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1982-05-20 - Orange Coast Pilot
,,,, ........ . NEWPORTER JOINS FAST -7.oe Ann Ananda of Newport Beach (right), stands at rotunda of IllinQia state capitol during fasting ~e to support ERA. Ot.ben are Sonia Jobmon of VilJinia (left) and Dina Bed>elor of"LOe Azl&elel. Embraeeabtes Laguna huggers, huggees meet Laguna's affable Hug Club la holding a picnic at the Festival of Ar1.a grounds Sunday, a 90rt of "arms race" rally in which everyone, they say, comes out a winner. Club officiala tenn it a day of smiles and laughter, and oce ds go to support the Beach Free Clinic. hat's the Hug Club? It was formed more than a year ago by several Laguna Beach strollers who started hugging each other o~ their ~jaunts. It proved contagious, according to founders Ron Membello and John Thrash, who term hugging "a transfer of positive energy from one person to another." And Sunday's hug picnic is the first organized event of the looaely knit organization. 'nle day's activities include a ''HI.lg Olympics," games and races for children and adults, a hugging pep rally, booths and displayS. celebrity buggers, music provJded by wandering minstrels, live bands and singers. There will be prizes for the moat huggable outfits, and a variety of vendors and concessionaires to provide nou rishment for exhausted buggers and huggees. 'nle 9qUee7.e fest will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and while admission is free, the Hug Club would appreciate contributions to the Free Clinic. Republicans offer reduced budget WASHINGTON (AP) -Republicans alike agree that House Republican leaders, finding a majority this election hoping to rebuild their sucawful year 1n the fractious House wm ~ coel!tiQo of last year, Are' ~ .an uphill battle. ''The No:--1 offenng a new pJan wttb abarply problem before the Hou8e is not ~ed back domeetic spending which one {budget) to pall. but and $95 billion in tax incre 11e1 bein8 able to i-any of them." over three years. ----.-'d H"Oll.R" Boagef Committee Chairman James R . Jonea, But Democrats and J>.Olda. WORLD Falwell jeered ·by Aussies SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -The Rev. Jerry Falwell. leedel' of America'• Moral Majority, wu heckled today by a right. group calttng ltlelf the "New South Walea Monl Majority. NATION 11 BOB 8PIUNO£k .............. ~ SPRINOrtlLD, Ill. -A nutriUon 1pect•'wt warned today that ..wn women, lncludina one from the Oranae Co11t, are rl1kln1 permanent injur_}' by f~ In IUpport of tho Equal JU&hta Amenainent, 'l'he Oranae Co11t woman amonl the HVen plannlnl a ~ hunaer 11\rike to l\.\ppon the ERA WU Identified U "Zoe Ann Anand& of Newport Beech. FuUna rilb for the women grow eaCh day they continue, warned Dr. ArthW'" J'rank, t.M nutrition.lit. · Frank 1atd If the women continue theli f• u)d IUl"Vive, they .uu rtak dmmal to t.helr Uvvt. hMrta and mu.r:la The women beaan their h\.U'IPI' ltrike Tuelday, vowtrur that un1e11 the ERA la raUftecf, they wUl rejeet all rood until June 30. the rat:Wcation dffdllne. •1Qod, • Fraca. rd give my n,ht arm for a ~." Dina B.chelor of Los Aneeles said to · Mary Bame. of Ralelgh, N.C., on the lecond day of the fast, aa the women camped ln c.h C.phol rotunda here. 11Well, I could 10 tor a couple of acrunbled egp, IOfM tout,'' said Luter SonlA Joh.Non, who wu excommunicated from the Mormon Church ln la~o 1979 after crittclzlna the church's opposition to the ERA. ~. JohlllOn, of Sterlin&, Va., complained of feelins weak and at one polnt needed help 1n ria1ng from a chair. "I had a difficult time getting up this morning," she uJd. Mra. Johnson, who normally weight 120 poW\CU1 lolt three pounds from ht'r 3~r~ frame ln hor first full day of fast.I~, accordlng to a 1eale at a nune 1 station at the Capitol. The other' women lost one to three POUnda. Such welaht lo. early 1n a starvation dlet. la uaual and indicates water depleuon, said Frank. at.aft doctor at George Wubington University In Washington. "Very few people have any experiences with total atarvaUon that are not complicated by other (See FAST, P•1e A!) Quake· s.a(ety challenged 1son counters 15 years ago Newport man held in sla~ing A 38-yeer-old Newport Beech busine11man wu •rr#a~d outside hia home Wedneeday In connection with a murder police detectivt!9 a1Jeae be ccmmttfed 15 ~ean aao on the outak:irta of Tuc9on, Ariz. PolJce said the man, James Lee Crwnmel, was surpr1aed when officers flagaed down his car near his Newport Crest home just before noon, informed him of the arrest warrant and booked him on murder charges. Crummel, who police claim also uaea the name Jlmi Lee Savage, is being held in Orange County Jail ln lieu of $200,000 bail. Police ln Tucson said Cnunmel is being c harged with the strangulation slaying of 9-year-old Frank Howard ClaWBOD WOOee body WU found beneath a meequite tree on Feb. 6, 1967. Sgt. Dan Abbate of the Pima County Sheriff's O:penment ln · 'l\IC9on said toda.y that there's never been a clear motive established In the killing. He aaid Cn.unmel had been considered a RISpeCt ln 1967 but that the man, 23 at the time, left town shortly after the murder and WM later arrested on child r molestation cbargea in Wisconsin and eentenced to a prison term. Abbate said the murder investiptlon was put "on the t>.ck burner" u the years p&Ded. More than a year ago, Abbate u.id,. L young sheriff named Robert Lough dusted off the case and started interviewing wttne9lel Including 101De of the murdered boy's frienda, many now grown and living in different perts of the country. STATE Abbate Mid hla department. obtaJn e d a warrant for Crummel'a arrest on Tuesday and moved Into Newport Beech. Police uld Crummel , who reportedly baa been Itvlng in Newport for aever.al years, recently had been employed aa a buaineas manager for a local physician. Officera said Cnunme1 likely wlll be arp igned early next week. It is unclear, they said, whether he will fight extradition to Arizona. Saudi 'prince' arrested on • cocaine rap A man claiming to be a Saudi Arabian prince was arrested early today near his Newport Beac h home on charges of poueulon of more than $4,000 worth of cocaine, police said. H.R.H. Mashhour Ben Saud, police allege,. was pulled over several blocks from his 2110 Yacht Miachief home after an officer said be obeerved his car weevtng. Police said it was detennined Ben Saud was under the influence of drugs and that a search of the car turned up 1 ~ ounces of cocaine. Ben Saud, police aaid, waa arrested earlier this year on charges of poaeaalng cocaine. -T hey aai"d he told them t he H.R.H. he &.-. as a title stands foe Hi.a Royal m,hne91. Insurance claim easy Want a quick $91. Why not file for uncla1med state disability lnsurance? Page A6. 2flice hijU,lcs tale ~reil Bureauc:rata 'Can nially take the fun out of life. A Department of Socla1 ServlcM Supervteor frowned on an office party that featured a ltlip-teMe ahow. Pap AB. 9 arges FOUND DEAD -Walter Casey Jones, who roamed U .S . roads artd preached carefree living on "The Tonight Show" was found dead W ednesday in his mobile home at Longview, Wash. He was 110 years old. 3 counties lose medfly ·quarantine SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Mediterra nean fruit fly quarantine is to be lifted from Loe Angeles, Stanislaus and San Benito counties on Jl.lne 1, say state and federal officials. JapaneR agricultural officials have said they would lift restrictions on produce from all of California when the federal govemment lifted the quarantine from Los Angeles and Stanislaus counties. INDEX At Your Service Erma Dombeck Buaine. Calltornia Cavabde ci-a&d c.om.a a-.:!o~ Ent.er1alnment A4 B2 B4,C6-7 A$ B2 Dl,D3-6 ClO ClO D2 AlO C8-9 S PORTS Does unit need 800 changes? By DA V1D KUTZMA.NN ()('the Dlllr ,... •ttift Southern California Edison Company officials were to meet today with high ranking representatives of the U .$. Nuclear Regulatory Commission U> defend E.dison's Un.it 1 ructor at San Onofre from assertiom that it might not be earthquake safe. A federal official said Wednesday this revie w of a utility-prepared seisrnk analysis showed there were as many as 800 modifications needed to insure safe operation of lhe 14-year-old reactor. That o ffic ial. William T . Russell, head of the NCR's office o f systemic evaluation, characterized the findings of the study as showing there were "significant seismic deficiencies." However, Edison officials insisted lhal the seismic analysis was being "misinterpreted'' and that there was no reason to prevent them from returning the reactor to active duty following a scheduled shutdown earlier this year for maintenance work. "Our bask position is this: As the plant stands, it is safe (to operate)," Edison spokesmtm Russ Hawkes srud. A contingent of utility of(icials flew to NRC headquarters in Bethesda, Md., Wednesday and w ere to m eet with federal officials this morning. Hawkes said the group would tell the NRC that 436..megawau Unit 1 was built to exceed seismic safety margins in eU.ect in 1968 and has been upgraded over the past 10 years to guarantee its safe operation. But Russell, who reviewed F.diaorHI-work on seismic safety, stated in a memo that the plant (See ONOFRE, Page A!) HOl"OICOpe B2 Ann Landen B2 Moviet C8-9 Mu~ F\mds C.6-7 National News A3 Public Notices B(C6,D2-3. Sports Cl-.5 Stock Mairket.s ~7 Televiafon CH 'nleaten C8-9 Weather A:J. Workl New. A3 .. c ~ l probl•m• uaoolat•d wlth fem1nt 0 IUOh JI \UbtrNlolil and cl.JHni•ry, J'r.nk aald from w~. J..~Th• brain and o'htr vltll cqU\I terMl to prot.ct thernlelvee the tx~ of other tilluel. body wlll Mt lta own flt tU lt dtole• ltetlf, and \Mn lt ~. F after m~• U.U•," he • Tht women lhould at leatt 1jke vttamlna. protein pUla and &J>~um capsule1, ht Mid. • Slater Maureen Fiedler, a Catholic nun (rom Mount ' Md., planned to drink juicee, but the other women 1 he.y would only drlrtk J Othn hun1.r 1trlktra ln llddltion to An&nda of Newport 8-cb, an MarY Ann BMI' of hlla Churchi V•·i .. llMi Shiray Wallace o1 rOl1 Couuw. Coa0. They ..sci they chOM to •\Me the taat In Ullnol1, th• ~hly Northern lndM1trl1l 1tate ln which the IRA II unrattt&,d, to protelt a ltlt4 ~ti~ N1e that th• amendment bt ~by tl\.ree.fifthl of each hoUM. Moet atat.tl reqUlre a llmple mltortty. The ERA, whicl\ woufd ben dllcrlrnlnation bued on 11x, muat be ratified by 38 1tat.e1 by June SO to become part of the Conatitution. Thlrty·ftve atatet have ratified It 10 far, but five have reednded their approval. ONOFRE SAFETY. . . By ft• AaaoclaSM Pren Brltaln uld today lt 11 "lnconcelvablt" that A!PnU.na will accept U.N . Store· t-.ry·Gtn•r•l Javier Perea d, Cuellar'• ldeaa for J'al~land lllandl PMCe becau.. It alr.ty haa Njeeted llmilar llJ!&IHdcl:al ln prevtoua talka. Addre11ln1 the HouH of Common• In London, Jlrlme Mlnilter Ma.rPNt Thatchtt aid Ar1enUn1'• clear aim waa "'ptOCrMUnatlon Md conUnulnl occ~t1on" of the l1land1 h lnv April 2. And with a Britiah talk torce ln the South Atlantic poMed to lnvade the ialandl, ahe aid that Brid.ah COJWderaUon of Pera de CUellar'• auuestiona will "not clc.e any millfary optiool." )I mlaht not meet current federal contended that neither Unit 1 nor ,,fety 1tandard1. Hi1 memo the newly built $3.3 billion unita •ted that utWty offidala told are strong enough to aafely the NRC 1taff that the plant, withstand an earthquake. located three miles IOUth of San Hawkes indicated this momina' SINDNG OF BELGRANO -nu. photo was made available Wedneaday in Buenoe Aires, showing ainklng of Argentine cruiser Gen. Belgrano. Shot wu taken from a lifeboat in foreground where capacity of 20 penona la indicated. Belgrano sank after betna hit by British submarine torpedo attack. Preu AuoclaUon, Britain'• domestic news acency, repo&1ed ADMJNISTL\TJON • KEEPS LOW PROFILE-At 9:"~'7':1:0~ as many that even though modificationa Talks to begin ,. may be required for Unit l, they 1 The analysis did not involve are not serious enough to KUWAIT (AP) -The fint Qewly built unita 2 and 3 at San ah td f th Jan direct negotiations between ~ofre. Those 1,100-megawatt warrant a u own ° e P t. Marxist South Yemen and ~actors received authorization 1fawkee said Unit 1, following pro-Western man will begin May tor full power licensing last near 1 y three months of 29 after U yeara of strained fieek. maintenance work, ii ready to go relations, the radical newspaper ~;~;i0f; h;u:; up the ~-;~~k:edn-y rigley hit with $55 million community property suit LOS ~GELES (AP) -A ormer wife of William Wrigley suing the chewing gum gnate for $55 million in mmunity property for the n years they lived together fore the marriage was nulled, her attorney said y: Joan Wrigley, 42, of St. eteraburg, Fla .. Is s uing the hrice-marrled 49-year-old _ .. ......,.r.v multimillionaire in Loe les because Wrigley has al9o tabllahed residence in Southern 'fomia with several homes, ft.. luding at least two on Santa talina laland, said celebrity v0,rce lawyer Marvin Mitchelson. Much of the island is owned by Wrigley. who is president and chief exe<:utive officer of the William Wrigley Jr. Co., Mitchehon aid. "She ii suing for $55 million for division of community perty, or fraud and deceit and ach of contract, a sort of palimony type of caae," Mitchelaon ·said in a telephone interview before filing the auit this morning in Superior Court. Reached in his Chicago of6ce, Wrigley said: "I can't comment on something that I know nothing about . . . except to aay that it sounds ridk:uloul on the face of it." The couple were married on Catalina Island in March uno, but Wrigley had the marriage annulled on grounds that her three-week Alabama divorce from her former husband wu not a proper divorce, Mitchel8on said. Althouah the couple lived l.n Cblca10, Mltchelaon aald, WrtcJey moved the annulment cue to Wi8conain. where he WM able to oonviJP the COW'll in 1978 that bi1 wife'• 1869 Alabama divorce was not valid becauae •he was not truly a resident of Alabama. "that ahe only went there fot the divon:ie,'' a lthougb the at ate hu a three-week legal residency rule, Mitchelaon saia. "It's le~al in the state of Alabama, ' Mitche lson aaid. "Almost every state recognizes it." He added: "Wrigley knew all about it when he married her. And she in good faith married him, ao she la what we call a 'good-faith wife'. · Mrs. Wrigley appealed the annulment to the U.S. Supreme Court, which refused to hear the caae last year. "But the property righll have never been aettled," Mitchelaon said. "We are contending that ahe is a 'putative spouse,' which means that if you marry someone in good faith, you are entitled to your righta aa a wife." Under California's landmark "palimony" law, developed principally by Mitchelaon in the cue of Michelle Triola Marvin va. actor Lee Marvin, people have the right to sue for ~unity property even if they are not le~y married. Warmer days Northwlet Winett 8 to 15 knc>U, tto oomblned -and IWll 4 to feet over outer lalenda lleor_.no todey. EIMWtlere llgM ert1bl• wind• through tonight .-t to ~t 10 to 19 nota eftemoon Ind -*'G. Fllr tonight. 83 TT 73 ao 12 12 80 82 95 80 79 92 93 84 92 5e 83 ee 51 ao 55 ee 84 12 19 85 78 14 11 15 83 ao eo 75 14 90 .. ee as 7t as 81 96 78 ee 71 7S 73 15 91 87 .. 15 71 .. 15 f7 11 n T"'9 II WlllNngtn 14 WlaMa '° CAU'OMIA .. 11 '° 11 a .. .. 91 15 A 85 50 81 44 n 58 72 98 12 N 79 59 84 ... 10 41 11 71 .. 55 80 52 78 sa 93 93 8t 40 55 .. 54 13 50 IS 47 75 ., 80 57 71 56 et 80 72 49 12 .. 73 52 97 50 19 ... 1t 40 17 57 .. 50 13 30 .. eo 73 57 ... 13 .. Le t7 1t .. 7t 78 10 ... 50 .. 71 ea ... .. ~ .. II 71 .. n .. .. .. 10 .. 17 .. 1Q ....., 12 18 Sen Juen, P.R. 93 n Trtnlded 90 72 verec:na 90 75 Smog Th• Soutn CoHt Air Quallty M1nagement Ol1trlct predict• unhealthful elr for Hn1ltlve people todey -Inland ~ north Ind MSt of L~ mec~.,.. .,..., Of9nge Coun y end Ill• coall•I erea1. Oood elr quellly 11 predicted In th• d•Hrt1, Hemet-El1lnore r21on, Benni"" '"d Bl~ 8Hr L e. UnhHlthlul elr lor Hn11t1ve = -lcnout for the SM abflll end Pomona vlllly9 wtt11 1 Pollutant Stendard lndell of 200, metrofc:!:11en Loe Angel .. , the Alver1 d•·Sart Bernardino ., •• end Sen Fernando and Senta Clertta vlllly9 wtttl Pll 118• lnlend Ofange County wtttt Pil 175 and the OOM!tal .,... wttll PSI 113. Oood al~ty -fotecaet for Hemet lnore with 'Ill '2 Ind Ilg .., l.Me. '!::;*,.1, end hlgtl and IOW ..,_ Wltft '7. ' . Extended weather l1turdEnd1y: '•Ir but WM IMe MdtirfJmllnMo low.... ... .......... "' ............. ':n: "°"' 10 to141t~to7t ·~ lntlH ~· Mountain l'MOrt .... to t. l.OW941to ... Skies possible key "deep glo"om .-.. about the proepecll of avoiding war," and Pel'ft de Cuellar cte.cribed h1s peace plan aa a "paUent ln intensive care but still alive." • • to any invasion LONOON (AP) -The crucial battle tor control of the Falkland Islands will be fought in the skies above the South Atlantic chain when the Britiah task force launches ita apparently imminent invasion, British military analystl believe. The fleet maaaing off the Falklands will be at lta most vulnerable when it moves within combat range of Argentina's air power, baaed on the mainland. "U it can't get ita air defense right, then lt'a in trouble," said Col. Jonathan Alford, deputy director of the International Institute of Strategic Studies. Argentina's air for ce comm4nder, Gen. Basilio Lami Dozo, has threatened a massive air assault when the Royal Navy fleet moves inshore to land ill 4,000 marines and paratroopers. British experts question Argentina'! abWty to mount a large-acale coordinated air attack. But "if the Argentines are prepared to risk their planes in a determined fashion," said Alford, "it will be very difficult to produce a water-right defenae. The Argentines will loee a lot of planes and men. But lf the Argentine piloll are prepared to die in a major attack, aome will get through. "The main pfOblem the ileet has suffered right from the start ia the lack of a bue away from home without early-warning radar and an adequate fighter• umbrella," said Vice Adm. Sir John Roxburgh, a fonner NA TO submarine force commander. The Argentines can muster about 190 combat planes fO( any mass attack. Agalnat this, the British have about 30 Sea 111• 111111111 Harrier fighters on the task force's two carriers, Hennes and Invincible. But an estimated 10 of theae are RAF ground-attack craft, asaigned to strike at Argentine shore poaitlona in support of the landing force. Tbat will leave only 20 fighters to meet any large-scale Argentine air strike. But the miaaile-anned fighters, dubbed "dancers of the aides" becauae of their maneuverability, will be backed by a formidable al'9ef\lll of missiles aboard the shipa. These in c lude co m - puter-controlled Sea Wolfs aboard several ships that probably will be stationed between the Falklands and the mainland as an anti-aircraft screen. So far, the Argentines have not committed their warplanes to a major strike. The British aay th.at in the only dogfight of the six-week-old conflict, on May l , the Harriers downed two Mirage fighters and an aging Canberra bomber, and no ~tish planes were lost. The Argentines' oniy success in the air came May 4 when a French -built Super Etendard fighter-bomber wreck ed the destroyer Sheffield with a French Exooet missile. Informed sources said one of the three planes involved in th.at operauon crashed when it ran out of fuel before it could get ~ "1 Ill base. Informed sources said the Argentines have only four Exocell left and are husbanding them > Britis h Foreign OfUce spokesman Nicbolu Fenn told reporters In London that P~ d e Cu e llar's "ideas" were separate from the publication of the British negotiating poe.ition today. Mrs. Thatcher's government said ha peace propoal waa given to Perez de CUeilar on Monday. The Britiah said the Argentines replied Wednesday and that the response was "diacouraging." "In their ... attitude, the Argentine government showed. that they had no respect either for democratic principles or for the rule of law. Britain stands finnly for both," the document said. It said Argentina "wu not seeking an agreement, but waa pla ying for time in the n egotiations in the hope of holding on to the fruits of aggression with all that this would imply for the international rule of law." Britain's proposal called for (1) a cease-fire within 24 hours; (2) a phased withdrawal of all anned forces to at least 150 miles from the Falklands within two weeks; (3) appointment of an interim U.N. administrator who would function "in consultation" with the islanders' legislative and executive councils, including two representatives of the small, resident Argentine population; and (4) talks on the long-term future of the islands, "without prejudgment or the outcome ... Premier welcomed SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) - Polish Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski was welcomed to Bulgaria today by President and Communist Party chief Todor Zhivkov. OxfordOoth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is Wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century. and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine traditional sportswear for men, women and boys. .. Or~ Collt DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 20, 1882 a • Did donations c llange vote ? ' Car deal ers 'campaign contributions' totaled $323,350 . WASHINGTON (AP) - J'lfty-lix .naton who voted t.o kill a federal rule requlrtn1 Wiid-car dealen to wam buy9" of known car defecta received a total of $323,360 ln caaaian contrlbutiona over the five yeen from the chief obbytng ~P ao!Nt the rule. But Frank Mc:Catthy of the National Automobile Oealera AllOCiation, which apearheaded the lobbytn1 drive aald he doesn't tblnk the donation• "changed a aln4ile vote." The Senate voted &9-27 to veto the Federal Trade CommilSion regulation whk:h would require the waml.ng. The oongresaional veto -the flnt ever of an FTI: rule -now goes to the House, which ls expeeted to follow the Senate's lead. The HOUie h.u until May 2e tQ complete consr-!onal action blockln& the plan. "ll dOlll'\'t look aood for Ult II 1~ld an •ide to '1\ep. Toby Moffett, D-Conn., a key bAcker of the rule ln the HOUM. The FTC re1ulatlon would require dealen to dl1eloae all known defecta ln each car they 11ell and to ltate whether the vehicle la covered by a warranty. The rule would make car dealer• aubject to flnea up to $10,000 for failing to disclose defects they know about. The association'• donationa, made through ita Automobile and Truck Dealers Election Action Committee , went to 36 Republicans and 20 Democrata who voted to throw out the rule, according to Federal Election Conunialton record&. Eleven other 1enaton -nSno of them Republicans -received contribution• but opposed the veto effort. Backers of the FTC rule blamed the dealers' lnten1lve lobbying campaign for the lopaided vote, but uld the campaign contrlbutlon1 were only part of the atory. ''Car dealers are respectable dti.z.ena in ~very town ln this . country," 1aid Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., chairman of the Senate Commer ce Committee. "They are often pillars of their community. A senator could think, 'why not give them my vote'?" By vetoing the rule, "we are in eaence saying to the public: we approve of shoddy dealers. we approve of cheat8." Paciw~ laid. ;i "Moet dealen are ~. unfortunately, ln every ba there a.re a few rotten appl&" The senator with the-m~f oont.rlbutions from. UMI ~ UIOCiation WU DonaJd W.~ Jr., D-Mlch., wh.o receive $1~.500 over the five.year according to the FEC. ~ Jim Arbury, Rteile' adminlatrative aamtant. uld cont.rlbutiona did not inf1 ' . the senator'• vote for the ve~: He said Riegle oppmed the FTC rule becauae it dom not apply ~ private Wied-car aale9 and wouJd_J be ineffective In protectin1 consumers. m "It will efve conawnen·a verj" falae sense of security," Arburt<1 said. f(; I srae li residents fearful of border UWlr_,... .. CAMPAIGN AUCTION -Actress Jane Fonda auctions off a poster for $260 from the film "Jµlia" which won Vanessa Redgrave an Academy'Aw"ard. PtoCeeds from the Los Aruzeles auction will go to the Campaign for F.conomic Democracy, and her husband Tom Hayden's campaign for the California Assembly. Filibust er b y Robbins short-lived SACRAMENTO (AP) -It was like a scene from a Hollywood melodrama: State Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys, strode to the witness stand and tried to start reading from a telephone book. KIRYAT SHMONA, Israel (AP) -A jet fighter's sonic boom o r a column of tanks rumbling down the highway ls enough to tell the people of this Israeli town on the Lebanese border to clean out their bomb shelters. Mayor Avraham Broshi only has to look out of his office window at the highway to know whether tension ls dropping or rising. When the hardware heads north to the border five miles away, he can expect trouble. When it moves south, he can relax a little. The threat of a massive sweep against Palestinian guerrillas in southern ·Lebanon receded following a decision by Prime Minister Menachem Begin's cabinet to exercise restraint. But the quiet probably won't last. And the rapid fluctuations of the military barometer are tough on the nerves of the 20,000 Israelis living ln the "Galilee Flnaer." The Finger ii a panhandle of mountain-rimmed lannland. 22 The attempted filibuster in a state Senate committee room lasted only seconds. The resolution. SCR67, would be a non-binding request to the Los Angeles Unified School District to keep unfilled schools open ln the San Fernando Valley until the U.S . Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of a 1979 anti-busing measure sponsored by Robbins. • miles long and 15 miles wide, that juts up between Lebanon and Syria. The neare1t Palestinian guns are three miles to the north. The roll was kept open w~ the committee proceeded to •ts final bill of the day, a measure to give the National Guard access to school records. With several · .,. ' members absent, that bill was evidently heading for a q~ck defeat, and Robbins was ruruung out of time. So before the opponents of the National Guard measure testified, Robbins took the witness stand, raised a telephone book he had summoned from his office, and said, "What I would like to do is to acquaint the members of this committee with IOrtle of the names of members of the San Fernando Valley." As he prepared to read, Assemblywoman Teresa Hughes, D -Los Angeles, broke in, "Senator Robbins, you are for real. I know that . . . I don't want to hear you r ead the telephone book." The committee chai r man, Leroy Greene, D-Sacramento, said, "Senator. I will not tolerate a filibuster." Robbins backed down and accepted defeat of hls measure for the day. MINISTER -Jeb Stuart Magruder, a former White-House aide who served a seven-month term for his role in the Watergate scandal, was overwhelmingly elected as associate pastor of the First Pres byterian Church of Burlingame. After an laraeli air raid a month ago, the Palestinian• mined an Israeli road, the Israelis reaponded with another air attack, and the Palestinians bombarded the Finger with artille ry sh ells and Soviet Katyusha rockets. The pattern is a familiar one. Many Kiryat Shmona people wear T -shirts showing a bandaged finger. But they say they c an't ride the merry-go-round of violence any longer. $4 million a warded to paraly zed man RIVERS E (AP) -A young Riverside an w o suffered nearly compl ysis from an untreated bro en neck has won $4 million in damages against Harrison E. Silver, a prominent Riverside neurosurgeon and four other · doctors. A Superior Court jury voted 11 -1 to award the money to Nicolas Dedouasis, 24, in a malpractice lawsuit that ended ln what his attorney called Ri'l.e rside County's largest personal injury judgment ever. The four other doctors with the Arlington Radiology Medical Group were: Arnold -z. Geller, Victor P. Johnson, Garry D. Roghair and Louis Schwartz. The lawsuit was aimed at the doctors' treatment of Dedouasis at Riverside General Hospital in late 1975 and early 1976. Riverside County, named 88 a defendant because it operates the hoepltal, agreed to pay Dedoussia $750,000 in an out-of-court settlement at the beginning of the trial , said Dedouasia' attorney, Richard Aldrich. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ClaHlfled adv9ftlafng 7141142-5171 Atl other ~nta 142-4321 DedouHis, a quadriplegic, shook hands with each of the jurors 88 they filed out of the courtroom. He has slight movement in hil anns, enough to operate hil push-button electric wheelchair; the rest of h1a body is paralyzed. Aldrich aid. Thomu P. Hal9¥ ........... -°""' ~ Olllow ~~ lllllOll-.ol~ =MurphlM ,_.. HlrWY DhOlor .. _..__ ~I Ken Goddawd ~ .. ~ ~ec:Leen C........Loot ........ ,...,\ hllr .... hl•wy ........... , MAIN OFFICE AO WHI ~St., C-.. Mew, CA. a..11...._: ... ,,..,C.WM9u,CA.ftla corrr'9M *2 Of ... <Mtll "'*'lfllfte ~ . ... ---~ .-.UI l'IW!Hw..-... "''~...,..... -'-r...--.,....... _ ... _........ .. ~-rllM-. YOL~NO.* Ded!)UHI• aald the victory "hasn't really hit me yet." · Harold Hunter, attorney for the four radlolopi.. aald the verdict ln the court of Judae Robert K. Gant may have been a fair one. "I can't uy that in vtew of the youth of the plaintiff and the permanenc7 and profound aerioulnell o the tJ:lJw'Y, I can't la)' hon.Uy that the verdk:t ii out of line," he uid. What dO you like about the l>aUy Pttot~ Whal don't )'Ou U•e? Call ~ number below and your meua1e wlll be recorded, transcribed •rid delivered to the appropriate editor. The aa~ 2A·hour anawerinl tervlc• may bt ute41 to record let· ten to lbe Hitdt on •nr. toplc. Mallbo1' contributotl mual include their name and tele~e numbtt for vfrlrlcatlon. No clrculauon calb, pleue. · -- Ttll ua whal'I on your mind. Menachem Amit, the town psychologist, says he took a poll and found that if the town waa shelled again, half the 13,000 residents would go south, out of range of the guns. Many have already left for good. Menachem Horowitz, a journalist, says h e rented a handsome villa from a departing family for only $70 a month. "The feeling here is that the terrorist positions must be destroyed," says Horowitz. "For that purpose people would be willing to spend days on end ln the bomb shelters. But just to bomb, get shelled, bomb and get shelled -they won't stand for it." When the shells fall, the people pack into underground shelters built to hold a crowd for an hour or so. After that the air gets hot and humid. ToUeta clog up. Children get restless. Adulta worry about damage to their homes and get jittery. Ruth Schechter 1ay1 when tension riael, she doesn't allow her children Into her kitchen because it faces the Palestinian guns. "How can one lead a nonna1 life like this?" she aaka.• ,.. .... ., ..... DOUBLE DISPLAY -Nurse Sandra Smith holds Maria Del'1 Carmen and Franm.aco Barron, twins who were born 'two,: miles and 55 minutes apart. Francisco was born in the back • seat of a car, with a CHP officer attending. Maria made her, appearance about an hour later in an ambulance on the waY' I to the hospital. Both mother and tots are doing fine in ~~~· 13 mode Remote Control Hand Unit. 2 Week Programablllty, Vl1ual Search. 11 pound• lncludlng battery. - VT8500A, VTTUe5A. '9noo ~4V ltelftote Control, Vhuol Search, 5 progro11u, 7 doy1. Sp .. d Co11trol & Frwu Actbl. VT'500A .699°° Pioneers Memorial Hospital in Brawley. ~ Vhuol Search & Still Frame. Veraotile I program 10/doy filHr. Triple Mode recording. VT9100 •59CJ00 G High '-f-•• '-cl, wW.i.a lnfrcw.d R..-. 8 progro1111/3 weeli timer. \'T9700. ....... ~HITACHI 25" COLOR TELEVISION Remote Control Table Color TV /25" diogonol screen Random Ace"' Electronic Tuning wittl Infrared Remote Control CT1302 13" colo< Ml, ~ will\ eorphonu. Color loll aystem. 10/2/1. ~ CT1912 19 .. Color, 10/2/1 Wominty -Do 110t lftilt thil at~ BEST PRICES IN TOWN LOWER PRICES OVERALL ZBNITH ZENITH ZENITH ZENITH ' 19" h111ote 25" Color -~ ~o .~ .. ~'::°: c~~~~ C o n t e m p o r a r y • Space 'ho11e. & C II 0 " "e I Styling, Oak fini1h. 4J. co"' p 111 e r •• =~~ Swivel ban, System ---'ro9romn1l11g, • .,... Ill , Direct h,not e Qabi9 Rell<IY·*5;:. Ceble ANdY· control. SN2535AR. g cable Ready. '84""°° ~ 19" Color Y --Solid State Mechanicol Al C1n11I• Tuning. Auto Color. ::-i:: ':::' SN1908 t32C)OO I A 1r•ol 1tl1 coreuMI MkNwne Own. In o mlftl ..... IJS20. With -.a rloltl• u•kf"I Clef'ltNk. t Exercise treats cramps Dl:AR PAT: Abo•t a year a10 JO• ......... u eserdle tbt a doctor laM toad waa effective la ~e1,1a1 peeple wlo were uperlada1 pm.lal let cramps. Woeld YM repeat tMI for me? W .E., Costa Meu ... 4A ............. 6.10 'l'bt tolJowtM ...._.WU~ by Dr.~ w. Dllilll o1 ~ c.uti a.a , With.,.. t•~fa ,Wall two or*-lilt awty and .. lelftforwll'd. Ulb'I biDdl - &l'IDI to NtWate forward tilt uCI -, the htel1 ln eoa\ari wlth the floort. until a moderate~ but not patntw DUWDa --don In the calf ...... Hoaa the 1wtchlna·poelUon for 10 MODDClt, then N~t after a ltw 11 cmd Pll1od Gl Nltxedon; J)r, DanJell reported that UU. exerdle worked effectlvel)' for nearly 10 adultl 1ufferln• _from recurrent l•I cram,.. He lldvtlld daUll the ..me thrie .... ct.Dy W\tU 1IC cram.Pl diappear, then~~ it• nec..ary to Jc.Mp • cramp-tr... Al~ mo1t of Dr. ~11·1 paUenta --. c:ured tn a abort Ume lt'• alwaya advilable to ctMICk wtth your own ~ before undM'taldna any aelf-help treatment that mayJhave l>een effective for other patient& Cremation qualifies DEAR ~AT: Caa a bulal allowaace-c I a Im be filed wit~ t~• Veuraa1 Admlai1tndoa for a •eteru wMM remalM were cremated? P .L., Colta Meu Yea. 'nle VA burial aDowanoe for eliilble veterans la payable few Interment. crematioo or for burial at -· Spouse responsible also DEAR PAT: MJ lHNff ... I flle4 a Jolat , ..... tu,...... fer ltk a.~ die reaua ... I J9lt .....,. 1DJ ...... Am 1 le1ally re1~11•1e fn tle lafermatlea b ••bmltted to SM IRST LL., Newpert Bea~ Yea. By ~ your name to the return Internal Revenue "Service aaya you become legally reaponllble for any tax.ea due. 3A .......... 5~·10 ~ aJ!i 2A ............. 5·10 ~-.. __ ~_~:.:;~~.:::::.4~.~--~L"i~ SHOES------~ 99 Fashion Island . . . Newport Beach 759-9551 Polyester Stretch Double Knits and Dm1ms ltEDUCED N•W YORK. (AP) -ABC woa tM iwtworkl' nttnp race for th• third WMk ln a row, Uaaak1 tn lar1• mea1ure to .,... the '1b1id a.b'' and a oouple of upi-hearted 1Dedall, _.... traD the A.C. Nieliln Co. ..... Two pl'Cllnml. CBS'~ of th• Miii USA Paaeant and "Too Clot• for Co•f ort," on ABC, ftnlllMd in a Ue for flnt ~In the canpeUtlcn for the w.ek tndlna May 18. and Part I of NBC'1 lcJ.bour .. Marco Polo" mimlerMI WU third. But ABC hlld nine lhowa 1n the "i'op 20, more than any other network. lndudlnc "It'• Not"-" letna Me· RodneY Dqertieidf· ln 12ib place, and "Hollywood: A Gift of Lauabter," 17th. The concf ualon of 111naide the Third Retch," a two -part made-for-TV movt•, wu No. 5 f« the week. The prime-time echedule. of all thNe networka were loaded with sped.al thowl for the May raUn11 '11weep1," which determine advert:Wna rates for local ltationl. The rattn1 tor Miu USA, u well u .. Too Cloee f« Comfort," wu 22.G. Niellen uya that meana In an avera1e minute of the 1how, 22 .5 percent of the teleYWan-equlpped home9 ln the country aw at leMt put of Heh ~Una for ABC wu 15.4 to l~.2 f« CM and 13.2 tor NBC. Here are the week'• 10 ~u-Jt~<:ss. and "Too Cloee for Comfort," A.BC, with ratino of 22.5 repl'eeenting 18.4 mijllon homes; .. Marco ~3" Part 1, 22.1OI'18.1 mllllon, n~ '-rluee'1 C.ompuiy," 20.7 or 17 million, and "lnalde the Third Reich," Part II, 20.5 or 16.8 million, both ABC; Maanum, P.I.," 20.2 or 16.5 million, CBS; "60 Mlnutea." CBS, and "Hart to Hart." ABC, both 18.7 or 15.3 mllllon; "Jeffenona," 18.6 or 15.2 mUlion, and "Trapper John, M.D.,'' 18.3 or 15 million, both CM. ~ .... , .... ~ WHO'S LEADING WHOM? -Two-year-old Dennis Bennett hu hia hands full with Jude, an 80-pound Great Dane, aa be takes him for a walk. The dog far outweighs Dennis, a 32-pounder. Turnstiles slow- at Disneyland Attendance at Di1neyland in the firat quarter of 1982 fell 9 percent from a/ear ago, company officiab aai , 'the largest drop ln more than 10 years at the AnaMim amu.ement park. Dhneyland reporte\d attendance wu about L7 million during the first three months of 1982, compared with 1.9 m.l.Illon for the aame period last '}ear. 1be company noted, however. that 1981 attendance at Disneyland had been the 9eCOnd hiahest In the park'• history. . Officials at Walt Disney Production• blamed rainy weather and the recualon for declining attendance at both Disneyland in Anaheim and Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla.. Al80 suffering a decline at the gate was Knotta Berry Fann In Buena Park. . ENT TO YOU. 3 months lo 10 ,._... 8100 lo 8100,000~ TERMS MINIMUM ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD BALANCE • IU441Mi 3-MONTHS 12.189% $7,500 (11 Days) 8-MONTHS 12.711J"b 13.384.,.; $10,000 (112 0.,.) 30-MONTHS a.BIO% 19.073% $500 (2~YNR) C-MONTHS $500 M.108% IU8% 1010YRS. 12-MOHTHS $500 9.414% 1.870% . li.790ql ti aamtl TD 5 ftS. Amllll$9CJO 18.000% ti llDfrHI 1'0 10 YllS. Vlll"* ... $100 -'Tiie ,....,. l'ttt '"*'Ill u_, IMI ,,_.... ... ill•t,i "'"'"""'"II.,,.. rllttldl ... ...., Nit-•.., llN' llllM • IJIMI •Mr""'*tltll .... art•lrfllt eaMI !'flillll ia MMIHIJllillltHtl,...., Every dollar up to $100,000 is Federally insured. EFFECTIVE DATE & DETAILS Rate ellect111e tl\ru M1y Z4. 1rld •$ ,,.,.., tor 91 dlys By t1w •nterffl not comPOUnde<I Ritt tlfKhlle lhru M124 11\d "fo•f'd tor 182 dl'fS y II• onttrt" not comPQUnci.cl Rite elltcr•.,. "'"' MAJ 24 11\d "hatd lor 30 """111\S tnte<t" compoU<ldtd <ll•ly Rate tflKltoe thfu M11 24. Ind •• IOJtKted f'1itty ,,. montl\~ tnltrffl compounded dllly 0.PM•ll permotte<I ouron1 the '""year. Yield ellectrvt '"'" JO>M 12 Up lo $2.000 on onlt•HI H•...cl utmpC ftom rtdef.i r ..... lntt•nt compouno.d clloly Alie "'°'"n tflectr .. thn.t ltAap 31. lor F1xtd-R1te Account V•r~ble·R•lt Account IS 1tso ltYllleble PIN$t 111k for cltl1lfs · ENTERPRISE REUNION -Cut members of "Star Trek 11: The Wrath of Khan" get toaether for a apeclal aalute on ''The MERV Wynn wears Actor Keenan Wyo says he spent his youth racing speedboats and motorcycles, but those pusiona eventually robbed him of his hearing. Speaking ln Pueblo, Colo. at St. Mary Corwin Hospital for speech and hearing prorraim of Sertoma Clum International, Wynn. 65, aar.d that du.ring the sporta' early yean, recera did not wear ear protection ~ roaring engines. Now, Wynn wean hearinl aids ln both eara. "Vanity ls a very destructive thing," he said of attitudes toward hearing aids. "People don't WeM them because 'it makes me look too old.' I tell people, rve been wearing these for four years, and believe me, it hasn't damaged my sex life a bit." * Melvla Belll, the feisty lawyer who's won hundreds of millions of dollars in damage and malpractice suits, has been slapped with a $5 millioo suit by his ex-partner. Vaslllo1 Cboalo1 say1 Belli "wrongfully" disaolved their partnership, kept moat of the firm's aaeeta and "physically attacked" him ln the office last December. Since they spilt · ln November, Belli haa illegally excluded Choulos from "business aaaets and receipts by force and other means,'' according to the ,Wt filed in San Francilco Supet:for Court. * Prla ce11 Diana said she is hoping for a baby boy in' July but ll eettiQg fed up with PrilM!e Clw'let teWnc her what 18.U to do In her pregnancy. The 20-year-old Prince9a of Wales made the remarks during a villt to the Albany C.omm~ty Center she inau=i;j~fofd, 10Ut.bdiit London, to help e:hiJdNn and 1be elderly. "I hope it's a boy," ahe told a 1._.year~ questioner. DavY RowlaM, "but we'll Just have to wait and aee." *' Stones, bags of rose petal.a, artwork and manU9C'J'ipts have been ahipped home to Fresno from the Paris a~t of the late Pulitz.er Prize-winning author William SUoyu. The project was COllU'Di-1oned by the honored playwright before his death a year ago. Dtckran Koaymjlu, a Fresno State University professor entrusted with the inventory work, was QllS/gCIS confronted with a cluttered store of penonal itema collected over 20 years. * Pretldent Reagan will visit CaJlfornia for six days next week, attending a California Republican Party fund-raisin8 event in Loa ~ and a U.S.-Mexican conference in Santa Barbera. The president will fly Jo Loe Angeles on Tuesday for the GOP "Salute to the President" dinner at the Century Plaza Hotel. Later that night. Reagan will fly to his ranch northwest of Santa Barbara. The U.S.-Mexican conference, on May 28, will be held at the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hotel and be attended by Mexican officiala, including legislators, the spokesman said. * A net gain of one newspaper for her syndicated daily advice column haa made /t,a Laden think tthe flap following di9closuret that ehe had recycled 15-year-old material Wat "almost worth the trouble." Two newapapen announced pl.am to drop the · column and 1eVeral others temporarily auspended publlcation following dlrlo-urea abno9t two weeks ago by The A..oc:Lated Pre. .nd the Pontiac (Dl.) Daily Leader that Mil9 Landen repeated with only minor changes letten lhe answered in her columns 15 yean ago. But others have beg\m tak1Jl8 the column. Ml11 Lander•, whoae daily column is syndicated ln more than 1,000 ~pen and rerd ~ an audience estimated at 70 million. promiled to dilcontlnue the practice. * Mlebel Rea1u. the president'• elder aon. la dieting and exerdldna his lep • train1nC for a ·Voluntarism mulled NEW YORK (AP) -The hMd of the Twent-- leth Century Fund questlooa whether voluntarllm can repllce IOda1 propanw cut by the Rellgan ad- ministration. • AP Wlrtpt 111 Show," du.ring taplna for upcomJna show. From left are William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley and Bibi Be.ch. aid freely grueling boat race against time up the Miadasippi River. The eldest Reagan aon told a neW1 conference in St. Louis he and teammate L.C. Sml*' hope to break a record of 26 houn and 50 minutes for the 1,027-rnile boat '1'fp from New Orleens to St. Lou.la on July 21 to benefit the U.S . Olympic Committee. The record was aet a decade ago ln competition for the E dward Koeal1 Challenge trophy, established in 1929 by the St. Louia lndt.lltrialist. When you open a n ew 91-Day Money Market Account at Bank of Ameri~ we11 give you a $20 cash bonus. High ~ for Just 91 Dayst 1be 91 -Day Money Market Account is a great new investment. You don't have to tie .. up your money for long periods to get high money market interest. A high rate is yours when you invest a minimum of 57500 for only 91 days at a ti~. At the end of the tenn your funds will be automatically reinvested ix )'OU, atthe~ rac i effect on your · maturity date. Or u may withdraw your money if you p er. 11.939% Annual ~te--I 12.666% Annual Yietct:• Bank of America's rate on this account is the highest the law allows us to pay. And remembe~ Bank of America gives you a 520 bonus, too! Safety and Convenience. Only Bank of America can offer you the safety and convenience of California's largest financial institution. Jn fuct, there':; -. - Newport Beach Fashion tsind 644-4411 1 probably a Bank of America branch nearby right nmv. So what arc you waiting for? Open a 9 1-Day Account at BanJcof America today. Also New: 31/2-Year Investments. 13. 75% Annual Ratet 14.73% Annual Yleld.1t Bank of America also offers a nt."'W i n\'e~t · ment that lets you loclt up this high rate for 3Y.z ya.rs, with a 52000 minimum deposit:ttt lt'sour 3Y.z.YearHighYidd Plu~ Investment. N,k us about it! BANK OF AMERICA ~------------~----1 Yo~beindlem0Dey. l I 91-DayMooeyMarketAccount. This coupon Is good b' a 120 cash~ when )"'OU I opm a 91 ·0a)• Money Martcct A«'OUnt at 8a1* of Amcria. (Coupons also IM!Jabk :u Bank CJ( America bnnchcs.) I I I I I I I 1 . . "' ........ . NOT 80 FA.ST, ADMl'ftAL -The U.S . Na"Y'• Qewett ·and moat powerful 1utded miulle ah.ailer, the Ticonderoga, hu a reply for the helicl o1 the Soviet Navy, who baa vowed to .Gmtrol the world's aeaa. The ~3-foot cruiaer is tt.e tint warshie ~carry the Aegis' air defense ~ for tracktn« and destroying incoming mlwJes. ' fl .J~BI GIUTINIANO. ,., ........ W ASKINQ'JON -ln t.b4t um ttWn Wffkl of the crl1l1 over the Falkland i.t·• Pnadtnt ~ and h1I Udll 1 ~y adheNd to a White HOUM Dolk'Y GI k~ the announcement of w .·n.w. u tar trom the prwtdtnt .. po.Ible. In rtcent/••ra, It hu become 1omethln1 o 1 truilm at the s-.te Department that 11. ct~ lntenu.tional developm'ent reflect• well o~jhe occupuit of the White Houle, then White HouH aldH, or perbapa •"•ll tht prt1ident, will make the .Subtle announcement about lt. Beef new" however, 11 rele1ated to the Statt Deputment. • And IO it la with the hJ.kland Wanda. From all public appearancH, the pree.ldent'a involvement In the c:rilil hu been limited. While high-level White Hdtlle aid• aay the pl'elldent la not enUrely divorced trom 1he lllue, they· a.re ~ to point out that the diplomatic ICt1on la~ p_lace ellewhere, primarily at. the Un!t:ea Jl{ations. One aenlOI' offidal, requel'UJll tha\ he not be fW'ther identltied, obeerved that "tt is a very good political rule'' to avoid asaoclatlng the president wtth bed news " • ~ ln the dlplomadc etfortl and thi ~ aubllded. There wu no denial that \be Whi• Jlowe roJe -U then WM any • -mlaht be broucht more lnto the open ln .Chal".-... Soon after ~tine troopl llbed the w.nda. NW b)" \he aitilh for a century and a half, tb*e WU a OWTY of ICtivtty on the part of the R.aml ad.mJnlltndon. Sec:Ntary of S1ete Alexander M. Hail Jr. undertook h1a f1nt diplomatic ahuttle m1J1lon1, flyln1 a triangular route between London, Bueno• Airea and Wubin1t0n. But even u he did that, Re.can'• involvement appeared to have beeti -~' at a minimum. The president wu to have apoken eeveref times by telephone with the teeretary and to have been kept up to date on Haig'a d11cuaaiona. Then, aa the pro1pect1 for aucce11 dimmed, Halg'a publ.ic role aho ~. Ila inmMld mWtary lcdon I~ · IS:~•ter , Hal1 dtcldtd to k••P ~~:•Piolntmenfl .. 'l\Uby, ONe!».~ ~. UM llelp!\; h• hu ~td to put tome d1-tane9 LOS ANOILl8 (AP) ~ hlmii1f iiid U)i cri"8 lriWM.nl -Th• 8 out b • r n two U.S . .W.. Catlfornla'au co. hu The pNiklent ~°"the telephoN uked for a NhMrtni.Of· With Leopoldo Oattlerl, the Ar,.ntln• the ee.c. ~ UUJTUel ~t. and .,...th~ Thatcher, Comml11lon'1 order the Brttllh prime m!nJlter. d1lallowtnl $12.9 mWioo Reecan told the 8oY1tta to 41butt out" ln 1980 natural fa' of the conflict. In an oU-tht·cuU purcbutt th• PUC elt comment to reporten at the end of a' COit too much. newa conference a week ..,, he -.id be T h e u ti Ji t y 1 a l d •w ane pioeptdl f« a bndthroueh. W.an.day it would a11o but laid little e1-. Mk later for a rehearlna With thoae exce5lon1, hl1 public of an addltlo~al SH.I commenta have been t to a mlnlrnum. million in pa and hJa aookelrnm every attempt dlsallowed by PUC. to al9o follow that coune. Day in and day out, Larry Speakes, The 1aa amounted to the deputy White Hou. pre11 aecretary, 13 billion cubic feet, hal been uked about the crilta, the U.S. about 1.4 percent of the role In it, and the proepecta for war.°'" total purchased by the puce. ~ ccmpany that year. Typically, on Monday, he u.ld when The PUC dlaallowed uked the standard queationa, "I don't the purchase because have anything for you on the Falklendl, 1 tock p 11 l n g t b e other than that we're prooeedJ.q at the hlah•r-prlced fuel had United Nationa .. •. We woulcfllke to prevented purchaaes of ' remain helpful to both partiee." cheaper fuel later. Disability refU{Jds ainclai~ed SACRAMENTO (AP) -For acme rea.:m. the • state can't seem to give away Sl25 million in tax refunds to 1.5 million Californians who worked in 1979. CAii~ ~s··.·CAN SAVE AN AVERAGE OF $1,1~5 -~p ··AS MUCH AS. $1,850*· WITH GMAC'S LOW FINANCING RATE The Employme!lt Development Depart- ment report e d Wednesday that about 6.$ million people have c1atmed $403 million in dmbWty lnsuraoce tax refundl lllnce 1980, but another Sl25 mlllioo has ecme unclaimed. Although the de- partmept estimated that l.' million people are eligible for the remaining refunds, it abo forecast that only 500,000 more claima would be received ~y the deadline of April 15, 1984, and S24.5 million would be paid. The refunds, up to $91 per taxpayer, were a\lthorized by the ~ture to get rid of a surplus In the diabllity iuurance fund. Anyone who earned wages in 1979, paid into the fund and haan't claimed a refund yet is eligible for one. A refund can be claimed by filing an amended state tax return for 19'79, fonn 540X. or by writing a letter to the Franchise Tax Board, the deeartment said. Speculating on reaaona the money baa gone unclaimed, the de- partment said s om,. workers have moved from the state and are, unaware of the refwldi 1 end others may consider the amount too mWl to bother wtth. Nearly one-fourth of the <Jriil,nally estimated 8 million claimants were enUtled to $10 or le.a, the deputment aid. Hayakawa sets meet : Senator S .l. Haya- •• aw a, R -Ca 11 f. , h agonaorlng a small- ,,u .1ne11 con· ,ference on federal fS>rocurement oppor- tunl tlu May 26 lq 14 Alunltoa. • Zntltled "How to Do Bu1lne11 Wltb the .rederal Government," the conference-b beini prwnted in coopera~ 'With federal_aaenclea •d eeveral California rn~erence will be ld fro'ID 9 a .m. to 1 m ., ln BuUdto1 #6 alntna Bulldtn1) of the Armed Forces l a.erve Center In Lot ~ "1amltoe. There la no ~for edm'Mr«>. OFFER ENDS MAY 31 You've only twe/i;e days left to drive home a bargain with GMAC's low financing rate on great new GM cars, light- duty trucks and vans. Right now, qualified buyers can finance any new Chevrolet, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick or cadillac passenger car, or a GMC or Chevrolet light-duty truck or v~·· at just 12.8%. Hundreds of thousands of smart, budget-minded consumers have already taken advantage of this special financing offer. -Hurry to your participating GM Dealer today for GMAC financing at 12.8%. Don't wait any longer to buy that new GM car, light-duty truck or van. DO it today. Remember, to dHve home your bargain, ' you must take delivery by May 31, 1982. •CalJfom&a buyen' nnanc~ aavflwa bated on GMAC data kw Fet>n.wy. 1982 computed for all vehicles and f\d&.!aAd hllcklze CMtillec veh.lc:lea. Actual uvh9 will dePeQd on.~~• c~. the amount f~ and the~ of conlrid. DeaJer tontrlbulion mq affect consumer <:bit. ··~tOOetWNClel ordeted prQ-toAPriJ 1. J982 which are e11j1>1e f<i' tt.e General Moton "~ Ol!t ~ CMh 00.... p_llp. and fleet MJes ind l4*ied W1tta. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE ' ' , I Kiam, father of three, l&id, ''The role of the father is much more important now'1 becauae "we've become a much more materia.Uatic IOCiety." Fox, a bachelor who saved a \7-year-old boy, Michael Buchanan, from coounittin,g aulclde and later became hia guardian until the youth found hia natural mother, said, "The image of the father must be maintained ln today's IOCiety ... but there are no quick answers. You have to talk to them." The Father's Day Committee deecribes itaelf as a non-profit organization which createll awareness of Father's Day. ~conoilly forecast luncheon slated Liberty National Bank (in organization) will sponsor a small business economic forecast luncheon H 0 N 0 RED -TV May 26 at the bank, San Diego Freeway and Beach new seas ter Hugh Boulevard. Downs has been Dr. Larry Kimball, director of the UCLA named to the Father business forecasting department, and Orange I of the Year honors County Superviaor Harriett Wieder, will speak. lial . For infonnation, call 895-2929. "*' ........... _ •••• ---.. .... Newport to Avalon ·.Get "Club Cardin~ The Great Shape Up" for just $15 with any Pierre_ Cardin purchase If you're looking for lots of carpet styles ... lots of dazzling colors ... and lots of carpet savings, you'll find exactly what you're looking for during our spectacular Evans-Black carpet sale. Our selections of beautiful Evans-Black carpets have never been better and the savings never greater. So why-wait? We have exactly what you're looking for. And at sale prices that are Just too good to miss! PACIFIC DECORATING 'CENTERS 8520 Talbert Ave. Fountain Vly., CA 92708 (714) 883·0881 MO.lt-Frt 1o-e: Thura. 10·Q Sat. Q-8 ao..d Sonday Amill Alli£ 0 COllP NYLON 1310 N . Kramer Anaheim, CA 92808 (714)832·7707 Mon·Fr110·5 Closed Sat & Sun /'-- Be thinner by tonfght. Meet Beverly Sassoon who'll introduce you to Slim Lines"' 1.itITTL;ne~ 8qdy Contour Crerne ~~ SAsso<J"' Net Wt ~ 5 oz o~ 1.,0 .m .• t( l'UJ ~·b ·~ -::>i.rtJ -- '"'• .#;& } .,., !r.O r .,, r ,IJ • tYl .VI ~" •1.:b ...;;.Q I~ .. ., '<1llA •f'J! ; I J"') -:.{ '; 4 ;l)l ... .,. M)~I .,.,,..,, .a'."b ~-iJ .vw T l !"q I !I ~ ~ 1 ' MCIVJUNTO (AP) -,,_.., a covtrui» .•\ Ult •tl\t Department of locdal~. ·~-~ . ...,...Of .. hU,. -·~· whWa budlll ...... rariitnc from adoptlona io·· ref u1H ~ baw bltft told Win art tO be no man ICri,p-.... ~ la atat.e ~A::l~Po lna~te to \ht work ltttiq for •ta ::If:»'"'• wucularly ll tht tMtWI ~ to beoome aware of UM tact that .~ WIN Dll'IDlttina IUC!b actavUl11 tft ,._._ bulldln•• cfurlna workJna hour1." Ah Po'• memo to ~t~M&d. Po dkl not reapond to te14tphone ASSOCIATION OF ORANGE COUNTY CARMEN RIGOLmo LA BOHEME tht ohltf .of tht a1tnoy'1 'Equal l:mploymtJ\t 0.J>portunlty Offlct, 1ttrnly warned that prole .. lon•l atrlppen an ,M""fter banned from oUSC. pardtl. calll. tiUt de~t 1pok•woman Sharon Patri&h COl\flrmed tht memo w11authendc. siw aaJd the memo wu trt,..red by an off Ice '-"'Y la April tor an ~ wbO l'• Ilium. married ln w a *IPPlf Wlibkell to deliver a Alllrwd ... ta 112.50. Seuon ticket• for all three only $30. Group dlteount1 avallable. For advance ticket• and more Info cal ••1n ldditioe\ to ti!IAI contrary to OW' --ewftftt policy an lbUal harwlmlnt. IUOh actlYltiH Wlll invariably bt viewed by th• taxpayer aa belna ----·tlit ot, and I'm ure It 11 the only 523.99 CONTINENTAL IWE IELL 5·PIECE PLACE SEmNG Reg. $44.95. Just one from our collection of contemporary dinnerware in cornflower/leaf green on white. Also available·: Blue Bell 5·piece completer set. "'Reg. $102.75. Sale ses:3s. Not shown: other Continental 5-piece place settings (including Silkflowers, Majestic, Amsterdam, and Dutch Garden). Reg. $44.95. Sale $35.38. Matching open stock accessories available at 15% savings. (Blue Bell quantities are limited.) lnddent.'' Ml; i aald. .... Sl6.99 •.llYVAU l·PllCI PLACE SEmNG Reg. $33. From our Country Charm collectton of stoneware rusticana, irr strawberry gold/dove grey on oatmeal. Also available: Berry Vale 5·piece completer. Reg. $82.50. Sal8'14t.19. Not shown: other Country Charm 5-piece place settings (including Straw Flowers, Tennessee. and Prairie Rose). Reg. $33. Sale 122.50; and col}lpleters. Reg. $82.50. Sale 114.15. You'll also save 20% on matching open stock accessories. ' ( s23,99 COLOl·HANDLI STAINUSI l·PllCE · PLACE lmlNCll Reg. S3Q. The decorating posalbllltles are enc:tless with pastel·hued handles In Ivory, pink, white, and ~ant, as well as navy and black. Set include• «nlfe, place tork, salad fork, place epoon, and teaspoon. Also available: goldtone atalnlesa place Httlnga with t»ack, brown, navy, or raepberry handtet. Reg. 135. Salt .... ~ evaitlbte: Mhcul ....,,.... ftatwe,. In OtMa Of AldlO Qty J)lttemt. ~· P'te• Mtllng. Ailg. sso. _s.aertta. 494-9441 • 494-3944 ;n,... progr ...... mede pOlllble by • Mobl ,oundlelon °'""' S9.W CONTINENTAL WHm 3·PIECI PUCE UnlNG Reg. $14.95. One example from our collection of Mikasa White dinnerware. Also available: Continental White S·piece completer set. Reg . Sn.60. Sale '82.0I. Not shown: French Countryside 3·piece pf ace setting. Reg. $ 13.50. Sale 18.19; and completer Reg. $67.50. Sale $54. Renaissance While 3-p1ece place setting. Reg. $15.95. Sale ... 19; and completer. Reg. $74.65. Sale S59.72. All matching open stock accessories: 20% off. sa.89 each PARK AVENUE HANDCUT FULL LIAD CRYSTAL IARWARE AT SO.. OFF Reg. $17.95. Start collecting your highball and old fashioned glasses now. At this price stocking the entire bar will be a party. Embassy and Ambassador patterns also available. Sale ends May 24. Robinson's China/Glassware/Silver Flatware, 67/861181 . ~about our China, Crystal and Silver Club Plans. . ...~ • Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to-the-minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come in and make a sawy investment on the clothes sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of rose, cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig. $128, sale $95.99. Skirt, orig. $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V. l.P. Sportswear, 3/147; Robinson's Sweaters, 1; Robinson's Pacesetter, 80. To order, call toll-free 1·800·345·8501 . I City p8rk use lees • • raise new questions lrvlne'a new .cenic park ln Bommer Canyon 11 a 1plendld lddttlon to the city'• recreational fadlltiet. But wUl lt coet too much to uae? That illue waa raiJed by one cltlzen when he discovered a propoeed contract caterer for the rustle park would charge a flat $1,000 uae fee for private and commercial groups. .The park, purchased under a state bond issue, is available on a reservation basis. It ls located oU Bonita Canyon Road and aunounded by Irvine Company property. According to a proposed reaervation and fee policy, city-sponsored and community groups would pay a fee to the city baaed on type of group and number of people. Community services staff had recommended Park Avenue Catering of Orange be awarded an lnterlm contrect thr<>Uah Jww of 1983, when compedUve bide would be taken by the city. Under the ~ment. Park Avenue would provide equipment and site malntenance. The buaineu waa .elected becaWMJ it haa worked at the park tor 10 years. The man who waa told by Park Avenue that hiJ amall group would be charged $1,000 wanta the city to either run the park itself or have competitive bids for the lnterlm contract. .The city now is studying alternatives which could include total city mana1ement of the park, a contract with a private caterer or perhaps a joint relationship between the city and the caterer. Ultimately, Irvine officials must decide if the city will foot all, part or none of the bill for this new facility. And private use. of the park hinges in part, on that delicate declslon. Sculpture ban silly Few people in Newport Beach who have been connected with the John Wayne memorial sculpture would suggest that the whole program has been well handled. only after it agreed to ban the sculpture from ever being displayed in City Hall. While we can understand the council venting its frustrations with the project tht• way, in retrospect, the banning is silly. The bronze bas relief, commissioned by the city more than two years ago as a ges_twe to Newport's late motion picture . It appears that some, ca~ght great, was a good idea that went . up tn the hubbub of t,tle proJeCt. sour and kept going that way. have overlook~ the f.a(t that the The sculpture doubled in size artw~rk, ~depiction of the1 ~~yne and price over the months. movie ~tagecoach, 18 a Nobody seems sure why. Then the hand.some piece. party that was supposed to pay off To ban the sculpture from the artwork didn't have enough being shown in a public pl.ace after money. citizens, directly and indirectly, Finally, with the artist close shelled out nearly $34,000 is to bankruptcy and threateriing to foolish. sell his creation to some other The artpiece, in truth, belongs party. the city agreed to pay off to the public and it should have a the bas relief. This· move came chance to see it. Young vandals need lesson Residents of the Huntington Crest community in Huntington Beach ie'cently went to some effort and expense to spruce up their neighborhood. They decided that their 15-year-old homes in the Garfield Avenue-Beach Boulevard area needed freshening up and asked city officials for help. ' The city didn't have the money so resident.I collected the cash among them&elves to do the work. They found a contractor who painted the walJ around the community. That nigh.t. two high school-aged girls came by with a • can of spray paint and drew a symbol on the wall, marring the brand-new paint job. Residents patched up the paint work themselves and, more important, they insisted to police that the two girls should pay for the damage they caused. The reside~. who were attempting to do gOod for others in the first place, now have a chance to do something kood for the miscreants. • They can lltick to their guns and make them Jtaj. Perhaps the yi>ungsters will even learn a Ieason. Perhaps they'll think twice before repeating such behavior. Opinions expressed in the space abOve are thc>Se of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex- pressed Of'\ this page are those ot their authors and artists. Re~r comment is lnvit· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, C~ 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. . L.M. Boyd/ Conquering I ear Does it help any to know that the least fearful people tend to be the least imaginative, too? Students of the mind say fear is a mental hazard only to thoae who too soon cross their bridges. Whip that tendency to antic- ipate, and you've got f~ licked, they aver. Q. Who was the famous man who passed out checkbook.a to all of his servant• and let them spend his money on the honor system ? A. Didn't I tell you about that? It was the Earl of Londeaborough, ac- cording to l .. end. One hWldred years ago, about. Draw at. will for expenaes. he told th~, and just don't bother me. How loaC tb.ia ~t luted ia not ln the record at hand. Teen-aae truanta bl Ironton, Ohio, are locked up ln jail one day fOf ead1 day they skip achool. Q . How many men these days marry women for money? A. The number of men who look for. financial help. in their love lives ·~ peen to be l'lllnl. ~ lt'• not yet equal to the number of women who do ao. Thirteen out of every· 100 brtde&rOOIDI were 11ld to do that thine when matrhnolllal ~ investigated the ~ier aome yean ago. However. OUl' .l,ove and War man s uggests more women work on payroll jobs now, 119-that 13-percent figure is no doubt too low. "Not all insula~ yacuurn bottles work.," writes a~ "Every week- end during the If~ .eu:>n. my wife seals a batch ofaartlnis fJl such a jug and puta them hi the refrigerator to chill overnight. lt'I usually bot In the stadium the next·altemoon, and so are the martll'lia, always. Worthless!" Still ai 1he same room temperature as W'"'1 bottled, you aay? Pretty good jq; I Q. What causes'1'awbin1? 1\ . .Depends on which sort of doctor exp!ains it. Phy~iclans uy fatigue, hunger, overeating or poor ventilation. Psychlatrlata say fear, alUiety or au.bl.le auresaion .. Shni1. At least UO motion plcturet have shown the Empire State Bwldlna eomewtae... bl the fooi.,e. Q . Who Wiii the rtchert man eYtt to 8"l'W •D.S. Preildent7 'A. Lyndon Johnaon. Reportedly worth f 14-mlllion when he aucceeded Johri I'. Kennedy. • /" . Tax. plans for nuclear age WASHINGTON -If you should survive a nuclear holocaust, you might thinkJou'd deserve a brief respite from feder tex.u as you wait for the dust to settle. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury has alttady begun plotting to remove even this tiny ailver lining from the mushroom-shaped clouds of nuclear conflict. Come doomsday, tax collectors will have a hand ln the pocketa of the survivors. Some of the paperwork has already been completed; lt'a titled "Design of an Emergency Tax System." THE AUTHOR OF thia remarkable document is Gary Robbin,, a senior official in the Treasury under1eeretary'a office. He concedes there will be aome worriaome problems facing the Internal Revenue Service as it eeta about putting the arm on dazed, distraught IW'Vivon of a nuclear attack. For example, "the income tax system is extremely vulnerable to losses of records of transactioha," the memo cautions. ''These records are required in order to determine the base for tax at any period of time." In other words, if a hardy taxpayer should make it safely to t.he fallout shelter but the employer's payroll records were incinerated, how would he get accurate W-2 fonna to submit with the 1040 on Apnl 15? "The necessary information would not be available for preparing of tax returns ~-G. JACI AllEllDI ~ and determining ta~ liat>ility," the Treuury mem0 concedes. "Further, the Internal Revell~ Service would find it lmpcmible to verily the necesaary figures in audit lituationa." In thi• bureaucratic nightmare, it might be thought the tax collectors would &imply throw up their hands in despair. But no one ever got rich underestimating the bulldoS tenacity of a federal bagman. Despite the basic survival problems of the unincinerated, the IRS agenta still on their feet could presumably be summoned to duty by the Treasury. "If sufficient damage is done" to the continental United States, the Treasury memo acknowledges. "the tax system itself may have to be changed." But Treasury has a solution ready. "INSTEAD OF an income' tax, one could design a general sales tax which would raise the revenues required," Robbins suggests. A pofnt-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of easy collection by the IRS and encouragement of savings "to aid in rebuilding the capital stock ," he explains. The author has even figured out how big a sale.s tax would be needed: ''The general salea tax on final sales would have to be approximately 20 percent in order to replace the current individual and corporate income taxes, Social Security taxes, and estate and gift taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the Treasury document might be a tongue-in-cheek exercise, my associate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocaust tax-collection plan a couple of years ago. It was quite senous. he said Teacher retirement less than rosy To the F.ditor: P.S. Willa (Mailbox, May 6) la not fully informed regarding the Public Employees Retirement System pension funCI. Teachers do not contribute to PERS. They have a separate fund (State Teachers Retittment System). The PERS has alloWed the governor to invest their funds. As a result, retired MAILBOX state employees (gardeners, cafeteria workers, secretaries etc.) get cost-of-living raises, paid medical and deni.al care and are not d1acrimlnated in retirement payments by sex (female teachers pay more into STRF and receive less). California State Teachers Retirement Fund has not, as yet, been allowed out as a1' investment. Consequently, the teachers pay their own medical and dental insurance, get a 2 peroent a year rabe and are 90 percent old women! THE PERS IS made up of 80 percent men. Men make our lawa, handle our money and criticiz.e our work, even our votes. A. a life member of CT A I defend our right to endorse a candidate, thouah I personally shall do my own dedsion-rnaking. If our schools are not doing a satisfactory job, in the eyes of many, perhaps parents should aet out of the schools and go back to lettlna the educators run them. Or, better yet, find out more about your adminiltrators. How many parents know what your dlatrlct superintendent ia beina paid? How he I.a choeen. and by whom? How is your county superintendent chosen? How many county and 1tate aupervilon viait your echool and check on the quality of work teachers att do(na? In 12 years my retfrement baa lncreaaed $180.94 a month. My husband'• Social Secw1ty hM ~ 300 percent. Teachers do not have Sodal Security. MALISSA B. McMANUS Tired of waiting To the Mitori rm WoDderlna about thJs DIAl-A·RJde that we have in~~ Beech.: You can never aet them! You have tow.St an hour for them to come, , I'm elderly. I want.ed to pt to tht ticn today. I called two different lilDlll ind the ~ rq 30 ttm.. N~ .w.l botbln '° ....... and lf ~ ·---· dwy'rt' IO ndt to )'OU. · ,Wbeft I fiilllb lhop~ at dlffmtnt ahop in c:entera, 1ou ••• ttioat money surely we ought to have something in return. I can't walk to the bus so I have to rely on them but I think they should be checked into, give ua better eervice and be more r_>llte to us. They re so curt. I know it's a wonderful service but not if your nerves are on edge from waiting and standing until your back is broken. I wiah you would look into it. M.A. PAXTON TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR ~ See instructions below Sea treaty To the Editor: Regarding the Reagan ad- ministration'• complaints about the technology transler, preferential accea to mining sites for pioneering firma, and council make-up provisions of the United Nations Law of the Sea Treaty ("Support tea law aims," editorial, May 9), lt should be noted that: 1. "Mining companies already accept requirements for operating ln Third World countries that are no more onerous than the ones in the pending treaty. These include ... transfers of technology ... " (Christian Science Monitor, March 10). 2. As mining a 9f!&bed site could oost $1 billion, lt would eeem unlikely that any company other than the five international consortia (Kennecott, Ocean Mining Auociates. Ocean Mineral•, Ocean Management, and 1Vemod) would have the resources or inclination to eng8'e in it. 3. Dec11lon1 will require either a two-tbirda or a conaensua depending on the t.ue, thus affordina ''more of a volce in the govemJ.na coundl f« natlona most affected by aea6ed authority c:ledllonl." JOHN W. OSBORN, JR. Pretddent, On.nae C.O. Chap., United Nation& AllOdation of the U.S.A. Voter listB To the Editor: Now that the aample ballota for the upc:lCllNnc e.lect.lon are appearl.nc in the niall bc»t1 I wander lf It miaht be•~ time to ao just a abOrt foUOw-up ariide about the problem all of Orange C.Ounty citizens could be of great help to the Regjs1rar of Voters. We are currently awash with names on the voters lists of fonner citizens who are no longer with us. The attrition rate la quit.e high. in my opinion. People have either moved away, without leaving a cocrect forwarding address -and. sadJy, in~ cues the voter has passed away, and the Registrar of Voters is still · carrying their names on the voter lists .• · Will you please inform your readers once more that there are prescribed legal procedures to remove those names from the voters lists, and the cooperation of the citizens is greatly needed to accomplish this? HELEN McPHERSON Look at Poland To the F.ditor: Did you watch the rioting in Poland on television and did you realize what it was you were seeing? What you saw was a bunch of angry people who like Hungarians have been led into slavery and have nothing to fight back with but words, sticks and stones and empty stomachs. Their mas- ters have seen to that -have taken away their firearms -and when that 1 happens kiss freedom goodbye. In the forthcoming election this year there is a firearm control bill on the ballot. This is the first step towards ta- king your freedom away. Only a fool would vote for it. WARREN G. ALTHOFF 1 Happy runner To the FA:iitor: I would like to thank the promoters of the recent "Around the Bay in May" nm. I believe Newport Beach, Co.ta Meu and Corona del Mar get good "city exposure" and t~t nothing but good th.lnO can come from IUCh an endeavor. The llewpon BMch poUee did a good job wtth traffic control • wen. Hope to participate In JMDY more! JOSl:PH R. GROTHUS I , .[. • II ••• ~I .... wtda It • MW r•llltdlr If Mw Wittile t\ l'Mllt bl '° ............. ~ ror klcla, '""'"''' rn•au 1ummtr ClllDP-........... u.. iu.. pMdl&.ns • eenoe, pl11tnc bueball, 101n1 on CM!ridlht aam~ Cripe. Summer camp It the one .un. dw.iftl the ~ \hat 1 kk1 ..-out of the clalirOGCn and lnto U. Wild9~. Summer.~ ln • lot of WIYf, It what bttna. kJd II all •bout. Well . . . hen Aa IClml newt about the hon11t new phtl\Olelnon ln 1wnmer cam pa. A COMPANY CALLED Computer c.amPI International II •t to launCh ita eecond 1ummer of eend1na )'OWl8 bo)'S and 1irl1 to oarnp whb comput•r tennlnaJa. The company rune three oomputer camps where kid• 10 for two-week periods -one In COnnecdcut, one In Wilconatn, one ln Texaa. In addition, it rum 1~ computer day c:mnpa aion, the Eutern··aeaboard. To1ether. the computer carops will aerve u host to 2,300 younpten th1a summer. "We think we're onto a hot thing," aald Dr. Arthur Mich.ala, who founded Computer Camps International. "Thia la a new age, and computer camps are part of it." Mich.ala said that hla camps provide IUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY 11 .. hl Ice .M S..0- IUZ tWIOI IL YD. COST A MISA -141· I I I'- t ig_;! ...... _ ........ • • 81 Uc. 2171&7 s.Moe T1rne 81M19 al YOtlt Door (c.I SIClre ........ YOtlt ,.,_, COSTA MllA 641-1289 1Ht...._.~ ..... Y1UO '95-0401 ,_ 1:: =::-.. '"C/™Phy.) ~: R. Ph. Corna are horny thlckenln11 of the akin, UIWllly Cll~ by ahos that flt poorly. or wearln1 run-down heell wh.lch make tht feet ..ume an unnatural position, crHtln1 friction. Hard com1 can eaally be treated by a 1oo d corn remedy and we can Mlect a re.IJ.abJe product for you; one that Uo A!'mOWJI canot- Soft coma are formed on the Inner 1urface1 of the io... 1bey rate the care af a podiatrist. When applytna a com or calloua remover, alway• aoak the feet in wann water for about 15 minuta. Then thonJuchly dry UMm and place a drop of the c:om remover dinc\Jy on the center of the corn for four aucc:ealve day.. Soak the foot ap1n ln hot water and lift out the oom. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medldne. Pia up your preacrlptlon If 1hoppln1 n.rby, or we will deliver promptly without extra dwp. A ~t many people entruat u1 with their pre1crlptlon1. May we compound and dlapenae youn? l'AM UDO ~ACY ,,.,,....,, •1 ,,, ,,... ,,..,, -:"r I• DOING ···::. BUSfNESS .:.: UNOERA ... FICTITIOUS NAME? " '°" '"'" i-fllietl J••r -• ,.,uue111 •••lt1••• ··-•Ml I ......... ,.. ... $ ..... .. ..,, ., t ........ •... ,.,... ,.... '"• lt111lt1tlett II H Hr1 ............... .,... OAILT ~II.OT wlll ,......., ....... ,... •••••• ••. o .. , .................. .... ,. o, .... c ... , ..................... ..,.., ............ "' ., .. , ...... r."' •••••••• t • , , ......... , .... . "'"'···..,, .... . ...... .. net ..... , . ""'°'· P.O. lllil 119. c....-.-~-............ ,., lllW • .......... .... ,.L..,..... ... ~--- eo•t outdoor acUvh\:_. bu' ng ~ •• ,........ b•ta coachln1 or any of 'h• traditional IWMMl"<iamp fare. "&lxty·five percent of OW'~ ii compuMM91a'*l," M Mid. ·l~.tt:.nt to 111111111 . 1tre11 that. The oth1.r 80 .,.rcent 11 recreation. We allow the boya and lf.rll to chooae whatever activtUe1 they want. bu\ there a.re no 1po11a lemona, u auch. They're really here to learn about COIDJ>'ltet'I. "And the kida want it that way. U we dJdn 't ~uln! them to do other t.b.lno. they'd •ever get a'f'ay from tfie computera. U they had their choice, they'd work with the computers 18 houri a day." ~ Mlchala &aid that the computer camp1 are hued on the premise that, ln our modem aodety, the uae of computers Is becoming an abeolutely necemary skill. The concept of computera still .:ares many adults, he said -but children find computers to be fun, and are happy to build a ca,nping experience around them. "Then 11 1 eompuaer for IY•ry ~"'~ ta our ~" tM Mil. wu a caiftper cianm In 11 a ~r. by the end of the llilion M wW be oompu~lltentl. He *'11 have lMmild computet tllnn.lnOloo. and he wW have wrhWI\ h1I own compu~ Pftll"UI\· That pn>CrUn wW bl on a dAIC that he can take honw wtth him. .. IF A CAMPER comet to ua and la more Mivanced, w. wW i.ch ~ men advanoed compu .. r ~.' The eowwelon at ComJ!Uter Campt lntemadONl are not blah acbool Ind collep athletee. u ~y of ua remember Crocn our camplna daya. The tunputer COW\lelQn are math whilzel from the lfaduate achool of \he Unlwratty of Muuchu.etu. And the camper• wear Computer Campe JnternaUon.iU T-ahirll, with a loao of a computer terminal and a keyboard on the front. All ot this raiaes a delicate question, yet one that It . is mandatory to uk Arthur MJchala: Can the popularity of fomputer Camp1 International r¥>t be mterpreted u encouraging the development o(. . . a generation of nerds? "I undentand th~uestion,'' Michala said, "but I don't you understand how comfortable kl a these days are wtth«impu..... . ,.,,_ IN noftnil kidi. The boYI Wm tM ....... Ind \hi ldrla l1ka dw bOyt -~too mUcft. You dan't have 10 be a math ~I.II to ~ to camputw' c.mp. "THESlt &JOI fool around; they hor9 around; they ahort-eheet the COUNIJoti jult the way you remember from wtwn you were ln camp. They are no more inv01veo ln world attain than ot.her k:ldl their own •ae. What you have to undentand ii that there la no stllJM attached to betn1 lntereated In computers. Uke I told you, lt'1 a new world. There'• not a hell of a lot theee kldl m aoln8 to be able eq do ln later Ufe without a knowledae of computen, and that'• why they have auch a aood Ume at computer camp." He aaid that the proof of this can be .een In the two daily 45·minute free period.a that the camp1 otter. "During theee periocb, the boys and if.rla are allowed to do anythin& they want,'' he aald: "They can play sport.; they can write letters home; they can hana arqund their bunb .. "Sut 80 percent of them go back to the computer labs during free periods. That'• how much they lib it." Other than that, he said, the campers live a We much like the one we did when we WeN lddi. ,,_.. an °color ~ but Inti.ad of playlnf 'Capture th• n.,,' &M cam~ oompMe tiY plalfUal computer ~ 'n..n an~W.nlabl d'8cU11ion1 -bUt lNtHCI of 11tt.lnc around a campftre ta.Wal _. ....._, the camJ*I pth.r to dllc\m rftlcro.ehlp bninl. "ONE or ova eampen 1a1t y-.r ~t it very wtll, I think." Mtchell liUd. "He told me, 40tw of the thlJWll I Wee about compu~•· camp la iNt t1 I teU a Job about coenputer'I here, everyone lauaha. At my ht>Ule If I told the aame joU, no one woWd think It wu f\anny." Mlchah la convinced.that h1I cunpen are the wave of the futun -and that U\098 of ua wbo find c.omputet ~ International to be vacuely odd are the echoee of the put. He aatd that at the end of each cam&Jln8 -.Ion. h.la campers bld 8ld fareWeO. and promJle to keep In touch with each other until next summer, just aa we did when we were kids. "When they get home to the computers ln their bedrooms, they_plug into major data banks,'' he aaid~-r"lben. uaing phone lines, they go on-line to each other. They don't write or talk. They communicate through thelr computera." Help. Salem 4 SMOOTH l.J:1N TAR 100s I ·' l I i .. .,.ft:r The foMawlftt 1*ton9 .,. dOlnO ~ ... C"IATIV! NIW Llflll MIMI· IT .. 111, 09A CHILOA(N'I VILLA, 1197 I ~Colt• MeM. CA ntt7. C"l"TIVl Hew LIFE MINl-IT .. IU, • OelltOf'nle OOtpotetlon, .. S1tui'd1y, Mar 22, 1112· 9 a.m. -8 p.m. ' Live · ~astern Musio, Free Drawing, Food, Bargains Ho 1 pl c e 0 r a n I e 1191 a. ~O'M. Qoeta MeM. CA CoLlnty will •runaor a• nJ.· ~-.... 11 oonouc1ei1 by• .----...... --------------. ~ommunhy e ucatlon ~°" . ALLYN-BLACK'S HAIR FASHIONS fonam entitled "Med.k:al Cf98M ..._ ute Mlnl9trt911 Problem 1 of the ~ P. Temo. Terminally Ill Patient'' Thlt llllWl*lt wee Neel wttt1 tt1e Monday at 7 p. m . at County an of Orlfl08 County on l\e~bllc Federal Maof 4, tta. ~ 8a and Loan, 2400 Publl1hed Orange Coa1t Delly E. 17 St., Santa Ana. Piiot. Me.y •• 1'· 20! t7, -~ The forum ll open to 1---------the public. rteUC NOTICE. t A panel of speakers from the medical world ":~~.Tr~" will be featured. For Th• l ollowlng peraon 11 <101n91 l n f o-r m a t l on ca 11 ~t·;':DRv WALL. 33402 s.a 837.-6500. Bright ()(Ive. Dani Point, CeJllornla HOllplce la a non-profit 112429 th t th w11111m Robert Trudeau. 33402 agency a serves e s.a Bright Drive. Dana Point. c.ic..: termlnally W. lornll "26211 This IOuslMN 11 conduc1e<I by en lndlvl<lual. C Wtlllarn It TrucMal • Ompufe1P Tl'tll llat_,t WU flle<I with the A. County Clerk ol Orange County on, Ap<W 7, 11182 h ,_ onen ouse Publlahe<I Orange CoHt Dally I:' Piiot, April 29, Mey I. 13, 20, 1882 • 11121-e:' scheduled . __ NlJC_.,_m __ Orange County ~=:,.u bualne11e1 have been Tiie 1011ow1no peraon 11 doing asked to Mild delegatel ~~T-:MICAL DESIGNS lO a May 26 open bowie UNLIMITED. 519 ::;,u•rlt•, at a computer rro• CorClnllclelMer.CA 1rammer achoo for LAUAEl. ANN NATTRESS, s1e ,etudentl WlUl CllMblbU.. :-~lte, Corona def Met, CA • The Dayle Mcintosh TNI ~ 1e conducted by en Center for the Diaabled ln<IMcJual . .._...Ann NeltlWI will host the open houae Thin atetM*lt -flled wfttl tN ~rom 2 to & p.m. at the Coun\y Clertl of Orange County on fllte of It• computer Mey 11' 1812·· • .,... ichool, 18()0-.E. LaVeta, Publlahe<I Orenge Coast Delly Orange. '}be nine-month Piiot, Mey 13, 20, 27. June~ training program, In lta ~ yeer of operation. NI.IC ll011C( preparea 1everely and moderately disabled ..:nnoua• •aa .... .,A,_, atudenta to compete for Th• tollowtftf ~ 11 dolno ~G aa ~ll t 0 th ~N~ (8) ALL AMEN-uea-WI our e CAN "OAD IHOW, 1751 Ea1t Jacilfty and meet Gerry.Av1nue,8anteAn1,0A lnemben of ita bulineta 82705. ·advlaory committee. Mt.C::::.==J= For Information, call Celfotnle 121oe. 532-1646. ~~ .. oonduc'9d by ... Courses offered POINT 4 Data Cor~ JoeePI s. 8urTOW9 Thia .... _. -.... wfttl the c-nty CWk of Orenge County on May4. 1882. ,_ '4ubll1hed Orang• Collt Delly . • M4!Y e. 13, 20. 21. 1882 2043-82 ')>oration baa ann ~ Ac:nnoua.,...-.. '()unced a achedule tor TIM ::i::1:::::'~1 doing courae offerings in lit ax--.• .. oft ware tr al nl n a c.w. SAIT0.1182 DMllVlll• • DfM. Hunlln9kln 9-di. CA...._ program. CHA .. LH WAAAIEN SAITO, · Cour9es will be held at ~ DMwlll om.. tMtSngton headguarter otricea In TNI ~ oondU*d by en Irvine aa well aa at aUel lndMIMIL offices in New York City, a.tee w . ....., Chlca0 o Atlanta and 1'111 1111 ,..,. .. 11111""' .. T'\....H--D ' County Cllrtt Cl 0nnge Coune)' Ofl ~ ._,,,,.... ,,_,. F o r f u r th e r ·1 n _. Publl1hed br~ cout Deity formation, contact Ann Plot. MIY 13' 20• 27' June :OU~ Johnlon at 754-4114. "9JC ll011C( ACTITIOU9 • ..... _. MAm ITA,._,.,. AC llllOU9 WU The folloWlnQ per-. .. doing ..... .,.~ ~-The fo11ow1ng per90n9 ere doing E. R. I •• 110 Newl>Of't Centlf bu11rieee-.; Drtve, #150, N-port Beach, C LONQWOOO ASSOC:IATU, t2MO. 118 E. 17th Street, Coeta ~CA R. WYATT HYOAA, 31841 Via tit27 0.0, T...OUCO Canyon, CA 92978. ~JAwu W MY 11910M1111. GABOA A. TOTH, 31811 Pueo !MM. CA 82714 ' Le Branu. Sen Juen Capl1treno. MICHAEL 0. AAY, 401 Hezel CA,,:S~ II conducte<I by Drive. Cofone c1e1 Mer, CA 82925. -II ...-..... e Thie bullneM" conclUcted tw a ---u-....... gerwel per11*9Hp. R. Wyatt ~· •. Mlc:flalt D Ray Thie ltlMmeltt -flied with the Thia statement -fllecl wft11 the County Cler11 of Orenge County on ~ty CWtt of Orenge County on Aoftl 27, 1ee2. ~ t , tN2. IJ-Publlahe<I Ore11ge Coa~y Publlahed Orenge Co1•t Deity Piiot, Apttl 28, Mey f , 13, 20, 1tl2. "°" .._ 1s. 20, rr, June e. 1111. 11311-82 i1 tM:l NI.IC tl)TICE Tr .. ~dit ion .. \ I ...&, Jl"Wl"il"rS t .·1f 20-50°/o s ·AVINGS E.ITIRE STOCK Sat., Mey 22nd Only 760-8035 TRADITIONAL JEWELERS-A Tradition of Fino Jewelery. Service and Cnftamamhip • NMcllepolnt-Knlttlng-Crochet Crewel-Cro•• Stitch I •Many Knitting Varna a Book 1'2 price • Get an Earlf Start on Chrlatmu Ornament• 112 price (~ 14) 759-0587 10 ·% OFF ANY ORDER SAT., MAY 22nd ONLY (Wtlh Thie C;_oupof'I) . . ' ·~=~ • Pita . • &uppllH MERCHANTS' DIRECTORY Allyn-Black's Hair Fashion Bank of America Bonaparte Bakery Coqt Jedaral Sa~ z..s.n.nalt, Lino-M Schuyler C. Joyner, D.D.S., M.S. Orthodontic. John I. MoGlauohlln, Inc. Investment S.rvic• Needleport Newport Hilla Animal Hoepita.l Newport Hilla Druo- Newport Hilla Jlorist Newport Hilla Travel Newport Hilla Shoe Repair Kenneth B. Schwan, D.D.S. Gezunal Dentiltry Parker'• Peta Ralphs Merk« SparkJ1-9 CIMnen The fdnqe 8-efit Traditional J..,elen Villaqe HoJM DeeiCJll w albr & Lee R.a1 lmte. What'• Cookinq? Restaurant Wine Country ... Bud Graham & Son's Union 76 640-94S.. 75M572 759-1100 759-0181 6«-1169 759--0882 640-9381 759-0567 759-1911 640-7373 640-7980 644-7311 640-7302 640-2970 6"°"'°°90 644-7992 6"60-9'40 644-5080 76()..8()35 ~9193 75~1501 &U-1820 644-7597 644-7151 MEN & WOMEN By APPOINTMENT 840-9414 2e 18 8AH MIGUEL OR. NEWPORT BEACH INTRODUCTORY 0"8R (New Patrone Only) CUT, BLOW 6 CONDfTIONIR OR CUT, SHAMPOO 6 SET $14.00Reg ..... $20.00 Perm Wawe Reg. S40 $15.00 PEDICUM Reg. 820 $25.00 SCULPTURED NAILS Aeg.*40 'THE FRINGE BENEFIT 844-5080 ) 20°/o OFF ALL FABRIC AlL PAI IERNS 1/2 PRICE One Day Only Sat., May 22,-1982 ttfUQ91tt .......... Totally remodeled by~ craftsmen! Featuring French dodrs, wooden shutters, plank floors, used brick & pool & spa. FEE land w/GREAT TERMS!! 2670 San Miguel Dr., Newport Beach. 759-1501 or 752-7373. .~. 11.211 PD •1&11 is all you pay when you takeover existing lat T .D. Spacious 4 br executive detached home. Featuring frml din, fmly rm & fplc. Only $213,000 FEE. 2670 San Miguel Dr., Newport Beach. 759-1501 or 752-7373. dlllUYllU. . .s111,111. 3 br house on tee land featuring hardwood fioors & abingle roof with 11'1 aasumable 1st T.D. Priced for · immediate sale!I! 3670 San Miguel 759-1501 or 752-7373. • i THUMOAY, MAY IO, 1111 CAVALCADE aa INSTANT RBl'LA YS DEPT. Newport Beach hu now become the lat.st of our couta1 com:munltiel to b.ve di8covend electnWc lln within lta nefchborhooda. Civic ~ are now mullJ.na lawa to pwp the precinct8 of this new tianllatorized tmiptaUon. The objecta of Newport'• municipal wrath are the video gun. that have been proliferating in liquor storee, all-night marketa, · laundromat• and other J)Ubllc placee where their -------~\ blinking lights and Tll lllPllll 'tt flickerina electronic ..L_ ,f i I u r e 1 1 u r e t h e ......... ______ .......... ..._ WllUSpectina. 'nieee PrDe8 swallow up quarters witli an insatiable appetite while the players become transfixed by Pac Man or Space Wars and are 110011 living the life of the dilatory or slothful. THUS IT IS that the dty plamUng commi8lion wW begin mulling control laws tonight that might regulate where video games can be locatecf in the dty. Newport isn't the first of our communities to diacover this new form of indolent sin.· Huntington Beech, for example, banned the location of public video games within one-halt mile of any school l.'P'l }JIP.111 - ij 1hJ •l:_ -\". ~"· . - _.,..--·. ~! __.- -~· .. :_-·-~ ~-~·· -=-~ .·-Another Balbolln, li.11«1 with lln, be11J6 rolled on home . -- campus or within one-half mile of each other. Newport's consideration is to banish the video lure within 300 feet of IChool campu8e&. You have to an..wpect the theory here is that if temptatiOQ and sin are far enough removed from campus, students are just too lazy to go any distance to find it. It is unclear if the history of sinful behavior would support this thesis. Alas, over the years, Satan has invented numerous devices of temptation which were ca1culated to ca\18e the unsuspecting to waver from the paths of righteousness and separate the ~r from his money. THESE BA VE INCLUDED pool tables, pinball machinea, juke boxes, nickelodeons, peep shows, crap tables, alot machines. lottery cards, football pools, playing cards, poker chips. burleeque theaters and commercial televillon. Most of these sinful offerings hrlve been found in Newport Beach generally at one time or another, and in Balboa in perticular. It should be noted, however, that Justice Robert Gardner, writing in this journal, considered ~boa weak in the area of hou8e8 of ill-repute. Anyway, most of these temptations have been banned in ~ewport at one time or another, with mixed result.. ~a few years back. Newport Beach had a dty manager ~ Harvey L. Hurlburt who di8covered that pool tables within Newport saloons were being utilized for gambling ~ leelDed at the time to come as a terrible shock to Hurlburt, proving that he was either a man of extreme virtue or he limply hadn't been around very much. Anyway, he eet out to get pool tables banned in Newport ...,tering holes. Again, the reasoning was if you purge Sauma device -the pool table -you automatically obliterate .m In Huribkt-1 cue, neither no1ion worked. YOU MIGHT HOPE that thoee Newport civic lighta who are now out to save the community from video games will have better luck. Have you ever been around these video _same arcades? <>bviowly, ...ibey are well worth purging. Tbey are very nm.y. v"':ir:* bot.ally lack the sweet, melodic clkk ot two pool comin& together. And everybody lmOW8 that the wont lln of all la a nmyone. BY JUT ADLBll or..w, ........ In a rat.her unuaual political about..f.tlce, GOP candidate Mary Schmit& 11 char1ln1 that the ume polltJcal co"'ulttna flrm that handled her hu16and11 M9CCellful 1978 Rate Senate bkl now la Ullna dirty tricb to st.op her elecUon drive for the 43rd Dla1rict ~onal ee.t. lr)atead of blamlna fellow GOP challenpr Johnnie Crean for a letter that urged men than S,000 Jewish voten ln the district to awitch their party regbtratJon and vote a1ain1t her, Mn. Schlniu la Pointina an accuainl tlqaer at the two con.ultanta manaafng the Crean campalp - William Butcher and Arnold Fonie. "They'll do anytbi.na to make a cahdidate win, includln1 (1preadin1) fal1ehood1 and character uaauination," Mn. ScbJnia charged. She aaicl the two ~ ''certainly a co~ting influence on the (poll ) procea. ti But, interestingly, it la this same Newport Beach oonaultlna firm 1he accu1e1 ol "unacrupuloua" cam.,.tgn tacUcs that wa1 retained by her husband , state Sen. John Schmitz., R..COrona del Mar, in his 1978 campaign. In fact, Schmitz or members of his staff contacted the well·known and controYertlal political coruultanta to handle both his 1980 and 1982 U.S . Senate races, said Forde, one of the firm's partners. In both Instances, however, Fonie said an agreement for the firm's aervicea never was worked out. Mrs. Schmitz said the consultants are motivated only by money 80 ''the ends justify the means.'' She added, "any firm that will do anythlna 80 long aa they're paid it a very poor example of American bull.neaa." a.&acted at bJa Sacramento office, Sen. Schmitz commented that the Butcher-Forde teem ii good but expenllw. He aidded that the main-ttaSlll he oontncted for their services during hl:t 1978 cam.,.tgn was to keep the two COOIUltanta from working for one of hia challengers. "U I could have been a8IUred they weren't going to come in againat me I might not have bi.red them," Schmitz eaid. "I figure they were worth one or two percentage pointa." I\ WU by one percentap point that Schmitz Jost the Republican nomination ln the 40th Congressional District to Rep. Robert Badham, of Newport Beac h , in 1976. Badham's campaign that year waa managed by ButCher·Forde. When asked about the charges Mrs. Schmitz la leveling ao1nat the firm, Forde c:ommeniecf that, "You work for the people that ~you." Sexual abuse • seminar set A seminar focuslng on .exual exploitation of cblldttn will be conducted between 9 and 11 a.m. Saturday at the Oranp County c.owthouae ln Santa Ana. Up to 200 parenta and ~n can be accommodated at the seminar apomored by the Girl Scout Council of Oranp County and the county'• victim wttne91 .-.iance prosram. The tint hour of the procram will be devoted to an orientation for puenta. The leCOIXl hour will be devoted to .... 1)11muily desl8ned f« children. Child c:.re wur be provided durln1 the 8dultl' lellllan. Surther lnformatton can be obtained by caWna 079-7900. He edded that the Schmit:r.ec- have been h1a dinner ~ ln the put year. The letter that drew Mn. Schmits' lre waa titled "Laat Chance to Stop Schmit.a" and was mailed on letterhead lndlcattng lt was paid for and authorized by the Crean for c.onare-CampaliJ'l. •-nu. ii our lut chance to atop, Schmits." the letter readl. "Mary Schmitz, John'• wife, la seeking th1a aeet 80 that the Schmitz family can oontlnue to have a forum to perpetuate their venom of bigotry and hatred." The letter was signed by Newport Beach resident Leonard Shane, active in the Jewish community and ch.airman of the baud of Mereury Savinga and Loan. and Julius Hirst. a San Diego County businessman. It uraed those voting against Schmitz to support Crean'• cand1dac:y. Forde said the letter waa written by_a poup of people who believe "Mary Schmitz doee not reprement the beat lnat1.ncta of our aodety and country.•• Asked how he would IWpOnd to the charae that the leUer waa a mnear, Forde laid, "EveryUme there I.a 10methina a candidate doesn't like it ta called a smear." lie alao said tha t when candldatea call attention to such th1np it .. intended to aenerate lntereet in their own cam.,.tgn. On the other hand, Mra. SchmJtz aatd she tee. the incident u indicative o1 how "poUUcs bu boiled down to who can buy the most vote..'' Both Crean and~. Schmitz are among 18 Re publican contenden teeking.nomination in the -t3rd district, which straddles the Oranae and San Diego county line. . Becauae voter registration fl1ure1 In the dlatri c t overwhelmingly fav o r Republicana, the eventual primary winner II considered an eay winner in the November ,enetal election. .,.., ............ CRITICAL -Mary Schmitz, campaigning for Congress, charged that the firm wJUch aided her husband John'• I! 1978 state Senate race baa ,)I used "dirty tricks" again1t hen. . '• ::.· -:. • l il• :c ·{ .. \ . i ., ~' d '· PRIZED PROJECTS -When fifth graders at Co" School 1n Fountain Valley staged a sdence fair, Derek Quigley won firlt place by charting why continental plates make the Atlantic Ocean smaller than the Pacific Ocean and showing the Dllr .... ,.......,.....-i......, earth's layers from inner core to crust, below. Ann Judson won aecond place for proving lemons really can produce electricity, and Ray Arriaza'• working model of an oil well took fifth place. . .. ..... ,'!() ' 1f IA') •' A I 11 f I NEW GENERATION TRAIN -A ~ of a magnetically levitated train Qt Japan Natimal Railways, rsta on ita ....._.ted rubber 1Upport wheels on a trxk'-blid at the railroad'• test center in Mlyuak:f. ID 8Dtrtbem tmerpncy. I havei ~ c;alled to c:ome and Rick up children I nanuy know. sev.raJ weeka qo U\e ne!chbon ICfOll th• "'"t Oh• man 11 a lawyer) took a four-day bu1lne11 trip and left their l3·year-old aon ln ctwa-of h1I ll·)'Nl'-Old brother and 7-year-old 1t1ter. The only lnlttucttona were to call me if they needed anY'thina. Th• people are not cloee frlendl. I tmelylmow them. I resent beln1 put In the po1ltion of refUllnl to atve attention to a child whoee needl are not belna met by h1I own parentl. In aelf-defenae I have compiled a list of e:n• numben and make every effort to te the parents. If th.ii ii not ~ble, I uk the tchool to locate the family doctor. In thll way the child geta the care he needs and ., ......... Japan. The magnetically driven train is being deYeJoped as a replacement for the company's "bullet'• train. which waa the world's fastest train from 1964 until the introduction of France's Paris-Lyon express. PiScfs: F·ocus on • trip FrNay, May Z1 ' ARIES. (March 21-April 19): Appenftt defeat ii transformed into victory. -U. ls recovered, financial prospects brttllten. Cancer, Capricorn natl ve1 tr1ure prominently. Valid investment opportunity is preeented by older ally. Gounnet c:fin&er 19 highlighted. TAURUS (April 20-May ~): FJemmta of luc:k. circwnstance and t1m1ng ride With you. Moon and numerical cycln point io popularity, communication, profit and deaHnas with bright, optimiltic Gem1nil and Sagittariana. Nwnber 3 will be lucky. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): ~ aids in removing some restriction•. You learn what'• happenin8 in areas ot.cured or deliberately dllfiUlaed. YOU win by waltine, measuring, piecing together cluet and signals. You are given chance to recoup I.om, to rebuild on solid baae. C'ANCER (June 21-July 22): Stimulation. inspiration and communleadon dominate scenario. Gemini, Vir10, Sagittarius persona figure prominently. InVitation i1 received -involves oppoalte 1ex, writing or travel. Wiah will be IWftlled and you pin new alllea. , LEO (July 23-Au,. 22): You dl9cern values, prlorltiea fall into place. Lunar HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA emphasis on aspirations, professional achievements, intelligent concession made by family member. Career decision is ~ted. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio persons figure prominently. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep options open; travel and other plans subject to change. Emphasis on communication, education, spiritual values and long-range aspirations. Places individual aids in perceiving cu.rrmt cycle and future trends. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Take special can ln connection with co-signing, loana, interest ratea, apparent tax shelters. Relatlon&hip results in added responsibility, premure and strong involvement. Individual wbo promises payment may actually be finandally embarrUled. II SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): It may be po.Ible to extend contract or renegotiate acreement. Doon of opportunity open and your penona1 ~ expand. You'll aeme ) pulle of p\lbllc. You could be on verge of a box office lmllh. Aries Ja involved. the parwnt1 .11tt the --.... -TIRED OF BEING~ ON IN SAN JOSE 1 DSAB LEANED ON: Yur letter uy1 mon Uotit •r• .__.., today tbu I co.id. ,..... for wrtda1. Dl!Al\ ANN LANDERS: I can't beDeve your ~uat4i reply to "Salem Reader," who liaffeinid frOm chronic deprellion and overdoMcl several tlmn. Why didn't you adviae her to aeek out a paychlatrlat who would put her on medicaUon? Believe me, antl-depnuanta can mean the difference between life and death for a chronically deprellld pel"80D. I know what rm talking about because, I, my.elf, suffer from manic-depression and have overc:lc>Rd twice. After the last time I went to a local cri1il unit and was immediately placed on anti-depressant medication. That wu almoet two years ago, and I have not suffered a sulddal depression since. People need to know that in many cases there ii med1catlon that can help them. No one ahould continue to suffer the tortures of the damned (there's no hell like it), nor do they need to be ashamed of having the illneta. Thank you for giving this vital infonnatlon to thoee who need it. -BEEN THEREIN BANGKOK DEAR B.T.: Yo• ma1t be a brud-aew reader. I uve repea&eclly atated tut ao one aeed1 to .. ff er tlae a1oalea of depre11lon anymore. T•ere are aow a variety of _g., u- ,, anU·depre111at dr111 Uaat oaa -•Ip IRt tllHe people oet of tlaelr black m0od1. Some of •~ett dr•1• may grod•ce 1lde·effect1. A competent, carl•I doctor will mODltor ~II pedeat ca ref ally• Alter die do1a1e or 1wltcll to another type of medJcadoa. Dr. Herbert Pardea, clltef· of tlle National la1Uta&e of Mental Bealt~ (a lon1tlme 00•1altaat), baa a1ked me to inform all my readers wbo wut to lean more abolt depre11lon ud bow to deal wltb It to write for tlae lmUtate'a f ~ booklet. It contala1 tlle moat carrent iDformadoa on depre11loa, written In laa1aa1e everyoae can andentaad. It 1tve1 new llope aad. ts aure to Improve tlle quality of a great many lives aa well as 1ave 1ome. Tlae addre11: National ln1tthte of Mental Realtla1 •• Pabllc lnqalrlea, 5180 Flab~• Lane, Rockvwe, Md. 20857. Are drugs OK if yqu learn how to control them? Can they be of help? The answers are Jn Ann Landers' all-new booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope." For each booklet ordered, send $2.00, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope (37 cents post.age) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago DJ. 60611 . . ·Empty nest lonely Open Letter to the Bombeck Kids: Well, how in the world are all of you? Since you moved out, Mommy and Daddy's nest ls really empty and you can make book on that. Speaking of books: Have you heard there's a new sibling kiss-and-tell book aiming out? This time it is written by the children of the late Peter Sellers. Hope none of you gets any ideas. (Ha, ha.) "' WHAT AM I SAYING? You little rasca1a would never take anything we said or did aeriowaly, would you? b::rr a lot of things come to mind that dy and I did that in retrospect were bizarre and misunderatood. Hey, what are parenta for, right? I know you're thinking about that incident, that swnmer in Florida when you turned on the car heater. Well, no publisher in his right mind would blame us for that! We had no way of knowing about the tooth that waa looee. And as for the math teminars for your birthday surprise, we did it for your own good. You have to believe that. Besides, the written word -and wills -are something you have to live with for the rest of your life. I know what you're t,hinking. What about the six books I wrote about you? They were fun, weren't they? Even your attorney had to admit they had their moments. THE PROBLEM WITH children writing boob ii that they feel compelled to tell the truth, and you know how deadly unentertaining THAT can be sometimes. No one wantl to lmow about the time I cut a hole in your bicycle aeat to shame you into toilet training. It wasn't my idea anyway. I flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S END think I read it in Heloise. Naturally, Mommy and Daddy would never tell you what to do with your lives. (The ti,me I locked you out for n<?t voting a Democratic ticket was a joke. Did you think 't was serious?) Why am I soing on so? I cannot believe the idea of writing a book ever croaed your minds. If it does, maytsu have terminal writer's block. Only ki · . We are both well an miss you very much. We are still storing all of your things and wouldn't think of charging you for it. We're that kind of parents. Write or call when you can. P .S . Enclosed is our unlisted phone number and a blank check. POT SHOTS 'BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT TMltRE:S &EEN SO MUCH COWCEl\N A&OUT WHAT Ml8HT MAP PEN TMAT W~'.5 ACTUALLY MAPPENl ... G MAS PASSED ALMOST lJN~IC£D. C>-...... -......... -....--·-c-.......-.- GOREN ·011 BRIDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF cashed the ace or clubs. Even though the suit. did not split evenly, be waa in control. He simply gave up a club and made hi.a contract -one spade trick, t.wo heart.a, t1'0 diamond• and rour clubs. True. dec.luer would have gone down had the defenders' bands been revened, whereu the ftnl dedatet would have pten home. But declarer daerved to ~e hit conwaet beca ... t.. p•e him.elf the beat cbaoc:9. l ~. IAN raANCllCO (AP) -l!\t WH • Ma= lldY who .,_, m"9Ch Of hir Ute Miid .. I lft a0oYt U.. nR Of tM WOl'ld, dtt:Ytnl ~" _. _,_._ w&U\ an tll!ilY tnYlillO -U\al -.. 1-an ...,_Uonll Mrol.M. In tht 1alcl1ttof tht Great Dtprt11ton'1 ..... ClllQI Amelia larhart;·a ..-.rnabr ln ....., !Uaht "* ... .-... \)n. Jlay IO, l-~ ''Wciy LlncJy" k>w•ld her ~ body "''° ,_. Nd ancr &old V• ~ at NewfoUndland, waY'td aoodby• I.NI en•• ii the AtlMUc-Uone. rtw yean later, on ih• aame date, 1ht ltft OlklMd -her lucky d'Y-for a Cl'Olf-«)u.ntey telt fUaht ~ up to the round-the-world trip from' wliich lhe Mftl' retumed. In the newly nl•led "1At1en From Amelia: An Intimate Portrait of AmeUa 1'.arhart.'' JMn L. Bldwl wrti.a that by 1881, M19 Earhart WU fed up wtth the double bOndl of work and marn.,.. 11She could rat on the lepnd, or aht could ltrilce out alone. '!be endeavor WouJd we the limit of • ltreNrth, but if ~. It would jult1fy the ~ aM qu.let her own llJlpk:ion that lht WU a mud, • Ma. Beckua M)'I in the blo8raphy whkh lncludt1 recently dlacovered lettera and photopp.ba. Born ln Atchi1on, Jean .• ln· 1898, Amelia l'M)wrt learned to fly by her 20th birthday. But It The Alluring rt@Jrru~ ~rrt, I No Yl91ble panty line, ewen under the tlghtnt clothff, tvmmr aupport tool AV AILA8LE IN: Body Bge. -Pink -Persimmon -Liiac Red-Blue-Mint-Nude-Black* Ivory M....,._,,. au. ... -Salilf .. llOl1 OI "'9 "911...o QTY. COLOR "'8C• Oftm 81D PIT8 ALL ..., .... S1UOll pr. Name __________________ __ Addreaa _____________________ _ 1 Clty/State/Zlp-------------------------------- P I eaae add atate aatea tax and 50• for postage and handling. T otaJ _, ________________ _ 0 Check Enctoeed 0 Biii MIC or VIM My number 11 · favorite oolr co.uol dotlt. -S. Cf»•t Hf/IT., Ugurle -..ctl, CA -1 Phone Orden Ace.pied 4M •1 FINE JEWELRY AUCTION IN ORANGE COUNTY THIS SUNDAY AT 1 P.M. A collection of Jewelry From Buffum's Department Stores Former Fine Jewelry Lease Holder Liquidation To Satisfy Creditors. NO IUY!lrl f>REMIUM WILL IE CHARO ED JEWELRY & DIAMONDS A Ml«tkm of ovn 200 Diamond, Emerald, Sapphln, Ruby, Opal, Pearl rinp, braceletl, ntdtlacn, unfnp and watchft. llNPICTK*: Tta IUNOAY, MAY 2Jrdl 10:00 a.m. undl t :OO pm-SALE~ AUCTION: THIS SUNDAY AT 1 P.M. SADDLEBACK INN 1680 E. 1 at Street ·Senta Ana, CA Olf'flOtlone: E .. t 111 St. et Sent• An• Frwy. Little John Gangel-Auctioneer walft•t until JuM 1928,.,.., lhe beaaml the~ woman to cro11 th• AtlanUc on tht plane "tnendihlp" wtth pUotl William Ssua and Lou.Al Oorcloftt that lhe deddtd to devote her Utt to the .. 8ht alio deWrm1Md '° c:Ulptl thit r..UM that thit rrMndlhlp ~t brouaht Mr fame Iha liadn't eun.d . Tht ttant·AUanttc eolo tU1ht •carted out a llCftt. wtd\ two ~ men pOoUna Mill larhart'• "II succtiulul, lt would justify the glory and quiet her own suspicion that she was a lraud." low·wtna ~to a~ DO&nt at Harbour Once, Newfoundland. while a lay on the floar' behind an extra fuel tank. At 7:12 p.m., ah• w• airborne and alone: 16 houri and 39 m1nute1 liter, on_May 2i -the fifth anniver.ry of Col Ow-111 A. Llndbqh11 Atlantic hop -Mill Earhart landed near Lcindonderry, Ireland. "Hl: I've come from America," the told the farmer at h~r. ., .., , .... ST~ A MYSTERY -Legendary aviator Amelia F.arhart poees with navtaator ~ Noonan in Brazil in 1937. Both diAppeared! over the Pacific on a globe-drcllng flight and no satisfactory explanation hu ever been found. .. ' ~ I ' I I c a., ..... , • .,I OWlltr of Toya laternauonal, h11 betn elected tr••ldtnt of South Cout Plata lllroban• MiaodatliDn: OdW' offScln ...... u.....-. •P•ltr of lake J'tfth Avenue, . Yi"·prt1ldtnt, and ••• P•llll••· ....... otO.W'a,ll'tlM.lret. Out101n1 prt1ld•n• &arta ........ mar...-of I.~ WM ile*a cba1rmu\ of iht bou'd. New members elected to the boerd are Btwar• Ptlltck, of Kron ChOc:oJak, and G111t B~r. BEADS PANEL -Med center planned F o r m e r T r a n 1 • A medical center la behur deat8ned portatlon Secretary for Chaun Development l:o., Palm John Volpe w l I 1 SPlinal. b~ Archuleta/Boben head a 26-mem ber Rlcctardl tet, Rancho Mtrap, pre1ide~tlal com-accordJn& to.Gary Cbua, of LaiW\a mlulon on drunken H11ll. the owner/developer. driving. Construction of the 51,000 sq. ft-complex wW beQin in the fall. with T h Id completion 8Cheduled for September enure Up e . 1983. It wW have an estimated value FRESNO (AP) _ Six in exoesa of $9 million. Sonora Union High The center will be located on BOb School teachers who Hope Drive on a lite contiguous to the were ulligned to teach at Eisenhower Medical ~nter. ~=~~~~~;: OC has 3 of nation's diatrict just like any fastest growing firms other inatructor, an ap-~Uate court aaya. According to the May i8lue of Inc .. mapll_M, California Mi 1'7 of UM fute1t 1rowln1 publicly held companMI in the coun~_. . In itl foW1h ann&aal J..llUnf ot tM 11Inc. 100," the ma111lnt rank• companlH accord£n1 to their peroent.ae ~In ... durinl the lut five ye.n (1$'7'7·1981). Three of the firml are bMed 1d Orar'8 County: PrtatrM&I ot Itvtne. No. 41: Omallli..acal of Anaheim. No. De, and Newpen ftarm.aent1ca11 ot Newport Belch, No. 84. •L..--.-- NB firm to design El Paso development A VC Development Corporation of El Paso, Texaa, has aelected the Newport B eac h firm of Rtc•ard1oa/N117/Jo•a1oa for Jardinea Coronado, a Mediter- ranean-atyle reaident commun- ity of 88 garden villu in El Puo. . Interior designer CarQle Eichen of Carole Elclaea heerton, be. in Santa Ana was rwned to decorate the three models. COmpleting the team ii Re,_.. Eavlroameatal Groap of Newport Beach. Jepenney • Businessmen If you are doing business under a Garden Shop Sale May 2.1st, May 22nd & May 23rd Friday -Saturday -Sunday 8" Boston Ferns 4" Bedding Plants. reg. $6.99 NOW 4.44 ' t Spring Color ~~.a~~;J13 reg. 99- Now 77• 8" Hanging Fuchsias reg. 14.99 Now 10.99 ,• Flowering Landscape ~D.. Plants reg. $2.99 Now 1.99 Asst. 1' gaJ. varieties Include Lantana, Gazanla. Verbena, Statlce and Daisies 10" Hanging Impatiens Special Buy 8.88 10" Houseplants varieties Include Ficus, PaJms & Draceanas reg. $24.99 Now16.99 • reg. t4.99 Now3.88 · F'ictitiou1 Business "Jame you are required by law t BusineH and Professiorw Code. Sec. 17900 to 119301 to file a Fic titious Bu1ineu Name Statement and have it published .for four consecutive weeks. WE at the DAILY PI LOT can help with both. Call tM LEGAL DEPARTMENT at 642 -4321 Ext. 332 for further information. CUrtll Mathes 11 Inch Diagonal Color Table Model Modem, compec:t ~ In this deluxe Ublt model fits ~ M1Y dtcor. Side grips ... '°" mow_..., from one room 10 ll'IOther. Now at ....... restrain clients from aettlnl~to operations and ~ to rform their Jeilllinla.l1) fUnction. '' The~. frmction tn a ~t.. he UBerta, '111o develop a concept of the new corporation and lnaare that it la comrnumca'8ct to various systems penonnel." That, and to .. f.cilltate the control, coordination and malnt~Dfnce of morale and 1.nspUation." . However, a total corporate realignment, Jennings contend., "can cr-. llUCh a whirlwind it drawa the chief executiw ~-management and away from leadenhip," ~Nm in the situation . of "stamping out anta while ~hanta oome over the walls." " If the chief executive m:11pes that trap -"it takes an exceptional individual to do ao," says I He muat avoid .the of inadequate Jenninp -he must then lothen. co111equentlal thinkinl, w occurs when the chief loses hi• wide-le .term view and lnatead react• in t:S J e, which leads ineYitably to oostlY .. It he malnt&lnl Mi perch and wide perspective be can aaticipate the contequencea of hi• de ftlto management affatn, '' saya Jenninp. When he loaea that reh he loses h is perspective. -l\elated to that trap 11 the 18olation reaction. Because of his inability to beh& the torrent of Wolllen alcoholics · tend to be young ( j~~~~e!iii--~~~ J ' ] • fashion stripe top orig. $24 now 15.99 SAVE 330/o knickers by "shades" orig. $15 now 8.99 SAVE 50% Shortle top orig. 8.00 now 8.99 SAVE 25% flashback t-shlrts orig. $9 Now 5.99 SAVE 33% Cawln Klein Sweats orig. $25 now 18.99 SAVE 29% prairie calico print skirt or quitted blazer Notr 17 •• designer prairie skirt orig. $20 now 15.99 SAVE 20% For Misses devone tan blazers orig. $38 Now 19.99 SAVE 47% - selected motion pants orig. $18 Now 8.SS SAVE 500/o selected motion blazers orig. $50 Now 33.99 SAVE 32% selected motion skirts orig. $18 Now 11.99 SAVE 33% summer terry top orig. S8 ~ow 3.99 SAVE 50% fashion ltrfpe lhlrt orig. $18 Now 11.19 SAW 25% spring color motion pant orig. 819 Now I.II SAVE 12% helf ea epr1ng dreeaes orig. *28435 Now 13.99 SAVE 48%-800/o all llMn look blazers orig. $4&456 Now 23.99-25.99 SA YE 48%-52% callee> print aundresses orig. $26 Now 14.99 SAVE 400/o Mlected ltjtee by bernee orig. S 14-$48 Now 8.40-28.80 SAVE 40% . Shoes lncluded paneu.ta Theodor Albert. third from .. right, and Ken E. Steelman, rlcht. and James · B. Lynch, tecond from right, and Lou Ellen '.: Moore, 18COnd from left, president and vice · president of Pacific National Bank. ..< mens warm-ups orig. 49.99 Now 24.99 SAVE 50°/o track and courte warm ups orig. 27.99 Now 13.99 •SAVE 50% action master slacks orig. $23 Now 11.50 SAVE 50% lightweight Jackets orig. $40 Now 19.99 SAVE 500/o · aportcoata-broken alzes orig. $80 Now 39.99 SAVE 50~o mens suits orig. $120 Now 79.99 SAVE 30% summer sportshlrts orig. $16 Now 7.99 SAVE 50% v-neck sweater-blue only orig. $23 Now 13.99 SAVE 39°/o summer shirts orig. 9.99 Now 4.99 SAVE 50°/o For Glrls bon bon Jean slzes 7-14 orig. $17 Now 9.99 SAVE 41% stripe blouses sizes 7-14 orig. $10 Now 3.99 SAVE 80% select girts dresses orig. $8-$30 Now 3.99-14.99 SAVE 50% white twtll Jeans sizes 7-14 orig. $10 Now 3.99 sasaon dorm shirts sizes 7-14 orig. $12 Now 3.99 SAVE 88% pre'school terry tank tops orig. 3.19 Now 44• SAVE 81% Jr-hi georgette blouees orig. S 17 Now 3.11 SAVE 75%'" ··~· ..•. .... .. . ,• .• . . . . liOfiOi Ci MU OP MAL,_.,., AT MVATI MU ...... ~ C .D M 0!810N.S , 3214 IUPIW OOUln .,... Montlol\8, Cottt Mela, CA tteH. ITAft Of' OM.PONIA MICHAeL W. MULLEN. G2t4 COUNTY Of'~ "'riJ:':i~,:: 1~~!,2Wen ~c\l.!~~~~~\LI VICT~ll 11\0Mduet HOTIC« II HIMBY OIV!H tMt MlchMI w. Mlllltn the und•HIQlled ...... et pri¥Me lhlt •tattfnel'lt WU llled with the ..... on« lftet June 1, tM2, at the County Cletk ol Orange County on office of I . o. Yeoman•~ Mtiy I 1. 11182 , WIWlk'I IMI .. tM"'9 101, f1m1t Hitt•, Callfornt• 1021t, to th• Publl•ll•d Orange Coaat Dally highelt and beet bidder upon the Piiot, Mey 13, 20, 2't, June 3, 1982. tennt and condition• '*91naft., 3054-82 mentioned. and eubfect to ----------confirmation by H id Superior P'l8JC J«)TlC[ Coutt ... the r1gtlt, -and ....... ----------of Mid d..aaed • the .,.. of dMlft and .. r1gtlt, tltla and ..,.... ,ICTITIOU8 ..,.._.. tt1at Mid eet• hal llOQYr'ld ~ NAMI ITATI..,.,. ~etlon of law«~ OCIW The lotlowlng '*'°"' .,. doing ttlal'I 0t In addition to tMt of Mid bu•lneu .. dloNMd et the time of dl9ltl In RESIDENTIAL DESIGN CENT-and to the real property In the ER, 23485 Vallarta Drive, Laguna =~f Orange. 8t•t• of NiQUe4. Calilomla 92877 deecttbed • folowe: JOMph W Spningl, ~ V#-Lot 415 Tr11Ct M18 M per look larta Oflve, Laguna Niglllt, Callfof-124, PeoM 1-11 of Mlpe of °'*IOI nta 92977 County, c.llforn6a. The eddreM of Judllll D Sprun~485 Val-thl• property I• 5002 Slaaon larla Dffle. Laouna , Callf()(a Avenue. Huntington Beach, nla 92877 c.ltornle 12MI. lilt• bull,_ 11 conducted by en Term• of HI• caah tn lewtul lndM<Juat money of Ille United Stet" on JOMP11 W Sprvngl ooi•otlldoft of ..... « J*t Cllf'I Thlt atat-t WU lllacJ with the and bllMcl evtdenold by note County Cieri! ot Orange County on ~ ~ ~ 0t Truet 0-2 Apnl 27, 1982 on ft• property 10 eold. Ten '•* pJl'rcent of amount bid to be Publl•h•d Orange Coul Delly dt0°"'9dot ~ ~ ... .._ In _ Piiot. Aprll 29, May 8. t3, 20, tN2. fMde .,.,.. .. _ --·-.,, t93842 Md .. be ,.... .. the llfor'llekl ----------office. Ot ~be Ned with the a.ti Nit.IC r«>nct ot Mid &.peftot Court. « dellvlrwd --.,.,.,,..,,.,~,.,....,.,,.,.,.......,......,, __ to the A011•Met0t ~1111'/. at NOTICa INV1TM .. llf"I time after ""' ~ of Holle• I• hereby given thet tlle !Ille notioe and befot9 '"'*lno Mid Board of Trueteee of the HunlnatOn .... · Beach Un~ .:!J" Seftool Dla&1c1 Detect: -11, tte2. wll reoe1¥9 bide for= o-gt V. Hollllofl, O.ta PrOCllltng Forme 0t Adn*Milklr for ~ to the ~!lone on In Mid deoadMt the oflloe of Mid Oletrtct. .. D. ~ ltda •hall be clHrly mulled AnarMf.., '* I I tao · Data Proceulng Forma Bid No. Publllhed Orange Coatt Dally 492", addt-.d to J#!tft E. ~. Piiot, May ti, 20, 21, 1182 Purchaalng Manager, Huntt.ngton 2197-82 Beach Union High 8cllool Dlefrtct. 10251 YOfktown Ave .. Hunttngton ..,_--... ---.,.-flllft-Tll'r ___ _ BMCll, CA 92948, and NOllWd at T~ nut~ 0< bel-2:00 p.m .. Fl1day, June 4, -----------1982, at Which time and piece bide wtll be publlcJy opened and "'9d. Eacfl bid shall remain v9ld for e period ol 30 daya alter the det• $plClflld '°' the r~ of bide. The Board ol Tru•t-thd be the aola Judge ol tl'le quallty or equipment ottered and ,__ tN right to retect arry Ot II bide and to MIYe any lrregulattty U.eln. St M'/fl E. Aowtey Purcllaelng Meneglr Oeted May 19, tN2 Publl•lled Orange Coaet ~ Piiot, Mey 20, 27, t812 2t spred "' 111ia Famous Lat.ex nat wall paint from Gllddtn. lleautltul ••• finish. ScNbs clean, stays _. colortlst. Easy water clan-- up. Reg. 13.99 I fmt fir lM .,. . . II Wiii Dual burner prapane 1J11 bbq flltur• heavy duty construction MCI high dollM lid. Tank lnch*O, 19230 LP ......... •.• &&•~~ LOI ANO&Lal (AP) - ACtr-·acUVllt JaM J'ondl joined llnll'• unbnzz• to dw Uil. for a Jtwllh PederaUOa bnald11t ln a 1bqw of mut'9al·Jupport thft cioa\rutad with a WMkend fracu wttb JeWtlh mWtantl. lii'Mli Miak 2 Z c'i« MOlhe ANnl ~ Mill l'cinda on Tu.da~, ~t to "'P.'W Nlnt over Sunda 1 lDCkllftt lrid tnvitad her to '°"' 1roup•1 breakfHt Wedne1day at Wh&ch he Wll l\Nllt apeaker. MJll ronda Md •tout an ll·mlle walkathon celebrattnc Iar.el'• 34th annlvenary after w wu challenpct by eewral men. Irv Rubm, het.d of the militant local Jewish Detenee Leque, apoloclzed • .-., for lhl Cllll\trcmtadGft. ~ .... Wbo led the ...... .ound_ltW .,.. **'"*'*"of. Ill .. 11"1p; ~. RulllD'• 5 •PP•• Cl OD 1Hfl•t• ctroula Sunday denouncln1 M1. J'on 1 an.id ~ ol uw PU), . 'r.i.tt Kn.tar. • IDlmbw ol the n:a-eaeuUW.. 6oaid, ld11 had CritldliD WedNlday f« the~ h ........ Dlmoclatlc ..... A-nbly cWftdtdatl Tom Hayden, for remark1 t\• alle1edly made about .,Jew( ~~" I , "Hayden II not only ants.I.nel, tWi anti·8emltic," KnaaJer Mid. He condemned Rayden'1 euDDCIMd crltlcl1m of llrael'• "mllliarl•t1e-• policy tn the Wwt Bank. All Keyed Up! 2-DAY KEY SALE SATURDAY, MAY 22nd & SUNDAY, MAY 23rd 'T ·~· .... , .... .,.,.,,,, . "are frog1 ear1 water- • proor'?? Come In and ... so•Yt our enormou1 Mlectlon of aaorted cotor1 and pattam1. O Ovar 200 boo4<a to ehooM Off from. Al I types of keys I House, Padlock, Auto (Incl. forelpn), Motorcycle. · '1 Single Cut 47~ . "'" .,. ...... . True Tempera' Floral tooll, mlnl-cuttlvator IGC-42, Hoe fGC-43, Shovel IGC-.0. All have 4 foot handlff. Reg. e_29, a" EA. Double Cut 61~. Self.,,.,.,, .. , Lawn Chief 21" rear bag mower Is self-propelled. 3'h h.p. Reg. 269.99· 184 249~1 n." circular saw from Sidi Glva extra cutting capaclty coml»nld with super .comfort and hand! Ing ability. •S 7 4 34~· ON THE moe ROAD -Laguna Beach Htgh goes for the CD' volleyball champlonahip Frld&in::!'t, meetin1 San Manm HiD at Sal;lta Bllrbera av . Adam Johmon (left) and ~ Hanaon are two 1'eUOll8 why the ArU8ta take a 60-game winning streak into the contest. • Will 'icemen' warm ·to task Friday? Artist volleyball team shoots for 61st straight triumph, CIF crown BJ ROGER CARLSON or ... .,_,,......., With a streak of 60 straight victories in' hand you might think it'• all been pretty boring for the Laguna Beach High Artists' volleyball team, even their reputation a1 icemen lends credence 10 the theory. And, 8Qmetimee maybe it has. Artists Cbach BUI Ashen admlu hi1 team's reputation haa, at times, been all that has been required to send aome opponents on their backs. Then again. how about the 1981 CIF championship decider over Sah Clemente in five aets, the all-time CIF playoff thriller? Or the five-set victory over F..tanda a year ago after trailina by two games. Or the past 'wee(( Vocal fans give Celtics a big lift with come-from-behind victorie9 over Marina and Santa Monica in five leta? "'lbat's what really makes this winning streak incredible," 18)'8 Ashen. '"lbere's always a time coming when you•re not going to be playing well and the other guys are. "Yes. I thought we were going to loee to San Clemente (in the '81 finals) and I felt we could lo8e ~satnat Marina and Santa Monica. too, but then again. you think about winnin&. too." Alben takea hi• Artists to Santa Barbara City College· Friday night (7 o'clock) 10 duel San M.arcoe for the CIF crown and he says bis crew won't be changing its style now. "We ai-epare the aame for each match.'' be says. "We don't get extra blgh for anybody. It was a mistake against Marina, we got too excited. wanting 10 play too well ln front of the home crowd and we tried too hard. "This is a fairly sophisticated offense and it requires a lot of self dmpline and control. "You have 10 accept the bad calla, the other team's breaks. So we're not looking at one game, but the whole match as Car as team concentration. We don't want to let refs, crowds or other playen to get our attention awal. ft-orrl the -way we want 1X> play. ' ''Last year we were like ice, too," confirms the catalyst of the Artists, Rudy Dvorak. "That's Laguna's tradition." "It's the mental part of the game that has always brought us back," says Aahen. 11\e Artists will be going for (See LAGUNA, Page C%) Has Kison come all the way back? Angel right-hanCler convinces Brewers after eight shutout innmgs in 7-2 victory MILWAUKEE (AP) -Bruce KJ8on aakl he wun't sure if he had pitched that well or the Milwaukee Brewen are llumplna, that beillly. But the preci8e answer JN• tmJevant to Kl8on. encou.rapi by hia bat perfclnnance since elbow and wrl•t •urae.ry on hla P'tchin& ann in mid-1980 lidellned him for more than a year. KUion. 3--0, pitched a five-hit' lhutout for etaht inningJ Wedneeday night. then left I felt ¥ery comfortable out d1ere, a com/ ortable a l'Ye felt "' any time .mce comi'W hie.le. runs. But we won and I felt very comfortable out there, u comfortable • rve feU ai any Ume lince ~beck." ··to.on pitched well. but w; :t hit too well, eilher. We didn't bit his miataba," Milwaukee Manaaer" Buck Rodgers aid. LOSER JIM Slaton. 3-1, who entered the ume with a 1.14 earned run average, was Clemson, Georgia kickoff TV sked Stewart rises hack to the top LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dave Stewart has gone from the bottom to the top and back to the bottom again in his brief major league career. For now, though, he's back on top, after hurling eight-plus rtrong innings, Wednesday night as the Loi Angelea Dodgera downed the Chicago Cubs 4-1. Last year, Stewart was ticketed for the Dodgers' minor league club at Albuquerque. But he earned a last-minute reprieve when the Dodgers decided to cut Don Stanhouae and keep him. He pitched well in relief, but had a shaky post~season, and it wasn't until early this year when ~ was back in the Dodgers' good graces. But when he encountered trouble, along with everyone else ln the bullpen. he was relegated to the role of. Iona relief. Wedneed.ay bight, he appeared as a fill-in for injured Hurt Hooton. but after pitching into the ninth inning of the Dodgen' aecond succeuive win, he baa earned himself at least one more 1tart, perhaps more. "l figured 10 get five or six lnnin8's out of him," Los lee ~er Tom Lasorda • opU.mlaUcally. 1.->r'da 90t considerably more Ulan that, and at a time when he desperately needed it. Wedne.day night'• win, the first dme In • week the .Dod&en manUed two winl in a row, Ft them:b.ck to MO. - U Pnm AP4l1p__atftel · rormer Oraqe Coaat Colle1• 11 • pt.chen MJke HoPn and Don SmJU\ II Wwe unol'\I the many UM a~ Hlected for the All-Paclflc 10 . -&c.t*Mna D6vialOD butball equacl ~ w ... .-1y. H and Sftalth were ~belt Ge Macna = pion Wlldceta. who ":!t'° 11con11 vWcJn ... wtth • 23.q aQd wtD f 10 lnto the NCAA tournament .. defendlna national championa. ASU ii ~18 overall. Hopn aQd Smith were two of •ven ABU playen. choeen for the equac:l. ~ other1 include outfielder Kevin Romine, who attended ) Fountain Valley HJgb and Orange Cout Colle1e. and MOOAM deai1nated hitter Chril Johnston. from Corona del Mar H1gh and O<X. ASU'a Alvin Davia, whoee hitting atatistica Included a .358 average, 11 homers and 79 nina batted ln, waa named Plar,er of the Year. Other Wildcats choeen were lnfielden Doug Balcer and Ronn.I Salcedo. Artr.ona State Coach Jim Brock waa honored aa the division's Coach of the Year. Meanwhile, Edison High product Mike Dotterer, now attending Stanford, wu aelected aa part of the outfield. ~ remainder of the team wu: pitcher Brian Mignano, catcher Bob Hausladen and infielder Bob DeCoata from Stanford; Kevin Ward of Ariz.ona; David Henael of ~ Brian Graham of UCLA. and John Wallace from USC. Baseball today ·~ On thla date In bueball in 1978: Plttaburgh alugger Willie Stargell belted one of the longest measured home n.tna In baaeball history, a 535-foot shot off Montreal hurler Wayne Twitchell that landed in the distant upper deck at Montreal's Olympic Stadium. Stargell'• blast lifted the Pirates to a 6-0 victory over the Expos. On this date in 1976: Botton'• Carl Yaatnemak.i belted a pair of bomera -his fourth and fifth In the last two games -in the Red Sox's brawl-filled 8-2 victory over the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Today's birthdays: , Ga11• oomblne to Hit KC Ttlliil .... hll lOOla ...... Ill ,.. ,..;_y_ ...... llN\ bill In ~ ....... -.. Ul~ from J~er~r and Or111 ' ,.,...... ftlPl; ~ tlW v.-. to • w ...... OWi' the KAlllli Qty ROYU. J~1 M i111M way to IUell O...U. to ttari tt'9 'Mihm ancr ~ allowed a hff And a walk OWi' the ftna1 two lnnlnp and MJ'Md tdi ninth MW , • • J:llewbfte ln the American LH1ue, Oar1 All•-·· two-out double to deep centier field dtvve home the wtnn1na NI\ ln the 12th lnnlnc and pve Balton a 8-5 victory over Seattle •.. a..., Ania, the tlnt better after an 81-mlnute rain delay, rapped 1 three-run ho$ner h\ ,... the aecond tnntn1 to help BUtimore top MlnMaota. 4·2 EH• Ca•ell'1 1tn1le drove ln Ala• Truiua.U wUh tbe p-ahled run in Detroit'• tour-nm llxtb innlnl Md UM Tlpn went on to wtn ~•tr alventh etra~ht 1ame, e-s over Oakl-1\d . • • Raaee N'lllbalka and Oa•e 1'eve,.._ cnebd RBI ~lea to hJlhlilht a thre•-r.un et1bch tnntn1 at Toronto beat Cleveland, 8-5 . . . Pincl\ runn&r Jerrf Hatn• ~ from tee0nd b-.e on an lntlelii hit and an error by Texu eecond bueman Doq FlYD wtth two outa ln the ninth tnn1na to Jlive ChJ.cqc) a G·& victory over the Ranaen. RoOlcle relief lenaatlon Salome Baroju picked up the victory, hJ.a flnt dedaton of the year, to go with hla American League-leading 10 saves. Kingman'• 13th unlucky for Rede 0.Ye J[laran hit hJ.a 13th home • run of the leUOll, a three-run thot ln the ftm lnnlna, to back rUO\t-hander Pat Zac"7'• 19Yen·hltter u the New · York Meta defeated Cincinnati Wedne9day niabt. 4-2. Kincman. who 1eada the major leaguet In homen. now baa 304 lifetime and 1 U u a Met, one thy of the team'• all-dme mark held by Ed Knnepool . . . me Gerda drove in two runs and the Houaton Aatroa beat Sten Carltoa for the flrat time in nine pmel lince 1978 with a 5-3 victory over Philadelphia . . . . Bob Boraer went 4-for-4 and drove in three runa and Clu11 CUmbllla knocked In a pair of rum u Atlanta unleashed a 13-hit attack to defeat 0111 ,,. ttrualing Montreal, 9-1. The W. was ihe 11th in 15 games for the Expos anQ .eventh stralaht without a win foe~ and l~ pitcher Ray Barrlt ... Doa Roblaaoa survived eight walb and three wild pitches over 7 ~ innlnaa and aot relief help from BM 8eany and Keat Tentve u Plttlb'11'gh shaded San Franci.lco, 2-1 . . . Catcher Geae Teaaee'a bues.-loeded error with one out in the 10th l.nnina allowed Alu Wiota• to ICOre the winning run and give San Diego a 5-4 victory over St. Louis. With the hues loaded and one out, Sino Leaeuo hit a routine chopper to third hMeman Due Jori, who threw to the plate and appeared to force Wiggina, but Ten.ace failed to touch the plate and WiUlna waa ruled safe. Both aides of NFL Issue meet Fonner St. Louil Cardinal third tu 11.1n Ken Boyer, the 1964 National Leque Most ; Valuable Player, la 51. New Yock ~anbes Repneentative. of the National designated hitter Bobby Murcer ii 36. Football League' a Management • -----------------' , Council and the Players A.Jdation Giants floundering, so trainer fired met for the flnt time in more than a SAN FRANCISCO_ It has.._.. • month Wednesday. Ed Garvey, executive ""• director of the NFLPA, said, "There was no been a aporta axiom that when the progress. but it was a useful meetinR." Jlm ~am is loaing, heads roll. MWer'1 1pokelman for the NFLMC, aaid "Garvey'1 The San Francisco Giants, comment was "accurate. People got thinp off floundering in the National Le.,ue West cellar, their chest. Both aides decided Wedneeday to fire their trainer. discussed philosophies and Joe Llado, a veteran of 36 years in bueball. didn't get into apecifica ... The the last aeven with the Giants, was let go becat111e present labor agreement of "philosophical difference.," according to expires July 15 and both aides Gian ta Vice-President Tom Haller. Perry are far apart on economic Arcllibald. Liacio'a 3()..year-old assistant, took i s 8 u e 1 N B A over aa trainer. Commilaioner Larry O'Brtea "We came to an impaaae in pbiloeophy," fli = said. "lt wasn't anything he wp, doing was to p a century-old , it was more aome•'-' .... he wasn't doing. s i l v er do 11 a r to d a y to ....... determine whether the San There were just philoeophical differences." CWIVWY Diego Clippers or Lakers ILakera, Kings will etlll be 'On' would cll008e first tn the 1982 college draft LOS ANGDW DO -ON TV will m I • • • Joe Cribbs, Buffalo'• All-Pro running ~ back, ii conaidetfng at~ out th1a 9eUOD or continue to telecast ae1ected live home playing for another tea.in il he can't renegotiate pmes of the Los Angeles Lakera and · hi• contract with the Billa, according to a Kinp, it was announced Wednesday publilbed report In the Buffalo Evening News. team owner Jerry Buu and Richard Cribbs, Buffalo'• leading rusher the wt two tman, vice president and general manager of yean and an adept~ receiver, wu the ~ ~ationai Sut.:ription Television in Loa Angeles veteran who ak:ipped .the Billi' National Foo ON TV). Leaiue minicamp la1t week ... De1pite an Thia new aareement will run through the intermittent drizzle, smne 40,000 to 45,000 New 1984-85 eeaaon. replacing the current oOlltiact, York Ialander fans lined a 4~-mile parade route hich waa to expire in 1983, and gives ON-TV Wedne9day night to hail the conquering hockey xclulive local n,hta to home games. heroes While terms were not revealed, Busa said hat the major significance of thia new ilun~~t ia that it will result In "revenues ~blch i,1?'aure the future of hockey in Los Televlslon, radio TV: No events acheduled. RADIO: Baaebell -Chicaao at Doda.era. 7:30 p.m., KABC (790). Aedeenl lh•s coupon '°' 1 Cllry PK.k IOldtCf With l1ltMn l)ltCtS ol IUl(y. QOldtn Dtown l<tnlucky Frttd Cf\ICktn ll~ IWo Olfttl PIT pu!CllUt ~ 0000 Qtlly IOf comlH!l'l•on wMtlO.Vll Olcfer& C11tli0nltl ~ya 111 111911W01t ._. lfX <>net ...... May 30, , •. f " their fourth ctr crown 1lnc• 1970 l'rlda.Y llalnlt an opJX)Mt\t whklh ...wlve1 around e.o hitter Eric a.ht and former Newport Hatbor standout Peter Parka, a •lter. "In \he put we've been ~ to •t th4t ~ to Para and aone over the top of him and we've treHtd tt\e middle blocker (Biehl) fairly well to f•t a one-on·one on the ou 1tde block.er," •YI A.then. 1 for Uwt ArUltl, however, the ...i story u.. wtthin the Lacuna BMchcame. Dvonk, On.nae CoounlY'1 Mott Valuable Player and th4t MVP 1n .u three toumammta the ArtilU ))ave entered (and won) thla 1fllr, leedl \ha way. a.Iona wttb ~ntora Nell Rlddelf and Uftlvenlty (Loe Abpld) High ttanafer Chria Latlc>n, in addition tO junlOl'I Ltlf lfan.eon. Adam JohJ\IOn and St.epb.en mue. Dvorak la the 1etter and his ability to adjuat to whatever .ttuatfon 1eta him apart from the main.stream. Riddell'• spiking, cutting back through the middle, spearhead.a Ocean View, Arcadia vie Ocean View High School, behind a pair of ahutout pitching performa.noea by Pam White, will continue lta bid for a 4-A CIF women'• 90ftball championship ln quarterfinal round action Friday at Murdy Park i n Huntington Beach against No. 4 eeeded Arcadia. Ocean View boast• a 15-4 record for the season while Arcac:IJa has lost only one decision while winning 21, Including a pair of playoH victories by 3-2 and 4-:Z ICOl'ell. Lynn Alferi saved the victory against Loa Amigos Tueaday when ahe made a perfect throw to the plate on a relay from the outfield to nip the potential tying run. Ocean View is the only Orange Coast area team remaining in the competition after a grand-slam homer in the seventh inning eliminated Edi.eon on Tuesday. \he otr.-. ''Ht Ml ane ol uw qWckelt arm ..,m.,. you'll .. In "-'lh tcbOOl, 11 uy1 Alhen. 11lt you're noc up wtth b1m eQCtly, you're too late.'' Hanlon la a two-year IW1« and the Artl1t1' belt out1lde hitter, and Larson la \he •tl'Oftlllt· ''IA.rlon II an tlCCllllent blocker, pta h1ah and II 1ble to penetrate. Jfe't had tome unbellevabl• block•, atralaht down atuff ," •YI Alben. Jotm.m'• •tlonl DUiin« and the 1urpri.11na play -of Bfue at outside hitter, complete• th• picture. Other 1tron1 contributors Include beck row 1ped1ll1t Eddle Su1tn and Wt-bander Jeff Bb.ie, who .pella h.il brother in the front row. The baclcbone of La1una Buch'• luccetl in the put. Roll J!'.naen, no Jonaer reaidee ln the ~ but his pteeenc» la still felt. .. He wu the tnadaator for all of thla," conflnna Aihen, now In his third year With the Artiatl. ''Kida come into .the prosram with IOwld fundamentala." Ai.o contributing have been volleyball experts Randy Sandefur and Marv Dunphy, whoae concepts have be~n lnoorporated by Aahen. So, although .... the Artlata certainly have their atan, the aucceaa has come from an all-around production. It'• a team concept, but wh~n the ArUsta are rolling, it's difficult not to keep your eyes glued on Dvorak and Riddell. easily the finest 1-2 punch in Southern California. San Ma.rcot lost to Laguna Beach In the quarterfinal.a of the Dos Pueblos tournament, but It was a one-game, 15-point match (15-5), which doesn't mean a lot, except that it was another stepping atone toward 60 straight. "We talked about It (the winning streak) at the besinnln8 of the aeaaon," says Ashen. "But It hasn't been the focal point. The focal point has been the CIF finals. "This team ia hungry. They want to prove they are as good b last year's team, that they can ao unbeaten. "They know that every time out there's a winner and a loeer, and they want to be the winner." EYES 1Tl'LE -Bill Aahen • and hil Artl1h 1eek back-to-back CIF crown• Friday . Unser leads Indy trials INDIAN APO LIS (AP) Three-time Indianapolis 500 wil).ner Al Umer, workinc on his aetup for the May 30 race, led the way in practice Wedne9day with .a top lap of 198.281 mph aa track activity began to build apln at the Indianapolt1 Motor Speedway. UD9et, the yo~ of the two racing brother• from Albuquerque, N.M., put h1a sleek white Longhorn LR-03- Coaworth racer into the field laat weeken~ with a qualifying run of 195.567. But his lap Wedne.day, accomplished with a full load of fuel, w,.a faster than any of the four laps during his quallfication attempt.. Among the non-qualified entries that took to the 2~-mile oval Wedneeday, Greg Leffler, a 30-year-old aprint car veteran from Winchester, Ind., waa the quickest. He drove his SEAl-Coaworth (a modified 1980 March) to a 197.411 lap after a bit of consulting with Tom Sneva, the former qualifying record-holder at the Speedwav. Software for the whole famltyl Speech lynthetlzer At Super Savings Lets your home computer toll<! (ReQUtres customized command modules that use speech.) K mart c omes a wide selection of Tl software for the Home Computer in easy to use plug-in command modules Subjec;ts Include Home Finance. Education and exciting games. all at attractive prices. • ''Household Budg&t Management •"Attoclc" • "Add & SubtractlOn II" • ''Tl lnvoded' .. ~,. .... """ """ ww • ......,1 trYtnt Like wUl -;-°' ................. ,,..in SoUU*ii ocaa-......,. -rt.. event wUl '-ke place Sa\urday and ~ and wW ,..,""" thit faltillt inboard And ..... bOa&l ln the OOW\U'y. ... I _Sfhe Coora UU Irvin• Lake WHt•rn Chanaplonehlpa1 conduct•d by th• South.rn CalSb'Na 8,.ec:IPOat Club Md lancdoned by the APBA, haa alread1 •ttracted mor• than 160 pre-N1li.'9Nd ndnl .boa ta who wW coml)9ta fw a ahare of more than '20,000 ln prbe money. SJ>Mda.ln •xce11 ot 180 mph are eXJ)ICted °"' of \he 'blown fuel h~ta wlth both J.ddie "The Texan'' Hill and•• te" Dave Nolte expected to be olirlna off in flnala. ,,_..WW allo be a tJ)eda1 fuel jet exhibition nan by record hokier BUf Hendenon ln hla boat "Rated -X''. Allo tXJ*t*i to be lnvolWd in alW of th• h~(hHt 1 p Hd1 r•oord•d du~ champlonlhlp NN la the ''Coon tJaht 8 "a blown alcohOl hydro ctnc boet dilv.n by Florence. Ractre and boat• from all over th• United Statea wUl be compettna and they'll be matched with tome 0ranp County favontee. Gret He1rm of and ltl top epMCI la expiCted ID be 1n a.a. of 1 mph. lven thouah the main ewntl IN~ • **" at I a.m. BatW'day1 the 'pUblio '9 ....... to .. Jlriday'a time trialt ana thaU doWn na 11 lbe boetl and driven~ fw the final hletl en Saturday and Sunday. The ~ fee "* l'tiday ti ee ibd Oft Saturday and Sunday~ tJ*ta&on wW be cha.rild $10. 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Aetoll 9 • 95 Gallon R.OOR TILES & SHEET VINYL 11.wooo TAU-WEAR LATEX Covers with o tough plostlc ftlm that protects ogolnst sun, fading ond woter Soop & wot9' cl eon-up. 1 ·COAT PAINT VINYL-ACRYLIC FlAT Lasts 8 years 0< morel In white. off-white ond 41 colors. Comp. Aetoll 14. 99 Each 5-GAL. DRIVE- WAY COATING .. • 10-fUNT .,. Ml¥4N SNIDMNA .......... .._ una OMAK ....... 8 ... ~I'~ ..... 2 ( ... ~AOU.81.. 6 ... ~MH ....... 59c.._ :=.~. '... Mlf.ON 11 oz. ,. MS11C ,.. 1 ., OMAK .. .. .. ..._ a AOUMI MT . . . . . 1111 BRlmE, NYlON or POl YESTER 1• ....... '"... 1• ........ 9" ... 1-111· ... &fl... a.111· ..... 11• ... AMTICO® or ARMSTRONG DRY BACK TILES SPECIAL SELEalON CARPET • ..-.... 5 FT. AWMINUM REMNANTS ROOM-SIZE ~~ STEP LADDER 11• ir 11• ~i 1 ·a~ 25( Each SlllAI 'SOUlllAN' ARMSTRONG~ Comp. Aetoli 98( AMTK0 8 'MMCMST'. J" ... HO-WAX TOP nt.l' . . . . 5~ .._ AIMSTIONG® 'ROYEU.E' N().UJAX R.OORING Durable nc>wox suifoce Assorted patterns ond colors. 1 i It widths. 3.99 VALUE 9 Sq. Yd. CONGOUUM 'FOM<Asr . OtMLOW PN<f 3t9 ¥d. MM ... GTONWM.- Ms.100 4'' Comp, 5. 95 Sq. \td. Sculptured plush pit. COfpet ifl o choice of Brown/beige. multl-colOf °' Aust/belgg. Me bodied. 6' z 6' Comp. 35. 95 ..... 6' z 9' Comp. 53.95 ...... 11' z ,, Comp. 106. 95 .. .. . 7 11' z 11' Comp. 141.95 ..... 11' z 15' Comp. 171.95 ... 95 ... 95 ... 5 INDOOl/OU'IDOOfl Au..wanttl CAIPmNG I~ Pol~ ftbet. Eosy to Install fotthe C»-lt-yourselfer. 6 ond 12 It. widths In 8 colors OtMLOWMCf Sturdy aluminum ladder hos nJb. bet fMt lot noo-sWd solety. Comp. 41.99 fW9. 31.99 WOOD STEPLADDHS 4FOOT OtM LOW PNCE .. SFOOT OtM LOW PNCE ..... 6FOOT OtM LOW PN<E ..... 40Z.JMGWE WOOOWOMaS (~A.toll 1.49 l . .1 I ;;~~--~ iilt ..... ,. • .aoo 14\t = ?1:: e· :: :: i:: \.. ~ :::: : T_. 11 It AU N ~,~a; ::r:r: ...... T ..... CIMIMCll .................. ..-......... (11~ Dler'llll t. ~a 0......1.T-I *" 'foftl I, ec-Cir I ,~ .... 1-~ (tMll 1) al .......... l"- foro11to (0111101 •·II at Clevala11d ---W).11 MIMelo:ai,"-cttet11 1-4) at lalt11110H ~ (Mlol9 '',_., ....... (T\ldlor a.11. II 011011141 CV11C11twood 1·1) al Oelrolt CWlllal 14). 11 ~--.......... '-==='-=-~ : 1\ ':#. --... ~ ·11 1t .... •i. Ls.: 1t 1t .IOO t 11 11 .4ta N a.iMMI 1t 11 All ti. -~ ,. ti .411 • .. Louie ,_Yclltl 't'''I' .....: ............. II 11 .a 11 17 .IN I 11 11 .. ,. ai. ti 1t .417 Ii. ......... 11 .. ,441 • 0-... 11 II .406 N • p ...... .... ~ .. ~1 __.r ........ 1 .._ Yoftl 4, Ollldllwl I ..,..,,,,,.,,. ..... ........... Loull 4110 ~ ,...,.. ..... ~1o:z.o fJa111ll111 1·4) at DIMlll1ar1 (V 14). II .......... I""'*" M) .. IM,,_... fClllll 141 ' It..._......,_ M) •San D11eO (w.tl ·~ ...... ......., l&WAwml • , 11111 0Mlnw2b. 1 0 1 YOUlll M 4 0 1 0 COOpOr tb a 1 1 o 1114122 • 0 0 0 ct• 0 0 0 llMwlldtl 3 0 0 0 ldwdlrt a o 1 o VOil c 2 0 0 0 ~\':R ... ••••• • • • , .. 41 • 4 • • • , .. ,, .. NA 11 I In 1.T-Qe,~aL.70.11. •. ~urtle lltll!fl, 10.11 .•. loott Hoctl. 10. ........ ~10.11. ................... 1. , .... OUlll, 114.I. l. 0.... ........ 210.2.a.ar..~-... .. °"' .... l'wzy 7.olllr, -~ . ,... ...... 1. a.Mn AU. I..,._ "'9d, .1'1. I. Gol'8 1 4. TOM Qo, .744. I. M "°"" .741. 9'wlflP '1 1 . ....., .._.._,.In. 1. Hot awon, .1n a. Jldl......., .no.•· en.-u.u. u. .711. .. CIMll ...... Oftd "°"" ........... .714. " ..... ,...,., ..... 1. CtlllD .............. I. Id"'°"' ti.to. I . T-0.. M lrtbon ond Monte ............ 21.M. ,. , .. ...,,., ...... 1. T°"' Qo, :Bl. I. Crelg ll8dllr, .%11. I. o.111 w.on, .2%7. 4. T-WllOOfl, .m. ........... 1. ,_ Qo, m. l. Cf'lll ...... 211. a. AMty hell, IOI. 4. looft Hodl, ttl. I . ~ ........ 1 .. ,........, ....... 1.Cf'lll ..... ta1.11t.1. T----. 1217,141. a. T-!Cito, 11N,171. 4. _.,., '-11N,741. &. L-., ......... 1111,· ... .. ... ..... ....... 7. Nril'/ liloft. l140,M4. &. M1IWrt .... 1111.-r ... fill ...... 1117.111. IO. .. Oldlr, 1111,011. •• .... , --::---.. --·· -· • N.UCM ... dt ... _.,~ 1M.2t1 187A11 1M.3T7 1M.I07 1N.at2 tta.t» 112.'10 111.471 191.001 t. Oorftl ':'.:" :L~ 2. .... Anteon, IH1,lt4; I . hntly Pareone 11-..10: ... 0.. .................. : Tony......_ l112.010; L ~ ~ 11M.~ 7 .............. l120Al6: •'. Cela y~ 1111.0ll: •. -. -., to.MO; JC!. _Hor!r GMt, ........... ._, '°"""~ I. ,...,.. ~40 pollllo; I. DlrNI Wllertp. 1 ..... I. Mlloft, 1,MO. .. ~· t I "' " Sea Kings' foe has the-numbers TIJe No. 8 bitter ba1 a .558 avera6e .,, aooa ~.ION or .. ..., .... LANCASTJ!R -Their atedtdm belle their recon:t and Tumday'1 thrM-run rally ln UM atxch fontnc behind one hie whJeh catapuUed th.nt lnto UM CJJ' 2·A quartedl.nala eound1 more lib a typb1 Corona del Mar outbunt. Bue when you talk to Antelope Valley C.0.Cb Brent Newcomb, there are tome fi8\aNI the Sea Kin;I are ao&rw to have to deal with on l'rfday -(3 o'cJock) ac the An~··~ field. Nl'MQ'nb ~ eewn t:.tten aver~Jed .H2 enterlnf the playotta, led by a .558 av.nee lrom Joe Roberta, tbe No. 8 hltt.r. For the molt put lt'a a ~ Ceam. II.nee the ~ are 1&2 to left. 411 to left-center, ~ to center, 395 to rtghi..center and ~to right, "You could put Dodger Stadium in thla place," 1ay1 Newcomb. 'Thilt la bay country, you know, so we're looking forward to eeeing playen from the beech." . The Antelopes aren't known u a running team and feel thel have the an1wer to anyone elae 1 running in catcher Bryan Peck, the cleanup hitter (.353) and team captain. Two IOphOmoNt have' beeD t1eva&ect to tht vnty ban the IV tMl11 jLWt _prior to the playo(fl and .,.. ~ (Harokt Bliiluite at DH and tint ~ 8eM Baton). On the mound the Anfe!opel ftlw'e to ltar1 lefi..hander' ctalc Baah~), but alto have riaht-hanc Rob cutt and nm WUkenon awilable. C«ona del Mar Coech Tom Tra1er, meanwhile, has rlaht-handen Chria White and ~urt Petenen available with Jlo. 1 pitcher Dave Rohde probably ttadoned at third bMe. 'lhe Sea K1ncs. four-time Bea View Leuue champ and the defendUw CIJ' 2-A kfnapim. my on an alf ..around effort 1flthout any one phMe of their pme domlnatfna. The ltartin& llneu~ to' remain unchanaed the tint •llht apota with rdon Mo11, Rohde, White, Brent Mell>On, Mike Hmt. Scott Looi, Dave Arri• and Greg Wynn manning the batting berths. Antelope Valley la 17-7 overall and finlahed eecond to Golden Leque champion Hart. the No. 2 seeded team. Hart dropped Antelope valley lh ie.gue play, 13-6 and 6~ . Olympics chief says Soviets will attend MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union la pJannina '° aend 1,000 athletes and officiala to the Loe Angeles Olympics, the largest delegation expected at the 1984 Summer Games, the U .S . organizing chief said Wectne.clu. Peter V-. Ueberroth, the Loa Angeles Games chainnan, said Soviet sports officials told him they planned a 1,000-member team, two-thirds of them competitors and the others coache1 and functionaries. Ueberroth said Soviet sporta offidals usured him they would .end a larJ{e team to Loa Angeles despite their harsh attacka on preparations for the Games. The Soviets have complained about private financing of the Games, housing for athletes, competition sit.es and the Games orpniz.en. He said many of ~ Soviet complain1s were valid and the pwpoee of his trip to the Soviet Union waa to confer on thoee questions and 1teek Soviet advice. . "We are extremely pleaaed with the resul1s of the meeting. We have made assurances to the National Olympic Committee of the Soviet Union that the Games wlll be conducted in a fair manner for athletes of all countries," Ueberroth told western correspondents. He called his meetings with Sergei Pavlov, chairman of the Soviet Olympic CommitteeL ,.the besinn1na of a good and strong friendship" between Loe AnaeJea officiala and the orpnir.ers ol the 1980 MC*X>W Olympb, which were boycotted by the United States. A Joint communique no~ that the U.S. government "bad not yet given valid guarant.eee" tor orpnlzatioo of the Loe Aneelea Game. ln compUanee with the Olympic charter. AIDOQg other thinga, the Soviet• have complained about aecurity for the athletes. But Ueberroth said the U.S. 1overnment already had provided a one-page letter of guarantee that the Olympic charter would be obeerved and a copy of the letter would be given t.o the Ru.man.. The Loe An1elea executive said the Soviets had given him what he reprded aa a binding promile that they would 9eDd a big team to Loe Angeles. Ueber}'oth said the United Stat.es probably would have the second large1t team in Loa Angeles behind the 1,ooo...trong delegation of the Soviet Union. Ea at Germany, another Olympic powerbou8e, 18 planning to 8e'nd a 500-member team ana Poland 250 athlete.a and offidaJa the officW uJd. referring to taib he had in East Berlin and Warsaw before c oming ·to Moecow . Volleyball tourney ser The first annual Newport Volleyball Club invitational tournament for §irll will be ltqed at the BoYI Club of the Harbor Area on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. · The Newport Volleyball Club wtll field two team• in the bantam (13-and-under) division and one team in the junior (15) divhion . A round robin tournament will be played againat hi1hly-rated lchiban VolleybUl Club of Loe Alamitos. Newport'• junior team will include Stephanie Noonan and Camie Doder u power bitten, All-American aetter Dana Wheeler and Andrea Redick u middle blocker. Setter Jennifer Noonan and power bitter Lua Alper ie.d the bantam team. Jack HoU1ton t. coach of the Newport teama and whniwicn to the tournament ta free. For further information, phone Howton at 646-1196 or the Boys' Cub at 640-6eSO. The Boya' Club t. located at 2655 Vista Del Oro, Newport Beach. ·women sailors race ;Dana Belles Series slated Saturday . t of a race' ONCS .UOUNI) T8B COUNTY1 H .... a chance to 11\ay in lhape and lwJp MW tbt whalte at &he MIDI Ume. GrMnpeMe, an •nv1ronmencal oraantaatton dedw.Wd to Pl'Otectlnl ·the wbaMI, wU1 6old 0 and 1Cll Nnl on June 6 aft.. H.bn l'Nhlon Square at the "°'1Mr Of Belch Blvd. and laiperlal Hlahway ln Le Habra. Th• run will be conducted throuah the city ltreetl of Le Habra . It will be the third year the nan will be held, the HCOnd time 1ponaored by Greenpeace. And many dty. offtdala, lncludlna the L6 Habra Police DeparUnent and exploren and volunteen from the community will be on hand to help CM.It. The refre1hment1 Include freah frul\ and Wat.et and there will be two aid ltationa, rwtroorm., puidna and a penonal belonaina check-in for the· nmnen' convenience. Pre-reliltratlon (before next Wednelday) la $7 with a T-ali.irt and $3 without. AddJUonal fee for late entry t1 $2 and entrant• mey pick up race psiclteta early, June 1-3 from 4-7 p.m. at La Habra Fashion Square. La Cuita BuildinQ. "The money we get will 6e used in our antl-whalina campaign," aaid Greenpeace repiwentative Jeff Utigard. "We feel that whalel have been commerdally exploited to the brink of extinction. Many of the apedes of the great whales are becoming negligible in numbers." The Ok race time la 8 a.m. with late reQistration and check-in from 6:30 to 7:45. The 101' run is 8Cheduled for 8:30 (followtna the CQmpletlon of the 5k) with late registration and check-in from 7 to 8:15. For more lnfonnation, call (213) 691-0589 or . (714) 525-1105. * * * THE SECOND Uk run sponsored by Noro.trom will be held thia Saturday at the Carl Thornton Park, one mile north of South Coast Plaza on Segerstrom Avenue. A $3 ~ntry fee la being charged with entry and a T-ahlrt at $8. The day-of-race entry fee is $4. Pre-entry packet. will be distributed and 1ign-ups will take place at 6:30 Saturday. The awards ceremony la alated for 9:30 a.m. For more information, call 549-8300. * * * THE CORONA DEL MAR c£amber of Commerce will apoNOr the Corona del Mar Claaaic, a 5k run, on June 5 with proceeds goil)g toward a city beautification prosram. The race will be held in conjunction with the 7th annual Kiwania Cub Pancake Bnaldast. The run will start at the comer of Avocado Avenue and F..ut eo.t ffiahway. For entry blank.a or information. call 67~. * * * ............ ,. .. ....... ..., II Liie .._ ...... W1IMI ,_ ........ _ ta ..... SWta Ill ............ l:30 Lift. It Lono e Lift ... Clf1 Thornton PeR, OM 8eedl ....... Lono ...,._ 8lwd. .. mlle nor1fl of Squltl co.t Plllla °" .., at. .,,. -...... RllNlg &egentrom A-. An II tntry from Lono leacll Plue along tea wtth r -eNn. u wttnout. Lat• a-.. ...._ ,_ 11 rr .-r ..,_ '" day ot rece 11 $4. For more 13 'llftllcM. Lm ... II $2 tllltr'a IN lnlormetlon, contect (714) myoftM-. 54t-a00. OFF ROA OPENER SPlllT IUCGIU Miii STOCIS Frl,.., 21,. , ... Or 1 lot of cutt? Then call claulft.d. ThoN thing• taking up apace In ygur home, Items you haven't uMd In agaa, m1y be tu1t whit aomeone 1l1eneed1. ~ T..QMIDCDS _,, ..... So give UI I c.11 ... It'• easy to UM c1 .. slfled to get your hand• on aorM c.1h. '!!~ ...... ~ '24 MICROCOWUTERS FOR SMALl BUSIES I.EARii BEFORE YOU BUY '24 3 ~ hande-on courM (you run the computer -not a demonatratton) C0¥8f1ng ouatomer a.no -peyrol - lnwntory oontrol -bll ~ -word proceaalng and ot'* UNI for th• bueln•11m1n. Capacity, coat and function analyala of popular microcomputer Qlteme lncludlno APPLE. T"8 • 80, raM, VECTOR end othen. Evening and Saturday momeng ••••one. aw • tlmtted to eight atudenta. . BED PLUS 11 UYEBIOB SITll s••. For new wood. etucco. llMUOIU"f• cmdpre'fknuly pa:lDted or 1ta1Md •urfcaceL Padie reel1tcmt •haft cmd that' 1 all you.r·,. goa.aa get. My Upe GN eealed (mmmmhhhhmmmm). GEllE Ya IP. DELUIE SCREW DRIVE . GIBIGE DOOR GPEIERS 127!! heh button con.en!~ lnchades remote CODbol. lfORMAL DfSTA.LLATION OF OUR UNIT WITH 1 Y&A8 WARRA!CTY. SS .. WOOD LADDERS 2 FT. 4 47 Rad OIW of thHe around lor pan and I 1tW UM lt. (Hey. bow about April from the Hlghlcmder her T -ahlrt aaya "Cruel but Fair" .•. What doe• that mean?) tFT ... 11 97 6FT. 1597 IFT.2797 hep thOM bot dopand bugenc:ooldD' btbe Memorial Day ... and. Hugo. We got coaapcmy eomln'. lncludea laTa rock and 20 lb • tank. H.000 ITU'a. ··~ TBE.ITED LOMBEi II• 22•UK.n. 211 32•UK. n . All 848 can be uaed dlrectly again.It 1lab or foundation. <That'• a little lumber lingo. folk•. Get It?) Good 1tuff for decking too. 30'' SPBllllLEB IEY 79c Beata hanllDg "9fl'OD9 al tboM little~ Oil by band. Gift• ya mon time to play Pac llla:n or wbatner. ••a• a M\lltkolcnd webbtDg. #5120 IOI WEIYE Tbeee are lD a yellow and white box Wecn9 pattern. Coutnacted from ~ gauge fade realatant PVC 1trapa lD yellow and white. FIESTA CUii 9•• f'IUllCll-llCI 5 x ' x ' WEIS •ueo CUii 17!! Cllll 25!! 73'' Fll.lllC ........ 7'" ...... WI• - .Cll'IE cw•m 1·7!! 8 x 18 WEBS 33!!. 74W' cw•m 55!!. Looka lllre enough 1tuff heN to haft a good alt down 1trtb. I'm all for that ao 1trtke uptM band and 1tart the abow. Margo, brtug me a glaaa of lemonade. wlll yu? MUBRIY BICYCLES TWO TOllE 21" MOllUEY CBUISEBS YOUR CHOICE LADIES' OR MEN'S 88~ ~2-!Cm OR ft.5032 Balloon wbltewall tlrn. large cnalaer llGddl.,, and cocuter brake. Flamboyant black cherry wltb flrecracbr red trtm. MEI'S 27" 12-SPEED PIOElll llCEB 117!!. Sun gold flDlah with block tcmwall U..... Baa a comfy double padded raClng eaddle (U JOU ride "'f tar that'• a plua. I know). llOllTEI TJClif Wl'n 4 97 • flOll LabtloagerCIDd ecn..alot more--.ir tbcm thereplar light klbe. O'm IDto ecma' ......,i.,,, bof, bcneJ bMDdlaggba'.) WITEBLGO 4 DBIWEB wau BEICB 79!.! Can't haft a workshop without a work bench. right? Baa 10 aq. ft. ohrork n.rface. botch up to one tOD. and flame la 19 gauge stMl . COLEIWI PICIBORSE D TUD.£R -w ... 11-1 l'EIDERS 18997 ... D Nlllng theM llie bot ca1r ... Cargo bed l• w· x 'l" cmd bcmdlH a pay load of 1083 lb9. Has NCHMd tallUgbta ao you CCII\ lltoN lt Oil end. K.D. DICO IM/FM RUIO WITH CISSEi iE ~~ ·1 L_ __ -. -J \ -.. '. v ecmrou lmag1De a car wlllaoutaradlo? A~e plclrer or 8-tlacku cm utra...but gotta bcne that mule. JComat• LD-da1b or •md..-.... GB 1-TBICI TIPE PUYEB YOUR CHOICE 49aa TUITLE WU IUTO CllE PBGDUCIS llPWU 119 Cll Wiii 11 oz. lnllllD ............ , ... . Cll WU It oz. ~'kt dOOf to Wrst Coost Meidl~ lntem.s11ona l Open 10.00 am to'·()() pm ACTmOUI........ ....... . U.-ITATlmNT 'ICTmOUI .oteNiU TM fOllowlr19 l*tOlll ... doing NA• ITATlllllNT ..._ ae: Th• lolll>'Mn9 "'IOfll a.-dol~ CHAMPAGNE TASTE, 1713 bullnen u: ~Piece. Coal• ....... CA 92829. THE lllLLAGE. 719 Btowneroh WILLIAM F.L. WEBSTER, 1713 Road, Lagune BMctl. CA t2851. 0.U Pteio9, Coata Mele, CA 9?eff CAROLYN M. T&l\RY. 11' ..___OOHNA JI.AH WEBSTER, 1713 Brownc:roll Road, Laguna a..ch _.., "-. Coat1 MeN. CA 92t2e. CA 92951. 1llll ~II conducted by I STEPHEN K. TERRY, 718 llrnllecl par1nerthlp. Browneroll Road, Laguna 8eeeh. . Wiiiem fl.L Weo.ter ::A 92951 Thie ata*"9nt wu llled with the KHAOOLAH ESHTEHAROt, Counl Clef1l ol Orange County on 5403 Wll1hlr1 Blvd .. LOI AnQ9i.t, Mey , 1982 ::A 90038. ,,_, Thll bu"-II conduciecl by I ~ubll•h•d Orange Co111 Dally ~al partMtlhlc>. f'llot, May 8, 13, 20, 27, 1"2. KhadolWI Eahlehatdl ~82 Thie 1111-1 -flied wltt\ ttle -----------County Clerk of Orange Couttty on PUllC NOTICE April 18. 1982. ,.,.,.14 ,Publl1h1d Orange CoHI Dall) P'ICnnoue 8UllNlll Pl4ot, Ai>rN 29. May 8. 13. 20. 1ea2. ..,._ ITAnmNT 1941-8' Tiie following pe<1on 11 doing ------------~ -rtaJC N01JC( SOLARTROlil ENOINEEAJNO, KOOOf'I ~ Ja.nn "wnue. COfona def ,.,. .............. ··--u Mw. Callfomla ~5 ....... ..,... -- Matk Gardin« Gordon, S08'A NAiii ITAT'EmWT JMmlne Avenue, Corona def Mar, The lollowtr19 penon1 are doing c.Mfomla t2e25 buslnet• .. Tiiis bu11neas la conducted by an LOS PANCHO'S '2, 1208 E. ltldlvlcllMI. McFadden. Santa Ana, CA 92705. Mark G. Gordon ISMAEL E. GUZMAN, 11S3 E. This 1111-1 waa flied wltn the Str.t, Senta MA. CA 92104. COunty Clerk ol Or1nge County on OELIA LOPEZ, 925 EUI April 27, 1982 Camile. Santi Ana. CA 02701. '1.a1 GUADALUPE F. GUZMAN, · Publl1he<1 Or1nge Co111 Dilly 1833. W. Garry Strffl. Santa Ana. Pilot, April 29, May 8. 13. 20, 1982. CA 9270<4. 1863-~ Thll ~ II c:onclUc*ed by I -----------oen-.i per11•~· PlCTmOUI.,... .. ..._ITATDeN'T The lollowlng per1bn 11 doing ~-L YHH.S ENTERPRISES. 8200 f~lnger, No. 901. Huntln91011 ea.di. CA 92647 ltmeel E. Guzman GutldaluC>e F Guzman Oella LOl)eZ This statetll4MI -f\led wtth the County Clefk of Orange County on April 18. UMl2. ,1*7M2 Published Orange Co111 0-.lly Piiot. May 13. 20. 27. "'-3, 1982. 2121·82 Ken L Frttla. 8200 Edlnlllr. No. 1------------ ClOmllllL't • •Jdf JObnlon SOuth ~ ()oun1y11rvtne 7M.'MM050 Ml.IC NOTICE 'ICTmOUI 8U .... ll NAiii ITATIMINT The followtng per10n1 are dolr19 bull,_ aa; A & 0 ELECTl\fC INC , 1962 Pelican PIHi, Co111 Mau. CA 9292t. GILBERT SCHOENBAUM, 1952 Pellcan Plaoe, Coat• Meu, CA 92621. ADA B. SCHOENBAUM, 19$2 Pelican Place. Cotti Mau. CA 92129 . This bu~ II condueled by I COfl>O' a lion AAG ELECTRIC INC Giibert Schoenbaum, Prealdenl Thll llal.,,..,,1 WU fifed will'I the County Cla(ll of Oranoe Courlty on AptN 27, 1982 '11aU Publl•h•d Orang• CO HI Dall) Pilot, Apnl 29, May a. 13 20, 1982 1924.S2 NIUC NOTICE FICTITIOOI IWSINlll NAME STATEMENT The IOllowlng peflOl\I .,. doing buslnessu. AMERICAN BACKPACKING AHO SURVlllAL RESOURCES. 6905 0110 Circle. Sutt• J. Buena Parll. CaJlfomta 90621 Pa1rlck Le• T&rjlan 26631 Altanero, Mluton Vleto. Calllornli 92691 Scoll Nelson Lokken, 26052 Ramjlt Court, f l Toro, Calllornla 92630 Dennis J Hn HHlh. 135'4 3 Beach S1reet Ce,,,101. Ca1tlorn111 90701 This bull,_ ts conouc:ted t>y a 0-11 partnerllllp Patrick LM ranJan Thi• Siii-i WU flied Wilh the County Clarll of Ottnge County on April 27. 1982 ,,.m Publtshed Or1 nge COHI Dally Piiot. AprN 29. May 8 13, 20. 1982 1937·8? ftCTITIOUI .uttNlll NAm STATIMINT • The lotlowlng per10n1 are doing bullnes1 a1: SURFSIDE DAY SERVICES, 400 Merrlmae. # 16, Co11a M"•· CA 92929. MYRTA O'BRIEN. 400 Merri- mac. , 15. Co.ta MN&. CA 82e29. Thia bull,_ It c:oncNeted by an lndMdual. MVftl O'Brien Thll llal-1 WM flied with the County Clef1t of Orange County on May 4. 1982 ,,~ Publlthed Orange Coatl Dally Piiot, May 8, 13. 20. 27, 1882 2037.S2 Ml.IC NOTICE FICTmOUI eua...11 NA• ITAT£MENT The lollowlng ~IOl\I are doing bu.W-u MEDICAL RESEARCH FUN· DINO ASSOCIATES, 4920 Campus Drive. Newport BHcn. Calllornie 926e0 fnvelldr• Anll)'lll. Inc: . a N.- Yadl C91'PO<•llon. 18 \/alley VI-. Irvine. C&lilOfnla 92715 Thtt bullneu II conducted by • corporation 1nvest0f1 Analytls, Inc:. Crtarles A POl'-r. Prasldenl Thll llllement WU filed with the CO\ln1y Cle<k ol Orange County on Ap<tt 21. 19e2. ,,.,. Publl1h1d Orange Cout Delly PNol, Ap<ll 29, Mey 8. 13. 20, 1982 1862·82 'ICTmOUI M.1 ... 11 MAm l'TATl..wr The followlng petlOnt -doing buW-H 901. HulltJngton BMc:tt. CA l347. PlllJC 11011C[ 11lle ~It conducted by an ----------- lndlMduel. .,_ F-·-NU 1111( COAST A U T O RENTAL SERVICE, INC dba THRIFTY RENT A CAR 35 10 lrYIUI Avenue. Newport 8"cn. CA 926e0 ,_, ... ~ PtCiliiOUe ..., ••••• n. .at-I -Ned with IN 11Mm STA'TUIENT Count( a.ril o1 Orange County °" The foll-Ing person II doing May 4. 1982.. ~-= ,~ THE GLASS BALLOON. 1774 Publl&hed Orange CoHI Dally New Hampahlre om., Costa Mefa. Coast Auto Rental SeMce Inc .. t Clhlomla c:orporauon. 3510 lrvlne A_..... Newpor1 8-:h. CA 92960 TIWI t>ullnMI It condocleel by I corporation Coatt Auto RanUI Servlee Inc l&tv• Davi.._ hM beeil appointed an apnt wtth the Alll&a&t ......... ~·J ln ftl office It theW~Mall. MiC!Mel eo .... uu of 1MM hM been ~pl)Olnttd vim prtlideftt. ..,_.i coun.I ot Nlltu U.l.A. Raymu• J. ••••• hu bffn eltcted vlce ~ent oc Jt ..... a-......... eaw.,..aa. In I n1urance broltera1e and b::,gioyH benetl t c:onaulttna and actuar(al ttnn tn eon. Meu. Dr. Anold o. a.cklni.. fqunder and dw1rman ol Beckmu IMtnm~ Jae., received a diploma of honor for CX>ntrlbuUona to clinkal chemlltry from the AlloclaUon of CllnJcal Sclentllta at a ceremony ln Bro. Jou M. Marti.a hu been nanwd president and chief operattna officer of ft• Melater Compuy, a Newport Beach-headquartered comJ>8n)" which 1pedallull ln development of luxury alng.le-family realdential communltie1 throuRhout Orange and Anti-apartheid stock bid backed SACRAMENTO (AP) -California's two major publlc penaJon 1yatem1 will use their sizable stock holdlng1 to aupport an anti-apartheid resolution at the annual Xerox shareholder meeting, an aide to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said. At the meeting today in New York, church groups were to p.reeent a resolution asking Xerox not to expand lta operations in Sout.h Africa and to refrain from aelll.na to the South African military or 'police as long aa the government maintains a white-aupremadst policy. Brown's secretary of State and Consumer Affairs, Alley Lytle, said two sponsors of the shareholder reaolution will be the California Public Employees' Retirement System and the State Teachers' Ret.lrement Syatesx). The two systems own more than 1.2 million shares of Xerox stock, about l.4 percent of the total, said Ma. Lytle, whose agency hu admlniatrative responsibility over the peruslon •r:.eema. Both systems are run by separate boanU w members are appointed by Brown or elected by various groups. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NE~GomCIH SI '91'1 tweSoVI n ~ "-lrlll NASDAQ Cml$1W IJ 1J JemJtrt 1s~ .. 0 11) "-lllball ~.. _.,.. GmwTef IJ\lo 141'1 Jerlto 100 ... ~ Pt>ileNM -.._,..bl' ConPec> » 1'\lt vfJllty ... ,. l'I PlerteSIS ,.........,. ....-n es a1 C.dla 1' ~ Joslyn • » nv. Plnti.l'tn Wed. Pl"lcles dlO "°' Cro•T... ,. .... 1""" kehSl pf ff -jg\/) PlonHI 5 ln<ludll ...,..I ,,,.,....., Cullrl'il ' l'I 1\1• l(elv., I... , __ PIHllnt _,....,.. « Ultf'lmo gftllron SIJ. SI'! ~men , II 111'1 PM1h iHton tor Wltd.. eOM • l)llt I~ l(ely~ t ll ,. Pre>GM Sloc:ll 8ld Alli. O.vtM ' 1~ 11"' l(lmbiMt JO ~ PnSle)'ft AEL Ind IJl'I IJ OBMr ' ' I 14 Kl Int "" 1"9 Pr09rp AFAPrac " 21 °""~ 1111> 11'0 1(1:::.G ,.. ... u PbSvNC AVM C4> • 4 .... OetC 11 11 l(n!/:11 IS"' 15'\lo PurtBofl Auurey ~ •~ Oe-yEI l >t: Kr "' I~ II Pul~ 110011nw 10 10\lt Ot.C:r"O nv. n K1111cu "''•I~ Quellr AdvAou ,._ 41'1 Ota.nc.n. JI • Lenee t 10"1 ~ Aaven<:p Alllhtl t 1111. 11 Ooculef ~ """ L.eMAH • 4 .... RAY<""' Reymnd Altcolnc » '71'1 OollrGft 17\'lo u--L-CO •v.,, Ameru 11\lt 11'• Oo'41oe 1"-"'" L"""' l• ... lo4tt AHv~ I Aoedb AFum 4\.'t •14 Dr efCn ""' ""° LlCISlor IW. ""° ROC>OMy AG..-22..._ 1"' OuMO S ,. .... 1.-. Llnllrd t nv. :tl\'J Rov.-AIVN<il>• u..... Durlron • ., .... ., ... ~·"' ..... " Sedloe< ANellm 14 14\<t ~etnvnc 11"-•>Ill IC »llt ..... S.le<o AQ1u111 -IOYI tonl.ell ...._ .... MGF 00 ''"' ·-Sl~!Gcl AA .. MQ I"" H. EIPe$EI n~ 11"-""-bG€ l~I~ SIPeul "Weld t 11 11\lt Elder9e S"°' .... Me~pt 414 4\11 ScrlpH t Anedl9 ..... ... EleNutl It. 9 Ma ~,.. s.n-Anos.A El-t JJ\Ao ~ MA•-S\lt ~ S¥<Mer 1 7 16 I •1• 1!11rorv 111 11111 Maul LP ,. JD s"'""' • = 611'1 '2"' l!llr-MayPI 14'4 , • .,, 51\Med r~ ::"" ffllhY I~ I 11•~ ::l::Z.' ·~ , .... $11 .. mvt Ar~ )II. ,..., Emwl•I 11\11 12"' w Ferl ll"" Jlh Sler•Rt AtdCllt a JoPO w..-. £~ ''" > wo.wr 1\o. I Sill<on• 11'-,, SCelW\I AllGsLI I~ IS ~ I I'-N MIOUW " 19'1> SwEIS¥ AUenAa Ul'I ~ ~ SC ~D 1-Jl MdttKAp . .-.. StandYn Bel~ ..... '"' erm<io ~ D'll MldlAes " ,. ll4 SIOMl<ro Belly 6"-1 Fldl<.or n .... 1S'-Midi 8ll a m...lJ t:!~ 8engHE -11\4o FllUIS~ D Dll1 Mllll ,. __ JI~ Ii.sk it ' l •1' J'-FllloUll >7\o. • ~G Ullo ~II\ FtE~ ....., It MIH I 11 11'-SlfflSi aMJIFr '" 10\'lo FIWll " • •"-:::.fc. •1 ""' Sire.Cl 8eyt.-'"' I ~ a..n .. S S"°' Fl~ 21 111•~ 1 .... 0 1 .. 8en1PI II ,..,. J S.16 Flk 17~ 1111> Jl'4 Jl\o. l'l•N le 1'111 J7 =~ n ,, ... llot1rL t .... .... MAlmH ANDUION ~ San Diego countlea. Neal D. OrQa.m hu been promoted to executive vice president. The Peridiu Groap, a landacape architectural and planning firm ln Irvine, named Prok R. MarcsyukJ u an ~te. He ia projtct manqer for The Woods at Scripps Ranch, a multi-unit housing development In San Diego, and la beginning work on Morningside, a planned unit development In Rancho Mlrage, and Greyhawk, a residential development and ski reeort ln Ketc}).um, Idaho. Samuel D. Anderson of Corona del Mar has been appointed resident manager of the Santa Ana office of CB blveatment Propertlea. He has been ln the Newport Beach office of Coldwell Banker Commercial Real Estate Services . Tlloma1 A. Rowell has joined the Fl•or Corp. of Irvine as senior vice preside nt, project management. He had been president and chief executive officer of Pl'OC'On International Inc., Des Plaines, µI. Centary Data Systems of Anaheim has appointed Robert C. Reece vice president, operations. He had been with the electronics division of Xerox In El Segundo. '"'J0 .. 1sv11.n , IJ'I\ u~ 11 "°"' TOK J2 :a .... UPS AND DOWNS lJ DI. TIME DC ~ .. II,., ,,. • T efftP'IS H''lol~ SI lO'I T et'ldm , ,..,,_ JSO,. U V. Te<umP ~ 60' ... , '"'I TeltrnA io·~~. ,,,,. u r..,.,., IH• U NEW YOflK IAP) -TlW lolloell .. Itta J6 1''11 To.A8 t lll'n JI -.. °"" 119 · ~ Zl~• lA"' TiP<-oT • ..... ~ tloO,l -w«l'enlt 1MI --..., 1'~ 11'1 Tomi I )~ ~ 11'9 ,,_ --Ille mot! ~ "" :~~ ~ .... Toyo4:i .v. "" i::~ .. "'-,_...... .. ... ..... m·. 13 l~,,., 211'1 H _.. ..... """ U::.~ ~~:~--~ ·~~ 1:~ UnM<Gll 19 ,,.}, "°" S1 US Erv • 61t. Cliffe-Ile!-... pnwlout <.lollno bid prk» and Wed '1 1111 bid price. Ullo u ... USS.... 11'1> Jiit. JJ"" Ul<o US T r<ll II~ ,, .... »"" » Ulle8V\ • ll'• II 11''> Unv E ~ ··~ • Ul'S 19 1'1r• UpP.., .,~ u• .. -~ .°it. Pu. ~ f VNIA .. 1 .... ..., I G<wEFn \01;.. Up JU JI', >H• VelWll t t~U't , GovEF fJI n . ,.,, Up JU » ~ Veno.n " ,..,, J Al-lkp S-11. • l\.'t Up 1oL.J .. 1'1 -llel<ro ·~ , ...... ' CNrlOC 0 ~ . llt Up 11.f 11..,, II lllctreSI IO 10'• s He4W¥ • ISl'I • l\Oo Up 11"8 -4)11. VI~ ·~ .... • "41*1 ... J'> . Vi Up 16.1 ~ ""' VeN8th ...... If.'-I CMNPtt ,~ . -Up ... , llV. Jiii'> Wer11E • IJ~. " • CM>llllSV ,_,.,.. • J\. Up ls.J 1llh ~ WtllEN " .. , ... • Encon , ... • \'-Up 11.J ~ ,._,, •dtm •\.. Sh 10 Cumo. »· . "' VP U.t 1 J\I> 14 w DMD n· ... ~ " Oitllel< ..... . ~ Up '" 1...,. 11... 010 J:J•• n~. ., ~ ..... . " Up 10.2 111'1 11 ,,_c 1''' II 13 Pro!Cr• 1• ... . "' u. 10.t 141'1 Ult. MIO s I• 1111t I• u .. 11o11 • J . .... Up " » ltlf> YAl\f ~ .... IS ProlC w4 , .... . "' Up Ill llt. "-I ,, .,.., ,. ~ " • 11'1 u. ... ~~~l'I rltf!~ n .... :a II Red5¥ l ,, ... +" ,,.. Up L.S ,,,., .,-., " Comdl WI n JV, . .. Up LJ 1ll4 J'" VI • ~ J• " E"""' WI J~ . .... Up I.A H iit i.1? e.· Hal -"l<Alll• 20 ~ .. ,... . ..... Up II .,,,, ., JI Alpirf I'• I? Up 11 n W~HI , . "" Up ,, u Potvut • . ·~ VP .. , 2• F....SU. -. ~.Up ... Plot, May e. 13. 20. 27, 1982 A ~ 203M2 Cynthl• Irene Rertger. 1774 Mike N1v11. PrM I Thil llllemettl WU filed with lhe County Clerk ol Orange County on May 11. 1982 &e•Mcll lllM>C.o ::~,5: 18\'lo II"" Fturocb ,__ 7"' -rllllfl II--111'1 !Slit 1~ For..io n ... N\.'t MolChA> I•. , __ ~~ ~~ ~~:~~ ~J 1~"' -IH ~I· JS 0.Sool<ll 11 • I Up u ,. Al""""° 1"\ . .... u. u ------------New Hamplhlre DrM. Coeta Melli. '1CTITIOUI .,._ .. NA• ITATDllWT The lollowtng J*l<>nl are doing ~ .. : INTER COUNTY PROTECTION. 5142 Warner Avenue, Sulla 214, Huntlng1on Beec:h, CA 9211'49. LAWRENCE GILBERT BALL 7U7 T .. k Way, Rancho Cuc•· monga. QA 91730. JAMES DAVID BALL. 859 N Mountain, OB, Upland. CA 91786 This ~ II e.onducled t>y t 91'*'11 partnereNp. J-0~8111 Thie 1tal~I wu llled with the County C1eftl of Orange County on AP'I 27, 1982 ,ieaoo Publl1hed Orange COHI Dally F'tlot. Apfl 211. Msy 8. 13, 20, 1H2. 1~ Nil.JC NOTia ACTmouseu_..11 ..... ITAft•NT The lollowll!O peftonl .,. doing ~ .. VILLA M IMOS A APART M(NtS, 3823 W••' llall Aoad ~.CA92104 CA 92929 This bu.W-II conduetad by an lndlYldual Cynthia I Rengef' TNI Siii-i WU ftled wtth the my Clefk OI Orange County on April 18, 1982 F117S11 Published Or1nge Co111 Dally Pilot. May 13, 20. 27. June 3, 1982 309&-a2 Nil.JC NOTICE '1CTITIOUI .,_.. ~ ITATIJimfT Tile following per1on 11 dOl"8 ~-' , M T & A DESIGNi OEVEL· OPMEHT 250 Newport Center brive f' Q Boa 2392. Newport Seactl. C.-.nta ~2913 ' Mlohael T opllkat. 2237-8 Rut· ~ Colt• ~ Cttllomlll 82821 Thl9 ~ II conlU:\ed by WI ~ MlctlMIT~ ~ .... _. -lllld with ... County a.ni of OBnge C0Un1Y °" J.p<W 27, 1912 , .. Pubtl1rted Orange Co111 Daily PllOI. APfll 29. Msy e. 13. 20, 1~ 1eeo.e2 A & M PROP~RTIES, 15481 Qlemleal l-. Huntlng1on Baac:h. CA 92844 •-.,. -thie 11u..-It condUC:led by • , ____ ~..;.;..;;...;.._"".;..;..;'.;..;..;-. __ --f general par1MJ lhlp Alan Danger, Gener al Partner ™• 118'-t -lllld wlltl the Coonty Cleril of OrlllOI CouMy on """ 27, 1982.. , .. 111 PubllthaO Orange Co11t Dally Plaot. Aprit 29. May 9. 13. 20. 1982. 1931·12 PUlJC NOTICE ,1191. Publlthad Or1nge CoHt Dally Pltot, May 13. 20. 27. June 3. 1982 3077·82 rta..IC NOTICE l'ICTITM)UI .,..... NAME 8TAT£MIEJfT The totlowlr19 per&an1 are dOlng bu1lness aa: P AYROLLER S ALES, 1989 Sou1h Ritchey Street, Sen'8 Ana. CA 92705 Jamee Mu,,ay Cant , 118 Diamond Avenue. Newpo<I Beach. CA 92882 Danial George Ven n , 114 Emar1ld Avenue. N-port Beach, CA 92882 This butlMM " c:onduc:ted by • genwlll~. J-M Cant Thia ... ,_, ... llltad With the County Oenl ol Ou1r>ge County on May 11. 1982 ,,., .. Published Orange CoHI Dally Piiot. Mey 13, 20, 27, June 3, 182 3057-82 NOTICa ltMTiNQ 81>1 NOTICE IS HEREBY Q(VEH that on May 27, fta2, ;t "'9 hour Of 2:00 P _. In 1M City Oler1c'1 ofllce toce- led 11 11200 JambclfM ~. lrvlne. Calltomll. Iha Cfty ol IMne wt11 open bid.I for the l>UbllcMJon of the leglf notleel ol the Cfty of IMne dufint the fleclll Yt9f 1~· 1913. All bide shah be contained In 1.aled envelope• marked on the outald• Ii'! the lower left-hand cor· ner. .._. '°" PUlllJCATIOM CW LE~ M011CU C&.outQ OATr 11>16' F•e111te " 14'-~ IO\IJ n"' 8trvoor 1 .... " 8onlftl Ii .... 1J\ ~~= ~~ = NJ ltete l:P,. IJI? 8rwlom 111<"'-10'.'lo IOI~ FullrH8 1•111 I~ HVAlrt l'-, __ ........ 1'\Ao ,._ (if\Aulm ''°' 4'-=~~ . . .... "" ll'olo ~~ 12\• 11 GnO.vo ,__ J'-Hlel1o11 A .. .,. .. llt J lW. c;..AIEM I)\ .. 1'1'1 Hl•l1n a CPl t ISll• ISi'! t.ovEF" 101• -Nike 11 """ ...... ~WIS¥ ~""' » >7 G•e!IM< IJ"" I~ NoCMGt ...... 14~ (enr_. l J\tf Gr•yAdll 61 II NwtHGt C.En ll-14 ._ Glllnlll 11'n 17"' NwtlPS 12~. IJVJ c...sw • 1'V• 16'1> 12 IJ Gyrod~n •~ 1--Houll lJ .... J)W. C...Alr ,,., 3 H•ml 14~> U NU< :l. t CAreC» 11'1 l'.l<t CIWlflltlv ""' lOlt. Herdwlle ,..,. , .. Nut y t JIV. llltlo ClvmS t M'h • HrpA-I !All Oc.e•ntr II ,, .... 10'-IO .. Her~ J~ 7'14 ~':;z! :a lJlo't CIW'O-\ 11>"" JI Her t tt>;o ""' a.mu.. l)llt U He<~ • "'~ "''• Dtl~•rro .0....- ClletUU I 1''4 c,,._ ~Vi==~ ~~ OOwTP 1---111'1 Clrtl<O '°" 1\to .__ I~ IO\o PCA Int •l'I ""' Cltr~ I'-~ Horlrltt J ~ Pebtl8 _ _... CJllUIA ~ Jt IMS lnl IS1i. Uh ~GeA 11111 If CIUUl8 M\I) H lnlrelnd •Vi IO .. eut~P '"" • CllH'IUL 2•\IJ u 1n1•1 11~ n =Eftl -11 ClowCP ~ •ttl l"trt£nr s•.. S"-tJYl I""' ColrTi. IS\4o !Slit ll'lmlGt 11 11•• :::"'-: l 14" IS ColoGM s.JJ 'Ao 1111111-10 I~ op ap " ...... MUTUAL FUND NEW YOftl( (AP) C.lHT •.a H ID NL -Tiie 1o1-. -c.nterrill 't . ., NL :::.~=-i. ta: ,. I. IAI NL QUlt U7 6 io • NL auon al 5acwlllft OWlncellor ~ • 21 NL ~Inc .• -HIY1d ., .. NL Ole pri<a .. wN<lt HIMurl IJ t7 12.1 IN9I _ .. NOK It. IJ_ NL CMld -.... T111M IU1 16. NL -,_ ..... Clll SN 11.:D H NL YelU9} :.. ""t: 0\111 ... (fflW ~· 'Md •. ... .., .....,.. 14.lll NL -..F 22.M NL ADV 14.1» NL Alvt"'9 11'2 NL AIM"'-'*' Cw Yid 11.'2 12.TS I!-1.11 •.» HIVlcl ....... All)lll "....ii A 91111\T 11.01 IUIO AMlf'l<en Flftla A ... UI t .Jll AntQll UIS 6.lt A-I '°"" 11.fl 8Glld 11..0 1:t..• ....... ,.., "I G....,, 10 w 11. ·- OOwt!IS -~ °"' l'lt1. NASDAQ SUMMARY I =ri-, OH .,.. , • 1141 Ofl tU J N~ I -1\lo OH IU • GdTec.o J -\It Ofl W.J wew YORK <API --.u ... -s ~:.., ""' -, ... Ol'I 11' .,,..., .......... ttockJ ""C,i.cl 11'1 MASO • ,_ -"' OH IU Name \/olume AIUO OIQ. 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Jenus 1.10 NL Ta ,,.. tll •• Int EQ l>JI If 61 8oNI 1.11 NL Jofln Hint«*. MllOultt 11.ll NL = n•u.a -a. °" 11.SJ NL 8onO 12. .. IJ 1t M>A 5"' ,.,. NL '" to..a Siaell 1'-11 NL °"""' t.al to..W NMM"T JI.JS Nl HI Y1d 13 '1 14 '3 Sin~ l0.117 NL us G\Ot I.I) .... HAI Mt. 712 Hl I-SID '-?J Sin • us Hl r., & IA t 1' Net lfld II" WL In-792 U6 Strallnv UD S.1' KM,..., 1.0. NL ""' Scw1tiet OP4J1 II 60 IJM Sir M G4ll n .«1 NL K-Fundl: Bel., '"IO n TU & T1IJ17 .. s-Gr1tl • ,. 10. tO tncom 7.ll 1.74 llond UJ JM Vlll&e ll» IUI r .. ~ 14.7416.n Gro# ..... 10.Sol G,_ IM 7.t.J VoYlllll 11 14 It.II T""'° 12.21 .. HI Yid .. .., ..... ....... Ut .. v = DCI NL T ...... OI ._. r.CJ lnlll"d 1121 12.IS 1"""" s.n .. n ,..,. J.Ol NL lmpi w ....... ~· ~ 1.m SIOd< l.:D '" 7 IJ NL T"" C. I.II Ut ()pin I 11.71 Tnb 123 '*' s.feco S«w r,....Htw '·" HI. s..mm 16.J7 11 ... Totltt 4.14 S.11 l!Qlltt 1.11 NL Tr•v '3 UJ tO.JD Teel! ICU) 11.» F1lrllod • i. '-II o..-ttl1 NL T_. "·" NL Tat RI 11-'D 12.57 Hl!Ule P'1.l'll lnco t.IJ NL ~~ t.Jt NL us G\Ot I II I SI Equtt IUI 20 M SCPeut 1-· 111' Nl l(l'::-MIM: Grwltl 14 M IS ,. Caplt ... :x:• Twnc Vt . ..... 111 81 llM IUD I"""" u•;i·• ~ IO.JI W USAA~· s 81 16.11 11.61 Aet E.q 17.ft .SS 5PICI 1'A Nl a.-I0.17 NL 04 .. '·°' 1.n r .. e. s.*' s• ~ Flllldt· lnco .... NL Cus Kl 6ft I M -... ...... °"" $t 11 ... NL Slllt ... Hl. Cl.S IU U2 .. w EMVY 1U4 NL OeWI ~01 NL Uftf ACQI s.n HI. Cull SI ISM,._.., ~ 21.'3 NL Ouovt 10to NL Unll ~ .... Hl Cus SI us 7.0S ~ J.JJ NL ·-I0..10 NL UllileCI ,..,,,.., Cus S4 OS 5.41 ,., NL Intl Al 16.» Hl Aurn r.11 ua ,,,..... 4.Cll Ut ,..,.,. 13 II NL MMll .. n NL llond '1S Ut Ta•Fr '-IO ._. Sc..... 14 I) NL 5"(I 4161 NL lnlGlll IJA 14.71 MMe II.JS 11 ti ....... GC 11 11 NL Se<urttr ""'* j: "" t.JI 1l.A1 I.awl~ °'11: ...._,Inc 1 10 NL ...., , 17 1.11 1'aa II.JIM• ~ IO..ellA Hkhole IUD Hl l!QIAy S.D U4 HI Inc 11 '2 IJ.QI 1..SI NL HE tnTr ft.21 NL 111....at lot '" tnc,-1.77 t.D OflllM rl• NL NI! lnc;t ... N\. Uftn 6U 1%1 """"' s." s..a Gr-. 761 NL ~ ·w.~ lttec ... ,,,,,. Scll!'nt l.G ••• ,._ )4.)1 NL Al'ft 9-101 NL v.. "·" 11.15 UMllr ti.• NL ... HI. ~ IU:l NL usa. .... Nl ~'-":. t.'3 NL V"1W UN Al: NL lUI Ht. Siii= ~ 1.Jf ........ ftL Miii U..lt NL ... ~ ttt ... ,,. .. _ ,, .. Hl. I.Md Allllllft: ""' ut u• I-.... Hl NI. 11.MllSI -~ tCl.71 NL ' i t fl I NEW YORK (AP) -Two major a:.nk1 taJd today they would ma.kt aood more than tU'O m1lUan tn 1ntereet payment.I that a llDA1l govemrtMmt elC\trfdee concern •ya lt It WMtble to make to olhet finMda1 tirma. Ftnanclal muket• appeared calro followln• Tuaday'• dllcloture by Ct\Ue Manhtttan ~ the nation'• thlrd-~ aommera.J banJt, that ~ Oovemment SecWit.'8 Inc. wu unable to n\aJce a payment that wu due Monday. Ch ... otflciala Hid Tunday t)\at Oryldale'• failure to make the lnten!llt payments n:Qht prGl'Dpt 110me brokerap hoUMe to sue Ch.ue, wfikh .ad It acted u an lntennecllary ln a loan of eecurida tram about 30 brokerqe hOUlel to Dryadale, a ~ in government not.et and bond.I. AirCal announces 'Party Plan' A1.rC.aJ announced a fare for group travel between South.em California and the San Frand9CO Bay area. The fatt, called the "Wholesale Party Plan,"~ for prolf'ell1vely deeper dlacounts begi.nnj.na at full fare for the f1nt pu.enaer ln the gr<>Up to the 10th paaenger who rues for free. Ai.rCal't plan la offered for travel between fl'Vtty dty pair aerved on the airline's 15-dty, five-state route network ~gtnnma May 24 through Sept. 16. Pacesetter reports net income American Paicet1etter of Newport Beach repcn.ed net income of J53,000, or 2 centa per common share, on revenues of $U,482,000 for the three months mded March 31. Thia oontruts with net income of $619,000, or~ cents per share, on revenues of $18,055,000, for the like period last year. Mesa firm reports net loss Biflyx of Costa Mesa reported a net 1011 of $197,897 on increued revenues o! $3,070,014 for the three months enQed March 31. This compares with a net loss of $27,491 on revenues of $2,288,232 Jor the year-earlier quart.er. For the nine months ended March 31, Blflyx had a net l~ of $218.623 on revenues of $10.263,181. B1flyx !1 an electronics, video and eneray company. Printronix earnings jnc~ease Printronix Inc. of Irvine, manufacturer of minicomputer line printers, reported increased earnings for the fi.cal year ended March 26. Earnings were $5,147,000, or $1.34 per ah.are, on aales of $64.855,000. • Thia compares with earnings of $4,639,000, or $1.24, on sales of $52,428,000 for the previous year. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW 'l'OftlC.CAPI Fl'*~..._ :;~ .. _, lt. JD Ind ~7' :f:1 ~ ~--~ » r,.... m . .s Ml JI m.e. SM.a-.... U Utl 112.n IU 1• 112 0 111.41 • t.11 .S $11< »t.a m 1' J11 OI DI.-U. 1nau. ,. ..... Tr*' IAZ2.111D Ulll• I~ 6S $11< ..... WHAT STOCKS DID w~ -JM m 151 It M .. ,) .. 'di . .. ,, .... .:- ··"' • r ....... •.)lo ., 1 " .. . . ..... .... I ..:> •JI' .... ,, I I I 1 I ,, I r , r I , I I r I I I I 1 ! ; f I t I I ' EDWARDS BRISTOt Costa Mesa• 540-7 444 Regular Feature Shown Belore and Alter Preview ·~ ••I ' I I ~ Oornmerdal entry I• art tu per en,ry and non-commercial '"' •a per eniey. Dtadlln• for entrlH ii May U, and entry fonm CM be obtUwci by Clll1nf t&l-FIJR. ProduotJona ue 11mtt.ct '° 30 mtnutet fOf' commercial entrtM and 20 mlnute1 for non~. fOC\18 to liriilh. * 8ARQAIN MATIN•••* Mond1y thru Saturday All Perfonnanc•• before &:00 PM (Enlpt l!IMI hp ...... IN HllNyl) ... ""'I"-' -J..A A LA MIRADA WALi< IN Hl)RAQONaLA YIR" ''VICTOR VICTORIA" IHI (PQ) ---··-""' 11-. -,.... -... -"* ... -.iv ''WRONG 18 RIGHT" ~CHANOTI CW ,_.. Cl'OI (It) .,,., ___ _ '9 YOU CCM1LO ... WAT I NIM" (N) 1111, .......... ,.. I AKI WOOD C INIU1 \OUIH .., .. ,.IN -----"IF VOU COULD Ill WHAT I HIAlt" Cl'OI n:Je.-. .......... __ -. .... -.. DU~(PQ) _,__ .. ,,_ ....... ,._ IMPORTAl£!!°T1Cl! CMllOflUI U110lR IZ FRH! ...... ... .. M.~·w.. ........... .- Cllt.fl -•YOUR ,,.. CM IWlll IS ,.._. 9'JlltOI • ~·lllCMMOlll .ml1Dt1111111lllCCIStclll'ff1111111111 _.... • ,._, l•IU '*"' ~ .. Oii Ml Mall ····~·· v ANAHEIM DRIVE 1N "CROCODILE" (R) ,... "FORCE: FIVE" (R) .. WRONG 18 RIGHT" ,... "TUNNaLYlalON'' (R) - Oi.'ANGE t•L•. • '" DUISIONS, DECISIONS -U three's a crowd. four II way too many in the Mission Viejo Playbouae•comedy "Happy Birthday, Wanda June," opening Friday at the Forum Theater on the Laawia Beach Fe1t1val of Arta ground& Barbara Hollll fends off the attentions of (from left) Randy Cobb, Norm Cobb and Dick Nicldin. A 'war' close to home By BOB THOMAS 'tfl ............ """' HOLLYWOOD - Moat producers of war movies at.art by opening negotlatlona with Yueoalavia or the Phlllpplnea. Al RuddY. wanted to try aomethlng novel: filming In the Unfted States. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil It wasn't eaay. Ruddy had to go to the Pentagon four times before winning approval. Ruddy is no faint- hearted producer. He~===:;;;;~:;;~~~~~~~ made ''The Godfather,' deaplte pressure from Italian-American groups, which objected to the concept of a Mafia, and from Paramount Pictures, which wanted to fire Francis Coppola early in filming. He also ~ together "Cannon- Run" for the Hong Kong-baaed Golden =eat Productions, Burt Reynolds $5 'tot ahowtng up. "Mega.force" marked a reunion of Golden I Harvest,, Ruddy and d irector Hal Needham ("Smoky and the Bandit"). It concerns a fictional U.S. battle force with futuristic weapons and vehicles which can be transported swiftly to any trouble spot in the world. The $20-milllon 20th Century -Fox reJeue will open in 1,500 theaters in this country and Canada on June 25. "I always wanted to make the picture in the United States," says Ruddy. u&t I needed to have the u.ae of troops and material, and all approvals muat come from the Department of Defense. A producer submits the script and receives one of thre.e relJDOnleS' '11. The picture shows U .8 . equipment and penonnel in a flattering light and la eligible for full cooperation. "2. The picture is not in the beat lntereata of the mlll tary and can receive no belp. 0 3. The picture does not,ut U.S. equifment an peraonne In a flattering or unflattering light and cooperation is poaible at a wier'• rate -..-n1ng the producer .P•Y• (or uae of eqµipment, ja1ollne, troope, etc.'' Buddy t•id his flrat three trip• to the Pentaaon were frui\lea "bffauae the Defense ~tmenl dldn'l llk• the .. of portraylna • phantom army-wftb node 9qui~t • .ready to flaht myw.t.-e in the wor1a." U. bad hoped to flJm In Nw9da. ~ . "A final pursuit sequence as breathtaking as the big chase in 'Raiders of the Lost Ark'." -Playboy Magazln~ "It deserves to become the first hit of the summer season:· -llme M agazine Available Now ... While Supply Lasts! Plump and delicioua ... burwtini with rich. natural Cheddar clleele. Great ooobd a11 the grill. Pick up plenty now ... betcn it'• all gone. ff iclcor7 fe1rms OF OHIO • ~Cf l.llf.RHTIS ..... FOilt.G B'O< s h c ~~·~:~~~~~\~ oat oast Plaza C 'l!CUll\e ~ ~ PEIMJT ~TAM) Cirooi.ar OltJO I.OM E~ nd'ilOe <iPIOClOOI Flf])~ ~t*117i 1().4 HUEV "° 540-6991 OIWO Z ~ Aoc1.c:ed 11; 0 ca.i:sTNmE (X)ITE DiOIO CJ,-l£ W(J 11.fllll R A~' PCllff ft ~~Rrs·~~-;;;;ow --, Jr ._iiiiiiiiiiiiiAmiiiiiiiiiiieiiiriiiiicaiiiiiiii' siiiiiiiiiLeiiiiediiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiigiiiiChiiiiiiiiiiiieeseiiiiiiiiiiiiSiiiitoiiiiiiiiireseiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim.I __ ...... .....wun 11 ------· ~44711't O.."-U0-4.0t IMilf'Ht.el$S ------------,-.---------------~-:---- ...... Pt.AU ~ ......... ._SH UH 0..,... U4 255' ~ 171 M50 NEWS --~CDTU ....... ,......,,. .... , ....... CDelllilMlt78041 ElT•ostHNO W.......ttl 3tt3 IWIMl•ITOl.C:..lalilMIS407U• _, ___ ,__ from all over California is rounded up each day SPARKLING CLEAR WINE GLASSES From Holl•nd Gr•cloos gla .. es for toHt· Ing or tasting. 9y, oz. 6" t•ll 1.49 RATTAN SCHOOL BASKETS From China 6oz. 6'11 • tall 1.99 """-..,-CHAMPAGNE 6'h oz. e•;,· t•ll 1.99 MUG 10 OZ. 3• t•ll 1.15 To tote books, sewing, picnic lunch HANDCRAFTED WILLOW PICNIC HAMPERS From lndla or whatever. 7• x 11 '/1. 6.99 NATURAL WOOD SCOOPS & CUTTINO BOARD From Yugoslavl• SCOOPS 5'11" long 7" long 9y,• long 1.49 A NICE LONG IAMIOO From Chin. Approx. 4' long .1 5 uch GOLD ACCENTED STONEWARE VASES From Japan Gold eccented floral design vases O ::::.~: e•;,· tall 3.99Meh Sturdy well m•de hampers wlll tr•vel near or far with a little or large moveable least. 9'/i • to 13• deep 9'/t. x 12· 8.99 13.99 17.99 "SLIP-tN" ACRYLIC PICTURE FRAMES From T•lw•n Keep your loved ones In full view. 3v.·xs·_. ...... .,------.\,_J .79 s· x 1• 1.49 a· x 10· 2.79 IAMIOO & PAPER FOLDING PAN From China In assorted colorful dealgna. Opena to •pprox. 15• wide Aaaorted orlent•I dealgna •r• 3-n. forever protected aq. In ttMlr own .39.oh llttte tr•mte. 1" the Daily Piiat PORCELAJN PLAYING CARD MUGS From T•lw•n White por~l•ln mugs h•ve ..-.-H.:.colorful playing card designs In all the proper suits. HEART, SPADE, DIAMOND 1 79 OR CLUB. • H Ch To dlspl•y • f•vorlte mug collection. E.ay to assemble. FOR 4 MUGS 11 'A• tall 1.99 ALSO AVAILABLE FOR 8 MUGS 14 '/a• 1811 2.44 GOURMET GROCERIES SPICED SARDINES From Portug•I 4 318 oz. .97_ MOTHER OF P!ARl IANQl.ES From lndla Shiny brHI •nd mother of pMrl balngles come In four assorted styles . __ ...,_ .... 1/8" to '11 ·wide 214 • dla. 1.97 each I I I I ·I '· )•ao jp "Oh yeah? Whot kind of flowers do yo want on your grove?" "Obvlou1ly tM got up on tht wrong 1ldt of ttM btd." MARMJ\Dl:K£ by Brad Anderson ''Don't get your hopes up Zsa Zta ... he smells this roast from the oven." GARt'IELD V00 REALL V '5MOOLP TWINK A600T .JOOGINC"t,GARFIELP. IT'!> 501. MENTAL, VOU KNOW 5·20 MOON Ml:LLIN8 COIJ.E °"', .JoCK--YotJ CAN Sf/OW 'EM! ~~ e 0 0 I HEAR rµEy .Jusr Sl~NEt> THE CHAP FOR$5oo.,ooo A YE/>.R ... ·----... ,I ·1 l! u· 0 ~J\NC'' t'l:NK l' "INKERBEJ\N IJ&-41!1.W U. D*' ,I, --' __ __._ ___ ..., APPA~E.NTl.c,> I'M OOER·QoAUFIED ! • c ___ .,.._ .. --2.o JOS1" ON A MUNCH, RUN A CHeCK ON MIM, wu ... t-YA~ I -,~T-.. 1"1M#S40MI .HAWAII~ •• CMIRMIY ..... Dee Dee DoMle."" i UNDIMTANDNI ~~"'°" I .. ==· NIONIWI MOvtl • *141 "The Helll" (1971) ~ AIMYouf, VltM Utl. A Frenotl hoodlllr'ft V'lel to tolow Ill the ~ofllle~ glngeter hero, Jofvl '*" er..;. * • * "TM Seottlc ~ men" ( 1t7't) AoMt1 Aid- lord, J-Fonda. A LM VegM~atee111112 mllllon ~hbf9d hOf'M to .. ,,. him• from hie ~111-.. own... 'PO' U0. AU. IN THI ,AMllV • NIWlm.AT wmt ClmM>eERt• • ......... ""'°"' 9 IAIWEY MIU.ER ·= * ·~ "Mltco P•. Jf." (1173) Animllld. A dee- oenctlnl of ... tllll'IOUI •xpiofer ~ 10 xan... ckl In ...,c:tl of the °"* Nit ol ttll ao.cs... Mecllll- llon of Frllndlhlp 'O' =1== HAPPY DAV8 AGAIN 1-MCNlWa l(OJAK • M0 A .. 0 M The)W 1951-totty i for Ille 4077th. (Pert 2) M*IJr8*'l.D ........ ~ POfmWT'I .. ,ASTua "Aed'' (I) ~.M. MAGAZM A IOOk 11 the Mlgl -'°' ""' 9-:tl loye; a.eon.-co'• Prw-~ ¥Wtl I her "°"'9\own of ~ phle. OENTERT~ TONIOffT Pett 1 of 1 --on mo¥te r111ng9 loob • "Midnight ~ .. ane~ o-t:Arto~ Cll>r...WAS "Thi IMOI" Die* Cl\'ltt recalll the dlcede _.... -mwMd by the -"" VlltNlft, 11'11 c:Mt. rtgflts Ind ..,,,.,.. -· the Woodltodl rOCk con- Clf1 end men'• nm ....,. on ttie moon. (D)MOVIE * * "Thi AOPll Dumping 0-V RldM Again'' ( 11711 Tim C-my, Don KnotU. A pair of -tlm outilwl try to wlllll thl 11rlllt end narrow ·o· (%)MOVIE • ·~ "Thi Fan" (1981) Lauren 81c1ll, J1m11 Gerner A popul9' fllm 1t1r .. victimized by. peydlotlc admirer 'R' 7:IO . 2 ON THIE TOWN F11t1Kld Hulhlnl, one of ttll rnoet captiY11tlng of thl French Jlolyneelen l9lenda; llOSTS SPECIAL -Howard Duff joina Lily Tomlin ln her ·~· 0 Lilly for President?" ton.lght at 10 on ~ (2). • IVIONLA. F11turld: I repor1 OI\ nude ~ • IOOk .. lll)'dl¥-ln0 end • 120 mc>h tr- tlll. • M•A•t•H "81ood lfotherl" I (I) TIO TAD OOUOH MACHD. / L84MR MPOWT I =' AIKED '°"IT F111urect: "Frog Jumolng" and "M~ Of Ouedl- cs·~ *'h "Up ~ .. (1NO) Morgen S~. A roung pioneer become• ObMMed Wllfl r9Wlngl • ,,., .. Wit• la klllld by • local land baron wno -tehle-. a:oo. ()) MAGNUM, P J. Magnum briefly -• glt1 wtlo -bill hit ..... who -reported dMd In Sllgon. (R) 88FAME. 8tUtlO 11111 In lo¥9 wtth • glr1 who, unlc-IO him, hell ... lncurlbll d'-. lit MOW •• ~ "Rreoall F_d .. (1172) Ben a-.. Eddie Alblrt. A tough Wortd Ww II 09'*'11 lallll clhlrge of a dMe6on wNotl la plllgUld ;'&~oiw.cH GMOB THI CAT IH ntlHAT Anlmltld. TM )eunty Cet In the Hit lnOura the wrath of the Ol1nc:h. wtlo bllm• -mecNllM thal llKn the Cet Into • fantaetlc r.:. ...... 8-nl" (1878) Jim l(.ely, 8Noe La. In Otdlr to ,_ .. Prime ............... 11'11 ... ._.. confrollla ''TN W.-.." .... of the South Amwtcen c:rVne -=--MAGAZJNE Morwco'• Prw-Or90I *Ill ...., llcwMMMn Of ptp esptb; • -~ crue Cll9d .,. ··~ Oenoe." .MOYIE • • • • .. Ab Ooetn't Live ..... Arftrr«I" (1874) Ellen aur.tyn, Krte Krll- toftenon. A young widow ~ • linglr-wattr-10 11.pport ....,.... end her 12..,...,.~ eon • LMTCHANCE GAMOE (l)MOYll • • * • "RNurreotlon" (1HOI Ellen Buntyn, lam 8Nplfd Altlf I -·fetal ILllO accldlnl. I _.,.. 11nd• 11111 lhl ,,.. lhl 11>411- ty to 11111 olhln l>Yt II per- MOOllCI ~ of her rel\IUI 10 claim • dM"9 ~·PO' .MOVIE * * "Thi Apple Oumpllng 0ang·· ( 1875) 8111 Bllcby, 8uun Clerk. A cerdetlarp •-10 111111 poenHtcn of -~Wlbll ~°'*'Y for a lrlend, end II rather IUrpriaod lo lllm lf\el thr11 orph-are lnc:llldld 1n the deal. ·o· 1.-30. aJ MOflK I MIHO'I' Morie end Mindy _..,. "°"' the IYll Kllnlll by using Morie'• tlml-tra\111 ahOll (Plrt 3) • AU. IN THE FAMILY An Innocent Edith 11 both the CIUM end the Ylctlm <)f • furlou• k>Ylr'• quiff .. wn.r.. her long-Iott edlNrlr 1Mlte With hie lnterldld bride. • INIAI< PAEVIEW8 Roger Eblr1 and OerM 8111111 ,....._ "c-i Thi e.tblrlan" and "Wrono 11 Right .. ID t.MT CHANCE aAMGE Brad a-. 1trlllgh1-out ... allgntMflt ~obWll end IYlllUet• dlhent mllt11 and mod9le °' tlr-e:aa (%)MOVIE **'h "Thi Wlndlrlrl" ( 1878) Ken Wllhl, Unda Mll\L Thi memblr9 of 1 tough 1INIOI ltr9ll QMIG In lhl B<onx dlecover lllat the ~OCllNI of gr<Mlng up end falling In IOYe -mucn mor• dlfllcuM e,.,,.n.. -thin 9IY'f of the rum. bill they've tallln pwt In. 'A' .... •a °""'MNT STN>KE8 Arnold danc:.e with I 1arnoue bllllr1na. a • 0 IAANEY MILL.P Bemey end hie men ltll NV. no ,_ auigi""'*'ll .. their '"' d8)' wrlYll In the 121.h ~ICinct building, which ,,.. ~ IOld ... l\IMorlc '"°"""*11. (Pan 3Jn ..... MERV OAIFRN <k•ll U.N. Ambulldor JMnl Klfttpatrlck, Father Andrew Or..i.y, Andy Cowan. • NUMEROUNO 'Ithr11 A=•:o f= . own lellnd empire; Claude BrCMillllt, lldV911turer and eneur. ~o.,._ lou. who could bl clllcl the "Frink Sinatra" Of TIHIJ &tad s-a flllll a net tire end IOOlll 11 lhl QIMllll)- control end of ttll euto lndultry. • NfHllE. PAEMIEAE A ~ of lhl upcoming mcMI at Edwlrdl N9wport Cinlml -.. Amie''. CllJ MOYIE ••~ "CetdMc ArrMt" ( 1171) awry Goodrow, Mike Olen. A ~ merti.i operadon lhlt .... dlllm- bodled '-'• tor ,,_ p1anu 11 dleccMlrld by en ollbllt homlcidl cop. 'PO' Runner Ir-8-lnalta Of Poland. comc>etltor In llY9 Olympiad• an4 winner of ..,,... mec:1111. 11 ~ofllld 8i) MMTEAPIECE THEA~ u l.oYI In A Cold Climate In Love And War" Uncle Matt'• lllrnity gather• al AICOillelgh for lhl duration or the wer, Fanny'• mother arriYel wtth ...., l8'aet paramour fP1r18)Q CC)MOYIE • I 8 FA.Mil V FEUD LAVENE & SHW..EY ICOMPAHV C~ANNEL LISTINGS 9 KNXT ICBSI 9 KNBC tNBCI • ICTLA (Ind.) • KA9C CABCI e KFM9 ICBSI 9 l<HJ·fV (Ind.I eKCSTIABCI e KTTV Clnd.I 'e KCOP·TV Clnd.) .e KCET IPBSI e KC':E (PBS> On-TV Z-TV HBO (ClnerNX) (WOR) NY.,N.Y. m IWTBSI <I.I CESPHI ()) 15'1owtlme) • Sclollliltll e Cc:abl1 News Network) ••• 'A "Thi Dain Curll" (Pert 2) (1878) Jamee Coburn. Nancy Addlaon. 8llld on the n0\191 by Ollhlell Hammett. A ~ ..... eye In~. diamond robbery encount1r1 a -• Of rnutOlfl end • ltrenge young woman who ~ lhl'• the ¥ICtlm °' • !amity curw (D)MCWE •• "Thi ......... ( tteO) Trill> Ven Devere, JoNpf1 eott.\, A achooltl9Cher trtll lo rlCO\'lf ffom • ner- ¥CM'8 bfllildown at ,_ lat• aunt'• llOfM. """*" II ~by dlnlOlll. 'PO' t:ao 8 8 GIMME A llMN< N.it borrowe fTIOMY from .................... ...... ~ .. F,.:...,. ..... ~ .............. ,..... ..... JI"."" ~ .. ,, .. , .. -.... ..-..1w.,,.....1.., i \llANO GOMM ''The Cllieel" A ¥Wl ~ ...,..., "'*8 MM Into Ill MOtY OOlifl'OflVlllon ~ ......... ~ ..,...,...,=,j (IDHm..M'I MOL THI MAD DMMt fl'THIM .... Holblooil twT ....... dOOIHMnll'~ det~lll"f tllfon• lo '*TY 1M HtlW't plan• fo' ,, .. 11111 • ~NylinllDI. 10i00•.1 ~·~ l'FlDIN'M lllMn lrennen, J.,,. Coco end ....... °"*' llllP Lily T omlln Ill her floh' !or Ille offtot of Preeldllnl Of ltlt UMed lt1111. •• *-LITMaT 11&.U. FolloMrlg 1 ~· II 1 1oa11 '*· c-"" Fur11o dtnlllldt 1 c:onltrenoe Of local OlnO chiel1, lf!d 81llle' g111 unw1nled "aid" from•....,. bimrlO himMlf 11 c..,tlln Fr-. domlAL_ I ... NEWI IO/IO TOn.MANOR 90M Un.--of Audrey'• "" llllUI II the manor. In old friend ltope b' for a Ylalt, CR>MOVll * • "Thi Olybrelker•" ( 1171) Ollnn Ford. Sim Elllot TM 8eclte« b<OU.. .,. find .,_,ture "'*' they 1r1Yll _, from INlr Ten-home. 'PO' (l)~LOWAT THECR018~ (P1112) .MOW • * • "Cutter'• Wey" (1Ht) John Heel'd, J«f l!lrldgll. A maimed VllC- nam ¥91 W Ille belt friend. • IOClal d<opout. tocu1 their energlll on IOlvlng 1 murder ~. 'R' 10:IOI NEWS UPPOMNll MONlYMAKEM "Enlrglzlr\g Y04H lrMlll· mentt" (I) GAU.AOHEA: AM UNCEH90AIEO IVEHIHQ Thi c:omec:llen perlorme 1 llflet of on.-llner• Ind comic ¥1g1Mtt•. tO:ae CZl MOYIE * * ''Thi Decllnl Of Wiii- em Chllllullon" (1181) New WllW rnUllc by l>lndt IUdl .. Ab Beo Band, 8llCk FllQ, Cltcll Jeru endF-le~ 11;00 • e •(I) a a NIWI • IATUN>AY NIOtfT Ho11: Steve Martin. Oullt1: PllUI end Undl ~. • YOU MN<ED F<>f' rT Flltwld: "Oemg Tott On Wetw Skla" -"Per• pleglc: Karate. .. • M•A•t•H The 1*-' of tfll ..onu. -bllllgad by • lone ...,., who .,....... hcl'• firing on U.S. HMd- quart1r1. • BEHNVHIU. B«lny P'IMflll the F rendl entry Of thl Eur~ SongConlllt • OD<CAWTT ID THE LAWMAKEN Corr11pond1n11 Unda Wetthllmlr end Cotlll Roberti joll"I Paul Dulce tor an up.to-ltMMMlule - mi ry ol eonor-lonaJ aetlvitlll. (1:)MOVE * • * "Meat! StrMt1" ( 1873) Her-..y K.11111, Rob- .,, De Niro. A lltlll6-tlml hOod and hie lrr.eponelble friend find plenty of tr°"bll In ~ Yorlc'1 Ullll ttaly 'R' (D)MOW * *'A "Urbwt Cowboy'" (1880) John Travolta, Debra Winger A blue-Col- lar wortcer wno lanclll hlmNll a mod1rn-d1y cowboy ,... In love wtth • girt hi l'Mltl In • l>09UI• CCMinlry-end-tem l>lr. "PO' 11:IO • (I) QUINCY Quincy Mt.I out to prove that • IOClaltt• -conlllc:ted of lllUl'dlrtng her husoenc:t .. not gully . 88TONIOHT Holl: Johnny C arton. 01111t1: Cari ~. W.A. "Slit" Jltoblen. Argue Hamilton • Cll ABC teW8 NIGHTUNa • !(OJAI( • THE Jl!fRR80NI eMHFON>AHDION • ~TWfll4 ClZTE ...,.,.,. • CAPnONID MC NlW9 . Cll THI COUN11n' OR. Faye Dunewey, Didi Ven TUBE TOPPERS . KNBC (4) 8:00 -0 Pame.'• Bruno faDI 1n love wtth a pl who bU an ~ble dileut. KABC (7) 9:00 -.. Barney MUler." Barney and hil men ltW have no MW Ul.\aftment u the1r !Mt day UTtv. at the 12th precinct buUdJnc. KNXT (2) 1():00 -.. Lily for Pneldent1" Comedienne brinM• her ca1t of aany characten to the White Hou.. See photo, left. KNBC (4) 10:00 -11Hill Street Bluee.11 Capt. Furillo dema.ndl a conference with local 1an1 leaden after a muaacre at a local bar. Dyke end l(en "1'4<>WWd lllf In Ihle perlonnence Of Cllf· lord Odel'1 plly about Ille oompl111 r1lellon1hlp1 between 1n eloohollc IC1or, 1111wffland1 lhllt- rlcel director 11:61 CR> MOVll • * "C11bon Copy" (1811) George 5egll, 8u1111 Slllnl J-. A llUCOIMful wtlttl bu1ln1Hm1n dlaoov1r1 11\11 hi hu • grown eon who II bladl. 'PO' ta:OO. llfTPTNNMIHT TO...OHT Plrt 1 of I .., ... on m<>"le rating• looQ al "Mldnlghe ~ .. eo V'IQAI Den lolloM 1111 IOl!ll of llOIN.,., to treck down r1p l111 who hive dlltroy.ct two peopte'• llwe and are ttv111an1ng Beatrice. (RI • MOV1I ··~ "Lft And Order" ( 1878) Dlrren McOaYtn . Suzanne Pillllltll. 8eMd c.n Ille "°""81 by Dofotlly Uhnalc Thrll generatlOnl of an lrllh lemlly In Hew York Cfly PUflUI llw enforC411111nl .. 1 car-. • LOVI. AMENCAM STVl.£ "Love And Thi Motel MIX· up" AIM end 8nat1 00 to 1 motel Ind thin 111¥9 llO- ond lhoughll. "Love And Thi Affbl" Lenny trill to cowr up tor 1118 fr11nd'1 "fooling llound.'' • IEXPl.OAINO LAHOUAOE .MOVIE * •~ "An Eye For An Eye" ( 1981) Chld Norftl, Chrletopher l.89. A San Francilco cop quite IN force to 1venga tile mwder of hi• partner by memblrl Of a drug ring. 'R' 11:15 (%) MOVW * * '"King Of Thi Moun-tain" ( 1811) Harry Hwnlln, JOllPfl eo.tome. nw11 young L.A. b1ch1tor1 devote lhalr .,_.... to the ~ of dr8Q rlCWtg. 'PG' tl:IO. 91.ATa NIGt(T wmt DAVID LnTIMIAN Gullt: Jerry Koalnekl. • OOUPl..E8 G MOYIE • * 14 "Living Fr11" ( 1112) Su9ll\ Hwnpehlre, NIOM Devenpon Thr11 mlt- c:Nevoul lion c:Wt ~ Into Ill 1or11 Of trouble wtllle being tr aneported to 1 ' l:"9 ..:w.- 12:40 ii W MCMIUAH & WIFE One of Mac'• former tMm- matll 11 found lllln II lhll< 20·)'Mr colllOI foot- ball reunion (R) 12:80 (1:) MOYIE ...... "Thi Heltt" (18781 Ch11111 ~"'°"', Vlrna Liii. A French llOOdlum trln to follow In lhl lootetepe of h4a American gangster hero, John 0.- ~ ·R' 1:00• MOVIE ***'h '"Five Gr-To Cairo" (1"43) Franchot T-. Erich von Stroheim In 1842 .• Brlllah lat* om. cer attempll to pty llCfll Information from Fleild Mwlhal Rommel during NI wlelt to 1 ema1t North African town. ... ow * * 'h "FOOIJtlPI On TM Moon" (1N7) Oocument.- ry. Hlrr•tld by~. w.,.,_ von lfeun. Man'• flret 1unar ecnie..em.nt• .,. reviewed • 1:108 MOVIE *•'A "Ttte Dey Thi !Airth M0¥1d" (18741 J1ekl1 Cooper, Stelle 11...,.,.. untM thl tr-. 111t1 no one l*leYll • men wno .. Yt thlf• wllf bl an eerth- 1:10 f £:wa * * "Metvln And H-erd" (1INIO) PIK.II LaMal, Jaeon Roblrdl. An OlhlrwlM unknown g11 111tlon · 11tendlnt dllrna 10 tie thll r1glllful heir IO .._d Hugh••' bllllon doll1r 1111t1. 'A' 1:41 CZl OlmlAIOOM 1:IO (I) MOVll •14 "Pldl-IJp """-'' (1111) Mlcltlllt l.llNc*w, Cwt Merotti. A rflWdy group of~ toughl Md high NIOOl lcide * for the plnball ofllm9iol llhlp al a local wc:edl. 'R' ~-MCME * * * "Ferne" (1M0) 1r- C.1, Barry Miiier. s.v.r11 gifted lludlnll 11 I New Y ortl high IChool tor lhl performing .,,. ...,.,__ varioue Mtbadl1 end ~ ~ ot boCh peraonal and profllelol"laJ nlllKll. 'PG' (%)MOVIE * * •.; "LA S.x Shop" (18731 Juliet Berto, ca.. 8lrr1 A l>c>oMtor1 propn. etor ftnd1 Intl.ant - when hi ltocu hie lllab- llehmlnt with ... ~ and ll'llfltal Ilda. 'R' 2:20• NlWS 2:21 (1:) MOYIE "819¥11" Glende JadlllOn, Mona Wlahbouml. A poet I• forced 10 come lo gripe 111"11 •'• llmlta • 2:a0•~ • • '"Night Of Tiie Sotwr- ..... (1170) .Md! Taylor, Simon Mdnle. 1¥11 and denger b9fllll "'9 memblrl of an mcpldltlon when tlllY ~ ltl.lmtlt8 on to • aeot1ftdll 1>ut1e1 orouncS ~ In Ille Junglea of Afr1.. ca. 2:401,.we 2:55 MOV1f *** "Fcwc:e Of M " ( 11411 John Oarlllld, Mlr1I Wind-. A famly equeb. 1>11 ineldl the ~ 1yndlclt1 lied• to 1 b<Mk- ~ In lhl~ a:00• MOYIE * * "King Of The Undlr- w1t11 Wortd'" (1875) Oocu- menltry Narrated by l.111111 Nlala.i. Explor911 ambarlc on a Pacific undlr- wet., .. pldltlon In -di of lhl_end ___ ....,. II'~ ,... lhatlt • MOVIE * •14 "BomtMW• 8-52" ( 1857) Kart Malden, Natalie WOOd A commanding ~ Cit ,_,,fut °' a --geant'• tnvo1¥emem wt111 hit deughW orderl him on • llCtlt million to 1111 a MW 8-52 bomber. JOHN DARLING .. (ft) ... •• * '"nle °'*" .,.., w ..... · (tt?tt OIM ..... .......... &MU.A men~ 111 _.... ..... ,_... ~" ~ ............. .. ....... lllMI .... .. llllljt .... ""' 'l'O' .. C&)Wi''-LOWAT 1"1CM11!\DAOI ~·) Ml(l)MON • • ''1111.,..,,.. Of .... em~" (1tt1) ---"'~~ .... Miii! ii Moe ....... .... "-'· Clrdl ... -~·.....,..,· . f'rffl••'• •••If ..... ., ••• ~-··-· MICZ • ** ''Ttll llf""t" (1NIO) W....,,. HcMden, Noll~ lotwodlt. A ~ 1t1111• teectlel • ~ OfpMn Ille Wayt of~ In IN Aullrlllan .._. ,._._•PO' UO Cl) • * "The ltlOOUfl W•· rtor11: Sp1c1ket••,•" (1911) Anlmelild. A.,.._ ptinOMI tmblttl• on 1 tni..ikH'I to Roe> !tie ber-*-who -,...,,.. bl9(or~,_...,.. Md -other lnMDitlnll Of lier home planet t:ao. * • • ''Foul l'lly'' (1t7') Oofdle HaMt., Chevy CllMI. A Mb<lflln enb11 tlll •Id Of .,, .,. polol d1t1iollve 1f11r 1h1 becor-lnYolvld In • blurre .., ... of murderl end kldnac>Plng •ttemcll•. 7;00 CC) • • • •;1111ct1bo9rd Jungle" ( 1Mll) Glenn Ford, AMte Francia. A dldlc:atld young IMCtllr •ttllllpta to r11t0f1 orellr In • big-city 1r1lnlno 1ohool where ,..,..QI~ end ~,. hlYI llkln root. 7:11(Z) ••'h ''Cear And Roedl'' (18721 v-Mon- lend, Romy Sohnllder. A Fr11f1Ch femall ertlat moet ~ between two tov• ... a:oo <ID .... ''Thi~ Dump- ling Gang Aldel Aoaln'' (1879) Tim Comrey, Don Knoltl. A pelr of -tern oullaw11 try 10 walk the ltrall 11'\d f\lllOW. '0' Cll •• "~taln Scaltll Vt. Tho Mystertorw From M1r1" (1H11 ~. Thi llftdlr al a ..,_ fleet It char gad with Ille tMk of .. Ying Earth from an lltadl by angry Manllna t:iO••·~ .. .._ Strllt" 411111 Hlnlaon Ford, L-.Y·"'-Down. An Amclricln pllot .... In love with .• ltlflrtlld Englleft nurM dumg Wortd Ww h. thin em blttla on 1 dlrtng mlealon to r-her IM»-band Imm enemy lore11. l:OO C1:> * • • 141 "Th• Deln C-" (Part 2) (1111) Jam11 Coburn, Heney Addleon. Baead on the rooYll by o..tlllll Ham- mett. A IPflYlltl eye "'-II- gating • diamond robbar'f encounten • ..,.. oc munMr9 lftd • .,.,. young WOl'l'lln who ~•'-'•the Clim of • tamly QUrll. t:Cll CI> •• ",Brlllclng or-" ' (1980) ~NII O'Conn9f, PNI Danie& A 8r11llfl punll pop .. ., •• ~ '*' mallly II Ide to ITl09dY. 'PG' t:aO. ·~ .. ,..._.... Ffontllr'' (1835) Jottn Wayne, Sflalll Terry A cowboy strugglaa to ••on11• ,..... of mr-blemed Oft him by • C:.-oollld lherttf. 10;00 CR> • * • , 'The Amer1c:an- 11.atlon Of Emily" ( 18&4 I J1m11 01,ner, Jull• Andi'-. Romlnol growe ~ • 9'ltleh -MO-ow end a ~om cer ualgnud to prcMdl hie euperiors wtlth ttll luxur'lll olhoml Cl) ..... Thi oi-Bot- tom Bolt' (18M) Oorll Dey, Rod 1 eytor. A~ cilt blcofnl II ln\'olwd with a girl wno p-••mer-maid part-time. to'.acl • • * ~ "IJ(bln Cow- boy" ( 1HO) Jofvl T rl'IOlta. Debra Wlnglf. A ~ let worker wtlo lalldll hlm1111 • modern-d1y cowboy , ..... In lo¥9 wtttl • .. .......... .... ~· .... 11w, ..... --(I) ........... , .. ,., ......... T,_ ......... ...._.. .,_ ............. ..... . .,. n•CID • ""*' ......... C ttrlf UN9 "*..iii.!: .,_ ,.,,.._, .................... =~ ... ·---............. ... -......: .. · ........... UMf: (tfoiM) ,., ......... -rta~A~ Md __ .....,,.... ... .. ..... ...,..., tMOunter ~ ~ ....... ...... ,. ... ,Otal Tor er• I"-" I) ( tt10t Miit· ttl'I .....,._, ....... Cot-. In o..aa •!Mr, *'· ,,...._ ,.. ---,.., ...... ..._lo mount • ,......,. .. ...,.. "',..,. ...... bor. ••• ''1119 lt°"*9 O'TOOle" (1111) JC>M ,.,_, , .. Cwrol. AP* Of ... dr1fllf"I rtdl ll'lle tlle lllllpy, br== Ing town of , Cobldo,ln ..... (I) ••••• ,.,.. Theil Jal'' (1t7t) "ov ....... .,.. elca L.anfS. TM ~ oue fife of 1 prMiMlonll ~--·,.,.,_, from 1UC01U on VII llUlgl 10 peremal c:r1111. 'R' 12:.IO CZ> • * '" .. Jow"'1f .. To Oz" (1172) Anllnl1ed. Volcll of Liu Mlnnllll, P1ut Lynde. Dorothy rl11Kne to lhl Land of Oz end _..,. IN ....., al !hi Wldlld Mtd\ of IN w-. 1 :00 (1:) * • • "SolneCl*IO Of Value" ( 1857) Aook Hud- llOn, Dene Wynter. Tiii ¥k>o llnOI ~-Id by • ~ ""'1w i.n Into ..... al 11911QM!I09 C11J .,. "St..r· ( 1980) Lii Malo'•. JIMffer O'Nllll. A beeullfUI women II ..... ,. Id by • tough c:onewc1Jon foremen In "'"'*Ill the company .. lrltllrtte .,.., ,_ tether'• aueplclou1, "llCC4d«lfll" daeth. 'PO' •••• "FoulPley'' (1t7&1Goldll HIWI\, CtllYy Cl!Me. A llbfw1an .,,... thl aid of an .,. polol dt1ec1tv1 alter 1h1 becofnll ~ In • l>Wlrre ..... of murdln end kidnapping attempt•. 2:00 CI> •• "Dllttt Hunt" 11811) CMtW er-. Lii Mrlln In the 1t30a, a Mountie end • frondar orimlnal wage an old bettle U cill!Mutlon •IOIOldlll on the Cenldlln wider-,_ .A. a. G ** "Thi Herd Ride" ( 1811) Robert Fuller, Stler- ry Bain. A vi.tnam ,_...,.... relum8 '-to c:lalln h4a belt ttlend'• mototcyigll .. ....... glr#riend. • ••• "Relntr11 eo-. ty" ( 1957) E11Dbet11 Taylor, Montgomery Cllft. Ow1no "'9 CMI Ww, a °"*"llllllo loulMm Nie le ...,_ "*lad to ~ ... "*' of ,_ cfldce ......... al the~ t:ao Clll ••• "ea-nan" (1881) R1noo Sterr, O.W. Oulld. Thi CIOwnleh --blr of • blnlly ~ pr9fliltortc lltbl tJ111t11 to ~ lhlt tnlne and not brawn .. bl ltll ~ lo hie people'• ~. 'PG' 3:M CI> * ..... MMy Body• gu1rd" ( 1978) Chrl• M1kep11c1, Ad•l'l'I Blldwlo. TM ,_ llld M 1 Chlc•oo high 1011001 melt• lrllndl with die .:hoof~ end ......... er they ltend up 10 IN cru- .. gang whlcfl l'led per- -=uted lhlm boCt\. 'PO' 4:30(1)••"~~ VI. Thi Mysterlont From M.,." (1981) Animated. Thi IMdlf of a ~ flllt II charged with the IMlt of .. ving Earth from en attadl by angry Martlanl. 5: 15 (%} * *'A ''Journey Baca To Oz" (1'72) Anknatld Volcll of Uza Mlnnlll. Peul Lynde. Dorothy retume to the La'ld Of Oz end ancount.,. "'9 ....., of lhl Wlckad WllCtl of the Wiit. by Armstrong & Batluk 1'9"'-----------------~-------E TO SAY Ii, CHARLIE, 0UT "I'M AF~1C1 50.' 4 dr., euto.. pwr. etr., 2-tone =· VI, MO., pwr. ltf., pwr. bf., *· llgM v~ we11 _.. tor. wi• tie a aa.iot VI, -.,to,,::.:·• elr, l ottw fMtuf-. 4' ~. 4~, am/tm radio. S.. Loededll 0nty 12,145 mllee. (PN750N) AM/PM redlo, 2,MS ....._ (1CM ) blue tieeuty. (578UOV) (1 0057) • A C'9lm I (162TU() thle one. (M OR) WholeN6e 8lueboott 18275. ~5982 s31a2 MUST s31a2 $2982 s7992 SEE ............ 71 77DAl .. 710 ., .... OMIGA RUTA llAllON WAGON MUllA• I • 4 cyt., auto .. lllf cond .. amltm radio. 4 cylinder, ~· eunroof, a gr .. t "cylnder, 4 ~· ...,., t.,.. See 2 dr., cust. Int .. 8 cyl., euto .. pwr et. l <•·"$5282 econornlcll ( 1 Bl.£395) tt\la onel (041T X) ~·· air, vtny1 tot>. eter. t.,_. (18HN858) , $2982 . $3382 $6382 . 79 MYllOUlll .• , .... 81-Y 79DA'lllm 79 llOl•A ........ llUllAllCI CA•mlH Ol.fAll8ACll CV" 4 dr., 4 epd.. radio, air cond. Lio. 2 dr., 4 nyl, pwr bit .. ltet9o, 4 epd .• Auto., pwr. 1t., w .. pwr. w .... .,..,. (Uc. AM/Fm., 5 epd. (IOOYDL) 4 cyl., 19 .. 2 dr .• 1tereo. (891WYK) Fully equi pped! A 8 t1ck 8 Hutyl 548YHF 11,094 ml.e.. Uc. 1CHH273 #1BUY104) (1DMM97). s3592 $6182 $6382 582 $3782 $2582 79a.IYPB ...... 79FHD 79 ClllYY u•a... 626 •mno MOllZA A Gr.et Buy! (570XZO) Station WllQOt'I. CB, cuaette, 4 apd .. ~~4f8A2FM, VI, coue:, 1uto. tr1n1., air cond. Lio. 2 Dr .• auto. trlr\9., lir cond., 4 cyt .• pwr. ... .,.T5'5°82 1CA 152. 1tr., radio. Uc. 278YZB $3482 l 100mr· $2782 s3592 . ~ . ,'r REE 24 ~QNTH QR 24,0QQ Ml. . . . <}\,\)WILSON FORD'S ,. :tf C .AR CARE & REBATES ~~ $2,0l'lO HUGE DISCOUNTS 1982 FUTURI 2 DOOR COUPE 8 cyt., in.trument group, ·1n1.wi1 wlrMilNlld wtpera, floor mounted 1hlft, aunroof, automatic, TAX .uapenaton. llumlnum wtlelllt, tllt wbMI, power -.mo. llght group, IPffd control, power door lock1, •leo. r•ar wfndow cs.froet«, llr condmon, AM/FM It.,_,, lntlRor luxury g_roup, power d«:k ltd releue, power wtndows, tin IAtd gee.. (St # 1209) (mt•.#121023) WILSON FORD YOU SAVE :e: $2025 TWO 1982· J FAiRMONTS ·NEW CAR WARRANTIES APPLY 2 YEAR. 24,000 MILE COMPLETE MAINTENANCE FREE WARRANTY 1982 LTD STITIOll WIGOll Dertl twown, Uni.ct gtua, IPMd control. IPflt ~ ...... llUmlna19d 9ntry .-n. 'Wtlte ......... quartz dodc, tit ....,, ·~ IMt, dlll.txe .. rac:tc, ,..., window ct.troetet, 11t condition, AM/FM et.,_,, rtgtrt-hand rernoc. mln'Ot, heavy du1y batt9r)'. vent wlndowl. n. whMt COV9rS, pow9f brlke releue, convenlcne group, tight group.(#1415)(1151748) ~~= YOU SAVE . vc::--1...k $201 "'- WIL80N FORD EXCLUalVE 1982· EXP-GT 2 SEAT SPORTY COUPE Two-tone J*nt, i.ttier IMta. eunroof, Iambi wool trtm, olOM ratio 4 epead trens axle, power "-'1ng, IPeed control, air c:ondttJon, AM/FM eter_, caaeette, right~ remot• mirror, hHvy duty b1ttery, TRX h1ndllng 1u1peoalo11, metl1c wide rtldlala, ptemium IOUnd booetw', tinted """' frOnt • dam. whale'• tall, ,.., window iouvr.. (#1518) (112'4858) 1982 LTD · CROWll VICTORIA Tinted gtaa, dlgltal c:k)d(, 9PMd control, r.ar window wtper, eurvoof, dOM ratio IPO't tr11n1 axle, power ateenna. r9dlnlng budlet Meta, power brllk•. 1ir condition, AM/FM stereo with c:uaette, .,,.mum IOUnd booster, frOnt vent wtncSoft, llumlnum wheell, llght group. (#1548) (#128291) TWO 1982 GRANADAS 82 BRONCO Bllld! cu1tom patnt, apoJt llaatrulMntatlon, lkld plat-. -.rtomatk:, lwfng away spare tire c:an1er. tllt ~. lpeed control. handllng pacttage. air, auper cooling nwlalor, 38 gal. tuu tll\k, ntP-fold rear aeat, tlnt~1 .... l)(lvacy glas, Ice cheat conlOle, cu1tom lnterlof', cent• whMt9 with railed white lettered MUD SNOW T RES.(# 14&4) (#40311) WILSON FORD YOU SAVE Ll~7:E $31 89 YOUR PRICE 114,031 1982 ESCORT 2 DOOR HATCHB-C Medium bfue met.lllc, cloth and vtny1 trtm, blec* lide wal tlr•. AM redlo, two-tone paint. YOUR PRICE ,• $5688* 1982 FAMILY VAN CONVERSION NEW CAR WARRANTIES APPL YI - -... 8U -= --------.,,. --. , --ml ------... -------- G EORGE El l\IN S C O ~·'' START tlRE In this very affordable and spacious 3 bedroom condo near South Cout Plau. $98,500 of assumable financing. asking lea than appraisal Only $119,500. .. ..._ ·-... .. _ :::-·-.... .... .... ··-.... ·-.. _ ·-..... ,.,. __ ,. ... ·-,._ •Oii ,. .. ·--... ........ ., ... == == .... ..._. ·-·-·-·-.,_ ·-·-·--·-·-·-·--,._., RVM~ of Costa Mesa .......... \ f >I/. I ti F tl . . ·.•• .. .,., ..... By bldr. Re9d'I to mow In to,"""" OUltom home, --------1 .... .,. 3 br, 2 ba. 1710 eq ft. 'h .... r.ut llZI By owner. or .. tlc price acre. View. Tiie roof. •••••••••••••••••••••• reduction tor lg• down- CdM G 8' 11850 Udo Prk Dr 28' $1800 Bayalde Cove 28' S2200 Bayfrnt 58' dock 13250 Clubt\OUN. pool, tennll. • ... , peyment. MO-7990 • Fn.U horHI OK. 1105,000. 1 BR Dana Point SH · ---------1 mOITIYE Cllff Dr 38r vu 11400 Open Sat & &un. 30812 vtewt Pool, tpeJ T.O. 30 lflw•llill VI• Non• (MMdowvlft yr I 0. n I I 1 2 2 0 m 0 . ADULT MOBILE HOME llrTE IPT./ .... Mobile 28' 1700 Npl Ala 38', pool tta50 I ~,.,. .... ..,....,.. from $400to11.000 wt! • Waterfront Homel. Inc. W99). 1-4176-4848. 931-teee PARK on th• Bay. 1 110 to 3000 sq ft bdfm. den. 1 1>a seo.ooo: "No Fr111" Prices llUlflllT llPLD ..,..,. .......................... ,.,..., " .................. """" ..... 1 ....................... ., 1mw ............ _. ... ..,......, u1-1-. 1.191 llU-WITD I •1mn ., .... ,, .•...•... ·~·· .. , .. , ....................... "' . ...... Llrp ..... e...., ... ... ....... . .. , ..... .... =...... .... s:::; ~J11l111 I W. ......................... ..., ..... 1-1•• ............... , ....... ...... ••• ••••fr ,.... • •• .. .......... 11.....-. .... ,,.. 3 Br. 2 ba 08,500. 2 Wlhlam COie. a.r . ...,. IHI bdrm, furn., 145,000. 2 i;;;;;;;ij~ •••••••••••••••••••••• bclrml25,000.300E.c.t i 114/111-1• U1·1• a-... ~'-Hwy Unit 113, New~ort Ill U1f11 2 8'. T~. delah-Beed\. Bkr. 875-33-4 NEW LISTING for your 2 ~. 1~ ba l'WnNe, ale, lul end unit with patlo, By Owner. 4 Bdr, den, & viewing! SeclUded In ltl dbl gar, rec lac. G.G. community pool & klddy guett rm. 2 famlly mw. 5 own IU9h landlCaPlng 11 seoo. (213)640-51MI ywd. LO'# down or take e.. frplc. formal IMna & CMK loYety .. Bdrm.home. ._, ...... _ over exlatlng VA loan. dining. 1225,000, llO, Spaclou• kltchen-tamlly l•tta• ,,,._,,. "'° --Full price • 1 oe,1100. ooo eswn. ~108 arM with Nnllng to large ••••••••~::-r.;.;,...... ""'-8/,a 1111 Aoant· te2-1700. patio and garden. Each 8 UNITS COSTA MESA, •••••••••••••••••••••• CAMEO SHORES wlndoW In the elegant 2 nee!SI work, grHt po-LARGE 3 BR 3 Ba... bttne, • SPLISHI SPLASH! &Ingle euatom 4 8'. 3 Ba. pool, ltory llvklG room of thll tentlal, S310K. John d~r, pertly ful'n. Big story Randi ttyte w/pool J•CUUI, kol pond, 3 o.uvtlle model, lramea 4M&-7llO AGT rm. S25()0-mo. to and ape. 1135,900. No l rplc'1, 1475,000. h I I I A mo 4M2 5200 qua~~1i:,a,:ow down., _e7_s.._5t30 __ . -----1 a deng t " ""· ,.. ml WlllD · · . Siu _..;7.,. , -c:urtty aat• encloMe ""' Trad• Io r my N . 8 . C.,... bl 1fM JUI • 11W1J area of condomlnlum1. ~front home. awn. •• •••••••• • ••••••••••• 1 8'. AdUtt Condo. Walk Newport 1 BA condo. OtMted at 1725,000. e7U57, spygtua •er. family to atorH, bank1, etc. Furn. elegantly decor•· M2·12M II llHt ,_ room. 2 frplo. ocHn/ :,~~~ tedl Pool, ape & club. Mlhelm, 12.400,000 ~;t"· l19SO/mo. balance at 12~. Total Tap MQJrlty. 11SSO mo. hl{ltl dn. A'1t 548.-5832 ------~..,-Price '70M. P .P. l3t-teee Spectacular oceen & city 64W2f2. .... W. .. .,,_...._ llghta view from every ........-.s room. Latge & ~ ,,.,,,,, IH4 11•11 ..... N 11 ml 2 Br. many amenltl ... •••••••••••••••••••••• s b d r in • 2 b •• ~~~~~~~~I 112001mo. caa An9'0nY Woodbridge 4 Br. Oet. apa.lcovered=tlo. Liu JU JM on •!moat 5 •er .. In daya t•2-57117, a¥M l home, cur-cta--Ho, •lo. eeautllull" dee atect. ••••••••t•lii"t••••••••• Coat• Mela. Mlnut .. to wttnda 931~ 0 I Ill It ' beac:h. N.v. a vecanc:y. • \ wn Agt. w nance. ~ loan 5"' Immaculate townhomee l.£A8E/LEASE OPTION ::7r.1't at &179,000. dn. 12311,500 FH By llflltlrl &..Ml with PoOI: mo.ttys ~ Lr. newty remod. 18t, OWner: 979-31123 Aacentl~modelad droom unite with petloe 3 •. tam rm In lrvlne .... ...111111'1 ~!=ina. s:~r~~ and g~. Large... Terr . I 1500/ mo , Wu•rWp....... 2 Bd 1\t ea a mother· con1ldar exchenge for aumable loane. 15.eoo, 931-7118, '45-0445 2 I ltudy °' 3 er, f*'""Y In.few. Only t142,000. condO Of l'IOUM In IMne 000.-........ llt .._ 21bdmllt * ~.~*.be l'IM. rm, 2~ 81. dlnln9 rm. AobertMmleenl31·12" or Cotta M .. •. call rw • _, ,_.,. fOf~ mdt home. 12~ i97f..ii2*i~~8i~~l~1~•~·~.,.~~~UE1~·~1-~~ M0-7000, MS-7521 financing, Ownr/Bkr TAABELL. AEALTOAa ...... '"'27 ll'Ylna Terr., 311d/19r, den. _..,, 2'4 8•. ai.arpl 11000, Hr Condo, upgradect, 644-0H1 '"9t 1oo,.aclttl, ........ -------&le 1•t D, lo* down, /91& .... 800. (714) m4151 UllL ~ 11 Ehllllll ~--= :..= - rated. Aleo Included .... .,.., ..... In Tti1rU• fllooll Glen bolt dodt; I•..,.... T~ I bdr'IM. I 4 bfkt to OOMll; tllt, -...... ' bteltl· 000. l'trm.: 714 ........ *' "°°'· txn b°""9 "'n1.21u, .,.ce ooufd N •PM----------i ded to lll»ftrr or omoe. ""' .,,,.. ....... °" two ......... 11•0.. and ntttM ltght YllWI. Tllle,te •n e•oepUonal ...,, at ., ...... 'A~Y9W ~,All Cet'IW!ert Mortuarr CN.Pel-cr,matory 3500 P~tflc VleW Onve Newport Beach 644-2700 NcCOll ICll MOl1VAUS LaQuna Beach 494-9'1S 1 L~unaH1lls 768--0933 . 8-1 Juen C.S>fstrano '86-1n& ....... , ....._ofTnie ....... QTDNo. OIS1 Ml.IC NOTICE ACmtOUI .,..... .. NAMI tTATIMINT Tiie followtng pereon 11 doing -THI! NIGHT STAR MUSIC HOWCME. 219 VII LIDO SOUO. lllcfl. CA 92963 . "-W. HW-Ill, 219 VII tdo Soud, Newport 8HGll, CA "9: "* , .... SUNW!ST IANK, 1 C*lltornla Tllll ~ II condUct9d by an corpor1tton. formerly SANTIAGO MdUal. BANK, H.duly appointed Tru1t.. Jll'llM W. Hlnet Ill under the loltowlnQ dMcrlbed deed Tiiie 1t1tement WU fll9d with tlll ol lruet WILL S!LL AT PUBLIC nty Clef1l ot Orange County on '1"101 AUCTION TO THEJilOHEST 810. fl'I 18, 1932. Put>llthed Orln"I Colll Diii" DER FOA CASH or 11 Mt forth In ,,_,. • ' Section 2924h of Ille Clvll COde. Ill Put>llelled Oraog• COHI Dally Piiot, Mttr 20, 27. June s. 10, 1932 right. 1111• and 1nlerMt conveyed to Piiot, Msy 20. 27. Juoe 3, 10, 1~ 1 __________ 2_111&-82 __ Ind now Mid t>y 11 undet uld Deed 2112-12 of Trvet In the property hetelnahet delc:tlt>ld l'taJC NOTICE flM.4lt1 TAVSTOR MOHAMAD FEKRI. an NOnc• TO CMDfTOtta unmwrled men FtCTI"OOUS IUS .. H °' IUl.K TllAMnJI IENEFICIARY: SANTIAGO N .... IT .. -•NT (e-. ·~ u.c.C.) BANK,• Celltornll c:«poratton. .. "'"' Nolle• 11 ll•r•t>y gt yen 10 Recorded J11ty 3, 1979 as Instr The following pareon Is doing credltort ol thl within named Ho. 2729 In book 13214, page 1371 bulinMI u ; ttanlf9l'OC1•) that a t>ulk tranel« 11 ol Offlclal ~01 In lhl omc. ol GENU t . 3005 Fiiimore Way, 1bout 10 be med• on p1raon1t th• Recorder of Orang• County; Coela M ... , C1lltornl1 926211 property herelnaller dlloribed Mid dead of tru1t dMcflbM Ille to-A An11• Hov1nc1. 3006 Fiii· The nam•(•) and t>u1tn111 11ow1ng proplf1y: lot 75 of Trect No. mc><a Way. Cotti Mesa. Calltornla 1 ddr111 0 1 th• 1n 11nd1 d 79'4, ln Ille City ot Newpc><-1 Seac:11. 9211211 tranlf«Oti•l are: Floyd Smtih, Tom Couoty ol Orange. State of Calllor-Thi• t>uelneu 11 conducted t>y an Smtih ind Mike Smtih, 1000 nil. •• P« ~ recorded In Book lndMdu•I Newport Blvd .. Coate Mall, CA 314. P1g11 27 lo 311 lncluslve ol A Anna Hov•noe 92.127 MIKlllana<>u• M~. In Ille office of Thie llatamenl WU flied wllll Ille Tile locltlon In Caltfoml• of tl\9 the Co11n1y Recorder ol said Cwnty Clerk Of Orange County on c:Nef exec:utMI offioa or prlnc;lpll County Aprll 27. l982 butlneu otttca of the Intend~ MAY 8E ALSO KNOWN AS· 21 '111171 tranal•or te· 11tn1 11 above. I.. Montac:lto Drive. Corona dll Mar Pub1ts11ao Orange Coasl Deity All other t>u1ln111 ni'm11 and Cllllornl• P•IOI Al>fll 29 May 6 l3 20 l982 addrHHI Uled by th• Intended "(II • ttrMI ad<lrau or common 1859-82 1r1nat11or within 1hrM :r-ar1 tut MUC NOTICl NO~°' IUUt TMN ..... , .... tttl .. 101 u.c.c .• No\t'9 11 hereby glYen to th• Ctedltort of 0-tron ~uan. Tren11erot1, •llo .. b111ln•H ecldr"' 11 31H-C AlfPolt Loop OrlYe. 00111 MHI, Oounty of Oreno-. State of Clllfomll. tti1t a bulk tr-i.r II about to be tnedl to Jorden ''"''' 1nd Rtcllerd T. ...... Trlnlfw .... wllOM tM1MM eddr ... II 6911 Town Clnt« Otiw1 81111• 800, Coll• Me.. County °' Ot81199. 8t1t1 of Ctlltlornle 8262e. The PfoOl'tY to be ltlMfefNd II IOcatecl It 31te Alfpon Loop Ori¥1, Bulldlno c. Cot1a Mee-. County of 0renoe. St••• ot Ce11torn11 9212e. l•fd prop1rt7 11 d .. crlt>•d In generel 11: At 1tock tn trade, flxtur .. and 1q11lpm1nt of that rnanulectutlng bullneal 11-• O.natton C«poratlon and localed 11 81N-C Airport loop Orl\'I, Coltl Me., Cowlty of Orange, St111 of Callfomll. Tiie t>11lk lfl'llflf Wiii bl c:ontummated on or If* the Ith d•v of June, 1tll2, et Turner, Oettlenleld, Wiik a Tlglnnln, 1383 WllilhlfW Blwl., Suite 610, Bweriy Hllll. COunty of Loe Ano1611. State of c.lllotnl• Liit det• tor tlllng (llalrne. tr7-12. So tar 11 known to th• Tr-ferM(I), Ill IMltlnlM MINI and 1ddr11111 u11d I>)' Tr-*Oti•) tor tlll lhfll ...-r11ut peat, H dlttwent from IM ~ are. Oanatron Corporetlon, 3191 Airport Loop Orlw, Ilda. C, Costa Mui, CA 92121; Oanatron Corporation, 53M Slwttng Center Or!Ye, WMu.kl W1191.t CA 91359 DATED M~ 19, 10U. Jordan FrMlar. Rldlllfd T 8ellt1, Tran11..--K._, .,.,,.... M T-n Cenl« Dme, 1""9 IOO c....-.c,.._ Put>ll1hed Orange Co11t Dally Piiot, Ml'f 20, 1942 d•1lgn111on It 1hown •t>ove. no ·-.,. MftllC( put ao llt 11 knewn to lfll Intended warrtnly '' gtV9fl 11 to ltt comp... ,.._ "" tnlnlterll -none. ~ C... •-or correctnesll)" F1CmlOU8 WU r11e n1m1(1) •nd bu1tn1H "*., C .. 1 NI Thi benelldary \lnOlf l9ld Deed NM9 ITA~ add r a a I o I I ha In I end Id C-'Y II ... P'rMlilol ol Trutt, t>y rHllOl'I ol • t>rMCll or The kJllowlng penone .,. doing "ltll\sferM(•I are: JllH K. Sharif•. NOla °' MTDnOll daltull In the obllg1llon1 HCured ~ -511 8ryca Canyon Wttr. Stea. CA TO MU. •AL HiWUll't lh•reby. har11olore exac:11ted ano TIGHT QUARTERS COHCRET£ 92921. AT llNVATI IALI dellvarad to the undersigned a BAEAKINQ AND EXCAVATING, 447 Th•I tb• properly pertinent Eat•,. of Mlluf W. Phllllpe. lllM. written DeGlareuon ol Oeteutt and Magnolla Newport Beach CA hereto le dllctlt>ld In general u : OacMeed. Oemlnd lor Sale. and written notice t~ ' ' g1101tna Hrvlce 111tlon and 11 NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEH Ullt ol t>reec:h end ol eledton to CllUM Te..c..d Thomll9 Cottem, 4e7 foelled 11: 1900 Newport Blvd.. 1111 undlrliO'*' wtll 1111 11 private Iha undertliJned 10 11141 uld prop-Magno1a. Coeta MaM. CA t2e27. Coell ~ CA 92$27. Ille IUl>jlct IO QOnflnnltlOO of Mid arty 10 ullsly Mid ~Iona. and Monlc:a Jane Cottam. 417 The ~ ~ UMd t>y the Superior COurt, on°' aftel' June 1, lher .. ller 11141 undenigNld <llUMd ....._ C-. ..... CA 112927. laid ltanelwof(I) 81 Mid lo<latlon II: 1912 at the oltlclaa ol ROtlERT A. said noltu of l>faec:h Ind of e!ec:-1f19..,..,... la c:onduc:ted t>y an· Floyd Smith & Sona Unio11 78. B ·.lUOMINI, Sulle 1040, 300 lion to I>• Recorded Fet>ruary 3, lndMdlMf. That utd t>utk tran•l•r 11 Montgomery StrMl, San FfWM:lllco, 19112 u 1n11r No 12-039760, of T.-on:t ""°"* eon.-n lft'9ndlld to be oonaummeted et the Cellfomla 94104, .. the rtght, tlOI Mid Oflldll Aecorda. Tlllt llll 1 •••I -fled wttti the olllce of> Weetem St1111 &crow, and ~ ol Mid....._, In and Said .... wll t>e fN!dl, t>ut with-eow.ty a..°' 0rwiga Councy on 2239 T~ Aoed, 8ufte 105, 110 111 II• cert1lt1 rHI prc>p41rty OUI C0'*'9111 or WIR'll\I)', ax.pr-...... ,, ,.. Wlltlalt• . CA 91361 on °' tltUlll In Iha County of Orange. or Implied, reo-tdlng Ulla, ~ ' fW19I .ner June I. 1 2 Stal• of Cellfornll. dllClftbed • llOn. or encumt>rancee, to s>-v the Publletled Ofange Cout Daity • folows: rem11nlng prlnclpal 1um of lh• Plot,..._ 20. 27 June 3. 10 1eet Thie t>ulk tr_.., II Mlt>tect to An undlYldaO one-halt (~) note(•) secured by Hid Dead ot ' 2'11&-82! Catllornla Uniform Commerctal lnl«llt In: TM Soul~ quarter of Trutt, With lnlarnt II In Mid note Codi $«11on 81C>e. the SouUllllt QUlrter of lhl South provld•d. 10111nce1, II any, under __ .,. ..._ The name and ldd,.... of 1111 one-hall ol Lot 4 In Bloell tt of the terml ol Uld Dead ol Trull. ~ nu1-. peraon with wt1om clllma f'MfY be Trett lie, Coul 8ouleverd Finni, In 1-. chargea and expen-ol the HChUOUI WM !Mid le Wlll«n Stat• Eac:fow, Inc:.. the Cl1y of Huntington Bw:tl, M Trustee and of 1111 llusted aeatad ..,... ITA'ftlmNT 2239 Town1g1t1 Rd , Sulla 105, etlOWft on• map recorded In boo6I t>y uld Deed ol Trull Said sale w.11 The tolowll10 .,.._. -doing WM1111<a Vlbge. CA 91361. Sllfldrl 1 0 , p 1ga1 3 6 and 3 I of t>e lllld on Frklay, June 4, 1982, 11 ~ • Snook. &c;tow Offleet, and the IUt ~ Mape, In the olb of 1100 a.m II the front entr11nce lo SECURED PROPERTIES day tor tlllng c:lalm1 t>y any cradllrx the County Recorder of•Hld GUARDIAN TRUST DEED SER-LTD ·I 17121 Mltcllell lrve CA 11\111t>eJune7, 1982, wtlldl II the County, t()Q91hlr with tMl portjon VICES. 1800 Eut Mayfl!r Avenue. 92714 ' ' ' bu 1 I n I a I day t> a to re t II a of the Hor1h ~ of Loe P1toa Orange. c.lllornia oOnllld 0 Zellner 624 Hart>or con1umm11lon data 1pecllted Avenue tying adjacent to Ill• The total 1moun1 of the unpaid · above a~t>ed land on the South t>tl•nce of the ot>hg111on secuted ::.::;t Or., Newport Beach, CA DATED Mttr 3, 1982 11 vacllad by Ill• Board of t>y aalO property 10 be solO, loge-Gaty J Morehead 87t Sleepy Jelll K. SherlN ~by Rllolutlon ldopMd 111« with in1er .. t. Illa c11erges. and HOiiow une , ___ . 8eactl CA Intended T,._,_.. on July 13, 1943, • c:artlftad oopy ntlmaled c:oa11. axpenMS, and Id· 92651 · ---·-· Put>llelled Orang• Co11t Dally being recorded In boo6I 1197, Peo' 111ncH, 11 or Iha date hereof. la 0 ;.,,, J Sdlnelder Ille ...._ PllOt, May 20, 1982 424 of Olftc:lll Aacord1. $124,760 92 _, · ' ,.,_ 2231-12 EXCEPTING THEREFROM all DATED May 6 192 ~. Leguna Beach, CA 92651· uranium. thorium end all other SUNWEST 8°ANK. Thi• bulinlll 1• conducted by Pta.IC NOT1C£ material• determined pu!'IUllnl to a Catllorllla corpor111on. 17771 0 .,~_...,_._ e«:llon 5(1>)( 1) ot Iha Atomic Energy formerly SANTIAGO SANK ary J .,....,_,_ K-40179 Ac:t of t946 (60 Stal 711). to t>e assaklTrustM, Thliltatemanlw•llledwlthllle "*..ICNOTICaOf'~U'nOM pecullarly 1111n1111 lo Ill• BY GUARDIAN TRUST DEED County Clerk of Ofange County on CONTINUAT10M Of'-·· production of tielionllbta materiel. SERVICES 1 corporation May Ill, llll2 ,_,.. Purauant to the provl1lon1 of con 1 • In• d In • h 1 I •" • r 1600 East Mayf1111 Avenue Put>llihed Orange Coast Dally S • c I Ion 1 5 0 3 5 5 o I t 11 e concentration In d1po11t1 In the Orange. CA 92667 20 7 3 o Cofporallonl Code of the Slate of land CX>"let9d t>y !"'-lnatrument. are (714) 771-6910 Piiot, May • 2 · Juoe · 1 · 1982 c.i.tornr.. notice le r.r.oy glYerl hereby~ for tne ~of the SY VIGl>y Lewtl, 2184-12 that: United itatn. toge111er with the Allillant S«tetwy rtaJC NOTICE The parlnaral'llp pr1vlou1ly rtgllt of the United Statea through Publlthed Orange Co111 Daily 1 ______ __,. __ ..,......,...,....,...--axt1tlng among JHnlll• Yoak. It 1 • u 111ort11 d 1 g • n ti or PMot. May 13. 20. 27. t982. ACnTIOUI .,_.. 1242 t Pina, Oar den Oroye, ~tel..._., any time to enter 3043-82 NAM1 tTAT'lmlfT Clllfomla; PNllp 0 . Lyncfl, II, 1042 11P011 Iha land and prompect tor, ----.---.,.-llft-nf't____ Th• lollowlng pereon 11 doing Marchel• Lane, Pebt>la Beach, "*11 and ~the-· making .--nv1-. bualnlll u : Celllomla; and Oouol• W. Forde, just oompenaatlon for any damega -----------OAK ST. SKATES. 212 Main 1915 Wlndwerd line. Newport or Injury oc:c11ton1d thereby. PlCTmoua ....... 81 .. Huntington Beedl, CA 92641. Seech, Cllltornla, under the ftml H°""""'9f, 9'ICft land 1111)1 be Ulld, NM9 tTA~ Hlllwyn F. HamHlon, 75412 EJ111. name of Tiie Lynch-Ford• end any ttghll othlrwlM acqulNd The lotlowtng penon 11 doing Huntington BMch, CA 926411. Company, doing t>u'"-at eee by thl1 cft1po11tlon. may t>• l:Mlll.-11. This '"*'-11 conduct9d by an Baker Str .. t, Suite B-21111 Cott• exwclaed ... N no r~atlon of lndMduai Ma ... C1Hfornt1, w11 dlHofvld. aucll m•l•rl•I• had t>eerl made; SOUTH SHORE INDUSTRIAL Hllwyn F Hamlllon ettec:tlve ~ber 31, tNI. IXCIPI tllet when mucti 1191-.ltl tn TOOL co .. 3303 ~ Blvd... F8, Thie 1tat_,1 ;.,.. flled with the Since tl\11 date, tna DI*'-hM the axtractJon of eny IUCfl meterlalt co.i:: ~.=· 1555 County Ci.ti of Orange County on .,_, and wlll t>e continued .. • from the land In quenfttlll wt1ldl Me11 Verd•. M. 6, Co111 M 111, M-v II, 1912 par1nlr9hlp compflaed of P'1lllp G. 'MY nae t>e trlltllfwrwd °' delMre8 Clllfornle taeM P'1'S10t Lynell, II, 1042 Marclleta Lene. wtt.llcM a 11o1r.-l#ldar the Alornlc Thie ~ 11 conduCted by.,, Put>Htlled Orange Cout Diiiy Pet>t>le Beach, Calllornta; and Energy Ac1 of 194e, .. H now eidlta lndMdual Plo4, Mmy 20. 27, JUne 3. 10, 1912 Douglaa W. Forde, 1915 WindWllrcf °' mey llerMll• t>e -.did. eucfl Thomll JoM Delelrxni 2111-82 Lane. HewpOr1 8-dl, Celffomla, mal8riel 9"111 t>e the Pf°'*1Y ol tile under th• firm name of Tiie United &tet11 Atomic t .ner11y Thll ltatement -fled wttti IN ftlllC MJnC( l~ordl Comc>anY. ~eel ., Comrnllllon, encl the Cornml11to" ~~ ~ ol °""91Countyon1------------Ht laker StrHt, Suite B-219. may requlft deliver)' of 1ucll ., IUPIJllOlt COUllT Of' Coell Meal, c.itfrxnll. The ,_ matl!'lll to It by any P<>NeNOf THI ITA'Q OP'~ ~'*end Wiii oontlnul to thareol altef IUCfl ma'*111 M9 ti.1'1 ,,_ Put>ll•ll•d Orenga Co11t Dally PNot, May 8, ta. 20, 27, 1982. 2035-&2 POil THI COUNTY °' Olf'fY on tlll bu11n111 and 11 ll'ltltted ...-.1ed 11 IUCh from the Ot11 tn IM DIKOO 10 .. of IN ..-ta of lhe ~ whloh II w11 conlatned. If 1111 DWIGHT 0 . WAHLIERG and f)ll'lnerllllp. AH det>t• owing the CorntnlMlon l'ICIW• the dellwry ol MARTHA e. WAHLBEAO, PWntm.. p. rt n. r 1111 p th 11 II• I b •• n IUCh mltlflll to It. It ltllll PIY to lhl w. dlaaofWd. and .,. debtl due from per1on mining or tlltractlng tlle -,,.~tc:CiiniiniC10U1Mitii•iiuiii1iiuiii1i1i11I-COASTLINE INVESTMENTS. IJllld par1nll'INp Wiii be~ or -· or lo MK:tl on. par'90l'I .. NM9 tTATW INC., CLARENCE Al BE AT p9'd 11 1111 addr-of ltie ,_ Iha Comrn1111on detlnnlnll to be The lollowlng ~ ... do6ltg VER~Q~ BETTE A. HARRISON pertnetthlp ... forth lbow. entltlld thereto, 1uch •uma. "'*--and UUt:olS I through xx. ~. DATED-....., 12. 1"2. Inc I II 0 In II pr 0" II. a. t II• RO.OMIES ROOMMATE ~C"'-...... ·-PNllp 0 . Lync;h, H Comml11lon d11m1 fair and SERVICE 1133 OollW OrM-. !k"'9 2 -....... -· DouolM W. ~ r111on1t>I• for th• dl•COYlr)'. ' ' OflDD POil ~SY STATE Of' CALIFORNIA ) ......._ ...... ........... t _ _.Ion ~--:·~~P-, ---.. --··~-"''_.....,._,pr_, • Mtctllll ~· -·-.--... _,... _. t11tractlon, and other 11rvtc•• Coeill ..... CA 12921. Al9UCA1'0M '°" OllDIR COUf(TY OF ORAHGE ) s>«fonnld with rNC>ec:t to IUCll CJety 8fnlttl, 2t7 P ...... ~ omC'l9ICI PAftmn' our OP' On ...... f2. 1Ma, befor9 me, the m.-tal l)l'IOr to lllClh dalhwy, tlUt MaM. CA 92127 RIAL llTATI fUllD uilder'lllgned, a Notwy Putlllc fn Incl Ult! ~t 1tM11 not lndu6a my Thie bu9lrllM • .. conduCted by a H • " ' " g o o" 11 d • r • d t 11 •· tcw Mid' l&Me. PtnOMIY ~ wnount on aooount of IN _,. t11 ,.,,.... ~. o.a.ratlon ol ett~ N. MUHAO PHtUP 0 . LYNCH. II, leriown to me IUdl 1n1ter1111 ~ rtmCMlf ti'Oltl ·Mlchela ~ . .Ml!AAICK and th• 111pporllnt to be flt ptl"IOft wtloee name la Ill.,.... ot cliP9llt Inn-.... "the 11111 .....,,_,, -tied wltn the e111\lbtta, 1111 Court find• •1t1l IUbecrl6ed to the~ IMC"'"*" Oommt11lon cloea not require ~ Qertl of Orallot County on detellOl\t CLA .. !NCE Al.H"T llflCI adqlO'Ndf'CI ~ .. ~ ~of"'°" melllfill to"· the M1ay 1•. 1Ma VERNON OMtt04 wlltl , ....... w.--. •9Mll•aft0n ~ t'llldl etllll oe ol ,,.,.. ~ oe a.wet 1n ..,, -WffHU8 ,.,,, '*Id 1nc1 offtcMI "° "'"'*' totoe "'...._ itvlllllfled Or11n99 Coelt ~ 04tlS IMft by p11bl111111on. ..... More oon1mo11ly kl\Owft H ....,., M1¥ 20' ~. "'-1' ~tfMa ~.:.=~ ;:::.:C.": ::: =..i M. ~ :~d ~o:::::; :.,=. -----------Or*'Ot ~ ""°". N•ll'llPS Notary""* lft H111111111to11 '''°"· CelllOri\11, "9lJC llmC( of Gef*ll ctfoutetlon In Orange end for M6d 11* ~ 11 ao6d "• II". CoUnty, Cllbnla. -a .... tor .... Ccwa: II Im .... Tern11 Of .... ~"' In t1wf1ll ICIUI 9J I 111• row (t) ... 9. ..... .. .. , fNll ~ of IM Ulllttd .... Ofl ITAW lea1t flv. (t) cl1y1 lnt•ntnlng tTATa 0# ~ ) ow1•11181ton d ...., or '*' Ollllfl n. ......, ~ .. doe:lf bet•"" P'f'>llo§Uon d1t11, In a,tf ~lllMe ~ ~ net• bulllnW • WO:,.•...._ CloM:•••il Codt COUN'N C1' ~ t l!HIH•I by d .. d of lri11t on MA"IO" l'RINITY ............ On-12, , ........... _,,. 90 ldd. TM,.,_... of ""'°"001. AND OAYCA"I Tlw....,,. of lwlnlnon9 .. oe i.:ldll'll9lltd.aNoWy"'*90111 ... ........-..... to be •nft•d""" CINTM t• .._......., ~ OO! ..... .,..tft""9._..._ tor~ ...... .;;;.__.. *·....,,...,.... .. to._. ...... CA... ol ~ OOUQf..AIW. ~ .. ,.. i11Y If!"......... , Hllrlorf...., ..... ~ DATIO.,._l,1tea. eooe ..................... •\. ........ -1no..., ..,_., c.t...., ~ Oon ~ 111111..., '° ....... """""""' iir oe cwr:sto: t.. W:.1:1:· ..... ....... trlddllON¢1f·f--lte ...... Ofloe ........ ""' ... ... Tilll~le-:e•tdllW.M .... Cowt ........ P1,l11t11...,_. ........ d.- wdlMMll,.... .... 11111••-~ -·-a· Wln9I My ~ ... _....... crf .. llmt • 911'!'wr .. '-DATID .._.,,, tta. 01IWI Mii ..._ --(llA&J _.,A.'• man ml\ .......... CIA... ......._..,n-.r ......... .._ • n.1=----·-... ..... .....,,l'IMOMd gs.;,..:-=.----~ I f/f Orwlf9. 0..., Oft "1811fl .. ~ 0.-0t "J ... Mr ....... -11,.-.: ....... ,,~.-a,m tilwCKal 111...,_ ,_ ffW ....._. Ila ,........0r.-.o-m • ~:.r=.-~~o.e.t~ , ...... iOt .... c...tOll) ...._...,a.n:.i...1.-. ~T•1• °' ---· ,...,._.,,,,n,.,... .----.., ... • 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 • Deerlltld, I tr. I le • twnhte, ttplo, I ow..,, OUll'T uw Ir "°'*' •nt. Cell tot_,.,., (1131 tlo ,;,;;J, ~W 1111 ~1 bet. •M. ~Ai~• 1~1• 3 ew. a~ t>a, ttm11Vm1. c11n. rm. Olote to epe. tetltllt _., • ' ... lergt )'lnl, ,.. l l o o I. • Io O m o , dtci. 1918 Confh1tnt11. 11 172' (0, Putnem) 1700/mo. llt-5001. TOOAY ~ ~ WOOOIRIOQE 2 9', ctoM 2bf / HUMY tifO t o p a r k , p o o I e n d OC. ?.flM;.,1 1.,. ... 14 1ohoo11. f"ncd yard. -n .. NT.... ........., N21Slmo. Ht-HM 2 Br. ended oat .... c.t-w~ 29' plUI den, peta. dr•P••· 7U W. 2 bl, detached a/c Wll1on. No pell. l\om• Cov'cl deok, f\o '625/mo. 931....,11. pet1. IS751mo. 551-2340 '11'..i.oe, Po04. pvt p&tlo l~.Xlo 1Ult • .,. t•rcten apta. on I/tide &J LA QUINTA HERMOSA from f4t0. 117•tltl1. 11211 ParUkie l.n. 1 bllt 1125, Sir tbe, chtlclren W. Of IMdl. 3 bllt• S. of Ole, "° oeu. 1N "C" L _, Edlngtr. 21et St. No• evall. * CIHn 2 br duplex, oft etreet prtcg. Quiet, 1450. VIII• lnot . no peu. 83tM7220 141 .... 1 Me-MM« ......_5 !11!~.~~t .. /1.ff *"°°· t er. tum .. pool, Vl.U PIUlll Lovely 3br & den, 2"'bJ, Jaouul. 11tt:r Ftond1. .. .... Not•"· ueo. H111• a.2-2934, Ma..3112. _., .. 2 Bf. yatd, no pela, ohlld 615 -18641, !Y .. 1---------t 1 I 2 Br. llHUtllully Ole, We1t1tc11. IHOlmo. 494·3503. W•IU IHfi 11fl 11ncaecape0. qW.t com· P1-'!793. ---------••A•••••••••••••••••• ptex, e11c gar••· c•r· ---------New nl'#leN 2 BR, den, 2 Furn. l.1gun1 8Hch lu-f:''·~fl el, pGOI, pe-• ci.an 2 t>edroom vntum. 81, oceanlc1nyon wt9w. xury 1tudl0 • Sltelfl• 1 Oerage, no P•I• 1500 11400 mo. 494-1478 TV, aeuna, 'maid ~ '°'8oRAY ..:i>fls mo. 2380 EJcMn El MORRO BEACH for ~::.;::1. • 1, 5IWHk. l4001mo' up, l200 MC .• &.lmrnlt Aini.I 4Br, MeM rant/for Nie. 1500 eq ft. cMoOlft V•deer•. 761·37M Of mobll1 llom1, No. l•· ,..._,,,.,,. n11 1180 Pomon1 Ave. (213) 1127-5001 ~.~pnre=I= •••';r.;;•••••••••••••• _M_2_-20_1_5_. ----- E• I II 28r+d • Oceanfront~· 2 a 3 br, Spic. 2 lty. 2 BR. 1~ bl. • d• -• erp en, eq ft deck 780-2"0 comp. furn cl. 01r. Avt. ~· ~ .. , ................ tJo. 2'A ba twnh1e. Obi ;er. ~784 _...,... • ., •• ..- micro, frplc, pool, Jae, w II I Jllj MW M 475 mo. Chlldren OK. 1au111 •. 18911 mo. no •• r.m ..• ~!........ no pet•. 4141-3017; pet•. Weyne, 1gt Luxury home. Oeffn vu, ' 213-3711-8107 Mll-M18 1und1ck, 1800 1/f, 3Bt 1_1 Br. ant. '350. vtlle ln-2bl, fem rm, 2 frplc1. 1 ~ csep, lllf 11 "' PUii l12001mo. 496-918& w.:;;. =· ' •. '2211 Get.I you •tal1ecl In reel .. ,_~-Vl~· -~1 ~ utll.I. 1150 MC. ~ .... ~~· ..,..,, ~·· ............ _ -..._ 1 Id ••••••••••• •••••••••• ""'""" .. '""' ~ t Br. dupa.x llt• 1• 3 Bdrrn. 2 8etll Condo. E. 1tth St. Spece 42, C.M. $450/mo. A/C, wlw oarpell, mo-C.M. M2·•1113 2 Br. Townl\011H with dern eppllancea, 2 Hr pool H B 1576/mo ti I t Sharp 2 8R 2 Ba. lg• Lil'~ g9c Your inw.im.it =::;, ~!c,~~-:,.: rooma, II bt1nt Ind OIW, etattecl. In beeutltul Miiiion va. II"· M•H Verde. 1525 Agent eei-1100 Jo. 14125 Fil plu• 1100 mo. Call 540-1158, '" Won't •u aeir. l:s dMn. 982-'>793 Ewa. Spedo&'8 1tud10S one tor Leny "' Pam ~~~s~eo-M1• ~.'!!P.!!.~!! .. !A!~ :nr;;o~:is= ~ p2:.o 1~~.~1{8: 3 Bdr & den z Bl & pool BACK BAY Condo. adlt. and UNFU .. NISHED. g1rege. E. Side. 50 klde OK. Sieo, 111 & mt'. «lenled, 3 br Of 2 & den. Oakwood 1tso ollers mo. 54&-e.49& • Cllrlittna, 567-2783 2 ba, bttn•. trig•. WIO, • All Utilitlel Plld Xlnt toe. Welk to S. c. frpl, 111 new decor,. pool1 ........ Plaza. NEW 2 Br. 2 Ba., 1 BHutlful M111 del Mar & patio. 1960 mo. 1et, •1mon•-Br & 1 Ba.« StUdlo. ln- 1\om• 3 BR 2 B•. 1 .. 1 a MC. 842-1155 OOCUperlcy CIUdH frplc. •••oa11f 1 lndecod. g.rdnr Incl .. wtr N f 1 3 B 1 • ., Mlll6on In French wtndow1, pool, •. pd, $t96. 540-4370 aft 8, "'00••n ron r. •-~ tennta, whirlpool 1p1, 111 d•Y wknda mlly rm. 2 lrplc .. yurly. l&Ul\I, ......._._.1 •x.ardee __ ...;.... ___ . ---~ 12600/mo. MS-0778. And Much M0<e1 ......... ._. 3 br, l'A be. p'lt pctlo . .,._ Hllt>or VleW Home 3 Br 2 For 1 month °'a hie-~m~ ":.. llundry hie. ;i~i~w~2~tnde Ba. tamlly rm. $11601rM 11me ModellQOPI\~ Why rent When you c:al) ' · Purch1H option •••II. 9-Jfto~ No~· now own '°' oNt 11000 • MESA VERDE 38r. f1m ~977. down & low montlUy rm . n I c.. I 7 7 5 . _EX_C_L_U_Sl_V_E_IR_V_IN_E_T_E_R __ , p1yment1. Cell fOf d•-- 831-3t65, 494-&594 Blt>I. RACE 4 bdrm, 2,A be. Oekwood 1 t1ll1. 549-3421. 3841 3BR, 2B1, wtk to ahop1, Attract. gerd1n/p1tlo. ,..,_...._ •--t• I BHr SI. C.M. BelwMn He SIS 1-5. 1750 w/ L .. 11500 mo. No pelt ~.,_,,.._..,,....,,.. Mee.Arthur & Sunflower. xrdnr. 3089 Loren Ln. pleue. M6-23811 Newpott Belch/No. 73-3495 3 br, Bluff• (Paula), on 880 trvone Heir nu 3 Br 21h Ba. lenc. q u I • I c u I -cs • -•• c • 1•1 16111) yrd, 2188 Miner. 1760. $11001mo. Rltr 731-4446 (714)~1104 EMtllde Condo 2 Br. , 'A • Be. frplc. g1rage. le501mo. Call 546-35e1 GARDEHN>T. 840-5010 oc.REHTAl.S Newport 8Mch/8o .. 4 Bdr 2 Ba. femlly rm. 1-5bf'I $200 to l2000 1700 1etfl St frptc, OIW. ucell. 750-3314 open 7~ (Oo¥ent ,..,) t bdrm. 1375/mo, water • pd. AYall. May 17 . : ee&-1452 ldM>ola. 1125. t25 Mee>-(714) MMtO etlen St. Stop by .... Bluff• 4 Br. 3 Be COftdo, k e n cs 1 . E w 1 1 pert Mf>· qtra. 2 car Mel 213/133-80e2 glf , much atorage. -----------1 $1350 .... 780-9313 ws/ .., , .. , m _w1e_nc1-. ______ , •••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT CREST-3Br 2 r=-.2c::·~c~. g•-condo for IN, 3B•. din ....., 493-04e7 rm, 2 car ger•g•. den. frptc, refrtg, drpa, p1r- tlally furn. 845-11663 or wortt(213)e59-e283 II ,,,. ...........•.••..••... Eut teth. St. unfUm. 2 Br. quJet eclult apU. e>mat• . yerd a petlo. enetld ge- r1ge. new1y decoreted. $425/mo. Call 64$-3778 or MS.2811. 1Br, newly redecoreted, pool. Ideal for working couple, no pell. M15 mo. UUI pd. Furniture avaJI. 546-7889 NEW BREED APTS. a tmlUYll -----------4 BAcH from '350. Frplc, mTllY ., 15951mo. 2 Br. 1'A Ba. Townhoule, II bullt-N, ~y. laundry rm, ~ rec rOOtn. pool, JICUZZl. g11 & water paid. No peta. 393 Hamiton, C.M. 645-4411 APT. MANAGER Seml-t911red qi! (50+-) to "' m1nege a 141 unit com- plex. Lite malnttnMnee Lerg• 3 Br. 2-ea. Town- houM In quiet comple . .x. lero• pool. garden Mt· ting. HOO 846-3381, 875-594D Wllllide 1 Br. Newly CS.- coratecl. atowe a rlfl1ol. iower. '375/mo. No pet•. Nr So. Co11t Plua. trg, - IUM)' 2 br 2 be, t>eaut. decor, patio, MC. get•. pool, clubh ... g111 water/ elr Incl. $~75. 97Mt19 urr .. 191.11 20S E. 11th 8l ~ .. I l.~l!t ........•••... Dn\1W9yt, '*"=tLot ..... IMlooe • l&I A1PNt N1-41 lo ALLITATI 'AvtNO a..oet1no08trlolna .... ~.l"-lis. Lio n•nta ..... 1111 Classifled salespeople know how to say tt rtght-call us today for assistance In prepar- ing your ad. ReCll Estate r~~!i!!~!#! ~!-W.l!.ffm.!.-!! ~!!~~ .... ~ ~.!!'.If!!!.!! ~!.!f.<Mt ........ P!h..'!.'!!!!. .... !.~! ~.'le.'!!. .... !.~!~.'!.~ .... !!.! ....._ "'--*-te n--CiOMt <>fi:.~=N~.!-\. ,:,~ ~ ~h~ 'N:;,h~:, llT IWY/UmlT W•~hoUH ~with ....... 111¥111 TR'f'o ....... UT8 June • 81 H~/P.f ",. """"'".,.... '°" .. ...., --~ arnmef. 973-7873. Have furn. June , . UH & 1375 lncldng carpell, drpe, a wet fNllll\ IM For eomeone who Ilk•• Q M.Ut o--... lndlan w• VAia. tum 3 842~58 utlll. 142-8200. bare. 700 lo 3200 eq.tt. UUl1ll NN to wen with • ~ ~~ ~~n~t ! oMc;:.'' l~'::~· :=~~~~or:; ..-_., BR 3 ... • 11_ L.. II NEWPORT BEACH MeeelndUl1"-pattt, 711 ARE fR« Permanent. Parlltlme. ~-----------------;..;,.... ·,..!J·1~ •~n5u• _, .... -1.18141 Office IUIJH -Dover W. 17th 81., Pacific BMf ~ 494-7771 l.aouna 8MCfl aum pereon good wlflguree ~a Alut•••IJ .,.. ........,.. ...... ···~TSfOE•c•M••••• Orlw. 294 10 eeo eq. tt. 1ndu1trlal Park. 1835 Cal•. Apt. Manager, Co••• :~:.~·; i:i':cti\!:: 118/ruaUW 11.Jtmdffl •-~-•----4.-Slnglielfn•O• ;0; 110• Cal agt, 956-6300. Wtllttler Ave. 642-44e3 &, MHa. Semi-retired cpl ,,........ ..... accurate record•: do •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• --le_. -r-mo 873-7'._.u 2 OFCS 100 f 1 842-7804 Mt.Ull (50+) lo manage• 19 Looking to add to our Bank~; ~CRT •••••••••••••••••••••• ......._ • ~ I ••• p UI I I fl I hi ... ,..._ f~ J.Mj Jllf PROFESSIONAL male/ 16111 _ .. too If WflM, sat ea. Top ,. LUii Un I o om P ax. LI t • eta 81 on orlenlad expr but no4 nee . • ___ {.,_ •••• •• -.-;r.;;•••••••••••••• femala In 26/35 age .,.,_ •W 4411 loo. 875-8251 maintenance & bkkpg profeMk>nala. 24 hn ..-approa. wa ••~•••••••••~ V....,._ 2 br, 2 ba, frsllc, range a a non-emoker te1J9w~·;,n.··w;,t C2000.M. new 3 un0011 lndu• .• Loa1: Lt tan Codlapoo, H. he 1pful. Partial rent. •SeYafal ~11 offer cpmpeny pd t>ene--mlrrored wardrobH wanted 10 INire a "LIKE • • · 1 • ... aq ft -21 ~ft • Johneon'• partc lot San 549-0433 •1 Shampoo Girt Illa lnol'g me)or medlcel, On the beectl 2 Bt pool M75. Sandy 842.e149 ' NEW" 2 bdrm 2 bath flnanclal ln•I. 7oooe.f. ...,,:. ~ 3000 eq ft. 1119 •hi "'iw p ,,......:..... •1 MMlcwtet dental pl\11 prolll •h•· · • .. ht floor Agent ---n -celllnge, 12X1 door, ..,.._,., SUn M . ..-.. b'/ Archltectural drattaman. •1 Mueeuee Ing .............. , .... 1 ., .,., ........... ,. ••• Juoo C•••"'ooo .. ,.;.,, . '"" a ... -.... -Ui1i -.. -· -· .,. "'-· •I -..... ' • CIMCO 7Bf4/9"4&-1854 Ewe. ~poo1&1A1nnia'. =-~~t~2= 520 eq. ft. 11.00per1q. EXEC. offic.t, lnclud.. f· Cell~278 975·2"4 •1 FalUl9t 2e6 .. Aw, C.M. 2 rapt w/pool, laundry 1 bl! to bead'l. l5001mo. ~O\fh• bHch 1 Dana ft., 3975 Birch., N.B. all amenltl••· From Found: Preap QIUMa. Nr. Babyalller, dally 7:30 -Richard ou.i.t1e Salon .... rm. no P9ta. f4' l.C. Hoap. 213/484-0478 Point Hatbof. 1275/mo. Aoenl 541~ 1225/mo. 144-1119. llf• guard 1fa. Balboa 4:30. Npt Ctr er•. Non-~ c.nter Of, H.B. -------- 1400. 873-2252 and 1 BEDROOM FROM '400 plue '.+of uUlllH. CaU EXECUTIVE 8UfTE Pier. 873-0231 1mkr. rel1. 548-3849, Count« P..on. AAJty In 53e-6882. No P91a. Shown by apot 0 • r h •rd •I ( 7 14) Do Yer Dr. N • w po rt Found: LAB RET. black/ 840-3218 ~ ~ pa<aon •I D.t<. Donu11. 2 Br. $450/mo. N9wty -. «ttf Mon/Tuea/Wed 0 to 8 3 1·204 0 Or ( 7 1 4) llU. 8Tll Beach71 1;.f1~~\&a. 1775 up. 21H ft. lndu-M, young, collar, Vic BABYSITTER wanted my wan 4~ llllon. 29e3 f'elrvlew Rd .. C.M. corated. Oaraga. 4pm,acro11tromNpl 49&-9758. mttlT 4--......1 ..... dyL ltrlllf -Offtoe.18081,_. 19th.FullerlonC.M. hometor2&8yrold. Coupte9WW1tedloaulsl 434-45751 &M-9042 ~~~olf couru. Elegant Exec 1ullH In IW'PT •t••T dondo Circle~ Hunt-548-7802 Fr1/8al ewe. 845-8828 IUITf Ill.II In expanelOn & rngmt for IPlllLD a • 2 u ... ..--.56 P'•l~loul loc. Incl .. Office ~ 8Ylllable In lngton, ltMdl. 842·2134. Found tern.a. bfWn, aboUI BA8YSITTER wanted In E. Salon hll opening• fOf lnt'I mklg MN. P/llme, 1 ml bch, IAlytta. trplc. 2 Br 2ba, condo, pool, creter al, recepllonlll, 8 attorney tulle. Slnol• llft•• 4111 8 mo. otd. Vic: Maple St. C09ta Meu for 'A yr otd quallfl•d manager, co-wll treln. 84M"5 Lg. rooma. bltna. OIW !~~· Wa1tcllft. '850. ~~::,• ~ ~~~ 11ory bulldlng In Koll •••••co•••s•r•:••••••••••• C.M. 14$-1507 a 3'h yr otd. 12 hr. Older emetok>gl:lt. hM outt«e, Dellvery Driver of auto Patio, W/O, ena oar. _,.°'Jedi 1175-1711 call ofc:. 1185 mo. THE Canter near Harbor ,. MESA FOi.ind· BHUI ehorlhalr woman pl'el. 548-7138 manlcurlll wtcllent•I•. part1. Mu11 hn• valid Wtr Pd ae 75 a93-04e5 Coufthouae. lndudea... Oerage, 170/mo. t x12 · · Excell. oppty, locatlon, Calif. Uc. & OOod drMnO · · ... a...1t 111• HEADQUARTERS COM-cr.w1al mo®le llbrllY room S30/mo .._1452 Calleo fem, young cal. B1by1111er: Loving. d•· kwety atmoaphere. finest rec:ons. Aidt 5'8-1tS3 2BR 2ba condo. Refrlg, ...................... PANIES: A profeallonal coi ,_eiice room c:oftM ' ' Corona Hlghland1. penclabtewoman needed In organic euoollea. A1k • tet5/mo. Pool, Jee. ten-Studio apt, oc.n vt.w, environment. (714) ro~m. Xerox ev~llabl• ..... W. JIM"" 4111 7~198 10 ceN for 2 t>oya (5mo., tor Al . 841 -0050, 11Uft1Y nle. 14$-1829 ult lnd'd. 1371 mo. 332 851-0881 Tradlllonal decor. Wiii •••••••••••••••••••••• FOWtd: ~d mix. blk 4 yre) In my home. Ap-6424740...,.. Fultllme for loCel ~ Ench) In a.i Clii•••• conelder other protea-~.... Mom, 13 yr otd male. ~d mix blk pr ox. 30.40 hre. per rl". Xlnt drMng record '-'--(aae It. Mar Apt C) I I s & trained cal need 2 l h I • WHk Newport Hghl• Bookk re Ph f UT-. on• •. mallwood I bdrm In SW tWntlnglon • '· ma e 6 female. t'aM _:..SP .. ·~2-1"""". . e!Der q. on .. or appt, •••••••••••••••••••••• Adllt ltUdlo. ~ rW1o. F'lof9. 955-0SeO. a.ct1 Ow)'8r Schod • ~ ""'*' beagte ..... ... ... .... ...... ilfl 551.9212 Mr. emrnona. Large MW 1 Br. condo for utll. pd. 1245/MO. 1455 -288 10 500 eq. fl. Marl-llr1ct '>0nt ,.,._ Wll pey mix. blll I tan female. UlnmD ~:':f:~'::efr~ J:~~g.~ NewpOf1 Sta~ IMM, near U.C.I. m«:ro-~-4111452 ner·1 M lle. 2700 w . up 10··~50. 536-9832 _.. Shih Tl\I blk l wtit. "*· My home. Mon. Tuai a S f d''P 111t•1 •-UT wave, frplc, wa1her/ N .. 3b d 8•30 (":....-.) .,.. AllO Sl•meee cat, New· .. • eouar ~ 90b0ald to -_, dryer area. 1850/mo. Clean, 1un11y 2 lk' 1 be, on-am ... r. r con o, Coa11 Hwy., NewpOf'I . . .,._,..,"" ~ 8Mct'I Anlmal Shel-Wed. aam-3pm. 1 yr old computer converelon. full/time. C09ta Mela. J 0 • n n• 9 5 5 • 183 3 gar. lndry, retno. "50. $2.00/mo. + 'h ut1. 1150 8Hch. 1400-'500/mo. -~---n-I'/ ter 844-3e58 chlld . Student o il . AP/AR/PR/Order entry. 841-3272 5~720. • ~ 5l2S. 49S-:t710 dap. 984 3864. H.B. ~Alt~ 845.!5655 • ..._,_r99 . . 940-5152 AMllt controtW. Happy OrengetrM Condo '500. fa~.... ... BAYFRONT: Female for ~;;:-..--,._, O.C. Airport, 420 eq. •••~•••••••••••• ~::: ~r,4~'1 ;:1b~ Babylltter neaded In Mii-=:i::,,~1~~~ ~~:.:: 1 br plu1 loft Tennie •••••••••••••••••••••• :;i:c-lllland 3 Bt. 2 8L "._ fl. or leee. Plueh N.8. ,....,, Fal~ CM0 s:e_177~ alon Viejo area tor 14 871 B Weal 15th. New-Part time. Sal and Sun pool• llrMm'no 1 ·3Bt.2bacondoSo.c.t 5/mo.+~ullle. ,.1,,.__ locallon. Call · monlholdglrl.41o5 portBeach•ttn·.Con-HrlyA.M.4houreH 553-1141 AYai8lft:2'· VIHu.Manyame11IUea. Bryanl73--1388or .1--(114)151-2078. ~!f. Jiii FoundPlll'r01 nlQhll perW'Mtl.MUltbe trol« " day.545-2911 . . . AWtl8/2.84M7~ 850-1324. .;.,....,.... ~son ••• BEAUTY.......... W llM• rel labl• and h•v• ,., .. ---------·--------- 1-wH ... ,.. ~ PK NEWPORT TWNHSE 3 000 . . 8A1.0H rencH. No 1moklng or B 0 0 K KE e p ER I •TWrm ;';",."::':' ••••••••••••••• .,,_11 l'flnlilJllM to "'81-e w/_,,,, ,__ • eq.tt. (10 of11ce9) Super monay maker· Found: F Golden Re1. or drinking on Job. Wiii SECRETARY-Can train wented for Imported ac-itront loe 28r. 3ba In 11 18hn ...,. Tannla. ~ ;;.;y;;;; ave II. Highly upgraded Beat ...... Bkr MS-0709 .m Ix . n r Ed w a rd• & conllder part or IUll time lhatp MC w/3-4=exp plutlc llylrlg bfrd. Unique old Med. 'llllla. 3 frpfel. •••••••••••••••••!'•~ nftJeL a.40-7491 with rich paneling a fa-Manufacturing Opportu-Shleld1, H.B. 848·6852 11119-ln. for It boollkff n du· •um m • r Io 'I . Ca I I IHd•d wlndow1, elec bric covered W•ll•. ntty. New concrete fan-br. doth collar. Call 859-8087, leeve tlea. Mutt type a 7141~19 gate & ger. Many tr.... Ill-Dana Point vi.w Home Location 11 w.lklng di.. cea. n.-Co toe. aYaff. , ...-. T·-mom In .. __ metNge pteaee uallt MC .nan nee Noi----------PY1 beaeh, COYe. 13300 v.1a1111r Maller br/own be, Uno• lo ai rport . wttti __ ..,.. ...,. .. --SH. butWOtdr.~· EleOtOcal ~for mo yr. round. C all •.....a $300+. *llLID ...... 714-833-9718 ~t and lral· Verde · •klnny orange/ Banking & or Arohl. ac"'frn circuit board 6 control 840-6e29 Naw 162bdrm.luxury 9&-2989 From 1 ,..,_103 ,.........,. nlngprogramlncluded. whtmale c1t.PIHH SECAETAR Y/ " bl E apla In 14 ptana. 1 Bdrm 4 1931•1257 From 11:18"8 eq. ft.N;) To 9ltabhh 'JOU lt't your contact Dana. 1972 Kor-EXECUTIVE V:~°.. u2l22d8 be a P u 1 · ;:p~~. lv11x::~ r~~: No End ltudlo, M lll1. n.. from $515, 2 bdnn from Fem to ftnd l "'8re pace ._.. reqult9d. Adj AJr. •II.Na .... W Hll ~ofltable bualneaa. nat Dr. 546-9927 Exparlenc•d Executive ..,...,. 04>9552. :~. :r~;.J350. S570. TownhouH from nr bwtl. Prof lad'/ prwf. por1er Inn. 2172 DuPont. ...................... Mr.~ ~·t. FOUND: Blacti Sehnaut• Secretery for S & L. -=-IBOOt<w;i<iKKiEEPEREEi>fFI-~~;;;~;;;-;;--~ '940 + r.0011, tennl1, Georgia e31.e140 Cell AM. 133-3223 u.A tuYll on CoHt Hwy. nr Nwpl Challanglng poeltlOn re-Plllm•. Knowledge ot ,_ 1111• waterfal 1, pondel 011 ROOMMATE WANTED Shop Space 4M-4764 Dl1trlbutort Wanted for Cir Dr. 842-4518 7-4PM qulr•• 1trong communl· p1yroll, 11xu, etc. The flneal l fUIMt gro- for cool!lng I hHllng Fem on ... f · BAYfRONT Imported plullc flylng • cation, organlzatlonal 7ao-e859 wing cookie compeny la ~ ... ~.~ .. ~! NO FEEi Apt. I Cond9 rental&. VIiie Rantall. 175-4912 Brok•. paid. From San Oleoo CM 2·.; 1;:::'t!:w:: 800-1300 •q ft, 5042 blrd.Un6Queaummer toy. 1.....U Ull ablllu ... Good typl~ coming to South Coa11 frwy drive North 011 min. to b..c::n. S230 otui Prllna ofllct.173-1003 Werrw, Hwtl 9ch. Cal 7141-..019 ..... ,................ lhorthand •mutt. CHhl., for Photo Drive-Plaza. Mn. Flalde' eoo-e.ach to McFadden to ·~ utl. ~ 752 1121 OWnet, 811 • commen.urata with ell-In. S4 hr. Coile MHe. klea hM career oppottu- 8•aw1 n d v 111 age daY9 142_.1,. ~ CdM dbt autte, AIC, ample 496-298411931-125,-..._ le .&.u 1111 l:...la & VilCkl.'S perlence. Call Lee at 9-e, Fri. l/or 9.5 Sal. n11i.. hallabfa at entry (714)893-5198. • pllg,utllpd.2885E.c.t Reta.llltoraal2850AYOn =:'l•••••••••••••••• llU 754-1801.E.O.E. Mu1t be rellabla. taYelforCrewL .. darl. •---...... Wantact: lfV houM to lhr Hwy. 975-8800 SL, 1840 :i· fl~ 8 car 2nd TO'a-compat. rale1, ...... -• ORANGE COAST S & L 646-0404. Advancement potential -...,_ wlfetn Nancy, ,. __ .............. u. II ..... A ,.....,_ •~ a 120,000·1100,000 fully --1700 Adame, Co11a CHILD CARE for }llgf\ energy__... ...................... :Z1s-e1.:2198 ...,. .. -....... · -----· --• amortl. a.tier 2nd'11011 llmTI/..... · mature od 1 ervlc· ...---c~u=i&W~~W F~J:r' anct balh. Rmmllt•loatw3Mt1M1n ~~~oSt.u~~~a 71t wn:~nd.,: =-:'ff,';~.oiO:· Brant. OVTCAu. 2'HRS. Mete ~2,r :.:.~t :,~·~~:CS~;:!; A cMluu community on 973-7544 !MM. 2 t.ennia crta. oool. Prim• offlc. 'C::· co-etorage, 220 9q ft., ....; •W•I UfW llM21l People who need people dence. CNld cere exper C-!~~~~:2~~~ ~~!~~ the Back Bay. CM> hou-N.a. L-quiet pvt furn 1250 mo. plua utlL MM rona dtl Mer. Imo. aooeaa. $136 mo., no IN lhould atw•ya check the n ec. LI v •-1 n pr• f . PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS N & 9')8; 7 poola; 8 IM-1ruct10'.-PrlvlleoM. Ullll pr.rd. Eva 857-4931 875-9610 nlq. 752-1830 ~ JIM"" JfM Servloe l>trectra In the IM0-288e. ::~::::. ~:~~;':':~.·~ ~~ 10 bUal-Inc Id. I 4 l O I mo, Female lo '"are 9 Br. 2 mJI ... MEET1HO ROOM tot Nflt .. ANOEAiiitMSTONt ~03~ DAILY PIL T Sell Idle hama 142-5878 Gsy Winn. ng. • 84M290. Ba. bwtl ffont apt. With 1 I 2 room cfllOea tr 1150 P9I' dlly Of rent bY l10,00C).f100,000 + fOf , ______ ..:;....._ 2 Junior exec. malH. l20S w Inducted °"' lh• hour. Cepaelty 100 tocal rMllMntlal TD'•. * '* * On Jambof .. Rd. It San Joequlfl Hiii Rd. 644-1900 '310. 541-4WI Rutii.IOfl'ia 17g'..a700 .,.opta. Avaltablllty be-Max~ t. to v. AeMn ............. 1-liiiiiiiiiiii~~I atne In June. ~ 3-4 above prtme. Call <>pan 24 rn ~ I ••WWW IUll rurnll!Md. For Info caff. CtennllOn & Auoe . 7 deya .... •"TUrnl<MIOffloa"$390. Ma. Coe, 751.e111 8~7311 et Oorgeoua glrl1 to ------..;.....--1 ···~' Offloa 175. p•mpar you. Jacuul, 1 _ __:._....:..;......,...~:.....;;.::.:.: •Seminar/Mtg Roome c...nul ........... ,,.,, S.UM. l.ocell .. wall aa ~. .... ,,,. tour1at9. ~. ·~ ~ ,_..i, H ••••••••••••••••••• .. • M••t•r Charge, Amer-Ctll tor Info 7&2..f408. •••••••••••••••• .. •••• WIDOW HA8 ... tor TD'• k:an ~. Dlnerl. M ...;~~~~~:==-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 ... • .. AE Loan•, 10K Up. No .-come 7141145-3433. llllLL ... tor .... 1IX20. 1125 ..,····r:.· Ml-Tl In newer bldO on C:O..t Credit C~. No Pen· 2112 Hatt>or II. CM Hwy, South L.agune. ""9 atty. Offnl1on Aa100. ...NO .......... ptOlt. &00 eq. ft. E.11ca11nt rn-n,' "" •""'"" private parklno behind --------NHdl C••hl Wiii Do bldg. 1525 mo. Turner U. U1'1lm AnyWno. Dew 142-8854 Aaaoc. 494-1117 ~ ....... ~In 11t I 2.nd .. LUii T0'1 1Nt 300 eq fl. -,OO'ilramc. Robt. 8at1W NH/CM Ontwn U1G 4f4.5818 R.E. ~ 8d Atelton 1---------12 f\oom otno. a garege. 142-2111 545-0911 Ne•r Balboe ley Cfub, NI UH. Protected! .. •••• ...... 7141 l (, ) ) \Ul'ID < (r--as~--) > Newsgaper Ca rrie~s tor l'Outes in HUntin9ton Beacli, Fountain Valley & N~~rt Btactl l • CONNELL CHEVROLET J\.,.11111,. .. 1' ~ " .... ~4b-I 200 -llOtUI U J. "" , ........ -.. -··-- Part• a s.rw:. Open All Oay Saturday 301 W. Warner Ave. (1 blll. we1t ol Main) 540-7430 '75 Honda CMc. 4 1pd. hatc:ttbk. NA rMllo. good c:ond. $2000. SSM542 11 Hondl Clvte 4 9')4, 1 Cl'WN', ldnt cond. IS,000. ________ ......_ __ , en-as2 eott '7t HOf* • dr A/:JoOlrd Maroon, auto, •Int, 1 owner, SIM "''· new tW... SMOG. 1IO-OSM I .1 $eOOO off new '82 380 SL. Calt780-9034 --------1 '75 280 Melen, xlnt cond, new llr11. 11.,eo. Mu11 .. 11 . S8990. Oy1 S48-e355; eYI 873-5'1M ,.,,. ' ...................... ,,, .. ..., ....... ....,. -':\::fl' OVERMAS DEL~ ECPIRT8 ..... •• , ... *'belt INd. COSTA MUA ......... ..., ., .. ~c..., COMMfll rHttR<Jlfl ~41> I JOO • '81 30050. Sliver blue, --------1--------1--------1 • mi·tWt>or Blvd. COSTA MESA asoo ml, Fae wrty, $31, 900.J 840·6192 or 646-1107 --------. • ATLAS CHRYS&.8-ft.YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mela. Tel. 5'4&-1934. 3 bloclla south of San Diego Fr.-way off Harbor Blvd. Completll body shop. S1111. Service. Pitta. !«Ya ~. open Monday thru Frld1y 7 30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Ind i A.M. td 5 P.M on Saturd1y. • llACH IMPOllTS 848 Dove Street, Newport Belcf\. Tel. 752-otOO. Call U9, we're the speclall111 for Alfa Aomeo. Peu;eo1;811b & Maseret l • THIODOll IOllMS l'OID Moc*n 1ai... MfVlce, ~ body, P9int & tire depte. Competitive ratM on ,.... & • r.nta11. 2080 H«bof Blvd .. Costa Mesa. 842..0010 or 54GC11. Q JOHNSON~ SOM UMCOU4 .-c .. Y 2e28J-iarbor Blvd .• Costa Mela. Tel. 54CMl30. 57 Yeart of friendly family Hrvlce -Or-. County'• oldt9t Lin• coin-Mercury dealerahlp. lll-2111 MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES NIWPOIT DATSUN 888 Dove Strfft, Nftp(lrt a..ch. Tet 833-1300. At the tt1enQM of Jambor•. MacArthur & 8tlstol behind Victoria Station. Salee, s.Mce, Leulng & Part•. We make QfM! deelal • HAlllS CADILLAC 29oo H.fbor Blvd., Cotta Mela. Tel. 640-9100. Orange County·a Largest C1dlllac deller. s.i.. SeNice. Le ... Ing. • DAVID '· P .. WPS IUICUCN1"1,AC-MADA 837-2400 LAguna Hiii• SaJ" • s.tvk:ie • LMllng 24188 Alida Plrkw8y • CHICK IVllSOH PORSC ... .4UOe..VW 415 E. Cout Hwy., Newoott BMch. 873-0900. The only dealetthlp In Orange County Vil4th theae thrM great ,,... under one roof! • • IOI LOHGPttlPOHTIAC 13&00 BNch Btvd .. w .. tmlnster. Tel. 892~1 Orange County·• oldes1 and largest Pontiec deaterahlp Salea, Service, Peru. • SAIL CHIYIOUT 900 South Coatt Highway Lagun18Hch °'Qny'• ........ fw ,.., .. SALES HOURS: Mon.-Frl. •T. Sat. •s. Sun. to-4 4M-113t s.4e-1967 • SANTA AMA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Str .. t, Sa~ta AnL Tel. 558-7811. Your 0r1g;na1 o.dlcated 01t1un o.a.r. .- • MllACU MAZDA We..,. mowcu Our lllW location la 1425 Bak9f Street, eo.ta Mel&. Tel. 645-3334. Stop by & vl91t our br~nd new ahowroom and .... why we're the 11 Mada dMler In SoutNrn Callfornla. S,alH , Serva. Pitta Ind LeMlng COSTA MISA DATSUN 2845 Harbor Blvd .• Co.ta Mesa. Tel 540-6410. Serving Orange County for 18 years. 1 Mlle So. 405 \ • SUNSET FOID, IMC. • (Home of Wiiiie the Whala~ M40 01rden Grove Blvd., W.tminttlf. Tel. 83&-4010. • MM &..IAStMe, IMC. 730 W. 19th St, Co.t. Me9a 842-1944 You're in for• 1urprl1e mt DOM Leali~ 0 COMM&&. CMlftOUT 2821 Haft>ot Blvd., Cotta ........ Oter 20 YMt9 aervlng ' OfMGe County! SalH, IMllng. terfk:ie. C.11 S..1200; , 1P9Cfel Pll'tt tine: 54e-9400; body....,., tine; 764-0400. It IOIDT 8AAQa or .. ...,._. .... Huntlnatcn ~ dt)' offldU cam• unan tom• heavy flr• when~ raantd the ae..acre S~enon Bro&herl i:nud dump a little more than two weeb aao. Offidala moMd the proper1)' acrOll the 1tnet trom Edl10n Hlalh School at Hamllion Avenue anCI MapolJa Stnin from liah\ manufacturl n1 to a mor' ~Ye Umlted -... IQCllna. Th~ocl•lm.d that tJ\•Y were the actkll\ to make It more dlff cult for a propoHd \rub and MW. ~ powef plant to be located there. 'But reaidenta ad•man\ly ol>PCIMd to the plant .ad they d1dn't trutt dty offidala. They •aid they belleved that the remnlnc actuall)" would make tt .-.r for the power plant to be buOt. ~t d' coundl member. blt' thelr ~ and approved the rerion&na anyway. Well, 1omethfn1 pretty embarrllllNr hll hal>Penied. It -tli.at ~ lJtewnon, a principal owner of the mud d~_w.n't notified of the May 8 pUbllc heuinl· He didn't r eceive notice beaaUle the dty didn't lend him one, M required by law. And that'• put the whOle 1-.ae tn doubt. ............................ LITTLE 'l'ROUPERS -Shannon Ricker, 7 (right), and Jennifer lnfuaino. 8 (bllckground). (left), holda very atill while makeup is applied Former school teacher Jean Krueger puts ,on to her face prior to pa'1tornime and puppet the program to expoee )'OW18Sten to playacting abow by studenta Wednetiday at Park View through aktta, pantomime and puppetry aa Schoql in Hun~ :ee.ch. W~tina .-Umtly demcnatrat.ed by 8~ and frienda (below). with their new faces are Thao Nauyen, e · 5-car crash halts traffic on freeway A van overturned in a five-vehicle cruh on the San Diego Freeway ln Huntington Beach today, tylrtg up all aouthbound momina commuter traffic for about a half-hour. Callfomia Highway Patrolman Mlke Brlaeno 1ald the chain-reaction accident started when a car croHed two slow lane• afte!_ pulling onto the freeway at !".dinger Avenue. That initiated the aeries of accldentl, according to Briaeno, who said the van driven by Lajuana Maria Edwarcb, 2•. of ~ owrtwned When it WM She waa taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital, 'COmplainlng of back, neck and lea Jnjurlel. 'The accident occurred at 6:45 25 people hurt SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -At least 25 people were Injured · Wednesday when an electric trolley apparently IOlt Its bnkes and rolled backward into a bulkllDI In the dty'1 Chinatown .eden. Municipal Railway offlclals aakl None of the lnjurlee WM 1erlou1 and no one wa1 bo9pitaliz.ed, laid •POl<e8men for three holpltala wlikh received the accident victiml. WORLD STATE Ct&y AdOllnlttrator Charle• Thomll90ft -.id the dty '*' prove that SteYwtlOll kiww about the heutna becaUle ht 11nt. letter co·offidala oPDollna the t'fton1rla, Thom~ ieid fhe dty:wouJd now ao to s~....-.. Mldnl h1m to 1ran a waiver from the ~ulrement. -U that'• not fOl1hcomln.a the city council could decide to chalJenae the ttat.e law and do nothi1'I furthW OD the t.11 that S~renon knew of the he&rinl· Or lt coUld order MW pubUc hearlna• betore the Plannlna ComrniliAon and aty Council. Department hu been bluned for the overli,ttt. It came about, ThomJllOfl Mid, becaUle the landowner UIUtlly ii the applicant In ~h rnattera. In thia caH, the city wa1 the applicant -not Stevenon -Md he wu overlooked on the~ U.t. Tborop1on, who Hid the overa.lght WH particularly embarrH1ln1 In Uaht of the . 1u1plcJon by resldentl, .. ad it COit.i between n.ooo and $3,000 to meet the public notltlcation requirement of notlfyln1 all property ownen within 300 feet Oftlclah eay they are lnltitutlna a l)'ltem ot cbecb and the c ity'• balance• to keep the ml1take S • r v i c e a from happenJria ap.tn. ot a lite. An intern In De.velopmen t A A.rgentines braced ·Thatcher "indicates. ·Peace talks dead By TM AuodaW Presa Brlthh Pri me Mi nister Mar1aret Thatcher 1tron1ly indicated today she &. liven up hope of negotiattna a peaceful aettlement of the Falkland Ia1anda crisll and that an lnvulm may be the only option left. Ar gen tine tro op• were reported braced for an lnvuion of the Falkland•. Argentine diplomata in Buenoa Aires aaJd lhey were still retd~ to negotiate but accu1ed Mn. Thatcher of lntranslpnce. Three held in 'opiu01 den' case Three Laotian nadonala wen arreslld ~1 ca •9(>6dcn of poe1 ...tni opt um for Nle at two Wmtmlnnlr apa tuwnla that autharttiet an.. may haw been ..... ~·a.n.. W1•tmln.1ter Off leer Earle · Graham -'cl today that 68 &l'llDI ol Olium with a atreet valUe of $2, '700 were teised at 8342 Weatmlnater Ave. and 8382 w-.tmin1ter Ave. by the W~ Police oWoen. U.S. Cu1tom1 agenta and the U.S . Drue Enforcement Aasrf. In addition, U .S ./01tal authoritlea participate in the two-month lnvatlotion. Graham aaid that a11orted ~um 1mokJng paraphernalia wu confl9Cated, leading to police 1peculation that the apanmentl may have been used • opium dens. . Graham said lnveatlgatora believe that opum WU put lnslde audio cu.ette ~and malled to the auspecta In Westmimter from Tbai1and. Grahmn Mid alleged maWna of opium WH flrat detected by postal authortdea. He alleaed that the>amuallna bad been aolni on few about a )leU' but reportedly had intenatfled in recent months. Arreated and booked into <>_ranae County Jail on IUl!p6don of po1ae11ln1 opium for aale were Mee Vans. 39, ctaonc Ying Moua, 43, and May Xiona, 63, Grahamuld. He aaid that Mee Van1 alto wu charged with 1utpldon of ~ evSdenpe by alJetedly attemptlnc to thiow opium out the window. Graham 1aid Chon1 Yin& Moua WU additionally cnar1ed with rellltinC arrest. With a Britlah task force in the South Atlantic poised to •torm the lalandl, Mrs. Ttlatcher told the H,ouae of Commons i n London that Bri ti s h consideration of U.N. peace ideaa will "not close an y militar y optioaa." "We really cannot go on and on," she said. "Someone hu to make a decision, an aaaesmnent of the Argentine junta. I believe that if we have any m ore negoUations, the results wOUld be the ll&IDe ••• .. FOUND DEAD -Walter Casey Jones, who roamed U.S. roads and preached carefree living ·on "The Toniaht Show" was found dead Wednesday in h is mobile home at Longview, Wash. He was 110 years old. Noguchi hearing LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Civil Service Commluio n acheduled a July 6 heartn& on the suspension and~ that bat former County Coroner Thomas T. · NOl'JChi ,perff'.'l'IDlna routine autop1ies at County-USC Medical Center. Noguchi'• attorney, Godfrey laaacl, told the comm1llion W~y that his Japene1e-bom ~t ii a victim' of rada1 j>l'ejudice. INDE.X Mra. Thatch e r said lt was "inconceivable" that Argentina will a c c e pt U .N . Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar's ideas for Falkland Islands peace because it already hu rejected similar suggestions in previous tallu. She said Argentina'• clear aim w as "procrastin ation a nd continuing occupation" of the islands it invaded April 2. Presa Association, Britain's domestic news agency, reported (See FALKLANDS, Page A%) Cal State sex class fate eyed Cal State L on g .Beac h administrators were keeping mum today on the fate of Prof. Barry Sin,e r a nd his "Paychol<>e}' o Sex" class that offered 1tudents homework credit for having homosexual, group of extramarital sex. While top university officials. such as Cal State LGng Beach Prealde nt Dr. Stephen Horn, were not available to comment on the matter, a news conference was scheduled to explain the university'• position on the unotthodox class. Meanwhile , Singer said Wednesday he'll stop giving stude nts cr e d it for sexual relations. But he said he still will offer atudents the option of doing home work assignme nts that consist of dressing in drag for a ~ and visiting gay bathbouaes, gay ban and nudist colonies. His oout1e is under review t>y a faculty committee commissioned by the-dean of the S chool of Social and Behavioral Science. Singer said he decided to drop the eex participation homework ~tion al~r the committee ~ C •. and another -in a different department -called "Women and Their Bodies," .bu been the target of heated cri tlcilm by e ~lellcal ChrtaUana In Long . . For the put two years. Singier baa offered atudentl 23 homework optlona, lncludlna experimentation with homoaexual , group or exttamarttal eex. Students muat get prior perminion from him (See SEX, Pap A!) \ I l l X'HOMEWORK .... muat notify tbei~ partnen 1pou1e1 they are ddnl It for l'lllllnMilll'nl'k, he said. "It can be a very powerful powth and leaml.na experience," Stnaer said. "The lcfee la not to 10 out and do some kinky thino juat to tee what they're like, 6ut to aee a chan1e In your behavior and your feeUnaa." The 1tudent1 choose four homework a11l1nmenis and write pa_pen about them. Other OJ)Uon.a tnclude vWtin• divorce court and marrtace eniichment groupa. Members of fundamentalist l'fOUP' who viaited Sinler'a clUI and the women '• cla11 complained to university admin111:raton and to state Sena. H.L . Richard8on, R-Arcadia, and OWe S1>eraw. R-Lorur BeAch. and to Allemblyman Deruu. BtOwn, R-Long Beach. 7 women · f asters ~risking injut:ies' l BJ BOB SPRINGER ~ ....... ..._ ..... ,SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -A 11\ltrition 1pedallat warned today tbat aeven women, including on~ i the Orange Coast, are g permanent in.jur_I by in support of the Equal Amendment. 'l'he Orange Coast woman a\lnong the seven planning a 44-day hunger strike to support the ERA wu Identified aa Zoe Ahn Ananda of Newport Beach. I ~aati.ng risks for the women grow each day they continue, w~ Dr. Arthur Frank, the n'4tritionist. Frank sa id if the women cqntinue their fast and survive, they still risk damage to their liven, hearts and mWIClel. The women began their hwiger suike Tuesday, vowing that unless the ERA la ratified, ·they will reject all food until June 30, the ratification deadline. "God. a Freeca. I'd give my t arm for a Fre.:a," Dina lor of Loa Angeles said to Mary Barnes of Raleigh, N.C., on the 8flCOnd day of the fast, as the women camped in the Capitol rotunda here. "Well, I could go for a couple of acrambled egp, 80IDe tout," said fut.er Sonia Jotuwon, who waa excommunicated from the Mormon Church In late 1979 after criticizing the church's opposition to the ERA Mn. John.on. ofSterllna, Va., complained of feell.ni weai and at one point needed help in riling from a chair. "I had a dif6cult time getting ~p th1a mornina.'' she sald. - Mn. .fobnlon, who normally weliha 120 PC>Unda. Jost three pounds from her 5-foot-3 frame in her first full day of ~· eccord1nc to a IC8le at a nurae 1 statim at the Capitol. 'nie other women Jost one to three l)OUnda. Such weight W. early ln a starvation diet is uaual and indicates water depletion, said Frank. staff sioctor st George Washington University In Wuhincton- _ WASHINOTON (AP) -A peychliU'llt tetllfltd today that Jobn W. Hlnokl•Y Jr. WH a tormented man lnfhae~d by 1 'bl1arrt U\ou1tat1 'and tranqulllura -••not the dlabollcal criminal wattln1 for th• beet momtnt11 -wh•,. h• lhot Pretldent R.aan !Mt yeer. Dr. Davld Mlcfiatl Bear of IW'vvd Mtd.IW School reUted " ~u11e1tlon1 by a 1overnmtnt proMCUtor at Hlnokle)"a trial 1n U .6 . Dlltrlct Court that the defendant coldly plotted hl• every move on March 30, 1981, when Reaaan wae abot whlle leevtna a WubJnaton hotel. ..He (Hthcldey) ahowed up at the Hiltol\ at 1:48 p.m. (about the time Reqan arrived). Ke dkln't lhoot him then. He waited, didn't heT" uked A11lltant U .S . Attoraey Roser M. AdelmaJ) ln a ~voke. "Jie tn tact delayed but th.la waa not the calculated wait of a diaboUcal man,'' Bear replied. The psychiatrist Mid Hincldey dld not ahoot when Reagan arrived at the hotel becauae his "bl&arre thou1hta were compeUng for ~ttentlon." Racing 'through Hinckley'• mind at that moment were ideas of 1hootlng Re.agan, committing aulcide, or traveling to Yale University to kill actreu Jodie Fo1ter and then take hl1 life, Bear said. Valley slices size of rec • • comm1ss1on The Fountain Valley Recreation Commiuton, an adWc>ry group that reviews local parka and recreation pro11"ama. wlll ahrink from RVen memben to five under a new ordinance approved by the Qty Council. City Recreation Manager Bob Cook laid the cornrru.ion l tle1f la ln favor of the size reduction., which would coincide with two planned ~tiom. He aald the reduction wlll brinl the commiaaion into line w Ith tbe 1lze of t.be cl ty' 1 Planning Commi-1on. Cook laid the reduction would result in 1ome coat 1avlng1 without hamperln1 the group's effec:tiveneaa. Warmer days TemperatureB NATION .. Lo Pre.. Albeny 82 80 .43 87 48 Albuque AmarlllO 90 52 ,..,_.... 10 59 Atlante 82 59 AIMlnlC Cty ee 82 Baltlmor• es 92 .43 ~ 54 48 .54 87 65 Bllmerdf' 87 60 Bo4M ee 34 BoelOn eo ea Br~ ee n Butt• 74 58 .09 Buttlngton 1a eo .91 c.., 70 42 .OCI cnenstn 8C eo 10 Ctlettltn WV 83 ff awm.NC n 83 95 • a,.,..-73 .. , . 01 l'tlo9nlx Senta Maria 74 CNc8go IO 88 ~ 78 57 .3S Stodrton .. 158 Clndnnetl 82 541 • eo 11 Thennel M CleWllind 82 eo .13 Plmnd,Ore 71 .. Ukllh 15 C1mb1e SC 80 IO AMllgfl 78 S4 30 lerltow '7 58 Columbl'9 82 82 .07 R9no 73 "° Big 9Mr 65 32 ~Wth 85 70 Sell Llk• 12 41 .46 Bllhop 43 Oeylofl n-13 .04 San Antonio 17 71 cetlllne f7 54 ow--.. .., ...... ... 48 Long 8eedl 72 51 Dee Moir-12 83 ~-= 16 • MoMMI 12 58 Duluttl ... 34 .01 71 51 Mt. Wiiton 70 42 El f.-0 82 54 • l.OUll ea 87 Newport 8Mdl .. 55 F.,.o 83 .. $t P·TM!pl 16 ... Onlerto re A ,,_..., ee a ..... ~ 76 40 .OG P•Spttnge 113 a O,_Fllll 51 31 .28 lt>okene 17 41 8#1 Bemerdtno IO 67 Hlrtfotd 10 12 .00 Syr.a.e 77 56 . eo 8111 Qabftel • 71 16 Helene • 56 39 .08 Topetta 73 S4 s.n JoM 82 ... Honolulu • 75 TUOIOn 81 158 8anta AM 73 62 ttcMlon ... 72 Tulae 18 71 .oa Santa Cna 76 ... ~. 82 81 WMNngton 114 84 .92 Ta(!OeV~ 83 30 • ea Wldllta IO 83 JadctlWlle es • KM9 City 71 87 CA&.lfONIA CAltADA LMVeQM ... 80 Ballerdeld 80 &4 .. t:::* 11 11 1.08 = 95 ~ N t6 • 68 48 :.=.on ff LUbOoOk tt 83 ,,.,., 16 &4 IO :::-13 •. 71 ~ 11 llO Ott-. 11 IO 72 Lee~ 72 5t ~ • ·:=r IO 41 ~ 84 11 16 .. ,, v~ .. ...... ..... t2 ~ to 80 WlrWpee • ..... on-. IO M .. .. .... vn 11 11 .... ....., .. .. ---• • Aadlfoqd Clle1 13 11 • .......... : : ~ :::.,,.,,.., ea : E%tended a.Iii CMy 75 ~ 7t IO a.il*90 • IO OWtlfldo r, : :::.. "== 72 .. weatller Ptld .... 11 62 If UTHtftN OALIPOftNIC CO ITAL AND MOUNTAI AMAS -hit "-' ....._ ..... =and .. ,., 111.,ftin1 IOW ...... °""'~"' ......... :m ..... 11· tro74 ......... to ...... lfltaflct r.:-1:: ,.._.. .....,, flltllllllto -· LOWl41toll. A country•wtttern iMme wU1 parUdpate. wut predominate durln1 Vlelton are encoura,.cl to Community l'tttlval 'U, attend tn eow'boy atU.N, &nd a echtduled Saturday on th• bHt dreued w11terner • .main quad at Oold•n WHt cont.tit will be' conducted. ~.!:n~.Tr..~Q=~ ~='!~= th• publlc, wUl feature "Olllahoma,'' a karate mumcal entertainment. eth.Nc demonltraUon, a map: ahow food, pine bootbl and other end perf ormanc•• by the actlvltlt1. l'Ht1vltlt1 will Golden Weit Colleae be8ln at 7 a.m. with a J;lllDCake Symphonic Band and the breakfut in the Qoldenwett Ocean View Hiah School Drill Strwt perldnj lot. Team. Bootlw wU1 open at g a.m., Children'• entertalnment and actlvitlea wlll continue w1ll include puppetry, mime, throulh 5 p.m. More than 9& clowna, 'Jua1lera and story Or~e County 1ervtce dube tew..n,. --------• An open..alr jlm ODOCll't obtained by caIJJna the ooUeae featurlnl the "fuldon" mUllc dcket office, '94-8070. of the Yellowjacketa w;ill be The fou.-membera of the 1ta1ed Sunday at Golden Yellowjacketa hiave Weit Colle .. In Huntlncton performed.with many Betdl. contemporary Jan and rock 'Ibe performance will be8fn 1tara lncludl~~ Stevie at 2 p.m. In the colle1e'1 WoMer, Eatl m9P, Georse outdoor amphitheater. Dake, Joal MUc•ell and Tickett, at $6 each, may be Rtekte Lee JOUI. • Show t~ marchel and other mUllc will be &::normed by the CoMt11ne unity Collea• Band ln a free 90-mlnute concert Sunday at Mile Squse Park in Fountain Valley. '11>e concert wlll belin at 2 p.m. by the aoftbalf field• near Euclid Street and Warner Avenue. The event wlll be in hOnor of the city of Foun taln V'alley11 2&th birthday. The Coaatllne band waa formed aa a quintet laat October. It baa now grown to 4 5 membera under the direction of Rae Bovl••· Mu1lcian1 lntereated In audldonJ.na for the band can call her at 776-7931. Skies possible key • • to any invasion LONOO?i (AP) -The c:rudal battle for control of the Falkland IalancU wtll be fouaht in the lkle1 above the South Atlantic chain when the Britl1h taak force launches ita apparently Imminent Invasion, Britlah milltary analysts believe. The fleet ma11lng off the Falklanda wlll be at ita moet vulnerable when it moves within combat ranae of Araentina'• air power, hued Oh the mainland. "If it can't get lta air defenae right. then lt'1 in trouble,'• laid Col. Jonathan Alford, deputy director of the International Institute of Stratelfic Studiee. Argentina 's air force commander, Gen. Buillo Laan1 Do%.O, hal threetened a mlllllw air -.ult when the Royal Navy fleet moves inlhore to land ita 4,000 marines and paratroopen. Brl tiah experts queatlon Argtmtina's ability to mount a J.arge«ale coordinated air alt.tick. But "if the Argentlnea are prepared tQ dlk their pla!Mll in a determined faablon," aa1d Alford, "it will be very difficult to produce a water-riabt defenee. The Arpntines wlll lme a lot of planes and men. But U the Argentine ~ota are prepared to die in a major attack, aome wlll get through. "The main problem the fleet has suffered right from the •tart la the lack of a baae away from home without early-warning radar and an adequate fighter wnbrella,'' said Vice Adm. Slr John Roxburah. a former NA TO aabmartne force commander. The Ar1entines can mu.ter about 190 combat planes for any rna11 attack. Against thia, the Brltlab have about 30 Sea Harrier fighter• on the ta1k force's two can1era, Hennes .and Invincible. But an estimated 10 of these are RAF ground-attack craft, aaaigned to lttrike at Ar1entine shore poaltion• In · aupport of the landina force. · That will leave only 20 fllht.en to meet any ~ Araentlne air 1trike. But the millllle .. armed fighten, dubbed ''dancers of the skies" becau.e of their maneuverablllty, will be backed by a fonnidable anenal of rnisailes aboard the ship. Edison defends salet~ BY DAVID &UTZMANN Of'.............. . southern California &dlaon Company offldala w.. to rneei today with hllh rankln1 repr•Hntatlvea of the U.S. Nuclear Reautatory Commilliot\ to defend Ea1lon'1 Unit 1 NeCtor at San Onofre from a11ertJona that It mJ1ht not be earthquake ufe. A fede ral o fficial aald Wedne1day thl1 review of a ut111ty-prepered aellmk analyajl 1howed there were aa many aa 800 modlftcatlona needed to inaure aafe operation of the 14-year-old reactor. That offlci•l. Wllliam T . Ruaaell, head of the NCR'a office of 1y1temlc evaluation. charac:tttit.ed the f1nd1np of the study •• 1now•n1 there were 0 11ani6cant -.me deficlendes," Rowever, Edlaon officiala ln.Uted that the llellrn1c analysil WU beina ''mlainterpreted'' and that there waa no reaaon to prevent them f.rom re~ reactor to active duty f a echeduled abutdown earlier year for maintenance wol'k. ''Our ~ ~Uon .. thjl; >.. the plant atandl, lt ls safe (to ope rate)." Ediaon 1poke1man RUii Hawkes Mid. A oonti~t of ut41Jt,y offidala flew to NRC headquariera in Betheeda. !.¥·· Wedne9day and were to meet wltH federal off~ this rnomtna. Hawkaa laid the poup would tell the NRC that 436-mepwatt Unit 1 was built to exceed .mrnic 18.fety ~in eUect in 1968 and hal been upp-aded aver the s-t 10 yean to guarantee ita safe operation. But Rua.ell, who reviewed .# Edbon's work on wilmk: safety, ltated in a memo that the plant miaht not meet cun-ent federal safety atandards. Fireworks ' ban proposed for Sunset Orange County Supervisor Harriett Wieder ls proposing a ban on the use of fireworks in the unincorporated community of Sunset Beach. In calllng for a n ordinance rnak.inR use of fireworks illegal, Mn. Wieder dted Sun.et Beech's hou.ing density, abundance of untreated wood shake root. and narrow streeta that inhit>it access by fire t.rucb. A ccordi ng to an o_p in ion prepared by the ool&nty ·c.oun.ei·a Office, the county can restrict the Ule, but not the sale, of ,approved firework.a. Supervilora will consider Mrs. Wieder'a proposal at a meeting Tue.day. Mra. Wieder said a recent survey of registered voters in Sunset Beach indicated support of a fireworks ban. Oxford Cloth PUilovei Storekeeper Monte~ is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally aeated b>-'a Scottish mill in the late 19th centuty9 and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue. burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offersjine traditional sportswear for men, wom.en and boys. . Soviets rap nuke plan - Talks to resume TuesdaY: on 'zero option' By TM Attoela&e41 Preta QENEV Al Swtt..rland -U.S. and Soviet reprHentat YH re•umed neaouattont on lntermedlate·ranae nuclear weapon• In Europe today, but they were lltill far from an llJ"Ment. Th• talk• ended after two houra and 40. minute. with the neaottatod aareetnl to meet apln Tueeday. '11\e U.8. neaottaior, Paul NltM, M1d befor9 the talka beaan that he would pNll diaculllon of the fundamental U.S. polltlon, commonly called "the 1ero optlon/' whlch the Sovleta have _publicly rejected. The Soviet newt .,ency T .. on ThW'lda~ c:rluo.d the plan N "tantamount to 'a u.nllateral d.laannament. '' South Korean ·Cabinet resigns S!X>UL, South Korea -The entire South Korean Cabinet submitted lta l"elignation today, assuming· reapon1lblllty for a major financial acandal and other embarrassments to President Chun Doo-hwan'a regime. A government spokesman aald the 22 Cabinet members tendered their realgnatlom to Prime Minll1er Yoo Chang Soon and he would praent/ them Friday to the president. There wu no immediate lndlcation many resignations would be ~pt.eel. I ·Actress Loren serenaded in prison 30-day sentence for tax evasion handed down in July 1980. She had said that ahe would return and serve her sentence as IOOn aa she fulfilled her "work obligations." SINltlNG OF BELGRANO -Thia photo was made available Wedneaday in Buenos Aires, showing sinking of Argentine cruiser Gen. Belgrano. Shot was taken from a lifeboat in foreground where capacity of 20 people ia • indicated. Belgrano sank after being hit by , 1 British submarine toroedo attack. .. CASERTA. Italy -Actress Sophia Loren blew kisses and waved from a prison window to de>7.ens of well-wishers who .serenaded the Academy Award-winner with Neapolitan folk songs during her fint night in custody. The 47-year-old film star returned to her native Italy on Wednesday to begin serving a millu~rnm She spent the night in a private, pink-walled cell with a private bathroom and a black-and-white TV, officials said. Setback seen in Caribbean aid WASHINGTON -Reagan administration support.en say they will seek to overturn a Senate Committee vote they argue would make the president's emergency aid package for Central America unworkable. The Foreign Relations c.ommittee approved the $350-million economic aid proposal, known as the Caribbean Basin Initiative, by a vote of 16-1 Wednesday. . Before the final vote, however, the committee approved an amendment funneling the money into a World Bank tn.ISt fund instead of granting it directly to Central American countries. Death threat told in Donovan probe WASHINGTON -The chairman of the. Senate Labor Committee is vowing to pursue allegations linking Labor Secretary Raymond J. Donovan to union payoffs and organU.ed crime figures -despite an anon~ death threat to a committee investigator. ' Sen. Orrin G. Hatch. R-Ut.ah. dilCJc.od that a comnUttee investigator got a call warning him "to lay off" Donovan. the subject of a special proeecutor's investigation in New York City and a continuing Senate committee probe. One labor committee 90W'Ce, who declined to be named publicly, l8id the anonymous caller warned that lf the inveetigator did not back away from the Donovan probe, " ... your wife will end up in a pine box." ·Social Security to go broke in '83? \9AsHINGTON -Social Security payments could stop next summer if the financial health of the retirement fund ia not restored, Treasury Secretary Donald T . Regan says. Decrying Congress' refusal to trim the cost of the program, Regan aaid Wedneeday that the fund will go broke and "those Social Security check.I will not go out'' after July 1983 without changes to make the system financially 90U.nd. "Now this is not a ecare tactic, this ia a fact from a financial penon talking as a financial per30n should when faced with such a criais," Regan told a group of bankers and buaineas leaders from Washington and Baltimore. Medfly quarantine to be lifted SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Mediterranean fruit fly quarantine is to be lifted from Los Angeles. Stanislaus and San Benito counties on June 1, say state and federal official.a. Japanese agricultural officials have aaid they would lift reatrictlona on produce from all of California when the federal government lifted the quarantine from Loa Angeles and Stanislaus counties. Lengthy cable car shutdown likely SAN FRANCISCO -San franciaco's cable cars stopped running when a maasive drive shaft cracked, and they may be out of aervk:e anywhere· from a few daya to two months, offidala say. The same break in 1979 scuttled an cable car service from Memorial Day weekend to July 4, costing the city about $150,000 in repairs and thousands of tourista. Municipal Railway workers ahui down all three cable car lines -Hyde, Powell and California street routes -Wedneeday afternoon after the shaft broke. And tow trucka hauled the motionless cars in u dieeel bu8el took over their routes. It will take five days to a week to aaaess the diunage aaid the city's Public Utilities Commission chief l\i~hard Sklar. ORANGE COAST D.aily Pilat ClaHtned ~ng 7141142-5171 All other depeftments 142 ... 321 UC students jeer Eldridge Cleaver. Thomaa P. Hale¥ ~ -CNll t-°"'- ...,,.,. .... ..., ............ MAIN <>FACE • WHt lley S.~ C..U Mew, CA. Mell.--.:._ t•, C.U Meu, CA. nurt c.r""" ""Or .... c-st ~ ....... ~. ... _....,.., ,"'""'9UIM. HIW!el m.nww_. _,, .. ..wm ...... _,, .. ,~ .. ~ _.cle4 ""'" ........ c..,,,..,.. __ , BERKELEY -Eldridge Oeaver, a former Black Panther turned "born-again" American. drew jeera from a atudent audience and tanaled wltb a· heckler dwinl a~ at t.he Univenlty of C"allfornta'• Berkeley campua. Unlike b1a militant ~ of the 19601, Cleaver'• talk Wectn.day pra1aed t.he UniU!ld St1te1 and denounced communllm . Saudi 'prince' arrested on • cocaine rap A man claim.Ing tQ be a Saudi Arabian prince waa arreated early today near hi5 Newport Beac h home on char~ea of possession of more than $4,000 worth of cocaine, police said. H.R.H. Mashhour Ben Saud, police allege, was pulled over several blocks from h is 2 110 Yacht Mischief home after an officer said he observed hul car weaving. Police said it was detennined Ben Saud was unde r the influence of drugs and that a search of the car turned up l 1h ounces of cocaine. Ben Saud, police said, was arrested earlier this year on charges of possessing cocaine . They said he told. them the H.R.H. he uses as a title stands for His Royal Highness. Premier welcomed SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) - Polish Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelaki waa welcomed to :Bulgaria today by President and Communist Party chief Todor Zhivkov. ITACHI ~ ~~ .... ' Ex-Wrigley wife wants $55 million I. 11 I LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former wife of William Wrigley is suing the c h ewing gum magnate for $55 million in community property for the seven years they lived together before the marriage was a nnulled, her a llorney said today. Joan Wrigley, 42, of St. Petersburg, Fla., is suing the thrice-married 49-year-o l d Chicago multimillionaire in Los Angeles because Wrigley has also estabmhed residence in Southern California with several homes. including at least two on Sat\t.a Catalina Island, said celebrity divorce lawy er Marv in Mitchelson. Much of the island is owned by Wrigley, who is president and chief executive officer of the William Wrigley Jr. Co ., Mitchelaon said. "She is suing for $55 million for division of community property, or fraud and deceit and breach of contract, a aort of palimony type of caae. ·' Mitchelaon said in a telephone interview before filing the suit this morning in Superior Court. Reached in his Chicago office, Wrigley said: "I can't ~ o n something t h at I know nothing about . . . except to say that it sounds ridiculous on the face of it " The couple were married on Catalma Island m March 1970, but Wrigley had the marriag~ annulled on grounds that het three-w eek Alabama divorce from her fonner husband wa, not a proper divorce, Mit.chelaon said. Although the coufle lived iD Chicago. Mitc h e son said, Wrigley moved the annulmen' case to Wisconsin, where he W&$ able to convi~ the courts in 1978 that his wife's 1969 Alabama divorce was not valid'• because she w as n ot truly a ·· resident of Ala~. "that she'• only went there for the divorce," altho ugh the state has a three-week legal residency rule. M1tchel8on ardd ' "It's legal in the state of Alabama,'' Mitc helson said. "Almost every state recognizes it." @HITACHI 25" COLOR . TELEVISION Tuner/Tim«. 13 mode Remote Control Hand Unit. 2 WHk Programablllty, Visual Search. 11 pounds lnclud6!g battery. .. 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SN1908 •324)00 • A great ltl9 carou1ol Microwave Own In o mini 9'N. 15$20. With varlable teokln1 '*''"'-· ' hill' hearing set AB 17S7, in it.a current venion, would rovlde that, with re1pect to a new motor hkle, "a reuonable number of attempt.a" be presumed to have taken place (thus ii erln1 the replacement or refund lftlltruliren:.ent) either: after the ume defect has repaired four times by the manufacturer ita -rnta or after the vehicle hu been out f. l8l'V1ce for repairl for a total of more than 0 bu1ine11 days since the vehicle was urchued. The bill has been opposed by the auto anufacturen and auto dealers and it hu een supported by consumer groups and arious law enforcement groups. 11 the bill is l»lllleCI by a majority of the Senate Judiciary ~-.---•ttee it will then go to the full Senate or a floor vote. Members of the Senate Judiciary iPJIDllni'ttee are: Sen. Omer L . Raina, chainnan; en. Ed Davis, vice chairman; Sen. John oolittle, member; Sen. Milton Marks, member; Sen. Nicholas C. Petrls, member; Sen. Robert Pre•ley, member; Sen. Alan Robbins, member; Sen. David Roberti, member, and Sen. Alan Sleroty, member. ntey may be contacted by writing to: Senator (name), State Capitol, Sacramento 95814. Exer.eise treats cramps DEAR PAT: Abo.a a year a10 yoa pebU.W an exerdte tbat a doctor lwl loud wa1 eff ectlve la laelpla1 people wlao were ezperteacta1 palnfal leg cramps. Woald yoa repeat dU1 for me? -4A .......... 6-10 W.E., Costa Mesa .. speelaton" ... A Huggins Favorite A compliment to our fall wardrobe. 1M foUowilw ..... WM diw~ tif Dr. ~·w. DINil1 al~. c:al1t: a..na wtdl.,. att. fadna a wall two or thM feet away Md thin llin IOr.Wud. Ulil.nl bAndl and U1D1 '° Nl'ala'9liforw8.rcl tilt and keep the hHl• In conaact with th• Uoor~ until a moderawly ~tenM but not pelnfw DUlJJq eenaaUcn dtwlopl In the Ol1f ~. Halil the 1tretehlna pollUon for 10 MOOiMll. t.Mn re~t after a 11ve_.11DOnd Dll10d al i'elaDUon. Dr. Daniell reported tha'thil exero&ae worked etfectlvely tor nearly &O adulta 1utferln• _from recurrent le1 cram,.. He lidviled dO&n& the ..... thrie Clmill daOy until lea c:nmp dJM~, then~--lt • necetal.l'Y to keep i.. crunp-fNt. Al~ most of Dr. Danltil'• paUmtl W9l'e c:uNd in• ahort time it'• alwaya adviMble to check wtdl your own physldan before undertaldJw. any self-help treatment that may have O.en effective for other patlenta. Cremation qualifies DEAR PAT: Caa • bulal allowaace claim be filed wltla Ot Veter••• Adml.Dlltratioa for • veteru wlaote remata1 were cremated? P.L .. Cotta Meu Yes. The VA burial allowance for eIJclble veterans la payable for interment, cremation or for burial at tea. Spouse responsible also DEAR PAT: My llHbaad .... flied. Jolat federal tax retvD for 1110. Re p~ tbe retara ud I Jut 1lped my ume. Am 1 le1ally retpoHl&le for tlae laformatloa lie submitted to tlae IRS? K.L , Newport Bead Yes. By lilPU.na your name to the return Internal Revenue "Service aay1 you become legally responsible for any taxes due. • Got • prob/emf Then wri~ to Pat ROIO-· -_ j w/ez. Pat will cut red tape, getc.1Jl6 the • answers and llCt.lon you ntJ«I to «>lve ln- ..,. equities in ~nt and bc«aiJNw M&l1 your qumlona to Pat Horowitz, At Your &rviCfl, ~ Cout Daily Pi.Jot, P.O. Box 1"10, a.ta meu, CA. 92626. A.a many Jet~n u poalble will be AIU· wered, but phoned Inquiries or letten not includJrw the reader'• full name, add.rctu and bauinea hours' phone number cannot be cona/dered. JA .......... S~·IO ~ .J/l 2A ............. ~IO ~- .... ~-:::~::-::::.:•~-!~ -.ft~~ SHOES __ _ 99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach 759-9551 Polyest~r Stretch Double Knits and Dmlrns IEDU.CED :4BC • ratings • winner NIW YORK (AP) -ABC won tht M1worlu' ratlnll race tor tbt third wHk In a row, tbanka In lar1e mtHure to "lnllde Uw Th1id Reich'' and. couple of liaht·hearted :•II, \a,w. from the A.C. N Co. lhow. Two~ CBS' bro1icb1t of the Miu USA Pa1eant and 0 Too CloH for Comfort," on ABC, flntabtd In • Ut to~ 1flnt ~ In the compeddan for the Week end1M May 18, and Part I of NBC'a lO'·hour "Marco Polo" m1nJ1erit1 WM third. But ABC heel nine lhoWI In the Top 201 more than any other netwOl'k. lncludlnc "lt'a Not ~ 8einc Me: Rodney Danprfjelcl ' 1n 12th place and "Hollywood: A Gitt of Le~hter," 17th. The concTuaton of "lmide the Third Reich," a two-part made-for-TV movie, wu No. 6 for the week. The prime-time 1ehedulet of all three networks were loaded with apedal lhowa few the May ratln11 ''1weep1,' • which determine advertilin1 rates for local ltationa. The ratina for Miu USA, u well u "Too ClOle for Comfort," WU 22.6. Nieben •YI that me&nl in an avera1e minute of the 1how, 22.5 percent of the televlllon-«1ulpped homes 1n the country uw at leut part of each ~ting for ABC wu 15.4 to 15.2 for CBS and 13.2 for NBC. Here are the week 's 10 ~U~~CBS, and "Too Cloee for Comfort," ABC, with ratino of 22.5 reprmenttna 18.4 mill1on home1; "Marco Polo," Part I, 22.l or 18.l milllon. NBC; ''Three'• Company,'' 20.7 or 17 million, and "Inmde the Third Reich," Part II, 20.5 or 16.8 million, both ABCi Mapum, P.1.,'' 20.2 or 16.5 million, CBS; "60 Minutes," CBS, and "Hart to Hart," ABC, both 18.7 or 15.3 million; "Jeffenona," 18.6 or 16.2 million, and "Trapper John, M.D.," 18.3 or 15 million, both CBS. //# ......... WHO'S LEADING WHOM? -Two-year-old Dennis Bennett has h1a hands full with Jude, an 80-pound Great Dane, aa he takes him for a walk. The dog far outweighs Dennis, a 32-pounder. Turnstiles slow at Disneyland Attendance at Dtaneyland in the first quarter of 1982 fell 9 percent from a year a10, company offidala said, the largest drop in more than 10 yean at the AnaMim amu.ment park. Disneyland report~d attendance waa about 1.7 mi1llon during the tint three monthl of 1982, compared with 1.9 million for the same period last year. The company noted, however. that 1981 attendance at Dlmeyland bad been the aecond hiahest in the park's hJst.ory. nfflciah at Walt Dllney Production• blamed rainy weather and the recession for declining at~ndance at both Disneyland in AnabeJ.m and Walt Disney World 1n Orlando, Fla. Allo IUfferlng a decline at the gate WU Knotts Berry Farm ln Buena Park. 7111 · ENT TO YOU. 3 •nths ta 10 years. 8100 ta 8100,000. TERMS MINIMUM ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD BALANCE lo-MONTHS 12.189% IUM' $7,500 (91 Days) &.MONTHS 12.710% 13 •• 4" $10,000 (112 Days) 30-MONTHS a.a•" IU73"" $500 (2~Yun) 42-r.omtS $500 14.100% IUll"" TO 10YRS. -. . 9.414% 1.870% 12-MONTHS $500 11.7•" 11111mCSl05YllS. ,...,.$800 la.D"" 11 lllmCS lO 10 YllS. v..,...,...,100 . -. . 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O.po11t1 permitted cturtna tht '"''ye•• Y1ekhflecll.,. thfu Junt 12 Up 10 $2 ,000 tn mtlfnl Ntned uempt from ftdtftltun. lnltrHI compounded ~lly Rett "'°""" tt1tclt¥t ttwu M~ 31. lor F11..:t Rlllt Account Ylt't11bte·Rllt Ac~ ls also l'lllYblt PluM •P lol dtUtls l Whatever your saving's goals, short-term or long, Gibraltar can help you put together a savings/investment program that will ~roduce substantial, guaqnteed results. And it's safe. Let us show you how easy it as to earn a sizeable return on your money. Graff Ute Blue and Navy Separates ·Jackets -Blazers, Pants. Sktrts - Koko Knits • LonQ Sl9'Ve end Short Sl~ve Jackets -Skirts. Pants • Ko~ty Oty Blues • Blazer Jackets, Skirts end Pants ln Ute Blue Denim and ~ust Denim. Sizes 8 to 18. Graff and Koko slza.6 to 20 ~~oo<erg@ ~I@ ©>n Trash burning conceR,t remains a valiH idea . i Seldom h11 anythlna ln Hu.ntlnaton Beach caUled u much commotion •• the 111-fated propoul for a truh and 1ewaae bumlna pow r plant ln the Edi.on Htah School neiahborhood. Resident• ln the area of Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Street where the plant was proposed were outraged. They feared noise, air pollution and heavy truck traffic. Near-hysteria set ln when the proposed plant was made a key bsue in t,Jle City Council election campaign tn April. City officials were upset too. They had never seen plans for the 50-megawatt power station and they feared that the Ryan Energy Corp. of Costa M esa would circumvent them and go to the state for approval. Dan Ryan, president of the eneray flrm, aubeequently dropped plan1 to bulld the facWty when some of hll blckera dropped out. But ti aeemod when controveray was at ltl peak that Ryan moved too fut and aupplled too little information to the community. allowing 1usplclon and mistrust to reign. It'a · too bad it was handled that way because the concept seems to have promise. Solid we.ste iB threatening to get out of hand and additional sources of electricity are alway1 w elcome. It may not have been the best time or most prudent location for the facility ln Huntington Beach. But it would be unfortunate if the handling of the matter prejudices the concept at another time and at an environmentally acceptable location. Street lighting cost Disregarding some dire predictions from the city manager, the Fountain Valley City Council has decided not to ~ local property owners to help pay 1982-83 street lighting costs. Two weeks ago, the council postponed action on a measure aimed at setting up a local street light assessment district. Because of this delay, city officials say there n ow appears to be insufficient time available to set 1,1 up such a district and collect funds for the coming budget year. • 1 By not proceeding with the lighting assessment, council members probably w e re 1 I responding to concerns raised during the r ecent e lection campaign. Several ca ndidates campaigned s u ccessfully on promises not to impose such a "tax" without the approval of local voters. The council has the power to impose assessments without s uch approval, but Proposition 13 has apparently made Fountain Valley officials a bit wary of trying to collect additional funds from property owners. A ballot question on an assessment district may be presente d to local voter1 on election day next fall or next '4J)ring. In the meantime, the cit y administration and the council will have their hands full balancing the 1982-83 budget. Street lighting alone will cost about $477,000 next year, City Manager Howard Stephens said. He warns that the state may withhold from Fountain Valley an additional $373,000 in motor vehicle fees, bringing the city's total reduction in state funds to $1.15 million. The council demonstrated sensitivity to the views of local property owners, plua, perhaps, some political savvy, ln declining to proceed with street lighting assessments w ithout support at the ballot box. But it is hoped that city services will not suffer in the face of further state cutbacks, while waiting for election day to arrive. Young vandals need lesson Residents of the Huntington Crest community in Huntington Beach recently went to some effort and expense to spruce up their neighborhood. T h ey decided that their 15-year-old homes in the Garfield Avenue-Beach Boulevard a rea needed freshening up and asked city officials for h~lp. The city didn't have the money so residents collected the cash among themselves to do the work. They found a contractor who painted the wall arou nd the community. That night , two high school-aged girls came by with a • can of spray paint and drew a symbol on the wall, marring the brand-new paint job. Residents patched up the paint work them.lves and, more important, they inliisted to police that the two girls should pay for the damage they caused. The residents, who were attempting to do good for others in the first place, now have a chance to do something good for the miscreants. They can stick to their guns and make them pay. Perhaps the youngsters will even learn a lesson. Perhaps they'll think twice b efore repeating such behavior. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on th•s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1t· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 11u1 642·4321. L.M. Boyd/ Conquering fear DoeJ it help any to know that the least fearful ~ople tend to be the least imaginative, too? &udents of the mind aay fear is a mental hamrd only to those who too soon cross their bridge.. Whip that tendency to antic- ipate, and you've got fear licked, they aver. Q . Who was the famous man who passed out ch~kboop to all of his servants and let them spend his money on the honor system 7 A. Didn't I tell you about that? lt was the Earl of Londesborouah, ac- cording to legend. One hundred years ago. about. Draw at will !or opemes, he told them, and just don't bother me. How Iona UU. experiment lasted It not in the record at hand. At leut UO moUon pictures have shown the !mplre State Bulldina 110n>ewheN' tn the footq•. Q. Who WM the richest !Dml ever to serve M U.S. Pl'elldent? A. Lyndon Johnaon. Reportedly worth $14 million when he succeeded John F. Kennedy. Teen.age truant) in lront.on, Ohio. are locked up in jaU 9ne day for each day they skip school. Q . How many men these days marry women for money? A. The number of meri who look for financial help in theif love lives ap- pears to be rising, thou,h it's not yet equal to the number o women who do so. Thirteen out of every 100 bridegrooms were said to do that thing when matrimonlal reeea.rchers invesllgat.ed the matter some years ago. However, our Love and War man 1uggesJ1 more women work on payroll Jobi now, eo that t3--percent figure is no doubt too low. Q. What dutfl yawntn.i? A. Depends on whlct\ eon or doctor expJatna it. Physicians HY f1tl1ue, hun1er, overealln1 or poor ventilation. P1ychlatrl1ta aay fear, anxiety Ot' aubtle •••r•talon. Shru1. Tax plans for nuclear age WASHINGTON -If you should survive a nuclear hoJocaust, you might thinkJou'd deserve a brief respite from feder texas as you wait for the dust to settle. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury haa already begun plotting to remove even this tin)' silver lining from the mushroom-shaped clouds or nuclear ronClict. Come doomsday. tax collectors will have a hand m the pockets or the survivors. Some of the paperwork has already been completed; it's tilled "Design of an F.mergency Tax System." THE AUTHOR OF this remarkable document is Gary Robbins, a senior official in the Treasury-QnderM:retary'a office. He concedes there will be some worriaome problems Lacina the Internal Revenue Service as It sets about puttlng the ann on dazed, distraught survivors of a nuclear attack. For example, "the Income tax system ls extremely vulnerable to 1011e1 of records of transactions," the memo cautions. ''TheR records are required in order to determine the base for tax at any period of time." In other words, if a hardy taxpayer should make it safely to the fallout shelter but the employer's payroll records were incinerated, how would he get accurate W-2 fonns to submit with the 1040 on April 15? "The necessary information would not be available for preparing of tax returns __ Q JACK AIDERSDN ~ and determining tax habili ty," the Treasury memo roncedes. "Further. the Internal Revenue Service would find it tmpoeslble to verify the necessary figures in audit aituatlons." In this bureaucratic nightmare, it might be thought the tax collectors would simply throw up their hands in despair. But no on e ever got rich underestimating the bulldog tenacity of a federal bagman. Despite the basic 1urvival problems of the unincinerated, the IRS agents still on their feet rould ~~ly be summoned to duty by the "H sufficient damage 1s done" to the continental United States, the • Treasury memo acknowledges, "the tax system at.self may have to be changed." . But Treasury has a solution ready. "INSTEAD OF an income tax. one rould design a general sales tax which would raise th(' revenues re'luired," Robbins suggests A point-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of easy coll e c tion by the IRS and encouragement or savings "to aid in rebuilding the capital stock." he explains. The author has even figured out how big a sales tax would be needed: "The general sales tax on final sales would have to be approximately 20 percent in order to replace the current ind1v1dual and corporate income taxes. Social Security taxes. and estate and gill taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the Treasury document might be a tongue-in·cheek exercise, my associate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocaust tax-collectaon plan a couple of years ~o. Jt was quite serious, he said. Teacher retirement less than rosy To the Editor: P .S. Wills (Mailbox, May 6) ia not fully informed regarding the Public Employees Retirement System pension fund. Teachers do not contribute to PERS. They have a aeparate fund (State Teachers Retirement System). The PERS has allowed the governor to Invest their funds. A!J a result, retired MAILBOX state employees (gardeners, cafeteria workers, secretaries etc .) get cost-of-living raises, paid medical and dental care and are not discriminated in retirement payments by sex (female teachers pay more into STRF and receive lea). California State Teachers Retirement Fund baa not, as yet, been allowed out as an investment. ConaequentJy, the teachers pay their own medical and dental insurance. get a 2 percent a year raise and are 90 percent old women! 'TUE PERS IS made up of 80 percent men. Men make our laws, handle our money and aiticlz.e our work, even our votes. A!J a life member of CT A I defend our right to-endorse a candidate, though l pereonally shall do my own dec:iaion-making. If our schools are not doing a satisfactory job, in the eyes of many, perhaps parents should get out of the schools and go back to letlina the educators run them. Or, better yet, flnd out more about your admin.iatrators. How many parents know what your district superintendent la being paid? How he ia choeen, and by whom? How ii your county superintendent chosen? How many oounty and state supervllorl \1at yOW' school and check on the quality of work teachers are do1na? In 12 years m y retfrement has Increased $130.94 a month. My husband'• Soda1 Security hat tncre11id 300 percenL Teachen do not have 8odal Security. MALISSA B. McMANUS Fight vandalism community. We have also been the victlma of the same type of vandalism and recently were the victims of a break-in and robbery of our home for the secoud tune. WE RAVE experienced broken windows, vents on our roof being stuffed with debris, break-ins and thefts from our g~ge and we spend part of each evening picking up the debris thrown from cars and by piming pedestrians into our yard. We Intend to police our residence closely and report any incidents and I hope others in the neighborhood will follow the lead of Marsha Cook and Jan Vinikow! MR. AND MRS. WALT DABNEY TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below School plan To the F.dltor We commend you for your May 13 editorial article stating the responsibility or the opponenta of the Fountain Valley school reorganization plan to present solid facts and the respoMibllity of the school district and board of trustees to list.en to these facts and to appropriately respond to them. We take exception only to your inference that our appeal may be inspired by a categorical oppoeition to the middle school rlan. We do not oppose the middle achoo concept per se, only the procedures being followed to accompllah it. Although aome memben of our group have morllton!d the district's activities on this matter for eome time, many of ua only became aware of their actions concurrent wtth the public worbhOIJI held in January of th.is year. Sut.equent to the board'• approval of the plan on Feb. 4 and con.finnation of the tchools MJected fOf' d\anp on April 1, teVel'a1 "91dentl vowed to a>ntinue to monitor the lmplementatlon of the plan. IN DOING THIS we discovered vtolatton• In the procedures for proce11ln1 environmental lrnpact documtntl .. requlred by the d.lltrict'• N10lut1on no. 79-2 and the proviliON of the Callfomla Envtronmental Qu.Uty Act. On April 29, we filed an appeal with the board of trustees on their notices or negative declaration and determination in regard to their compliance. On May 6, we appeared before the board of trustees to present a well documented report that outlined the sp~lflc procedures the d istrict was required to follow, the procedures the district' actuaJly followed and the specific and numerous violations. Most significant was approving the project on Feb. 4 , before any environmental documents had been filed. The board agreed to submit our report to the district's attorney for review and that his written response be sent to the board and to CARE members. The comment in your May 13 editorial article regarding "bending the law" to suit one's purpose appears to apply to the district's actiona. At the very least they seem to be compromising law for the sake of administrative expediency. We believe the accountability of public officials and of public agencies is of paramount importance and every pncaution should be taken to insure thelr actions are above reproach. We feel the achool district and board of trustees have failed to meet the appropriate sta ndards for accountability in this matter of grade level reorganization. What is the big hurry for this action? If there isn't time to do it right - perhaps it shouldn't be done at all. KEN BRADLEY Member -C.A.R.E Telecourse quality To the F.dltor: A recent article in the Daily Pilot diacuDes the ''concern" of four teachers at Orange Coast College. It seems that they challenge the "quality" of couraes given by television. Rather than point the finger at someone elle, their ~m lhou..ld be the "quality" of educaUon at Orange c.o.at COUete. What about the financing of these te1evtaion counes? 11 the money were not Uled for the above funcUon, would It be dJverted to -where? I I I I f t ! • 0 Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to-the-minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come in and make a savvy investment on the clothes sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of rose, cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig. $128, sale $95.99. Skirt, orig. $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V. l.P. Sportswear, 3/147; Robinson's Sweaters, 1; Robinson's Pacesetter, 80. To order, call toll-free 1·800·345·8501. ' I I I I I I .. ................ _,..,....._ , By BOWARD L. RANDY or ... ...,,... .... She'a 11pretty11 a picture,""" with a fluid It.ride and could ...Uy be taken u a aona lelc.*' Oft homecominl queen at any one of a nwnbft of hJlh IChooll. to run in the Olympb ln 1988." A year ago she 1uffered lnjurle. that a1moat. COit her a chance to defend her 1tate title but lhe overcame them in Ume to win. • At 17, and with four yean at UCLA a1iead of her, Plumer feels oonfident ahe can continue to Improve and feels the mile or 1,600 ie her belt ~nt. In feet, ahe'e been bot>\ a IOI'& 1Mdet-and II thia yee.r'1 homecomlnc queen for Unlveniltf Hlah and II u well known u any Oranp Cout area tnclt and O.ld perfonner on the hilh 1Choo1 level. "I admit I waa trying to oonterve eome enef8Y for Sunday in the preliminaries last Satw'dav. But I had a r-------::::~-s--------i different feeli,ng on Sunday. My legs t Polly Plumer la the two-Ume defendlns atate 1,800-meter run cbamp6on and well on the way to a third auch title. 'nlere are few who would doubt that auch a rare accomplllhment will ooc:ur ln Saicramento in June. were tighter and it was harder to get looee for the race." PLUMER SET A NAnONAL high 1chool record for the mile run laat Sunday at UCLA and will be C01bpetln8 ln the 800 aa well u the 1,600 at this week'• 3 -A track and field championships at Cerrltoa College. "I'll probably push m)'lelf a little in the COO this week," Plumer says. "It will be the 1.aat time I will run the event ln high achool and I want to aee how well I cah do. I'll concentrate on the 1,800 for the Masters and atate meets. "I'm running both e\lents this week to try and hefp the team win the championship. I'll allo nm on a relay team lf they need me but I won't know until Saturday about that." Plumer aet the national record for the AS PAR AS DEPENDING her championship 1UCCe11fully ll concerned, she takes a cautious approach to the oompetition. "You never know what ls going to happen and I'm nervous about it. I very much want to be a three-time state champion. I have n o doubts about quallfyma in the l ,600 ao I will puah myself more In the 800 this week. But if I am going to compete on a national and International level, I 'll have to be winning races like the. one last Sunday. I'm sure my limes will drop in the next couple of years but how much. I don't know." Plumer rWlB between three and four miles in the morning before school and then adds another 6 to 10 miles in the afternoon. mile despite running two races the day B E S T I N before . in the 3-A pcellminary meet at Unive...tty'a Polly Plumer has v alel'lClf High. • ~ "I average between six and eight miles a day and run an average of 50 miles a week in practice," she says. For two years she has had sophomore Teresa Barrios running with h er, giving University two of the top prep stars in the area. "I really wanted to break the record won two s~ralght state and it was exciting to me when I was 1,600-meter titles. •ble to do it," she says. "I didn't expect to run much faster. I think I could have taken one or two aeoonda off if I had been fresh. I didn't feel like I waa really au-etching and ready to run. 0 1 felt tired, especially on the third lap but other people started to fall back too and I figured it wu part of the race. But I just didn't feel ready to run." PLUMER W ASN-i' making e>CCUleS. Far from it. Her performance proves that. And ahe aaya lhe learned a Jot from the race. "We really learned a lot from each other." Plumer says. "Teresa helps me and I feel I have helped her IOO'\e too. I can run interval work and loek like rm in shape and she can do the same with the longer distances. l help her with interval work and she h.aa heJped me with the distances." PLUMER .AND BARRIOS will be the favorites in the 3-A distance races Saturday -Plummer in the 800 and 1,600 with Barrloe the choice in the 3,200. They will be joined by three other top distance stars from University in Susan Armentrout, Laura Sauerwein and Jami N..J :.&rae~in Saturday'• competition. Between them they could sweep the first three places in both of the longer races. ON THE WGB ROAD -Laguna Beach High goes for the CIF volleyball champlomhip Fri~:t, -meet,f.ng San M.arcol Htah at Santa Butma Qty . Adam Joh.moo (left) and U!t.t Hanlon are 1Wo reuom why the Artilta talri a 60-game winning streak into the cootast. "I didn't know if I could keep up with that type of competition (the bes\ women runnen in the U.S.). I had thouaht to mpelf, 'maybe I won't be able to Nil with the9e people.' But ) learned that I can and hopefully I will improve." Her goal is to compete in the Olympic Gamel. "RunniN in the ayrQpks II my dr.m. my future aoai." lbe aaya. "rm not ..are if I CM a.Ice it in 1984 bat I iJef.lnltely will. be polntinc toward 1988. U I can stay i.Djury-ftee, l feel I can get the experience and m.turity U Plumer decides to opt for matrimony before the 1988 Olym~Games arrive, she isn't worried. .. k at Mary Decker," she says. "She's running bettet than ever and ahe'a married now.•• And U Plumer ever decides to quit running. she could enter a beauty queen cont.est and come out No. l in that endeavor as well. Will 'icemen' -~arm ~o task Friday? Artist volleyball team shoots for 61st straight triumph, .CIF crown By ROGER C.ft\LSON °' .. .,..,,... ... With a streak of 60 1traight victories in hand you might think it'a all been pretty boring for the Laguna Beach Hlgh Artists' volleyball team , even their reputaUon aa icemen lends cn!dence to the theory. And, sometirnel maybe it hal. Artists Coach Bill Alben admits hii team's reputation baa, at times, been all that baa been required to aend IOf'De opponenta on their backs. Then again, how about the 1981 CIF championship decider aver San Clemente in five 1eta., the all-time CIF playoff thriller? Or the five-set victory over btancia a year ago after trailing by two games. Or the put week Vocal fans give ~eltics a big lift. .. with ~from-behind victoriel over Marina and Santa Monka in five 1eta? "'That'• what feally maka Olla winning atreek incredible," say. Alben. '"Illere's always a Ume coming when you're not going to be playing well and the other guys are. "Yes, I thought we were going to loee to San Clemente (in the '81 finals) and I felt weoould loee ~Blinat Marina and Santa Monica, too, but then again, you think about winning, too.'' Aahen takea hl• Artists to Santa Barbara City College Friday night (7 o'clock) to duel San Marooa for the CIF a:own and he aaya hla crew won't be changing lta style now. "Wep Direpare the aarM for each match,' he aaya. 0 We don't ,et extra high foe anybody. It wu a mistake aga1nat M.art.na. we eot too excited, wanting to play too well in front of the home crowd and we tried too hard. ''This is a fairly sophisticated offense and it requires a lot of· 1elf diacipllne and control. "You hav~ to accept the bad calls, the other team's breaks. So we're not looking at one game, but the whole match as far as team concentration. We don't want to let refs, crowds or other players to get our attention away from the way we want to play." "Last year we were like ice, too," confirms the catalyst of the Artlats, Rudy -Dvorak. ''That's Laguna'• t.radi tfon.'' "It's the mental part of the ~ that has always brought us '' aaya Aahen. The Artists will be going for (See LAGUNA, Page Cl) Has Kison come all the way back? Angel right-han«ler convinces Brewers after eight shutout innings in 7 -2 victory MILWAUKEE (AP) -Bruce Kilon l81d he wasn't aure if he had pitched that 'Well or the Milwaukee Brewen are alumplftl 1 that t.dly. But the ~ answer wu in'elevant to Klloo. encouraged by hia beltbonnance since elbow and wria\ aur ery on hla pitchin8 ann in mid-1980 llde him for 9lOte than a yur. Kilon. 3-0, pitched a five-hit shutout for eight inningl Wedneeday nf&b then left I felt very comfortable out there, as comfortable u I've fell at any time •ince. ~mms baa. tuna. But we won and l felt very comfortable out there, u comfortable u rve felt at any time since com1na t.ck .. " ,.Kllon pitched well. but we dicln't hit too well, either. We didn't hit b.ll miltakee," Milwaukee Manager Buck Rodgen Mid. LOSO .JIM Slaton, 3-1, who entered the srame with a 1.14 earned run avenge, WM Stewart hack • rises to the top LOS ANGELES (AP)-Dave Stewart has gone from the bottom to the top and back to the bottom again in his brief major league career. For now, though, he·s back on top, a fter hurling eight-plus Jtrong innings, Wednesday night as the Loa Angeles Dodgers downed the Chicago Cubs 4-1. L a1t year , Stewart was ticketed for the Dodgers' minor league club at Albuquerque. But he earned a last-minute reprieve when the Dodgers decided to cut Don Stanhouse and keep him. He pitched well in relief, but had a shaky post-season. and it wasn't until early this year when he was back in the Dodgel"S' good graces .. But when he encountered trouble, ·along with everyone elte tn the bullpen, he wu relegated to the role of long relief. Wednelday nJaht., he appeared aa a flll-in for injured Hurt Hooton, ~t after pitching into the nintti ~ of the Dodge.rs' 1econd aucceulve win, he hu earned hirmelf at least one more ~tart, perhapa lnore. "I figured to get five or alx lnn1ngs out of him." Los lea Man.ger Tom Luorda • opdrn1aUcally. Luorda aot ooosiderably more than that, and at a time when he tlelDerately needed il r Wednead1y nt1ht'• win, the first time ii\ • Mell the ~ ~two wiN lna row, p " them Deck to .600. , I I I , ' ! I I • ,. Area ballplayers ·dot Rae-I 0 team . ' ' Prom AP dl1patc'ea u Former Oranae Coa1t Collea• • • pticNra Mike Hoean and Don Smith •., were aMOnl the many atta athlei. '' 1tlected for the All-Pacific 10 Southern Dlvltion bueball aquad anDO\&nced w~. )lo&an and S-1th were memben of Artlona State'• Champiqn Wildcata, who won their~ 9tra18ht dMaion title with a 23-~ reoord and wtll ao lnto the NCAA tournament 11 defendtn1 national championa. ASU ii 53-13 overall. Hogan and Smith were two of aeven MU playen choeen' for the .quad. :rhe otheu include outfielder Kevin Romine, who attended ) Fountain. Valley High axld Orange Coast College, and HOOAN designated hitter Chris Johnston, from Corona del Mar High and <:XX=. ASU'1 Alvin Davis, whoee hitting statistics included a .358 averaae, 11 homers and 79 runs batted ln, w'8 named Player of the Year. Other Wildcats chosen were infielders Doug Baker and Ronni Salcedo. Arizona State Coach Jim Brock was honored as the division's Coach of the Year. Meanwhile, Edison High product Mike Dotterer, now attending Stanford, was selected u part of the outfield. The remainder of the team was: pitcher Brian Mignano, catcher Bob Hausladen and infielder Bob DeC.oeta from Stanford; Kevin Ward of Arizona; David Hengel of Cal; Brian Graham of UCLA, and John Wallace from USC. Baseball today On this date ln baseball in 1978: Pittaburgb alugger Willie Stargell belted one of the longest" measµred home rum in baseball hi1tory, a 535-foot shot off Montreal hurler Wayne Twitchell that landed In the distanl upper deck at Montreal'• Olympic Stadium. Stargell's blast lifted the Pirates to a 6-0 victory over the Expos. On this date ln 1976: , Boston's Carl Yastrzemski belted a pair of homers -his fourth and fifth ln the la.at two games -ln the Red Sox's brawl-filled 8-2 victory over the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Today's birthdays:. Former St. Louia Cardinal third bueman Ken Boyer, the 1964 National Leque MM Valuable Player, la 51. New York "Yankees designated hitter Bobby Murcer la 36. t Giants floundering, so trainer fired ! SAN FRANCISCO ~ It has long Iii been a sports axiom that when the i team is losing, heads roll. The San Francisco Giants, floundering in the National League West cellar, , decided Wednesday to fire their trainer. Joe Liacio, a veteran o! 36 years ln baseball, the last seven with the Giants., was let go because of "philosophical differences," a~rding to ,Giants Vice-President Tom Haller. Perry •Archibald, Liacio's 30-year-old assistant, took over as trainer. "We came to an impasse in ·philoaopby," Haller said. "It wasn't anything he was doing wrong, it wu more something he wasn't doing. !here were just philoaophical differences." ....... nt •• lo .... KC ·M... '·::~.:: .... ..... ...... ,.... -~ = r.t:\!!,.m and nr. Nittlil W.. -=1 ftllb\, ,_..._ ... Y...._ '° • a.1 ...._ ovw uw K..-av loyak 1~l 1~4,-llW way to .... o. .... to Mari the Mihm Md .a-.. allowed a hlr··-• wane 0\191' lM ftMl two lnNnp and Mmed I h18 nlftth aave . . . l:lawhen Iii the American LH1ue, Gary Al ........ two-out dou .. to dMp .otnt.er field drow home the wtnn1na ND 1n the 12th lnn1l1I tnd llV9 Bait.on a 8-& victory over S..ttle .•. S.Uy Ayala, the tint batter after an 81-mlnute rain delay, repped a three-nan homer ln the ••~nd lnnlna to help llOMN Baltimore toP. M~ta. 4-2 . . . Eao1 Cabell'• 1ln1te 'drove ln Alaa Trammell with the go-ahead run ln Detrott'a four-run lbcth lnn1na and the TSaen went on to win their Hv•nth atraiaht 1ame, 8-3 over Oakland . . . R11ce Malllalkl and Dave Reverlas cracked RBI doublet to hlahUCtlt a three-run eighth lnnlna H Toropto beat Cleveland, 8-5 . . . Pinch runner Jerry HaJrttoD acored from KCOnd bate on an infield hit and an em>r by Te~ aecond bueman Dotts FJyu with two outa ln the ninth ~ 1o Jllve Chicaao a 6·~ vtotory over the Ranaera. &Okie relief aerwat.ion Salome BuoJH picked up the victory, hiS flrat decilion of the year, to ao with his American League-lea~ 10 saves. · Klng"'.'an'a 13th unlucky for Reds Dave 1.1npa1D hit hit ·1sth home Iii run of the aeuon, a three-run ahot ln the first lnnJna, to blCk rtaht-hander Pat Zadrf1 aeven·hitter u the New York Meta defeeted Cincinnati Wednelday nlaht, 4-2. Kinpwl, who leadt the major lea,uee ln homers, now hat 304 lifetime and 116 u a Met, ope ahy of the team'• all-time mark held by F.d Krane Kiko Garda drove ln two runs and the Houston Attrot beat Steve Carltoa for the fir•t time ln nine games alnce 1978 with a ~-3 victory over Philadelphia . . . . Bob Boraer went 4-for-4 and' drove ln three runt and Cbri1 ClaambU.1 knocked ln • pair of runa u Atlanta unleashed a 13-hit 'attack to defeat ......... ttruallna Montreal, 9-1. The l<a WU the 11th ln 15 games for the Expos and aeventh straiaht without a wtn for ~ and IOling pitcher Ray Ban1' . . . Do• Roblllaoa aurvived el&ht walb and three wild p_itchee over 7 ~ lnnlno and got relief help from Rod Sc:arry and Knt Teblve u PittablJrlh shaded San Ftand.tco, 2-1 ... Catcher Gelle Tenace'1 bua-loaded error with one out ln the 10th inning allowed Alu Wluln1 to 1COre the winning run and give San I>Tego a 6·4 victory over St. Louil. With the hues loaded and one out, Sllto Le1cuo hit a routine chopper to third bueman Due lor1, who threw to the plate and appeared to force Wiulns. but Tenace failed to touch the plate and Wiialns was ruled safe. Both sides of NFL Issue meet Repreantatives of the National Football League'• Management Courw::tl and the Playeni AalOCiation met for the first time ln more than a • month Wednesday . .Ed Garvey, executive director of the NFLP A. said, "There was no progress, but it was a uaeful meetilU[." Jim MWer't spokesman for the NFLMC, II.id ·Garvey's comment wu "accurate. People got th.i.ngs off their cheat. Both sides discussed philosophies and didn't aet into apecifica" The present labor agreement expires July 15 and both sides are far apart on economic ls1ue1 NBA Commilaioner Larry O'Brla wae to flip a century-old silver dollar today to detennme whether the San Diego Clippers or Lakera \L&kers Kings will stlll be 'On' would chooee first ln the 1982 college draft ' . . . . Joe Cribbs, Bullalo's All-Pro running L_ .LOS ANGELFS -ON TV will m back, is considering li\ting out this lleUorl or )PtJDunue to telecast 'Selected live home playing for another team ll he can't renegotiate Li~ ~f the Los Angeles La.kers and his contract with the Bllla, according to a 'Kinga, it was announced Wednesday publiahed report ln the Buffalo Evenlng Newa. PY team owner Jerry Bu11 and Richard Crlbbl Buffalo'• leading ruaher the last two M'hitman, vice president and general manager of years .'.nd an adept ~ receiver wu the only .Nationai S~bacription Television ln Loa Angeles , veteran who skipped the BWa' N~tional Football (ON~-. . .... " Leaiue mlnicamp lHt week ... ~aplte an u~ new a~'™:nl ww run through the ln~rmittent drl.z:zle, aome 40,000 to 4~.000 New 984-85 8eal0n, replacing the current contract, York Islander fans lined a 4 ~-mile parade route hlch was to expire ln 1983, and gives ON-TV W~y night to hail the conquering hockey usive local rig}lta to home games. beroet While tem\8 were not revealed, Buss said hat the major significance of this new Televlslon, radio ment ia that it will result ln "revenues TV: No eventa acheduled. hich insure the future of hockey in Loa RADIO: Baaeball -Chicago at Dodgers, · les." 7:30 p.m., KABC (790). Goad · meals. dcleals. their fowth Cir crown llM• 18'1 ~1 ~ ... opJ)OI .. \ which NYUIYll UOund M hltw Krlo 8'ehl and fomw Newport • Harbor ltaN:lout Pet.er ParU, a letter.' 111r! the .,..i we've been able to '" ~ bAll to Para ~ pw over the top of him and we've frHHd th• middle blocker (8tebl) f alrly well to a•t a one-on-one on the oubtde blocker," M)'l •Aaheft. J'of the Art.Lita. howwer, the reel story u.. within the Lacuna Beech cuip. DvonJc. Or..,.. CountY'• Mott Valuable P-.yer and the MVP ln all thrM tou.rnamentl the Al1ilta have entered (and won) thl1 ~. l.-dl! the way, ~ with Hnlort Nell JUddelT and Univerll'Y (Loe ~) Hl&h tranlfer Chrlt Lal'lon, ln addition to junloN Lett ffanllon. Adam Johnlon and Stephen Blue. e _ Dvorak ll Che •tter and nta ability to adjuat to whatever altuation 11eta him aput from the malnltream. Riddell'• 1S>iklna, eutting back through the -midcile, spearhead.a Ocean View, Arcadia vie Ocean View High School, behind a pair of Shutout pitching · performances by Pam White, wt1I continue ita bid for a 4-A CIF women'• aoftball championship ln quarterfinal round action Friday at Murdy Park in Huntington Beech apinst No. 4 aeeded Arcadia. Ocean View boHtt a 16-4 record for the 1ea1on while Arcadia hat W.t only one decision while winning 21, lnclud!ng a pair of playolf victories by 3-2 and 4-~ acores. Lynn Alfed .. ved the victory against Loa Ami101 Tueaday when the made a ~ect throw to the /late on a relay from the outfiel to nip the potential tying run. Ocean View la the only <>ransce Cout area team remaining ln the competition after a grand~alam homer in the aeventh Inning eliminated EdJaon on Tueeday. the°''' ....... -alb qulcMI& -..... ,.u•u .. &a tu1h ICllOol," .. Y• Alt\en, •111f you're'* up wlth hain -.Uy, you're too late." ff.anion II a tWO-"fMI ltar1lr and the Artl1t1' beat O\ltttde hluer, and Lauon 11 the ~t. 111Arton la an excellent. bloc.kir. lllfl blah and ll able co penetrate. If•'• had 1ome unbelievable block1, 1trat1ht down 1tu.ff,'1 •)'I Aahen. Johnton'• •tronc Pllllna and the aurprtatni play -of Bf ue at outalde hltter, completea the pk:ture. Other 1tron1 contrlbutora lnclUde bllCk row 1peclalltt Eddie Sulin lbd left-hander Jeff Blue, who t"1a bil brother ln the froht tt1W. ,. The backbon• of L•1"iia Bear.b11 ~ tD the .PNI. Rolf r.n,en. no 1oatet' resktet ln the area, but bit J:etenbe II tiiU felt. .. He wu 1NU..tor few all of th.ii.," conflnnl Aanen, now In hll third year with the Art.lat.a. 11Kld1 come Into the program with aound fundamentals." Alto conVibutlna have been volleyball exper~a Randy Sandefur and Marv Dunphy, whoae concept• have been ' lneorporated by Aahert. So, although the Arti1t1 oertalnly have their start, the 1ucce11 hat come from an all-around production. It'• a team concept, but when the Arti1t1 are rolllna. It'• difficult not to keep your eyes glued on Dvorak and Riddell. euily the finest 1-2 punch In Southern California. San Marcos lost to Laguna ae.ch ln the quarterflnalt of the Doe Puebloe tournament, but it WU a one-game, 15-polnt. match (1~-5), which ~·t mean a lot, except that lt waa another 1teppin1 atone toward ee straight. '1We talked about It (the winnln,g ~) at the beClMlni of the~ .... ya Ashen. "But it)Mum'\ been the focal point. The focal point baa been the CIF finals. '6Tbia team la hungry. They want to prove they are u aood b 1att year'• team, that they can go unbeaten. "They know that ~ery time out there\ a winner and a loeer, and they want to be the winner." EVES TITLE -Bill Ashen and hh Artists seek back·to-back CIF crown1 Friday . Unser leads Indy trials INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Three-time Indianapolis 600 winner Al Umer, worklna on his aetup for the May 30 race, led the way ln pcactkle Wedneeday with .e top lap of 198.281 mph as track activity began to build aoin at the Indlanapolla Ptlotor Speedway. Un.er, the YOUJ'\ler of the two racing brothers from Albuquerque, N.M., put hia aleek white Lonehorn LR-03- Coaworth racer Into the fleld last weekend with a quaJJfying run of 195.567. But his lap Wednesday, accomplished with a full load of fuel. was falter than any of the four laps during his qual.!ficatlon attempt... Among the non-qualified entries that took to the 2~-mlle oval Wednelday, Greg Leffler, a 30-year-old sprint car veteran from Winchester, Ind., was the quicke1t. He drove his SEAl-Cosworth (a modified 1980 March) to a 197.411 lap after a bit of consulting with Tom Sneva, the former qualifying record-holder at the Speedwav. You're not just playing-you're teaming! Th• Texas ln1trumentl"'I Home Computer Conaote-Th• "lraln" Of The System This efficient hOme computer connects to T exos Instruments 10" video monitor or with the RF modulator. directly to y04Jr TV set Sole price includes both the console and the RF modulator Monitor ovo1loble at regular low. Kmart•• prices PMP.1900 I Speech iynthost1er At Super lfMnp Lets your home computer tolkl ~ReQUlres customized convnond modules that U'8 speech.) Software tor th• whole famllyt K mart carries o wide selection of Tl software for the Home Computer In eo!y to use plug-m command modules Subjects Include Home Finance. Education and exciting games. all at ottrocttve Prices .. : • lllAICMt LIA .. IT ...... 1 -=:a.t:s-· : 1~ =. .. ,. .-1 141 IO ,. .IM •141 • ,. .... I » n .... 1141 "' 1on .aos11 -. 11 •.•• ,,~ ...... ~ .tlf •• 11 .... ,. 11 .. ,. • ,, 11 .•71 1141 11 ..... I 11 10 .•ae I TOfOllto 11 II .A17 ~ ... , ... ..... ~1..i ....... . TOJOl!to ••~a a.itlmcn•.~t 9oeton I,~. (11 lnnlnQI) OWoll .. Oeklllftd • ~1,T-1 *"-'(Oft! S. It-. Cllr I ............ ....... (Zalln &;.1) at MlwaullM(H ... 1-1) l'oro1110 (Clency 4-11 et Clevelend (~a.!J.n MlnnMota (Reclf9fn 2-4) at 8alllmore IMoGteoot 4-1). n . ..... (a.tocw. 1-4) at 8oeton (TUdof a. 1). " Oakland (Underwood 1 ·21 at Detroit (Wlooa 2-2). n Only""*' ~ ~.=:- • &. ~ -Allnata 26 1$ .Ill 1811 °"'° 1t ,. .~ 4i. ~ 1t It .500 • 11 21 .4412 7~ Clndrwwtt 11 21 .~ ·~ ten Frencleoo ti 22 .421 t ....... DftW911 k lOUla 21 t5 .IOI HllW YOftl 2t t1 .568 2 ""9dt1$hle 1t 11 .514 3~ ........, 11 1t .457 ·~ ~ 15 It .441 • a._., 15 22 .~ N • *••••f'• ..... =.Ql6oeaol 2. Sen l''*""-> 1 ... Monu-.11 HllWYOftl4.~2 Houaeon 5, ~ 3 Sen Diego 5, St. loula 4 ( 10 ""*'oal ,..,.e ..... Chic.go (Jenkin• 2·4) et Ded1era (V..._.WJ.n PltUOurgll (flhoden 2-4) at Sen Frencl9co lo.le 1-3) St. Loia (M9ttln M ) et Sen Diego (W.wi 1-o) Only --llCll9dlAed A•RICAN LI.AGUE Angele7,....,.2 CA&IONllA aaWA'*D • , ..... • , ltlll o-.ia • • o 1 a Gentner at> 4 1 o 1 C.-fll 3 1 0 0 Yount • 4 0 I 0 Oltc:fl. 211 4 0 0 0 COOC* Ill 3 1 1 0 Aa.JcQnrt 4 1 2 2 MGMr"' 4 1 2 a a.tid 1000 OoMe• 3000 ..,_ _, 3 1 0 0 O"--d4 0 O O O.C:.-31> 4 '2 1 Smnwwdl'I 3 0 0 0 9-llqlad 3 2 I 1 Edwdalf 3 0 t 0 Um d 0 0 0 0 Yo.I c 2 0 0 O l"oll• 4120 honec 3011 Tot..-33 1 I 1 Tot.llf30 2 I 2 ..... ., ...... Celllomlia 210" 2 tO 010-7 ........ 000 000 002-2 DP-Calllornla a, Ullwe11lcee I. L08-Callfornl• e. Mllwe11ll•• 4. 28-DeDlncH. HA-A•. J echOll (ll, OeClncH (5), Money (I). S8-You11 . 8"-8-. ~ ." .... .., IC-.n(W,3-0) • 5 0 0 2 5 ,._ t 12210 ........ Siiton (l.:S-11 )'!\ 1 5 5 3 2 .Augultlne ~ 2 2 2 3 2 Pe -v-. T -2:36. A -10.482 --~,"= · •nie• •Al"""" llonMll. Tot0n1o IO ft tf M ,4$0 ~~ .. ,. • 11 Ml r:=~t:1D'IH:m I.~, .....,_..U 100 14 II .NO Ooeoer ..... •• M 111 IO 47 .143 ,..,., <:tliceOO 34 tat ,, ... .... , ~T-ao 107 10 M .3M ,lodl-. ..... • ,. ,.. t<Ma .w ~ Clliofloo J4 IOI II M .333 ...... ...... Thornton. Clevtlend, 11; Hrbtll, Mlnneeota, 10: ,._lcke, laltlmore, 11 Ha1ran, CllMlland, ~Y· O.lallcl. e. --... ~. M ; L4mnlk!, • 29; OalMe. Mo"••· KanH• Cl=, 17: Thornton. ..._. .. ,re,..,.., • ...,., MlllnMola. a ,..... (I o..e.i..) ~ Qbgo, ~. °'*"Y. Ntw YOftl, 1-1: z.-. ......... ~-.....=·1; Gute.~Clty.4-1:8-'d,Oek ,4-1; F e.nn.ter, . s-ttle, 5-2. NATIOMAL &.aACM.9 QA8"" ..... J.l'homlleon ....... 82 117 2t 43 ·* BallOf, New Yon 14 7a 10 H .347 MorwMncl. Ct*-00 37 139 11 ... .$4$ Au.Jonea. s. Dleoo a 1 1 u 21 41 .M 1 .....,..,., ~ 37 141 23 ... .sat ,...._ ~ 33 ISS 15 44 .329 SIMtN, Ntw YOftl 3S 124 1t 40 .323 KnlgM, Houl10n ,. 150 23 ... .320 Wlleon, Ne YOfil 37 167 25 50 .311 Lo.Smith, St. l.oull 37 182 34 48 .311 ...... __ l<lnQmen, Ntw York, 13; MurotlY, Atlenla, 12; J:lllompeon, Pltt1burgh,·11: Homer, Atlente. 10; Hendrick. St Loula, I ; 0-.....0.::-:,.... .. ~~ 37; l!Jnmnen,_~ York, 35, • CNoago, l90; J .• ._..paon, PIUtb"'9fl, 30; I . Ofai, PhHedelpftle, 27; ~. A"1nta. '¥7. ....... (.~) For9dl, St. LoUla. Ml: Sutton. Hollston, 8-1, ~ ..... York, 5-2; Puleo. N9w• York, 4-2; Gerti«, Allente. 4-2; a..nyt, Cinclnnlll, 4-2; WMM, ~ 44. ~ecor.. l'AClnC· 10 9'L\ YOW ~ .... = SIMlord ti. Ol'9gOfl StMe 4 ~ H1gf1 ptoduct .... Don-. lll'Ollld ,_,. two runt d1Klng en eiolll-run, ..,._tfl..lnnlllg rally which cerrled lh• Cardinal• to • ~ IW9lp of lllelr ..-.. Stlrdord. 46· f 5 overall, edvancH to NCAA ,_. ~ oomp«t1lon tcheduled -Week •t • Bite lo lie del.-mtnecl). c.~v~a (Owi•R tr MllliJ, J ~.) •• Aowllllnd • Mmien Mira eo.. 111 &amt v~ w-... .. St,..... LA*~ at Collon M Magnola .. c.mtoe OMndor• • Senti Alie "°'111 1Rlvw9idel Ill Loera Fulerton at Cll.n.v I f.A eo.on. dlll u. •• Mt~ v.a.; Nono9ll • Whinier a.-1y .... Senti Fe ~mNorco 1·A .._. .. T~ llalOwirl Partt .. Sen MerlnO Alo .._ er v~ Ctinatten ,..._ .. Laa.le .... ldloela MelodyWld .. Cate Alo Hondo .. 8'enlWood .__•a ,._, • ~ Helpei1a aw. 111 ~ Prep ....,,. llACll. • ll#tonge. Wlrller 8plrll (V-.nzuala) 11UO UO 3.0 ~~~~ 10.00 ~= Alto : Melncle'1 Plum, T• of Time, EnQIWt Girt Gentle Hinda, Agoyle. flm« 1:10 1/1. • DACTA 14-2) peld 1271.110. aomf uc:a. One ...... Fo.lorla l'l**I 7.to 4.20 3.tO Oedefw9 l>r-" {McHlrglle) 5.20 uo ~ WlndatOflft (Upham) uo Alto raced: Lord'• Lanie, Seralcl, Vltnr\!IY. Time: 1:31 215. ~IUCa.11/llmllea. <*'9 a.y Lall CMoCerronl uo a.to uo ~ 0. (o-ra,) 7.to t.00 F19nch eon., • ., 1-.i1 uo Mao raced: er-Doug. l(Jng o.tue, ~A-Knight. Tlme: 1 :43 115. • DACTA (2-6) peld -.oo • fltCtlt IOI (l-3-++2-21 peld 172.AM.IO ..... hlPO winning uc:a ... (1111 hot-.). b Pldl Six con101111on peld 1114.10 with 54 wtnnlng Ile* ... (M ~). 8mfnt llACll. One 111111 Oft Mf. 8*Mllul~~l1.40 2.40 2.10 PtlMdre ( 2 20 2. tO ,.,..~, 2.10 Allo r909ll: CerTy e T-. A~. Tll!le. 1:34. 11 DACTA (1-2) peld IN.00. ...,.. RM:a. , 1/lt ,,..., fl'l9nclly ~ IPlncatl l.40 4.20 uo P.-0 Mom~) UO 4.IO °'C ~ . ..., Moro,~ ~. An ... Alloiit-ttm. Aldlad, .... M7l4I. Tirne-1:A3 215. 11 DACTA (4-101 pelCI1174.00. A!Mndlnoe: 11,Ma. ....... --::"'L W U • "9 ... ,. ... • • ,. 1t 11 47 ~ : i ,~ : u PGA-....... 1. c:rwe ..... ~-, 2. TOlllW...... t. Tom IC"9 4 • .,.,.,., ..... •• ~Wdlna 1. SOoetHodl 7. Jaoll Nlclcleut I. Mltf9-I I.~ ... 10. f.d...., NA ..... llw ~~ 1. Tom Ma. 70.0I. 2. Tom W1118on, 70. 15. 3. Cur11• llra~~I. 4. Scott Hoell, 10.44. a. 1oott 10.a1. ..................... 1. Tateo OUltl, 274.f . 2. 0.. WatMn, 210.2. .. .,.. Doualaaa. ....... Oen Pohl. Amy ZOllllr, •S. . ... .. lllP-.., 1. c.Mll .. ,.. 2. ... l'lld •. 711. 3. 0.. 1 4. Tom Me, .744. 5. • "°OWi. .141. ----··· I. , .. ., ~ •. Tit. a. Hal Sutton. .721. ................ 72G. 4. INoe UIU-u. .111. a. c.Mll ,.._ anc1 "'°"" ~. .714. ................... 1. CnilD ............ 2. Id """" aa.co. a.,_ 1Cae. • 1rtttan anc1...,.,. ....._,, la.14. ,_,.. ______ 4., ............. I. T-'°"-.fM. 2. Cf90 ......,, .!SI. I. 0..-W-. .2%7. 4. TOlll W1Cto11. .221. ........... 1. TOfft Kiii. 223. 2. Cn1a 8ladllr, 211. 3. Andy a..n, aoe. 4. Scott Hoed!, 111. a. Cur1ia SltWlglt. , .. ................. 1.Cfela ...... ,123,,711.l. TOlllW-. r.11.t4f. a. T-Kite. ltN.175. 4 . .-.,., ate, 1 111,747. I. L.-y WedUM, 1111,- M. ...... Hod\, 1148.m. 7. "'°'--. 1140.'44. .. Jdnft .... l12SM7 ... Id SnMd. 1117,115. 111. .. Older, lttl,015. NASCAR~ ....,L.IAllDI 111.211 117.411 1tt.an 118.I07 118.312 193.133 112.'10 112..472 111.001 1. DmrTwl ':'.:t.' =.a~ 2. llOllby Alllton, H21,IH; 3. Benny Partone, •111.110; 4. Dale EatnNrdt. 1183,1108; 5. Terry~ 1112.0IO; I. AlcJlwd Petty, 11,.,118: 7. Aon 8ollc:flanl.1 1120,416; •• Caley~ 111~ .. Aody ..._ I 110,M>; '°· Hlny Gani. ...... • '°91TIT._ 1. Tany ~ 1,740 --2. o."111 Wallr1p, 1,143; I llOllby Alllon, 1,ato ... Sea Kings' toe has the numbers The No. 8 hitter hs.s a .558 averase !J .. ~~~N . L•ANCAST!R -Their Nd.ta belie thelr record and '1\.-dar.'• three-run rally tn the lhrth nnin& behind one hit whJch catapuit.ed them into the ClF 2-A quarterfinal• aoundt men like a typical Corona del ~'r'=" you talk to Antelope Valley Colch Brent Newcomb, there are aome fllu,re9 the Sea K.lnaa are aoina to haw to deal with on J'rfday-(8 o'clock) at the . Aofelopel' ·~ field. Newcomb 1 top teVen batten aver~1ed .382 enterlna the playo.ffa, led by •. "8 avef1lle from Joe 1'obertl, the No. 8 hitter. For the molt part it'1 a linalee team. llnce the dlltanc. are b2 to left, 411 to left-center, 385 to center, 395 to ript-center and 385 to right. "You could put Dod1~r Stadium in thia place," MY• Newcomb. "Thia ii hay country, you know, so we're looking forward to seeing players from the beach." The Antelopet aren't known as a running team and feel they have the answer to anyone ebe'a ru.nnina in catcher Bryan Peck, the cleanup hitter (.353) and team captain. Two 110phomotea hav• be.a tlevai.d co the vu9ty lrciim tbe JV tMm )Ill J)l'Sor to the DlaYOlfa and art~ <Jlaiold BUU1e 1t DH .nd tine b1i1iinari 8eM'i Suon). On the mowid the Anteiop. fAcure co ttart left-bands en.a BHham (7-2), but alao have rtaht-handt-ra Rob Cl1ft and Dan Wl.1.kenon available. C«ona de1 Mar Qiiech Tom Tra1•r •• meanwhll•, ha• rtaht-handeri Chria White tAd KUrt PeterMn available with No. l pitcher Dave Rohde probebly stationed at third bue . The Sea Ktnp, four-time &. View Leque ~,Pl ~ the defendlna CD' 2-A k:i.nOtm. rely on an .if-around effort without any one phue of their pine domlnattng. The starttna lineu~ to remain u.nchaoged the firtt eJ1M apota with ordon Mo11, Rohde, White, Brent· Melbon. Mike He.a, Scott Loos, Dave ~rrla and Gre1 Wynn mannina the batting berths. Antelope~ ii 17-7 ovenll· and finlahed ieOOnd to Golden ==pion Hart, the No. 2 Hart dropped Antelope valley in ieaaue play, 13-5 and 8-0. Olympics chief says_ Soviets will attend MOSCOW (AP) -'l'he Soviet Union la planning to aend l,000 athletes and officl.ala to the Loa Angeles Olympics, the largest delegation expected at the 1984 Summer Games, the U.S . organiziJ\R chief said Wedne9c1u. Peter ~-Ueberroth, the Loa Angeles Games chairman, said Soviet sport.a offic:iala told him they planned a 1,000-member team, two-thirds of them competitors and the others coaches and functiooariea. Ueberroth aaid Soviet 1porta offidala usu.red him they would 9end a larae team to Lo9 Angeles despite their harsh attacks on preparations for the Games. The Soviets have complained about private financing of the Games, housing for athletes, competition sites Ml<! the Games organiz.en. He said many of the Soviet complaints were valid and the purpoee of hia trip to the Soviet Union was to confer on tboee questions and aeek Soviet advice . "We are extremely pleased with the results of the meeting, We have made assurances to the National Olympic Committee of the Soviet Union that the Games will be conducted In a fair manner for athlete• of all countries,' .. Ueberroth told west.em correspondents. He called his meetinp with Sergei Pavlov, chairman of the Soviet Olympic Committee, "the beginning of a good and strong friendship" between Loa Ar\2eles offidala and the organizers ol the 1980 Mc.cow Olymplics, which were boycotted by the United States. A Joint communique noted that the U.S. IOVttJU1lenl "had not yet liven val.id glW'anteea" for organization of the Loa Angelel Games in complianOe with the Olympic charter. Among other thin11, the Soviets have complained about aecurlty for the athletes. But Ueberroth aald the U.S. government already had provided a one-.,.ge letter of guarantee that the Olympic chart.er would be ot.erved and a copy of the letter would be given to the Ruasiana. The Loa Angeles executive said the Soviets had given him what be ttprded • a binding promlle that they wouJd 8eftd a big team to Loa Angeles. Ueberroth said the United States/robably would have the. aecon largest team ln Loa Angeles behind the l,000...uong delept.ioo of ihe Soviet Union. Eaat Germany, another Olympic powerhoute, ia planniDQ to eend a 500-member team ma Poland 250 athletes and offidala, the offidal said, refenina to ta1ka he had in East Berlin and Warsaw before coming to Moecow. • Volleyball tourney set . The first annual Newport Volleyball Club invitational tournament for ~irla will be ataaed at the Boys Club of the Barbot Area on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. . The Newport Volleybell Club will field two team• in the bantam (13-and-under) divia.ion and one team in the junior ( 15) division. A round robin tournament will be played againat highly-rated Ichiban Volleyball Club of Las Alamitos. Newport's junior team will include Stephanie Noonan and Camie Doder aa power bitten, All-American setter Dana Wheeler and Andrea Redick u middle blocker. Setter Jennifer Noonan and power hitter Lara Alper le.d the bantam team. Jack Houston 11 coach of the Newport teams and adml"'oo to the tournament 11 free. For further information, phone Houst.on at 646-1196 or the Boya' Club at~. The Bo)'I' Club b located at 2H5 Vl1ta Del Oro, Newport Beach. Women sailors race ·Dana Belles Series slated .Saturday BJ ALMON LOCU.BltY Dtilt ............... Dana Potnt yacht Club wtl1 keep 1 .. (llMatt membera on the water thD w-kmd with flnt and eecoftd .... ol , .. pooular Dana Beu. Seriea Saturday . It will be a bUly w.ek:end for I I l I I I i I t lr~ine Aake this weekend hr VMt an& Ume ewr, Milby ln1nl LIU wW ., .*t ....... ~ .. , ttDll In IOuthim ~. '""' will ''"' place Saturday and ~ W wW r..wre t.M felt.It lnbou'd and dNi, .._ .. ln the t'QW\t.ry. '.1.!'rbt C9on, 1982 lrvlnt Lak• WHterl\ Ctlam~aon•hl"1 conducted by th• Southern ~ S~ooat Club and lanctSoned by the AP.~ ba1 already auracted more than 100 ,,..r "1ltld ~ boetl who wW compew fOf a lhiN ot moc't theft U0,000 tn pr1ll money. S=tn •~ of 160 mph an expecied out of the fuiel h=tl wtth both ldd1e "Th• Tnln'' .JlW and 0 te" Dave Nolie expected to be Jll.irtna off ln flnall. ,,_.. WW Ulo be a 1Dtdal fuel Jtt exhibition l'Uf' by record holder BUf Her.denon ln h.ll boat "Rated • X". AllO txJ*t*1 to be lnYOtvtd ln tome of tht hl&bHt tpHdt recorded dur~n the champlONhJp Nnl 11tht 14Cocft l.Jaht 8 11 I bk>wn alcohol hydro ct,.., bolt driwn c.il Florence. Racer• and boata from all over tht United Stattt wlll bt COm.Pttlnt and they'll bt ma\Chtd with IOIM 0rana-County favorite,. Gret HUnl ot CGl&a ...... a Rd Of hmlr and tht 1111 Nadonal Cr1ebr lox iMml6on.-wW bt out to retain hll chain~~-be~Wdl bie oumDetiNI bow to bow with Ovy ~ ... °' ea. M.A. - Newport 8Mch nm&dent Jack Bumi wW put hb pOWtl' at "CJoldnllh" throuah ltl pecll M Will BUl and a.. r01ter ... ot NewpOrt, who have a f.Mt SK bdlfi..ady f« aompeUtloft ~ tht "2nd OeneraUon." Gordon J~ of Hunan,ton BMch wW be t\Oldfna up hb fathef't lndltlon ot fall 1petd on tht ~at.er u bll 1uper-1tock ''Crown • lt" barely touchee tht ,Ul'faDe w•ter of Irvine Lake. And i..,una BtlCh Nlldent lllley Cowman wlll put hta expert mental 2 ~-litre hydroplane throuCh IOIM rww to .. bow lt performa. The new t.t IOoU more ua a plane on water than a boat and lia top tpeed la exJ)lct4ld to be ln .__ ot 1 mph. • Even thouah tlMt maln .wnca .,.. ldMiclullCI to belin at 8 a.m. Batwday, the DUbUc 11 lnvttid to-· rftday'1 t.lmt lria1I and ahab down J'Wlll • tbe boetl and drtvel"I prepare for tht final beatll Saturday and Sunday. nw. admJalJon f et for rrtdly ii to and on Saturday Met Sunday. ~ton wW be duqed tlO. There ii ample parklnt available and ptt p111111 tor race day1 only COit an additional t2. For more lnfonnaUon on the l'ICI, fhone Bill Andrew1 or Dou1 Elliott at 8 9-2991. Under1tandably, of ooune, durtn, the9e three race da)'I Irvine Lake will be cloeed to all flahlna, but will r.open Monday. Prk•s EhctlV'e Thrv Tuesday, Jun• 1, 1911 ....... WHERE QUALITY COSTS YOU LESSI INTERIOR WALL PAINT INTER-TONE lATEX ldeol for lntetlor surfoces soch os 1 plaster. wollboord. bf'lck or tMtol. Latex Rat Point ~ 1f)(ftlllOI .., Olll llllUJll. ~ - Cleans up with soop ond woter Avolloble In wl'llt• only. Comp. Retail 5. 99 REDWOOD STAIN WOODCOAT EXTERIOR l.on9-1ostlng llnllh fa /etus, ltllngles and rough wood exteftqrs. Soop & wot., cl~. ~Nllli!::.,~~9>mps:::. Aetoll 5. 98. ll&W000 TAU-WEAR lATEX Covers with o toogh plostk lllm that protects ogolnst SJ.I(\, fading and woter Soop & woter cleon·up. Fl.AT WALL PAINT ULTRA-TEC® LATEX 1-COAT PAINT HIDE-All® INTERIOR 1-COAT PAINT VINYL-ACRYLIC FLAT losts o fvll 4 years. Choice ol white. off-white ond 8 colors. Comp. Aetoll 7 • 9 5 95 Gvorooteed to cOYet In one coot. In wl'llte. off. white ond 23 col<n. losts 8 yeors or mo<el In white. olf-wl'llte ond 4 1 colors. Comp. Aetoll 9 • 9 5 R.OOR TILES & SHEET VINYL AMTICO® or ARMSTRONG DAY SACK TllES 11• IC 11• =· 18( 25~ Each SRI.II 'SOUlllAN' ARMSTRONG~ ~( 9~ 39Cto.. Sfl .... ARMSTRONG~ 'IOYEUA' NO-WAX R.OORING Durable no-wax surface. Assorted patterns ond colors. 12 ft:. widths. 3.99 2'' VAWE Sq. Yd. C~ 'l'OMQaST . Jt9w. -·•lctTON WM; .. ,. 4'' Comp. 5. 95 ~ ""' Comp. A.toil 14. 99 SPECIAL SELEalON CARPET REMNANTS ROOM-SIZE Sculptured plush plle cotpet In o choice of 8rown/bel9e. mvlt1-<olor Of Aust/beige Jute bo<ked. 6' 16' Comp. 35. 95 ...... 2 6' 19' Comp. 53.95 ...... 35 5 11' 19' Comp. 106.95 ..... 71 11' s 11' (~.141.95 ..... 9 v 11' 115' Comp. 171.95 ... 119 INDOOl/OUl'DOOI AU.-WM'llMI CAIN11NG 1 ~ polyptOpY!ene "bet. Eosy to Install fOI' the do-lt-yourselfer 6 ond 12 ft. wldttls In 8 colors. OUALOWM<E Each 5-GAL. DRNE- WAY COATING t• 110• A.INT DAfte Ml¥-<>N ~.......... to. unu OIUUI .. f' I 11' ""5TI( J• WIDt NC» Q.01M .. .. . . . . to. TIUM M>U.a ... J/ 4• wet r.: < 1 /I MT unu IMSIUHO "'"· . . . . . ::> to. SNCllU M\¥-ON 11 OZ. t• Mm< NN OIUUI . . .. . . .. .. .. .. .. to. a AOUAA SfT 8AlmE, NYlON or POl YESTEA 1• .. . 6tc... 1· ........ 99( ... 1-111· ... lfl... 1-1 11· .... 119 to. 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'#lllMe It QU $116.-~ ,...Ip() •• " -, __ ~ ;;.;;;;;' 1~ ~ J J:;:. = WIMarl .t21 • J1 JI'-"' PMlf't ... 4 .. m..-'°' ~ t• • • ~\'I WkE,. Ut t • ~ 14 fltl!l•t:I 2. • .,,. 1--"' s..tlelf .. ,. .__ "' WltG "' U5 . • 4 • • ••.. """ "'ur. .. ts -w. 5ul'9ll ,. , ·; ,_ ,1 • " Wh<PI. Lit • 1n "~· 11t PMll' f!I ',tJ . .,._ ~ ,.. S.WO A • t1 ....._ 111 ~ll!S 1... 1 n ,..._ " i/:il .. .,. • . . . .. SoME1 .. ~ • ~ wi-. ,.. s • ~ " 'J i *:' ~·" ~ bs .• ,, =!1: ...... = . .: i! ..:i :;-:: 2 t ........ • 1a •t 'ff 14 -'t A f1 • ~ \.-. llWll... A t 119 '*·.... e I ""'"" " if 1a t a ,. -.. ..,_..~ i ·1 . t 11 • •... ' A i6 I tHu Ill • • 1 111 .,_,, ... .... Wf 1 .,. at -" =::;,& .. ft "!! .....,_ ~ ,..... • l . --="' .. ·; !=l = .. • ti 'r'::.~ ;:-·*-" 111 ~f ~ I ~+ " I 1i M 1M .... , w,lill Ats 17 ,}" u. .,....... 1-. s...-, ... wt •• .. ~-'t~ .... ' 7 t1~'" ,.,,.,... ',.,. ........ ~ J • ,..._._"' tM 1 '9 -~ 5¥ .. t A .i..• 611'111+ \ti XTtt• ..... M ,_+ '-,, .tt . IJ ~ '--•-• -~ 1a 1 ! ,_... " .. ij m ·~·" ~:i° ,., .~ :: ~ .. ~ lri...-: n' I~ .,, .... ._TRW JM,, " I " ~ :'l .... ----~ ~=-= . ' -:: . .... = Af j i: ==1= T ., _ Ml I 6 It 1 ~~£! a~C, ... 1 • -\Iii aj!' ~ !~i ~F9~ .... :t '~ .. Ut 'ii tMT.' .. , . ,._ ., "" .. . . t: 642-4321 Direct or coll«t, to tublcribt to JIOV' honutouin ~.the Hl l' . Th9 nuor Corp. of IMM annOUnced that St. Joe Mlneral• Corp., a •ubaldlary, enteted lnto a ~Unllnary ~t 10 .ell CocauJ.na OU ~. ~ COquina Petroleum Inc. to Kerr-McGM Corp. for a pure.hue prioe of approxlroac.ly $265 mW.Ion. The tranucUon aa .ubjec1 io the completion of 1 def lnlttve a,rt•m•n~ and th• Unall1ln1 by Ken-·Mcaw o appropriate ttnanc~ wtth!n 30 da)'I . Quit;k . thermometer sh own Temp-Stick Corporat1on of El Toro introduced It. 3-teCQnd thermometer for routine clinlcaJ temperawre taking of pat.lent. at the American Aalociation of Crltl~...c.N Nane.' convention in Anaheim. Teinp·S~lck, which 1ell1 product• throuah lta wholl)' owned l\1blldlary, International Medical Corpdration, hu prepared marketin,g pack.aaell to be ottered to ho1pitalt and other medlcal hutHution.1 throufhout the United Stats. Fluorocarbon earnin68 off The Fluorocarbon Co. of Laguna Niguel announced lower eamingJS for the first quarter. Sa.lei wett up, profita down, and orders flat, the company 8jl}d. Net inbome for t.he tttree month.a ended April 30 was $477,9!H, or 11 oenta a share, compared wtth $891.089 and 21 cents a share for the comp&19.ble 1981 period. AirCal seeks more flights AirCal hu announced it ia reque1tlna authorization trom the Federal Aviatlon Administration to add flights between Lu Vegas and Reno. This Is in response to the public'• demand for flights between the cities since Bra.ni.ffa 1uspension of flights last week, officials said. AirCal rues three roundtrips daily between Reno and Las Vegas and seeks to add a morning flight departing Reno at 6:50 a.m. arriving in Las Vegas at 7:55 a.m .. and a 01.ltht leaving Las \Tegu at 9 a.m.. for arrival in Reno at l0:09 a.m. Comp uter market due Orangegate P1'lza CompuCentre has announced plans for a computer marketplace in Westml.nlte.r. The CompuCentre wlfl be a point of contact between manu1acturen, dlatributora, consultants, software bou.es and buyers of buslnea computing product.a. The location which will ultimately contain 200,000 square feet of space, is at 54051 Garden Grove Blvd. The compuler division of McDonnell Douglas (M~uto) haa leued one building. Stock seminar slated A free seminar on "Stock Index Futures" will be aoonsored by the Newport Beach branch of Bache Halaey Stuart Shields Inoorporated tonight at 7:30 at the M.ah'iot1 Hotel. The principal speaker will be Paul H. Franklin, vice president of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields Incorporated. 'for reservations, call 752-2280 STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YOlllK IAPI Ml1Y 1' ,.,,..,.,,,.. Ot<llreo VncoNneeO ToHll- -hiGl'll ...__ -1-•DIO """'· TOO., -DI m 151 IO ,. ~ -,. ,. d ' I I · 1 : I :1 .• i " I I ,. ... • ... 'l I noa·oom•~&.l:llatrltl and Incl~ or_._ pr!Ml\dcn. J~ wU1 be on U.. billll ol hOw Well the ln..W .PW'l*t Of thil ~ ii CCllNlU&IUoatild. lta ort1lnallty and th• overall weMkitl quality. Wtnntrt of the C!OID~tltlon Will be txhlblwel dwlnl the falt. EDWARDS BRISTOL Costa Mesa• 540-7 444 Regular Feature Shown 8'Jfore and Alter Preview ·~ .. '. '' ~ CominercMl entry ,_an pa Ptr entry and non-commfrctal fMI ,, ,.. •"l· DMdllM for tntrlH ta M!lt.21• and entry foiml can be inld by ~ 701·JAIR. Producdona are Umtt.4 to ao mtnu• for commerdal tntrlt1 and 10 minute• for nan~. f«W to ftnilh. R9BIN HOOD IB ....... --~~TITNeCN> *BARGAIN MATINB•S • Mond1y Utru l1turd1r All Pertonn1nce1 before 5:00 PM (i.,t ,,... E•11••t1 IN Hlldlyi) " .... "'.. .. ._,. .. Mltodo 01 toMct0n1 LA MIRADA WAii!' IN tH-MOO . "DRAGONaLA YU" "VICTOR VICTORIA"'"' (N) ~-.--.-Ye.-.-.NI.- -.oMY'I" 1.111 ~--.-.. -.- LAKEWOOD c EN H Jl W/\111 IN "WRONG .. RtCIHT" (R) ...... -.-.- 'WYOUCOULDMI WMATIMINl"(N) 1111, -..... .-. ,.... 11\l(f WOOi> C f N 11 P \OUIU WA I . "' A,.... A it! 1,4 ANAHEIM O~I VE ·IN ......., .... '-_" ..., YOU COULD an WHAT I .. Air''"°' U:a,l:JI, ___ _ ,oc111ty 11 Conot .. ooci 211/lll•tNO ----'WA~(PQ) ---.. ,,_., .. __ _ "CROCODILE" (R) ,.... "FORCE: FIVE" (R) 179-9llO C1'0f ,, toUllO • YOO COULD .. I ADUCIOfllUYD"'ll'QT T I MIMI" -"Ttte ' -I "THm ILIPHAHT WY HOU. Y ITORY" llAN" Jr:> (N) ClllMl 10U110 • Clllt A ,. .. ,, .. I ••t UWRONQ la RIGHT" BUENA PARK 'llm! IN I ' • 1 t t 1 ~ b b ti I • ., • I .. . I '""'"" c ..... t:::'b::l r:.~:.. ~·-.,..C:~ES ~OYMOU& PllPAIATIIM s.-..& ·---·-JMW-· twipW-M6F IUICllANltSl ~ ~ ::=:.._ .. ca.tno•~-· c.. !lop . ~ .... v.,. ,.,,,._. Cor ... Sale :=...c.-J...ity u.-lladllMrJ .. -ll-W1nted .._., ............... OftlN fWft • £4•P hU ,.._·.°'= -....... =z=· •M Bar f!'.'C.i...H1F1 .. 8tn oo 18ATS & MAllllE HllPMDIT 0-al ...... ~ ..... l«••t• ......... .:..,, -. ....... -. ... a... ... -.so.I -.su,.o...n =:=a•• ... ,. !al ·-... ... J ... ,,. ... ·-.. a .. -.. = :: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim 11W -·-1111111 Advert!· eera should check ,.. their ade dalty and : report errors Im-= medlately. The : DAILY PILOT aa-= aumea ll•blllty for : the flrat Incorrect : lneertlon onty. f~\1)111()\., h'I \I I\ 5' DOWN! ..... ,. •••• 2 a a BR r· ... owi-••""m""i-.. C09'9 Mela ~-r-'tty S137,tl!O Furn. Model Open 11 to 5 o.lly. A\'OCedO et FalrMw Rd. MWUt ::1-::::::::::::::::::::::~1 m• II Find out •bout the :~: = Ulfl II& ...... eeriq ,.., lltat9 .-One BA condo, Mutt II-~ opportunttlel wtttl !: =: Upetelra unit wl THE REAL ESTATERS. -ao. to pool, .,.. Llcen1lng echool , ... :: Welk to South CoHt ~~to -Plaza. Agent/Owner. 1choo1 ot your choice. -171.000. Stwon Collnl' EJCtenltve ..._ tnlnlna. 111t1ng. 751-1100 For Information, call , .• . .. -... ~ -w. IMlml• Swim 1ny1lm• In lovety 1olar h••t•d pool. S Bdrm1"'8a.~ 751-4111 ........ 11111 2 Miit« M-. vi.. of Oc••n I Night Llgllta. a.. ~ ,,..... °'*' ·~· 1125,000. Only 1~ dn. Xlnt F1n .• Hml OI Pat 8l&S Agt. 87&-7300 kltehen In one of Coeta WU. Tiii .. ....... beet ....... ow--""' n•r very fl•JClbt•. Full ~e;o".,;-"' prlc• • 149,000. ...-701411t iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil C•lllNCIYI O>ronado 11.Jand CUit. blyfront lot. 8&' boat dock. Plana avail. $426,000 w/tenna. ILIFPl-SJ.nale 11«y end unit, exPllDded 3 bl', 2 bl on J.ara-t "1'"nbelt. $260.000. ..... 3 bdnne, 2 ~ betha condo near pool. •145,000. BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR J-l .,i 'f \ C1t (J1 • • "• ~ ,., • l / f) \l.. I -...1 I 'i \ TAYLOR CO. 1\1" ·\: ·1 <ti\~ · , , l't lti -c:::: ·' . -ti-' . . ' ·::.m· ........ -lll) , .. -. .. .!) ------------... -Ml --mT ------.... -------- .... &Ingle lewl lcN9ly 3 BR wtencloHd yard, pvt petto on lulll green~ Fr .. hly palnt9cs, MwtY ~-onty S222..500, safly Shlptey'• 111nno. 75t-t100 ..... Very aped.al custom 3 Bdr 3 Bath home. WOWI Low•1~rlc•d Gourmet entertainment kitchen, Matr ~~b~ Lar::-"4 Bedroom w/2 walk-in cl08eta, blt-in bdrm. 3 beth, double ward.robes, ape for two etc, etc. Must .e. ftrepCecl, coveted petlo Priced '° eell. plu• much morel Wiii -ft1D N1·1111 AITD or tracM f« Eut-. · bluff -Be)lhOI• 0t ??7D .... .., ...... .... ,. •n1-1•• RVM~ of Costa Mesa START tlRE In this very affordable and spacious 3 bedroom condo near South Coast Plaza. $98,500 of assumable finandng. asking lea than apprailal Only $119,500. 110•1111 --.a ..,..,. TIMSPOITA TIOM .._. 11 ....... ••I•" In 11._, ..... " trill ............ '"""' ....... 1 ................... ., 1mw . ......,....., .. ..,....._ U1·1-· um& llU-Wl1D I •"*11 lr11••rr ••••••• •• •••• .., •• , ............................ ...... Llrl ..... •G=-· = ...... tf :.:~~· ~ .......... .. ...... .... ..._ · lld1lrc """' ..... _.. • ..W• ,. Lwwll• I .._ all1t1tlntl "''·~···· ... ••••ff ,.... • ... , ....... , ....... . . WATERFRONT HOMES,JNC. REALTORS ~ llfnt* Pr-1~ ~ 2400 1V. r.-t Hwy. m M.ennt ~ N....,.n a.cit Wlol llllnd •1-~ '7utee ~· .. ~-·HERITAGE HE.AL TORS \ f >I/, I tl F If \ t ·. 11. / 11 /:'If .. '• _ ... _ ... ullfuUy upgreded 4 IClr 3 •• llom,. LOW meln"'*10e ~. OO'M- ~.'1!t!A ••• !.'.¥. 8LU£ fU880H SPECIAL 3 bdn'll. 2 l9Y9I flOOf plen In .-ood I glul. Ooe9r'I view, t>Mmed c•lllno1. tlUG• •ton• frplO. LOCI• Wcf~UM1Ye~·· Rlvlel'• coutllne. S1H, 000. M188IOH MAL TY 4"44731 fi .... -...... LIT Panoramic vlaw on Newport Ba1 and Pacific <>c.an. l'rlma 1oc1t1on. 0wr teoo.ooo ol-* tl.nandn&· 8"t available lot 011 Rldp. •1.sao.000. (714) 780-1900 A PETE BARR ED REALT Y 1 • ... / ... CdM 3 Br 11850 Udo Pr!( Dr 2Br I 1800 Bayside COY9 2Br l2200 Baytmt 5Br dock 13250 Cliff Dr 3Br w 11400 91-1 .... Mobh 28f 1700 Npt Ht1 38r, pool S 1850 S4A'nms renum llYlllble from ~to S1,000-. Wataofront Homel, lnC. U1·1• LEASE/LEASE OPTION Lae newty remOd. aar. S~a. fem rm In Irvin• Terr. S1500/mo. 131·7118, "40-0445 Ml.IC NOT1C£ PlCT1TIOUI Ml ..... Ulm ITA~ 'ICTmOUI ....... The lollowlno 1*90nl are doing NAMI ITATQllPfT bvliNM U: The following J)eftOlll are doing MAAKATREX, 22211 Cll'l'llnliO bullnMI u; Elcotledo, Laguna Hiiia, CA 12853. LIDO PENINSULA 80AT STO- MELVIN fl WHETSTINl, 22.211 AAOE. ~ WrJ, ~ C1mlnl10 Eacobe<lo. Lagune Hlli.. 8Mcfl. t2te3 CA 92t53 WIL80 INOU8TAIO, 900 Udo PHYLLIS R. WHETSTINE, Park Drive, Newport fMclt, Cell-22211 Cwnlnlto Eecobedo, Llglln• tornl• 112983 Hiiia, CA 112663. '(hie ~ le conducted. t1y a Thia~ It coflducled by a corpc>fltlon. ttmlted ~ Wllbo lndUatrtM Mef¥ln fl Wlletatlne H. Pllt1tClt A~, Ptiyllla R Whetatlne V1oe Pr~ Thia 1111._,1 waa llled wltll IM Thlt llatement wu lhd with the County Cleril or Ofange County on County Clettc ot OflnOI County on April 27, t1112. AprU 27, 11112. -,.,.. '1'11tt Pu~llahed Orange CoHI Dally Publlahed Oral)Qe Co11t O~aUy Pilot, Apftl 29. May &. 13, 20, 1~ Plot, Apftl 29, ~ 11. 13, 20, fllft. 1~12 1930-f2 011111mc1s '9Cnnou9 ·-.. BISSING Scout Council for·~ years. a NI.IC NOTICt ..._ ITA~ MAR IL y FA y E put M.1er of F. &A.M. Mar COAIT ComunY ~ol.::;-'ng pecaon 11 doing DISSING, age 53, of Seal Vi.tta ~ #820, a member :--L °'::! IA) ONCE ANO FOR AL.L -(BJ Beach, Ca. Paaed away on of El Bek~l Temile, Long c..-...... CA -THE NOHT WEJOH, 2300 FalrMw May 18 1982 S··-...__ ... b .. _ h S I h I llO'nCa Of Wl'INT10N TO Rd., Y-203, Coee Mela. CA 928H. • • 1.1.ev1'""' >'/ ..... ac con 1 te, pa1t IXCHANGll IAMWMTI a• ha v 1 or at pro or•"' her be1owd hUlbuld Lloyd, 1>9tron of Harbor Star #5&8 NOTICE &a HEflEBY ~ lflll on Con1u1tan11. Inc .• • Calllornl• lovln1 children Hilary. O.E .S . Frlenda may call at th9 24in of Mlnltl t1121M 9oafd of corporation, zaoo F.trvlew Rd .. Adam Robert, and Ju1tin Pierce Brothen Bell T~ of the eoeat Community Y-203,CoataMMa.CAt212t. Robert, devoted 1l1ter of Broadway Mortuary on CollaoeOlatnct.CttyofCoeta~ ~~ 11 conductad by• Shirley Boren and PhyW. Thuuday, May 20, 1982 ~~o~~~cf=io: ~PrOf'l"I Hoover both of Wyoming from 4:00PM to 9:00PM. eaumanta ~Ith Stewart ~U. lno. and Gordon V . Hoover of FUneraI lervka wUJ be held D.....,.,..,...,, CO.. VI lor '*""'*" ~ ~ Garden Grove, Ca. Memorial on Friday, May 21, 1982 at and ~~of ecaum and TNa ~ aervlcea will be held at l :OOPM at .... _ n... ........ _ v•-.·· •dlacent I If tun ( 15) toot County :i:r~ c:'tythe ....., T-.:UJK: .,..,.. r.lfht-of-way1, Tll• two (2.) ..... 11 1 .... 2 __ .,,.. on 3:00PM on Saturday, May Chapel with Rev. Brian Cox ngnt.ot...,,_ ~'°"" e..,.. ..... ' ... · 22, 1982 at Harbor Lewn of St. Jame1 Eplleopal ~3~10~":::!nb!: Publlahed Orange Cou~ Memorial Chapel with Rev. Church, Mar Vla\a Lodfe Community Collage Dlllrlcl Piiot, Me'f ~. 27, June 3. 10. 1"2 William E. S~l of Meaa #820 and O .E .S . #5 8 p!opert)' and th• Stewart 214&-82 Verde Unlted Methodist offidatlng. In lieu Of Oowen Devllopn••• Co., VI property. Thi f'tB..IC Mft"IW Church offlcl.a~. ln lieu of contributiona malibe mad• dlltJ1et property and the St-1 ~ fl th f ... propeny •• 10e8ted at ~ ACTITIOU9 au-II owen e · Y IUQe.Jtl to the Masonic ome1 of and Werner StrHtl , Fountlln ,..._ ITATIMSNT donation• be made to the California. Pierce Brothen Vallay. County of Orange. The following penoo1.,. doing Hospice Prognm c/o LOI, Bell Broadway Mortuary C4lllfomla. buel-u: Alamitos ~neral Hoepltal,· A publlc "••ring upon the 1<1U>OA. 17" ~ °""'9, ~ of mMlng tudi dedication Nftpott &Moh, CA 112ee3. 3751 Katella Ave., Loa wlll ba held at th• COAST JOE l<ILLEeN. 201. 411t Alamitos, Ca. Services under COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT Str•I, Newport BMc:tl, CA 11*3. the direct ion of Harbor' iOARO ROOM. 1370 Ad•m• ROHALD c. DOROONI 2011 -La w m M o u n t 0 11 v e . A--. Cost• Mela. CA, on the • 111 Slrfft, Newport Be•c". CA 29111 of Mey 11112 at the how of ll2t&3 540-5554. light O'clodl. Tlll9 '-"-It conduc:ted by 1 .. .,. .... y BOARD OF TRUSTEES general pennerthip ~ COAST COWUNCTY Ron Duran WILLIAM EDWARD COU.EO& DISTAICT KELLY. age 75 of Newport t of Seal Be.ch. Ca. and ~~ i.:':d Beach. Ca.. pamed away on er Jerry of Loe .Alamos, llUOWTM* May 18, 1982. Survived by ~ M-v..n --'·the. r of RESOLVED, that Ulle Boerd. hla beloved wife Ellubeth ~-. .. --APOfl tlrdng thet It la In the beat and devot•d on R b t · Funeral aervlce1 were 1nt•r .. t1 of th• Olatrlct and In ... • o er on Monday May 17 ~with eouc:atlOn COdt -----------Kelly of Stockton, Ca. 1982 at Harbor' ~wn Mount 8eCUonl t147M1474, .,,._,.to ftllJC M)l1C( 1..,._..,.. Private familthe ~ were Uve Memorial Olapel with ==~-:= ncnnoue .,._.. held under direction of Sidney Guthman of h•r•to, tranaferrlnJI to Stewan NM11 ITAT'lmNt Harbor Lawn Mount Olive c.oncreeaticmal Shalom. Seal Development Co. VI • HI foot Tha folfowlng peraon 11 dotng Mortuary and Memorial right-or-way ror ~dMlrl1n and. ~ u : p h officiating. Interment ~•hlcular PHHOt and related COMMERCIAL GRAPHICS ark. 540-15554. a a at M o unt 011 v e p11rpoat1 along the eoutllarn CO., 1700 N.Wport Clrcla, Santa LOWRY emetery. Services were boUnOlt)t of 1M Dlattict'• prCJP9'1Y Ana. CA 112106 LE w Is ED w AR 0 under the direction of acquired ror ti... Co11tlln• DAVID w TUBMAN, 153 N. ~ Collllge Cent• Protect, 0'-891. Orange, CA 9Me7 LOWRY, JR., a resident of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive In exohang• tor • grant 10 the This ~ Is conducted by ., Costa Mesa, Ca. ~away Mortuary 540-5554. ~ ::: ~ ~~ lndMdual0.¥1d w. Tubman on May 18, 19 8 2. lie l 1 toot rtgllt-of-wty tor pedeltrllln and Thie 1t11ament w11 flied wllll th• • u r v Ive d by h l 1 w 1 f e CRANE velll~l•r p111eg• and rel•t•d County Cleril of Oranoa County on Madeline ot Coat.a Me.a, Ca.. EMMA B. CRANE. Born purpoH• along '"• northern M• 11. 11112 3 IOn&. David F.dward Lowry 1891. She w .. a resident of boundaty c4 the pr0Pef1Y of 8tewltt ,_. of Lake Matth•wa, Ca., Coat.a Mesa, Ca. {or 52 _,..._ Davalopmant Co. VI, th• two Publlahed Orange Cout Dal~ .. ,,__ rtaflta.of--.y 1ogettllr to form one Pfltl', Ma)' 13, 10, 27. June 3, 1111 . Steve Bay of Oxnard, Ca. Pa11ed away on May 15, 30 root ~tor common u. ~2 and John JAwrj of Ontario, 1 9 8 2. Sur v l v • d by 4 ~ h DIWtct ~ and "8JC NOT1C( Ca., l daufhter Muy Lou children, Mar1aret Wu.on, IN~L~RTHEA, that---,_;;.;~~.;..;..;.;.... __ Southmlo LakeMatthewl. Al Crane, Lloyd Crane of WWllnl c . .._._... c4 ~ .,_, Ca., hll mother Zblle Lowry Co 1 ta Me 1 a , Ca. , al 10 ~. Celbnla lfllll be ippo111ted AC~ WM of Cotta MeH, Ca. and 7 Virgin.la F.Morl of San Dieao. to a ~ of IPC>t..,.. ot trw.t MAIS ITATDlmJrT grandchildren. Mr. Lowry Ca . Sur v l v e d by 5 ~~~~ ~-= ~::wing peraon 11 doing WM acUve in the local Boy grand ch l Id re n , 1 2 tfi:th lrd ·b v t II• c 011 n t y LANCASTE" ENTERPA18E8, -----------!great-IJ"&ftdchlldren and 2 lupatlntend•nt of lchHi.l to 3152 Yellowaton• Drive. Co.ta McCOINIQ WOITUAlllS laQun1 Beach 494-9415 Laquna Hilla 768-0933 Sen Juan C.p11trano 495-1n& great-great-grandchildren. = ~0 a;:'~..::: ~T~:erLANCAST!A. 3152 llM!llolo.._ -~ Visitation wt11 be held on County ""'*tnlendent of ldloOl9 Yallowstone Dr1\lll, Coal• ......... CA Thursday, May 20, 1982 of tu ....,,.latlon of '"' oaet1 11~· ... -·~ ... from 12:00 noon to 5:00PM =of"'-"'°C* jlJfopoaed ~-'"' OOOOU01ed byM at Harbor Lawn. Servke9 ~FURTHER. tlWll " s~ P. ~ wt1l be held on•Friday, i...y th• County luperlntandent of ~ '=*'t ... ftled wtd'I die lllllMalned 21. 1982 at ll:OOAM at ldloo9 ~ tt1a "'*"of tt1e ~ °'°'*'Oil~ on Harbor Lawn. appralMra anf lh• term• and M-v • 1982. • oondlllona of th• fuement r-Aoreement Ht forth In tlll• Publlahed Orano• Cout Oally 8ADR Aliee*ltion. ,,_. INI be~ Pilot. Mey 13, 20, 27, Jurl9 3, 1912. WALTER R. BAKER.•-ac lelllt onaa a.,.. tor two..... 2120-aa, Mr•• 71 raiden' of H --In • nawapeptr of o•n•t•l 1-----------, t untb\l'OD cilr~ulatlon In 11111 co11nty th• P\8lJC JIJ11C£ Beech. Ca. P....t awi.y on fONOOlnO ~ of Intent to ---..;.;;~~.;.;.;---May 17, 1982. Survived by ••ch•no•. tit• propertt .. and • ..cnnoue ~ hl1 wife Lorena and IOD :;:'°'~V.,MlaandJ::of MAl91TA~ R 1 ch a rd Baker, 3 lleMldto===:.~tlf,: ~=wino petton la doing Ir and.ch 11 d re n . 1 .,. ..... "li.~Cllh SUNDANCE 8TA.,,a tHO ~~ Grav.Ide~-· de•c~lbed In tlle cMiuy, Newport 9Mofl, caitfotnie service• wlU be 'held on ~"*IM ·~ Thundav u ... 20 1982 at dll n II I ... VI M. c. HOrlllftO, Jr., 1•10 o ......... ,,, -, • 09 •r or 1tM11t .... e ''119 1uy, Mewporf leach Oalllotnla l:IOPM at the Inclewood a. -.. .............. t1a.n.t ntio ' '=r" 1Giiii11 lfA,......., TM lotlowfng perlOll le dolnt ~ .. : .. lJNAWAY TAAVll., l»t W. '1CTITIOUI llUllNlll fllCT"10U8 ...... MAm ITAft .. NT MAim aTATllllNT Th• ollowlng parlOn 11 doing Th• lollOW'lng p•reon 11 doing M! butl'*lt u: THE NIQHT STAR MUSIC R·X RE8lARCH, U41-0 HOWCASI! 219 Via UOO 80UO Adema Ava., Coete Mtu, CA ~, ......... ,""'" ..... ~ CA '*3. , t2t2t JllMI w ~ 111 '211 Vie Juqllh Mueller. 1150 Ntw OTO No. OM7 Re: 14tM ,.,. ldo loud, Newport Beach, CA H~~1: ~:C,9~2!; 2te3. lndMdual. IUNWEST BANK. t (:alllornla c:orp0tt llon, lormerty SANTIACJO BANK, u duly eppofntld Truat" undet ltll followlng dMcrlbed d-.cl of trull WILL SELi. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HICJHEST BID· Thll ~ le~ by., Judith Muellr Mdual.;_ W ~ IN TNt Ital-I WM flied wtlll Iha Thie etalWMMI ~ .. ftlecl with the County CWtt or °'9nD' County on ty Clartl of Orenge County on Mey 11, 1982. .., 18, 1982. ,~ Publl•h•d Ortn91 COHI Deity llot, May 20, 27. Jutle 3, 10, 1N2 211242 ,,ll7'01 Publl•had Oreng• CoHI Dally "'°'· May 20, 27. Jvne 3. 10, 1182 2181-82 Ml.JC NOTIC£ • 0£R R>R CASH ~ u M1 forth In SecUon 292411 of Iha CMI Code, el right, 11tlt Ind Int.,.., conveyed to MCI now Nld by 11 under Mid Dead of Tniat In Iha prOc>tflY M!tin•ll• delc:ribed. Nltc NOTICE -.-1 TAUSTOA: MOHAMAD FEKRI. an MOTIC9 TO CMDfTOM unman1td """ cw 9UUt ~ llNlflCIARY: SANTIAGO '1CTm0Ut .,...... , ..... ,., .... u.c.c.) BANI<, I Ctlllornla COl'po<lllon. ...._ ITATl•NT Notto• la l)artby given to Recorded July 3, 1979 H lnetr. Th• lollowfng perton 11 doing crtdltore ol th• within named No 2729 In 1><M* 13214, page 1378 bull,_ u · ,,_,_Of(e) thel e bulk tr-19' 19 of Otllcl8I Aecotdl 11'1 the oftloe of OENU 9. 3005 Flllmort Wey. ebout to b• med• on panonel 1111 Recorder ol Orlnga County; Colt• .._., Cafiloml• 92828 property """""'" daecribed Mid cMad of truel del«lbel Iha lo-A. Anne Hovenca, 3005 Fiii· The neme(I) end but lneu llowlllQ pt0!*1)': Lot 7& of Tr9CI No. more Way, Cotti M .... Celllornl• add rt 11 o I t II t Int• n de d 7844, In 1"9 City OI Newpo(I BMcl\, 92828 trtn9fatOI'(•) ••: Floyd Smith, Tom County of O!'lllQI, Stitt of Calilor· .,J.~alnMI II conduc:lld by en Smith a nd Mike Smith, 1900 nil ... pet "'8'> 1'9COfd«I In Book A ·-H Newport Blvd., Co•t• M•H. CA 314. Peg .. 27 10 38 lncluttve of "''°' ovenct 92127 Ml9oellanaoue Mep1. In Iha ollloe ol Thi• 1t1tement WU filed MUI the The. loc:ellon In Callfornla of Iha tht County Recorder of utd County Clefk ol Orange County on et11a1 executive office or pr1nctpa1 County. Aprll 27, 1982. butlneH ollloe of th• lnttndtd MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS· 21 ,,.,,. tr"*-~ It: uma u ~ Monteclto Drive, Coron• del Mer, p\Pubh1t1ed Oreng1 Co111 Detty All other bu1lna11 nemH end Cellfomlt IOI Aprtl 211 May 6, 13 20. 1982 •ddr ..... UHd by Iha Intended "(H • llratl tddresa « common 1859-82 tren1faror within tllr" )'M.rl lu1 dHlgnetlon le shown 1bov1. no PUBUC NOTICE pMt ~tar u known to the lnlanded werrenty 11 given 11 to 111 eompla-tr.,.,.,_ ere. none .. •-OI correc1-I" '1CTlnout IU99981 Tiie ne m•l•I and buelnut The benellolary under laid Deed um ST A 1'llmJfT • d d re 1 t o I I h a I n ta n d t d ol Trull, by r-...cwi of• brNdl or The lolowtno panone .,. doing 1t--..C1l we: Jell K. SNrlte, deleufl In ilia obllgallon1 HCUted bullnall M: 588 Bryce Cen)'Oll Way, BrM. CA thlrtby. htr•tolort executed end TIO~T OUAATERS CONCRETE 82921. dt llvtrad to the undtralgntd • llAEAKIHCJ ANO EXCAVATIHO, 4'7 Th•I Iha property pertinent wtllttn Oec:IMetlon of Default end Magnolle, Newport Buell, CA hereto II ~bed In ""*" • Demand tor Sale, end wrilt"1 notice t2tl3. gHollnt Hrvlct lletlon end It of llr-" end of "9cllon to C81*1 Ttlkltd n-. Cottam. 447 located at: ltoO Newport Blvd .. Iha u""9f1lgned to Mff Mid PfoC>-~ eoeta w.a. CA 92e27. Coale MaM. CA 92927. ef1)' 10 Mllsly Mid oOllgetlone, end Monloa Jana Cottim 417 The bullnall ,,_ uted by ttlt IM!Mlt., Iha undarllgnad CMIMd ....... Coetl ..... CA tiu7. Mid trlnlWof(I) .. Mid location It: uld 11otlct ol brnch and of -*· Thie ~ i. oondwted by .,. Floyd Smllt\ & 8ofll Union 78. lion to be Recorded Ftbru•ry 3. ~ fh el eald bulk trenefar 11 1912 u lntlr No. 82-039780, ol T~ "*-Cottam Intended to bt ~ad a1 ttle Mid Offlclal AMOfdl Thie 1t1181Nnt -t111Ct .ttt11ht offlot of: W-.m Stat• &c:rO'#, Said .... JWlll be mec:tt. but with-COunty Olertl of 0renge County on 2.2.39 T~Aoad, 'Sul.. 105. out c:owntnt or warrenty. txpr .. MllY 18 1882. Waetlak• , CA 8f3e1 on or or Implied, r911erdlng tltla, ~ ' ,_,. eftw June I , 1 lion, or encum1>n1noe1, to pay tt1t Publ~ Orel'QI CoMI Deity remelnlng prlnclpel 1um of 1111 Plot. ,,,..,, 20, 27, Jww a, 10, 1t12 Thia ~ If_,_ II wbjiect to no1.i11 HCUrtd by H id 0Hd of 2178-421 Callfornl• Uniform Commtrclel TNlt, with Interest 11 In Mid note COde section etoe. provided, edvencet, II eny, under •-.,. lllftTlC( The name end tddt-. of Iha the lermt of Hid Dffd of Tru1t. nlPLl\I "" perwn with wttam clalme may be '-· ChltrQll end expan-of Iha _.. llltd It Waetern Stataa Eecrow, Ille., ]NII• Ind oC the truatad cr•tad '1CTIT10U8 ~ 2239 Townaget• Rd., Suite 105. by lllld Otec:t of 'Truet. Slid .... Wiii The =:~ere dOlng Weeta.ca VIiiega, CA 81381, Sendre be held on Fr~y. June 4. 1982, et bu*-u : Snook, &c:rO'# Officer, end Iha lut 1l:OO a.m.. •1 '"'front tntrenoe to SECURED PROPERTIES dll)' I« lltlng d..,,,. by W'IY cradltor OUARDIAN TRUST DEED SER-L TD.-1, 17121 M\tcllall. Irv•. CA """ be Junt 7, 1te2. wNct1 .. the VICES. 1900 EMt Meyfllt A,,.._, 92714 bu 1Ina1 a de y b a Io re th a Ofll'IQI, Ctlfornia. oOneld CJ. Zalnar 12 con1umm111on d•I• 1peclll•d The total 1moun1 of the unpeld • 4 Hllrt>Ot ebcw9. bllenc• of UI• obllgellon HOured ltlend Or., Newport BHch, CA DATED Mey 3, 1882. 1 by 11ld l)foperty to be told, toga-~8,y J MorehNd 171 Staapy Jmll K. Stwlfa lhat with 1n1ar .. t. lal• c:hargee, Ind HOiiow LMM Laguna, Beech. CA Intended Tr_,.,.. attlma1ed COiia, ••~end Id· 92851 ' ' Publlthad Orenge Co11t Delly I venca1 ... ol Ill• dll• lllrlOf. It Oery J ScMa6dat tee Nyat Pllol, May 20. 1912. l124,7I0.92 Piece ~. 8NCfl CA 92861 2231-82 DATED: May 6, 192. ThtS bu.U-11 Oonciuctec:t ·by 111111.,.IC NO'""r SUNWEST BANK, ????? r~ 1~ • Calttornl• COl'potallon. -lonnarty 8AHTIAOO BANK UMld TrutlM, BY· CJUAAOIAN TRUST DEED SEAlllCES, • corporation 1800 Ealt Meytelr Avenue Orange, CA ~1567 (714) 77t.fi10 BY. Vldlylewll, A8111t..-.1 Sacratery Publlelltd Orenge COHI Delly PllOI, Mey 13, 20, 27, 1te2 3043-82 NI.IC fl)TlC( Ger; J SdlnalOar Thie atatatntnl -lltec:t wttll the County Clertt oC Or..-.ga County on Mey 18, 1N2. ,,.,. Pul>lithad Orenga CoHI Dally Piiot. Mey 20, 27, June 3, 10, 1H2 2114-82 PUBUC N011CE PICTmOUI.,_.. NAlllSTA~ The IOllowlno pareon 11 doing ~------------OAK ST SKATES, 212 Mein "°'moue .,...88 St., Huntington BMch. CA 92648. MAim aTAftMEIT Hafwyn F Hamilton, 75e2 Ellll. Th• following pa11on 11 doing ~~a..c:-~by an ...... lndMduel IOUTH SHORE INDUSTRIAL Hlllwyn F Hamilton TOOL CO., SS03 Hart>or 81vd .. Fii., Thia stae-t ;_ .. flied with ttlt c-.n:. ~~?:· 1555 County Clattl Of Orll'IQI County on Mui Verde, M·fl. Colle Mell. May 18, 1982 •c.llOtnlama •11m1 Thll ~ i. conduc:t.s by an ,ubllthad Orenga CoHt Dally lndMdull. Plot, May 20, 27, June 3, 10, 1982 Thomae Jolln o.iatOtre 218 t-82 Thie "8ttmlnl -ftl9cl with the lllftTIH' eo.ny an of °"""' 0oun1y on 1 ___ MUC __ ""-'~--- M9Y 4, 1te2 "'""'°" COWIT tW Publl9had Orange Coa:1': ,_ aTATW ~ Pllol, M-V e, 13, 20, 27, 1N2 FOil = 01100 OP ---------2035-a2--OWIOHT 0. WAHLtfRG end MARTHA E. WAHl.8UIO, P\lllntll'9. ... --;P1CiiC1mmitoueouii11Uw11ii•ii•i•--COA STLINt INVH TMEHT8 MAm 8TATlllBIT IN C., CLARE NCE ALBERT ' The fo11owtng P«10nl we doing VERNON, BETTE A. HARRISON MOTICI OP IUUC 11Wt1Ntt , ..... ..,,.. u.o.oJ loloitoe I• ll•r•bY given to the Crecmon Of Dwietron CorP«etlOl'I. Tran1teror1, wl\Olt bUllneu addr••• I• 31••·C Airport Loop Orlv•. Coela M•11. County of Oreinoa. 8t•te Of Cellfornla. ""' • 1111111 ft-fer .. M>Ov1 10 be made to =•n Frultr and fUohard T , Tran.,._., ..no.. bullMta ~, ..... eH Town c.mtr OtW.1 Suitt IOO, eo.ta Mete. County °' Orenge. 8tatt of ceNfomla tmt. Tiit Pf°'*'Y to be tranalerred It IOcaled at a 1N Airport Loop Ot!Ye. Bulldlng C, Cotti M .... COunt; of Orwlot. State of Cellfomla 92Ue. 1erd propettr 11 dHcrlH«S In general H : Al llock In Ired•, n111urH and equlpm•nt of that manufacluflng t>ullnau known M Dantlron Corporetlon and tocei.d et 31M-C Alfport Loop Drive, Cotta .,._., County of Ofanot. 811'• Of caMfofnla. The bulk ltantlar Wiii be coneummated on ~ aftat the Ith d•v ol June, 1H2, at Turner. Oatt*tltld, Wiik & T'lgamlen, UU Wllthn INd., Suitt 510, a.-1)' Hiiia, County of lot Mgeie9, State of Calllomla. LMt dale I~ hMng ctelma: 8-742. 80 far at known to lht TranafarM(t), 1111 buelrllM n.,,_ and eddrett•• uead by Tranatwor(I) for the tlw• ~ lelt peel, H dlflar9nl lrom the et>ova, art: Oanetron Corporation, S1H Airport Loop Drive, Bldg. C, ~a Mtn. CA 82828; Denetron Corporellon, 5388 Stentno Canter Drtva~~tt.k• VIiiage, CA 91359. DA1iw May 19, 1A2. K._, Jordan Frllller, Rlctlard T. BaUll, Tr-*- '°''r .... -Tew11 C-lar Dfhe, IWta IOO eo. ........ CA ... Publl•had Orange COHt Delly Piiot. Mey 20, 1te2 223&-82 • . s 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D (213) 437.-1& Oc•anfront 2 Br 2'Ab1, den, trplo, wet bar, epeoteo ular view. 11000/mo. SSU Ire· Spedoul stuChOI O,_ end two bedroom IC*'I· mtnts FURNISHED end UNFU .. Nta..ED. 'IWdi .. I Occupency • 11 Millloft In ~ And Muell Mole' For 1 month. or • hle- twne Models OCWJ. ~..'lv 9iW'Jf to~ No QIU· Sharp 2 BR 2 8a, lge roomt, d bltne !net O/W gu. MHa Verdi. S52S mo. Cell 5.40· 1 tH, ••k fo< Urry IX Plln OupMx 28r, 181, lg pYt )'d. wllg petlo a 1111 880, ger1g•. E. Side. 1550 mo. 548-84115 Xlnt loc. Walk to S . C . Pl&D. HEW 2 9'. 2 81.., 1 Br a 1 Ba. IX Stuctto. ln- c I u d H frplc, •l•g•nt Fr•nch window•, pool, tann11, wntrlpool •P•. llUM.~~ rm. In horM leundry tac. • muctl mot .. Why rent wh9n you can now own f« only S1000 do wn & tow montflly paym•nte. Call for d•· tall•. 548-3421. 3141 a .. r St. C.M. B•twMn MICA.rlhur I Sunfloww. Eutllde Condo 2 8'. 1 'Al • B• trplc, garage. · M60/mo. Cell ~1 OARDEH APT. 1 1 bdrm, 1375/mo, w.'9r pd. Ava II. May 17. tel-1452 1Br. newly r.ct.coretad, pool, ld .. I for wortllng· coupl•. no pate. S• t 5 mo Ulll pd. Furniture avail. 548-7889 HEW BREED APTS. 1---------l BACH from $350. Frp6c, rec room, pGOI. J1cuz:zl. g•• 6 w1ttll' paid . Ho pets. m Hlmllton, c.M. &45-4411. APT.MANAGER Seml-r9'ked c:p (50+) to m1n10-1 18 unit com- plex. Ute malntaneence t .. IM.L .... for rw11., 1IX20, •125 ..,~. Ml-n t .. (, (, ) ) WANTED ( {,__...,<CS ___ ) ) ~00~~ ((~~ Classified salespeople know how to say tt rtght-call us today for asststance in prepar· Ing your ad. month on a 111low.1rowth" platform. The city'• DHllll Review Board l11t month app_roved Abel'• p1uw to tidd a third l10ly to tht two·1tor:r: Park Forest Pharmacy at 202 Park Ave. Plant called for a Normandy·1tyle bUUdJn1. wlth half ·timber conetructlon, ueed brickwork\ band· .. wed corbell And wood tuh. NEWPORT FIJER WITH EARHART -The late stunt flier • Paul Mantz of Newport Beach is shown with aviatrix Amelia Earhart in 1936, prior to her ill-fated attemp~ tq cross the Pad.fie: Mantz helped prepare her aircraft. Aviatrix mystery was never solved Fifty years ago today, famed American aviatrix Amelia Earhart took off on a flight across the Pacl!ic and vanished forever in a mystery that her friend, the late stunt filer Paul Mantz of Newport Beach, attempted to tolve. (Related story Page 83). Mantz had been an aviation comrade of Earhart's in the pioneering days of aviation. He got into the effort to solve her disappearance 22 years ago when a televi•ion newsman, diving off the island of Saipan. found an old aircraft eenerator. Man~.was asked to .ee if he could ioentify the generator as · havtna come from M1D Earhart's twtn-enai.ned Vega monoplane. 'The Newport Beach stunt pilot had helped J_>ttpare the F.arhart plane foe her Pacific Oia}lt in 1937, including installation of the senentor. WORLD . There was a long prevailing theory, never substantiated, that Mils Earhart <.Tubed near the island of Salpan, wu captured by the Japanese, and later executed. Mantz turned over b1I entire flying eervice, then located at Orange County Airport. in an effort to IC.TUtinir.e the aira'aft generator and determine if it came from Earhart's plane. He did say later 'that the generator was identical to the type on the female avia1or'• crafl But he could never indicate positively that it was the same generatoc'. The mystery was never tolved. Mantz was killed in 1905 while Oytnc a stunt in an unorthodox aira-aft ~ u.ed in filming of the movie, "Fllaht of the Phoenix." Falwell jeered by Aqt11Jles SYnUY, ~ (AP) -The Rev. Jerry Falwell. ... of America'• M«al ~'>'• WM heikled today by. rtahta ~ ~ ltllflf the "?WW South w.-Mani Ma~. But on t.bt IMt da)' an aJiDiill of t.bt bolld'a approyal could be eubmAtted. tNINDan ~ Bob Gen"1 -.ad he want..t the ClmCouacU to con1lder the ~ . he council dld Jutt that ~ ~t. and. ~ a 4 to 0 vote (BOtibii ~n w. abtes\t) overrule4 the clHlcn review panel'• dec:lllon, tti\&I turnln• down tht projad. r · CoWictl membtn llAd they~ no quabm about the~ Of the • bulldln1, which they ttrmed attractive, and In k .. Ph"I wlth thi ''ytllap charactitr" Qt ~ Beeeh. What they ob]ected to, they Hid, w11 the hel1ht ot the thret·atory bulldln1, which would a\lnd: at the SoUth Cout Hl1hway enirance to J'oreet Awnue. "Their (the councU'1) whole approach wa• a J>Qlltlcal one," Abel Hid after the council dedllon. "It WU tht flnt project the new coundl dilcuaed of any ltlnlflcance. "It WU aometh~ they Uled CO Ht firmly their Campaign promllff of controlled erowth. Thcy•d made up their mlnd1 before l even 1poke to them. It wu 'don't bother me with facts, my mind Ja made up.' " Abtl Hid hi• propoHl WH "\otally within the allowable heiaht and profile, and, even thouah we met~ ~uimnenta establiahed in the (buJJd1na) ooct., they 1tlll felt the buildlne wu too maulve and would 1tart a precedent for other three.story at.ructum on Forest." And, Councilman Dan Kenney (See PROJECT, Pase At) Jleactor versus qqakes Edison def ends plant By DA V1D ltV'l'ZMANN or ... ....,,.. .... Southern California Edison Company offidala were to meet today with hi1h ranking vepresentatives of the U .S. Nucleu' Regulatory c.ommt-1on to defend Eaiton's Unit 1 re.ctol' at San Onofre from ...ertiona that it might not be earthquake 11.fe. Thatcher 'gives up on peace' By Tiie AltodatM Pren Bri ti ah Prime Mtnister Margaret Thatcher 1tronaly indicated today lhe hu pven up hope of negotiatinl • peaceful settlement of the Falkland Ialands crili8 and that an lnWlloo may be the onlr option left. Ar8•'1tlne troop• were reportCc! bncecl for an invulon of the Falkland•. Ar1enttne diplomata in Buenoe Airwt Mid they were still r*y to neaodate but accused Mrt. Thatoliitrfof in~. With a Brtu.h tMk fon:e in the South Atlantic polled to 1tonn the lalanda, Mn. Thatcher told the House of Common• in London that British conlideration of U.N. pe.ce ldeala will "not close any mllitary optkina." "We really cannot go on and on," lbe said. "Someone bu to make a dedlion, an -•nent of the Arfentlne junta. I believe that 1 we have any more M&Otlationa. the results would be the tame." . Mrs. Thatcher said it was "inconceivable" that Argentina will • ~ccept U .N . Secretary-General Javier. Perez de Cuell.ar• ideu for Falkland IsJandl pe91:e beca-.e It alre.dy bu rejected aimilar 1uge1Uona in pnviom talb. She uld Araenttna'a deer aim Wiil .. procra1dnaUon and continuing occupation" of the illandll It invaded April 2. Preu A9oclation, Britain'• dome.tic ..... apncy, ttpOl"ted "deep 1loom ... about the pl'09peCW of avoldina WV," and Perez de Cuen. deecrlbed hla' peace plan al a "patient in intenalve care but still alive." British Foreign Office spok.-nan NicholM Fenn told reponen in London that Pera ·de Cuellar'• "ldea1" were teparate from the publication of the British negot1au.n, poalUon today. Mn. Thatcher'• government said ita pe9Ce IJl'Ol)OU.1 WM pven to Pera de ~ on Monday. STATE A federal official said Wednesday this review of a utility-prepared leiamic analysb showed there were u many as 800 modifications needed to in1ure Hfe operation of the 14-year-old reactor. That official, William T . Ruaell, head of the NCR's office of systemic evaluation, characterized the findin,RJI of the atudy as showing there were "liKniflcant aeismic defici,ncies.'' R9wever, Edison oftlclala inlil1.ed that the aeilmic analysis was being "misinterpreted" and thai there was no reason to prevent them from returnin:!ie reactor to ~tive duty folio a scheduled shutdown earlier i is year for mainteruu"K:e work. "Our buic position is this: As the plant stands. it Is safe (to operate).'' Edison spokesman Russ Hawkes said. A contingent of utili\y officials flew to NRC headquarters in Bethesda, Md., Wednesday and were to meet with federal officials this morning. Hawkes said the group would tell the NRC that 436-meitawatt (See ONOFRE, Page A%) DISPUTED SIGN -This chain fence and •ign, reserving a portion of Laguna's Main Beach for Hotel Laguna guests, has been up since 193~. according to hotel operators. But Deir,... ..... ,... city officials are dubious. The legality of the fenced off area is being irivestigated by the city attorney. Hotel fence, sign disputed Jn Laguna The legality of a chain fence and qn prohibiting access to a •mall C.atch of und on Main =ted ~:. apin betni 1'he tign -strune between two poles in the iand out.aide the 'Hotel Luuna -hu been there llnce 1935. re.ervina the area for hotel ~=· acoordinl to hotel owner NleJ.en. But City Manager Ken Frank HY• the city'1 attorney• are uoconvinced that the chain and "811 hu really been up that lq. "'Ibe "'1l waa up before there waa an ordinance and before there wu a city council," said Nielaen. "When it comes down to • the lepll~ of the sign and fence, thev won t have a leg to stand Clll.'r But according to Frank, the city ii now looking Into evidence that the sign was washed away in the winter of 1979 and may have been rebuilt without a pemi!t. "We're looking Into the lep.Utla of alin and pole\," said Frank. ''The whole iaue is in a l"elle&l'Ch 1tage as far as the city is concerned." Frank said that four weeks ago the city lellt letters asking other beachlront property owners to take down sian• arid fences prohibitina ac:ceaa to the beach and that all but the Hotel Laguna "°'1lpl1ed. INDEX Sex course fate kept under wraps Cal State Long Beach administrators were keeping mum today on the fate of Prof. Barty Singer a nd his "Psychology of Sex" class that offered students homework credit for having homosexual. group of extramarital sex. While top university officials, such &1 Cal State Long Beach President Dr. Stephen Horn, were not a.Yailable to comment on the matter, a news conference was scheduled to explain the university's position cm the unorthodox class. Meanwhile, Singer said Wednesday he'll stop aiving (See SEX, Pa1e A!) I I i i I ••People waJklng toward the aoh on Fort1t would ... a c.r flnwlll," ht aald. He a1d Abel'• 34·foot, 8·lnch dine "mlaht be appropriate Coait HJRfiway, b\.lt It would • ctea*-a t\&l\Ml effect on J'cnlt.'' KenMY allo ~ ., Abel'• c)ur.1• the decllton wu pi)UUCally modvatlld. 41 1 WH on• of thoH who op~ the ~jlct when 1 Wiii on th• Dll1an Rmew Board (lu\ month)," Kinnev ald. "When I came to the c.'OW'W:il, l dl.dn't chanp my vo~. "I don't think the council reflectl a narrow view, I think lt retlecta the vjew of th• people of La1una S.ach. It the electlcm wu a clear cut example of that - a barometer -then h would have been improper for us to vote the other way." .EX HOMEWORK ... udents credit tor sexual relations. But he said he still will offer students the option of doing homework assignment• that conallt of dressing in drag for a day and vi.siting gay bathhouaes, gay ban and nudlat colonies. Hla coune la under review by a faculty committee commissioned 'by the dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Science. Singer said he decided to drop the sex participation homework option after the committee raised objections. , The cl.a51, and another -in a different department -called ·~omen and Their Bodies," h~ t{een the target of heated ~riticism by evangelical Christians in Long Beach. For the past two years, Singer }\a a offered students 2 3 }\omework options, including e.xperlmentation with homosexual, group or extramarital sex. Students muat ~t prior permission from him aod must notify their partners and spouaes they are doing it for . homework, he said. "It can be a very powerful growth and learning experience," Slngel" said. "The Idea la not to go out and do IOfnfJ kinky thinD Juat to see what they're like, 6ut to 1ee a change In vour behavior and your feelinp}' The student• choose four homework aaalgomenta and write papers about them. Other optiona include vi1lting divorce court and marriage enrichment groups. Members of fundamentalist groups who visited Sln(er'a clua and the women'• class complained to university administrators and to ltate Sens. H.L. Richardaon, R·Arcadia, and Ollie Speraw. R·Lona Beach. and to Asaemblyman Dennis Brown, R-Long Beach. Brown characterized a recommended book about lesbian sex for the women's clau aa "blatant filth" and said it was "totally inappropriate" for tax money to be Uled for such eta.ea. But Singer uld atudent.a are warned what to expect from h.la class before they enroll. ONOFRE SAFETY ... U6it 1 was built to exceed Seismic saf.,.ety margins fn effect in 1968 811<f has been upgraded over the pat 10 years to guarantee its safe operation. ,But Russell, who reviewed F.dlaon's work on seismic safety, stated in a memo that the plant IT1ight not meet current federal safety standards. His memo stated that utility officials told tile NRC staff that the plant, located three miles south .of San demente, would need as many as 800 modifications. The analysis did not involve wly built" units 2 and 3 at San ofre. Those 1,100-megawatt reactors received authorization for full power licensing last' week. Critics of San Onofre have contended that neither Unit 1 nor the newly built $3.3 billioq units are strong enough to 'llfely withstand an earthquake. Hawkes indicated this morning that even though modifications may be required for Unit 1, they are n ot serious enough to warrant a shutdown of the plant. Hawkes said Unit l , following nearly three month s of maintenance work, is ready to go back on line. . . 0-. ................ NO THIRD STORY HERE -Lafuna Beach City Council members have rejected an architect a plan to renovate the old Park Foreat Pharmacy, adding a third story and a Norrnandy·atyle motif. The architect terms the council action politically motivated. Embraeeables Laguna huggers, huggees meet Laguna'a affable Hug Club la holding a picnic at the Festival of Arts grounda Sanday, a aort of "arms race" rally in which everyone, they say, cornea out a winner. Club officials tenn It a day of smiles and laughter, and proceeds go to aup~ort the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. So what's the Hug Club? It was formed more than a year ago by several Laguna Beach strollera who started hugging each other on their momina jaunts. It proved contagious, according to founders Ron Membello anq,..John Xhruh, who term hugging "a transfer of positive energy from one peraon to another." And Sunday's hug picnic is the first organized event of the loosely knit organization. The day's activities include a "Hug Olympics," gamea and races for children and adults, a hugging pep rally, booths and displays. celebrity buggers, m• provided by wandering minstrels, live bands and aingera. There will be prizes for the most huggable outfits, and a variety of vendors and concesaionairell to provide nourishment for exhauated huggera and hugg~. The aqUee%e fest will run from 10 a .m. to 4 p .m . and while admiaion la free, the Hug Club would appreciate contributiona to the Free Clinic. Hinckley 'no diabolical criminal' WASHINGTON (AP) -A psychlat.riat teatifled today that John W . Hinckley Jr. was a tormented man influenced by "bizarre thoughts" and tranqullhera -"not the diabolical criminal waiting for the be1t moment" -when he shot President Reaaan last year. Dr. David Michael Bear of Harvard Medical School reslated s=~tlon1 by a government p1 tor at Hlnckley'a trial fn U.S. Dia tr let Court that the defendant col4ly plotted hia every move on March 30, 1981, when Reagan waa shot while leavinl a WaabiJiiton hotel "He (Hinclcley) showed up at the Hilton at 1:45 p.m. (about the time Reqan arrived). He didn't shoot him then. He waited, didn't he?" uked A11i1tant U .S . Attorney Rotier M. Adelman in a ris1n8 voice. Warmer days "He an tact delayed but this was not the calculated wait of a diabolical man," Bear replied. Temperatures NATION HI Lo Pre. Alb•ny 82 60 .43 Albuque 87 48 AmarlllO 90 52 AaheY!il9 80 59 Allat1t• 82 59 Atl.ntc Cl)' 66 82 Balllmc>t9 85 82 .43 .. ~ 48 .~ BlnnlnOhm 87 65 Blwnercll 87 50 8olM 88 34 eo.ton 80 83 8'~ 89 77 8utt81o 74 58 .09 8uf'llngton 79 80 .91 70 42 .09 CHI* CNm1n SC 80 70 Charl9tn·WV 83 59 Ct1ar11t• NC 77 83 73 41 .01 c~ne 80 88 Chlc:egO Clnctnnatl 82 59 c~ 82 80 13 Clmbla SC 80 80 Columbus 82 82 07 Twltl•r• were slghled In Del-Fl Wlh 85 70 uthwett South Oekot• 1nd DllY'on 90 83 .04 Of1hwMt l<anHS, end HVtr• DtnWr 78 47 hunderstorms In the Texa1 0. Molti. 82 83 anhand .. trtoo-ed tornadoes Duluth 84 31 .01 Ml • big • l>eMballl El Puo 92 ~ Rein was heavy today In Fargo 83 ... aaila and around the Blacll A11g11att 88 29 1111 of South Oelcota, and th«• GrNtFalls 51 31 .28 • thund«9tcwms In -tern H..ttord llO 62 .03 Miia, ctntral Ollllhoma and Helena 55 39 .oe orthw .. t and 1outh·c•nlrtl HonolUlu ee 75 .,,..._ Houaton 64 72 In Colorado, a tcwnldo touctled lnclnae>llt 82 81 brlefly WednMday south Of Jldlan MS 69 88 uma. but no d•"'•D• ••• Jec:kerwtle as 58 ..,orled MUCh of the -tern 1(-City 78 87 o( the •l•t• -hit by LUVega.t 84 80 but Int-thunder91cwm.. Uttte Roctl 111 81 1.06 A tomadO In Sheton $c>l"ing.. In U>uilYllle 115 65 ~I K8NU. de9tf~ I LUbbOCtl 91 83 and farm bulldtng1 MemptM t3 • .11 ~ IOIH alt~ I~ ........ 10 72 and • IUpply of latm ......... IO 41 t. ~.P 75 M WIOtly ICat...0 .._. .nd NMfwllt M ee .12 .... on-. tO IM f-"'~""-Hew Ycwll 7a 17 ol 1111 n•tton, whll• f1lr Norfolk .. et htf' pr11¥alled wMt of th• Ho. Pllnll 80 ~ .11 let. Okie City 83 5t .to TemplraturH around the ~ 1' IO Mrly t~ tlngtd frOl'l'I 3t IS 13 n 1<1111pelt, ont., to 81 In PhlllldONa S1 83 ,Ntl. . to to 1 "*'* w ...... S9Na to NOM US 0. 04 C-ce Front•: Cold.-. Wt1m ...., Phoenix 85 89 SantaMertll 74 PlttltM~ 71 57 .35 Stockton It 5e PUlnd. 89 llO .11 Thermal 98 Ptlend.Or• 71 49 Ukllll 115 Allle6gtl 71 84 .30 S..tow 117 61 Reno 73 40 BIO &Mt 65 32 a.it I.Ilk• 82 41 .45 8letloCI 43 s... Alltonlo 117 71 Catallnl $1 54 SMIU. 84 49 Long 8Mdl 72 541 ~-r.: 85 89 Monfo¥1e 112 61 7S 61 Mt. WlllOll 70 42 St Louie 86 87 Newpot1 8..cl't ee 55 St P·TimP41 85 84 Ontario 7S 51 St Ste Malle 75 40 .03 Palm Sprlngt 93 83 Spollane 87 4t San B«nardlno 90 57 8yracuM 77 55 .50 Sin G1brlel 711 55 Topella 73 84 San JON 112 48 r~ 81 58 Santa Ana 73 52 Tulaa .. 71 .08 Santa Crui 75 41 W..ntngton 14 64 .82 TahOe Valley 83 30 Wlehlta 90 83 '- c~ORNA CANADA e.keratltld 90 84 .. Blythe 05 Celgery 61 Eureka 56 .. Eamon ton 59 FIWOO 85 54 MonlrNI IO ....,_... 81 50 Ott ... 12 Loi AngtMa 72 5t Aeglne 82 MoftllttY 84 Toronto 78 ........ 91 Vancou'ftf a 0.tend llO 60 Winnipeg tz PMO Ro«llta 8t <4e Aed llufl 18 58 Aedwood City 83 51 :::*''o SS 52 ·Exteni:led 75 411 8an DlegO " 80 8an Franc:llco 72 49 weather . lent• ....... 17 52 SOIJTHlftN CAL.,OANIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN ARIAi -,., bl.It _. IMI ntallt •net ••rty morning tow dolldl ...... OOllll ...... Ill OOlltll ...... ~ '""" 10 1074•beMltlllto1 toMCMt Intend v~ Mollntllft t..ort fllOlle .. IO I.owl 4t to ... The paychlatrlat said Hinckley did not shoot when Reagan arrived at the hotel becal.lli! hia "bizarre though ts were competing for attention.'' U ,OU have~ to •Y to the i..cuna Beech Ctty Cowidl, ~ rou're not on th• Nl\llat epnda, plan to wait until" the Mld of tht meetl111. ·Council rnemben rejected Coyncllman Dan Kenney'• oror>Ollal Tue.day to move the f•pu'blio communfcauon1" portion of the •nda to the front of the meeuna on alternate rneeilna. KenMy ~had 1u,a.i.ci aueh a motion would allow people to pt thing• oft \helr cheat lmmedlately after the 6 p.m. meetlnll beQln -at le•t once a month -thus avoldlng long watt. to be heard. · He alao proposed that the "ooftlltflt calendar" portion of the meettna -thoee Items lumped together for one vote becauae of the 1uppoeed non·controverslal nature -be plac.'ed at the front of the .,end.a. In that regard, Kenney WM IUccetSful, with the remalnciet of the council agreeing to that change. But when ft came to public communication. Kenney fou11d A fund·rallfna party by the i.a,un. Beach S-top the Canal Committee will be he)d Saturday at the Unitarian Church in Lagwia Beach. Proceeda from the $15 per ticket party will benefli the Support Californians for Fair Water Polley, according to aponion of the event. The no.host cocktail party •;'Collectin( Prints," a lecture on the pleuure and lnve1tment a•pecta of collecting art, will be prellfnted next Thursday at 8 p .m . in the Laguna Beach Mu.ewn of Art. Art profesebr Brtu Coaley • A fund·raising "Summer Cruise" is set for the parking 'lot of South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna June 28 beginning al 6 p.m. The lot will be converted into a steamer setting, complete with nautica l decorations and a full casino featuring blackjack, craps, roulette and bingo with play 'money. hlmltlt the IOle 1Upporter of till mocJon Hl1 fellow councll member1 1ald movtna public communicat.iona to the besinnlnc of the meeUna would be unf.alr to thoee ln the <X>Uncll audience who went to the trouble to aet on the reauJ,ar qenda. And It would not be fair, they reuoned, to public membera who 1howed up to hear a 1ped(ic qenda l~. · . They a1IO noted the number of necative t'OCN'nentl from aev~ council re,ulara that "1et the meet.lng of to • bad •tart." were public communlcatloru to come first. Kenney termed his ausge:ttion a compromile, but later 9dinitted, "It was clear the othen were not in favor ot it." , ''I felt '(the proposal) had merit, in that the public could come to the meeting, get their business over with, and be able to leave." While Kenney aUU supports h.la proposal, he says it's unlikely he'll broach the 1UbJec\ again - at least in the near luture. . runs from 4 to 6 p.m. at the church, 429 Cypreu St. The party includu hors d' oeuvres, a no.hoat bar plus a llUle shbw and guest speaker Tim Brick, pre1ident of the Californians for Fair Water Polley. For ticket infonnation, call 497-4359. of Golden West College will talk on the history, critical concerns and purchasing of prints. Admission ii $3. 50 for non·members and $1 for students. For more lnformation call 494~531. A "captain's dinner" will be served and a grand prize winner will take away $1 ,000 in caSh. · The event is sponsored by the Silver and Gold Auxiliary of South Coast Medical Center, hoping to add to its $150,000 goal this year. For information on the fund-raising cruise. call 499-1311, ext. 2740. Oxford· aoth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav· ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine I traditional sportswttir for men, women and boys. Disability refunds unclaimed SACRAMENTO (AP) -For aome reason, the atate can't seem to give away $125 million in tax refunds to 1.5 million Californians who worked in 1979. The Employment Development Depart- ment rep o rted Wednesday \hat about 6.5 million people have claimed $403 million in disability insurance tax refunds since 1980, but another $125 million has gone uncJaimed. Although the d e- partment estimated that 1.5 million people are eligibl e for th e remaining refunds, it also forecast that only 500,000 more claims would be received br the deadline of Apri 15, 1984, and $24.5 million would be paid. The refunds, up to $91 per taxpayer, w e re auth orized by the Legislature to get rid of a surplus in the disability insurance fund. Anyone who earne d wages in 1979, paid into the fund and hasn't claimed a refund yet is eligible for one. A r e fund can b e claimed by filing an amended state tax return for 1979, form 540X, or by writing a letter to the Franchise Tax Board, the department said. Speculating on reasons the money ha s gone unclaimed , the de· partme n t said some workers have moved from the staie and are tinaware of the refund, and others may consider the amount too small to bother with. Nearly one-fourth of the originally estimated 8 million claimants were entitled to $10 or less, the department said. Hayakawa sets meet Senator S .l. Haya- kawa, R -Calif ., is 'aponsoring a small· buainess co n · ference on federal 'procurement oppor- tunities May 26 in Leis Alamitos. . Entitled "How to Do Buaineas With the Federal Government," the conference ii being pre1ented in cooperation with federal agencies and several California contncton. The conference will be , held from 9 a .m . to 1 " p .m., ln Building #6 (Training Building) of the Armed Force1 Reserve Center ln Loa Alamltoa. There le no C!barp foe admi.ton. BJJAMBl~O •1111111• ........... WASHlNO'roN -In the tlnt Mven wtek1 of the C!rl1l1 9ver the Falkland lalanda, Prelldent J\Maan and hla &ldft 1uCC'tldully adhered to a White Houae po~ of keepint the &nl'\OWK"ernent Of bed newa u far '1'orri the prealdent • pollibae. In tectntlura lt hu btcom• 1omethln1 o a trulam at the Stat• DepertJMnt that It a ctven inte"'-Uonal development refltct1 well on the occupant of the White HoUM, thtn Whltie Hou1e aldt1, or perhapa even the pteaiclent, wlll make the pub'U~ announcement abo4t ft. Bad newa, howevet, la releaated to the State Department. And 10 it ll with the Falkland lllanda. From all public appearancea, the president'• involvement in ,I.he cria!I hu been Umited. While ht1h-level White Hou1e aldet 1ay the president la not entirely diV<>r'Ctd from the blue, they are quick to point out that the diplomatic actJon II takina place ellewhere, primarily at the Unitetl Nations. One senior official, reqUt!ltlng that be not be further identified. obeerved that "it ls a very good poUUcal rule" to avoid . associating the president with bad newt plllM tn the cUi!lomaUc effortt and the \ CrWt aublkled. The.-e wu no denial that the White HOUie roJe -lf thenl wu any -mJcht be broueht more into the open ln that OMe. Soon aft.tr Arpnttne troop9 melled the lalanda, naled by the BrtUah for a century and a half, there wu a flurry of actJvity on the pan of the Reuan ad.riUolatraUon. Secfttaey ot State Alexander M. Hate Jr. undertook hla tint diplomatic shuttle ml11lon1, flying a triangular route between London, Bueno• Airea and Waahincton. But even u he did that, .. ~·· involvement appeared to have lieeri kept at a minimum. The president •• aaid to have spoken aeveral dmet by tel'5)hone with the aecretary and to have b.een kept up to date on Haig'a dflculsiona. Then, as the prospects for 1ucce11 dimmed, Halg's publi c role aho ~ ...... Alri"•"d """tary ictJOn a~ •~~ ~=d•d 10 koop ~· appotntmentl lri Turkey. ona And 1. L1ka ~. h• hu mauae.to put IOl'M dt.tanc• L()8 A.NOELIS (AP) between hliftli1t and the crtali lnvolvb~ -. T h • Io u t h • r n two U.S. awei. ~~rnla Oaa Co. haa Tht l)ttlktent apok• on tM t.tJtphOM tor a rehearina of with Leopoldo Oaltlerl, the Arcen&lnt ~ atat.t Public UUlftill PIWklenw arv,i with Marpret 11\atcher, ~ommh•lon'• order i.he Britiah prtrne mlnla~r. d~ $22,9 m1lllon 8"aan '°ld the Sovleta to 11~tt out" l n U 8 0 I) U u u l I u of the conUic:t. ln an off-the-cuff purchase• die PUC felt tomment to reporter• at the end of a c.'Olt too much. news conference a weelc aao. he Mid Jw T h e u t l l l t y a a l d 1aw some proepeet.a for• breakthrouch. Wednelday 1t would ai.o but aaid little elle. Mk later for a rehearin& With thoae exceptions, hlJ public of an additional $11.9 comments have been kept io a min1mwn, million in gu ~ and hla spokesmen made every attempt diaal.lowed by the PUC. to. allo follow that ooune. Day in and day out, Larry Speakea, The gu amounted to the deputy Whit.e Houae press secretary, 13 billion cubic feet, hu been asked about the criais, the U.S. about 1.4 percent of the role in it, and the pro1pecta for war or total purchued by the peace. 1u company that year. Typically, on Monday, he said when The PUC disallowed aaked the standard questions, "I don't the purchase because have anything for you on the Falk.lands, s t o c k p i l i n g t h e other than \hat we're proceeding at the higher-priced fuel had United Nations ... We would like to prevented purchases of remain helpful to both parties." cheaper fuel later. CAR BlW-ERS .CAN .SAVE . AN AVERAGE OF $1,125· AND AS MUCH AS $1,850* WITH GMAC'S LOW FINANCING RATE OFFER ENDS MAY 31 ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RJXf E i t I I t. I I ENTERPRISE REUNION -Cut members of 0 Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" get together for a apedal salute on ''The MERV Wynn wears Acior Keenan Wyu says he spent hi.a youth racing 1peedboata and motorcyclea, but tho1e puaions eventually robbed him of hi.a heartna. Speaking in Pueblo, Colo. at St. Mary Corwin Hospital for speech and hearing proarama of Senoma Clubs International. Wynn. 65, aald that during the sporta' early years, racers did not wear ear protection agalnat roaring engines. Now, Wynn wears hearing aids in both ears. "Vanity is a very destructive thing," he said of attitudes toward hearing aids. "People don't wear them because 'it makes me look too old.' I fell people, I've been wearing these for four years, and believe me, it hasn't damaged my 1ex life a blt." * Melvin Belli, the feisty lawyer who's won hundreda of millions of dollars in damage and malpractice suita, has been slapped with a $5 million suit by hi.a ex-partner. \'a11llo1 Cboalo1 say• Belli "wrongfully" dissolved their partnership, kept most of the firm's ueeta and "physically attacked" him ih the office last December. Since they spilt in November, Belli has illegally excluded Choulos from "business assets and receipta by force and other means," according to the suit filed in San Francisco Superior Court. * Prlnce11 Diana said she is hoping for a baby boy in' July but ia getting fed up with Prtace Cllarles telling her what •W tO do in her pregnancy. The 20-year-old Princess of Wales made the remarks during a visit to the Albany Community Center she ina~';:t~ord,,authetlrt London, to help chl.ldMI and the elderly. · "I hope it's a boy,•• . she told a .14-year-<>Jd questioner, David RowlaM, "but we'll jUst have to wait and see." *' Stones, baga of rose petals, ~twork and manuscripts have been shipped home . to Fresno from the Paris apartment of the late Pulitzer Pri.ze-winniJl8 author Wllllam s.r,yu. The project was commilsioned by the honored playwright before hi.a death a year ago. Dlckran Koaymjlu, a Fresno Si.ate University profesaor entrusted with the inventory work, was QllS/gCll conf.ronted with a cluttered store of r"°nal items collected over 20 years. * Pre1ldent Reagu will vmt California for six days next week, attending a ~ Republican Party fund-raising event in Loe Anaeles and a U.S.-Mexican conference in Santa~. The president will fly to Loe Angeles on Tue9day for the GOP "Salute to the President" dinner at the Century Plaza Hot.el. Later that night, Reagan will fly to his ranch northwest of Santa Barbara. The U.S.-Me>Cican conference, on May 28, will be held at the Santa Barbara Biltmore Hotel and be attended by Mexican official.a, including legislators, the spokesman laid. * A net gain of one newspaper for her l)'lldicated daily advice column has made Au Loden think ithe flap following dbclosurea that ahe had recycled 15-year-old material waa "almost worth the trouble." Two newspapen 8.nnounoed plana to drop the column and eeveral otherl temporarily 1uapended publication following di1eloeurea alma9t two weeks ago by The A..:>dated Pn!la and the Pontiac (Dl.) Daily Leader that Mill Landen repeated with only minor changes letten she answered in her colWDN 15 years ago. But others have begun takiJ'\I the column. Miu I!andera, who1e dally column la aynclicated in more than 1,000 newspapen and read by an audience lltimated at 70 mlWon. prom1led to dlaccJotinue the practice. * Mldlael Reapa, the president'• elder aon. ii cUet1na and exerdalni hla lep 11 trainlnC for a Voluntaris~ mulled NEW YORK (AP) -The helld of the Twent- ieth Century Fund qumtionl whether volunterilm am replllce IOdal JlCOll'AIDI cut by the ..,_ ad- mlniltndon. '"lbe way our nation meelll UI c:lalnmitmm '° the poor and tMt handJcapped mt the ~ cllll for ,. .. xamlnation and reform. But It eannot .. lbmm.I,'' .set director M.J. ~ , MIMI ... Show," durtna taping for upcoming thaw. From left are William Sbatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForeet Kelley and Bibi Be9ch. aid freely -- g;rueling boat race against time up the Millllslppl 'l'tiver. - The eldest Reagan 10n told a news conference in St. Louis he ancf teammate L.C. Sml*' hope to break a record of 26 houn and 50 minutes for the 1,027-mlle beet trip from New Orie.na to St Lou.II on July 21 to benefit the U.S. Olympic Committee. The record was aet a decade ago In competitiort for the Eel ward Koeall Challenge trophy, established in 1929 by the t. Louil tnauatrlalial When )'OU ~n a new91-Day Money Market Accowit at Bank of America, we'll gift )'OU a $20 cash bonus. High Rate for Jmt 91 Days1 The 91-J)Qy Money Market Account is a great new invtstment. You don't have to tie up your money for long periods to get high money market interest. A high rate is yours when you invest a minimum of !7500 for only 91 days at a time. At the end of the term your funds will be automatically reinvested for you, at the rate in effect on your maJurity date. Or you may withdraw your money if you prefer. 11.939% Annual Rate• 12.666% Annual Ylel~ • Banlc of America's rate on this accounc is the highest the law allows u~ ro pay. 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The Lquna Beach Festival of Arta and Pqeant of the Mastera -which deacrlbea growth as "i"4'vitable" -la.at week began to look lnto the posaibllltles of expandll'\g the festival grounds to include 12 8Cre9 adjacent to the current site. They say that parking, traffic, congestion and a wish to service more cu1tomera are the main needs of the festival. The. Festival of Arts should 1 remember that it is not alone in these "growing pains." The City of Laguna Beach has an ambiance to maintain, its citizens and business people have their own interests to protect and promote. . Any chanp the f.n&Vi.l plant -etpecially expaNIOn -will affect the entt,e :n f~. culturally, aeethett y . The 1tudy of ualng adjacent grounda to expand the fettlval looks like a posaible 1tep kl euln& those ''inevitable" growing pains. Regardless of the outcome of the study, we can see how on-1Jte expansion may be the answer to the headaches of the city and the headaches of the festival. r . The Festival ·Board should continue to IOok for the beat methods of expandln& its annual show, and we hope too that the people of Laguna who are not a part of the festival -but are unarguably impacted by lt -will be considered when decision time comes . ! Artists zoned out? I Although it hasn't been proved, the Laguna Beach Arts Comrnis&on fears artists are being forced out of town by high rents and restrictive zoning. The nine-member panel has asked the City Council to consider zoning changes that would allow artists and craftsmen to have their studio and their residence together in areas zoned for industrial \.lie. Current laws prevent an owner or renter from living in an indu strial area, but arts comrni.s&oners have suggested a zone change could save some artists the expense of having to pay rent or mortgage payments on two structures in order to continue to work and live in Laguna Beach. Coun cil members have directed city officials to explore the potential for amending the indu strial zone ordinances to accommodate artists' residences and studios. And while such a move could set a precedent for other businessmen seeking the same privilege. a study of the matter seems in order. Laguna Beach has long been touted as an Art Co~, and if artists are being fo out of town becaU!e of economics, 1<>me meaJ¥t of remedying the situation should be considered. The analysis of a proposed zone cllange will take place next year as the city begins forming ordinances to coincide with the local coastal plan. A notable achieve:ment Dr . Robert San c his , superintendent of the Laguna Beach Unified School District for the past eight years, is drawing congratulations and accolades this week for a significant achievement in his c hosen profession. Sanchis has been appointed new superintendent of the large Glendale Unified School District. with 19,000 students, three high schools, five junior highs and 19 elementary campuses. This is a signlficant challenge for a professional educator. It is also a compliment to the Laguna school system. During his time at Laguna, Sanchis guided the administration of a school system that has suffered enonnous reductions in financial support while facing dwindling school enrollments and continuing demands for increased salaries and benefits from the teaching staff. . Leading Laguna schools in to the 1980s has not been an easy task. The fact that Laguna students continued through these pressing times to score well above state • averages in scholarship tests, and that the district continued to function and develop inno'ladve financial support programa. ts indeed a credit to the departing superintendent. We suspect these accomplishments did not elude the attention of the Glendale Board of F.ciuca ti on. Yet the future for Laguna schools isn't all rosy. 'The ~ has already been lorced to cldae one elementary campus. More closures could be in the future. Budget cuts probably will remain the order of the day and the search for financial resources will c.'Ontinue to be a. pressing need. Laguna school trustees may indeed find that recruiting a new superintendent to continue Sanchis' able leadetship will be a difficult task in itaelf. The new superintendent must be a person willing to tackle significant challenges. Meanwhile, we offer our congratulations to J)r. Sanchis; our thanks for his eervice to Laguna Beach, and wish him success in his new challenges at Glendale. Opinions expressed In tht space abOve are those of the Da11v Pltot. Olner views e•· pressed on tt11s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit· ed. Address The Dallv Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone t7Ul 642-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Conquering fear Does it help any to know that the least fearful people lend to be the least imaginative, too? Students of the mind say fear is a mental hazard only to those who too soon cross their bridaes. Whip that tendency to antic- ipate, and you've got fear licked, they aver. "Not all insulated vacuum bottles work," writes a client. "Every week- end durinC the football letllOll, my wile 9eala a batch of martlnt. in such a Jua and putl them in the refrigerator to c:hlll owmtahL It'• usually bot in the ltadillD'l the -next afternoon. and 10 are tfte martinis, always. Worthleu!" Still at the ume room temperature .. when bouled, rou •)'? Pretty load jua. . Q . How many men theae day1 ~ ~ tcr money? ~A:."ntie ftwribeor of men who look for financial help in their love lives ap- pears to be rising, thou,h It's not yet equal to the number o women who do so. Thirteen out of every 100 bridegrooms were aald to do that thing when matr1m0n1al retearchera investigated the mantr .ame yean ago. However, our Ltiw and War man suggests more WOrr\en work on vestipted the matter IOl'De yean ago. However, our Love and War man suggests more women work on pay- payroll jobs now, ao that 13-percent figure is no doubt too low. At least 160 motion plctureta have shown the Empire State Bulldtna aomewhere In the footase. Q. Who w• the richt9t man ever to 9et'Ve -u .8. Pr'elldent? A. LyDdon Johnt01\. Reportedly worth •lt wd1DCin when he aacceede<t Johnr.~. Tax plans for nuclear age WASHINGTON -If you s hould survlve a nuclear holocauat, you might think you'd deserve a brief respite from federal texaa as you wait for the dust to settle. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury has already begun plotting to remove even this tiny silver lining from the mushroom-.haped clouds of nuclear conflict. C.Ome doomsday, tax collectors will have a hand in the pockets of the survivors. Some of the paperwork has already been completed; it'• titled "Design of an Emergency Tax System." THE AUTHOR OF thb remarkable document ls Gary Robbins, a senior official in the Treasury undersecretaey's office. He concedes there will be some worriaome problems facing the Internal Revenue Service as it sets about putting the arm on dazed, distraught survtvon of a nuclear attack: For example, 0 the income tax system ls extre'mely vulnerable to losses of records of transactions," the memo cautions. "These records are required In order to determine the base for tax at any period of time." In other words, if a hart:iy taxpayer should make it safely to the fallout shelter but the employer's payroll records were incinerated, how would he get accurate W-2 fonna to submit with the 1040 on April l~'! "The necessary information would not be available for preparing of tax returns __ G. JACI 11111111 ~ and determinins tax liability." the Treasu,ry memo concedes. "Further, the Internal ~venue Service would find it impossible to verity the necessary figures in audlt situations." In this bureaucratic nightmare, it might be thought the tax collectors would simply throw up their hand.a in despair. But no one ever got rich underestimating the bulldog tenacity of a federal bagman. De1pite the basic survival problems of the unincinerated, the IRS agents still on their feet could presumably be summoned to duty by the Treasury. "lf sufficient damage is done" to the continental United States, the Treasury memo acknowledges, "the tax system itself may have to be changed." But Treasury has a solution ready. "INSTEAD OF an income tax, one could design a general sales tax which would raise the revenues required," Robbins suggests. A point-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of easy collect1on by the IRS and encouragement of savings "to aid in r e building the capital stock ... he expWns. • The author has even figured out how big a sales tax would be needed: "The general sales tax on final sales would have to be approximately 20 percent in order to replace the current individual and corporate income taxes. Social Security taxes, and estate and gift taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the Treasury document might be a tongue-in-cheek exerclae, my associate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocauat tax-collecuon plan a couple of years ago. It was quite serious, he said. Teacher retirement less than rosy To the Editor: P.S. Wills (Mailbox, May 6) ii not fully Informed regarding the Public Employees Retirement System pension fund. Teachers do not contribute to PERS. They have a separate fund (State Teachers Retirement System). The PERS has allowed the governor to invest their funds. AB a result, retired MAILBOX state employees (gardeners, cafeteria workers, secretaries etc.) get eo&t-of-living raises, paid medical and dental care and are not discriminated in retirement payments by sex (female teachers pay more into STRF and receive less). California State Teachers Retirement Fund has not, as yet, been allowed out as an investment. Consequently, the teachers pay their own medical and dental insurance, get a 2 percent a year raise and are 90 percent old women! THE PERS IS made up of 80 percent men. Men make our laws, handle our money and critidz.e our work, even our votes. . AB a life member of CT A I defend our right to endorse a candidate, though I personally shall do my own decision-making. If our schools are not dulng a satisfactory job, in the eyes of many, perhaps parents should get out of the schools and go back to letting the educators run them. Or, better yet, find out more about your adqUniltratora. How many parents know what your district superintendent la being paid? How he is choeen. and by whpm? How ii your county s\.lperintendent chosen? How many county and state supervilon vllit your achool and chec:k oo the quality of WOl'k teachers are doing? In 12 years my retirement hu Increased $130.9.4 a month. My husband's Social Security hM lncrewd 300 percent. Teachen do not have Social Security. MALISSA B. McMA.NUS Tired of waitins To the Editor: rm wonderlna about thll Dlal·A·Rlde that we have in ~ewport Billch. You can never 1•t them! You have to watt an· hour for them to CIOl'IW, l'nM~~t:J wmted to a.t to tM _,. today. I two dltferen& timll Md thit phlJw rans 20 Umel. Nol)odj ev.n ~to wwer and lf they dD WW•. thet'n~iD nMW to.you. '"*' J ftnlib lhopptril M illmwnt ~tlel.ceattr~u l••n::.:;: J:M"r;&&i'S.: dMID. Whira peJ tMlr l9Cl4 •oaey 1urel1 we ou11at to llav• \ something in return. I can't walk to the bus 10 I have to rely on them but I think they should be checked lnto, give us better service and be more ~lite to us. They re so curt. I know it's a wonderful service but not if your nerves ~ on edge from waiting and standing uniil your back is broken. I wish you would lpdk into it. M.A. PAXTON TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Sea treaty To the Editor: Regarding the Reagan ad- ministration's complaints about the technology transfer, preferential access to mining sites foe pioneering'finns, and council make-up provisions of the United Nation• Law of the Sea Treaty ("Support sea law aims," editorial, May 9), it should be noted that: 1. "Mining companies already accept requirements for operating in Third World countries that are no more onerous than the ones ln the pending treaty. These include ... transfers of technology . . . " (Christian Science Monitor, March 10). 2. AB mining a seabed site could cost $1 billion, it would seem unlikely that any co mpany other than the five lnt&rnational consortia (Kennecott, Ocean Mining A'asoclates, Ocean Minerals, Ocean Management, and Afernod) would have the resources or tnc:llnation to engage 1n it. 3. Deciaions will require either a two-thlrda or a consensus depending on the lalue, thus affortlina "more of a volce in the aoverntng council for nattona n:at affected by 11N6ed authority decialona." JOHN W. OSBORN. JR. Prmldent, Orange Co. Chap., United Natiom ~tion of the U.S.A. To the ldltor: L Now that the sample ballo'8 for the upcomlna election are appearinl in the mail box, I ~ If it milht be a aood dine to do just a ihOrt follow-up ~ about the problem au of ~ County cllliena could be of •re•t help to ~be f Registrar of Voters. We are currently awash with names on the votel'I lista of fonner citizens who are no longer with us. The attrition rate is quite high, in my opinion. People have either moved away, without leaving a correct forwarding address -and, sadly. in aome cues the voter has passed away, and the Registrar of Voters is still carrying their names on the voter lists. Will you please inform your readers once more that there are prescribed legal procedures to remove those names from the voters lists, and the cooperation of the citizens is greatly needed to accomplish this? HELEN McPHERSON Look at Poland To the Editor: Did you watch the noting in Poland on television and did you realize what it was you were seeing? What you saw was a bunch of angry people who like Hunganans have been led into slavery and have nothing to fight back with but words, sticks and stones and empty stomachs. Their mas- ters have seen to that -have taken away their fareanns -and when that happens kw freedom goodbye. In the forthcoming election this year there is a firearm control bill on the ballot. This is the first step towards ta- king your freedom away. Only a fool would vote for it. WARREN G. ALTHOFF Telecourse quality To the Editor: A recent article In the Dally Pilot diacuaes the "concern" of four teacher$ at Oranae Coaat College. It .eems that they challenp the "qwality" of oouraes given by televiaion. Rather than point the finger at aneone elw, their ooncem ahoWd be the "quality" of education at O.... Cout c.one,e. What about the financing of the1e televtalon COW'Mlf lf the money Wtte not u.ed for the above function, would it be diverted to -where? ' # r .. Orlftll COiie DAILY N.OT~ • ._ M. 11U Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to -the-minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come in and make a savvy investment on the"'Clothes sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of rose , cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig. $128, sale $95.99. Skirt, orig. $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V.l.P. Sportswear, 31147; Robinson's Sweaters, 1; Robinson 's Pacesetter, 80. To order, call toll-free 1·800·345·8501. .. .. l fr INSTANT REPLAYS DEPT. Newport Beach bu now bec:ome the latett of our coutal conununities to have dilQovered electronic lln within lts nelchborhooda. Ovlc leaders are now mullil'\I laws to purge the precincts of thil new tianailtorized temptation. The object.a of Newport'• munidpal wrath are the video g~ that have been proliferating in liquor stores, all·night markets, Taundromats and other ' public places where their • r.w\ ~ b 1i n k in g 11 g h ts a n d Tl_l_l_U_l_PH_l_ll_f ~I; fl.ic kert ng electronic II~ figures lure the .~---,;,.._ __ ._.._.1 _.._ unauspectina, These games swallow up quarleh with an insatiable appetite while the players become trWflxed by Pac Man or Space Wan and are soon living the life of the dilatory or · slothful. THUS IT IS that the city planning commission will 1 begin mulling control laws tonigh\ that might regulate where video games can be located in the dty. Newport isn't the fu-.t of OWi communities to discover this new fortn of indolent sin. Huntington Beach, for example, banned the location of public video games within one-half mile of any school - -:;::::-> -._ -·-~ ~~~.~-aw e:._......._ Another Balboan. filled with Bin, bt!ing rolled on home campus or within one-half mile of each other. Newport's consideration is to banish the video lure wi1hin 300 feet of school eampuses. You have to suspect the theory here is that if temptation and sin are far enough n:moved fro~ ~P~· students are just too lazy to go any distance to find it. It is unclear if the history of sinful behavior would support this thesis. Alas, over the years, Satan has invented numerous devices of temptation which were calculated to cause the unsuspecting to waver from the paths of righteousness and separate the sucker from his money. THESE HAVE INCLUDED pool tables, pinball machines, juke boxes, nickelodeons, peep shows, crap tables, slot machines, lotte?' cards, football pools, playing cards, poker chips, burleSque theaters and comlnercial television. Most of these sinful offerings have been found in Newport 'Beach generally at one time or another, and in Balboa in particular. It should be noted, however, that Justice Robert Gardner, writing in this journal, considered Balboa weak in the area of houses of ill-repute. Anyway, most of these temptations have been banned in Newport at one time or another, with mixed results. Once a few years back, Newport Beach had a city manager named Harvey L. Hurlburt who discovered that pool tables within Newport saloons were being utilized for gambling purposes. This seemed at the time to come as a terrible shock to Hurlburt, proving that he was either a man of extreme virtue or he simply hadn't been around very much. Anyway, he set out to get pool tables banned in Newport watering holes. Again, the reasoning was if you pw:ge Satan's device -the pool table -r you automatically obliterate sin. In Hurlburt's case, neither notion worked. '. YOU MIGHT. HOPE that those Newport civic lights who are now out to save the community from video games will have better luck. Have you ever been around th• video game arcades? Obviously, they are well worth purging. They are very inolsy. Video game9 to1ally lack the sweet. melodic click of two pool balls coming together. And everybody knows that the wont sin of all is a noisy one. " . ByJIPll'ADLER OflM.,_.,,......., In a rather unuaual political about-fee.. GOP candidate Mary Schmltz la charslnf lhal the same political con1ult1na flrm that handled her l!:µ1band'1 1ucceMful 1978 1tat.e Senate bid now la us1n& dirty triclw to atop her elec:tlon drive for the 4Srd DlatrSct congreesional teat. Inaie.d of blaming fellow GOP challenger Johnnie Crean for a letter that ursed more than 5,000 Jewiah voters ln the district to awltch thelr party reglatration and vote agalnat her, Mrs. Schmiu la pointing an accusing finger at the two consultants managing the Crean campaign - William Butcher and Arnold Forde. "They'll do anything to make a · candidate win, including (spreading) falsehoods and oh~racter aasasslnation," Mn. Schmitz charged. She said the two are "certainly a corrupting Influence on the (political) procelll." But, interestingly, it ls this same Newport Beach consulting firm she accuses of "unllCrugulous" campaign tactics that was retained by her husband, stale Sen . John Schmitz, R-Corona del Mar, in his 1978 campaign. In fact, Schmitz or members of his staff contacted the well-known and controversial political consultants to handle both his 1980 and 1982 U.S . Senate races, said Forde, one of the firm's partners. In both instances, however, Forde said an agreement for the firm's services never was worked out. Mrs . Schmitz said the consultanta are motivated only PY money so "the ends justify the means .. '' She added, ''any firm that will do anything ao long as they're paid is a very poor example of American business.•• Contacted at his Sacramento omce, Sen. Schmitz commented that the Butcher-Forde team is • good but expensive. He added that the main reaaon he contracted for their services dwmg his 1978 campaign was to keep the two consultants from working for one of his challengers. "lf I could have ~n assured they weren't going to come in agaln1t me I might not have hired them," Schmia aaid. "I figure they were worth one or two percentage points.'' It was by one percentage point that Schmitz Jost the Republican nomination in the 40th Congressional District to Rep. Robert Badham, of Newport Beach, in 1976. Badham's campaign that year was managed .by Sutcher-Forde. When asked about the charges Mrs. Schmitz is leveling against the firm, Forde commented that, "You work for the people that hire you." Sexual abuse sem•nar set A seminar focusing on eexual exploitation of children will be conducted between 9 and 11 a.m. Saturday at the Orange County Courthowie in Sfnta Ana. Up to 200 parents and children can be accommodated at the seminar 1ponsored by the Girl Scout Council of Orange County and the county'• victim witness assistance program. The flnt hour of the pl'08l'8JD will be devoted to an orientation for parents. The 9eCOnd hour will be devoted to lelliona primarily deslaned for children. Child ~ wur be provld~d durina the adulta' aemlon. Further information can be obtained by calllnt e;e.7900, H• added tha' the Schmttze.· have been hll dinner aueeta in the put yeer. The letter that drew Mre. Schmitz' Ire WH titled 11La1t Chance to Stop Schmit.a" and waa malled on letterhead tndACatlna lt waa paid for and authoriied by the Crean for Congreta CampallJl . "Thia la our lut chance to 1top Schmits.'' the leuer reedl. "Mary Schmitz, John'• wife, la aeeJd.na th1' .eat ao that the Schmitz family can continue to have a forum to perpetuate their venom of bigotry and hatred." repreeent the beet lnatlntta ot our IOdety and country.'' Asked how he would i.pond to the chars• that the letter w• a ameer. Forde said, "Eveort.lme there ta eomethlng a candidate doean't like lt ia called 1 smear." He alao said that when candldatea call attention to auch thlnp It ls int.ended to aenerate interest in their own campaign. On the other hand , Mra. Schmitz said she sees the lncldent as indicative of how "politics has boiled down to who can buy the most votes." / Deir ................ The letter wa1 1igned by Newport Beach resident Leonard Shane, active fn the Jewlah community and chairman of the board of Mercury Savings and Loan, and ,Juliua Hlnt, a' San Diego County buslneaman. It ~rged those voting againal Schmitz to support Crean'• candidacy. Both Crean' and Mn. Schmitz ·are among 18 Republican contenders aeeklng nomination in the 43rd'distrlct, which straddles the Orarfgt!j\ :nd San Diego county Une. Because vater registration fl g u re' In the q.ia tr i ct overwhelmingly tavor Republicans,· the even tu al primary winner· 1s considered an easy winner in the November CRITICAL -Mary Schmitz, campaigning for Congress, ;~ charged that the firm wh'tch aided her husband John's fl Forde aald the letter wa1 written by_a ar<>UP of peOJ:!:.~ho believe "Man' Sclunltz not 1978 state Senate race has .,! used "dirty tricks" against general election. · hers. · PRIZED PROJECTS -When fifth graders at Cox School in Fountain Valley staged a science fair, Derek Quigley won first place by charting why continental plates make the Atlantic Ocean smaller than the Pacitic Ocean and showing the I 0., ............. ..., ..... 1( ...... earth's layers from inner core to cruat, below. Ann Judson won second place for proving lemons really can produce electricity, and Ray Arriaza's working model of an oil well took fifth pl.ace. ... ., • r. ... ft ... •.: ·) ,, "· r. .... 'i ·l .. , I. DEAR RBADSlll: Htrt 11 110 .. tr ltUtf tlaat rtfltCtl tilt dllllttJrltlOI el Amtrl.,11 lamll1 Ult. I wo11..-1ot lllave rtctlv" 11H a 11ner tvta nve '"" ap. TM we•u wlMt wntt did 101 ad for: adv• IM ilamtlJ·Wuted me &o bow llOw •-"'811..,,tM ...... J~tUwitll die tao,. ••t '" •t:1t1:w111 recoplH yo1r1tlv11 will •• 1oat ttrlo11 10~.1oai~'1 ~rea are aet 1etllg a fair 1au. Htn It Ja: DEAR ANN LAND~: I amt.he only mothel\ on OW' street who it not woridng at least part-time downtown. Without my permisaion my name and phone number have been given to aeveral ac})ooll u the person to contact in case of an NEW GENERATION TRAIN -A prototype of a magnetically levitated train ol Japan National Railways, rests on ita lide-mounted rubber support wheels on a tracldew bed at the railroad's test center in Miyaz.aki, in eouthem emerpncy. I nave been called to corne·and pick up children 1 hardly know. several weekl aao the netahbon aero. the 1treet (the man 11 • lawyer) took a tour-day bu1lne11 trip a~d left their 13-year-old IOJ\ 1n charae of hli U-yar-old brother and 1-year-old 1l1ter. The only lnatrucUona were to call me lf they needtd anyth.ln&. Thete people are -not clme frtenda. I bani~ know them. I reaent beina put In the po~~tlon of refusina to atve attention to a chUd w~ need.' are not being met by h.ll own parenta. In aelt-defense Inave compiled a U1t of phone numbers and make every effort to locate the parenta. If this is not pwible, I uk the school to locate the family doctor. In this way the child gets the care he neecb and UWlr ....... Japan. The magnetically driven train is being developed u a replacement for the company's "bullet" train, which was the world's fastest train from 1964 until the introduction of France's Paris-Lyon express. Pisces: ·Focus • on trip Friday, May Z1 ARIES. (March 21-April 19): Apparent defeat is transformed into victory. Losa is recovered, financial prospect.I brighten. Cancer, Capricorn natives figure prominently. Valid investment oppo~unit)' is presented by older ally. Gourmet dinner IS highlighted. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Elements of luck, circwnstance and timing ride with you. Moon and numerical cyclet1 point to popularity, communication, profit and dealinp with bright, optimiatic Geminis and Sagittariana. Number 3 will be lucky. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Aquarian aids in removing some restrictions. You learn w}\at's happening in areas obecured or deliberately disguised. You win by walting1 measuring. piecing together clues and signals. You are given chance to recoup loss, to rebuild on solid base. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Stimulation. inspiration and communication dominate scenario. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius pensoiu figure prominently. Invitation is received -involves opposite aex, writing or travel. Wish will be fulfilled and you gain new allies. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You dilcern values, priorities fall into place. Lunar ... ,,,,. ay PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna Beach • HOIOSCOPI BY SIDNEY OMARA emphasis on aspirations, profe11ional achievements, intelligent concession made by family member. Career decision is highlighted. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio penom figure prominently. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep options open; travel and other plans su~ject to change. Emphasis on communication, education, spiritual values and long-range aspirations. Pisces indivi dual aidt in pe~ivini current cycle and future trends. LJBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Take .a>eeial care in connection with co-siping, foam, interest rates, apparent tax shelters. Relationship results in added responsibility, pressure and strong involvement. Individ\.Lal who promises payment may actually be financially embarrassed. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): It may be possible to extend contract or renegotiate ·agreement. Doors of opportunity open and -jOW' penonal borilona elcpand. You'll 1en1e ·c:e of public. You coUld be on verge of a office amuh. Aries ii involved. ~~~~the~. -TIRED OF BEING l ON IN SAN JOSE DEAR ~ED ON: Yo1r letter NY• 'more UO.t wut 1 lllappnbl& today tllu I could. naDt for wrHlq. • I . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I can't believe your lnadequate reply to 0 Salem Reader," who 1uffered from chronlc depreuion and overdoeed 1everal tlmea. Why didn't you advise her to seek out a psychiatrist who would put her on medic.at!qn? Believe me, antl·depreuants can mean the difference between llfe and death for a chronically deprelled penon. I know what I'm talking about ~uae, I, myself, suffer from manlc-depre11ion and have overdoeed twice. After the last time I went to a local crisit unit and was immediately placed on anti-depressant medication. That was almolt two years ago, and I have not auff ered a.sulddal depression since, I People need to know that ln many cues there is medication that can help them. No one should continue to suffer the tortures of the damned (there's no hell like it), nor do they need to be .ashamed of having the illne11. Thank you for giving this vital infonnatlon to thoee who need it. -BEEN THERE IN BANGKOK DEAR B.T.: Yoa mut be a brand·aew reader. I uve repea&edly stated that ao one needs to aaff er the agonies of depre11ioa aaymore. There are now a variety of ·'J.•wa '· antl·depre11aat dra11 tlaat can taeip Ult tlaett people Mt of tlaetr black moodl. Some of tll11e dr11s may pro41ce 1lde·effect1. A competent, carla1 doctor wlll moo.Hor Ma patient ca ref ally, alter tbe do1a1e or 1wltcll to aaoUaer type of medJcattoa. Dr. H•rbert Pardea, clalef of tbe Natloa-l lnttUate of Mental Healtb (a loa1Ume coasaUaat), ha1 asked me to lllform all my readers wbo want to learn more aboat deprusloa and bow to deal wltll It to write for tile J.uUtute's free booklet. It contalat tlae moat carreat Information on depre11loa, written la laa1aa1e everyoae can aaderstud. U 1lvea new hope and Is aare tt lmprove the qaallty of a great many Uve1 a1 well a1 HVe some. Tbe addre11: Natlou.I la1tttate of Mental Healtll, Pabllc laqalriet, HOO' Fithen Lane, Rockvtlle, Md. 20857. Ar.e druga OK if you learn how to control them? Can they be of help? Tbe an11wer1 are in A1nn Landers' all~new booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope." For each booklet ordered, send 12.00, plus s Jong, sell-add.reaet:i, atamped envelope (37 cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago m. 60611. ·Empty nest lonely ()pen Letter to the Bambeck Kids: Wen. how in the world are all of you? Since you moved out, Mommy and Daddy's nest la really empty and you can make book on that. Speaking of books: Have you heard there'• a new sibling kisa-and·tell boolt coming out? This time it ii written by the children of the late Peter Sellers. Hope none of you gets any ideas. (Ha, ha.) WHAT AM I SAYING? You little rucah would never take anything we said or did seriously, would you? I auppoee a lot of thinp come to mind that Daddy and I did that in ret:rollpect were bizarre and misunderstood. Hey, what are parenta for, right? I know you're thinking about that incident that summer in Florida when you turned on the car heater. Well. no publisher in hia right mind would blame us for that! We had no way of knowing about the tooth that WU looee. And u for the math aemin.an for your birthday 1urprise. we did it for your own good. You have to believe that. Besides, the written word -and wills -are something you have to live with for the rest of your life. I know what you're thinking. What about the six books I wrote about you? They were fun, weren't they? Even your attorney had to admit they had their moments. THE PROBLEM WITH children writina books ii that they feel compelled to tell the truth,·and you know how deadly unentertaining THAT can be sometimes. No one wants to know about the time I cut a hole in your bicycle seat to shame you into toilet training. It wasn't my idea anyway. I llMA IOMllCI AT WIT'S END .. think I read it in Heloiae. Naturally, Mommy ' and Daddy would never tell you what to do with your lives. (The time I locked you out ' for not voting a Democratic ticket was a joke. Did you thirik I was serious?) Why am I J<>ing on so? I cannot believe the idea of writiftl a book ever crossed your minds. If it doea1 mayt5u have terminal ' writer's block. Only ki · . We are both well an miss you very much. We are still storing all of yoW' things and wouldn't think of charging you for it. We're that kind of parents. Write or call when you can. P.S . Enclosed is our unlisted phone number and a blank check. POT SHOD BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT T14ERC'S &E&:N SO MUCH COWCEl\N A&OUT WHAT MleHT MAPP!:N • THAT WHAT'.5 ACTUALLY MAPPENING '-IAS PASSED ALMOST UMt.JO"TICCO. ,,_,,....__.. o;:: ~r!"::", =. ~ GOif N ·01 BRIDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF Both hlnerable. South deal•. NO&TR •eta O J5 9 AJUU ••z WEST EAST •Kits •GU o JOH·U <:?Qt7 0 1' o QU •t• •Klt87 80tJT8 •AlU O A&I 0 &It ' ••Giii · Ttt. biddlnr: S.-. 1'991 Nerdl EM INT.._ INT P .. ... ,_ Openiq Je.:d: FOUJ' of <:> • cubed the ace or clubs. Even thourh the suit did not apllt evenl7, he wu In control. He 1lmpl7 gave up a club -and made his contract -one spade trick, two hearta, two dlamoncla and tour clubs. Tt'Ue, declarer would have rone down bad the defenders' bands been l"e•trsed, whereu the flnt declarer would have gotten home. But dedarer de1erved to "'-b hit eonttad becauae he pve hlmaelf the beat c:hanee. ... JD •• .Jury says death for 'cop killer A Superior Court jury recommended today that convicted police killer Gordon Lee Mink die in the gas chamber for the June 1980 alaylng of Garden Grove police offloer Donald Reed. Mink, 32, smiled allghtly as the aix-man, six-woman Orange County jury returned with ita dedlion thia mornlng. The long-haired and bearded defendant ia to return to court June 11 for formal sentence proceedings. Mink was convicted of fint-degree. murder for Reed's slaying outside a Garde!} Grove tavern two years ago. He a.bo was convicted of wounding two other officers and two bystanders in the Cripple Creek Saloon. "It is a well-deserved verdict for Mr. Mink." proeecutor Bryan Brown said today. "I can't thin)c of anyone who ii more deservirig than Mr. Minkr'' Defeme Attorney Daye Shinn said his client wu not surpriled b y t h e d e a t h p e n a-1 t y recommenda\ion. AJao reaclini to the · verdict was l.Jnda Reed, Officer Reed's widow, who tearfully told reporters that Mink "definitely got what he deeerved." NEWPORTER JOINS FAST -Zoe Ann Anand& of Newport Beach (right), stands at rqtUnda of l1lino6I state capitol during tasting strike to support ERA. Others are Sonia Johmon of Virginia Oeft) and Dina Bachelor of ~ Angelel. Irvine probes 6 burglaries; one arrested 7 women f asters Six residential burglaries were reported Wednesday in Irvine, and police arrested one man believed responsible for one of the break-ins. 'risking injuries' None of the six burglaries, however, wa1 similar to the recent outbreak of lock box the eeoond day of the fast, u the ........ 1 .. ...1 • -'n said women camped in the Capitol .,_._..es, mv ....... atora · By BOB SPRINGER .An nt1tlll Pt-. ....., SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -A nutrition specialist warned today that seven women, including one from the Orange Coast, are risking permanent injury by feating in support of the F.qual Rights Amendment. 1'he Orange Coast woman among the seven planning a 44-day hunger strike to support the ERA was identified as Zoe Ann Ananda of Newport Beach. Fasting risks for the women pw each day they c:ontinue, warned Dr. Arthur Frank, the nutrition.lit. Frank said if t he women continue their f.ast arid survive, they still risk damage to their liven. hearts and mWICles. The women began their hunger strik~ Tuesday, vowing that unless the ERA is rattfied, they will reject all food unW June 30, the ratification deadline. "God, a Fre8ca. I'd give my righi ann for a Fre.ca," Dina Bachelor of Los A.ngelea said to Marr Barnes of Raleigh, N.C., on WORLD rotunda here. John A. Feccara, 27. of Orange was taken into custody at 3:30 p.m. by Officer Bob Milton, who answered a report of a suspicious subject in the University Park nei&hborhood, said Lt. Bob Lennert. "Well, I could go for a couple of 8Cf811lbled efJP. aome toast," said faster 'Son18 John9on, who was excommunicated f:rom. the Mormon Church in late 1979 after criticizin1 the church'• o~tion to the ~~. Mrs. Johnaon, of Sterling, Va., complained of feeling wen and at one point needed help in ri&1nC from a chair. "I had a dilflct.alt time getting up thia morning," she said. The 1u1pect wu arrested on suapldon of violating probation after off.icen dllcovered he was auTYinll narcotb paraphernalia, twhfch-11 prohibi ted b y his robetton terma, Lennert said. eccara hll prior' convictlom for Irvine~ he added. Later clMdm allo revealed that Mrs. Johll90n, who nonnally a pocbtf\ll of oolna the suspect weighs 120 pounds. fost three carried WM believed stolen In a pounds from her 5-foot--3 frame burglary of a home on Aspen in her first full day of ~ Tree Lane, he added. according to a aca.le at a nune 1 station at the Capitol. The other With the exception of that women loll one to three pounds. bt.qlary, the other five break-ins were reponed in neighborhoods Such weight km early in a c1oee to the intenec:tion of Culver starvation d iet i• uaual and Drive and Walnut Avenue. Thoee indicates water depletion, said burglaries were reported on Oval Frank, at.all ~ at Georp Road, Elluford and Majorca Wuhln1ton Unlveraity In avenues and Belvedere and W~ . Glenwood street.a. STATE NEWPORT FUER WITH EARHART ..t:... The late stunt flier Paul Mantz of Newport Beach is shown with aviatrix Amelia Earhart in 1936, pr1or to her ill-fated attempt to cross the Pacific. Mantz helped prepare her duaft. Aviatrix mystery was never solved Fifty years ago today, famed American aviatrix Amelia F.arhart took off on a flight across the Pacific and vanished forever in a mystery that her friend, the I · late stunt flier Paul Mana o( Newport Beach, attempted to 90lve. (Related story Page 83). Mantz had been an aviation comrade of Earhart's in the pioneering days of aviation. He got into the effort to solve her disappearance 22 years ago when a television n ewsman, diyi.ng off the island of Saipan, foUnd an old aircraft generator. Mantz was. asked to see if he could identify the generator as having come from Miss F.arhart's ·twin-engined Vega monoplane. The Newport Beach stunt pilot had helped prepare the F.arhart plane for her Pacific Qight in 1937, includlng installation of the generator. There was a long prevailing theory, never substantiated, that Miss Earhart crashed near the island of Saipan, was captured by the Japaneae, and later executed. Mantz turned over hia entire flying service, then located at • I Orange County. Airport. in an effort to 9CfUtiniz.e the aircraft generator and determine if it came from Earhart's plane. He did say later that the generator was identical to the type on the female aviator's craft. But he could never indicate positively that it was the same generator. The mystery was never solved. Mantz was killed in 1965 while flying a stunt in an unorthodox aircraft being used in filming of the movie, "Flight of the Phoenix." Noguchi hearing • LOS ANGELF.s (AP) -The Civil Service Commission scheduled a July 6 hearing on the suspension and demotion that haa fonner County C.oroner Thomas T. Noguchi performing routine autopsies at County-USC Medical Center. Noguchi'• attorney, Godfrey 1saaca. told the Commission Wednetday that h1a Japanese-born client ii a victim of racial prejudkle. INDEX Falwell Jeereliby ADMies hisurance ~laim easy SYDNSY, Auiltralia (AP) -The Rev. Jerry Falwell. ~ of America'a Mani Majodty, WM heckled~ bi• riahta aroup m•mc 1tleff th! "New South WaJee lti'al Majority.' Peaceful solution · ·rejected By TM A.11odated Presa Britain'• armada "has been the go-ahead for a aeries of and hit-and-run raida on lklanda," Britain'• domestic news agency aa.ld today aa Prime Minister. Marg-,ret Thatcher strongly indicated ahe haa given uf hope Qf negotiatln4r a peacefu eettlement wlt6 ~ Una.. ';'he British arip on the islanda wlll now be tightened 'quite steeply and quite quickly,' it wu being said tonight,'' the agency, Press A.uociatlon, aald, quoting government aourcea in London. The British Broadcasting C.orp. quoted a government source as saying: .. Thia 11 now a war of attrition. To be blunt, that means Argentine forces go on taking loaaes until they surrender their grip on the ialanda." The BBC reported the British would likely leb.e a bridgehead from which to operate Ranier vertical-takeoff jeta. . Ar g e n tiln e tr o o p s were reported braced for an invuion of the Falklands. Argentine diplomata in Buen08 Airea said they were ltill ready to negotiate but accuaed Mra. Thatcher of intransigence. With a British task force in the South Atlantic po'-ed to storm the-islands, Mrs. Thatcher told the House of Common• In London that British consideration of U.N. peace idea ~m "not close any military options." "We really cannot go on and on.~' she aald. "Someone baa to make a dedaioo, an u 1 1•.ent of the Atfentine junta. I believe that i we have any more negotiations, the results would be the same." (See FALKLANDS, Pace A%) Palm trees - targets for Irvine thieves You can lock up your jewelry and make a <;ar pretty tough to penetrate, but how can you protect a palm tree? Irvine residents are discovering that these popular yet expensive symbols of Southern California are increasingly in demand -by thieves. · Five palms, valued at $450 each, were reported stolen Wedne9day, according to . Irvine police. In each case, the - three -to-four-foot trees apparently w~taken at niaht by thieves w nply dug them out of yards or ped them from planters. Tbe trees ~ reported stolen from three homes, all in the northern ~ of Irvine. Such cues prompted one resident to call Wednesday seeking extra• police patrola in h er neighborhood to protect her pa1ma. I I I I l I f. I l I ·I Mu. Th1tch1r 11lct U wu lnconetlvablt" \h•t Ar1tntln• lll accept U .N . rtiary-01ner1J J1vltr Ptrt1 Cuellar'• ld111 for f1lkl1nd -.. 111U9 ~ blcaUN lt already rtjlc~ atmllar 1u11ut1ona J)t9YioUI \Ilka, She aald Ar11ntlna'1 clear atm u "procraetlnatJon and \lnutn1 occupation" of the di lt Invaded April 2. PreH A11ociatlon. Britain'• Uc newa aaency, reported • eep 1loom ... about the pect.t of avoiding war." and de Cuellar deteribed hl.J •ce plan H a "patient In naive care but aUll 8llve." ritiih Foreign Office s kesman Nicholas Fenn told rten in London th•t Pe~ Cuellar'• "ideaa" were para~ from the pubUc.tion of the British negotiating posit.ion today. Mrs. Thatcher's government said its peace prop()Sa} was given to Perez de Cuellar on Monday. The British said the Argent.Ines replied Wednesday and that the res~nse was "discouraging." "ln their ... 1ul\ud•, 'h• Araentin• 1ov1rnm.nt 1how9d that they had no ,...~ elWu' for democ.ratie prlndplli or for the rule of law. Brtwn •\Andi flnnly tor both," the docwnlnt utd. It aald At'ftntlna "waa not 11tklnl an aartement, but WU play£n1 for time in the ne1otl•tlon1 In the hope of holdln1 on to the fruit• of aR&re11lon with all th•t thla would Imply for the International rule of law." Britain'• i>r01)()1111 called for (l) a ceue--fl.re within 24 houn; (2) • phued withdr•wal of all aimed foius to at least 160 mllee from the Falkl.anda within two weeka; (3) •ppointment of an interim U.N. administrator who would function "in cooau}tation" wlth the ial•nders' legislative and executive councila, including two representatives of the small, reaident ArJentine population; and (4) talk.a on the long·tenn future of thi ia1anda, "without prejudgment of the outcome.'' FOUND DE.AD -Walter Casey Jonea, who roamed U.S. road• and preached carefree living on "The Tonight Show" was found dead Wednesday in hls mobile home at Congview, Wash. He was 110 veara old. H . kl , . ~1 d 5-car crash inc ey JnJJ uence halts traffic by bizarre thoughts' \ -'WASHINGTON (AP) -A psychiatrist testified today that J9hn W . Hinckley Jr. was a tormented man influenced by <bizarre thoughts" and t~anquilizers -"not the d"8bolical criminal waiting for tqe best moment" -when he s)lot President Reagan last year. Dr. David Michael Bear of Harvard Medical School resisted suggestions by a government pt'OIM!Cutor at Hinckley's trial in U1S. District Court that the defendant coldly plotted his every move on March 30, 1981 , when Reagan was shot while l~ving a Washington hotel. ,"He (Hinckley) showed up at the Hilton at 1:45 p.m. (about the titne Reagan amved). He didn't shoot him then. He waited, didn't he?" asked Assistant U.S . Attorney Roger M. Adelman in a rising voice ''He in tact delayed but this was not the calculated wait of • diabolical man," Bear replied. The psychiatrist said Hinckley did not shoot when Reagan 'ved at the hotel because his izarre thoughts were competing for attention." .Racing through Hlnckley's rrund at that moment were ideu of shooting -Reagan, committ.ing suicide, or travelina to Yale University to kill actress Jodie Foster and then take his life, Bear said. By the time Reagan reached the hotel, the psychlatrilt addP.d. the four five-millluam tablets of the tranquilizer ~alium which Hinckley had taken before he left his hotel room were at a peak in his bloodstream. "That ls not the diabolical criminal waiting for the best moment," Bear said. Hinckley sat without emotion at the defense table today, watching Bear discuss the defendant 's sta~ of mind during the shooting of Reagan and three men. He is charged in a 13-a>ont indictment with trying to assassinate the president and shooting the other three. Before the trial resumed, Hinckley joked with one of his lawyers and read a newspaper account of the trial session Wednesday. . . on freeway A van overturned in a five-vehicle crash on the San Diego Freeway in Huntington Beac h today, tying up all squthbound morning commuter traffic for about a half-hour. California Highway Patrolman Mike Briseno said the chain-reaction accident started when a car crossed two slow lanes after pulling onto the freeway at Edinger Avenue. That initiated the series of accidents, according to Briseno, who said the van driven by Lajuana Maria Edwards, 24, of Compton overturned when it was struck. She was taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital, complaining of back, ne<:k and lee injuries. The accident occurred at 6:45 a.m. Talks to begin KUWAIT {AP) -The first direct negotiations between Marxist South Yemen and pro-Western man will begin May 29 after 15 years of strained relatJons. the radical newspaper Al-Watan reported Wedneaday. Warmer days toastal Sunny 11ternoon1 today and tlday Highs 70 to 74 at beac:haa. 8 to 82 Inland Falt tonight a04lpt for lo.,. eoea"I clouds night lows SS to 62 Hight at eaehH on Friday 7S Inland -es Elaewhera lrom Point onc:apllon to the Mexican det and ou1 80 mllM UOht art~ ..ind• night and morning ou11, beco m i ng ... eat 10 l'r#eat 10 to 1s knots In the lternoon• today and fttday ttemoon wind ••-t to 3 feet •terly lwell 2 to 3 f... Nlgtlt nd morning low cloud• over thetn w1ter1 Mostly aunny ttemoona Thund9r1torm1 that heve raged OWi 1 WHk Ml'lt more llooc1a urlng aero•• N1btHk1 and kl1hom1 today. wHhlng out tlroada, ruining homn and owning cattle. Slit wuhtng down ftom th• ebruka htllsldes burlld llOfTll • In mud thr .. feel deec> Soaked aandbaga. flllld by ndtlda of 11oluntffrt, ringed M\CI buslneu.. In Pt1tt1 ter. Nit> .. • c:ommuntty of 370 out 100 mllH north.,.Ht ol Iha ~ of dead cowa -• tll'lg In Cfeekt r,... -· llrlpped by hlll 11'1<1 dens -• flattened lti aome Temperatures NATION Albany Atbuque Amarllto ASl>eYltle Atlanta Atlante: Cty Balllmore Sittings Blrmlnghm 81ematc:k 8olN Bolton Btownsvlle Buffalo But11ngton CUI* Cnetlltn SC Charls1n WV CllMttte NC Cheyenne cnic.oo Clndn~ti c.....eeand Clmbil SC Columt>u• Oat-ft Wth Oeylon o.n-Oee MolnM Ouluttl El Puo Fargo FlaQ9taH OrHt Fatts Hanford Htlen• Honolulu HOUiton tnelnaplia Jac:!len MS J9Ckll'lv11e K11111 City LU Vagas Little Aock loulaVllle Lubbodt Mime>'* Ml8ml ....... M~P NlliltWlla Newo.1elM Nft Y0111 Norfolk No.~ ()1(141 ~ OIMha Oftando PNledoflle HI Lo Pre. 82 80 43 87 48 90 S2 80 59 82 S9 86 82 8S 82 43 S4 48 .54 87 65 87 50 88 3.4 80 83 89 n 74 sa .09 79 60 91 70 42 .09 80 70 83 St 77 83 73 41 .01 80 88 82 59 82 80 . 13 80 80 82 82 .07 85 70 80 83 .04 78 47 82 63 &4 38 01 92 54 83 48 88 29 51 36 .2S 80 82 .03 55 39 .oe ae 1s &4 72 82 61 89 88 85 59 78 87 84 80 81 81 1.oe 85 85 91 83 13 69 .71 80 72 80 48 75 58 ... ee .12 to &4 75 17 M 18 80 ~ .11 13 59 .90 79 80 15 83 81 '3 Fronts: COid .,. W11m WW l'tlcMnlx t5 Ptttabutt. 78 Pttend. 69 Ptlll¥f, Or• 71 Rallilgtl 78 Reno 73 s..t Llk• 12 San Antonio 87 S..ttta &4 SN.-..port 85 Sioux Flhl 78 St loull 85 St P-Tempe 85 St Ste Marie 7S Spoil-87 SYTICUM 77 Toc>ek• 73 Tucson 91 Tulle ae Washington ... Wlc:Nt1 80 " 57 80 49 IM 40 41 71 49 89 58 17 &4 40 41 55 64 sa 71 IM 83 35 81 30 •5 .03 .50 .oa 92 90 ... 95 51 48 IS 1M 81 50 12 se ... 50 41 6e Santa M.,... Stoellton Thermal Uldlh S.1tow Big 8-' BlsllOI) C.tallne long 9eec:tl Monrovia Mt Wilton Newpor1 a..ch Onterto Palm Springs Sen kNtdlnO San Oabflel Sen JoM Senta Ane Santa Cru.t T lhOe V all9y Cllglty Edrr)onton Montrtel onewa Aeglnl Toronto VMCOUWI' Wlnnlpee CANADA 11 80 .. .. 13 16 75 88 72 97 51 :! 'Extended 4t 52 weather 74 89 98 85 81 85 87 72 82 70 69 78 93 80 78 82 73 75 13 .. 58 59 80 72 12 ,. ., 82 5t 51 32 43 S4 5e 51 42 55 58 83 57 55 4t 52 .... so SURF RIPIRT · SOUTHlAN CALlllO"NIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAi -rrlll blit IOIM .... nlgllt end 11rly morning low dolldl "°'10 tlle aoetl, HIQN In ~ .,... .. ,.,. "°"' 70 10 74 11 btldlll to Tt to N O\l9r lnflnd villey9. Moynllln r.-orl lllgft8tltoft. "°"''4810le. safety I Y DAVID ltUTZMANN Ofllle Dllr ........... 8outh•f'l California Ediaon Company offlcia1t were to meet today wleh hl1h unklna rJpreaen t1tlv11 of t h e U.S. Nuclear JWiulatory Con\mialion to defend l.alton11 lJnlt 1 roctor 'at San Onofre from aMtrtlona that it ml&ht not be earthquake .. , .. I A federal official aaid Wedneadey thia review of a utility-prepared aeiamk: anal)'lil ahowed there were 11 many M 800 modUlcaUona needed to inaure Hfe operation of the 14-year-old reactor. That official, Will lam T . RU11ell, head of the NCR'a office of systemic evalu•tlon, characterized the flnd.lnlP of the atud,y H showina there were "aianiflcant ~iamic deficiencies." Rowever, Edlaon otflclala inaiated that the aelamlc analylia wu being "misinterpreted" and that there waa no reHon to prevent them from returning the reactor to active duty following a 1eheduled shutdown earlier this year for maintenance work. "Our basic position 1-this: ~ the plant 1w1da, it la aafe (to operate)," Edlgon spokesman RUii Hawkes said. A contingent of utility officials flew to NRC headquartera In Bethesda, Md., Wednead.ay and were to meet with federal officials thla morning. Hawke said the group would tell the NRC that 436-mepwatt Unit 1 was built to exceed selmlic safety margins in effect in 1968 and has been upgraded over the past 10 years to guarantee its ufe operation. But Russell, who reviewed Edison's work on seismic safety, stated in a memo that the plant might not meet current federal safety standards. Hla memo stated that utility officials told the NRC staff th.at the plant, located three miles soyth of San Clemente. would need aa many as 800 modifications. The analysis did not involve newly built units 2 and 3 at San Onofre. Those l ,100-megawatt reactors received authorization for full power licensing last week. Critics of San Onofre have contended that neither Unit 1 nor the newly built $3.3 bllllon units are strong enough to 11afely withstand an earthquake. Hawkes indicated th.la morning that even though modifications may be required for Unit 1, they are not serious enough to warrant a shutdown of the plant. Hawkes said Unit 1, following nearly three months of maintenanee work, is ready to go back on line. 2 5 people hur t SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -At least 25 people were injured Wednesday when an electric trolley apparently lost its brakes. ; Heritage 'Park offers sw.imm'i ng Irvine reeJdenta who enjoy a quick dlp In a coot •wlmmln1 pool can take advanta1e of recreational 1wlmmlna offered aa of May 29 at the Herttaee Park .Aquatics Complex. The oomplex wlll be open for '* from 1 p.m. to 3:1~ p.m, Saturdav-and Sundayt. •University Hl&h School'• le'J'\ior clul will hold a .~.t 111enior awardl de9ert•r;l7 p.m. next Thul"lday to honor delervtn1 eta. members. The event in the achool nmnaaium at Cmnpus and· C'ulver drives in Irvine la , •Mar lly SI Lanlo of W~cllff.e Bible Tran1lators wi dlacusa her experiences ln Pa ua New Guitiea Sunday at 6 p .m . at Saddleback College North Campua \ Th n ~atnnCng June 18, the pool wUI be open dally for recreational awimmlna, aaJd Carole Lons, city community servicea 1upervlsor. Adml'9ion I• 50 centa for adulta and 25 cent.a for th<*! 17 years old or lesa or more th.an 56. lnt.enoed to recognize winners of echolarships, department awards and various other honors. Catby Clranna, student body pubhcity director, said some sort of banquet-type dessert will be .erved during the affair. auditorrwn m Irvine. Ms. Laszlo went to the island in January of 1969 to work among the Sepik-Iwan people. Sex class status eyed at Cal State C•l State Long Beach administrators were keepil\8 mum today on the fate of Pr6f. Barry Singer and his "Psychology of Sex" clfss that offered students homework credit for having homosexual. group or extramarital sex. While top university officials, such aa Cal State Lon11t Beach President Dr. Stephen Hotn, were not available to comment on the matter, a news conference wH scheduled to explain the univefsity's position on the unorthodox class. Meanwhile. Singer said Wedne1day he'll stop giving students credit for sexual relations. But he said he still will oUer students the option of doing homework assignments that consist of dressing in drag for a day and visiting gay bathhouses, gay ban and nud.iat colonies. His course la under review by a faculty committee commissioned by the dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Science. Singer said he decided to drop the sex participation homework op~n. after the committee raised obJeeUon.s. The clasa, and another -in a different department -called "Women and Their Bodies," has been the target of heated criticism by evangelical Christians in Long Beach. For the past two years, Singer has offered students 23 homework options. including experimentation with homosexual , group or extramarital sex. Students must get prior permission from him and must notify their partners and spouses they are doing it for homework. he said. "It can be a very powerf.ul growth and learning experience," Singer said. "The idea is not to go out and do some kinky things just to see what they're like, but to see a change in your behavior and your feelings." The students c hoose four homework assignments and write papers about them. Other options include visitinR divorce court and marriage enrichment groups. Members of fundamentalist groups who visited Singer's class an d the women 's class complai ned to university administrators and to state Sens. H.L. Richard.son, R-Arcadia, and Ollie Speraw. R-Loruz Beach. and to Assemblyman Dennis Brown. R-Long Beach Brown characterized a recommended book about lesbian sex for the women's class as "blatant filth" and said it was "totally inappropriate" for tax money to be u.d for such classes. But Singer said students are warned what to expect from his class before they enroll. Many students have said in course evaluations that the homework assignments were beneficial, he said. Oxford CIOth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers fine traditional sportswear for men. women and boys . .. Gity park . use lees . . / . raise new quest1ons Irvtn '• new teen.le park in BOmmer Canyon l1 a 1plendld addition to the city'• recreational fllCWtiee. But will lt cmt too much to UM? That laue wu railed by one cttiien when he discovered a propoeed contract caterer for the rustic park would charae a flat $1,000 uae fee for private and commerdal groupa. The park, purchaaed under a state bond issue, ii available on a rewrvation basis. It la located off Bonita Cany o n Road and surrounded by Irvine Company property. According to a proposed reservation and fee policy, city-sponsored and community groupe would pay a fee to the city based on type of group and number of people. CommUh.lty services staff had recommende d Park Ave nue Catering of Orange be awarded an interim contract, Utri>Ulh June of 1983, when comp.etlUve bid• would be taken by the .,-tty. tfnd•r the .,....ment, Park Avenue would provide equipment and site mafntenance. The buatnea wu aelected becaUM lt has worked at the park for 10 " years. The man who wu told by Park Avenue that hit small group would be charged $1,000 wanta the city to either run the park ltaelf or have competitive bids for the interim contract. The city now ls studying alternatives which could include total city management of the park, a contract with a private caterer or perhaps a joint relationship between the city and the caterer. Ultimately, Irvine officials must decide 11 the city will foot all, part or none of the bW for this new facility. And private use o( th~ park hinges in part, on that delicate decision. Layoffs reflect• times Only a few years ago, the idea that city Qf Irvine city of ficiala would be mulling over the need to lay off employees was about as alien as the need for redevelopment projects. Thi s great planned community was growing at a rapid clip and a more compelling need was to recruit the kind of worker who could keep the well-planned momentum going. That was before interest rates took off and the construction industry gradually slowed like rush-hour traffic. Today, Irvine is a growing city best described as temporarily donnant. And because the city's budget was traditionally tied to construction, the lack of building has meant a lac k of needed revenue. It also meant the workers so carefully recruited to assuage the city's growing pains no longer had enough work to stay busy. Thus, administrators a re speculatinJl today that up to 10 planners, engineers and inspectors may be laid off in July to keep the city's budget balanced. Although 10 may seem like a lot in a city where no one has ever been laid off, the number certainly sounds better than the 20 to 25 persons earlier projected to lose their jobs. But as city officials must admit, running a dty requires an accountability to the public, and in a case where a staff is overloaded with help, there is little recourse but to lay off some workers. If the need is there after closer examination , administrators and eventually City Council members should accept their responsibility to carry out the distasteful as well as their more gratifying tasks. But these workers, certainly some of the victims of ~· should be highest on priority USts to reclaim their jobs when the economy reawakel'l3. Invitation to thieves? . 'Lock boxes are the common denominator on 17 lrvine homes which have been burglarized in the past three week& In all 17 cases, police said t here were no signs of forced en try. They theorize the homes were entered via keys obtained from real estate lock boxes on the homes, all of which were up for sale. All loc k boxes on Irvine homes can be opened with a common master key available to all 700 memben of the Irvine Board of Realtors as well as to realty board rnemben from some other ci(les. Realtors, in turn, obtain their master bys directly • from the lock box manufacturers. What the thieves have been making off with 90 far is jewelry, things that can be stuffed in pockets so it'• difficult to tell if someone has removed property from a home they've entered. Last year at th.is time there was a similar rash of burglaries on Irvine homes wl&h loclt boxes. That thief wa•·~aught. Now , apparently, someone else has gotten into the bulbless. The Irvine Board of Realtors should either abandon use of lock boxes on their lilUngs or change the type of lock \.wed on current boxes and put a halt to this kind of thievery. Opinions expressed 1n the spac.e above are those ot the Daily Piiot. Otner views ex· pressed on this page are those ol their authors and artists. Re•der comment is invtt· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (7U ) 642·4321. L.M. Boyd/ Conquering fear Does It help any to know that the least fearful people tend to be the least imaginative, too? Students of the mind say fear is a mental hazard only to those who too soon cross their brtctaes. Whip \hat tendency to anllc- ipate, and you've got fear licked. they aver. Q . Not all fish have seven fins. do they? A.No,notall,justmoet. "Not all lmulated vacuum bottles work," writea a cl.lent "Every week- end durtna the football .eaton, my wife 1eall a bat.ch of mart.ln1a in such a jug and puta them ln the refrtaerator to cbll1 ovemtCht. It's l.AIUlllly hot ln the stadium the next af temoon, and 10 are the martini.-, alway1. Woflblmt" Still at the Nme room te~~._.re aa when bo&tled, you •)'1-iP.IW'lY aood Jua. financial help In t heir love lives ap- pears to be rising, ~h it's not yet equal to the number of women who do so. Thirteen out of every 100 bridegrooms were said to do that thing when matriJlM)nlal rewarchera Investigated the ma~ some years ago. However, our Love and War man suggests more women work on vestigated the matter some yean ago. However, our Love and War man auggea&a more women work on pay- payroll pm now, ao that 13-pen:ent figure ls no doubt too low. In the U.S. Conare-of 88 years ago were eight men named Geora• Waahinaun At leut 160 motion pictures have shown ihe Empire State Bulldln1 somewhere in the foo~e. Q. Who•• the rtcheft man ever to lle!W • U.8. Prelident? A. Lyndbft JohNOn. R'!portedly Worth fl4:niUJ.loin When he u:aeded John r . KauMdy. Tax plans for nuclear age WASHINGTON -If you sh ould survive a nuclear holocaust, you might thlnkJou'd de.erve a brief retplte from feder texas as you wait for the dust to setUe. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury has already begun plotting to remove even this tin)' silver lining from the mushroom-shaped clouds of nuclear conflict. C.O~ doomsday. tax collectors will have a hand in the pockets of the survivors. Some of the paperwork has already been completed; lt'1 titled "Design of an Fmergency Tax System." THE AUTHOR OF this remarkable document is Gary Robbins, a senior 1 official in the Treasury under'9eCf'etary's office. He coru:edea there will be some worriaome problems facing th.e Internal Revenue Service as it sets about putting the arm on dazed, cUat.rauaht 1WV1von of a nuclear attack. For example, "th.e income tax system Is extremely vulnerable to lo11ea of records of transactlon1," the memo cautions. ''These records are required iJ) order to d etermine the base for tax at any period of time." ln other words, if a hardy taxpayer should make it safely to the fallout s he lter but the employer's payroll records were Incinerated, how would he get accurate W-2 forms to submit with the 1040 Of\ April l~'! ''The nece1181')' lnfonnation would not be available for preparing of tax returns -__ G. JICI lllEISDI ~ and determining tax liability," the Treasury memo concedes. "Further, the lnt.emal Revmue Service would find 1t lmpoesible to verify the necessary figures in audit situations." In this bureaucratic nightmare, It might be thought t.he tax collectors would limply throw up their hands In despair. But no one ever got rich underestimating the bulldog tenacity of a tederaJ bagman. Despite the basic liurvtval problems of the unincinerated, the IRS agents still on their feet could presumably be sununoned to duty by the Treasury. "If sufficient damage Is done" to the continental United States. the Treasury memo acknowledges, "the tax system itself may have to be changed." But Treasury has a solution ready. "INSTEAD OF an income tax, one could design a general sales tax which would raise the revenues required," Robbins suggests A pomt-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of easy collcctton by the IRS and encouragement of savings "to aid in r ebu1ld1ng th e capt tal stock," he explains The author has even figured out how big a sales tax would be needed: "The general sales tax on final sales would have to be approximately 20 percent•in order to replace the current individual and corporate income taxes, Social Security taxes, a nd estate and gift taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the Treasury document might be a tongue-in-cheek exercise, my as.90e1ate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocaust tax-collect1on plan a couple of years ago. It was qui te serious. he said. T-eacher retirement less than rosy To the Editor: P .S. Wills (Mailbox. May 6) is not fully In formed regarding the Public Employees Retirement System pension fund. Teachera do npt contribute to PERS. They have a separate fund (State Teac.hen Retirement System). The PERS has allowed the governor to Invest their funds. As a result, retired MAILBOX atate employees (gardeners, cafeteria workera, secretaries etc.) get cost-of-living raises, paid medical and dental care and are not discrlminated in retirement payments by sex (femstle teachers pay more into STRF and receive less). California State Teachers Retirement Fund has not, as yet, been allowed out as an investment. Consequently, the teachers pay their own medical and dental insurance, get a 2 percent a year raise and are 90 percent old women! THE PERS IS made up of 80 percent men. Men make our laws, handle our money and criticize our work, even our votes. . A. a life member of CT A I defend our right to endorse a candidate, though I personally s hall do my own decision-making. If our schools are not doing a satisfactory job, ln the eyes of many, perhaps parents should get out of the schools and go back to lettlna the educators ru.n them. Or, better yet, find out more about your adminlatraton. How many parents know what your district superintendent 11 being paid'! How he ia choeen. and by whom? How ii )'Our county superintendent chosen? How many county and at.ate au~ vtalt your me.hoot and ~ on the quality of work teachen are dotna? In 12 years my retirement baa Increased $130.94 a month. My husband'• Social Secwity n. incruad 300 percent. Teachers do not have Sodal SecWity. MALl8SA B. McMANUS money s urel y we o ught to have something in retUt't). I can't walk to the bus 80 I have to rely on them but I think they should be checked into. give us better service and be more polite to us. They're s o c urt. 1 know it's a wonderful service but not if your nerves are on edge from waiting and standing until your back is broken. I wish you would look lnto it M.A. PAXTON TELEPHONE YOUR '1 LETTER TO THE EDIT6R See instructions below Sea treaty To the Editor: Regarding the R eag an a d - ministration's complaints about the technology transfer, preferential access to mining sit.es for pioneenng firms, and council make-up provisions of the United Nations Law of th e Sea Trea t y ("Support sea law aims," editorial, May 9), It should be noted that: 1. "Minlng companies already accept requirements for operating in Third World countries that are no more onerous than the ones in the pending treaty. These include ... transfers of technology . . . " (Christian Science Monitor, March 10). 2. As mining a seabed site ~uld cost $1 billion, it would seem unlikely that any compa ny ot\ler than the f i ve international consortia' (Kennecott, Ocean Mining Associates, Ocean Minerals, Ocean Management, and Afernod) would have the resources or i.ncllnatlon to engage in it. 3. Decisions will require either a two-thirds or a consensus depending on the lMue, thus affording "more of a voice in the govemlna cound1 for nations moat affected by .. bed authority declaiona." JOHN W. OSBORN, JR. Prftldent, Orange C.O. Chap .. United Nations Allodation of the U.S.A. Voter lists To~ Ed111or: • Now that th• sample ballo&a for the upcornln& election ~appearing in the mall boXi I wooder U ft ~t be a ~ dme to do just a short foUow·up afUde about the problem all of Orange County citizens could be of great help to the , Reidattar of Voters. We are currenUy awash with names on the voters lists of former citizens who are no longer with us. The attrition rate is quite high, in my opinion. People have either moved away, without leaving a correct forwarding address -and, sadJy, In some cases the voter has passed away, and the Registrar of Vote rs 1s still carrying their names on the voter lists. Will you please inform your readers once more that there are prescribed legal procedures to remove those names from the voters lists. and the cooperation of the citizens is greatly nee d e d to accomphsh thlS? HELEN McPHERSON Look at Poland To the F.ditor: Did you watch the n otmg in Poland on television a nd did you realize what .it was you were seeing? What you saw was a bunch of angry people who like Hunganans have been led into slavery and have nothing to fight back with but words. sticks and stones and empty stomachs. Their mas- ters have seen to that -have take n away their firearms -and when that happens kiss freedom goodbye. In the forthcoming election this year the re is a firearm control bill on the ballot. This Is the first step towards ta- king/our freedom away . Only a fool woul vote for It. WARREN G. ALTHOFF Happy runner To the F.ditor: I would like to thank the promoters of the recent "Around the Bay in May" run. I bellew Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar get good "city exJ>09ure" and that nothing but good thtno can rome from such an endeavor. The lfewport &ac.h police did a good job with traffic control as well. Hope to participate in many more! JOSEPH R. GROTHUS • • s Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to-the-minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come in ~nd make a savvy investment on the clothes sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of rose, cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig . $128, sale $95.99. Skirt, orig . $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V.1.P. Sportswear, 3/147; Robinson's Sweaters, 1; ·Robinson's Pacesetter, 80. To order, call toll-free 1·800·345·8501. • I I . I I ... a tr NEWPORTER JOINS FAST -Zoe Ann Ananda of Newpcirt Bach (right), stands at rotunda of IlUnoia state capitol dwina fasting atrlb to support ERA. Others are Sonia JohDIOll o1 Virginia (left) and Dina Bachelor of Los A\ngeles. 7 w-omen f asters 'risking injuries' By BOB SPRINGER A1111l111il ,.._. .,,.._ SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -A nutrition spedallst warned today that seven women, including one from the Orange Coast, are rlskln~ permanent injur_}' by fasting ln support of the Equal Riabta Amendment. The Orange Coast woman among the seven planning a 44-<lay hun&er strike to support · the ERA was identified as l.oe Ann Ananda of Newport Beach. Fating rtaka for the women gtt1W eech •Jay they continue, warned Dr. ArthW' Frank. the nutridon.lat. Frank said if the women cic-.tinue their fast and survive, they still rlak ~ to their llwn. hearts and muscles. The women began their huneer strike Tue8day, vowing that unless the ERA la ratified, they will reject all food until June 30, the ratification deadline. "God, a Fre.ca. rd give m)' right arm for a Fn!9ca," Dina Bachelor of Loe Angeles said to Marr Barne. of Raleigh, N.C., on WORLD the second day of the tut, as the women camped in the Capitol rotunda here. "Well, I could go for a couple of .::rambled eggs. 90IJle tout," sai4 faster Sonia Joh.mon, who wu excommunicated from the Mormon Church in late 1971 after criticizing the church'• opposition to the ERA Mn. Johmon. of Sterlina, VL, complained of feelinc weai and at one point needed help in rtatna from a chair. "I had a difficult time &etting up thia morntna." she said. Mrs. Johnaon, who normally weighs 120 pounda, lost three pounda from her 5-foot-3 frame in her first full day of ~· accordlng to a acale at a nune a atation at the Capitol 11>e other women w.t one to three pounds. Such weight W. early ln a starvation diet I• uaual and indicatet water depletion. aald Frank. staff stoctor at Geoc-p Waahlnaton University In WaafunctOn. Falwell jeered hy Auaies · • SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -The Re\r. Jerry Falwell, 1Mc1e1' of America'• Moftl llQlrt~. w• becklecl today by a rtahta ll"OU,P ,..™:Dc iileff -the "New South WU. Mcral Majority. NATION Newport man held· . de8th A 38-year-old Newport Be.ch bu1lne11man waa arreated outside hla home WedQeeday in connec:tlon with a m""'9r poUce detectives allep he oommltted 10 , ~~on the outlldrta of Police uid the man, J .... Lee Crummel, WU aurpriled when . offlcen flaued down hia car near hla Newport en.t home just before noon, fnformed him of the arrest warrant and booked him on murder charles. • Crummel, wno police claim also uses the name Jimi Lee Sa'!•• la being held ln Onnaie CoUnty .Jail in lieu of $200,000 bail. Police in Tue.on uid Cnunmel ls being char1ed with the strangulation alaylng of 9-year-old Frank Howard ClaW8on Who9e body WU found beneath a meaquite ~ on Feb. 6, 1967. Set-Dan Abbate of the Pima County Sherlffa Department in Tualon said today that there'• never been a clear motive establlahed in the killing. He said Crummel had been considered a auapect in 1967 but that the man, 23 at the time, left town shortly after the murder and WM later arrested Oil child mo&N&adon chara-in Wilooalln and .menced to a Pl'i9orl term.\ Abbate aaid the murder ln~Uon was put "on the Abbate said bt. department obtafned a warrant for Crummel's a.rreat on Tueeclay and moved into Newport 8-dl. Police aald Crummel, who reportedly hu been llvin& in Newport for aeveral yeara, recendy had been employed u a busineu manager for a local physician. Officers said Crummel likely will be arralped early next week. It la uncleer, they said, whether he wt11 fight extradition to Arirona. Burn victim still critical An 83-yar-old Newport Be.ch woman. bumed when fire swept throuah her Kinp BoMi bouR late fast week, remained in critical cmditlon toct.y at the UCI Medical C.enter bum unit. Flremen aa1d the woman. Ruth Jones, la an Invalid and waa unable to eteape the blue under her own power. The woman'• prtvata nur., fire flOten aid. carried her fJaD the lire. The blaze ln the two-atory blufftop houae at 1411 Kin11 Road started when a beat luD~ tipped over on the woman a body. 0umae to the boule WM estimated at '100,000. 25 people hurt . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -At least 25 ~pie were injured Wednesday when an electric trolley apparently Jost lt. bnkea. STATE Aviatrix mystery was never , , Fifty years aao today. famed American avlatrix AmeUJ l'Mhart took off on a flight~ the Pacific a.nd vanished forever ln a mystery that her friend, the late stunt flier Paul Mana of Newport Beach, attempted to IOlve. (Related story Page 83). Mantz Md been an aviation comrade of Earhart'• in the pioneering days of aviation. He aot into the effort to IOlve her dbappearance 22 years ago when a televlalon newsman, dlylna off the l8laJld of Seiprm. f.ciand" an old ai.rcraft eenera•. Manti WM· asked to tee if he could identify the pnerator .. bavtna come from M1ll Earhart'• ~Vega fDmlOPlane. '!be !fewpon Beach stunt pilot had helped prepare the Earhart plane f« her Pacific fiigbt in 193?, lncludlnc lnlltallation of the generator. There WM a 0,, prevaiJina thdory, never tut.taDUated, that Mill Earhart cnlhed near the ia1and of Saiprm. WU captured by the Japane.e, and later executed. Manti turned over hla entire 6ylnf eervkle, then located at solved Orange County Airport, ln an effort to llCI'Utinize ·the aircraft generator and determine if it came from Earhart's plane. He did say later that the generator wu identical to the type on the female aviator's craft. Bl.It he could never indicate positively that it was the same aenerator. 'tile mystery was never solved. Mantz -waa killed ln 196~ while flylnc a stunt in an unorthodox aircraft being used ln filming of the movie, "Flight of the Phoenix." Noguchi bearing LOS ANGELES iAP) -The Civil Service <J!mmiuion 1eheduled a July 6 hearing on the auspemion and demotion ihat haa former County Coroner 'Thomaa T . Noguchi perfonninl routine autop1lea at ·county-USC t4edical Center. Nogµchi 's attorney, Godfrey laaaca, told the aomm1llion Wednelday that hla Japaneee-bom client ia a victim of radal prejudice,. INDEX Peaceful solutiOn . rejected 87 ne AllOdated Presa Britain's armada "has been given the go-ahead for a eeria of landings and hit-and-run raida on the Falklands," Britain'• domefltic news qency said today as Prime Minister. Mar caret Thatcher strongly indicated she has given ur hope of nesotlalliur a peacefu settlement wlt6 Ar~entina. ' The British grll? on the islands will now be tightened 'qu.ite ateeply and quite quickly,' it wu being said tonight," the agency, Press Association, said, quoting government sources in London. The British Broadcasting' Corp. quoted a government source as saying: "This is now a war of attrition. To be blunt. that means Argentine forces go on taking losses until they surrender their grip on the islands." The BBC reported the British would likely aeize a bridgehead from which to operate Harrier vertical-takeoff jets. Argentine troo ps were reported braced for an invasion of the Falklands. Argentine dit>lomats in Buenos Aires said they were still ready to negotiate but accused Mrs. Thatcher of Intransigence. .. With a British task f on::e In the South Atlantic poised to storm the islands, Mn. Thatcher told the House of Commons in London that Brittah consideration of U.N. pe.ce ideas (he FALltl;ANDS, Page A!) · Jury selects gas chamber for cop killer A Supe rio r Court jury r ecomme nde d today that convicted police killer Gordon Ltt Mink die in the gaa chamber for the June 1980 slaying of Garden Grove police officer Donald Reed. Mink, 32, smiled slightly as the six-man, six-woman O range County jury returned with its decision this morning. The long-haired and bearded d_efendant is to return to court June 11 for forma l sentence proceedings. Mink w as convi c t e d of first-degree murder for Reed's slaying outside a Garden Grove tavern two years ago. He also was convicted of wounding two other officers and tWo bystanden in the Cripple Creek Saloon. "It is a well-deaer:ved verdict for Mr. Mink,'' proeecut.or Bryan Brown said today. "I can't think of anyone who is more de9ef'Vinl than Mr. Mink." Defense Attorney Daye Shinn said his client was not aurpriled by the death penalty recommendation. Also reacting to the verdict was Linda Reed, Officer Reed'• widow, who tearfully told reporters that Mink "definitely got what he deserved." 82 82 C8-9 C6-7 J I . I • r I . ' .. ALKLANDS IN:V ASION ll1 "not cloH any mllttary t.lona.'' 11W• really cannot 10 on and ," 1he Mld. "Someone hu to a~. an ••mnent of • Arfentlnt junta, I belleve at I we have any more U.Uona. th• results would bt Mme.'' ldra. Thatcher uld il waa • co~lvable" that Araentlna Hl accept U .N . tary.CJeneral Javier Perez CueUar•a ideu for .Falkland ._.noa ~ ~uae It al.ready rejected tlmllar suueationa prevtoua talka. Stit ..td Allentina'• cltet a1m wu ••procrautnuton and contlnulnc·occu_paUon" of th• talandl It mw.dld April 2. Pr•11 Auoelatlon, Btltaln'• domelUc ntWI ~. reponid, ••deep 1loom ... about the proepectl of avoldlna war," and Perea de Cuellar dilcttt.d ht. peace plan •• • ... patient In Intensive care but 1Ull allve.11 British Forel1n Office apokesman Nk:holu Fenn I.Old reporters in London that Pera de Cuellar'• "ldea1" werct ~parate from the publlcation of the Britlah ne1ouaUna pc.tt.lon today. iille-share condo restrictions eyed By STEVE MARBLE ot:IMDelJNettuff Newport Beach officials are puahlng for restrictions on time-share condominium setups, the so-called "inflation-proof vacation" that developers so far have been uns uccessf ul in bringing to the beach city. Tfie -proposed law to be considered by the city planning cornmiaaion tonight, would block bUildera from converting hotels, n'iot.els or apartment complexe to # ., 'Paradise' ad ban rejected LOS ANGELES (AP) -A fePeral judge haa refused to issue a ,restraining order against use of aQ advertisement for the movie "Paradise" that producers of "The Blue Lagoon" contend retembJes an ad for their motion picture. 1U.S. District Judge David V. Kenyon denied the request of Columbia Pictures Wednesday \lidthout issuing a written order, b~t still has before him a request by Columbia for an injunction that would bar f urther distribution of "Paradise. · Columbia, in it$ copyright suit against producers and dlitributors of "Paradise," alleges that it borrows heavily and unlawfully from "The Blue Lagoon." F.ach picture, Columbia saia, tells the story "of coming of age and sexual awakening of a blond, curly haired boy and a k-haired gir 1. lSOlated in an Uic eetting.'' time-aha.re arranaementa. In La1una Beach,. one of the few Orange Coalt ciaee to allow time-ahare ~exes, the altn have been f mot.ell. The propoae Newport law also would give city offlciala conaiderable leeway on whether llme~ahare owners should be permitted to swap Ume with other time-share ownen ln other parts of the world. The auggeated law, thou1b, could cttir the way for a plan to con1truct a tlme-ahare facility along tree-lined Via Lido. There has been conalderabJe opposition to the Via Lido project, which would be built where a waterfront office now stands. The time-share uranaement allows people to buy a stretch of time, usually a week, ln a condominium. Each unit often will have 52 ownera who take turns using the place. . The popularity of the system. though, la that ownen can swap.- time with time-ahare ownen from other areas. The result ii a vacation in Palm SpringJ, Hawaii or Europe. Ken Deltno , Newport executive assistant dty manager, said the city's concern with the time-share system ii that it could bring ln a tranaient population that h.u little regard for the dty. Dellno said llmltfns the ability to swap time cnuld insure that Newport end.a up with a group of time-ahare ownen who develop a respect for the dty. "Sort of like you bad in 'On Golden Pond'," Delino suggested. ''You would have individuals returning to Newport each yev." FOUND DEAD -Walter Caeey Jones, who roamed U.S . roads and preached carefree· living on •'The To.niaht Show" waa found dead Wednesday in hil mobile ·home at Longview, Waah. He was 110 Yeart"<>ld. .Hinckley 'no diabolical criminal' . WASHINGTON (AP) -A p1ych1atr11t ieattded today that John W. Hinckley Jr. waa a tormented man Influenced by "bizarre thought•'' and tranquilizers -"qot the dlabollcal criminal waltln& for the beat moment" -when he lhot Praident Reagan lut year. Dr. David Mlcliael Bear of Harvard Medt.cal School resisted 1u1gettion1 ~y a _covernment proeecutor at ~y'a trial ln U.S. Dlatrict Court that the defendant coldly plotted his every move on March 30, 1981, when Reaaan waa •hot while leavi.na a WuhJ.niUm hot.el. ''He (Hinckley) lhowed up at the Hilton at 1:40 p.m. (about the time Reagan arrived). He didn't shoot him then. He waited, didn't he?" asked AHlltant U .S . Aitcmey Roger M. Adelman in a rillJ\8 Voice. I • "He 1n tact delayed but this waa not the calculated Wait of a diabolical man," Bear replied. The psychiatriat aald Hlnpdey did not shoot when Reagan arrived at the hotel because his "bizarre thou1hts were competing for at~tJon." Warmer daY.S Temperatures ~lda~~f« 7p.m. EST "-"'B anowmJ NATION • ¥ .. ......... F1uMet Coastal "' Lo Pre. 4D Albany 82 eo .43 Sunny •fternoon• tod•y end Atbuque 87 48 Am•ritto 90 52 Frlc:l•y Hight 70 to 74 It beacha. AlheY\tle eo 511 711 to 112 lnl•nd F•tr tonight All911t• 82 511 eac;ept for low cout•t cloud• AtlllntC Cty 6e 112 Overnight loM 55 to 112 Hlghl •t Bal11tno<e 85 112 43 t>e•ch .. on Frld•y 75 lnl•nd 8illng9 54 48 54 •-as. 8lrmlnghm 87 115 El1e"'her•, from Point Bltm•ck 117 50 Conception to the M•xlc•n 8olM ee 34 bofder and out 80 mite.. ~t Boston 80 183 \Wl•ble wtnd• night •nd mOf no Brown1111te 811 77 houra, becoming "'••I to Buff•lo 74 58 .09 touti-t 10 to 15 knot• In the Burttngton 711 80 .111 :::ti w.._ S....C. IO •fl•rnoon1 lod•y •nd Frtd•y CMP« 70 42 .09 HO US Oeci4 OI C-.t t Ahemoon wind "'.,,.. 1 to 3 t .. t Ch91'9tn SC llO 70 Frontt: Cold .. Wflm ,,.. Occluded .,. W..terty IMlt 2 to 3 f .. t Night ChMl91n WV 83 59 StatiOnary •• •nd morning tow ctoudt over CNlntte NC 77 83 eouthe<n w•ter1. Mo1t1y 1unny ~ 73 41 .01 Pnoenla 95 118 Sllnt• M911• ..,.,_ Chago llO aa Plttlburt 71 57 .35 74 ClnciN\911 82 59 Pllllnd. • 80 8 1 Stodnon It 58 U.S. summary CleYel.nd 82 80 .13 Thern\11 N Clmb19 SC 90 eo Ptillnd,°'9 71 411 Ukllltt 85 Columbul 82 112 .07 =gh 78 14 .30 B•1tow 117 se Thunderttormt th•t hlMI rll09d O.l·FI Wth 85 70 73 40 Big BMr 85 32 owr • wMlt Mnt mor• floodt Oeyton rt-:: .04 S.it Ulil• 82 41 .45 911ho9 43 o.-rlllil •croe1 NebrHh •nd 0.-~Antonio a7 71 c.tallna 117 64 kllhom• tod•y. wHhtng out o..~ 82 83 S..ttte 14 411 Long Bellctl 12 58 •llro•d•. ruining homH •nd Dtlluth 14 38 .01 ~-wr.: 85 st Moov0¥ill 82 58 owning C9ttlll Et Puo 92 54 71 51 Ml W'Mon 70 42 Sitt wHhtnJ down from the hr go 83 4e 81 L.oull 15 87 Newport 9eKtl ee 55 •btUll• hRt dee burled ~ F\9Qlat•ff ee 29 St P-TlfnPll 15 14 On1erio 71 58 tn mud !hr ...... deep 0r .. 1F• 51 38 .21 St Ste M.n. 75 40 03 Palm Sc>rtng9 93 83 So•k•d Hndb•g•. flll•d by H.nfof d 80 112 .03 8pok9t1tt 87 41 SM Bemetdlno 80 57 undred• of volunlffn. ringed H-.n. 55 38 .oe Syr9CUM 11 55 .50 SM Glbrtel 78 55 and ~ In Pl•tte Honolulu ee 75 Topeh 73 14 S....JOM 12 411 •• N9t>., • CO!\'lfl'IUnl!y of 370 Houlton 84 72 Tucaon 111 58 SMta An• '73 52 bout 100 mllH northwHI of Ind,,..,.. 82 81 TulM .. 71 .08 S•U• Crui 75 411 Jecken M8 at ae I WUhlngton 84 14 .t2 Ttlhc>e V911ey 83 30 Jadl-"9 85 59 Wlchlt• 90 83 Kana City 78 87 CAii~ La Vega 84 80 BPettfleld 90 ... CANADA Utile Rodi 81 111 1.oe !llythe " .. ... ~ as as C.iottrY 58 37 Lubbodl 91 &3 Euf•• 58 48 Edmonton 511 41 ~ 13 • . 71 Fr-85 54 MonlTMI IO 51 Mleml IO 72 ~ 81 50 Otl9w9 12 •• ......... 80 48 L.09Mgelet 72 &9 AeglN 82 eo Mom.It)' 04 Mptr,..9'.P 76 lie Neecltll ,, Toronto ll 52 ........... ... .. .ta OllkllnO 80 IO Vancower .. .... ~ to 84 Winnipeg 82 47 NewYOftt ,79 17 ,_~ .. ... ~ .. . Aed lluff .. lie No. P9lt19 ao 53 "9dWooCI City . 13 11 .11 t::*'to 15 62 Extended Ollla Cffy ~~= .to omni 7S 46 Ottendo 18 13 Sen Olego .. to Ptllledoflll 11 13 San Fl'Wldeoo 72 .. weather SMtl IMblra 17 62 IOUTHERN OALl,ORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AMA.9 -F• but *M .... nlotit •lfd Hrly mornlnt tow --~ .,,. ooell .......... COMlef ........ '-:1: trol'll 10 td 74 at .,...... ~ to .. OOlitr lnlMCI v'::'r. lain rMOft Nofleeeto •. LOM .. tok ' lb olvm IUJTZMANN or. ........... Southern Callfornla Edlaon Company offldaJI....,.. to meet today with hlah rankln1 rtprtHntaUVH of tbt U .S~ Nuc:1-r Rffulatory Comm1111on to cWend r.a&.oft11 Un.lt 1 reactor at San Onofre from ueertlona that It mJ,aht not bt e.rthquake eafe. l_ A federal official uld Wedneaday thl1 review of a utility·~ lela'nlc anal~ ahowed there were u many u 800 modUlcatlona needed to ln1ure Hfe operation of the 14-year-old reaetor. That official. William T . Ruaell, head of the NCR'1 office of 1ystem\c evaluation, characterized the flndinp of the atudy aa 1howin1 there were "1Jgniflcant sellmk deficfenciee.11 However, Edison officials lnal1ted that the aelamic analysis was being 0 miaint.erpreted" and that ther1 waa no reason i-o prevent thern from ret the reactor to active duty follow a 1eheduled lhutdown earlier t year for maintenance work. "Our basic poei lion Is trua: As the plant stand.a, it ii safe (to operate)," Edison spokesman Rua Hawkes said. A contingent of utility offida.ls flew to N'RC headquarters In Bethesda, Md., Wedneaday and were to meet with federal officials this mom.Ing. Hawkes said the group would tell the NRC that 436-megawitt Unit 1 waa built to exceed seismic safety margins ln eff«t In 1968 and has been upgraded over the put 10 years to guarantee its safe operation. • But Russell, who reviewed Edlaon'1 work on aelamic aafety, stated in a memo that the plant might not meet current federal safety standard•. His memo stated that utility officials told the NRC staff that the plant, located three miles BOUtb of San Clemente, would need aa many as 800 modifications. The analyeis did not involve newly built units 2 and 3 at San Onofre. Those 1,100-mE"gawatt reactors received authorization for full power licenaing last week. Critics of San Onofre have contended that neither Unit l nor the newly built $3.3 blllion units are 1tron1 enoush to i.afely withstand an earthquake. Hawkes indicated th.la morning that even though modifications may be required for Unit 1, they are not serious enough to warrant a shutdown of the plant. Talks to begin KUW AlT (AP) -The tlrst direct n egotiation• between Marxist South Yemen and ' pro-Western man will begin May 29 aft.er 15 ye1trs of 1trained ·relations, the rad1cal newspaper Al-Watan reported Wednesday. Llndberah. Schoo! in Cotta Me. will celebrate tw &0th annlvernry with a family r.lcnlc at the 1ehool Saturday rom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. All current and for{Tler 1tudent1 and ataff members and their tamilJel are Invited. The C;f'TIPUI it located at 23rd and~ Avenue in F.ut Cotta Mesa; •AU former and current atudenta at Newport-MeH Evenln1 Hlah School are Invited to the school'• last reunJon tonilht at TeWlnkle Park ln Coeta Me... A barbeque wW belin at 4 •Newport Beach'• Walter GerlkeD, chairman of the board of Pacific Mutual Life Inaura.nce Company, will be honored at a dinner Saturday hosted by the Mardan Center of F.ducatjonal Therapy. Tickets for the Newport Marriott Hotel dinner are tUO. Proceeda benefit the education cent.er. Gerken is a trult.ee of the American College, Orang~ The event alto wtU lffVe u a farewell to the achoo) which haa been 1ehedu1.F_d .0 cloae thla 1ummer. 'Ille plcnJc will feature family lametl In the atyle of an old-time 1ehool c arnival. Fi.mllle1 are welcome to bring their own lunchea. For more information contact Steve Leeper at 646-3492. p.m . near the park'• rear bueball diamond. Ticketa are $2.50 in advance and $3 at the f'Vent. For more information call 0~-3334. County Muaic Center and chairman of the board of trustees for Occidental College. He also ls on the board of governors of the California Community Foundation, co-chairman of the Orange County Tran.sporUition Coalition and president of the Chancellor's Club at UCI. For further information or reservations. call 64~-4437. Sex class status eyed at Cal State Cal State Loni Bea~h adminiatratora were keeping mum today on the fate of Prof. Barry Sin,er and his '1P1ychology o Sex" class that offered student• homework credit for havln1 homosexual, group or extramarital tex. While top university officials, such 11 Cal State J,..on~ Beach Preatdent Dr. Stephen Horn, were not available to comment on the matter, a news conference was 1cheduled to explain the university's poaltlon on the unorthodox cl.aaa. Meanwhile, Singer said Wedneaday he'll atop giving students credit for sexual relations. But he said he still will offer students the option of doing homework a11ignme1'ts that conabt of dreasing in dras fQr a day and viaiting gay bathhouses, PY ban and n\Jdiat colonies. Hia coune is under review by a faculty committee commissioned by the dean of the S chool of Social and Behavioral Science. Singer aaid he decided to drop the sex participation homework op~on after the committee raised obleCtlons. The class. and another -in a different department -called "Women and Their Bodies," has been the target of heated criticism by evangelical Chrlstiam in Long Beach. For the past two years, Singer has offered students 23 homewc;>rk options, including ex p erimen tat ion with homosexual, group or extramarital sex. Students must get prior permission from him and must notify their partner• and spouses they are doing it for homework. he said. "It can be a very powerful growth and learning experience," Singer said. "The idea is not to go out and do some kinky thinp just to see what they're like, but to see a change in your behavior and your feelings." The students choose four homework assignments and write papers about them. Other options include visiting divorce court and marriage enrichment groups. Oxfordaoth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally created by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and stiJJ remains a tradition today. Available In blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender. and yellow stripings. A stort that offtrsfint rroditional sportswear for men, ' womtn and boys. I I I t I on . After waltlna lon11r than nearly all thtlr Oranp County nelahbora, Cotta Meu retJdentl could finally be tunJna ln to a cable communJcationa ayatem by 1984, accordlna to a consultant hired by tho clty. . Bld1 probably won't b4' accepted until next apring. In the meantime, the city has a lot of work to do. In addition to .electing a cable firm the council a1ao muat decide if it wanta \o pursue a jolnt venture, in.st.all underground cable lines, and offer 52 or 108 channels. The city al10 must decide whMher or not to ·appoint a citiJens' committee to help decide on a number of policy issues. Ron Dyas, the consultant hired by the city, has told the council that a cltl:.ena' committee cou,ld tlow the ~ doWD ti monthl. He'a opPallcl to the klea. But couQailman Ed McFarland wantl to .. a dtl..na' committee •tabUJ.hed. He railed the luue qaln during a council meetina thil week. CoUncUman Donn Hall ..Sd he would like to tee a convnitt.ee hold a 1peclal one-day hearing.° That eoundl like a good fdea. The city hu atre.dy taken IO Iona. that to IO ahead now without oornmunicatina with the felldenta. would be a m&tab. The dty alrMdy has learned from the unhappy tree experience ln College Park, what can happen when resfdenta are not adequi•tely in.formed. · The council la ICheduled to take up the ;natter again during a study session June t• .. Heights study • wise Santa Ana Heights ls a . While we certainly aren't community under attack. implying that the county has On one side is the John anything less than honorable Wayne Ai.rport and the push to intentions in this regard, it is rezone the rural county island for obvious that ,Santa Ana Heights commercial uses, or at least largely represents a troublesome spot to commercial development. The the county; an unfriendly theory, some say, is that such a constituency. move would remove one large It came u welcome news thorn from the side of Orange recently when ~e Newport Beach County which operates the City Council agreed to form its airport. own committee and study the state On the other side is Newport of affairs in the Heighta. Beach, a .. city battling against Perhaps the city and county airport expansion. Some would now will aerve u a check and like to annex the Heights to balance lystem for each other and Newport and feel 11uch a move residents of Santa Ana Heights would give the city a built-in noise will get a fair shake. buffer r.one. While we don't necessarily By all accounts, it seems there support annexation, it does ' . are some in the Heights who want deserve study. We also believe the commercial zoning and that there notion of rezoning is worthy of are others who favor annexation. study. It's tough to tell which is the What we don't believe ia that majority voice. residents of Santa Ana Hejghta But one thing is clear: County should have OQe of these not.Ions government is mapping the future rammed down their throats of Santa Ana Heights for the without a fair hearing and a clear residents who live there. , idea of how the sides are UJ1l!d up. Don't reject everything Newport Beach residenta had a chance to voice their opinions this week about who moves into the Corona del Mar Elementary School. A citizens' committee heard from some people interested in leasing the school vacated by the University of Southern California following an agreement last month with the Newport-Mesa Unifie d School District to te~te the disputed lease. Meanwhile, the univer"ity has expressed an interes t in moving into a couple of schools either in Costa Mesa or Newport Beach. Corona del Mar High School, F.astbluff and Bear Street elementary schools are .at the top of the liat. They have been considered for clo•ure in the 1983-84 school year. But the problem of who will move into Corona d el Mar Elementary school nmains. Residenta have expressed an interest in seema an educational facility locate there. A citizens' committee will meet Mon~y night and make a • recommendation to the school board Tuesday. Dennis McNutt. who heads the committee, said an actual group won't be singled out. Instead recommendations for uses will be made. So far, the owner of a doll museum in Santa Monica hat bowed out of the picture, after deciding that nearby residents didn't sound too friendly. "We would be hemmed ln. There would be a constant battle every time we turned around." After the state Coa1tal Commission rejected the • universify's permit to operate the school, we agreed that the IChool district should tenninate its leue. But now, lt might be time for the neighbors to ~ve a little. A doll museum doem t exactly 80Ulld like a magnet for hot rod cars coming and going at all hours. Given the high price of land, the neighbors are going to bave to face the fact that tbe IChool is not likely to be turned into a park. Someone Is aotng to move in. And more than -likely they'll be using cars to get there. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Otner views ex· pressed on this pag• are those of their •uthors and artists. Re,ader-comment Is Inv it· ed. Address The D.llfv Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . • L.M. Boyd/ Conquering !ear Does it help any to know that the least fearful people tend to be the least bnqinatJve, too? Students of the mind say fear la a mental haJard only to tho•e who too 1oon cro11 their br'ldps. Whip that tendency to antic- lpete, and you've aot fear licked, they ·~· bridegooms were aaid to do that UUnc when matrimonial ~hen lnvestipted the matter tome )'MI'S .,o. However, our Love and War man 1ugge1t1 more wom•n work on vestlpted the matter ~ Yeal'l -.0· However, our Love and Wl:r man tuapllt8 mott women work Oft pey- peyi'oll Ji* now, IO that 13-percent fttw:-... doubt too low. Q . Who WM the rkheai man wer to aerYt • U.S. Pr...-..nt? A. CYndon J~hnaon. Reportedl)' ~ •••· 1n1111an whlft hit ...,l!W!Md JobnP~. ~~~~-I L11 _. ltt Z:-I '' w;;p ~ '1b>, N11E WAL~ SAit>:~ l 1'£E)\'( ~PA1Mtl£," .. Tax plans for nuclear age I Wi\SHINGTON -If you should survive a nuclear ho~uat, you might think you·d detlerve a brief respite from federal texas aa you wait for the dust to settle. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury has already begun plotting to remove even this tlnr silver lining &un the mushroom-shaped clouda of nuclear conflict. Come doomlday, tax collectors will have a hand ln the pocket.I of the survivors. Some of the pa~rwork has already been completed; it • titled "Design of an Emergency Ta>e System." THE AUTHOR OF this remarkable document is-Gary Robbins, a senJor official in the Treasury undersecretary'• oUice. He concedes there will be 10me worri8ome problerm facing the Internal Revenue Service u it 1ets about putting the arm on clued, d.t.traUght aurvivon of a nuclelr attack. For example, "the income tax system is extremely vulnerable to loaaes of records of transactions," the memo cautions. 1'These records are required in order ..to determine the base for tax at any period of time." In other words, if a hardy taxpayer should make it safely to the fallout shelter but the employer's payroll records were lncinerated, how would he get accurate W-2 fonna to submit with the 1040 on April 15? "The nece.ury information would not be available for prepuin& of tax returns G -J.-1:.-•• -.--•• -.-. -~ and determining tax liability," the Tteuury memo concedes. "Further, the Intemaf Revenue Service would find it lmpcmible to verify the neceaaa.ry figures in audit llltuationa." In this bureaucr"tic nJghtmare, It might be thought th' tax collectors would simply throw up their hands in de~pair. But no one ever got rich underestimatlnc the bulldog tenacity of a federal bagman. Despite the basic survival problems ol the uni.ndnerated, the IRS agent.I still on their feet could ~~ly be summoned to duty by the "If sufficient damage is done" to the continental United States. the Treasury memo acknowledges, ''the tax system itself may have to be changed." But Treasury has a aolution ready. "INSTEAD OF an income tax, one could design a general sales tax which would raise the revenues required ," Robbins suggests. A point-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of eas¥ collection by the IRS and encouragement of savings "to aid in rebuilding the capital stock ," he explains. The author has even figured out how big a sales tax would be needed: ''The general sales tax on final sales would have to be approximately 20 percent in order to replace the current individual and corporate income taxes, Social Security taxes. and estate and gift taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the !freasury document might be a tongue-in-cheek exerciae, my associate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocaust tax-collection plan a couple of years ago. It was quite serious. he said. Teacher :retirement less than rosy To the Editor: P.S. Wille (Mailbox. May 6) is not fully informed regarding the Public Employees Retirement System pension fund. Teachers do not contribute to PERS. They have a separate fund (State Teachers Retirement System). The PERS has allowed the governor to invest their funds. As a result, retired MAILBOX at.ate employees (gardeners, cafeteria workeris, secretaries etc.) get cost-of-living raiaes, paid medical and dental care and are not d.l.9criminated in retirement payments by aex (female teacbera pay more into STRF and receiVe }f:m). ~ Ce!tfomia State Teachers Retirement Fund hu not, as yet., been allowed out as an investment. Consequently, the teachers pay their own medical and dental inlUrance, get a 2 percent a year raile and are 90 percent old women! THE PERS 18 made up of 80 percent men. Men make our laws, handle our money and criticize our work. even our votes. >.. a life member of CT A I defend our ri&}lt to endorse a candidate, thou&h I peraonally 'hall do my own dedlion-maldng. U our achoola are not doln1 a satl1factory job, in the eyes of many, perhaps parenta ahould get out of the schools and 10 back to lettln1 the educaton run them. Or, better yet. find out more about your admin11trat«a. How many parent.I know w}lat your dl1trict superintendent la being·paid? How be ii cholen, and by whom? How is your county auperlntendent cholen? How many county and atatc au~ Visit your acbool and d-.ic CID the quaUty of work~ are dome? In 12 years my retirement hu increased U30.94 a mon•b. My hUlbeiMl'a Social Security hM Ines' r •eit 300 percent. Teechen do not bn'e 8odll StcUritv. ... ·~ MALISSA B. McMA!WS 80IDet.hJ.nc in retum. (can't walk to the bus 'ao I have to rely on them but I think they 1hould be checked into, give us better service and be more r:>lite to us. They re 10 curt. I .know it's a wonderful service but not if your nerves are on ed&e from waiting and standing 4,l'ltll your back la broken. I wlah you would look into it. M.A. PAXTON Look at Poland To the F.ditor: Did you watch the rioting in Poland on television and did you realize what it was you were seeing? What you saw was a bunch of angry people who like Hungarians havt; been led into slavery and have nothmg to fight back with but worda, sticks and atones and empty stomachs. Their mas- ters have lffn to that -have taken away their firearms -and when that happens kila freedom goodbye. In the forthcoming election this year there la a firearm control bill on the ballot. Thia is the first atep tbward.s ta- king your freedom away. Only a fool would vote for it. WARREN G . ALTHOFF Telecourse quality To the F.ditor: A recent article in the Dally Pilot diacUlleS the "concern" of four.teachers at Ora_n(~ Coast College. It seems that they Challenle the "quality" of courses given by televillon. Rather than point the finger at .:meone e1R, their concern should be the "quality" of education at Orange Cout Collep. What about the financing of the1e teleYUilon COW"leS? U the mooey were not Ull8d f« the above function. would tt be diverted to -wbeft? E. Mii.I.ER To \be l'.df t.or: Now that the um pie ballot.I for the ~ *"°" are •i>Pearinl ln the m.a1 -I wondlrr it lt mlcht be • aocx1 Ume ti'.dO )*a abort follow-up arUcle about the p;otlllm all of <>ranee C.ou.nty cttlMftl could be of ll'e•t help to tu ..,_.,.of Voe.n. ' .W. are Nl'l'mU,, awllh with namm • lht wtlr'l U... of. former dU... who are no longer with us. The attrition rate is quite htgh. in my opiruon. People have either moved away, without leaving a corTect forw4lrdina address -and, sadly, in some cases the voter has passed away, and the RegJatrar of Voters is still carrying their names on the voter lists. Will you please inform your readers once more that there-are prescribed legal procedures to remove those names from the v,otersJists, and the cooperation of the citiz ns ~a greatly needed to accomplish this? ~EN McPHERSON Salute Moore To the F.ditor: How many ed,ucators receive fan letten? This is ocw. It's to alert the many Oranse Count)' friends of Dr. Robert B. Moore that be'• going to be saluted by indUttry and education friends on Thurs. dav morning, May 27, at a break:fut '1trout" -that's an enjoyable tout-and-roast. Bob i1 abbut to retire. He's been president of Orange Coast College for many years and his friends in the Orange County Induatry-F.ducation Council are not only giving him a sendoff. they are establishing a Robert B. Moore Award and it will be presented on the 27th. Soi readers who know Bob Moore and want to add to the Troast with an amusing anecdote or comment involving Bob, should just dial 556-0628 and talk to Jim Garmon, president of the host OCIEC. h 's hail and farewell to a great friend! · M.W. (MIKE) WELDS Happy runner To the F.ditor: I would like to thank the promoten of the recent "Around the Bay in May" run. I btllew Newport .Beach, Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar 1et 1ood "city expo11&re" and that nothing but good thin. can come from aach an endeavw. The lfewpori Beach poUce did a good job with U'alfic control u well. Hope to perUcipate ln many morel JOSEPH R. OBOl'HUS ; I , • ' Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to-the -minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come In and make a savvy Investment on the clothes sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of rose, cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig . $1~8. sale $95.99. Skirt,'orig. $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V.1.P. Sportswear, 3/147; Robinson 's Sweaters, 1; Robinson 's Pacesetter, 80. To order, call toll -free 1·800·345·8501. ..... ;I 111 NEWPORTER JOINS FAST -7.oe Ann Ananda of Newport Beach (right), stands at rotunda of Illinois state capitol during fasting strike to support ERA. Others are Sonia Johnaon of Virginia (left) and Dina Bachelor of Loe Angeles. 7 women f asters 'risking injuries' By BOB SPRINGER the second day of the fast, as the •••• 1 lilllld ,.,... ..... women camped in the Capitol SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -A nutrition specialist warned today rotunda here. that seven women, including one "Well I could go for a couple f~om the Orange Coast, are of scrambled eggs, some toast," risking permanent injurfq by aai~ faster Sonia Johnson, who fasting in support of the uaJ was excommunicated from the Rights Amendment. Mormon Church in late 1979 1'he Orange Coast ~oman after criticizing the church's among the seven planning a opposition to the ERA 44-da~unger strike to support Mrs. Johnson. of Ster~ Va., the was identified as Zoe Ann Ananda of Newport Beach. complained of feeling we and -" Fasting risks for the women at one point needed help in ~ grow each day they continue, from a chair. "I had a difficult warned Dr. Arthur Frank, the time getting up this morning," nutri tioniat. she said. Frank aaid if the women Mra. Johnson, who nonnally continue theli-Cast and survive, they still risk damage to their weighs 120 pounds. loat three liven, heart.a.and muscles. pounds from her 5-foot..3 frame The wome~an their in her first full day of ~· according to a scale at a nurM a hunger strike y, vo~ station at the Capitol The other that unless the ERA is ratifi , women loat one to three PC>Unda. they will reject· all food until Such weight loss early in a JUl)e 30, the ratification deadline. ''God, a Fret1ea. I'd give my starvation diet ia usual and right arm for a Freeca," Dina indicates water depletion, laid Bachelor of Loe Angeles aa1d to Frank. staff doctor at George ~Barnes of Raleigh, N.C., on Wublngton University in Washington. WORLD NATION A 38.yeer-old Newport Beech bualneurnan waa arrested outlide hU home Wednelday ln connect.ion witlt a murder police detectives allep he comrpltted 15 yean aao on the outak.lrta of Tuclon, Ariz. Police aa.ld the man, James"l..ee Crummel, waa au'rprtled when officers flagged dowl') hia car near hi.a Newport Crest home just before noon. lnfonned him of the arrest warrant and booked him on murder charges. Crummel, who police claim alao u1e1 the name Jiml Lee Savage, la being held ln Ora.nae County Jail ln Ueu of $200,000 bail. Police ln Tuceon said Crummel ia being charged with the atrangula ti on slaying of 9-year-old Frank Howard ClaWIOll wh<lee body waa found beneath a maquite tree on Feb. 8, 1967. Sgt. .Dan Abbate of the Pima County Sheritrs Department rn Tuc8on said toc:bly that there'• never been a clear motive establiahed ln the killing. He aa.ld Crummel had been considered a auapect ln 1967 but that the man, 23 at the time, left town ahortly after the murder and wu later arrested on child moleetation char&ee in Wi8romin and ... ~ to a Pl'ilon term. Abhate aald the mur~er inv~tion WM put "on the Abbite aaid hi• department obtained a warrant fvr- Crummel'a arrest on Tuaday and moved into Newport Be.ch. Police aald Crummel, who reportedly bu been Uvini in Newport for several yeara, recently had been employed u a buaineaa manager for a local physldan. Officen said Cnonmel likely will be arralaned early next week. It ls unclear, they said, whether he will fight extradition to ArUiona. Burn • • v1ct1m still critical An 83-year-okl Newport Beach woman. burned when fire swept thr~h her Klnp Road hoUJe late aat week, remained in crttbl condition today at the UCJ Medical Center bum unit. Firemen laid the woman. Ruth Jonea, i1 an invalid and waa unable to mcape the blue under her own pow~r. The woman'• private nune, fire ~ten laid. carried her from the . The blaze in the two-1tory blufftop hou1e at 1411 Kings ROid ltarted when a heat lam'-~~d over on the woman 1 y. Dunace lo the bouee WU estimated at fl00,000. 25 people hurt . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -At leaat 23 people were injured Wednelday wben an electric trolley apparently Jost ita brakes. STATE NEWPORT FLIER WITH EARHART -The late ~t mer Paul Mantz of Newport Beach ls ahown with aviatrix Amelia Earhart ip 1938, prior to her ill-faJed attempt to cross the Pacific. Mantz helped prepare her ahraft. Aviatrix mystery ... . . was·. never solved\' Fifty yean ago today, famed Orange County Airport, in an American aviatrix Amelia effort to ICNtinize the aircraft F.arhan took off on a flight am.a aenerator and determine if it the Pacific and vanlabed forever came from Earhart's plane. in a mystery that her friend, the He did say later that the late stunt Oler Paul Mantz of generator was identical to the Newport Beach, at~mpted to a:pe on the female aviator's craft. 90lve. (Related atory Pap B3). ut he could never indicate Mantz had been an aviation positively that it was the same comrade of Earhart'• In the generator. pjoneering days of aviation. The m)'1'tery was never 90lved. He got into the effort to IOlve Mantz was killed in 1965 while her disappearance 22 years aco flying a stunt ln an unorthodox when a televiaion newaroan, aircraft being used in filming of 'l:t:J off the Wand of Salpan. the movie, "Flight of the an old aLrcratt generator. Phoenix.'' Mantz w•. aaked to eee lf he could Identify the J:'F:tor u Noguchi bearing having come from Earhart'• . twtn:;e: vie.a. roorq>Jane. LOS ANGEUS (AP) -Th1 The ewport atunt e: had helped pre~~ P.ar Civil Service Commiasion plane for ber Jc flight in 1eheduled a July 6 hearing on the 1937, including lnttallat.ion of the auapension and demotion ~t has generator. former County Coroner Thomas There WU a lone pttvaillng T. NOflUChi perfonnlng routine theory, never substantiated, that autop1ie1 at County-USC Mill Earhart crashed near the Medical Center. Nogucbi's isJand of Safpan, WU captured t!r. attomey1 Godfrey baacl. told the the Japane.e, and later execu • commilaion Wedneeday that hi.a Mantz turned over hil entire Japane.e-bom ~t la a victim· Oytni 81!1'Viot, then located at °' ndal prejUdk:e. INDEX Insurance claim easy . Peaceful J solution I rejected BJ 'nle Aal0Clate4 Presa Britain'• armada "has been · liven the go-ahead for a aerlet of fandinp and hit..and-run raids on the Falklanda," Brita.In's I domeatlc newa qency laid today aa Prime Minister: Margaret Thatcher strongly indicated 1he hu given uf hope of negotiating a peacefu settlement wltll Ar.ent.ina. 1 The Brlt)sh gri)> on the i1land1 will now be tightened 'quite •teeply and quite quiddy,' it waa being aald tonight," the agency, Presa Aasoclation, aaid, quoting government sources in London. The British Broadcasting Corp. quoted a government source u saying: "Thia is now a war of attrition. To be blunt, that means Argentine forces go on taking l09eS until they surrender their gri on the lalanda." ~BBC reported the British would likely aeiz.e a bridgehead J from which to operate Harrier , 1 vertical-takeoff jeta. Argentine troops were reported braced for an invasion of the Falklanda. Argentine diplomall in BuenOll Aires said they were still ready to negotiate but accuaed Mrs. Thatcher of intransigence. - With a British task fOl'Ce ln the South Atlantic poised to atorm the ialands, Mn. Thatcher told the Houae of Commona lo London that British consideration of U.N. peace ideas (See FALKLANDS, Pase AZ) Jury selects gas chamber for cop killer A Superior Court jury recommended today that convicted police killer Gordon Lee M1nk die in the gas chamber for the June 1980 slaying of Garden Gro¥e police officer Donald Reed. Mink, 32, smiled slightly as the six-man, six-woman Orange County jury returned with its decision thi!., morning. The long-haired and bearded defendant is to return to court June 11 for formal sentence proceedings. Mink was convicted of first-degree murder for Reed's slaying outside a Garden Grove tavern two years ago. He abo was convicted of wounding two other off~ra and two byatanden in the Cripple Creek Saloon. "It is a well-deserved verdict for Mr. Mink,'' proeeaator Bryan Brown aa.ld today. "I can't think of anyone who it more de:leMng than Mr. Mink.'' Defeme Attorney Daye Shinn said his client was not IW'pri9ed by the death penalty recommendation. Alto reacting to' the verdict was Linda Reed, Officer Reed'• widow, who tearfully told reportera that Mink "definitely aot what he deserved ... I I I .... Mkl ~tln.1'1 ClMt Um waa 11 procrutln1tlon and oontlnutna ~u~•lon" of \ht lalaNk t• lftv.did Aprtl 2. Pr ... Aalooiatlon, Brl\alq'1 ~ MWI epnr:y, re~ 11deep 1loom ..• aboul the proepedl of ~ war," .net Pera de cu.uar dmcribtd hill r,eace plan H a 0 patlent In ntenaive care but •till alive." Brl thh Fore Ian OfUce 1pokemnan Nlcholu Ftnn told reporten ln London that Pern d• Cuellar'• "ldea1'' were 1eparate from the publication of the Bfitlah l\eSoUat!J11 pol!Uon today. • ifile-share cOndo restrictions eyed FOUND DEAD -Walter Caaey Jones, who roamed U.S. roads and preached carefree living on "\he Tonight Show" wu foli.nd dead Wednesday in his mobile home at Lonsvfew, Wash. He was 110 yeara old. By STEVE MARBLE Of"'9D91rNMI .... New1>9rt Beach officials are pu1hlng for reatrictlona on ti.me-share condominium setupe, the so-called "Inflation-proof vacation" that developers so far have been unsuccessful in bringing to the beach city. Tile-proposed law to be conaidered by the city planning commission tonight, would block bW.lden from converting hotels, ~tels or apartment complexes to v 'Paradise' ad JJan rejected LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal judge has refused to issue a restraining order against use of an advertisement for the movie "Paradise" that producers of "The Blue Lagoon" contend r8embles an ad for their motion picture. U.S. District Judge David V. Krenyon denied the request of Columbia Pictures Wednesday Without issuing a written order, but still has before him a request by Columbia for an injunction t h at would bar further distribution of "Paradise. ·Colllmbia, in ita copyright suit against producers and distributors of "Paradise," alleges t~at it borrows heavily and unlawfully from "The Blue Lagoon." F.ach picture, Columbia sa:id, tells the story "of coming of age and sexual awakening of a blond, curly haired boy and--a k-haired girl, oolated in' an Uk aetting." time-share arranpmentl. In Laauna Beach, OM of the few On.nae c.oa.t dtleta to allow time-1hare com~lexe1, the 1ite1 have been former motela. The propo1ed Newport law also wquld give city officials conalderable leeway on whether time-share owners 1hould be permitted to swap time wUh other time-share owners in other parta of the wodd. The suggested law, though, could cleii the way foe a plan to construct a time-share facility a.lon& tree-lined Via Lido. There has been considerable opposition to the Via Lido project, which would be built where a waterfront office now stands. The time-share arrangement allows people to buy a stretch of time, usually a week, In a condominium. Each unit often will have 52 ownen who take turns using the place. The popularity of the ayatem, though, is that owners can swap time with time-sbar, owners from other areas. The result is a vacation in Palm Springs. Hawaii or Qi.rope. Ken Delino, Newport executive assistant dty ~. said the city's ooncem with the time-abare system is that it could bring in a trana~nt population that bas little regard for the city. Dellno said limiting the ability to swap time could insure that Newport ends up with a group of time-share owoen who develop• resoect for ~ city. .. Sort of like· you had ln 'On Golden Pond'," IA!llno suggested. "You would have individual• ~turn.Ing to Newport each year.'' Hinckley 'no diabolical criminal' WASHINGTON (AP) -A psychiatrist testified today that John W . Hinckley Jr. was a tormented man influenced by "bizarre thoughts" and tranquilizers -"not tbe diabolical crimlnJl wailing for the best moment" -when he shot President Reagan last year. Dr. David Mtdiael Bear of Harvard Medlca.l School redsted suggestions by a government proeecutor at H~ey's trial ln U.S . District Court that the defe'ndant coldly plotted his ev~ry move on March 30, 1981 , when Reagan was shot while leaving a Washington hotel. "He (HlnclcJey} showed up at the Hilton at 1:4'~ p.m. (about the ttme Reaaan ai'rived). He didn't ahoot him then. He waited, didn't he?" asked Assiltant U.S . Attorney Roger M. Adelman in a rlsi.ni volce. "He in tact delayed but this was not the calculated wait of a diabolical man," Bear replied. The peychiatriat &aid Hinckley did not shoot when Reagan arrived at the hotel because his "bizarre thoughts were competing for attention." Warmer -days ·Temperatures 'teocutal l 8u11ny •ft•rnoon1 1odey end Frldey. HIOhl 70 to 74 et bNch ... 78 to 12 Inland Fair tonight ' '••c•pt for tow coHtel cloud• 0...Wnlght ~ 55 to 82. Hight et lbHChU on Friday 75, Inland ,-15. • El•••h•r•, from Polnl IConc•pllon to th• Mealc1n border end out eo ml• Light VWteble wind• night end morning l houre, b•comlng w•ll to , eoutt!w91t 10 to t 5 Ii note In ,,,. : afternoon• today end Friday , Af1emoon Wind ....... 1 to 3 ,_. I W-.rty IWlll 2 to 3 !Mt Night 1 end morning low cloud• over I ::::::..••l•u Mottly eunny U.S. summary Thunderstomie that "'" raged owr • ..-Mnt more floodt ourlng acroH HabrHka 1nd klahoma today, wHhlng out allroed1. ruining llomH end owning cattle. Silt •Hlllng down from the .t>ruka llllllldee t>Yrled eoma In mud thrM l•t deep 8oelled Hndb•Qt, fllled by undr9d1 of volunlMre, ringed Ind ~ In Platte • Heb.. • OOli1munlty of 3 70 bout 100 mllH nortllwHt ot .. Lo "'°-S2 90 43 87 48 90 52 eo 59 112 59 ee 112 85 82 .43 5' 48 5' 87 Cl5 87 50 ee 3.4 eo 83 89 n 74 58 .09 10 eo .91 70 42 09 10 70 83 59 n 83 73 4 1 01 PhoenlX : = =re. 12 ., 13 ao eo 82 Cl2 .07 85 70 rt-:: .04 82 83 &4 38 .01 92 54 83 48 ee a s1 ae .2s 80 Cl2 .03 n n .oe M 75 84 72 S2 111 It 88 86 59 95 It 7S 57 .35 • eo .81 s.nta M9rla Stoekton Thern'llll 71 49 Ulllah 71 64 30 SW.tow 73 40 Big a-- 82 41 .45 8WIOP 17 71 Ca!Mlna 84 49 Long a..ch sa ea Monrovia 78 58 Mt. Wllaon sa 87 Newpot1 Beach 85 64 Ontario 75 40 03 Palm 89rlngt 117 41 Siii &.m81dino 77 55 .50 S.n Oebri.I 73 64 San JOM 111 58 Santa Ana ae 11 .08 Senta Cruz 84 84 .92 TtrlOe Valley eo 113 74 89 5e 91 115 S7 58 115 32 43 17 54 72 5t ea 58 70 42 89 55 78 51 93 83 80 57 11 es 82 49 73 52 75 41 13.~ 71 87 CALW-" 84 eo -.. CANADA 11 81 1.os Sltlerallald Blythe H 16 Eureka 91 83 ~ 13 •. 71 ~ IO 72 Loe .,.........._ IO 41 --15 .. Mont-.y .. • .1a ....._ IO 14 Olll:ilnd 78 87 p_,~ .. .. ==~ : :: :: a.cr.tneMo a.. 79 IO SM Diego 16 83 SM Franclaoo 11 II lanla latbwa llO 64 98 58 48 u 54 11 50 72 ff f4 50 441 .. 58 51 80 ra ., • 1' II • t1 IO .. .. A 85 75 .. 72 17 ~ --------~-------::"Extended IO : weatber lllf If Pllll SOUTHl!"H OAL.,OAMIA OOAITAL. ANO MOUNTAIN AMAi -llllt tlut 101M ... night end early mornlnt low olOlldl ltol'O !tie OOMC, ...... In CIC*tlf ..... , ... "°"' 1Q I074 at ~tonto•over Inland v..,_., Mountell! ra.on lllON .. 10 11, Lowt ... to If, I !11 DAVID &UTIMA.NN "':fff!-....,,... .... South•rn California l:dllOn COrri~Y. OUtdaJI wen to mtet today whh blih ranklna repre1tntatlvH of U>• U.S. MUclMr ae.ulalOr)' ~on to defend Eailon11 Vn.lt 1 rMCt.or tt San Onofre fl'Om UMl'tionl that lt mfaht not be u.rthquake •te. A federal official ••ld Wednesday this review of a utWty~pi'epared llellrnic analysta lhowed tlien. we"' u many u 800 modl(tcatlonl needed to ln1ure 1ate operation of the 14-year-old reactor. . That oUlclal, Wllllam T. RwaeU. head of the NCR'• offJoe of 1y1temlc •valuation, characterized the findlnp of the study •• 1howln1 there were "significant leismJc deflclendee." However, Edi1on officials insisted that the Mimtlc analysis was being "milint.ttpreted" and that ther& WH no reason to prevent them from rel~ the reactor to.actJve duty followfng a echeduled 1hutdown earlier thia year for maintenance work. "Our basic position la this: AA the plant st.ands, lt ii safe (to opera\e)," Edtson 1poke1man Russ Hawkes said. A contingent of utillty offlclala flew to Nl\C headquarters In Bethesda, Md., Wedneeday and were to meet with federal officials this morning. Hawkes said the group would tell the NRC that 436-~gawatt Unit 1 was built to exceed leiamic safety margins ln effect in 1968 and has been upgraded over the past 10 years to guarantee its saf.e operation. But Russell, who reviewed F.dis9n's work on seismic safety, stated in a memo that the plant might not meet current federal safety standards. His memo stated that utillty <>fficiala told the NRC staff that the plant, located three miles IOUth of San Clemente, wouJd need as many as 800 modlflcationa. The analysis did not involve newly built units 2 and 3 at San Onofre. Those 1,100-megawau reactors received authorisation for full power ll~ensing last week. Critics of San Onofre have contended that neither Unit l nor the newly built $3.3 billion units are stro ng enough to Hfely withstand an earthquake. Hawk.es indicated th.la rnornlni that even th~gh modifications may be required for Unit 1, they are n ot serlou1 enough to warrant a shutdown of the planL Talks to begin KUWAIT (AP) -The first direct negotiation• between Marxist South Yemen and pro-Western man will begin May 29 after 15 years of strained relations, the radical newspaper Al-Watan reported Wectne.day. L~ SchOol In Coita M.. w"1 e1lebrit.e lta &0th annlverNry wt th. a family J>k:nlc It the 1ehooJ Saturday lrom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. •All formu and current 1tudent1 at Ne~J>9rt-Me11 Evenlna Hlah School are Invited to Che 1ehool'1 lHt reuruon ~l at TeWinkle Park ln Corti Meu. A barbeque wW begin at 4 / •Newport Beach'• Waleer Gerlle•, chairman of the board Qf Pad.tic Mutual Llfe ~ In1urance Company, will be ; · honored at a dltiner Saturday hOlted by the Mardan Cent.er of Educational Therapy. Tickets for the Newport Marriott Hotel dinner are $160. Proceeas benefit the education cent.er. Gerken i.a a trustee of the American ColleRe, Oranae The event allo wlU •rve 81 a farewell to the school Which hu been echeduled tO clON tf\la 1ummer. The picnic will featun-Wnily pines tn the style of an old-time school carnival. Families are welcome to briq their own lunches. For more lnlormatlon contact Steve Leeper at 646-3492. p.m. near the park's r ear bueball diamond. Tkket1 are S2.50 ln advance and $3 at the f"Vent. " For more information call 556-3334. County Mu11c Center and chairman of ,the board of tr u1teea for Occidental College. He also i• on the board of governors o( the California Community Foundation, co-chairman of the Ora nge County . Transportation Coalition and president of the Chancellor's Club at UCI. For further lnfonnatJon or reservations. call 6"~-4437. Sex class status eyed at Cal State Cal State Long Bea~h administrators were keeping mum today on the fate of Prof. Barry Singer and bis "Psychology of Sex" class that offer ed students homework credit for having homosexu!ll, group or extramarital eex. While top university officials, such as Cal State ~ong Beach President Dr. Stephen Horn, were not available to comment on the matter, a new1 conference was scheduled to explain the university'• position on the unorthodox cl.asa. Meanwhile, Singer said Wednesday he'll stop 'giving students credit for sexual relations. But he said be still will offer students the option of doing homework assignmeqts that conaiat of dressing in drag fQr a day and visiting PY bathhou.es, gay bars and nudist colon.lea. His courae is under review by a faculty committee commiaaioned by the dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Science. Singer said he decided to .drop the sex participation homework op~on after the committee raised obleetions. The class, and another -in a different department -called "Women and Their Bodies," has been the target of heated criticism by evangelical Christians in Long Beach. For the paat two years, Singer has offered students 23 homework options, including experimentatio n with homosexual , group or extramarital sex. Students must get prior permission from him and muat notify their partners and SJ>OU3eS they are doing it for homework. he said. "It can be a very powerful growth and learning experience " Singer said. "The idea is not to go out and do 1<>me kinky things just to see what they're like, but to see a change in your behavior and your feelings." The students c hoose four ho!flework assignments and wnte papers about them. Other options include visiting divorce court and marriage enrichment groups. Oxford ·Cloth Pullover Storekeeper Monte Pries is wearing our all cotton oxford cloth shirt in a ticking weave stripe. This shirting was originally crcat'eft by a Scottish mill in the late 19th century, and still remains a tradition today. Available in blue, burgundy, pink, lav- ender, and yellow stripings. A store that offers.fine traditional sportswear )or men, women and boys. l Study could claril)T, choice for Heights • Santa An• Hel1ht1 la a c.unmuntty under attack. On one tide la the John Wayne Airport and the puah to resone the rural ~unty Island tor convnerdal Ulft, or at leut laraely commercial development. The theory, eome 1ay1 ta that tueh a move would remove one larae .. thom from the aide of Orange ' County which operatee the airport. On the other side ia Newport While we cenatnly aren't tmplyln1 that •h• county baa anythlna leaa than honorable intenilon1 In thlt reaard, it It obvtoua that Sani. Ana Hei&htt repretenta a troublelome 1pot to the county; an unfriendly constituency. It came H welcome~new1 recently when the Newport ee.ch City Council 8ll'eed \0 form lta own commlttee and atudy the state of affain ln the Heichta. 4 Beach, a ctty battlin1 agaln1t airport expansion. Some would like to annex the Heigh ts to Newport and feel such a move would give the city a built-in noise buffer wne. I. By all accounts, it seems there are aome in the Heights who want commercial zoning and that there are others who favor annexation. It's tough to tell which is the majority voice. Perhape the dty and county now wW lerve u a check and balance ·~ for each other and residenta of Santa Ana Height.a will get a fair shake. While we don't neceuarily support ann-:xation, it does delerve study. We also believe the notion of rezontna LI worthy of study. t I I I I I I • I I I I t I l I But one thing is clear: County government is mapping the future of Santa Ana Heights for the residenta who live there. What we don't believe ia that residents ol Santa Ana Heights should have one of these notions rammed down their throats without a fair hearing and a clear idea of how the sides are lined up. Sculpture ban silly Few people in Newport Beach who have been connected with the John Wayne memorial sculpture would suggest that the whole program has been well handled. The bronze bas relief, commissioned by the city more than two years ago as a gesture to Newport's late motion picture great, was a good idea that. went sour and ke pt going that way. The sculpture doubled in size and price over the months. Nobody seems sure why. Then the party that was supposed to pay off the artwork didn't have enough money. Finally, with the artist close to bankruptcy and threatening to sell his creation to some other party. the city agreed to pay off the bas relief. This move came only after it agreed to ban the sculpture from ever being displayed in Oty Hall. While we can understand the council venting its frustrations with the project this way, in retrospect, the banning is silly. It appears that some, caught up in the hubbub of the project, have overlooked the fact that the artwork, a depiction of the Wayne movie 11 Stagecoac h ," la a handsome piece. ' To ban the sculpture from being shown in a public place alter citizens, directly and indirectly, shelled out nearly $34,000 is foolish. The artpece, in tn.ath, belonp to the public and it should have a chance to eee it. Don't reject everything Newport Beach residents had a chance to voice their opinions this week about who moves into the Corona del Mar Elementary School. A citizens' oommittee heard from some people interested in leasing the school vacated by the University of Southern California following an agreement last month with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to terminate the disputed lease. Meanwhile, the university has expresse'd an interest in moving into a couple of achools either in Costa Mesa or Newport Beach. Corona del Mar High School, F.astbluff and Bear Street elementary schools are at the top of the list. They have been considered for closure in the 1983-64 school year. But the problem of who will move into Corona del Mar Elementary school ~. Residenta have expressed an interest in seem, an educational facility locate theft. A citizens' committee will meet ~y night and make a • recommendation to the achoo\ board Tuesciay. Dennis McNutt, who heads the committee, said an actual group won't be singled out. Instead recommendations for uses will be made. So far, the owner of a doll museum in Santa Monica has bowed out of the picture, after deciding that nearby residents didn't sound too friendly. "We w ould be hemmed in. There would be a constant battle every time we turned aroupd." After the stete Coastal Commission rejected the university's permit to operat.e the school, we agreed ihat the achool district should t.ermlnate its lease. But now, it ~t be time for the neighbors to gi'e a little. A doll museum doesn't exactly sound like a magnet for hot rod cars coming and going at all hours. Given the high price of land, the neighbors are going le) have to face the fact that the school is not likely to be turned into a park. Someone ia going to move in. And more than li.k~y they'll be using cars to get there. Oplnk>ns eJCpressed in the space abOve are those of the O.lly Pilat. Otner views l!X· pressed on this .. ge are those of their authors and artists. Reaw comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address T~ Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71') U2-'32t. L.M. Boyd/Conquering fear. Does it help any to know \hat the least fearful ~ple tend to be the 1eMt tmacmatlve, too? Students of the mind eay fear ta a mental haJard only to thoae who too •oon croH their bridps. Wlilp that tendency to antic- ipate, anti 100've aot fear Ucked. they aver. bridegrooms were aaid to do that thine when matrimonial raeerchen investigated the maJt,er nne years ago. However, our Love and War man sug1esu mote women work on vtttigated ~e matter eome ~ a,o. ltowevet, our Love •nd War man 1ugpsts more women work on pay. pa)'loU jobt now, IO that 13-~t u,un ii DO dOulJt too J0W. Q. WhO ... the richelt man eve!' to aerw •U.S. Pl...-.t? A. Lyncloft JohNOn. ~portedly Worth t14 awan Whlri .,. NCCeedJtcl JoMF.~. • Tax plans for nuclear age WASHINGTON -If you should survive a nuclear holocaust, you might think you'd deserve a brief respite from federal texu as you wait for the dust to settle. Perish the thought. The U.S. Treasury haa already begun plotting to remove even this tinf silver llnlng Crom the mushroom-shaped clouds of nuclear conflict. Come doomsday, tax collectors will have a hand In the pockets of the survivors. Some of the paperwork has already been completed; it's titled "Design of an Emergency Tax System." THE AUTHOR OF this remarkable document ii Gary Robbin•, a senior official in the Treasury underaecretary'1 office. He concedes there will be some wonilome problems facing the Internal Revenue Service as it aeta about putting the arm on dued. distraught survivors of a nuclear attack. For example, "lhe income tax •pt.em ls extremely vulnerable to loaaea of r ecords of tranaactlon1," the metno cautions. ":Theee reoorda are required in order to determine the base for t.ax at any period of time." ln other words, if a hardy taxpayer JACI AIDIRSll and determining tax liability," the Treuury memo concedes. "Further, the Internal Revenue Service would find it lmpomible to verify the necessary figures in audit situation.a." In tbi1 bureaucratic nightmare, it might be thought the tax collectors would limply throw up their hand.a in despair. But no one ever got rich underestlmatlftl the bulldog te:naclty of a federal basman. Despite the baste survival problems of the unincinerated, the IRS agent.I still on their feet could presumably be summoned to duty by the Treasury. ''If sufficient damage is done" to the continental United Sta tes, the Treasury memo acknowledges, "the tax system itself may have to be changed." But Treasury has a solution ready. · "INSTEAD OF an income tax. one could design a general sales tax which would raise the revenues re-luired," Robbins suggests. A point-of-purchase tax would have the twin advantages of easy collection by the IRS and encouragement of savings "to aid in rebuilding the capital stock," he explains. The author has even figured out how big a sales tax would be needed: "The general sales tax on final sales would have to be approxJmately 20 percent in order to replace the current ind1v1dual and corporate income taxes, Social Security taxes, and estate and gift taxes." Footnote: Suspicious that the Treasury document might be a tongue-in-cheek exercise, my associate Lucette Lagnado called Robbins. He said he wrote the holocaust tax-rolleclion plan a couple of years ago. It was quite serious, he said. Teacher retirement less than rosy To the Editor: . P.S. Wills (Mailbox, May 6) la not fully informed regarding the Public Employees Retirement Sy1tem peruion fund. . Teachers do not contribute to PERS. T!',!~ have a separate fund (State T en Retirement System). The PERS has allowed the governor to invest their funds. A. a result, retired MAILBOX atate employees (gardeners. cafeteria workers , secretaries etc.) get cost-of-living raises, paid medical and dental care and a.re not dillcriminated In retirement payments by aex (female teachers _pay more into STRF and receive lea). California State Teachers Retirement Fund bu not, as yet, been allowed out u an investment. Con1equently, the teachers pay their own medical and dental lnsurance, get a 2 pereent a year rat.e and are 90 percent old women! THE PERS IS made up of 80 percent men. Men make our laws, handle our money and critk:Ue our work, even our voia. ~ a lite member of CT A 1 defend our tlght to endone a candidate, though I per1onally shall d o my own decilion-making. If our 1chooh are not doina a aatl1f actory Job, In the eyes of many, perhape parenta should aet out of the 1choola and 10 back to letUna the educators run them. Or, better yet, find out more about your adminilU'ators. How many parent.I know whAlt your district 1uperintendent LI bein1 paid? How he ii Choeen, and by whom? How ii your county 1uperintendent choten? How many county and state 1Upervilon vtat your IChool and check on the quality of work t8dlen are doUw1 ln 12 years my retirement hu lncreued $130.94 a month. My husband's Sod.al kwit)' hu Iner! rnd 300 percent. TellChetl do not haw 8odal S«urlty. MALISSA B. McMANUS aomethlng in return. I can't walk to the bus ao I have to rely on them bui 1 think they should be checked into, give us better eervice and be more ~lite to us. They re 10 c urt. I know it's a wonderful .ervice but not if your nerves are on edge from waiting and standing untll your back I.a broken. I wish you would look into it. M.A. PAXTON Look at Poland To the F.ditor: Did you watch the rioting in Poland on television and did you realize what it was you were seeing? · What you aaw was a bunch o( angry people who like Hungarians have been led into slavery and have nothing to fight back wl\h but words. sticks and stones and empty stomachs. Their mas- ters have aeen to that -have taken away their fireanns -and when that happens kiaa freedom goodbye. In the forthoomlng election this year there la a firearm control bill on the ballot. 'This ls the firat step towards ta- kjnglour freedom away. Only a fool woul vote for It. WARREN G. ALTHOFF Telecourse quality To the Editor: A recent article ln the Daily Pilot d1acuaes the "concem " of four teachers at Or~~ Coast College. It seems that they ChalJen&e the "quality'' of COW"les given by televtaion. Rather than point the finger at aomeone elait, the.Ir concern should be the "quality'' of education at Orange Coast eon.. Wh•t about the financing of these ielevillcn oounes? U the money were not \ad for the above functlon, would lt be divened to -where? E. MILLER Voter lists are no longer with us. The attrition rate I.a quite high, in my opinion. People have either moved away, without leaving a correct forwarding address -and, sadly. in 90me cues the voter has passed away. and the Registrar of Voters 1s still carrying their names on the voter lists. Will you please inform your readers once more that there are prescribed legal procedures to remove thole names {rom the voters lists, and the cooperation of the citizens is greatly needed to accomplish this? HELEN McPHERSON Salute Moore To the Editor: How many educators receive fan Jett.en? This is o~. It's to alert the many Orange County friends of Dr. Robert B. Moore that he's going to be saluted by industry and education friends on Thursday morning, May 27, at a breakfast "troast" -that's an enjoyable tout-and-roast. Bob is about to retire. He's been president of Orange Coast College for many years and his friends In the Orange County Industry-F.ducation Council are not only giving him a sendoff. they are establishing a Robert B. Moore Award and It will be presented on the 27th. So, readers who know Bob Moore and want to add to the Troaat w ith an amusing anecdote or comment involving Bob, should just dial 556-~28 and talk to Jim Gumon, president of the host OCUX:. It's hail and farewell to a great friend! M.W. (MIKE) WELDS Happy runner To the F.ditor: I would like to thank the promoters of the recent "Around the Bay in May" run. I believe Newport Beach, Coat.a Mesa and Corona del Mar 1et good "city expoeure" and that nothln1 but aood thino can come from IUCh an endeavor. The 'Newport Beach polke did a good job with traffic control u well. Hope to parUci_pate in many more! .rOSEPH R. ORCYrHUS . Or•• Olill DAILY fll\OT,,..,,_, -ID, 1111 Here are the top name components you want to collect more of. In the up-to-the-minute styles that'll show off your business sense, or send you off on a weekend adventure. So come in and make a savvy investment on the clothe~ sure to be eyed for seasons to come. Shown, just one from our famous name collection of jackets, skirts, and pants with a polished linen-look. In muted naturals of ·rose, cork or natural polyester/rayon/flax. 6 to 14. Blazer, orig. $128, sale $95.99. Skirt, orig. $60, sale $44.99. Robinson's V.1.P. Sportswear, 3/147; Robinson 's Sweaters, 1; Robinson's Pa9esetter, 80. To order, call toll-free 1·800·345·8501 . i I I• I . • t I"·. .... ~ $f£ u~ 1 B: r:," • I.Ji • 4 IW.., •• I "',a .... "'··· -"' .w .• ,. -.... ..... " .. a. "-• " .,...."' Cl " • ·~ " 11*0 .J6 • "' 1Mit. "" IMI.. ;pt t I tWt-\lo l!-11 , .... "' ··"· " 11111"'. Iii • Its ,,_.__ ._ .,., .. ~,,. •• ,._ .. \lo ,,J .' : 'l-.::.~ lfUl " "-lilt • ...,. t.llO • n ~"" E4tU t.IOtU • t -119 11mr11 s1M t •I «JI'>-'-ltlllllr 1 Ms at llYt-1 1E-.c .D • I 171~ •••.• l: .. *"'t ... • • 11't-" 1!"'11 ,.. • " ,. .. "' l!tyl ,,,. 4 ., t SI ••• , &vanf> .tsl I SI ~" even " tAO • • I ew.-" Even "' LIO • • ' 11\11 •• EJcC... ,.. • 11 ~ llo Elocllr '·"' • • J wi. ... I!.-I I S *1 Jl\<o-\19 -18-fl -"MC: .... 1 ,.. 2'l4o-"' "MC p1 US . • I ~ .... ..... Al • '" 17 -f\ l'.wtl .II • 11 ..-..--.. l'ec.t " t ,.. ..... l'llrclld • • 44 '*-" F.irc JI UO . • 11 11141 _. 1'-of I .l4 11 • 17-t """'"' • • Cl ,___ "' F¥... I ft 1 ..••. ,.....,.. ..... " FedlCO I.JO Ii 17 mi.-Vt ~-.,., «J .••• l"dMoQ I.JI t 11 tl\19 + \19 l'..-.M • ,. .. ins '°" • " FeclPtl ,. j • J:M+ " FdSenl••• .. ~. FHOSI t,11 I ISS 41 -1'- f'llH're UI t • ~ . l'lillOlll UD t t U l<lt + ._ t • 1 ,,. II. .. 4 .. '""'""" .,.,.,, . ,,, ~ ..... l'f!Ol4 I M S tft Miio + l4o l'f!Sller 111 ,.,._'""' ~ All ti l: 15:~ .. ~ ""'llfl••'. ~"" "'°"" •.. "" 11 + "' '1tOlk , .......... " .... , .. uo • " --· "" Ftctty U 11 ,..__ 19 FlllkP U• i ~ Mt-" ~.: • .a..~~,~ l"NS4 .. 2..D4JM -\lo ... ~ • 11 ,__,,. l'sl,.. .. . • 7..J>-1-11 l'tUftltt '·" • 2 1S ••••• .. CLOllNO 132.41 The Fiuor Corp. of Irvine announced \ha.t. St. Je» Mineral• Corp., • 1ub1ldlary, e!ltered Into• e_rellmJnary -creement to tell Cocauina OU Corp. and Coqulna Petroleum lhC. to K.eft'·McGee Corp. for • purchue ~ of approKimately t265 million. The tranaactlon ta tubject to the comp)eUon of • detlnltlve afreement and the flnallitna by Kerr-McGee o appropriate flnandni within 30 day.. Quick thermometer shown Temp.-Stick Corporation of El Toro lnuoduced ltl 3..eeoond thermometer for routine cllnkal t.erGpereture taking of pa\ienta at the American Auoclatlon of Critical.cate Nunes' convent.ion.in Anahetm. Temp·Stlck, which aeJla producta throu1h Ii. wholly owned aubtldiary, International Medical Corporation, ))u prepared markettna ~ to be offered to hosJ>ltal.a end other medlcal inatltutiona throughout the United States. AirCal seeks more flights AlrCal haa announced lt h requeatint authorization from the Federal Aviation Adminiatratlon to add flight. between Lu Vegas and Reno. ' This ls In response to the public'• demand for flight.a between the cities 11.nce Braniff'• suspemion of flight.a last week, oftidals uid. AUCa1 rue. three l"OW\dtripe dally between Reno and Lu Veau and teeks to add a morning fll&bt departing Reno at 6:50 a..m. arrivina ln Las Vega. at 7;~5 a.m., and• fligbt. leaviJla Laa V"egas at 9 a.m. foe arrival in Reno at 10;09 a.m. Computer ·market due Orangeget.e Plaza CompuCentre hu announced plam for a computer marketplace in Westmins~r. The CompuCent.re will be • point. of contact between manufacturers, dtstributora, conaultanta, aoftware houses and buyers of buainea computlne producta. The location which wtll ultimately contain 200,000 mquare feet. of apace, la. at 64051 Garden Grove Blvd. The computer division of McDonnell Doug.las (McA.uto) hu leMed one bulldina· Stock seminar slated A free aeminar on "Stock Index F\atures" will be 1p0nJOred by the Ne'!}>Ort Beach branch of Bache Rabey Stuart Sliields IDcorporated tonight at 7:30 at. the Marriott. Hot.el. The principal speaker will be Paul H. Franklin. vice president of Bache Halsey Stuart Shield.a Incorporated. • For reservatiOns, call 752·2280. STOCKS IN THE SPOtLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS ... 'W'OflC WI -S-. ---Ml !!IW9" ... Moien -- -., ...... :.----.-. ,,_...., .. -- UPS AND DOWNS SILVER EDWARDS BRISTOL · Costa Mesa• 540. 7 444 Regular Feature Shown 81J/of8 and Aftrx PrrMw STRIPESlll t'l9W&W\Srl.'P • * •ARQAIN MATIN•••* MDUIY thru l1turd1y All Performa •• befOtt 6:00 PM (,....... ... ...... , ........... _ ... YOU COULD Ill WHAT I HIAR" .,.., ------- ---,.ii~,i~) "WRONCI .. RIGHT" (R) -"':"'.:tfl- --. -. .-. .-. - ... YOUOOUU>MI WHAT I MmM" (N) ,..,.. ...... ~,.... ll\l<lWOOI > < tNlfU \()If Ill ... " "' ... ...,. ..... let ............... -,..,_-~ ... "CHA.MOTi Of' ,_ .. I .. ,--.-.-.-.- ---~~;r J ~-'t."'W:f °' .!'JlTJ..~.rJ. ~Tl OF FIRI" " ~i .. ' , .. ANAHEIM DRIVE IN ... " ' LINCOLN IJlllV( IN ·.' l(1lJNTAIN '/f\lll'T [JI/I" I '"" "CROCODILE" (R) ..... '"PORCI: FtV8" (A)