogaphen eetlmate that 55 tlea, coordinate training and C::nt of the famllle9 In Irvine evaluatlon1, handle record- both parent.I in the work-keep~ and standardize tuiUon force. The city hu the highest cmta, aaid. peroenta.ge of working parents In The prelimlnary goal la to en-the county. U.t 10 homes Into the network to The ln-home network would handle from 40 to 60 children. not only add to the supply of facilities, but a.lao give eome mo- thera (or fathers) a chance to SJate law allows up to alx chil- di-en In a private home, with no more than three less than earn an income without leaving 2 yean old. home, said Mrs. Tilley. If the system proves popular Through the center, new day and efficient, then other homes care providers would so throush might be added later. NOT MUCH WIND -The ducks aieem to be the only ones leaving a wake aa they swim past almost becalmed sailboats in Newport Harbor's North Lido Channel. The people on the The center's current $52 per because etate budget cutbecka are week tuition for full-time etu-reducing check-up vilill to pri-dents will be the basis for flgu-vate homes by social 1ervice1 ring the fees for in-home eervice. workers. The price -likely to go up in the fall -will be higher for infants "Frankly, 1 could uae about 30 but let111 for after~achool care, she more homee," said Mre. Perry. said. who is an in-home provider her- self. The plan has the backing of Wendy Perry, volunteer referral Mrs. Pe~ keeps a U.t of the chairwoman in the city and a current in· ome providers for member of the Orange County interested parents and can be Day Care Association's Board of reCM;hed at 559-9223. Directors. "Even if they work m Irvine She said the guaranteed and come up from Mission Viejo, supervision from center ~rofes-I can put them in touch with sionals will be a valuable eature people down there," she said. . .,.., ........... .,,'-....... boats are participating in Orange Coast College's adv~ sailing class. Among the things they learn in the class is that sailing has its slow days. Possible Foothill routes reduced to 21 Two cut close to populated areas in north Irvine and Mission Viejo By DAVID KUTZMANN MIM 0.., Not IUiff An in-depth study of where to locate a future 10-lane freeway through Orange County's foot- hills will focus on 21 alternate routes, including two that pass near populated areaa in north lrvine and Mission Viejo. The Board of Supervisors on Wednesday agreed with trans- portation planners to whittle the number of prospective routes from 41 to 21 for the second phase of a study involving the ao-called 26-mile Foothill Trans- portation Corridor. A single route will be chosen next year. The future eaet-west thor- oughfare -which would not be built until the 1990s -is projec- ted as an eight-to ten-lane free- way which would relieve over- crowding on the nearby Santa Ana Freeway. The foothill freeway would run parallel with Interstate 5. It would also paM near lrvine's Northwood Village if superviMrs decided to route the corridor south of Rattlesnake Reservoir instead of north, through hilly terrain. About 13,000 people live in the north lrvine Village. Several Northwood residents told supervisors Wednesday they hoped key decisions on route alignments -expected next March -would not be made without full public participation. Officials said two public hea- rings already have been held in Miaion Viejo and lrvine, where reaidenta last March expreued various concerns about living close to a major transportation corridor. In particular, Mission Viejo residents asked that the future roadway be kept half a mile away from their community and north of Oso Reeervoir. Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro. Some of the route alternatives would traverse part of the Ma- rine base now used for storing high explosives. Although the Marine Corps has objected to the idea of runnmg a route through the area. transportation planners said "linkage across this property (was) an important part of the overall set of route alternatives. Without 1t. the southerly routes become more circuitous." Suspect hound over in newsboy's death A 35-year-old convicted sex offender has been ordered to s tand trial in Orange County Superior Court on death penalty charges that he kidnapped. mo- 1 est e d and strangled a 12-year-old Anaheim newspaper delivery boy last August. Judge James K . Turner, after hearing evidence during an 11 -day, closed-door preliminary hearing. ruled Tuesday that there was sufficient evidence to order defendant Robert Jack.Ion Thompson to face murder char- ges in Superior Court. Fun Zone's future on the line In Irvine, residents at a March 18 hearing worried about noise and air pollution hazards as well as advene impacts along surface streets u traffic moved to and from the propoeed freeway. Disneyland stricken from death suit Thompson, arrested two days after young Benjamin Lee Bren- neman 'a disappearance Last sum- mer, will be arraigned before Judge Turner May 17. NB planners to stud y con version to office-shop compl~x By STEVE MARBLE o<tti. o.., Not IWf The Balboa Fun Zone, a part of Newport Beach hiatory that hat survived the years and rnott than one redevelopment try, eoon may become a thing of the put. The block-long am\.llemellt ar- cade that eome contend bu be- come ecrulfy ln lta old .,e will be reviewed by city planning com- milllonen ~t at 7;30. Commilllonen. In particular, will be looklna at a plan to eli- minate most of what now II the Fun Zone and replace It with eometh1nc called the Balboa Ma· rtna Project. U approved, the waterfront li- neup of pme arcades, bambur- flr lltanda and c:amival-llb rtdel would be replaced with a thfee. ttory C.pe C.od-«yled lt.ructuft tontalnln1 1ho1>9, offlcet and rmtaunna nw loric~ ferril wheel and adjlcen\ caroueel would be ~ md returned to the"'* ~the projld w• con..-. '!be t20 mauon .PtOJilct 11 bllDC t=. by Jll8 ~t. a ~t firm that bm had tbe property in etla'OW for nearly a year. The P.lan la the laie.t In a lerlea of propou1s and promilel to up- grade the arcade, unveiled in 1936 by an·EnaJ.lahman named Al Andenon. A plan in 1972 to bulldoze the Fun Zone and rep1.ce It ..vith a oondominium complex w11 killed by the ltate Couta1 Commlmon .. Later lt1l1. a dlffennt eet of aw- nen vowed to~ the lite, but no plane were ewl' filed. Officials from JBS Hy U thln11 10 their way, the Fun Zone wlll 1tart fallln1 to the buJ.lcbel' by Sept.ember. Beca'--of the cnmped quar- ters In Balboa and the narrow, often-cloaed 1tneU, the firm bM ~valet~ f• lhJppll'I and~ ..... A two-level undeqround pra,e would be cuvecf out for office woran. Ccn1Je 0.pL 3 ••, a ,......,. OOlllUlunt for JllJ, ..,.1hl arm h., etl'ived to come up wltb a plan that would pr ... rve th• atJDoepbere of tbe J'u.n Zone .. while cleaning it up at the same time. To date, reaction hu been mi- xed. Many Balboana aay while they have fond summer memo· riel of the Fun Zone, they agree the place needs a facelift. Memben of one group, SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport). an a1Ucal of the J'un Zone plan. They criticized It In a recent ne'Wlpepel' ad. SPON memben, In tbelr ad, aald the plan le ju.t the latest example in Newport Beach of · commercial flan• that will "overwhelm • a residential ~borhood. The ad al8o oom- plained that the developer will med a~· YU'tMDt. In , ..... the dew1ops l'Ul ... ~ad Pointmc au& that the J'un Zon• h.u bein soned ~. not neidential, for almolt 60 ,..,... Qcy bAll ........ pndld that th• advertlalnC aword-cro.IOI llk•ly le only the 1tart of th• controversy 1urrou.ndlnt the T planlmw will men •t city b.11. County officiala say the need for the freeway La two-fold: To relieve current congettion on the Santa Ana Freeway and to sup- port future development expec- ted In the foothill reti<>n· Eventually, it la anddpeted the foothlll freeway corridor wlll extend from the San Dle10 County line to the intercha.nfe of the Garden Grove freeway In Onnce· In partna the number of study routes from 41 to 21, oftidala aid most ''problem aJ.ianmenta" were eliminated, leavln1 po11lble roui. tha1 ue comldered the moll~. Generally, \he FoothUI Corri· dor 1tudy tncludes analylft of potentlal alJ~ta north and IOUd\ of Loma 1Ud19 ln the Ir· vine Randi area. Accordlna to the npan, pnpuwl by v .... n.u Alloda•. the northerly allp- m.Atl nm alonl Santlalo can. yon loed f.Nn htae I.Ma to 1:1 Tero Roed.. The tOUtherlJ . .u.n-· menta run ~1 parallel to IMm 8oWMfd ...... the muth ... al. Loma ............. ..., oorth of Northwood and the An Orange County Superior Court judge haa stricken a $60 million punitive damage claim againlt Dianeyland from a law- suit filed by the family of a Ri- verside man who wu fatally etabbed in the amURment perk ln March 1981. Juda• ·Thomae F. Croeby Jr. told the att.omey repneentJ.na Mel C. Yorba'• family that the fac18 aJJ9d in the laW.Ut were not IU.ftident to eupport a punt. tive cs.rn.a dab:n. Hla ru1Tu1 had the effect of removina Dilneyland from the Sep! action, which aim MIDM al cle1endanta Pallb Harbor Hoept-tal. where Yon. WM tabn. and Jamea O'Dri.:ioll. the man c:har-aed wttb the~ Yorba'• deata WH Dlaney- land'a lint homicide. He wu stabbed .,.. .... "I tnYO&wd In.., ~t wkb a man an.-a-I to be DIWoll. Tb• law1ult claimed that ..... D9 1Ded6aill ~"'"' ..,.. \lftla~ a\ Dlme)'· 1IDd. The bearded defendant pre- viously had been indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on murder, kidnap, sodomy and lewd conduct charges. His preliminary bearing, where It 11 determined if evl- denoe La •tl'olll enouch to order' a trial, waa eeaJect ott from pu.bUc I view by Turner when defeme 1 attorney Ronald Brower com- plained that media coveraae could pnJudlct hia client'• chan- Oel for • lai.r trial. Prevlou1ly releued Grand Jury tnnleril*. however, haw ahown that 'nlompeon edmltt.i to Anaheim police wt Aupt that he eexually mol111:td ._. neman and ewntually .. ~ l hlm "8fore te.~ him tn a ,. mote area In Loa An1e le1 C.ounty. Hbwever, Thotnpeon den1ed th8t he kmed t.be YoUCb. wMll body" .. found hi the 1'.anebal hlae v ....... a~.,.. be dllappeared from an Anabellil ~arun,.nt compl•• wtier• Tbomplon llwd. I ..................... i*I*' deliver' bO~ for the Ora.a .. C.oumy _. UI. .A Ir .. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Thumay, May e, 1982 Animal abuse puts off ender down • Ill dumps ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have read several letters in your column about people who havf' "bused animals. Thoae letters made me l.., ..ad I have actually wept. Today I read aomething th.al me me stand up and cheer, "God bless that judge!" I'm asking you to print it. It might start a national trend that could result in better treatment for an- imals everywhere. A man convicted of abandoning four 1 puppies at the city dump in sub-zero wea- ther was sentenced to the same treatment - two nights with the frozen garbage. Judge . Wallace Anctil said, ''That kind of treatment shouldn't be given to an animal or any human being, but I felt he should gel a taste of it. He'll be rather lonely and cold." This happened in n orthern New Hampshire, which speaks very well for the kind of justice they hand out there. What do you say, Ann? -APPLAUSE FROM NEW HAVEN DEAR NEW HA VEN: Wallace is my BEST OF FRIENDS -A Canada goose, which recently stopped off at the Fred and Natalie Haas hobby farm near Anoka, Minn., blocked the door to Duke's doghouse to keep k.lnd of judge: I tblnk la all f alrne11, howe- ver, we 1bould tell the readers that the of- fender bad a choice of paying a flae of $%00 or 1peadla1 two con1ecattve a.Jgbt1 at tbe city dllmp -from 5 p.m. to 5 a .m. Also be was to be coaaalted periodically by a police officer to see If be would prefer to pay tile flae. Tbe most reoent word was that be cbo1e the garbage dump. DEA.t< ANN LANDERS: I would like to comment on a trend I believe is a big rnla- ~ \ake. I refer to women waiting until they are in their 30s and even 40s to have children. I was born when my mother was 42, and this is what it is like with u.s "late div- idends" -as we were called. Our fathers rarely live to see us through high school. We never know our grandparents -they are long gone. When we get to a marriageable age, we feel guilty about leaving mama -so we ask mama to come in with us. This can be very hard on a new husband. Ple811e, Ann, urge women to have their .,~. the 11-year-old collie-shepherd from exiting. The goose has become attached to Duke and spends lots of time near the do~. children when they are young. That's what the Lord intended. -OUT OF SYNC IN HAGERSTOWN DEAR SYNC: Some women wbo delay motberbood aay It It a woaderfuJ Idea. Otllers are on yoar aide. Bat just be- tweea yoa and me, wouldn't you rather be born late tJaaa ae\'er? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm an adult who sometimes feels immature and inept becauae I don't know how to respond when I am put on the spot. For example. when I am asked questions I don't wish to answer, I become red-faced and flustered and usually end up blurting out the answer because I don't know how to get out of it. Afterwards I am mad at myself. P lease tell me how to fend off embar- a ANN IANDEIS . z . . fl KAi i rassmg inquiries m a tact u way. -- LUA KONA DEAR KONA: Finl, forget about tact. People wJaq ask non-uv-yer -bluolu ques- tions don 't deserve gen tie handling. Be blunt. For example, if asked bow mucb money you make, bow old you are or bow mucb you weigh, simply look tbe c lod la the eye and say, "Now wby in tbe world would you want to ask a question like that?" While tbe jerk ls struggling to regroup, w.alk away. Mom's silence golden Sunday is the day when children eve- rywhere pay tribute to some virtue posses- sed by their mothers. Some applaud her selflessness. Others are grateful for her firm hand. A few re- member her sacrifices, her forgiveness. her aboundiAg love. Some children remember their mother's words of wisdom, times she has saved them from disaster with her advice. moments when one word made the path infinitely easier. I GUESS IF I HAD to pick the quality in my mother I have come to admire the most, it's the times she did absolutely no- thing and said dbsolutely nothing. Those moments of silence when she allowed me to fall on my face, fail, make bad judgments and take stands I'd have to pay for. Only the Lord knows the golden op- portunities I made available to her to pro- test, rave, grimace, cringe, critique, and try to turn me around, but she never took the bait. The time I signed up for $800 worth of silverware before my wedding when I didn't have a pot to cook in. The decision to buy a car with 86,000 miles on it. The times I shouted, "You don't know anything! These are my friends!'' The time I loaned my camera to a friend I had known for two days and never saw either again. The time I listened to "everybody else's mother" who were letting them go swim- ming in April when the temperature was 59 degrees. MY DECISION TO TAKE calculus when I couJdn't ~vide a recipe in half . M y stand to buck the principal and believe my own child who wouJd never tie. The time I knew a hot iron wouJdn't hurt my new blouse. ERMA BOMBECK AT WITS END A.de<.·1s1on to u:ll my bos.s to .. t.ake the· · job and shove it, I could find another one.'' Thinking back on it all. at must have• ~en the most d1ff1t·ult part of mothering she ever had to do . knowing th~nding. yet feeling she had nu right to keep me from charting my own path. So, thanks, Mom, not only for your st· lence, but for the greatest v1rtut' ~ mother can possibl y havC'. for never on<'e having said. "l told you so .. QUfflllf By PHIL INTERL AN DI \\li.tf1!11•''"'1lh fll'll!••t•d11 111 1I• Taurus should steer clear of self-deception Friday, May 7 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Money dispute rebounds in your favor. You learn truth concerning financial status of one close to you. Mystery is solved -if you dig be- neath surface. clear of self-deception. TemlS will be outli- ned. mea."lings will be defined. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You may be missing out on legal rights . Examine documents, see beyond the obvious. Steer GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on basic tasks, policies, necessary services and added responsibility. Significant rela- tionship leads to cooperative efforts. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Finish ra- ther than initiate project. Creative efforts ~ ----------------------------------------------------~--:~. GOREN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF North South vulnerable !'lorth dealt. NORTH • 853 7 AK76 0 J 103 •AK 8 WEST EAST •J784! •AQ <:7 950 "QJ108 o KQ2 o 8765 •1 •QIO$ SOUTH • K 101 <:;> 2 O AH •Jt602 The bidding: N.nll Eut 8.-WHt 1 ~ Pue 1 NT P ... !NT Pue INT P ... , ... , ... Opening lead: ~·eur or +. There are no rt•wardJ for playln1 quickly. You collt>d point. only by maklni or brHkin1 con&racul Wear• IMK enemored with fltorih·• approech. Althou1h he had 15 polnu. hi• t..a.3 3 dl1&nbutlott ••• hardlr at t.racOve, and even If hit part ner had a mulmum 10 poinu. 1•m• waa doubtrul a& best Therefore. he should have passed his partner's no trump ruponst!. South went on lo gam e bPcuuse he judg ed Lhal his six-card suit might be a aourre or tricks. West led a low spade. East won thf' are and ronl1nut'd w1lh Lhe tfUten. Declarer made h11 first grievous error whtn he allowed the queen lo win. Luckily, for him , We•l shifted Lo a heart. Oerlarer won 1n dummy and waslt'd no Lime in playing ace, k1nR and another rlub, to aet up thrte long c-lub trick1 in hi• hand. Now. Ent 1hirted l-0 a dia mond. Declarer'• pll1ht auddenly dawned on him. He could take elfhl trlcka, and the nint.h -&he hl1b heart - w11 &here In 'dummy for •II t.o Ht. Unfortunately, there wu no way t.o r•t to It. Once • doclarer had run hl1 •l1h1 trick•, the deftnM had t.wo more f.o tak• for down one. lt declarer hed taktn a bit more time, he mJ1ht. ha\19 fore ... n t'"-p1'oblem. He could not afford c..o cuh Utt HCOed heart wben he •a• In dummy. fol' thet WO\lld *up enouah lrleka tor the drfender1 to ht-al the ron tract if they rained the lead with a club. Whal he could have done was to establish the c:uba while keeping his c:ommunacallont intac:t. Aher winning the heart ~hifl, declarer should cash JU5l onr high club. lf tht IJUt'en dropa, declarer can c:uh the remalnlnl( heart honur and then run hl1 win ntrll for 1n ovortrlck. But whl'n the club 11utten doea not appear, declarer •hould give up on the overtrkk and con· cenlrale on maklni hi• 1e1mo. Ht contlnuH wilh a low club. Eall win•. bul declarer tUll ho a hl&h club to ael to dum my to ra11h 1he •etond heart winner, and two tnlrlea to hla hand to run club1. R•H , .. ~· ,.... ...... &• 4H~l• &rH~ .. 1 Let Ca.uieeOen•W.T"W ,.., .. ,~ ....... •f DOUaL£8 let ;...kM• .................... ,., W.DOUILE8~~ n .u w "G.,...~" taN el &Me ... .,.,_, P.O. IH Ut, N .... ~. N • .I. 01"8. Make dlecl&a ,.,.._ -~N •• .,.,. ........ are highlighted -your style is imprinted, charisma becomes evident and members of opposite sex are drawn to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Some past obligations will be erased. You have valid chance to st.art anew. Focus on sales invol- ving land, home, property. You gel to heart of matters. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on direction, messages, intuition a nd decision affecting relative. Accent also on budget, quick trips, information gleaned from special reading material. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Display ver- satility, expanq personal horizons, become more aware of body image and need for proper nutrition. You locate what had been loet, missing or stolen. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll re- vise, review, rebuild and be free of restric- tions. Lunar emphasis on individuality, in- dependence, creativity and fresh start in new diredion. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You get peek behind acenea; you're presented Obesity, breast DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I have two problem1. Olle It la *• prese•t. TH o~er 11 fear of troeble Ill tlte 19.i.re. MJ ,re ... 1 ff9'lelil, wlddl I uve bad 1lllff I wat H (I'm .ow II) 11 bel11 over- welpt. I've trt~ all klad1 of diet• wl~oat 1acct11. I've Iott a few poadt for a •lalle, bit re1al•ed •••• mere after 101•1 oa a diet. I-••w am a& le11t II P•••d• Ofer· wetpt aeee ........ m1 deetor. Bat I doa't ............. wm .. ...._ MJ 1eeeall ,,,_.,,. 11 aa1lety a~at breut eunr. llJ •illllr W It ad • did a1 aaat. I ,,., ........ mr brtatt1 n1•· W1J ...... 1111 --fer a et.hp at lea1t tYer)'. tll m•dlii. lat I'm ttlll wor· i'til. -MRS. M. DEAit MRS. M.: If you wonied mare about J'OUf ...,._'"'Pt. )'OU mllbt have • ~~~'!f~!!R with material which could lead to profit Rest pe riod is necessar y -gam second emotional wind. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19). Favo- rable moon aspect coincides with romance. fulfillment of desires and money from sur- prise source. Major domestic adjustment is part of scenario. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on responsibility, power. authority, promo- tion and prestige. Superior makes room for you, provides opportunity for important advancement. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Travel plans come into focus. Lunar emphasis on distance, direction, language and learning process. You'll complete assignment and feel relieved of burden which was not your own to carry in first place. Aries is in picture. cancer tied rou1 HIAlTH DR PETER J . STl:.INCROHN leaa reason to be concerned about breast cancer. Accordln1 lo IOme recent flndl.., there eeema to be tome c:onnec:Uon between obesi_!>' and breast canc:eT. For examrle, consider a ~t anJc .. In the Journal o the American Medical Aao. ciaUon: lt concluded that brfflt ~ ptU· enta who are overwel&ht have leli chmci of survival compa.Nd wfth peUtntl of ftOrillaJ wetpt. And there ls lncreub~ evid4tnN t the riill of deft&opma bnMf aniw ·1111:!- ~ With • n.e ln ~ ~t. .. .. . ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Maye, 1982 S~ith empire dead Baalcrupt Westgate's assets distributed SAM DIJXlO (AP) -A rnam- mo&h --h~~ lecal tanal• that be1an with the collapH of C. Arl\holt Smith'• flnandal empire ---W MUinl an end. of the firm'• 12th-floor oUk:e ln downtown San Dleao. The buil- din1 once housed Smith'• 0 .S. National Bank, which led direct- ly lO the bankruptcy or Wettpte when lt went belly up. RUFFELL'S urHOL$TllY ••••1101 .. .-.... lfU HAlllOI IUD. COSTA MllA -14 .. l 116o Newport to Avalon With the tllln1 thl1 week ot final UquadaUon pepera ln a Ne- yact. court, tlaht yean of reor- 1anilat6on under Chapter 10 of federal bankruptcy law reached • c:ondullon. • Herbert Kunzel, a~lnted president of We.tgate~ fomia Ce lnNw~~l~tp~~wtt~~~H;u~n~tl~n~gt~o~n~~M~e~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~i the d.lamantllng of the company. dally thru Sun. His appointment by a federal Checka were mailed Monday to 8,000 fiiple who held shares ln the 11 fated Weatgate - Callfomla Corp., in accordance with a previoualy announced plan to d.i.tribute the company's nearly $62.~ million in asaeta. Until ltl bankruptcy in 1974, Westgate-California was one of the ltlte'a laraat conglomerates with control ovet Air California, the San Diego Padres baseball team, a tuna cannery, real estate holdinP. and nµmerouS< Yellow Cab tranctu.es. Smith, 81, once one of Califor- nia'• most IUCCe9Bful money bar- ons and a Republican Party po- wer broker, got hia start as a bank teller and went on to found Westgate, which at its height controlled 60 companies and had a net worth of $2 billion. But it all came crashing down in the early 1970s amid charges of grand theft. fraud and income tax evuion. Smith, who remains free on bail, was convicted of lncome tax evasion and sentenced FIRM IN RUINS -The fi- nancial empire of C. Arnholt Smith, once one of Califor- nia's top financiers, has been liquidated after eight years of legal proceedings. , in 1979 to three years in an honor camp by a judge who called him a "crook" and chastised his "misuse of corporations." Tuesday's filing represents the last official gasp of the firm, which was incorporated in Ne- vada but based in San Diego. lt is now officially non-existent. All that remains is the closing ~~~~~~====::=:=~ IRE YOU BUYll-I CIR? judge was the result of a Secwi- Uee & Exchange Commillion ac- tion against Westgate. In certain cuea -dependina on which claaa of stock was beta -investors may receive more through liquidation than they would have had they been able to hold thelr orlglnal certificates. Kunzel noted, for example, that an investor with $612 worth of common stock just before the company went under would re- ceive $875. 75 under the liquida- tion p.an. Kunzel said the most Impor- tant step in protecting the inter- est of the shareholders involved the successful battle against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which had taken control of U.S. National Bank in 1973. The FDIC claimed Westgate- California owed $300 million in outstanding loans and other liabi- lities. But in an agreement rea- ched in 1976, the FDIC settled for $70 million from the compa- n y . SOUTH COAST PLAZA This Sunday, Mother's Day COM PLIMENTARY VALET Mall Emry Between Bullocks and I. Magnin We Park Your Car Free WE COULD SAVE YOU AS MUCH AS $3000 ON HIGHER PRICED AUTOMOBILES Now thru Sunday, shop our great inventory blowoutl ANO CERT AINt. Y HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS ON MODERATELY PRICED CARS WE WILL DO YOUR SHOPPING CALL VIRGINIA AT (714) 145-4110 or 145-1122 ICUPUllCTURE Cllll-llWI CIOU, C.I. AUTHOR O' "ACUPUNCTURE & SCIENCE" Former Chairman. seminar of Chinese Acupuncutre Foundation PROFESSOR OF ACUPUNCTURE, GRADUATE; CHINA MEDICAL COLLEGE WHO'S WHO IN CALIFORNIA, 13th Edition 545-2438 Mon.-Wed • ..f=rl. mnetollledlcel Center 2120 a. 11rteto1 at. •utt• No. 221 SANTA ANA 532-5040 TUM.-Thur.-Sat. Medlcal o.ntel CenteJ 1500 E. K•t•ll• Ave. Sult• F ORANGE SMOKING & PAIN-CONTROL MANY ono DISORDERS All> DISABllTES LINKS OF EMOTION For Mother's Day ln'I4 and J8 K•r.t Cold. Man7 wltb preciou• •tonu. All len,th•. HEWPOttT RACH M11 Via Lido I ~Z1ll Ma}f-Clearance ~ lfYll. ror men 'BR \TTANlA I ,,:.:--,.,A ,, . - ~ 111 1 •Iv 1 ... .J1111 1.1. FOR l,l~A\' U.S.A Save on a huge selection of favorite spring fashions, all from original top-quality brands. We 're making room for summertime styles at Wild West, so this spring merchandise is priced to gol GEno Lev rs YOU CAN'T PAY MORE THAN- •4.99 Juniors' knit toos ~lt"clt'd nyles. (('9Ularly s2&. s22 Juniors' dressv blouses Sl('clt'd styt~. regularly ~7· S20 Young men's soortshlrts ~It'd s~ r('(]Ularly s'1t.-Sl8 Boys' knit beach shirts ~lt'Clt'd s~ r~larly s S8· S20 Boys' f ash Ion knit shirts ~lt'c It'd s~s. r('(]Ularly s 15 Boys ' woven soortshlrts ~!«led stylt'S. regularly Sr 4 Glrls' knit & woven tops ~lt'Clt'd styles. regularly s13. S23 Bovs' f ashlon knit tops ~ styles. regularly SIS • Bovs' woven soortshfrts ~~ ~ rrgulalfy sr4 Glrls' leans & knickers ~l«t~ styt~. regularly S22 • S29 Girls' knit & woven tops ~lected scytes. regularly S 13· S23 Boys' fashion leans StleCted sey1n. r~atly f1s.s22 ,,_ •9.99 Juniors' f ash Ion leans ~l«tt'd stylt>S. regularly SJQ.1'4 2 Juniors' fashion oants ~lt'cted styt~. r('()ularly S26· !39 Juniors' f ash Ion knickers ~ted s~. regularly SJO· S42 Jrs' shorts & caorls ~It'd stytn. r('(]Ularty s 1l,. s22 Juniors' sweaters ~lt'cted ~s. regularly S2 l • S28 Juniors' knit toos ~IKted styl('S, regularly S2cf. S22 Jrs' casual blouses ~lt'cted styles_ regularly S20· S23 Jrs' dressy blouses ~lt'cted s~s. r('(]Ulilrly s I 7. s22 Juniors' dresses St'l«ted styl('S. regularly S22. S36 Men's & women's casual shoes Se!Ktt'd Styl('S. brands, r('()Ularly SJO· S60 Young men's beach pants ~lt'cted s~. r('()ularly Young men's knit beach shirts ~l«trd ~ reg!Mrty S 18· S25 Young men's soortshlrts Sel«ted ~ r'9lJlat1y s, 6-s 18 Young men's casual knit shirts Sei«ted ~ ~rly SI 7· S 18 Young men's dress shirts Selectt'd ~ rrgul¥1y s 18 Bovs' knit beach shirts Sttec'°frd stytes. regulM1y S8 • S20 ../ IAllTA MIA 3430 S Bristol Ave, 114-'""-nolfh of South Cont f)fm. '51-6100 Juniors' fashion leans St'lt<led s1yft"s, rt'gu1ar1y s30.f 47 Jrs' f ash Ion pants ~lt'ctt'd stytt"s. rt<Jularly S26· S38 Jrs' caprls & shorts Selt'Cted Stylt'S. regularly Sl6· S22 Juniors' dress slacks ~lt'ctt'd Slylt's. regularly S30· S36 Juniors' sweaters ·~lt'cted sryl('s. regularly S2 l • S28 Jrs ' casual blouses ~l('(tt"d sty1t'S, r('()ularly S20· S23 Jrs' dressy blouses ~l('(tt"d stylt's. r('()ularly s I 7. s20 Juniors' dresses ~lt<tt'd stytt's r('(Jularly S22· S36 Llttle glrls' leans Selt'Cted s1yb, r('(}ll arly S22· S29 Men's Hawaiian shirts Selt'Ctt'd styles. r('(Jularty S26· SJO Men's dress slacks ~lectt'd stylt"s. rt•gularly S28· S32 Men's dress shirts ~tt'd slylt'S. regularly Sl9· S28 Jeans for Men Stieclt'd stylt'S. regularly S25· SJO • Young men's fashlonjeans ~l«ted Stylt'S, regularly S24· SJO Men's & women's casual shoes ~l('(ted stytt"s. brands; r('(]Ularty SJO· S60 t Sale prk~s good May 5 thru May 9 or whlftrsupplles last. ~l«tlon varies sto" to sto". Somt brands, ~s. sizes or colors may ~ in limit~ supply or one-of-a-kind. Sorry, no ralnchecks. I.Ml FOlfEIT 23162 Mertiiry Rd, In the Lake FoltSt Ctnttr. • 855-2318 COSTA MESA KIWANIS -CLUB'S 32nd ANNUAL PANCAKE BREAKFAST Your donation wtll f*p Coeta ..... KtwMa. Club 1upport tM routh Hnlcee In our community -to help gift our roung peop .. that RIGHT START. PIHM Join ua for -aunahlne -door prlzH -entertainment - SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1982 o 7:00 A.M. to 12:00 Noon :i Donation -$2.50 Costa Mesa (Lion's) Parle, Downtown Costa Mesa 18th St. & Parle Ave. JCPenney Garden Shop Sale -May 7th, May 8th & May 9th Friday -Saturday -Sunday Pi':i:"Ji~.-.... ........ ---fi)~~';._------- Landscape plants / NOW 50 o/o off ~II 5, 10 & 15 gallon t -# --. 10" Ficus Benjamlna I ~- reg. $24.99 8" Reiger Begonias reg. $16.99 Now 112.99 2 gal. Pelargonlums reg. $8.49 Now 16.99 1 gallon Strawberries (Dougie•) reg. S2.99 NOw 1 1.99 •• 2 gal. Zonal Geraniums reg. $8.49 Now 16.99 6" Clnerarlas reg. $4.99 NOW 12.79 6" Potted Marlgold• reg. $2.99 NOW 11.99 SALE County firms fined for 'polluting' ...._.....~---KITCHEN THINGS CUTLERY4<"'o'OL'oryo()ffwF) oou:Mn "'°'==~.c:.=~PROM 70 8PeCIAL TV A H*lf ,GI ... Mlell o .. 119'1 COOKWARE ·~:::.:."::.: w111 Gll'T8 ~...., °' "°'* ASTA COOKWAR! 20o/o'.0f f Eleven Orange Cout bualneua were amon1 112 •uooe.fully pl'OleCUted for alr pollution control violations in March, the South C.oaat Air Quality Management Diltrict reported. JOHN 8008 24x41 WORKTABL! '100 OFF •OUISINART DLC 7E •MARBLE PASTRY SLAB •ATLAS PASTA MACHJNES •TEAK CARVING BOARD w/aplket •COPPER EGG WHITE BOWL REG. 1260.00 49.95 47.50 39.50 HAMMERED • 10" 38.95 PLAN • 12" 49.95 •CAST IRON POPOVER 19.25 •CAST IRON CORN CAKE PAN 9.95 •GOURMETOPF CLAY COOKER 25.00 •LEYSE 3 PART ALUMINUM STEAMER 29.95 •TENDERLOINER 19.95 •SHRIMP IC!=RS, SET OF FOUR 12.60 •SUPERSTONE CLAY FRENCH BREAD BAKER 16.95 •AMERICAN MADE COPPER COLANDER LG . 5~.95 SM. 42.95 •AMERICAN MADE MEASURE CUP SET 49.60 -CALPHALON COOKWARE 10% OFF ASK ABOUT OUR CUSTOM PICNIC llA8KET8 BY NANCY w. pricee • .,.,. ,...., fttl, 'tOO , .M. ~-=, 8ALE 1H.OO ••• 11.H 28.M 21.M 21.M 11.15 7.88 18.N 18.N 14.N 10.N 12.M U.80 M.50 atM They are: -Gill Orr, doing buaineaa aa the Leisure World Union aervice •talion, a $400 fine for failure to maintain a vapor recovery 1y1tem at the gu pumpe. -W.D. Binghma Inc. of Huntington Beach, a $240 fine for alTowing exce.sive odors toe.cape. -Sam Pugileae, doing buaineu aa AJl-Con Landfill of Huntington Beach, an $800 fine and summary probation for allowing too much duat to e9C8pe from the land!ill. -Gordon Miller, doing buaineea as West.cliff PlaUl Shell in Newport Beach, a $250 fine for fail· ure to maintain a vapor recovery system. -M . Kuckaltunyan, doing business aa Lido Aroo in Newport Beach, a $2W fine for operating without a vapor recovery system. -Valley Sandblasting of Irvine, a $250 fine for allowing excessive visible emissions. -Plan Hold Corp. of Irvine, a $500 fine for failure to obtain authoriuition to construct an edl· Lice. -Federal Exp~ Corp. of Runtrngton Beach, a $500 fine for pennitting gasoline to drop into a storage tank without using a vapor ra'Overy system. -John LaRosa's Uruon Stauon of Fountain Valley, a $1 W fine for failure to maintain a vapor recovery system. 3.t29 E CoHt Hwy. Corona del Mar, CA 02625 7 1•-873-3"' 1.t905 Hott Ave Tustin. CA 92680 71'-731-8615 Ml .. lon Viejo Mall Room 79.t -Brahma of Texas Thermoplastics, Inc., of Huntington Beach, a $2W fine for failure to obtain proper authonzations. -Gasper Farace Union 76 Station of Hun- tington Beach, an $85 fine for failure to maintain a vapor recovery system. CLEAR ACRYLIC COOK'S HELPERS From Hong Kong 3·MINUTE EGG TIMER Time a perfect egg or telephone call. 718" SQ. 3· tall 1.55 COOKBOOK & RECIPE CARD HOLDERS Mlaak>o Viejo. CA 92891 71'-.t95-2eec> FROM OUR JEWELRY .. SECTION CARNELIAN OR ROSE QUARTZ NECKLACE & BRACELETS From Taiwan Beautlfully pollshed and delicately colorful! NECKLACE 20· long 19.88 each BEL TED con ON DRESS WITH STRIPED VOKE Recl~s are easy to loo!! at and safe from splallers and chocotate-y fingerprints. From India Solid colored dress is accented with a striped yoke, embroidered detail and ~ contrasllng ~ banding. Blue. BRACELETS Raspberry WALNUT FINISH WOOD COLLECTOR'S BOX From Hong Kong Approx. 7" tong Red and Light 6.88 each Golden Brown. 11t----------+. ..... -......c S·M·L·XL To dlsplay many miniature treasures. With ,...,1!!111!!1~~;:..I brass corner '9-.--1 detalls. Hangs r-r---.!-.· venlcally. 22 Sections THE GOOD COOK'S HELPERS From Hong Kong and Taiwan STAINLESS STEEL I 'A. dla 9• )( 12 •1 •• 5.49 ,,_,,_ _____ I~ 12 •;, • wide -Q==i::::::!c;;~~~WJ 16'/2 • tall 6.99 ~·1 c1:.1if foj U 3"tall CARO HOLDER 3" >< s· .99 EARTHENWARE LADY BUG MUG From Korea A white back· ground adorns a cluster of red and black lady bugs. 8 oz. ~ 1.22 pair STAINLESS ----~-F;;~~ STEEL - SPORTY PAPER WEIGHTS Baseball 3• dta. 6.99 Glove ,. )(4'/,· 7.99 From Korea CHINESE CALLIGRAPHY PLAQUES ··Happiness" '"Long Life" Approx. 5" long 3.99 each Q) BRASS POLYGON PLANTER From Hong Kong ~~~~Stunning planter has many facets. 3 v. • to s· deep .t 2.4 • dla. 5.99 s· dla. 8.99 1•11 • dla. 11 .99 WOOD l ABACA ROPE COASTERS From The Ptllllpplnes Walnut stained woOd coasters have natural, brown or orange rope Insets 3•1.-dla .• 51 each PLASTIC COVERED OINQHAM PLACE MAT From Hong Kong Printed gingham paper Is forever aafe In a clear plastic coat. Red, Green. Brown ot Yellow with White. SAUCE BOAT 7'11 • tong 1 '/, • deep 1.99 12· x 17V1 • .89 each IAM800 SLAT i WOOD FRAME 1------------ STAINLESS STEEL PINEAPPLE CUrTER a· tall 1.69 6'/2 • dla a· dla. 9· dta. 15.99 CHIMEV BRASS CHIMES From Hong Kong Tuneful tubing to catch spring breezes. 22· total length Stl.lrdy hanger to hold utensils, ~--·-lit cheese or salami With 8 soldered hooks. 10•1, • base dla. 11 '/J • long chain 7.69 MULTICOLORED RAYON i RAnAN DUSTER From The Phlllpplnes Wonderful wlld colors to help around the houae. 18" tong IOARDWALK CHAIR From China NATURAL l\AMIN WOOD No-.atglo allng chair 11 handsome NATURAL CANE IAR SERVING TAILE enough to combln• with any lnfor-ITOOL FroM lndoneat• From Hong Kong mat decor. Ruggedly constructed Sturd iootllng Lift-off tray make• for NATURAL OR WALNUT FINISH RAnAN ETAQERES From Thalland of natural bamboo atata and nylon a ool for easy service. cord on stained Informal 23% • x 15• and varnlthad dining 23V. • tall hardwood. or a 19Yt" wl<M 11at AdJu1t1 from at th• 27" tall to bar. 32" taH 12· .... di•. 30• 13.55 1•11 R•CTLY ACROSS ROM SOUTH COAST PLAZA IUIHTL Y WEIT Of UllTOL AT 1111 IUNf'lOWH (TW llHITOL EXIT OFF '81 fftEEWAY) Lacquered plywood ahelvee hold book•, toweta, collection or plants. o· to 13· deep 1s• to 29" wide 3 ShelvH 41 • tall 53.98 4 Shelves M" tall 79.98 5 ShalvH ee•tatt 99.98 OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK MON. TO Fiii. 11 A.M.-1 P .M. YIU • •UTa c.au. • ftUfMOMI H Ull-• MIPU FltU PMltM IAT. 11 l.M.-I P.M. IUI. 12 llOOll-1 P .M. r ·- , ...... -............ . ..... ,.. 'I ' v I \.' \. Don't Forget Halliday's For That Special Gift For Mother's Day! Newport e .. ch 17th 6 lrvlne (714)141-0712 A ·Letter-Pafect Value For Mom Wrtttng Pap9 Orpnlzer Just $2.00 with any H.allmadc Purchase of $3.00 or more. I j / --......... f ...... ~ .. ..- Beautiful portfolio stores her notes. stationery and other writing papers. and doubles as a writing pad. too. Cover is easy to clean. and sturdy construction assures many years of use. Fill it with Hallmark writing papers and it's the perfect gift for a thoughtful Mom like yours! • Mother'• Day Plat" • • • Hummel FiQ\lrioe• :· '+ • Precious Moment• fl9urlo" .. .. ,. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, May e, 1982 Nancy Dunn Antiques Fine European & Oriental Antiques and Furniture Also : Crystal, Sliver, Antique Jewelry Alf on consignment- J 130 Irvine A venue Newport Beach, CA 92660 W estcliff Plaza 631-3332 With Love to Mother from Veta's ~~l_GA e • /Ir ~Ir ,11111 4~·117 . ?'/ >ju aA., ~ 11 /,-,"' Ila/; An1,,11n llr yf'a/'>. D1om0nds suppl>1rcc; l merokh ru t)ll'S . as many d1ffcren1 '>lylt::<> O'> thPre urP ways ro soy I love you All 'lei in r•lu11num n• e19h1een karat yellow qold All designed w11h the unique bndd set11nq so that there is never snagging of line clothing. From fl06 ....-er of Accreclttd G- 4wwnc• ~ Society L..bonltory I 71tt & In•, Wntclff Plcna Newport IHcll ~a~~ ~©J a ®~a© Q' ~---;;;;;;;;;;;~ ~o~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;._, At Last .... Children's Espadrilles Just Like Moms Fits Like a Glove 1052 lrvrne Avenue Newport Beach 548-8884 . . . . . . Anthony's Shoe Service • Bank of America • Charles Barr Jewelers• Crown Hardware • Or. Lou Elder • Hair Handlers Salon • Halliday's Men's Clothing ' Hic;l<ory Farms• Humpty Dumpty• La Galleria• Market Basket • Mes Amles Teens• Nancy Dunn Antiques• Newport Balboa Savings• Paper Unlimited Sav -On Drugs• Storekeeper• Veta's Intimate Apparel• Westcfiff Cleaners• Westcliff Corners• Westcllff Shoes• Xavier's Florist . -. 0ranQ9 Oout DAILY PILOT /ThUrld~. May I. 1"2 P\atC M>iiCi "9.IC ll>TIC( ..... P10fifiOUi ..... ..annoue 1uH•u . ..cnnoue ..,..... MMl ITAW MAim .,.,.._., ...,_ ITAT'Olmn Tiie fo1tow1nu p.,aon 11 dolno Tiie tOlloi#tnO l*IOM .,. doln(I Tiie fOllOwfng S*tont .,. cl0411C l>utlnoot •• ...._. bullnOMN: A·1 Sll.VUI CLIPl'l!R DOO l'llltDCNTIAI. OHION CINT• THI VILlAOI, 111 llOWftefOfl OAOOMINO. 1U\t ltoaclway, lit H4tl VU..rta Drive, L0011n1 "°9d, LAIQIJl\I IMoh, CA tff61, Cotta Mou, Ctlllornlt UH7 --.~•H» CAllOLYN .. """"· 711 To111nco LU ooao. 1944 _.....,.. w. •PN"llll. »ttO v• lto~oft "°ed. Leouna 8oocll WMtMlf Awnuo. Coal• MIM. Cell- • terta on... t.aoune N1gue1 CallfOr-CA tHn fornl• t2t27 1111 tHn • art, ... I! H IC Tl"" y I 1 II Tiii• l>Ullnooe 1Honduc1ocl by Ill Juctltll O lp1u11a1, 13416 Vtl• lrowneroft !'load, L19u11• .. 1011. ln<IMclUll ,.,,. OflYO, t.aoun• NIOutf, Calllor· ~A 02651 Terr•• L. Dodd• nit tH77 KHAOOLAH E8HT EHAADI fhlt lltltfntfll wH fllocl wHh Ille TNe ~ le aonduclocl by .,, S403 Wll1lll1t 811/cl • LOI Ano•IH. County CIOiii Of Ortngo County on lnclMcl\lal. :A 80038 Allfll f3, 1 .. 2 ~ W. ~WICIL • Thie but11*1 It oonoue100 by • •tlftn Thie lltttmOl'lt WU llted' wffll Ille ~~ ~Orange CoMl Otll't Pi. COunty OWi! of 0r.,. County on Khedolall Elhlel'tardl IOI. Al)(il 15, 22. H May I, 1942 "°'" 21. IH2 Thi• llllelMfll ... fll4KI will\ Ille t11e..a2 ,,.,.. County Clerk of Or•noe county on l'ubll1hael Or1nge Cont Di lly AIJ(li 18. 11182 Piiot. Aprli 29, Mey I. 13, 20, 1H2 Ptl1'74 11138-12 Publltlled Or1ng1 Cont Dall) Pllo1. APfll n . May e t3, 20. 11112 ~~-P\llllC~~-NO-T-IC(~~~ 1941..a2 PICTITIOUI IM.l ... H "A• ITATl•NT Tiie following perton• ire doing butl""9 u : LIDO PENINSULA BOAT STO- RAGE, 100 Shtpyard W1y, Nowpor't 9Nch. Clllfornla 92M3 WILBO INDUSTRIES. 900 LldO Patk Drive, Newport Beach, .c a11- foml11128e3 Tiii• 1>utlne11 Is conduclad by a corPO<atlon. .. Nil.IC NOTICE 'ICTmOUI •UllMIH NAMI ITATl•NT Th• IOllOwlng ,,.IOM .,. doing butinfflU AMERICAN 8ACKPACKINO ANO SURVIVAL RESOURCES, 11105 Oalo Circle. Suite J Buane Patk. California 90621 P11tr1ck L•ll Tori111n 26831 All1nero. Mlulon VleJo. Celllornla 92691 Nil.JC NOTICE P1Cm10Ul•UllNHI NAM9 ITATWMINT Tl\e IOllOWlng pe<IOnt are ClolnQ bulM*t ... A & 0 ELECTRIC INC .. 1152 Pelfcan Plec:1, Co1ta Mtu, C A 92828 011.e&RT..SCHOEN8AUM, 111&2 Pelican Placa, Co•ta Men, C A 11~828. AOA 8 6CtiOEN8AUM, 1152 Pellc1n Pl1ca Co111 "4H1. C A 92126 Tllta l>ul lnffl II conducted by I COrPOtalion A&O ELECTRIC INC Ollberl Schoonbaum, Pretldanl NIUC NOTICE llK:TmOUllUltNIH NAMI ITATl•NT T 111 lollow1nu pereon I• dot no bUllllOll U. VICTOR P~TJOHS, 1103 Wllnvt SllMI, Tutllll, 0A tHIO. VICTO,_ L•VA .. PlllAION, 1103 W1lnu1, Tuettn. OA t2MO. Tllll butlneae 11 oonduoted by Ill' lnOIYldUal. Vietor UIV•r Pet9flOll fNI 1t•*'*1t .... lllocl '#Ith Ille County Cieri! of Orange Counly 0t1 March 31. 11182 ,,.... Publllhod Ora1191 Cout o.lly PllOI, Ap<ll 15. 22. 29, Maye, 11182. 1702-82 Nit.IC NOTICE WHl>o lndutlrlM H. PetrlCk Ayres. Vici Pretldetll This a111emont wH flied with the County Clertt of O.anoe Coun1y on April 27, 1982 '119210 Put>llslled Orano.a Coesl Diily PllOt. April 29, May ll. 13, 20. 1982 Scott Nelaon Lokken, 28052 Ram111 Court El loro California 92630 Dennis Jean Heeth. 13543 B<"u;h S11ee1 Ce•rolol C.a1o101n11l 90701 llltl bustnell II Cc>ndUC:led l>y I general pa11ner1111p PatrlCk LM Tam1n Thlt Slltomont Wll lllec:t Wlfl'I tilt Coon1y Ckl<I. of Orange County on April 27 1982 '119212 Pubhshad Orange Co111 Dell~ PtlOI, April 29. Mty I '3. 20, 1912 1112•·82 Ml.IC NOTICE ...... ~ICTTTIOUa 9Ul*ISI NAMI ITATSMINT l ha 1o11ow1no person• are dotng bUSl'1eU H SANTIS a COMPANY, SOO Newport Center Drive. Suite 700. NewPO<I Beech, CA 92860 AWARD-WINNER -Huntington Beach resi- dent Camille A. Gaulin of the Aerospace Corp. has earned an Invent.or's Award for developing resin compounds which help prevent hazar- do us fibers from being released through in- cineration of carbon-tiber reinforced resin materials. Gaulin said the released fibers can damage e lectrical equipment. 1930-1<' Th•• s1111men1 was flied with Ille coun1y Clerk ot Ort11Q8 County on ,1Cmt0ua •UltN€1• Aprol 27 1982 NAME ITATUlllNT F111117 lhe tollowong per1on It C101ng flCTrTIOUI IMlllNEll Pu1>1os11ed Orange Co111t Dally ou11neu u NAM£ ITATIMINT Pllol Apul 29. May 6 13. 20. 1982 SOLAR TRON ENGINEERING, ""-IC NOTICE CURTIS 0 BARNES, 500 Naw- potl Center Drive Surll 700 New- porl 8"ch, CA 92660 S ANORA M BARNES, SOO Newport Canler Drive. Suite 700, Newport Beecl'I. CA 112860. Whiting figure gets jail Tiie 1011ow1ng p~...ans are e101ng t937-82 508'' Jasmine Aven~. C0<ona Oel butlness es Mer. Celllornta 92825 MEDICAL RESEARCH FUN· l't&.IC NOTICE Mark GarC11n11 Gordon. 501'A DING ASSOCIATES. 4920 Campus Jumrne Avenue, Corone def/Mar, Curtla 0 Bernes Th11 t1a1ament w11 flied with 11141 County Clef'll of O.anga County on Aprll 13. 1982 Financier Rogers also fined in bankruptcy Fraud case Drive. Newporl BHcll, Calllornll SuttlUOfll COU9n Of THE Cahlotnla 92625 92e60 STATI Of CAU'OMMA Tllltl bullneu •• condUCled t>y Ill Investors An1lyt11. Inc:. 1 He-COUNTY OF °"ANGE lndr\'IOual veda corp0<alion. 18 Va119y View, NO. A·'11DD Mark 0 Gordon IMne, CtNlornla 927t5 ~TO IHOW CAUU Tlllt 11a1-I WU Ned with the Tll1s 1>ua1nes1 11 con0vc1ocl by a • (CC, hctMfl 1m) County Clofk of Orenoe County on corPO<ation IN THI MATTI .. O' 1HI A'· AprM 27, 1982 lnY011or1 Analytla, lnC: f'UCATION OP Al.IMO NDROZA '1eaot Charles A Polley, l'Ol'I CHANG( OF NAME. Publltlled Orange Cont Dally Pret>Oenl WHEREAS, ALFRED PEDROZA. Piiot, "°'" 29, May I . 13. 20. 1982 Tiits Slilemenl WU ll40d wllh the pehllOn«. has fllocl 1 peCltlon wfl!I-----------1-~---2 County Clel'll of 0.ange ~ly on lhe Cler~ of 1111s Coull for en or- •.•AprH 27. 1982 der cl'lenglng petitioner's name '1t7182 Pub~lhed Orange Coast Deily PllOI. Ac>fll IS. 22. 29. May I . 1942 1709-82 l't&.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI 9UltNIH NAMI ITATIM«NT The lot10w1ng poreont ere oa1n9 bUtinets 111 :• • F11t11t from ALFRED PEDROZA 10 ALFA· Pul>hshed Orenge Co11t Dally ED COLE SHREDDERS 234 Proapect Newport Beach. Cellfornla 92663 NOTICI OP TMISTU'S SALR Stephen R Tully, a C1lllornie T.I . No. Sat90 corpor111on. 234 Prospec1, Newport • Pttol, Aptll 29. M1y 8, 13, 20, 1942 IT IS'SO ORDERED that all per- :, 11182-82 1on1 tnterHted In Ill• above- • Ofllltted man• ~ bolot• 11\tt • DIDIJC Ml\TU'C Court at 10'30. on Jul'9 II, 1912, In NOTK;E 18 HERE.BY GIVEN. thal 8Mch. Cetolorn<a 92683 The former o wner o f the Whiting Ranch near El Toro has been given a six-month jail 1ent- ence and fined $20,000 on char- ges of bankruptcy fraud and con.a piracy. U.S. District Court Judge Wil- liam Byrne Jr. a lso ordered fi- nancier Kent Rogers to perform 300 hours of community service a8 part of being put on probation for five years. Byrne, during a non-jury trial in January, had found Rogers guilty of six counta of bankrupt- cy fraud and other charges a ri- sing from his alleged attempts to conceal his owne rs hip of the Whiting Ranch property while his Global Western Deve lopment Corp. prepared to e nte r bank- ruptcy proceedings. The 2,800-acre ranch is located near El Toro. • Rogers was convict.ed of ille- gally trans ferring title of the ranch to another of his f1nns. Also sentenced by Judge Byr- ne Monday in Los Angeles was attorn~y Jacob Peilt.e, a business associate . He was convicted on similar charges and sentenced to two months of ;ail time and fined $5.000. He. too, must put m 300 hours of community serv1ce work as part of h lS 5-year' probation. • •' n.vL nu ~ tl)e courtroom of Department No 3, •' ------------11 700 Civic Confer Drive. Santa flCTrTIOUI •UtlNEH. An•. Callfom11. and •!low CIUM, II eny. why the pehUon fOt change of name tho\11<1 not Ile granled. on Wedne1day, M1y 12. 1982. •• Ann M Phllllp1, 2<M~ Anllt>es 9 00 o'doc;$< • m of aakl day. 11'1 th« Newpor1 BeKh. Ca111ornoa 112663 • room set 111de lor conducting This ovsinesa " conoucteo t>y a TrutlM'S Sales within the off1cia ol 09ftefal ptr1nefsl\lp REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SER· S1epnen R Tully VICE . located •• 2020 North Thll 118temenl WH fll9d Wllh Ille Coast women Will Baja air race NAME STA TtMENT 1he following person is doing business es COAST AUT,O.RENTAl:. INC JS tO Irvine Avanue, Newport !• e.ac11. Ca111orn1a 112860 •• Mike Nevai. 224• Port Carhsla, •• Newport Beach. Calrforma 92680 ;, This 1>u11ness 1s conducted by a •• corporetlon .: Coasl ~UIO R1n1111 Inc •• Mike Naval, :! Presldenl ~ Th11 11a1emen1 wu flied ""'" Ille IT IS FURTHE~ ORDERED 11111 e copy of 11115 Otdet to Sl'IOw cause t>e pUOhshed 1n the Oalfy Pilot a ,__ speper ot generll arc:ulalion pt1n1- ee1 1n Orenge county. <..a1ororn1a once • week for lour successive weeks prior to the dale sel for hMrlng, on the pelloon DATED April 27. 1982 Bruce W Sumner Jud91 of Ille Suc>«IOt Court OEUU> W. NEWHOUSE BroedW•y. Suite 2Cle, In Ille City ot Couoty Clerk of Ore1191 County on s 1nta Afla. cooniy or Or•nr. State Ac>f•I 1. 1982 LA PAZ, Mexico (AP) -A 01 Ca1r1orn1a. REAL ESTAT SECU· F11N10 veteran woman pilot from Tor- R1T1ES SERVICE • Clllofornl• cor-Published Oranoe Cout Delly Pi· ranee and her C""-pilot have won porauon, as duly appointed TrvslM lot. Apttl t5. 22 29 Mey 8 1982 ,.,.. un<1erandpu1suantto the~of 1875-82 $3,000 firs t prize in the All· sale con•eueo •n •hat ea<tern Deed ------------Women 's Baj'a California A ir or Trusl e.cecu1eo t>y J111T1es Russell PU8UC NOTICE Kearl and Bart>ara Gey Kearl. Hua· ------------Race. 1>ane1 and Wile. n 1oln1 •enants. ~TITIOU• au11 .. 11 Thirty-one planes began the Signd Ramelli of Seal Beach, in first with their Beechcraft Bo- nanza A-36. Although the pilot fle w military craft in World War Il, it was her co-pilot's first rur race. 1ecorded Septemt>er 4, 1981, 1n NA• ITATl:M«NT Book 14209 ot 0 111c111 Recore11 01 The following por•on• ere doing 1,000-mile race last Friday with In the last of the races spon- 11111 Coun1y 11 page 577. Recor-11u51ness u . overnight stops in San Fe lipe. sore d by the Baja California Cler 1 1natrume111 No 6902. t>y RAUL DESIGNS. 1638 Iowa L oret o and Cabo San Lucas. Touris t Departme nt in 1979, Ann Linder . also of S he rman Oaks. Dodie Gann o( Fnday Harbor, Wash , who was second in 1979, placed that way again w ith co- pilot llovene Potter of Federal Way, Wash . T hey received $2,-. 000. •• Coul>ly Clair. of Orenge CQunty on •.:Aprl 27. 1982 • f11S211 27001 La PU "°8d, No. -......._.V ..... CA t2111 (714) 111-41111 Pu1>11111ed Orange Co11t Diiiy Piiot. Ac>fN 29, Mey 8, 13, 20, 11111'.l 1923-82 reHon of a t>reach or deleull or• s1ree1 No C COiia M9N. Cat<l0t-""'--failed •~ finish' . payment or pertormance of 111e ,... 9262ii ~ 1u-"" Louise Martin-Vegue of Sherm-The first three to hrush were 01>flgat1ons -=ured theret>y. onclu Raul Garcia 1638 1owa Street The h a ndicapped time an-an Oaks finished first S he was separated by only .096 of a see-Publeslled Oranae Coast Delly Pilot Aprtl 29. M.iy 6 13 20. 1982 11129-82 Nl.IC NOTICE FtCTITIOUt 9UIMH NAME ITATl•NT ITATHllNT (HJ W""DAAWAL The following peraons .,.. doing nM>ll butlnett 11· PA~i.ltW OP€"ATINO MARKA TREX. 22281 Camlntto UNOIR Eaoot>edo. leguna Hiiia. CA 92653. FICTIT10Ua .,._,, ...._ MELVIN A WHETSTINE. 22281 The lollowlng por1on llH wtth· C•mfnlto Escobedo. Lagun1 Hiiia. drawn u a gen9rll ~,_ lrOm the CA 92653 partnership oparetlng under the PHYLLIS R WHETSTINE, f1 CltllOUI Oualneu name of 22281 C1m1n1to EICOOedo. Laguna ORANGE COAST FUNDING at 191 Hlb. CA 92853 E 18th S1reet. Co111 Mell, Call- Tlllt bu11ne•• IS conducted t>y a IOtntB 9U27 ljmlted p111nort1119 The llcilllooa t>uslnest name at• $• Melllln A Wlletsllne 1emen1 tor Ille par1nor1111p was flied Phylllt R Wllelsllnf' on September 4, 1911 1n Ille Counly • fh1t slelemont wu hied wilh Ille ol Orenge FILE NO F 170229. f !! County Clerk ol Orange County on Full Name and Adel•ess of Ille Aprll 27. 1982 Petson Wllhdr1W1no F111111 Franll Kevin McDonald. 242 I P.ubflShed Orange Coasl Dally 16111 Street Aparlmenl 15. Newport P1lo1. Aprtl 29, May 6, 1:1. 20, 1982 Beach. Cailf0tnoa 92663 1938-82 Frank K McDonald ~ ~ --------~ • MLIC NOTICE · Published Orange Coast Delly PtlOI AP"I 29, May 6, 13 20. 1982 1928-82. ! " ACmioua tualNEH ~ NAME ITATOIENT MLIC NOTICE ~ Tiie tooowtng persons are doing bulineu 11 flCTmoua 1u11HEaa ~ PACIFIC FINE ART, 2600 EHi NAME ITATUIENT ,Coast Highway. No •6. Corona del The following perton 11 doing t M11. Calllornla 9282S 1>u11ness as 'lo J1mas Certet Tutwiler, 2600 , M 1 & A OESIGNI OEVEL· ~·Ent CoHt HIQhway, No 46, Co-OPMENT 250 Newport Cenler " rona Clel M•r. Ct11lornla 9262S Ort•P P 0 Bo• 2392 Newpor1 t Miclleel Lewrence Brennon &!Jch Caltlbfnla 926&3 2800 EHi Coaal Hlgflway, C0ton1 M~llMI l..,.lllar. 2237-B Rut- "' -del Mar. Calllorn11 92625 s. Cosla Mola, Camornla 92827 ~ T1111 bu11net1 11 conelucllld by a Thrs butineM It eonduc:10CI by an t limited pennershlp. lndMOUal. J Certar Tutwiler Mlchaol T..,.ikar This S11temon1 wu flied With Ille 1 This 11atement wu flleel with Ille t' County Clel'k of Orenge County on County Glortl of O.lr\Qe Counly on ~ AprU 27, 1982 ~ April 27, 1982 :• F111111 F1111to .-Pu1>1t1hed Orenga Cont Dall> Published Orange Cont Dally ~ Pllol, Aprll 29, M~y 8, 13. 20. 1982 PllOI, April 211, May 8. 13 20, 1982 "fl. 1932·82 I 1860-82 $. ~ t-, , 'i ~ .>- ·PUBLIC HEARINGS will be held at WOOOUll> EUMDflARY SCHOOl 2025 Glrden Lant, COSTA flESA on Mly 10, 1912, .. M Ill.Tl rt1POSE ROC*. AT 7:30 P .M. **** llllE&H D.ODTMY SCHOOl 220 East 2lf d Street COSTA WSA on Mly 12, 1912, .. M lllllt NtPOSl IOtll, AT 7:30 PJl FOi T1I emzm MMSOIY CCII I Ill TO •caE Mt.IC M:C08EeATIOIS If&.,_ POSS8t.t MTDllM1tlm. NEwroRr -MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT '-40r•c....-r,. _.n -.,&. ita ltl1 U ding 11111 breach or e1e1iu1t. Nota No c . CoS111 Meu. c 111tornia n ounced Tuesday put Dolores third this time in her Beechcraft ond. handicapped over three of WlllCh _, reeoreled January 19, 92826 1982. u Recoraor·1 1n11rument No Jim Newes. t8311owa s1ree1 Reed o f Torrance and co-pilot Sierra B-24-R with co-pilot J o days. 82-021721, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC No C. Cotla Mesa, C1l1torn1a 1--------------------------------------------------AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO-92m DER ,OR CASH. lewful money ot Thit t>uS1ness 11 conducteo t>y a the United Sta!H or a caahler 1 general partnortnip ~ drawn on 1 11ate or n.Oonao Raul G111Cla IMIMl. •ital• or loc>oral Ctedlt unlOll fhrt statement waa llled Wtth 11'11 or a 1tate or lederel uv1ng1 anel Couoly Cl«I. ol Ora1191 County on ioan auociatlon dom~lled In tllll Apt1I 13 1982 state. alt payable al the time of tale all rigllt. tlUe Ind lnterMt held by It •• Truatee. In 11111 real property ai. tuale In Mid County Ind Stale, ~ ICrtl>OCI U tOltows •'f:alllblt A' Thal portion Of IOI II o f tht Newport Heighll 1ract a racordocl In l>OOk •• paoa 83 of rnlacellMOOUI map1. 1eGorC11 of Orange County, Stale of Celllornle. described 11 lollows Beg1nn1ng al lhe most norther!) corner ol saod IOI I 8 NICI point elto t>etno 111e eestt!(ty corner of tr8CI no 2150 as Shown on 1 map racordocl 1n t>ook 58 page 18 of mla<:ell•· neoue maps record• of Orange County. Slate Of Callfornl~ tllenee south 50 degr-Ot' •3" -t 83.32 teet 10 Ille mosl n0ttherly corner of Ir act no 1583. H thown on • "'9P ra,oreleel In book •&. page 41 of m1sce111naou1 mepa, rec:ord1 ol Oranoe Couroty. Siii• of Caltfomla, 111enc• south •O Cleorfft oo· 27" weal 196.72 fMI along tile norlll--•ly line of uld tract to the true point of t>eQinnlng, 11\enQe nonll 50 degrHe 00' 00" west 0 32 IHI, thence south •O clegrffa oo· 18' wu1 103 49 fee\.10 the 1outll- -lerty line Of UJd IOI 18. tllenQe toUlll 50 degrees 00 00" HSI 48.31 feet lllOflO said aoulhwetterty line 10 Ille most weaterly corner of H id 1rac1 no 1583, lllence north •O de· or-oo· 2r· ea11 103 49 reet llOnQ the northwesterly llne of tald tr.ct to the uue P01nt of beginning Thi street llddrest 0< other com. mon desognetlon of the real pro- perly aa llereln11>ove descr11>.a It purporled 10 be 2330 -15th Streat. Nawpon Beach, C1lllorn11. Th• under11onee1 he1eby di•· cll1m1 all Hablllly IO< eny lnco<ract- neta 1n MIO ttreet adclr ... or otl'lor common deeignatlon S11e1 tel• wMI b• mad• wllhoul wuranty. e.aprHI or Implied. r•· gardlno llU•. pouH1lon, or •n· cumbrancoa. 10 Mllafy tlle prlnclpat belance ot the Nole or other obll· g111011 secured by Hid Deed of fruit. wilh 1nterHI and oll\of IUl\"lt U prOVldod llleUlln, 1)1111 lldvWlcet. 11 1ny undet lhe term• lhefeof end 1n1eres1ontueh1e1vancoe. end ptue feet, Chatges 11\d UQllll-of Ille T rullee and of Ille tru4'11 crHled by UICI Oeed of Trull, The 10111 11mount of aaid ot>llg1llon, lneludlflO rauonabfy Mllmlled f-. ctiargw Ind axpen-Of the Trutt•. at llle time of lnlllal publlc1tlon o f llllt Notice. It $39, IM 08 Oiied April 20. 1942 Rt.\L ESTATf SECURITIES SIRVICE. • CaHfornla oo<por•llon. 11 Truet91, (SEAL) O. J Morger. lta Praeldlnl 2020 North 8toaowty suii. 208 hnlJ Me. CA t210I (714I MMft0 PuOlfalled Ofll)9e COltt otlly Piiot, AprM 22, 21. Mey I , 1tn, ll'tt-82 ,181,. Put>Hlhed Ora1191 Coall Dally Pl- lol, Apttl 15 22. 29. May 6, 1982 1854-82, P\&IC NOOCE •ICTIT'IOUS IMl'*IH N.Am ITAJ'l•NT The follOWlnQ person• ere dotng butinet• u . THE TIN LIUIE, 7S2 St Clair. ~II Moaa. California 92626 Dof1I L Boenm, 8192 Celltornla StrMI No. 21. Buena Park. Cald0t· nl8 92821 Alvin F. Boef\m, 1192 California Street. No. 21 . Buen• Perk. C.Ntor- n11112621 Gene H FeullllCk. 3081 Yukon Streel. Cotta MeH. Celllornle 92828 Tiits butlnosa la condue1ed by 1 generll partnorthlp 0 L 8oorvn Thll llalemenl wu lfl9d willl Ille Couoty Clerk of 0r.,. County on April 13. 1982 '181200 Puoll!lhed Oranoe Coaat Dally Pl-1<>' Apnl t5 22. 29. May 6. 1942 1157-82 PlllUC NOTICE ITATWMINT Of WITHDAAWAl fflOM PARTNlfl .... ONi.ATINO u,tO«i. FtCTIT'IOUI •U .... HNAMI Tiie foflowino paraon hH with· e111wn 11 e gonoret p1r1ner from ,,.,. per tnarslllp operating under 1ha toc111iou1 buslneu narna of CHAR· LES PRIN TING COMPANY, 830 WHI 19th StrHt, Co•ll Men, Cellfomla 92627 Tiit fletltloUI buslnesa name 111· 1-1 for the pertnerlhlp wu filed on December 30. 19111 111 the County of Orange full Nem• and AddrHt of the Ptreon Wlll'ldrawlng. CRAIG Wfl.· LIAM BATLEY,., Monteclto Off\11, Coron• del Mar. Cllifornla 92925 ~Cr ... W ... ltoy ,,,..,. Pu1>111hod Or•nge Coaat Delly Pio lol AprM 15. 22. 29. May e. 111112 1658-42 ' Nil.IC NOTIC£ lSenator <T • turns on charm WASHlNGTON (AP) -=-..Anrut...Goraucb, bead of the El')vironmental Pro tection Agency, ha1 h er de tractora among Capitol Hill Democrats, but has at leaat one chl- valrowi admirer. S e n . William Prox- mire, D-Wis .. confron- iing Mra. Gorsuch at a Sen a te Appropriations s ubcommittee hearing, could not contain his en- thuaiasm at his first meeting with the ad- ministrator. To the groans of femi- nists in the audie nce, Proxmire told Mrs. Gor- such tha t sh~ reminded him o'f "kind of a young Suzanne Pleshette," and declared: "I'm smitten." Mrs. Gorsuch thanked him for the compliment and gamely suggeste d t hat the h earing s top there. BACK IN? -Former Iran hostage Kathryn Koob says she would like to serve in a for- eign country again. She's currently wor- king for the U.S. In- ternational Communi- cation Agency. 3 20 laid off FOWLER (AP) -The large$t employer in this southern Fresno County community, S perry New Holland, will lay off 320 workers when it closes. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, May 8, 1982 They're out for blood Red Cross bloodmobiles due on coast ~ R.s Q'09 will conduct eeveral baoodmobUel alonl the Ora.nae Cout tbta month. Their tlmet ana plac:e1 are: -Todayt.f.rom 2:45 to 7:80 p.m. at the Crown valley Recreation Center, 29701 Crown Valley Parkway, La· -.ma Nt1Q41l:-ForaJ>polntmenU call 831-7264. -Saturday. from 9:45 a.m. to 2:30 p.m ., at the Family J'itnea Center, '14H Edln1er Ave., HunUn1ton Beach. For appolntmenll call 847-7800. -May 12, from 9:45 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., at J .C. Penney Co .. 7777 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. For ap- pointments call 892-7771 , exteusion 264. -May 16, from 9:45 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., at the Modified Motorcylcle >..- sociatlon, 903 El Camino Real, San Clemente. For appointment• call 492-5816. -May 19, from 2:45 to 7:30 p.m .. at St. Simon & Jude Catholic Church, 20400 Magnolia Ave., Huntington Beac h . For appointments call 835-5381. -May 20, from 1:46 to 6:30 p.m., at the Red Cross South County Service Center, 27324 Camino Capistrano, Laguna Niguel. For appointments call 835-5381 or 831-6582. -May 22, from 8:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m ., at Christ Lutheran Church, 760 V ictoria S t., Co1ta Meaa. For ap- pointments call 836-6381. Al.lo that day from 9:45 a .m . to 2:30 p .m . at Golden Weat College, 16744 Golden Weit, Huntington Beach . For ap- pointments call 898-3547. -May 24, from 2:16 to 7 p.m.., at St Joachim Cathottc 1:hurch, 1984 Or- ange Ave., Costa Mesa. For appolnt- menta call 836-5381. -May 26, from 2:45 to 7:30 p.m. at Three Arch Bay, South J..aiuna. For· appointments call 499-4465. Al9o that day from 1:15 to 6 p.in. at K-Mart, 550 Camino de Estrella, San Clemente. For appointments call 496-7811 or 835-5381. Donors a1ao mal_ give blood at the Orange County Qpmmunlty Blood Center, 600 Parkcenter Drive, Santa Ana. Hours are 8 :30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays and Thundays, 8:30 p a.m. to 3:30 p.m . Tuesdays, Wednesday• and Fridays, and Saturday• and holi- days from 9 a .m. to 1:30 p.m. Anyone in good health, weighing at least 100 pounds, between the ages ol 17 and 66 is eligible to donate. ___ .I Monster backed MONT PELIER, Vt. (AP~ -A res- olution l'alling for the protection of "Champ." the elusive Lake Cham- plain monster, has won overwhelminsz approval in the Vermont House.· trotters The Walking lady En1oy,1ouring and shopping 1n true comfort Bone, Camel or Navy Calf All w11h crepe sole 4A 3A 2A A I I to 10 f le l s.tl SYt te t~ HI ~· ~~~SHOES 99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551 ingvalues. 8 7 IGHT ELYI ---~:;:!J.. -----1 ...., -~-i ·-' I With The University Diet, you're under constant supervision of physicians and weight-loss specialists to pro~ your health. !-$L99=1. i~99=. ·~7A9F! 0 Gooo 101 tttree pieces ol 1u1cy golden I Goo<! tor nine pieces ol 1u1cy golden I Reoeem 11115 coupon tor a carry Pack 0 o. brown Kentucky Fned Ctt1cken plus brown l\en1ucky Fried Chicken with •• ID.lOeo w•lll lilteen pieces 01 iu•cy ~ The UniwNily l.)iet is a protein-sparing, modifil"d fast that is clinically proven and availahll• only through licensed mt'<.I· ical offict•s. Prescriplion supplement.<; supply your hod_v'c; nutritional needs while unwanted fat ,.., bumt'd off. A Complete Program. UnJike other pro· ~'Tilms. The Univt'rsity Diet includes a pre· udmission physical. preliminary kctogcnic diet. fasling prc:x-edure, prescription supple- rrn:nL'>. regular lab tests. EKG's, refeeding. llC'h~oral coun~ling and maintenance. Rapid Results. You can lose an average of ~O pounds per month (•very month until your l\'ach your goal. Simple and Effective. You make no <k>eisions aooul food -only t he commit· mcnt LO follow our program and sucCcecl. Exclusive Refeeding and Maintenance. You are re-introduced to food in a gradual 4-step process and taught how t.o keep weight off. Individual Counseling. Behavior modifi · cation and nutritionaJ guidance arc offered to all palients by experts. I H you need to lose 20 pounds or more, call our phone counselors for an appoint· mentor information. They're former patients. They understand. You ·u find we cost less due to our size and experience. Your insurance may cover it. And after you complete The University Diet. free counselinl( 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· ries welcome. MasterCard and Visa Accepted 1 'II '"II< ol 11 , • .,. • I 'I: I\ Vlt"ll " ThE lJNNERSITY DIE1:M Ill \LI II ('\HI \1 \'\; \l.L'.\11 :v1 "I WHEN '10U'RE READY TO LOSE WEIGHT. 5 single servings of cole slaw mashed I tour rolls. a large cole slaw a large I goioen Drown l(entucky frieo Chicken O u potatoes and gravy ano a rou mashed pota1oes ano a meo1um gravy z~ l""'' 1"'0 otters Of• purcnne Couoon """" I c I l m.1 1 .. 0 Ollt•S oer ou•t114St C.Olioon gooo I ,,...... l •m•I lwo Ollt•s Of' Pu•tll4St OllPOn 9000 oniv IOI comO<tlilllOI' ... n.ie O•" o<Ot <\ only lo< como-111110., w1111c101•• o<oer\ only tor com0oiu1o0., "'"ltl~rk 0<011s Cuslome• Plr\ ••' •ISP'•UD c urn ,,, Cus10tntr p.iys ,11 aopiiuDlt »Its ta• Customer oay\ 111 •PO'•UD't s11ts 111 Offer expires May 16, 1982 I I oner up11es May 16. 1962 I Oller e>tp11es May 16. 1962 Prius rnay vary " P••l1c1p.i1on9 1ou1oons Pttcu m.iv ,;iry ,, oa•llC•PillnQ ~•loons CouOOl' gooo only '" Sou1ne1n I Protn may •lfy •I oa•l•c•oal!ng 10Ca1o0ns I Couoon gooo on1y '" Soutnern ca11f0<l111 wnere I c;,htorn,. wlltrt y0u -lr>e mem COllPO" QOOCI oniv on Soutne•n Cahl0<n11 wr>e•t you stt tne memoe1sn10 su1 o• Int Ktnh.te•y Ot•sn•o sul o1111e (t nluOy TOii see Ille mtmoe1sn10 sul ot ll•t 1ten1uoy froeo Cn.t•tn Assot,.loon froeo Cllt(U n Associ•t.on 9 FrttG Chtei<tn Assoc~lton 9 ---• --COUPON -• -----~ntucky Fried Chick~ Remember Mother and we'll d-0 the rest. JU8t a few suggestiol&8 ••• Umdy • F/IJWtm. • EnJ(raved c;,,-sta/ .<;wmtm1Y: HuwJ.<.:rujtttl jera:lry • Oriental UJ.w~ • v"1«/JIY8 PlaU:Nand P,11"Ct!,/ain.11 •Hand-ltJinl«l f..~l'I • RelaxinJ( Facial owl Mas.W4J.,I(! • Ut/riJUs Fmh F111il HasktL\ • &uliful VlfJ/Jer arid Hmi;,s Cappucdn1J cups. '/~arr mt/y fJ hand/ul ti/ 1118 neany ik-m.~ lo cW~M/rflm at .<;tMlh VltL\l /1ulti Vil"'1ft. 1d w1" 'lftl'lily awl '1Mvntina OhN /ir.i,. South Coast Plaza Village Located at Sunflower & Bear StrHtl Santa Ana, CA 92704 • (714) 751-8&95 ..... L .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, Maye, 1982 HONORED -Su- prtimc Court JuRticc Sandra Duy O'Omnor w as a w n r d t• d t h c nat!onnJ G1mbt•l Phl- ladelphin Award tor uutstanding ach1ev-c- ment. YOUR CLOSE-BY ISLAND Daily Cruises from San Pedro and Long Beach spacious 700-passeriger. triple-decked vessels GO NOW!. C'ATAUHA CAtltscS Reservationa, information. 213· 775-6111, 213-832-4521 714-527 · 7111 @T!O\~ON Low Cost Vaccination Clinic Dogs· Cats ANIMAL 01$£A1£ PREVENTION 12131 70.1187 Vaccinations Dog · Cat RabiH $3.95 Distemper $4.50 Parvo $S.OO Dog 5 in I $7.00 Cot 3 in 1 $5.00 2 LOCATIONS SATURDAY, MAY 8 9 am to 12 noon 2:30 to 5:30 pm AT AT Co~ro Me>0 Shopping c.,,,,,. Loguno Hill• SllC>f>pt1>9 Center 171!i & Orot>ge ?3000 Bloc~ of Rockfoefd Blvd ~to Me10. Co. El Toro ,..,..,. •· ··~ 1.;, Velennarlan Always PteHnl f'l,.o,e 0og, on leo\hes. Cat\ 1n corrie" ( .1 1' 111 1111111 i11••l1111 Bt'adr . ,... lln1•11111• ~lrarin~ l'ropn•wtl I ~t· I lt•nrirtl! 011 \1.1~ Ill .rt 7:00 p .111 .. 1<1111111 H II. Cit~ llall. 1 lw ( ii\ \d111111 i~t ralor ''ill l111lrl a B1•H·111w :'11:11 i11 :! l'r11p11 ... 1•d I ., .. ll1'ari11;!. \II 1 II i1f•11 ... (r-... p1·1·i,1ll ~ "l'J1in1 1·i I i1y11..;) art• i11vill'd lo al11·11d af11l pro\id1· llH' Cit~ \rl1111111 ... t1 alor \\illi \Hill('fl and or;1l 1·11111- 11u-11l~ orr l'"~~il1lt-11s1•,.. tor S I Jl:!:!,700 of UP\1 ·111w !'liari11;! 1'1111111' 1·,111·1·l1·d 11~ lht> 1·i1~ duri11;! it)O 19H2/H:s l1!-1·al ~··ar. Cit) llall i~ lrn·;rlt-d al :WOO Main Strf'd in I l1111t i11:.:to11 Hf·ad1. ()1w.;t io11s should tit' dirc·d1•d lo tlw P11l1li1· l11forr11ation OITi1·1· (i I ·i) 3J(,.:;:; I I. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE I • NA•M&50 NOTICI INYITINO B D DEPARTMENT OF Notice la hereby given that the TRANSPORTATION 8oerd or Tru•t-or the Huntington Beach City School Dl 5trlct or NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS ~ ,.._.. c I Wiii Sealed ptopoa&ll wlfl be received .,,ange """nty all ornla, rec-at the Department or Tt1n1porla· elw 1eateo bids up to 2:00 p.m. oo the t9th day or Mey l982. at rhe lion. 120 South Spring Street. ottlce of Hid School District, loca-Room tooo. Loa Angeles. Calllornla 1 90012 until 2 o'Clock pm on May ted at 3~ 14th Street Hun11ng1on 20, t 982 at Wl11ch lime they wlll be &eecn. Cttlllornla, at Which time Hid publ1<:ly OPf!ned and read In Room 2 llld• will btt publicly opened and ill said address. for cons1ruc11on on reed ror· SCHOOL a OFFICL SUPPUl!8 S1ate highway on accordance wllh AM bid• are to be In 11ccordance 1h11 speclflcellons the<elor. to which With CondllloM, lnstruct•ona. and ~.,:;1a1 reletence 11 made, as lol- Specillcerlon•. which are now on file Orange Counly. in Newport In the office of lhe Purchaalng Agent of Hid School 0111rlct, 73S· 14th Beuctl. Costa Mesa, Santa Ana. Street, Huntington ee11ch. Calllor-Tustin. Orange and Anaheim. a1 /Ill, 926.48. various locauons from Finley Ave- No bidder may withdrew hla bid nue t o Roule 9 1 (07 -0ra-5$· tor 8 period of rorty.frve (45) dllY• O 0117 8). overhead and roedllde after the dtte eet for the opening sign p11net1 to be modified. lf*eot Bids are required for the entire The Board ol TrulleH ol the work deK¥ibed herein. Huntington Beaeh City School 01· Plans, ac>eefllcet1ot11. end propo. f!tlct ,...,_the t19ht to reject any sal form• lor bidding lhla ptojecr or 111 bide, and not nec:Hnrlly ac-can only be obtained at the De· upt t,,. lowul bid, end to waive partment of Trtneportellon. P11n1 inY lnfOfmallty or trr&Qvlattry In any and Bid Document a, Room 39, ~ rec.IVtd Transportation Bulldlng, 1120 N ~ 9MOf1 CltJ &1tee1, P.O Box t499. S..:ramento, tcfloofDletrlct Cat1f orn11 95807 (phone of Onflfe COUftty • 918-445-3326). end may be IMtl at too liOftd the abOve olllte and at the Offlc;ae l'wcm.lfw Agent of thll Dl1trlct Dlrectore ol Tren1-...-1 portellon et Loi AngelH, Sem Publithld Ofanoe Cout Dairy Pl-Frenctsco. •od lhe dltrrlct In whk:tl ._. M 8 13 1982 the WOfll II tltulled. '"" ay • • 2031-82 Th• IUCGHllUI bidder lhlll lur· nlllh • payment bond and • j>ertor- 1'\8.IC NOTICE m~';:~,0 s.c11on ms ot the FICTITIOUS BUllNl!88 Let>or Code, the general prevalUng NAMI ST A TfMl!NT rate ol Wegel In the county In which The l.ollowlng pef.Ons ere doing the work le to be dona hH llHn tlueln.. .. dllermtneo by the Director 01 the " I L I. A M I M 0 s A "' p A RT Oepenment 0 lnduetrtal Retetlooe. MENTS, 3023 W .. t Ball Aoad. ThHI wege ratt• IP,PHr In the ;n111etm CA 1128CM. Dap111ment Of Trllllll)Ort1tton pu· A & 0M PROPl!R?IES, 15<18 t bllO•tlOll tnlllltd OIMtel PreYllllng Ollemic..i l.ttlt, .. unllngton ltttcll, Wege 11111 ... OlllCI M1rch, 1112. QI< 92644 fuMI tfftctlv• w1ge ret .. whlc:h This tiu.w-11 ~led try • h•v• l>eM prtldetermlnect 111\G are fllt*ll p.,lnf(tlllp: on Ill• w11h tht 01p1rtm1nt of Alttl 011\W. tndu1trl1t "-lit.Ion• 1rt rlftttn~. <Hntrll P9'1ntr bVt not ptlnltO In Mid f)llblleltlon. Tl!la 1tatemtm WU llltd .ith the DEPARTMENT OF County Cterll o( Oranot County on TRANSPORTATION Al>t" 27, t982 QaPuty OlteCIOI' •1•17' Protect ~I 11\0 Pulllllhld Or1og• COHt Ditty ' Corielructlon ""°'· AclfM a . M~ e.. 13, 20, 1M2 Publl•hed Orange OoHt Dally 1931·'2 Plot. u11 e, 1a, 11112 te11 .. a• • I\ ' TV violence-kid WASHINGTON (AP) -There 11 "overwhelming" evidence thlilt vio- lence on televlslon leads to aggnmive behavior.by children and teen-agers, a aovemmE'nt study says. • "Both prime lime and weekend children's t.eleviaion al.'e domJnated by action, power and danger. There 1a an average of Cive violent acta per hour on prime time and 18 acta r hour on chlldren's weekend programs," ille National Institute of Mental Health report aaid. The study, "Television and Behav- ior: Ten Years of Scientific Prof'ess and Implications for the Eighties, ' is a follow-up to a widely publiciU!d t972 Surgeon General's r~port on telev,i- '', .. :l\.,.,, \ . I .. , " 'J L--_j I;~~-~ ', I spred it on the house G11aden goes on eiisy. dries qu1cl<ly Durable llat linisn Resists bhslers peeling mildew Easy water clean- up Reg 17 99 ch1rminc 'oh1rm1 ow' Sturdy propane BBO with tank Convernent clean and 15995 portable Self-cteanmg 117 130 Reg 223 95 "do •• h1Y1 w1llp1per1" .. are lroga elrs water- proof'"1? Come In and aee 300~ our enormoua aelecllon ot assorted colors end pauerns. 0 Over 200 books to choose Off from. .. a.Ion violence. Sean Sheehan, senior vice pretldent for public affain of the National >..- socia tlon of Broadcaatera, aaid Wedneaday, "We think the 1lt~tion h.u improved in the put decade, 10 we're somewhat 1keptical about the study." He aaid that the Industry hu taken ate a to 1ereen vlole~ the car- toons andoiher children's ahowa aired Saturda~ mornln,ga. But he acknow- ledged, 'They're atW showing older material that's pretty violent, like the old Warner Brothers cartoons. It's a problem." The report is baaed on a review of several hundred research studies. Among the rtllMl'Ch 1tudJ• cited tn the report we,.. two that found pre- 1Chool children lhowe9 "unwarranted aggre11lve behavior In free play" af· ter heavy televialon viewing of violent programs. In another 1tudy, a 1amplo. of teen- age boys ln London showed they were more likely to engage in "aerious _violence" after watchfng violence an tele on. "Violence on television eeems to be cyclJcal, up a little one year, down a little the next, but the percentage of programs QOntalning violence has re- mained essentially the same over the peat decade," it said. "In general, television, despite the conoerrv of congreaamen and clUiena' 1ro..ap1, remains a violent form of ent.e,...l.nment," thl' report said. 4'The evldenc.-e accumulated In the 1970s seefl\8 overwhelmin'J that tele- viaed vfolence aod aggression are po- aitlvely related in children. "The consensus among most of the research community I.a that violence on televiaion does lead...to _agg.reul.ve-- beha vlor by children and teen-agers who watch the programs. This con - clusion Is based on laboratory experi- ments and on fi eld studle11. Not all childre n bt.'(·Oml' aggrt!ssive, of C.'OUl'Se. • " The report made no recommenda- tions. For all the great direction JOU received from Mom ••• Quality-built director's chair for patio, beach· or backyard. Sturdy, folds flat. Choice of colors. Reg. 29.95. 19•• . Clamp-on umbrella Multiple colors. 311 f antastlcally spredable Exterior spred latex gloss House & Trim paint from Ghdden Goes on w1tn ease Quick drying Also recom-11 •1 mended lor aluminum s1d1ng. Reg. 19.99 GAL d1-fl11 thl IClftl D·Con Ilea kill 6 oz aerosol g1ve5 75 c1 .. y~ of continuous protection Kills c•gg!. Reg 499 349 RIMA'S 'WHILE THEY lASr-' DAILY SPECIALS ••THUR& ONLY: •FRI. ONLY: •SAT. ONLY: •SUN. ONLY: •MON. ONLY: • TUES. ONLY: Sunbeam It~ Iron #10-n Reg. 27.tt ............... 19.88 lunbe•m Hudmbrer Oolct or Almond ,II W3, 3-M, R ... 15.99.............. 13.00 'Super Mu Pro 1300 Hairdryer #0200 R ... 17.19. ... 00 AdclltoMf CMh r"-te 1'om Mfg ................ 13.00 Etcfled 9'•• •ud v .... AHt. •h•pee, Reg. 2.39 ..... 1.98 'terfor Pado .TherMOmeter Reg. 1•.H ...................... 8 .99 . Aral Alert...._. AWfft #8A7'AC R ... 21.19 •• 00 Ad•oMI C.... ftffete from Mtg ............. . IO-ft. ho11 11~ reel ti•• t• 11er1l11 From Black and Decker #8600 Completely portable. hose ii Itel like a ftrelighler't ~~e. 29.99 22•• just breezing around GalaJ1y t 2 osc•llaling fan l\eeps cool air r ircul<Jl•llfJ on (Our hnrne W olh heavy base ,iq<J o;,1f••I, 111111 a?l'iJ A 1799 1 ~· 11(' 1'10 H~·g JI u9 . .... ...... ..... . U.11 16 #<!15 1A Reg 42 99 .................. 31.11 Stanley 25 x 1 rape measure stays r1g1d up 10 7 Power return Bell clip llPL425 Reg 15 49 .· to stay In hot water 30-gellon water heater with energy eavlng temperetu,. shut-otf. Best glau· tined tank llner In lhe Industry. , 11811 ' I I I 1 ' ' ' llllJ Piiat . THOMOAV, MAY e. 1912 TELEVISION BUSINESS ENTERTAINMENT RUNDOWN -Estancia's Jim McCahill finds himaelf caught between third and home during third inning of Wednesday's Sea View League game. CdM catcher Brent Melbon runs McCahill back toward bag where Sea King third C5 C6 C7 Irvine stays a step behind Corona del Mar in Sea View. C2. Dav.is attacked . at trial LOS ANGELES (AP) -A) Davi.I and the Oakland Raiders,• National Football League 11ttor', ney maintains, are perfectly wil. ling to accept their additional $5 million annually from a ne"f television contract, yet oppos+ league rules regarding moving. Patrick Lynch told the jury in a U.S . Di.trict Coul't re-trial of a ntitrust suit brought by the Raiders and the Loa Angele• Coliseum again st the leag.u~1 "You must consider how footoa11 differs from other types of busi- nesses. Can the NFL tum over ita franchise rights to individuals?" ln final a rguments Wednes- day, Lynch maintained that rule 4 .3 in the N FL cons titution, being attacked by the Raiders in their bid to move to Los Angeles; was legal and n ecessary to in- tegrity and consistency. He said Commissioner Pete Rozelle has held throughout 20 years in his office that franchises should not be moved unless they show good cause. "TH E RAIDERS h ave no t shown good cause," Lynch told the jury of s.ix women. The Ratders and the Los An· geles Coliseum had their final chance to address the jury today, then U.S . District Judge Harry Pregerson was to give jurors his final instructions and they were to begm deltberatrons. . - The plaintiffs hold that rule 4.3, requiring that three-fourths of the 28 NFL members approve a team'• changing of location&, ia illegal. Dllr .... .....__,......,K......, baseman Jim Murphy awaits throw. Already on third is Estancia's Steve Nichols. Sea Kings shaded J'.agles, 4-3. Davis, the managing general partner of the Raiders, wants to move his club to the Los Angeles Coliseum, which was vacated in 1980 by the Rams when they moved to Anaheim. Gray hair has its rewards-ask Trager This re-trial has taken 19 days plus three for arguments for at- torneys after the first trial, w hich took 55 days, ended with a hung JUry. LYNCH ATTEMPTED to jus- uf y the testimony of Rozelle that putting an expansion team into Los Angeles would mean more revenue for the othe r league members. By ROGER CAR~N Of the Deity Not atatt Winning has it.a ways of 1uatification for a few strands of gray in your hair - Corona del Mar High baseball coach Tom Trager will back that up. The Sea Kings' coach, in his 14th year at the helm, watched his team clinch no w orse than a tie for the Sea Vie w League championship Wednesday after- noon in typical fashion , rallying for a 4-3 victory with single markers in the fifth and sixth innings. "Sometimes I wonder why I'm doing this," said a beaming Trager following his team 's 11th victory in 13 league starts. "The only time 1 feel like smiling is right after a win, then you start wor- r ying about the next game." It's the fourth stralght league title for the Sea Kings. The defending CIF 2-A ch aC&ions, ranked No. 1 in the most recent poll, were down by a 3-2 count after Estan- cia's hard-hitting crew erupted for two runs in the fourth inning, thanks to a two-run single by Mike Campeau. But Dave Rohde, who has been cuffed around pretty good by the F..agles, held on to record the complete game victory. The F..agles, who fell to 7-5-1 ln league play, but still usured of a playoff berth following Costa Mesa's km to El Toro, went to work quickly1 with Jeff Gardner (a single to right), Campeau (a double to right) and Steve Nichols (an RBI single off Rohde'! glove) providing a run. But Corona del Mar acored twice on five hits In the bottom of the first inning, keyed by RBI singles Crom Brent Melbon and Scott Loos. "He (Rohde) w as battling all the way," said Trager, who was thinking seriously of bringing outfielder Chris White into the pme aa relief as early as the first game. Base-running mistakes hurt Corona del Mar's cause during the game and Trager harped on that, saying: "We made three mistakes with our base run- ning and we did not get awar, with any of them. Each time it cart UI. ' Nevertheless, the Sea Kings obviously didn't pay a supreme price and Trager smiled and said: "This team's got 90me character, and some luck. And we're pretty good, too." The Sea Kings got even in the bottom of the fifth inning when Gordon MOIS got on via an infield single, stole second and 900red on Rohde's single to right. Angels happier at home Perry: 15th 300-game • winner Half of the others played be,ore the turn of the century By CURT SEEDEN oflM Delly~ at.ff When we last got a close-up look at the Angels, they had just swept their second homestand, thanks mainly to a fine 1.85 team earned run average and some ti- mely hitting. . So it was with great enthusi- asm that Manager Gene Mauch'• troops stormed the East Coast with full intentions of continuing the impressive play which vaul- ted them into the American League West lead. The Angela are back, ready to open an 11-game homestand to- night against the same three teams they just uw on the road, namely Baltimore, New York and Cleveland. The Angela completed their fir'lt Jenathy road trip with a 4-4 record. 'the hittinl wun't quite M timely U it WU at Anaheim, and the team ERA la a al.lghtly inflated 2.~. But, they're .uJJ ln first· place in the AL West, and they have their ICe, Ken Fonch (2-2) on the , mound tonight agalnat the Ori- oles and Jim Palmer (1-1), 7:30. Palmer'• victory came Jaat rrtday when be beat the AnaeJa. M with a complete-same effort. The Angell ended their road U'ip and opened the month <.I May on a sour note, falllna to a.wland 6-~ Tuieeday ni&hL In that one, tM lndianl hand- -' itarter Geoff Zahn hie f lnt clef•t of 1982. And whlle the ~l pltchbaa staff ta flnallJ ...... down to -1b. the Anlel 1au .. n ha•• fouad th• •olna Clli ANO-., .... Cl) What do Pud Galvin, Kid Nichols, Timothy Keefe, John Clarkaon, Michael Welch and Old Hca Radboum have in common? Well, for one thing they're all bueball hall of famers. And, they're all pitchers who have won 300 games In the major leagues. And tonight they could get some company when Gaylord Perry goes aft.er that elusive victory No. 300. There are actually 14 300-game winners, led by Cy Young, who won 511 games in 22 aeaaons. The others (all quite a bit more famous than Galvin, Nichols, Keefe, Clarkaon, Welch and Rad- bourn) include: Walt.er JohNOn, Grover Alexander, Christy Mathew80n, Warren Spahn, Eddie Plank, Lefty Grove and Early Wynn. I went leatChlng throuah the record book the other day and came up with lhe following bit of trivia on the 300-game wtnnen: -Half of the 14 played before the tum of the century. -The last 300-p.me winner WM Early Wynn (1963) and before that. Warren Spahn (1961). -Wynn won just one pn:w in h1a final leMOI'\, and that was victoey No. 300. He won that pme. M a rdember of the ~ lndiam. al&houch he had spent the tut five ~ with the auc.,o White Sox. (Wynn had apent nine eeuona pre- vlo~ly wlth Cleveland, winnlnt 20 1ame1 four timM). _:_Of the 14 300-pme wib.nen, only Spahn. Plank and Grave were lett.-hmden. -All 14 are in the Hall of hme, the liatat beina Spahn and WeJch (19'73). -Radboum Md a NCOl'd of eo-12 durtnl the 1884 teM0111'tth the Provklence Grays. ('!'be cM.- tance from the llitchlnc nabbs to ~ ~ Wiii 50 feet ln thme days ind ... not ~ to the ~t 80 fellt, e inchm until 188t). -Galvtu, who WM niclmamed '"nie Little Steur Daclne'' becauee of hla 9'atun (&-8, 190 DOUACll), hMI a rtc(ll'd al 48-• tn 1m 1Dd 48-.22 h tollowlna wn for the Buffalo 8'8ona of the NadoDl.11 ~· • • • --L----· -----· . SPORTS EDITOR CRAIG SHEFF -Keefe finished all 68 games he started du- ring the 1883 season and completed 557 of 594 games in his 14-year career. -Cy Young and Galvin were 300-game loeers. Young lost 313 games and Galvin was defeated 309 times. They rank 1-2 In the record book In that category. -Wynn was the oldest 300-game winner. Early (43 years old) was late in hia career when he won No. 300. (Perry will be 44 in September). -Kid Nlcbola wu the youngelt, getting his 300th at the .,. of 30. Nichols, in lb nncrm, w• a 30-game winner 1eYeD tima. He won 29 in another yeu. So, with all that in mind, it should be quite. acene In Seattle tonl&bt when Perry face• the Y ankeea. And just think, the Anaell bad a chance to pt him. For you trivia buff•, here'• a U1t bf the 300-game ~ with Perry included: -._ I ...... ...... ~1n1""12 ~ 190'1-1m 21 as 1911-1830 20 S7 1900-ltlt 17 32 18'7t-1192 10 SS 1942·1NO 21 41 1110-1eoe lo ao ll90-l•I 14 M 1812-1*94 12 11 1901-191'7 11 40 l*-t• 11 11 18'0-t•t 11 .. l.._lMI 17 41 lm-lMI 21 ti .... am 21 a "It might serve to the overall bene fit o f the league," L ynch said. "Davis says you must give me a ll the benefits of the con- tract, but you must give me the nght to go to Los Angeles." Lynch said the Raiders would benefit by $5 million a year on the new $2 billion television contract negotiated by Rozelle and "the contract means no party take advantage over another." i I , i l j ! ' Orenge Cout .DAILY PILOT!Thu~, May e, 1882 ,(~----------------------· aimer lashes out at certain golfers . From AP dt1patc1M1 WASHINGTON -Arnold Pal· !I mer want.a tome members of the pro golf iour suspended for "d1ecourteoul and ~ngentlemanly behavior a nd thouahilellllMll" that be called cte.pbble. "the Wuhington Poet in lta Wednaday edi- tions reported that Palmer, in a March 8 letter to PGA Comml11loner Deane R. Beman, aaid "abusive Ianguaae and displays of iemperament" have met "too often ln the past merely with wria~alapplng ... Without mentioning any Individuals by name, or de- ICriblng 1peclfic incident&, the celebrated golfer said "suspensiom are in order for aome of theee incidenta." Beman re.ponded by sending copies of the Palmer '~" letter to tour memben'on April 16 along with a warning of his own, the newspaper said. Quote of the day Jim McMuoa, the BYU quarterback, on why he won't graduate th1I year: "l kinda 9Cl"ewed up my redsh1n year, then had to take 1.ncomplete9 in 1ummer dl001 becauae I went golfing every day." San Antonio advances to meet Lakers George GerviD scored 26 points m and Mike Mltclaell added 24 Wednes- day night to lead the San AntoGio ; Spurs to a 109-103 victory over ' Seattle a nd eliminate the Sonics from the National Bas~etball Association playoffs. The victory moved San Antonio, the ~est Divi- sion champion, into the Western Conference fi: .. nals against the Lakers with the series a.et to begin in lngJewood with game one on Sunday and Cn two on "'Tuetday ... Ai., advanctna was , 81 Robert Parlala poured 1n a. career playoff high of 33 pointa. includJnc a three-potnt play in the leCOnd overtime, boosting Boston to a 131 -126 victory over Washington. The victory gave Boston a 4-1 triumph over the Bullets ... Bob LuJer acored 27 pointa and Brlu WlDten 23 u Milwaukee defeated Philadelphia, 110-98 to atay alive in their series. Balnee QOM ftom goat to hero 11.nN BalMI went from pt to II hero wlth a two-run .. venlh·lnnina homer w~ niCh' and aw Af. mM and Jlm M.rrl ... follow~ wtth eolo ahotl to power the Ch~ Wh1i. Sox to a 4-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jan/Until Bai.n81' homer, lh• tuue Jay. had nW'lild a 1-0 leed mainly becau.te of a mllplay by. Bl1ne. in rieht field . . • 1n other pne1 pmee. Larry • e.,.. ... , ~ ecored IUrk OlbtH with th•· 10-ahead run H Detroit rallled for three rum ln the •l1hth In· nln1 to beat Texu, 6-4 and extend the Ran1er1' lotlna 1t reak to 11 game1 ... Gary OaeHl belted a two-run homer 1n the fourth lMint io help the Mlnneeota Twt.na to a 3-2 victory over Bo1ton, •AM• snapping the Red Sox'a flve- game wlnninl atreak . . . Oa ts Coacepeloa looped a double with two out ln the 10th inr:Una to knock In the wlnnln1 r un H Kanu1 City nipped t.Jilwaukee 3-2. Fonner Costa Meu lijgh and Orange Coatt Colle1e pitcher Du Q1l1ea· berry earned h1a flnt victory of the year 1n relief ... TotOftto hu traded afuggtng first bueman Jolla Mayberry to the New-York Yanbee for flnJt bueman Da ve Reverla1 and minor leaguer J eff Repold1. . . . Otcar Gamble, angered by his lack of playing time UU. aeuon. baa directed a "play me or ·t.raCle me" ultimatum to Yankees' owner Geor1e Stelabreuer. Rhoden gives Pirates a llft -with bat Riek Rlilodea knocked in two II runt and won hi• flnt game of the teUOn Wedneeday night as the Pitts- burgh Plrate11 beat th e Atlanta Braves, 4-2 in National League action. Fonner Angel, Jatoa Tllompsoa al80 drove in a run and rapped three singles for Pittsburgh . . . In other garnet, Terry PaM'1 two-run a1ng1e high- lighted a four-r un aixth inning that carried HOUltan to an 8-7 victory over Cincinnati. The- Astl'OI batted around in the alxth Inning to give Doa S.ttoa his fourth victory against one defeat . . . Geor1e Headrick 1macked bis second home run of the day in the aeventh inning, lif. ting St. Louis to a 7-6 triumph over the ClUcago Cubs and a three-game sweep of their series. Baseball today On this date in bueball in 1953: In his first major letgue start, Bobo Holloman of the St. Louii Browns hw1ed a no-bitter to defeat the Philadelphia A's 6-0. It would be the only complete game of HoUoman's brief major league career. -On this date in 1915; . Boston Red Sox rookie Babe Ruth belted. the flnt of his 714 major league homers, off Jack Warhop in a 4-3. 13-lnning lqa to the New York Y an.kees. Today's birthday: Hall of Farner Willie Mays is 51. Irvine keeps pace with CdM Founta in Valley le aps past Huntington Be a ch into second Irvine High remained a game behind Corona de! Mar in the Sea View League baseball derby, while Edison put a crimp in Huntington Beach's hopes to finish second in the Sunset. and Fountain Valley moved into the runner-up slot by il9elf. Here's what happened: lrvlne 5, Saddlebeck 3 1t waan\t an earth shattering performance by either aide but Irvine's Vaqueros will take the de- cision over the Roadrunnen. Irvine is a game behind Corona del Mar in the Sea View League st.andlngs with one game remai- ning. The Vaqueros were in front all the way, sco- ring single runs in the fl.rat, third and aeventh in- nings and adding two in the aecond. Saddleback acored all three run.a in the bottom of the fifth. "We didn't play very well today," Irvine Coach Bob Flynn said aft.er the game. Blake Smith wu 2-for-4 with an RBI and Jack Medina 2-for-3 for the Roadrunners. No Irvine player had more than one bit u the Vaqs had two unearned runa for the day. Unlveralty 3, Newport Harbor 1 Troy Larson had a 3-hitter for the Trojans and after the Tars scored an unearned run in the first. held Newport scoreless for the remainder of the game. He had three strikeouts and one walk. Jeff Miller was 2-for-4 including a solo home run in the seventh inni~ for the Trojans. PREP BASEBALL For the Barons. the scene now shiJts to Mile Square Park Saturday for a 7 o'clock encounter with league champ F.ctison. Edlaon 8, Huntington a .. ch 0 The Chargers knocked the Oilers out of a share of second place with a combined shutout perfor- mance from junior left-hander Robb Biagi, who was making his first start of the year. and senior right-hander Greg Cloney. Cloney was credited with the victory, pitching the final four shut.out frames, and allowing only three hits and one w alk. The victory moved Clo- ney's mark io 11-2, and established a school record for meet wins in • season. Sophomore Paul Ellison rapped two hits and drove in three to spearhead the Edison att~ck. Martna S, Oce•n View 7 The Vikings had to rally f or a pair of seventh-inning runs to tie, then needed a wild pi tch in the 10th inning io subdue Ocean View at Blair Field. Dave Hargrove led off each time, tripling in the seventh io start the tying rally, then in the 10th coaxed a walk, stole second and eventually came home on the wild pitch. Kevin Elster had three hits for Marina, whHt Fred Tuttle went 4-for-5, drove in one run and scored two more io pace the Seahawks. Perry trle1 for 300 tonight SEA'M'LE Oa)'lotd P rry u-Ill chanaed breay i.lephone lf"tJn,. with Pruldent Rea11n and told a MWI conference W~)' he WM more excited than nervow aboU\ ap~ hlil 300th major 1"pt pltchlna vk1oiY. • Perry, who pkUd up Ho. 299 lut Friday ln New York'• YankM Stadlwn, la echeduled to pt hl1 flret crack tont1ht at becomlna the Uth pitcher to reach the 300 mark. The Yankee• 11aln wlll oppme Pe~ihe Seattle Mari-nen, th.la time In UMt . "l know IV•~ an namor that you andt +ve-thronly-onm left aw A~ day throw owit \he f1M bell," Reepn told Perry from the While Houae. · Rea11n, at 71 the oldett man to serve u pretldent, told Perry, 43, the oldett player in the major leaguet, "I don't celebrate birthda)'I any- more, 1 celebrate •rntveraarlet ot my 39th birthday." Perr>' told Reaaan, "You're 1tlll a young man too,' and Mnt hla regardl io Reagan'• wife, Nancy. Perry camp1t1ned with ~e Reagan• when Rca1an WH teeklng a 1econd term as governor of c.lif omla. UCI tennla team falls short The UC Irvine ten.n.La team WU El noeed out bY. Lona Beach State in the , final point itancflng1 at the PCAA Champlonshipi Wed.needly, hotted by the Anteaters. UCI fintahed with 34 pointl, one le,as than the 49era, while UC Santa Barb~ra tallied 27. However. UCl'1 J im Snyder was cho- sen the player of the year a fter winning hi1 match over Jeff Jacki~ of Fresno State. 7-5. 6-4. Rabea Berciek of Irvine a1llO won ln 11.ngles, and Snyder and Eric Qude were victorious in the No. 1 double• competition, defeating the Long Beach State duo of Haak Moravec and BllJ ~ardl. Hagler-Hearns bout postponed Boxin g promoter Bob Anm • Wednesday indefinitely poetponed the May 24 title bout between mid- dleweight champion Marvla HasJer and TlaomH Hearns, cl\lna an injury to Hearns' right hand. "We are awaiting the ·,_ponae to treatment of Hearns' hand before we •t a new date," Arum sald In a statement from New-- York ... Wkltaey Marda. a tanner sporta col- umnist for The Asaoci.ated Prtw, died Wednes- day at Green w lch Hoapital. He wa1 85 ... Former Atlanta Falcona quarterback Jue J ones signed a multi-year contract with the Toronto Argpnauts, the Canadian Football League team ~ouni'ed. The CFL team did not disclose finan c ial terms of the contract . . . Fruk Lafdea, who says he never expected to coach the tftah Jazz for more than a season. will contlmre as both head coach and general manager of the National Association basketball c lub next year. Television. radio TV: No eventa acheduled. RADIO: Bueball -Baltimore at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). IJux, Martin fiFe no-llitters It wu a day for no-hlltena u Liu Martin of lrvtne and Nance Lwc ot Coeta Mme each pelted 1uch a 1tellar eertonnance Wednelday on the h1lh achool women • eoftbtll .:iene. Martin recorded her fifth no-hit deciAoo ot the _JeUOn J.n...de1u.tlrui Saddlehack. ~-0-Sbe had~? 1trlkeout1 and wal&d two ba«en alona with one hit batter. She 1ttuck out the~ in t~e seventh IMltll when the a1eo f.laued one of her two walka . LIM and Wendy Martin each had two bate hill in five plate appeeral'l(.'eS for Irvine. For Colla Meaa'• Lux, It was a different type SOFTBA L L of thrill. Her no-hitter was the first of htt blah school career and came despite ialulng eight wal.U. She had five ltrikeouta. Lux ia a aophomore left-hander. She alao had a bMe hit and drove in' a ru.n for the Muatanga in a 4--0 decilton over the Chargers who were tied for the Sea View League lead at the at.a.rt of the day. Costa Mesa and El Toro are right back at each other today t-0 make up a ralnout earlier in the seaaon. Jamie McA.leer, Costa Mesa's catcher, was 2-for-3 at the plate including a double. Elsewhere on the prep scene, Marcia Fu pit- ched a six-hitter as University defeated Newport Harbor, 4-1. Karyn Jones waa 3-for-4 with two RBI for Univeraity. On the community college scene, Orange Coast closed out the regular season with an eight-inning, 3-2 decision over visitinR Cerritos. UCI falls, 11-5 Cal St.ate F\Jllerton's Dave Wilder went 4-for-4 Wednesday afternoon and teammate Bob Bright added a pair of triples and three RBI as the Titans whipped host UC Irvine, 11·-5 in Southern Califor· nia Baseball Association action. Wilder belted his seventh home run of the year in the seventh and added a double in the third in- ning to account for two RBI, while Mike Ruble was 3-for-5 with two RBI. The victory lmprov~ Titans' SCBA record io 17-4, 41-17 overall. Cal State Fullerton jumped on UCI starter Gary Brahs for six runs in the first four innings. but the Anteate~ Ron Cummings made things inter- esting wi'th his eighth home run of the year -a three-run shot in the bottom of the fourth inning. The loss dropped UCI to 9-12 in conlerence play. The lone bright spot for the Ant.eaters was Mike Rupp who extended his hitting streak to 19 games with a pair of singles. Rupp also collected two RBI on the day, leaving him 11 shy of the UCl record for most RBI in a teaa0n. From Page C1 ANGELS. Track prelims set I • • tougher away from Anaheim, too. The team batting average has dipped to .251. Only Rod Carew (.309) is hitting better than .300. Brian Downing had aeven home runs when the Angels departed for New York. He returns to- night with the same seven. For bright spots, there's Reggie Jack.son's slow climb out of the .lOOs and into the .200s (.205). Jack.son also cracked his first two home runs of the season on the road. Tonight's game is the first of four with the Orioles. The Yan- kees come to town Monday to begin a three-game series, and Cleveland wraps up homestand No. 3 with a four-game set star- ting next Thuniday night. ANGEL HOTEi -Jim Pal-r owna 25 Mletlrne vic:torlN agalnat Ille Angell Tlie Ort- OIH " lt8r1., ,rld8y night. I Mll lllleQ,. • .,, hat 10 Nfe11me wlN -Ille Anoelt MoOr• gor wllf be opooeMcl by .,,.... ~. The rnt ol the m1tehup1 lor the _ .. , with Bel· tlrnore llnd1 MMI• P:lllNlgen pltehlng s.turdey night lor th• Ortol .. •o•lntt •n. H~ named Angel pitcher, and o.-11 going for 8•111more Sund•y •galn•t l rucm kleon. whO It "'" lool\lng tor his lltat dec:ltl<>n of 111S2 Ona yHr ago tod•y. P:or•cll outdueled the YankMt' TomntJ John for 11 2-1 decision •I An•h•lm Sl•dlum. but the Angtll -· IOdOed k1 IOU<1h piece In the Al Wt1t, nlnt garnee out of llttl pl-To- night's g•m• will be televtalad on ON The N1Q111t 8fld Yank-will a1eo be telelliMd 11w on KTLA. Channel 6. when Ille)' open tl\elr l«IM Mondey ntoht Community colleges vie at Bakersfield B~RSFIELD -Southern Califomla's top community col- lege track and field stars con- verge at Bakersfield College Saturday for the Southern Cali- fornia preliminaries, and Orange Coast-area schools a re well- represented at the meet. Ac tion Saturday begins at noon with the women's field events. Men's field events begin at 1 p.m., with women's running events set io start at 1 p.m., and men's running events kicking off at 5:30 p.m. Orange Coast CoUege will send 27 athletes to the day-long affair, Saddleback College boasts 26 qualifiers while Golden West will send eight qualifiers. Southern C•llfoml• PreUml~ (et a.llenn.td College) OflAHO€ COAIT OUALWlEftl I 10HH -St...,. Southw1rd 400IH -Gary Stenlund 1,500 -St .... Uchyllt 5,000 -Mike Sem• 10,000 -8'1.,., HarOkS 3.000 at~ -Tom F1Uge<ald 1,600 relay -Steve Odgeta. Uch)'111. Greg Welker. Slenlund HJ -0.... Garrell. Enc Cllmlnlll PV -P•I Lustig SP -Craig Glid<en JT -Steve Odoefs. Greg HOiden w- 100 -DI-Terry 800 -Angle St_., IS.ity Rlnoe< 1.500 Barbie ludcWIM. Carl• Rillera 3,000 Barbtt ludcw!M, l(atrMen ~ Sue Ziil• I 600 rel•y -Stevena Ringer. Ronda COll>tr1 Susan Z81V8dnlk HJ hmmy Rooke LJ Ronda Colber1 OT Heidi Muumen. Pat NaYalrO SP Heodl Musaman OOU>£N WUT QU~S 800 Dive PHICN>l8 t 10HH -MIU MOito <IOOIH Mike Molto 1.500 Den ArNnaull t0.000 Jouy G.negos OT Mike Geno-. Dan N-klfk w- 1.500 Karren H•rns 3.000 Ka•en Ha1111. Ton• Teall" SAOOU8ACIC OUALIP'IERI 100 Norman Andenon. Jim G'-1. llOO Armando N1e10, Dooms AOOJta 1.500 -Cr.et Vert 3.000 sleppleeh•H -Boo Olmeda, Oenms Acost• I IOHH Oallid Ashford 4001H David Asntord 4-00 rel•y VlnCe Harris, Aahlord, Gleed, Dave OeM11rs 1.&00 retey OeMars. A1hlord, Gleed, 4'1an Estrade 5 000 Oevld Howerd Brad Guao. HJ Jonn Aop+quet. LJ Tracy M11etlelf TJ -Ken G•tea SP Scott tnn11 JT O•n 0·0onna11 ·-400 Tonya Reyes Peggy <Autkatienk 400 LH ROM Ven W1t. <100 relay -Ray••. Chitkanank. Melanie Purves Sabrina Pendleton t.600 ret•y -Pendleton Reyes. Crulk· shank Van Wle LJ -S•brln• Pendleton. OT Judith Bodner, P•m Wondruh, J•· nine Trlt>Olet JT -Judith Bodntt. Cindy J8Cktor1. University acored firit in thea:f of the first on two hue hits by Rich SoreNOD Randy Myers. then two errors. ln the bottom of the inning, the Tan tied the count on an error, a hue hit by Jerry Piaskow1ki. a sacrifice and ao Infield out. The go-ahead nm came in the fifth as Jeff Carr opened with a single, went to second on an error, third on a balk and 900red on an error. Salt water fishing improving t SoreMon, Miller, Jeff Frei and.Collin Cate each had two hlta for the Trojam. El Toro 12, Cotta MeN 1 An upstart El Toro squad put together a pair of. five-run frames to push the Mustang• out of a playoff spot. Barry Sneed rapped a double for El Toro, while Costa Mesa'• Brian Millett tripled. Founhlln V...., 7, Weetmtnee.r 1 The Baroni recorded their e(Chth atnlght vic- tory, while handing Wettminater lt8 leWl'lth oon- 81!CUtive ~ 81 Rhior ftrlt ~ Deen Ro- berti carried much of the hlttina Jo9d. Roberta went 3-for-3 wtth five RBI, lncludlnc a ~ homer OYet" the -li&n ln n,ht field in the third tn.nlna· It •• Robtrti ninth career ho- mer, three • a ~. tm. • a junior and three more durtn1 hia eenlor eeuon at Fountain V.u.Y. 1he nine homen breaks the previous achool reeord Ql Kevin &mine. MeUtwhDe, ..mar rlgbt- bander Bick ~ Id.fled the Uona on thne bite through five lnnlnta before atvina way to lef~handtt Steve ~ • ,, ' I Warmer ocean tem peratures equal helter catch es ' ,, OUTDOORS JIM NIEMIEC ·I ~U!t!NQ DENNIS BROSTERHOUS \ A ·run around the Bay set Ten -m ile race Saturday One of the more popular 10-mile runs ii slated for this t:iaturday when the Seventh Annual Around the Bay ln May will be prese nted in Newoort Beach. A large field with quality runners, an unusual distance and a acenic course are just a few of the features of thia race. The run is sponsored by City Sports Magazine and is pre11en~or the benefit of the China Cup travel fund. L t year, almost 3,000 participants turned out for t rat.-e's sixth running, which is part of the 11-race China Cup Series. Winners of the series are rewarded with free trips JO Taiwan in December, as well as the oppor- tunity to compete in races on the island hation. Race director John Blair says the route around the bay has been a popular one for years, and for good reason. "I've been involved in track for over 20 years and just about every local distance runner has made the bay run for tr~ ... he said. C.OSta Mesa's Kathleen McCartney; winner of the Ironman Triathlon, will be there to run in the race and present awards, which include running shoes and T-shirts, and to the first-place ,man and woman, Costa Mesa's Back Bay Rowing and Run- ning Club will present Gravitone backswing de- vices. T he race ia due to begin at 8 a .m., with check-in ti.me set between 6 and 7:45. Pre-registration fee, i.ncluding_a year's subscription to City Sports Mag- azine is $8, with late registration at $9. For a T-shirt as well, the tab is $11. For further details and entry blanks, contact J ohn Blair at 966-0556. ANOTHER POPULAR RUN, known for being well-organiz.ed is the Leatherneck Marathon hosted annually by the Marine Corps. The fifth annual race is scheduled for Saturday and more than l ,000 runners are expected to par- ticipate in the event put on by the "Grey Ghosts" of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron-531. Among this year 's runners will be Gilbert Cortez. laSt year's first-place finisher. and Dr. Jean Ellis, another well-known marathon competitor. The course for the marathon is a level, scenic loop a pproved by The Athletic Congress encom- passing El Toro, and the Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin. Refreshment and aid stations will be set up along the route at three-mile intervals. T he Leatherneck Trophy from the Marine Corps Association will be presented to the first- place finisher, with other awards being given by division. A certificate of completion will be awarded to all finishers. The marathon will ge t under way at 7 a.m. with a fun run scheduled for 7:30 for family members and friends who want to run one lap around the Air Station at no cost. * * * * * * RUNNWO SCHl!OUlE l ehwday, ... , I Leethernecll lb rethon: At Metlne Corps Alr Station. El Toro Merelhon begins 11 1 • m Fun Run begin• at 7.30 Flal courH wtlh nine aid station• Fee S9 wtth T ·shlr1. S5 wlthoot. Conlect (714) 559-3115 Around lh• ••r In Mer: Al OuMS Patk. Newpor1 Beech Teo- mlle run baglns 11 8 • m with Check-In be~ 6 and 7 45 Lele reg1s1r111on 11 S9 w1thou1 T ·Shirl end S 11 wllh For more lnlorme-tlon. conlect (714) 96&-0556 Mar1Mf1hon Sit fun llun: 8e- 01ns el 8 • m el TRW Menheltan Beech BIYd end Ooomoe In Re- dond o BH ch. FM ii 17 with T. 1hlrt. S3 wllhout. Contect Phldlp. pidH Spon1 Center. Menheuen 8eadt .....,,...,. lllllothef'e Der 10ll: 8eg1n1 al 7 30 Bl Hawthorne Memoriel Hos- pltal in Hewthorne Fee 11 S8 wtth T ·shk1, S4 wtth0u1. Contect· (213) 679-1146 Chlnott ~ flte 10ll Nn llftd Southern '•clllc A.AU Junior Olrmplc Spring Champlonahlp· Begins 9 a.m at R1111ch0 Perk In Wesl LA Fee $12 wtth T-Sh1r1. S& Wllh<>ut Conlec1 (213) 331-0559 Webb 's effort highlights meet By HOWARD L: HANDY OftM Delly Not Slaff Tammy Webb of Ocean View High put in a busy day Wednesday during the S unset League track and field preliminary meet a t Edison High, winning both of he r heat races in the hurdles, finishing third in a 220 heat race and capturing one of two field event finals, the triple jump. But the host Edison Chargers dominated the action Wednesday like they did during the dual _T_1lA_C_'K ____ m mee t season whe n they went undefeated. The Chargers qualified 19 perfonners for Friday after- noon's finals on the Edison High track that begin at 1:45 with the varsity 2-mile run. While Webb was a standout, there were others who performed well including Edison's Taenre Jackson in the 220 (27.05) and 440 (59.08); Sharon Hatfield of Fountain Valley in the 110 hurdles (14.23) and 330 hurdles (47.15) and many others on the Edi90l'l team. The Chargers took 8-of-15 first places on the running track and had Marybeth Thobe win the diJcua final with a toss of 120-8~. "We've won the league championship and will hopefully qualify a number of the girls for the CIF meet," Ed.lion Coech Rueben Chappina said. "We should get .rood performances from Bar- bara Rainey and Jackson ln the sprints; Kim De- VeU. and Leslie Pratt in the distance races; Thobe ln the weight events and Kim Walullk ln the high Jump.'' Hatfield ta the claaa of the Sunset Lea1ue burdlen, wi.nning her heat races in eMY f..aahion in 14.23 for the 110-yard event and 47.15 for the 330. ~ two timet were well ahead of Webb, winner of the other heat races. Webb will concentrate on the hurdle..__ Friday, tcratchlna from the 220 final. "I enj>y the lhorter nK» ~ becaute It la a lot more darin1.'' Hatfield aaJd. "But In the longer dtatance, you have time to pick up people who mlcht a-t ln front of you." n.. h~ star hM nrYef" hlt • hurdle hard enouab to fall dwinl her h'8h achool career and la confJae.nt • the faoea the touaher competition in fUture CD' meeta. She w• an ill~leque volleyball ~ but prefen tnck bleM.-ol tlw individual llClCOlllPUahmea She will al8o compete ln the h1Cb Jump Yriday where t h• hM a nw-k of 6-8. Other Sd'8on wtnnen of heat racea include Lort Shaw la the 100; .J&'boft and Kalney ln the m; Kathy .a.frM wt ..._, b\ the 440; 1...u. P.ratt In tlw NO; DeVltu and Timmy Snyden In \he mOe nm. m SWEET TALI TELEPBOlff: Oh. get Mom on• of thff•. Sb. wtll fMl llke a quHn wtwn 1tw cal11 the beauty shop with thlt. ("You ahou.ld ... my uw phone.") 47.!?r PEIUE CWSIC TELEPIOIE 549 7 #PC704 • DISIDIASTER ·FAUCET 59!.! Mom wlll loH thl1. Got a nice pu1h button 1ud1 head. MakH light load• a breeze. Better yet. do the dltbH for her. CLOSE-OUT ROCKY MOUlfTIDf CARE BOCKER 2777 No ma1ter bow young Mom i1. a rocker i• good for the clrcula11on and the back. Walnut flniah (the rocker. aot mom.) Easy a11embly. DURALITE 6 PC. CUE PATTERN SET · Okay. Mum. you did a good job all year maybe the gang'll get together and get you thl1. Hai 4 chain, table and umbrella. laM not lncluded. 99!7 ARK.llSIS IWfGAROO FOLDDfG WOOD TABLE BERCH SET 5377 Fold• up to 4" wide llO ffll tit in your trunk. (Oh. I get lt tha1'• why they call It kangaroo. fit• right in th. pouch or trunk. CIHerl) S.t of table and 2 benchH fully a1Mmbled. DOIWJTE STICKDfG STRAP OUTDOOR FURllTURE Sit and enjoy the warm weather out1lde. pour a lemonade. grab a magazine or light up the barb.cue and ha.,. a hot dog.Yellow and white 1trap1. CUii 25!! ....... 74W' ~ s ..... 55 •• ~ ClllSE #7541 DORA COOL ALOMDIUM WINDOW I WIONGS IHpa the barth 11\&D rays from mfttlngupthe hamltuN and drapes. (Mom le alwcrys thent for fO\t whelh•r lt' • a aaaped lmee or hurt feellnga.) 1111 PlllL 2'x3' ..... 9.97 2'x4' ... 11.97 2'xS' ••• 13.97 r • ... I S.97 IWllW PlllL 3'x3' ••• 16.97 3'x4' ••• 23.97 3'd ' •.• 29.97 f ...... 31.97. Orange COUt DAJLY PILOT /Thuraday, May 1 1 1982 4" POT AFRICAN VIOLET • 4" POT MINll TURE ROSE 199 6" POT FLORIST 2 89 QUALITY FOILED MUM 6" POT GREENHOUSE 5 89 GROWN GARDENIA Good ol' Mom 1he worlra hard all year cooking. cleaning and caring foreverybody. lf1only right tha1 we ban a 1peclal day in her honor. Maybe 1be' d like a nice Dower for Mother'• Day. MURRAY BICYCLES LADIES 26" 3-SPEED SlllDS BIKE Chrome touring handlebar with front 8r Nor 1ide pu.11 caliper bra.k•t and 28"x l ¥•" blackwall Urea. Flniab I• Buckskin and Sand. # 1-6541. OR MEI'S 26" BALBOA CRUISER Good looking gloa• black bike with gold flni1b rima and,procket. Hai 26" x 21/e" black with whitewall tire• and coa1ter brake. #l-S022X42. YOUR CHOICE 8997 GUNK EICllE BRITE Clean• dirt. greaH, and grime. Gunk ma.kH thing• clean? AN th-r sure? Uu1t ldddiDg. It workl.) 16 oa. OB FODIY EIGllE BRITE Cllnga to ,,.rtlcol 1u.rfaces Oust Uke my pet gorilla). 18 oa. YOUR 99c CHOICE EA. nu. would be a hcnMly thing for Mom to hcrT• In the c:ar. "'9bt get M r off the fneway fater U ahe e••r had a Oat. 2!! 11,1 .... CBGOI BODI LOCI QUAKER STITJ: MOTOR 00. Orl. even the Brooklyn kid 11 pronouncing It thl• way. Still we got the real price•. ye1? 30 WT. OR you2:~:ICE 84!. ALL TRADE 40 PC. SAE & METRIC SOCKET SET 3~~~ Got ¥1" and 11 ... drin. A Hry bandy thing to hert'e around the bouM. ISPElflTE 11 4" 7/16" ·~-~ 6!~ Strong 1tuff. conatructlon grade. UH indoon or outdoors. {Happy Mother'• Day, Mom. How'd you Her •W"ri•e a rotten kid like me?) PlllASOlflC CORD Bln'ERIES 15~. What a price. U Mom·• I ape recorder or radio need• new batteries get her aome and Mnd her to the beach on Sunday. OLDBAM 7Y4" COMBllAnDI BLIDE l!'!.c Ne•er bwt1 to hert'8 an extra around juat lo COM. (Don't forget Mom on Sunday. Ma.ke lwr day apeclal gt.,. her a call.) Bulls Blade Only. PRO-TEC PLUS DECITBED ''·-~·· -.. ~~ .-.. ... _. __ . 9!! Don't do llke I d1d cmd allp cm the atepe WMD thef'N wet. letter to paint with tbJa ak1d realatcmt etd. For wood. COGQe ... cmd apbalt. htE llCB COSTOJI llST 11.1,ED Biii COllU OlfE Oil TWO ITOllY LEU TRAJf 100 n . 100 n ....... I 17 50 n . 1m" I 'l'I UR.n . u..n . ,_ D«mGl lutallatloa - l'MldieDIJal PfOPMtf• DowD- llpCMlta are eJdla. WWte ot a.o......waa··--oeoe 4191111._ .... c aet ., .. Cl ). • I ~~ KanuaCnv Oekland S..llle MlnnMOta Te• .. ~ • • ... · .. 14 • tot 14 10 513 16 II 577 l2 1$ 4U 10 17 310 6 15 211i11 ,....,,.~ Boeton n 1 .llO OelrOll 11 9 840 MilweukM 12 10 S45 CleWland • 13 409 New Yorll 9 13 409 Totonto. 9 15 37!> Balllmote • , • JIM • ......_, .• ac_ I\~ 2 2 ,.,. 71-t a·~ t 3•,. a-.. .... 71-t 7'1> I(.,_ City 3, Mllw ... k .. 2 ( 10 tnnlnQSI Detroit a. te ... 4 Mlnne9ota 3. Boalon 2 Cllieago 4, TotonlO I °"'Y 0-ICheClul9d TlftilM'• 0.-81tllmo11 (Palm .. 1·1) 11 Afltela (I< For.ell 2·21 Boslon (Ojeda 1·21 at Teaet (MedlCll 1-31 MlnnHole (Hl••n• 1·01 II Mllw1uk11 (VUCllOVieh 3·21 New Yori! (Ateaande< (). 11 •t Seattle (Perry 2·21 Cleveland (Denny 2 ·21 at Oeklend (McCatty 1·tl Only 9amea ICMduled ... ttoNI~ WMttnl W L l"et. Ge A01111t1 11 I ·-San °"lie> 1 s a 652 ~ t2 t3 480 HOUaton 12 t5 444 Clnelnnall 11 t4 4'40 San f rWldlcO 11 u 440 ... ""' Df¥Woft 11 •. tff 12 9 S71 12 13 460 10 13 435 9 t4 391 3 s a 1 SI LOUii MonlrMI New Yen Ptllabulgtl ~ CllceQO 8 II )08 9'~ W.-....y'a acor .. .._,()fl 8. Clnclnnlll 7 St Loull7 ~6 Plnlburllh 4. Atlellta 2 Only v-llCheOuled T..,.ea-.a D•de•r• (Reuu 3· 11 11 Monlre•I (Sandereon J. 11 San F11nc11co (Hemmaker 1·01 11 New 't orli (.ion. 3-I) San OieOO (Eichelberger 1·31 11 Pnilloel· p111a (Chr!stenM>n 1·31. n °"'Y 11-llCNduled AMl!"tcAN LEAGUE TwlM J, i..ct loa 2 MlnnHOll 001 200 000 3 10 0 8oll0fl 101 000 000-2 10 0 ErlCkaon, CO<IMlll (7) and Wyneg11, TOI· 111, Burgmeler (4) and Gedm111 W -Ettckaon. 4.2 L-To11ei, 2·1 S-CO<IMlll (3~ HR-MIMMOte, Geeltl (6) A 14,632 Tieer9 •• """-"• 4 Ta•U tOO t02 000-4 1 t 2 Oettoil 000 021 03•-6 11 0 Hough, Cornet (81 and $undbef9. Wllco~. Soea (71 and l M P111l1h w -so ... t·O L-Comer, 0·2 HR-Taua, Ball (41 A-14,811 .,.... ......... .urr.1 Toronto 001 000 000-t 7 0 ChleagO 000 000 40Jo -4 10 2 Leel. R l Jacleaon (71, J McllUlll*> (61 and B Mert-..Z, Trout Lamp (91 and Rik W-Trout. 2·2 L-LNI 2·2 S-LMnp (1~ HR-CllieagO. Ba1nH (I) MorllM>n (4). AJ.. mon (II A-20,873 ..., ... , ...... 2 K_. City 010 100 000 1-3 13 I MllwMM 020 000 000 0-2 II 0 Blue. ~ry (71 and Wettlan, H-. F1n911a (Ill and Yoat. Moore (I I w- Ou1Hnbe11y. 1· I L-F1n9111 2·3 Hlll- Mllwa.Alae, ll<OU/lald ( 11 A-9 833 NATIONAL LEAGUE ........ llledl 1 Houston 010 t 14 100-6 13 1 Cinc;nnau 000 122 110-7 14 0 SullOfl. Ruhle (81. YCorl• (81 D Smi1h (81 and Aallby, PulOI• 191. Putora. Edelen (6). Ptlea (II). Katn (71 Hume (91 and Trevino W-SullOfl. 4.1 l Paatota. 3·2 S-Smllh (4) HR-Hovalon. Gatna< 131 C .......... 7. Cube I CllicaoO 000 330 000-8 12 t SI Louil 021 2t0 IOc-7 14 1 Bird, TIOrow (51. W Hefnendel (81. Smith (II and Oavla. Rincon, LaP0tnt (51. Bair (81, Sutter (91 and P0<l1< W 8111, 3-0 L-W Hernandaz. 0·2 S-Sutter ( 10) HR-St LOUii. Hen<lrtcl< 1111 A-22,528 ,.._.,.,_2 Atlante 020 000 000-2 9 0 P1t11buf9ll 110 101 OOa-4 12 3 Maf'lle< McWllNaml (61. e.d10Slan (7) and Benedk:I. Slnetro (8). Rhoden. Scurry (I t. T ... Ullll Ill and T P-W-RllOOln. 1·3 L-M-. 2·2 S Tall..M (21 A 6.S95 Top 10 (leeed °" 41 .. beta) .-NC.AH LaAOUI! QU Ill H~. Bonnell. Totonlo 20 SJ 1 t 22 415 Mutray. 8'1111more 22 I S t t 32 378 H.,, Ill. CleYelend :>I 8 t 20 30 3 70 D-. Balllmor• 22 79 17 29 387 $undt>er9 T ... , 20 71 a 28 368 Jollf\IOI\ MIM 20 72 t 1 28 381 C-. Mllwauil .. 22 90 t2 32 356 Almon, Chicago 2 I 62 12 12 355 Belt. Ta•IS 2 t 82 II 29 3~ Pec:ior ... CNceoo 22 116 7 30 363 ~"-Hrbell. Mlnnetola. I, Dowftlftt, ,,.,..._ 1; H••lll. c..........o. 6: ovi-. MllwP ... 6, Gaelll. M'"'-•·. 111-lettedlfl Hrbek, Mtnneaote, 22. Thorn!~ Cleve· ltlnd~~ City, 21; ,...,_ 1111. • ~ .......... 10; <>Iii. ~Qty.tu. rttcflMlo (I --•I HOYI. Clltcego. 6-0: CM>dlll. S.attle. 3·0. z.M. A ....... 4-1; Ecli1<1H1y, eo.ton, 3·1. Tudor. 8oet0fl, 3· 1, Bano1<, CMMl4and. 3.1, Saucier, Oelroil. 3.1. Guidry, New Yori!, 3.1, "'"· Afl .. la, J.1; Burne, Chlc•vo. 3· I. G Jack-., KlnNI City, 3· 1, Froel, Kan ... City. 3 · t . J Jon•• Oakland. 3 .1 F.BetWalet, S..llle, 3· I MATIOMAL LaAOU. Q Al " " f'c4. ThQmpeOn, Pgll 23 16 20 33 31& Motelend. CNc.go 28 H 13 38 3e7 Concepc:lon. Cln 24 '1 14 32 3S2 LI fl d I I a• I , 22 14 ti 29 :MS WOOdt, CNcego 19 811 9 23 336 Smith, SI ~ 2S 82 13 31 337 Wll9on. New YM 24 109 14 38 330 JoflSI. Sen Oleoo 20 82 t 1 27 329 Gt9M. 81 Loula 26 55 5 " 327 ~. S.. Olego23 IO 18 29 322 ............. TllOf'nCllOn, Pltllbl#OI\, t , Kin11mW1 • .._ YO<tl, I; Mvrpfl,, Allame. I: Hendfldl, 81 l.Oula, 7, "°"*• AtlMl.I, 1 ............. Murll»tJ, Atllflt•, 28. Tllompton, ""' .. l>uttf\. 25~ H«~ St Louie. 21, Kina• !Nin. MN YOffl. 20: Kenntetv. len Olego, 1t .......... ,.~, ,Oflldl, It. L.oufe, 4-0: e.lr, 81 LOU1e M: Lollat. hn Olego. 34: lhow, San ~: M: ~ ~ ..... 4·1: Berenyt, ~ ~ii. 4-f: Sutton. Hou11on, 4·1: o Tied With • 710. ... 1 ·* 8 .294 11 .tta 0 .Ill " .217 I ..,. '' .m ~m . ... 7 ,,.. ··-ii ... , . "':":' .. ""' .. H.... IS" • A , 0.0 000 4-21 ,. ii ti ).1 0'11 ..... ··~ " , • 2· I 1 .. &.fin .. ,, • 11 4-1 117 ~=-~~ ~ 1~ u ~~ \~ .... 1eV\ • 116 .. • t-0 uo ,.,_ 41 M 12 13 2-2 U2 Wi11 H H 13 I' t-0 a M lllMMll M\ 12 1 • ().1 •. II Tot• 241"\ 2 II 12 117 17•1 2 M Cl ,.,f:,~~ ir'flM I 01 t='°" ·002 4 f2 200-11 ,., a UO 000 310 IOO-I t 1 8lmmon1. Wt~~!."Olllpeon (~, lllo-~:;J,~~l.i'{1)M4 t=:~. ~~ !111 (3•2). L-lllelll (8·2). 2U -Ill ... l ) t , Wlidet ( Ywt1 IUCI), """-• 11. ,. -ltlQlll CSF) a. Hiii -lllu!IM 08¥\. WllOw (C8'~ (UCI). aCaAe~ L Oii Peppifdine I I 5 CW State f\lllerlon 17 4 1 UC Senta e.tbera 10 12 ti. u ol Sen Diego 10 12 .... UC.,_ t 12 t LoYC* Ma17moun1 t 12 9 Lona Beed\ State I 15 12 cs Loe Mgelee • 16 12 T....,.1ac.rw P191>efdlne 2, UC S anta 8etl>atl I ( 10 lnnlnCPl U. ol SM Diego 5, Loyoleo-Mltymollftl I ••• Jtillilr'•..,.... Cel Slate FUlarton 11, UC lr""'6 5 C8 lot A"liJSllS 3, l0fl9 8Mcl> State 2 ,....,..o-u. ol SM Diego al UC 1tW>e Cel State Fu1«1on at Pipoerdine LQYO!a--Marymounl at Long 8eactt State UC Santa S..t>eca at CS Loe Anoe!M Cel Stale LA 3.~~11 Slate 2 UC Santa 8at1>er1 8-7, UCLA 11·2 • • I I • • 4 Loe~OC 3 LA Souit-1 0 L -2 I I ' 4 • II • ... 1 1 114 2 3 . ... . ......,. ..... ~ 10, Eeat LA 6 -T..-.a-s..11 Monica CC at Golden WMI Loe ~CC at Rio Honclo LA Herflor 111 EU1 Loe Mgelee <:)pt-.. I.A-Sou ....... ~~~.._.., ~ 100 200 1)-J 7 1 cow-•... 200 0'1 ·~ • 2 Roaci>elle, Linton (8). ano llllg91. Rohde and Malbon W-Rohde L-llloachalla 28 -1114C'.hOls IEL .klllMOn 131. Camc>Nu (El. Mon (CI ~ .............. 1 U.W.-111)' 100 010 1--3 10 I Newport HerbOI 100 000 0-I 3 3 LareOn and Fr•, NUQlflt and Terry HR- M-IUI irw.. s. td•1t11c11 s lrvlnl 121 000 1-5 5 0 S~ 000 030 0-3 II 4 ~ 8lll'lml (I) end Klrll: OerteO. CW. ••n (21. Joroen tell eno ~ ... ., w -P-1 L-Garlab m T-11, C.... _. 1 El Toro 005 205 0-12 9 1 Costa MIN 000 001 0-1 ? 3 lomellt and TodO<O. Goe111Cll. Peu,,unv 1111 and Fllld w-Lomem L-Goettach 211 -81..s (£T). .. -.-..t ICM). ,_ .. v.-., 7, • ...,,......, 1 F<>W>tlill Vlollay :ZOO 020 0-7 10 0 W19trn1na1er 000 too o-1 3 0 LaMwehe 8uf1 (I I and Prati AOliil. 8eliey (4) and Hamman. Wiley W -L1M1rc111 (3-ti L -AOl<t (4-0) 28 -Prell (fVI HA lllober1a ( FV) ....... 1 MC' ...... HuntlngtOfl e..ctl 000 000 ~ 4 t E.0-..'I 400 400 ·-. 10 0 Bucl<llS, flwd (4). p=tlw_, = ~~~ ~~<:J.:' a -,...-(H9). ...... 0... .... 7 ()can v-0 12 040 000 0-1 13 4 Ml<-302 000 200 1-8 14 . 7 AlllnfdlZ. ~ m. Klll8 Ct! ... ~ Bennell Munot (5) and Flor• W-Munoi. l-Kl119. 28-EVMI (M), Pet.,90tl (Ml. Tulll• (OVI :l8-H1<o•ov• (Ml. H¥nandez (0VI HtGH SCHOOL IT ANDfNGI S.. View ~uel T Gii C0<ona del Mer It 2 O lrVtne tO 3 0 t Eatanc1a 7 ~ t :I'" Cot11 Mesa 6 8 I 4''°' Unt-stly II 7 0 5 E1 T0<0 5 8 0 8 Saddlabac~ 5 e O a Nilwl>O<l H8rb0f t 12 0 tO w......, .. lc:ote• Corooa del Mlf 4, Eetanoe 3 Un-lity 3, Newport H11b0f I Irvine S. Saddtebeck 3 El Toro 12. Coa11 ...... I '11def'• a-(a<11) Corona del M..-111 Unlver11tr Colla ...... , Irvine M9wpof1 Hwoor 11 Eatancia El Toro at Saddlabacll lun..t L.Noue • Edison 12 Fovnlmtn Valley 9 Huntangcon Beach 8 Marina 1 O<;ean ~ 4 Weslmonll., 2 • ......, •• lcofee Fountain Valley 7 W-111'Un•I• 1 L -2 5 3 • 4 7 5 10 a 12 tO Mllk'9 8. Ocan View 1 110 """"QI) Edllon 11 ttun1tnv1on 8Nc:I> o 'rtdet'• ci-HuntonvtOfl &eactl ,,. Oceen v -11 Mlle 5Qv1<e (7 pm l ... ..,., .• a- M•r•n• •I W•tmlnater (noon! EdilOn va Fountllln ValHly at Mlle Squala (7 pm) 8ouih Coeel Uegue W L Gii Ceplstreno Valley 12 2 Million VlllO 12 2 l111Ufta Hlll9 1 1 5 Dana Hills 6 e I San Clement• 6 9 1 Laguna 8each 0 14 12 . ......, .. ._... Cap1s11...o Vllley 2. Sen Ciem.nte 0 MIUlon Vlalo 5. Ygunl Hilla 1 Dana Hilla 14, '-'Ounl S.ectt 2 ,.....,.. GMwe (1<1') Lavun-8Mch al "41911on VltiO Capiettano v..,,, .c L.-H#llt Sen ci.m.nte II 09t\ll ftllll ~'r:.:'::!--(• LM Cl. _, -200 __, t*t -1. fdllen. 1:.41'°4; I Fount1lfl Valley, 1:41.IO; I . Hllfltlllf10f'I laMll. 1;41.11: 4. .....,.._ t:AUO . 200 ..... -1, o. ~IQ. 1:11.IO; •• Judd (l'V). 1.12.07• •• ..,. (l'V). 1:12.10: 4. J. Hopll(ne~.M: 8. Gt'""" (H8), l:A.25: I. (l'V). U4All 7, flut· ¥11 (l'V). 1:14.7t: •• IOllAtl ,~, .... ti . 200 lM -t. Win CM t.'04 2. T. 8"'111 =4.lt; I . !'Olk et \::]• ;OI, 'f4.i,.~' (l'V), 2!0l.ta: •• ~-,,.,,,, I ....... M t:tn~'· '*"' --crvi. a:••·-.. .,_.. J:.17.cN • IO IW'M -1. T. Per-(~H.111 I . LWlt ~.II; t.......... IUS; 4, ~ 11,.-.: 8. IUfi I. Me-0 J. Unit· 7~f..-.r (OVI. fMI• Moor't n.rt. • -I, • lltlOftl(~M) 14,i ; I. ...... M.11&=" .. ...... "'" 1:1. ., .. ... '· ..... .. -t.~ .... ~ left;& .. ..... ~iilElntt; '· "' ...... ·~· ., ...... . a... • -·i.·•. j :J: .. ., . ~ti.~,.... ~ I I/ What network TV pays for pro football ht n•lllnnt of dOllltt per IHIOol -----~= year 11 one 11 wl'lte,, Wl\1rioct wa• tlQl1ld 1veollU 1ge2 111,o tV<>5 • tH.7 19(!0 .l30.0 1wo •Mo 1974 -MOO 11119 111a 11182 5 11 12, 8. Oen<ertantan (FV). I: 11 ... ; 1 Lynell (M), &· 18.42, •. Wedlelgfl en 1:21.47 100 beck -1 8. 81111111 (Ml. Ill ot; 2. Pern11n1111 (HB), 5f.75; I Follte t IHB). 10001, 4 Rahet (f). 1.02.H : 5, lflaM (FV). 1 OU 7, I Rlc:twflond (FV). I :02':92: l . Oucld ( E). I 03.08, I 8'IMllM (l'V). 1:03.IS. 100 btlMI -1 Wen (FV). 1:00.M: 2. 8. Smith(!). 1:00.87; 3. T Smith (f). 1:01.17; 4 Nomur• (FV), 1:03.28; 8. Hua no t'VI. 103 37. 8 Lyndl(M). 1-<M.3'; 7. Young(FV), 1'04 98, 8 B«ro IHB). 1:0S.01. 400 lrH ral1y -1. Founteln Vatte r. 3'26 50.i, 2 Edlaon, 3:28.H ; 3. Huntington Beedl, ~:21114; 4 M11lne, 3.31.5&, 5. 0C.... 11...,, 8:41.05. WCNMn IUNMT LIACIUll ,_~I (Ill.MC....,_) 200 medley relay -1. Foun111n V1tl<ty, 2:01.15; 2. Mertna. 2:08.17; 3 Eelteon. 2:08.78; 4 HuntlfllllOn e .. cll, 2:12.07; 5, Fountain Vt//Wt "8'~ 2: 14.111; t . Edllotl "B", ~-10.04. 200 lrae -1 Atmetrono (FV), 2:01.40: 2. ~ (M). 2.07 73; 3. 8t0tch (HBI. 2:08. 10; 4 H11b11 ta~W' 11.21: &. Veney c-..). 2 18 48, t. (E), 2:11.41. 200 tndo -I. CWll (l'V). 2:2Ut; 2. w . ltlacK•n~•· (E}. 2:30 90; 3. McKell\ (FVI. 2'31 Oii, 4. Boehm (M~ 2:55.03; 5. Glbaon (HB). 2 35.89. 8 K. M~ (I!). 2:4 1.52 &(I ,, .. -1. Cemc>l>el (W). 2e.4$; 2 ,.. halt (lilt. 28.60, 3 Tlleua (F\I). 26.81. 4 8eckley (HI), 27 05. I . McNarney (H8), 27 35, t. Vouga (l'V). 21.04. 100 ht -1. tlleua (FV), 11>5.63: 2. W MecKenzle ~ tf,.1 .ee. ' K. MacKINle (E). 1:111.11; 4. {He). 1:10.oe: I . 8'own (M), I 14 16, II. Boltvw (H81. 1 14.64. 100 "" -1 Campbell (W). 57 17. 2 IWllll (M). 57 68, 3. ~ (l'V). 1:01.92, 4 O'Conner (0Vl, 1·02.86; 5. Elllaon (El. I 03 32, 8 HettMI (fV). Ul3.43 500 11 .. -1 Armetronv (FVl. 5 21.oe; 2 Alw'll (Ml. 5 33.27, 3 SIOrCfl (HO). 5.34 U; 4. ScllulU (FVI. 5•38.113, 5. VH"Y (M). 5 61 73; 6 luall (FV). l'Oll.IM 100 back -1 Burnell (El. 1: 11 45; 2 Coopet (E). 1·11.116, 3. Berrlll-(a.o, 1.13.81, 4 Brown (HB), I 14,32; 5 D•vt<laon (FVj, I: 15.00, 6 McHerne)' (HB). 1: 18 15. 100 l>teaat -1 Clatk (FV), 1 09.3-4; 2. Boehm 1MI. 1· 11.21; 3 Ha rward (FV). 1 19.31, . Ryen (HB). 1: 19.64: 5 . ._ (FV), I 19 91: 8. B«*ley (H8). 1:20 14. 400 ''" rally -1 Huntington Be•ch, 4·06 12, 2 FOU<111Mn v.,.., 4, 11.06: a. Edl-1on. 4:U .H ; 4 . ,011nt1ln Valley ((8)), 4 16 50, 6 Fountllln Valley "C". •:31.80: 8 Edlaon "B", 4.44.40, Loe~ ._.BOo\nwn (Jrel of 11~1...--.. --.1 n'9T lllACI'. 350 yetdS lul>Oodl Rocio.II (BrOOlla) 1 80 4 80 3 00 S-Party <Creeoarl 4 60 3 00 Catelul Call..-(Dominguez! 3 80 Also ••Ced Prlnca • Pl<tnly Flnat Dale • Doc Lurby o-Slrallgy. Sonoleb!Mter T-1127 1:2 l:UCTA (7·41paidS2S60 KCOND lllACI. 350 yetdt ,._ Elft hW« (Cf'dra) 7.20 3.20 2.40 Beller Judlllmenl (Hart) 2 80 2 40 r111 R4f111 of F111 (MttCMlll 2 40 Alt o raced M1g111y N190111101. Jolly Lunch.~ Ruler, .Ill• Quarter ,_ 11120 Tttll'IO lllACI. 400 yardt frll>OI Prune 1Craa111<1 9 00 4 40 3 00 819 W1nll (Clla .. 11 S 20 3 20 Bred on Ille Purple (CWdOUI 3 00 AllO raoed Hua Wiid Rebel. Some Kinda VoflaOI, My a. Admlr8I. Weylofl A~. Time 2080 FOUATM llACI. 350 Y•dt T" Jaye P1an (Cardoul 17 20 e 80 5 oo Janeva .Ill (Tr-.a) 9 80 5 40 819 llCll (Hert! 5 20 Also reced Balllln lnlletton UI Speedy Sla Spec:tacutar Bid, POiiey Bua Bill LMllUI 0-, Tr1pol 8orlu1, Leos Boone Timi 11 27 '2 lllACTA P-91 paid $193 60 ,.-nt lllACI. 350 v•O. UM w.rtwioe (Oror) 21.40 7 .IO 4.IO Catllel in 1111 Allr (CW dOU I 4 fl 3 40 El9)t LMn (Hat11 3 80 IJIO •aced GranOpe Wiiiie. Pnme Power. ...... o.y ,._.,, a.maoo. T-1855 llXTM lllACL 350 y~• Dea lltWll CNdt ~ uo 1.20 Lind• Cllltm (Wwd) 7 20 11 20 Follow Me HOme IBrOOl<al 8 tO Alao raced Go Go Kall. MIU Love Lit\. llloNid9 Rocttll. Ktma141. Llllll 81111 Time. tU9 1:2 IUACTA (1·71 paid sn 20 UVbfn4 lllACI. 3&0 ywda wi.c. lld ~ tCflr\ 14,00 ruo 11.00 isou111ern 111orm (Caidoul 4.60 4.llU Cloud 81rM!let (Mytea) 14.20 Aleo raced. J11wrto111, DH·Clllolta O•ea· 1191, OH-Oulll lJMly, I Julllll TUOQ<, MldnlOfll Polley. Speed Te, llmllbO T-11111. 1:2 lllACTA (6-101 paid $376 40 llOHTH AACI. 350 y1<dt Merry W9QOll (Adalrl 13 80 5.2.0 4.00 For111e ~~ (Mltdlalll 1 UO UO Up Fron! Undl (Cteeger) 4 llU Aloo raced· H•IHh Reb, Ruby Be, Poo Beet MIM, MIM BrMZll ~. Glne "'-'-· ~lure Thia. Time 17.11. .. l:UCTA 17·11paid1346 60 • fltelt lnl t•M·l-5·7) peld te,t2t.to with lwo wlnfllflO 1lc1111a (II.,.. llor-). H ll'lell ... OOl'MOIMlon paid 12.41.to """" 27 wlftntno oc11111 ''°"' llOr-). H Plett 81• ac:ratcf\ COfllol•tlotl paid 1130.40 wllh M .inNno llCIHCI (1'WM II«-. one -lllC:lll. '8NTtt uca. aeo ylfda. Tiny CfylUll (CwcloU) 11 to 5.20 •.20 111 etwwoer foo CMltchlll o ao 4.20 ~ lt.¥111 4.20 J.JttO r-6 lllMld Aabl>lt. KluUlae Pot•. ~ ~. Adv..-. 81arel:ludl Time· 11 ... • DACTA (1-1) pllll 11't.OO AltencleMr U~1 NUllTlt UC.. 1· 1111 ,,..., ..._ •• QMiar'll (Orteoe) 10.to 6.20 4 20 "-'• eoy· (~OWi 4 40 3.40 Alcwta'• lrOlflet (l.Jpllem) 8 00 Ai.o reoed: Hit a... -"* Goolln, Matll'a Polley, FO<'lllard Covt1, • Ca.pychtno. Oualy JVlfif • Tin. 1:.W"- """ """ av. MIOnOI ~Toe.I 17.IO 1,80 5.IO PWktntMdet11 (Plnceyl 8 60 7 00 a.owe 0.-(Pleroel 4 llO Aleo raced Ol91nllc, C101lng Trend•. heglo Bell, Pllntac. CounMI01 Cooney, 8ef10llnl. Sclf plno Time. 1:15 115. • lllACTA (l-71 paid 1346 SO. llXTM RACa. 6 l\irlongll. Sutfin Cutle (Ou..111 • .40 3 20 2 80 i..cty Ethelyn (McHwgue) 3 20 2 .60 Tony'I Dllf1lnll (Slt>llM) ~ 80 Aleo rlCIO: ~ °'¥"· Budt Sp;lnQ, I'm Smoochln, Windy'• Sonv. Velequ111u1. Radiant oa-. . T-1'10211 MWMTH Mee. 6 ""'°"91• T ony'a lAndinO (0.-ra) 4 40 2 80 2 20 Doon'• Bay (MoCa"onl 4 80 3.40 C1*91 Acc:ounl (...,_I 3 00 Alao raced TJin1n9 Whaela Top Geeltc. A RMI SplMh TllTll 1"0ll t/5 • UACTA ~I Sleld M0.00. 12 ...cit IOI (7·2·~ 1-t) Peid U ,898 20 wltf\ 21 wlnf*1Q t1cb1~111a horMll l2 PICI! ~~~500 wllll Mii """· AACL 1 1 16 ,,,... on IUlf MW)O (Plnc:8yl 3 80 2 20 °"'' MocMf ten (Guert1I 2 40 °"' HIW8ilen SNl<e (~> OUI (No "'°"" w.getlngl . Aleo raced RIQitlg Slorrn Time: Ul 215 • DACTA (2·1) paid 8 13 00 ...-nt lllACL 1'4,,,... Moorllll Stat (H....-y) 11 60 6 00 4 20 My Nullrplece (Slloanlk•I 6 00 4 20 Sir SFruca (Oll\lw•I 9 oo Aleo raced: Atcovtlle. Sea Ride, Flwl Ru- ler, Okie River. Ctedll ~ Timi' 1:•~. • HACTA (0.71paid $13350 Allend-. 20,813 HIGH 8CMOOL womM .__.~ ........ ...... , .......... , 100 (.._ I) -1 5"-(Ed). 1178, 2 "'-'fl (MW ). 12 20 (Heel 2) -1 ~ (Wm ), 11.82. 2 ~ (H8). 12 18, 3 Maceyen (FVl. 12 21 (Heat 3) -1 Hlfl· dereon (FV), 11.12, 2. Hilll (FV). 11 ti. 3 Nun (W"'.). 12.0I 220 ( ..... 21 -1 Jeclteon (Ed ), 27 05. 2 91\wp (Wlft.I. 27 14, 3. WlllO (OV). 27 92. 4 McGov.,11 (HB). 29. 11, I Nelton (Mar I. 30 61 (Webb ecr6'Cfllel from llnala. rnovinll 1-. lnlO 1111 llald). (Heel 2) -I ~ (Ed). 27.14, 2 Sh-(Ed I. 27 tO. 3 H.,,. det90l'I (l'V). 2 7 .11: 4. Nutl (Wm I. 28 5a 440 (HNI II -I Billeld (Ed ), 1111 3 I, 2 WlllSllll (Wm ). I 03 57, 3 s~ (HB). 1:04.'8 (HNI 21 -I Jedi.eon (Ed I. 59 06, 2 Fiorini (FV}, 1·02 81, 3. lnllln (HBI. 1.05 52 tHN• 31 -1. ~ (Ed 1. 59 es. 2 Ne\lllle (Ed ). 1•04 81 8llO (._I 11 -t Prall (Ed), 2 22 61, 2 Co11al (Wm I. 2 31 6, 3 Ctabllll (FV). 2 36.01: 4. ~ (Mw j, 2·36 63 (HMI 21 - I Wltlallat (Wm I. 2.31.911, 2 Boelcl (FV). 2:32.01, 3. Miiier (Ed.). 2:32 53. 4. Anno (OVJ. 2:35.42 Mila (HNI t) -1 0.V"M (Ed~. 5 17.32. 2. Prall (Ed.), 11.23.H . 3 Giibert (FV), 5:34.60: 4 ~(MW ). 5·53.86 (Heel 2) - I , Snydera (Ed I, 5:38 22, 2 White (Ed.), 5.39.76. 3 A11nO (OV). &·47 05. 4 v...-y (HO). 6~.N 11004 ("-! 11 -I Hllllleld (fV), 14.23, 2. Walullll (Ed~ 11 42, 3 .... (HBJ. 17 22, 4 McComb (Ed ), 11 33 (Heel 2) -1 w- lOV). Ii.JI; 2 Moc:lt (FV). 15.M . 3 GrlNm E.d.). 18.20: 4. SmM (HBI. 11 59 33«.H ("-! 1) -I Hatfletd (fV). 4 7 15, 2. Moc:lt (l'V). 4& 71, 3 8-!H8). 51 28. 4 Gt1"6nl (Ed ). 51 75. (Heal 21 -t Webb (OVI ... to. 2 s"'"" (HI), &o ... 3 Au· ~(Ed.). 51.31, 4 Lund (FV). 53111 ................. TJ -I Wlbtl IOVl. 3M, t St1Ydat lFVI. 35-114, 3 .... (WBI. »-t~. 4 Nlalll N ). 33-3V.; $. W•d (MW.). 32· I l'lo OT -I TllObe (Ed.). 120-6\t, 2 Tenebl (Ed.), lo..l'A. 3 Amermen (FV). 911-10: 4 Hendrlcka (HI ). 1)6.0lt. 5 utu (HBI, 94· 11 Totlll quellllatlC Edleon, 19, Fountaill V9'- ie,.. 13; Huntington leec:h. 9; W"1rnlne1at. 1; <>-I View. 5: Mlr1nl. 3 Tll'll 0.. (~L• V .... l IMf ,,.,. 'Ape«ehH (,.U). f.), 1-1; No 4 -tlH IWOI (l.M)., ~ ...._, CVCI), M . M. .. a. No 8 -1....,. ~Cl.Ml def Cflrlt ........ ~UCN~ M. M , No. I -Aubin ,..,...... UCI) Mf Oev!CI Kr-(UCll l. a.7.W . 1 c·•1-.1•r'lll ..... n ....... Ho I -llretl Oll:Mt1IOn jlen Joel lteMI dll Henll Mot9"*l 11.N), .. 1. M , M . No fvN'LSi~t.1~11.J.'=~1 g•!,: ':~:,:-':~i~ ILHI def "'"lh t4IOO• l~t1•1. 1.e, 11:.'.1 ,. ... , Ho. 4 -PllA VanEynOI (8J8) Mt -Y(lll......, (ft). ..... t .... M , No I -->-fl lanfotd C,.I ci.t 06'lln llrMllllQton llJ81, l-4, •·4, No. I -Tim ltOOlt• lLBS) ell XI*' Hotlllll I,.). ....... . ~1 .................... .... .~~ikJ'cJ'f.¥ttiv.d~~~~ (UCI) def. Ok*Wl-Bt-.lnglon ~JS). t-2. :;:b:!Ci~.;.,~~j 0~:1 t~ •11ap110.~root.1 (LWI) dei 81vlano-Klh11 IBJS). 8 ·7 . 1 ·4 . 8 ·4 , No 3 -1 M~l'htrtol\•ft•IOltk (UCll def Lubbert• ""9Mfl (U018), S.1, 1 ... ; loclll·M1<rlh (l881 def. AQaltl-HendettOn (UNLV), 6-4, 6-3 C.....WleltO.-...'lflele No. 1 Gtller·Moro•" (UNLlll det Barton-Kennedy (Vllfl 811111, 2 ... 8·2. t-3. No. 2 -N1taon.1111m o1 (UCll dal WlllelMtld•NOblll jF81. e.3, 7-t . No 3 801111•·M•ddo1 (USU) del 81;1on- V111£ynde (8JS), 0.3, 7_. c......,... .. 11., o........ , ...... HO 1 -Snydar-Ouade (UCI) del M0teveo•Nlrdl (LBS). 8.0, 7·6, No 2 - R19g1-And1reon (UCSB~ &fflpllil BrOOlla jUISJ. 7·S. 7-0. ~Merl .. (LBSI def McPtlatlOll-Perg... UCll, 8-2 7 ·S Fitlll IMm tc0fl9 I L 8eec;h Sllll 36 2 UC !Mne. 3•. 3 nta Bwbar• 27. 4 H•••d•·LH V19n. '21 6 FrHnO State, 17 8. San Joae S1•1.-. t4. 7 Ulah Stall 3 8 Cal Steta Futlat1on. 2 II PllClloc 0 Plefl' ol Ille yMt J1tn Snyder (UC lfWlll Coach ol 1111 ru1 Dan Campbell (Long 8"1:11 Slllll CommunHw coffecN ~CAL DUM."Tt.Ul-....W.. (•1 ..._ ...... c ...... , tlllclleNcll S. Otaf191 Cont 1 llftolH Fedderly (0CC) 01( Strobl ~·2, rellrld Sc11bna< (SI det Kl•ne. 6-3. 11·3. 04m11H<l (81 del RehlOllk 8·0. 6·2 Bl•Ckalana (SI def Donia. 6· I. 6·2. Stephana tSI det Btaun. 7-6, 0-11. 6-2. M1llt11 ($1 del Schuele• 8-3, fl..3 Noll Doublet .,.,., no1 held alnctt Sadd lebacl< had ct1nehed match High llC~ ldl .... 21, ,._,.,,. v....,,7 ""' ... Whllcher (El 1011 to Perez, 3·8. 1011 to Shougl•n, 4·6. toll to lee, 1·8. toll 10 Sl)OC)ne' 4·6. Sutton <El won 0.1 6-1, t-t 6-0 Turrell (El won 7·6 6-4 6·2. 10•1 3·& Moloecho (E) won. 6-2. io.1. 0-8. wOfl. ~ io.1 3-6 Double• Patl<tw·SlrnmOflS <El del BUCf\anan-MellO 11·4 11·2 def Wendtel·Muncl< 6· t 11 1 Mau ... ~ 1E1 won 6-4 6·3, won 11-t 6-t New-1 Haftlof 2.4, Ufllvlfaltt 4 Slflglff Suna111ne (NHI def Oliver 7 ·5 0.1 Mar 001t1. 11-t def Ma11-2 6-2 def Dt y 8-0 S•andMn (NfQ won 8-3 6-4 won by de llUll, won, II-~ MY.lf'I (NH) won (>. t 6-0 t.-3. 6-4: Jo (""I WOQ .,,, defe&AI. - by delaull won 6-2, 8~ lost 4-0 DoutMee Maue•Conkey (NHI aptll w.th Paulaon· Qr-t-7 6-4 def G11ther·Sc1ammb 6-1 0.1. Sten-·Ha~ (HHI spb1 1·8, 7-~ woo 6-1 .. , c-def..., ltV., Ee'-'9 .... ..,,. ... Ho111tlar (CdM) del Barger, 6·0 del S1udtbel.er 6·0, dot Golcrell 8·0 del S•ndO•ll. 6-0 Propp (CdMt won. 6-0. 6-3 8·4, &.2. Housell5 (CdMI won. &.O 6-4' 11·3 11-2. Wlfl!lms (CdMI. won. 7.5 lot1 0·6. won 8·4 8·3 Double• Cza)e·JonH (CdMI spltt wllh lt1•dom1 F111111. 3~ 6-0. def Sp.c4W·B•own 7-~. 6-2 Gellagh.,,·Smllll ICdMI loSI 3·6, 1·6 1011, r.-1. 3·8 NHL NJoftt C<>NnMHcl FINALI ( ... lof .....,., c.,.....c:.r...,_ T ........ 'eO-Vancou..., 11 ~ (Vanc:ouvat leads --3t) ..... c...,_ N.Y ........ ....._ Ouaelec. 4-0. ~ . . ., " Women'• eoftb9lt C~COLLIGI Ot&1191 Coae1 3. Cerntoa 2 CerTf\OI 000 002 00-2 10 ~ 0<11'1111 Coaa1 001 010 01-3 4 I Dodson and Brickner. Culp and Cruz 28-ZMflcn (OCC~ 38-Bradunat. HIGH ICHOOl. ~4,~HMMtl urn .... 111y 001 002 1-4 1 4 ~ Harbor 000 010 0-I 8 ~ Fu and WltNr'IPQOll: Mec:K..,,., and ROlt lrw.. t. 8ad•abadl 0 lrWll 010 030 5-9 9 0 Seddllt>«ll 000 000 0-0 o 7 L Mertln anc:r K-weh; O<oeco L-101 and Z..... 2&-Locke (II. Oden (II C""8 .... 4.ll T-0 El Toro 000 000 0-0 O I Colla MMe 000 220 --4 5 I T CelMighln end Trill, lw anc:I McAleer ?8-M<;A-(CM) CQl~~u.&A .......... , ...... c ..... -··· ,,.. .... Sen Mtorllo '°'· a.c1tl 103 (Sin Anlonto ...... ......... ,, l..-niC1 lt-Wa• llf ,....._ 80l1on 111, w~ 12t(hllonWltll ........ 1) Mllweull•• 110. ,.hlledelphl• II ~ ............. 2) ...... , ., .. :::c.:-.. ..... :=r. .=-vi ..... :z;::•llMCtlone 'I' NO. 1 -Marina High'a Andy Klussmann is the Sunset League's Player of the Year. Marina dominates All-Sunset Sunset League volleyball champion Marina dominates the all-league selections with the player and coach of the year. three other first team selections and two on the second team. The Vikings. who raced to the championship with 11 straight victories wrapping up the title with a week still left in the campaign, are preparing for the first round of the CIF playoffs Friday night when they host South Torrance at 7. And they'll be d oing it with VOLLEYBALL Sunset League P layer o f the Year Andy Klusamann. the cat· alyst to the Vikings' success. Tim Reed, the coach of the year, molded together a team comprised of KlW1Smann, Mark Cox, Bill L ennertz and Chris Fisher, each a first team selec- tion. a long with second team choices Jerry Meunier, a junior, and Steve Miller. Also showing well and earning CIF berths were La Quinta and Fountain Valley and each school garnered a pair of first team choices and thrtt second team berths as chosen by the league's coaches. ,,Junior Utu, the 6-8 junior, and Rick Weissinger are the first team choices from La Quinta. another Sunset League team which has surprised the ranks of CIF circles with its play. Fountain Valley's John Kosty and Ken Harter led Fountain Valley to a third place finish .and were accorded similar honors. The other first team player is Huntington Beach's Greg Kleck· er. Fo untain Valley is at Dana Hills Friday rught and La Quinta hosts La Serna. . All·SuMe« Laegue Fltel Tum Merli Cox (Merine). Bin LennerU (Marina). Cllfle ,...,,., (Marina). Junior Utu (La Oulnl•I: Alck Weininger (L• Oulnlll. John Kosty (Foun111n Velleyj, Ken Hu1er (Foun111n Velley), Oreg Kl.cker (Huntlngtoo Beecto) 8ecOftd Tum Jerry Meunier (M8'ln11: Steve Miiier (Mar1na1. Scoll Nll80n (Founl11t1 Velfey); Rot> Whitehair (founteln \lellly), Brien C11t1111 (Founteln Velley), Joel Sc:hneggent>urger (U Ouln11)., Bin 81en<11n CL• Quinta); Scou c.I· <*WOod (la Ouirllll, Mike Hix (Oceln View); Keith Sllaye (Hunhng1oo Beach) Pteyer o l the Veer Andy Ktuumenn 1Mertna) Co.tell ol 1111 Yn r Tim Roed (Mwlnlll Yacht clubs to stage openers It'll be eating, drinking and cannon firing time in Newport Harbor Saturday as six yacht clubs obeerve Opening Day oere-- monies . Oube observing the tradidonal Opening Day with flag ral.aJ"' ceremonies and a~ve para ·e of yachts through the harbor a e Bahia Corinthian, Balboa, Liao !ale, South Shore, Voyagers and Shark laland. Opening day la a traditional hold-over from the east coaet where yacht.a are laid up eight months of the yec. On the west COM\ -parUcula.rl)' in Southern California -yacht clubs and other boetln( orpnizatlona ue open all YetAr lone· ' King Hlftlof ';:, ~ _e.z.., W.-i n101 c~• ..,..., , .. urdlly. 01lltornl1 YIOlll Club -0.,.,lon ...... (IOAJ l 1111rd1y: Mlllbll ' """'n ''""'· MOAC} a.tunle. eo-itt1 C0Mt Cottn1hlln YIOM Club -i.. diet ti "" ~ ,_ (l'ttAf) lundtY. Def ~ YICM Clllb -"9dlcMd Joo r--. ~. ....... O«Ol'lldo~ -911fta ........... "°"' '°"" . llfM Clere n.t11~1t111n -....,. "= ... ......, . ; tJlll a YllllM Cll* -.,....... 0., ,.. ~ ••4i::.•· ......... ,..,.. "'"""' . ~:=:m-K ... ... Yllltl -'-""'·ION IU :..o.. &::r; .._, ~ , .... ,.. \ 1111 l<'>ll\) -EV'HtG--1·· .... OHAMJl'e ANGllL.I WHfTW IHAOOW I THI# 0 LMC*I HAWMows.4 • <MMiM-i · • ~:Ven JoMeon I") Q ·~MDNQ HUMAN llHA"'°" l[S ** "Young And Fr•" ( 1979) ~Ill lMMn, 1< .. th LM-.i. A young MOfmon boy,_ meny ,..,, .. he 1ppro1ctie1 edullhood. 'PO' i:=PCQ * * * "The Eetthllng" ( 1980) Wiiiiam HOiden, Alcky &h<Oder A wot1d tr•....., leechw • young OfpNn the_,.. of~ In the Auatrlllan Wiider· -.·ro· t:ao • AU. IN THI 'AMll Y • NIWlllEAT wm. CUTl~11 ...... MJ'()«T (J)QINIW8 @ IAAHEV Mlt..LP An open hOUM 11 the 12th brlnge IMdy char~1ar1 Into the IQuad room CI> THE GIN GAME Hume Ctonyn and Jeaalc:a T1ndy re-cre11e their 8roedway r<>IM aa an ekl· wty couple who dltcOY« tMI Mle in en Old·llQI holne hN f-r-ard1 out- lldl ol playlng gin, untM tentlon creep. Into the te41~CHAMPUN ON THI ALMAQEH« 1:00zcee~ ..CNEWI • HAPPY OAYI MaAIH I MCNEWI KOJAK • w•A•a•H While Col. Potter _,, .. home, FrMlc and Hot Lipe have I wood CIMng m.cle '°' him and Radar r~ I hotM I ~~ MAOC°"Ok. PAINTING CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE A IChool where women .,. teught hOw to anere a w..ittiy husbMcl: • vlel1 to • cMnQet-l!Med MIJ.1lcen rodeo. 9 INTBt'TAIHMIHT TONIQHT An Interview wUh Donald Sutt.1and QITHE~ 0.-t· Oledya Knight (C)MCME * •• "&>melhlnQ Of 1111- ue" 11957) Roe* Hudaon, 0-W~« The Y101erw:. e ncountered by a ~er 1um1 him Into 1...eiarof~ ~~AYrTWA8 • * .,.. "The Man Who Loved Women" ( 11178> Chetlea Denne<, leelie C.,on Directed by Frat>· col• Trulfaut. A mat> 1a ao ObMUed with ~11M -lhal he find• 11 dlffl.. cul1 to remain aatlallecl With any lndMOuel ,..._ tlonlhfp. 'A' 1:IO 8 2 ON THE TOWN F•turecl a loo« at the SOU1hern Callf«nla 111,_, cr11M: a vlllt to the Pr• monition t.nler. wl'lera paycnle'• predletlon• .,. cNcllecl fl)( -Ky I QI 'AMILY FEUD LAW... & IHIALEY &eotlPNl'f L_,,. and Stwley end up at the C011lrot1 ..tlen th9)' win a plat>e trip to a proleulonal lootball llmONLA. Feeturecl: I behind-I,._ CHANNEL LISTINGS 9 ICNXT ICBS) 0 8 ICNBC INBCI l 8 ICTLA llnd l " .ICABC IABCI c 0 ICFM B ICBSl f t Cl) KHJ TV llnd l 11) e KCST IABCI I e 1errv find.I s • ICCOP TV llnd.l • e ICCET (PBS> • e 1<oce IPBSI HEROES -Country music star Johnny C.ash visits Texas to salute the American cowboy in "Johnny Cash: Cowboy He- roes" at 9 tonight on KNXT (Channel 2). --look •• the ""'•Ill• Of The NetWOfk Slat•" '°' a rapon on why the CMl!et>- rltlea COf'lll)ele: KABC-TV crltle Elmer Ollt• <:1ttlquM the culalne 11 • gremmar 9Choot caletarta; Pan 11 of a r99ort on Mirvlvlng World War Ill • w•A•l'H TN Junk mat> mallM a much-naadad aurglcal clemp '°' the 4077th and Klinger lhrowt OU1 Hot i . wedding ring. CJ) TICTN;~ MACH&. I LEHlllEA MJIORT CD NEWS tll YOO ASKED~ rT FNtured; "Donkey a-- ball" and ··Auctto- ScllOOI '' CB) SNEAK PREVIEW A toOll Is !liken at the mov- IM. tp«laM and l90'1• event• coming up on Home Box Otflca. (Q)M8EM.LL Baltlmore Ot1otea at Call- lomla Mgelt 1:00 8 CJ) MAGNUM, P.t Magnum I• hired to ect u bodyguard for an rnterne- 11on111y lemou1 ballerina. IA) e a,,... Budget CUii IOfce the dlt- miMel ot one ot 1he IMCl\- llrl, and one of 8Nno'• IOOQ• II 1101*" by I famoua rodl compoear • MOVIE * * "Bruce LI, The lnvlncl- ble" Bruce U When a young KUnQ Fu atUdenl turn• bad. one ot hi• fellow CliaumetM muat ti}' to right hie tarnble -~ •«I NO~.MDK> Tunle booU a bMu'Y ~· !Mt turn• out to -·-· . ..,,. * *"' ''Tiiey came To Oordur•" C 1Ht) Gary cooc-. Alie~ An Army ma1or become1 ~Wltfl•"-_.,..,~,......, ot hie combllt commend. • P.M. MAGAZINI A ICnool -'*•women ere taught hOw to .,_, a WMlthy hutbend; .,, lnt•- vlew wtttl Otana Roa • A WOMAH CAU.ED OOlDA Ingrid Bergmat> •Iara In the lll>ry of Golde Mw'1 111• lrom her ...iy daya In Molwaul!M to h« trium- phant mMtlng. .. larNll Pr"-Mlniltar, wt1h Egyp- tia n Praaldant At1war Seclat (Perl 2) • LAST CHAHCE QAAAGI Bred Seer• demon•tr•tM the "bum9 and grind" with 1 ~led Muatang and ratee automobile 11ereo -~~ Roger EDef1 and Gene SI.-.. hOll an lnfonnetlve IOOlc at what'• ,_ at lhe moVIM (H)MOV!l * *'A "An Eye For An Eye" (1981) Chuck Norrie, CM11opN< LM. A San FtanclKO C09 QUiit the force to ·~ the murder of his partn« by rnernbef'1 of a drug ring 'A' (l)MOW * * '.~ "The Fan" ( 1881) On TV Z TV HBO ICoMm,ul IWOR I NV NV IWTBS> IESPNI IShowt1mel 5'1c>tllght (C•bl• Nl!W~ N•twork) Laure n Bacall, Jam•• Garn« A populat lllm 1tar .. llictimlzitd by • peycl\OttC lldmlrw. 'R' .MOVll • • • "Oh Godt" ( 1977) cf.otoe Bumi. JOhn o.n. ver God 1111ct1 a n unauapecllng young auper· merllet mat>agw to deltver • ,_.. of hOpe and good will to the altaptlcal people of the rnodettHlay wor1cl 'PO' 1:30. 9 MOM & MINDY Mork ~I an allerl frOM Neptune who -to llllve 1 lot In common with him (Pet1 t) • AU. IN THI FAMILY When an ero.rty -I diM, alone and unloved. Edith It the oiMt one wtMI cornea 10 pay llnal raec>ectt. • SNEAK PAEVIEWS Roger Ebert and Oene Slaltel h<>lt an lnlormltlve loolt el what' I ,_ 11 I ht moVIM. ID LAST aw.ca: QAMOE Hott Bred s..t1 dllO- noMI an alllng battery and lrwea11g11M I brlke 8)'1- llf'll compleint. t:OO 8 CJ) JOHHNY CASH: COW90Y HElllOU John Anderton, June Cartar Cull, Gian Catn9- bell and the O• Ridge Boyt )oln Johnny CMI\ In 1 mUllcal tribute to the American eowboy. a a Dlff"lllENT STJIO(U Klmbert)' la oflwed the job aa IMd alnger In a rodl group when •h• and Arnotd ~ Wiide to an eudltlon. o • 9 MANEY MIL.LP 8#ney and hit men IMtn 1"8t their pttclnc:I building mey be lot MM.(Pert 1) 0 • MBIY GM"f'* 0-•· Or Henry I( .... Inger. Or Armand H-. e....-..e>UNO Sir Roger 8-Wter Of England, the llrat runner to bf.. the bel'flar ol ,,,. lour-minute mite. Is l>'O- flled. -~ THIATM "LOW In A Cold CHmate: FO<elgnen Ara Flenda" Lord Mw1ln gl-Linda • Vitia houM. and Chf'l911an ~ lnvotved with one of hit aiOM wfllte ~ refuOIM or the Spenllh CIVIi W.,. (Perl 8)0 (C)MOVI€ "Graduation Day" {%)MOVIE * *'A "American GlgOIO" I 1980) AICl\ard Gere. L- ren Hutton A ~ Hilla glgoto ~ the prlfTle llUIC)eCt In a muroer 1n- t~at10n. 'A' t:IO 8 QI GIMME A IMAI< F« the flrat time in hie CM-. Olief Kenieky klllt • mat> In the tine ol duty. IA) •@ TAXI The c:ebbiea recaM the _.. In thelt llYM wnen they decided to become taxi d<I-• (Plr1 i0uetAWJ~ "A SC>edaf FMllng" \/Mt· la .. leced llWtth • dlffleutt CledalOft wMI\ .,,. join. • popMr alnglrlg group. 0 10;00. CJ) ~ L.ANOINO Karan and Lillm• llC>OI 0wy and Abby In I lundl- tlme 8Mlgnall0n, and L.Mlo- ,. -bid< In with Alc:Nrd. 8Q!IHUSTMn a.ua The handgun u-' IO klN I pOllceman turntl OUI 10 be atolen from lhe potlu 1>'°'*1Y deoat'lment. and Belll• ~ • auepec1 I~ ..... :-... ,. TO TMI MANOft ~ ~......,,.IO~· Ille ...,. ..... of "" ... .......... Md~ ..,,.,.._.., ....... to ......... ~ .. ®MCWtl * * * "laolllt>ut" 11H1) Hlgell T wry, Nlool WllliMl- aon. The explott1 ol KinO Mtu btll'I ,,_ llld ...... to -.. k1119M1 of IN AounOTltlle.'W (l)MINN "YOO-'°' HMllll" .MOVll • • • "()ti Godl IOOll It" C tHOI George lurn1, auz-PtaaMtte. God return• to l•tlh end ~·~~ .., Of 1111 ~""'9 ...... utM '° acw..cl ..... -aeoe to IM wortd. 'PO' tO;IO·~ ... and ... .,. WOftltod tbOl,tt thel+' ~ IOn Adetr\, wtlo '"""" 10 .... .... Ot ..., --Nt glri- ftlend lel1 Nm. • MOHIYIMKIM "The RMI Aewerdl Of "-Eatll•" (D)MOYll * * * "For1 Apache, The Bron•" (11111) Paul New- men. Ed AM* A tough cop bett!M crime and cor- n..c>tlon In New YOf'k Clfy'a South Bron• nelghbOf· hood. 'R' Cl) LOU ,AUNA: THa fllMT LAOV ~ l.M 'II.GA.I LOia Fii-par10fml "I Will SU<Vtve," "Love The One You're With" and "WhO Wiii BYy?" In a con- C«t par10frnance from the Aladdin Hotel In Lu llegM. 1 U )O 9 8. CJ) tll Cl! NlW8 ' • IAT\JN>4Y HIGHT Holl: S'tave Martin Gueata. The Dirt~ Cl YOU A8Km K>R rr FMturecl• "Shootout Al The O.K COfral" and "The A thl9te II An Armedlllo " • w·1.·a·H Unrequited love. death. danger. e1v1y and tomfool- ery malca up a typlGal day In the 4077th • IENNYHIU Freel Scuttle proudly lnlro- ducea a ,_ find to add to hit fiat ol ""' • ~CAVETT 8'0 THE LAWMAKEM Cort11pondentt Linda wer1helmer and Cokle Roberta )Olrt Paul Duh lor an up-to-the-minute aum- mery or Congreaalonal ~M11M (C)MOVIE * * "Mkklle-"'99 Ctazy" I 1880) Ann-M.,grel, 8ruot Dern A Taue develof>ar'• aucceaalul job and tlMull- tul wife menage to dllw him Into 1 mid-Illa crlala. 'R' (%)MOVIE • • * "Cutter'• Way" 118811 JoM Heerd, Jeff Bfldgea A maimed \/let· nam vet and hi• belt friend, I IOCiel drop OUI, locua their -giM on eol¥k'fl a mu<O.. C8N 'R' 1 t:IO 8 CJ) OWICV 8'11TOMGHT Hoi t. Johnny Ceraon 0-t Tony Randell •@ MCNeWI NIGHTUNE -~ • ,....&nMONe .IAN'ON>AH080N ......... l"Wm4 CLErl "°"'". ·~MC NIWI (l)MOVIE * ** "Aft That Jazz" 11979) Roy Scheider, _,.... alee Leng. The tutnultu· OUa Mfe of a ptolM8ional choreograpNH 11 followed lrom IUCC8l9 on the 11aoe to pwaonal crl-·A ewovie * **~ "The Four See· aona" (1981) Alan Aide. Carot Burnett Thr• COU· .... .., CloM, IOf\g·lllTMI friend•. experience pro- found changea In their r•tloneNpa wtl4ln one or the ma rriage• dl•ln- teQralM. 'PO' ··-r.w>flGtf'T- 12:00. l!NTaT,.....,,,. TONIGKT An lntarvlew wl1h Donald ~. •a vmM Oen tnea to find a Pl!'IOO mM!lng repeeted •ttemcil• to kllt a femela lmper'°'1a· tor (A) • MOYll • • ''Wind Acroea The E_.gtlCMe" (19581 8ut1 lvH. Chrl1tophar Plummer. A man fight• to -tfte rwturel ~ of Mf1V :lOl"'-tury Flo<lda. • LOW, AMINC.tM ITYll "L-And The Longeat Night" Lulher and OolorM ttt• on their wey 10 LM 11ao.aa. bul get toa1. "love And The Phof\lee' • Boyd and ~ Nlurn from a formel party. I POCtM ON IOCIETY 1t::a0 8 LA ft NWIH'T WfTl4 ~YID~ O-te· Jimmy PlwMll. O~ Cout DAILY PfLOT!ThUllday, May 8, 1982 TUBE TOPPERS KCOP (13) 8:00 -"A Woman Called Golda." Pan 2 of •tory on the life of the late laraell Prtme M1nl1ter Golda Meir . St.an lnlrld Berpwl. KNXT ~2) 9:00 -"Johnny Cuh: C.Owboy Heroee.' The Oak Ridae Bon and Glen Campbell join Jcihnny Cub. Pho10 at left. KNBC (4) 9:30 -''Gimme a Break." Chief Kan.Laky killa a man while in the llne of duty. KNBC (4) 10:00 -"Hill Street Blues." A handgun used to kill a policeman la stolen from the police property department. MIGl!ey Spilt-. paycnle Ootochy Alllton 1:8 *** "Jamea At HI" ( 1977) Lanea Kerwin, MellNI Sue Anderaon Atlttt moving 8Cf08I lhe country wltll hi• lamlly, a heertlldl teen·eci• boy leevea home to reiurn to hlatWMthNl1. ·~ l>HGUAGI <BJ HAI I fl I LIAH HOU.VWOOO Gene Kelly holll • dtu· Ding trlt>.ite to the days ol HOiiywood when the MGM mutlcal reigned Mlpt- CD) THE FOUA TON The preelM harmonlaa ol the Four Tope -INlured In IUCf'I '°"' clMetct .. "Bernldetta" and "Stand· Ing In The Shlldowe Of Love " 12:M CC) MOVIE *'A "Kiii Of Be Kiiied" I t980> JamM Ryan. Char· lotte Michelle A IOI,,,., Ntu1 commander" who io.1 an Important kar111 match lo the Jap-during the war. Mella lo e-.ge hit oel•at by *'lll•llng ,,,. top kung lu llghlera lrom around the world In a tour- nament 'PG' 12:40 9 CJ) ~IUAH & W1R: The day etlet Mildred, on )ury duty, 11 attac:lled. one of lier leltow juror. It found murdered (R) 12:41 (Z) MOVIE * * ·~ "Peler Aebblt AnO Tha TalH 01 Beatrix Potter j 19711 Fraclericlt A.,,ton, Alexander Grant M•mbera ol London'• Aoy.r S-t ~)'pet• lorm verll<>n• of "Plgllng Blend." "Jeremy Flllher." •• Jemlme Pud<IJ9.0udl, •• "Squirrel Nut kin," and "Two 8ed Mic. " 1:00e MOYIE * * * "The Cowboy And The Ledy·' ( 1938) Gary Cooper. Merle Oberon A rom•n<:tng ranch hand •WMPI an ,,..,_ ff'om ,,,. city off "-,_ ., MOYIE ·~ "Plan 9 From Ou1ar Spece" ( 195e) Bela Lugosi, Mona McKinnon UFO. containing •tranoe 1Mab11- en11 from an unknown "4-' Invade Eerth 1:10 • MOVIE * *'A "GodZille \It The Thing" I 1984) A.kiri Tatcerada, Yur"'o Hoell! When Godzllla thrNten• a huge mo111 Ill moth« Mothr• a1tac111 9 NEWS 1:308QINEW8 CR>MOVIE *'A "The LHI Cll- '1981) lee Ma)o<•. Chrll Malcepeece In a WOfld of the future. • former r.ce car drtvar and a ,...,..aoe comc>uter e101>«I fight Ille government's proac,lptlon of automobllea 'PG' OMOVIE * • * ·~ "The Howling" (1981) Oaa Waltace, Patrldc Mee,_, A women raponar I• menaced by a kllter who -10 be • werewolf •fl' t:MCl)MCME ** "SWtnglng~ .,. .. Jo John11on. Cof!Mn Ctttnp. A joumellMI major 1nr11tratM the ranU ol a college cheertaadlng 1quad to ••POH th• e11ploltatton ol the c:NwlMdet• by the 1001- befj 1.-n. 'A' t.'00• MOVW • * "Elgh._-. And An•· loua" ( 11157) Marthe Sc:ott. Jadtle Coogan A young glt1 llnd• thal U>e roecl to happl-11 a roci<y and often tregte one . 2:10 CC) MOVW * * "LOOlt Badl In Anger" ( 1959) Ctalta Bloom, Alcll· trd IWrlon Sued on the play by Jonn OabOfne. At lhe ••• moment. • m... ell~• 111111 he lovel and need• hi• wife 2:11 (%) CHAAlU CHAMPUH ON TME ALM ICEHE 2-.30 ., MOVIE • *"" "The Oev11'1 Hand" (198 I) Robert Aide. Linda Clvltllan. A man llndt that hie tnnete good-pr• '*'Ill him lrom becoming 1 total per1lelpant 1n an evil voodoo c:utt • 2-.A0 8D NlW8 2!41 {%)MOVIE e * "Cattle Annil And Lii· tie Brltchae" (1981) Burt Leneul•. John Savage Two tough outtawa plek up a pair ol teen·age girl• and lake them elOtlg Oil their edventur .. ·PG· l.'00 8 MOVIE * • "Love In Pawn" '19521 Barnetd 8raydon, Barbara Kally A woman gambiea With IOve and toa- .. her hue~end 1;119 MOVIE **'A ~0..tinlfk>n Inner Space" 119881 Scott Bra. dy, S'*'M Hor1h When dell)--div«• aatvaoe an UtlUMial cratl l'rom tM OCNl'I llOor. a myeterlou• mona1ar -gee from n (HJ 8HEAK PAEV1EW A toOll It talcen at tht mc>V· .... aoeclele end ap«ll eventa coming up on .._Bo• Office (l)MOVIC * * ·~ "The Fat>" jt981 I Lauren Becall, Jama• Garnet. A ~ lllm 11er It vlcllmized by a PIYc:hOllC adn'llfw 'A' s::ao 11 MOYIE * * "Lover a Arid Llera .. I 1979) Goldie Hewn. Glat>- carlO Giannini Whtie t•av- ~ In 1181\1, an Arnerlcan girl ,,_.. and , ... In IOve Wflh a merrltod mat> A' ..... ..-..oH: ~ The IMF mut1 peraued• an A,,_lcen IClentllt nol 10 give tht rMUll.I °' ,,., r-Cll lo the AuMlanl CB)MOVIE * * ·~ "An Eye F« An Eye" (1981) Chuck Norrta, Ch<lllC>Pf* LM A San Frencieco cop quit• the force to evenge the murder OI 1111 pertner by rnemt>et 1 ol •drug rtnQ 'A 3:80 CC) MOVIE * * "Mlddle-"'99 Crazy" ( 1geo) Ann-Margret. 8<uce Dam A THU developer '1 aucceulUI job and beeull· lul wile manaoe to drive him Into a mid-Ille cr1911 'R' 4:06 8 QfHE AUTRY 4:30 8 VOYAGE TO TH£ ~eonow ~TH£ SEA I "The SllaC>e Of Doom" • {Z)MOVIE * *'A "Monty Python MMll 84tyond The Fringe" ( 1978) Narrated by Dudley Moore. A behind-th•- _,_ to011 I• tak.,.. at ,.,_..,. and l>'ec>et• Ilona '°' Amneaty lnterna- llonal'a 1979 comedy ben· JOHN DARLING eflt .._ tllel aa.rrect ....,,...,. of~ 'VIiion ..... .... ~ll,.O. ... ~ jOIM lam. Howefd Md • ffltlld on • ~.,.. • <l>THI ... GAMa Hwne CtOflYll 111\d .....,. Tendy ••·Crute t"81r ltoedwey roe. aa an eld· -iv Couple wllO dlaeCMW ,,.,.. Ille In .,.. °""• llOme Ilea ... , .... .,di out• elOe of pley!ng gin, ""'" teNioll OfMCle Into N OM.*· Frfifa11'• Da11tl•~ Mo11I~• ~~- l:a) (Cl * ._. "KIM Or Be KllleO" I 1lllO) Jemea Ryan, Oh11- 1011e Mtcnelle A former Niii OOf'Mlander, who loll en ""90f1ant k.,ata matGh to the J.,_ dUllng the w11. Mele• to avenge hit defM t by enlltllng the top kung tu fighter• lrom around the world In a tour- ~! 'PG' &:ao. * * * "Oh Godl Book II" ( 1880) George Burnt. Swenne Plelhelt• God return• 10 Earth and CllOOIN the young daugh· tar ol an adverllalng ••ec· ullve to apread hll ,,..._ tage to the world . 'PG' t:00 CZ) * * * "The ldotmlk· ., .. (19801 Ray Shllkay, Tovah F .. dlhuh A m1n1. pulallve ml()ag« ..-var- IOu• ploye 10 catapult two teen-ager• into pop alng- 1'!1! etardom 'PO' 7:00 (CJ * * "Seliur• The SIO· ry Of Klllly MOf•lt " Leon- ard Nlmoy. Penelope MH· l«d A t>eaulllul young womat> with a promlllng car-fight• ror ,,., hf•. When lhe It st•uok down by a near-11111 br11n tumor 7:30 (8) * • "Hewlt The Slaye r.. ( 1981) Ja ck Pal1nce, JOhn Tetry An adven1urou1 young men enllata the IHI ol a bind ot warrlOr• 10 llQhl 1111 eY1t uncle. the ovetlo<d wno kHled hll llther and II holding an abbell fOf ren· '°"' 1:00 D • * *. "Fat'*' Of The Bride" I 11150) Spencer Tracy, Ettzabelh TaytOf A father e•perieneel aM ol the jOyl and headech•• tnvOlved with the prepara- llona lor hll daughter • upcoming wedding (%) .... Dominique" ( 1979) Chll Robertson. Jean Slmmont A weallhy women'• huabend He- cutn an alabOf•ll ICtleme 10 drive her 10 aulelde 'A' t:00 (~) * e * .. Penelope ( 19881 Nllelle WOOd. Ian Bannen A negMKted wile deck!• to dllQUIM h«Mll and rot> her h11abend'1 benk 9:30. *'~ "Wlndl 0 1 The Wuteland" I 1938) JOhn Weyne. Ptty!Me Fr-A 11egec.oecn owner racea agMflll a rival to obtain a v~ mall conlr~ In CalllOfntl 0 **'A"TheGreen Hor11on" I 18811 Jam11 St-art, Philip Sayer An amneailc: zootoglst In Alrl- ce flr><lt a refuge on Ille wltdlrle pr-or en .. d - arly men and Illa grand- deughtw l'M (%) * * "MUNCt'e At Central High" ( 19781 Andr-Stevens. Robert Cerradlne A cruude lor r-. begins after a prank 111111 went too lar wu pulled on the quletef 1tudenll by a group ol bOfed hlgh·ICIW>ot lrlenda 'A' IO:OO (S) * * "Chandler" ( 1971 l Warren 011e1. l •llll Caron An ••·••curlly guetd. now ~Ing .. prl· vale eye, It Ml up lor • murder frame -he ~II at> ualgnrnenl to ~ard • 1t11e'1 ..,,,_. 11:00 lC) * * * * "I'm Aft Right, Jedi" ( 1980) ,.,, Cermi- chaet, Peter Salletl In trying 10 do a good job for hi• uncle in a llC1ory 1 watt-meaning bumbler a ctually upHtt th• crootied ~ hit uncle hU ao cerelully plenned (I{) * *'A .. A F«oe Of One" 111179) Chudt Horrlt. Jennifer O'Neill A m111ar ot the martlel art• emt>arkl on a r~mo11vated Nllcll '°' the klllet'a ol hit edopted eon 'PO' • * * '•IOI Md IOI Aftin" (1M1)Jemet Ayen, ~ KIMI A _,.., .,., ...,.,, beC1i. tM mlnlofll °' • poww-rNld ........ ~ .,. .,,,..,._,. lllO llVoMJnd wllll • - "*'d-OOfllrOl ctrUO ·.a• n :tt <.J:> • • • • ''Tiie 1111161 Dick" (1~1 w.c l'Wdl, UN Mttkel A 1M11 ~ -*"l't foll • roooery and .. eweto.d _... job °' Dttt* f'le/d. Jofdno him 10 ltce • rMl llOldup. thlO G * * "~H_,,lnt We Wiii Oo':J.!142) .,.,, '-- '"· ~ Haicty-:-A coUp6e of gllottl O'-Ille bOyl -anlllOul _, • • * *._.''The Mec>Neto WllU" I 197 11 Alen Nde. JecQUlljne lllMt WllGll- cr att turnt1 1 medlocte mullclan tnto • 1"'*' ple- nllt, terrt¥ng hie famfly WhO are drawn up In the -......Olng clfOle ot evtl • ••• "TlleJO«Mlt Wild" ( 1957) ,,_,. Sine. Ira . .....,,,,. Cr llln 8tlcWeCI comedian Joe E. Lewta 1truggte1 to o'ercorne moo 1ntarlerenc:e 1n Illa Cll- (l) * * "The Blacll Hole" ( 1979) M .. lll'lllien Schell. Aobett For•ter, Yvette Mlmleua The Cl-Of a fulurlllle specealllp ~ cover• anothet ~••••' perched on ·111e edge or a IOtTnatlon #hlcl\ pulla MY. thing ,_b'f lnlO a glenl void ..tier• time and apace ~toeldat ·PG• 12:30 ( ZJ • * • 'A "The FOOi Se11on1" (19811 Alan Alda. Caro! Burnell Thr .. oouplM, all ctoM. long· '"'"' lrlenda, upertenee l)(ofounc:I changel In their relatlOnllt\lpa When one of lh• marriage• dlain- teg<at" ·PG 1:00 IC) "Stev11" Gtenoa Jed<· aon. Mona Wlahb<>urne A poet 11 IOfGed to CQMe 10 ~P• with 11111'1 llm1tt U • • * "The Earlhllng" I 19801 W•lfl•m Holden. Ricky Schroder A world trav-19Khe9 • young «ph•n the way• ot ...,,,,,,., 1n the Auatrallan wllder- ,_ PG' 1:30 (HJ * • "The Apple Dump. ~ng GanQ Ridel Ageln" I 19791 Tun Conway Oon Knotll A pal< or -•ern outl•-try to w•lk the strait and nartow G 2:30($1 • • 'Hawk The Slayar' 118811 Jack Paltnce. John Te.,y An edventurou• '(OVng man at>h1t1 Ille Mi ot • bend of WlttM)(• 10 ltgl'll "'' .,.,, uncle. the ovetlord who killed h19 '""" and •• llotdtng en ll>belS tor r en- IOm 1z, • * MaMKte "' Cen1ra1 High I 1976) Andr-Stevena. Robert Cert edlne A Cluaade tor r-. begin• •ftet • prank that _,, 100 tar wu pulled on the qu,.,., 1tudent1 by a group of bOfecl hlgh·achoot lrlendt 'A' 3:00 0 * ..... "Aelen1lell (1948) Robar! Young Mar· guarite Chapmen A P'•llY g111 ,,.,ps a condemned orlllar to •~•d• • bfoodlh1nity posae tong enough to ntablllh h11 innocence •n the rnutde< eharge again11 hun 0 • * "Lover• And L..,• j1979)C)old .. Hewn Goancarlo Gtannlnl White trav .. lng In Italy. an Ametl· Cit\ g;tt ~· Ind falls HI love wtlh a m.,rted man 'A' 3:30 IJiJ • • •;, "Cardiec Arrn1 ( 1978) G11ry Goo· drow Mike Chan A black me!llel operetlOll that tell• dlMmbodled heart• lor traneptants •• d•scovered by an o«oe11 homoelde cop 'PG' 4:00(% • • * The ldolmlk· er" ( 19801 Ray Snatkey. Toveh Fetdshuh A mant· put•11ve manager u-var- IOUI ploys 10 cet19Ult two IMn-IQIWI Into PoP 11ng- *"9 st.,dom ·PG' 4:30 (SJ **'it Tot>y And The Koela Bear (198 11 ROii H.,ris Live action end 1111- mallon combine 10 tell the tale ol I young boy Ind hit pe1 koele In Australia'• lronti.r daya. 'G · 1:00 (C) * * • "Penelope" I 19") Nat .. le Wood, lat> Bannan A negtec:tad wll• decidM 10 dltlgulM herMll and rob her husband'• bank. by Armstrong & Batluk Soap no longer is number one sponsor for 'soaps' P/t-~R ~ENBEBO NEW YORK -The IUda ate oomina out of the ..,.._. Brtchtmlna, whlteninc detergenta, Iona the l'l)ajr tpo1.ir1 for ...Uerf.na and 8*kJ.rur around tn the afternoon, have dropped to thirCl 1mon1 daytime advertitera, reflectln1 1 chage In who waticbea ~ytime TV. AcaordlnC to Brand AdverUstnc Repcrq, day- Urne'• top 1porwon in 1978 were, In order: deter- ,_.., pet foodll, ~ mi.. and laundry prep.- l'lldonL 'n.e tarlNd bowtwtw. who would &et TV tlpa on cleaninc the c:utle, c.artna for Rover, ~ dinmr' and dolna the wMb. Today, a n ew bned cl OOG11nerdal producta ii · paylq to reech bur1eontn1 audlenc:ea or youn1 ld\altl (18-25) and men over 00, alone with llill· dlambumt womm vtewwn. ' In 1t8 l. tb .. • were the major s ... for the '*-'*"'' cllQy 20 boun ol qula .... ~ -~ and Ml1aJI: dental auppll• ~ ---................... Ind Gold and CCD1 U '1D 1w1""81 Whit It -II tMt die mm ''9oep CJPll'I" II bee ..... an amctnnlim. .. With toothpMte and breath ftellbenen for the youn1 at heart and denture creams for thoee no lonaer In the tooth the No. 1 daytime Nrodueta, "0.neral H0tpltal," .. One Life to Live and Co. prob•bly should now be known 11 "Dental DUelnrnM'' The advertialnc ahtft to mon youth-oriented, penonal p-oducta mJecW majlx' cMna-1n Ameri-can lift:ltyles and viewtnc 1>911«N OWi' the p..i lJ'hile more women let I tbe home for tbe job market, more men toolc early retire- ment and become site.moon TV addici.. advent.in&'• main taraet, 18-49, and gone off to watch Rriall in college fraternity houlet and dor- mitoria. A.C. NieJRn C.O. f~ show that ln 1971, &9 percent of daytime'• 24 million network Yiewen were women. 18 percent were men and 26 percent were children undes' 17. In 1982, the women's per- ceni.ee dkln't chanp, but male vlew.n ln both the 18-19 and over 50 cateaor* lncr1 •ed. Kiddie vie-- wen decUned to fewer than 20 peroen1. "The one dernolrapbk that abow9 a ..,.,.,ant ahSft ii IM1' over 50," 18.ld frank Camplli, ABC'• maMift of audience ana1ysla. Thia explaJna why advertlllftl for bNdllche mnedMI mowd from ntnth to aecOnd In the PM\ flve,..,.., and two ta_. la not In the ToP 10 In 1978 -coff .. and wa and balr produci. -are ..-1!i.-=.°' ~ =-llCOOmlDOdadn.I Che,... 8duhl wttll cJMmM °' ..... fiction ana fan..., ... ..wna,.... --nwn a cult of V1\it& ... w•wn11 au& tbilre, ..Sa_.. ~ofadwiU ................... .... ~ ....... ABC. dfniiior of ........ ...... au TICh. Schafer aald one result la commercl•la for make-up, akin-care treatments, deodorants 91\d feminine hygiene products. 'The lalt cat.eaory, the 16th·J.lraelt lpoNOr 1n daytime adverUmni b\ 1981, w11n't maldnc TV pttchm In the mid-1970.. With lncreued vtewenhlp ln the older cate- aoriee hM come • ct.oUne ln the you,..i vtewen. Thetr favorite <1-yUme fare, qula ahowa, went from 11 neiwork pn>ll'Wnl 1n 1978 to eliht now, wlth f~ all~ expected nelrt MMDO. Backlash possible NEW YORK (AP) -Slnct CBS' •-eo M1nu9" becam1 b*t vieWtnc. ABC hM hid dllftcultJ fln- popUio ~·''"'far ltl tint hour SUDday ti. ~ .. ir,t.nc to ..... Almrtca with ounterauack : -Crl me ln America .'' ~ ......... .,.. ........ ....,.. tM netwan ~ IDCllt Ylolmt b7 ii;; atlonal Ooalhlon Oil,.. ...... vw.no.. --~ ...... ~ _..about ABCI prapwlt;y b ....... boaiit. 'nw .... 11 to ~e Yiewen to jolD tM Mttle ··tr rt.....,, bUt ~ ..... ~ onlJ --~ ........ b llllt..., claan. r ' ' I I II ,. FIRST COMPLETED -The six-story Liberty National Bank building was the first to be finished in the $50 million, 14-acre One Pacific Plaza oHice and comme rcial center in Hun- tington Beach. Other buildings planned in the center are a 12-story, another six-story and a two-story office structure. Exchang_e the Trust Deed You Took to Sell Your House •••• for a Safe, lnsUred Savings Account. Republic's Trust Deed Exchange Treasury-Mate Account can get you safely out of the unfamiliar mortgage loan business. And put you into a h1gh-y1elding, insured cer-· t1ficate. You collect the interest and we do the worrying for you. lnqu1re today about current discount rates on our purchase of residential first or second trust deed loans. Call Dave Winslow at (213) 254-7163 or (714) 978·6000 for complete information. or call your nearest Republic Federal Savings office listed in the telephone white pages. 988111& Your s.vlng1 ln1ur~d to SJ00.000 RFS REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS 'FSLIC 11111111 •n<I loan •UOC•ll•On -:---;-:---:- Hf'•d Offlcf' ~t 1 .. t>I .,._ .> •.i1 .. , '"'' "'· • •1 t / ~ t 'fi •·Iii t, Al IAOl rv1 ..... ,.. ... ,,, '"' ....... '[JIA. BUl<BANK • t' Alll 'l'Jf11 • 'I""' MO~T 1>1t1<.111.,. l•AC II "ll" Ill It.II I'>. LAC.UNA Nt<..UE l 1•>'-ANl.1 11 '> • l'"l 'I ..,I'll"''•'-• PA-.. .. [;f "<JI • "1<11 1'1\f l>A •'-A"'IA ""'" • l Hll"'""'l1<l.'IK'>•Wl '>l~l"'ll II • "°'0001 "1"\0HILl'> FOR BUSINESSMEN DOCTORS ACCOUNTANTS Imagine. hundreds of smah computers and word processing systems all togelher in one place Volin see computers ranging from ne.xpens1ve personal systems to sophisticated small business systems You'll see word proces$1ng systems that increase your office p<odUCtMty Plus all the rot new releases in sman computer software, peripherals. accesS()(ieS. services. even supplies So. 11 you want to understanC! what the rapidly emerging small buseness and personal C()(Jlputer system phCnOmCnOn Is all abOut and what It can mean to you, you shoUld be here Because ycu'U be able IO study and compare systems end appllca- Anahetm Convention Center May 7, 8, 9 FndoY,111 AM·9 PM Saturday, Sundoy 10 AM-6 PM . • ··- !Ions An<J not JUSI a few But IUldreds The ~pular names you already know And the new ones you should know about Computer St'OWCase ExPo is the one com· puter show yo"' need this year • Alialielm ,s IOred by 'TC"lnterface:.Orou~ frqmingham, MA 01701 .. ,, Rlclil1r4 D. Cobb, of Lake Foreat, a Mnlor couruel with tht ataff of Coldwell Baaker Com· merdal Oroaf • lac., haa been named a vice preil· dent. He wll continue to be baMd ln Newport Beach. Narmco Ma&ertaJ1, be., • supplier of edhestves an<Ltt.ructural mat.erla.11 tD the aerolpact and avia- tion lndu•trin, hH announced two man.a1ement appolnt.mtnta. Wllllaaa N. Broatcb haa been ~ &etleral manager of the company, oveneein8 operationa at Nannoo'a two Oran&e County-buecf facilities. Carl J . Brwger wW be plant rnanqer at the company'• new 16-acre manufact~ complex ln Anaheim. N'&PmOO, with admlnlfiraUve headquarters ln Costa Mesa, relocated production units to Anaheim last month. • Jamu P . Crew, of Irvine has been na- med lales manager of the Newport Beach office of Coldwell Baaker Commercial Real Eatate Ser- viCff. Commerdal lines underwriting by Employees M•tul Cempuie1 haa been Initiated ln Southern California with the opening of the companies' Or- ange County branch in Laguna Hills. Kent Kocllllelaer, formerly of Phoenlx, resi- dent vice president, is manager o f the Orange County branch. Catberyn Tennllle has been honored as the top salesperson In the Newport Beach office of the George l!:lklDI Company. Also honored at the company's annual awards luncheon in Beverly Hills were Sally Slllpley, the top lister, and Pat Hag. B. J. Stewart AdvertlalDg ud PabUc Relations Inc., New port Beach haa named Patrtcla Berwald senior art di.rector. Robert J . Flaller haa been appointed director of public relations at Lenac, Warford, Stoae, be., ad- vertising-public relations, Newport Be.ch agency. He had bttn with Cochrane ChMe, Uvlnglton ln Irvine. The name of Robert P . Warmla1toa was ort\itt.ed by Enterprtae Natloul Buk (in organiz.a- Uon) ln ita list of directors carried Friday ln the Daily Pilot. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS u... 1' "'"llbon 1~14 Pt\11•-.. ~ 19'·> Pl•r<..SS '.).. '' 'I> Pinkr1n 1't ?tltt P•onHI \ •• 20 Po•ll• I !rl6 U• Pr•\GM 11v. ""' p,.s,..,,n 21"" 21v,: PrOQrp 70Vt 21 Pl>Sv NC 111. II» Pur18en 11~ 21Y> Putoc..p IS\• IS~ Ou•~r()I U t • Hlf> A-oenPr llV. 1' R•ycr.m 1•v• 19.\o R•ymnd ••19 '"' AHve ' •'°' 1'•1, Ro.<!E• 24 24'n RobOMy 1'~ 19"1 RO<Ae 24''> 14-¥. s.ollff 11 ll V, S.le<O •'-»"< S4 ... l-Oo 1'11 1't• StP.ul I~ 1"-S<rlpH > 4'" n. s...-l'• • Svc,_..r Slo, ~ S"'<""I \ 21 JD Sl>Mecl I~ II Sl\•fl•>ul t''"I , .. S..erAAI 11'-Z1 Sillcc>n• I.\\ l"'o SC•IWtr 11 12' • W.El!w "'• 10 Sl-yn "• ''' S40M>cro 'r.1~1~16 ~:~ l<t I"'• Sl9<1SI 11 11'-Sl r•wCI ~ 4'Yl !WIMwv ~ ~ Suoe'E' 1n.. 11 .. •. ,,.. ... IO~• 10\., 11 .. 11\.>t , 11. 11 I ... ,. ?11·1 II .. 11 IJ~ 1JllJ l11'1 l \la Daniel Coaatnctloa Co., a unit of Fl•or Corp., Irvine, hH appointed L.W. DoDDelly senior vice president to coordinate technical llaoon between the sales and operating divisions of Daniel and F1uor aubsidlarlea. Bermu-Gnvely, b e. of C.O.t.a Mesa ia one of 13 firms honored by Sola Electronic, a unit of General Signal, for electronic representative lales. ADtbony B. Fllber of Corona del Mar has been named branch manager of Mlcroclata Corporatlon•a Orange County branch sales office at 4000 MacAr· thur Blvd., Newpon Beach. He waa with National Training Systems as director of marketing. Ed Farrell of Irvine haa been named director of national distributor sales for ITr Cuaon, head- quartered in Fountain Valley. He was general ma- nager for ITT Components. Jalle Hampbrlea of Newport Beach has joined Gloria Zlper & A11oclates, Newport Beach-baaed public relations agency. as an assistant account ex- ecutive. ASR Multi Construction, Inc. of Troy, Mich. appointed Dennis W. Heine of Lake Forest as gen- eral manager of ASR's Pacific Coast regional office in Newport Beach. DOWNS LA\I Pl! U: il~ NASDAQ SUMMARY I l ] • I ) .... • I •.. ..... 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J~~iilfi OW! .. :~! .. ::.. .II "" ._ .. ~.. r_ 1;,. :: e 1 ..... Z; . • I I I ' • 1 I t t . I' , ... . '• Orange Cou1 PAJL V PILOT /Thuraday, MIY 8, 1982 s NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS IUOUTIO.U IHCt..UOa THOU O• , ... llltW Y .. M. Mi .. IU, Pt.ClllC, l'•W, IOtfM, DIHOIT ••• CtNCl• ... 'f'I ttelll •CMAMGU a•O •al'OUID IY , ... •AIO AN01 .. lfllll f o a.1~ Htl ""' -a. ... c ... condo Phase I done The ftnt phale ot what la de9crlbed u Oranp County'• larp1t oUJce condominium complex hM been completed by Sattell & McAdam, Inc., Bullden, ot Irvine. Seven otfJce oondornhuum buildfncll. otte~ a total ot 110,000 9C1uare feet, comprite Ph.ur l of Lake C.enter, a $96 million, 33-acre complex one mile wett of South Cout Plua In Santa Ana. The project la on Sunflower Avenue near the LOI Angeles 'nmes plant. Developer of the project is C-alifornla Pacific Properties, a partnenhip ol C.J . Segentrom & Sons, Greaory L. Butcher and Jamea M. Heitbrink. Archi· Leet.I are J...anadon & Wilaon. Frost, Spence & Trl.nen of Costa Mesa ii leasing agent. New bank in the green Marine National Bank, which began operations ln July, reported a net income of $2,330 for the quarter ended March 31. The bank i• located at Harbor and MacArthur boulevards. Marine National, with 600,000 shares outstanding, haa aaeta of just over $18 million, according to lta statement. MSI data entry system told MSI Data Corporation of Costa Mesa haa an- nounced the availability of a program generating eoftware package which can be uaed by non-technical penonnel to create ~tomlzed applicalion programs for MSI's handheld portable data entry comp\tters. StarTel sells StarTas system StarTel Corporation, an lrvine-based manufac· lurer of computerized communicatlona and business systems, hu announced the sale of the company's StarTas system to Monroe Telephone Answering Service. Inc. of Beaumont, TeXM. Fluqr unit in Brea office Kibby-Roberts, a Fluor Distribution Company and a Fluor Corporation subsidiary, has moved into 35,000-aquare foot corpora~ headquarters in the Brea Financial Commons, Brea. The new facility for the metal tubular products company replaces corporation headquarters in El Monte. Douglas declares dividend The board of dlrecton of McDonnell Oouglu Corporation h.u declared a quarterly dividend of 31 centa per ahatt on the outatandina stock, to be paid July 6 to ahareholden of record at the cloee of businesa June 7. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS MEW YOl'ltt l~ -T"9 tollOM"O 1111 "-' .. ,_ V-5"c.. EacNfl9t .... , -_,_ --....... U. ..... - -IN ,,_, -Ofl r;< .... W:.<Nr<ot ---"' - Mo ~tie> ,,....,. -'1 -Wl· "*° ..... -peft~ u-.n -.. •11..--~ .,,. """'°"" <ia.I ... ptlc9 end Wed""l1:l a ptlQ9, 1 ... m-pl Lesl. ;,., Up~\... n'='~ ,~: ~ ~ :A.: 4 l>a Telle! 1.-. • 1'-Up '6 S GTFI pf9 ioo;, • Iii Up 7.t • lt.ite 1 J1111 I~ + llAI Up 7 • 7 lftl--., S 1tlll II • 'WI Up 1 J t WeC11> Del E 7\'t + \'t Up 1 1 t Purttft F_,, tW. + " Up U 10 Mll.,"°'I' ' 1~ • 1 Up u 11 WyilUllla .... • .. Up U 12~ lt\o't• """' ... IJ IJnllOril fl ,.,-. + " Up 6' 14 Tr\tflll '"" ~ • ... Up 6 I IS Oii& 4..., JD • '"" Up U " ....,_El • 11 • "' Up .. , 17 KCl'L U5Cll .-.. t U• Ull U 1' N-'M 11111 1''11 • l\'t U. i.O "~"'~·"'Up J.S I~ '-ltllt~ or'21.o I~"' 2111 -'4 ! tl , w..... 11" -1 ,,, 4 AydlnCp l' ... -1" 7.1 s ~ • 11-.0 -... Of! ... a GE0""1 ~"" -,.,. Ofl i.S 1 KC .... ,, I lo\ Ofl U I MMMo -1n. -'lo Oii U ·~ .. --Oii u Ml "n*" • *" -,.,. Oii u 11 ~F M -.,. Oft U n 'Mlle! IAllE a -• Oft u ~ ~KA I 11\4 -" Ofl S.. IA 0.... o.11 r -1'• 8:1 U ll£i~ • =~Oii u 17 OM 11'--" Oii U " _..... 11\11 --Oft u .. ~ .__ -°" J.1 • icor·.,... "' -" °" u WHAT STOCKS DID wea NEW YOAK IAPI INY ) T..S.y /ti "' 4S1 "'1 SI ,., Wf>(l NEW YOflll IAPj """"-S TOO.y ,,. ~ Z1I , .. 10 ll METALS Wean.day C••1t•r 71·1 I cent• • pound, U.S OMt~. L..i 26-27 ce1111 a pound. n.. 36 cellll • pound, ..._._,, ni. M.8691 M9lllll Weal! OOfl'lpOll1e lb •tt ••-re..n 09ntl, pound, N.Y ....,...,, ~75.00 pat fleMI . ,..._ 1331.00 troy OL, N.Y Sil VER WedneM!ay Handy a Harmen, H .135 par troy 0¥!!9! GOLD QUOTATIONS ., Tiw AH ID ....... ,,_ Selected worto gold prlctl WtiOnMday ......_,.! momlflO n111no aa.1.75, un- cNnotd ~ tftemoon tt.itl"O 1331.40, on SUS. ..... 1345.02, of! '2.24. ,flllllttwt 134).M , on to.It z.to11i: Ute bing: lO OOfM la1er H•Hr a H•rM•R: only dally quota SS38.40. on '3.3&. ·11.··--ollty dally qve>l• '338.40. off .36. ·~ only oeltf ~ ,..,.toeted 1355. • on '3.52. SYMBOLS -.............. .._ BOLD COINS 0.-tr ..... '" c><ec .. 11\t It _..,. ~ ........ --...... -..... . .,.,. .... _. ___ ......... ... lltlW YON<~ -,..,._ .... Tuee-~--• ._ .......,._..... ~ .._ ... ~ __ ., .... ,.,..... ...... _ .. ___ _ _ ... .....---Ill-......,_.--. "W'• ... 111,._..11 ......... r.:---Mlilit•-lll .......... I -.-Kl!'ttil--. t troy oa., IM0.00, oft __ M........,.4in• •t t --.00 ............... ~-. . ...111 ............... l\jl . ........ 1 troy 01., tM0.00, 4tft ·~ --.... ,_ .,.,._ ...... ... -""" ------............. , .. ~ ........... ....,,_,. ..... -·-,1: ... , ........... -......... . ....... -...... MOl trO)I .... ;-:-.......... ., ........ --11. .. 11.00. ...,.....,. ___ ,,_ -ca • LOS A.NOELIS (AP) -"J'kldllr Of\ the lloor' I• • lHO• muelcal about J•w_. J~ t•'l':'ol-J.b•· century a-. that, in lta 198GI ~tlonlhlll tremendous appeal to tho Ja~. "I WH In Japan and I HW the etay In Ja~ ... Mid the ahow'• recurrent 1tar, Herichel Bernardi. "The audience •tarted tauah.lna on cue and crylna ; .. After the lhow, the J•'*'-pc-o. ducer aatcf. 'I don't tee why the 1how ehouJd be eo popular In America. It'• IO Japaneee'.'' The reuon, Bemardl aald, LI .. the content of thil pley la about the breakdown of "'8df tion and the famU . He (the Japanese producer) 11ld , 'What's happening an thll flay la happening today 1n Japan ." The show alto has attracted new audiences mi,n New York to the Pantages Theater in Loe Angeles, wt\ere Bernardi bow• out June 20 to undergo telt and therapy for a back problem. Afterward, he said, he may de- velop a one·man show under the •KMA-_....,.~~-L..J auspices of the Smithsonian In· stitution. He said he was persuaded t.o do the revival because the original dfrector, Jerome Robbins, was going to st.age it. Bema.rd.i, who took over the role on Broadway !rom Zero Most.el, had never worked with Robblns. "This ia not a re-<:reation, it's a restitution," he said. "We have new insights, we're older." One significant difference that's developed ln the past 15 years ls that the show is now adverti8ed on television and radfo as well as newspapers. "We have opened up a new audience to live theater," said Bernardi, wearing a bumooee a, he ....... ,ft.Ill ~lltH!>O llUllMAPLAU l<u S29 SlJt owuea CIKIU CllTOI Com lile1' t19 41'1 A~.~~~o. ........ ~1 . .. ...,.......__ -. NOW PLAYING OWAllH UlellUCll lOWllln fOlllTAll H W • (tfOloSl lS .. O fountMIV-.,llt l~ UA TWiii c.MU COiii.iS ftlJO lltlll WtH•wt-HJ 170 _.,_ ...,_ •'!'> 6~.'0 OWAMI WlllHll• PAClflC MUfll COAIT h.,. UI OOS l...., lle.cll "9t !Sit . .............. ....._,...,. ... . ·~ .. 191 3613 ....... , __ , llW ... MWn1 COAll rWA T ... CUllll ClmllAI Cos!1 ~ IS 1 t 1 e• THE ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC CENTER Cabaret Center wants to thank Lido Marina Village M1n11ement and Merchants CilJ 'of llewport Beach ... Cabaret Chapter Memben Activities Inc. -llewport Beach for making the CELEBRACION DE CINCO DE MAYO On May 1, 1982 at Lido Marina Village stJch a great success. We also want to thank the following for their generous support and donations ,. Which made this fund-raiser possibie. NEWPORT BEACH TENNll CLUB BACK BAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE NtW'port e.ctt THE PINNACLE CLUB Fountefn v-.y •ACHE HALSEY STUART SHIELDS INC. Newpott IMch PNCI WATERHOUSE AND CO. ='COAST PLAZA HOTEL Oott9MeN .._AND ~··STANLEY CRANDON NtW'port 8Mdl AllTHU9' ANDS"ION AND CO. CoetaMeN .._ AND MM. RONALD WHITS IL TONTO MITAU"-ANT ~'A:··-· CIMnR, INC. Newpott leedt NAAP--1 John WllY"f MrPof1 ....... ~~·rc .. cK Newpott hedl RoeERT MONDAVI WINE CUl ... IANTE Corone del Mar IAN MIQUEL MER ~~. '-.. lrvlne LAGUNA NIQUIL TRAVIL ~PHOTOGRAPHIC MlllVICEI ~CKCOUIGa MllllCw\ Vlafo CA19mU AND CHAA'IN =-..ctl ~· Newpott • ... -~~----..-----------·-.... ----- STRIPES[!) THE GROOVE TUBE (RI A LITTLE SEX (R • 6J9 8770/"$~~ ..., .... , .. R9BIN HOOD K11 The 0..11 • Mu t;,;;1;~ iPGI .. Ctllld't "'- "='m~ &0.8 (RI •BARGAIN MATINl!l!S • Monday thru l1turd1y All Ptr1ormanct1 before 5:00 PM (b.,r ljlldll fnt1 .. 111t11t1 IMI Httldayl) "0UllT FOR 'M" 1•1 ...... t: ... •At..Mt.-.- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< IN "IOm KIND 0. .. RO" Ill)' --.-.-.-, .... ... YOUCOUlO .. WHAT I HUA" (N) 1:11, UI, ... --.. LAKEWOOD C UHUl SOUTH W .. l. IN Al Det /l#no 211 6M-tll1 _, __ _ -ON OOl.DOI POND" IHI -----I "VtCTOR VICTORIA" CN I 1Ht.-t•l:11.- "PARTNERS" 1•1 ·--.... , ............. "IF YOU COULD IEE WHAT I HeAR,.cNI ta:».J:a.••---·- Paculty at Cal'\CllewoOd 21J/IJ1·9110 "fJARTNERI" 1111 ·-----· .... IOvlll COOtt Mlwoy ) ot kaodwoy 414-1514 --''PARTNERS" 1111 _,_ ....... "'' ______ _ IMPOIHHT ltOTICI! CHILOR(ll U•OIR 12 flU(! ..._ "' W-._ In r.t. 1M • s.t~ la, MllMJS l:tl ~ SOlllCI •!'OJI ,... CM MllG lS fOIJll ~ tf NO UI CM fWllO WlfH OllTOo ...ctl$IOltr fOSln:lll • Wiii Mii l'Olllllll I• AU CM-I! OIWl-INS D Oii Ill ~ l'N •HllM ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN f1•e"'Of t1 or l•-SI 179·9150 "'9llVATl u:aaONa" ,., P\119 "ltACOUEr' 1•1 Cl111 11SOUllO ----.--- ..,...,,..u•1•1 OWi ~ ~AMa'f\' (f'OI CfNl"SOUttO BUI"• PA~r BUENA PARK ORIVf IN lt~-A•• .... OI l ftOft 121·4070 "Uf ~A ~.a.~r LINCOLN DRIVE·IN hftCOk" ~·· Wetl Of •f\Ott 121·4070 11•11Mtll"I So" Ot•tO ,,.., 01 ••o0«r.11nl (So) 962·2411 Al ,'V1P.-. I~ HI WAY 39 DlllVI IN , Clllt n- YOU COULO ... • WNAT IMIM"Plt 1".11&...,.. IUDOY HOU. 'f aTotrr"' c.r "'°""° .......... LA HABR A (Ill V( IN ...... --~-.............. 111-1 .. a -~ -~ "'"'• 0'1A NGE Pl."V• IN ...,. --....... _TUI"' (IQ P\UI "CATP£~11tl Clllt "- .. ,,.VATI ~a<>Mt· 1111 P\UI ~C0~1111 lffen llltt So~ t.l<otll °'-ft ... r . 191•3693 Cllll fj IOUllO ---""°"" {NI ~ • NtOllr ,.., ............ ..., •s .... c ..... IM·7012 I .. Pryor la wonderful!" -8tw11e """'°" I.QI ANOElD TIMQ • c11•u '* ..._ MAll llWAMI,_,.,. waun WMt~Slll 993 0~48 OtlllOt 07 0340 founl»i Ylil4'f flt 1500 ua cm ci.r.. llWUM ..,., )rlllQI 834 391 I Hewpoll IAcft 644 0700 ... IMU rwa ITUIUM INllfl·ll "'°LA MIMIA •n·• Btu S2t UH 0<11191 Ut eno ta Mirada 921·1706 ltWUH UDIUIACll uwuoi NllfOl ........... .. El Toro sa1 ~HO · eo.ca Mtu S40 7444 sa.. J""' CiodttlllO 4tl oo . Ii ... I I ,. . • Orange Gout DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May e, 1982 ()()0 . . ---o~-__._ . eliot -#· · -· · :___ . . -----. ·.·.· -~ :-. . JillL_ . .:r:::::::. --_..>r----- Orange County people count on us for their favorite . music, Orange County news, sports, weather and traffic. You can count on your' fri~nds at KWIZ, 24 hours a day. ' Or•• Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 8, 1982 Sai i-nto • ar or J • 1ew GUllD DRUG Make us your lost minute Cord and Gift Store · .... Open Mother's Doy· 644-7330 After O// Wh ' Ol 's fl \IV tre tlhou1 C dreorn l~l.11:0~ s. "'·~ J:1~a .,. ·~"' ~ 644 ..... ,.,,,.., 1-0'< ·BS I I t( .. . . -~~ ~ .. .~ ... --::--... .;.._._ ' .. . ----.. ...... -.... _.......... --·-. ·-.. '-.. -. .. . -... """ . - Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, May 8, 1082 Why call a dozen different airlines shopping for the lowest fare when one call to Associated Cardillo Travel Service GUARANTEES you the lowest avail- able airfare. Our computer pricing program network gives up-to-the-minute fares and schedule informa- tion for airlines world-wide. Your ticket is issued in minutes and best of all there is no service charge. . . Money Back Guarantee When you purchase your ticket from us, we guarantee that it will show the lowest available airfare. If you bring us a ticket purchased for the same journey and date at a lower fare, we will give you $25. (Subject to availability and airfare changes). ASSOCIATED CARDILLO The friendly skies ·of United Airlines. Backbay Newport *Capistrano (714) 496-0777 *Westmlneter (714) 895-3693 Associated Cardillo offers many discount fares featuring United Airlines. United is your best way East with the biggest treet of widebody nonstops going. Ocean to Ocean service is available from Los Angeles to New York, Boston, Philade::111p~h~ia~·===========:~ Baltimore and Washington. D.C . - .. Call our travel services today. (714) 754-1555 *Buffum& La Habra (714) 870-4151 *Eastbluff(714) 644-9100 Fullerton (714) 879-1500 Irvine (714) 752-6391 San Diego (714) 233-9777 So. Coast Plaza-Two Town CTR (714) 754-0280 *bPEN SATURDAY 10 A.M.-4 P.M. .. -· DI . t JM •• Or1nge Colet DAILY PILOTIThurld•r. Maye. 1982 THE f,\MILl' c1act8 BIGG£01lG£ by Virgil Partch (VIP) by 811 Keane "Is this cereal new and improved or ju$t the old kind?" "I can't 1t1nd dirty flng1m1ll1." :tl.\R :tl .\Dl'Kt~ by Brad Anderson ,,, I , Vr .. .;t"'6.Jl,,lftl""'1'••t"'fit~ ... " i ""~ · s~ i 6) "He's not trying to catch his tail... he's looking for the designer label on his new sweater." 'I'LL NEVER & IN LOVE WITH ANYONE euTYOU,Moo ... M ' SQIAfTtME 1 MIGHTeE l~J~ WITH~.· Jl'DGE PARKER --~~~~ .. ---l"l.L GO IN ANO WAIT FOR YOU ~T I JUST DROP ME OFF SAM' !"LL. FINO THINK YOU'RE ~EINC:i VERY FOOLISH IN A V'jAY TO (,ET OAC~ TO MY HOTEL' DEF=ENDIN(, THl5 MAN' HE PROM!)LY HAS A AAP SHEET A 'YARD LON6 1 THEN.ONCE THE POTATO 15 DOO UP. IT I~ ~LICEP. Pf£P-f RIED. 5ALTEP AND M GGEP. VOILA, YOO MAVE j I AATE KNOWING ( WHERE FOOP C,OME5 H~.OM- YOUR POTATO CMIP SAY,SWIVH·· HoWOLD ARE You? ACROSS I HtU 6 ExclamaliOfl tO Hindu felt , .. Ot'enge type 15 Petionned 16 Protest t7 H1tdat - tll Medi.It 20 Roell !Ith 21 Amtrlnd ' 22 OhlO clly ~Ontroy 25 ltlvt. jet 27 "LI -·· Opera <411 Napery <49 BtfOft 50 Polly S<4 Parallel 5 7 Narrow Pre1 511Sand11111 Vtlf 59 Drive 60UKmoney 81 looked O¥ef 62 Wlltf boditt 63 Llamaa' mlUtu DOWN t GrOWi 2 Unu11111 3 Elrl ot -" Eden WEDNEIOAY'I PUZZLE IOl vtD 30 Moreac::Clve 31 Lamp()Oll 32 Ori'1 33111et <4 ~re11tng 2<4 "<>nc. In 40 AdMr• 6 BPOE IMm· Love With <4 I Aelallvt 3f Groe>ed ber 43 Unlufltd 37 Where Stnll· 0 0 •" f Author ' 2$ COmbatt 44 Putry Whttton 26 Sieve of Old 45 Plow IPtt1 38 ThtnMrlf 3tAdvttll/IY 40Chtngt 1 UNd 119 27 W11ac11 48 AY!tt0t 9 Soclll inM(I 211 Moumtln: P0tt 9 ltCMr Pref 47 Kirner~ 10 Temper 2t ~ 4t lmC:Nttlent t 1 ~ 30 TrtfltC)Of1 61 Of ant . •t 8hOe IM4 .... 42 T•tt 12 fntic.d: 32 Altldt &2 A e1r9e Mme ...,.....,_.-...,_ 2 wordt 34 --dHefftp 63 Troublea 2wordt ... "**"""' 4&,.,_.. 478'wtl..., •. 1S OM'•....., a6 ~ rtwr 55 lelow: Prtl . tt Rllt 37 Ki.s Of dot M Mr. o.ntlw4n tt ~ • AntlllMnC 11 Holdly epot ' -----~ -------- by Harold Le Doux WOULD YOU Lll\E TO MAKE A WAUER ON THAT COUN5ELOR? EXCEPT FOR A Ml&DEMEANOR OR TWO I LL eET HE 5 NEVER ~EEN THE INSIDE OF A POLICE ~TAltON I by Ferd & Tom Johnson Wen .. 1 WAc; .A~ADY : 1: 5 BEFORE I S'T.ARTED , '~ LfARNIN~ A • '!.\ (. How TO COUNT. ......__ __ ..., r '" .,.~. , (f.~ ... by Charles M Schulz PEANtT8 --------. Beauty Tips TtMBLEWEEDI 0 I I f I I HeAR1He 1HUN~UV~Y ~OOFS. SHOt; ~Y. ~ER7ME'~ M~6 MA~E 'OJ SEEN "DE JW SttK. LOON'? I 'LL BUY SOME CANDY WITH MY DIME GORDO wow---1rs EXPENSIVE !N FAC:f l CAN'T REMCMBER mt LAST TIME 1 AC.TUALLc.> PR/¥,>E.D . .. I ™INK VOIJ NEED ME TO SIT VP THERE, A~D ~YOO WRITE VOVlt COLUMN ... u- Ugly Tips by Tom K. Ryan WfLL1 L.E'SSE~ •• .-11 C/JJIJ'f lJE ~e PEIUJ(i "THA'T'S OVM •• rrs 100 f:ARL.¥ Fa{ 1Hf: fflf:E.KNESS .. ER---I WANT TO START A CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY PLAN FOR SOME GUMDROPS ~ 1 fHINK IT Wff.> ()JPl..J BP£J< WHEN 1 WANTED ID (£f fHAT CDACHIN& .roe I~ Sm:efSBORO . by Jeff MacNelly by Gus Amela by Tom Bat1uk £W THE (.J.iJI..) ,DrO I £UER THANK t;oo ~ iMf~ \..;;.\.......oi:;.....,::;"""--."-'...U ~~~:_...:::.....cLJ;.-'-._, ~1.1...L.~~"-L.J....J......L...l..J "~\.~ M1!61~ ~({E. 3 f'U1'E~. A m'f ~AAKER , 'f <.l.~~.OOR. ~ 'f'I, ANO M~ Cl~. "5 IMP 1--e ... He NOW HAS 1"weL-ve v1oeo GAMeS IN HIS WAl1"1~G ROOM. - by George Lemont , I ., .......... Orange Coeet DAILY PILOT/Thureday, M1y e. 1982 NUC .. Ml.IC NOT1Cf Compound said to he ~.-NAo9Gll =M. COURT PICfflt0\11 IUllMIH Tll• lollowlno .. """ It'°'"' ... a ..... ~ ........ STATl•NT I .ovll~ ~l•u• ., ... ,.._.1._ ......,. ....., CA..... Tiie foflow1n11 1>1r1on 11 doing nvn,..... .....,.,. --~-• flLAl .. 'tl,,:-0-All'I' JAl,.I!" & bullnata ... tlfWICI. 1712 MtfOld Plloa, ~ AllOCIATll MA•ONRY, e Cwl• fa) CHARLOTT(' S SITTl'RS Ungton leeefl, CallttJmll 12t47. fomlll COrJIO(Mlon and/0< lbl CttARLOTTC COOlA S l'ofleld L.ae ~I. 1712 He-Ol,l!HOAHT· flMCI< HUITON. in-IAllYSITflNO A NCY 420 62no sobering rotd Piece. Huntington leach, CA dllllduelly end dbl IOUTHWl!8T SllHI N•wport leech e,1o1orn1• 92847. OIVILOPMINT. and llD CROO· 0'883 Thi• butlnelt 11 aondue1ad t1r en ILIV, end 000 I• )O(V. lnolu9'vt C11erlottt Coder. 420 Und lndlvlduel. ' k1n?llONI StrMI. Nawl)Ott etMh, Celllornll LOS ANGELES (AP) -A '""' ,1...:::1~=~1t1e NOTl~Y~•'=~ -4. 12= butt1nM1" condl#Cted by.,, compound that would reduce the Coullty c1tt11 of Otano-COunty on n. ..wt """ daoldt ....... ,.., lndMduel .ff t f alcohol On a nAflOft'I Mey 4. tff2 wttlMtlt ,_ ......_ flMtd 1111Me1 Chloflotte COder ec O r-,,_ ,_ ~ wteMri ao •re.,._. Thia etatament wH filed with 1111 drlvina ability may be available Publl1lled Orenge Coa•I Oell)' .. W.m 1td111 ...... County Clefk of Orenge C~ty on to tht publlc In six month9. It.a Piiot. May•. 13. 20. 21, 11t2 "YC1U WWI to """ t11e ~of Aprll 18. 1ts2 • -·• said 20GM2 an 11to111ey In thl• Metler, you F1tall man1n1Ct\1rer • 1-------.-----lltlOllld do 10 PfOf'llplly 10 lhll your Put>llthed Cranoa COHt Deli The product, i>ober-Ald, WU l'tllJC NOTIC( written ralPOtlte. If 111'1. tnwt bf fl· Piiot, April 29. Maye, 13, 20, 198 announced~ Zoe Products, Inc. __ --.. led on tln'te • 1g27.92 r_.,,_.. -AOVltOt U.ted "8 9* deMen· It ii deecrt U a powder that ii ...._ STA.......n ..... II trltMinal ~ ._Wlr ---------- m ixed with water and take n 1't1t 10floWln0 pereone .,. dolno .....,. u& SIR .. lllwM6a • -l't&IC NOTICC orally. ~~IVE NIW LIFE MINI-'" Ud. rea..-nda d•ntro d• N ------------ T i f h d STAI ......... CHILORIN'S VILLA ........... !Meflt •••n.. ....... FICTmoua IUINH eat ng 0 t e pro uct WH 17979. M;;cMe, coeu ...... CA SI Uele4 d• ... tollc1t1r .. con· NAMI ITATl!MINT d o ne at Sou them California Re-mn. :'°t>erci:'e ";;'~:'act-:'~~.=~:~: bu:~~:~~wr11g person " 11u11111 search Institute, where lta 8llO--CA!ATIVE NIW LIH MINI· dt "'" me nare •u reapuute 81Ll s ORY WALL lJ402 Sea cla+ .. director, Marcelline Burna, STRIE8, • Cetlf0<nla eo1poratl0n, H Cflta, •I hey a111' una. puede Hr e o o P c; """ 1797 s. MontO'rit, eo.ta MMe. CA ,...,.,.,1,.,.1 , t'-~. 9~ip2f1,! """' 01111 otnt 011101r11<1 Ph.D., said Intoxicated 1ub'-t.a 92827 ----·-'" ~ ,...., · t. TO TM! DEFENDANT: A cillll W1li111no ~oburt Trudttuu 33402 performed better o n el1ht dlf-Tl'lll ~le oondue1ad tlr • eomplllnt f'IH been filed by th• se .. B•oghl lJ""" o11ni. Po.nt C.Jh f erent t eat• when given the c:ot~,... Ute Mlnlltnee plalntHf IQ9lnt1 you If you wtlh to 1orn1• 926~9 compound than when olven a °' Oonatd p T IMland '"" lewtull. you muat. Within lh1-riu1in11" •• t.ont1uctt111 11v .. 1 a · · amo. • daye 1tter thl• eumrnona 11 --111<11v111uu1 placebo. n:teldenl 1 fllad with the ved on you, Ill• with 11111 court • Wrlh.un R Trudeuu "These data deroonltrate that Coull '~ 0.... County on wrltttn raaponM to Iha complaint 1111~ ~ta1emun1 wu~ 111uo w11h 111., at the -1-"-o l and O-L....... • .ou...1 ...1__ ty ange ~you do ao, your daleult wHI Cnunty C"'r~ 0 1 01 .. 1111, <..ovn1y on IUUIJJ ~ n.11U ~ May 4. 1982. be entered on 1ppllcet1on or th• ""''' 7 t98? level.a studied, the com~ can ,,_ plM'ltlff, and thl• OOUf1 mey ent., • be expected lo Partia }y offset Publlehed Orange CoHt Dally judgment egaln1t you fOf !he rellel Piiot, Mey 8. 13. 20, 27. 1182. dernended Jn tile coml)leln1, which alcoh ol -related deflcita In driving 2038-82 could rHult In g1rnl1hmen1 ol skill.e," sh e said . gJC NOTICE weoee. '"'"'° ot money Of property Dr Em P Nob1 hainna.n or other reflel reQUHlld In Iha . est . ~e. c PICllTIOUS .,..... comp1a1n1 of the compan y's actentlflc advi-....-nanlillWT DATED. December 18; 1g82 aory board, said the teat data was The lollowlng pereon I• doing J. Pa1eteon, Clerk bu*-u : By Kim E Granl, Deputy "the best I have seen ." Zoe FIRE 8AFETI EDUCATORS. COO«HV, COLOllAN a HOWAAD Products claims the product can 1eoe Ponderoat. eoe1e MH•. CA ,,o .... 1090I d ff d i 9282t. S-ta Ana. CA 12711 reverse a verse a ecta on r -EDWARD WALTER LEWIS. Publtahed Orenga cont 0111y ving by about 40 percent. 1608 Ponderoee, Coate Me ... CA Pilot, Mey 6. 13, 20, 27. 11182. Noble w as director of the 112&28. 3007-82 N a t ional Ina ti lute of A lcoh ol ~u~ 11 ~ed by.,, 1---------- Abuie and Alooholiml during the Edwetd w L.wtl flt&.JC NOTICE F1 .... I Publ11'1eO Oranoe Cou1 Dally Piiot Aprol 29. May 6. 13, 20 1982 1926·82 Ml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUBINEH NAME I TATl!MENT fhe lollow1ng persona ire dotng t>u11neu •• INTER COUNTY PROTECTION. 5 1~2 Warner Awenue. Suola 214 Huntington Beech. CA 926411 LAWRENCE GILBE RI BAlL 79S7 THk Way. Rancho CUCil· monga, CA 91730 .. Ntmoue-SI ...... STATIMlffT fha IOllOWlng PtrlOfll 811 doing bullneet "' 0 & K OCVtl.OPMl!Nl'\ t 102 8 El C1rn1no "'"· l•.n Clamtllte. Caltlornle 92172 Ktnl A l<Oll)Mll. 10 I W Alle- •andrO, S•n Clemente. Ctlllornle uen W1t111m Ouaran1. 1302 Calle ro1e00. Siii Clemente. Cetllotnl1 92872 Thie butllnlM It coMuc1eCI by I oentr•I perln«tf'llP Kent A IC0t9Mil Thl1 atetemenl wll llled wtth tile Coullty Claf'll of Orengt Co\ltlty on Apfll 27. tt82 ,1 .. ta Pul>loahl'<I Orenge Co .. t Delly Pilot, April 29. M•y 8. ·13, 20, lt82 1936-82 NOncll .wmMO .. Nolle• II h.,atly 11•~ tllat the 8owd of T,,,.._ of tM Huntlnaton Beech Clly lcllool Oletrtci of Orenge County. CelltonM ... ~ elw Maled b'de up to 2:00 p.m. on the 19th dey ~ 1912. II Ille Office of uJd Oletrlol, loce- tad II 736-141" It,_., Huntington hecfl. Cellforrlll ... "'*" time eeld bid• wlll b• publicly opened and rMO for; SCHOOi. I MACI SUPftJSS Alf bide ere to be In aooordanca W1th Condition•. lnatruo1lonl. ll'td Spedflcetlonl. wNcfl are ,_ on fllw In lha office of t~cNotlnQ Aoenl of H id Schoot~etrlct. 7Sl-J4th Street, Huntington lleaeh. Callfor- nle. 92$48. • No bidder rr*f wtlhdr ... hll bid for 1 perlOd of forty-five (41J dayt .11., the d•t• "' '°" the °'*''"" thereof. The Boerd of Trull•" of the Huntington 8eacn City SChool DI· elr1c1 r--Ole tigl'l1 IO rajecl any or ell bide. Ind not _.tty ec- cept Ille towHt bid, end to waive eny lnlormellty or lrr9gUlaltty In "'Y bid reoelYed. "-:C.:=.cttr "'OrMfaC.-, .. ..._. CANNES ENTRY -Fonner Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr are actors in an 11-minute surrealist film, "The Cooler," to be entered in this year's Cannes Film Festival. With the former Beatles are Starr's wife Barbara Bach, and kneeling, direct.ors Lol Creme and Kevin Godley. Ford and Carter adminiatrations. ThM etet-1 wu flied with the County Clerk of Or•nge COunty on FICTmou• IUllHHS NAME 9'ATUMENT The com pany's president, Mey 14. 1H2. ,19172A The lollowtng pereon 11 doing James P. M acPh enon, said the company w ould "try to keep the cost of Sober-Aid under the price of a drink." P 0 C bult"41U H ubllehed renge OHi Delly SUNDANCE ST AMPS. 1380 Piiot. Mey 8. 13. 20. 27• l982. Galuy. Newport Beach, Ce111orn1a 1----------?03-?_~_? 92660 rtaJC NOTICE M C Ho1nino. Jr 1380 Ga· 1------------taay. Newport Beach Calllornte JAMES DAVID BALl 859 N Mountain, •8B Upland, CA 91786 This buelness la conducted by a general pertnatllhtp Jemea Oevld Ball Thia statement waa hied with the County Clatk or OfenQI Counly on ~:a- Pul>lltlhed Orengt Cout Dally PI- iot. Mey 8. 13. 1M2 2001..a2 Aprol27. 1g92 l------------ F111200 l't&IC NOTICE Pubhlhed 01ange Co111 Oa11y Pilot. April :>9. May 6 13 20 t98' t940-82 FICTfT10UI IU91HEH NAMI ITATUIENT NOTIC« TO CUDfT°"S 92660 Of 9UlX ~ Thoe bullnns 11 conoucteo by an (S.C:.. 1101 .. 107 U.C.C.) lndlYlduel Notice I• hereby given to the M c Horntng Jr credllOfl of ALL·STATE AUTOMO-Thtl s1111emen1 wu flied wrth me STAT£ OF CAUFOANIA TIVE REMAHUFACTURERS. Tren• County Cl«k ol Orange County on Stete CoHlel ConH ,..ency feror. whoH buelne11 eddre11 II Aprll 27 1982 NOTICE Of PutlUC HEARING Bolt kills Reagan horse l't&IC NOTICE The IOllOWlnij petlOfll ere Ootng t>uarness u E R I . 110 Newport Center Orlve. o 150. Newport Beach. CA 92660 R WYATT HYORA. 31941 Via Oso. TrabUCO Cenyon, CA 92678 GABOR A TOTH. 31811 P._., La Branza San Ju1n Capralleno. KANAB, Utah (AP) -Sinbad the Sailor, the horse that Ronald Reagan rode on the television aeries "Death Valley Days," has been killed by a bolt o f lightning. She said Sinbad was killed In· stantly. Day's" programs, many of which were filmed. in th.e Kanab area. Mrs. Johnson said s he didn't know how long her hUlband had owned the large white hone, but she said Sinbad waa m0re than 20 years old . 1420 W. Flfth Str..i. Clty of 5em. 1'1 .. 1IO Noroce 11 hereby g111en thet lhe An•. County of Orenge. Stele of Pubt11ned Orange CoaSI Dally State Coaallll Conserwancy wott holO C1Ulornle, that • bulk treneler I• PllOI. AP'il 29. May 8. 13. 20. 1982 a public hHtlllQ at the tome and about to t>e med• to SHELLOON 1933-82 ptace indie<1ted below Among lhe CA 92875 ' Anna J ohnion said Sinbad was standing in a field under a power line whe n the animal was struck in the ear by lightning M onday. -Mrs. J ohnson said the horse was owned by h e r husband. Calvin J o hnson, a rancher and member o f the K ane County C.o~on. INVESTMENTS. INC . a Oetewere items to be cons1deled 11 1 1equesl corporetlon. Traneleree. whoH rtaJC NOTICE trom Oranoe Counly tor lunos 101 t>ullnHI l<ldren la 1420 W Flllh Str"1, a"' of Sente Ane. County of FICTITIOUS BUSINESS the Oe•elopmant o r a beacn res ., totalton pro1ec1 ... , Ahto Beac;h Orenge, State of CalllOfnie NAMl STATEMENT Notice rs ul!IO giwen' lhlll .iny per· The pr01)4111y to be tranaferred It The totlowlng peraon ts doing son ontetested may preaent &late· d-ltled In genarel •:Al stocll In business as fhls business 11 conducted by 1 -al partnen11\fp A Wyalt Hyotd Tnos s111ement wes llltd writ\ rne County Cllltk ol Orerige COunly on Ap11I 27. 1982 r1111" PubltaheO Orenoe co .. 1 Darly Pilot Apr1t 29 May 6 13 20 t982 She said the h orse w as ridden by Reagan whe n h e per formed as h ost of the "Death Valley "He w as just a good. old riding h orse. W e could just put the grandkids on him," she said. trede. fixture.. equic>menl and good C HUNT PERSONNEL SER· ments or ilrgumenls orally 01 on will of lhet eutomotlve pert• ano VICES. 68S t Crist• Petma Oriwe. wrotmg ralevani to tne proposed aupplln l>ullnHt known '' ALL· Hunhnglon Beacn. C11tlorn1a 926'17 clttrons at the hearo"g Thi' State Sl',t.TE AUTOMOTIVE REMANU· Carolyn H Hunt. 6651 Cr1st11 C08Sllll Conservaflq may thereol FACTUREAS end loceted 11 1420 Pelmt Ori••. Huntington Beat h. tei adopt the propo~ed dC.llons w. Anh Street. City of Sent• Ana, Celllornle 92$47 -iut>stan11dlif .1~ ~··t lorth w11h out ~ 1939·82 Seoul to hide weird meµus SEOUL, Sou th Kor ea (AP) -The city g ov- ernment has ordered restaurants se&TVing dog meat or snake soup on front atreell to move to back al· leys. Aa part o f a beau tification campaign, the city also told ahop o wners to take down signs adverti· atng dog meat and snake soup. They al8o were or- dered to remove makes on diaplay in show win· dowa. 11111 llllCll MATHENY they moved to Caillomaa In WILLIAM EDWARD 1935. They resided on Bal- MATHENY. rHldent of boa llland fo,-the ptat 10 a.Jboa. Ca. P..-d away on yean. Eugenia and John May 2. 1982. He la survived celebrated their 50th annl by hla mother Mildred Ke· versary on February 7. 1982. boe. his brothers Harry Ma-She is survived by her lo- lheny and James Matheny. Ying husband John and her hla children Bonnie Lewu1,, 2 children, J ohn. Jr a nd Willlam F . Matheny and Kay Cooper and 7 grand· Beverly Holtzer. Private children. John Lester Ill. terVices wW be conducted by Paula Lester. Carrie Cooper. the Neptune Society. In lieu Wilfred Cooper. Alfred Coo. of flowers the family re-per. Michele Lester and Mi· questa memorial contrlbu-chael Lester. Services will dON be made W> the Ameri· be held on Saturday. May 8. can Heart A.8oc:lation. 1982 at l l :OOAM at the Pa- c1f1c View Chapel. Ent.omb- LESTER ment at Pac1f1c View Me- EUG EN I A LI LLIAN morlal Park. Pacific View LESTER. a re1ldent of Mortuary directors. Balboa Island, Ca. Puaed away on M ay 5, 1982. She MURPHY was born In Arkansas Oty, ANN E. MURPHY, resi· KAntaaonJuly31, 1912.She dent of Costa Mesa. Ca. waa preceeded in death by Palled away on May 4, 1982. her perenta and her br'OtMni Survived by her son Dou- and aiatera. 1he wu the glas. sisters Mary E. Rourk. youngest of 7 children. Eu-Adeline Williams, Ma rtha genii and John Lester were Burns and Kathy Baker. married on February 7. 1932 brother John Jocobs. grand· In Arkanaaa City, Kansas. children Patty, Lisa and -----------..Dale Murphy and many IALTIHIOUON SMITH I TUTHILL WISTGUff CHAPIL 417 E 17lh St Cosll Mesa {Wf..Cl371 other family members and friends. Graveside services and Interment will be held on Saturday. May 8. 1982 at 12:00 noon. Directed by Westminster Memorial Park Mor tuary and Cemeter y. VisltaUon will begm on f'ri. ay. May 7, 1982 at 12·00 noon . flCTTT10US ....... NAMESTAn•NT The tollowlng per1on 11 oolng l>ullntll U. SOUTH SHORE INDUSTRIAL TOOL co . 3303 Herbor BMI ' Fe. Cotti Men. catl!Ofnla 9262il. ThomH John Oelelorre. 1555 Men Verde. M-6. Coll• Men , C.UIO<nie 82626 Thft bullinell II conduc1ed l>y 111 1ndlvlduet T"°""8 John Oe111orra Thia elatement wu lllad with lhe County Clerk of Orange County °" May 4. t982 ,,_ PublltheO Orange COHI Dally Piiot. Mey 8. 13, 20, 27, 1982 2035-82 P\B.IC NOTlCC County of Orange. Stete of c.llfor. Thia bu.U-. rs conoucted by an lurlller noloce CPP-11283 nle. lnOMduel DATE May 13 t982 IMPOATANT NOTI CE FfCTI'TlOU8 .,_.. The bulk trenaler wlll be con· Carolyn H Hun! TIME 10 00 'i YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORE N,._ STA~ eunwneted °"or eher the 21at dly This stetemenl waa lit.d with the PLACE Sldlt-Personnel 801111d c l OS URE BECAUSE YOU ARE The lollowlng pereon I• doing of Mey. 1982. et 10:00 ,t,M. ,, H(). County Cte<k of OrlnQt County on 801 Capllot Mall Sacramento BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENIS 11 bull,_ ea: WARD M LARSEN, INCORPORA· Apr~ 27. 1982 Copies ot the full agenda and MAY BE SOLD WITHOUT ANY STEINER OF LONDON. 2070 TEO. wt>Oee eddr-la IQOI Nortll F111192 uall report may be ol>t81ned on <..OUR T ACTION and you may haVf' Bu11nH1 Centet Otlve. Suite 240. Btoaoway. Sent• Ane. CalHOfnle. Put>hahed Orenge Coest Dally rt>oue51 l1om the S111e Coastal "'' teqal roqht to bnng yovr account lrvtne. CA 92715. That Ille leet d4lta lor fling cMlm9 In PllOI. April 29. May 6. 13 20. 1982 Conserwancy 12 12 Broadway '" qood s1.ind1ng by peying 111 ot TOPPY'S BY STEINEA, L TO. Ille eecrow ~to herein It Mey 1g34•82 Room 514 Oak ta no CA 94 612 yuu• 11ast dutt peymen11 ptua per· (Anehelm). e Callforni. corpcwetlon, 21, 1982 1415) 464· 1015 1111tt•·d C0515 and eapenses w1th111 2070 Bull,_ Center Drive. trvlne, 8o tar .. 18 knOwn to tile T-.. -II' MnTJCE PubllShf'cl C"range CoaSI Oaoly """'" mon1h• trom the d11le th•\ CA 92715 I«• • .,. ~ -and ed-~ "" P1101 May 6. :g92 Nn111 ... ol Del<1utt was rec.orded Thlt bu.W.U 19 conducted 1>y I ~ U9ed lfY Ole T,..,,.._or tor C:.--1833-82 lho\ amounl 1~ S2 219 8-4 H ol AP"' corporellon Ole three SMle ~COURT Of THE •• 1982 ann w1ll 1ncreese untot your T099Y0I by Steiner Ltd -' ~et« 91'ATI Of CA&M'ORNIA NllJC NO~( .iccounr l>eeon>es cuHenl Yoo ma, (Anaheim) Rlc:Nlrd l(eguofl, '°"THI rw t navu to Pd) thl' f!n111e unpaid VietOf St. &ifle. Trantller• COUNTY Of Lot ANGm..SS poi t•on ot your account ewen Prtlldent e.ie .. Of AUBY LOEBEL. au.MRS NOTICll Of TWU8TU'9 IAL.2 rhOUQh lutt payment was demanded Thll elll-1 -l!Md wtth Ole Publlahed Orenga Co .. 1 D11Jy M1TCHEU A. LOEllEL. o--s. Lotti No. 000 117 t>ut vou ,._,pay lhe amount staled County Cleflt ol Orange County °" Piiot. Mey 8, 1982 MO.....,. T.S No. 72037-1 .1h"we Aller 111<ee rnonlhl t1om the Mey 4. 1982. 3006-82 NOTIC• OP N"90MAL NEWPOAT PACIFIC FUNDING. (l,,te til rPco1cJa1oon ol lh1~ Oocu ~ ,,_ ..,...NTA~'S SM.a INC. u duly lj)p()lnWd TNll" un· m!'nt 1w111ch dllte or recordal10n Publl•h•d Orenge CoHI Delly P\&.IC NOTIC[ OP M.A&. ""°""" der tfle lolloWlng deaerlbed deed of ,1pp<•111s nt-u1on1 unless the ol>h911· P\B.JC NOTICE Piiot. Mey 8, 13. 20. 27. 1982 -------------AT MYATI SM.a truat WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC· "°'' t>etuQ toreclose(J upon permrt~ ------------2042·82 NOTICE Of TIIUSTU"S IA&.a ....... C... TION TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER ,, 1onger p<>rood.. you 11ave onty me FICTITIOUS 9UtllME99 ~ Mo._,,..,._ ,,__ C.-J4,., 711 FOR CASH (peyabte et time of .... lf'flJI "9h1 10 SIO(I Ille rorec.IOSure Dr N4Ml 9TAte•NT "8JC N0T1C[ T.9. No. 7..._.. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11181 In lewlul rnoney of the Unlled llJy•ng the entue .irnount dem<JnOeo The lollowtng persons ere clolng CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPORA· Simi Zolot, • penona1 r~la-StelM) all right, tltle end lntertll Uy y11111 cr11d1tor fo 11110 out tile l>ullnest 11: FtCTJT'tOUS ~·• TION H duly eppolnted Trultee tlW Of the &late of RUby L.oebaf, conwyecl to end now held 1>y tt un-or11uur11 you mu~r pay O<' 10 drranqe CHAMPAGNE TASTE. 1713 ..... STATl•NT under the loflowlno dncrlbed deed o-:t. d NII 11 prtveta ... to dtt Mid 0..0 <>' Truat In the PfO· h•r paytT\enl 10 ,,op tne IO<l'Cl~re Oallu Place. Cotte Mase. CA 9?826 The fOllowlng petaon1 .,. doing ol trull Will SELL AT PUBLIC the ~ end 11e91 bidder. under '*1Y llerWlt.ft• daecrlbed· '" ot vou1 prOQ('fly rs 1n l0<eclo!>Ure WILLIAM FL WEBSTER. t 713 t>ualneea u : AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO· Ille tenne and condltlont her'*'8fter TrUllO<'. CHRISTOPHER LEACH Im any ot!W>f rl"a"<on conla<:I Far Oahu Plac.e. Coeta M818. CA 112626 COMMAND PERFORMANCE. DER FOR CASH (payable et lime ol mentioned. end eubtect to conllr· ROUFF and PATRICIA A. ROUFF. ,,,,.,, A Me1c:hanl\ frusl Company DONNA JEAN WEBSTER. 1713 2070 Bull,_ Cenler 0.tw, #240. sale In lawful money ol the United matlon by the Supetlor Court. on huebend end wife u joint tenante ,,, Loroy Bea<.11 TU FBO lCOLF M Ollllu Pl-. Cotte Mesa. CA 92626 Irvine. CA 92715 Stetea) ell right. 1111e ano lnterell Mey 111. 1982. et 10·00 e.m .. or 8enellclary: Eric 0. Nlileon, M.O rirr!'.F IRA ·~ 14 9 . ,10<1 Paul Thlt bu..,_. " condut1ed l>y • TOPPY'S BY STEINER. L TO con111yad to end now held by H thereatter within the time elloWlld by Inc. Profit Sherlng Plen .. to en 'ISC ""' r.u,hbom <.10 WFSTERN Mmlted partnerSllip !Gerde n Grove). 2070 Buelneu under H id Oaeo of l ruat In lh• i.w. at the omc. of~. Buell & undivided 37.5 percent: Eric 0 . 1 OAN SHNl<..f S 11301 w Olym Willlem F L Webster Cent., Drive, !Nine. CA 92715 propeny htralnafte< o.acrlbed. MlnnOl'I. ettomeya for Ille paraona1 Neteon M.O. Inc. Oaflneo Benefit pu arvo t ,,., Anqet•~ CA 'Xl064 Thie 1tatement wu llled With the Thia bualnau It conducted l>y • TRUSTOR: FRED LAVEY. a llngle repr-tlllve, et 1235 North Har· Plen H to en undivided 40.825 1. IJI 8?0 0711 Atln rnr+'<.IQsure County Clet1I ol Oranoa County on corporation. man bor Bouleovard, Suite 200, Fullerton. pttcent: J. Wlrf4WI Collne. • llngle ll<•fJI May 4. 1g82. T099V"1 l>y Steiner Ltd. BENEFICIARY CENTRAL FED· Ca11fom1a. all tf'le r1Qllt, U"9, lnl«Mt men 11 to en undllllded 9.375 pet· 11 vou havt• ,iny 11ueS11on~ you F1_, (Qeroan Gf°OV.I ER Al SAVINGS AN 0 l 0 AN end ...... Of Ole oec.-s. end all cent; JOMCJl'I 0 . a-y end Wende ,11oul<I co1ot dtl a tawytr or th.-Publlthed Orenge Cout Delly VIC10f St. Su.;e. ASSOC .. 1 COfPOt•tlOn the r1gl'tt, title, lnltrMt and •tete E. Qeaty, huebltnd and wife u joint •iovernmMI ·l<l"''CY wnoch may have Pilot. May 6 13. 20. 27. 1g82 Pr .. ldtnt Aec:Ofded Oec«nbtt 19. 1980 u that Ifie &te te Of Aut>y LOIOll. c»-tenentt "to en undllllded 3.125 "'W'"° your loan Aememt.er vou 2095-82 Thi• llltemtnl WU llleO With 1"9 lnatr. Ho. 28773 tn boOtt 13880 P9QCI CMMd. ,_ aoqund l>y ac>er•llon percent:....,,..,.. KIM,.,, lllllTl8l'n.d MAY lOSC LfOAL llfGHTS If' YOU ------------County Clerk ol OrlnQt COunty on 910 ot Official Record• In the office of lewor ~. Otherlhln.orln women .. to •n undivided 8.25 DO N011'AKE PROMPT ACTION P\ll.IC NOTICE May 4. 1982. of tile Aaeorder OI Orenot County; addition to, lf'let of the deoeatad. at perce nt; Auguet RelHll, • •Ingle r hi' tollowong copy ol No11ce ,,_., H id d"d ol truel daacrlb•• the tfw time of her Cleath. In 9"d to el man u to en undivided 3.125 pet· Hw ongonal n t which wu hied 101 NOTICE TO CMOfTOl'IS Publlahed Orenga Co111 Delly rollowlng property ltlei oertaln,.... pr°'*1)' eltueMd In cent el M t_,.i. In COl'IWTM>fl. •f'cord nn 4 22 82 1n the olhce or Of IUUt TilANSl'EJI Piiot. Mey 6. 13. 20. 27. 1982 Lot 3 In BIOca 2 of Trect No. 27 the City of Fullerton. County of Recorded Oetober 18, 1980 II thl' 1eco1Cler or Orang" County (lecl. 1101 .. 107 U.C.C.) 2041-12 Boulevard Addition to Newport Orwlga, State of Cellfom141, dMOtl· lnetr. No. 2609& In book 13792 page C,11otorno& 1' 'if'nt lo you 1nHrnu<:h Notice 11 hereby glwen to credl· Height•, 1n the City of Coate Meea, bed " tolow9: 645 of Official Recordl In the ~ d~ an e~am1nRl10o ot the title to said I o '' o I I h • w I I h In n • m • d ...a.IC NOTICE County of Orange. Stele of CalllOf· An und ivide d on~tll (~I of Iha Recorder Of Orange County; tr us I property ,hows you may have ~:i-o~:'f'1o •J~",!',~.~ "p=~ •------------nla. •per maip recorded In book 9 Int.,. In that,..., pr deecr1-11~Md ~I deeorlbtl the ~n Inter"" on the trus1ee s sal" peo-2e of ~· mec>S. In bed • Lot 48 of Tr!ICI 4429 u pet --~ ... pr..,,_.,. i..rocee<11nq" property hereinafter deolctlbed. f'ICTITIOUI IUSM•S Ille office of the county recorder of rnep In Boot 180, PIQ89 21 9"d 29, Loi 5 Of Tract No. 4-M, .. par map NOTICE Of DEFAULT The n1me(1) end butlneH •d· NAm STATW....,. Uld eounty of~ Mape In the Office recorded In Booll 19. Page 29 In-Notice os nereby gJven lh1t Los dre .. of the Intended tranaftrOf(I) The followlno pereon I• doing 3214 Clay Streel, Newport Beech. of the Orange county Recorder. ctu11ve of Mlecell1neou1 M1p1." Angel!'s Tolle 11no Trust Oeeo Com- er•: NEAT THINGS & FLOWERS t>uam.. u : Calttornle commonly known 11 2937 North e•r record• In Ille office of th• pany 1s duly appomteo Trustee un· TOO (flower 11\0p only). 710 E. Bel-(Al B C.C., (Ill BRION CON-"'(H 1 atreet eddr-Of common _,.. AWtllle, fullrton, c.lfornlL C0Un1y Aacorder of Mid COunty. cler "Deed or Trust dllecl Aorrl 10 bol 8Nd ·Balboa. CA 92961 STRUCTION COMPANY, 2214t Vie dHlgnatlon I• 1hown ebove , no 'fh11 .... 111ubjac:t to current 332 Ca1911na, Newpor18-ctt, CA 1980 e•ecuted by Pereo1se ln\lfll Thi l~tlon In Celltornla of 1111 Santl'IJO, Mlulon Viejo. Cal"ornla werrenty le glWfl • to 111 comple-tuM, covenante, condition•. rn-t2M3 mMt Inc a C1lllorl\l8 CorPOfehon ebhle11 •.11ac:utf1fvle•of0flfcetllor1nPftelncn:lp•edl m 91. ,_11 or conectneul."" tnetton.. ,_...,.11on1, rtgflte. r1gl'tte .. ," e 11!WI addr-Of COfMIOfl u fru,1or. to secure certain ot>ll· ue n H o c • dt MIChHI E Brion. 22848 Vie The beneflci")' under Mid Deed of way, HHmtnt1. and nleflng dHlgnellon le thown above . .,,o qa11oni on rswor ol Farrne<s 4 Mer- lrenlferor II: UITle • abo¥9. Sentlego, MINIOn VlaJo. Callfornte of Truet, t>y reuon of 1 breacl'I °" encumbranoeaof,_d,tllceptthe warranty le given u to llt oom~ ch.Jn ts Tru11 Company ol Long All Olhar bualneu nemH Ind 92i191. default In the ot>llgetlon1 MCUred llen of lhe Abetrect Of Judr;enl 1-Of corrac:t-1.'' BHCh TEE FBO LEOLf M REESE eddre11ea used by the Intended 1 _.. 0 ......... .._...... __ . ....._ .._.... ~ tR• •• • 1 "' 1 dt •0 .... 'r.nl'erol within !hr .. yeira leat Thll bu"'-II conducieO 1>y en lh.,_.,y. hereto Ori eaac:ul.., Ill rec:ofded &.ptatnber 30. 19 a, by ,.,. _ _._, .,.,._ _, -.r ,.. ~~-~ ·• II Oen un II• .., lndlvldulll dallnred to the undarelgned • o areld E. Gannon end Merl• O. of Trull. by reuon of I breech or s 1 S46•1. 1nte111t ano P1u1 f'la<:he• Piii to far II known to the lnten-· Mlcl'laal E Brion written C>eclerellon of O.ltult end Qannon. In tfle emount of 1983.98 deleult In Ille obllgellon• MCured f 1utht>om es 10 an undt•tdeO ~h~·~::::.i'~e~d~elna" •d· Thia 11e1-1 wa nled with IM Demand IOf Sele. and Wfllten notice ..-1n1erwt. thereby, l'teretofora uecute<I and 48 4!>4"1. interest. ALL AS TE-dr•• of the Intended tranaf.,Ml•I County Cletlt of Orange Couoty on of brMCh and of 9*110n to C8tlM The terme Ind oondltloN of lale delivered to Iha undeulgned • NANTS IN COMMON. u l>enalocla ere GIOfle F Bltt«. 18161 Wino'°' Mey 5. 1982. th• underalgned to Hll u ld pro-ere: Cati! to the u11t1ng 91\CUm· wrlt1en Oectaretlon of 0.leull and ry recOfded 4-2t·80 n 1nstrument Drive. vine Peril. CA 92667 '*171 PttlY 1011111ty llold obllgetlona, end branca In Ill tmount equel to tile Oernend for Sele. •nd written notice no 27068 rn book 1358 t page Thi! the property pertinent h•· Put>ll•h•d Orenge CoHI Delly therHfter the und«~ c.tuMd total catll paid and encumbrenc. of brMCh and of eMcllon lo ~ t98 1 ol Olhcre.I Reco<01 "' Ille Of. rato 11 dtlcf'ibed In general u : flo.. PllOt, Mey 8, 13, 20. 27. 1082 H id notice of brHcfl ~end of eleo-9HUmed of H .000.00, to be peld the underelg,,ed to H tl H id pro-lice o r lhe Recorder ol Orenga "°Cl.OTHtU SMmfl' NOl'fUAIT G?'T ..._,,St Hunt~on 8t:ach 536-6539 -thOl) and 11 toceted et· 710 E. 20H·82 lklrl to be .....,_, Dwowmll• IA, pjltt OMfl end '*1 credit. Iha terrna petty to Ntlafy Mid obllgatlone. and County. ca11torni1, deKrlblng 1ano ----.. ---11'-.,,.-Y'M'-r___ oe Blvd 1H1 M lftett. No. 11Ht In bocMI of tllClfl or9dfl to be~ to th«Mfter Ille undertlgned caueed lhet9'n 11 Loi 104 ol Tract ~71. In ,.~ ""'rK 8elb04I ·• Balt>oa. CA 9288I t4Ht Pitt"'· of Mid ()fftctaJ tM ,._,., ~ end to Mid notloe Of~ end of electlon lhe City ol Orange. n sno.n one ,AC9'1C .. w ....,.. ... , .... <Aml*V Mortuary Chapet-Cf'ematorv J500 ~1hc: VlftW Or111e NewDOt1 Beacm W..TIOO .--- MAllOI LAW.-'41. OUYI Mortll/llV • o.,.. *" c,..,. tOf"( t82!.G~tA~ Cot••Mft• 540-6M4 The bualne11 name uaad by Ille rtaJC NOTICE "'8oordl. .. °'°""·Ten perwnt (1°'4ool of o. to be .... ded October 23. 1te1 • mep recorded in l>OOll 388. page 27 Nkl treneler~•l 11 Mid looa11on IL Sato Ult wlll be maoa. but wt.. ll'llCMlt bid to eocomp111~1M °"-in.tr. No, 31aaG In boot! 142t7 pege 10 3 1 1nc1u11•• of Mt1cet1eneou1 '1CTlTIOU9 .,.,.... Neat Thing• 4 Flower• Too (flowt thoul ~or warrenty. •llP' ... llld u. .,...,_ 10 bt on con--t434. of Mid Offlclal ,._._ M•ps. en<J emended by• certlbt• Tht f=1!11TAP~~n~ doing ~.only,.!~ bul .. tranit-ie inten-P1C~A~H or Implied. l'tg9fdlng lltle. poMtto-""""°"of .. tlrtN . T-Said tale Wiii be med•, but wl-ol correction recorded April IA . '" -" -tlon. at enciumbtancff. to pwy lhe Md '91\lt e11aft be prO<atad 11 of lhOul -*It or ...,,amy, ~ 1976 In Book 11704, Piiia 1730 ~ • did to be ooneummeted 11 '"' of-The follo.wlng P•r•Oft 1' doing remelnlno prlnclpel 1um of th• the eta-. 0, conftnnatton W'd ..... Of ""'*"· rwe-rdlncl tltl9. ~ Official Aecotd•. In the onJce of the MR T'S AUTO RESTOAATION. lice of· 710 E. Btlbo• Blvd .• Bel· ~ •. note4•1 MCUred by H id OMd of n. --'*"'*' Of lllle NOordlnO lion. or ~ to pey ""' Counly Recorder ol Hid CCM.tnty 332t·F Weet Wern« Avenue. Sent• bol. CA 92882 on or •tier Mey 21. Edl;;~rNSN~N~~~P'::~~rin;~~ Tn.t1I. "'4111 lnMnlt .. In eald 110i. of oon£ and.,,.; tttla lntu-remaining prlnotpet euin ot th• inctuding note fOf 111e pr1nQl>al "'"' Ana.~::'l:een Huret. 233 South 19:!. bulk treneter not eub)aCI 10 ~ CA 92947 • prollidad. MlvancM, II any, 1tnfft ,.... lfllll be tt tN...,,.,. ~ote(•~i:;s.:y ••kl :::d of of "48.600 00 eald obllgtllont•that Broollllurwt. No 0318. Anehalm, CA ""elllorf)la Uniform Com-trclal K9n L. Frltta, ·8200 tdlna9r. No th• term• Of .. Id Deed oi Trull. of u. . Nit, • Ill now • brHch 01. and del1u11 In, tht " '" CA bM • ,.... aflervae and ..,,.,_ of IM 1k1e or °""9 .. lllwMd tot tNw ptow:tad, adftnett. If eftY, llno.t obllg1tK>nl IOr wtllCh IUCll Dead of 92904. Coda Section 8109. 80!:.._~~ ~~ .... 7. T~andOf thelt'*IUNl9d t1r ~lftdlllUllt lleln9'tllfloend the terma of Mid 0... of Truet. T1u1111 Hcurlly hu eccrued In Tiiie ~ 11conductedl>y1n The neme end addren of he ,,_ ..,_,_,. --.,, en eeld DMd of TruM ... llt ,..._Ill._ oMOll ~ ..._ CiMf9m anct llCPIMtl Of tfw '"''payment hU not l>Mll made Of Mduel. perton with whom Claim• m•)' be lndMdutll. ... ...... be Mid on Mde)' • .., .. a MIMOtt lttomwyt fOf T"*'t .-of IN"""' .... tlr THE INSTALLMENT Of INTEREST Thomae 0. Hurat llltd 11 Glorla F. 8aktr, 11181 T ...... e•u~1F':!!!_~-...... __ -May H , 1112 ti 2:00 p.rn. tt tM .-....... ~at 1nt DMdotTNll. WHICH 8ECAME DUE F£1'9\IAIW Thia atltement -filed with the Wlrldtot Ofhl9, VIiie Pll'll. CA IHC7 "'-~ _, ............................. ~ Awnue "'''-to tM *'ii""'* ........... IOO ,.... ... ..... bt lllld Oft ,rldey, s. 1082 ~s I.ATE CHAAOI. ANO IJ Cler1I of °'anot County on and tM .... day for flllng c:leln1t by ......... ty Clarll of Ol'tinOt ~on Mo CefttWf lvlldlng. 100 bet ..... Cellfomla, Of !MY llefMad 21. 1MI ., 2:00 '""'·.,IM All s •SEOUENT INITALl · 4• 1te2. "'Y c:redltOt.,... be MllY.~\ 1111. May 4• lte2. hlPftlln A-u•. In O'tt COy ...... a.ti .......... COurt Awnue tfttf-. to Ifie MENTS OF IHTIREST, PlUI t.ATE ,,._,, wtlloh le Iha buelntM day-• Ille "' ,_ Ofange, CA or ....... to 9'111 ,.-. ....... l'Yfe Ceflltr lulldll'lt1 HO bet CHA ROE. AHO DILIHOUINCY Publl1he,ll Orenge CoH I Dally oon1um111at1on dalt 1peclflad Publlehed Orenge 00111 Otlly A1 llle tllM of the lnlttaf f)Vbllo .. ~ at "'1 tllM after""" pt &htllOh flaPftMll't A-ve. tn 1111 City ol OUE ON PAIOA ENCUMIAANCCI, llol, May •• 13, 20, 27, 1982. lt>Ollt. Piiot. Mey •• 13, 20. 21. 1912 llon of VIII notlet. '"" lolel ""'°""' Oi .... nCllDUnd before ...... IN • OA IF ANY that by reuon llltr~. "" ---------~---• DAnl> May 3, 1t12. ~ of Ille unpeld ~ of the Obi!• .... Al time Of tM lnftW pWlloa-PflMnl bentflclary under eeld Owed P11LJC M)TIC( Olofl9 f . Bea• atlon ffQllrad by Ille tbo¥9 d.. ,., fWtW lllfom'tetlOfl 9ftd bid of .. ftOloe. IM ...... MIOUll'tt. ot Tru11 hH dtPOllled '#lfll aald lnttl"td9d Tr.,,.,._ •-• -i1rtbM Md Of tr\llt ..-....._, ....... _. .. IN..._ of t11e at• tflw ""9llN MlaMt of tM otMj. duly llPPOW!leCI TNIM, llldl ~ Publllfled OrtnOt CoHI Delly ,._ ""'-• -~ and lldvanota ta ...... fOio h ........ ,........ tlOfl ....-ty tM Move de-of TNll end 1111 ~ ...iotn-ncmnoua WH lftllot, Mey •• 1N2. PICHfiOUI ......... 131 Ol7.U. .... ... '11 Wll lftd ........ ting Ob1i9etk)n1 MCI#' .. ~ MAlll STATWmlln ~ ...._ ST~TW To'1tetetmlne 111e ~ntng bid, fllwrtalltll,_.to,.._.,,, t, ••J)Ml. Md •cnoee It and lht 11ndlf"9ned dOWI l'tWWy OMHITMOI: (I) ALL AMIRI• Tiit ~ Pl'IOllt n dolf'tt W-""'i!£14) ....,_ lfld 11 ..._ 1tf1H4.M . To dett""ll'te tllt dectera 11t.1ume eequred 1"""'6f CAN "OAO IHOW. 1151 l ut ~ -DMt; . tMI. oa.i: AOrl la, 1MI. lflflll b141, ~ "'t)' oell (114) lt11medlelely due tnd IMIY•ble 9ftd '::./OJ. avenue. lanta Ane, CA • Tum your au,.,.101 l>AY 11"v1c11. L CA19TAL -.. z..t 7.otll. doll narWOy-*' 10-.. .. lll'Ull Unu•sbl-400 M«rlmto. ti 11. Cotti ...... OON'ORAT10N ,.,.... "*"-••••• Detlc ~:~ ''°""''to M...., to MC~ 1"9 JOMiPft ~ llurrowt. ''* • -.. .,, CA 12Ue. ., r.o. 11 .. VtCE COM-.......... OO!lgttlon•......,.., .....,, ""-Otmt4tr Circle. Founlaln v111ay. Into MYmA o ·•"llH. 400 ....,,1. ,NfY, ...,., lAlilM4. o...... , INC. Loe ANOILD TITLI ~ ptlllDrNttlTOl. • • 1M1.1t1.oo.s.--.CAtHM. lOlf)t ~--·•111an ..... ............. ~' OH OCOMf'ANY. ~---llOOf'tdUC!MdtlrM usable .. :t:--'"°'""'°"'•lllJ• =.=.TIMM. ' :--..... -=:... ... 111 .,T.o.--~· "111=oot1TLI Joetpfl I . lunowt • Ceslt. Call ""'8 0'.,_ 1111 Ca'::i:':?,et fUo.... O !'!?'J. "'::':.r 1 =-=NC« COWMY, Tiiie ICMUMfll ... fllad"""""' • D•lly Piiot -......,,..,, ..... wtlll N .... --..... ~ ~ • ~ County c..ll of 0r-r.--on r-.-,..._., --r~.... ...._-.. =-OM Cley .,._ ...... ~I. CO•. 1111tw(1tl2.. -...... -.. , ..,_ .. ,...,....,, __ ,,.._..,. .. , .~ot;lo,CA .. 10I -OA-Or--.OA ... ' Allt......, _., ,_ • claaffled ., •. ,... ,... • .,....... '""--t 11.,..... ~TIOAtlfl!M,,.. ~ °'~ 0...1 o.ttr 642•16n. ,u .. ..,... °'~ o.... Deity °' .... c.u• o• " .... GI-. o.... _,.. ,....... ~ o..e ~,... ,uo""'" ~ c....f.S >i_,_..,.._._. ...... _,.,,.,._.,,._I, tl,20,t7, 1M2 Not.•l.1S.IO.fP.... • ... ti.ID. ttll •Mlrt:t.ft.1• ...... tt.IO.,_ IO .. "°'·~n,Mt;'-.... 204M2 IOI?.. I047.U • ,...,.., 1t \ \ Students honored by Bo/A Four local colltae tophomore, went awar- decl llOO checU for \helr pwfannance ln Bank of America'• community ~ awarda proeram. Julia Danal1er of Cotta Meu In the bu1l- ne11 category: Ruel Csach of Hunttneton Beach ln the 1clence-· en1lneerlng category and Yvonne Miller of Fountain Valley In the technical-vocational cat- epy. All attend Orange Coast Colle~. The fou rth winner WH Saddleback Com- munity College student Karen Shingleton of Ir- vine, In the 1clence- englneering category. The four w o n their local 1emi-final event• and advanced to final competition. First-place winnera in each category received $2,500 each, and a to,al of $24,000 was awarded. The program Is d e - 1igned to recognize and honor community college 1ophomores w h ose teholanhip, leadership and sense of civic re- sponsibility give them prom.be of future aervice to aocle.ty, bank spoke - smen a&ld. Benefit • aµct1on in Mesa The Orange Coast College Children's Cent- er will conduct a benefit auction May 14 at the Carta Mesa campua' stu- dent center cafeteria. There will be a vie- wing hour from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. when the auc- tion will start. Admission la $2 at th e door, and r efreshments w ill be 1erved. The center was started 10 years ago by OCC's Asaociated Students to rrovide child care for ow -income, goal - oriented studenta, accor- ding to officials. It serves about 150 children of OCC students each se- mester. Proceeds Crom the auction will be used to purchase needed equip- ment for the children and to repair buildings. Some items that will be up for bid include a weekend at South Coast Plaz.a Hot.el, an original cartoon, a bronze sculp- ture, two live lobsters, one hour of legal advice, and a half-day of house cleaning. For information, call 556-5569. Landlords to talk finance ''Financial Dynamics'' will be the subject of four financ ial and in- vestment planners at the May 18 meeting of the Apartment Aaaociation of Ora.nae County. The meeting w ill be held at 7 p.m . in Ana- heim. Participating will be Bruce F. Bennett, an ac- count vice president for Paine, Webber, Jackaon & Curtil; Donald F . Lynn, a partner with the firm of Andenon, Lynn & &dch Accountancy, and Diane 0 . Wood, a f1nandal oonsultanl Dl.a- cualon moderator wlll be William R. Gorman, owner a nd broker of W.R. Gorman & Aaao- data. For information, call 638-6HO. Fire unit --------------~---·-... -.. .. Ortnge Cout DAil Y PILOT /Thuteday, M*Y e, 1912 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • The marketplace on the Orange Coas t ... 642-5678 I CLASSIFIED ~l!!f!f ........... !Mt.~!*-...... «Mt ... ~ ...... t.!m.~!A'!....... «~.!'!.!~!. ...... ~!.!!!!.~'.t.!tJ! ....... ~m.!~h.l!. .... .. 'INDEX (!) ~~;;;;:1·~ ,,,..:;~·=·-.. ··;·IS ..... ~ ..... ;:_.~ ...... I.IS ~~=· ~;:i;; lt -Y• a..i ---MAT U IA gotta ... to b•ll•v•. S 8p1clou1 new s bdrm. r-. .., -...... •TUI Prize Wnt &y bayfront. SUpe for 2 bolta, Br. HH.000. Oood fl-den, 3 betfl home. Affor· 642 5671 WOWI LOWHt prloed PAICI! Al!DUOl!D HOO, remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. , n1nolng. 0Wner/A01 C. debl•. 116,000 option • IOUAl HOVtlllO beytront hom• ON BAL· 000. Thie unique home Spiller H 1-128' ltkr-fM. 11300/rno . .sQ Fii SAU 0"011TUN1H BOA COVES. Lero• 4 -wox. e.ooo eq. n. II en Oceen & Jetty vlew1. Manne room. 4 bd.nn. 3 ... ,... a-11 1• bdm\, 3 beth,~ fir• entertllnetl peredlM. La bath, 3700 sq.ft. $1 ,38~.000. Oceanfront. AM f« Lofl, lgl. ..... ,&!Ml •• p6eoe, oowred petlo olul .. p. be).'llde i.wn. pool, s ··-· -~ 1.-=--.. ~· 11!! much morel Wiit AITO or tplo1 plue hie end here 1 ... ISL.I ..._. -r1 I --· ... ade t E.aetbluff .. betht din 0Mo9/.,, .... ~ •••••••••••••••••••• ='•:'.11 " :: PaHI~ lr't ..... ~-: ??711 • Y· room~. gymnealum. Prime Udo Nord bay front. 5 bdrm. 5 ~ bath. LAAOE MedltWrW lt)1e ~.,.!-• All rMI •t•t• ectwr11Md ..... .., ..._ Unu1u1lly d .. p lot w/ R 2 .U $ ~ 000 C.,Ull,.. 4 bf. 2 lty home. Welk to ,_ VolloJ :-_ .. t=;'~t t0Mlth•e"~•der1tel M>-'•lr l11l1n .. ..., approx. '.·• f .. t on th• Lee L. .. boel pa I. . . ...,. Ill be9d\. Steeht 120UOO. ......_.. ltw• .... .... ..6" ,Of 1.., _........ --·-, .... ••• bey. Onty II '1"11'• otd. '4. •••••••••••••••••••••• _ee_1-_M1_2 ____ _ :::,...... 1 .. mall ti=~ t ,;;;;• dll-eao.ooo. John M1on1b, hemodded 3 bdrm. 2 bath+ larse rec. rm b1l11h1..... •ull.aflM i..c---t'-~ o ..._.-~~~~~~~1142.am. (K52). beam ce~. fumJahed. patw.. $420,000. ..... •-... • ••• L 1 .... .....,.. """" 1111 -any pr enoe, .. , •• .:: _....... -• .,... =i.!......... •'"'• tatlon or dlacr~~•tl_!" ••••• .._ U . Lllll llLE llYFlllT FOi .... Of"'"'· Unit 21 •••••••••••••••••••••• .u ..,. bued on race . ......,.., r--••-•._.. 114--531-'010 &PUSH SPLASH s..,-c.,..11... .,. glon .... °' na0one1 orl-0et reecty '°' tt with thll _. m 111 Laaoon view trom 6 bdrm. 5 beth. playroom. c,,.., al Jiu I Sln(lle atOf'f RMlCtl ::l': t:' .. --::. =gin. or any Intention to en:: 4 l::::,2 Be CNnnlng28Ahomewtttl dark rm. den. Boet 1hp. $1 ,3~.000. • ..................... w/1pect1culu poo 6 S..U.Lac-119 m•k• 1ny 1uoh preter-Ai ao ha• ~rg add~ bachelor unit In b•ok. .llYSllE ,.._ HouH on Begonl• f235, •P•· f 135.900. Low ••-•• • n c'. II m It 1 t Ion or fam~room Aiaum• Pr~ decorated. vv•~ ooo. lot vllue, pr1n. only. Oown. no Q~ng. Bair. --·s.i. 1* dllcf1mlnetlon." · 5 blodt8 to ooean. OWfMr ..__ f i 2 b 2 2 b Bar. (213\.ol''U'-5823. 848-0709 IUl ESTATE HI. loan. FUfl ptloe wlll Halat wltlnenolng. Spectacular uay ronl v ew r. ba up; r, ,....,.,---------~ 1or s.i. •• Thia n•w1p1per wlll not 1156.000. 831-7370 Muat '"to ippreclete. 2 ba dn. 2 boel 1lip1 $1.900.000. If.... lnU1 ' 10#4 ~~.. :: ~=~ f~l~t:t. 1285.000 Pat 01tc1on, COllOUIO CITS 11M-w~~o·.;;,e,;;;·;-9;_·c,·;~ =:;1 ..... c:1,.. :: wnlctllelnvloletlonofthe 752-1414 (K53). 2 Br. 2'h B1. 2 trplc. home. cul-de-He. 1/c. ~,:'...,.,_.,7 ~,!!! lew. ---Coronado bland cuat. bayfront lot. 85' boal Condo. Pool. J1cuul. Own/Agt. wlll llnence. ,_ ns&i. --• ,_ d k p•·---•J .... ., .. 000 t•-Tennie Court1. Owner Below IYWkt 11 f179,000. =~~"".:~ :: ,_ ,<X • ..,,. av .. ·~"· w ""'nns. WIW C1try. 640-5249. 84!1-477e :=~~., : .-Si AdvertlMra ... Piil UM _C_l_S_T_O_lllZE __ I_ LGU1ors.i. ~ ahould check their .. rms •••• ......_ ll<illiltHow Tr1t ,,~. -d d lty d r rt -1 3 bdnlll, 2~ baths condo near pool. $145,000. B .. uuful 11r"t In CdM. ElmR -.o-n.auon -e a a an epo ~ HARBOR VIEW There'• nothing Ilk• t In Owner"• unit wtbeem cel-~.,.c~7~.. : errors lmmedlatety. HOMES Corona del Mer. s BA ll1d Unga &ne1 nr~. 1.99 1 1n Univ. Perk -Park 11 o.itts.i. '""' • The DAILY PILOT Thll 4 BR Portoflno model hug• 101 on • H clud•d Bdrm 1pt with tlreplece. Homee.. 4 bdrme. 2~ be . .-.r ...... c...... "" I 1 one of the loWMt priced It,.. VllCMt l rtillt'/ '°' pl b t*<>r Good I with larger fam. rm. ll1d :=t=~~,... : aaaumea llabl tty for :nd you own th• lendl lov•. 1221.000. Coby C:::.:. P:lo arciund ~~ •dd•d bdrm. Relud IOTALS the first Incorrect Flr•pl1c•. bonu1 room, Wiid. 142-1236 (K'4~ A11um1bl• 101n. f 315. deck wl1h View of mouo--,..,,,._ , .. Insertion onty. owe. 1319,900. ooo. t11n1. M~ln eondltlon. Heoae lJ••-.._.. ma 111 L11Mhold reoegotlatM =~:;,~ = llllill(JlJt= f1()~1.S ATTN: BUILDERS Lavel In 22 YM19 f 200.000. =:_""r~' : •lllWlf lllf fWtlOf!, e7MOOO ~ ~ R-2 lot, So. ot hwy tor -duplu or alngle f1mlly. =-~"'. : Thia "Stir" alllnH on MW _ TIW•llll Call for Into regarding fl-°"l*Hl uat • bHt E11t1ld1 at. Fee-Y•w Mn. $230,000 • °"""'"' 1111 tur• 2 Bdnne, carpeting 2 Muter suci.. vi.w of ODY -.i••• .....,_1211 =~:.1.111 = (NW good hrdWd ftoora. Ocean I Nl,ht Llghtl. II your• elOft9 With 2 ~ -• ippll•ncea. I lh1tp ep. O\Mt Ar-. 1rU. open «ooma. 2 be"" end IMng =. .. ~ :: pewenoe. Owner flexlbte apecff. 1125,000. Only room that 1111 a n c--.... on term1. Full price 1()'1(, dn. >Ont An. Hel"' out1t1ndln'l,.= of th• e.:::.\&---. am .ll33 000 751-3191 Pit~ Agt. e73-7300 ~telf'I. te,~ ._ .... i.o si...n• ,. 4 U .... -mot!Yated to ... and wlll ~~.,,.... :: with c1thedr1I c•lllng1 =•t In flnenclng. ft&e, .-....·::.. = end. r~ kitchen. . f::j: wt 9.5% 111umebt• lo•n .. ..., ,,:.,.:-: WILY mHB 1nd an enJ1lou1 own.,. RCTaylorCo Miii" INYEST· Well maintained 3 Br ~7'!.1~ .. 170110.000. Call .u. houle on llfge lot. EM)' .. ......,.., .~ r >()<_ lllOfT, ANAJICE 1ccH1. Prime corner ~~ *' locetlon with future -.. --io1t commerclel potenllel. ::::::::~::::.? = Owner wlll 111l1t w / . \ { : ·J l I 11f.·11 ••I 1 •• ' • ' t •• f ... ~ '" t ..... ' _,ioi.o.• im financing. Full prlc• =~~: = f 1S4,500. 761-3191 W-an_t_A_d_s -C-el-1 84-2--56-78-t More f1mllle8 are getllng the camping ""bug·· thl• year II you have a ~mper lhal'a nor getllng used, sell It now with a Classllled Ad. _.MC OUN TS. PCISOltAlS & LIST & FOUNI c::. 4-,J I t ( ' -t-' 111•{ JPI H' I '• 11« Find out about th• high II~ Mmlng rMI Mtate ..... :: cerear OC>C>Of1unltlel wltfl loJlf. THE REAL ESTATER8, -Llcenalno 1choo1 t••• -~etv refundeble to 1chool ol your choice. • EAtenelve ..... lrWnlnQ. 'or lnformetlon, c all 751-t191 .... ~J~ ~~om hclmelll ........ of Palm •=•· H0.000 dWn Of • °'""' .. .. ..,.... ~ tor 1 yr. t411,IJOO. Joyce Welti•. ft•I M•• 131-12M RCSIO£NTIAl R£AL ESIAIE SERVICES Seaview Spectacular comer New Bedford Model. This immaculate home has 4 bedrooms or 3 plus den, vaulted ceilings. 2 fireplaces, family room, cozy kitchen, all on 1 level. WILL BE OPEN FRIDAY 10-2. 2121 YACHT YANK.EE, CDM. lll.UIY 1'llml IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 ,,_ ·-....... .. _ ,...,. •Of •"'-.,..., ,.,..,...,.. 11 ... .. . ..... .............. ................ ".. .. ......... 110. .,. ... .,~ ...... .. . ,, .......... ...... .. .-.....,...... ........... ,, .... , ....... ,..._ •Ot ......... . .,., ·-...... ,,.....,, ., .. DAii 110.... a..._ ..... a • .. ,..... ......., .. ....,.,.... . ..... •"'-• ......... ,,..... .. ...... •Ck ...... ,,,.., .,..., ...... ..-..... ~c-i @~.t ..... ··-·-·-.. -·-•• "°'" ·-••• .. _ .. _ ,._ ,._ ··-.... ,._ 11-.... ..... ·-··-•oo a CM .... .... ·-·-··-··-.... .. C)N<wnl mn1a1. STARTING ' !~~!::°.::O"a= . A NEW BUSINESS? l.IUt ....... Tll ...... A fanwtk 3 Br "Lind.a'' model_pn wi- de1t greenbelt. Like new. Vacant. $270,000. New carlfets & drps. Ready for immediate occupancy. See anytime . 1111 lal ................ .. •111r. ........ , OllTU, .... 144-4110 IEWLim• MPLD Balboa Peninsula -Well Kept Du- plex With Two 2-Bedroom Units, 2-Car Garage -One Block From Beach -Good Winter, Summer Renta.la -Minimum Vacancy Fac- tor. $389,000. A Dion-Maria L is- ting. (5) __ ........ _ .. 759-91• uc.,., ........ .,...,..c..- llJCI, WlllMTH, VIEW! .................. •fttt ... , .... tJ , •• •••1wa .......... ......-aMt •It·•··· •••• •It• ••• 11, ,. ..... ..,., ....., .......... ,., ....,. ... ......... ,,, 11 ............... .. 111-t• . WATERFRONT HOMES.INC A£Al ESTATE s.i.. iv.. .. , p,._,, ~-... 2436 W Co.os1 H...,. ~l».och Ui-1400 llS M.ittnt A" s.itio. IM.nd '7Uto0 RfS10£NTIAl REAL £STAI£ SERVICES ..... -... 1111,llO This home offers old world gra- cious living yet i.a only steps from the ocean. Exquisitely remodeled 2 BR, den, formal dining and a cheerful breakfast room. Assuma- ble loan. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 ':i::' sa:~lA-a~~s· :: -"'QAf II. llOU.M ----- ·=~...:.:: ~~'Lfl uAILE f Ii, ASSUCii"iTES ~~~~~I it523 CWV,Dl·llWM CAMEO SHORES Cuatom 4 Br. 3 Be. pool. z..,... ~ IHI jacuzzi. kot pond, 3 ••'•...-••••••••••••••• fr p I c • 1 f 4 7 5 O O O FORECt.OSURE SALE e75-5930: . 0 Under lender·• coet. So. ________ , L1gun1 PY1 Mt•••· 110 C.11 #HI IOZ deg. OOMll YU. Secutlty. •••••••••••••••••••••• $546,000. ISS....2013. "~ ... .... ,._, lmm1culete North Co1t1 M9l8 3 Bdrm, 2 full b1th1. 1127,000 With 13% lln1n- cll')(I on 111 TD. Jutt llaled, need• fut Hcrow. Cell 540-1161 ~-HERITAGE BLUE RIBBON SPECIAL 3 bdrm. 2 level floor plen In wood & glul. OcMtl view, beamed celllng1. huge atone frplc. Loee- ted high •bow l.agune'• Riviera coutllne. 1195. 000. MISSION REAL TY 494-0731 . • REALTORS FABULOUS 4BR 3b1 home. Great ocean 1_3_Br_1-... -..._-_--,.-.-i vlewl. Gym. IMAnl. ~. · --. ,....,.. on -oe 1ge decile. Gourmet klt-50x175' 3 unit lot. 43e chen. Exceptlonelll Hamilton. Oo not dllturt> te95 000 ten1nt1 f 129.000. • · 548-5041 -I wtlnd1, Llpu flllle U 531-3520 wtldy9. 411-11f1 .... 11111 z..M 11n1t IHI IAll •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 1 Be. + 1 er. 1 Be. Piii -lac 72x105" R2 lol Do not ~ dlllurb tenant•. 1521 mam O range 1129.000 .a M. 21L II. 548--5041 -a wt1nd1, ~ n 531-3520 wtldy9. BETTEA THAN MOOEL M • I tll HAS EVERYTHING 3BR, 28A. A-1 COnd on c~ ttreet luge R-2 lot. Park Ilk• Sun 4 Sall II Club y11d. Eutllde. By ownef. 20 min. to S 139.000. 842-9125 or Newport Cent« 842-2741 1tter 5:30 PM 1210.000 wtttl f180,000 at 12% lllled rite a For Sele by Owner. 4 Br. 2 fully amortized. Be. Dining rm. Family rm. N p01nt1 0< -··'""'ng M .. North. 751-5163. o 77o-o;;J'"7 ' • MWNIT IWT1 OwnertO@:nt T1WRUllH ·~ J.Mi IHI Ftve new 3 bdrm, 3 bath •• -.-;c;;;•••••••••••••• condo1. Pluah c arpet•. EAecvtlve condo. OOMr1 a drp1. •t•I'*' g1111. pvt bey vleW. Fplc. cettledrel yvd1, 2 ~ gerega. 210 clg1. etc. 1+ den. f 10. teth Piece. 80% io.n 11 000 option money. Dy1 12~% -OWl"lef" wtll cerry 551·9035; evw 873-4899 2nd Of try equity lhllrtng -.;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;-.-PfoOr•m with no money ,_ ..,., down. John Eliot, Agt, . Cen1I tront 4 Br. FM e31-4321 WHkdey1; land. Term1. 1299.000. 873-38ell or H 1-4509 Mr. Clark. 845-3370 alt wtellenda. ePM. AT TEN T I 0 .. VE TS . l •nWMNljjjjlTjiiriii .. namiirN"- BRAND NEW CONDOS. Owner Medi ceeh, dMr1 13 •leg1nt 2 BR 2'h 01 en11que type houae. 2 Br. condol In prime locetlon. 1 Be. 50X t 17' lot. L.erge Lg• g ourme t kitchen. detectled gerege. St19, micro oven1, veulted 000. 541·5041 evH a celli ng a. betconle1. wtlnds. 1131-3520 wttdys. yerd•. 2 cu guagH, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii pool • 199. Build« glV9I xlnt r11e1 & term•. Sat/ .... ..., Sun 12•5• U l -8194 • 8y owner. Dr11Uc price wtidya, 150-9778• Evea, reduction for lg• down-751-3287 peyment. 640-7990 harming 3br/2b•. A1- aurne sea.ooo. f106.000. e>wnertagt e.2-9n2 wnm l5000 dOWn. 3 Br. 2 Be. + Den, pool + Bechelor Unit. Monthly payment f1800. Full price f1H, ooo. e67·2783. Y OWNEIW8r. 28e wllg heeted pool. In lg .... ded bec*yd, oonwnllnt· ly located I llexlbl• termel Cel IMCM27e rot mot9 Info. LIW ... Try 10" down for low lnferHt term• on thl• r~ ..,._. 3 bedtoofft. Aooent.I Inc** • cr•-uno ttr9'-fac• .... utltut ~--MQ.Jull •w,.tmrr Thia bHutlful condo 11 decorated 1n the nneat of tute. Fumllhlnge can be purchHed. 3 bdrm plu1 relrHI , 3 bathe. Or11t Ill 11. By Owner. ' Bdf, den, I lll*t rm. 2 *nl'I rma. 5 ... "'* fOnNI IMfla l dining. :S2u.ooo. no. 000 dWn. 64W10I ll1IS, O rm a MOr•. 1121,000. autltM • • 5 c-a1 -a.. now. tn.ta10. ACOOfclftt to Caafofnle H Sets PICDIC AITIS, ISO •"d ~rofH1lone COdl (lee. 11'00 to ~.. For A.a.. •ction 111at> '" ,.,eon• cto1"' 1Mt11ne11 "* · · : U" n under • ~· name lftUllt Me • ..................... _ I· t i y t 1·· 1 I "*""-"°"' Vie boeCltll 1112,100, TA"HLL. MALTOM.t1t-ISIO •t_, °'""' 8Ndoul. 4 8drm. 2000 eq ft t\om• with .. ..... ·--.. -... i.{L :ser a din, bee. ltM*9 GI• ... 2 frP'el, NCUttty l)'Nm. ""a 1ot. eon e.. a 1.1n111. Wiit trade fOf In- com• f'oporty. "oo. ooo.' 1•> en-1111. 1111 ...... Dr. T he Oran1e County =.. ... 111101MM WWf IM C°""'1 aottc •net J'lre ~' awdlla-6 c.-.. :t Cal a ....... 'pubtt•hod, tour "'"' '" .• ry wm~..-a family ~=-. = " .... , ... ..,.. .... ate• "' "'*h l l.. I 16 • 11 0.-0 0 0 ' ... Daly Plot tfte IMf ....... le louted, p ciuc ay 1rom ~ . ... m y,._ ..... ,....,. It '"'*" 'J 11w a.m. '° 5 p.m. at C.Oco de 7 =· ····· · .......... If\ VISOR ond It ,.._...,, In ~ ,... Casa 10 1outb Oran1e ~-·· : .. · .. ·= nu• buaiftfte MlfN Mott bOnlll ,...._ :St~·:::ic:-::~! a· 'l:·::~:::;>.::i _!!. =~;.;.;-;;;;. dwaldnl ~ and door • ' · · · .... Ei or ·~· "'"t 11 ... .,. .... ._ ... , .. " ,.,_ _. DriMt Will be fMtw'ed. I ... ··:;::;··· . ~ ...,,.. ...... , ...... ..., .......... °""" Tbere UID ~ a. • raf. .... "" Dally tot C1111fu1ct ~ C11•111H. ---r=;--Or for. Video .r900l'dllr. a ""'.. . . . ... . -Adi. To,. .. your •d. .. ..,, WCCUI ••• ..... • ... ~ .... --.. .... ._•...._ _____ 1 ceM 142·M11 Md lot a LIGAL ~ , ... I· I I II 0 Ii G I I I I r LU I A M I I I I' CNALIH I I' I' I I J 11 I formal dl"lno & f1m1ly rm. t1H.IOO. M"" ... '" H day•. 0111 no~ t1M110 \ t .11 I 10 . 1t ~ ..t a.b, Cl••lfltcl M-Vllof help Sit fef _.. lll'DIWllll• .---., ~t .... uon,t'all_L._~----~Jw~.,,.~~Adl~~Olll~14~t·~M~7•~~you~. :::.:,:~::.~~~====~~~:i:~f:~~~:=::!J.~!!~~~~~~~!!!!..!5~1!I0~•4'.__..!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~==I!~~==~~ -------,.~ --- ......,llllT -Plan •· 3 bdrm, 3 ba. $200,000. . ..... lllll't 18.,..% 30 yrs. "2l'oo mo. AHNE HARRIS ·~7218, 409-12U ge Ju11 1 block away. 3 Bdr I~'. Be, !amity home w/veulled cefllng1, earthtone carpet1. lf92. 000. lll-1111 ABSOLUTE STEAL!! I 1take my reputation that thll 11 the BEST BUY In Newpor t Beach. OCEAN VU, LRG 4 BDR. PROF. DECORATED, pool, tp1. & llke nu all for only $378,500. A trade conaldered. Call PA· TRICK TEHORE Directly 131-1288 or 780-8702 TODA YI .... _ .,... By owner. Under 1ppr. value. 2 bf 1uxury oonoo. Terme neg. 840-0806 _.. Archltttll, deel1ner1, plannen Two 1~ee In Newport Center One 11 2000 aq ft end one 11 3000 9Q ft Very ravorab"' rateal Wll-' llam Col#, Broke< - Orange Cout DAILY PllOTIThureday, Maye, 1982 •• DOLLAR DAY DOUGH IAVEM Sell your no-IOf'gfH'·needed tt.,.. for Ollt'I. If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3 days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no r .. 1 eatate or commercial ade. Call today for full details . ... ,.... ....... ., ....... ,,..., ~ . '. '' .,._ .. !!ft!.~ .... ~~.¥~ .. ~!!!J~~~~t!. .. ~,,.'!.~ ~~ I ~:;._ "::.::W ~!a!!.l!.P.e!.!lftf "',,., 11 c..t. ... mf ..... ..... .. '--..... n# .... ::::::::;z....... .. ... ::::;:............ • ..................... 8har• • Ir. llom•. b•t· ••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••t"ii••••••••••••••• ~r.':••••••••••••••• C.. ,,.,. JIJf C..fl ,,... JIU ,,. J ~lay & ~. A\9111.. bdrm, 2\t be, Ir· Soeotoue 2 If. 2 la. 8'*t Nwpt Blufft. 3 If on otlOI· Furn. ~na •••ell II.I· ... !!................. ...................... W now. t7f.lt37 an WM. vine Terrace. Yr 1..... fevel, frplc, micro. 3 ca greenbelt, allarp. Kury , ..-, ktelMte ~,.,.,,,.. "11 $1400. 873-3100 • deck•, 1kyllte. open t1126. M4-N1t. TV, MUM. mlkl MMol, .... Bau Ul1W .... ;c;o; .............. Hon-1mkr, &br condo. 11_ .. ___ •ll:f beam, dbl gar/opener. pllonH. St 11/week. -~-..Jl-ftV, I bdrm 1tove, refrlg. Tr1-Plp, lllrp 2 Br. 1 Ba. '200/mo. + ~ ~ S1'0 _,. -• Avail. 5·2•. 1150/mo. Wll -4ee-.22:21. 11 ..... lllill. Nice. l400 mo lnoludlng yard, qulfll area. 1480. dap. 114 39&4. H.I . ... ;r.uueuuuuue t7t-3378 Wkd I , _.,_ -.. •-utM!Uea. 845-0109 9'1·1127. Hew 3 Br. 3 Be. Condo. 761.a1M weatwtcMi • LUii ·~ IMd nn .. .utf;:ul lendeo&pff 21500 1q ft condo. Bey- 11500/mo. furnl1hed. 4 Br Canal front f'•• •• -...... ••••••••••••••• gerdan • l'ool & ape. Nr Nwpt H~t • 1 1ty trl lta~ Au "" view. pool on beau $1000untum. Mo. to Mo. 2 Br. Eal..ide, upgraded, land Mr ciark 1 '"· VerMIH•• condo, eoww parking. HHt plex. 2 br be, crpll, •••••••••••••••••••••• Greenbelt. 557.7aa3 Of' rental. 111. & IMt. ~ wont a beck yerd. Lower. 845-3370 Aft •8 pool, Jecuul, 9ym, bll· peld, No peta. drpe. pall • 14215. Open Mac:At1hur VIiiage 2 If. 2 _'4M __ ess_38 _____ _ looatlon, ne1tt to ahop· MOO. ~1S3. · · llerda. .-.na. 2~ tw 990, led"6ot Tlluta. 10.6. 247 E. 18th Ba. new carpell a ap-p Ing & thuten. Garden view. UH. 1 Bf 81. (218)441-t6t2 pllancee. M25Jmo. Call Female, non amoker, 648-4988. Oull\andlng MMe Verde CdM. 38t Vu t1SOO 764-4114: 142·9057. 2 It w. ea. 213/748·1250 day•. 26--40 to INre 2 bdfm. 2 ---------I home 4 Bdr 2'h Be on Udo Pk Dr vu s1eoo Kate 2250 v--....., El•ld• 2br hM. trg fncd 21313n .1221 ....... Alk ba Laguna BHch apt inUt '6H cut-da·HO, 1950/mo. EMtt11Uff 38t . 11200 -..-.. rd. Pet Ok . 1485/mo. tor Mr eutwnan Wttf\ Ooeetl VW. 9375 & •••••••••••••••••••••• Agt. 831·1281. A•k for IMllftl 3Bt-fwonll)l S1500 .. mTILI 1460/mo. 2 Br. 1'.4 ea. '200 eac. 842-0967 · · .,.. utll. 494-3304 WllH•• Altrte. Ctn Cow 3Br l2000 Avallabl• now. 000 apt., balcony, patio, Small 1 BR 1 penon only 2 Br 2 Be twntwe, laundfy, BAYFROHT: Fem•,. for Thi• bdrma, 1'h bt.,For tutlfutty deCOfated up-B~ld• Cove 2/den week up . Agent laundry rm, carport. no peta. Drive by 1t18 c r,:3~ '::e 1496· ewe 8albOa llMnd 3 If. 2 ea. ..... or ..... opt. $760. raded 3 Br 1paclou1 I 87M170. ac>Mto ... Callfonppt. Waltace.1325. • • 1350/mo. + Y. utll1. 751-9906 amity rm w/11one frplc, Bayft'ont 6&0ock 13260 OoMntront wtdy. 2 a 3 bt, TSl Mgmt. '42·1tl03 2 bdrm 2 Meat V de A,ut:mal1 hntbW Bryan 873· 1388 o r .__,, ,,_. 1111 trenoh doora, covered w~11;' Rtlt9 comp. futn'd . Ger. Avt. ~l~c:.-·dl1hwa:.,: II flmn 1111 _•_50-_1_3_24_. ____ ,...... ;:;w:;o;:u;;r;a;;;;~-;-;;;-1i•ii·-···•·iiir;;.ii.;"ii"ii""ii•ii•ii•ii••ii•ii•ii•••••• PTtlo. ~eatd '°' ent:-1f • now. 040-47M ~tfl'_._. . ...................... Young prol (M/FI 10 '"' NEWPORT BEACH LOT n ng. ar ener nc ' IUMMEA '-=--=-.I 731-134e lovely 3 BR Turtlerook nur b1y and ocean: BIO CANYON EXECUTIVE 1850. l56'-0347 BACK BAY Condo, adlt. ........... lllW. hrne w/couple. Pv1 t.th, 1144,000 or trees.. Ownr. HOME. V~w. privacy, 1 'it BR. yud, no pe11, oriented. 3 bf or u den, ~;::!°Apt. :r~, BHutl:'J:rden ept1. ~:C~ .. ~~~·.~~~l:~~: .,. 1 a..r otc, tenn11. fool a lg• 875-18&4 Hcurlly. uallty lurnl-c hlld OK, WHttlde. 2 ba, bltn1, frtoe. W/D, • Pdoa/ Heat paid. On, ....!Ln. AvaN .,..,::20 .,...._, yard . Aval lmmed. ---------i-h In 11~· S 2 5 O O Imo· M75/mo. 841-4713. trp ... new deeor .. poola No p«a. 2 c:hldr9n. seao""';w mo ..... , Hew 1&2 bdrm. luxury 553-1539. uk tor Oaly llUI YllW 1llll I••-& patio. '950 mo. lat, 2 If. 2 Ba. $635 a.a 1·0...., IPU In 14 pane. 1 Bdrm F ..__ .. 3 ~ 2 .... --lut 6 MC. 842-1155 3 Bt. 2 Ba. MOO .,..... -from $515, 2 bdrm ffom 10 lhr pvt,_.. "'• 3b 2b I f m lg -.on I " T h f ba duplex w/tam•. 2 500 aq. f1. )(Int Laguna ,,_,,__,_ .. _. tnc'd "d•. wg/ndanmr.'11'15_ 3 br, Bluff• (Paula), on • 391 w. W 1 Br. up1t1lrt, poo • gH .570, own OUM rom blkl from ~h. CdM. Beectttocatlon $15000 .,.,_ , • 1 t 1 t31-5513or842-37ot ~It!, Ref 't raq. S840+pool1,tennl1. . • .••••••••••••••••••••• ...,.1173 qu. cu ·d•·•ac. I 1•11C't-st t f II d I 0 l375 +'11 ut*.87).3615 Flnanc~all. o-n.rt ,,,... v,.,. $1100/mo. Rttr 731-""6 -. llllHllY1 MM~·-.. .-...,_ · ~~ ~'o~k1n:~n h:.11~: Nd 2 rminte'a to anr 31>1 Agt 409-. 3 BR 2 BA. lrp6c, rwioe, 2 N oc:Mnfront 3 Br f1 ~75/mo. 1 & 2 Bt. p1ld. From San Diego 2b1 hH, 2 car/gat frpl. •----,,_,,.,, • ._ 1~ J#'/ car garage. No pet1. ew . 2 1 le • rty. apt.I. new GalJM'I, pallol, 3 Br. 2 Ba. yard. frplc, Frwy drive North on 1, ._ ~::""{;';;(. -•••••••••••••••••••••• 1776/mo. 111 + $450 Z'~ty rm. ~~ . oar ...... a. cat Ot<. garege. MIO/mo. Broker lrg yrd $230. mmed. 8"uP.irscosrA ;..·isi.·. Charmlng/Sparklln,. 2 tee. 846-1423, M2...oe36 -5001mo. . TsC"...Qmt 842_1eos 851..aaoo Beach 10 McF•dd•n to ea2-11ts M 6'8-51 .. nHdt work, grHI po-itory, 4 bdr!!:l b~· 1 BR. 6 OEH Mdllded a Newport Shore•. C1nal -8 •a w~5d 08 v 111 ' g • Home to etw $27S mo. Ind tenllal 1310t< JoM ,,.., rm on........... · -.. ... ....:. d 6 front. 3 bdrm. 2'1\ ba. Roomy 3 Br. TownhoUM 171418 1 · utll. 111 & t11t. Furn. Mt-7..0 AGT I blk from Buoh and .,. ••• te, • ....,.. yw • 04ll Walk to bead! Pool and apt In quiet 1duU com· II fflf 3'11 •---~.-non-tmkt. 873--8302 Bey. Yearty ..... s1.eoo water paid, range. No tennl• avail. ·No pet1. Specloul studios. one ~1ex H ........ decorated •••••••••••••••••••••• _. ...._ ·-mo. 87s.«l75 pet1. Catpol't. $510/mo I....,. mo . •W•J • PHEASANT Creek El •••••••••••••••••••••• Shr 3 BR 2 Bahm• Coll _... 1 1 t . + 13 5 0 1 • c . ....., . wld two bedroom IPl'1· .-. endld patio a 1 Fr .. bacheto<ette. mature Tu 1111..TD ,._'/!!.._•_ .... __ .... ,, ......... 23 ••• 2 ....... 752-747• ments fUANISHED garage. Sorry. no pet.. Toro. New. dlx. 1 br. lady, 11change lor baby· Pk, CM w/M/F. Pref P'O -.. _ _._ -_.........., UNfu•NISHED HOOMo.845·3381or b1.condo.PandfkeMt· llft•-&WOf\.54~73 1. non 1mkr.s2eomo. ,.. llWllT•U ..................... 2 bd 1 b 1425 no I bf. 1 ba. unfum, ltlpa lo end " . e75-51M8. ting._,., oriented,,.,,... u .. "~. 846-2718 C t Id · f 3 Br. 2 Ba. d .. I) home, rm, 1• .. __ ......... 5 mo o ~ ood also olf-s nit pool •~a WM' .,...,...,.,.... ---------San lemen • pr e o completely repainted & dogl. M5 Vlc1041a. Ho 8. .,_...._ :""7.,7...,.5° a"w . "' ' ' . . . Yr F lhr 3 bf. 2 be hOme, ownenNp. Modern Sc»-~.,,...,1 _ _. •rnox 1500 54e-9124 • .-... •A11UtllltleePaid $600/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. up-ISOO. 856-1 25, 1 M Over 21. Pool, )ac. tennlt. 175 6 I utllt. Cill nlth atyte four unit -·..-.... · per 1Pt., ended garage. Step• to bHch. Rel1. apartment houH with • q . t t . 50 I mo· 3 Br, 2 ba. w1ter a gar-Cozy Hpt CrHt town· 'lnlfl_.... balcony/patio. laundry ... .,,.,. Newport Bdl. M&-4290. 10-3:30~ Tina M2..e&5I oc:ean hlla a....-cour.. 4~1730. dener Incl. 1786. Ho home, pool, lennfl, nr ~ rm. Avelt. 5-5. •---"' .. _ Unf. rm. ba. auto nar. PROFESSIONAL male .:........... -· ........... 2na beactt. Catt to ••• .,1.......,__111 TSl "-l ••2 1..,... _. _._ • _ .. vt.w . .....,.. to~. b....... ..... ..--......... . 1162-0t07 . -· _.. -• ...,.. •••••••••••••••••••••• kllch prlv/ deluxe CM non-1moker want ... to only thrH yurt old, ·-... 1 Br. quiet, yard, ref. Plue Aec:fellllon 1 Br.+. E.lllde. 11t & IMt THE WHIFFLETREE 1-2-3 twnhle. W/D, patio. Own •hare Ilk• new 2 b•· 1how1 Ilk• new. Seller .._...... range, 'f. adults. no Harbor View Home 3 Br. 2 And Much More• + Hcurlty. 1500. Call Bdrm. Apll. Gym. Spa, """"""· 1360. 846-Q162 droom. 2 t.th. Sen Juan w111 ha6p finance and -f« IM Of 1'9ftt. Unit 21 d 0 111 . t I. + d • P. Ba. fwonll)I rm. $1150/mo. 548-438& Sauna. pool, tennll, etc. .....~~ C1pl1trano condo. Ftre-buyer thouaand• of 714-631..t010 1445/mo. Mt-968e. PurcllH• option avall. For a month or a life· IMl-08111 Room In largm houM Co-p&aoe, pool,~. on1y dollatSlll s.Mng pr1ce of C..... "1 Jiu JIU ~. time Models oc-1. ~'":Iv l50C>-i52S/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Deluxe poolalde xtra lat· rona del Mar 'h block 2 ml6e 10 beaC:tl and Dwia 1325,000 11 way below•••••••••••••••••••••• •u"-ff• 2 Mt tr Bra. 2'A ••· 9aly\to6om l'loQI''-11tory, aha~ drape•. • 2br 2 ba' bltn• from Ocean. S250 per Point Hart>ot. 1275 pua current replacement Juat rellated COZY 2 Br. ..... 1Jfl 1700/mo. Kldt/tml pet patio. frplc, d • beamed ~aWhf {.,..ml ... beech' mo. 111 and lut. ~ uttlltl". Call Oertlard co 1t11 PRINCIPALS frplc, MW cpta, em patio. •••••••••••••••••••••• ok. Avail now. JoM, agt. celllngt, garege. Adutta'. no pell. S500mo: 873-1729 ( 7 1 4 ) 8 3 1 • 2 0 4 0 or OHLYI Call owner So of Hwy. $125. HOMESFORRENT 831-2242 Olflwood TSLMgmt 842•1tl03 536-8382 Fumpr1vroomandblth. 496-9758. (71 4)642-0138. 873-1734. 3 a 4 Bdfrna.18154700. Glrden Apertments •2 Br 1 ba MM• verd1 , Ref11g. S285 E CM I I Fenced ywda & gll(agat. Newport Heights large 3 upper. New decor. Ho v, mile beaC:tl. 2 bt, 2 car 845-0108 II Tll NST T:r~~ n~ti 2S~~y~. ~~~~ 8fo~U,:,~~·f:p~:: ~::.·~~ ~g_a~·!!.;:~'==· :!i_ 31~:&o7r:.Y c9:~: Newport 8-:h/No. ~9~ar. l4t5/mo. ~·h~: ri:.~·.~r.:. E/t lde C.M. Rm In pvl To llve on lido In a new S1tOK, for ~ut~ harbor._..... S1MO/mo. · ._. • · thony day• 142-5757, 880 Irvine M75/mo. 213/926-47116. home w/pool. Shr bath Shr beaut. ocean view home In Laguna with 1 other . 1400 plu1. 855-8755 cuetom home with all lhl llde C.M. °' N.8 . MMnt. • br. 1~ be, frolc. 2 car ~ & wllllda t31-tl30. 17.~.:~ •Sbf. nr S.C. Ptaza. 8.A. .... -·-1250. Pvt bath S275. Roommate wanted amenlll•I BeauttfUlly co-prop. Prln. only. LG. 1 IR. A.-.,1 ger gar. Sgl femtly ... 00. C 11 N 1 ... , Carpon. pool,~ St16. -·-_.,. 557-2783 $100/mo, 1tep1 from ordinated wall eowf1nOI, 540-le27 ._ '16• Av.I. Nia 1. f7l-Ot2t ountry c armer, P Pet ott. 762·5122 or Heu b .. ch. 8f1cJou11---------t t>Md\. Needtomeoneby plu1h carpell, exten1fve -ltiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiij-1 WID, •torage. H 6, Hgls. 15 Bdr, 3000 aq n. Newport Beecf\/So.. 841-1490. quiet 2 Br. 'A B1. Hpt Bch, apscloua, furn.. 5/ 5 845-2091 UM 01 mirrors. and -'de ... llWI 7 tl'4 Marigold. 1Br condo. 1160/mo. Vacant. RV acc:eu. Call 17001&1hSI TownhouH. 149si mo. quiet. pvt 1tudlo, prlvl-__ 1_· ______ _ c>pen IPICH I Overslled o.11ae ........ '"1· NCMZll 1141 CooltA••• ~ Diana. agt 131-12941 (eov.t 11 1811'1) Eutllde 2 BR. tm yard.· ~ tegea $450/mo 640-t290 H.B. atrllaht Prof. gentie- fot • you'll b~lad you, _da._OWC __ . _.,_~_...,....,..-ii 9* 1 ... daft. 2 frS*, 2 a:ao daly) 1-417 •-M--a... _11 (7'4) 142.5113 option at attach gar.I · F 1 f ed R man wlft share large ·--.,_,.. ~• 1495/mo. too aq.ft . 2Br. t'.~Ba, 1375+1375 emae pre err · oom home nHr beech -.Ith c.necS at>out C.M. Tr1D6IOC llUr. MllC oar 1er•r.· lrg patio. """ JIH •••••••••••••••••••••• ~5 dep, gas pd. nr Beach '°'rent..?~~!~· male over 35. 13t5. 142-IZll dn 111•~=-· "''"° n•~ •oorated ....................... BEACH COTTAGE, 2 B d & Mt F dd .....,....,....., fldt. 9Y 11 MO. 8'7 PolMet-I Ir. 3 k ~ Home In bdrm, 2 ba.. Wik to tniln, Yeal1y, OCMn vtaw, 2 Br. I 1 U. 2 .. I U. ~.no~ .• ~~· .... '~ . fHI _963-&538 ___ . ----j PETE BARRE TI .. REALTY 1•8 IMO IL ..._10ll :'~.ar:."1:: twn, bdl. $700. 412-1113 Ba. Beaut. furn .. w/d, Newly decor. 011 pd. 1 Br w/garage walk to ...................... ~ W ,_,fl" : s p W 11Wt 2 M ocim.: UlllCI doge o.daMr a ... Jw gar. 1775/mo . tncldl encl gar. dw1hr, pool, beach 1435, 'pal OK Pvt rm, bath. gourmet ... ~ ............ .. I '' brtek frpto., fMtwd nre. wete~eld ... OO/mo. II-~··-•••i utll. 873-4132. bbq. Adult•. no pet1. 8$2.2127. 812·-4078 mHI•. tranaportatlon. Garage. amd dout*. El l'Jnt& • CtoMd tar. 8etow Cat &-o ....... --•••, 842-5073. . lndry. companion, tor Sid• Co1t1MeH.1to-u;;,:~·~;'f• .. • .. ;,•c;c Hwy. ltto. "42·0t72, ~ ·._ ... no ........................ j .. -11 IW .. AP'll 2Br apt w/poot. taundry active, elder~ lady. Ir-rage only, 175. 64$-11n ~~~~~~~~ fn.e3M mflLI 2 Br. ~ fem rm. encl 2 --rm, no pet&. Hr 1.C Hoap. vine 552·303 M.. 0 = AlrpOr\. aq ft. bldl-1 bf, 1 ba M60 oar gar, dOMd beokywd, ffahlnlJW Adult IMng, 1 Br., car· ssoo. 873-2252. i--·-------t Stor1ge If ape, down-"111 Lm" 4200 aq ft AC ofc, Soect8CUar oca.t a dty 2 bf. 2 a. 17604800 nr •chi•. R.V atorage •••••••••••••••••••••• PortLel & laUndry. No •1.U ..,,h fl# town Co.ta Meaa.. h20. High rlM condo, 8th fir. 200AMP 3 ph ... Oof':· flgt1t1 view from every 2 bf 2.,.. ba l8004l50 avall. 1525/mo. lttllall C..al 1M petS. . 931 w. 1tttt. lmM RH ...... c............... $50/mo. 842 ... 907. Ocean & Bay view•. ~~~..:C,. ,.,.~ ~~· ;':l; :m~ G br: 2 ba 1825 & uc. a clHnlng req. •3··.,····;::.': .. ·········,·,·•• St. 12. 2"a~:·1~t:;•:.;0~~d;d .. I PUCl1 E11t1ld• 2 car garage. 1060,000. ExdualYe Agt. By owner~ 11200/mo. Call An1hony 3 bf, 2 'A ba MOO 32 102 Via de Ollva. ..., • 2 Br. M#tf redec. duptax CONDO. Northwood. K~tt4:ty ~ 1ppro11. 20x20. $75. 752-5710 1---------•days942-5757,eve1& 3bf.2ba 11400 7141758-25e5 752~731 w/=~)Wd. 1725mo.Avall.7/1. "Z"c:Nnnel·M~ 645·1 18• daya, .... ,., ...,, wtlndl t3l.et30. ! ::: ~ ~ 11~1= ,.. .. ~ JZll ..,.... $500 mo. 1· 731-6423-Sandpiper. 11187 New· 6-45-9S43 ewe. •••~••••••••!~ C..U .... nJf 4 bf 2'h be M2M1100 3e;•3it.° ~;&;•,•:,:•;: •-'--'· •-1 2 ~· 1911 ~Ave, tit W..... .... Jlfl Port ~~~HTED·::. ~oar-r a:. Park City Utah Condo. •••••••••••••••••••••• Le Ral8of Dotu 833-aeOO • • ....... -.a r--.--· t '· no pet1. per1on1 •• A....-••••••••••••••• Bl. Costs Meaa 645-9137 7 II - .. · •••1 toe. 111 6 lelt 2 months •••••••••••••••••••••• 1425 Sierra Mgmt -·-CM. d, 873-1 Own« IOOklng tor par1· HOME FOR RENT rent req. AV911 l2000 mo. 4BR. 2BA. yearly. Frple, . . __ , Sw.All .a ner. l8000 up l'ront,.,.. of lm ~ flW 4 Bdrm. 1750. Fenced BHutfful new home. bit-Int, pat1tlng. CloM to 841•1324 Mott elegant 1Pt. bldg. In Wkly rentall now 1v1ll. M/jn i..laJ f4ll $483 mo. 642...o871 Rent In Co1t1 Meaa'1 yard & garage. Kida & ~eel 494-1065 fc>< b a y & ocea n. B r k r W•tlkte 2 Br. 1 Ba. <*'t--Laguna Beach. flneat 1 105 & up. Color TV •••••••••••••••••••••• HEWES T gated 2 0 ..-, wetcome. 545-2000. addltlonal Info. 675-4912 lral hutlng, gar1ge, ioc.tton In town. bf .. th· PhonH In room. 2274 C.M 2 omc:., 345" ba1h. T h VILLAGE .,... 11ove, carpet•. drapea. Uiktng vt.wa all bult-in• storage avall. S250/mo. own ome Agent. no fee. ..,n.._, __ .._ •-• 2Br. 1Ba, bltna. relrln, Nor.! .......... t ·, b · Newport BIVd. CM. 548-3345 494--3803 COMMUNfTY 2 & 3 Br 11ri ..,..,_ ••-• 1 ..... _,.en, -•· heated poo • au . ga· 846-7445 · · · tt.' WOODBRIDOE-3Br. •••••••••••••••••••••• garage. yrly 1550 mo. b1 1. 1450 + aecurlly ra9•. elevator. Le11e 1 _________ 11617 w-cllfl. N.B. went 2'A BL 1eoo-1eoo eq, 1'AB&. nr ~ ' lennla. HOMES FOR RENT 111. r .. t + 1300 HC.. d•io•ll. 548·5•42 or only $850 a 330 Cliff -· ol pure twa#y. Owagaa, 1700 mo. ~Av·" 3 a 4 •.o--. ••7 .. ...,00 matur9 _...,..,.or ...... ..-. n ,....,. ·,, • ._,.llf'· , .... r.uu fZll lln1ncl1l ln1t. 70Q01.f. hyd,olub.lnma.I., -......... -~, _,._ ....._ """'•· Df.4---... •••••••••••••••••••••• 111. lloor . An•nl . I 1 t wk o June . Fenced yarda & garagaa. 673-&Qell ~. 752-8005 ---------i ---------• au lie. dining rooms, 494,...142. Kida '~P•t• welcome. dys Uk for K.athy. mg IUll um& Un.T 541-6032 wood burning flreptecea. 545-2000. •---t tee ..... ~B.A8 Deluxe 2 bdrm 2 ba 4 bdrm, 4 bath, undy --------micro-wave oven1, prl· 1 Br. Condo, nlcely up· ·~··no · C.... 1eJ J1.r Jm ~_... 1750 ~ beach, pier & 11011 . - FIRE SALE vat• patio• a graded. $495/mo. Call 3 bdrm. 2 be. very nice. ················h···2·B.. liW&IUll =to bead!. . saooo for Augu11 .• Blll lti -·-~., lull Au '°"•---------I ya rd1,gardener provt-Don 552·7415. 1875 mo. H .. r 1chool. Walk to pV1 bHc • r, New Condo for rent. 2 Adtta. 494...oeo Grundy. Rltr. 87S-t1v1 AWPllT 9;~·;;1~·,d"f."i:·;;~~·;;~: I.HI llllll d1ed5 _:!utleG••~omftvf~.!!1..'! * *.....-~ 082·228t or 1193-3117 ~1Ba.ara~~· • ~d:~c:n°pe Br. 2'A Ba. 1705/mo. Dbl •---t •-t 2 bdrm turn condo. CM. Elega1n1t Elltc1 1u1~~~· In B "'"' " --• W~ II -.6 I I • gar, llrep6ace, pool, tpa. ar-.t --Av all 8 / Ill thru 8/2 1. prHI g OUI oc. nw M-XIOUI, 4Br 1'1., a, gar. lxeW• IM lllend. 7 mlnut• to 8.C. Sharp 3 Bdr 2 Ba view ...er.=A.., • remdl'd. Me W 18ttL 845-2739 :-.-.";r.;:.............. u50 mo 541-5418 cretarlal. recepllont1t, p111o,pool/park.S89, ••••••••• A••••••••••• PtazaorO.C.Alrport. hOmelNearleke&beedl fl~ 1fJI 11000 mo . (71 4) · 18Rcondo,Venalllet. -· telephoneans&.mot\. 900. Aaaume1511.000 let 4 bdrm. Canal Front. Ju1t eaet of Hew~ club. Avall. Im med ....................... 173-1608, 833-2000 Ilk• new.1650 mo. C11t Hpt 8ch beylront w/doct<, Otes from 1431 mo. en. 11 11'11%. AiJt. 657·2040 Newport for Big Bur BIYd. a eo. ol Sen llOOO/mo...,.. on 1 yr ., ..... ..... Cody Large 1 bf, pool. QUlllt. no Rldlard, 213·130-2323; el~ a.10. 11750 pr wk. call ofca $185 mo. THE OIA11 I.HJ 111111 ~~~~ ~~~ ~r~tark ~':ih~~aJe~~7~ IM. a other• to ch~ 752-8731 Wta ti ..... ~~~· M 873-oet4 H2jMFE2E~:854pt. ' Condo ~;s-~~7vlc . 87 5. 23 55. ~~~~~R:;~ •••••••••••••••••••••• c Oran"• Ave .. Cotta [gfrorn. Reeon-Llk• edit trect, nr 3 bdrm. 2 ba, 2 tloty E. SIDE ..... --v environment. (714) TRADE Central oa1t • UL ••• u .. Id --... Pool, 9'dnr Diii 1 h d 1 ll ...,..., ...... gartOe. rent.Ila. v .. Rentala. Month o1 Auguat If.Mii..... cteer, cu1tom 3 br ~ Meaa. "'"'•"'' 9f SC..-..... M75 6· own ouu u~ · children OK. no pet1. t7Ml12 Broker. Udo 1bf'. den S2000 851-08a1 t,11 lali I Ill home on 2 a c. horu • .-.. , n-.. lltj lBr. No pet•. ..!! '1'!5 OVerelz.dfl pat tlo. d i ~· 1825 mo.+-= dap,,.. e.cone.y 3t>r 12500 -52-0-.q-,-, _1_1_00 ____ 1q_ •••••••••••••••••••••• ppty. Atuc:adero.1225M --.-:• utN. n&-2690, ......-1 '" Jae, rep ace, • • tundable. Avall May I. Vertalll•• 1 br condo. • l3000 . . . ,.._. . Newport Beach De Anll V8Jue. For home or unltl. 3 Br. 3 Ba. TownflouMby .r. l-'lllOll So ,,...-·t V"'·-.. ,~ 2 BR wHl\er. Bullt·lnt. 1060 841-9&116 1550. CtoH 10 buch. CdM. bMUt 5br •• ft .. 3075 Birch., N.B. babb=ln brook, frplc. ·•·1 • • ...._. ._, ...,. mo. V •a r 'J '•a 1 •. Full _ ... .., 541-3474 W.Oceanfrnt. 3br ... soo Agent 541-6032 bayfront Park. Mint Org. Cty.}>HCh arH. d/w. , dbl t:oc;_.., 1t!lltbr••••·• t'I.•'-'"'"" ~_!a. nr Sopool. C•t.fb'!H· "2-1836 aft . Sharp 2 BR 2 Ba. I~ _ .. ,. Waterfront Homea Rltrs cond. '78 dbl wide. fife-C>wlw. ll05-49e t043 .. _., ..-nate "' nM Sh O d 0 t call 131 1400 1 b 1 k 110 111 1----------xtraa. Ho pees. /mo. Unl¥wllty Pettt 2 bf, 2 ba. · ,,.. • • • 2 bf ........ encl _ l rooma. II bttna lnc::t D • ar P a r en u.. : • WESTCLIFF BLDG "-£ WPOll' Bl~\.'· pace, re pa • .... ---.0 luu, 1at. & uc. att. g:;:J.•· Condo. MOO. 878-e918 ... .-, . ·--· gar. Me .. Vwde. S525 home. 1br, quiet, W/D, VN•t* lnllhfJ" ~~~bl:l~~d!.b:o~:.~~ot So. ol PCH. Wll trade for 84M423. "90. 1U 9*. .._,,,__,. f'MlbW =·~~· Cel fOf ;:>·Call 54t1158, aak ~t~ 13 3 5 1 mo· ..................... . 138.000. Biii Grundy reel ea1ate. Darrtll Pllltl. •cteen 2 br duplex, off-Deerfleld, 3 br, 2 b• :r.:'.';tt;"............. LAln'Y or am OCEANFRONT 2 a• Br. 87M181. Ownr/blu. 750-1221 ttr..i prq_ CM«. M75, twnhM, frplc, 2 Cf/I gar. C#la ... nlf _. m -2 Bt. TownflouM, 1'A e.. PARK NEWPORT Avall. now. WMkty thru ... ,. ' .. . ,,. .tuc;...-.· ../c....-.......... ,_ . Hunllng1on Beach, doUble utll• I net. Ho pet•. 1725. Call for appt. {213) •••••••••••••••••••••• FrWlty palnt.d 28drm IP' No pet~. M60/mo. 755 APARTMENTS aummer. 173--7873. wide, adult•. large lot i..uu 131-7220 M . M-F. 939-3041 bef. 211m. USA... with eneloHd garage. W. 11th. St. 146-8607. lndlan w• VIiia, tum. 3 ,,_ .;, .. __ , __ tmall pet ok, ,_ ahOp-•••••••••••••••••••••• New 2 tty 3 Bt. widen M 4 " ..... ...,. 1141 AlL UTILmES PAID Carpeted 6 1Valtable for Ctaart, qulelt 2 BR 1'.ti ba. COUNTRY CLUB LIVING BR. 3 Ba. ping. low rent. $28,900 ....... ltnlhlN4 Br. 2'.ti be. Condo. 2 car .. ,.................... Immediate occupancy. g:~·~~o pet1. 1488. IN NEWPORT BEACH Call 714-840.5648 .1 ...... ...-. Terme. 847-2954. •••••••••••••••••••••• auto gar. Many xtra1. lovely 3 Br & o.n. 2'A Ba. c ompare before you MOO mo. ....,.. A deluxe community on L* ia....... "-----'·J JaJM hl&M 1111 Pool, Jae. LHH IHO. Ho/eta, 1850. Hant ,..,., cu.tom del6grl fM-671-4400 So. CoHt Plau 2 BA 1 the Back Bey. Club hou-Luxury 4 -B~ 5 b1 turn Ca11 loll • Ho"'·'"' 645 6•0' .. _..... •••••••••••••••••••••• S38-o17• Of .. fOf Mr. 6 5 • 185 8 0, Ing a turea: Pool, BBQ, CCW'rd ba. lgepatlo, full .AA. .. & ape; 7 poote: a ten-h t I b h h rt. 1111 tun a pretty 2 bdrm Lupll 541-2311. •~· garage, IUffOYnded Wlttl HARBOR Kida OK. Sll5 lnolgaa.._& n1e oourtt6 ~to i-t-A~:.·no,:~~·O::.\,:;: ... ~•••••••0•• home, patio, garage, , __________ F .......__ 3 Br 2 a. vi.. pluah land1captng No t N f A t neat ----·""· 1 800 *Ill.Ill ...... ...... Yll.llY avatt. May a June. ma .. _ °'-· . . -. wa er. 0 ••• g . June, a Oct. 4 per From 1 room'°arooma. l600 (JulyM50hiltl). 4 ldr m 2 Ba family $795. Arch Bch H,.1 . ..-~ fr = 117-022.2 Unfum61NC111udloa. 1 & mo. A')1. 18500, Sept. From l1.1t a .. ft. Ho Neat~=bOrm. 17~ home. OuMt .... Aw/A. 551-3037. Aw/A. 511 . ~ .,: = tr::: RaALTY 2 Ir 2 :-..t::.; ~ 2 bf. apertmentt, town-::1.~:0.· 175-8074: ..... ~ MJ. AJt. 2 !.,,!~·~· wtllotn tne flltHI dflW In th• ~7~~:--l11.'!!f.~ •••• e.ff aee w. WlllOn.M2•1•11 A Dlvi1lon or ;r1r,t-5*-tt7~"'°· ~ "°'*'154Q..$1000 •....:..,,_, .. ---, ... ~ ... lnn~t>upolrt. fir • -pa • w .. 1. .a Dally Piiot ~FOR AEHT floe 1 If. dpllt. Quiet. a.p II arbor Investment CO. -.,, ,._. -_...-__ .,.....'--·-----,.,..,.--oeraet. ~-1•t. Poa. Clauifled Ad. call atever Bf Tl MY PUii 3 ldrm ... 76. Fenced by gar. 1 emplyd adult STUNNING taro• 1 br •Several 1tudlo1 • 1 .,;;j;·~;;d•;crt·;..-.;;;; 480 1q. ft. furn. office oeeflllow.Nowf15t,500. the Fed 0eca )'O'I litarted In,..., yerd & garage. Kida & t¥'l9lf 35. No pett. ISSO. ~aw:. Poot. 710W. bdrm. unltu,.Mnlllhed bWltlflA Coronadell Met apeoe.. '400/mo. 1111 0 r" n d Y • A It'• ~·em on the market -.te OM*._. .,.ea~. 64&4000. 849-1021 9126 2 If 1 a.~ _.. With fine dae9*' fUfftl· llOfne. taU/montll P"" 641-4713 t7M1tt. With a Clualfled Ad !.'1!1·rnoW•. •t•lde. C.M. A9af'lt, no.... 135()/mo . .=.:moblle ""'· .......... ,.,,., pool. No Diil 2 ....... In*-. tin l ~Mova utlHtlff. C•H rtoht nowt ,._., Idle 11~1 842•5878 Cell NoWI 842-5878 ..., " M m• --111 M. ...._ -& D/W -In tOday or teteNe for ......... .a.079, ._. _.. 1Br.duple1t,lHt1tde, t...aalli-.I 1111 ature •"° · pete.Agt.7-1 • ...... .,_..... '''Ciiiid eummermont'*.SmanlYl----------1 •--Ill..,. 1411 ltt lalf C.M. '450/mo. ::A';';';".::'l".m....... Quiet. Houe~~-=t 1 "'-...I.-... ..._.. ~~""r"'• furnllhed model• open·-.-------•! m:•••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. Townhou" wltll I Ir 2 ... lrg yetd, Pfl· Nltwpof1 Btvd. 71.. .._ .._. ""--..... • pool, H.B. 1871/mo. vaov. otoee to IChOOll •H••iiiiii••• .... l/llcle 11r IUMt '*'99, ~· 111m1111 UDUCED TO SSS0,000 UCB 11-.LDUT 2 Iota. OONMlde of Ngnway. w ... ter .. pertl .... .,..,. Included, a..~tnomce. t..t•a g« 'f04/l In•~ ......_ t7IO/mo. ~ ~ -9Ull .. .,_ I lllr 1~ w/9are .. l lltll. Avell On Jemborea Ad. et fllll as execunlan ltar'ed. Aetnt ~1t. 111;.1101. ••· e.. T • • 11 .:..-.. r. '411 nio. '41 ••• .., JoeqUln ... N 111.-,..._. Elllde a 1r. 1 a.. _..., aer. ae.. waltlna ....,_ •••• • ••••••••••••••• ""~~ uo,;: aw,..--..•= 84+ 1900 · Otdeet • ..,._. ept01. -. ~.:::t: gar, large yard. NO toDene._..lJUbdt, U.'t WT coveted perltlnt. Ntoe end. p~ c:il. • ....,-..11r 1..__.en ctlant9 wiad With '"" PETI. 151t ....... ftt. !If;:;. r • e ' SH I . ..,.,.. ._.. LMngt loaeltef\T .. ...._ ...,._1_ ~i3'iiiu MDt kltoll. l!nol petlo. gar. ~&ct::.~ ofltOa l dltllc-. 1146/rno. 548 MIO. a..:....-............... -~. -. _,.. - -Mii no -142-ltM ,._......., ......--... _.......... Hr. O.C. MrJOft -·-....... "" .... ..... ......... _.. ...... --..... '° •Ill'' IHI l!Htllle looatlon. ...._ ...._ ~ roundlllt•· Terraoe4 a......,..,_..,. M40 .._.. t bdrl'I\. 2 The Tomorrow lhow. roomy 1 Brlweter patd • ....,..... .. ...,. •••• :;:;: poot. luftieft ... bbq, mett.ire tHent, quiet ba. """° pod ..,..... •'40llf*to11 MWclanta 11!~!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!~!1 Att. get .... Mun•. no ~ '°" M"1" epuktln1 fountalnt. -. ..,.,..., 11111 pd. 111 Mllioa w'rJ .-Ned a...... ~ peits. ..-, N147M i & 4 8drlM. M7Wf00, lpeotouuoome....... ..Wt• no.m4 1·1 C4IM •--.NO. ..... SM. 2 ba. 2oar91t.Noe ,__. ,_. l..,..... :::.*.:::--.. w~ We ......... I IW~!....,llMt., "' ..., ~ vtl ..._ -I. CM yrd. w/trdner. SllO. l<ldl l ,. .. weloome. ..._.. femltY ...,.._ ,_ + a-... .,.,.., .UN l1'4IOO 14141•. a 7•1..,. 541-IOOO· Afll!!: no.... en & ,ablMta. W8* to -. .,... .... ;,,, ,..... :m ..... m. ... -T-n Mele to* •fl*"· epeo ~ CW'9CI .. .,...,.._. BM ""'~""eiot .......... ,.,, ·.=-..... -:~·~...:: ::::'e~M~I~ .._,_,.llltt . .: 1d':c.11t'.~t:: ~.i;nn .. :;i:t 2 8drm•unfurn from I'" 116 ... fPIO, D/W, ...., lift llft CIMMI• ~. M , 711-4111 ••· Prlw ••· AIC. 17'IO/mo, llllol00t. Off THI WA,.....! ... IJIW\ .......... ,.... , ..... ~ct Prof ... ,, lfl•r• lu•ury H7·ttt 1. t11·H~ -- Gr••t ¥few of M•t• & .... "'°'......,.. AMl ltucMo ... .-.. ,.. turn.~ I.() . ......_ _._,...,. _____ _ b•YI tr toll ftreplHe, ..J::*,...:.._. .._, t -r:· ~ fitr, utlle. tltOtmo. t 11 s . l 4 1-4111. a... .._ • II. "= ~ llr ........ too oouMrY ....... t. Mr'lft ._ -....... _.. " .,,... Ull -nrlC,.._~..._., P•lf1Mtll~A-... retrlt, 1II.8aJ. • MCM11a.-'4U. ....... ,_1. -· •llvtlt•, trptO ... ffOll ............. Cll LA OUlfTA ••llOM ~ore, ........ !9 O!';:t ...... ,........... "·.., fU9telC Wiiii ..... , to* a •• I.. w ... ._ '1W llllft ....... .,..., IJa.IMO NIH~ LI!. t llll ;!:,0~~.,, oam-Hev• y-1 reld todey'• .., :if ' lllolk .,_ llouM, O.M, ,,.. ..... .._ ....., ... ._. ap•1 dbl .. ,JOP9Hf. THI MAL UTA~ w........ ...... .. P•' '•ll•t'• ftOI getting c1 ... 1f1ee1 Ad•1 ,, not, ~ ... ,., ............ , ........ -,~ +K--.11 ~---.·~ AH I. ftew, tlOO/l.-0. ...... ueed Nit It nOw Mtll a pl.l'N.....,. the i.... Pft. lllo41Ut, 1"9 l HI . •! ' e r -. .,. .. ., .... ,.. .., .... , ~Ad. ...,....1r1towftl ....... -·····El ..... ;;; 1t1 .. 1'4~ ............................................ """"""!!!!I" .................... ~ ............................................... .._ .................. ._ ........ .._. ......... ____ ..... .._ ________ .._~-~~-~~~---------~~~~----_,,-•• .... :; •• \. ] I .. , OOIT HOWi ......... YWI 09lly Hot llf'iloeonatOl'Y ,_..__..uw • ...,., .... an t.'l!M!t •••••••••••••• ~ P8rtllng Lot ~~~'=lie ALLSTAT! PAVIHO ~~. ~ #317382 645-8181 Oen H .. berO Grading & PIVlnO Co. All/Coml. UC 3t7~ 842-1720 . . ~'·······~··· ~1!!'!!11 ........ !i."ffl! •••••••••••••• !!Jtta ............ !?.,,................ ~~ ......... &.'!~ •••.•........ ~~-. ............. l/ff! •• TiAAr~a··· --I .. ..-. ONl'IT CAM Dl'VWAWAOOUITIC LAWN oAAe Heullnt. •Mina. __.., or. t • mo¥1no to 011lf, ,. ...,.. o~~::~,:::J~:C, o~z,:~~ 1 ~~~ u.u.r w ... ..... ... , .. , ~""""' .. fir ..., •• ,.. ,_...' .. ~. 1 t I ~· NwptlCM Uon. Oonor•f• & tr.. dlvoroed, loolilnt for by "lohard llnor. Lio. ,. L-es1 .. 211 10078 Adlrnl 112 .. 631 AdMoni·"-'••111111 ......_WOftl , ~..,..,.eu.1111 Xlftt,,....wortt. remov·dumf. truok. Nwptlohlalbo11r11 2IOM4• 1'yre of~ _...;;.;__'.;..:';__'"-..;,;,.._..;._..;. __ 1---------Doon,wWI.....,.... ,.... • ..._, 1 • 0twtOJ11,~..._14t2 Ouk*Ml'V. 14 .7931 boeteitUneorhMe1tt1ng 1oca1cuetom1re. I la ,,1._.1, f lll oowrt. ,,_-."-a. ...... ,,._ ~-..-• ..., _ ....:. .. •-• H"''" ~ & ou~-po1ltloft Whlle aqulrlnt ThllWt """''• '3l-4410 •••••'~::-~•••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ..... _.. _.. _.,. -• Ii ~·••••~•••• '"-..__-r _. .. _,"'8 _. NlktlflGe & IQIO)'.lllt tor ,~ .,. II• U.. 1110MI 170 ......... & ...._ L On.tCIA N-,.rloM ~llM U. MllM. JOM.,,."'f'M,,.f!' .. rwwtt. Callf. lie. Or. H.D. Lff .. ,..,. Neat~' Mldut'll 11•1 ..... 11! It TNdl..,..._. rttfll, "" .. ....._ .. °" Ooll!INo ... .,..., -1-· C~lJIS ·l122 or AHld/l~du1/Comm'I. ,,_Ill. ln-1at l'AUUT. ~20lt cu.tom~ Wft ... ~11• ~r.~~ ..... PAOf'. SIAVICI t Low ratu. Fru .... PLA8nAPATCHtNO TILEINITALLID D1ot11 a pa troe. J.e. ~·~ '~~.a-. H&lllna -)'lfd dMnYp J~ ,,_,,, 875-71et AHtUCCOI. 1nt111Ct. 30 All l<lndl. OUerlntllld. Con1t. Co. top qualltr ~~-;;it• UC'D li.ICTNCWf .._ 7114471 OutoR '""-'· ,,.. eet •• :.-er.-." •• -::1r;:....... ...... ,..... yr•. NMt. I'*' 14~fln ~ John l40-t2t7 work. Uc. No. HotOf. OUll.. WOftl-Nea.,.... Up. ,..,,,, 87MMI ~ ~ Ht E .lo.4051 ••ALL TILE•• ,_,,_,.._•....,..,1....,Mt-M-.~1....,1 ___ 1 ::'com°""..-~~ ,,.. .... U 1«111 Tom • ......_ HAULING and local mo-~ th,.'~.o). ,,.:<~r~i ~·i1 L::..:o ~ !!!.'!~/. ............ Ouallty work. 10 yra ••· ,, .. HOMa rg; QUALITY ~~-~.. ~.~~~~.o'"' truotl. ..om._.. I ..... i.vh... •xPl't· "3-0911 biok D D1 Ml-llll pw. GlofOI 831·'478 AcsJ,~,:.O:e,:::ri:.,19 ~.'!J'!.'f!tc~~ .. ,,l:f ="Lm>"..:O. C:,::"~ .....,,,.... ~ ............. Top Quallty, lo price, •WT I UY• !!_~-t}~ ............ ., '!_.~~llo'd. ILICTA ICIAN: LI,. ~. J,I ~ •••••••••••••"•••••••• BRICKWORK· Small Jot>a. prompt. Ext a Int Srr!· IHI lfm H .__,,. Molt tllbJeot•. K·12 & .... n. lNtrd' 1aa 10 1 c 10 Small • • Want a Rl!ALL y CLEAN "9Wpon, Co.ti MIN. lalllt. RM A Comm'I ref •••••••••••• c.-::r.-:::. colleoe· 25 yrt. 15/hr . 26 ,_,., 1414711 Joba. M;lnt & ;.palre. HOM& IMPfllOV!.MENT HOU81? Call Olngh1m lrvlne. Aelt. 875-.3176 llt. 714-739-0708 QUALITY commlrH , 12 Mr. Morgan. &46-5178 -.... OfM'MWI '°"" ddltlona & remOdellng. Ml-6203 MPAIA~UMlfNO Olt1. ,,.. Ill. 845-1123 Bryant'• Landtcaplng QUALITY PAINTING yre eitp. Repalr/remod. Uc. l:MMtt no-t554 bonde d &tat• L lc AH•DICO'Mit'L.llHO ::''r,:. ~":; R09IN'B CLEANING Btlet! .• atone, blocil. con-10 vr• llMng o.c. Refa. Fiiter. heater' ~•~••••••• 120t712 20 yra. Do "'town wortt. tmell. 846-2111 ~:!. tnoroughly 7 cnt-. Frplct, 880'1, pe-Reaon&ble. '4&-6844 IWM9 ..... 973-8ll4 ProleHlonal Typing & L~:~.c: =-bUll-.I.CJ. Allen 414-1110 UC. 218041 H ..... 1H .._, ,..,... ~ tlo1 & drive~. Ouar. BllhOp & SC~P . t1ng IHfl ~k~, my home. der? l'IHH conaldtr Fin• llnlaMd car~try, !aHf ~OIMral ~~.~~ 11-tm UC. & lnl. II 14 30 vr-.xp.. ., ........ !'! ..•.•. ~:.::;.:.:• Lynne 1 271. Randell E Pr-.v Jr & ramodellng 1pecl1ll1t. f ..S.. '"' ......,. .. ~ -CONCRET! B I k k Fr .. 11t. 1029 Llbor/Metenel """""'V ' n. Park . lie. 4191187. Ra ndall ••••••• ••••••••••••• * "'Y 840-6 44 CL!ANINO SERVICE: • r c wor • Alt 1ype1. 10 yra exp, Wla.. Cl~·l- ,,ed Wlllon. Par vi.. 7~12t0 FOAMtCA ~a ~&mENTIAL AEPAIR8 R•Honabl• r•t••· frH Drain plpee, cillnup, ~~ lie, pr. Lin')' 842-8233 ~:~·,:..:·au··~.···,"·~~··· HOl'I* Inc. El TOfO Ole. T~Clblnlt9 r9f9oec1 lltlmat•. 211 yra •l<P· 636-2098 Int/__., --L ... , ,,. ,_..,,. 71 ... "'"'11780 ....... 1 call d"""• It ell. Aefa. -· -··-HUBER ROOflNQ c-u ........... ~ Wlft .. _ -. Cul• fr,.,.,.,Mlif. Fr• aet. -"'·5317 Don~ eee-o149 720-0742. Cuatorn Brlcit, Stone, (IXOYE) 7111·9103 All typee & Flreprooflog c..:ii;.'Lici"' ~53 l'...a-1# · ., .................. • ,. ~ HouflOlffnlng hon111 & Bloc:k, Concr9'1. Slucc:o. W..M...e.w< New·RKOYer-Oeckt 20% Monthly Ol~nt :::-r..-:••••••••••••••• flare, m1ntela. kit. cabl· ,,.., EXPERT HANDYMAN deperidtble. ' · Rel1. Fr• •I, 5411·9482 Palntlftg/ _,,_..... ,ng 802 548 9734 CUSTOM SPA OECKS ne1•, ,.IHd panellng, I, IJ.# Ctrpentry ·Roofing te2-2680 Q!Jallty W0111-<eU. rate. Lie. #411 -•RESIDENTIAL* Petloa, gaebol. Llc'd. doora. bookc1•••· r•-•••••• .. •••••••••••••• Plumbing. eta. 842'e013 #rtl•f. Lk:'d. Dlllld 144..eoeo k tH•• Av; 1 11y $30; Avg 2 aty L'-lf•'-. John or Aidt 97~218 mod. & 1dd·on1. Xlnl IM•l'll •t 1 KNOW-LET'S OET Et>-HOUSECLEANING .... :ABC.MOVING: .... 1.---'-...................... $46. Chrla 957-8388 :::.-~~.~1........... ~· .,__,_ refa .. lie. B:M8278. Chrlltlnl A Ed ~782& DIEi ...... ftAft tlx ~-........... 1 IS OUR BUSINESS! 0 "--~~ ·-~--.:-c.-.":11............. Moblle Ser~ Doctor ~ 53e-23ee ""'-· .,.,"-"" 10 yn. Jenice'• Raggedy ulc;tt, .....,.,.,, ...,._,., Farthing lnt111o1' Olllgn Repair/replace. Cuttorn. ....... ...W Wortdi..eMom: b&byllttlng ••• •••••••••••••••••• ""~'-4 ... -et5t Ann 8711-2514 Free Mtlmltll.1152-0410 HANGING 110/ROlL Reu. 831~ Mt meg IMM'I belt. Beale: 1 •ty CdM. yr olda. No S1eem/No Shampoo Crown mould~..:..,.cedaf II-•••••~"::;W•••••••••••• •-~ ,..__ fxoenlM Houelkeeplnn *a 1 -· Quality Uc/Int Sll'lp-S20 2 at; '30 Vldd 75i-1083 . Stain Speclalla1. FUI ned cloMtl, .,.,.,..ca.... 111 UID -_,._ , _. We fumllh vecwm ,.. r -'f-ping, 0..C:. on j,.p.,. l#tlllrU/ ""'ttl ' 55t.13o2 Lie. molt\« wm cera for dry. Fr1111t. 83f.1582 menu ... entertelnm.nt L.awfl."~ lnetall ••HAROWOOOFLOOAS• Top quellty. Sl)ldel cat9 VIM.-MC Scott 845-9325 •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ , ft d & cablnetl. Wood tOIUtlon1 Tr ..... _ _____. auppllll. Kitty 64 l-4870 In llandllng. 2$ Y"I .xp. WOAD PROCESSING your ... ---· -Y" Crpll lnltall/,_..1red I ..-...... _ .......... _I u,.,,...,,..,.... ......... ..... .-.. dllned Com I'"-a-II I I N get meala. &4&-5313 Flood ~~St--0 -.-.J pr.,.,,_,,. Lawn cer.Aot.......... and~"'."' 832-4881 Quellly Hou11cl11nlng pet t.,,. ... t.. Experl wa cover no n-PROOFAEAOI G For Ad Action ._.510.. _.. 831-1528 64~ or~'V w/1 pertonll toucn, CM. No overtime. 730-1388 1t1ll1tlon. ReH price• Ful-Oependable-Prot ... ,,, lfMalf ... n / dng.5~51 · 17~511 DHkJ A" 1 w1 r Ad II 5 4 7 • ...Jh• Irv. HB. Beth 850-0933 STARVING COLLEGE Con1u1t1nt AHlgnmenl Mertln & Hinze 845--0887 ,.,.,,,. Shtmpoo a it.em clean .•••••• -.t.............. &42-4300 ....................... HOUSECLEANING STUDENTS MOVING 5St·1590 ,,,,, •• ,,n •••••••••••••••••••••• Color brightener•, whl RIVER ROCK • parf•ct HiAU~l~!-L1tud1ntt hat • Aeafonabll-dependable CO. Lie. T124-438. ASR PAPERHANGING ·"•••••••••••••••••••• Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 MARINE SERVICES crpt1 • 10 min. bleech. OV11 poof dedl•. pat10t, K&O Landac:.pe Malnt. foe ,r.,.. ... ow11 ra •· Tenya ees.2401 ln•ured. 841·8427 7 yre 1oc11 exp. Guu. *8pf'lnkler Repelr* Mechanic;, peln1. vamlah. Hen, Nv/dln. '""1111; 1vo welkweya, drlvewaye, Reeld/Oomm. Clean-up. Prompt. Cell 7118-1878, WATCH us GROWi work. PrlcH atarl 11 R•.lcornm. Commerct11 Tee k , rub & wax. room 17.50; couch $10; etc. 681-2371 Lt Haullng. 6'4&-2418 Tfwtl( you, John, EXP. HOUSECLEANER $8/roll. Alec 751-7027 Landecepe 8eMcM MS.9768 chr 15. 01flr. ellm. pet G·•:=w• .. ...., ou•-.-8 Rellable, rel1. l'rM Mt. 11/al/8'/. 957-8388 oc:IOf ,....,, r~" 15""' Dir-;-" -_,,_ ...... 'OIVU Cd 2~ ... ...., ... "'"18 Classilled Ad• are Ille Thinking ol I new home exp.' oc:'~;'k'my1e'l1~ :-:/'.':~.............. MoWlng, Ing:, rakl~, & Smell Moving Jobi .. '"'· ............. . ····,;;,iNTEANEEDs···· answer IO a succesalul Have you read 1oday's for sprlog? See the many Refl. 63l.Ol01 ORYWALl TAPING tw11pln,. Free Ht • Cell Mlt<E 846-1381 Wiii clHn your houu or WORKI 30 Y"• e)(p. lnU gatage or yard aalet ti's a Classtlled Ads? ti nol. llatlngl In loday·s Classl· All tmur11 & ecouetlc mat••· 45-4372 or office. Elec., painting:, It Ext. Acoultlc celllng•. belier way to 1•11 more you re .n1u1ng the best tied columns. 842-5678 W1n1 Ada Call 642-5678 F,.. eat. ICMI 87~8088 645-5737. CIUl411ed Ad• 642-5678 plumbing. ~9005 01vt1 Painting M7·518e peoplel bargains in lown• Classihed Ads 642-5678 ~=i''1 . f!!!.,.!.'.~~ .... !.~'!f ~!.'1..!.'!!!!. .... !.{!t "11..'!!!.~'!. .... !.~'!f 1~.!.'1..!.•!.~'!. .... !.Y!~ 1!.~11.."!!!.~'!. .... !.1.'!f ...,, ff~ Found whlll Malteu BABYSITTER w1nled In FOOO MANAGER. Ofc. 'I llllSQEIPO 1 AIAm •••••••••••••••••••••• Poodle, m•I•, orange my H.B. home for new count• help. Hunt. Bch. Responllble pweon. M-F Exp'd . In all ph•••• ol ~II llH coller. Vic. 13th/Ollve. born & 5 yr old glr\. PIT. erea. Seuonel, Aprll • 81m·noon. Start $5/hr tn1tent Pflntlng. Previous •••••••••••••••••••••• H.B. 860-4'82. flexlble tin. 89'-0350 Sept. Sen. citizen• wel-L 1 g u" a N 1g ue1. m1n1g•rl1I exp. pref'd . • -------------------------------------------~PetOwner'•wlllpla~ roUN~Mllel~Sett~.BABYSITTER.M/W/F, ~~a~.~-~n ~M41~ R~.l~~~Wlt~ your pet In a hOma wt.lie iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil & rngmt. Production ma· r-~ •-'·' •--•-•faaAj lion Red. Mlle, mlit ahlp. Blk 8:30-5:30, 2 yr. old boy, G•ner11 office . Heevy nagemenl, ttltu• ,.. 01JJn •11111 fM Ollie1 1,.1'1 440I ,...,.,._. _.., -yO&Litao.a --no e-oee. & brwn. Fem. ml• lab, my CdMllome. Rel'a. phonea. bookkeeping, 11t111EfPO t kl & •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 814-8228 -bfll. Mele, mix ...._, Blk 644-8564 evee. $5.00 hr. Certified AP· n __ ,._,. full or perl time., porla. ace · lrac ng Olll1t ••• ,,, "" ..•••.....•...•....... Prim• office 1pac1, Ce>- rona dll Mar. M501mo. 875-8510 Smell IUlte, 215 Rlverllde. N.B. 3975 Birch. &eOO aq. I -...... ,._...., gen. ov1t1ll operation. WA~ Oii N.B. icroH from Poat It. or 1111. MIA zone. .......,.11111 & tan. Fem lhep, bf'Wn & ..... pll1nce. 642.()240 Good Hlery. Bl-llngu1I.; Gd benefit peckage. ........ fta U.! Oltlcl. 13501~. Agent 541-5032. CLASS. Reduce 1tr ... 1n blk Puf PY· Mele. •hrl-lelerll tMee R•l•rencH req'd . Con· Rm. t or 1dv1ncement Superbty lumlthed View 640-5657 your m.t 4 1...tv lllllont. hair bl cit. Mile, Ing-...,.... lat tact: Jen. 4944490 I with mjr. eorp. Reeume · Pl• 1fFm s4o. Siert Mon. 5110. hair, brwn, grey & blk Good lyplng ablllty 11llM1 Mu11 be neel end Ible to ~~~~~~~~~ 10 Jim Hunt. P.O. Box I.I. .,.T ~r~r~t:i'ci:: l uiull laW USO WerehouH 1p1c1 wllh 7:30 PM. Prof Thenlpls1. ~~t5 ':lwporb Sh~11:;· In bHlc m1th Olllce In ~~~th pub:ic·, au:• HOUie M~ lull lime 1790. Npt Bch. Ce . Office epace avellable, $52548$0 2 room IUlt• •••••••••••••••••••••• cerpete. <1rpa. & wet 75e.().499 ••• r . . . aurac t lvt Newpor t nc u e reg • er no Mon Fri BUIY houaehold ll2660 56tleq ft. 986-0122 11175. 876-9400 • ~11=• 1~ 2:: :von bera. 700 to 3200 ~tt.1---------&44-3e5e s: ~~~pllelR'i:· ~~·~~. l~:::J.~u:!p~~ needt malure. depend•· ---------O~~c~o·rr.~ ~1.~1:; Rentlleue/optlon nr oc oarege. ':41-8777°!~ :.-:1~~~~=·~ SCRAll·LETS !~~'! ........ !.~~ 64 . 950 rene helpl·ul~.... ~~C=l~.n:.a;:,~ Fu~~,~~ Cennery VIiiega. Burr Alrpor1, 4800 aq ft bldg. 973-777o lndua,trlal Ptrk, 1835 ANSWERS AGORAPHOBIC BOOKKt:EPERIOFFICE ....,....., lloht cook.log & llhopplng. 1urg•on'a office, New- WMe Rttr, 175-4830 4 2ooaqllACofc,11 ___ ..,_,_, WhltUWAve.842~& ft HELPLINE Growlng C01t1Meu 1U1 1_..., ••• Ple ... call759·8054or port C•nterarH.Back 200AMP 3 phH•. ou•--. ... uu 142-7804 Hybf'ld Going 53e-7734 OHIO" ~lrm hH Imm•-.. 1-1 T....s.t 640-2950. office •Kperlenot helpful. • Tft WATD renteed tenent 1,000 tq J.•1'1• U1S --------1 Album : 8lln<:h * dial• ~Ing for '*'°" I --------1 P11010 llllng dutlea. C1ll Dix exec tulle 2 012 ..,. fl. Financing. 8efow mkt. •••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 aq. ft. 2 ofct. wl GINQH•M * * d I II ht •a•• mUST INSURANCE 644·1240 (9-12, 2-5). · · • • .... By awf'M 648-4502 lfflll MS. cpl•, F&R dra. O/H dr, " exper enc• " O -FGS hu openings tor ft, lnc:l'g. 2 IX.IC. ofCI .. 5 1op cond. Frwy clou I knew lhl WH an old· aaa-...al. ·--· boo!(keeping (A/P & AIR) Newporl men'• Hlon. exp. lndlvlduile to aer MEDICAL AMl•t. Limited pertlon.ct aub-olc1, lg. 1EW'91T llAll '" "-"bldg on CoHI 1385. 1000 tq. ft. 1295 IHhloned glrl when I ~;;;; ?y & general office prcx:e-Mutt t11ve 1oc11 follo· X·ray cert. req'd. (MS). cntr1. WOf1I ., .. plus lg. ...,.,... Hwy, South ~. Ar>--·...._. .._ ...... lt'1 ~ ..,_, a • dU<• :nclud•~ ..,,,..,"" & I I 7 5., o vice peraonal llne IC· F .... w hr• 831-4420 •"Turn Key omc." ..,..,, 500 OI H dr, toll et & b11ln, ,._,_, •-• "'" -·~ 7 dlyt 1 ._.-d 1 ;"" .,...,... w n g · ,. c mm · counta. Mut1 have good ,..._ recp\. rm. All done 1" •"Bn1nc:h" Off'lce 175. prox.. tq. ft. Excellenl •IOfllOl lot\. 875-8251. barr111lng to go lo th• 811 Goroeoua glrl1 to goo le •P 0"• perto-648-2718 0<11 & wrllten cornmunl· Model• now hiring at Tlf. decoration atyte. l>Mut. •Seminar/Mtg Room• privet• perking behind --...;;_------1 be1ch with a women J~ I nallty. WW conMdlr part cation tklll• S•l•r"' B M prMllOI bldg Newport hourty. Aleoc:. 494-1177 ....... .,.4 -,_ Slur\a. Loc:eill u w.ii.. 1012 D lly Pll t p 0 buay BalbOI ltl•M ... commeNUrll• wlexp & 21 Audlllona held Mey In 1ppeer1nce, In loc. bldg. 1525 mo. Turner •--•-•-•,.~ ~~-WMttng 1 GINGHAM bl· pamper you. 1cuu: • time. Send rllUtM to Ad HAlASTYUST dellfed 104' · '! lenys, N. uat be ov. Archll Marine Bldg. •Typing , m1111ng1 , ---------1• .. 0 •;miiiiT· .... ~ klnf 1ourl1t1. Bank Amerl-:ox lSeO~ Coal: M•t•. Ion 873-4013 eblllly P1td compeny 12th Wednee. &PM. 3rd 842-4144 phonel. Fii W11 me X11clM Cocnpeny In-card, Muter Cherge, Ca. 112828. benefit•. Advencemenl floor. iCllliiiiforiilntoiiii7i5i2-M08iiii·~ 300 •q It. Foot trefllc, Lll&L • vtt• you 10 1 free due. American ExpreH. DI· UllWAll WIS potential For 1ppt c:.111 ---------1111'1 ml Dntwn Lag 494-5eel 111klng quality aptl Clll 531-5822 nett, e ll welcome . Bkkpr/Sc;ty, 1 glrl office, Full llme. Exp. prel'd. Sam 549-8908 1111 DfU _, 1 a 2 room.~ from mu,... condo, turn. Of un1um for 7141645-3433 2112 Her-1ome computer work. Crown Hudwere, 3107 .l&IH111 But don't want• 11-5 Job? $206. Ut•. lnduded. . tot !Wit, 1IX20 1 125 ......... llnc• own llmlted u11. Call I.al ti I~ I• bof Bl .. CM CM/NB aru. Simon• I E. Cout Hwy. CdM Sel your own hour a & ~ 875-8700 .., =. 2180011111:1, 1ttcorompree!o11r.. Laurie 1t 714-856-1414 •••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY MASSAGE 642·9851. HEARING AID ~'11 ~;e~.lt~lo;:F,Jl~J~ Income level. We lraln 3600.... P __. __ ..._ ... 5.__...... / you. 557.5175 tor app1. HI tq.ft. Dowr. Newport Ml-Call 9 9-5370 Hk tor J--'--·j.'•----"'/ ,.,._..,.,_ ...., ... , le I • LI Ot a ee. $4/hr 5'1-3311 •f· Beach. Choice patio ~~~~~~~~~l~V~lci~Of~------1 ._ .. .,,., fNIMn ADS lt;tl. VIP tnlatrnenl. U... artH 11• ,., 8 PM loca tlon, $308 mo. ;:. n... uunu 10-aPM 548-2817 MUtt be able toWOf'k sat .... --------1 NllSES AIDES 831·1084 Sell Idle llama 642-5678 Daily Piiot C1ass1tie<1s ...................... ARE FREE TIMptlone Fanluy & Sun. Other hra. 10 b• O..MlltMt LllAL SlOIOAIY Exp In Gerlatlc: nurlling 1 i:=================~~=~=:==iii~fl l•llun Conver11tlon with Ml-~~~i!~a~g:;~: IMrilc AW..,. ~c~°';n~J"~~ muat Only d1dlc1t1d. 0-rt.al,. llf. ch e 11 e . M C I VI I a . ..,.,.. .. _...._ Bl C M S If I t 3 I I lovlog PlflOnl need ap-•••~;;::';'•••••••• Cat 53~70 '""" ._"""' ·• · · Expenenc:. ~ e ·•" •r. yr• eo• ply E•p all shift. x1n1 Tell Mom You Love Her Thi~ Mo1her'; Day 1o1•1Hl Mom a wrering & enll'r our "World\ Grf'all'~I Mnm"' t"on1rs1 at tht' sanw lirnt'. Our 1udge~ will M'lel'I 1he nir,.~I ~lnth,.,·, Dav Cr~ting ;ind 1ha1 mol~r will rtl'f'IVI' a $50 g1fl cr r11fi1·a1r from a l,.admg Jepartmenl ~lore. It's easv. wr11e \Our 111,...s.igr 10 f11 one of thr horders below or dr 1gn your own hordtr of l'•jual !IV' with mr.s.sage 1ns1<k Borders rome m 3 SIZC'S. S 18. SI 0 11ncl lhP spPrial rh1ld si~ for S4 for children undrr I 2 Yl'ctr• of aK<'. Bring or mail ynur gr,.Plmg lo 1hr Oa1lv 111101 , '.~:W W. Buy 51 .. Cos1a Ml'sa, CA. Q2o:.!o li<·for" 5 p.m .• Mav b1h or you · may orck-r your mesi.ag<'~ hv n 1ll111i: 0•12·51178. we have many liordt'rs 10 rhoose from and wr 'II 11111 you or <·harge to your Visa or Mas1erCard. .. -Ne••••-· .... 118 1iu 110 SAM Ar1, NMdlework. Trim A Full llme, permanenl exp pref1tred. 647-M4ll Ina progrtm. Call: Braid ahop. Futly 1toa-MJ ... ll Civil Eng. Co n11d1 Beneni. Ull Clll 842-80« ed. New. SM! a.mente. I :....t3 & Vi1C"='s de11oner/dret11man E 1 , d ---------875-4491 Tuu-Slt LIN IU DES Inc: 8425552 APPLY IN PERSON xperence preerre · Nurllng 10-5:30 ""' -.... . . .. . • 300 .... but not lleQNlaf)'. salary cm 11111'1 ... _________ 1Ann or Somer Snyder -CMI (IMM4) 24 LAtguna HI-Mall negollebl• with expe-t 1_7 Sm.it convaletcenl Co1t1 Meta baaed engl-Arden D. Metting to lo-.-nt aa.:11 Welertront realaurinl. ~na Hiiia rlenca. Apply In person llospllll. Newporl Bick neerlng butlne11. 190, cate you. Oen. Oat. Al· OUTCALL 24 HRS. Excellent benellll. 8 EOE PLOVER betwHn 3-5PM . 210 Bay arM. Good Wl>'klng 000. 150317118-5415 lendlle. N.J. 111-1211 day a. e 73· 7228 b•I 1 1 MDIAIUI ~Can•~ Dr .. Np1. condition• 549~1 . PU.Ill Ill.Pt 10-4. Earn $8. per hr. llOUM· TIE .... um 8~; :r1~~ Stlll loolllng for loll~ Hendaome, lntelllgent coo~s & Hoat ...... Exp. ='~rvln:'2 ~dMW: Equal Opp Employer Pert TllM hel. Cot la Meta/Newport '1'1· Mother 000 OrteYlllG. 30llh 1x111neaman Miki pref d. bU1 not nee. Full I. ox re · Telephone order clerk. 29% down Net 145 Shaggy long h1lr. Olf i lncere 1l1nd1r lady. or p/llme. Sa11ry depen· Qlrl Frldey Home Ser· Loan PrOOMIOI'. Cepeble Help u1 conduct• pro- "000M· C ·net 3 • w h It•, 4 mo ma I•. ~CM>d morale, under 35 ding on •xper. 842~ 1 vlON 559-5022 10 run 1 gal olflce. Mutl motion tor thla ., ... , fl. · an PfOVI · yr 846-8110 1 1 1 ... 1 be able to proceu tor Mil newapaper. Mon thnJ , .... Mobll , ..... Cell or Utlno,. at ~n ... p. COUNTER PERSON for HOTEL FHLMC 101n1 & 2nd Fri. 5.3o>PMUM 10 "·.30PM. 979-5370. A.lk tor~. Lam1r come homel We 839-9397 equlpmt. rent•I 11ore T 0 • 8 h .. love youl Ml11lno Sia-Proteealonel Men 3 ,,. 1pecl1 llzlno par.ty CllCtDIEI 1· Leguna ••c Set. morning• 9:30 lo m111 M Reward H 8 v 1 t T 1 d Needed for luxury Laguna ., .. Salery open plu• 1:30 ..,2•7oo.t · · · 11•k• rHpontlbl• •I· equpm · ypng r~. Belch hotel. F/tlm• tum· commlu lon. Clrcle $84 oo •week to ttert. trac11Ye young: Women to ::.'l phonlleoUntt.d I mer month•. llexlble Home Lo.n• 4911-2281 Aller flral wHk •hare In . \ f >I l / 11 F II I~ f I. 0 • '\ '• • I ' ••I '• Found: M. Ke11hound, en.re waterfront M1tt•. • 64$--07 houra. Contecl: Gell partMrahlpt proflta. ---------i 5/1, vtc. ChlMpeake Ln, pool, bolt, etc. In ex-DANCE MIF U111t In to-Veughn-Purdle for eppt. L..19 PrHIHtr/lr, High Mrnlnga, only requt- lnw,...1 FHB. te3-3eel •ft 5PM ~::.Ce.!::n;~~I~~ =· ~~ ::~~::~ 487-«77. E.O.E. 5 Y"•· exper. with FHA & ~=~.~ :tt = phone a-fa/,. Hll ound: aurl boerd. on "'' bebyllttlng. Silery 110001~. PIT IYll'llogi. VA wt1I lend you 1n. poa. · · · ••• ~; ••• ;'•••••••• Beech Bl, Hun1. Bch. ......., ....... ,..M ,,.~,. 778 ...., .... Jllert with buay, conoenlel co. M1n1gemen1 Oppor1un1. ~..,.,.,.. '""'"1 . Mr. Elll1 542-9047. llel ~..._.. 847-. 12el, 875-6831 M b I d Sallf)' $1 800 ••~•_... 1---------LARRY ROGERS, t1thar IMtll Aealttl9t u•t e exper enc• · Bentley, He~ & Aaeoc:. ext. 312. 642-5878 Woutd ..,,., ,...1 .,.. Imme-Loat. Lt blu aplrel note· 01 Wendy. lmportent, NCR 4200. Room rH-1570 B ookhollow Or equal Oppty Emp!X! ,~"" boook. B11111 vie. Very Or1ho chalrelde. Excel-ervetlona. APPLY TO: r · ----dlete&hlghrateretum lmpor11nt. Reward. hippy newt. Cill: lentwage1ndben111t•. OtvldMcNlelorMra. Stell4.sant.Ane on your mon•r? Inter-845-7491 714-364-3e03 evee. RDA or ellglble. Newport Baltaz.ar betWMn 10 AM 549-2825 100% Fr• Piil ..,_ ••tad? Cal Fred , I ff Blld'l M0.0121 IOd5PM: •-493-0451. loet 1 tern blk w/tan Cd-ft1n/ f ' _,... •a-a ••-... ,, ew_._._ .............. 8·9pm. EJtpalldl"" youth r -·-•-• 11• mix. 1 mate Poodle p-··~·;·,-··;-w·· .. DOMESTICS -·---..,~ i;;u;;;; ~& oounaelllog firm 'ha. ope---II ---mix. 4·21 In Harb« Vu en °' · MetUl'I houlek11911 for 425 So. Cout Hwy LB motel unltl. AW'/ lo the "'"O' tor 3.5 aherp out· 2:::::11.d l, •••••••••••r••o·~·. Hc>m9. &4 4 4414 5/31. worth up to WOO, prof...ionaL Varied du· 414-1161 Sen Ctemenl• Inn. AP going m11ur• people to l3001080. 875-8740 tiff. Hon11t, •nero•tlo, bltlout o-120.000-1150,000 fully Loet: 81k A wN M longhair II I A bll rellable. 5 tire pr dey. HOUSECLEANERS went· for Angle. No telephone motl\'ete em 1 13 emort. to 20tyr1. Other c:et, Cfootled taM, Broed Anyone Y ~ epu I c Mon-Fri. Cer/reft req'd. ed. P/tlme. exp. pref"d. c:ellll yr old1. Cell 2-Spm. 2nd a to I 1,000,000. St .. N.9. 64U155 ~~l:•:n:.owlt ::~ro.11 ~te2 Own trene. S6 per hr· MANAGEMENT ~c!2~~.1L exl. 343· Aak Apyt1. comm'I I non-. I W II I O 548-9715 • I -1 owner progrem. Prln Found. Blk & wht Ooxl1 c1 I me. I pay . 111¥11 (YAI) ur- only. Call for eg1. DOW-breed ~up . Aft 3 , Rob. 8411-1711 Good driving record. Hou":~r. llve In. •"2 ASSISTANT MANAGER Pl1n1 Melntenanoe. Int• NEY SAV1""04. Brent: 642·l331, 5'8-3890 BAROAINI Going over per ,. ' neoen. lmriled IUll·llrne polltlonl rlOf & •x1erlof ~1t1on1 113-2811 ,... C 1111? 1 ''" r/t ticket: CIHt 2 lie., work with chlldren 11 & k17. Mature, av1ll tor 1ggr11alve In-avell. Full time Mon-Fri. _________ 1Found: ledlll' watm, J. . eldlf1)l..CdM. 759-9471. women to ta • cere o dMduele who en)oy 'WOf· Mual hev• gOOd driving .,__ "' "' H Penney, Harb« Center, AIM. 213/595-0069 fN Exec. llCt. ldmln. uelat. home In Hunt. Hbr arM. king with p.ople. Mu•t d 545--1252 :-::-::1 ••• ~•••••••••• C.M. ldlnUfY, Ml-502t. "8.i....Mt & confident In Newport Mutt be able to do tome be eble to WOfk -· tt recor · · 110.000-1100.000 +for Found Yovn~ w/ ••• fuffi::........... C•ntr. Lono tire, herd cooking. Som• En81t1h lntarHt•d epply elter PIT Permanent Ioctl rHldentlal TD'•· t'9d oolar. ~ J• ,,,.,_ . 1111 work & ch1llanolng for nee•••· 111 5PM dally, Ilk for Jen« 11111111 Max IO'l't L to V. A9tum s*'I o.nw. M-1n1 ...................... 1omeon• unuaua11y 2l3·582-2.Ul ME A ED'S PIZZA Ulllllll l ~-:n'n~:"o'/~'~~·.~~~ oet; em ,,.noh Lopee Y:n:'!° ~b~'tv:': bright & 1kllled. II thl•1 '"IBUPll 17th & TUltln, CM LlldlnO nettonel martt• e73-7S11 A1bbll. 1an. P ..... oeM wMncJa. Can do• 't9rt9ty llll't you.'*"' call your 5 yn ~ r.q .. to Uno firm nffd• lnt.,11- --------• MS-ell3 ..... 1111 of handyman Jobi. =:.liz.~~ cook, dw'l IMMlll a be-mum 111ma oent. adeptabte,~ ..,,.,.,, f'n.d In Ooltge Partt.,.... 872·1621 ..,.., aett IOf them •bout thll ad. b)'tlt 2 yr otd. Nonamo-CtrMr opportunlt111 for who enjoy publ o con· ~ "' lf'Mll II** ttllGIY 600. 811. CompenHtlon to 124• ker, mature. 8alar/i + Manager TralnH1 with teat.~ Mutt have cleer .............. •••••••• "9wwd. o.rm ~. 000 plu• benefit• 11 room & board. 752-7 te. one of 1n. f .. t111 gtowlng 11Mp1100• VOlce. A/I ldltll WIDOW HAS• tor TD'• !we M&-8'0t IW• fraMI 1111 you're the beat plMM Hout1kffper wan1•d 2 ®thing retell ctlelne. Ex· poeltlon for an outgoing RE L oane 1 OK ~ N • ;e;"r.••••••••• •• • • •••• ' . ,... . Olll oppty for tM hlON'I peraon wtlO CM WOl1I on • p. 0 OIT: Ilk. p ur11, con· IM••llc ltrY reply 1" confld•nc• 10· lull daya or 4 .,.,.diyi, moi1v1tecl · oal oriented a r19uler acMdute Op-;l;~~l~~~:'.~n"l!.:~: tent• WKY Mntlmentlll, Tele phone oper. ~per ~tefhJ!~;0~·~;,:0°11~ ~:r.~::. ~:r.":~·::: 1ndlv. A11~1f or, m1naoer ponun11y ror en uoiil.n. t 87'-7i11 Mkt. l u ket pkg . lot, only. No other need ap-Ca t!ttiO 720-1192 lllPtf. helpful. !JC<*!. em-P9fllllrne lnooml. '« a BalbOa & 30th1 N9. M-pJy. 8·4 Mon M·'· H2 · · plo)'M blnefltt. Apply at conlldantlat lnt.,vlew. ,.11&.mll . WAltO. MO lhl Third at. LaguM tWfl I 11.,1 ,1.,814 .. .. . .. .. . .. .. • .. • • . any etor•. 'J..:~~7~;. a 1 rot• • t I buy dleoounted Trut t MOfl famll ... ere 09ttlng ~It bt1r1g ~ " . DMcte, •tr9'oht not-. the camplno "bUI" t"*t Met tor..,.. qullfty fUnil. : ~~~ AM e..... ..._ 2nd• Of 3'da ln fol'ldo-)'W. If you ll~ • a.am-turl ~ dfMr. own : . : Coldwetl l a nk4N·FEO, _.ti °'i~t t •,'•h per that'• not getting tran1port1t~I•· : AdvertltlngN•-AMaa ..... V : Co eta M111 11 now ao on .. on 1 0 .. o n uMd, 1111 It now wtth a ""°"' a xent ,.. • ,. 'rv 1•uu • ..., • · .. --lnterv*ewtn11~oan Miii "-, lkr. 111 ..... Cl...itlld Ad. c:or41 • mu1t Catt on· : COOftDINATO.-; l~Kemp~~·.!84~1~0303~~-- b......,.ll 1111 frfllff••ll !l '''· t :H ·tAM only. : Coordinate & schedule natlonal : Rec1pt1on11t nMCSed, 2 ...................... .... ............ ... M&-7411• : advertising. Re1pon1lbllltle1 In-: w~~Mlll }1991"1 ~ .......-. FINANCIAL PLANNING IR As At~= ... ~"IA:.· .. ~ · elude: monthly reports, corr•· : W•tm1net• City ~1:~,:" ,:J::'::0~!; Q r190; Yaahtt, 1111 spondence, heavy phone work Orenoe eo.t ~ rto'• CoMtlVOtlon 1no •• l'tWl11111. eo.ta MW and light flllng duties. Ap:ilcant ttOt ChipmM Ave, ~;;:~ ~~~ :i.~r. M'rl -.. should haw tome advertl1 ex-_w•t ....,. ,.... ·- 0 1ea11 & ma111t .. n work ptrlence. eblllty to handl• u1y 1111& .,_,.,,.. Ill ; I II ., ... & run errand•. phonH, be detall oriented an d --,.~•=:.-:.~-· """''" ... -.. b-Mu1t b• ••• 11, r••· ....... to d-... 1 d•--ti.. .-ath _ ... __., ,... .._.. _ ... ,.. pone1-.e a ha.,. o attf. ~ =. "-''rw' ::.:.:.· GllOO# ....... ,L .... ,,_., llo._AWI In ,,.,. _."' egw_, etc. ype auwpt!. a,PMtMM ...,., .... eon: 1111....-, c.w. Hrt. e to 5PM. ~: Pwlonn9I ~ <**' "9ftW r.= """.,. ..... OIDlll Cwt ..... rm dlntarA¥1. ~Prt.~:~•=-= ,,_..'"M:M: ••. ..,.... .... eo-=..•1•"· .... ,.... An l·~-···" ...,. ...... find whit &•u want In Delly Piiot ... ftlcll. -------~--="'""------.,._... - . -- j .. Orange COMt OAILV PILOT1Thorad1y, Ma 9, 1992 ., ~ .. ~. ~ .... 1.~~'-;..~ .... tJ.! em.............. AYMt.~ ........ ~~~ ,,.,,.fft! ...... !ftf !!~ ......... ~!, ... '!!..,111!1 .... ~ff ~,,,.., .......... .. ..... a.;__. Lib~~ ..... Many toolt.fl•nd. m•· •• 191nn;in •••• ~ ... , 111', I ltaller. w•llft'I\ T "611... l'laf ffH l :•l·t ,.,, '"' na •nd llUfU ~ "'~• ,...,., 10 wett • .ine. OOleotllMa ato. 2 tAATCHINO detkt ..,. tf:::li" .,., wooct. Mltu op UU11f ;rr .............. l'.".TJ 1"'*'9 41 Wht m6n. M X.... llO a;-....,., t111, ..... 1., 111• Calle-.,.; len 1 -.. wltlft ,.iun. ..,. ndna ·n HO lpydar oonv • ~, ano 1"8dloa l -_...., • .. "8 MINAH HUIKY Jlllll a.po, let -.. , r ooo. °""'· 1 .... .... ~':.?.· rHdy lo 1111: TO BUY p-1.1 ......... NM Y'!•· 4 da~ W . Non. TO QOOO HOMI type ~ I ltMd e ~ coemettc1. tlU U000/090. 141 OIA JQ.41M .....,, ~ M· ......_ .... "" 2 lllll'lpt l lble .. 'Oxt4 tuOCJ. UI 490t UR -. 'Of YOAI/ Carl '74 'IAf 12• ..,..., 4 df, .. ' 'I Im... OMTANAL. •••••••••••••••••••••• worll 11:11. w/drawere. ..,_ mt aa.. fllDlll I .. cte n AM/l'W 1te.r.o ,...... HNl17 AKCOootiw_pupt .... , .,. ...... • .... ~ ... ,.,..,. --.......... • 1'eo· ............... 17"2 • 'vii 11"'• tamPorary I l:ICM .,..eatotoii'OO wllltand l110 e.o.am .,.. ..._ M'lf SON -:J _, __ .....,_. ____ .. _ moa PCllltlOft needed tor • Dfll •I QIO. &teat Motl\at'• E .. 011110 m •llooany .. :eir.: ......... 1.~~,. Wl FORD ~~~ · ·11 U• oonvertttlte. ~MACH •••••; h'h•••u•••••• ~ (11'> .ti1.1111 Oeldln9 OH. Oood w/ d .. 11. Petf. ooncl. Coi t NIW'O"T Arol\H M•· 11256 .._,. lt¥d -540-6NO beaUllflA; nu loP, Ur• • PUil.iC LIMMY Al._ Mii youn11ter1, 1500. HOO, H it tlOO/bll. t1na, I 111ot 9¥1111. up 10 HunllnO\On .._,.· •• nv mu.1 .... NOtto- Admlnlt1r1tlon Hpt Otr ••• ';'Am ....... ~ ,.,.,. """ NOPLE H1·Ht1, ... O!) ........ ,Ml 41' • .., ......... t.6ftM ...... 11 ·-t.-W floe ...... 1 ... ,,nc.,. IOCallon. 11.1. pr l\r. MAHOQ. ~....... Call abcMlt our .., • .,., kenda. ~· ••••• l.::-r.e.~...... ootleble . 4M-432A Min I yre ••r TyJ>lng *-• *Y Mia '400, IO tloP "lwNMr ltotl" "'1 lillllf WANTIO: Ooclc lo rent for fm -..:... MO-a. ;. ...... tlO'• ,_ ... ,.... l•oUo vacauone, hair _,_,_ ,,,,, ••••••••••••••••• ~; I p¥t ....... ""11JfOX 20ft man IALI •••••••••••••••••••••• 'IO X· 11 5 epct, eloy wNI, _ .... _ ..... ..._._ .. ___ • __ em . & ovtt 1 111. -.~1ove1tlherr(t. ::.-;r.~•••••••••••••• Hand*lbab)'Moluooen. ••·Newport 1re1. MAKIOfFtft.'MToro-'11• 1.. AM1'M,t11 .. lnJ.'rarga Ract911don 8ec1Hlty Guard. Applloe t7M1M ' 'oodte lild• • ute. T-'U;:='' ~ Alngt Wll"I effeGllonaM. a rnoe. 115-7474 Mk tor M111t nedo, •73 Pinto, ·ee 4 dr xlnt running cond tof.• teeoo. P'. ttone being t1ken tor OLD Qotdeft Oak rotltop cup. 'flt "*'· I I f~'s O I O~~ l12IO. (114,..14MS. .___ .........__ Mu111ng, 'et Sllvetllne l1o0o 4t&-5te2 ' 83 .. 330 P/TIR.Wlll Super p/tlfM poe. l0t an outgoing pereonl Tl\69 poe. II 11 one of our large 8'>t. oompl•••• In lrvlne. 1uperv111ng ohlldren & teen recre•llon11 lune· t1on1. OrHI Job lor cot· lege lludent. Houfe: TWo 8 hr. daya & 3 1rt•noon1. P ..... contMt: Chrl1ll1n School. Aef'I ._ w/---. ..,._. ..... H • · Pertot All1oen ONy Wll"I --.-• --tt...,, 980-0111 ell« 8 . --------r~. 18135 8rookl\urel. drt --. -..u. -567·1t11 oun· 'tame. •'110 lloeewlfde)',wttOtmo. •11w1+1 ... n11 'F.V. 982-3312 • -· h 11 f• Ml w. 01 011mond p•ndent, (114~1-6MS ' ' Mt-CIN1 Allllfln/ ford Sedan. AIC, Sun-•••••••••••••••••••••• s.our11y Ml .. -;~:;·;:•• .. •·h~;·L;b mu•• Mfl thi. 'llMll. •P-w ANT 1 D a ALB o A Ciu.ln 1111 root. •••«>. whMle. 25, Circa 1t•O. Liil• new. blonorr:m 114 yr P-r•IHd 11'21 ·HOO~~.::::" ISLAND Dock, Sllp, ...................... 000mllee.110,000 WE'RE PATROL Eleotrto"'°'*'*it.'744. epeyect llll lhote fMt 080. Petfeol Motl\er'e 1 •· ~«Tie Down f0t -. .. l"tl 714-752·945e 7 u.1 ou. d• or w/kldi . us.0118 all Day otftl S61-l~t71 $450. cn•)l<t ..eM3 ff tfloN mooflng for ... : Shlly rep11ca1: ptckupe' ''12 ... 111U DEALIN' ........ lnl 84$-0493.., IPM. Ledl ... 14K yellow gold n..., I ...._."" H , Newport 81y, S5 co11pH. 4 to cl\OOH New 1 brak 110 N ..... 11~ 7PMto5AM 5' Clawfoot 8111\ Tllb .en-Roi•• dre11 ••lch HI ............ r.;';"' •••••• NllbOet. 561-11493 froml (008781) (81k. rldlo~200 840-~ffo . .... ... '.! • amel I lClnl oond •-a ,,,,.,,.,, "" wit!\ 2 dlamOnd• 11196 Story end Clertt COftlOI• WANTED· N I Bel\ Ill Aaot:il. PrtcM etenlng II • . IUUrNl1£ Muet .,. 0 Of' '* with ' n • _. · •••••• .. •••••••••••••• 157 .-..5 • · piano Aaklno ltOO · P · · p, y •••• ·ao aooos IW1 PIS AJC 1111111.111" gd. drMng record. Pr .. 7eo-t127 KINO ~HG EX· ·1 · Ml~1' ' 31' NMt>oet. 4~22t t eunrl • frl • oot &.unne Htlee .,. ..... 1081 Camett>ecll St, Newpoft 8eech 714-720-2878 E.O.E. M/F =~~Y.,:: llc•n••: AWi.a•,., •II TM w menr.ea eet. sAPPHtREs 1 RUBIE& 40,. bo•t •llP av111. Mu•'• ~·.rr. i~o o : DELIVERY ON • Y beneft1 · .~••••••••••••••••• ntWf' IMO, ll'Of1h '530. (cut) Need CMh. 80% off 1-"•r..... 1114 Huntington Herbo11r. ~2724 llltll'lltlllll HAR80A AREA 110. •u8 dal. Never O.S.I wr111en,1ppre1111. ·~~' .............. t200 mo. S41-34111 •---------• MOST lltJ lnmltJ APPLIANCE SERVICE uHd quHn 111 worth a.4-7007 5 7 X:ydu ~d 10347Loe Allmltoe Bl. wu .. '900nd., t:-· :!~~·u0:!:,~~1~o'!~~ 1fMi1J 1111 541-1ooeOO:S·1131-o314 ,..,,, l,M I Ruby'• S1ndwlch Shop help needed, 1ppllca-t1ona 3-SPM, C.M. 1873 Irvine & 17th. &4S-1100 Loe Alemttoe appl~. 64 n 754-1350 ..... ~........... ~ 1111 MODELS 714-827·2020 Relrlg 1226 Weeh•r 1" Elgin prodUCtlon turret 30 callber M1 rift• w/35 ........ , ............ . SERVICE Sllllon Alt•n· Dryer .. DllhwPMr 1125 **'BUY** l•lhe, 11500. 541-9490 ~!.:!!.Pa.l~~o1"~=~ ''" I~ ••• , ... 8alea dent. PIT evee & wtitnc11. ... 848-5648 mome. 1111 trade 875-7834 22 Chrle Ct•" 56' Ma-SAVE N • • t • ~ • • r • n c e & ~ Oood 11 .. d f11rnllure & llhnU..... ,_ . hog hull. Every option. 8*11, 2 lope, •tic*. mint. hltldwrtl .eAodY: 2590 L!. 11Y 967 .. ,33 ~ 1 w111..., ••••••••••••• !........ 6'7"..,Ha1n VdU Kneei11b80-o.vd :~·~·1~P r::_ 111,aoo. 846-1448 Newpoft • ~.M .. -Of SEU. I« You Home Computer. T•xe• ..., t oond. • ~,. · 'II .. Ytfti LMkllc fir SEWING MACHINE KelVln•lor food-1t1m1, 11&11'111 mTm lne1rumente, 99/4A, new. 548-lOOll Of 1131-0374 =~.:ig~u:~·~ Clllelc:. Pow. at!.tno. uus..aawm AT btn ...... , OPERATORS •herp llnH , very lg. HI Mii Ul-MH 1330. 1-462-1115 Oii)' Skl'1, Olln 111170 ROI· dooll 1pace. Compl. brlk•. wtnclowl end Air. W .. rne Penny11vu I• ac-Experienced, quallty refrlg/lrtr, dbl dr •Ide/ OLD SLOT MACHINE algnol 180, 1100. with 1ummer pkg. 1000, 645-&48e 131·2040 496-4949 HONDA ~:~~~i ~~~1.c:~:fy·1~ ~~~~~··· P•-::o.~r":.·~ L~"' Fm1Ja~133 873-2~ ~0 apm. ~':r~·.~~·a ~~:~~ :~o~ 976-7474 4 n..1 llrln1 llJO IAllLD• lft peraon: 1860 Pl1cent11. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:~8~7~S-:..!1~3~55~-:::----846-&0n '1Mll!(!•tl• •••••••••••••••••••••• 284'02 Melguente Pkwy C.M. St· ... -1 ,_.._ Ne~ refrlg Kenmore ~ fuU·lll2• nwittr ... Ml, Double crypt, Weit· ••••• • ••••••••••••• '78 Jeepk CJ5, run1'•'F"oo' M~IVlenjol ") SANTA .,._, ...,.,. fr~ eUi Ice melt • .110. New quHn 1lze, min••• Memorlel Perk. rr: JM# C..,.n, Iii. 100 1 ~ood. .... (Avery...,.. o ... UUI llYl S550 :&-17:9 • 1100. 750-5832 value I 1700. Aeklng M i'I,,,, "" ._1 ' II 876-945 ()pert Sundays Earn big money wor111ng MYI lllLI · Heroulon couch, 135, 1 1400. Call Anewer Ad ...... :r............... ...................... JEEP CUTS PRICES PUILIC • ....,.~ pelt ume by the a..cn. How would you Ilk• to Seel• 1513 cu fl. 'FroeltMI brown & belgef:l•ld, 1574 842-4300. 24 hf•. 19 7 9 2 I 2 Co Io r 7' C1bover C1mper for UP TO 11000 U I 1¥5 ANA CALL: W. w. Wiicox eem u muc:tt u $50.00 I upright freezer. xlnt good cond. 54114 20 AMWAY PRODUCTS dell-TVa.-O-l\r1. Aak lot Jim """truck, W/rttl# jeeka. JEEP CJ'• $&785 ....... , llLl 714-960-3441 .wee«? Do you Nk• drlYe-ln =· S275. 641-2887 eft SLEEPER-SOFA vered to your home. 992.5593, 876-2734 '7001080. 54e-291'4. --ll&IT lft 2112 • SALES 1movtea, plcnlce, pine with matchlno ctlllr CyntNI Blalc• &41-1215; MOA pu11\bu1ton color I, ... ~.... •11111 1111 OH-3 OEROVITAL pert I••. bHCh perll••· Admiral 1t cu ft lroel·fl'• 1490. 873-1202 • eve &41-3218 TV. Litt• MW, 1325. Brian 1100. ..... 2524 Harbor Bfvd, Cotti .. IPHd tren1 .. etereo now available In the USA. plua many other lhlnga? 1lct.by·llde r.,rlg, idnt et 7764191 ·-ti P • • 11 r c 0 n d · 11 It th• Founteln of Then you would probaby cond :,:rant.ad $245 PIClll aedenra 8alMtt Free-111ndlng pol belly MMe (078MVK). Thi• cu wlll Youth? Free aemlnera prob1bly enjoy working ••• 7· · · ebout 5'. Aekl'ng 1125'. flrepl1ce. never bHn NEW KLH SPEAKERSI ,,_,,,. C.. II 549-I023 846-7770 b• eold to the hlgnHt f ~U--uMd 1250 831 1218 n--w ............ ••2a. .-..lJ.A •••••••••••••••••••••• b""~I ..... ,...__I ,.._U high Income polentl1I. IOf U9. 983-4090 ' · • ,_,_ v-. -v, r ...... •73 CHEV. Open Ao•d. ,,_.. ISIO ......, -• ., .. ., ..,_, dl11rlbutorahlp1 evalll · QUALIFICATIONS: ..... .... Couch' L~t nr IWW PICNIC tbl fOf lg famtly. oed lo 1375. 780-()t98 77K ml, ••II ch••P· :-····················· for delellll ble 714/983-5535 1· OVer 12 YM'• Of age. __,llYI xlnt cond Aaklng 1350 pert!. dllKc:h. echool $45. MOA pu1hbu1ton color &42..-n 11 King Ceb. 2000 ml. .. Siles 2· ~~~ honeat •nd d•· Coln opereted. 1350. 993-4000' · 2benctlee$20.54G-1735 TV.Llk•MW.1326.Brtan .,_forc.eule.'7150 WITllll M••R l •-pen. w-... a· It.,.....,.,.. and 54a-9490 mome. ...._ -•--..._, .... , & 5 Piece Piece Settlnga. at 7754191 •1.U~ .... II COii IMOO 873-1784 -. ._. 3. ~ ""' '"""""" ~· -. ___. ..,. :-7•:•p~!!!!·~~·:!!,·:.~ 111 Toyota P/U, lo ml,,,_ YW STllT IOI SalUl'daya. Refrlger1t01: Dbl dr. Xlnt ttnen $170 Frendlc:an Delett Rote, BEAUTIFUL 26" RCA • .._....~._.. $390<> CALL TODA YI c 0 n d . '3 0 0 I 0 Ir . . S..~3573 $20 per 5 piece pl•C• Colof TV .... 2 yr wmty. In ltorag• lor 2 yMll. pelnt. xlnt Cond. . 7800 W•tmlneter Ave The Loa Angelea Time• 537.59311 or 531·5257 &45-8332, 780-1390 Hltlng. m1ny HrVlng $141. fr• dtftvoety. Xltl CIHn wltl\ m1ny Deya 957•8507 Of •Vff WESTMINST~ Ctrcul1t1on Dept. cur-8AM to 10PM Attrectlve room divider plecee. 852-3352. TV John'• IM&-17511 xtru. 1396 Of beet on.. 873-11275 rentlyhUpoeltlonaopen I SMr1 freear, epattment buffet 17JtA2x72 1175. """" .,...,..,, -.7-3_1_H_C_"'_t--P-..... -U-p-1 113•1&11 In HIH. A• 1 fleld re· .iz.. $150. Cell tor eppt. FOf'mlc• top .... to ep-!Nine Coelt Country Ctllb Mlcrow1 ve 1ntenna for .....-"'v... · · · "' "" """ · presen1111ve you'll eun 54&-3312. preccete 557-0927 Memberahlp lor aale, movtee In Y"'lf home 24 PUCH SUPER SPORT Xlnt 11300· 5 131-1111 an hourly wage & gen-T~tllr -· $1500 OBO. 780--0142 htlld•y, 1149. 54e-21156 MK II •M6HT* 960-2 14• 9fOUll eommlalone. Hit WM at..___ con• .......... 11~1n "" Swedleh emolted glue di-I B h 873-1455 '80 IA ton ahot1 5"" 9400 & ,..,.,,. _, .. .,. •••••••••••••••••••••• netle ••I cene beck M•g c Love age, t • Wlr .. N• remote control • -.-· 4pr.!"a9rc~,~~9~:3~~~ bualne11 ownera pert Peugeot PBN 10, 12 c h re. s '350/0BO. perfect gift for Mother. unit. flle Ill tv'e, new. •~i.,1 ml. 15200. 842-4482. ,, ext. 1204 time. ExP9f anct pleuant epeed. 24" trame. peer1 150-1580 $4.95. 831-1211 1115. 54e-2855 _. ... ,. I _64_5-0'83 __ . _____ 1 phone voice required. whit• w/1ccea $225 lfHlm II '78 F250 ~" ton 4 X 4 44. SALES peraon w1n ted Cell John. 835-3263 844-6269 , · Cuatom contemporery Mini trempollne fOf' l\NIUI, Beeullful 25" cofor con· •••••••••••••••••••••• 000 ml. Lota Of xtru. Art S I F • aof1 & loveaHI orig. be9t made. jog In Mfely. aote TV, dtl W9lnut cabl· ·n Yarnetll 7SOCC. 1twtt g~~~·~ch~·~~~~j7 ~:; T1l.Dllll SCHWINN 20" 1 1300. uc. loo. relexlng & benlflcta l. net. 1196. &»1580. d r Ive, 8 ·•pd. 5 495-e638 CR£Vlr'D 497_..774 ---GIRLS' BIKE. MS. 850-1580 $199. ~1 11" Ill JL.l• 11050/0BO, 551-0859. 1978 Chev·~ ton Sllve-&.I\ WM In the 9119nlft0 Ml· 7~2 Nlturll Ollk 11 pcbdrm111 N1tlon1I Caeh Regl11er. Colof ~TV 1250 Oood cond. rlldo J: up truck, yellow. Alelt 11111111 Ulll P11111 Ung 1ppt1 for my Nwpt Olrl'• bike: 28", Bllloon dbll~n bed, nH; Ilk• new. elec1rlc, 1225. ltand mil. 873-72411 ' 79 Suzuki RM 126 Dirt Loe ed. Sec. 13150. II lrlllp....., Order dHk, full or pt/ Bch ofc. fOf •major ho-llr•. coeater bnla. 15(), new . 850-1580 ~7909 Bike, good cond .. 1600 497-3494, 497-1718 ~ lime, IOf Ofenge count· tel. Hrly-oommlnlon-H7-t7te ' CONSOLE STEREO firm. 845-0490 ·10 Chev El c.mtno, em/ we epeclellze In Euro· ''ll moat dynlmlc:alnglng bonu1. 833·3740 1ft , Solld pecM coff• I end John W~~ CliJb Derk wood ceblnet, 1.,.73 v-n-~·· bl•~k. tm, ltipldeclt, 20,000ml, .-.. De1M11y 1etegrern c:omp911y. Oood 1PM 10 epeed 29'. ltllllan fight tbla w/watl unlla, 1775, F~ ;::.:."'":'."';'1'1... $150. • -..-..., ... I 5 o o B ..---· -.·..,.-· telephone peraon111ty & w.lghl xlnt, aewup tlrH wtl1 aep. 850-1580. .._, .,,,_, ....,..,, ...., 1131-1319eve w~. t cond. 5 • y appl • -., .. I lb' h d Ill • TBDIMI 1AL1S s12&. 873-4708 So d Ink " 1975 080 846-3439 975-e858. mw• -1m eg • an wr ng Eleg1n1 unUled 10f1bed, ft r nuichlne, " .. 23" Color Con1ol• TV, ---------• __. mSt~~' .. !i,·hsr.· ~~~~.•.!.!· Aggrenlv• computer 1-:1~'-1 mint cond. orig. $850, lectlone, new cll1nger. dattc wood. Jdnl ....... ur•. l<Z 900 18 850 ml talr1no. ·72 Refrlgereted Truck. llW1l1 .,, -.,_,....,.,.. productl co. lootllng fOf ~ S350 Cell 1-tM-51110 .,.... duel i.1i. reek ·, b1clt l2' ..... ptete bed, ,,_ """'w. 111 77 HONDA CIVIC *9111' IBL* 5 epeed yelow wtlh doth Interior. Sport modal AM/FM CUM11e. Look• & rune perfect. (905TEB) Juat nMd rell1ble si-t1Y to make am1ll monthly pmll. No old contrect1 to aaaume. No beck pm11. due. A•k for Ro•• 842-4400, 558-1008 Proto LIM '80 Accord. 4 door. 5 epeed, aar cond. arn/fm. Xtnt cond. 17395. Daye 549·2120. Eva1 631-0688. '80 Honda Prelude, 5 apMd, n-tlrH , moon roof. am•fm ca1Ht1•. Uke iww. 1&399 090. Eva. Wknd ee1~2 '79 Accof d Hatc:tll>adl 5 epd. am/Im, lmm1c., $4500. 499-2t22..,.. ·79 Accord 4-dr, 5·•!>0. AIC. AM/FM caae ..... rao, lo ml. reg gaa, Ilk• nu. 68t~179 '71 Accord LX, aHver. orlo owner. $4300. 97S-3~ dye, 551-8738 alt SPM nellta & credit union. femlle Of mele teMphone •1nhh #If eec:. $400. 850-1580. . . $450/0BO. 831-1319 reat. •Int dHll 11885. motOf'. clutch, fly Wheel. S'.Zi11 Alie Apply In person M·W·F aalHplflOn. Prev. , .......................... Sol• Sleep« sea. Brown 0 R IE NT I L eve Ken IMl1·1711. tren1ml11lon, tire•. Ck>Md SUndey ·79 Aec«d. AC, xlnt oonct 9·11am: Anlm11 Creek-phone 11le• exper. pr.. .. Jlt/n tonH, good cond. Call * * " s ear'• 17" color TV . 9 brakH, etc. Sea Ed & ---------1 Beige lnl/ext. AM/FM, ers 2 t 5 Riva raid• Av fd. but nol nee; wlll ttaln. R d d 2 ,. d kl Lllllen 151-4074 Evn & RlJGS moe old co.t *'""" t8ke 11 HONDA XL 500S ttuok et Mobile Ou Sta-& Mu at • e 11 I 4 9 5 0 . · " Prtme eonalder1tlon wlll • woo xv ec ng, · .,_.,, Low mlee,.,,.. llon, Herbor & 0 111er. 778-4021 dye. olc. N.B. • 20· ......,.. -"--~ Wknde. · tt 1260/b9t. &48-1tM5 '• be IOQ<eaelwneU. Eer1y ... -.,.. _, ,.........., 11400 649-2812 C.M. Cell Ed aft 5PM 845·7957, 8'0·8931 S ALES P/tlme auto fencing. Loweat price KINGSIZE Firm bad & Gorgeou1 Turklah ... a•-~--,,_,.,. ........ 500/080 I Iva., pltlme, atralght ... guar. Jim or Ken eny. 1150 ,._._,_, II•~ '71 Kawl KH500, '82 cale .,._....,vv. -' home. m •In t de Ivery lery Celt· Jim Cenger lreme, alnt. cond. . .,...,,_ ruge. --------~is~a~ ~ olor ;:.~· 11..:983-55oo • time, 849685. 857-8734 ''· .. , .... , ... ~Jl!I!!!!......... ~'::1'!: C::::/:'~.~::: !~ ............ !!!¥ 1~~. ~! ~.~ =iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil mm. AIDT c..., .. I Sot• bed, loveaMt, con.. Deelgner Wllpepet & ... .i "" m. k • 0 fl er . R I c k 75 Dodge Ven, ldnt cond.. I I I •• L I R E I H 11 • Imm IC S8 1 0 0 i:_,_ Need Apolo-tral~ er. L.J_..t llJJI lbl, end tbl, c abinet. F1brtea. S5 a up. •••••••••••••••••••••• 8734640 13.700. AM/FM 1tereo. .. 730-1939 .._ _.with 3 ""' min ...... ";'I:-~••···••••••• 1250. 157-8964. 720--0739 -_ ... • •90 KawMMI ICX250 · ,,_ Ur•. 540-8332 --------SEARS & ROBUCK & CO. p;;"~ ~··-Bcti , Call New Vlvll1r enlarger & DIVORCE SALE _. -Salee--~ JI/.'!!! 11,, Needa uleaperaon tor TV. ., ___ .;..,. 73 • Ian•. $299. Alk tor 8r1en Cullom Sot• Oflg 11400 Sliver I cryat•11 cendal•1• Everything for bo1t buff. ~M~.;1equlPf1*11 I ,.,., Jla'-' llH 860 ~.Beech Blvd. •• ••••••••••••••••••• vacuuma, sewing me-':W~ii.,,iii,.,i....,...iiiiiii.iiiiil et 77$-8191. • bre centerp ece. co• dera & ealloral Set. only, """· • ..,.,. """1-8351 •••••••••••••••••••••• La H1t>r1 '72 XJll, ldnt. lnvwa1merlt. chlnea, part-time. Apply In ~· now 1286. ~5365 I 4 5 0 . Se 11 S 1 7 5 . 9em-5pm. 1023 W. 11th '71 HOHOA. 750-F, Super WI llD Tm 122-1111 Leevlng country. Red w/ pe<aon: ,...... New Vlvller anlerger & .... llr I StMk 720--0739 St. C.M. 84&-0820. Sport, 1>111. 4 In 1 Keril• .. llD U1J 1>111 tni. Fulty loaded. New 24300 Laguna Hilla Mall lenl. $299. ,..., for Brien 8 000 111111 II IY'I tlrH. brks. S how car Laguna Hlna ..... Peel al 775-1191. $150. 720-0739 12 ............. ef hdr chrome. • orig Anything c:onaldered: --S5,900. 6411_.14 t E.O.E. ,.., ........ M•tc:hlng IOlld dlfk wood ..,...., ......, 1111 ...... -.n.1 mllHi r~~~~~nd .• M~lt 1977 thru 1980 IUUT We're ...itlng lo bulld 1 lllOM coflH, end tablea & l2Mllt ~l--1 If# ;:;.1&45 ea 0 r. ~ & llua 11JI SALES labor pool of qualllled commode. Aaatd c1bl· ••• ";'I:"'~•••••••••••• Salea Aepresentellve lo graphic arta PlflOnnel for Siert your darkroom to-net• & d r • • s • r a . 11 ,. ,.... ..... tf New 1982 Evlnrude 7.5 HP '11 -•aa lH ..••..............•.•• 11 k t th d1y! With• S...... 23Cll 831-1319 eva outboerd motor w/8 _.., •--•-call on reeder Id bual· on-ce wor n •pre· enlarging*'-· aaf961ghl lilHntl .... 1111. gea een Never ue:d 4500 mllH with 38 mo. K s.tee-Sefvlc».Leulng neN accounls for •<Mir· preaa irea. Al IHll one & Mera, electronic tlmet, Wrougnt Iron dinette Ml, l2Mlll 1875 'c ell Doug' werr. Like new. $2460 t 1 a Ing Mon-Fr I yeer'a expe<lence In~ vertou• HHI• & every heavy blaclt octagon top. 842_.9;0 lft llPM Offer. MUST SELL. •I hi or-. c-. I{)( (AR\IER 9am-5pm, Baa• & com: Mtllng, pute up, camera type of darkroom acce. 6 hi-beck chair•, lll!l!AS llL ~ ~, mlaslon. oom!*'y belle-ope<allon or plltemaklng IOtY ~nable. A• In xlnt $500/0BO. 831-1319 .,. N-12· Bo1ton Wheler, -.,-_..._-_-._-_-i.J-,.-{---4 ·2925 Harbor Blvd. l(_lL" lllrt. t.·~1W 1111. wlll treln. NHI IP· II neoeuary. Yoo mo.t be ~"'. w ... u ........ 9'18 $50. 7 739 lnfll1abte bolt & iww 16 -_, COSTA MESA ... ..,,,. ... • .,.,.. • '"' pearance & good llpelllng ev1llabl• to work on • ""'"' 7 58409 hp IEWINOe 11200 firm. •-Y.:'• II lll-21N ........ ... .. .... ..,.. eaaentlaJ. Apply Penny· aubltl1U1e or eaH-ln bUI•. only. 1500. 1· Obi bed: Malt/bx 1prg1. W1terteu 1t1lnle11 1tMI · · -1 •,..,_ '74 2002 air 4 epd ate C M ' • rlenca. Con11c1 Pereon· I 125. II 4 6. 8 3 3 2 . 842·2915 NATURAL OAS CYLIN· R~ 8 28 .. ~ ~home. WE PAY reo. xlnt con.d. I S.OOO. ~01 TOUI aaver 1880 Plecenlll Salary depend• on ex~ evee. amt mirrored dreaaer. cookwere. atlll In box, a...7oo7 ••••• •• ;;eet"•••••••••'---------· · · ·· HI US ~ . . ...,.... ·-1 ,,,__, 49~5882 MUT 11<4AlDA • SR111•n••y 11411. C.,. "'' 780-1390 311" frenkun Arepteoe, .. DEAS.S..,....Si.tfcw • 845-tll18 . TOP 1•• I•• 80 BMW 3201. BHut11u1 -n I .,_ -lralc• 0..t •••••••··~~.!·••••••••• 1 •....., IWlvel rocker ehllr c1et Iron. xlnt oond, bo111. 1100 •• · ________ ..,.. .....,. ••-Typing , S/H, aoma ·~ _J BURMESE KITTEN ....,.~ 1 · ,2.,,_. 7..,,. •727. 644-7007 24' 72 Clae1 A Winnie. F• ~•••a cond. Caahmer• color. ,._, ......... CfA ~· 1150 ~11 :!1... 0 Id. 5 0 . -vv-v x In I c 0 n d I I ... 0 ~ .... tux~ ............ 113,800 ,.. -.. ... • bkkpg AHi E•l•t• In-330 . Bay SI .,...,.. ..... ""'7 v .,...,.,.,., l!'IHrR _., '97 Evlnrud• 15 HP . . • ., . ~-..-vealmenl firm. N-port Coete MMe .... ...,.. ra55 _.1 13501080 540-11542 Of 54ll-4MeO llM"U•ll Of e OWi IMM $331. PMIUl'fl Canler locallon. Sen An Em ._ 1upNl'lllWlrookerctlllr. When you••• our 876-47&4 ·73 oMCong.OWMr,xlnt P111111/--8J3-4209 t1H •S1.CIS1ll(MWIWI Joaquin Oii Co. Contect ~';••••••••••••••••• 2 Y • • r • o Id· I 1 5 O · wettl' .... cookware d.. cond., gd mlleege, fully 2480 Hlrbor Blvd. 81 3201. 111 optlona, ex-J 1me1 Krueger ......... Pll 875-4805 monetratlon. No oblloa-... ,.. ,.,,., N4f equip. 124.950. COSTA MESA ceptlonal cere 11ken. 1979 Mezda RX7• 5 epd, &44-1860 YALITPlll• Mpupe. 546-1396aft4 2R«:llnerCllAl<a tJonorhlQtipreeeureF0t ••••tt•••••••••••••••• 1131-6249 MM* l mm1c . $1 3 ,950. eunroof.AC.AM/l'M More 1am1lles are getting saw:~Appty In Golden Reer\9V9r puppM!a. =.: ~ ~· Cal IOf eppt, 651-98511. . 22• ~'!'1~r~MI· _1'_al#n ___ fi_a_n_/_l _l 'li-f-4 M .. 1Ql 496-4523 c eaH lie• 3 1. 000 m I. lhe camping 'bug this N pho u AKC . 90 + ch•mplon1, Memb1rehlp In Rancho hog. hull. Every option. •••••••~••••••••••••• 1---------1111 .. 1211 $8500. 875-2838 year 11 you ha~e a cam· P9f10n. 0 -3~• ea •· home rel ud titter. RATTAN Dinette HI w/ Sen Jo1quln Alhlellc 0'91t oond De9endlbte Tent triller. f1mlly llze. WE llY 35,000 Ml . LOADED per I hat's not gelling Thur• =· 1E S M. 831-8984 glH• top & 4 match'g. clut> for lernPy. Reg $300, 9 cyt tnt>rd '1ao h/p Her· good condition, lot• ol IWI •••• 1sr OFFER Of ...,,d 1111 used, sell ol now with 8 IN · chr1. Never bMn u .. d. Hll for 1260 lncludH culH eng. Full lnetru· room end .. lrH. Clow _.. s11,9000WNSCARI Class1fled Ad 3333 w. Cou1 Hwy, ••I• Jlat• 1111 S300 080. 55'-0798 ttlMlef I•. 976--0237 rnentation end redlo p1u1 price). 997..-79 119 11•1 Deya 840-0783 ..........•...•.•..... Sult• 2. N.B. ···'·················· INTERAAMS MK. x dock •P•C•. Com~I. tm TIAllD ..,.. 840-9451 ~~.~ ..... ~! ProfH1lon1lly Cu.tom •um mer pkg. 145 O, 3 Burner 1tove, 20 1111. 1981320l8MW. Excollent < t ___ co ___ > __ , > WANTED ( c---<05----) ) Newspaper Carriers for ~outes in Huntin9f on Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach •Good Emaiatcp • Super Trips Great Pt l&c1 CALL CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT ......... 842-4121 Bulll Rifle. HMvy Barrel 876-7474 •• ,., tank. •Ink. tebl•, cond, 18,000 ml. AM-FM .. •• lmR'9 .22·250 with Redfleld for S•I• or tr•d• for •~box. 5 gel, propane cHHlt•, eunroof, 1lr .,. ~• 3•-9a Scope. Coat S1 . ptcttup true*. 18ft TrMIUll tllnk, gd cenvea I tW-. conditioning. 101ded. Evert 8und1y, tam-3pm. 100 SaoO. 1700 Firm. Jeff walk lhru. very good 11111• UHd. K•PI Inga· Aeklng 114,100 or take Oreng• Coaet College. 842·1570, 558-0440 cond. 11,100. reg• when not In uH. -----""-"'===="-• over p1yment• of 1374 F1lrvlew & Arllngton. Electric: C02 beer cootet 551-1233 Of 993-97411 SlffPI 8 comfort1bl•, -llYll mo. Call befOf'• 6 pm. Co111 Me11. Admlaelon ........ ,.~ Bud 9'c pt111 other JCtru 11395. T d II f S VICKI 521-1143 tree to buyue. Seller on ... -·1"""'100· 9'7 ... ..:.... Wiii rent, ..... °' T.O.P. 997..-7t . op o .,, or porll ---------• Ree«vatlonallnfo. on lap. • ..--on your 20-28' N.8 . po----------1 Care, Bug1, Campere, Ci-' 1111 656-5880 LtYI llll.. wer boa t. Bry•n SlrMmllM 25'. Awning, 914'•, Audi'• .. r.: ................ . Helium Bouqwtl ~ 1173-1388 ot tl0-1324. A/C, 811 jldl1, 2 dr. re-Aak IOt UIC MOR 73 c:.prt, reblt eng., MW Eltat• Sele, moetly furnl· red frig, ...... l\ltcl\,:.;: • .._ bf'ek•. JClnl cond. l l800. ture In good condition. Periec:t for any oocUlon :!8 21\t f~. BAYLIHEA :'J:;.'::9:;~ cl\u: YIUIW... 840-1143 en. 5. -..,_,,,----.... -----.- eome •ntlque1 Phone OrHt for Mother'• Dey. Vletorl•. "Y brtdg•, 13 000 ~15 11711 8Motl Bfvd. 0.ln• 1111 •••••••••••••••••!.'.' •• 641-31144 tn 1-'10AM' 873-4419• VHf redlo. b•ll l•nll . _09';,.....·--·--· -----1 HU~':!T~BEACH ...................... • ....... . 4:30-7PM. Kodak Co1or1>unt in.tam :ni~":~~1:;.°t~~To':: ... ,.., 1ufl -"'&-~ ..... . Eulbluff MoWlg Siiia q1mera 200. NMt new 8•8 tMa • An•••• Hll w•mwR•1 .. Etec. Oriti, T"ablee, 920 Ot oftw .... 4002 ...................... -llli9 I IR Lampe, BBQ smoker. ·m,,,u,.,... &porl*Cfillft ,.. pwr tloet. = ec:v~ = L•t• "'odet ToyotH, tNJ•f C •1 Anlq T•l•pl\one, PIO· • w .,, w/40Hf' JoMIOn .. .... body:,: llt VoM!a. ~ ' Vane. COntpat• HOUM of ''a;. :~r':e ':o;~.·~ •u•l:iafiiiiiuu :~10:.·=~~·!:!::~:; .... mYf nl..... Cell UI ~ ~ ~== · Clrc• 1'40. Liii• ri•w. 538-4563 tee. N1~ te 213 Of 1141111'7·2313 '~:S ~t:· ~01 11ec111o ~. 11.0. w11111 Jiiiii!!!!!=:iii~ ~!1=11:1 ·n 4101E. suver t1t11•. 1 Lid~· ....... · c en 754-1030 da or 84M<tN 21' M' T• oww loM lllMIW I-1a;.;.;;;.;,;;;~~iii;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii:ll tllve Interior . llltao ....,.,,,.., ., =·__,;, ............... • • 1= I I ,. lfllna (IOfM new). Jel#l6.. -·· ""'" --· ,.. . ..-• ·~ • -CMMtte, vaee MY .... ry. 1flver, HovHl\otd ....... I 13-11116 TOHNEAU OOVER ·79 910: Top r11nn1no b~t oond. meo. Ooodl. ·-----...... Wl ... '"' ..... '11·'11 cond. Ctaen, .. r. ""'"" Mr. Ol.tggafl -...St4. ---------i ... ~'1•••••••• :::;:i.:r.e •••••• ~ ..._uted Pl ·-radio,• door.11,000 '714IO.K. atl~ .. ...._ man ULI TAKAMINE 12 etr!n MOTIYATID~ '-!!!~~1!·!!!!"'!!~ UIE>CAM I TMJCKI mttee. I Ow!W. IHIO. blue Interior. l tereo Set «tty Mey .. ..aPM. '3ff/8 "°MWOOd I C#. M .... ~ ooncs. ,;: OOMI '" °" CAU. '°" m-4Mt illft •. ouaetw! UMI ~ .... 2217 Herbor Blvd. Apt t321twemw.111·111 Ha...., t'7M1f1 ,.oreol\a UI enotne, ,_ ...... •16 210 OM Owner Exoetten1 OOnd. ttllO. F5. C M. ~-.__6.__ f H '. Good lfel\1 air, tr1r, apert. a... llOO. ~.oaulo UOIO Mr. Duggan -..14. -.... _..., ,_,_ lftOtOr .... • .. ..... • .. IOll • ••HD ~" '11 HOlll 1.1. Ofte of •1"!-1 -,,,_,_, Mii 1t .. ii1~t2t' 12 _.._,.. ... kVO tl\e I I edvoed 11 Cllldr9n t dolNe, ~ •• tti;x;::: ..... :;;;; ... ,., i.11 1 11 .__.... · 1tt0 HOZX, 2H, 5 epd, 11 pr · • mlto hun1tvr1. Ovon. 1A11model114191 .-0. er--1ebOt. Foci 111t y.-boot ................ ..,.... HUNTIHGTI>ft tlACff blUe, OL. ~ .ewao 000 r.1:'~ mltea. JClftl MOICW~ air oonct. '"· ~. w/otMI, 8200. tor--..., .. wltrtr. WCMTANT NOna! ...,..,, .. 1111 .... >OrlC ...-110.400. 0tf'10.;00 111 ~lp"41. ht•·•· Vloktbvro. fqlltl •• N//IO lldo 14. • ..._ TO MADIN~ ..-. ~Ml·1nl con't~•t ~A..-:! :.i:te Nol9MOcMI. blo~---•ltll In_.., Mr.,__ 1\191 ADVIRTlllM •I lftl .... 146-Hl1 Oflloe, ... .... ..._. -. w.......... t7W.O ~ff~·~·..... ......... .._ ' --·~ -..... ...,_ ---........... ,··-·········~-;iii&i-iiiiiiiiiiiiii Mutt Hll •II ltam• • flltlell. 1111., Ml-4121 Uk•""' 11'......,... In In .. __..-... 1• MCMNGll .......... T 0.llli•M T ..... ot1K "°"' Clll9 ............ tlld • i1llllfW ..._ To pleoe ~ ~ mot.,.._yJ1IO HoMe nm.-. w/l n11t 11pt1ot. =~~ ~.! ._..;.-.... .,... [11(1£11 bafOrw the ~a=•:f'.: ~·•"'t .. ,.,.,e'eHe&,boet. ~·:::,~=--= (IOIOl1) 1~ crto, , .. Int lllHl\lne, ..... _... oherfll, ~ 111..... = Oelly Plot antl~u••· tlH•••r•. •tHll =-•Dllk• __ m.,.. IT ~ ~ ...... • lutton oon•r•I •••toe CleMHled, 842<.&171 = ........ -..... . "'"'-...., ., .... ..... ....... .. ......... ., ..... ..... ..... ... dettl l110, ..... •f'r, ltl -dOOWMlttary ,,.,_,.. 11111 • tlATIM~Y 1• -•1·144t llen o"•rtt• uitleU 10 W ..,._ I tlU1atlHllHll lllCMHlep'? ..... .... .... lfllll.,.._~ ~-MIAlllttCll ...... 11 .,._.. ......... ..., .... DI Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurldl y, May e. 1982 ~.~!'!.l!fr.!!!! ....... ~.-.'!!.!~m~ ....... ~ .. ~~~'.!!'~!!4 ....... ~ ... ~~ .•..... ~ ... ~1.~ •••••• ~.-.~'!.!!'~ ...•..• ~ ... ~'!1.~!!!. ..•••...•• ~ ... ~.~~ ••••••••••• ~.-.!'!..~!~ ..•........ ~.-.!~'..~!~ ........... - ~!!.~!. .• !.~~f ~ ............ !.~~~ !~ .......... !.~!f !~!m. ..... !.~!f !~ ..... !. ... 1.'H!.rttm. ..... 1.~!t ~ ......... "-! ~'!ff ......... !!.t f.~m~{~' ........ !~~~ ~!!f!!~M!f ...... !!.!f '10 Mercedell 280 L COf\• 't3 MOB A STOAfO 'N HATCH8ACK QL n"' -.. ..,. "'... ~=w= .,. .. '11 MVILLI. Wtltt• ..... '7' L1gun1 Mlllbu 4 dr 7'T CUTLASS IUPAEMI V*ttbi. & 111rdto.,. AMI 13100, mint cond • wlr• f"ully lo•d•d. I 1800 a PUBL I c Ch1mpaon• edition. Low. ,.,.., """'oono. thtr lntlftot, 8terto c..-uC•llent body lnteflor, 8AO 'M racllo.L new 11ra1. ~hi•. nu Pt1ln1, cllrom., tale• ov., pym1 • 8u11rool 14100. AM/fM. U Nl/Offtt. __ 1 •ill Ill.I .. ue. H. 140·54211, Of lf\OIM Mil.a. MOO *ml llU.* 114 100 "'" IH·30•5 upllol • rbll engln• a Nt-1391 M3-At3' Nt-f010 720·219' 942-4153 T"" Of the llMf DrM In .vet • ~ "'°'• 14e.1211 1•1 ...... ...... --II 1111 ·n Sclrocco, S4100. fJt. 1177 vw. 1lr Oond. Aoof C4aut 1111 ee Bel Air• 1lrta1 rod. 1tyi41 In 1111• fully io.decl It itA 81.C: Sllv9t otua, 77 M08 Convwttbta, ldnt •• '/.!~••••••••••••••• NOTI c E cell cond A•k fQr JQr· reok. t i er.a OH••ll•, llft.U •••••••••••••••••• .. •• AMIF.M ettr.o ceH. c. bMi.lty ~tow mt!ill-blua IHlhar 1unrool cond. Going abroad. 1080 COAOLLA Ol)( den 7152·t'TSO. vwy clMn U480 oeo ........ '72 tllO ~ fac:1 oond llnH 12 000 WIOU1 I g• 2 to ohOOH from. ll'nfnaeut•t• Ht-8001 l.!~~/btt otr 157•1751 *.-J SILL* OIVOAC! 8Al·'12 vw ... a-*3 HH •v9fY oonce1v1ble lo orto mf, l 21001oeo: 111100 s.r1oua0 caller•. It ll72ll(l37183) Ju•I I p 11~• OH, w HAT A c A A 1 WMttlll option lnoludlng auto. £Yel i tt.1021 13 1~8 naad r•ll1bl• party 10 '12 H I ... HI -e•NKRlfTCY M ........... n·,·. new .. ~· ,.newtnt '10 8CIAAOCO, 21K ml, tren• pow11 l tM rlno m1ka 1mall monthly Xtnt cond ro1ny 11.tro ·~·""••••••••••••••••• AulornetlO, budc•I ..... n ..,,_, r • • A/C, ,\M/,M o .... pwr. pow~; bri kaa, pow•; Cintt#t HIO t977 Chev Monz.a 38,000 pmta Noold oontrectlto 15800 494•7978 71 PIMllT MPll and m«•. (0138211 Juat xlnt. Saorltlca 12600. bOOl ter •quallu r , 4 Miii Pow.r moonroof ••••••h•••••••••••••• orig mllM Auto, 11r, new •Hum• No back pm11. --Kept In 11orago tor 2 no1d t•ll1bl• party lo 831-0074 1pk,., C1tm. wlll1. Im· a lone oelnt ONIM con' Ill ft .. m tlrM At~ o<* duo . A1k for Aou Ill II IHll Y"fl. 011111 c ... n. many mlk• 1mall monthly SALE ·71 CONVEATIBLE mac. Tu•overlle.U12. trol tlh Wll,MI 110,.~ W h d 1 12.200 145-IOtS ah 8 842·.UOO. 558-10011 Turbo dleMI, Alt.a red ••tr11 '305 or b .. 1 of· pint1. No old contrao1• to Xlnt runn1no OOf\d, 2'T mot . tH·OHO or 1•"· '"I'* Interior & u :n :~eNae~°a ~ie~ ·11 NOVA Cpo , Mao Wiiia. Proto LIM. ~;~~'"li84~11J l•nk ftlf H3-2l02 ~·~~~~ .~0 ,b:~\Po"'.'! ... IOO. 001-1381 t7t-1300 Mr. o.wnpor1. wlr• wllMI•. (tttlH). CNwolettl IUIO, VI P/8. MUii .... -------- ' 873 7388 l'ot1ti • 11$0 842·U00,5&e.1008 'llnf....., ·11vw ,a11baok,naw Thl1 01twlll boaoldto $1.2oooeo.s.e.272.f I WANTED ...................... Proto LIM II ohlo wlll _... ctuoh I rune Wf(y good !t'!.... 111c11, ~t~1 ... M.•• It··~·,, ,,.1 1073 450Sl, xlnl cond MEISTER A v IN 1>41 .... dto All optlon1, •Ir, •t•r•o. l t260 Don MO-~ , ..,,..., .,.. "" ...,... '" ., TO BUY new paint, con11e11lble & 77 Corolla, 5 •pd, 4 dr, thl hlOheot bidder! Ota· 11.tnroof, roof rack , bettor · .. ••• ••••••••••••••••• hudtop. to ml, $17 ooo POllSOME/'UDI air, em/Im, 40,000 ml. 181 demdon•lt1tofl, uNd than ~~~3,,200 Vtln Im 79 COUGAR XR·7 UTI llHL contact Joo 1176 2968 01 " S350010BO 847-061• car1 in comr:ny cart. -141 •••••••••••••••••••••• W11'UM •MtlT IEU.* 673-0944 •383 1 Harbor Blvd dlO•yAthMrutFor1l5d•yMC•Mll0f!!; '15 VW a.-. S1200 or wlll #1 W•.... VW Spectal dacor Pkg w/ llEI 0111 a dtlll Orovo ·51 Co10111 cpo, lo ml, ..,. ..._ ddle 1 1 Com le 711 450 S L MorcedU •r 121<. •btolutlly Ilk• new, d•l•ll•I tak• b•l t o ffer . .. ..... .....,, 'M mn 21• = .. nt8for p •• WILSON FORD B hi S.lta-lemo•Lt11l11 .... 50 • .w.lraa 67,_ 1784 lll0-81411, "4-2825 _ 1800 W•tmlMWr Aw . • • 1111 of powor equip AMI 2:~~·0~ :i~·:~,1=~~=~ 114 131-2333 _.. BOB u .. ml= WE8TMIN8TE.A 115. 831· 55g FMll•r:·· wire wheal• 18255 BMch Blvd warranty, mint cond 80 PorachO 924 Turbo & I ~~~~,r~~~~.0;.~~~:1 ·~~.~~·;:~r.~tir':m~ 111• lll 1 WANTED ~1:~ ~!>·~:::'. r~~:~ Huntington Beach Many Htrll Cir phone '80 Poracha 024 Both door, n-bflkH & tlrM. lnt.12900/0tr. 142-30411 OVERSEMI OEUVEAY 111-1111 monlhly pmt• No old 142-1111 negol 133,500 Auume S C D r vee .. 1'9 t ct I N 9 ~ I•••• Call ore loadert T•k• over IH 3500. all ouo Turin WITHAM '13 BUG, xlnt cond, nlW ..,. .. "'" TO BlJY con ra • o ueumo o .78 Cutt Su too p11ymwn11 71•1825-1808 (w ork I e 7 3 • 1 4 3 4 . 1300 motor, I 1850 or back pmt• duo Aak lor ... pr-. • 975· 1128 Loa 842-4911 •fl 8PM m1ko offer. 882-0583 uaJ Ill 111 LlllllT UTI ~· Ro•• e 4 2 • 4 4 O O d • d · w 10 • 1 r • • 70280SL Claaak: Looks 75Porache914, 18,red,, ...u.. 56e-1006ProtoLIM . $4200 /boat offer orut. runa great S t8,I 5 epd, Kint •h•p•. &OK, ''U CEUOA ·ee vw VAN 1MI !!l~ -...... lll.llml ISO OAll Li1t1l1 11~ _8_4_o-3_9_•e ____ _ 5 O O or b 11 at o t 18 r $7500 645-0805 VOtY Sharp. $2500/080 v w Runa ~· """9 cMc:tt COSTA"MEi'A' of i.te modal, low rnllaa· T 1970 Old• Vlala CrulH r 072-2376 T4 Porach1 Targa. white. 839-8219 work. 942•997o 141 ••• ... AMl ~In Southern WILSON FORD ..... i977°MAAK0V..... Wgn, g pua, OOOd cond 73280 Super cln 1;;;: xlnlrNln1.S13,000 '88Toyola Corolla,2 dr,4 ·11gvweurunagood, • -I S..Ul lOdayt 182568each8tvd *llll'Slll* Sf1 00 759.g411. ner 7•K or10 m t New evee, 714·1197-4129 spd Run• good, $595 •1200 18111 Hunllnoton Beach Drive lhO Mark VI One o1 _54_0-_2_1_19 ____ _ Mich's S6,250 840-5311• 74 914 1 8, xlnl 15600 6•5·7578 7800 W9ltmlnlla. Ave e715.elN ~ ... t-!1.¥.'!!........... IN 1 M 142-1111 a k ind. Cutler EdHlon ·13o0c000ut1aaa Catala dle"42~ 72 300SE 6 3 842-t965 Eves •. ~ llll WESTMINSTER •7g VW Rabbll. 4 door. J-' .L Hll 2900 Hett>or ........ with leather Interior 1nd • ml, xlnt cond. <> One ollhe laslprO<luced 76TARGA,1ttnt,MUST •••••• ••••••••••••••• dleaef. apeecl, r.1e-•••••••••••••••••••••• COS'TAMESA •OllYfTTI S L '".. l 5 al t fil• .. ..,.,, lull ~ower Low mllea mpg, compl "'" rec 83,000 orig mt Xlnt ·72 TA-6. new paint, conv 893 7880 reo, 24,000mlMe.15500. '73 RIVIERA, xlnt. mecll. , ... llll HW 1112 (650 AR) Juet nled re-Opllon• 4950/bll ofr cond Fully equlpped ~4~~4~~~0rtg o wnr . top,lnt&redlela.Strono • 7 14 /&•1 ·3080 or cond.Nda.1omobody • • lllblopertytomeke 542.g213 tvem1g S 12 ,300 or l>UI otfer enq. & drive train S~OO 955-0730 E~. work . M ako 0 Ir . CAO '81 SEVILLE L~. glUI tc>p1, elc email monthly pml1 No '78 OLDS 88 DIESEL Con11c1 H A or Chris 'ID Penotlt 121S Rick 673-a8•0 '71 vw Super Beetle, eng •~goo I e 5o Sor. 4140172 t'T. old conlrecta 10 auume 34 mpg, loadod, •Ir• Bellin. 540-5821 otflce or While/black 19811\er. 300 638• 7880 work r.c:entty done, new C. ~'J''-ffJf Int min~~~~::~:~.:~ MJ 111,4111 No beck pmts due As~I Cleen 14395 548-2855 6•0-0"38 h~ p 5 d $28 500 Volklw111• 1110 1 h 1 1 ti t ,.,,., MW&ll -._,.J t or Ao•e 8•2·4•00. , " "'"" ~ h speeb , tad •• •••••• ••••••••••••• c ulc ' pen , re•. e c. •••••••••••••••••••••• dr toctta, 8 w~ ~II, 11, ~ 556-1008 Pro10 LIM '71 ILIS CITUSI 76 M81Ceaee 280· sun-t:'u ~I ~~.n·a~~~~"Pvt '7t vw W••tfalia '67 BeJe, 2150 0 c •POI ~2~~1~:,· o'::. w~~~3 OllTIMA'lm 000 ml. PP. 8 3-334 N~:b~~Jt:cH '78 Mark v Certler I $800 54>3982 -~~~,c~~~c~~~~. ~:~J~· Ply 213 456-5289 c .. ,., temps atereo cull om Iv m90. OUIU.ll! 1979 SEVILLE DIESEL. tU-ffll Moo~roof, loeded, Kini "78 Olds Cutlus Supreme 639-790611\/e & wknds g Sf $2500 Cufl, eaaume Int n°ew tires, new ,72 vw Buo. oood cond, We 1pecl1llio In laHH 33K mllM, wntto w/ rod cond $'1'260 833-1290 compl loeded wit-lop lloJ/1 loltf 1 paymenll of S 189 per ehocke, new electrlcel, S 2 3 0 0 I b •at o fie r . lor the bu1lno11 ex.cu-',!.~rk,uphtrokl •• _i:~•tr~c' fmulor~ ·~!,. Md,o .. n}t~• Carl,oa".9,oF~f. Llncoln '70 Merk Ill, 82, 9757.5000·5 t3m01 Aaklng $3700 73 MB 450SE, sun1001, lo ••••• ••• ••••••••••••• mo Belence S8700 faat Won't 1111et 12699 "•2-4510 blwn 1 & 2. Uva & proftlllonll. -· 8 -....,., "" ,.,.. .., ' mt, S750Plbost ofter "IO llR ,.tt-lt•a Call 831•8017 .,.. •--e llllttitll ror1, crulM control, roe-A/C. $24 . e.t5·3e34 OOOortolna1mlle1 Sharp 646 5477 EA IN U.S A ~ • ...... -· llnor peaeongor ... t r•r I Aun• oreet Mull Hiii '68 Old• Convert Loeded · fY"?v' r , A 0\ /LR '6• Bug, nu ang, bllkH. '11 -• If ... 1112 w indow d eto ooer. 4 '80 CHEVETTE 4 dr, AIC, • $11150 545.9744 ollolnel paint. Dependa'. MQ 9142 \Lil \J\.l\.V c ·7:nv:,,f1°.n."f~1~ci6o~11~ tnterlor Port paint & OllYUTllU 01•111 whaal dl1c brka. Orto I ~0·m~~;F~~I~ ~1·~0 '78 Continental Town bte Irena lntr. & top nd •••••••••••••••••••••• jY'llJ .S ~ g ood con a 17500 body $1775 661 ·3982 Every xtra, llke new. ... le 1 .... 1 owner. SI0,500. Lie. OLD 54s.2951 Coupe. orlotn el owner work Muat ucrlllce lTTEmH ~ -l~./l\...C 640-3215 dys, 720-0303 '64 VAN, 1835cc. t2V, 644-4643 NABER~ AAT 815-1188 Mua1 sell $84 75 $850 firm 5•5-9428, e•• •" OW•E•S eves Jackie auper dill Irena. s1900 ·et vw Fulback Runa '75 Monte Carlo, clean, 759-89•4 33 ______ _ • n c O\to 11 ••U"" 642-7018. 646·1805 0ree1 $1300 (~ \()I( ( \ P'/B , PI S $1950/0BO ·79 Veraa111ea. IO ml moon 79 Cullus Cruiser Slat TONNEAU COVER '71 lllUfT day 575•2315 ~I J JI , To place your message 548-0812 won. s4oo below whist F G 1 8 2 d 1 d /1 ·11 v •N 1 before the rt fully loaded $8,500 lls M s, I t S11Nr• 9162 oor, 'r con , am m " new •no . al /iH Jtl ••iv.,• *PVT PARTY need• auto 546-4388 prl<'.e very ctn, prleed to Nevtlf used $75 •••••••••••••••••••••• cassette new clutch German p art1, needs I 1111 IQ 1 "',"'"''•oil> 11• 111ad1no publte, for approx 1150 Must 5811 $3800 552-t8t8 Marla 631-77971\1 mlj Sale1-Serv1ce-leea1no S t950 or best o ffer slloht bO<ly work. 12900 Clean, run• greet, Sl500 phor1e run well 640•2776 '74 Mark IV Sliver Anntv Sl.Du.lCI 631 -7958. &42-70 18, 646-1805 8'7-5276 _ Daily Piiot mdt Cherry cnnd 1011 • ~ Clas11tM!d, 642-5678 •32so 515' 1"45 " I I • •• '" . .,. Ill •1 1111111 Want AO lleip7 Find what you wan1 in SELL Idle Hems with• ded • • , · .. 131·2041 41M141 642-5678 Dally Pilot Classifieds Daily Piiot Class4fled M ,--------• --------- 0 A TlAS CHRYSlB..Pl YMOUTH 2929 Hdrbo1 ~ 1' r' l<I MP-..t lei 546·1934 J l>IOCkS soulrt •ii ~an D""l" F '"ew.iy C'll Haroor Blvtl Complele body ..,t,op SalP'> SPrv ce Parts Service Depl open Monday th u f. Jily ' JO A M 10 'i 10 p M and 8 A M •o 5 P M on Salur J,1f IUCH IMPORTS 84S Dove Snee• Nl•wport Beach Tel 752·0900 Call us. _,e·re the soec1a''"'' lrn Alla Romeo Peugeot, Saab & Maser at 1 THEODORE ROllHS FORD Modern sale!\ service parts body. pamr & t11e depls Compe1111ve rates on lease ,f, c11111y renlals 2060 Harbor Blvd . Costa Me511 642-0010 or 5-40-82t I .. G) JOHNSON & SOH UHCOlN MERCURY 2626 'Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-5630 57 Years of f11endly lemrly 'erv•Cf! Orange County s oldesl Lrn· coin-M ercury dealeri.h1p • SOUTH COAST DOOGE 2888 Harbor Bllfd Coslt Mesa Tel 540--0330 RV servu:e speclallets. custom van conver11ons NEWPORT IMPOITS 3100 W Cout Htghwav N1wport Beach 6"'2·9405/540-1764 Th• F1rrari He11dquarte11. • CLASSIC AUTOMOltLIS 785 Newton W•y. Colla MIN Ttl 831·1303 ••JAGUARS OUR SPECIALTY" >CK 120'W140'1I 150'1/!-Typea a.... -S«vtoe -AttlOtatlont Off PllC*'llle betWeen 1tth & 18111 In eo.11 Meal Tel. MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IH THE BOXES NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove S1reet Newport Beach Tel 633-1300 Al the tmingle 01 Jamooree MacArlhur & B11s101 behind V1c1011a S1ation Sales Service Leasing & Parts We make great Cleel'I' 0 HAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel S.0-9100 Orange County s Larges• Cadillac dealer Sales Service Leu· tng tD DAVID J. P'HILLIP'S IUICIC-POMTIAC·MAZDA Sale'> • SeNtce • LeaS1ng 24888 Ahc1a Parkway Laguna Hill& 837·2400 G CHICIC IVERSOH P'ottSCHl-AUOl-VW 415 E Coas• Hwy Newport Beach 673-0900 The only dealershrp 1n Orange County With these three great make'I under one roo f' • ALAN MAGHOH flOtitnAC·SUIA.RU 2480 Harbor Blvd , Coate Mesa ial 549-4300 Sal", Servlc•. Leasing 'Mr GoodWr1nch · • O•ANOI COUNTY VOLVO 10120.0irden Grove Blvd., Gatd•n Grove Tel. 530·9190. Elfclu•lvely Volvo to cover ell your Volvo r.qulremenla . Ntw•UMd•Sale••LeHlng•Parta•s.Mce•Body Sl'lop .1 Fr.away cloM In thl heart of Otange County at Garden Grove Blvd. & BrQOkllu 1. G 0 IOI LOHGPRI roMTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange County s otdellt and largest Pontiac dealership Safes. Service, Pans SAIL CHEV•OLET 900 Soulh Coast Highway Laguna Beach "ca.<ry'1 .............. ,.., .. SALES HOURS Mon ·Frt ~7. Sit ~5. Sun 10-4 4S.·1131 546·9967 0 SAMT A AMA DATSUH 2001 E 17th Street. Sai\ta Ana Tel 558-7811 Your Or1gln11 Ded1catAd D1tsun Dealer 0 MIRACLI MADA We've moved! Our new location i. 1425 Baker Street. Costa Mela. T•I. 545-3334 Stop by & v111t our br1nd new lhowfoom end Me why we,. the 11 Mazda dealer ln SoYlhern C.llforn1e. Sal11, S«llloe, Perts a.nd Leasing . • AMAHBM MAZDA "cw, o.c. .... h4w ... ,,.. ....... L.-. c:.t .. 601 S Anah•lm Blvd , AMN!m ee&-1820. Ju1t north of Santa Ana Frwy. on Anahelm Blvd. Call us flrstl "WE ARE HARDTO ANO-eUTWORTH ITI" • SADOLllACIC IMW!SUJIMU 28402 Marou1r'lt1 Pkwy., A-.y Pkwy. ult W. offer what no benk or 1u11 company can: t. E11p(tftly statfld, "10lt modern 11rvlc• I pwta dept.: 2. One of the Souttlland'1 moat ••perlenceo Ml• I teasing staff: 3. Ellmlnltlon of tht mlddltman by IMling dealer direct. 831·2040 Mlallon v 496"'4Mt COST A MESA DATSUN 2&45 Hart>or Blvd Costa Me-;a TPI 540 64 tO Serving Orange County tor t6 year-; t Mile So 405 SUNSET FORD, IHC. (Home of w 1111e the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd Westminster Tel 636 4010 0 DGM LEASING, INC. 7'JIJ W 191h St CostaMesa642·1944 You re in lor a o;urprisP ill OGM Leasmg COHHELL CHEVltOUT 2828 Herbor B lvd . Costa Mesa Over 20 yHts Mrvrng Orange County• SalH. leasing, Mrv•oe Call 546-1200, spec1111 partt ltne, s.e-9400 body shop lino. 7S.-0400 0 •OY CAllVB llOU.S IOYCWMW 1540 JamborM Roed, Newporl 8"ch. ~ Sat ... Service, Parts And LHslng • DICK MILLH PIAT/LANCtA "Probably the low111 priced Flats tn Southern CaHtornla" (LOCalld 1 mH• north o! South Coatt Plata ntar M11n St ind Worner Ave In Senta AM.) 120 W W11r*. Senta Ana 557·2133 FOR FURTHER. INFORMATION, OR TO BE-~LACED ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAl~Y PILOT REP. 642·5678 I· ... --"--~ -·- • 1111111111 lllCI I flllTlll llllll THUR SO A Y. M A Y 6. 1982 O RANG E COUN I Y C A LIFORNIA 25 CfNl S Housing council, Valley • Ill fund flap . BY PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of'"tlle.,..., ""°' "•" The Orange County Fair Hou- slna Council may terminate Its contract with Fountain Valley because of a dispute over how much money il should receive from the city for Its services. The Fair Housing agency, which fields landlord-tenant in- quiries and housing discrimina- tion complaints, requested $10,- 000 from Fountain Valley's 1982-83 federal Housing and. Community Development Block Grant. The City Council hu authori- ied a $2,700 allocation to the group, however,~ on a ltaff report that computed this sum u Fountain Valley's proper share of Fair Housi~ Council expel'l.lel. But Gene -Scorio, executive di- rector of the Fair Houaing agen- cy, Tuesday told the City Council this sum is "woefully inadequ;te." He said he will urge his board Deir ............ _, ........ O"D_ .. YOUNG BEAUTY -Tajsba Thomas, 14, of Fountain Valley, has won the Miss American Sweetheart crown for Southern C.alitornia. The Fountain Valley High School sophomore will compete in the national finals during July in Pabn Springs. U.S. losing ground in Latin Ainerica WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. backing for Britain in the Falk- lands crisis is producing a back- lash in Latin America that could hamper American efforts to re- sist communist expans10nism in Central America. The hostile hemispheric reac- tion to the U.S . move Friday has raised doubts about American ability to muster broad-based support for its Central American policies. And the cri§1s has left the Un- ited States more politically asola- ted from its Latin neighbors than at any time in recent memory as virtually all governments from the region, spanning the political spectrum, have aligned themsel- ves with the Argentine cause. Moreover, what appeared to be a new era an U .S -Argentine relations a few weeks ago has given way to one of almost total alienation. In a protest note delivered to U.S. authorities Sunday, Argen- tine Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendei predicted that U.S . support for Britain will leave "lasting scars" on relations be- tween the two countries. But the political cost to the NATION NllS ANllYSIS United States would be dimi- nished if the U.N. mediation ef- fort ends the· fighting and leads to a negotiated settlement. U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar said Wednesday night both Britain and Argentina indi- cated interest in his proposals. One immediate beneficiary of the U.S. estrangement with Ar- gentina 1.s Nicaragua. Before the crisis over the Falkland Islands, the United States looked to Ar- gentina as an any in bringing pressure against Nicaragua's lef- tist Sandinista government. According to reports this year, the administration cited Argen- tina for a poesible role in a covert operation aimed at disrupting al- leged Nicaraguan arma ship- ments to leftist rebels in El Sal- vador. Any su ch cooperation now would aeem highly unlikely, par.; ticularty m View 01 tne entnus1- as tic backing Nicaitagua h lls shown for Argentina since the early days of the crisis. (See U.S., Pase A!) EPA doctoring attempt alleged Jack Andenon reporta that an oftialal of the En- vironmental Prot«tidb ~ oniered doctoring of techNcal papen IO that a cardnosen woWd be made to appear le.a harmful. Page A8. Washington's liner points What do Elizabeth Taylor, the fun lobby and rattletnake meat have ln common. They are all WMhiJleton auperlltlvt!9. Pace AlO. Soap operas losing suds '!be term •'*>ap open" hM a different mMnlna theH days: the maJo.r aponeon a.re the m&ken of tooth~, bttath lreahenen and denture Cl"Mml. P9Cf· • of dlrecton to refu.ee the $2,700 and dilcontinue service to Foun. taln Valley after the cu rrent contract expires June 30. Fountain Valley will diabune $322,000 in Housing and Com- munity Development funds du- ring 1982-83. The federal grant requJrea the city to have a pro- gram to accept housing inquiries and oomplainta. For the peat two years, this has been done through the city's comract with the Fair Housing Counctl. Scorio said that If Fountain Valley's contract la not renewed, the city will have to set up Its own program for handling hou- sing complainta. He claimed thla will ooet the city much more than the $10,000 requested by his agency. City officials denied that as- sertion, aaylng the Fountain Valley ataff operated its own Fair Housing program before contracting with the county or- garuzatlon and could revive that program Patricia Flynn. the city's hou- sing and community d evelop- ment coordinator, aaid 1 percent of the county group's 1981 calla came from Fountain Valley. She said the approved $2, 700 alloca- tion exceeds 1 percent of the Fair Housing Council's 1981 bud~et. City Manager Howard Ste- phens said the current staff would have to find time to han- dle the additional Fair Housing work if the contract is not rene- wed Noting that the city 18 prepa- ring a bare-bones budget for 1982-83, he said, "There's no way we could hire anr additional employees to do it.' Remaining block grant funda a re targeted for assistance In low-to-moderate income housing, rehabilitation of existing hou- sing. a new senior citizena center and the proposed Orangewood home for battered and neglected children Reagan endorses budget" J - ; Accepts Senate GOP version, hopes Democrat~ agree WASHING TON (AP) -.!:'res- ident Reagan said today a com- promise budget plan drafted by Senate Republlcans and endorsed by the White House "can put our ~ountry firmly on the road to t!\'Onomic prosperity" if congres- sional Democrats cooperate. At a question-and-answer seS- siln with reporters in the White Hl.'\Wle Roee Garden, Reagan said the i~w budget will "'continue to protect'' the basic benefits of Social Secl.&rity re<:ipients. The compromae budget plan was said to include $40 billion m unspeci- fied Social Security cuts and tax increases. Reagan was questioned on that point, but did not explain how the reductions could be obtained without lowering benefits. He did say that the savings "could come from a restructuring of the program," but didn't explain that in detail. The president said the answer on Social Security would come ultimately from a bipartisan commission studymg the system. The commission is expected to report by the end of the year. The president said the spen- ding plan approved Wednesday by the Senate Budget Committee would "continue to bring down the growth in federal spending . . . . It should reassure financial markets by sharply r educing projected deficits in the yea1 s beyond . . . . It will preserve our commitment to a stronger defenae." He said the tax increases in the budget compromise. totaling $95 billion over three years, would not impinge upon the mcentives he expects from the tax-cut pro- gram he proposed and Congress enacted last year. Standing with Reagan as he began the inlormaJ sesston with reporters were congressional GOP lead,ers. Reagan said the burden would be on the Democrats to explain how they would refuse to agree to a plan that w ould redu ce budget deficits to $106 billion in fisal 1983. $69 billion in fiscal 1984 and $39 billion the year af· ter. Speaker of the House Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said this morning the Re publican spending plan ··provides for walloping defe~ expenditures and falls to correct the ineqwties and excesses of the Reagan-Kemp-Roth tax bill. At the same time. it propases deep cuts tn Social Security and other vital programs."' The plan, he said, "retains some of the major defects of Reaganomics." Earlaer, Senate Democratic (See BUDGET, Page A%) B~itish won't withdraw Daze of judgment FV parents seek help in dispute By ne A11oclated Presa Britain vowed today to conti- nue military activities to regain the Falkland Islands while ac- cepting U.N. proposals as a framework for future talks. An Arge ntine Foreign Ministry source said the British position ruled out a diplomatic solution, for the moment. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told the House of Commons in London that Britain accepted U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar's pro- posals for sett.linR the conflict as a "framework" for future talks, but said Britain will "continue with our military activities." ~~ ~~=:) Decisions. Decisions. Deciaions. Appellate Court Justice Robert Gardner has made plenty in local and state courtrooms since 1938. Now that the Coron.a de1 Mar jurist ia semi-retired he's decided to apply his wit, memory and ~h obeervations in an editorial column for the Daily Pilot. His commentary bas made him a popular master of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he has spent 62 of his 70 years. And he's well published on such topics as juvenile jurisprudence and body surfing. He starts his column in Sun- day's Daily Pilot, r~alling the thunderous arrival of another Harbor Area celebrity. Some Fount.am Valley parents are tr}ting to enlist the city's help in an argument over the Foun- tain Valley School Distnct's plan to r eorganiie its grade level system City Attorney Alan Burns said the city has no legal obligation to e nte r this dispute, and City Manager Howard Stephens rec- ommended that the city not get uwolved Perez de Cuellar refused to make public his peace plan. but informed sources said it included a cease-fire, withdrawal of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falkland.a area and appoint- ment of a U.N. administrator for the islands while negotiations resume to determine their future. The plan reportedly takes no position on the thorny sover- Kindergarten day extension approved But Councilman Fred Voss, a former school district trustee, as- ked the city staff to prepare a letter endorsing the parents" call for a school district study on the environmental impact of reorga- n1zat1on. which begins in Sep- tember. This letter must win the approval of the city Council be- fore it is sent. School district trustees decided in February to add kindergarten through fifth grade schools and middle sc h ools (grades six through eight) to the c urrent kindergarten through eighth grade structure. eignty issue. , Britain said Wednesday it was working with Secretary of State Alexander M. ~g Jr. on a plan from Perei de Cuellar that in- cluded an early cease-fire and withdrawal. But the ideas were never spelled out and the latest statements clearly indicated more fighting was likely over the South Atlantic islands that Ar- gent~na seized from Britain on 4'PrU 2. "It would be too easy to say no military activities duri ng negotiations," Mrs. Thatcher said. "What would happen? We (See FALKLAND, Pase AZ) STATE Huntington Beac h City (elementary) School trustees have ordered school officials to stretch out the day for kinde r- garten pupils in an experimental program at two schools. The pilot program will be tried for a year beginning in Septem- ber at Kettler and M offett Schools. Kindergarten students in all Orange County public schools presently a ttend achool 180 min- utes a dav. .. Childn!n in the two classes in the experimental kindergarten program would be in achoo) from 240 to 270 minutes a day. School Board President Gary Vidal snipes at Brown Senatorial candidate Gore Vidal calla Governor Brown a "political corpee" in Chicqo 1peech. Daily Pilot editor Tom Murphine repona on Page Bl. Smidt empire liquidated The em~ of C. Arnholt Smith, who once con- trolled Air omia, the .san Dieto Pacltel. a tuna cannery, real estate and taxicabs, .. DO more. Page m. 'Fiddler' bu wide appeal 'DMt •DDMI of 11ncldlts GD tbl Root" the DOPUlar' mumml bliCk In Laa MIN-... ~ Pac9 C8. Nelson said the program will be evaluated at the end of the year to determine if it s hould have wider use. He said the extra time will al- low children to receive additional classroom instruction and get additional preparation for rea- ding. Children attending the exten- ded kindergarten class at Kettler will be tested for maturity. No very young or very Immature students will be selected. At Moffett, the youngsters will be selected on a random basis. The difference in selection will pennit a broader base for evalu- ation at the end of the year. school officials sairl INDEX Devon Dahl, a spokesman for the parents, said the group is appealing this action under pro- visions of the California Envi- ronmental Quality Act. The distnct filed a statement saying its reorganization plan would have negligible impact on the environment. But Dahl claimed the reorga- nization would result in addi- tional traffic, air pollution and noise. He said it also would affect the cr ossing guard program, which ls operated by the dty. The parents are scheduled to present their appeal to the school board tonight. At Your Service Erma Bambeck L.M. Boyd Ba•new A4 B2 A8 Ann Landen MOY1ea B2 C8 C6 A3 Callf oml.a Cavalmde OW fled Comics Cromwonl De.th Nodoe9 l:dit.orial lllnwtalnment Hcc'OICOJ)e C6-7 A5 B2 Dt-8 D2 D2 D3 A8 C8 B2 SPORTS Mutual Funds National New. Public NodcM SJIOl'D Dr.Stelncrohn Stock Marketa TUMlion n...ten W•ther Wctld Newt CdM clincbes title Ile B8.B8.D3 Cl-4 B2 c:t a C8 A2 A3 Corona del Mar clinched at leMt a tie fot the S.. V1ew ~ bwbell chams*nblP· Pap Cl. ;\ monumental achievement ahoWd be hanwtn.u\I. The people would~ rwnaln under the heel of the invader while the Arpn- tlnm lncreued their ectJvttt• on the mainland, lncreaaed their 1uppliee and reeervee ln order to attack u. et thelr will." Mra. Thatcher .. id the U.N. propoeala came with ••no apeclfic detail•" au,ched but linked a ceue-flre with Argentine with- drawal from the lalanda, a buic British precondtUon for a truce. But Mn. Thatcher aaid It wu "likely" that ArgenUna wu aee-- klng a cease-fire without with- drawal of its troopa from the is- lands. "That would be a very evident ploy to keep them in possession of their ill-gotten gains. We are ~ right to be very, very wary of it," she said. Meanwhile, no new militar y action was reported in the South Atlantic battle zone Wednesday. Argentina drew the last blood ~ Tuesday when one of its planes fired a missile that set fire to the British destroyer Sheffield, for- cing its crew to abandon ship, and a British Harrier jet fight.er * * * • • • WU ahot down and the pilot kil- led in an attack on or\e of the J'alkland alntript. The Bridah ao'!'_enunen\ aaid at lea1t 30 of the Sheffield'• 270 crewmen were kllled, and aov- ernment 1ourcea 1ald 57 more men were mJNln8 or wounded. The shattered hulk of the de- 1troyer wu reported •till afloat Wedneeday. Two Argentine 1hlp1 and 1 Chllean craft continued the search eaat of the tip of South America for about 350 aallora missing from Argentina'• only cruiser, the General Belgrano, which a British submarine tor- pedoed and sank Sunday. The Argentine government reported the rescue of 680 crewmen. Press Association, Britain's do- mestic news agency, said two Argentine submarines were re- ported operating in the 200-mile war zone both nations declared around the Falklands, but it said the rest of the Argentine fleet was sailing back toward the mainland coast. * * * .. U.S. POSITION SHAKY ... The Falklands debate also may have s trained relations between the United Stat.es and Veneruela, an American ally in Central America. At an OAS foreign ministers meeting here last week, Vene- zuela captained a successful ef- :; fort to delete from a proposed resolution a laudatory reference ' . to Secretary of State Alexander M. HaJg Jr.'s mediation effort I • More significantly, aft.er Haig announced U .S . backing for Britain, Venezuela called for a "reorientation" of the OAS to ensure Latin American -a nd not U.S . -interests are protec- ted. Venezuela and the United States cooperated closel y in opposing El Salvador's guerrilla ' movement and in promoting an evolution toward democratic rule in that country. It now aeems li- kely Venezuela will find it more difficult to 1upport U.S. polici~ in El Salvador. Mexico, Ecuador and other countries also have publicly cri- ticized the U.S . position on the Falk.lands. Even before the Onited States staked out the pro-British stand Friday, Haig angered the Latin Americans in his speech td the OAS foreign ministers meeting 10 days ago. Argentina requested the mee- ting under terms of a Western Hemisphere self-defense treaty but Haig, in effect, told the del- egates that hemispheric backing for Argentina's strategy could actually prolong the conflict. BY ITEVE Mi'IUld.L . Of9e0., .... 1Wt Former Oran1• County 1upervl1or Alton ATitftl thou~t ht1 1ood ftiend Eu1en Maler-Krle1 deaerv~ aome epedal for the 15-foot monument ha c:reeted for the dty Anaheim. Alter all. Allen reuoned, vialt.on to Peanon Park In Anaheim'• downtown have enjoyed the atone 1tatue of Madame Helena Modjeaka for nearly -47 ye~. Maler-Krie1 of Lacuna Beach created the 1tatue of the great P.oliah-born tragedienne in 193& with funds pro- vided by the federal Worka Progreet Admin11trat1on. The monument wu dedicated that September with the usual hoopla -an eight-piece concert orchestra and a lot of important d!gottarlee aaying nlce things about the statue and, of coune, the unveiling. · Alton Allen attended .thal ceremony nearly a half century ago with hia artist friend. "They didn't give him any kind of a citation at the time," Allen recalia. "Furthermore, hit name haa never appeared on the monument." Allen thouaht the oversight 1hould be corrected. He callee Anaheim of ficiala and offered to pay for a plaque to adorn the statue 11 the dty would 1ponaor another ceremony. They agreed. F.arlier this week, Anaheim officials met in the tree- lined park to honor the aging artist. . . Allen, who was a county supervisor from 1963 until 1971, said h e and his long-time friend had a good chat following the brief ceremonies. "I wanted the ceremony to coincide with his 85th birthday in January, but the plaque didn't arrive in time," Allen said. "He's been my friend for more than 50 years, and I just thought he deserved some recognition." Valley man g e ts 44 years Wood roofs nixed BURBANK (AP) -The Bur- bank City Council hae banned wooden roofs without fire- retardent treatment in the wake o f a $50 million fire that de- stroyed 50 buildings in Anaheim. The ordinance passed Tuesday covers only new construction ln the northern Loe Angeles 1uburb and won't take effect for a mon- th. • in r ape ca se A Fountain Valley man has been sentenced to 44 years in state prison for participating in the rape of ~ teen-age deaf mute girl who was assaulted by seven men aft.er being abducted from in front of a Los Alamitos pizza parlor. Orange County Superior Court Judge Alicemarie Stotler impo- sed the sentence Wednesday on defendant William G. Aguilera, 36, who wlli not become eligible for parole consideration until he is in his 60s. Daly .... ,._....., ..._d " ...... DE~ Y~D CEREMONIES -Long-time friends Eugen Mwer-Krieg and former Orange County Supervisor Alton ~en ~d in front of statue of Madame Helena Modjeska l1l Anaheim park. Maier-Krieg created the stone statue 47 years,,ago. Hunting ton back s use of housing funds .. BUDGET COMPROM-ISE • • • leader Robert C . Byrd of West Virginia said the committee ac- tion amounted to ''mortgaging plan Wednaday aft.er monthB of public bickering between Senate Republicans and the president. Prosecutor Jan Cummins had sought a maximum term of 121 years ln state prison. Book sale set The Huntington Beach City Council has approved the use of $1 .4 million in Ho using and Community developments funds throughout the city. 1 the economic future of the el- derly of this country ... to fi- nance the eronomic folly of the Kemp-Roth tax scheme" of across.-the-board tax rate cuta. "I hope you can pus it." Rea- gan told Sen. Pete V. Domenici, ,~N.M., the committee chainnan. by telephone Wednesday night after the comproml1e was worked out swiftly in private negotiations between admini.t.ra- tion official.a and Senate GOP Aguilera was convicted of 17 fe lony counts in connection with the assault on the 14-year-old girl. who had to testify in court by using sign language. On Social Security, Reagan assured recipients the committee budpt plan would not affect the 7. 4 pet'C)en t cost-of-living increase they are to receive in July. leaders. . Also convicted in connection with the attack were two neph- ews of ~ra, Randall Maldo- nado, 25. and Phillip Maldonado, 21. They were convicted in a separate trial and will be sent- enced Friday. The committee approved the A short time later, the com- mittee did give tentative ap- proval. Warmer days Co<Utal nong. becoming aoutllwesl 10 west 10 10 18 knoll by ahernoon with• wMl·IOVthwett swell running 2 to 3 feet Sktea over Ille oceen probet>ty wlll clear only partielly aller heavy morning cloud•. Morning iow cloude Gtve -r 1.0 ----------11ay llfternoone lodrf end F rtday. Temperatures Werrner with high• of 74 to 1a. Nlgtlt end morning low cloude t~ night and Fr1day, othenwlle felf. Overnight low• In the mid 80•. H l 9h1 Frldey 88 to 75. Huntlngton·N-port ., .. tem· pereturee renge from • high of 79 to a low OI 85. ~. from Point Conotp- UOn to the MeJCJcan t>orw end out 80 mllas; Ugnt ~ wlnde, ~w.tto~10to 11 knot. tNa .nemoon. Wwt to .out"-t twell• of 2 to 3 fMt. Pertly cbldy Ihle en.moon. U.S. summary Thundefat0<m1 tp<Mdlng from _t.,n K.anu1 lo ,,,. r .... Rlo Orende \/elley Pf~ up IO 8 ltlchet ol rain during Ille night In Oklahome. c:ontrlbullng to lhrM d .. lhl. Fl.uh floodlno we• reported In low-lying areH ol L1w1on. Okla., where Ille II lnchea of rain w111 meaaured A Lewton wom•n wa1 klll•d when a raln-leden auperm.,kel root eollaoaed Two other people died on taln·allcllened hlgllwaya In MP""• UUllM Sc:ellered ahowera •nel lllun- deratorma 1•0 from upper Mlchl· gan lhrougll norlhwMt llllnola 10 nor111Mel kentaa toct.y end lrOm eHtern NebrHk• to the TexH P~. Oklallome relnfell repona In· eluded ,,_. than 5 lnchee •t Ad• end 4 llldlM et Lawton 11ne1 Ron Felr elllet preve11eo over the rwt OI the oan1rel U 8 and much of the w..c. The Netlof\lll WHlhef ~ preclleted ~·and l!Wnd«-etonnt from the toulhem pllllne ttwougll the Ml11llollpcJI Velley to IN ""* Gr• Lallaa. Mottty tunny tlllet -• pr .. dloted !Of lh• Wa11. end from Aorldll to to11tnern New Englend. NATION HI Lo Pelf Albany 7t 40 Albuque 82 3& 12 Anwlllo 38 35 03 Atnevltle 81 49 Allente 83 60 Allantc Cty 61 48 Ausltn 79 66 911 Belllrno<e 72 44 Biiiings S8 43 Bifmlnghm 86 62 BlamMCk 61 37 B°"9 eo 32 Boat on 60 47 Brownavlle 84 78 Buft•lo 78 60 Bunlnglon 72 44 Cuper ~ 24 Cherlaln SC 64 Cherlaln WV 84 47 Charllta NC 82 S5 CheyenM 47 26 ChlcegO ea 114 09 Clnc1nn111 82 S3 C141Yelln<l 113 S7 Clmb11 SC 83 54 Columbus 82 50 081-Ft Wth 7S 61 1 72 Dayton 84 se Demw 54 32 01 OM Motn. 711 49 .74 Detrott 82 54 Duluth 61 40 .oe El PMO 71 ... . 81 ""'° .. .. Flegetefl 58 33 or .. 1, ... 54 30 Her110fd 73 39 Helene S1 42 Honolulu 80 73 01 Hou.ton 78 71 ~ 85 eo Jedlan MS ae 63 JedlMMle S2 54 ~City ., 60 1.91 Lee Vegae 82 se Little Rodi u .. Loul!Mla S5 57 Lubbodl 71 42 .Ot Memptlle ae .. Mllweullw 77 eo 011 Mpls-SI P 112 42 10 NUhvtlle H S7 M&fY$Yllle 89 St Monterey 88 NMOlel 85 New on.an. S7 71 Oelllend 7t S4 New YOfll 88 S3 Puo Rob'" 78 S3 Nor10lk 77 47 Red Bluff to 59 No. Pllilte 53 34 OS Olcle City 80 60 1 80 Om•h• 117 46 43 Redwood City 12 se Sec:remento 84 411 Sellnea 88 53 Oftendo 113 80 Phtledphl• 74 51 Phoenix 80 111 .02 Sen ~o 70 114 Sen rencleco 84 50 S•nta Barbera 114 57 Plltab<.lrgh 77 52 Ptlend, Me ee 39 Sent• Marl• 83 Stockton 87 48 Ptlend. Ore 70 •II Thermel 117 Provldeoce 117 44 Ukiah 114 RNgh 80 60 ~ 10 34 Sell Lall• 57 34 San Antonio 75 63 3.58 Bar11ow S5 SS Big Beer 81 31 Bltnop 111 40 Catallna 72 S4 S..111• 63 47 Shrewport S2 112 01 Sioux F• 511 « 10 Long 8Mdtl 8" 57 .01 Monrovia 88 Sii .05 MIWlilon 42 8t LAIUlt .... St P·Temp• 11 80 8t St• Merle se 48 .12 Sfloltetlt 113 4 2 8yr8CUM 72 411 Topeke 77 47 2 12 Newport Beech .. llO Ont.no 87 58 Pelm Springe " 58 Plludene 811 58 .04 Rlvetlide 88 55 San Bernwdlno 81 57 ' T UCIOl'I et 52 81111.Joee 78 52 TulM 77 83 1 12 ...,."'°" n eo Wldllta n u ua Extended .. ..:AWOMM!l' llyttle 87 Eur-.. e Fraeno l.anc:Mter 57 weather SOUTHERN CALIFO .. NIA COA8TAL ANO MOUNTAIN ARIAS -Patchy 18'9 nlgflt and . Temp«atur" eround the ne· lion eetfy lod41y renoed lfom 2t In c.oer. Wyo .. 10 71 In BrOWfle'lll. le,feue. .....,.,,. 78 Loe~ .. 80 ~ ~ oloudl-the I ooaat ot '*· LOC11 •ono 75 'California . .. lllf llPIRT gutty norlh•••I wind• In lllt mounlelne Salurdey. HIQlle Ill !tit COHtel 8/eH ran~Ofl'I tM llpPel' '°' .. the to mid '°' 1n1enc1 ., ... Low1 "to ea. ' M~nt•ln rMOft lllftl• M to 71. 1.owt 40e 10 io. eoa. I - ' ' at Valley library Officials allocated $400,000 to the Oakview residential area be- tween Warner and S later ave- nues and west of Beach Boule- vard for the upgrading of alleys and the replacement of det.erio- raung garages. The Friends of the Foun- tain Valley Library organiz.a- Uon will conduct a u.aed book tale Friday and Saturday at the library, 17565 Loe Alamos St. Friday's sale, from 7 to 9 p .m .. will be for members only. (Memberships may be •The Huntington Beach Las Olas Toastmistress Club la seeking new members to participate In Its program of conununication training. ~nyone·interested is invi- purchased al the door.) Sat- urday's sale, open to the public, will be (rom 10 a.m. to 3p.m. Paperbacka. will be priced at 25 cents, hardbacks at 50 cents and up. Proceeds will go toward 9Cholarships and gifts for the library. led to attend a Toastmistres.1 meeting acheduled May 12 at 7:30 p.m. at Mercury Savings & Loan, 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. More information can be obtained by calling 846-8155. A total of $300,000 was ear- marked for the rehabilitation of housing in the downtown coastal ~t1on. Amounts of $200,000 each w ere allocated for the Main Street Village and the Washing· ton Avenue neighborhood. Money at Main Street will be used for upgrading the pier. the improvement of parking condi· lions and to promote the eco- nomic development of the area. say officials. Our Season Opener • We've teamed up a couple of winning looks to ger your spring and summer off to a great start 100% cotton madras pleated walk shorts, and an all cotti:>n crew neck sv.tearer From our ladies de#)artment. naturalo/ I , .. ,HF ' IJispute threatens fine college system An unhealthy 1cbt1m be- tween~ Cout Community Col- i,. Dl9trict ldm1n1ttration and ita full-Ume matructora seems to be Jl"OWhla wider er.ch day. In a campwwide poll. Orance Coa1t College tn1tructon thi1 weet indicated by a large margin that they lack confidence in Chancellor Norman Watson and the district's board of trustees. The teachers alao voiced ob- jectionl to the manner in which a new Orange Coast College presi- dent, Bernard Luskin. waa selec- Led. This vote comes on the heels of another quarrel regarding the district's use of televiaion counes, offered through Coastline College, which Lu.akin currently heads. Four Orange Coaat College professors questioned the quality of television courses in a letter sent to officials of four-year col- leges throughout Calitomia. Officiala of the junior oollege district then demanded that the profeaors retract their letter and threatened legal action if they didn't. The academic senates of Or- ange Coast and Golden West Col- lege countered by unanimously approving reeolutions echoing the concerns voiced by the authors of the teleooune letter. Emotions are running high on both sides. In some cases, seeming- ly to the point of paranoia. ~ With television instruction, the district believes it can reach QllON mics.nta (and receive more 1tate funda), wtth niduced cl.ul- room and i.culty upen111. The ~ W'l the o1her hand. believe lncreutn1 ute of televl1ion may jeopardtie their Jobe. They al8o u.y they have te- rloua concern• about how well atudenta teem in the telecounea. Regarding the Luaktn ap- pointment, the teachers felt dis- enfranchised when trustees turned away from the applicants suggested by a acreenlng commit- tee and named Luskin, who had not even applied, to the Orange Coast presidency. Trustees argued that they are the people elected to make such decisions. Both camps seem to be stand- ing firm. The district claims the unrest is related to current teacher contract bargaining. The instruc- tors say the trustees have ignored them for too long. The dispute ia diverting at- tention from the more important question of how to maintain edu- cational quality at a time when state aid to community colleges is being reduced. The present split between professors and administrators must be cloeed before it tears the basic fabric of what has been one of the nation's finest community college systems. . To begin with, the contending parties should start communica- ting with each 'other in less tiys- terical tones. Back to !Jaseball Does anyone remember when Little League baseball was just a game, just a wholesome way for youngsters to have some fun and get some exercise while learning about team play and sportsman-. ship? Apparently, a few people in the Fountain Valley North leag\Je forgot about these things in a re- cent dispute focusing on 12-year-old Arri Buford. When Arri began to display outstanding athletic skills, some rival coaches began questioning his eligibility and branded him a "ringer." Ultimately, district, regional and national Little League officials were drawn into the dispute. It seems that Arri•s father was temporarily transferred to Detroit for medical treatment last year. But Arri himself waa living in Fountain Valley with a family friend when local Little League registration took place. He now lives with his family in Garden Grove. That home was the scene of a recent firebombing incident. Au- thorities say they don't know if the incident was linked to the baseball dispute. The eligibility question was settled late last week when national Little League officials ruled A.ni can continue to play for the Fountain Valley North Aatros. The young athletes and their parents should put this 9quabble behind them and get back to ~e main business of Little League - playing baseball. Schoolbooks get priority Huntinf ton Beach Union High Schoo trustees have an- nounced their intention to upgrade eligibility requirements for stu- dents who want to participate in extra-curricillar activities. · The district currently abides by the CIF eligibility requirement that allows students to participate in sports as long as they are pass- ing in four or more subjects. Huntington Beach Superin- tendent Frank "Jake" Abbott ia recommending that the new re- quirements apply to all extra- c urricular a.ctivitie"* not just 8~. Trustees aay they want to in- crease standards despite the rec- ommendations of an eligibility committee. That panel found stu- dents engaged in extra-curricular activities (band, drill team, drama, • debate, etc. as well as athletic.s) are doing better in school than non- participants. However, the board majority said it believes there is a particular need to upgrade requirements for athletes. (The standard for grade point averages has not 6een determined.) Trustees expressed concern about athletes graduating without learning to read and write prop- erly. They emphasized that ath- letes, aa well as others, need to mast.er basic skilla before receiving a diploma. If nothing else, higher re- quirements would show that in the Huntington Beach Union High School District, atudenta must hit the books before hitting the playing fields. Opinions expressed in the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex- pres.sed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is ~li ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) '642·4321. L.M. Boyd/ School bells No b1arina be1Ja lignal clam starts and stopa at the high .cbool in Eliza. ~ C.olo. Imteed. currently popular ~ does IO over the IChool'a public addftll ty1tem. So? Nothtna ~ tant. mayt»e. Bul ewn atw all Y9M1t lf I c:be my eye1. I S*D hear ttioe, Janlllnc bells rattle the hall-wan. C:.""t you? 1bt Brtdlb tnd!donally have been ~ u ~~= contervatJ'bialiet rtiluchen c there ll a er RANGE COAST ]JPlat · ... . ... percentqe of nudian in Greet Brit.ain than in any other country. Maybe IO, don•t know. Do know the 0.rmana, too, ~ byaone yeara were comklered extremely atral~':,. moet matters, and it Wl9 the who ttar1ed the first nudist colonies. Tbe Ubra woman ta the mott beau- ty conacloua, the Scorpio woman the moat dramatic, the Capricorn woman the mott pbyaicaJ. Or IO COG· tend the stars...,... . . Thoma's P. H•l•Y Publisher TllolW A. Mllr"pltlH l!i9ttor · ......... ,..Melt !dltorlel lt ... Sdltor - Two-house legislature best The litany for a unicameral Legislature started by former Speaker Jesse Unruh and continued by Common Cause has now been taken up by Sen. Barry Keene. He has propoeed a constitutional amendment which would replace the present Legislature with a senate of 67 members. Arguing the present system which is costing over $100 million annually is '"too duplicative and far too expensive," he contends the ''checks and balances" ooniemplated with a two-house Legiala- t u re have been eliminated by t h e "one-man, one-vote" court decisions. He says his plan would save $23 million yearly. . WHILE HS lS correct in the view that (he Legislature is "far too expensive," his remedy is akin to throwing the baby out with the bathwater. For It is essen- tial th.at the Legislature remain a strong branch of the government and its ne· cessary 0081S should not be an argument for weakening its powers. T.he reason the Legislature is now too costly is due to the self-indulgence of the members. Far more than $23 million can be saved in current legislative operations by eliminating the so--called field offices, a euphemism for the year around cam- paign headquarters maintained by each member in his di.strict, cutting the out· rageous payroll with its more than 2,200 staff workers whose main function is ;r- llll WATIU partisan politics, and discontinuing the furnishing of autos and unlimited sup- plies of gasoline for each member. It is true that the changes brought about by the court ruling on the one- man, one-vote issue have weakened the check and balance of the two-house system. It is not true that it has been eliminated. On the same day that Keene was ex- pounding to the press on his plan, At.- sembly Speaker Willie Brown told the press the Assembly would not pass any new tax bills this session because the m ember s d idn't believe the Senate would agree, thus demonstrating that the checks and balances of the two house system lS alive and working. Under the current legislative plan each bill introduced must clear one or more committees in each h ouse. Thia provides the public with more than one chance at testifying for or against pro- posals. Under a one-house systerp the bills would only be subject to one public hearing before passage, thus reducing the time the public would have to le.am of the proposals and present its views. Proponents contend that this would make the Legislature more efficient. But if efficiency means the quick passage of new laws it will not benefit the public. The LegtSlature is supposed ~ be a de- liberative body in which all proposals are carefully weighed. TOE WORST feature of the Keene one-hou.8e proposal is that it would ine- vitably place far too much power in the hands of one man, the speaker or, under Keene's proposal, \he president of the senate. A much better plan for reducing legi- slative costs and making the legislature more efficient is that of Sen. H.L. "Bill" Richardson who would return the Legi- slature to the people by limiting the length of sessions and providing for its meeting only every other year. Foundations can help rescue schools To the Editor: ln a recent article, a UC law profeaor, John Coons, and our state Superinten- dent of Public Instruction, Mr. Wilson Riles bemoan the sprouting phenome- non of educational foundations. They discredit the formation of thete founda- tions as perpetrators of inequality in the funding of the public educational system. It is my opinion that foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu- cation as Mr. Riles suggests, but rather MAILBOX symptomatic of a society that is fed up with being told that they can't provide their children with whatever level of public education ther deem adequate in their own community after they have paid the bills to educate everybody elae'a child in the public echool system. Many of the same voices that wring their hands and cry for "equal" funding of the public educational system are the same people who pay little, if any, of the taxes that provide for th.at funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles are much more Interested In pulling down the educational level of the ao- called affluent .egrnents of our aociety, rather than bringing the less affluent eegmenta up to a predetennined level of educational competency. What they propoee w nothing lea than a headlong rush to educational medlocrtty. And th1a doesn't appear to bother them in the slightest as long as everyone la "equal" at the lowest pc:aible oommon denominator of educational competence. FORTUNATELY, an ever-increasing majority of people in th1a state refuae to suocumb to um call foe public educatio- nal mediocrity. And thua we are wlt- nemina an exploaion in the fonnaUoo of the public 9Chool foundaUollll. What the foundatlooa can contribute t.m•t a drop in the bucket ln comparlaon to the total budpt. At $600,000 it reprwntl about 1 percent of our local Newpon-Meu Dl- atrict'• budpt. But OD the other band, this aum equates to about 20 teachen' aaJ.ariel. And 20 teliChen can~lcma way to tMch1nl ,....,... .. , • etc .. oc whatever' a partkuJar dlltrict it .. betnc depi\ted of by the Mate'• wdalr ""equalllinl,. f\&Ddlnl formulu dJctaied by the coun'• Se&Tlno-Prillt dedl6tm Ont very Important function thaat theee foundaUoftl are ~ la \o eouod the c1aricn to our dU.. that our pubUc ........... .,.._II In ... of succumblnf to the IOd.aJ ...,meertn1 HcetHI 0 OW' liberal IUt. Judld&J ~ md uni-tbe ...... ltlmd up and demand of their ferfalal.c(ra that IOllMtb.lq be clone about It, we wW wt-the oaa 1'rte _..."°"of our ~--..... ~ ......... · .,. .... .._ ... oftllll'rds r-atll•• ..... ~..__.. ..... -.... to .. ,_cit .. ~ IChool .,..._. 'nleJ cSD; hi»w•~ •• emw u a wmporary llle--avbll toUrnJqUilt t)\at is being urgently applied to our hemorrhaging public school system whose financial life-blood is being bled white by the oourt-impoeed sanctions of the Serrano-Priest decision. The ultimate cure for the peril th.at we now find our public education system in is through public supported legislation that will set a predetermined level of excellence in public education for all of our public schools. At the same time, this legislation should encourage communi- ties to exceed this predetermined level of educational excellence through their own additional financial sacrifices il they are willing and able to do so. TOM WILLIAMS Director of "Parenta for a Responsive Board of Education" Ba~king baffles To the Editor: ln the April.26 Pilot I noted a news story datelined Burlingame, stating the CT A (California Teachers Assn.) repre· sen ting 197 .000 members, endorsement of Tom Bradley and Jerry Brown for governor and U.S. Senator respectively. On the editorial page, Earl Waters' column graphically describes Gov. Brown'• underhanded raid on the Public Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of '180 million to help balance hla budget. Thia la the employees' own money, held in trust for their pemiona. If the CT A endorses a candidate of that Uk, and their endonement reOecia their idea of intelligent thinking I can now more euily understand one of the reuona why students are reportedly not learning matt in llChool. P.S.~LS Medicare fraud To the Bdltor. My subject ll Medicare fraud. I en- countered It lMt year when 1 wu hot~ pitalized for a broken hip. I Wiii dw'aed lor th1np I newt received. lib $2.50 for a aunple of toothput.e. I wrote to both my sen.at.on; trom them I NCetwd a nt- ply that showed they mlllecl the poinL I waa not oompa.tnlnf abcUt what f had to e&1· My ~t wu what they ar. dOiJa8 to M . I wroce to tbe J)l'elll- den t and rec»lved no reply. 11 this an ..... that " too bot to hand)e? Do you believe thit may account for the near 'demlle of 8odal Secwity? NOW TllBBB • IClmMhlnc new. A medical aent.r baa bffn Mt up for Medkme .,..... whln the cloctort IC• oept wt..a M # •re PQL Tbe ftnl tb13e I went I DWm" -. the ~ ldl1 don't know what It w-. "n.n 1 .,.. .nt to • derme&oklefit who alao ec.upte whit ...... ~ • c.-.~~-"" • .. L.l9lrt .... ~--.J: ............. ~ ......... ., ...... ...-.. --. ~ ............. ~ .............. ... ..... .... ,.... __,,., ..... "':.:""""' ... : .. ..... "~--~ . . . He charged Medkare $695 for a pro- cedure (exactly) that I had done a few months ago for $80 and couldn't un- derstand why I was shocked, when I didn't have to pay for it. Some people {ll&Y not care but I do. I refused to sign tbe bill and have reported it to Health Care Administration. I have written to both my eenators and told them of thousands of dollars the hospitals are cheating; they also missed the point, or is it a no-no subject? It is bigger th.an the defense budget and it's killing Social Security. I feel I must give it one more try to wake somebody up. JANEM. KERR Bolsa Cbica plan To the Editor: While the text of your Apri) 23 article, "Coast Unit Rejects Bolsa Chica Plan," was generally accurate, the headline, which suggests that the Coastal Com- mi.-ion denied approval of the Orange County Bolsa Chica land U.9e plan, was in error. The fact is that the CoastaJ Comm.ia- sion ruled for another hearing to once again look at the plan. This will be scheduled sometime between June 15-18. In the Interim, the com.mlaaton staff ia to review scientific evidence introduced by a team of nationally rec- ognized 9Cientiata commisaioned by Sig- nal Landmarlt. private owner of ID09t of the Bola Chica property. The ldenUR show that 453 acres of the 1,600-acre parcel, including the exlaUng 200-acre ecological rt!9erve, la wetland.a. Thia ls a contradJction to the Department of FUb and Game report which states that 1,000 acne ia wetlands . In the meantime, the Coastal Com- m.lmlon staff ll to be in cammunJcaUoo with Orance County planners to da.a. dlfferenca A Spedal Are.Manieement Pr'OPMI (SAMP) -plannlnc invWvtna a mix of federal and state pernmental aaenctea and ooncex ned dti.len lfOUpa - ia .cbeduled to meet at county omc. cm May 10. Tboee who have communicated IUJ>- port for the worthwhile well·thouaht.- out county pl.an ahould be f!nCOW'lllll!d to continue their eUora WA YNJ: CLARK a.pr r r rntattw Slpal Le.ndmarir. Ille. The Qiamond Anniversary Ring ~bond of diamonds . that says you'd marry her all over again. RAF'F' jewelry-~ 32 '""'" lelaftd N.wpo•t e .. ch • 144.2040 • 3 genetallont ot lfl~ly pertoftal unle• erything must go up to70°0 0FF! FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH A ROSE HAS A SPECIAL MEANING • • • Pin a Rose on your Lady Fair in the language of flowers, to give a rose Is to say "I Love You." The rose in full bloom has come to mean beauty at its fullest, while the unopened rose signifies un-awakened love. One or both of these beautiful emblems of love from Slavick's will tell her more than many bouquets. Rose Bud Pin lf'l 14K Gold. $69 .95 In Vefmell · $19.95 In Ste<llng . $ 9.95 Ful Rose Pin In 141< Gold $69.95 In~ · $19.95 In Ste<ing $ 9.95 Both 14K Gold Roses Ofe ovolloble with a diamond SLAVICK·s floe~Since 1917 Where che bes1 surpnses begin. F&Sh!Qn lslMld (714) 644-1380 ·Newport Beach Also Grtlter Los Angels• San Diego• Las~ for spring hiking, boating, Walking ... thQ. sportif camp short in khaki or whit<i . with it, our shorts~ tradi- tional ploid shirt errl l~th<Z.r bilt mak<Z. it at-easq. ... spring and summer. JCPenney FABRICS! Entire Stock Reduced 503 off ~ FASHION ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTER Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley Luggage Travable catalog coming Wednesday, May 12 In fhe Daily Pilat e 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach, CA near Bullock's Wilshire 92660 714/759-9101 ' ( ) Sunday, May 9th MOTHER'S DAY j oin us for lunch or dinner Great Drinks Delightful Lunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644·2030 500 N. Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772-2130 ... • .I Orange COllt DAILY PILOT!Thureday. Maye, 1982 Liz, Marines, snakes Reporters pick Washington superlatives • W ASHlNOTON (AP) -Sawl•lak, polltlcal reporter for DominJque'• fell into the newt WuMnaton'1 beet reetaurant ii United Prea International, aet during the Carter adminiatraUon one that Mrvet up rattleanake out to provide ephemeral an-when an Interior Department and buffalo meet. Its tm.t mon-1wer1 to Wuhlngton'• eternal envlronmentallat dlapatched a ument la the Utt.le-known Navy-que.t1on: Who'• on top? letter notJ.na that a rattl~e on Marine Memorial and lts mo.t Not, they think, that Waah-the menu l>elong,d to an en- effective lobbyllt workl for the tnaton II reelly worth the eUort. dAn1ered apeciea and ahouldn't National Rifle Allocla\lon, two "'t'he capital'• modeaty ta well be there. jownaUIU aay in their book. Juatlfieet, they write, naUna that >.. for monumenta, Klllan and And In thla political town, It waa "built Sawtala.k find most to praile ln a when it oomea to pie~ the te-in a peatllen-1934 memorial to aallon and xleat WaahingtonlaN, 'plump llal aw amp, Marines loll at aea in World War but 1till gorgeoua" Elizabeth burned by the I. They like the way flying eea- Taylor of suburban Middleburg, Brltlah and gul1a evoke the aplrli, of the loet Va., has to take a back aeat"to left for dead, men and the danger of the .ea. "handaome, rich and channina" for decade• a The beloved Lincoln Memorial • Edward M. Kennedy, "the 1u"b-ramshackle cornea in' eeeond. -. .... --:._ ' ject of more sexual go11lp and Sou the r n Ronald Reagan Ls llated as the SEXIEST _ Eliza-, speculation than any regiment of town noted most persuaalve man in Wuh- b th T 1 Hollywood leading men." moat for 1t1 lngton, but when It comes to e 8 Y or was Of course, Miss Taylor no bawdy hou.es 1m .. ov fulltlme lobbyl1ta the authors picked as the ~exlest longer qualifies as a Washlng'to-and alave market•. a crude plck Harlon B . Carter, the Washingtonian -nian -not since her aeparation hlckavllle that, until the Ken-National Rifle Alsoclatlon'• top eve,n though she no last/ear Crom her seventh hus-nedya came along, lacked even gun. The NRA's strength cornea longer· lives there sin-ban , Sen. Jo~ Warner, R-Va.. one first-cl.ass restaurant ... " ln persuading its 1.ll milllon ce separating from whose estate in Middleburg 1he Now, the au thors think, members to write Congreu husband, Sen. John no longer shares. Washington has more than one whenever it begins to doubt that Warner R-Va. In their book, "Who Runs first-claas restaurant. As first gun ownership is to be equated ' Washingt~n."· Michael Kiljan, among them, they list Domini-with ''patrioti1m, nationalism, Retired officers to meet The May meeting of · the county chapter of the Retired Officers Associa- tion will take place Sat- urday at the Officers Club, El 'Toro Marine Corps Air Station, star- ting with a 6 p.m. social hour. A film of the Coast Guard sailing bark Eagle will be narrated by reti- red Coast Guard member Harold Baker. Retired or active duty officers, wives and friends, including any person who ever held a commission in the armed forces of the U .S., are invited to attend. For reservations call Forrest Vick at 546-9858. Realtor to speak Robert Lee Thomas, first vice president of the regional development division for Century 21 International will speak at the May 19 meeting of Southern California Chapter 12 of Certified Commercial Investment Members. The 9 a .m. meeting will be held at the Air- porter Inn in Irvine. -THI "EARL'S ~UMa-HIA~ a-w ... -. ... • St Le 217657 Serw::e Time S111t11 e1 V<>u< Oooo (Cel SIOle --1 VOu< AIM) COIJA MUA 641-1219 11,......._. .... -. MltM<* VaJO 495-0401 2"22~~·,_ ..... '"'l'· ... ....,. ... ..,.., Truddoad Phmt Sale Huntington Center doily thru Sot. lge. 6" pots 2'! Dazzle her with a Krugerrand Pd pendant. An affotd- sble &ift that's simply stunning. And nothing short of shMr elepnce. Give her the Kruprrand pct pend1nt. In all the Worid. there's nothlna quile like It. But then, there'i no one in the world quite llke your mom. !5!1.C'~~ ••••• <-·!!n•• .. -...... (II._) NEWPORT BEACH (714) 545-6931 Washington columnist for the que's, where the meals are .. very masculinity, Christianity and Chicago Tribune, and Arnold French, yet light and healthful." invulnerability," they write. CAR BUYERS DRIVE HOME A BARGAIN WITH GM/Cs LON FINANCING RATE ON NEW GM CARS, LIGHT-DUTY TRUCKS AND VANS. Yes , now is the time to really save o n a great new GM car, light-duty truck or van with GMAC financing. Qualified buyers can fin ance any new Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile,_Buick, Cadillac, GMC or Chevrolet light-duty truck or van** at a low, low 12.83 rate and save. But hurry, time is running out on this special 12.83 rate offer. Your participating GM Dealer is ready to help you select the stylish GM model of your choice and then offer you substantial savings o n financing costs. Remember, to drive home your bargain, you must take delivery by May 31, 1982. CHILDREN Mother's Day la supposed to be a remembrance of your mother. Big Deal. Rlghtl It la reported In the newspapers, mentioned on T. V. BUT THINK ABOUT ITI What la Mother's Day? And why should you care? You are busy with your own llvea - have to work -more Important thing• to do. Mother's Day la the moat PERSONAL and Important day In your llvea. We celebrate Christ- mas, Christ's birthday -that's Important, Do you really know what Mother's li>ay la all about? It celebrates every birth of yourselves! It's the remembrance of carrying YOU through 9 months In her body and the pain of deltvery. But that's just the beginning. Mother's Day la a re- membrance of ,all the problems, joys, help, and what she went through and In fact what she Is stlll going through with you. Your mother Is strength. understanding, banker, band-alder. In other words -the most Important of all. Out of 365 days Mother's Day Is the moat important day of YOUR LIFE! DAD , .j" .. · • l~· OFFER .t ENDS MAY 3l *Ca/1fmn1a /111y1.•n · f111anc1ng 'ldvrn~ M'lt!d on GMAC dar.a for frhruaY). 1982 c•11np111edfm all 1't!fudo1.md JuJ/. and m1d·S1~e Cadillac- 1-ehiclCJ Acn.al sam~ IA 1/1 depend on thl· mode/ ~lccted, the amount financed and the length of nmtract Dealer conmhunon moy affect rnmumer cost .. Excludes vefucles ordeTed pnor to April I, 1982 which art el1Rible for tlv Gen1.>ral Mot(lrs "Let'~ Gtt M0t.1ng" cash bom'-' plan, and fleer o;ales and leao;cd 1ini« Ot'mnge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thu'9day, Maye, 1982 Advice on the unpleasant task of firing people With the unemployment rate IOU'll'\I tn the nation, the ne~1peptt1 .,. filled with ud et.oriel abou men and WOl'Mn who have juat loet thelr Jobi. Not 1ur· J>rl1Jnaly, readert often feel aympathy toward thHO people who have been fl- ~. No one seem• to feel any aympathy wward the ~pie who are doing the flrtna. th<>Ulh -the bollet. AT LEAST, no one you have heard of does. But there la one fellow who epec- lalir.es in teaching executives how w fire their employees. Hla name la James E. Challenger, and he la president of Chal- lenger, Gray and Christmas. Inc. The firm deaiB in something called outplace- ment, which means it Is hired by com- panies to help find new jobs for people those companies have fired. Challenger, 56, d iscovered that execu- tives or those companies were coming to him with a dilemma. They had the un- pleasant task of firing their workers, but they weren't sure how to do at. No one teaches courses on how to fire people. So Challenger st a rted dispensing how-to-fire advice. He says that no one really enjoys firing another human being, but tha t it's a necessary task. I talked to him about all thta. llnd here are 'hit 1uidellnea for how an exeeutlve thould fire a 1ubordlna\e. 1. "Dolt quJckly. You don't want to lit there and go throuah how you ~l about makln1 the d.cltlon. There'illb use arguJna. If you uy he's no aood, he'll Ill CRElll teU you he's good. lC you say he's not needed , he'll say he's need ed. ~y the time you've decided \0 tire a pel'IOn, the two of you probably have nothing to say \0 each other anymore anyway. So just get it done." 2. "Do it in a place where you're in control. Which means your office. U you go to his office to do it, then he's behind the desk and he's in control. If you do it outside the building at a restaurant, he may break down during the meal. And then there are the questions: Do you do it at the beginning of the meaJ? Do you finish the meal a{~r you've fired him? Ju.at do lt ln your office." 3. "'The beet Ume to fin IOmeOM la on a Frlday. Th1t way you won't au.rt • new week olf havtna h1m lllttlna there waJUnl for It to happen. And you don't have to lit and worry about lt an week- end. Wt had one man who fired an employee on Christ.mu Eve becau.ee the 00. didn't want to ruin hla own Chritt- maa by worrying about what he waa going to have to do." 4. "THE BEST TIME of the day io fire someone ta 4 p.m. That way he can leave work with the rest of the people. PIUS/' he won't have the opPof'lunlty to go out \0 lunch and tell other people at the company what a bad guy you are." 5. "Find out what he baa that belongs w the company. Credit carda, keya, re- ports -you've got to get all of them back before he leavet. The way \0 ac- complish this ii to assign eomeone to help him pack his stuff. Have the penon look for pro pe rt y that belongs to the company." ti. "Don't offer him an office that he can use to look for a new job. Many companies do this, and it's wrong. It doesh't cut the cord. As long as the per- son is coming into your building every day. he atlll holds out the hope that you'll admit you made a mhltake, and that you'll rehire him. h 'a best to make the 1eparatJon complete." 7. "Don't tell his co-workers that he'• leavtni. They're going to know anyway. but If you tell them directly they'll want an e~planatlon from you, and there's no reuon you have to provide an explana- tion to your other employees. Having to explain why you fired a person can make you look weak." 8. "Dolt yoiuelf. If you give the job of flrlng someone to your assistant, some- where down the line the person you've fired la going \0 demand to talk to you anyway. S o you 're going to end up face-w-face with him in the end. Save time and do It yourself in the first place." 10."SIT DOWN. Make the person you're firing ail down. If he's towering over you, then he's psychologically in control. If you're both standing up, it's awkward -plus he may break down emotionally when you fire him, so it's better if he's sealed. Ir he cries, it's easier for him if he's siuing down. We had one case whf n t~o people were standing up. and the person who got fired punched his employer. This is not good." 11 "Don't bolatA"r yuur courap with a <.'Ouplt> ol drink.a befoN' you fire someo- ne. The drlnk1 will te nd to mak you more garrulOUJ1, and the ftrtnc will take longe r. You think It make• you lea• tense. but It actually lengthena the ter- mination proc.'edure, and lhaf1 one thing you don't wunt," U . "DON'T TALK to hla family. You may be tempted to break the news to the fired man's wife, but that's not your re· sponaibility. It may seem humane to tell the wife to be nice to the man when he comes home that night. But you can't do that. It souncb aa if you're apologizing, and what are you gaining? Stay out of It." Challeng<'r said that h<' realizes many pE.'ople may find at cold-blooded: The idea of a man who a<:tually tnes to make at caswr for bosst.>S to fart> their workers. "But soml·on<• has to gave these ex- eculiv~ adv1c.~ ... hL' ~ad. "No one likes to rm: anyone. you're playing with so- meont>'s whole life And sm<:e a boss d~n't hkt~<' 1deci of fanng someone anyway, tflt• l<'ast I <:an do 1s help cut down thl• lr<.IUmCJ or th(' situation and make at as t>asy on everyone <.'Oncerned as possible " Dress up your mom's car for Mother's Day with a Supermom's ·License · Frame $1.49 at 01M CROWM . HARDWARE Weetcllft Plaza 1024 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach 642-1133 Corona del..., 3107 E. Coast Hwy. 673-2800 • Energy Sovhg Sold State Platten Ignition • Glarnofoua Jet Glow Oven Door wtth Window • Energy Sovhg Efftex Varlable Heat St.foe• lkmefa • INUoted Oven Bottom for Even Baking All Stor" open 7 Daya Westctlff TIU 8:00 H•rbor View Center 1614 San Miguel Dr. Newport Beach 644-8570 AIUlhelm Hiiie 5620 Santa Ana Canyon Rd. (at Imperial Hwy.) 998-5282 • Clltlllm Cltllllt .. tflH• fttll C.· lrtl S.• , ...... .. .. ·-· ... ,.,..o Rise 'n Shine to Stereo or an Alarm Ail the big features at a gift-away price! Clock has Cut 47 88 hil\o display dimmer, LED PM/Wake indicators, sleep and snooze controls. Radio features twin 3" speakers for excellent st~reo. FM·AFC, stereo indi· 320~0 Reg. 69.95 cator, stereo headphone 1ack. #12-1530 7• FMNHF-TV Sound/ Weather Radio Pocl<et PortaVlalon by Realistic . ~:~ 179!1.95 Hear audio from TV channels 2-13, and info from VHF weather stations, plus FM. #12~2 4-Key-Memory calculator EC-270 by Radio Shack 39o/o 795 Off Reg. 12.95 Featuree front-oanel metric con- version chart. Percent. square l'OOC keys, ftoatlng decimal. With catf'Y pouch. ~n 8IMflee ,.,,. "French Continental" Phone 8y....; Sh6ck Save •.10 &9!~.15 Save 5 10 4995 ~~~5 No hands. no dial. no d1g1ts! Set hidden controls once. then tap button on top-a speech·synthes1s c1rcu1t con- verts time to talk! #63-902 Portable Cassette. Recorder CTR-37 by Realistic Cut 3188 36°/o Reg. 49.95 Built-in mike and Auto- Level for easy record- ing. AC/battery operation. #14-806 .;.11.n.• .,, --~-- I Or.na. Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday, May 61 1982 H/F NYSE OMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS Ol.IOlAltONI UICI.I.IOI, ..... , 011 fNI llllW ~O•C. lllUOWUT, 'ACl,IC, ,,., lotlf> ... OIUOll ..... Ctll(fjljlljtfl Ok• «•ClfANOU AlfO llflOUIO I Y fNI NAI• AllO ll•Ullllt Meet focuses on development Bualnete and Industry 1pok~ from ~ the United Statee and several foreign countrle1 will be on hand an Newport Beach next week to explore devel- opmenta in induaLriaJ expansion. The occulon will be the spring professional semlnar of the lnduatrial De- velopment Re.earch Council. Atlanta based IDRC la a non-profit prolnaional association. Seminar lle98lons, lncluding a presentation by Lo. Angeles Mayor Thomas Bradley, and a gubernatorial candidate are acheduled Monday through Wedneeday at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel. Stang reports earnings For the six months ended March 31. Stang Hy- <ironics, lnc. of San Clemente reported net income of $36,250 from revenues of $13,360,480 as compared to net income of $592,961 from revenues of $11,954,604) for the same period in 1981. 0 The company earned $.05 per share for the penod as compared to $.77 for the same six months in 1981. The board of directors authorized a $.25 per share semiannual dividend to shareholders of record June 10 payable July I Housing m eeting set Affordable housing and densities will be di.scll.55ed May 17 at a meeting of the Home Bu.Jlders €ouncil at the Airport.er lnn, Irvine. Speakers will be Gary R. Collins and Steven W Wraight, partners in the firm of Collins & Wraight. The dinner meeting begins at 6 p.m. ;'or infor- mation, caU 213-625-5771. Mortgage rates decline WASHINGTON (AP) -The average interest rate charged Americans for new mortgages fell slightly in April to 17.41 percent. the sec.'Ond time \his year that those rates have dropped a bat, the govern- ment reports. The number of lenders making loans rose las t month for the fifth straight month, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board said. The new average effective commitment rate on long-term, fixed-rate mortgages declined 0.1 percen· tage point from March's 17 .5 1 percent, the reporf said. The rate was 15.53 percent in Apnl 1981 Business parks m erge Wilma/Pacific. Inc .. of Los Angeles, and the partnership of Shaw, Talbot, Budge and B1bin. of Newport Beach, have formed Calaforni~ Partners. . This joint venture will develop m1xed-Wie busi- ness parks m a five-<:aun ty area of Southern Callfor nia. The executive offices wi11 be located at 1303 Av- ocado Street, Newport Beach. Comarco gets Hughes pact Comarco Inc. of Anaheim announced it ra-eived a $3.9 million contract from Hughes Helicopters Inc. Terms of the oontract call for developing software documentation for all the couputer programs on board the AH-64A Apache advanced attack helicopter. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YORK tAP) S llH. Wld p11ce lf'd MC t~ OI ti. I.., rro\I .CllYe ""'"'"'" Stoo E«....,... 1-. ~"it~:""'"' •I ~;.,-1:. ... weatlllrcl 1~.'°° 11 • 11.; A....... IOUOO 71V, \o <Jnl.e!Olt 18, IOO 1 lh \o AHr11nl A 71.100 11' > '• O..mo !40 11 100 ,.._ wenv 8 •UOO ~ • v, Nel -M,100 10'• Ala>lla Aln '1..00 6 Ver"-l•m ' Sl.IOO Je'• I"' UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORI( I AP) Tiw IOOowlno 11\1 -in. -Yor' Slo" En,,.,. >llKU ...0 ...,.enh .._.. flaw -""' ltw ....... --"'-,,.., -Oft f:""'~ UWWJt ......-s .,. .......... Ho leC\Wlllft trldl"Q -U .,.. ln(I -Mio\ --""i._. ~.,..IN 0111_. lll't-''l! --<IOolno Pf\oe ....0 Wee!~~ 1 Pfice. ........ Le\I C1'0 "-:I I Pec:Tl.T pl II • I VP ltO 1 1_..cffe< .,. • ..... Up 17. J Ennh8F 11"' • 1'" Up 10 t • Pac TetTet ''"' • '"' Up t• S GTFI pl& IOI• • "' Up 1 • • Kel\C I J7pl 1~ • '"' Up I• 1 Int_., ~.ltcJI II "' Up I l I -Olll IV. \l'J U0 1 I t Putllwl FHll IJ'h + ~ Up U 10 !11\ll'°"AoY \ I~ • I Up t I II wvi.i.-,v. • "' UO .. , 12~ 17'h •\oUt> ... IJ \INIOrtl " ~ • "' UO "' 1' l!UflOI llw:I 10" • Ill Up • > I) OlllAI • Cpl 10 • 1'• Up • 2 It "*-El > IJ • _. \'9 • I 17 ICC .... •3"" -• , ... Uit 1 0 11 ~ lllcl 1'.,._ • 1\'t UO •O ,. G\Mrdnlll' ~ • ,.. uo ,, I~...:: ~1"' :1.. Ofl""-iTIO ' CllrYWr -~ -.. °" •.• , w.I~ ,,_ -I g; n 4 A\119f'O m: = 1:: Of! ... : ~· ,,.. -1~ °" l.J f i(!'5ijW; ... '"' -~ g: :-,: l~Mlt ---OftU JE, 1M -•"'Off u II ~ 1"'-"41 OH U 12 W1W1 ui.e SJ -> Off S.S ,, ~"" ~ ~ : 1:: g; ~ ~=-~ t1 -W.OllU " n.r ,,_ • .... ()It S.J It MitlM '0,.. 11'-' -._ Ofl U ~ """ -... Olt ., • °"9f'll TM\ -"' Oii I. I "'KOT'I,... ,_. -"' Olt U COLD COINS NIW YO"K (A,1 -'rloH l1l• w.dl1 I rt ' of -...... 0011'4111• .... f\leldllY•pr1o9. ll•..-reN. , 11oy N .. .su.H. ~ te.11. " .......... , troy Ol., Utl.H . 0 -:....,.., u.., ... Mii.Gt, ........ a..... ,. ...... ..MOJ "°' .... ............... NEW V()llKIAPI FtNI Dow J.,.,... -'°' -Nwv l STOCKS lO Inc) 10 Trn U Utl 0 SI• lf\duc, Tr en Uhl\ U SI~ °"" """ i.-a... 0. 11\4 11 .. I •1 M 1• Hot O loll n J\4 IA ~ 11 34'1 ~ • I II 11• .:J 11\ C> llHI It< l<I • 0 Cl "" ti )4) .. 13< ., J37 JO • 0 \4 WHAT STOCKS DID Wecl NE.W VOAIC IAPI -V WH/11 ifilr,ffA DO ,,_~ M.I 01 "" SI ,. Wtd NEW VOllK I API ,._.., AdY•l'l(_f!d Dt<ll...O Un<l\a"Qfd t ot •• • "'-"'\ ,..., "'GI" New-. METALS ,.,.,., ,,. ,., n1 , .. 10 1J 1mooo 1 t<l ,IOO I 1'1 tJO • ,,., 'lOll -o:r. Sii .., 18') ,. ,. ........ o;r, lJt m ,., IO ,, NEW Y()fU( IAP) -890! non._,OUI !NIM P'loel loeley ~fM1-1pound.VS Olll- 1~ 29-27 oeni. • pound -Diie 36 oenta I pound. --«!. -Tiil M .7038 MM• W .... oomc>CJllt• 111 _........,_ 76-71 oenta I poulld, N.Y _...,_, '376.00 I* flMk, _,...._ "3100 troy or... HY SILVER H...oy' Hennen. se.eeo per troy~- SYMBOLS ...... .,..,.. ..... ..-_,,...... .. ~-----"'--.,.,... ........................ ......, .. -· .. --llf•I==. -· _.,,._........ . ...... ............. _.......,,._ ..... _. .... -.... "-.... ...,._ ................ -. O.Ctere4 or ,.,, •II ''-'"' It -. ~ ........ '*'........_ ... .. .,..._,_........._ ................ .. ____ .._.._.,.........,. ..... ,.., ... ......-..-.. ......... _ .....,_ •4-111• ~"'..__.. .. _... .... __ ............ ~··-~--................. _. __ ........... .,.... f'«·---............ ""' •...cle!IN -~ ... ltttV,.. • ........ ____ ._._ -... ..... .-,.__ , .. _ ... _ .. ._ .. ~-····-_, ......... .... .._.. .............. _ ... _ Cl Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday, May e, 1982 'Fiddler' appeal universal LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Fiddler on the RooC'' la a 19601 mualcal about Jew1 In turn-of-the· century RUllia that. ln t• 1980. relntatnatloft. n.. uemendoua appeel to the Ja~ , "I waa In Japan and I aaw the pla tn JaparM*,'' IA.Id the ahow'1 recurret\t 1tar, Herechel Bernardi. "The audience atarted laughU., o" cue and crylni ... After the ahqw, \he Ja~ pro- ducer ...icr, 'l don't eee why the ahow ahould be ao popular in America. lt'a ao Jape:neee'." The reuon, Bernardi uid, U. "the content of thla play la about the breakdown of tradition and the famll . He (the Japaneae producer) aaid, 'What's happen.mg m thia \>Jay ta happening today In Japan . " The 1how alao ha.a attracted new audiences from New York to the Pantages Theater in Loe Angeles, where Bernardi bows out June 20 to undergo rest and therapy for a back problem. Afterward, he said, he may de- velop a one-man show under the ·.-"""-,...104m;..--'-m.......i auspices of the Smithsonian In- stitution. He said he was persuaded to do the revival because the original director, Jerome Robbins, was going to stage it . .Bernardi, who took over the role on Broadway from Zero Mostel, had never worked with Robbins. "This is not a re-creation, it's a restitution," he said. "We have new insights, we're older." One significant difference that's developed in the past 15 years is that the show is now advertised on television and radio as well as newspapers. "We have opened up a new audience to live theater." said .Bernardi, wearing a burnoose as he relaxed ln the ~lhowie of hlt Hollywood apart-~t buUdlnc. 'Yau llave PfC>ple th.at are.UNUre ~hether ta appl1ud Qr ..rtot , but they kno• to lauah." ' . Some =r=• oommenta have been over· heud at ln , he eaJd. "includinc Ont ~ w}\O tolct h1a wUe, 11Honev, U,ey 1\0lt tba IClal they pi6yo:t • out ~· .. "\ , '11t'• aa If tlMy're enter{na,tnto a ne~~Jd and you can te;el lt ln ~e_belinnlna.'' he Mid. UWllt•OlltYf· .. A..-11tt&~ .._lllUrWA Illa~ 579 nJ9 UWAllOI ClllUU ctlTfll '°''~~91941 41 A~.~~ .... ----~~-_.. ............ -~· NOW PLAYING IOWAllOl IAOIUUCl lOWAllOI fDCllTAI• H lUl fr T0<0 511 5UO ,...,,.., YM) lli tSOO UA nt1• CllllUI IDll.AIOS ftlO llllll Wt\IMl!Ma.r 893 t 24) .... "' "-'" e I\ .. lOWAllOI WOOOllllOCI 'ICIJIC IOUT• COAST ... ,. ~~1116~5 I~ 8ucJ1 C9C 15U '"4WAY • Ntfl··.. ...,,._wu~c.•••to WntnNMtt'f 19f 3693 •o-.... ,.c.o10tt111t1o• lOW&llOI IOUT• COUl rLAU lOWll C'IMTfll CltlUIAI to.i. Mn.I 151 418~ THE ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC CENTER Cabaret Center wants to thank Lido Marina Village Management and Merchants City . of llewport Beach Cabaret Chapter Members Activities Inc. -llewport Beach for making the CELEBRACION DE CINCO DE MAYO On May 1, 1982 at Lido Marina Village such a great success. We also want to thank the following for their generous support and donations, which ~made this fund-raiser possibl.e. I NEWPORT BEACH TENNIS CLUB BACK BAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE Newport e..ch THI PINNACLE CLUB Founteln Valley 8ACHE HALSEY STUART SHIELDS INC. Newport e.ach PRICE WATERHOUIE AND CO. Newport Beach SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL Colt• Meea MR. AND MRI. STANLEY CRANDON Newport Beech ARTHUR ANDIRION AND CO. Cotta MMe MR. AND MRI. RONALD WHrf£ IL TONTO -TAURANT Newport 8Mctl MmNCAN .,.MIS CDTIR, INC. Neiwpot1 8Mctl NAAILINQ JohnWeyne~ •IMID ~A~ .. CK Ntwpol't 9MCtl , STRIPES (!) THNJROOVE TUBE (RI A LITTLE SEX IRI ~, ...... R961NHOOO ~ The D.¥11 •Mu o9w-11n !POI CMcl'tl'IM* ~ SomeKJnd ~ m o1ttero S.08 (RI RKHARD ~ LM ON THE SUNSET STRIP OtC8t W•nner I CJ ARTH *BARGAIN MATINEES* Mond1y thru Saturday All Perform1ncH before 5:00 PM (bc.,I lptdal ft1 .. ttmt"t1 and Holldlyal I ,,_ MIV,,.11/1. M/1.11 Mirada at tatecran1 LA MIRADA WALK IN 994·2400 ••QUIST FOR FIRE" c~t "VICTOR VICTORIA" 10>01 ~M -•M. '-ff. IM. .. M •UO I.._ S ... I ll, - NIT Poe T\Me A#O IClllftWU T "CH.utlOTI 0' flftl" 10>01 ~·---.... "PORKY'I " 1~1 tt-lll ~ ·-....... ,..,. LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< IN •IC)MS ICIHD CW .. RO" IR) _____ ., .. ..., YOU COUU> en WMA T I HUR" (N ) 1:11. a:ao .... 9:10, ,_ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC IN AIO..Nno 211 6M-t211 IAC.J'-IA "PARTNERS" 1•1 U-M • ._ IOI 11t. •tt U ti "IF YOU COULD IEE WHAT I HEAR" 10>01 »"• 2:11. ....... ue. .. ;M fac1111y at Canotewooo 21S/H1·9HO "PARTNERS" C•I llAO. IM. •M.-•OO. 11 >t ···~ ... ~· ''CHARIOTS Of' ,_.. IN I ____ _ so . COAST WALK·IN So11th Cooel Htwo, at ltOOOWoy 414-1514 •n _,._ °' ,,. nu "CHANOTS OF FJAE" tl'OI _, ........ IATl"""9 J"-tl •• 1-. •:JI "PARTNERS" 111t ~-1•t.•• . .. ,, ..... ,.. ... ~ .. -- IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHllOIUN UNDER 12 FRll! """'°' _,. •-.... ""fll. 7M • Sat, S-.. .....,. IM CM-Ft SOUtlO • l'OUll AM CAA llAOIO IS YOl)ll IJ'IM[JI '" "° AM CM "'°"' WITH l()lfTlON acassorn l'OSITlOll -IMC AM l'OlllAIU l •AU CM-A DIWf.<llS IJO Olt Alll llAOIO ANMlllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IH ff•••OY '1 at le mon St 179·9150 "l'tnvATE LE880HS" 1111 l'lUI "llACQUET" 1111 CINf ,, SOOIOO -~----·----- .,,.,.,,.., C"I ... u. "MOMMIE DEAMIT" ll'OI Clltl fl SOUND &UI NA PA Dr BUENA PARK ORIVf IN UM"ot" A•e W••t ot ~" 121·4070 IUI NA ,Allk LINCOLN DRIVE·IN 1.1r1co•n A•• ••ti 01 1~t1 121-4070 t'Yf',r~J,.4',TfQ NI· '/YA f 39 cJRIVl IN I "l"A'""'"'" 1111 "M0MM41 ~,llHT" Cl'OI ,,. t-tA.fl!JA LA HABRA [·RM IN ._ .. _,, ___ ·-- 17MN2 - " ..... Or:l ANGE OlllV f IN AHOY 1fAllHOl I ~llJYOICCNITI*" Clll ... u •. "CAT PEOf'l.E" 1111 CINI foloO\lttU "DEM«* MOE" 1111 ... UI "NIOKT'MAM" NO Ottl UtlOH H -nco "EN TEA Tt4£ NIM.IA" C~I ... .,. THE 018APP£AllANCE" 1~1 CINI fl SOOHO a.ocn ti.a So °' G.lfoen GI~ F1ttw0Y 891·3693 kt~lo Ano,_, ''"''•c-.-551·7022 "Pryor .. wonderfuJt" &lw'tl• U..1!"""' Ulft A~t'I t'!t rtMf.3 ' """"""·--1' ...... ... ~~~ ................ ~ .~ I ~ow PCAYINQ Ill CtllUIA AMC OIWIOI MAU fOWMOI fOUWTAll HUIY Wt'1111W111tf 803 0S4& 0.•"Gf t37 0340 fount'"' Vllllty Ut t&OO UA CITY CIMMA lOWAMI •WHllf lrM>Q<t &J• Jt 11 Ntwpor1 S.4Cft eu oreo .... lllU PLAZA ITADIUM ......... no LA MllWIA OlllH·• &u ~29 5339 o.~ 63~ e110 La Mirada 921-1706 OWAllOl IAOOUIACll IOWAllOI lllllTOl MIHIOll OAIYf·I· II IOIO 581 5880 Co~•· Me:i.a ~40 1444 S4ll Juan C.$111nC) 493 00 G .. llAlllCllll llllll IUCI / .... ClllT T~tURSDA Y. Ml\ Y 6, 1982 UHANGf rouN I '( C ALH"ORNIA 25 CENTS Fireworks funding sought • in Laguna Most everyone agreed there should be an organized fireworks display In Laguna Beach this Fourth of July. bWty" to let off ftreworka. But the bottom line, after more than a half hour of diacusaion before the Oty Council, wu who la going to pick up the tab for a pyroiecruuc dilplay. Some argued it would be a deterrent to crlrpe and reduce injuries related to discharge of illegal fireworks. Last year the City Council en· acted an ordinance that makes the discharging of fireworks - even the so-called "sate and sane" brands -illegal. Others said it was a fair ex· change foJ the city's recently enacted bclh on discharge of PY· rot.echnics on the city's beaches. One citizen even argued that it's Laguna's "patriotic responsi- A constructive alternative, the council aaid at that time, would , ' ca.., ......... .,~ ...... DELA YEO CEREMONIES -Long-time friends Eugen Maier-Krieg and former Orange County Superviaor Alton Allen stand in front of statue of Madame Helena Modjeska in Anaheim park. Maier-Krieg created the stone statue 47 years ago. Artist honored Cited after 47-year delay By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille 0911y Piiot 91•ff Former Orange County supervisor Alton Allen thought his good friend Eugen Maier-Krieg deserved something special for the 15-foot monument he created for the city of Anaheim. • After all, Allen reasoned, visitors to Pearson Park in Anaheim's downtown have enjoyed the stone statue of Madame Helena Modjeska for nearly 47 years. Maier-Krieg of Laguna Beach created the statue of the great Polish-born tragedienne in 1935 with funds pro- vided by the federal Works Progress Administration. The monument was dedicated that September with the usual hoopla -an eight-piece concert orchestra and a lot of important dignitaries saying nice things about the statue and, of course, the unveiling. Alton Allen attended that ceremony nearly a half century ago with his artist friend. "They didn't give him any kind of a citation at the time," Allen recalls. "Furthermore, his name has never appeared on the monument." Allen thought the oversight should be corrected. He called Anaheim officials and offered to pay for a plaque to adorn the statue if the city would sponsor another ceremony. (See MONUMENT, Page A%) • NATION EPA doctoring attempt alleged Jack Andel"BOn reports that an offidal of the En- vironmental Protection Afency orde~ doctortna of technical papers IO that a au'dnogen would be macfe to appear lna harmful. Paae AS. Wasbingron's finer points What do Elizabeth Taylor, the IUD lobby and rattle1nake meat have ln common? They are all WMhlnpm superlaUves. Paae AlO. Soap operas losing suds 'tile term "toap opera" hM ·a different ~ tbeae daya: ttie major 1pomon are the niaiira of tootbpute, breath lreahenen and denture creams-. Pagee5. .. ( be a professionally operated py- rotechnics display. probably at MaJn Beach Park. But a 1tudy conduct4.'<i by Fire Chief Ron Adams showed that even a modest show would cost between $3,500 and $5,000. And a wham-barn half-hour show loaded with rockets red ~ would OQlt $12,000 to $18,- Community association leader& said Tuesday they don't have the reaourcet to fund a display, de- spite araumenta that the organi- zed ahow would be a deterrent t.o crime, 'hnd probably aave a few eyes and limbs. · Not to mention the annual overtime expeme tor police and flre crew1, who last year alone, extinguished three structure ti.res, a graaa fire and responded to 32 emergencies during the Fourth. Councilman Bob Gentry sug- i;tested the city might provide 8ome funds -perhaps $2,500 toward a show this year , a nd hope civic groups would pick up the rest of the tab. He sa1d the show would be a deterrent. "If ll saves an eye. or a young child's hand, ifs worth ll," ~n try said. But Lagunan Dallas Anderson argued the money ('OUld be put to better use, adding the city's em· phasij; should be on enforcing its new law and preventing the dangerous dl&Charge of firework• on city streets. ln the end, the C'OUncil directed City Ma n a ge r K e n Frank lo chloek with community groups t.o set• 1f there is support for funding a n annual show. And they asked the fi re chief to make tentative plans to hire pyrot echnic e xperls for the. Fourth. / Just in case m oney for the display IS forthcoming. 6 denied $175,000 Jury backs Sycamore Hills defendants in harassment case By DAVID KUTZMANN Of IM Delly Piiot ll•ff An Orange County Superior Court jury has ruled that six leading Laguna Beach citizens are not entitled to $1 75,000 from the former owners of Sycamore Hills, who were accused of mali- cious prosecution for filing a $28 million lawsuit eight years ago against 43 residents. Claremont attorney John Mc- Carthy, who represented the six Laguna residents. said his clients are considering an appeal. The six-man, six-woman jury returned with its verdict in the case earlier this week after Mc- Carthy had asked the panel for $175,000 in general damages and unspecified punitive damages. The jury, however, voted 9.3 in favor of defe ndants Rancho Palos Verdes Corp. and its parent c.'Ompanies, Great Lakes Proper· ties Inc. and Great Lakes Carbon Corp. of New York. The companies had filed the $28 million lawsuit in 1974 alle· gmg that the 43 Laguna citizens had participated in an alleged cons piracy through political ac- tion t.o deny the firms' rights to develop Sycamore Hills. S ix of thosC' resid e nts then s ued the properly owners, accu- s ing t hem of u nlawful h aras· sment. The six who sut>d are Arnold Hano, wn tt>r and forml'r cha1r- ma n of Village L aguna ; Bea Whittlesey, a longtime cnviron - mt'ntalist; a ttorney Ra lph Ben- son , no w a res ide nt o f San F rancisco; Michael Schll•y. for- me r city board of adjustmen t member; Victor Be lleruc, hu:.· band of Laguna Mayor S ally Bcllerue, and Paul Egly, a retired Los Angeles County S uperior Court judge a'nd G r eenbe lt mPmber. Mc<:arthy had argued that the only purpose of thl' 1974 lawsuit was to silen ce a nd int1m1da te tTlllC"S of the m mpony·s develop- mt•nt plans. Attorne ys for Ra ncho Palos Verdes, however , ~id tha l law- yers for the m mpanies honestly believed they had a good case in 197'4, when the legal acuon was f1k'<i It was later d1Sm1ssed. School budget OK due? Daze of judgment S. Laguna project cut urged Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees will be asked to approve a preliminary $6.9 milli· on spending package when they meet tonight. The inch-\hick budget for 1982-83 shows employee salaries taking up the bulk of expenses in the four-school district. Teacher salaries of $2.9 million are included in the preliminary document, with classified em- ployees taking another $1 .09 million. Employee benefits total $985,095. ~ t?~s Decisions. Decisions. Decisions. Appellate Court Justice Robert Gardner has made plenty in local and st.ate courtrooms since 1938. Now that the Corona del Mar jurist la semi-retired he's decided to apply his wit, memory and arch obeervations in an editorial colwnn for the Daily Pilot. Hi.a commentary has made him a popular master of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he has .spent 62 'lf his 70 years. And he's well published on such topics as juvenile jurisprudence and body surfing. He starts his column in Sun- day's Daily Pilot, recalling the thunderous arrival of another Harbor Area celebrity. By JERRY HE RTENSTEIN Of 1M D•llr Piiot St•tf A recomme ndation to cut m half the density o ( a housing de- velopme nt in South Laguna - Hobo Canyon has won praise from resid e nts of the coastal community. But at least one South Laguna c1v1c leader SC'es the latest pro· posal as a poss1 fle political move and the developer of the proje<-t 1s hopeful a compromise can be reached. The district anticipates recei· ving about $3.15 million in st.ate funds next year, based on an es- timated student enrollment of 2,- 449. And while the district is cur- rently overstaffed, a d.i.!trlct sp- okesman says no layoffs are anticipated. Clyde Lovelady. the district's business manager, said teachers who retire, resign or seek a leave of absence won't be re placed. Britain \Von 't halt Falklands action Fifth District Supervisor Tom Rile y had a lette r read at Wednesday night's meeting with the South Laguna Spcoeific plan committee m eeting rf'commen· ding the 350-ac re p roject be trimmed from 500 t.o 250 housing units Peter Herman. aide to Ki· k•y, read the lctlC'r Riley cited "sl•ns1t1v1 ty to the C>nv1ronme nt" and L·onc:('rns with tra ffic on Pacific Coast Highway as reasons for his proposal. The preliminary budget in· eludes no major capital improve- ment ite~ for oext year. And it doesn't take into ac· count salary increases for tea- chers, counselors and classified employees. Lovelady said he anticipates the district will take ln $71,153 more than it spends, plus a 3 peramt reserve account. He said that $71,153 could go toward salary increases, which would amount to less than a 2 percent hike for all employees. In addition, the district has received $100,000 from the La- guna Beach Education Founda- tion, which could add another 2 percent to employee salaries. Teachers are negotiating for a salary increase that would be the average of salaries paid teachers in all 12 unified school districts ln Orange County. (See SCHOOL. P11e A!) STATE By Tbe Asaoclated Press Britain vowed today to conti- nue military activities to regain the Falkland Islands while ac- cepting U .N . proposals as a framework for future talks~ An Pot grandma out on bail HOUSTON (AP) -An 82-year-old grandmother char· ged with marijuana possession says an arresting officer has promised to give her "something even better'' to ease the pain in her stiff joints. Laura Ethel Clark, grandmo· ther of five, was freed on a $1,- 000 bond Wednesday after nar- cotics officers found plants. bea- ring nine pounds of the illegal weed in her backyard. - Vidal snipes at Brown Senatorial candidate Gore Vidal calls Governor Brown a "political corpee" in Chicago 1peech. Daily Pilot edlto~ Tom Murphine reports on Page Bl. Smith empire liquidated The em&1Uj of C. Am.bolt Smith, who once con- trolled Air om1a, the San Diego Padree, a tuna. canue.ry, l'ffl '91ate and ta>dca~ ii no mon. Paa@&. • • 'Fiddler' bas wide appeal The appeal of "Fiddler on the Roof,'-' the popular mUlkal blCk In Lo. Anplel, II unlveral Pap C8. t Arge nti n e Fore ig n Mtnistry source said the British position ruled out a diplomatic solution, for the moment. Prime M inis ter Ma rga r e t Tha tche r t old l h c Ho u se o f Commons in London that Britain accepted U.N. Secret.ary-~neral Javier Pe rez de Cuellar's pro- posals for settling the conflict as a "framework" for future talks, but said Britain will "continue with our mill tary activities." Perez de C uella r r e fused to make public his peac.'e plan, but infonned sources said it included a cease-fire, withdra~al of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falklands area and appoint- ment of a U.N. administrator for the islands while negotiations resume t.o determine their future. The plan r e porte dly takes no position on the thorny s over· eignty issue. (See FALKLAND, Page A%) INDEX The Hobo Canyon property, fo r whi c h a gen e r a l plan a m e nd m e nt w as a ppr oved in 1979, is located on the northeast s1dc o f Pacific Coast Highway across from Blue Lagoon. Riley said proposed deve lop- ment of the canyon area, which would mean landfills as much as 50 feet deep m some spots. was one of his m a1or conce rns for proposing the cutback . He urges that only the mouth of the can· yon and ridge above Ahso Creek be dC've loped. "There was considerable dis- c.'Onlent in the community and concern over traffic"' which also persuaded Riley to c hange his view on the project, according t.o Hennan. Hugh Wilkins, president of the South Laguna Civic Association, greeted the announc-cment with enthusiasm but said "we would like to see it eliminated all toi;te· (See HOBO, Page A!) - At Your Service A4 Ann Landers 82 Erma Bombeck B2 Movies C8 L .M. Boyd A8 Mutual FwMb C6 Bullne9I C6-7 National Newa A3 Callf omia M Public Notices B6.B8ca C..vak8de B2 rstelncn>bn 1-4 ClulUled 04..S • B2 Comics 02 Stock Marketa C7 era.word 02 Televllkln g I>Mth Notlca D3 Thea ten Editorial AS W•ther A2 EnteNinment C8 WOl"ld News A3 HorolCOPI 82 SPORTS CdM clinches title -tie Corona del Mar cUnclMicl at i..t a'u. fOI' the See View Le-cue bMeball ~p6ooahip. hie Cl. • -..---~ ~ ,....,.. .... ._.. ~".::...--~ . FAI:;KLAND ISIJANDS • • • • Britain aaid W~y lt WU workin.I with Sooret.ary of State AlexuM!er M. Hail Jr. on a plan from Perea de CueJlar that In· eluded an early cea1e-flre and withdrawal. But the ldeu were never apelled out and the lat.est atatementa clearly indicated more fighting was likel y ove r the South Atlantic l1laod1 that Ar· gent~na aelzed from Britain on April 2. "It would be too eaay to say no military a c tivities during nego tiations," Mrs. Thatche r said. "What would happen? We should be hamstrung. The people would still remain under the heel of the invader while the Argen - "' tines increased their activities on th e mainland, incr eased their supplies and reserves in order to attack us at their will." cease-fire with Argentine wit~- drawal from \he lllandl, a bu.le c Brit.lab ptc.'COJ\dJUon for a t.ruce. But Mra. Thatclaer aald lt wu ,''Ukely'' that ArgenUna WU ... kln1 a ooaae-flre without with- drawal of ita troops from the ii· lands. "That would be a very evident ploy to keep \hem in poaeeaton of their ill-gotten gains. We are right to be very, very w ar) of it," she said. Meanwhile, no new military action was reported In the South Atlantic battle zone Wedneeday. Argentina drew the la.st blood Tuesday when one of Ua planes fired a missile that set fire to the British destroyer Sheffield, for- cing its crew to abandon s hip, and a British Harrier jet fighter was shot down and the pilot kJJ. led in an attack on one o ( the Falkland airstrips. SCHOOL BUDGET. • • The school board h as offered a 5 percent pay hike that w ould work toward the median salary paid all county unified districts. Under that proposal, teachers , would receive a percentage in- .crease based on longevity, college 1,credits and advanced de~rees. T hat mean s some teach e rs could receive only a 2 percent in- crease next year, w ith others receiving up to 8 percent. The board's intention is t o redesign Laguna's salary sched· ule to be more competitive at the maximum salary level. HOBO CANYON. • • th e r e xc ept for the rid ge development." Wilk.ins said that he personally hopes R iley's proposal isn 't a "political move." Riley is up for re-election J une 8. "My first thought was that this seems stra n ge coming a t this time," Wilkins said. Dan Salceda, vice president for Mayer Const ructio n Co., L os Angeles, de veloper for Hobo Canyon scud it would be "back to the drawin g board" for his firm. "Cutting the density virtually in half is not going .to be so easy," Sa lceda sa id . He said his firm will like ly do i ts own traffic study and meet later with Ri ley to see 1f a com promise can be reached. "We're not against listening to any proposal," Salceda said . Only the general plan has been approved for Hobo Canyon. T he project still needs w ning and use permit approval as well as finaJ a p pr ova l by t h e co u n ty and Coastal Commission. .. We're looking at two years before grad ing would even began (if. the project is approved)" said Ron Tippets of the county Envi- ronmental Management Agency. The E MA reco mme ndations stron&ly influenced Riley's latest position. MONUMENT ARTIST. • • They agreed. Earlier this week, Anaheim officials met in the tree- lined park to honor the aging artist. Allen, who was a county supervisor from 1963 until 1971, said he and h is long-time friend had a good chat following the brief ceremonies. "I wa nted the ceremony to coincide w ith his 85th birthday in January, but the plaque didn't arrive in time," Allen said . "He's been my friend for more than 50 years, and I just thought he deserved some recognition." . A# Wlrepfloto A~<?THE~ VI~~ -A magazine in Buenos Aires depicts BnUsh Pnme MllUSter Margaret Thatcher as a pirate. U.S. losing ground Latin America • 1n WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. backing for Britain in the Falk - lands crisis 1s producing a back- lash m Latm America that could hamper American efforts to re- sist communist expansionism in Central America. The hostile hemispheric reac- tion to the U.S. move Friday has raised do ubts a bout American ab1h.ty to muste r broad-based support for its Central American policies And the cn s1S has left the Un- ited States more politically isola- ted from 1ts Latin neighbors than at any time in recent memory as virtually all governmen ts from the region, spanning the poLitical spectrum, have aligned themsel- ves with the Argentine cause . Moreover. what appeareci to be a n e w e ra in U .$-Arge ntine rt'la taons a few w eeks ago has given way to one o( almost total alll'na I.Jon. ln a protest not~ dehvered to US authorities Sunday, Argen- tine Foreign Min is ter Nicanor Costa Mendez predicted that U.S . support for Brit ai n will leave "lasting scars" on relations be- tween the two countries. But the po htacal cost to the NllS ANAlYSIS United States w ou ld be dimi- nished 1( the U.N mediation ef- fort ends the fightmg and leads to a negotiated settlement. U.N. S ecretary Ge neral Javier P erez d e Cuellar said Wednesday night both Britain a nd Argentina indi- cated in terest in hlS proposals. One Immediate beneficiary or the U.S . estrangement with Ar- gentina is Nicaragua. Before the crisis over the Falkland Islands. t he United States looked to Ar- ge ntina as an all y 1n br inging pressure against Nicaragua's lef. tist Sandinista government. According to reports this year, the administration cited Argen- tina for a possible role in a covert operation ajmed at d isrupting al- lege d Nica r aguan arms sh ip- ments to le(tast rebels tn El Sal- vador. Any s u c h coope r a tion now would seem highly unlikely, par- ticularly an view 0 1 tne entnusa- as tic bac king Nicarag u a has s hown for Argent ina since the early days of the crisis Warmer days The Falklands debate also may have strained relations betw~n the United States and Venezuela, • an Ame r ican all y an Ce n t ral America. At an OAS fore ign ministers meeting he re las t week, Ve ne- zuela captained a successful ef- for t to delete from a proposed resolution a laudatory reference to Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.'s mediation effort. Coastal n1ng becoming soutnwest lo wesl 10 10 18 ~nol5 by afternoon w1tn a wes1-sou1hwes1 swell running 2 to 3 teel SKles over the ocean prot>at>ly will clear only parttally aller h4!avy morning clouds Morning low ctoud• g4YI wty 10 ----------.; ...... WASHINGTON (AP) -i>ret· ident Reagan aaid today a com- prom.lae budget plan drafted by Actress dies in LB Ser vices w e r e con d u c ted Wednesday for television and movie actress Margaret Wildman whB died in h er Laguna Beach home last Saturday. Mrs. Wildman w as an active television performer in the 1960s, and before that was under con- t rac t with the late H owar d Hawkes. Her movie appearances inclu- ded "T he Thing," "One Minutt• to z.ero," "I, the Jury," "Ziegfeld Girl," "The Diamond Wizard," "Pride o f the Blue G rass" and "Man's Favorite Sport." On television she appeart.od in ''Ellery Queen." "Peyton Place," "Wagon Train," "The Ray Mil- land Show" "Ch rysler Thea~r" and hundreds o ( commercaals. S h e w as t he w1(e o ( Paul Wi ldman , preside nt o f the Southwestern University School of Law in Los Angeles. S he is survived by her hus- band and daughters, Ann Con- ley. Julia Ham and Eileen Wild- man; a grandson . Chri~topher Conley, and her father, Thomas Sheridan. Senate Republlcana and endoned • by the White Houac "can put OW' 1 country firmly on the road to L'COnomlc proeperity" if conares- aionaJ Democrata cooperate. Al a question-and-answer ae. sion wjth reporten In \he White House Rose Garden, Reagan said th£> new budget will "continue to protect" the basic be ne fits of Social Security recipients. The c:ompromise bud~et plan was said to include $40 b1lllon In unapecl· fil>d Social Security cuts and tax increases. Reagan was questioned on that point, but did not explain h ow the reducuons could be obtained wi thou t lowering benefits . He dtd say that the savings "could <.'Om(• from a restructuring of the program," but didn't explain that tn dc1.a11. The president said the answer on Social Security would come ultima te l y from a bipa rtisan <.-Ommis. ... 1on studying the system. The <.·omm1ss1on is expected to n •porl by tht.• t-nd of the year. Th(• preside nt said the spen- ding plan approved Wednesday by th<.' &>natc Budget Committee would "continue to bring down thl' growth in federal spending . 1t should reassure financial ma~kcts by sh arply reducing projected d e fici ts in the years lx·yond . . . It will preserve our commi tment t o a s tro n~er dl'lense" F aniilies sought for foreign kids Hos't families in Laguna Beach and other south Or- ange County cities are being sought to hos t 25 Scandina · vi.an students for the 1982~83 school year. T he program is sponsored by th e American Scandin a- •The new Laguna Niguel Ch amber of Commerce w ill hold its installation d inner May 11 at the ~l N igu e l Country Club. Cock tails wi ll be served beginning a t 6:30 p.m. with d inner served promptly at 7:30 p.m. •Th e Capistrano Bay Park a nd Recreation D istric t is seeking youth and adult ath- le tic instructors for its sum- mer programs. Instructors are needed for via n Student Exchange, a non-profit group headquarte- red in Laguna Beach. Interested fam ilies should con tact the o rgaqization at 497-6526 or re pt"esentative Fra n s Vollebregt at 498-4095. Cost of the dinner is $17.50 per person and reserva tions w iU be on a first come, first served basis, with a limit of two reservations per chamber member. For information, call Carole Zcvan Bowman a t Monarch Bank, 495-3300. specialty classes, workshops. sp o rts c lin ics. c hildre n 's camps a nd arts a nd cr a fts classes Those w15hing to instruct a class s hould call the d istrict office at 496-4251 bv May 7. hazy 1ftlf'llOOnt lod•Y Ind Frldey. T · Wermer with hlgh1of 74 to 78. emperatureS Nlgh1 Ind m«nlflg low ~ to- night end Frld1y, oth«WIM tllr. Overnight 1ow1 In the mid 501. NATIOH HI Lo Pep 7t 40 ' Our Season Opener H I g h 1 F r Id I y 8 8 t O 7 5 · Albany Huntington-Newport erH t•m· Alt>uque per1ture1 renge lrom I l\lgtl of 79 Amarillo lo I low of 66. Asheville Eleewtlete. lrom Point~ Allanll llon 10 lhe Mlllcen bofd« i nd Atlante Cty out 80 mlle9; Ugl'll Vllllble wlndt. Au1ttn 62 36 12 38 35 03 11 1 49 83 60 61 48 N..tt•ff .. tt W••lttht"f •-...,4• • H()A.1' U •, O.;otpl ul C t-rl'ff\•""• 1• f becomlnO _.to eout'-110 to Balt1rnore 18 knotl lhll Ill~. Weet to Bllltngs 79 66 98 72 44 S8 43 Fronts: r:o1<1 .... w.irm .... Ot I k.OWI -~l.lfMtft.tl */•• 1~thwMt 1well1 ot 2 to 3 tMt "eirmt0911m Plrtly doudy Ihle aftemoon B11tn1rck U.S. summa r y Tt>unoerst0tm1 se>re11d1ng lrom, ea1ter11 Kensu to the Texes Rio Oren<le Valley P<O<l~ up to 8 Inches or "'" during the night 1n Okt1hom1. conlrlbutlng to three deal hi Fl11h lloodlng WIS reported Ill tow-tying 11e11 ol Law1oo. Okla , where the 6 lnch11 ol rain wae measured A Lawton women wu killed wh1n • rain-laden supj!rmarket roof collepee<I. Two other people died ~n raln·allckened hlgllw1y1 In eeparete craanes Scallered showers and lhun. derstorma lell from upper Michl· gan through north-I Illinois to northeeat 1<1n1u lodrf end lrom eu t1rn Nebraska to the Teu1 P11lhllldle Okl1hom1 relnl1ll r1por11 In· eluded more then 5 lnChet II Adi end 4 lncl'let et Lawloo Ind Ron F1lr 1kle1 prev11110 over the r"I of the centrll U S Ind much of INW•I The Nlllonll W .. lhlf Service Pfl<llc:ted tMwerl Ind thundef· 110tm1 trom the tOUthetn pleln1 through IN MtAltelppl Vllley 10 the uwer 0r .. 1 lMI• Mo1lly tunny 1kle1 wife pr .. dieted lor the WUI. 1nd lrom Flotld• to tOUthem New Engtend T8"'petlhH91 1round the 111· non --'Y today renol<l lrom 28 In Caper. ~· to 11 In Brown1vtt- 1e, Te.- California lklel 1hould be mo111y 111r 1cro11 S outhern C1111ornl1 tlltO\IOh 81hH'dey once morning low cfoudt dittlc>tl•· GUiiy .... 10 nottflweet wind• could reu "'°""*"' Ind not1Mm deeen1 Frld91. The N1lion.I WMtMt hrYlce 1>r4'dlcl4'd high• lfrld•y II 11 In Loa An9e .. 1, In lh• upper 701 eton9 the COMt • .,......., 112 Md 72 111'1 -ll'IOUlllllnl, In 1'le IOI In ..,... ....,.. Md tM t0e In low . ....... ..... '""",.._. COi~· 8olee Bos too Browns Vile BullalO Burlington Cuper Charletn SC Chertsin WV Charltte NC Cheyenne ChlClgO Clnclnnall Cleveland Clmb11 SC Columbus Oal-Ft Wth Dayton Denver On Moines OetrOtl Outulll Et Pao F.,00 ~···" Oru1Fw H1rtl0td Helen• Honolulu Houa•on ln<Sn6Pft• J1el111n MS Jac:ksrwtle Kini Chy LU Veg.IS Lltlll Roell Loulsvllll Lul>bock ~· Miami 86 82 61 37 80 32 60 47 84 76 76 60 72 44 54 24 76 84 114 47 82 55 47 26 88 64 09 112 53 83 57 83 54 82 50 78 6t t 72 8• 56 54 32 01 18 49 74 82 ~ 61 40 06 71 411 .91 ea M 58 33 S4 30 73 39 57 •2 80 73 0 1 78 71 85 60 86 83 82 S4 81 so 1.91 82 56 85 86 85 57 77 42 09 86 69 78 75 M1twaut1w Mpts-SI P NaV1v111e N-Orleans New Yo<k N0ttotlt No P111te Okll City Om1ha Orlando Phtladpnla Phoenix Pill a burgh Piiand, Me Piiand, Ore Provldflnce Raleigh Reno Salt Lake San AnlOOIO Seattle Shreveport Slo(UI Fi ll• SI LOIM St P·Tlmp1 St Ste M11i. spo11- syracuse Topek1 ·Tuceon TulH w~ WlcHt• 11 60 08 62 42 10 85 57 87 1 t 68 53" 77 47 53 34 05 80 50 1 80 87 45 43 113 60 H 51 80 61 02 17 52 88 39 70 48 67 44 80 50 10 34 57 34 75 63 3 56 63 47 112 62 0 1 55 44 to 88 88 Ill 60 S6 411 12 83 42 72 48 77 47 2 12 ag 52 71 83 1 12 11 50 T1 42 2.33 CALIFC>ttNIA Blkertlleld 91 68 Blylhe 87 Eur1U 87 47 Frnno lie 57 llnCltter 89 57 Lot Angelel N 80 ia:- Mft Mft Mft Nft Wft ::t:: Mft t"4ft ...... T-. ff 82 '2 t2 t2 Q 18 17 11 .. ... ..... --r.11\ ""*' ..... _ ...... --In Ill•-· T~I T'IOH: Hllft 10:0t a.Mo L-l:lt p.m. 1we11 Qlo. rlOIOft ..... lol • Ht. Marysville Monte<ey NIM'dlM Ot kllnd Pi»o RoblO'J A.a Bluff Redwood C11y Sacramento SehnH Si n 01eoo San Frarn:lsco S&nta Barbera S1nta Marie Stockton Thermal Ukllfh Barstow Big Beor Bishop Cotallno Long Beach Monrovln Mt WllJOO Newporl S..Cll OntlflO P1lm Sprlng.e P1U<len1 R1vere1de Sen Bern11dlno Sin JIM' 89 51 68 85 - 71 ~ 78 53 90 59 n 56 84 48 68 53 70 64 64 50 64 57 63 87 46 87 84 85 55 61 31 81 40 72 54 69 57 01 68 58 05 42 86 50 87 se 89 58 85 56 04 86 S'5 87 57 78 62 Extended weather SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COAS TAL A N O MOUNTAIN AREAS -Pe1ehy Ill• ntghl Ind 11rly morning low Cloud• nMt the cOlll OlherWIN lllr Locel ttr°"CI gully norl llweet wind• In 1h1 mounllln• S11IKdl)'. Highs In lhe COHiii lrHI rl~Om thf upper 801 It lhe to mid 801 Inland ., .... LOwt 53 10 83. Mountain re10fl hight 88 lo 78. Low• 40s to low 509. Tide1 TODAY ~ IOW 3'00 p.rn. 0.1 11.oOnd hlalll t : t 4 p.m. • .• -·· ,,,.. IOW 1:14 a.m. 0.1 '"' """ tO:Ot a.m. 4, 1 leooftd' IOW 1;11 p,11\, 1.1 l«IOflCI ....... 1:11 PA I.I lvfl Mt• tomy •t 7:40 p.m., ,... , ...... "' . MOOll ""' ~ .. 1:11 ~ .... ,,. .. 1:111.11'1. ' • .. - l We've teamed up a couple of winning looks lO gee your spnng and summer off to a great start 100% cotlOn madras pleated walk shorts. and an all cotton crew neck !>VJeater From our ladies deparcment. naturally I/ ~· L Pet lovers should rally to , aid shelter It took a little budget 1huf -rung, but the Laguna Beach City Council Tuesday found a way to keep the city's an1mal 1helter open to the pubUc seven days a week. Last month, the city dosed the 1helter to the public on Tues- days and We dne sdays, c iting budget constraints and strict reg- ulations on cleanliness imposed recently by the county. But animal lovers argued the ci ty cannot adequately serve ani- ma l ow ners by closing s h elte r doors on those two days. B ased on the concerns ex - pressed by a group calling itself the L aguna Beac h Dog Owners Guild (DOG ). city officials took another look at the budge t. What they found was about $1,000 in the police ove rtime ac- count tha t w as unspent -just e nough to cover salaries at the shelter and enable the facility to remain open on those two days. The $1 ,026 from the police account wlll keep the doon open dally throu1h the end of June, when the council will conalder next year'• budget. That bUdaet propoeal includes funding f« full-time shelter h<>u.n througfi October, when the faclllty could go back to a five-day-a- week operation for the public. Be fore that tlme, the City Council will have to decide whe- ther to spend another $3,000 to $4,000 to keep the facility ope n daily through next year. The animal shelter, with the help of volunteel"i, ia a succesaful and humane operation in Laguna Beach. Funds sho uld be found to keep it a s~. available to the public seven days a week. Maybe the animal lo vers could meet the council half w ay b y marshaling more volunteer help. Budget future hazy On pa pe r, Laguna Beach's budget for next year shows more money coming in than going out. In reality, there a re uncer- tainties tha t could change the pic- ture, according to city officials. Incom e to the cit y for fiscal 1982-83 is s hown as about $7.9 million , and C ity Manag er Ke n Frank's spending package calls for the expenditure of $7.79 million. With a cost-of-living increase for e mployees of 9 pe rcent, the city would have an ending balance of more than $800,000. But the city's financial picture is difficult to assess, with several factors te nding to make things a bit fuzzy. Examples: -The city could lose as much. as $254,000 in state allocations to cities unde r Gov. Bro wn's pro- posed budget. Added to that uncer- tainty is the outcome of two ini- tiatives on the June ballot that would also adversely affect income to Laguna. -Federal reve nue sharing might not be continued, meaning the city w ould lose an estimated $144.000 in revenues. -Capital improvements long neglected in town should be un- dertaken, Frank says. In addition, the s lump in housing sales affects property tax income to the city, and investment earnings will decline if the interest rate drops as expected. But the city 's pro pose d budget shows no layoffs of em- ployees, with the exception of a police officer position that will be eliminated as a fede ral safety grant runs out. The City Council will be re- viewing the proposed budget later this month, and it could be adop- ted by mid-June. , Frank warns that it could be the end of summer before the city hu a firm idea about what money will be available. In short, every- one should be ready to make ad- justments. Fireworks priority low What it all comes down to is economic priorities. The L aguna Beac h C i ty Council last year enacted an C)rdi- nance prohibiting the use of fire- works by private citizens on the Fourth of J uly. The new law took effect after a rash of firew orks-related inci- den ts in the Art Colony last year. But in a pproving the fire- works ba n , the City Council or- dered city officials to s tudy whe- ther the city should sponsor and • pay for a pyrotechnics display on the Fourth. The reault.s of that research show an organi zed fir e works s h ow , put on by professionals, w ould cost between $8,000 and $12,000. With the city facing financial uncertainties in the next year, the City Council has suggested that conununity organiz.ations and civic groups step into the breach if there is to to be a fire works dis- play this summer in Laguna. That id e a m a k es a lot o f sense. Opinions expressed in the spa(e above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views e.IC· pressed on this page are those of their author s and artists. Reader comment is inv1t ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, tosta Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7t4l 642·4321 L.M. Boyd/ School bells No blanng bells signal class starts and stops at the high school in Eliza- beth, Colo. Instead. currently popular music does so over the school's public address system . So? Nothing Impor - tant, maybe. But even after all these years. if I close my eyes, I can hear those jangling bells rattle the hall- ways. Can't you? The British traditionall y have been r egarded as quite conser vative. yet r esearchers claim the re is a hi~her percentage of nudism in Great Britain than in any other country. Maybe so, don't know . Do know the Germans, too, in bygone years were considered e xtremely straight in most ma tters, and it was the G ermans who started the first nudlst colonies. Among the married. if ooe or the two votes but the other doesn't chan~es are four to one the voter is the husband. Q. Didn't all the Japanese kamikaze pllota of World War II wear head - banda to keep their hair out of their ey•? A. Headbandt yes. but not to keep QRANGE COAST. Daily Pilot - t the hair out of their eyes. T hose ce- remonial bands were called hachimaki a nd they symbolized stre ngth and courage. Th e la w o f an ci ent Ro m e pro h i bite d a b ac h e lo r from delivering a n oration. Not e verybody can gueaa the whereabouts of the world's lar1est w ine cellars . Resear c h revea ls they're in South Africa. You say automation puts people out of work? The mos\ automated country in the w orld -Japan -hH only about a 2-percent unemployment rate. You. too, may find It convenient every ye a r abo ut t h is time t o r e m e mber the o bservation or Wiiiiam J a mes: ··There is no bad we ather. T here are o nly good clothes." The Libra woman Is the motl beau- ty consclows. the Scorpio woman the most dramatic, the Capricorn woman the most physical. Or IO con- tend the star1aaer1. Thomas P. Haley Publllher ,......... A. ........... Editor ••rNra Kntlltk .. Edltorl•I P-..e l!dltor ; TwO-house legislature best The litany for a unlcamL•ral legislature· started by former Speaker .Jc•SSt.• Unruh and continued by Common Cause has no w b een taken up b y Sen. Barry Keene. He has proposed a constitutional amendment which would n •p lace thl· present Legislatur<' with a S<'nall' of 67 mem bers. Arguing the present system which 1s costing over $100 million ;rnnually 1s "too duplicative and far too l'Xpcns1vt:," he con tends the "'t·hel·ks and halaneC's" contemplated with a two-house Legisla- t u re have been e liminated by thl• "one-man. one-vote" c'Ourt dl'l01s1oni. HP says his plan would s ;.ive $23 fn11lt0n yearly · WHILE HS IS t'Orrec'l in thl' Vll'W lhat the Legislature is "rar loo l'xpcns1v1"" his remedy is akin to throwing th<' baby out with the bathwater. For 1t as essc·n t1al that the Leg1slaturc• remain a strong br anch of the government and 1ts nC'- t-essary l'OSlS should not be an a rgum<'nt fo r weakening its powers The rt.'ason the Legislature is now too l'OStly is due to thl' self-md ulg1'nt'l' of thl• members. Far more than $2:\ mr llro n l·::an lx.• saved in current legislativl' opcrut1ons by C'lim inatmg the so-called fie-Id off1cl-s, a <•uphl·m1sm for tht· ye<1r arounJ t'.tm· pa1gn ht •adquart<'rs m:.11ntainl'd by t•a('h mem ber in his district, cutting the out- rageous payroll with its more than 2,200 staff ~orkt•rs wh11s1· m<1in function as fARl WATIRS partisan polrttc:., dnd d1S<.'ontrnu111g th<· furmshrng uf <JUlu:-. and unl111111t•d !>Up plU'l> of gasoltnC' for Nl'h meml>t•r It ,.., trU« that lht> t·hang<'::. hrought about by lht-<:ourt ruling on tht· 1m1• man. un<"-VOlC' issue have• Wt'akl0nl'Cl th1• 1·ht·1·k und balanl'(' or tht.• two-huu:.t• systt·rn It 1s not trut• that ll has tw1·n d1mmawd On the same day that Ke('nt' was ex- pound ing lo the press on his plan. As- sembly Spt•aker Willie Brown told tht• pn-s..., thl' Assembly would not pa:...., any ll('W IHX bills this l>l'SSIUn bt·eau:-.1· \ht• mt•m twrs d id n 't bt•lit>ve the· St•n<tlt· would ugn·t'. t hus dt•monstrallng th.it l ht• 1·h1.'\·ks and hcilant•t•S Of thl" IWll h11UM' systPm 1s alive <ind w•11·k111g Undt•r 1lw t·urrt•nl l(·g1)'i lat1v<> plan 1·ad1 hil l 111lr11dun·d mu:-.t d1·ar one or rnvn· c•1mrn1llN·:. 1n t'at'h howw. This 111 ov1J1·.., lh<· publw w11h mon· than one dtanl·t• al lt•..,tlfyin~ ror or against pro- µ11:-.Hb Undt·r a 11n1· howw :.yst<'m the lnlb would only II(• .;ubjt'(.'t lo om• pubhc IH·.irtng hdon· pa:.:-.agl'. thu:-. 1 t•dudng 1h1 tum· tlw puhl1t would havt• to learn 111 lh1· propos.1b ;11111 p11~·nt its views. Propon1·11h 1·1111 11•1111 th.11 1h1s would mak1· lht· I .t·g1:-.lalu11• 11uir1• t•l f11·1ent. Sul 11 1·1 f1Lw11t' nu Jll:-. 1tw 4u11·k pa.'iS<lge of rlt'w law:. 11 ~\<rll not lx•nl'l1l lht· pubh1·. Tht• L1 •g1:.l.1tun 1.., :.uppo..,<·d t11 bl' a de- lltx•rJlr\'1· bod\ 1n "h11 h .111 µroposal.s are l.in·fully "'"18h•·d THE WORST feature of the K eene one-house proposal 1s that it would ine- vitably place far too much power in the hand:. ol 11m 111.111. tlit "J1t ".1k1·r 11r. under K"'''nl•':. µropo:.al. tlw pn·..,11.lt-nt of the :-.<•nalt A mut la bt'llt•r plan tor rt>tlUl'lng ll·g1- s l.111v1· l'l>:-.ts and m.1k111g lh1· ll•g1slatt1rE' 1111111· Pf111wn1 1s th.it •11 S.·n Ii L .. Bill"' H1t·h.1rd.;1m wh11 \.\.111rld ro·turn lh<· Lt·gi :.l;11lo1· 111 th1· 1w••iil•· 11 \ l1m1ttnJ.( lhc l1 ·11gth ''' ,,.,..,,.,11.., .111d p111v1dinj.( f11r its n1(·1 ·11ng 1ml v 1·v1·rv ol~ll'r v1·,11 Foundations can help rescue schools To the Editor: In a recent artide, a UC law professor. J ohn Coons, and our state Sµpertnten- dent of Public Instruction, Mr. Wilson Riles bem oan the sprouting phenome- non of educational foundations . They discredit the fonnation of these founda- tions as perpetrators of inequality in the fu n d ing of the public educatio na l system. It is•my opinion lhat foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu- cation as Mr. Riles suggests, but rather MAILBOX symptoma tic of a society that is fed up with being told that they can't provide their children with w hatever level of public education they deem adequate in their own community after they have paid the bills to educate everybody else's child in the public school system . Many of t he same voices th at w r ing the ir ha nds and cry for "equal .. funding of the public educational system are the same people who pay little, if any, of the taxes that provide for th.at funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles ar e much more interested in pulling down t he educational level of the so- called a Cfluent segments of our society, ra the r than bringin g t he less affluen t segments up to a predetermined level of educational compete ncy. What they propoae is nothing less than a headlong rush to educational mediocrity. And this doesn't appear to bother them in the slightest as lQJlg as ev'eryon~ is "equal" at the lowest possible common denominator of educational competence. FORTUNATELY, an ever -increasing majority of people in this state refuse to succumb to th is call for public educaUo- naJ. mediocrity . And thus we are wit- nessing an ex.Plosion in the fonnation of the public echool foundations. What the foundations can contribute isn't a drop in the bucket In comparison to the total budget. At *'~.ooo It repre9entl about 1 percent of our local Newport-Mesa Di- strict's budget. But on the other hand, this sum equates to about 20 teachers' sa1aria And 20 teachers can go a long way to teaching remeclia1 readlnS. etc., or whatever a ptrticular district thinka it Is bei.1\8 ckprived of .by the atate'I un.fatr "equalliing'' funding formulas dktated by the court'• Sernno-Prielt dedllion. One very important function that thne foundations are pertormlng la to IOUlld the clarion to our cl\lzena that our public educational 1-,.iem 11 ln dancer of tue<:umbinf to the aodal englneerln1 exce11ea o our liberal alate judicial l)'IU!m: and urtlea the people t i.nd up and demand of their le111latol'9 that eome\blng be done about it, we will wllnlm the 0tpplete erna&"Ulltlon o« our public eclucMloml lysteftl • W9 know it w.u before the • ot um dee8de. l'ou*am. are ln no war~ \ild· maw mww• to I.be pUPt al. as public IChool syttem. 'Ibey do, ho-Newr. eerve aa a temporary llf •-•vtn1 tourniquet that 1s being urgently applied to our hem orrhaging public school system whose financial UCe-blood is being bled white by the court-imposed sanctions of the Serran o-Priest decision . The ul timate cure for the pen l that we now fmd our public education system m 1s through public supported leg1Slat1on that will set a pred ete rmined level of excellence in public education for all of our public schools. At the same time, this legislation should encourag~ communi- ties to exceed this predetermined level of educational excellence through their own additional financial sacrifices 1f they are willing and able to do so. TOM WILLIAMS Direc-tor of "Parents for a Responsive Board of Education"' Backing baffles To the Edjtor: ln the April 26 Pilot 1 noted a news story datelined Burlingame. stating the CTA (California Teachers Assn.) repre- senting 197,000 members, endorsement o ( Tom Bradley and Jerry Brown for governor and U.S. Senator respectively. On the editor ial page. Earl Waters' column graphically describes Gov. Brown's underhanded raid on the Pubhc Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of $180 million to help balance his budget. T h is is the employees' own money. held in trust for their pensions. If the CTA endorses a candidate of that ilk, and their endorsement reflects their idea of intelligent thinking I can now more easily understand one of the reasons why students are reportedly not learning more in school. P.S . WILLS Medicare fraud To the Editor: My subject la Medicare fraud. I en - countered i\ lut year when I was hos- pitallz.ed for a broken hip. I was charged for t.hlngl I never received. like $2.50 fbr a sample of toothpaste. I wrote to both m y .enators: from them I received a re- ply that ahowed they mis8ed the point. I WU not complaining abou\ what r had to pay. My complaint was what they are doing to M.edkare. l wrote to the presi- dent and received no reply. la thia an iasue that ii too ho\ to handle? Do you believe this may account for the near dem.iae of Social Secwity? NOW THERE IS eomething new. A medical center baa been aet up for Medbre patlen\a wlwn! the doctors ac-• cept what Medicare pa)'9. Tbe flnt time I went I never aaw the bUl. .Ull don't know what ft wu. Then I wu tent to a dermatolocl•t who alao accept.I wha\ ~)'I. • ~.illln ,,_ r.-rure--.... Tllt r ... •u••-let· .., ... , ...... ,, ........ 1*91 .. ,_,_ ~· .. - _.. ·-....... -~· .... ~ lftllll"' ''"91 ........ .,., INll!f'I .............. -· ... •1t.......-.-i ....... If wffiC*" ""'*'It~ .... , •Ill Ml .. ,...,.,... U ftet\ 1'10 M , ... .,_ .. ..a~ Nel!lt _....,. ~ M -tM lflW .. _.. .... .,... .. , •er1l.ce1.e11,..,...._ ' ' He charged Medicare $695 for a pro- cedure (exactly) that I had done a few months ago for $80 and c·ouldn't u n- dc•rstand why I was sh ockt·d. whe n I d1dn•t have to pay for 1t Some people may not care but I do J refused to sign the bill and have re ported rt to H ealth Care Admintstratton I have written to both mv scnal.ors and told them of thousands of d ollars the hospitals are cheating. thl'y al.so missed the point, or L'i 1t a no-no subject? It is bagger than tht• defense budget and ifs killing Social Set·ur1ty. I fc.'t.'I l must give 1l onl' mon• try to wak1· somebody up. JANE M . KERR Bolsa Chica plan To the Editor: While the text of your April 23 article, "Coast Unit Rl·jects Bolsa Chica Plan," was gcn<'rally at'curate, the headline, which sugg<'sts that th e Coastal Com - rruss1on denied approval of the Orange County Bolsa Ch ica land use plan, w as in error The fact 1s that the Coastal Commis- s ion ruted for anolher hearing to onre again look at the plan. This will be scheduled sometime bet ween June 15-18. In the interim, the commission staff as lo review sc1en t1 f1c evid en ce introduced by a team of nationally rec- ogn ized sc1e nt1sls commassioned by Sig- nal Landmark. private owne r of ·most of the Bow Chica property. The sdentista s how that 4 53 acres of the l ,600·acre par~!. including the existing 200-acre ecologicaJ reserve, is weUands. This is a contradiction to the Department of Fish and Game report w h ich stat.es tha t l,000 acres is wetlands. In the meantime, t he Coastal Com - mission staff is to be In rommunicat.ion with Orange County planners to discusa differences. A Special Area Manuemenl Process (SAMP) -pla nning involving a mix of rede ral and state govemrnental agencies and concerned citizen groups - ls echeduled to meet at county oWces on May 10. Those who have communJc.ated sup- port Cor the worthwhile well-thOUf(ht· out county plan should be encouraged to amtlnue their efrorta. W~ YNE CLARK Repno.eentative SJgnal Landmark, Inc. CllllYCll ...._, .. ,_..._..,....., ......... ... _._., ................. a; ... ,~ ....... ... ..................... ,"" . The Diamond Anniversary _fing ~bond of diamonds tharsays · ~ you'd marry her oil over again. ·RAFF.jelVeJry-. a2 P'nNon 19f•hd Newpot1 Be•c:h • 844-2040 • 3 generation• ol lflendly peraonel a .. wlc:• eryt hi ng must go up to70 °0 0FF! FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH A ROSE HAS A SPECIAL MEANING • • • Pin a Rose on y~ur Lady Fair_ in the language of flowers, to give a rose is to say "I Love You." The rose In full bloom has come to mean beauty at Its fullest, while the unopened rose signifies un-awakened love. One or both of these beautiful emblems of love from Slavlck's wlll tell her more than many bouquets. Rose Bud Pin In 14K Gold ..... $69.95 In Vermell · · . $19.95 In Sterling · $ 9.95 Furnose Pin 1n 14K Gold. . $69.95 In VermeL ... $19.95 In Staring. . . . S 9.95 Botti 14K Gold Roses ore OVOllable with a dianond. SLAVICK·s Flne~Slnce 1917 Where the best surpnses begin. Fashion Island (71 4) 644· 1380 • N.wport Buch Also CrtatM Los Angeles •San Ol9go • Las \leoa5 for spring hiking, boating, Walking ... fuq. sportif c.amp erort in khaki or whit<z.. with it, our shorts~ trcrli- tional pk3id ~hirt ani lciath<ir &1t mak<i 1t at-eaeq, ... spring and summ<ir. JCPenney FABRICS!· Entire Stock Reduced 50% off ~FASHION ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTI:R Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley Luggage Travable cata log coming Wednesday, May 12 In fhe Daily Pilat G 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach, CA near Bulloci<'s Wiishire 92660 7:1 4/759-9101 ?- ( Sunday, May 9th MOTHER'S DAY join us for lunch or dinner Great Drinks Delightful Lunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644·2030 500 N. Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772·2130 111111 1111111 THURSDAY. Ml\V b 1q9;,i 1lll J'\fl'4 · ,f 1 •ll1 N I • 1 A t 11 ORNIA ~!>C ENT <; Irvine QuoruHJ taps Nakaoka, Wiener By GLENN SCOTI' Of--.OM!r .......... The Irvine Quorum, a small hut hardy policical group, has endoraed John Nakaoka and Barbara Wiener in the June 8 city council election. The groµp, which claims to stand for less government and less "social experimentation," didn't endorse the only incum- bent In the six-person race, Lar- ry Agran. Alan Snodgrass, president of the group, said members view Agran as an elected o(ficial who tends to rely on government pJ"Oll'ama to eolve local prob.lema rather than turntna to private enterprise or voh.lnteen. That position la not popular with Irvine Quorum, which had about 20 of its estimated 60 membera at Tuesday's endorw- ment aession. Agran disagrees. He sald his record shows prudence in spen- ding and taxing while he was the official who went to bat for small businesses when Irvine Company officials began reviewing lea.sing policies in their shoppiJlR centers. ..., .......... .., ....... "...., DELAYED CEREMONIES -Long-time friends Eugen Maier-Krieg and former Orange C-ounty Superviaor Alton Allen stand in front of statue of Madame Helena Modjeska in Anaheim park. Maier-Krieg created the stone statue 47 yea.rs ago. Artist honored Cited after 47-year delay By STEVE MITCHt:LL Of the Deify Pilot S l8ft Former Orange County supervisor Allon Allen thought his good friend Eugen Maier-Krieg deserved something special for the 15-foot monument he created for the city of Anaheim. After all, Allen reasoned, visitors to Pearson Park in Anaheim's downtown have enjoyed the stone statue of Madame Helena Modjeska for nearly 47 years. Maie r-Krieg of Laguna Beach created the statue of the great Polish-born tragedienne in 1935 with funds pro- vided by the federaJ Works Progress Administration. The monument was dedicated that Septeri\be.t:...wt(h the usual hoopla -an eight-piece concert orchestra and a lot of important dignitaries saying nice things about the statue and, of course, the unveiling. Alton Allen attend~d that ceremony nearly a half century ago with his artist friend. "They didn't give him any kind of a citation at the time.'' Allen recalls. "Furthermore, his name has never appeared on the monument." Allen thought the oversight should be corrected. He called Anaheim officials and offered to pay for a (See MONUMENT, Page A%) NATION EPA doctoring attempt alleged Jack Andenon reportl that an offldal of the Err- vironmelltal Pro1eetlon ~ordered doctorina of techn.lcal papers 10 that a eartinopn would be macfe to appear lem hannful Pace A8. Washington's finer points What do Elizabeth Taylor. the aun lobby and rattleanake meat have ln common? They are all , Wuhinlton IUperlaUva. P• AlO. Soap operas losJns suds The term "eoep opera" W a diffennt mean1na tbete diy.: the ~-ipOMOft are the maltert of toothpute, breath lresb~Mn and denture Cl'MIDI. PaaeC5. t . ~ -~--------"-/ The Irvine Quorum endorse· menta dilfer from recent recom- mendaUona from another local political group, Irvine Tomorrow, which endorted Agran and can- didate Edward Doman. Irvine Tomorrow generally backs measure• to protect the city'a environment. The other candidates in the council race are Wllliam Pozzi and Marjorie Keller, Pozzi, a Li- bertarian, received some consid- eration fro m Irvine Quorum members, Snodgrass said, but hasn't contributed as much ser- vice to the community as Mra. Wiener or Nakaoka, who is a trustee of the Irvine Unified School District. Among the five candidates for the Irvine Ranch Water Diatrict. quorum members endorsed ap- pointed incumbent Betty Olson and challengers Frank Hurd and Orville Reinhardt. Two incumbents, Peer Swan and Ray Auerbach, weren't en- dorsed. ln their case, Snodgrass said lt waa less a caae of ph.iloeo- phy as much as a t.•ase of pdlHic- king. Supporters in the membership who helped Swan wan an en- donement four years ago didn't show up at Tuesday's meeting while backers o f Hurd and Reinhardt "were there m force," $81d Snodgrass. Hurd is a former dty planning commissioner and S<:hool district trustee. Reinhardt, who was un- sealed two years ago, 1s a former c hairman of the watt'r distri<.'t board. Dr. Olson, a UCI proft>ss0r who specializes ln water resource~, won her s upport by staging a recent coffee for lrvine Quorum members. Snodgrass said mem- bers were impressed by her knowledge and views Irvine Quorum trod1tlonally schedules programs on local cable television channel 3 an which endorsed candidates are intervie- wed and aruiwer telephone calls from viewers. This year , the programs will be on Friday, June 4 and Monday, June 7 -the eve of the electJon. Second hot.el design eyed Irvine Co. submits preliminary plans for new Hilton Construction has started on one major new hotel in Irv.ine and city pla nners are studying designs recently submitted for a second. The Irvine Company has turned in its preliminary designs for a new Hilton Hotel planned for 15 acres at the southeast cor- ner of Main Street and Jamboree Road. The $65 million hotel is to have 550 rooms and wiU be part of a larger, 48-acre site also including some retail shops, research and Reagan OKs budget • comprom1se WASHINGTON (AP) -!:'res- ident Reagan said today a com- promise budget plan drat~ by Senate Republicans and endorsed by the White Houae "can put our country firmly on the road to economic prosperity'' if congres- sional Democrall cooperate. At a question-and-answer ses- sion' with reporters in the White House R06e Garden, Reagan said the new budget will "continue to protect " the basic benefits of Social Security recipients. The compromise budget plan was said to include $40 billion in unspeci- fied Social Security cuts and tax increases. development firms and profes- sional offices. The hotel wiU rise just across the San Diego Freeway from the new Marriott Hotel under con- struction on the west side of the thoroughfare al Von Karman Avenue. Marriott officials last month applied for the final $18.8 million phase of their city building per- mit for a 17-story, 504-room high-rise hotel already under construction. It is expected to be completed in September 1983. The two new hotels will join a list of prestigious hotels already ex1.sting m the region. which in- cludes the South Coast Plaza. Registry , A lporter Inn. Sheraton-Newport, thl' Newpor- t.er and the Marriott at Newport Center Irvine Company !>pokes man Dan Carlsson srud tht• number of rna.)Or hotels hasn't changed tht• demand that still t·ontinues for more high-quality hotels. "We have done studies on the projected demand for hot.els, es· pecially for the Main and Jam- boree sate," said Carlsson. "and those studies s h ow without Daze of judgment ~~ ~~J DecWona. Decisions. Decisions. Appellate C.ourt Justice Robert Gardner has made plenty ln local and at.ate courtrooms since 1938. Now that the C.orona del Mar jurist is semi-retired he's decided to apply his wit, memory and arch observations in an editorial column for the Daily Pilot. His commentary has made him a popular master of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he has spent 62 of his 70 years. And he's weU published on such topics aa juvenile jurisprudence and body surfing. He starts his column m Sun- day's Daily Pilot. recalling the thunderous arrival of another Harbor Area celebrity. question that thl' demand 1s al- ready there." Those remarks a~ music t.o the ears of lrvme <:1ty offlcaals, who envision new bed tax revenue from the bag h o te ls Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr said analysts proje<.'l that the new Marriott and Hilton wall produce about $400,000 a yt•ar in new bed tax, or transient occupam·y taxes. Thos e funds 1n1t1a l ly we re counted o n to fina n ce a con - struction loan for a new animal shelter and corporatJon yard on Sand Canyon Road. Because the (See HOTEL, Page AZ) Frizzelle's • campaign investigaterl A.ssC'mblyman Nolan Fnz.zelle. R-Costa Mesa, said today he has ~n asked by the state Fair Po- I 1 t1cal Practict:s Comm1ss1on lo provide add1t1ona l information on campaign exp<•nses <.'ailed into question by a political opponent. "On a couple of things, they c·alled for points of c:lanficalion," said Fri:zzelle. who as lx•ing t:hal- lenged by Irvine Mayor David Sills for the IU>publlcan nomina- tion in the reappo rtioned 69th Assembly dlStm·t. Frizze lle said h1 !> campaign treas urer, Ganny Gyorkos, o f Huntrngton Beach. wall bc pro- viding the add1t1onal 1nformat1on sought by the FPPC Reagan was questioned on that point, but did not explain how the reductions could be obtained without lowering benefits. He did say that the savings "could come from a restructuring of the program," but didn't explain that in detail. The preside nt said the answer on Social Security would come ultimately from a bipartisan commission studying the system. The commission ls expected to report by the. end of the year. Britain won't halt Falklands action Sills re<:ently a<.'t·uscd Fm:wlle of \laolating s tall' <.·ampaagn n ·- porting laws by not 1t<.•mizing certain campaign commattec ex- penses, mdudmg p;:ayments on a bank crt.-dal t·ard and reimburse- ments to Fnzwll<' from the com- mittee. The president said the spen- ding plan approved Wednesday by the Senate Budget Committee would "continue to bring down the growth in federal spending . . . . It should reassure financial markets by s harply reducing projected deficits In the years beyond . . . . I\ will preserve our commitment t o a atronser defense." The vote was 11-9 with all the "yes" votes coming from Repub- licans -including conservatives who cited assurances that there would be no change In the 10 percent penional income tax cut scheduled for July 1983 STATE By Tbe Assoclatecl ~~ Britain vowed today to conti- nue military activities to re~am Pot grandma out on bail HOUSTON (AP) -An 82-year-old grandmother char- ged with marijuana possession says an arresting officer has promised to give her ''something even better" to ease the pain in he r stiff joints. Laura Ethel Clark, grandmo- ther of five, was freed on a $1,- 000 bond Wednesday after nar- cotics officers found plants bea- ring nine pounds of the illegal w eed In her backyard. Vidal snipes at Brown Senatorial candidate Gore Vidal calla Governor Brown a "political corpee" ln,,Chicago speech. Dally· Pilot editor Tom Murphine reports on Page Bl. Smitb empire liquidated The em~ of C. Arnholt Smith. who once con- trolled Air omia, the San Dte,o Padres, a tuna cannery, real eltate and Wdcabt, ta no more. P.,e 83. 'Fiddler' bu wide appeal 'n. appeal of 1'Flddler on the Boot." the popular mu.bl ma in Loa ~ ii unlvw.1. .,.... C8. -----~- the Falkland. Islands whale. ac- ce pt1 ng U N. proposals as a framework for future talks An Argentine Foreign Ministry source said the British position r uled out a diplomatic solution, for the moment. Prime Minis ter Margaret Thatcher told the H o u se of Commons in London that Brat.am accepted U .N. Secret.ary-Gent>ral Javier Perez de Cuellar's pro- posals for settling the conflict as a "framework" for future talks. but said Britain will "continue with our military activities." Perez de Cuellar refused lo make public his peace plan, but infonned sources said it included a cease-fire, withdrawal of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falklands area and appoint- (See FALKLAND, Pa1e A!) INDEX State law requ1rC's that any amount greate r than $100 be 1tem1zed . Several e ntries on campaign expen...w forms subml'\- ted on Frizze lle's behalf contai- ned unitemized amounts ranging from a few ht:ndred to several thousands of dollars. Sills called for an mvesttgation into the matter by the FPPC, a state watchdog agency John Meade. a special asslStant to the commission. declined to confirm or de ny today that fur- ther information had been asked of FrizzelJe. Meade, however , said it was rather routine for further infor- ma lion lo be sought so that a determination can be made on whether lo conduct a full -scale investigation into any claims of misreportin~. (See FRlZZELLE, Paae A%1 At Your Service A4 Ann Landen B2 Erma Bombec:.k B2 Movies C8 L.M. Boyd AO Mutual Funds C6 Buslnae C6-7 National News Be.Ba~ Califomla A5 Public Nodicetl Cavakade 82 Spor18 Cl-4 a a.med Dt-8 Dr.Stftncrohn B2 Comb D2 Stock M.arllet1 C7 Cromword D2 Televtaon C6 DMth Noticet D3 Theaters C8 Mltarial A8 Weather A2 Entertainment C8 World News A3 Hen.cope 82 SPORTS CdM clinches title de Corona del Mar dlncbed at lellt a tie for \he Sea V~ J.Mcue bMebaD ctwnprwhlp. _..Cl. :___;. __________ ~--~--...... """!"~_.--~...,;-------=<--- I .l l U.S. losing Latin America FRIZZELLE CAMPAIGN. • • 11ru,ht now, we are jual ln the lnqulrY It.Ip," uld Meade. Saeed on what any further lnfoc:madon would ahow, Meade ald the FPPC would then decide whether to puuue the matter. The qency haa a wide range of optiona, raflling from taking no further actJon to bringing either civil or crlmlnal lepl action. Frizzelle once again c!aun~d Sills was attemptina to create an laaue where none really ext.ta. And the assemblyman, elected four yean ago. faulted Sllls for lrya.n• th e caae "ln the newapapera." In the paat, Sllla haa aald FtlueUe'a allepd mlateporting.11 not the only laaue ln the cam - paign, clUnj among other thlnp, Ftlzzelle'a votes agaJnat a major '1&.at.e transportation fundJna bill and for election of Willie Brown, D-San Franclaco, aa Auembly Speaker. Sllla also haa said he mere ly wants to know how hta o ppo- nent's campaign committee 11 apendJng lta funds. HOTEL DESIGNS • • • hotels are slightly behind sched- ule, city officials a re examining methods for either scaling down plans for the new public facilities or delaying the projec ts until revenues pick up. Brady said city o ff1c1als a~- ready are examining the possi- bility of raising bed taxes from six to eight percent. Thal m ea-' sure already has been adopted in Laguna Beach. and it is on the June 8 ballot in Newport Beach, he said. t FALKLAND ISLANDS • • • ment of a U.N. administrator for the islands while negotiations resume to determine their future. The pla n repo rtedly takes no pos itio n on the t h o rny sover - 1 eignty issue. Britain said Wednesday it was working with Secretar y of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. on a plan from P er ez de Cuellar that in- clud ed an early cease-fi~e and withdrawal. But the ideas were never spelled out and the latest statements clearly indicated more fighting w as like ly over the South Atlantic islands that Ar- gentina seized from Britain on April 2. supplies and reserves m order to attack us at their will." cease-fire with Argentine with- drawal from the tslands, a basic British precondition for a truce. But Mrs. Thatcher said it was "likely" that Arge ntina was see- king a cease-fire witho ut with- drawal of its troops from the Is- lands. "That would be a very evident ploy to keep the m in possession of their ill-gotten gains. We are right to be very. very wary of it," she said. Meanwhile, no ne w military action was reported in the South Atlantic battle zone Wednesday. WASHINOTON (AP) -U.S. backlnc for Britain In the Falk- landl crilla ii produdng a bac.k- lalh ln Lat.In America \hat could hamper American tflorta to rt· elat communlJt expanaionilm In Central Amerlea. The hostlll hemlapheric reac- t.ion to the U.S . move Friday has raised doubts about American abllhy to muster broad -baaed aupport for lta Central American pollcles. And the criala has left the Un- ited States more politically laola- ted from ltl LaUn nellhbon lhan at any time ln recent ~ u virtually all aovernmenta from . the region, 1pann.Lna the c=I 1p«trum, have allaned t I· ves with the Araentine cau.ee. Moreover , what appeared to be a new era ln U .S-Araentlne ,.elatlona a few weeka al{o h aa given way to one of almoet total alienation . In a protest note delivered to U.S. authorltiee Sunday, Argen- tine Foreign Ministe r Nlcanor Qieta Mend~ predicted that U.S . fllll llllYlll aupport for Britain will leave "lasting scars" on relation• be- tween the two countries But the political co8t to the United S tatee wo uld be dimi- niehed if the U.N. mediation ef- fort enda the fighting and leada to a negotiated aettlement. U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar said Wednesday night both Britain and Argentina lnd1- ca~ lnte retl In hi. propou.Ja. One hnmediaw benelictary of the U.S . estranaement with Ar- g ntina ta Nicar~. Before thP crwa over the Faakland lalanda. the United States looked to Ar- ge nllna a• an ally in brinaing pressure against Nlcaraaua•a lef- tist Sandlnbta government. Accordlna to reports this year, the administration cited Argen- tina fo1· a possible role In a covert o~ratlon aimed at disrupting al- lege d Nicaraguan aqna s hip- ments tQ leftist rebels in El Sal- vador. Any su ch cooperat ion n ow would aeem highly unlikely, par- tac.·ularl y m view 0 1 tne entnus1- ai.t1c back ing Nicaragua h as shown for Argentina since the (•arly day11 of the crisis. The Falklands debate also may have strained rela tions betw~n the Unitt.'<i Stat.es and Vene%uela, a n Amn1ean ally in Central Amt.•rica At an OAS foreign m in iste rs ml':<'ling here last week. Vene- zuela captained a successf ul e f- fort to dt:lcu .. fro m a proposed rt'SOlut1on a laudatory reference to 5<.'<:rctary of Stale Alexander M. Haig Jr 's mechation e ffort . His spcet:h was g reeted w ith stony silt.·ncc by the delegates, who felt 1t demonstrated U .S . inscns1t1v1ly to Latin con cerns. Some analysts predic t a <.'001 La- lin response• the ne xt lime the United Statt..'S seeks he mis pheric support o n an issu e where Washington feels its security in - tl'rCSL'> are at stake. Tht.• Latm Amt>rican nations St.'(' lh(• (TISIS C'SSCntially as a co- lonial issue and believe Argen- t111a ac.·t<•d w11h1n its rights in re1<1king th(• is lands from Britain on April 2 .. It would be too easy to say no milita r y activities dur ing n egotiation s," Mrs. Thatc he r said. ''What would ha ppen? We should be hamstrung. The people would still remain under the heel of the invader while the Arge n- tines increased their activities on the m ainla nd, incr eased their Argentina drew the last blood Tuesday when one of its planes fired a ilussue that set fire to the British destroyer S heffield, for- cing its cr ew to abandon ship, and a British Harrier jet fighter was shot d()wn and th e pilot k.U- led in a n attack on o ne of the Falkland airstrips. CUSTOMIZED PARKING SP OT -Driver of this Cadillac apparently did a bit of creative parking leaving Newport Beach police to speculate the unknown driver was either too quick on the gas pedal or too slow on the brake. 0., ,.. "'°'° "' Ndiwd l(oeNef The car was spotted today in a parking lot al 833 Dover Drive. The driver was nowhere to be found. A handicapped driver sign was stuck in a window of the car. Va lley man gets 44 years • 1n rape case A Fountain Valley man has b<'en sen tenced to 44 year s in state prison for participating in th e rape of a teen-age deaf mute girl who was assaulted by seven men aft.er being abducted from in fron t o f a Los Alamitos pizza parlor. MONUMENT ARTIST. • • plaque to adorn the statue if the city would sponsor another ceremony. They agreed. Earlier this week, Anaheim officials met in the tree- lined park to honor the aging artist. Allen, who was a county supervisor from 1963 until 1971, said he and his long-time friend had a good chat following the brief ceremonies. "I wanted the ceremony to coincide with his 85th birthday in January. but the plaque didn't arrive in time," Allen said. "He's been my friend for more than 50 years, and 1 just thought he d eserved some recognition." Lagunans By DAVID KUTZMANN Of , ... Dally Pllol Stan An O range County Superior Court jury has rule d that six leading Laguna Beach citizens are not entitled to $175,000 from the former owners of Sycamore Hills, who w ere accused of mali- cious prosecu lion for filing a $28 m1ll1on la wsuit eight years ago agains t 43 residents. Clare mont attorney J ohn. Mc- Carthy. who represented the six Laguna residents, said his clients are considering an appeal. Warmer days Comtal n1ng. becoming southwest to -1 10 to 18 kno" by afternoon with a weS1·SOU1hwest swell running 2 10 3 feel Skies over the oceen probably will clear only partially after heavy m<>1n1ng cloud• Momtnv low clouda llfW WrJ 10 ----------hay ettamoona 10C11Y end Friday. T · Warmer with hlgha of 74 to 78. emper a l Ur eS Night and rnomfng low doudl to-niont and F1i41y. otharwlM llllr. NATIOM 011ernl9hl 1ow1 In th• mid 501 Hl9h1 Frlde y 88 to 75 Huntlnglon·Newport er•• tffn· peratur• renv-ITom a hlgtl Of 79 lo a low Of 55. E1Mwhet•. ITom Point Conoep-llon to tha MaJtlcan border ~d out llO mllee; Light YV!a* wfnda. becOrnlng _,to IOUt'-1 to to ta knot.I thla afternoon. W•t 10 IOUthw••t •W•ll• of 2 to 3 IH I. Pertty cloudy Ihle 1ftemoon. U.S. sum mary Thlindefllorma •Pteadtng from eaatem Kanau to lhe Teua RIO Gtande Valley ptoduc.d up to 6 lnc:hn or ram durtng the nfOht In Oklahoma. contribu ting to three death• Fl11h floodl09 WH reportad In IOw-lylng ar111 01 Lewton. Okie . whera 1he 6 Inches of rein waa ,,,.asurad A Lawton woman was killed when a r1ln-laden 1uperm1rka1 roof COiiapsed Two olh&f ~pie died on reln-allclcened highway• In MP•rata cruhaa Scellarad thowafl and lhun-deratorm• fall from upper Mk:hl· gen through northwMt 11uno1a to northaul l<an'8t lodlY and from 1111.,n Nabrllka to 111• THH Penllendla Oklelloma ralnfefl r•porte In-~ more then 5 ~at Ada and 4 fnctlel a1 LllW10t1 end Ron Fair 1111•• pr111111•0 ovar th• , ... of Iha f*!lrll U S end much of Iha W•t ~ N1tlon .. WNtllaf s.mc. predict.CS enow..1 end tllundaf-''°'"" from Iha tlOUthafn pllinl ltltOUOf'I Ille MINIMIPPI 11.-., 10 the upper Or .. t Lall" Mottly tu11ny 1111 .. -• pr• dieted lor th• Wut. and from Flortd8 to touthern l'Mw England Tampef1turH around the nt- tfofl ~ todty rllnQ8d from 2e In c.ciar. Wyo .. to 71 In Browntvll• ... 111111. . California 1111 .. 1hould be mo1t1y f1lr t orou loutflern Callfornlt ttlrOUGfl l'1uro1y onoe mornlna IOw doudt ... , .. ~ .. to nortl!W91f wlnd1 oovld rtke mountlllnl end nortflllm ~· ,,..,, The Hlttlotlef w....,., hMot predicted hitflt 'rldly 411 76 In lot An ...... In IM vppet 70• --........ ...._, t2 tnd 721111tie,,.,........, lll .... IOllll _......,....,.Md ltl9 IOI In tow . ~ .....,. fNl'll ~ Coi'°"NI' Albany AlbuQue Ama11110 Aat>ev1lte Atlanta Allantc Cly Aus11n 9a111more BolhOQS Birm109hm B1smarell BOIN Botton Brown1vlle BuHalo Burlington Casper Charl1tn SC Charl11n WI/ Char111e NC Cheyenne Chk:ego Cincinnati Cleveland Clmbta SC Columbul Oa1-F1 Wth Dayton Oenvef Des MOlnet O.trOtt Duluth EIPMO ,.,go F'.i.gttan Gr .. 1 Fallt H1rtford ........ Honolulu Hou1ton lndnepll• J.elltn MS Jaclctn'ltla Kena Oty La l/egu Lllfle Roell L.oul9Yflll l\lf>Oodl Marnphlt Ml8ml HI Lo Pep 71 40 62 36 12 38 35 03 81 49 83 60 61 411 79 66 98 72 44 58 43 86 62 61 37 eo 32 80 47 84 78 76 60 72 44 54 2• 78 ~ 8-4 •7 82 55 47 28 88 8• 09 82 53 63 57 83 ~ 82 50 78 61 1 72 84 56 M 32 01 78 49 74 82 54 81 40 06 71 48 ·" . ... 5,9 33 54 30 73 39 57 42 80 73 01 78 71 85 llO 116 63 82 54 81 50 191 82 58 85 88 85 57 n •2 oe a& ff 78 75 The Forecas t fOf 7p.m EST Ra1n(JJ SnowCJ M.oy / Showetslllmlll Flurries!!:!] f'llA.•ftl• .. 4 w, ..•. ..,. .• "' ...... NfJM U •, 0.1M tlf ( '""'™ .. 1 • Fronts r:Old .-. W.+tnl ...., CX.clt~ -5,,.,,.,~ .. " y •• M11waui..-Mpts-S1 P Nutwolle New Or1eena New York No<'lofll Ho Plalla Okla Oty Om-1\e Orttndo Phil ad phi a Phoenht Pllt11>ur11n Piiand, Me Piiand, Ora Prov10ence Raleigh Reno Sall Lake San Antonio SHllle Snr8118P0<1 Sioux F•t I St Loult SI P-Tempa SI Ste Mlfle Spoll-Syr~M Topella ·r-rui.a WllHngton Wldlfta 11 eo 08 82 •2 10 85 57 87 71 68 53 77 47 53 3• 05 80 60180 87 •5 43 a3 eo ,. 61 80 61 02 17 52 66 39 70 .a 87 ... 80 50 70 34 57 34 75 83 3 58 83 •7 82 82 01 55 •• , 10 ea 88 a1 eo 5e •a 12 83 42 72 •8 77 •7 2 12 159 52 77 83 1 12 n 50 T7 42 2.33 C Al.WOftNIA Bakertflald 9 ' 88 Blythe 87 Eurtlte 87 47 Fr~ ae 57 Lancuter 89 57 Loi AnoMI 68 50 ·~ , .... ...... .... .. t2 t2 ea .. .. 18 17 17 - Marysvtlle 89 51 Mon1etey 68 Needles 85 Opkland 71 S4 Puo Robles 78 53 Re<! Blull 90 59 Redwood City 72 56 Sacremento 8• 48 Selln11 68 53 Sen Diego 70 64 San Francltc~ 64 50 Sante Barbare 84 57 Sanll Marla 63 Stockton 87 •8 Thermal 87 Uklllh 84 Bara tow 85 55 Big Beer 61 31 BllhOp 81 40 Catehna 72 5• Long Beach 69 57 01 Monrovta 68 58 05 Ml Wiiton •2 Newport Beach 88 60 Onllflo 17 58 Palm Spflngl 89 58 P•udena 65 5& Got RIY«llde 68 55 San B«nard•no 67 57 San JON 78 52 Extended weather SOUTH ERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Patctry l.i• night end H rfy mor~ low CIOlldl ,_ Ille COU1 01 M lalt. ~ ttrong gully northwHI wlnd1 In th• moun1a1ne Sah#Ol)I. High• In Iha 0011111 lfHI ll~Om lllt UPP« 80t at Iha to mid 80t lnlllld .,.., Lowe 53 to 83 . Mountain tffOfl high• te to 78. Lowa 40t to low &Ot. to .. ~ --°"' ...... . ............. -*!ft, ... ,..., . TOMCIMQW'e T10le; H1111 te:O' Ut. LAM l:Jt '·"'· .... 0.-...... ... .. • •t. lose Sycamore suit Tht-six-man. six-woman jury Hano, writer and torm ... chair· returned with its verdict in the man of Village Laguna; B ea cctse earliP.r this week after Mc-Whittlesey. a longtime e nviron - Carthy had asked the panel for mentalist; a ttorney Ralph Ben- $175.000 m general damages and son . n o w a r esident of San unspecified punitive damages. Francisco; Michael Sc~ley. for- The jury. however. voted 9-3 m er city board of adjustment m favor of defendants Rancho member; Victor Bellerue. h us- Palos Verdes Corp and its parent band of Laguna M ayor Sally rompanaes. Great Lakes Proper-Bellerue, and Paul F.gly. a retued ties Inc. and Great Lakes Carbon L os Angeles Coun ty S upe rior Corp. of New York Court judge a n d G reenbt•l t T he companies had filed the member. $28 million lawsuit m 1974 alle- ging that the 43 Laguna citizens had par t icipated m a n alleged conspiracy through political ac- tion to deny the firms' rights to develop Sycamore Hills. Six of those residents the n su ed the property owners, accu- sing them o f unlawful hara s - sment. T he six who sued are Arnold McCarthy had argued that the only purpose of the 1974 lawsuit was to sile n ce and intimida te critics of the company's develop- ment plans. Attorneys for Rancho Palos Ve rdes. however. said that law- yers for the companies honestly believed they had a ghod case in ·1974, when the legal action was filed. It was later dismissed. Orange County Superior Cour t Judge Alicemarie Stotler impo- sed the sentence Wednesday on de fendant William G . Aguilera, Je. who will not become eligible for parole consideration until he IS In h is 60s. Prosecut()r J an Cummins had sought a maximum lt'nn of 121 years m state prison. Aguilera was convicted of 17 ft'lon y <.'Ounts m connection with the assault on the 14-year-old girl. who had to testify in court by usmg s1gn language. Also co n v icted tn connection wtth tht' attac:k wer e two neph- t•ws of Aguilera. Randall Maldo- nado, 25. and Ph1ll1p Maldonado. 2 I They were con victed in a st.•parate tria l and will be sent- cn<:cd rnday. Our Season Opener We 've teamed up a couple of winning looks 10 get your sprtng and summer off co a great start 100% cotton madras pleated walk shorts. and an all cotton crew neck sweater From our \ ladies department. naturally '/. 1028 Irvine, Newport ~Kh. Callformi, Ph ne 642-7061 I ti I I Ofenge COM1 OAILY PtLOT ~. MllY e. 1912 No valid cause lor closed salBry meet A recent d.edalon to imple- ment a new salary system for ad- miniltrators in the Irvine Unified School District 1.an't as sJgnificant as the way the achool board chose to do it. Board members last week adjourned to a closed executive ~session to discuss the implications of abandoning a merit pool system for a more conventional salary schedule. Trustees voted 3-2 to make the change. One of the dissenters, Gordon Getchel, said after the session that he objected to the closed hearing. He claimed that retreating to the priva~e discussion was not proper under the state's Ralph Brown Act, which forbids closed meetings except in a few exceptions, inclu- ding sensitive personnel isaues. Getchel said the law didn't apply in this case because "no discussion about any one individual was held at all." Getchel appears to be correct. The intent of the Brown Act is to require elected officials to discuss and arrive at policy decisions in public, where their actions can be scrutinized. The IChoo1 board fell victim to the cw10WJ pnllW'es-that afflict eo many elected bodie1 when it comes time to talk salaries. lt ta a touchy iuue and they withdraw. The Brown Act generally allows private discualona about hiring and firing and has been cited when boards privately plot stra- tegies tor negotiating new labor contracts with employee groups. Neither case existed here. This was an issue in which the board was faced with changing a policy on how to grant salary in- creases. The discussion and vote should have been conducted in public, even if it meant that trustees would take some heat from unhappy taxpayer groups or, more likely, administrators. The new policy meana prin- cipals, assistant principals, psy- chologists, program coordinators and directors will receive 1 per- cent raises on the average. It is entirely likely that the raises are in order. Thus, the se- crecy seems even more unneces- sary. Sp~ed might not pay It certainly was no surprise to hear the president of the Taub- man C.Ompany assure Irvine City C.Ouncil members recently that the long-awaited Irvine Center shop- ping mall probably will be built soon. All of this has been heard before. In fact, frequent claims in past years that the center is im, minent have bred a certain skep- ticism among folks in Irvine. Bob Larsen, president of the shopping mall development firm did his best to dispel the skepti- cism by suggesting that increased urbanization of the Irvine area has made the center even more pro- mising than in the past. Where it was once conceived as a suburban location, now it is an urban center. To retailers, that means a bigger, more affluent market. Larsen note d once again that the center's location within the still-undeveloped triangle formed by the intersecting San Diego, Santa Ana and Laguna freeways gives it the potential for a magnificent layout. Given de- cent economic conditiona, he said, construction of the first phase (75 percent of the mall) will begin in late 1983 or early 1984. For now, even the skeptics would be better advised to focus on the key elements of the Irvine Center plan. Will. for example, large-scale development of adja- cent office buildings overload road capacities? Can the freeways be saved from cpngestion? Those who chide developers for tardiness might be sorry i( they allow the proposal to be rushed through approval pr-ocems- es. It is better to be metitulous now. even at the cost or more de- lays, than to be mired in traffic jams later. Children's honie dile:mma A non-profit group in Orange C.Ounty wants to offer a homelife to mentally retarded children in Irvine. It even has the money to see its dreams through. The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development has prorriised up to $750,000 in loans to build three specially designed homes. But after searching for sites for nearly two years, the Sutton Foundation can't find a builder who will construct the special houses that are required. The loan agreement specifies new construction and the Sutton Foundation has until May 10 to identify three sites for d evelop- ment. After that date, Sutton of- ficials can try for a time extension or request that their loan agree- ment allow for the modification of existing homes to house two trained workers and six unrelated children. The Irvine Company, the principal property owner, says • builders are unwilling to take on the "burden" of constructing spe- cial units in their developments. Land that could qualify al- ready had been committed to builders before Sutton's request. And the company says it has no new vacanf land ready for home construction. The Irvine C.Ompany is n ego- tiating with one developer inter- ested in the project, but time is growing short. Another time ex- tension wouJd be the third for the Sutton Foundation. The community as well as the builders 1hould embrace the con- cept of raising developmentally disabled people outside of institu- tions. Other communities have embarked on similar programs. Irvine prides itself a1 being a planned community.Uthe Sut- ton Foundation loses its HUD loan or goes e lsewhere in search of housing, the city will remain well planned, but hardly a model com- munity. Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Otner views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <71•1 642-4321 . L.M. Boyd/ School bells No blaring bells signal class starta and stops at the high tchool ln Eliza- beth, Colo. Instead, currently popular music does ao over the 1eh02l's public •ddresa system. So? Nothing lrnpor-- tan\, maybe. But even after all thete yeen, Lf I cloee my eyes, t can hear thote jan~ling bells r•ttle the hall- ways. Cari t you? 'nW! BriUsh tradltionally have been re11rded u quite conservlllve, yet reNarchers clalm there iJ a hl1her percentafl of nudllm in Greet Britain than in •Y ~country. Maybe 11>. ORANGE COASl llilyPilat don't know. Do know the Germans, too, In bygone years were considered extremely straight In most matters, and lt wu the ~rmana who started the firlt nudist coloniet. Q. Didn't all the Japanete lwnlkue plloi. of World War 1I wear head- bands co keep their ~ out ot. their eye.? A. Hftdbandl yes, but not to keep the balr out of t.helr ,!C Thoee ce- renoNal .. "~ hldltmaJd and tbeJ •)'1nbo11J.ed fVtn&th and ...... ......._ , . w.....-•. :f '1.s ~£ftE ~ 'DOcroR o;: iCONOMtCS IN~£ 1-\0JSt?, Two-house legislature best I . The litany for a un1camcrnl legislature started by former Speaker Jesse Unruh and continued by 'Common Cause has now b een taken up by Sen. Barry Keene. He has proposed a constitutional amendment whic h would replace the present Legislature with a S<·nate of ti7 mem bers. Arguing the present syst<.•m which 1i. costing over $100 million annually as "too duplicative and far too t>xpe ns ive,"' hl• conte nds the "checks and balanN•s" contemplated with a two-house Legisla- ture have bt-en c llm1 natl'd by the "one-man. one-vote" rourt tk><:1s1ons. H<' says his plan would saVl' $:!a m11l1on yl>arly. WHILE HS IS correct in the Vll'W that the Legislature is "far too expensive." his remedy is akin to throwing the baby out with the bathwater. For it is esstm- t1al that the Legislaturt.' remain a strong branch o f the government and its ne · n-ssary costs should not b<> an argumC'nt fur wcakt•ntng its powl·rs The n·ason tht· L<>gislaturt• 1s now too costly is rlue to the self -indulgl·m·<• of tht· memb<>rs. Far more than $2:\ million l0an b<· saved m curn•nt legislat1v(· op<.>rallons by eltmmatmg thc so~allro field ofrlt"C'S. a c•uphC'm1sm for th<· year a1ound <:am· p:ugn he<idquarters mamtainlod by ea<:·h member in his district, cutting the out- rageous payroll with its more than 2.200 staff work<·rs whoM· main funetiun 1s IARl .111111 partisan politics, and d1s<:ontmumg tht• rurn1sh1ng of autos and unltm1Led sup plit~ f)f gasoline for c>ac·h mc.:mlx·r. It as true l,ha t the· changt•s brought .1bout by the t•ourt ruling o n the ont'-. m<in, ont•-vole L<;SUt· have wt·akt>n<.'CI tht• t·h<.·t·k and balann' of the two-h ou st· system. ll is not true that it has bet•n chminat.cd. On the same day tha t K<.'E'nc·was ex· pounding to the press on has plan. As- sembly Speaker Willie Brown told the pn'l>.'> the Assembly would not pass any n<•w tax bills th1i. s<•ss1on bt•t·ausc· thl· mc•mbt•rs d1dn•t lwl1l've the Senate• would agrt·t'. thus d<·monstraung that tht· <·he<.·ks and balan<.'<'S of tht• two houM• syblt•m is ahve and working Under tlH· l"Urrcnl ll·g1sl<1t1vc· plan t•ach bill 1n1ruJun•d must dt·ar one or mon· l"Omm1tt(.•cs in <·ad1 houst•. This providl's lht• publi<· w1lh mon· than one t·hant.:t· a l ll'sl1fyang for or against pro· po'><ib Undt·r ,1 om··houM· syMcm lhc bills would (Inl y Ix· sub)l't.'l to unt• publtt: ht•anng bt.•fon· passagt'. thus redul"lng the• time the· publie would havt· lo learn of thl· prop<l'!>Jls :ind pr<'S<.'nl I~ Vll'WS. Pruponi·nts t•onl!•nd lh<tt this would make• th<· L1•g1slaturl· murl• c·ff1t01l'nl. But if effu:ic•m·y rm·ans tht• quack passage of nt.'W J;.iw<; 1l will not b•..nl"f1t tht• publfc.' Th<· Lt·g1slalun· 1s supposc·d to bt· a de- l1bt•rata(lt• hod~ an wh1<·h all propc>S<lls arc <·an·fully Wl'tglwd THE WORST feature of the Keene on~-houae proposaJ is that it wouJd ine- vitably pl.ace far too much power in the handi. of um• nwn, the· sf.14:akt>r ur, under Keene's proposal. th(· president of the st·nal.l• A mul"h IX'ttt•rt pl(Jn for rl'liu'n ng legi- s l.at1v<· t'OSL\ and making lht· ll'g1slaturc murl· df1t·1en1 1s that "f S<·n H L .. Bill .. R1t.:h(Jrdson whu would return th<.> Leg1 - .;lalUn· lo lht· pc·opl1 · by l1m1t1ng the ll·ngth of St"'· .. -.11ms ,ind providing for its m<'t'lmg only t·v<•ry oth«'r yt•ar Foundations cari help rescue schools To the Editor: In a recent article, a UC law professor, J ohn Coons, and our state Superinten- dent or Public Instruction. Mr. Wilson Riles bemoan the sprouting phenome- non of educational foundations. They discredit the formation of these founda- tions as perpetrators or inequality in the funding o r the public education a l system. It is my opinion that foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu- cation as Mr. Riles suggests, but rather MAILBOX symptomatic of a society that is fed up with being told that they can't provide their children with whatever level of public education they deem adequate in their own community after they have paid the bills to educate everybody else's child in the public school system. Many of the same voices that wring their hands and cry for ''equal" funding of the public educational system are the same people who pay little, if any, of the taxes that provide for that funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles are much more inte rested in pulling down the educational level of the so- called affluent segments of our society, rather than bringing the less af!luent segments up to a predetermined level of educational competency. What they propose is nothing less than a headlong rush to educational mediocrity. And this doesn't appear to bother them in the slightest as long as everyone is "equal" at the lowest possible common denominator of educational competence. FORTUNATELY, an ever-tncreaaing majority of people in this st.ate refuse co succumb to this call for public educatio- nal medlocrity. And thus we are wit- nessing an explosion in the formatlon of the J>'olblic school foundatlona. What the foundations can conUibute Isn't a drop in the bucket in comparison to the total budaet. At $500,000 lt repreenta about 1 percent of our local Newport-Mesa Dl- atrict'• budget. But on the other hand, this tum equate• to about 20 teacher1' aalarlea. And 20 t.eachet1 can~long way to teechin.I remedial , etc., oc whatever a pU1ku1at dlatrict It la beina ~prived of by the state's unfair "equalllfnt' funding tonnulu dictated by ibt court'• Serrano-Prlelt dedlton. One very lmportant function that th-foundadona are performina It to IOUnd dw darion co our dtiMm \hat our public .......... .,..... .. tn ..... oi 1uccumblnf '° t~ aocta1 ~nalneerlna ex~IHS o our liberal state Judicial fYl\emi and unJel9 the people liand up •nd demand ot thelr (e1tslaton that aomethlnl be done aboUt 1'. we will wt-&bit Clllll)Ql71Tte .-P ?Wil'atkm ol GUI ~---.... ~--~---·t w.u ........... al ..... ~.· - ,.,_.. ....... In no nJ die ulfl· mete...,...• tlw ~ « CNr ,_. IChool ~ 'n.y dO; ......... , SW u a tem~ry Ufe-uvfnl toumlquet , that 1s being urgently applied to our hemorrhaging public school system whose financial life-blood is being bled wtute by the court-imposed sanctions o( the Sel rano-Priest decision. The ultimate cure for the peril lh<ll we now find our public education system an is through public supported legiJ;lation that will set a predetermined level o f excellence lJl public education for au of our publi(' schools. At the same lime, this legislation should encourage commun1· tics to exceed this predetermined level of educational excellence thro ugh their own additional financial sacrifices if they are willing and able to do so. TOM WILLIAMS Director of "Parents for a Responsive &ard of Education" Backing baffles To the Editor: ln the April 26 Pilot I noted a news story datelined Burlingam~. stating the CT A (California Teachers Assn.) re pre· senung 197,000 members, endorsement of Tom Bradley and Jerry Brown for governor and U.S. Senator respectively. On the editorial page, Earl Waters' column graphically describes Gov. Brown's underhanded raid on the Public Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of $180 m\llion to help balance his budget. This is the employees' own money, held in trust for their pensions. If the CTA endorses a candidate or that ilk. and their endorsement reflects their Idea of intelligent thlnking I can now more ea.ally understand one of the reasons why 1tudent8 are reportedly not learning molt1n achoql. I P.S. WILLS Medicare fraud To the Editor: My-aubjecl la Medicare fraud. I en- countered It lNt year when I was ho.- pit.allied for a broken hip. I was chatged for thinga I never recetved, like $2.50 for a aample of t.oothpute. I wrote to both my eenators; from them I received a re- ply that thowed they nlllMd the pain\. I wu not coml)laln.lna about what {had to pay. My cor...:r WU what they are doing to M . I wrote to the pn!lli-d~nt and received no reply. Ia this an llaue that l.t too hot to handle? Do you believe thla may account for the near demlM of Soda! Secwity! NOW TllBll& 18 antthlnc new. A medt~al center hu bHn Ht up for Med6all-. pitdlnta white the doc:con ac- cept what ,.... ... paYt-1be um time I 'M!'ftt I never •w the bill, atill don't know what It wu. Then I wu ~t to a dermalOlocitt wbo allO acffJN what ,., • ., .... PQa. • "'"",._.....,,..::.::'= -~ (--.. -. ............... , I ta ........ ............ """".,....,... """' ......... ...... ....... .. _,..... .... --,,,., .. ................. WfkiilM ............... .....,,, • .i • .-.. ................... -................. .... !Hi.It ... ,.....~ .. IM tllll~ ,_,.. • """' lef •f!lllUlltll ~ j He charged Medicare $695 for a pro- cedure (exactly) that I had done a few months ago for $80 and couldn"t un - ders tand why I was shocked, when I didn't have to pay for 1t. Some people may not care but I do. J refused to sign the b11J and have reported at to Health Care Administration. I have written to both my senators and told them of thousands of dollars the hospitals are cheating, they also rrussed the point. or is 1t a no-no sub,ect? It IS bigger than the defense budget and it's killing Social S<>curity I feel I must give it one more try to wake: somebody up. JANE M. KERR Bolsa Chica plan To the F..ditor: While the text of your April 23 article. ''Coast Unit Rejects Bolsa Chic.a Plan," was generally accurate. the headline, which suggests that the Coastal Com- mission denied approval of the Orange County Bolsa Chica land use plan. was ln error. The fact 1s that the Coastal Commis- sion ruled for another hearing to once again look at the plan. This will be sche duled sometime between June 15-18. In the interim. the commission staff is to review scientific evidence introduced by a team or nationally rec- ognized scientists commissioned by Sig- nal Landmark, private owner of most of the .Bolsa Chica property. The acientista show that 453 acres of the 1,600-acre parcel, including the existing 200-acre ecological reserve, is wetlands. This is a contradiction to the Department of Fish and Game report which states that 1,000 acres Is wetlands. In the meantime, the Coastal Com - rniuion ataff ia co be in c:ommunicat.ioo with Orange County planners co di8cusl differel"IC'etl. A Special Area M&Ngement Proce. (SAMP) -planning lnvolvtng a mix of federal and state governmental agencies and concerned citizen groups - is echeduled to meet at OOWlty oWces on May 10. Those who have communicated 1up. port for the wor1hwhile well-thought- out county plan should be encouraceci to <:ontinue 1.helr efforts. WAYNE CL.ARR Repre.ematiw Stanat Landmark. Inc. .... .._, .......... "" .... .,..,. ~-................ .. ....... ...Dell,~ ~ . --• The Diamond · Anniversary Ring A bond of diamonds that soys you d marry her all O'(er again RAFF Jewelry-· ~ Fnlllon lelend Newport BHch • 544.2040 • 3 11•n•retlon1 ol lrlendly personal HfYIC• erything must go up to70°0 0FF! FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH A ROSE HAS A SPECIAL MEANING • • • Pin a Rose on y~ur Lady Fair in the language of flowers. to give a rose is 10 say "I Love Yoo." The rose in full bloom has come to mean beauty at Its fullest. while the unopened rose signifies un-awakened love. One or both of these beautiful emblems of love from Slavick's will tell her more than many bouquets. Rose Bud Pin 1n 141< Gold. $69.95 ln Vermel $19.95 In Staring $ 9.95 FUii Rose Pin IO \41( Gold $69.95 In Vermeil $19.95 In Stef1ing $ 9.95 Both 14K Gold Roses om CJ\JOiloble wtth o diamond. SLAVICK·s Fine .i-ttrs Since 1917 Where the best surpnses begin. F~IOn ls&lod (71') ~· 1380 •Newport Be.:h Abo Greater Los AAgetes • Sin 0ie9o • Las "9g.IS for spring hikiaj, boatmg, walking ... Ula, sp:>rtif camp s\-x)rt in khaki or whit<z.. with it, our shorts~ trddi- tional ploid shirt en::l lq,at.hczr bz.lt makcz. it at·czaecz. ... spring and summ<ir. JCPenney FABRICS! Entire Stock Reduced 503 off lml FASHION ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTER I Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley Luggage Travable catalog coming Wednesday, May 12 In fhe Daily Pilat ~ 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach, CA near Bullock's Wilshire 92660 714/759-9101 ( Sunday, May 9th MOTHER'S.DAY j oin us for ltmcb or dinner Great Drinks Delightful tunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644·2030 ·-- 500 N. Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772·2130 Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Maye, 1982 ~· -Advice on the unpleasant task Of firing people With the unemployment Nte eoerina in the nation, the newtpapen are f Wod with ud 1toriee about rne_n and women who have jutt lott thelt iobe. Not aur· prl.aJncly, readers often (~l 1ympathy toward theeie people who hlve been fi- red. No one 1eem1 to feel any 1ympathy toward the people who are dolng the flrlna, thouah -the bollel. AT LEAST, no one you have heard of does. But there I.a one fellow who spec- lalir.es In teaching executives how to fire their employeee. Hia name is James E. Challenger, and he is president of Chal- lenger, Gray and Christmas, Inc. The flnn deals in 10mething called outplace- ment, which means it Is hired by com- panies to help find new P,be for people those companies have fired. Challenger, 56. discovered that execu- tives of those companies were coming to him with a dilemma. They had the un- pleasant task of firing their workers, but they weren't sure how to do it. No one teaches courses on how to fire people. So C hallenger started dispensing how-to-fire advice. He says that no one really enjoys firing another human being, but that it's a n47essary task. 1 talktd to b1m aboutall-thla. and here tre hl1 guidelinee for h ow an executive 1hould fire a 1ubordl.nate. l. "Do It quickly. You don't want to 1it there and go through how you went about maklng the declalon . There'• no use arguing. U you aay he'• no good, he'll 181 CRllll tell you he's good. If you aay he's not needed, he'll say he's needed. By the time you've decided to fire a penon, the two of you probably have nothing to say to each other anymore anyway. So just get it done." 2. "Do 1t m a place where you're In control. Which means your office. If you go lQ his office to do it, then he's behind the desk and he's in control. If you do it outside the building at a restaurant, he may break down during the meal. And then there are the questions: Do you do it at the beginning of the meal? Do you finish the meal after you've fired him? . Juat do It in YO\U' offku.'' 3. "The betlt time to fire eomeone la on a Friday. That way you won't 1tart a ~w week off havlna hlm 1htina there waiting for lt to happen. And you don't have to 1tt and worry about It all week- end. We had one man who tired an employee on Chriatmu Eve becaUM the boa didn't want to ruin hll own Christ- mas by worrylni about what he was going to have to do." 4. "THE BEST· TIME of the day to fire eomeone ii 4 p.m. That way he can leave work with the rest of the people. Plus, he won't have the opportunity to go out to lunch and tell other people at the company what a bad .guy you are." 5. "Find out what he has that belongs to the company. Credit cards, keys, re· ports -you've got to get all of them back before he leaves. The way to ac- complish this is to assign someone to help ttlm pack his stuff. Have the person look for property that belongs to the company." ti. "1.)on't offer him an office that he can use to look for a new job. Many companies do this, and it's wrong. It doesn't cut the cord. As long as the per- son is coming into your building every day, he 1tlll holds out the hope that you'll admit you made a mlatake, and that you'll rehJr 'hlm. h'1 best to make the aeparaUon1complete." 7. "Don't tell hJa co-workers that he's leaving. They're going to know anyway, but If you tell them directly they'll want an explanation from you, and there'• no reaJIOn you have to provide an explana- tion to your other employees. Havtng to explain why yo u fi red a person can make you look weak." 8. ''Do It yousel!. 1f you give the job of firing SQmeone to your assistant, some- where down the line the person you've fired ia going to demand to talk to you anyway. So you're going to end up face-to-face with him in the end. Save time and do it yourself in the first place." 9. "~IT DOWN. Make the person you're firing sit down If he's towering over you. then he's psychologically in control. If you're both standing up, it's awkward -plus he may break down emotionally when you fire him, so it's better if he's seated. If he cries, it's easier for him if he's sitting down. We had one case when two people were standing up. and the person who got fired punched his employer. This is not good." 10. "Don't bohlter your courage with a couple of drink. before you lire eomeo ne. The drank• will lend to make you more garruloua, and the-f1rtns will take longer. You lhlnk It makes you leas tenJe. but it actually lengthens the t~r mlnatlon procedure, and that's on~ thing you don't want." 11. "DON'T TALK to h.ta famJly You may be tempted to break the new1 to the fired man's wife, but that's not your re- 1ponsibilily. It may seem humane to tell the wife to be nlce to the man when he comes home that nighl. But you can't do that. It sounds as if you're apologizmg. and what are you gairung? Stay out of it." Challenger said that he reahit.'N many people may find it cold -blooqcd The idea of a man who actually tm·s to make it eas1t'r for bosses to fire their workers "But someont-hat> to give thesl' ex- ecutives adv1c:e," hl• satd. "No one hkL>S to fin• anyone, you'rc.• playing with so- meom"s who le life And s im·e a buss doesn't hkc the· idl•a of firing sonwune anyway. the l<.>ast I can do 1s help cut down the tra uma of the slluation and make It as easy on everyone <.'(Jnc:<.·ml-'d as possible." Dress up your mom's car for Mother's Day with a Supermom's License Frame $1.49 at @Mt' CROWN HARDWARE Weatcllff Plaza 1024 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach 642-1133 Corona del Mar 3107 E. Coast Hwy. 673-2800 • Enefgy Sovhg Sold State Plottesa "'11tton • Glanofoua Jet Gk>w Oven Door wtftl Whdow • Enefgy savng emex Vartcble Heat SU'foc. Buner• • nuated oven Bo"om For Even Baking • All StOl'ee open 7 Oayt Westcilff Till 8:00 ~ Harbor View Center 1614 San Mlguef Dr. Newport Beach 644-8570 Anaheim Hiii• 5620 Santa Ana Canyon Rd. (at lmperlal Hwy.) 998-5282 • c.tllllll Clu1111 ... •lr1·1• , ... _. '"' . .,. , ..... ... ., .., 211" Rise 'n Shine to Stereo or an Alarm All the big features at a gift-a~ay price! Clock has Cut 47aa hi/lo display dimmer, LED PM/Wake indicators, sleep and snooze controls. Radio features twin 3" speakers for excellent st~reo. FM-AFC, stereo indi-320~0 Reg. 69.95 cator, stereo headphone 1ack. #12-1530 7' FMNHF-TV Sound/ Weather Radio Pocket PortaVl1k>n~1 by Realistic ~~!, 17~21 .95 ,, Hear audio from TV channels 2-13, and Info from VHF weather stations. . .-plus FM. 112-612 4-Key-Memory Calculator EC-270 by Redk> Shack 390/o 795 Off Reg. 12.95 Features front.panel metric con- version chart. Percent, square root keys, ftoating decimal. With carry pouch. ~n a.n.,i. •xtr• "French Continental" Phone Br Recllo Shectt Save . •10 ... Talking Clock "Tells" You The Time! VoxClock'• by Micronta Save 5 10 4995 :s~is No hands. no dial. no d1g11s1 Set hidden controls once. then tap button on top-a speech-synthesis c1rcu1t con- verts time to talk! #63-902 Portable Cassette Recorder CTR-37 by Realistic ~;t..31~ 49.95 Built-in mike and Auto- Level for easy record- ing. AC/battery operation. #14-8()6 Batt.,IMt r Our •vwy-ct.y low sine. ONLvggas ,\""'::::;:;..,<ll\ en..outton Auto-Redial of a •ir....-..,, laat number called. Unlver-.., Ofaf S}'9tem tor pusn. button OC>nWOlence eve on rotaty dial fine.. ~ to Plug In. #4286 ~·· H/F SEXIEST -Eliu- b e t h Taylor was picked as the sexiest Washington ian - even though she no longer lives there sin- ce separating Crom husband. S e n . John Warner. R-Va. --.-,.,........,.-.......... __ --------------,.--- Orange CoMt DAJL Y PILOT IT'hur9day. Mey e. 1812 'Liz, Marjnes, snakes Reporter& pick Washington superlatives t WAS Kl N 01'6 N (AP) -Sawialak. political reporter foT Dominique'• fell into the newt Wuhlngton'a beat ttataurant i. United Preu lnte rnatlonAl, aet dwin& the Carter admin1atration one that 1erve1 up rattlesnake out to provide ephemeral an-when an Interior Department and buffalo me.at. lta ftneet mon-1wera to Wa1hlngton'1 eternal e nvlronmentallat dlapaiched a wnent la the Utt.le-known Navy-queeUon: Who'a on top? letter not.ing th.at• rattlesnake on Marine Memorial and lta moat Not, they think, that Waeh-the menu "belonged to an en- effectlve lobbytat worka for the l.ngton ta really worth the effort. dangered 1peclea and shouldn't Natiooal Rifle A.11ociatlon, two The capital'• modeaty la well be there. journalists say ln thelr book. ju.stifled, they write, noting th.at ~ for monwnenta, Kilian and And In this political town, It wae ''bullt Sawialak find mc.t to praile ln a when It cornea to picking the i. ln a pe1tllen-1934 memorial to aallora and xleat Washingtonians, "plump Ual aw amp . Marines lost at aea ln World War but still gorgeous" Elizabeth burned by the I. They like the way flying aea- Taylor of suburban Middleburg, Brltlah and gu11a evoke the spirit.a of the loat Va., has to take a back seat to left for dead, men and the ~er of the sea. "handaome, rich and charming" for decades a The bel9ved LJncoln Memorlal Edward M. Kennedy, "the sub-ramshackle comes ln teeond. jeet of more sexual gossip and So u the r n Ronald Reagan la listed u the speculation than any regiment of town n oted most persuasive man ln Waah - Hollywood leading men." most for 1 ta lngton , but when It comes to Of course, Miss Taylor no bawdy how.es KINNaOY fulltime lobbyiata the authors longer qualifies as a Wa.shlngto-and slave mark ets, a crude pick Harlon B . Carter. the ruan -not since her separation hlcksville that, until the Ken -National Rl!le Auociation'a top last year from her seventh hua-nedya came along, lacked even gun. The NRA's strength comee band, Sen. John Warner, R-Va., one first-class restaurant ... " in persuading its l.S million whose estate m Middleburg she Now, the a uthors think, members t o write Congress no longer shares. Washington has more than one whenever it begins to doubt that In their book. "Who Runs first-class restaurant. As first gun ownership ia to be equated CHILDREN Mothers Day la supposed to be a remembrance of your mother. Big Deal. Rlghtl It la reported In the newspapers, mentioned on T.V. BUT THINK ABOUT ITI What Is Mother's Day? And why should you care? You are busy with your own lives - have to work -more Important things to do. Mother's Day Is the most PERSONAL and Important day In your llves. We celebrate Christ- mas, Christ's birthday -that's Important. Do you really know what Mother's Day Is all about? It celebrates every birth of yourselves! It's the remembrance of carrying YOU through 9 months In her body and the pain of delivery. But that's just the beginning. Mother's Day Is a re- membrance of all the problems, Joys, help, and what she went through and In fact what she Is atlll going through with you. Your mother Is strength, understanding, banker, band-alder. In other words -the most Important of all. Out of 365 days Mother's Day Is the most Important day of YOUR LIFE! DAD Washington," Michael Kilian. among them, they list Domini-w ith "patrioti,sm, nationalism, -Washington columnist for the que's, where the meals are "very masculinity, Christianity and Chicago Tribune, and Arnold French, yet Ught and healthful." invulnerability," they write. Retired officers to meet The May meeting of the county chapter of the Retired Officers ~ia tion will take place Sat- urday at the Officers Club, El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. star- ting with a 6 p m. sociaJ hour. A film of the Coast Guard sailing bark Eagl~ will be narrated by reti- red Coast Guard member Harold Baker Retired or act.ave duty officers, wav es and friends. including any person who ever held a commission in the armed forces of the U.S., are Invited to attend. For reservations call Forrest Vick at 546-9858. Realtor to speak Robert Lee Thomas, first vice presidl'nt of the regional developme nt division for Century 21 I International will speak at the May 19 meeting of Southern California Chapter 12 of Certified Commercial Investment Members. The 9 a .m meeting will be held at the Air- port.er Inn in lrvme '~ -· THE .. if, ,!!!t~:,! "' .... , w .. .,. ........ . .,, , ,,. '11&~1 ~VA' l1m111; Sl .. Ht. ti VtAi' ( .. ..,.., fCaal SI014 """'""r•.1 "104.Jt A.11•e) COSTA MHA 641-1289 1116 ... _ _, ...... MIUIOfol VIUO 495-04()1 1"21! c....6ft• c •••• ,.,.. ,_ Ot.e-,....,, ••.... r, l'~wy.) Truckload Plant Sale Hunt ington Center doily thru Sot. Lge. 6" pots 2~~ Delight Momwith.1 "-!ique gold tewelry. Dazzle her with a Krugerrand gold pendant. An afford· able ~1ft that's simply stunning. And nothing short of sheer elegance. Give her the Krugerrand gold pendant. In all the world, there's nothing quite llke it. But then, there's ho one in the world quite like your mom. , f!~an= ,..,., .. 11111111 •SSJ ..... """(It lrdl) NEWPORT BEACH (714) 54s.6931 ~-~--------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------------~ CAR BUYERS . l ..... _.,.~--.. DRIVE HOME A BARGAIN WITH GM/Cs LON FINANCING RATE ON NEW GM CARS, LIGHT-DUTY TRUCKS AND VANS. Yes, now is the time to really save on a great new GM car, light-duty truck or van with GMAC financing. Qualified buyers can finance any new Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick, Cadillac, GMC or Chevrolet light-duty truck or van*"'' at a low, low 12 .8% rate and save. But hurry, time is running out on this special 12 .8% rate offer. · · Your participating GM Dealer is ready to help you se lect the stylish GM model of your choice and then offer yqu substantial savings on financing costs. Remember, to drive home your bargain, you must take delivery by May 31, 1982. , ··' :J" .• ~~. OFFER ~ ENDS MAY31. •C1l1j11mw httyl!n /111t,11u.1111< -<mn~ l">a,<·tl 11n GMAC <law /m F..lmun'I, 1982 ' 111np111"d fc11 all t'f.'hidt•\ ant.l {tdl· 1.md m1d·'il~C Cadillac' l'f.'hidcs Acnial 'f(H1nR" u·1ll depend rm die model sclc~·tcd, rlie ammmr fnVJnced 1md rlw lengrh <( nmtrad Dco.ler cnnmbun11n tna'Y a// cct rom11mcr co<ot ••£xc/11.dcl t't'ludcs ordered prmr w Afm/ I. 1982 u l11rh are cl1w/ile far the Gem'Tal Ml>fon .. Let l G t1 Monng' c;o<;h 1-ionu.s pi,m t1rul fleet 'ltl/e, and let1scd ur11u ' I THURSDA 't . M f\ 'I' ti ll!U2 Deltr .... PMeo '7 ...._.. K.-.., DELAYED CEREMONIES -Long-time friends Eugen Maier-Krieg and former Orange County Supervisor Alton Allen stand in front of statue of Madame Helena Modjeska in Anaheim park. Maier-Krieg created the stone statue 47 years ago. Artist honored Cited after 47-year delay By STEVE MITCHELL Of the Datly Piiot It.ft F o rme r Orange County supervisor Alton Allen tho ught his good frie nd Euge n Maiee.-Krieg deserved something special for the 15-foot monument he created for the cit v of Anaheim. After all, Allen reasoned, visitors to Pearson Park in Anah e im's d owntown have enjoyed the stone statue of Madame Helena Modjeska for nearly 47 years. Maier-Krieg of Laguna ·Beach created the statue of the great Polish -born tragedienne in 1935 with funds pro- vided b v the federa l Works Progr~ Administration. The m onume nt was dedicated that September with the usua l hoopla -an eight-piece concert orchestra and a lot o f import.ant dignitaries sayin g nice things about the s tatue and, of course, the unveili~. Alto n Alle n atte nded that ce remony nearly a half century ago with his artist friend. "They didn't give him any kind of a citation at the time," Alle n recalls. "Furthermore, his name has never appeared on the monument." Alle n thou~ht the oversight should be corrected. He called Anaheim officials and offered to pay for a plaque to adorn the statue if the city would sponsor another ceremony. They agreed. Earlie r this week . Anaheim officials met in the tree- lined park. to honor the aRio~ artist. Allen , who was a county supervisor from 1963 until 1971, said he and his long-time friend had a good chat following the brief ceremonies. "I wante d the ceremony to coincide with his 85th birthday in January, but the plaque didn't arrive in time," Allen said. "H e's been my friend for more than 50 years, and I just thought he deserved some recognition." NATION EPA doctoring attempt alleged Jack Andenon reporta that an oftida1 of the En- vironmental Protection Agew:y ordered aoctorina of technical papen ao that a carcinqJen would be made to appear lem hannful. P.,e AB. Washington's liner jloiJJts What do Elizabeth Taylor, the aun lobby and rattleanake meat have ln common? They are all W~ IUperlaUva P.,e AlO. I • Soap operas losing 1suds The term 1410ep opera" hM a dlffeNnt meenrnc tbete dly1: th• ~r lpoDIOh are th• ma.ken of toothpute, breath lreehenen and denture c:rMllll. hleCS, Cllll lfll llmll OHAN f lr <OU N Iv C AL IF OR NIA 25 CENTS '.Diedrich guilt upheld State Supreme Court upsets appellate acquittal ruling By DAVID KUTZMANN O('ltle O.W, Not It.ft The California Supreme Court upheld the 1979 bribery and conaplracy conv¥:tlon of former Orqe County aupervlaor Ralph Diedrich today. The state high court also urheld the consplracy conviction o Diedrich'• one time campaign treuurer, LeRoy Roee. The supreme court's deciBion, ln effect, overturns the ruling of the state Fourth District Court of Appeal, which in February, 1981, Bristol high rise weighed By JODI CADENHEAV Oflhe D .. IJ Ptto4 St.H A developer who failed to win city approval for two office buil- dings in Costa Mesa , ranging fr o m 5 t o 14 s torie s s aid Wednesday he is considering building a hotel or office com- plex. ordered dlre<:ted ve rdicts of ac- quittal for Diedrich and Roee. Both men had been convicted in San Diego County Superior Court on the bribe ry and con- spiracy counts and were senten- ced to one to 14 year 1tate prison terms. The charges stemmed from al- legations that Diedrich and Rose conspir~ to gajn fina ncial con - siderat(bn' from owners of 2,200 acres iii ~heim Hills In return for a favora ble supervisoria l de- cision that would permit res1- d e ntlal deve l opm~nt o f the property. Assistant District Atto rne y Michael Capizzi. whose off ice petitioned the S upreme Court after the lower cour t reversed the convictions, said this morning that t here 1s a "very real ltkelt - h ood" that D1edr1ch a nd Rose w1U go to jail. Santa Ana allorney Keith C Monroe, who re presen ts D1t>- dnch, said he was "shocked" by news of the S upreme Court ru- ling th is mornin~. Monroe md1- Daze of judgment 11i~~ 11(1 ~~ J \ ~I ~ Decisions. Decisions. Decisions. Appellate Court Justice Robert Gardner baa made plenty in local and state courtrooms since 1938. Now that the Coron.a del Mar jurist is semi-retired he's deetded to apply his wit, memor y a nd arch observations in an editorial column for the Daily Ptlot. His conunentary has made hun a popular master of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he has spent 62 of his 70 years. And he's well published on such topics as juvenile jurisprudence and body surfing. He starts his column m S un- day's Daily Pilot, recalling the thunderous arrival of anothe r Harbor Area celebrity. catt.-d that he would petition the state high court for a rehearing and , if that lihould fail, perhaps take hts case to the U S. Supreme Court Both Monroe and Cap1ZZJ said 1t was their undenstandmg that the state Supreme Court upheld a single bribery ('ount against Otedr1ch and a conspiracy count against Diedrich and Rose while agrnemg wath !Jte appcaJs court to throw out om• briber y count against D1cdm:h alon<.· Frizzelle expenses probed Assemblyman Nolan Frtzz.elle R Costa M<-sa. said today he has bet•n ask<:d by the st.ate Fair Po- It t1cal Pract1('<'S Comm1ss1on to provide add1t1onal informa tion on campaign expenses caJled into question by a poht1c-dl opponent. "On a couple of things, they called for points of danftcation. .. said Friudlc, who 1s being chal· lc•ngcd by Irvine Mayor David S11l!'> for the• Republican nomina- tion 1n. th<· reap port10ned 69th Assembly d1str1ct. Jim G ianulias of Newpo r t Beach , a partner in what has been called the Bristol Plaza, said the City Council's decision Mon- day to increase allowable heights a\t>ng the eas t s ide of Bristol Street be tween the San Diego Freeway and Paularino Avenue to 85 feet will allow him to de- velop a high-rise complex. For two years the City Council turned down his request to con- struct high-rise office buildings on a 4-acre site located between the free way a nd the closed Montgomery Ward and Co. store. "We've got to go back to the architects," said Gianullas. "We're r eally starting all ove r again." President approves compromise budget Frtzzt•llt-said his cam paign tn·as urer , Ginny G yorkos. o f H un tington Beach. will be pro- viding thl' additional information sought by the FP PC. S ills n.-cl•ntly accused Fnz.zelll• of violating state campaign re - por t rng laws by no t 11em1zing cert.am campaign committee ex- penses, mcludmg payments on a bank credit card and reimburse· mt•nts to Fnzz.elle from the <'Om m1tt.ee Following the City Council's denial last December. Gianulias said he was prepared to go ahead and design an office comple x within the ctty's two-story lirrllt. He said he plans to submit new plans for either two hotel or of- fice buildings within the next 90 days. In addition to the 85-foot limit, the council also set a 50-foot lirrllt on construction along the west side of Bristol Street between the freeway and Paularino Avenue and voted to maintain a 30-foot limit south of Paularino. WASHrNGTON (AP) -Pres- ident Reagan said today a com - promise budget plan drafted by Senate Republicans and endorsed by lhe White House "can put our country firmly on the road to economic prosperity" if congres- sional Democrats cooperate. At a queslton-and-answer ses- sion with reporters m the White House Rose Garden. Reagan said the new budget w1U "continue to pro tect" the basic be ne fits o f Social Security recipients. The compromise budget plan was said to include $40 billion in unspet'i- fied Social Security cuts and tax 1ncre~. Reagan was quesuoned on that point, bu t did n ot explain how the reductjons could be obtrunro w ithout lowe ring benef its He d id say that the savings "could come from a restruc·turing of the program," but didn't c>xplam that in detail. The president said the answer on Social Securit y would com<• ultima tely from a b1part1san commission studying th e system The commission is expec ted to report by the end of the year (See BUDGET, Page A%) State law req uir es th at a ny a mo unt g r ea te r tha n $100 b 1· 1ll'm1ze d Se ve ra l l'ntries on campaign expense forms subrrut- ted on Fnzwlle's behalf conta1 - n<'d unitemized amounts ranging from a frw h~ndred to seve ral thousands of dollars S1ll!-o calll-d for an mvL-st1gat1on mto the matl<'r by the F PPC, a stat<• wat.<:hdog agenc·y John Meade" a special assis tant to the· c·l)mm1ss1 on , de d tned to c·onf1rm or deny today that fur- ther informa tion had ~·n as ked of F'nzwll<>. It remains unclear what effect the 85-foot limit will have o n California Pacific Prope rties' plans for an eight-story hotel and four high-rise offices, the highest being 125 feet. Last m onth the development company in par1l'lership w ith C.J . Segers trom and S ons re vealed plans for the hotel and office oqmplex to be built on the 13.6 acre site formerly occupied by Ward. U.S. losing ground_ in Latin America Mt•adt•. how evt·r . said 1l wa!t rathc•r routmc· fur further mfor· mal1 on to be sought so th a t a d<•t<:rminat1on ca n be· made on whC'lhc•r lo cond uct a full-scale 1nvcst1gat1on mto any da1ms of misreportinll. Based on w ha t any f u rther information would show, Meade said the FPPC would then de<:idc, w h ether to p urs ue the matter T he agency has a wide range of options. ranging from taking no further aclton w brmgmg either c·1v1l or cnmmal legaJ acllon Company representatives have been unavailable for comment regarding their plans. California Prope rties had sought a 130-foot limit, while resid~nts speaking at lhe meeting Monday said they would favor a 55-foot limit. Support for California Proper- ties' 130-foot llmit came from Brookview Homeowners Associ- ation President Lester Thomp- son. Howe v e r , seve ral other Brookview residents opposed the plan. STATE WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. backing for Britain in the Falk- lands crisis IS producing a back- lash in Lalin America that could hamper American efforts to re- sist communist e xpansionism in c.entral America. The hostile hem tAphe n c reac- tion to the U.S . move Friday has raised doubts a bout American ability to muster broad-baaed support fo'r its c.entral American policies. And the crisis has left the Un- ited S tat.es more politically isola- ted from its Latin neighbors than at any time in recent memory as virtually all governments from the region. spa.ruUng tbe political spectrum, have aligned themsel- ves with the A:rgentine cause. Vidal snipes at Brown Senatorial candidaie Gore Vidal calls Governor Brown a "political corpee" in Chicago 1peech. Daily Pilot editor Tom Muiphine reports on Page Bl. Smith empire liquidated The em&1m of C. Arnholt Smith, who once con - trolled A1r omia, the San Dleao Pad.rel. a tuna cannery, real eat.ate and taxicabl, ll no more. Pap BS. 'Fiddler' has wide appeal nw •PDeal of "FlddJft on the Roo«." the poou1ar mllllml bliCk ln L09 Anplm, .. unMral. Pip a . NIWS ANAlYSIS Moreover. what appeared w be a n e w e ra in U .S -Argen tine relations a few weeks a~o has given way to one of almost tot.al alienation. In a protest note deLive1 ~ to U.S. authorities Sunday, Argen- tine Foreign Minister N ica nor Costa Mendez predicted that U.S. support for Britain w ill leave "lasting scars" on r ela tions be- tween the two countries. But the political cost to the United States w ould be d1m1- nlshed if the U.N. m<.-diation ef- fort ends lhe fi~htin~ and leads (See U.S., Page A%) INDEX F rizzelle once again (·ta1mect Sills wa.-. attempting to create an issue w he re none really e xists. And the asse mblyman , elected four years ago, faulted Sills for tryi n g th e cas e "1n th e newspapers." • In t h e p as t, S il ls h as said F nuelle's alleged misreporting is not the only issue in t he cam- paign, citing among other things. Frinelle's votes against a major state transportation funding bill And for election of Willie Brown. D-San Francisco, as Assembly Speaker. • At Your Service Erma Bombeck L.M. Boyd 8ualnell C..Womia CavaDde Q....Sfl..t A4 B2 A8 Ann Lalkten B2 C8 C6 A3 Comk:a era.wotd Death Notices Bdltcrial l:r'.lwtainrnent Horolcope f C6-7 M B2 o.-8 02 02 D3 A8 C8 B2 SPORTS Movie. Mutual Funds National News Public Notices Spona Dr.Stetncrohn Stock Marketa Televtslon Theatel"I Weether World Newa I . , , ' . : I . : I . I ·: B6.B8.D3 Cl-4 B2 C7 a C8 A2 A3 MONTREAL (AP) -The Loe Anaete. Dodpn 6pened • ro.d trip here today with • 3-1 vktory 0¥9I' the Expos. although Montttel catdler Gary C.arter bit two homers . .. I, U.S. POSITION SHAKY. • • ref uses pullout t to a neaoUated 1eulefiwint. U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez• de Cuellar aa!d Wednelday nliht bolh Britain and ArgenUna indi- cated interest In hll propoula. One Immediate beneficiary of the U.S. ettrangement with Ar-, • gentina la Nlcarasua. Before thP cria11 over the f~alk.land lalands, the United State. looked to Ar- gentina as an ally In bringing preuure agaJnst Nlcar(lgUA's lef- tist Sandlnlata government. According to report.I thU. year. the administration cited A.llgen- tina for a possible role in a covert operation aimed at disrupting al- leged Ni caraguan arms ship- ments to leftist rebels in El Sal- ~ vador. Any such cooperation now would aeem highly unlikely, par- ticularly m vaew ot tne entnusa- a st ic backing Nicaragua has shown for Argentina since the early days of the crisis. The Falklands debate also may t, have strained relations betw~n the United St.ates and Venezuela, an American ally in Central America. At a n OAS foreign ministers meeting here last week, Vene- i: zuela captained a successful ef-1 ' fort to delete from a proposed resolution a laudatory reference to Secretary of St.ate AJexander . M. Haig Jr.'s mediation effort. His speech was greeted with stony silence by the delegates. who telt It demon1trated U.~. tnsenaJUvlty to Latin concerna. Some analysts _J>n!dlct a cool La- ttn reaponH the next time the U-nited States eeeka hemispheric support on an iuu~ where Wuhlngton feels lta eecurlty in- terest.a are at stake. The Latin American nations' see the crisis essentially aa a oo- lonlal Issue and believe Argen- tina acted within lu rtaht1 in retaking the Islands from Britain on April 2. , More significantly, after 'Haig announced U .S . backing for Britain, Veneiuela called for a "reorientation" of the OAS to ensure Latin American -and not U.S . -Interests are protec- ted. .Venezuela and the United States cooperated closely in opposing El Salvador's guerrilla movement and in promoting an t:volution toward democratic rule in that country. It now seems li- kely Venezuela will find it more difficult to support U.S. policies in El Salvador. Mexico, Ecuadot and o ther countries also have publicly cri- ticized the U.S . position on the Falklands. Even before the United States staked out the pro-British stand Friday, Haig angered the Lalin Americans in his speech to the OAS foreign ministers meeting 10 days ago. By Tbe A11oclased Preti Brli.ln vowed today to con\J. nue mlUtary actlvitlet to reBaln the Falkland lllanda while ac-· ceptlng U .N . propoaala as a framework for future talks. An Arge ntine Foreign Mlnl•try source said the Brltiah position ruled out a diplomatic solution, for the moment. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told the House of Commons ln London thaf'Britaln accepted U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar'• pro- posals for settling lhe conflict as a "framework" for future talks, but said Britain will "continue with our military activities." Perez'de Cuellar refused to make public his peace plan, but informed sources said it included a cease-fire, withdrawal of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falklands area and appoint- ment of a U.N. administrator for thP islands while negotiations resume to determine their future. The plan reportedly takes no position o n the thorny sover- eignty issue. BUDGET COMPROMISE . • • Britain said Wednesday it was working with Secretary of St.ate Alexander M. Haig Jr. on a plan from Perez de Cuellar that in- d uded an early cease-fire and withdrawal. But the ideas were never spelled q_ut and the latest statements clearly indicated more fighting wa$1ikely over the South Atlantic islands that Ar- gentina seized from Britain on April 2 . .1. The president said the spen- ding plan approved Wednesday by the Senate Budget Committee would "continue to bring down the growth in rederal spending .... It should reassure financial markets by sharply reducing projected d eficits an the yea1 s beyond . . . It will preserve our commitment to a stron~er' detense." The vote was 11 -9 with aU the "yes" votes coming from Rel?ub- licans -including conservatives who cited assurances that there would be no change in the 10 percent personal income tax cut " scheduled for July 1983 -and all the "no" votes coming from Democrats. He said the tax increases ln the budget oompromise, totaling $95 billion over three years. would not impinge upon the incentives he expects from the tax<Ut pro- gram he proposed and Congress enacted last year. Standing with Reagan as he began the infonnal session with reporters were congressional GOP leaders. · Reagan saad the burden would be on the Democrats to explain how they would refuse to agree to a plan that would r educe budget deficits to $106 billion in fssal 1983, $69 billion an fiscal 1984 and $39 billion the year af- ter. Speaker of the House Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said this morning the Republican spending plan "provides for walloping defense expenditures and fails to C-'Orrect the inequities and excesses of the Reagan-Kemp-Roth tax bill. At the same time, it .proposes deep cuts in Social Security and other vital programs." The plan, he said, "retains some of the major defects of Reaganomics." Earlier, Senate Democratic leader Robert C . Byrd of West Virginia said the committee ac- tion amounted to "mortgaging the economic future of the el- derly of this country ... to fi - nance the economic foUy of the Kemp-Roth tax scheme" of across-the-board tax rate cuts. On Social Security, Reagan assured recipients the committee budget plan would not affect the 7.4 percent cost-of-living increase they are to receive in July. "It would be too easy to say no military activities during negotaataons.'' Mrs. Thatcher S'\1d "What would happen? We should be hamstrung. The people would stall remain under the heel of the invader while the Argen- tines increased their activities on the mainland, increased their supplies and reserves in order to a ttack us at their will." But Mrs. Thatcher said it was "likely" that Argentina was see- king a ('ease-fire without with- drawal of its troops Crom the is- lands. "That would be a very evident ploy to keep them in possession of their ill-gotten gains. We are right to be very, very wary of it," she said. Meanwhile, no new military action was reported in the South Atlantic battle wne Wednesday. ~ntina drew the last blood Tu y when one of its planes fired a llU&'JJle that set fire to the British destroyer Sheffielct. for- cing its cre w to abandon ship. and a British Harrier jet fJghter cease-fire with Argentine ~1th drawat from the islands, a basic British precondition for a truce. Warmer days Co astal rung becoming sou1nwes1 lo wesl 10 10 18 kno1s by ef1ernoon wl1h 11 wesl·SOUlhweSI swell running 2 10 3 leel Slues over lhe ocean probably will clear only par11ally al1e1 hea•y mo<n•"ll clouds The Forecast For 7p.m EST Ra1n[J) SnowCJ M.1v I mm711 r.;:-:::i Showers WllWJ Aumesi!.!J I Morning IOw Clou6I giv. wr; to ----------hal)' tlt«noone lodly end Frtdl)'. Wermer with high• of 74 to 78. Night and motnlng low cloudl to- night and frld1y, othenf!M fllf Overnight IOWI In th• mid 501. H i gh• Frld1y 88 to 75 Hunllngton-H-port .,.. tern· pel'l tur .. 'M09 tram I hlgtl of 79 Tempera tures NATION to a low of 55. EIMwtlere. from Point ~ lion to the Mexican t><HOer end out 80 mlal; Ughl Ylfl4lble wlflOe, bec:omlng wwt 10 eoutr-1 10 to 18 knott Ihle elternoon Wee1 lo touthweet ewell1 of 2 10 3 fHt Pat11y Cloud)' 11111 11t«n0011 U.S. tJum mar y Albany All>vque Am111110 AshevJOe A1len1e Atlante Cly Auslln 8all1more 81H1ngs 8ttmmghm Bismarck 8olM Boe Ion 8•own111lle Bulla•o Thunderstorms IPfHO•ng from Burhnglon easlern Kansas 10 tne Texu RIO CeSPef Grande Valley i>roduced up lo 6 Cheiltln SC Inches or rain during lhe night In Chllrllln wv OklahOma, conl11butlng 10 1hrH Chatllle NC Oeelhs Flash llOodlng was '"""'led in Cheyenne -.--· Chicago IOW·lylng areas ol Lawton. Olll• • C1neinnat1 where the 6 Inches ol rain was Cleveland measureo A Lawton woman WAI kllleO Clmbl11 SC COiumbus when e ra1n-leden aupermarkel Dlll·Fl W1h root cotlepsed Two olhe< people 0 Oleo on ra1n·sllckeneo highways o!~~~~ In MPlr814! Crlllhel Sc111ered thowera and lhun· g:r~.°',,.. ders1orm1 lell from upper Michl-Duluth gan lhrough northwea1 llllnol1 to El PNC> n0<1neu1 Kansas lodey end from , IHlern NebrHil• to the THH ... ~..,, Penhendle ' -· Oklehome relnfell report• In· ~~d ... duded mo<• than 5 lnohet a1 Ada H eno 4 •nchet •1 Lewton and Roll ~Iv F1lr aklH preYa11eo over Iha ' Houllon rM1-0l lhe C«llral US and mUCll lndnaotia of 1118 w .. 1 J~tn MS The Hlllonel WH1her Servlee J&ilsnvle predk:led 111ower1 eno lhunder· Kant City atbfml from Iha touthern plalnl Lu Veges through the M1st1u19p1 Valley to Lillie Rocil the upper or .. 1 Lall" L~ Moelly 91.1nny tkl•• were Pt•· Lubbodi dieted lor lh• w .. 1. end lrom MempNt FIOfldl 10 toUl,.,_n Hew England Mllml HI Lo Pep 71 •O 62 36 -12 38 35 03 81 49 83 60 61 4'8 79 66 98 72 "" 58 43 86 62 61 37 eo 32 60 4'7 &4 76 78 60 72 44 54 24 76 &4 84 •7 82 55 47 26 88 &4 09 82 53 83 57 83 54 82 50 78 81 1 72 84 56 54 32 01 76 49 74 82 54 61 40 .08 71 48 .91 M $4 58 33 54 30 13 at 57 .42 eo 13 01 78 71 85 60 86 83 82 54 81 50 1.91 82 56 85 66 85 57 11 42 09 88 89 78 75 N.,..,,.., . ., w ... ..tftll .. ""'~ • N(JAA U •, Ot-pf of (.•,mtt~1 , .. Fronl 5 r:o1<1 -.. WKn• W'W M 11Weukee Mpts-St P Nash111lle N-O<tean1 N-Yo'11 NorfOlk No Platte Okla Clly Omaha Oflendo PhMadpllia Phoenhl Pittsburgh Ptlend, Me Piiand, Ore ProYidence Ret.lgh Reno Salt Lake Sen Antonio S..111• Shreveport Slou,11 Fllll SI Louil SI P·Tampa St Ste Marie 8pokMe SyrllCUM Tooelc1 'TUCIOn TulM WelHngeoft Wldllta 11 60 oa 62 42 10 85 57 &~ 77 47 53 34 05 SO 50 ISO 87 45 43 113 60 74 61 so 81 02 17 62 66 39 70 48 87 "" so 50 10 34 57 34 75 83 3 56 83 47 82 82 01 55 44 10 88 88 81 80 56 411 12 83 42 n 411 77 47 2 12 ?: C 1 12 n ao 7T 42 2.31 CAllfONU a..lfleld 91 88 lll)'lhe 81 Eur• e7 47 Freeno M 57 lancelter 19 57 LOI Angelet 88 80 Tempe111ure1 1round lhe n1- t1on •"Y lodlY rtngec:I from 28 In Cuo«. Wyo • to 71 In Browntvll- le, 1 .... .Calif o'!'ia SURF REPORT Ski•• thould b• mo11ly lalr 1c:ro11 Soutllern C1lllor11l 1 through S11urd1y once morning low ckluda OlNipltt. ~ Wiii 10 nor1hwe11 wind• could relCt mount1ln1 1nd nortMm deMl't1 f'rtdey. Tiit Hilton., w ... ,_ let'llOI predlottcl 1110111 Frkll)' II 78 In Lot Angel••· In lllt upper 70t *Ill Ille OOllM, '*"'-' t2 Ind 721111M~llltMJOllll llPPCW dlelft• end .. ..,. Ill -• _,., ..... "°"' ,.. COi...,,..., IO._ Mmdc91 _.,<*I~ Noftl, ... bit ....,. Ill tllt mot- • i7 M ft :i: M ft ta~ a .. ,. Mft f ·~ T_, .. 12 II 12 .. .. 18 17 11 M1~v~le Mon1erey Needles Oakland Puo Robles Red Bluff Redwood Cl1y S1eremen10 S111n11 Sen Diego Sin FrtncllGO S•n111 81rb•t1 S1n11 Marie Slockton Tnermel Ukiah 81111ow Big 8Hr 81thop C111111na LO"ll 8HCh Monrovl1 Ml Wilton Newport Buch OnletlO Palm Sprlngt Puadenl Rlvetlkle San a.rnatdlnO Siii JOM 89 51 68 - 85 71 54' 76 53 90 59 72 S6 84 •8 611 53 70 64 64 so 64' 57 63 87 48 87 -84 85 55 111 31 81 40 72 54 69 57 01 68 S8 05 42 M SO 91 se 89 58 85 M .CM 6& 55 87 57 711 52 Extended weather SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -Pllehy lata nlQ!lt end .. rly '"°"...::~'°"" cloud• ,,.., the cout ot lllt Loell llrong gully norlhwHI winds In Iha mountllnl SalUf'diy. Highs In Iha co11111 1re11 r1ngt11g from 1111 UpPel 801 at the beacn.e 10 mid 801 Intend •r-. lowt 53 lo 83. Mount1ln rNOtl highs 88 to 71. lOWI 40t to low 50t. Ti~• TODAY leooncl low 8:00 p.m. 0.1 atoond lliltl t: 14 p.m. S.I ~y ""' tow 1:14 ...... 0.1 ::::I: ,.., ....... '·' ..... ::. =~: 11 ltlft N(i t.-r el 7:40 It.Ill., .... ,.. ......... ............. 1:11,..., .... ~·-Ml\. CUSTOMIZED PARKING SP OT -Driver of this Cadillac apparently did a bit of creative parking leaving Newport Beach police to speculate the unknown driver was either .too quick on the gas pedal or too slow on the brake. ~ ..... "'4lte bf llllcherd ~ The car was spotted today in a parking lot at 833 Dover Drive. The driver was nowhere to be found. A handicapped driver sign was stud~ in a window of th~ar. I Mesa honors man, woman of the year Volunteerism was the theme Wednesday afternoon as the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com- merce honored Norma Hertzog and Harold "Bud" Hohl as Man and Woman of the Year at the Cost.a Mesa Country Club. Ms. Hertzog, a councilwoman since 1974 and the city's first woman mayor, was honored for her numerous civic and commu- nity activities that Included the Orange County League of Cities, United Way. the YMCA and the Family Service Association of Orange County. Hohl, a former Marine and leader of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, was lauded for his work with the Boy Scouts and the Navajo and Hopi Indians. Speaking about Mrs. Hertzog, John Schade, executive aaiatant to county Supervisor Thomas Riley, said, "We have found her to be a conscientious, hardwor- king, dedicated pubUc servant. When she tells you something she tella you something directly. She never lies." Hank Panian, president of the Mesa Consolidated Water Dis- trict, praised Hohl as "generous and effective." The two award winners also were pralaed by•representatlves of the City of C.OSta Mesa, Sen. John Schmitz, ·Assemblywoman Marion Bergeson, Congressman Robert Badham and Assembly- man Nolan Frizzelle. ····· sets signups for youth clubs Parents and youngsters from kindergarte n through fifth grade can register for one of several YMCA parent-child clubs Saturday Crom I 0 a.m. to I p.m. Clubs include Indian Gui- •Cheryl Smith, 17, of Cost.a Mesa has been selected as a finalist in the 11th An- nual Miss California NationaJ Teen-ager pageant to be held Friday t~rougff Sunday in • l"ree sight and hearing tesl3 will be offered at a Lions Club mobile unit stationed Saturday at M ile Squa~e Park in Fountain Valley on •Therapy and rehabili- tation for stroke victims will be discussed May· 10 at the Golden Timers Senior Cat.ii.en Club in Cost.a Mesa. A spokeswoman for the Rehabilitation lns titutE' of des. indaan t'rancesses and Trail Blazers. The sagnup will be held at the Orange Coast YMCA , 2300 U nl v.ersi ty Drive and refreshments will be available. For more information, call 642-9990. , Los Angeles ..; The wanner of the s tate <:ontest will go on to compete an the Mass National Teen- ager Pageant to be held in August. the grounds ot the Uordon Bennett Balloon Race. ~xams waU be offered from I 0 a m. to 4 p.m Orange l..ounty w111 a1scuss therapy for persons with de- bihtalmg diseases at 2 p.m . at the center. 114 E. 19th St. Adm1ss1on 1s free. For more information call 642-2275. ' Our Season Opener ' We've teamed up a cpuple of winning looks to get your spnng and summer off to a great start 100% cotton madras pleated walk shorts. and an all corcon crew neck sv..ieater From our ladies department. natural/\/ ·- J .. , ~· c Orange Coeet OAJL Y PILOT /Thurtday, May e, 1912 I Dispute threatens fine college system I An unhealthy sch ism be- tween the Cout Community Col- lege Di.strict adm1ni.stration and ita full-time instructors seems to be growing wider each day. In a campuawide poll. Orange Coast College instructors this week indicated by a large margin that they l'ack conf id~nce in Chancellor Norman Watson and the district's board of trustees. The teach ers also voiced ob- jections to the manner in which a new Orange Coast College presi- dent, Bernard Luskin, wa.!f selec- ted. This vote comes on the heels of another quarrel regarding the district's use of television courses, offered through Coastline College, which Luskin currently heads. Four Orange Coast College professors questioned the quality of television courses in a letter sent to officials of four-year col- leges throughout California. Officials of the j(m.ior college district then demanded that the professors retract their letter and threatened legal action if they didn't. The academic senates of Or- ange Coast and Golden West Col- lege counter e d by unanimously approving resolutions echoing the concerns voiced by the authors of the telecourse letter. Emotions are running high on both sides. In some cases, seeming- ly to the point of paranoia. With television instruction. the district believes it can reach m ore students (and receive more state fund1), wlth reduced class- room and faculty expeNe11. The instructors, on the o ther hand, be lieve lncreaslna use of television may jeopardize their jobs. They alao say they have ae- rious concern s about h ow w ell students learn in the telecouraee. Regarding the Lusk in ap- pointment, the teachers felt dls- enf ranc h ised when trustees turned away from the applican ts suggested by a screening commit- tee and named LuSkin, who had not even applied, to the Orange Coast presidency. Trustees argued that they are the people elected to make s uch decisions. Both camps seem to be stand- ing firm. The district claims the unrest is related to current teacher contract bargaining. The instruc- tors say the trustees have ignored them for too long. The dispute is diverting at- tention from the more important question of how to maintain edu- cational quality at a time when state aid to community colleges is being reduCed. The present split between professors and administrators must be closed before it tears the basic fabric of what has been one of the nation's finest community college systems. To begin with, the contending parties shou ld start communica- ting with each other in less hys- terical tones. Diplomas upgraded Getting a high school diploma in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District just got tougher. T he school board has decided to inc rease graduation require- ments from 200 to 220 units, ef- fective with September's entering freshmen. The ne w requ irements will apply mostly to math and Engliab, two s ubjects pa.rents and teachers have long complained need more emphasis. In fact, a group of parents and teachers who served on the school district's Educational Resources Advisory Committee, told trustees that they'd like to see the r e- quirements increased to 230 units. District officials said it would cost too much to do that right now. They figure the additional 20 units won't cost that much. But, district officials e x - plained, the dollars w ould add up fast if the district w ent along with the committee's recommendation to add 10 units of foreign lan- guage. A ctually, 42 percent of the dlstrict's graduating seniors com- pleted 220 or more units last year. The aver age number of units completed was 219. There probably will be a few moans and groans from freshmen who were not counting on 220 units, but the increase in require- ments is a good idea. And the goal of 230 units shouldn't be aban- doned. Stiffer high school re- quirements will pay off in the long run. Council splits dill erence It rarely happens that a com- promise pleases everyone -more likely n o one will be quite happy. That was the case this week when the Costa Mesa City Council finally acted to break the arbitrary barrier that has ke pt all high-rise buildings on Bristol Street north of the San Diego Freeway. North of the freeway, buil- dings a lready rise as h igh as 17 stories. To the south, only t he five-story Holiday Inn and on e three-stor y building h ave bee n allowed to exceed a 30-foot height limit, principally because of ob- jections to high-rise from residen- tial neighborhoods in the area. T his week , pressed by deve- lopers and recognizing the increa- sing value of land south of the freeway, the council broke the barrier -to a degree. The height limit along the east side of Bristol Street between the San Diego Freeway and Pau- • larino A venue will be raised from 30 to 85 feet. On the w est side of Bristol, buildings up to a height of 50 feet will be permitted. But south of Paularino, the existin g 30-foot limit will reman. Develo~rs for California Pa- cific Properties had sought a 130-foot limit in· accordance with their plans for an eight-story hotel and four high-rise office buildings. Now they will have to sh.ave 40 feet off a planned 125-foot buil- ding. And some residen ts will have to live with high-rise development nearby. Thus, no one is totally satls- f ied. That's the w ay it usually goes with a compromise. But it should be remembered that, even with the n ew height limits, most projects still will have to come before the city planners for specific approval. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex- pr essed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comm ent Is lnvlt-' ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714 ) 642·4321. L.M. Boyd/ School bells No blaring bella signal claas 1tarta and stops at the high achool In Eliza- beth, Colo. lnet9d. c:urrenUy popular mUlic does 10 ovel' the IChool'• public lddret1 ayatem. So? Nothing lmpor- tet, maybe. But even after all the. years, if I clOM my eyes, 1 can hear tha.e je~Una bell• rattle the hall- ..,._ Cari t 100? ORANGE COAST" lli~Pilat · Q. Didn't all the Japanne kamikaze pilots of World War ll wear head- bands to keep their hair out of their eyes? A. HHdbandl yea, but not 10 keep the hair out of their c:IJ:t 1'\oee ce· remonial bum were , bach1makJ and they 1ymboll1ed atrenast\ 111nd courage. ,. Two-house legislature best The litany for a unal·um<·ral ll•gisl~turt· started by former SpeakC'r Jt'SS(' Unruh and continued by Common Cause has now been taken up by Sen. Barry Keene. He has proposed a c..'Onslltutional amendment which would rt'plaee thl· prest'nl Legislature with a S(.'nate of 67 mcmtx•rs. Arguing the present systt•m which 1s costing ovt'r $100 million ;rnnually ts "too duplu:at1vC' and far too £•Xp<ms1ve," he conte nds the "check s and balances" contemplated with a two-house Legisla- ture havt• bee n elimjnatc·d by th(> "om .. man. one· vote" ('ourl d<'<.'is1ons I k says his plan would savt• $23 million yearly WHILE HS IS t'Orrei:t in the view that tht• Legislature 1s "far too cxpcnsivl' ... his rcm<'<ly 1s akin w throwing the· baby out with the bathwatl'r. For 1t 1s esst·n· tial that the Legislature remain a strong branch of the govcrnmt•nt :.ind its nl•· t't'SS8ry t'OSts should not tx• an .:irgunwnl for wc.•akening its powl•rs Tht• rc.•ason the Leg1slalu1 ,. 1s now loo t·c.>stly ls due to the self·indulgcnc-e of thl· ml•mber... Far more than $:.!:i m11l1on c.:an ht• saved in t·urrcnt leg1slat1Vl' opcrauon.' by chmmallng thl" so-calll'<l f1dd o ffit'<'S, <i cuptwm1sm for thl· yc·ar around l·a111- pwg11 h<·adquarwrs maintained by (·ath member in hts district, cutting the out- rageous payroll with its more than 2.200 slafl w1>rkt•rs whosi• marn funl'l1on 1:-. IARl WATfRS part1s;in polill<'S, and d1sc:ontinu1ng tht· furnishing of autos und unlimlll•d sup· !Jiil's of gasolirw for t'al'h mc·mbt.·r ll 1s trUl' that lhl• c-hanges brought a buu l by l he court ruling on the. om·· man. one·VOtl' lSSUl' have· Wt·akc.·nc.'CI lhl· t·h<•c.:k and balant·t· o[ lh<' IWu ·hoU<;t• "vstt·m It 1s nol l1 Ul' lhal 11 has h1•1·n d1mmated On the same d<.iy that Ket.'nc• was t•x- pounding lo thl' prt•ss on his plan. As- :-.t•mbly Speaker Willie Brown told tht• pn-s. ... thC' Assembly would nut pm;,.., .m y nl'W tax bills this Sl·ssiun b1..•t·auSt• tht.• mc·mbc·rs didn 't ht•ltt•ve lht• Sl'llJlt' would agr('(.'. thus 1.kmunstr:..trng th.11 tht• c. hC'Cks and balann-s of the· two h11u~· -;ystc.·m 1s <.ilivc :.ind working Undl·r tlw t urn•nt lt•g .... l:.i11vt• plan t·ach bill 111trodun·d n1ust l'11·Jr onC' or mon· l·omm1 l l<'l•s Ill 1°.1l·h hnusl! T his pruvrdt·s tlw publit with rnon· than one l'hiJn1·c.· al t1·:-.l1fying tor or ,1g,1insl pro- posals U11d1·r a 1111t··h•>UM· svstc•m tht-• bilb would 1111ly he • !>Ub,Jl'( l l11 11114.' publit· 111 ·ar 111g Ill' r urt· passiJgl'. I hu..; rc.•<l ut·ing till' tum 1h1• public would h,1vt· to 11..•am ol tlu• Jll OJH"'-lls and prl"~·nt 1ls vwws. Proµo11t 11ts l Ontl•nd thc.11 this would m:.ikl· tlw l.A:g1sl:itur1> mfH't' t-ffll·1cnt. But 1f di 11.ll'lll. y nwan~ th<· 4u1l'k passage of nl'w laws ll will not l.wnc•fit 1h1• publk. Tht· L<•g1sl<.1tun· 1:-. suµpost •tf to b<· iJ de- litx·nil1vt• body in whK·h all p101~ls are t·an•fully w1·1gh1·d THE WORST feature of the Keene one-house proposal is that 1t would ine- vitably plat.-c far too much power l1l the h;,intls 111 11111· m.m. tht• spt•ak1•1 o r, under Keerw's propos;,il. tht• prl·s1d1•nt of the· S<'n<.ilc.· A mw h hd l<·1 plan f11r n 'flUl'mg ltogi- slat1vt• l'l,...L'i ;ind making tlw ll'grslaturc..· mun· l'rf1c..·1t•nt 1 ... lh:..I uf Sc·n II L ··Bill" H1c..·h;irc.J~m "'ho wuuld rt'lurn th<· Lt·gr- -.1<.r tun· 111 ll11· 1wupll0 Ii~ l1m111ng the I• ngth lll s.·s."""' and pnw1dmg fur rts 1m•c·ting only 1•v1·1 y olhc..·r yc·.1r Foundations can help rescue schools To the Editor: In a recent article, a UC law professor, John Coons, and our state Superinten- dent of Public Instruction, Mr. Wilson Riles bemoan the sprouting phenome - non of educational foundations. They discredit the fonnation of these founda- tions as perpetrators of inequality in the funding o f the public e ducation al system. It is my opinion that foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu· cation as Mr. Ril es suggests. but rather MAILBOX symptomatic of a society that is fed up with being told that they can't provide t heir children with whatever level of public education they deem adequate in their own community after they have paid the bills to educate everybody else's child In the public school system. Many of the same voices that wring their hands and cry for "equal" funding of the public educational system are the same ' people who pay little, if any, of the taxes that provide for that funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles are much more interested in pulling down the educational level of the so- called affluent segments of our society, rather than bringing t he less affluent segments up to a predetermined level of educational competency. What they propose ls nothing less than a headlong rush to educational medlocrtty. And this doesn't appear to bother them in the slightest as long as everyone is "equal" at the lowest possible common denominator of educational competence. FORTUNATELY, an ever-lncreaai'ng majortty of people ln thll atate refl.ISe to succumb to this call for public educatio- nal mediocrity. And thus we are wit- nesalng an explosion in the formation of the public 1ehool foundations. What the foundations can contribute isn't a drop ln the bucket in comparl.aon to the total budget. At $600,000 it repraenu about 1 percent of our tocal Newport-Mesa Di- strict'• budget. But on the other hand, thla 1um equates to about 20 teachers' salaries. And 20 teachen can 8<> a long way to tHchl.ni remedial reacling. etc .. or wh.acever a p9rticular diltrict thlnka lt la belna depriWd of by the nate's unfair "equal&lng'' fundlna formuw dictated by the court'• Serr.ano-Prielt dedlion. On• very Important f unct1on that thne f oundatlom are perf orml"I la to eound Ow clarion to OW' ddleN that our • public educational lyNm • .., ..... al auccumblnf to th• aoclal en1tneerina txceaaea o our llberal at.ate judicial system; and wile. the »tOPle ttand up and demand of tbelr fealllatore that tomethl.ftl be done •'*" It. we •ill .,.._ ... ~.,a '*"°"al._. ~..:r" n' ''6..,..~tt .. .. ... ,,, .......... ro.mfntl-.. Iii• ..,,.w Ulil· .... -·· • the plpt:'ef ......... IClMliol .,....m. Tbey do, bowewr, M'W .. a tempdrary Ufe-tevlnc tourniquet that is being urgently applied to our he morrhaging public school system whose financial life-blood is being bled white by the rourt·imposed sanctions of the Serrano-Priest decision. The ultimate cure for the peril that we now find our public education system an 1s through public supported leg1slauon thal will set a predetermined level or excellence in public education for all of our public schools. At the same time, this legislation s hould encourage communi- ties to exceed this predetermined level of educational excellence through th<'1r own additional financial sacrifices 1f they are willing and able to do so. . TOM WILLIAMS Director of "Parents for a Responsive Board of Education" Backing baf fies To the Editor: In the April 26 Pilot I noted a news story datelined Burlingame, stating the CTA (California Teachers A.Mn.) repre· senting 197,000 members. endorsement of Tom Bradley and J erry Brown for governor and U.S. Senator respectively. On the editorial page, Earl Waters' column graphically descr ibes Gov. Brown's underhanded raid on the Public Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of $180 million to help balance his budget. T his is the employees' own money, held in trust for their pensions. If the CT A e ndorses a candidate of that ilk, and their endorsement reflects their idea of lntelligent thinking I can now more easily understand one of the reasons why student.a are reportedly not learning more ln achoo!. P.S. WILLS Medicare fraud To the Editor: My subject is Medicare fraud. 1 en- countered lt lut year when I was hoe- pltalhed for a broken hip. I wu charged for things I never received, Uk• $2.60 for a sample of toothpeat.e. I wrote to both my aenaton; from them I Neetved a re- ply that showed they ml8aed the polnL l waa not complatntnc about .what I had to e&1· My complaint waa what they are doing to Medbn. I wrote to the preli- dent and received no reply. t. this an lleue that lt eoo hot to handle? Do you believe thls may account for the near demJet of Sodal Secwity? NOW~ll ~new.A medical cen&.r ha• been Mt up for M«iic:ere peden• when the doct«I •· cept what Medkare ~ The flnt t1me I w.nt I MYet .. .., the bill. atW don't know whit tt WM. Then I -tent to a d.,.._....., •ho aleO 9CCr'9Pll what ... ,,, .. ~ He charged Medicare $695 for a pro- cedure (exactly) that I had done a few months ago for $80 and couldn't un- derstand why I was s hocked , when I didn't have to pay for 1t. Some people may not care but I do. I refused to sign the bill and have reported 1t to Health Care Admimstrauon. 1 have written to both my senators and told them of t housands of dollat"s the hospitals arc cheating, they also missed the point. or 1s it a no-no subject? It is bigger than the defense budget and it's killing Social Security. I fe<•I I must give 1t one more try W wake somebody up. JANE M KERR Prom souvenir To the .Editor: We believe a response ts 1n order w your headline story of April 23. The souvenir glasses des<.·nbed in your news story were purchased from a sup- plier who had adverttsed them as parfait glasses. The intent of the students was to purchase a souvenir glass that could be given to those attending th<' 1982 prom. We understand some persons were offended because they perceived the gla$ and the song title printed on it as a kind of encouragement to drink alcoholic beverages. For that we are sorry. That certainly was not the intent of the As- sociated Student Body or the school. To the contrary. over the past several yean, the school has worked very hard to dis· courage and prevent the use of alcohol al school activities. WE SERIOUSLY question the manner In which the Daily Pilot pursued this story as well as their purpoee in 10liciting and publishing remarks by Mr. Geron- dale. The Gerondale family has alwaya had our deepmi 11ympathy ln regard to the tcagk lea of their daughter, JIU. It is our opinion the Daily Pilot enpaed In very Irresponsible and in94!nsl\lve jour- nalism In dealing with thia l.uue. lT'ur- ther, we w ere amued tbla story was selected by the Daily Pilot editors as "front page material." THOMAS W. JACOBSON P. 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FashlOn Island (714) 644-1380 •Newport 8uch Abo Crnter Los AA9*S ·San Diego• Lis '.legas for spring hiking, b:xiting, walking ... the sportif camp short 1n khak 1 or white.. with it, our shorts~ tradi- tional pU,id shirt ani l<iathczr bz.1t makcz. it at-eaecz. ... spring and summ<Z.r . @J~o@@)~c 44 Fcuhlon l1land •Newport &ach • 71,/644·5070 ~ JOOJ Watwood BIPCI.• Wntwood VIiiage • 213/208-327~ _ JCPenney I I FABRICS! Entire Stock Reduced 503 off ~ FASHION ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTER Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley Luggage Travable catalog coming Wednesday, May 12 In fhe Daily Pilat ~ 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach, CA near Bullock's Wiishire 92660 714/759-9101 £ Sunday, May 9th MOTHER'S DAY j oin us for lunch or dinner Great Drinb · Delightful Lunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644-2030 500 N. -Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772-2130 I J THURSOA'V . MA't' ,, l'Hn 0.., ........... lllr ....,_ K..._ DELAYE D CEREMONIES -::-Long-time friends Eugen Maier-Krieg and former Orange County Supervisor Alton Allen stand in front of statue of Madame HE;lena Modjeska in Anaheim park. Maier-Krieg created the stone statue 47 years ago. Artist honored· ' Cited after 47-year delay By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille Delly Piiot Sten Former Orange County supervisor Alton Allen thought his good friend Eugen Maier-Krieg deserved something special for the 15-foot monwnent he created for the city of Anaheim. After all, Allen reasoned, visitors to Pearson Park in Anaheim's downtown have e njoyed the stone statue of Madame Helena Modjeska for nearly 47 years. Maier-Krieg of Laguna ·Beach created the statue of the great Polish-born tragedienne in 1935 with funds pro- vided bv the federal Works ~ Administration. The monument was dedicated that September with the usual hoopla -an eight-piece concert orchestra and a lot of important dignitaries saying nice things about the statue and, ·of course, the unveilin~. Alton Allen attended that ceremony n early a half century ago with his artist friend. "They didn't give him any kind of a citation at the time," Allen recalls. "Furthermore, his name has never appeared on the monument." Allen thought the oversight should be corrected. He called Anaheim officials and offered to pay for a plaque to adorn the statue if the city would sponsor another ceremony. They agreed. Earlie r this w eek , Anaheim officials met in the tree- lined park to honor the a~~ artist. Allen, who was a co'Unty supervisor from 1963 until 1971, said he and his long-time friend had a good chat following the brief ceremonies. "I w anted the cer e mony to coincide with his 85th birthday in January, but the plaque didn't arrive in time," Allen said. "He's been my friend for more than 50 years, and I just thought h e deserved some recognition." --------- NATION EPA doctorins attempt allesed ' Jack Andenon reporta that an official ol ~ En- vironmental Protection Aaefv:y. ordered doctorina of techn1ca1 papen IO that & cardnoler> wouJd be mam to appear ie. harmful. Paae A.8. 'W asbinston 's liner pointa What do Elizabeth Taylor, the 'un lobby and rattle1nake meat .have tn common They ar e all WMhlnpln .uperlaUva. P• AlO~ Soap operas JO.ins suds 'Ibe term ••eoep open" hm a d.lffer«n• m.nlna u. ... ~y1: th• maJor 1pomon .,..· th• '"'ken ol toothpute, breath tre.henen and antun eNalnl. P ... C&. Of-I ANG[C OUNIV CALIFORNIA 25 CEN f S Diedrich guilt upheld Sfate Supreme Court upsets appellate acquittal ruling By DAVID ltUftMANN O("ehe 0.-, ,.... ..... The Calltomia Supreme Court upheld the 1979 bribery and conspiracy conviction of former <;>range County supervtaor Ralph Diedrich today. The state high court also urheld the consplracy conviction o .Diedrich's one time campaign treasurer, LeRoy Roee. The supreme court's decision, in eUect, overturns the ruling of the state Fourth District Court of Appeal, which in February, 1981 , ordered directed verdicts of ac- quittal for Diedrich and &ee. Both men had been convicted in San Diego County Superior Court on the bribery a nd con- splracy counts and were senten- ced to one to 14 year state prison terms. The charges stenvned from al- legations that Diedrich and Rose conspired to gain financial con- sideration from owners of 2,200 acres in Anaheim Hills in return for a favorable superv1sorial de- cision that w ould permit resi- dent1a l deve lopment o f the property. Asaiatant Di1tnct Attorney Michael Capizzi, whose off ice petitioned the Supreme Court. after the lower court reversed the convictions, said this morning that there is a "very real likeli- hood " that Diedrich and Rose Will go to jail. Santa Ana attorney Keith C. Monroe, who represents Die- drich, said he was "shocked" by news of the S upreme Court ru- ling thls morning. Monroe indt· cau.'<i that he would peuuon the state high court for a rehearing and, 1f that should fall, perhaps take hts case to the U.S . Supreme Court. Both Monroe and Capizzi said it was their understa~ing that the state Supreme Co t upheld a single bribery ("Oun against Diedrich and a conspiracy <.'Ount against Diedrich and Rose while agnoeing with the appE>als court to throw out one bribery count ag:iinst Diedrk h alone. Bristol high rise weighed Daze of judgment Frizzelle By JODI CADENHEAU O(lhe Deity ltllol Steff A developer who failed to win city approval for two office buil- dings in Costa Meaa, ranging fro m ~ t o 14 s t ories said Wednesday he is considering building a hotel or office com- plex. ·~ ~~s Decisions. Decisions. Deciaions. Appellate Court J ustice Robert Gardner has made plenty in local and state courtrooms since 1938. Now that the Corona del Mar jurist is semi-retired he's decided to apply his wit, memory and arch observations in an editorial column for the Daily Pilot. His commentary has made him a popular master of ceremonies in Newport Beach where he has spent 62 of his 70 years. And he's well published on such topics as juvenile jurisprudence and body surfing. . ·He starts his column in Sun-· day's Daily Pilot, recalling the thunderous arrival of another Harbor Area celebrity. expenses probed Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle, R-Costa Mesa, S<t1d I.Oday he has been asked by the state Fair Po- latacal Practices Comm1ss1on to provide additional information on campaign expenses called into question by a political opponent, "On a couple of things, tney called for points of clar1f1cation ," said Frizi.elle, who 1s being cha ir lenged by Irvine Mayor David Sills for the Republican nomina- tion In the reappor tioned 69th Assembly district. Jim Gianulias of Newp ort Beach . a partner in what has been called the Bristol Plau., said the City Council's dedaion Mon- day to increase allowable heights along the ea s t side of Bristol Street between the San Diego Freeway and Paularino A venue to 85 feet will allow him to de- velop a high-rise complex. For two yean the City Council turned down his requeat'to con- struct high-rise office buildings on a 4-acre site located between the freeway and the closed Montgomery Ward and Co. store. "We've got to go back to the architects," said Glanulias. "We're really starting all over again." President approves compromise budget Frtzzt:lle said his campaign treasurer. Ginny Gyorkos, of Huntington Beach, will be pro- viding the additional mfonnatJon sought by the FPPC. Sills recently a('Cused Frizzelle or violating state campaign re- port1 ng laws by n ot itemizing certain campaign committee ex- J>Criset. including payments on a bank ~edit card and reimburse- ments to Fnz.zelle from the com- mittee. Following the City Council's denial la.st December, Glanulias laid he was prepared to go ahead and design an office complex within the city's two-story limit. He said he plans to submit new plans for either two hotel or of- fice buildings within the next 90 days. In addition to the 85-foot limit, the council also set a 50-foot limit on construction along the west side of Bristol Street between the freeway and Paularino Avenue and voted to maintain a 30-foot limit south of Paularino. WASHINGTON (AP) -Pres- ident Reagan said today a com- promise budget plan drafted by Senate Republicans and endorsed by the White House "can put our country firmly on the road to economic prosperity" if congres- sional Democrats cooperate. At a question-and-answer ses- sion with reporters in the White House Rose Garden, Reagan'said the new budget will "continue to protect" the basic ben efits of Social Security recipients. The compromise budget plan was said to include $40 billion in unspeci- fied Social Security cuts and tax increases. Reagan was questioned on that point, but did not explain how the reductions could be obtained without lowering benefits. He d id say that the savings "could come from a restructunng of the program," but didn't explain that in detail. The president said the answer on Social Security would come ultimately from a bipartisan commission studying the system. The commission is expected to report by the end of the year. (See BUDGET, Page AZ ) S tale law requ1n·s that a ny a mo un t gr eate r tha n $100 be itemized. S ever al e ntries on campaign expense fonns submit- ted on Fri:aelle's behalf contai- ned unitemized amoun~rangmg from a few hl.;ndred to several thousands of dollars. Sills called for an mvesugation mto the matter by the FPPC, a state watchdog agency. John Meade, a s pecial assistant to the commission, dec lined to confirm or deny today that fur· ther mfonnation had been asked of Fr1zze1Je. • It remains unclear what effect the 85-foot limit will have on California Pacific Propertie s' plans for an eight--story hotel and four high-rise offices. the highest being 125 feet. Last month the development comJjany in partnership with C.J . Segerstrom and Sons revealed plans for the hotel and office complex to be built on th_e 13.6 acre site formerly occupied by Ward. U.S. losing ground in Latin America Meade, however, said 1t was rather routine for further infor- mation to be sou ght so that a de te rmination can be made on whether to conduct a full-scale investigation into any claims of misrepartln.ll. Based on what any further information would show, Meade said the FPPC would then decide whether lo purs ue the matter . The agency has a wide range of options. ranging from taking no further action to bringing either civil or criminal legal action . Company repreaentatives have been unavailable for comment regarding their plans. California Properties had sought a 130-foot limit, while residents speaking at the meeting Monday said they would favor a 55-foot limit. Support for California Proper- ties' 130-foot limit came from Brookview Homeowners Associ- ation President Lester Thomp- son. However , several other Brookview residents opposed the plan. STATE WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S . backing for Britain in the Falk- lands crisis is pro41ucing a back- lash ln Latin America that could hamper American efforts to re- sist communist expansionism in Central America. The hostile hemispheric reac- tion to the U.S . move Friday has raised doubts about American ability to muster broad-based su~~rt for its Central American policies. And the crisis has left the Un- ited Stat.es more politically isola- ted from its Latin neighbors than at any time in recent memory as virtually all governments from the region, spanning the political spectrum, have aligned themsel- ves with the ~gentine cause. Vidal snipes al Brown Senatorial candidate Gore Vidal calls Governor Brown a '.'political corpee .. ln Chicago speech. Daily Ptlot editor Tom Murphine reports on Page B~. Smith empire Hquidated The em&1m of C. Arnholt Smith, who once (.'()n - trolled Air om.la. the San Dieto Padree, a tuna cannery, NA1 estate and wdcabe. la no more. Pqe B3. NllS ANALYSIS Moreover, wnat appeared to be a n ew e ra in U .S -Arge ntine relations a (ew weeks ago has given way to one of almost total alienation . In a protest note delivered to U.S. authorities Sunday, Argen- tine F~ign Minister Nica nor Costa Mendez predicted that U.S. support for Britain will leave "lasting scars" on relations be- tween the two countries. But ttte political cost to the United S ta tes would be d imi- nished if the U.N. mediation ef- fort ends the fi$!htin~ and leads (See U.S., Page AZ) I INDEX Frizzelle on ce again c laimed Sills was attempting to create an issue where none really exists. And the assemblyman, elected four years ago, faulted Sills for trying th e case "1n th e newspapers." In the past, Sills has said Friz:reUe's alleged misreporting is not the only issue m the cam - paign, citing among other things, Friu.elle's votes against a major stale transportation funding bill and for election of Willie Brown, D-San Francisco, as Assembly Speaker. At Your Service F.nna Bombeck L.M. Boyd Bulinma c.allfomia Cavalcade a...tf ied Comb ero.word Dea\h Noticee Jrdt10r1a1 Entertalnrnent Horwcope A4 B2 AS Ann Landen Moviel 82 C8 C6 AJ C6-7 A6 B2 04-8 D2 D2 D3 A8 C8 m Mutual Funds National New. Public NoUces rstelncrohn Stock Marketa Television TbNten Weather World NeWll AIV-gersbeatExpo~ B6,B8.D3 Cl-4 m CT a C8 A2 A3 . MONTREAL (AP) -The Loi Alwelea ~ oPeD8d a roed trip ~ today wlth • S-2 ~ over the l:xpol, although Montreal catcher Qary Carter hlt two hornen. t I N Or ... Ooeet DAIL.Y ~LOT/Thu~, Maye, 1M2 ~------~~~----~~~--:~-------..;.~-----------------------------------Brit a in U.S. POSITION SHAKY. • • to a ne&Ot.lated Mttleii.nt. U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez· de Cuellar said Wedneeday niaht both Btttaln and Argentina lndi· cated interest ln hll propoeala. One immediate beneflclary of the U.S . estrangement with Ar·, pntlna lt Nica.rqua. Before thf' • crWI over the Falkland Ialands. the United States looked to Ar· gentlna aa an ally in bringing p~ure againat Nicaragua's le(- tiat Sandlnlata government. According to reports this year, the administration cited Argen- tina for a possible role ln a covert operation aimed at dl.srupling al- leged Nicara?.gn arms ship· menta to leftist bels ln El Sal- vador. ~ Any such c peration now :t would aeem highly un.Ukely, par- ,. ticularty an view or tne entnus1- astic bac k ing Nicaragua has shown for Argentina since the early days of the crisis. The Falklands debate also may have strained relations betwr?en the United States and Venezuela. an America n ally in Central America. At an OAS foreign ministe rs meeting here last week, Venc- e. zuela captained a successful ef-1 fort to delete from a proposed ._., resolution a laudatory reference to Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.'s mediation effort. His speech was greeted with stony. silence by the d elegates. who tell lt demonatrated U.S. insensitivity to Latin concern•. Some analyata predkt a cool La- tln response the next tlme the u·nlted Sta&s .eeka hemlapherlc s uppo. rt on an iaaue where Waa,hlngton feela ita eecurlty in· •tere8ta are at stake. The Latin American nations· see the crisis essentlally aa a co- lonial issue and believe Argen- tina acted within its right• in retaking the ialanda from Britain on April 2. More significantly, after Haig announced U.S . backing for Britain, Venezuela called for a ''reorientation" of the OAS to ensure Latin American -and not U.S . -interests are protec- ted. Venezuela and the United States cooperated closely in opposing El Salvador's Kuerrilla movement and in promoting an evolution toward democratic rule in that country. It now seems li- kely Venezuela will find it more difficult to support U.S. policies in El Salvador. Mexico, Ecuador and other countries also have publicly cri- ticized the U.S . position on the Falklands. Even before the United States staked out the pro-British stand Friday, Haig angered the Latin Americans in his speech to the OAS foreign ministers meeting 10 days ago. BUDGET COMPROMISE . • • The president said the spen- ding plan approved Wednesday •' by the Senate Budget Committee would "continue to bring down the growth in fed~al spending . . . . It should reassure financial markets by sha rply r educing projected de ficits in the yea1s beyond . . . . ll will preserve our commitment to a strontter' defense.'' The vote was 11-9 with all the "yes" votes coming from Re~ub licans -including conservatlves who cited assurances that there would be no change in the 10 percent personal income tax cut , lltheduled for Jul:y 1983 -and 411 the "no" votes coming from Democrats. I He said the tax increases in the budget compromise, totaling $95 billion over three years. would not impinge upon the incentives he expects from the tax-cut pro- gram he proposed and Congress enacted last year. Standing with Reagan as he began the informal session with reporters w e re congressional GOP leaders. · Reagan said the burden would be on the Democrats to explain how they would refuse to agree to a plan that would reduce budget deficits to $106 billion in fisal 1983, $69 billion in fiscal 1984 and $39 billion the year af · ter. Speaker of the House Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said this morning the Republican spending plan "provides for walloping defense expenditures and fails to correct the inequities and excesses of the Reagan-Kemp-Roth tax bill. At the same time. it proposes deep cuts in Social Security and other vital programs.'' The plan, he said, "retains some of the major defects of Reaganomlca." Earlier, Senate Democratic leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia said the committee ac- tion amounted to "mortgaging the economic future of the el- derly of this country ... to fi. nance the economic folly of the Kemp-Roth tax scheme" of across--the-board tax rate cuts. On Social Security, Reagan assured recipients the committee bud.set plan would not affect the 7.4 percent cost-of-living increase they are to receive in July. ref uses pullout BULLETIN LONDON (AP) -Two more warplanes from Brttala'1 Falk· laad1 fleet were reported loat today la tile Sou~ Allntle war wUll Ar1eptlDa. Tiley were Sea Harrier vertlc~l·talreoff jets from the Royal Navy'• talk for- ce. By Tbe A11odi'ied Presa Britain vowed today to conti- nue military actfvitlea to regain the Falkland Islands while ac- ce p tl ng U .N. proposals as a framework for future ta.lka. An Argentln~ Foreign Ministry source aald the British position ruled out a diplomatic solution, for the moment. Prime Minis ter Margare t Thatc her to ld the House of Commons in London that Britain accepted U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar's pro- posals for setlllng the conflict as a "framework" for future talks, but said Britain will "continue with our military activities." Perez de Cue llar refused to make public his Peace plan, but Informed sources said it included a cease-fire. withdrawal of Ar- gentine and British forces from the Falklands area and appoint- me nt of a U.N. a(iministrator for the islands while negotiations resume to determine their future. T he plan reportedly takes n o position o n the thorny sover- eignty isiue. Britain said Wednesday it was working with Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. on a plan from Perez de Cuellar that in - d uded an early cease-fire and withdrawal. But the ideas ·were never spelled out and the latest statements.clearly indicated more f1ght1ng was like ly ~ver the South Atlantic islands that Ar- gentina seized from Britain on April 2. "It would be too easy to say no military activities during negotiation s," Mrs. Thatcher S'lid. "What would happen? We should be hamstrung. The people would stiU remain under the heel of the invader while the Argen- tines increased their activities on the mainland, increased their supplies and reserves in order to attack us at their will." But Mrs. Thatcher said it was "likely" that Argentina was see- king a cease-fire without with- drawal of its troops from the is- lands. "That would be a very evident ploy to keep them ln possession of thelr ill-gotten gains. We are right to be very, very wary of it," she said. Meanwhile, no new military actiqn was reported in the South Atlantic battle zone Wednesday. Warmer days Coastal n1ng. becoming southWMt to west tO to 18 knots by afternoon with a west·sou1hwest swell running 2 to 3 toet S~les over the ocean probably will clear only patllally after rieavy mOfnlng ctouda. MClmlng low Clol'°8 glW wey 10 ----------Nzy aft9f110011e tocl4ry 9nd Frtdey. War1n« With high• ol 74 to 78. Hlgtlt end morning low dolldl to- nlgfll and Frldey, Olhetw!M 181r. Overnight lowe en th• mid 501. High• Frldey 8S to 75. Huntington-Newport arN tem· peraNr• range lrom a high ot 79 to • low ot 65. ~ from Point Concep-tton 10 the w.itlean border and out 90 ,,.... light YW1elMe wlnde. ~ w.t to eoutr-t 10 to 11 Qlotl Ihle afternoon. Weet to eout~t 1well1 ol 2 to 3 IMt. P9l1ty doudy Ihle aft-. U.S. 3ummary Thundent0fm1 11>1•dlng from aaatern Kanua to Iha T•u• Rio Grande Valley produced up to 8 lochn of rain du•ing Iha nlghe In Oklaf\oma, contributing to thrM death•. Aull flooding Wll repor1ed In tow·lyfng 1r1a1 of Law1on, Okla • · ~h•r• the e lnch11 of rain wH !neM\Ked A Lawton woman wH killed when a raln·l•d•n supermarket root coHapMd Two other people died on raln-1llckened highway• In teptrate craahn Sc11t1red 1howe,. and lhun- d«1torm1 leer lrom up1>41f Mk:hl· gen through nonh-• llUnola to noru-t 1<1nN1 todey and lrorn tHtern Nebr11ka to the Te111H Panhandle Otllahoma rllnl11t report• In. duded more than 5 1nm. at Ade 9nd 4 lnctlM 11 Lawton and Roff. Fair 1kle1 pr1v111eo over lhe reel of the ce1'1rll u.s and much of the Weet. The NatlOl\al WMthar s.rvlce predlc1ed ~ and thundet· 9'onna from the eoue,_n plelnl ttw'ougfl the MlMIAl9PI v-., to IN ~ Oreat Lall•. Mo1tly llH\ny 1klel -• Pf• dieted for lh• Wut, and from Florlde to touthern New Englend. Te mperatures MATION HI Lo Pep Albany 71 4() AlbuQUe 62 38 12 Am1rillO 38 35 03 A&heVllle 81 .&9 Atlanta 83 60 Atlante Cty e1 .&8 Austin 79 66 98 Baltwnore 72 « B•"•nos 58 43 B1rm1nghm 86 62 Blsma•cl< 61 37 8dM 90 32 eo.100 60 47 Brownsvlle 84 76 Buffalo 76 60 Burlington 72 « Caaper 5' 24 Ch81'1stn SC 78 84 Cherlltn WV 84 47 Charttte NC 82 55 Cheyenne 47 28 Chicago 88 84 .09 Cincinnati 82 53 C~efand 83 57 Clmbla SC 83 6'4 Columbul 82 60 081-Ft Wth 70 81 1 72 01-y1on 8.& se Oeflver 54 32 01 Des Moines 76 49 74 Detroit 82 5-4 Duluth 81 40 .06 El Puo 71 .. . 91 Fwgo ea ... Fl901t1ff 58 33 0r .. 11'a1ts 5o4 30 HtrtlOt'd 73 39 Helerla 57 42 HOOOlulu 80 73 01 Houatoo 78 71 lndnapftl 85 eo Jec:1t111 MS 86 83 Jacklftvtle 82 54 ~City 81 so 191 LUVegu 82 58 Llttl• ROCI< 85 ea LoulsYClte R 51 LUbboctl 42 .09 Mernptlla .. ell Mieml 78 75 Fronls rAJld .. W,t1m .. Mllwauke1 71 60 08 Mpls-St P 82 42 to NuhYllle 85 57 N-Ot1ean1 87 11 New Yor~ 88 63 Norfolk 71 47 No Pl11te S3 ~,I Oki• City 80 Omah1 67 45 '3 Ottendo 83 60 Phlll<lphle 74 61 Ptioenix 80 81 .02 Pltt1bur~ 11 62 Ptian<t, 86 39 Piiand, Ore 10 48 Providence 87 .&4 Raleigh 80 60 R1no 10 3.& Salt Lake 57 3.& San Antonio 75 83 3 56 Seattle 83 47 Shreveport 82 e2 .0 1 Sloult F ... 55 4.& 10 St Louil 8S 88 St P-Tampe 81 re St .$It M•le se 12 SP<*-83 42 =:-72 48 11 47 2 12 ·Tue.on e9 52 Tulle 11 83 1 t2 WMf*lgton n 80 'McMa n 42 2.a:t CAL•OR*A Bllleratltld 91 N llylhe 87 Elnlla 87 ,, Freano " 57 Llnealer " 57 Loa Angelel N eo TemperaturM around the ne-tton terty today ranged lrom ze In ca.c-. Wyo .. to 11 In 8'ownavll- 1e, f...., California . . .,.1_ J_~lf IEPllT za:.· .... ·=-~ ~::d ~ ..... .. Mft ea ='•xa";:.,,_ • Mft II =-·~ . ti: .. :::: ea ii 12 .,,.~"!" e= 12 I ...... M= .. CllMIMI,.., 17 ~ Mft .... 11 Occlude<!-,51;.hou. K ¥' •• 51 Ma<y1vOle 89 Monte<ey 88 NH<lla 85 O•kland 71 $4 Puo Robles 78 53 Red 81ull 90 59 RedWOOO City 72 56 Sa<:ramento 8'\ 48 Salinas 68 63 Sen C>Cego 70 ... Si n Frencitco 84 60 Santa 8arb1ra 64 57 Senta Mina &3 St()(;ktoo 87 <48 Therm el 87 Ukleh 84 Bar1tow 85 55 Big Bear 61 31 Blthop 8f 40 Cataflna 72 54 Long Beach 69 57 01 Monrovia 68 58 05 Mt WMton .&2 ~Beech .. 60 On tat lo ~ 58 Palm Sprlngt se PllHdena es .., .04 Rlverllde ee 55 San 5-nardlno 87 57 Sao JON .78 52 Extended weather SOUTHERN CAllFOANIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AAl!AS -Patclly Ille nlgllt and -ly mor~ low c:louda nMr Ille cout ot M lair. Locel 1trong gully northw11t wind• In th1 mountalnt Saturday. Hight In the COHiii ., ... ra~<>m lht upper eot at Ille 10 mid eo. Inland ·-· Lows 53 to 83. Movn111n raaort high• ee to 78. L-40t to low 50t. Tide• TOQAY leoolld low l.'00 p.m. o.a leoolld lllGll 9:14 p.m. ... ~y """ ... l:Ma.m. u ~ '"'':t 4.1 low ... , .. ~ t:lf~ u ...:r. :ti:! .. , .... :=.:.._.ur-....., ........ Deity ""°' '9Nl4o bf Ndwd ......... CUSTOMIZED PARKING SPOT -Driver of this Cadillac apparently did a bit of creative parking leaving Newport Beach police to speculate the unknown driver was either too quick on the gas pedal or too slow on the brake. The car was spotted today in a parking lot at 833 Dover Drive. The driver was nowhere to be found. A handicapped driver sign was stuck in a window of the car. Mesa honors man, woman of the year Volunteerlsm waa the t»eme Wednesday afternoon as the Costa Mesa C hamber of Com- merce honored Norma Hertzog and Harold "Bud" Hohl aa Man and Woman of the Year at the Costa Mesa Count!'y Club. M6. HertZC>A, a councilwoman since 1974 and the city's first woman mayor. was honored for her numerous civic and commu- nity activities that included the Orange County League of Cities, United Way, the YMCA and the Family Service Aasociation of Orange County. Honl, a former triarlne and leader of the Veterans of Forel,gn Wars, was lauded for his work with the Boy Scouts and the Navajo and Hopi Indiana. Speaking about Mrs. Hertzog, John Schaae, executive assia1ant to county Supervisor Thomas Riley, said, "We have found her to be a conacientioua, hardwor-kina, dedicated public servant. When she tells you something she tells you aometh.ing directly. She never lies.'' Hank Pan.Ian, president of the Mesa Consolidated Water Dis- trict, praiaed Hohl as "generous and elfective." The two award winners also were prailed by repretentatlves of the City of Costa Mesa, Sen. John Schmiu, AMemblywoman Marion Bergeson, Congressman Robert Badham and Assembly- man Nolan Frlu.elle. .... ~ sets signups f Or youth clubs Parents and youngs te rs from kinderga rten through fifth grade can register for on e of severa l YMCA parent-c hild clubs Saturday from 10 a.m . to 1 p.m. Clubs include Indian Gui- I •Cheryl Smith , 17, of Costa Mesa has been selected as a finalist in the 11th An- nual Miss Califonua National Teen-ager pageant to be held Friday t~rough S unday an •.t"ree sight and hearing tests will be offered at a Lions Club mobile unit stationed Saturday at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley on •Therapy and r e h a bili- tation for stroke victims will be discussed May 10 at t h e Golden Timers Senior Citizen Club in Costa Mesa. A spok eswoman for the Rehabilitation Institute o f des, Indian ~r1ncesses and Trail Blazers. The signup will be held at the Orange Coast YMCA . 2300 University Drive and refreshme nts will be available. For more information. call 642-9990. Loci Angeles. The winne r o f the s tate contest wiU go on to compete an the Miss National Teen- ager Pageant to be h e ld in August the grounds o f the Llordon Bennett Balloon Race. i!:xams w1U be offered from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Orange Lounty w111 a 1scuss therapy for persons with de- . bil1t.ating diseases at 2 p.m. at the center. 114 E. 19th St. Admission as free. For m0re information caU 642-2275. Our Season Opener We've teamed up a couple of winning looks to get your spnng and summer off to a great start 100% cotton madras pleated walk shorts. and an all cotton crew neck sweater From our ladles department. nawr ally N Orange COMt OAllY fttlOt~1 Mey e. 1112 Dispute threatens . · fine college systeqi •• An unhetlthy 1chl1m be- tween the Coast Community Col- lege Dlatrict admlnlatraUon and ltl f ull-tlrne instructors seems to be growing wider each day. In a campuswide poll, Orange Coast College instructors thi1 week indicated by a large rnaratn that they lack confidence in Chan~ellor Norman Watson and the district's board of trustees. The teachers also voiced ob- jections tO the manne r in which a new Orange Coast College presi- dent, Bernard Luskin, was selec- ted. . This vote comes on the heels of another quarrel r egarding the district's use of television courses, offered through Coastline College, which Luskin currently heads. Four Orange Coast College professors questioned the quality of television courses in a... lette r sent to officials of four-year col- leges throughout California. Officials of the junior college dis trict then demanded that the · professors retract their letter and threaten ed legal action if they didn't. The academic sen ates of Or- ange Coast and Golden West Col- lege countered by unanimously approving resolutions echoing the concerns voiced by the authors of the telecourse letter. Emotions are running high on both sides. In some cases, seeming- ly to the point of paranoia. With television ins tructio n , the district believes it can reach more 1tudent1 (and receive more 1tate fundl), with reduced clau-room and fllCUlty expem• The imtructon, on the other hand, believe lncreulna use of televlalon may jeopardize their jobs. They a1lo aay they have se- rious concern• about how well students le.m 1n the telecounes. Regarding the Luakln ap- pointment, the teachers felt dis- e n franc h iaed when trustees turned away from the applicant.a suggested by a screening commit- tee and named Luskin, who had not even applied , to• the Orange Coast presidel1£Y. Trustees argued that they are the people elected to make such decisions. Both camps seem to be stand- ing firm. The district claims the unrest is related to current teacher contract bargaining. The instruc- tors say the trustees have ignored them for too long. The dispute is diverting at- tention from the more important question of how to maintain edu-. cational quality at a time whe n state aid to community colleges is being reduced. The present s plit between professors and adm inistrators must be closed before it tears the basic fabric of what has been one of the nation's finest community college systems. To begin with, the contending parties should start communica- ting with each other in less hys- terical tones Diplomas upgrade d Getting a high school diploma in the Ne wport-Mesa Unified School District just got tougher. The school board has decided to increase graduation require - ments from 200 to 220 units, ef- fective with September's entering freshmen. T h e new require ments will apply mostly to math and English, two s ubjects parents and teachers have long complained need more emphasis. In fact, a group of parents and teachers who served on the school district's Educational Resources Advisory Commit tee, told trustees that they'd like to see the re- quirements increased to 230 units. District officials said it would cost too much to do that right now. They figure the additional 20 Wlits won't cost that much . But, district officials ex- plained, the dollars would add up fast if the district went along with the committee's recommendation to add 10 units o f foreign lan- guage. Actually, 4 2 pe rcent of the district's graduating sen iors com- pleted 220 or more units last year. The average number o f units completed was 219. There probably will be a few moans and groans from freshmen who were not counting on 220 units, but the increase in require- ments is a good idea. And the goal of 230 units sh ouldn't be aban- done d . Stiffer high sch ool r e - quirements will pay off in the long run. Not too fa st , Mnie. Ma y or Energy. That's what Ne wport Beach Mayor Jackie Heathe r al- ways seems to have plenty of. Less than two months after suffering a cere bral hemorrhage that le ft he r in serious condition at the hospital, the 52-year-old may- or returned to her City Hall office, ready for work. She'd been out of the hospital only four days and was still re- turning regularly to the hospital for out-patient treatment. Aside from a lingering weak- ness on h er left side and a cane she uses for walking, Mrs. Heather seemed much her old self, talking about the county airport, offshore oil drilling and a likely referen- dum election. She even announced that she will seek re-e lection next Novem- ber and plans to ch air Monday evening's City Council meeting. • Several days a fter her return to City Hall, the mayor was out at the Upper Newport Bay a ttending a press briefing about a dredging project s he had worke d hard to secure. It's great to have Mrs. Hea- ther back in action. There are few who didn't miss the spunkiness s he brings to City Hall. But we hope she isn't rushing it. Many of the issues she is ea- ge1' to tackle have been with us for years. The problems aren't going to be solved in a day. The mayor should call upon some of her council colleagues, such as Mayor Pro Tem Evelyn Hart, who has been doing a good job filling in for Mrs. Heather, to help out. The mayor shouldn't try to shoulder all of the city's prob- lems. Take it slowly, Jackie. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1t· ed. Address The Da ily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 64'2·4321 . L .M. Boyd/ School bells No blaring bells slgnal claa atarta and 1to1» at the high echool ln Eliz.a- bed\, Colo. Instead, currenily popular mUlic does 10 over the 1ehool'1 public Mldrna ayatem. So? Nothlftl Impor- tant. maybe. But evm after all the9e yean. 1f l elate my eyes, I can hear those jan,llng bellt rattle the hall- ways. Cari t yoo? -Q. Didn't all the JlpAMN kamikaze' pllo .. of World War 0 wear .,_ad - ORANGE COAST bands to keep their hair out of their eytt! A. He.dbendl yes, but not to keep the hair out of their c!C Thoee ce- mnon&.1 bendil Wft'e bachi.maki and they 1ymbollzed 1trentth and cour.,e. Amonc UM marrt.ct, tt one ol the two vote• but the other 41oean't chancee ate four to one tM 'JOiter lt Lbe b•....., 'l.S 'n4£~ ., ~OR Of ECONOMICS IN ~E ~St? I Two-house legislature best The litany for a unicaml'rnl legtslaturc starlA.'<i by former Speaker Jesse Unruh a nd t·o ntinued by Common C<iuse· has n ow been taken up by Sen. Barry Keene. He has proposed a constitutional amendment which would n·placc the preS4mt Legislature wi th a senate of 67 me•mbers. Arguing the present system wh1l'h 1s costing over $100 million annually is "loo duplicative and far too cxp(:>nsive," ht' conte nds the "checks and balances" contemplated with a two-house Legisla- ture have been e liminated by the "unt'·man, one-vote" court dt•<:1s1ons Ile says his plan would sav1· $23 million yt•arly. WHILE HS IS correct in thl' vww that the Legislature 1s ··rar 100 expcns1v1-." his remedy is akin to throwing the baby out with the balhwater. For 1t is cssc.·n- tial that the Legislature· remam a strong branc:h of the government and its nc>- <.'t>ssary costs should not bt• un argumf'nt for weakening its powc·rs. ThC' reason tht> Legislatun• 1s now lt.K> tostly 1s due to the self-mdulgcnt·t' of the· members. Far more th<in $2:J m1lhon 1:an be saved in l·urrent leg1slat1v(.· os><.•rat1ons by c hm.inatmg the s<>-<:allro fi t.'ld offil'\.'S. <t euphemism ror thl' year around <.·am paign hc·adquartl'rs maintained by c.·<.il'h member in his district, cutting the out· rageous payroll with its more than 2,200 staff worke rs whose main funl·t1on 1s IARl WATln partil-a n politics, and discontinuing thl· furn1sh1ng of autos and unhmit<'d sup plks or gasoline for l'ach mc·mbt•r It I!> true that lhl' changes brought about by the <·ourl ruling on lhc ont•· man, unt•-vote 1~ut· have Wt'akt•noo th1.· t:ht·l·k a nd balam·t· of the two·houst• systl'm. fl 1s not true tha t 1t has bt•t•n t'liminawd On thc same day that K<.'(·nc was l'X· pounding t() thl• prc•ss on his plan, As· sembly SJ')4:aker Willw Brown told lhC' pn•ss tht• As.<Jt•mbly would not petss any m·w ta x bilb th1!> st•sswn beeaust• th1.• mc·mbl•rs didn 't bl'11eve the Senate would :1gn·1." thus dC'monstratmg that the l'hN:ks and balant'C'S of lhl· two how~.· sysl<'m is ahve and working. Undt•r the l'Urrt·nl 11·g1slallvl• pl<.in l'Jl'h bill 1ntrodut·t·d must l'lt•ar one or mort· t•ornm1 ll<'t•s 111 t·al·h h11use. This prov1dt':> the pµblit· wllh mon· than one t•ham·t· al tesurying rur or ,1gamst pro- posal::. Uncit-r a on« huus1• "Ysl<'m the bills would uni) ht• -.ubJ<'t I lo one> public ht-aring lll'fo((• µJ-.sag1-. thus n·dul'mg tht• t1m1• tlw publit· would have' lO learn cot tht• propus;,ils and pn-M·nl tis v1l·Ws. Prupunl·nb t·unll'nd thal 1h1s would makt· lht• Lt•g1slalun· mon· t•rf1 t:1t•nl. But II t•ffiewm·y nwuns tht• quwk pa~gl' of r\t•W laws 1t will not l>t•nt•fll tht• publil'. Tlw Lt·gisla tun· 1s suppos1·d 111 bt· a de- latx·r~1t1vt· body 1n whll'h .ill p1oposals are t-;1rdu lly wt·1ghtod THE WORST feature or the Keene one-house proposal LS that 1t would ine- vitably place far too much power in the h<tnds or ont· mun. lht· spto;1k(•r or. under Kl'l'nl'0S proposal, lht• prt.•s1dt·nt or the &•n;11.(•. A mut·h bt•ttN plan for n·dul'mg lcgi· slat1vt• t~JSL'i and making 1h1· lt·gisl<iture inurt• t•H1t·1l'nt 1s lhiJt of S<"n 11.L "8111" R1t·hardson who would n •turn lht> Lt.•g1. slatun· tu the pt•oplt· by hm1ling the· h·ngth of SC'SSIOns <tnd pro1v1ding for Its ml'<'lmg only l'Vl'ry uth•·r Yl'Jr Foundations can help rescue schools To the &litor: ln a recent article, a UC law professor, J ohn Coons, and our state Superinten- dent of Public Instruction, Mr. Wilson Riles bemoan the sprouting phenome- non of educational foundations. They discredit the fonnation of these founda- tions as perpetrators of inequality in the funding of t he public education al system. It is my opinion that foundations are not a threat in any way to public edu- cation as Mr. Riles suggests, but rather MAILBOX ,. 1ymptomatic of a society that as fed up with being told that they can't provide their children with whatever level of publiC' ~ucation they deem adequate in thelr own community after they have paid the billa to educate everybody else's child in the public school system. Many of ,the same voices that wring their hand.a and cry for "equal" funding of the public educational system are the same people who pay little, if any, of the taxes that provide for that funding. It seems to me that Coons and Riles are much more interested in pulling down the educational level of the so- called affluent segments of our IOdety, rather than bringing the less affluent 1egroent.a up to a predetermined level of educational competency. What they propoee is nothing Jess than a headlong rush to educational mediocrity. And this d oesn't appear to bother them in the slightest as long as everyone Is "equal'' at the lowest possible common denominator of educational competence. FORTUNATELY, an ever-increasing majority of people in this state refule to sua:umb to this call for public ed.ucatio- nal med iocrity. And thus we are wlt- ne91i.na an explosion in the formation' of the pul>Uc school foundations. What the foundations can contribute isn't a drop ln the bucket in comparison to the total ~t. At $500,000 It ~pre9e0ta about 1 • percent of our local Newport-Mesa Di- 1trlct'1 budaet. But on the other hand, this aum equates to about 20 teachera' lll.laNI. And 20 teechen can So a Iona way to teach1na remedial reading, etc., or whatever a p8rtic:u1ar diltrict th1nb it la being deprived of by the state'• unlalr "equalfzihl'' fW'ld.lnc fonnulu dktated by the ooui't'• Sertaric>-Prielt ct.clllon. One very important functlon tlult theee foundat.iona are pertonntna ~. to aound the clarion to our dtbem that our pubUc eduraUaml tystmD 11 In .......... ol 1uccumblnf to the todal enatneerlnt ' eXC.IHI o our liberal 1tate Judldal •)'Item. and urue. the people ..and up and demand of their 'le1lalatorf' tlult somethin1 be done tbout it. we will wtcnw tbl cmmpleti ....... Clem al our ~---.,.,.. ........ .. that is being urgently applied to our hemorrhaging public school system whoee financial life-blood is being bled white by the court-imposed sanctions of the Serrano-Priest decision. The ultimate cure for the periJ that w e now find our public education system in is through public supported legislation that will set a predetermined level of excellence in public education for all or our public schools. At the same time, this legislation should encourage communi- ties to ex<.-eed this predetermined level of educational excellence through their own adrutional financial sacrifices if they are willing and able to do so. TOM WILLIAMS Director of "Parents for a Responsive Board of Educauon" Backing baffles To the &lltor: ln the April 26 Pilot I noted a news story datelined Burlingame, stating the CTA (California Teachers Assn.) repre- senting 197,000 members, endorsement of Tom Bradley and Jerry Brown for governor and U.S. Senator respectively. On the editorial page, Earl Waters' column graphically d escribes Gov. Brown's underhanded raid on the Public Employees Retirement System Pension Fund in the amount of $180 million to help balance his budget. Thia 11 the employees' own money, "held in trust for their pensions. If th~C A endorses a candidate of that ilk, d their endorsement reUects their i ea of Intelligent thinking I can now more easily understand one of the reasons why atudenta are reportedly not learning more in achool. P.S. WILLS ~ Medicare lraud To the Editor: My subject is Medicare fraud. I e n- countered It last year when I wu hoa· pitall.Rd for• broken 'hip. Iwwas charged for thinp I never received, like $2.~ for a sample of toothpaste. I wrote to both my aenaton; from them [ re<:eived a re- ply that thowed they mil9ed the Po(nt. I Wll not complainlnl about what r had to ea)'· My complaint wu what they a.re dolni to Meclkar9. I wrote to the presi- dent and received no reply. It tht.. an i8lue that t.. IOO bot to handle? Do you believe thla may account for the near ~ of Social Security? NOW 'l'llaE II ~thine new. A medtcal oenter ba1 been ••t u p for ,....... ~-wt.. ... doetion ac-cept what .....,.. .,.,.. 1'h8 finl ti.me 1 .ent I newt •w the bill, atilJ don't know what it Wit. n.en I WM eent '° • dermaioloCilt who al8o accep .. what Mldkww Pll1L • He charged Medicare> $695 for a pro- t-edure (exact.l y) that l had done a few months ago for $80 and rnuldn't un- derstand why I was shocked, when I didn't have to pay for it. Some people may not care but I do. I rerused to sign the bill and have reported 1t to Health Care Administration. I have written to both my senators and told them of thousands or dollars the hospitals are l'hcating. tht•y also mJSSed the point, or is it a no-no subject? It is bigger than the defcns~.· budget and it's k1Jhng Social Security. I foci I must give ll one more try to wake somebody up. JANE M . KERR Prom souvenir To the Editor: We believe a response as in order to. your headline story of April 23. The souvenir glasses described in your news story were purehased from a sup- plier who had advertised them as parfait glasses. The intent of the students was to purchase a souvenir glass that could be given to those attending the 1982 prom. We understand some persona were offended because they perceived the glass and the song title pnnted on it as a kind of encouragement to dnnk alcoholic beverages. For that we are 90rry. That certainly was not the intent of the As~ sociated Student Body or the 1ehool. To lhe contrary, over the palit several yeatl, the school has worked very hard to dis- courage and prevent the use of alcohol at school activities. WE SERIOUSLY question the manner in which the Daily Pilot pursued this story as well as their purpoee in soliciting and publishing remarks by Mr. Geron- dAle. The Gerondale family has always had our deepest sympathy in .regard to the Lragic loaa of their daughter, Jill. It ia our opinion the Dally Pilot enpged ln very irresponsible and in,ensitive jour· nallsm in dealing w1th this isaue. Fur- ther, we were amazed this s tory wat selected by the Dally Pilot editors H "front page material." THOMAS W. JACOBSON P. 8'1'JCPHEN ~s: Ac:tMtlel 0U.C. NfJW'pCll't Harbor ·ffilh 8chaal ~Pilat · ................. ,,, ... ...... "· c.... MrW ..__. ,.,,...,._. te..,. mnt WWW ID the ........._ ol. M -·wa.. IJel,C...llifw,CA~ ~ .,_ d-ooa fYl'lilln. 'Ibey -how•\IW, ..w u a temporary Ufe-Mvlnc tourniquet •• l.IM\ .... ...,..,.:='C· Hi'' ....... .. ........ :i.s ..... =te· ~---· --~-· ,......... .... ........ ..,. ............... ,..""". ..... ......... ,. .... "" ........ """"...,.I ....... "~. _____ _,_,, .... c.,,...., ..... .,... ... •tttlteetMOt ,_...,. I ......,,....;..-.,., .... ,,.,.,.,....,..,. h•t1'lm .. ID80"'1 .. .. ~~.._.:.___..;,,_~~~----------- f' The Diamond Anniversary Ring A bond of diamonds that soys you'dmorry her all over again. RAFF jeWilry- 32 Fuhlon' t.l•nd N•wporl Beach • 544.2040 · 3 gener•Uont ol lrlendtr personal 1ervlc1 erything must' go up to70"0 0FF! FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH A ROSE HAS A SPECIAL MEANING • • • Pin a Rose on y~ur Lady Fair in the language of flowers. to give a rose is to say "I Love You." The rose In full bloom has come to mean beauty at Its fu llest, while the unopened rose signifies un-awakened love. One or both of these beautiful emblems of love from Slavick's will tell her more than many bouquets. Rose Bud Pin 1n 14K Gold $69.95 In Vermell $19.95 In Sterkng $ 9.95 Full Rose Pin 1n 141< Gold $69.95 In Vermell $19.95 In Slefing $ 9.95 Both lAK Gold Roses ore ovoitoble with o diomond. SLAVICK·s Ane ~Since 1917 Where rhe bes< surpnses begin. Fashlpn 15'1nd (714) 644-1380· Newport Buth Also Gremtr Los Angeles• San Diego• Las \legas for spring hiking, boating, Walking ... tha. sportif camp short in khaki or whit<i. with it, our 9horts1<ieMZ. tradi- t1onal plaid 9hirt eni lwthcir bz,1t rnak'l it at-e.a.ecz. ... spring and summe.r. JCPenney . .. FABRICS! Entire Stock Reduced 503 off li:l FASHION ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTER Hawaii ... Free Trip Anyone? Look for Benchley Luggage Travable catalog coming Wednesday, May 12 in the 125 Fashion Island, Newport Beach. CA near Bullock's Wilshire 92660 714/759-9101 Sunday, May 9t!J MOTHER'S DAY join us/or lunch or dinner Great Drinks Delightful Lunches Glorious Dinners 37 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644-2030 500 N. Euclid St. Anaheim Plaza 772·2130 ~-- Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Tt\uraday, Maye, 1982 N NYSE OMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS OVOUllONJ IHCl..UO• H AOUO!t ""' .... •o••· ......... flACIPIC ...... 90tfh.Olfl01f Allllll c1111c111••f1 nocir I X(MAlllOU AltO •l"O•UD aY •Ml HA•• AlllO llllUllfU .. Dow Jones Final UP 8.76 CLOSING 883.20 Meet focuses on development Business and industry spokesmen from acr068 the United States and several foreign t'Ountrles will be on hand in Newport Beach next week to explore devel- opments in Industrial expansion. The occasion will be the spring professional seminar of the Industrial De- velopment Research Council. Atlanta based lDRC is a non-profit professional association. Seminar sessions, including a presentation by Los Angeles Mayor Thomas Bradley, and a gubernatorial candidate are scheduled Monday through Wednesday at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel Housing m eeting set Affordable housing and densities will be discussed May L 7 at a meeting of the Home Builders Council at the Airport.er Inn, Irvine. Speakers will be Gary R. Collins and Steven W. Wraight, partners in the firm of Collins & Wraight. The dinner meeting begins at 6 p.m. For infor- mation, call 213-625-5771. Mortgage rates decline WASHINGTON (AP) -The average interest rate charged Americans for new mortgages fell slightly in April to 17.41 percent, the second time this year that those rates have dropped a bit, the govern- ment reports. The number of lenders making loans rose last month for the fifth straight monCh, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board said. The new average effective commitment rate on long-term, fixed-rate mortgages declined 0.1 percen- tage point Crom March's 17.51 percent, the report said. The rate was 15.53 percent in April 1981 Business parks m erge Wilma/Pacific, Inc .. of Los Angeles, and the partnership of Shaw, Talbot, Budge and Bibin, of Newport Beach, have formed Cahfomia Partners. This joint venture will develop mixed-use busi- ness parks in a five-<'Ounty area of Southern CalHor- nia. The executive offices will be located at 1303 Av- ocado Street, Newport Beach. Comarco gets Hughes pact Comarco Inc. of Anaheim announced 1t received a $3.9 million contract from Hughes Helicopters Inc. Terms of the contract call for developing software documentation for all the couputer programs on board the AH-64A Apache advanced attack helicopter. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT f.,.tll.MJ ••••• 669 000 MUOO .,.,500 Ul.O s.o.100 w..ooo U1.IOO Ul.AOO S11AOO SIO,IOO 50$.000 5G:l.to0 sen.JOO UPS AND DOWNS U"5 Ul>I Ola 21/> • " ,.,, . 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Off •.• Off 4S Of'I 4J Off u Off 42 Of'I .. , (_)fl 4.1 IC,....,nMI. 1 troy oa., Ual.H, oft ... 71 • ..._.. ... ,, 1 troy 01 .. UH.21, otf tut. ....._.,...,u~oa. .... u.oo. oft .. ,,. • ...,.._ W • ..., .N02 lroy -. • ..... ,off •• 80. AMERICAN LEADERS MflALS NEW YORI( lAPJ -Spot nonl••lllM IMlel praa 1ooey -~ 78-81 c.ii. • pound, u.s o.- llMl!on9. -LMd 28-27 c.ii.. pound -Zlac 35 CWl'9 • pound, cNllvw.cl -Tiii .. 7038 Mtllm w ... ccimc>0911• Ml _........._ 7&-n -•pound, N.Y _..._, 137$.00 per llMI<. -Y'lll•z-$331,00 troy OL, N 'r SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS 11 Ti.. Aa.ocl•l9d PrMo s.tee1ed wc><ld gold P11G1t• tOClay -Loft49A: mornlno llaino: 1336.25, off '3 16 -Londoft: •llNnOQrl hu'lg $334 SO on Sl 90 -Parlo: S340 07, Oii S• 05 -'renklurt· S33e 118. oft S7 O I -Zurich Late lmno '33l 00 bod o ll SA 00 $336 00 asi.eo -H•ndr I "''"''"' (Only •l•oly QUOIOJ S334 !>O. off S3 90 -1,,..Jhard· Conly daoly QVOltJ $334 SO oll $3 90 -a,...tl\erd. (only ch"'Y ouoteJ lot>rocaled '351 23, on S4 Oil SYMBOLS r • . . OrMOt CoMt DAILY ptLOTr.rhut9d-.y, M-.y 8, 1882 LOS ANGELES (AP) -"J'tddler an the ftao«" 11 a 19601 mu1lcal about Jew1 In tur..-of .. &h•· <»ntury BUlll.a.. that, Jnjta 1980e J'Wlrv:am&Um.. hll tremendOUI appeel to the JapaneM. "I waa In Japan and l aaw the p_l•Y. I~ Japaneee," Mid the lhow'a recw-rent atar, HtrCheJ Bernardi. "The audience 1tarttd lauahifti on cue and crylna • • • AfLeJ' the ahow 1 \he JapaMle pr'O- duc:er aalcf. '1 don't 1ee why the ahow ahouJd be ao popular ln America. It'• ao Japaneee'." The l'UIOn, Bernardi uid, la "t.be content of thll play la about the breakdown of tradition and the famll . He (the Japaneee producer) Hid, 'What's happening a.n thla flaY la happeninc today In Japan .'' · The show a.l.eo has attracted new audiences from New York to the Pantaget Theater in Loa Angeles, where Bernardi bowa out June 20 to undergo rest and therapy for a back problem. Afterward, he said, he may de· velop a one-man show under the .... -..,.-....... 111·Df-..--..._, auspices of the Smithsonian In· , stitution. He said he was persuaded to do the revival because the original director, Jerome Robbins, was golng to stage it. Bernardi, who took over the role on Broadway from Zero Moetel. had never worked with Robbins. "This is not a re-creftion, it's a restitution." he said. "We have ne.w insights, we're older." One significant difference that's developed in the past 15 years is that the show is now advertised on television and radio as well as newspapers. "We have opened up a new audience to live theater." said Bernardi, wearing a burnoose as he You•u be glad JOU camel -~~~!-~ All&llllM DIUYf·la ~11991~0 llMI ... ,I.Ali 11<1'1 ~.., ~319 lOWAllDI Ct•M& CllTlll Cow ...... 91q ... , A PMlffiO\.t'lt Plctlle . .JA. .. ~c:...~=~ ............. ...._._ -.,:". NOW PLAYING lOWMOt uoouuca llWAllOI fOWTAI• HUU El lato ~ti ~HO ,....,...., Vllltr; 139 1~00 llA TWiii CIM.MAI I OHIDS Ill JD 1M1 I WtSl_,.,llf 193 l?•l ~ ' t • lDWAllOt WOCl9MIOGf '&ClflC IOUTa COAST If.._ ~)I 06)) l~ it4c" 49• l ~U lft:·WAf>IMt•l·t9 -0•.....,.•~c.1"'' WH-tm.tt\t• 191 3193 •om , ... , ...... ..--«•"' lOWUlll IOllla COAll ,WA TOWll Cllllll C..a&I Coit.i Mtw /~I 411• THE ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC CENTER Cabaret Center wants to thank Lido Marina Village Management and Merchants CifJ of llewport Beach Cabaret Chapter Members Activities Inc. ~ llewport Beach for making the CELEBRACION DE CINCO DE MAYO On May 1, 1982 at Lido Marina Village such a great success . We also want to thank the following for their generous support and donations, which made this fund-ra i~er possible . · NEWPORT BEACH TENNIS CLUB BACK BAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE Newport Beech THE PINNACLE CLUB Fountain Valley BACHE HALSEY STUART SHIELDS INC. Newport Beach PRICE WATERHOUSE AND CO. Newport Beach SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTIL Coeta Mete MR. ANO MRI. STANLIY CRANDON N9wport BMch ARTHUR ANDEMON AND CO. Coeta Mete IM. AND .... RONALD WHln l!L TORITO ... TAURANT Newpol1 9Mct'I AMINCAN MIWll CIMTIR, 1$. ~~ JOM weyne AlrPol1 ~MID ~J.,*re .. c• ~IMc:tl •,~~AH~ ......i1c..+,A/OO '"VICTOR 11~ PERSONAL BEST (Fil IJm STRlPES @ THE GROOVE TUBE (Al A LITTLE SEX (Al .... , ....... R9BINHOOD ~ Th41 0..11 6 Mu C>e..r.n (pQ) Ctl1td'1 p,_ ~ lomeKJnd ·~m otttwo S.O B (Al *BARGAIN MATINl!l!S * Monday thru Saturday All Perform1ncH before 5:00 PM (£icept Spedal En91111111nt1 and Holld1y11 1 '4 MttlA(JI~ MAl I M11000 01 t o 1ecron1 LA MIRADA WALK IN 994·2400 "OUEIT FOR flRE" 1111 ,t..tt IM .... •M I.At .... Mtf PICfUM AMO 6CllftWlA• "CHAlllOTI OP F1112" 11'<11 !Ut.>•.1>0,1•.•- "PORKY'&" •1 •t::M. J JI, ......... J .... . LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN M90MI KIND Of' ltlJtO'" 1111) ,_ ____ .... "IF YOU CC>Ul.D K l WHAT I HIA.111" (f'O) t:tl, ,. l:IO, .. 10, tO:JO LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAlll IN •etACToa-- "ON OOU>«)C ~"' "-.----- t,AC,UN,f. "VICTOR VICTORIA"''°' ,.,. , .... l ti. ..... "PARTNERS" 1•1 ti ti >-ti IOI P 10 .,,, n 1• •ocu11y 01 Con4tewo~ 211/111·9110 "PARTNERS" 1111 ,, ... , ........... .,,. • ., ~ ""° ___... "CKAIUOTI Of' FIM" I,.,,__.._ __ so . COAST WALK·IN sov111 Coo11 Nlwoy al .. ooawoy 494-1514 NIT l'ICTUM Of , .. •au ·"CHARIOTS OF FIRE" IMt •• ,,=:--: ~-, =· ... .. >j AHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ltee.-oy t f OI L•MOft $t 179.9150 "PARTNERS" 1111 -~ ... ,,,,, .. U 116Ull.2-•4MHLHI.- "Pftl\#ATE lEllOHl .. 1111 "-US .. l'IACOUEr' 1111 ---~--••1n.._•a c•, O\.US -111~ OEAllEIT' 11'<11 Qllf " SO\l'"D &UI NA PAiia BUENA PARK ORIVE·IN Ltnc: 0111 A•t Wt1I OI I.non 12h4070 I UI NA P .. lll LINCOLN DPIVE·IN \ff'K.o•n A•• ••" ot llrt0tl 12'-•070 l '.)UNIAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORIVf·IN so" Dt•oo ,,.,,., 01 .,_,,..,.,(So 1 962·24a1 '°"'' 'J'M1NS'f Ii Hl·WAY 39 ORIVt ,,.. "f'AllTNllll" t•t .._.,. .. ~ Ol!AlllEIT" tl'OI CtllfllSO\lllO YOUOOULO. ~.J .......... 1 Nila "TMI llUDOY HOU. Y lfa.IY"CNI Clllt H IOUllO 4 ~4 A~'°'' LA HABRA ORIVI IH -·-~---....... .... 17M .. 2 - - • ""._4(,I ORANGE OlllVf IN ,. l/.l .. wt\"' N f Q f) I/ I"' I~. AIOOY ·-S ,.._._._ ......... {II) •w• "CAT l't'.OPLE" 1111 Cnot " )()ut<U ..ENTlll THE NIHJA" 1111 ... .,. THE OllAl'HAl'IAN<:I" 1111 • e.ocn ll•O So OI foj.o." a.-f, ..... , 891·3693 -r PICTUM <W TMa •UAI •'<:HAlltOT~~ f'N" tM1 .. AlllTHUft" fl'<ll "'f'OflK Y"I" ll'OI ""ut "UP 1H IMO.CR" r111 ..... VATI LaHONS" 1111 ~-"M C OUST" (ti) $OMO AftO f PW'f' I lte•• C01t911• 551·7022 "Pryor ii wonderful!" -&l~lr. &,,..,,, 1,()1\ AN(lr:l.118 TtMl''I ~·--·-·~,.,,,---~· ........ _ . NOW PLAYING UA CllMllA A'-C OIWMll llAU lDWAUI fOUH&ll HUlf W«\lmon"!'f 893 O~•G OtltlQt 637 OHO fOUlllitlll YllfV 831 tSOO ua CITY CIWMA LOWAllOI ..... , )taog. 63• 391 1 Ni!WllOfl fltl(h OU 0f60 lll&Nll lllll PLAZA IT&OIUll OlllWl·I• 1110 ll lllUOl INlllWl·I• &u 529 5339 0.lllQt e3t 1110 la Mlfida 921·1106 DIWl llOI llOOlUAC:ll lOW&llOi lllllTOl MllllOtl Dlllfl·t• (I looo 511 saeo '°"' MtM S•O 10• SMI .NMIC..lllllO •t3 •5•S