HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-05-25 - Orange Coast Pilot\
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Last moments of HMS Antelo e
• • ·1ng. escr1 e
FURY OF WAR -The British frigate HMS Antelope
explodes in flames in San Carlos Bay off F.ast Falkland before
sin.king Monday. A bomb disposal man was killed as he
No damage
..............
attempted to defuse an unexploded Argentine bomb lodged in
the ship's engine room during an air attack.
Pair seized
on county
bookie raps
4'.1 earthquake
Mesa wins
round with
feisty artist ,
Two remaining out-of-<:ounty
residents indicted by the Orange
County Grand Jury for alleged
operation of a $12
million-per-year bookmaking
ring have been taken into
custody.
rattles coast area By DAVID ltUTZMANN
Ofttleo.lrNoelleft
Three people surrendered on
similar charges last week.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart
identified the two lat.est suspects
as Sandy Lou Lightfoot, 43, of
Paramount, and Barbara J .
Shepard. 42, of Harbor City.
Hart said Miss Lightfoot. who
also goes by three aliases,
surrendered to Orange County
authorities Monday afternoon.
She was booked into Orange
County Jail.
Miss Shepard already was m
custody at Los Angeles County
Jail on another charge and will •
be brought to Orange County as
800n as she finishes that term.
Hart said he didn't know how
long she has remaining on her
eentence in Los Angeles.
The five alleged bookmakers
were all indicted by the Orange
County Grand Jury last week.
An indictment is a formal charge
made against a person. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
It is alleged that the
bookmaking ring accepted bets
on horse races at tracks
throughout the United Stat.es
and also accepted bets on various
sporting events involving college
and profemonal teams.
WORLD
By ROBERT BARKER ortt1e o.11y "°' ,...,
An offshore earthquake with a
magnitude of 4.1 on the Richter
Scale rattled throush portions of
Orange and Los Angeles counties
and the northern part of San
Diego County at 6:45 a.m. today.
The earthquake, centered
about 13 miles southwest of
Huntington Beach, apparently
caused no damage and very little
alarm on the part of Orange
Coast residents.
Local police departments
reported only a few calls from
people wondering what was
going on. There were no reports
of damage.
However, Huntington Beach
Fire Capt. Roger Hosmer said the
tremor struck with sufficient
intensity to awaken him at his
home near the Huntington Beach
Civic Center at Main Street and
Yorktown Avenue.
"It was a quick, sharp jolt,"
Hosmer said . "It felt like
something large like a truck had
hit the house. It wasn't of the
rolling variety."
"I felt something shaking, like
the floor was swaying just for a
second," said Randalf Norton,
night manager at a 7-Eleven
store in Huntington Beach.
"There was no noise or
anything ao 1 wasn't sure it was a
Fire kills 67,000 animals
TOKYO (AP) -About 67 ,000 animals and birds,
including 60,000 turtles, perished Monday when
flames swept through a pet breeding center in
Fujioka. a small town 50 miles north of Tokyo, police
reported today.
Jet splits on landing
BRASn.IA. Brazil (AP) -A Brazillan jetliner
with 112 people aboard broke in half on landJna at the
Brutlla airport Monday night in heavy rain, k111ina
two people and 1njurina 15. airport offld•l• Mid today.
, l 0 clJildren die in blaze
AIR.slJ'R..L•ADOUR, France (AP) -A~ that offld•'• •Y may haw been eet deliberately twept Uuouah a IChoo1 for marded youthl in IOUthwe.t rr.-today. lrilllna at leMt 15 and Jeavina 8IWll
othen_mjlllnl. police MkL
q~e -sometimes 1 just feel
things.''
However, some residents in
other parts of the city said they
didn't feel the tremor.
Hosmer said the fire
department took its customary
precaution of removing abput 15
fire trucks from the stations in
case a severe earthquake should
follow.
Edison officials at the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station said ground motion
instruments at the plant three
miles south of San Clemente
didn't detect the quake and that
there was no damage.
The number one unit is
presently out of service until the
company can prove it is
earthquake-safe. Unit two is not
expected to come on line until
mid-summer and unit three is
still under construction.
The earthquake was felt .in
inland Orange County in Garden
Grove but apparently escaped
notice in much of Santa Ana.
Contacted about an hour after
the tremor, Orange County Fire
Information Olficer Chuck
Murphy said, "I didn't hear a
thing about this."
A spokesman at the aelsmic
laboratory at the California
Institute of Technology in
Pasadena said the reading wam 't
strong enough to cal.UM! damage.
STATE
Costa Mesa's long-simmering
feud with colorful lrtnian
"sculptor" Ali Roushan is
probably headed back to the
California Supreme Court,
Rouahan's attorney said Monday.
In a ruling mued Friday. the
state's 4th Dlatrict Court of
Appeal upheld the city's
development review codes as
constitutional, both as written
and as applied in the Roushan
case.
The ruling was a clear -cut
victory for the city and a setback
for Roushan, whose attorney,
Meir J . Westreich, said he would
take his case next to the state
high court.
Roushan has been locked in a
testy legal battle with Costa
Mesa officiala for nearly two
years over his right to erect
towering, red-metal ICUlptu.res
on his industrial property at 1550"
Superior Ave.
The acrappy little welder came
under fire when he erected three
of four structures without
seeking City Hall's stamp of
approval firat.
He argued that he is entitled to
free artistic expression without
government interference while
city officials claimed that the
towers -a1 structures -
required the normal building
(See MF.SA. Pa1e A%)
Riding rails (or work
Rail-riding hobos are moving over u families
with children and men out of work hop aboard trains
in eearch of work and a brighter future. Page A 7.
Dams doing tbe job
Columnist F.arl Wat.en aaya the atate'a systems of
dams baa proved invaluable ln th1a, one of the
cen1U.ry'a wett.t years. Page A6.
COUNTY . .
Flames, co:Pter
rescue detailed
A gnphic deecription of the
last moments of the British
frigate HMS Antelope before she
aank at San Carlos Bay in the
Falk.landa was broadcast by BBC
World Service Monday night.
"Only a few planes got
through the strike force against
HMS-Antelope," a British
correspondent reported In the
half-hour news broadcast
monitored on the Orange Coast.
"But the frigate then made her
way slowly up the bay, trailing
smoke, with the main mast off at
an angle.
''There were holes in her aide
• ahe made anchor about half a
mile from us.
"Helicopters with searchlights
were overhead and landing craft
came alongside to lift off the
crew. We could see figures
crosaing the deck, silhouetted
against the flames.
"There were explosions and
flames. Sparks flew into the aJ.r
long into the night.
"Other ships and helicopters
crowded around to pick up
survivors.
"It was a courageous and
orderly l"e8CUe."
Earlier in the day, the same
BBC radio correspondent had
been aboard a helicopter that was
nearly trapped by an Argentine
air attack that reportedly
included waves of more than 30
warplana.
"I waa caught on the helicopter
during the latest raid." he re~rted via shortwave. "The
helicopter' banked sharply and
dived when the pilot realized he
was caught between the (British)
Rapier missiles and the targets.
"One missile missed us by
about 100 yards. We moved down
and blended into the hillside and
watched two more waves of
warplanes come through.
''Three (Argentine) Skyhawks
were dropping bombs as they
went and machinegun fire and
explosions could be heard from
the hillaides. ,
"We thought they were going
to strafe ua but they turned away
over the hilltops, with trails of
missiles following them."
The BBC world service
(See BBC. Pa1e AZ)
* * * Thatcher:
Argentina
must leave
By Tbe Associated Preti
The Falkland Wands war will
not end until Argentina •
withdraws from the South
Atlantic British colony, Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher ·said
today.
In some of her toughest
language in the seven-week
conflict, Mrs. Thatcher also told
Parliament that Britain will veto
any cease-fire .Proposal by the
U.N. Secunty Council meeting in
New York.
"There can be no cease-fire
without full withdrawal of all
Argentine troops," she said. "Our
objective is to retake the
. Falklands. They are British
aovereign territory and we wi.9h
to restore British Admin-
iatration."
Her remarks hardened the
stance her government took
during tal.ka on at lealt seven
peace plans following the
Argentine invasion April 2.
Thoee efforts collapeed last week
and Britain invaded the islanda.
Asked how Britain would react
if the Security Council passed a
resolution calling for a halt in the
fighting, she said: "If necessary,
we shall have to uae the veto."
In fighting Monday, Britain
cl.aimed it shot down eight more
(See FALKLAND, Page A%)
Citibank decreases
prime to 16 percent
NEW YORK (AP)-Citibank,
the nation's second-largest
commercial bank, cut Its prime
lending rate today by one-half
percentage point to 16 percent.
"It's in line with our view of
the money market," said John
Maloney. a Citibank spokesman.
The reduction, the tint by a
major bank since early March,
followed recent declines in other
short-term interest rat.es that
defermine banks' cost of
acquiring funds. Some rates fell
by almost a percentage point last
week.
Also, the average return on
new Treasury billa auctioned
Monday sank to their lowest
levels since December. As a
result, the maximum rate banks
INDEX
and savings institutions can pay
on six-month savings certificates
fell nearly one -quarter
percentage point, to 12.47
percent.
The declines m short-term
rates partly reflect an easing by
the Federal Reserve System of
credit conditions since early May.
The prime lending rate is that
charged to banks ' most
c reditworthy corpo rate
· customers and, although it does
not directly affect consumer
loans. it indicates the direction of
interest rates in general.
The prime has stood between
16 percent and 17 percent si,nce
the start of the year. It hit a
record 21.5 percent in December
1980.
At Your Service
Erma Bernbeck
Busine9I
California
C..valcade
Clulified
Comks era.word
Death Notice9
F.d.i tortal
lhtertainment
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86-7
A[)
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C6-10
C5
C5
C4
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Horoecope
Ann Landen
Movies
Mutual Funds
National News
Public Notices
Sports
Stock Markets
TeleWlion
Tileaten
Weather
World News
w
B2
84-5
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SPORTS
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~""" ~ bU\ ... I• lalt • U1 lhlrd mejor warehlp, 'h• ~te An•lo;e blown, up b)' an NllnUna ban\b. .. D .. plle the lltHt baUlH,
:Vadoaft otftalaJa IUd today POl)e John Paul U waa deflnltel)' ~to Br1\lin at wMk'1 end for·hl• nlatorlc alx-day vlalt.
Vatican aource1 aald he may
, make a "balanctni vt1lt" to
~tlna. where 96 percent of
the D90Dle.,. Roman Catholic. ~ Pope hu WWl'CCWfully
plelded for• ceue-fire between
the w-rrlnk n•tlon1. Jt wa1 -.rUer f.....Ohe would ICl'ap the
trip to Brttaln to avokl ~
the Araenttnea.
In Wuhlnaton, Sectetary of
State A.Jeunder M. Hata Jr. told
a White HOUie meettna t.cxtay
that Britain 11 approachln1 a
pol(Uon to brin« the war ''to an
early conclu1lon.'' Hou1e
Republican leader Robert H .
Michel reported.
He offered no det•ll•, but
British mtlHary officials
predjcted they wW retake the
heavily defended Falklands
•••••
Jun'• warned th• war could PDUW1 and hinted it may .. k
help from LeUn alll• and th•
Sovie' Union . Dehnu
Mlnltter Amedeo J'ru101J told
the United StatH to 1top
1upportln1 Brhaln tn \he
eeYen•tfeek conruct.
Brhl1h war corrHpondentl
reported wavH o~ Araentlne
Mlra1• end Skyhavik li:.!: 1ttackld Brltaln'a lnvuion
Monday in Falkland Sound oU
the Brt\llh beechheed. It WM the
third 1uch attack I.ft four days.
The Brttllh Defeme Mlniat.ry
aald lt1 Harrier jeta and
anti-aircraft fire from the ahiPI
and 1hore batterie1 brousht
down efaht of the attacken.
Thl1 raised to 64 the total
num~r of Arsentlne aircraft
•bot down or destroyed on the
g:round. Nott told the Hou.e of
Commons more than a third of
the ArgenUne air force baa been
destroyed, and more ships were
arriving to strengthen the British
task force.
c:apl1al within days. The Argentine government
At the United Nationa, Ireland admitted it loat two fi&htera
1ubmitted a re.olution to the Monday and claimed the raiden
Security Council calling for a inflicted "aerioua damage" to a
72-hour ceaae-ftre while troop ahlp and damage to a
Secretary-General Javier Pere% frigate. The Argentine Embuay
de Cuellar made another attempt in Wuhington said the troopthip
to negotiate a peaceful 10lution. was the 44,000-tcn cruJ.er -Il.ner
British Defeme Miniat.er John Canberra, which the Briti1h
Nott said eerller a truce was government requisitioned to
lmpoaible until Britain'• troops carry the invaalon force to the
retake the ialanda. South Atlantic, but t.hla waa not
In Buenos Aires, the military confirmed in London.
* * * * * * BBC COVERAGE ...
broadcast monitored here .eemed
more subdued than the war
report monitored Sunday night.
perhaps in the light of the to. of
HMS Antelope.
The BBC claimed eeven enemy
planes shot down aft.er being
~ by Sea Harrier aircraft, ..,mliidles-~ and naval gum.
.Another enemy plane waa eeen
leaving the San Carlos Bay
bridgehead area, t.rail1na smoke,
the BBC report aid. BBC repoq .. ~ra quoted
~~ IOW'CeS as _aa~ the
British Sea Harrier had struck
Port Stanley with no damage.
"Argentine sources nave
admitted no lOllel," the BBC
reported, "althoUgh for the, tint
time they have admitted 2,000
British troops are ashore in a
lar~ force."
The BBC added, "Brlti1h
f on:ea on the ia1and atill face
problems in difficult terrain and
a hostile climate.
'.'Br~Ush r einforcements,
however, will more than
oompensate for ahip lcme&."
UCI student takes own life I A UC Irvine junior w.. found
I ahot to death Monday in what
police are calllng an ~l
I suidde.
. p-~ were summoned-~ theln _-a.west apartment corn.,_ ..
Irvine after a roommate
dbcovered the body of Charles
Donald Stotts Jr. Police aald
Comtal
Continued overceat mllh
Mlty~ Clrtz:zle llllf/11. COHlel, lnlend Iowa 101 eo.t8t hlgf1 et, lnillnd 74. Weter·
63. ~ llall1 _..._ night
and morning wl'hd• t>ecomfng .,. to ~ 5 to 15 knota.
Wind -1 to 2 feet. Weeterty .... 1 to 3 leel. Moetly cloudy
end l'MIZy wttti morning fog and .....
U.S. summary
FIHh 11000 wetch•• were
...... Mondtry tor cent.rel and
1outhern Tex11 •• lre1h thund1ratorrn1 drenched th• .... .._._. . ......,
acroee midi of the Soult-' lftd«*W..,_Of .. ~
Alnlolt ~ lndl9 al '*" tel on Hodlwlln, T ... , Ind 314 Ind-.
• ,.. fWOlll w• brlnGlnG ttie Ff1o Rivet to ,_ bal*full et
lllvet Valley, TexH. By early lftemoon, llbout 4 .._ of rein
,.,, In en are1 from Nuraery,
T'eUI, to eouthweet of Edne,
TexH. Brownnlll• got 2.37 ... Mint ......... pertod
_... • 2 p.lft. EDT. ltloww• and thundwetor1R1 ... ...,... acroee l*1a ef
L041111Me. Teau, 01cre1101t1a1 ~ ........ ~frOlft Neltra1111 Into Iowa.
...... Md .... "°',. • .,
........... eblg ........
Qui eo.t. fl'* ~ Aoftda Md troln .....,, Georgie ecro.a
~VlrVlnl&-A tornado toucJled down et Qaeton, 1.0 .• 1bout 10 mll .. llllUlh of CclUnl*. l .C .. but .,_.
... no ,....,,,. of mel« cMIMge «.,..... . l•n Angelo, THH, hid I ,..... low ..,,...... fot the
..... 51 ...... Tlle~
..-d ..... -In 1911. ' Tff!t,eratuf .. •rollfld ,,. ••
-.i • 3 p.m. EDT rMglld •-41..,._ •~~··'° ........ c.lf. ,_T...._,ao~W .............. ... ..,..... ... .....,,. .... r ... ....
Stotts apparently died instantly
at about 11 a.m. from a single
gunshot wound to the head.
The 21 -year-old computer
9Ciences major from Inglewood
apparently had been despondent
over per1onal matters, police
said.
:..M.,.:1~....-ec!:'::
""' 'lottd• to """"'•· wttll _......,..."°"' ... .... ........ -....... .... .. CAL.llCMMA = Vflltett ....... .. &t 107 1t
• 11 IO If 71 •
............. ~. .... ._mo11t ......
Actress ·
'drove'
Hinckley
WASHINGTON (AP) -John
W. Hinckley Jr. came away from a brief camp.ae encounw with
actre11 Jodie Foetar convinced
that If ht ahot PrelAdent a..,an.
"1he would detlre him, 1he
would feel he wu a hero, the
would love and Nlpect him." a
peychlat.rllt testified today.
Dr. Thoma• C. Goldman, a
defeme wlt.netl who lntarviewed
Hinckley three tUnea in hLI )ill
cell aince hla trial bepn 1n U.S.
Diltrict Court on A~ 27, II.kl
Hinckley believed ' they Md a
relatlomhlp" after he stopped
Mtu Fo1ter on the Yale
Unlveralty c•mpu1 briefly In
1980 to uk d.lrec:Uona,
BUNDLES FOR BRITAIN -A r gentine
Armorers work over a cluster of bombs
somewhere in the aouth of Argentina in this
., ...........
photo, released Monday ln Buenos Aires by the
Argentine government.
Thia fantuy, Goldman told the
trial jury, prompted Hinckley to
compo1e a urles of poems
dedicated to the tlCtr'e9I and to
telephone her lat.er. Mill Foster
poUtely told Hinckley to atop
bothering her.
The psychiatrist said Hinckley
told him he tried to contact Mill
Foat.er directly while he wu in
prbon at Butner, N.C., awlliting
trial on charge• of trying to
a.saasain.ate Reagan and shooting
three men out.aide a Waahlngton
hot.el March 30, 1981.
From Page A1
MESA·. • •
permita and safety checks.
Deputy Qty Attorney Stephen
Wiley said the city obtained
aeveral court orders to prohibit
erectlol) of the bright red
structures, but Rou1hao went
ahead and built them '1\yway.
That led to two contempt of
court convictions against
Roushan in Orange County
Superior Court last year. Re was
sentenced on one of the citations
to five days in Orange County
Jail and fined $500.
However, imposition of the
sentence was delayed while
Westreich appealed to the 4th
District Court of Appeals, which
turned him down oru:e, and then
to the state Supreme Court,
which reassigned the cue back
to the ap~als court .
Friday a decision thua became
hls second a ppea l s court
rejection, Westreich noted, but he
said he would ask for a rehearing
and then take the case back to
the st.ate Supreme Court.
U that proves unsuccessful, he
said, he would take the matter
into the federal coW18.
"The decision by the (4th
District Court of Appeal) totally
miases the point," Weetreich laid.
The Santa Ana attorney has
argued that there should be
discretion allowed within the
regulation s to d eal with
situations like Roushan's
aculptures.
116
104 ea se
'"' tlU 1A 41 101 ..,
94 11
71 81 ee 91
101 ao 51 11 eo
73, 52 ao 83
103 11 ea 81
at 14
71 58
102 11 57
" 55 n 51 101 74
M 83
N 42
100 11
72 50 80 H
78 59 ea 14 71 511 " ., T3 81
12 52
to 55
11 &3
103 12
14 ...
100 ao 11 151
102 71
au.deloupe Hevena
l<Jngtton Montego 8tiy
Maullen
Mende
Mexico City
Monterrey r=-ru.n., P.A.
Smog
u 75 ea 1a u 75 se 75
Ml 71
101 75 81 511
75 72
It Ii
Alt quality wlh be ~hful
l'Of llntltlYe P90C)le I i-o.y In
th• aut>urban San Fe1n1ndo,
Santi Clarita, Sen Cfal'lrlel andl
Pon,one-Welnut vellly9 M WI u
In Alwrelde and San letnardlno with polllltlon •tlndera 1noe11
,.~of 18' Ind~ ...tth. PSI of 125, the Air Ouallty
M1nagernent Ot.trlct reported
Monday
Air qu111t~ wlll b1 good .......,_. with PSI r1tlnge of 42
llong the cout. al 8IQ a..r and
In the high deeer1. so k'I lnlend
Ou1n91 County. f7 In the IOW
deMrt. t2 k'I the metropollten LOI
Angelee -and 100 In Hemet and Lale• EJalnore.
Extended
weather
Tides·
TODAY
leocwld low 8: UI p.m.
leocwld high ''. tt p,111 ....... .,
flllrlt ICIW 1.00 a.m. •U Anit llldl 1:83 p.m. 3.7
leooftcf"low 1:11 p.m. u
lun "t' 1:51 P·"'·• rl••• 'Nm Udll)'l~a.lft. ~ ... 'tO-.IO p.tft., ,... wed!.., t:11 Lin.
Board to wrestle
with airport ruling
Hinckley. he said, waa ''furious
with his a ttorneys when he
learned they had lntervlewed
Miss Foster and had not carried a
message from her to him." By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL oftM Dellr Piiot ltaff
Orange County supervisors
will meet in c losed session
Wednesday to devise strategy in
the wake of a federal judge's
refusal to approve a propoeed
p l a n to reg u l a.t e w h i c h
commercial airlines may serve
John Wayne Airport.
U S . District Court Judge
Terry Hauer, following a
lenRthy hearing ruled Monday
night that the county's latest
plan waa unconstitutional and
unfairly beneficial to the two
dominant carriers serving Orange
County AirCal and Republic
AJrlines.
Hatter's ruling delivered a
stunning blow to the county's
efforts to oev1se a system to
allocate the 41 jet departures
permitted daily among carriers
who desire flights.
The ruling marked the second
time in eigh t months that Judge
Hatter has blocked the county
from implementing an airline
aocesa plan at the airport.
Hatter scheduled a June 28
hearing for oounty officialJI to
return to his court with what he
termed a "non-discriminatory"
access plan for the airport.
And the judge added a caveat.
Should the county fail lo adopt
suc h a pla n, it must permit
Continental Aarhnes to begin
4th elephant
born at park
S~ PASQUAL (AP) -The
San Diego Wild Animal Park
says another African bush
e lephant has gi ven birth,
br1ngsng the number of
pachydenns born at the park this
year to four.
Park spokeswoman Martha
Baker said Monday the female
baby is h ealthy and already
walking around.
Th e mothe r , a 13-year-old
elephant named Wanki, is taking
good care of the little one. The
baby began nursing Monday,
Miss Baker said.
service with two flights daily
using Boeing 727s, an aircraft
curre ntly banned from the
airport for noise and weight
reasons.
A Contin e n tal attorney
con tended durin~ the hearing
that the airline has been trying
for 14 years to gai.Jl entry to Joh.ii
Wayne Airport. He did not
specify which rout.es Continental
would like to fly.
In ruling from the bench,
Hatter said he doesn't oppose the
county maintaining the 41 flight
per day cap on jet departures or
s pecifying noise levels with
which air carriers muat comply.
But Hatter bluntly said any
special treatment for the
dominant carriers must be
deleted from any new access
proposal.
"All this grandfathering
(permitting AirCal and Republic
to maintain flight allocations) ls
going to have to go, that's all,"
Hatter said.
Under the county'• proposed
plan, AirCal, which operates an
average of 23.5 flights daily, and
Republic. which operates, 11-5,
would have been stripped of
their existing flight guarantees at
a rate of 10 percent every three
months.
Flights yielded by the
incumbents would be placed in a
pool for re-allocation among
carriers desiring to begjn service
at John Wayne with new and
quieter jets.
B oard of Supervisors
C hairman Bruce Nestande,
reacting to Hatter's ruling, said,
"Of course, it's fair to say we're
all disappointed."
Nestande said supervisors will
meet We dnesday with the
county 's privately r e tained
airport issues counsel, Michael
Gatzke, to determine a course of
action.
Nestande said he would favor
the county joining with AirCa1 in
an appeal of Hatter's decision last
September bloc king
implementation of the county's
original access proposal. That
action ls sch ed uled for
consideration June 8 by the 9th
Circuit Court of Appeal .
Goldman said Hinckley went
to Yale, where Mim Foster was a
student, on the pretext of
enrol.ling in a writers' coune. He
did make Inquiries about the
course but his real reMOW\ for
going to the New Haven. Conn.,
campus was to meet Mias Foster,
Goldman said. Hinckley never
enrolled at Yale.
"At one point he identified
Jodie Foet.er on campus. stopped
her and asked directions," the
psychiatrist laid.
Hinckley felt "great
excitement and exultation." he
said, and "from that point on, he
thought they had a relationahlp."
ln the months that followed
that brief meeting, Hinckley
came to believe that "if he shot
the president, she would desire
him, she would feel he was a
hero, she would love and respect
him," Goldman said.
Hinckley wanted to reecue her
from Yale, which he believed
was a prison, said Goldman.
"His goal was to be a saint and
to win the Academy Award for
bravery."
Goldm an testified that
H inc kle y "had a strong
conviction he had impreaBed Miss
Foster with what he had done"
-referring to the assassination
attempt.
Reagan to visit ...
shuttle factory
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Reagan is beginning
his six-day California trip by
visiting the assembly plant of the
apace shuttle's chief contractor
whe re company officials say
employment has been steady .
The preside nt is making a
quick s top at the Rockwe ll
International plant in Downey,
Calif .. later today. He will
address a Republican i'arty
fund-raising dinner, expected by
White Houae aides to gnm about
$1 million, in Los Angeles ln the
evening.
ANNIVERSARY
.. o ~o~ '~~ ~ &ALE
· -~ EVERYTHING IN OUR SHOP --
25% OFF
•COPPER
•CUTLERY •CUISINARTS
•COFFEE BEANS •COOKBOOKS
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•BASKETS MUCH MORE
(Sorry COOKING CLASSES not tnotuded)
•
WAIHINOTON (A,P) -lt
1urfae.ct q\ll•tly, In wt1tern
M1111chuHU1, on .th• day ,ftonald lh•1•n won the ~. VcMrl -many of t._em RH1an 1upport•re -IDUcht that day to n~ the
IOWl'M*\t toward • ptQlram the prelldent oppoH1: an
lmmeCtlate nuclMr vnw 1 .......
In three ltate Senate d.llti1ctl.
by • ~ of S.•2, voc.n
endonld a ltandldll ln wh.lch
both the Unic.d Stew and the
, Soviet Union would nop buJldina
and deoloytna nuclear ..,,., ana
make do with what they've tot.
To the = edmlniltraUon that la • llm and danaeroua
kiea that wOuld weld ln • Soviet
nuclear ~tap and t.hteeten
the American nUdear deterrent.
But advocatell of the tree., ln Concn-and at the 1fa9 roots, arsue the only way to stop the
um1 nice la for the auperpowen
to atop annJ.na. Period.
The vote ln weatern
Muuchuaetta baa been matched
now ln other dtiee and ltaU!S
Kl'09 the country. The freeze
campailn hu tumed up at town
meetln11 in Vermont arid at
rallJee ln mountain cornmunltiee
of C.01orado. Freeze propositions
wtll be on many ballot• in
November. Garret Park, Md., a
tiny Wuhington suburb, baa
declared itself a nuclear-free zone. ,.
Since that New England vote
19 months a10, the freeze
campaign has become a looeely
organized maaa movement,
claiming 17 ,000 volunteen at
work ln 149 offices ln 30 stats.
More than 180 members of
Congress have endorsed the
free%.e idea. And while Reagan
still opposes the standatUl at
current arms levels, he is
pre11in1 negotiations with
MOICOW on sharp cutbacka ln
nuclear weaponry.
G . Randall Kehler, 37. who
~ worh:ect-tor .-peace center ln
Deerfield, Mass.. one of the
communities involved ln the 1980
freeze vote, now runs the
Natiooa.l Freeze Clearingbou.e ln
St. Lou.la. Kehler spent two year.
ln federal priaona for refusing to
cooperate with the draft.
The clearin1hou1e baa a
budget of $180,000 for 1982 and a
paid ltatt of four. Kehler said the
money cornea frun individuala,
foundations and fund-raising
eventa such aa a benefit concert
by the Boston Symphony
Orchema Accordlng to Kehler,
that ~ rat.ed $90,000 for
the movement, with $15,000
going to the cleerlngbouae.
The oraantzation holda ab
annual national ccnlerence and
haa a 12-member exeeutive
committee that meeta monthly tg
aupervi8e day-to-day operatiicN.
William Ramley of the American
Friendl Service Canmittee ln St.
Louia ia chairman.
'"The clearinghou8e doee not
d.lrect the approech. tactlca, style
or content of any local or
atatewide freeze. campaip,"
Kehler said. "We almply try to
monitor the activitiea, share
reeources. arow together and try
to provide acme coordination."
treeze advocate• have
pthered more than 1 mi.Won
1i1nature1 on petitlona
mppol1ina their c.-..e and pined
the 11.1~ of nearly half of the
naUoa I Roman C.tboUc blltq&
More than two dozen city
eounc:Oa In a dmai atai. have
endoned the freeze. So have the
le1ialaturea of Co?nectlcut,
campaign tgathering steam . ~
' be tro.n at exilUna levell while the cM'Ytlopment of lltemaUve removed tram the liberal tln&9~
neaodaton .. k recluctSone. · IYltAtml· 'lbe proa and cona of the MaHachuHU• 1•t1 from die
The orpnlaadon coardlnatiOI SALT n Tnety AN too technical ~puJou• Bolton area and ltAv
the ,,.._ campalp ~ lta tpecw ~. pedenot of the ·~ ~J.~~-ln .. ,. of the 6'>·~ root• to the debate over the , &i.r ...,_, o• *"'
SALT 11amwoontrol111'9111,.nt, ''In contrut, an effort to 1top town1. In th• 33 town• that,\
1crapped In 1080 and now the development and production Reacan can1ed, the freez.e won Inv
dilm{ued by the Rea1an of all U.S. and 8ovMtt nuclear 30. "
admlnl1tration 11 a deal that w • a p o n • l a • l m p 1 e Backen of the frene ate moro A
would affirm current Soviet 1tr .. 1htforward, effective and ambldoua now. fJ
weapon• advant•IH while mutual; and for all thele ~ They predlct1.hat ln November
permltt1n1 the arm• race to it l• Ukely to havfl sreater voten of C.Ufom!a will 1pprove14 oont:tnue. popular aupport. Thia/ti eeaential the freeze in a referendum,u
Relpn'a uwwer la START, for c:reatinc the acale of popular providing the momentum to .,
the acronym f« neaotiadom he support that la needed to make make their propma1 an iaaue In-a
wantl launched by the end of nuclear arms control effort. the 1984 presidential elect.Ion. o
June f~r atratesic arm1 auccellful." The freeze ldea waa first
reductlona. He propoaea they Ma. Fonbera'a call had not explored u a rallytnc cry for a ~
~th the lntercontinental G ~.r.-::.=i~ the "We have such enormous amounts of ~
the cvnp1~ • ~ nuclear overkill that the issue of who is ·R
movement la on what ahe M
calla .. the percolate-up theory" 'ahead' or 'behind' in the arms race
learned from the fate of the a
Strateaic Arma Llmltatlon has become meanm· 1rJe.Qo. " Kt Treat)' that Prealdent Carter e ·. oa• 1rl:
atlMd ln Vienna only to eee it ~
shelved ln the Senate after the been written when western national disannammt campaign
Sovieta moved lnto Afghanistan. Malaachuaetta resident.a voted on at a New York City meeting in Ja
. '"There wu a sreat deal of the same proposition it offers. September 1980 of peace, 9Cience,a
lobbying for it (SALT II) in Instead, the vote was inspired by and international oriented groups r
Wuhinaton. but vtrtuall_>' no an ame ndment advocating a and unions. Following that,a.
active gruB-roota support,' Ma. freeze that Sen. Mark 0 . session , Ma. Forsberg draftedlt,;
Forsberg uys. "I think that' a the Hatfield, R-Ore., had drafted for "The Call." o1
reuQn it wu shelved.". the SALT II debate that never 18'.
Ma. Forsberg la direct.or of the got started ln the Senate. At a meeting at George~wn .~
Institute for Defense and , Kebler was then a worker ln University ln March 1981, hern!
M a l n e , M a a 1 a c b u a e t t 1 , Dtaarmament Studies, a reeearch the Traprock Peace Center ln document was adopted and the :11
Minr>M>ta, Oreaon and Vermont. orp.nlJation ln Brookline, M.w.. Dfierfield, Maas. freeze campaign launched. A
AND MORE: They won
approval of their pmltion ln 267
New England town ineetlna•.
claim to have campaiam ,a.na ln
270 congreaional dlltriCta and
have the support of auch fiaura
aa evan1efllt Bllly Gra6am,
former Defeme Secntary Clark
Clifford, former CIA Director
William C.Olby and former Vice
President Walter Mondale.
The freeze advocate1 a.re
tryinl to make a nei&hborhoocl
laaue of a highly technical
national defeme matter that had,
for the 37 yean alnce H1roahlma.
been left to the ;utament of the
~ heir crltlca caat freese
campateera u trreaponaible peemnl
But the freese campalp'a
focua la cm a Joint freeze in which
both the Unlt.ed Stat.a and the
Soviet Union would aciee to a
verifiable plan to atop maklnc. testinl and deploytn1 nuclear
weapom. Nuclear anenall would
She la ai.o the author of the H e r e c a 11 s t h a t t h e national freer.e committee was set
freeze movement's four-page anti-armame nt worke rs at up and the executive committee
manifesto, "Call to Halt the Traprock seized on Hatfield's es tablished t o g iv e loose
Nuclear Arma Race," which amendment as an idea that could oversight to the effort.
advocates a mutual and verifiable be put on a ballot -a way to The clearinghouae opened in id
halt in nuclear weapons give 'tie average citizen a clwlce January. St. Louis was choeen as-n
~ and spella out how it to do aomethi.ng for anns control the site, says director Kehler,~
woula wcia.. "What we we offering la a "becau.e St. Louis preeented us~
"The C..U." u it la referred to handle -a apecWc, concrete, with the image we wanted, one Hi
within freeze circles, says a total pithy handle with which to catch of a movement anchored in
freeze might achieve what this terri.fylng imue,'' he says. middle America" q ~afa-'tion to the anna In January 1980, voters "We have such enormous 191
race baa to achieve. It says: petitioned to get the propaeal on amounts of nuclear ovedilll that rn
''Campatcm to stop individual the ballot in three Senate the mue of who is 'ahead. or
weepom systema are aometi.mes diatricu in Mauachuaetts, an 'behind' in the arms race has >l
t r e a t e d a a u n i 1 a t 'e r a 1 area of 62 dties and towns. Many become meaningle.,'' says Ms. cJ
dlaannament or drcwnvented by of the9e are workaday places. fat Forsberg. 'ti
Supreme Court ruling nixes
disclosure of· Nixon's files
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here,
at a slance. are highlights of U.S.
Supreme Court actkioa Monday:
PUBUC DISCLOSURE
The high court ruled that FBI
files documenting the activities of
then-President Nixon's political
opponents are not subject to
public dlaclclsure. By a 5-4 vote,
the justices said that even though
the document.a were aent to tile
White HOUie ln 1969 for political
purposes they atlll cannot be
releaaed. The ruling la the aecond
S\lpreme Court setback in a
week for the supporters of the
Freedom of Information Act, the
federal law aimed at curbing
~t aecrecy. The caae la
FBI w . Abramaon. 80-17~.
ABORTION
The justicea lllftd to judge
the validity of aweepinB abortion
regulations that Akron, Ohio,
tried to lmpoee four yean ago. At
iaaue in the a~ la whether a
dty or state government may
require that any girl under 15
7'!819 of ace have the cement of a
parent or a judae before
OAANOE COAST
obtaining an abortion; that the
doctors Inform patien1a aeekina
abortion• about the rlaka
aaaociated with prepancy,
abortion technlquea to 1>e u.d
and the oood.ttion of the fetus;
that doctors wait at leut 24 houn
after a woman signs a cmwent
form before performin1 the
abortion ; and that aborted
fe tuses be disposed of in a
"humane" way. The ca8el are Akron~va. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, 81-746;
Se8u1n w . Akron Center, 81-854; ana Akron Center va. Akron,
81-1172.
In a eeparate c.e. the high
court agreed to review a MmoUrl
law that require. all abor1iom
after the tint 12 week• of
~ to be performed ln •
holpital and ai.o lllftd to dedde
whether Miuow1 can requltt
court approval or nC>tlce to a
oarent before a non-mature,
f•unemandpat.ed" woman under
18 can get an abortion. The 8th
Circuit court aald aucb a requirement la ~ble. The
CMS are Aabcroft Ya. Planned
Parenthood, 81-1623, and
Daily Pilat MAIN~
Thomee P. Htllev ~ .... Qllilf . .._,.,. Olllmr
~~ 8'1C10hclllrol~
Tom~ ..,..,
=:..":.:L.. ~
~Goddwd
D119111r• ~
=..-~
.... ..,-..c..u-..,CA.
INN...,_: ... u ... c:....-._CA._.
C4""9M ""°'= c.... ......... c-r . ............. ,~ ............ ......,., .. _.._ ......... ~_., .. , .... c .......
~ ... ,.,.,........ .. ~.....,.
,., .. ..,.....,
-from a T-shirt. The shirt cleared a Dallas
bank and was cashed bl the governme nt . .,.
Security National Bank of Rmwell, N.M., teller •
Jan Anglin is shown with Rayl verifying the~
cancellation stamp. • 18
No booze
Throw old tax r.ecords out OM.ND ftAPIDI. Mich. (AP)
-A loud rock bend WW play
unttl dawn at thl• year'• 11'9duation party tor I IUburban hJah IChoo1 -but the ~
won't be 1Dtked MCI Urea wop't
eqU4Mll ln t&e DUidNr Joe.
D&AR R&\DDS: U your ~ are
hl•~wlth old iax ncorda O\at' ~·re afn.kt to away, the tR8 bu.-. welcome
adviol.
MOit documtnta need to be kept fA'\ly
three yMl'I fJ'Om the date yow We ~ WU
ftled. Gr two YMrl from the dat.9 the tax WU maw. whJchewr II lat.er. Jn other wordl. if you
..... your le81 return by April 10, 1981. you
lbo&&kl U.p the related recorda untU April 10,
1816. \ Some recorda do need to be kept Jon&er.
R.l eltate recordl, for lnltance. lhoWd be
kept H lon1 H they can be useful ln ~the ownenhip baall of a piece of
eroperiy. 1'hAa tntonnation 11 needed to claim
depr9dation or to report the aatn or lom on the
~ when it la eold.
'Copiea of put tax retuma ahould be kept
if you think you may U1e income averagina to
compute your tax on a fUture reWni. 'l'o \.&le
·the income averagina method, you need
information from four prior years' re\Uml.
Good financial records are the key to
effective tax planning and will help you fill
out your tax returns with eaae, according to
IRS. Organized records a1ao can uve you time
and money if your return. is audit.t.
For more lnfonnation on recordkeeping, ms offers a free booklet entitled, "Publicatio.n
552, Recordkeeping Requirements and a Liat
of Tax Publications. Request the booklet by
phoning (800) 242-458!).
DMV closes loophole~
DEAR READERS: The California
Department of Motor Vehicles has announced
that it bu cloeed an administrative loophole in
regulatiODI which had pennitted eome illegal
reptratlon of .. new" vehicles purchued out
of state and brought in to California.
~ of April 19, 1982, CallfomJa residents
and busine9les are not able to repter a .. new"
motor vehicle with leas than 7,500 miles on it
if the vehlcle baa not been certified by the
state Air Resources Board regarding the
design and ~rformance of the vehicle's
exhaustion control system.
The OMV a1ao has notified out-of-state
SHOlnST LINH IN OIANGI COUNn
"IXTIA IDGI" GAIPllLD IANK -=
ll01 EAST COAST HJCHWAY
CORONA DB. MAR. CA
(714) 160-0JJ1
SHUTTER
lllST ALLA 11011
dMlen that they may be 1ubj1Ct to civil
519nalt1el tor auch Wqal aal• to California
....tdenta or bualne9el ln the future.
DMV Dtrector Dona V. Alexia said that
the Heelth and Safety Code deflnel a new
vehicle u OM wtth lell than 71~ m.Ue1 on
the odometer. She pointed out that lt 11 w.p1
for a Ca11fomla resident or bua1nem to import
for reslltratlon, u. or Ille any such vehicle
which hu not been certified by the AJ.r
~ Board ln Callfomia.
A vehicle'• certification atatua ,may be
ldenWJed by ename compartment la~ at the
point of purcl\Ue. Theee vehicles ai.o will be
verified by Cal ifornia'• amos lnapectlon
stations, which are supervised by the Bureau
of Automotive Repair.
Mra. Alexia said owners ot auch
non-certified vehicles may not lawfully
register, uae or re-sell the vehicle in
California, and are subject to fines of up to
$~.ooo for attemptJ.na to do ao, accordlna to
Health and Safety Code Sections 4Sl51,
4SlM and 4Sll)6. Gary Nllblte, the DMV'a
Reliatrar of Vehicles, pointed out that any
dealer in any state who sells a non-<iertified
vehicle to a California resident or buaineea a1ao
may be subject to a civil contract resialion
action by b~!{; who cannot register the
vehlclee in omia. Anyone asalaUna in
such activities al80 may be subject io Civil
penalties. ·
The OMV director noted that there are a
few very limited d.rcumatanoes under which a
new, non-<:ertified vehicle may be imported
by a California resident. The reside1't may
import such a vehicle if it ia acq~: to
replace a vehicle which was damaaed oeyond
reasonable repair or stolen whlle oµtaide
California; as a result of an inheritance; pr u a
result of a divorce, dissolution or legal
eeparation.
• Got • problem? Then wri"' to P•'-Horo-· 9 j wiu. P•t w/U cut red tape, gettin1 the
•
answers 111Jd action you ~ to llOlve in-
equities in 6fJvemmmt and businea M.all
your quntion6 to Pat Horowjtz, At Your Service,
OranJlf! Cout Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1'80, Co.ta mesa,
CA. 92626. A.a mahy Jet~rs u poaible will ~ ana-
w~ but phoned b..quiri~ or le~r11 not including
the reader'• full n•me, addrea and busineu hours'
phOl>e number cannot be considered.
8erUort It tONlt 'Billa Central ., Hlah School dectded to Ii" up booze and can. ., leMt lw tha
nlaht, to make MIN then &a no drWdnc and drivtftl. In mum.
puentl u. plddna up the $4.000
tab f« the June .. peny.
'"nMyU ~ kill their wbeela aoc>dbye at about 11 p.m. and
won't .... them._,.m until about
7 a.m. the next day," said Daniel
Robertaon. chairman of a
parenta' FOUP that railed the
cub.
Senion will le.ve their can at
the ecbool and rlde bu.es tb tbe
party -which will be held at a
teeret location.
BecaUM beer, wine and hard
liquor frequently show up at
student satheringe, par&nta
decided thia year, "there mUlt be
a better way," aald Lealle
Louisell, director of prevention
llervices tor Project Rehab, an
alcohol and drus a buse
prevention and treatment prosrazn.
Robert8on said parents decided '
about aix months ago to host the
party. They Mt up a tax-free
lund and began collecting
donations.
The achoo1 provided buaes, and
IChool bua driven will donate
eervicee aa chauffeura.
"Most lmportantly, we have
the support of the kids," said
Robertson, who.e aon will be
among the graduate.. "There are
250 kids. We're positive we 'll
have over 200 attending this
thini·" A survey by Project Rehab and
Grand Valley State Colleaes of
1,223 students in 10th, lltn and
12th grades found that 74
percent said they bad Ulled liquor
and 22 percent aald they drink at
least once or twice a week.
,., ........
MOBILE HOME -A 91-year-old, 300-ton brick hoUle ia
moved by truck along Bl0880m Street in Boston to its new lite,
366 yards away. The resident physician's house belongina to
M8818Chusetts General Hospital is being moved to make way
for the construction of a new medical research building.
Reds not stronger
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Although the CIA has increa8ed
ita estimate of Soviet military
strength by a million men, the
Red Army really lsn't any
stronger than before, Rep. Les
~pin says.
Aspln said that the higher
figure is the result of lmprOVed
estimates by the CIA and doim't
reflect Soviet buildup. Hd aid
most of the 1 million are in
n on -combat areas auclt aa
construction, civil defense and
internal security.
THE LYRIC
ASSOCIATION
OF ORANGE
COUNTY
CARMEN
RIGOLETTO
LA BOHEME
Diainonds
Save S0°A>
CMID
b1 lint
Newport Harbor tlch
Friday, May 28, lpm
RIGOlETTO
b1 V#'tl
Newport Harbor ""' Friday. bM 4. lpm
Reserved seats $12.50. Season tickets for all three only $30.
Group discounts available. For advance tickets and more Info call
494.9446 or 494-3944
Theee progr.m. m.s. poeelble by a MOblf Foundation Gnint
TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY SEA SON 196~) -198/
1122
A Tredltlon
for 80 Yeera
1982 " ............... • =..
145-1077
OVER fl HOT a COLD ENTREB•
112 IWll'ORTl!o a D011Eanc ....
Flneet of VMI, letected ..... F ...... INfaad. ,.,..,
CLOllllG
Selected diamond jewelry.
45 styles. Choose cocktail
ring, pendants, earrings,
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Ldel Coc:kUI Ring
.13 roUI -lght
ortg. s.499 .00
Sale S249.50
Dl.nond & SapptW9
QawE.,,...
. 25 total-~
0tlg. SI 216.00
Sale S608.00
Mens 14k Ring . 40 total weiGht
at1g. $2572.00
Wt 11286.00
an sales subject to stock on hand no spedal orders
14KW=Sel 14 total we
orig. S 1175 •
I Safe $587 .50
I •, ..
I
I ~
I
I
I ~
lt Wll )an" ~phkal enw, not a J)U1iMn alW'. M 1-lilt that i UM way a NG-faced l{ep. Jlm 811\dnt J):.N..,., explalned lt tn apo1oplna to Rep. N._ O ....... ,, a.c..ut., at a conare-tonal
~I
ln a forqaal wrl~ statement about lealalaUon
he wu co-apomortna with Shumway, ""Santini
d9Crib.tt b.fa cone.cue .. ''my aoof friend."
Be dkfn1t refule the money, but a hardware
atore owner who won t123,000 ln •Lu Veaaa ~~~it wun't the cuh that cotmted. ''11'1 b title l wanted," u1d RalDll Morton, a 4S~y......clcl bualnetllman who won the Hold 'Em
amateur divi8ton of the World Serie. of Poker.
M~'I priJie wu half the $246,000 awarded
tn the dlWlkln, which wu the 13th of 14 eventa in
the montb-lana J>Oller 9eriea at Binion'• Horaeshore
Hotel and c...mo.
For .U the Ume Bob Dope has spent en~ troope overaea, he ltill lan't a veteran. ~Rei>~lobbt Fidler, R-Callf .. said 1he is
Oefen.e Secretary Caspar WelDber,er made between te79,000 and aU1htly more than 1 milllon
la1t year, according to hta official lnanclal
di.::l01ure report.
The 1lngle biggest source of Income wa1
aU1htly more than $200,000 ln capital 1aina from
Welnberpr'• ale of stock ln the &chtel Group
lnc., for which he ~rved u vice president and
,enetal counael before, oomlna becom1ng defeme
eecretary. Weinberger received a federal aa.1ary of
$69,680.
Palestine Liberation Organization leader
Ya11er Arafat received an honorary degree from
Osman.la, University in the 10uthem Indian city of
Hyderabad.
A 20-year-old senior from the University of
Nevada-Reno has been named 1982 Helldorado
Queen .
Orange Oout DAIL V PILOT /Tueeday, May 21, 1112
ltare. Smltb wu eelected from a poup of 14
encnnta l.n actMUee kkkinc off lM Veau' annual
wettem celebnation.
Mt. Smith i. 1tudyin1 elementary education
and wW be a 1ubsUtut.e teacher ln Lu Veau thil
1wnmer.
The preaident of Oakland'• Merritt College
pleaded Innocent to chargee of attempting to receive
stolen property.
Oakland anomey G. William Huter entered a
plea In Piedmont-Oakland Municipal Court on
behalf of Job.D B. GreeDe, who faces four counta.
Undercover police arrHted the 41-ye.,--old
college adm.lniatrator May 13 i.p the college parkfnl
lot, where authoritlea aaid he wa1 about to purch.ue
an expenaive microwave oven.
Jazz great Monk Montgomery wa1 eulogized at
Laa 'Vegas u a "rare combination" of man and
muaic who will be impossible to re place.
Montgomery, brother of the late jazz star Wet
Mont1omery, died following a long bout with
cancer.
Comedian Pete Barbattl wept as he eulogized
Montgomery in services interspersed with jazz
selecUona by a small combo.
APW\ st••
DOWN THE RA TCH -Secretary of Defense
Caspar W. Weinberger fits himself into the
twTet of a U.S. Army M-1 tank during a tour
of the Warren, Mich., tank uaembly plant.
Weinberger was in Michigan to address the
Economic Club of Detroit. . -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vo~· ·B.uiow .. .
'defended'
by Capote
NEW YORK (AP) -
Author Tnutwl Capote
aay1 Martha "Slinny"
Von Bulow used
amphetarnln~ and
taught''hlm to use a
hypodermic needle
and be believes 1be
touched off the
lrrevert1lble corfta that
her husband wa1 convictfd o1 caustng.
Capote, author of "In
Cold BlOQd,' I laYI be 11
wlllln1 to provide a
deposition to help Claua
von Bulow in bia appeal
of his conviction for
twice trying to kill his
wife at their Newport,
R,1., mansion.
In..-~ Interview
pub~ lD the May 31
illue of ~ple ~ne.
Capote ducrlbed Mn.
von Bu.low • • woman vrho knew aboUt ~
frequently Injected
hera~lt with
amplletiunines and •u
"certainly capable of suicide ...
Mn. 'vOD Bulow fell
into a ooma in l)eoember
1980,. abd remain• unconscio~.'la • New
York Q\Y bosoltal. lfer huabmd. who la free on •1 ~,.~~in& an appeal. f8Q!ll ~
In prlaoh on hi1
conviction.
Capoie aayw be did not
come forward during
von Bulow'• ~rial -thll
year becauae "I
She was "cer-
tainq capable
of suicide."
•
Salem
' SMOOTH LON TAR 100a
Indigent legal costs
an ·increasing burden
Oranae County a~vernment ~ted more than '8.9 milli6n d\&linc the current fllcal year -not enouah, u it has tu.med out -
to cover the coat of providing legal
repreuntatlon for pel'90llll aocuaed
of ertm. who have no meana of
paytna for an attorney.
-The public def ender's office,
which hal a budget of $5.1 million,
will get through the year without
major problems.
But the public defender's
office doesn't handle each and
every case for wh ich
representation is provided at
pUblic expense. In many instances,
legal conflicts arise that force the
office to tum cases over to private
lawyers. Those lawyers, in tum,
bill the county for their services.
County government budgeted
about $1.8 million this year for the
so-cal.led conflict appointments. By
April, it was apparent additional
funds would be needed.
Thus, supervisors recently
were forced to take $350,000 from
contingency funch to cover the
increased costs.
Supervisors had no choice but
to take the action . Legal
representation cannot be denied,
for any reason.
It is hardly surprising defense
costs have been on the rise. The
economy la bad. The number of
major crlnu1 requlrlna
JcOmJ>rehenalve and' competent
lepi work 11 1welling. And the
cou nty '• population \11
ever-increasing.
But ls , there 10me way to
control Jhe coata despite these
fact.on?
County officials believe 10me
progresa was made last year when
contracts were erttered with
various law firms to provide
representation for cases the public
defender's office couldn't handle.
The contract lawyers take on all
but the most difficult cases.
Others, like major m4fder cues,
are still given to P,.ominent
criminal spedaliats.
A new idea is evolving.
According to officials, there has
been some diacussion of forming
what would amount to a aecona
public defender's office that
would take on all cases the
existing public defender's office
would be forced to give up. The
alternative off ice would be a
separate entity. ,
Containing legal costs
admittedly is tricky business. But
the concept of a second public
defender's office to handle conflict
appointments seems like one
approach worthy of more study.
A federal problem
The federal government, once
more, is trying to unload part of its
refugee problem on the states.
The Transition Program for
Refugee Children, funded under
the federal Refugee Act of 1980,
prov1des states with funds for
tests, bilingual education and ·
remedial programs to assist
refugee children, mostly
Southeast Asians, in public and
nonprofit private elementary and
secondary schools.
But the administration has
requested no funds for the refugee
children's education program in its
fiscal 1983 budget.
This means a cutoff of an
anticipated $22 million in federal
funds that now assist 166,000
children, almost a third of them
in California.
This possibility clearly
dismayed many of the 100 school
officials from 44 states who
gathered in Washington last week
for a three-day refugee
educational assistance seminar.
The California delegate told
federal officials in attendance that
his state now receives $7 million to
help educate 53,000 refugee
children. The head of the Texas '
refugee program said that lf his
state cannot raise substitute funda,
10,00~ refugee atudenta would
have to'be "written off."
School officials again pointed
out that since the federal
government admitted the'
refugees, it should be up to the
federal government to back up its
policy instead of absolving itself of
any responaibillty for refugee
education.
This, of course, has been
argued repeatedly in all .phues of
the refugee programs, including
medical care and interim help
with food and housing. which the
federal government keeps trying
to hand over to the states. -
The education aspect ia
especially critical becaWJe if theee
children cannot be taught Eng1iah
and given adequate ICbooling. the
nation is simply developing the
potential of a wh6le new welfare
Class. I
The California ~
delegation, especially, should
strongly oppose the sugge1ted
federal fund cutback.
Lesson -for Aniericans
The television, film ''Coming
Out of the Ice" which was shown And the picture is not pretty. It ta
Sunday night, was excellent frightening.
viewing for all Americans. While some events took place
in the 1930s and 1940s, there ii no
The CBS TV movie portr8:yed reason to suspect that the situation
the true story of an American• has improved. Actually, with more
hounded, imprisoned and ~rtured 80phisticated devl""' the torturer
ln R~ over a period of 38 Y~~· can do even more' paychoJogk:al
Critic Jerry Buck wrote. his and physical damege today.
epic struggle to survive is told Indeed, it wu 1976 before the
with brutal realism" protagonist finally wu allowed to
W h il e t b e t e 1 e v i s i 0 n leave the Soviet Union.
treatment was harsh, one can We ml g h t do w el 1 to
imagine what it really was like. remember the means the RWlllan
The network had to tone down government m\J.st Ule to enslave tu
conditions for rea80M of taste and people when complaints are made
family viewing. about the Ammcan way.
"Coming Out ·of the Ice'' Our nation haa imperfedlona,
depicts as few movies on TV do but it does not require forced labor
what Ru.ia wa and really ia like. in Siberia to remedy them.
•
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Delly Pilot. Other views IX·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvll·
ed. Address The Oally Pilot, P.O. Box tS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <7141 642·4321.
L.M. Boyd I Guard duty
Whilky dJ.luu.n lD 8cotland ~ 24, what are No. 1 and No. 2? lffM for auanI duty aJ'OWld th.9ir A Homk:ide and icadenta. ~ lliralr'dml .. ~ ~ •Y· 'n'9 .... baak at IMrudln. set up an aw.-me racket. The7 alao
~Mid llitnlcW't and bite ....
Mirror-image presidents
PARIS -The president la keeping h1a
campaign promisea. He la attempting to
change the role ol government. People,
in general, are disappointed, even angry,
about the effects of h1a programs and
reforms. The economic programs, in
particular, don't aeem to be working. But
people still aeem to like the man.
The man's name, of COW'le, ls not
Ronald Reagan. He la Francois
Mitterrand, the Socialist who baa been
president of France for just one year.
THE IRONY CONTINUES: The
presidencies of the French leftist and the
American rightist seem mirror lmagell of
each other. And it is conceivable that
neither of them will prove endwinaly
algnificant. For an American report.er in
Paris on May 10, the annlvenary of
Mitterrand's inauguration, the big newa
seemed to be that there waa no news.
Many Frenchmen and foreign
obeervers expected a revolutipn -or, at
least, a iraumatlc tranafer of power -
when the SodaHsr.a and their Communist
coalitionJats took over after 23 years of
rule in the perton or image of Charles de
Gaulle. In the 19308, when a aimllar leftist coalition, the Popular Froot. won
electoral control, millions of workers
immediately aeized their workplaces in
jubilant sit-down strikes that para.lyiied
the country. ; Not this time. RadictHan 1eemed to
peak on May 10, 1981, when thoounds
of cheering left-wingen poured into the
Place de la aastille and a great
thunderclap eeemed to presage great
confrontation.a. Then, the next day, the
sun shone and everybody went back t.o
work.
Mitterrand seemed as good u his
campaign word. The new govenunent -
including four Communists in charge of
minor ministries -raised minimum
____ €J1
RICHARD 11011 1 ;.. )a
wages and~ taxes on the wealthy,
decentralized aome government
functions, marginally expanded civil
rights and liberties, and nationalized
enough banks and industries to raise
public-sector involvement in business
from 16 to 30 percent.
All of that aounds more drastic than it
was. The l}ationalized industries, for
example, were alrea4y so heavily
regulated that they were practically
govenunent operation.a t.o begin with.
The reaction of the wealthy -. taking
their money out of the coun~ -was
al.a just more of what they have been
doing for generations. 'lbe French, at
leaa1. rich ones. have never been noted
for either generosity or
civic-mindedneee.
The resuha of the refonns? So f.ar, not
too good. The French economy ia
• •
stagnant. Unemployme"t -the
Socialists' principal target -has
increased a bit to about 8 percent.
Inflation has increased a bit to about 14
-percent -while most of Europe's was
declining by a couple of pointa.
INTERNATIONALLY FRANCE has
acted more Gaullist than de Gaulle: more
independent than American presidents
would like. opportunistic in ita sales of
arms or anything else, but basically, and
inevitably, pro-Western. Mitterrand,
who has always been a very
sophisticated enemy of oommunism. has
met four times this year with Reagan
and not once with Soviet President
Brezhnev.
National polls indicate that a majority
of the French are dissatisfied with
Mitterrand's administration -but
wolUd vote for him if he ran today
against last year's opponent, Valery
Gi.acard d'Estaing.
Familiar? The lesson may be that the
two old radica.lB, Mitterrand and Reagan,
were elected because of the inevitable
excesses of tired incumbent parties and
the personal unpopularity of Giscard
d'Estaing and Jimmy Carter. Very
probably the basic opinions and
directiona of neither of the democratic
welfare states. France or America, has
been changed by the circumstances that
brought Mitterrand and Reagan to
power last year -and will probably
take them out of power in the middle of
the 1980s.
Dams prove worth ID rainy years
Although the devastating floods of
1955 and 1967 are now ju.at a memory,
state water officials are quick to point
out that flooding this year would have
been even worse had it not been for the
new dama which have become
operational since t.Mee years.
FOR THIS YEAR has proved to be
one of the wetlest in the atate's history,
far exceeding the 1955 and 1967 yea.rs.
And while the dama have prot.ect.ed the
state'• Central valley from floods during
the torrential rainfalls which extended
the winter aeaaon, the runoff from the
heavy mow packs ln the Sierras b yet to
be met.
& Don Neudeck, head of the state's
flood control center, points out, it wu
the late snowmelt In 1967 which kept
California rivers at flood stage from
Aprll to the middle of July. With the
snow pack this year ranging from 125 to
200 percent above nonnal. there is atill
great danger of flooding If the weather
should turn unseasonally hot between
now and July.
The 13 major flood control dams,
which stem the flow of the Pit ,
McCloud, Sacramento, Feather and
American riven in the upper part of the
,,--.
IAll IATlll
valley and the Klno. Mokelwnne and
Kern rivers in the "San Joaquin basin,
provide the major protections. Added to
this are the myriad dams of utility,
water and reclamation district&
Orchestrating the roles of these dama
in flood con1rol la the at.at.e's Oood control
center. Information gathered from rain
ga~. anowpack i.mtruments, and river
and dam monitoring ls c:omputeriud to
provide Instant warninp to threatened
areas.
Releases from dams holding back
Rejection not the end
Th1nga I Learned Reading "Rejection"
by John Whi~: .
-That James Joyce's collection of
abort atortea, "Dublinera," wu turned
down by 22 publiahera before It waa
finally ICIOepted by an offbeat bowie.
-1bat Rodin -..ulpted a brome bult
~
m1n11111 ~
of Bame, anly to ~ve Ba1ac 1'9jeet tt
outriaht. -"ni.at .. Madame Butterfly,'' "Rlt.e of
Sprlna." and "rtdelio" all llopped on
open1nQ niabt.
--~t °** Cari.on pecidW hil
Idea for xeroaraphy_ to ••v•n
COl'POfttbll before he found one~
to inWllt l.n x.ox.
-That Van Go1b. aold only on• ~ 1n hll whole l1f.um. (to 11111 ~
-That the Wtanlu palntln• poJ>Uta;!Z,,ic:allld •1Whl.ttler'1 MOthir."'
when titd to lb9 16.ril AM .. •WJ,
WU ptOIJ>PtlY NlMated io die cleDM-. wbift lt riwQiabwt',lli )IW'I; ebe .,.
DaWI' .... ~ bti'wartt • tht
~t tbe world•• mOlt po= boud ~ !'ManO;otJ." WM N bytllil·~~-..nl:)~~-tt oonw.t clOlilil of~~ ttiat
would prevent tt from bffomln1 a
11'Dll9 -1'hat ~ M1mdll, the .,.,.....
of genetics, waa rejected by hla own
university. (He then went to the
Univeraity of Vienna, but left without
graduattna.)
-That when the infant Bell
Telephone Co. waa struggling to get
started, ita owners offered all of their rfahta to the mabliahed Western U~
CO. for $100,000, which waa rejected by
the WU president, who aaJd, "What uae
could this compeny make of an electrical
toy?"
-That ThomH Edl1on himself
reject.ed taUdnl .pktUrea on the pounde
that they were~" al)d belldea
would "-troy the film'• illusion. (Thia
wu In 1929, only a few year1 befoN
UtalJdealt became a rallty .)
-That Pretldent :Fillmore mod.ill
rejected an honorary d•lfH from
())(ford Unlvenlty, written in Latm.
with th• diaclatmer, 111 had not tbe edrintaet ot. a dssdad educe.don.. and no
man 1bowd accept a dell'" that be
cannot ...t." .
-Tb.It Conp-tel n~ Pnlldeiit
Wuhm,.ton'a requett for an·~ account of tH,000 a 'year ta Ueu of
~KJDIM-~cwtr-u ... for Poetl.Aunate ii arltata
tnH••lliaeolbm .... wz=111 ~ Vidana. (-rhlt "" 2111 Ill
tbl .... -tbi,::11•11 cillll ... ...... ,, ........... .. ....,,. ..... wl.,.,,,,,, ....... ..
-That DID ........ ~ ....,_. ....................... ........... e-~w.~..-. ~o1 .............. .,«d." . ~
runoffs in the upper portions of the
Central Valley have been controlled so
as to protect from the rains and appear to
have avoided the threats from snowmelt.
The lower valley runoffs are expected to
be al warning stages until July.
The Sacramento Valley.regions, wh.ich
experienced inundations back in 1955
and 1967 are now benefiting from the
protection of the Oroville and Folsom
dams.
But the lower C.entral Valley eouth of
the Mokelumne River has a watershed
that officials estimate will pour some 11
million acre feet into a basin which has a
reservoir capacity of only 9 million acre
feet.
Ironically it is the additional protection
provided by the New Melones Dam
which may save large areas in the San
Joaquin Valley from flooding. Already
storing 1.2 million acre feet, its 2.4
million capacity should contain the
anticipated run-off barring e><cessive hot
wea,ther between now and July.
So while the New Melones Darn baa
probably averted millions of dollars of
flood damage already. and poaaibly
millions more from the anowmelt, its
b~ are begrudged by the "white
water' enthusiasts since the reservoir
hu all but eaten up the nine mile white
water atretch 80 cherished by the rafters.
THE WET YEAR has tended to dim
the memory of the 1975-76 drought
years. And the water stored thia lear
will terVe to offaet any drought o the
next year or two. Still millions of acre
~t of water from this year'• anow-peck
will run out to sea that could have been
stored il dams on the drawina boerd, or
· ~y under way such as die Auburn
Dam, bad been completed.
Such dams not only provide flood
co11trol and water storage but cheap
hydroelectric power a.a well. Yet the
New Melonea Dam, al woll aa the
Auburn Dam and ot.hera. are oppmed by
Gov. Jerry Brown and other actlvlata.
ulck to dream up reaaona for
oppoaU.lon, the P.rlnclpal objectlon
~on the pcmibllltlel of eu1hquab
dllDMI ~u the fact not one maJm'
dam']n the state h .. euffered any
•biWldaJ ~ from quaba.
AP~ JOB EXPRESS -This unidentified couple
h~~ a freight between Fresno and Klamath
F , Ore., and are typical of people riding the
rails in search of jobs.
Job hunters
· riding rails
SACRAMEN'IU (AP) -Lower-middle class
job seekers, some with children, are riding the rails
like hobos, says the Sacramento Bee.
Reporter Dale Maharidge and photo~apher
Michael Williamson said they interviewed
jotrsee~rs and others for six days along the nearly
1,000 miles between Fresno and Klamath Fallil,
Ore.
They. said the traditional hobos complain that
the marginally employed poor began hopping
freight trains, and were joined in the last year by
blue-collar workers seeking jobs. The hobos say too
many people are competing for the available food
and shelter.
At the Oroville Rescue Mission Inc., 65 miles
north of Sacramento, C.W. McComas reported a
22 . 7 percent increase in those seeking aid. But
that's not the whole picture because first-timers are
often too embarrassed to ask, he said.
"Instead of becoming welfare cases, they travel
to pick up jobs. It's completely economic," McComas
said.
At Klamath Falls, railroad policeman L .W.
Harroun said the newcomers are m.11nerous.
"You can spot the first-timers easy .... They
usually tell the truth. They're neater and have nicer
packs and walking shoes. And they usually have a
little bit of money. A lot of them inquire about
jobs."
Harroun said three weeks ago parents with
three children came through. The husband waa
looking for work, but their car broke down.
A week later he saw a couple with two
children.
. "We just try to keep them moving .... Most
of the time, nobody wants trouble," Harroun said.
In Sacramento, Tim Caldwell, in hi.s 20s, still
had clean clothes as he waited to hop a freight for
the first time. He was laid off from a timber job in
Oregon in early May.
Caldwell said, "I sold everything I had. I still
have a clunker car at my folks' house, but I can't
afford to put gas in it .... This is the worst off
I've ever been. I think I'll go to Utah. Maybe there's
something there. Something will come up, some
time."
In Fresno, Fred Johnson, middle-aged, had
been a forklift operator at a Chicago convention hall
until 5even months ago. He and house painter
Herbert Thiessen, just in from s V
contemplated selling blood for $10 each.
Johnson said farm labor is the only work he's
heard of, but he won't do it. He said it pays only
$3.50 an hour, the farm labor contractors put you in
isolated camps so you have to buy groceries at their
canteens, and charge you to be driven to the fields
and back. .
"You wind up with almost nothing,'' he said.
Thiessen said, "I hit state employment, every
union hall, and any place I could. There ain't much
out there. I don't know which way to go."
Elsewhere, Tony Hilliard, a yound oilfield
"roughneck" from Texas, hopped a freight for the
first time, headed for Oklahoma.
"I haven't worked in three months. I got food
at.amps for the first time in my life today. I figure
I've paid enou~h in taxes over the years."
He said hes been hitchhiking for three months,
but "it's harder and harder to get rides . . . . rm
ecared as hell. I wish I could do something to get out
of this."
Tom -not his real name -is 44 years old. He
was laid off four months ago from a sheetmetal job
he'd held since age 18.
"I'm tired of thi.s. This stuff ain't no good. You
stay nasty and dirty all the time. And the police are
always messing with you. Don't use my name. I
don't want QO one to know I'm riding these trains."
Reaaona for hopping freights vary, however.
Wayne, 24, who is legally blind, geta $320 a .
month from Social Security. He rides witJ;l Lisa, age
19, and two dogs.
Lila said she and Wayne eat out of. garbage
bins behind fut-food places at least n days •·
month.
She expla1ned while poking.at a campfire at a
hobo "jUnp": At aae 14, ahe dropped out of 1ehool
uid turned to drup and pl'Oltitution in Seattle, wtndlna up u a proltttute in Sacramento. She and
Wa~. who met two rnontha ago, plan a "hobo
weddlnl-" Wayne bought a tent.
U.. teid. "Being out here on the tracka la
better than the lite fled. MY young glrl ta better
off out here than on the streeta: Thia ta me. rve got
iomethbur now. Out here, people don't treat me like
a wbO.-e!" .
Card counters upheld
TRENTON, N.J . (AP) -The New Jeney Su-
preme Court aays nate officlala, but noi caalnoe,
have the r~t to ban card counters from the b~ ta of Atlan&lic City.
counten are ak1Ued players who lncreue
thetr oddl of wi=~ ~ the cards ~' haw been pla . c1alm ccd counten could oos* Uiem ot dollari. •
Fifties
return
for. trip .
HUDSONVtLLE,
Mlch . (AP) -Roller~skatll\& waltera
and wahreaaea served
hot do1s, bur1ers and
bubble 1um to the
stralna of rock 'n' roll as
they transformed a
church park.Ina lot into a
1960s drlve -l n
f'fttaurant.
The 35 young people,
members of Hillcrest
Chrlatlan J\eformed
Church, donned bobby
socks and argyle
aweaten to raise money
for a trip to a convention
in Canada.
''Brylcreem ls the
key ," said Steve
Schn:Eders, who wore
tight ans, a T -shirt and
a lea er jacket with his
glistening pompadour.
The outdoor diner at
the church near Grand
Rapids waa named H &
K's, after Hillcrest's two
pastors, Kenneth
Schepel and Howard
Vanderwal.
"This is the second
year we've done this,"
Schepel said. "It's to
raise money, but it's also
for fun."
Orano• Oout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, May 25, 1992
Whenever a visitor to Newport Beach. stays
In a motel. hotel or In some other kind of
temporary IOdglng, he pays a tax.
Six percent on his bill.
Ten years ago when this tax rate was
set, 6% was enough.
Today. It Isn't. Not with the grow·
1ng cost generated by more and
more tourists.
Currently, 20.000 to I 00.000 peo-
ple each~ visit our city, drive on our
streets. sunbathe on our beaches and
picnic In our parks.
Six percent on their lodging is no
longer their fair share for sharing Newport
Beach with us.
Measure B on the June ballot calls for a 2%
increase In the tourist or Transient Occu-
pancy Tax. taking It from 6% to 8%.
The impact on the individual is negligible.
On a sso a night room, the increased cost to
the occupant is only St .
However, this Increase would make avail-
able to our city an addltipnal S3,000.000
over the next five years for community
improvements. including improvements in
our streets, traffic signals and bicycle trails.
It's an increase in our city revenues
that's long overdue. And It will ease
pressures to raise local taxes and fees
charged·to Newport Beach residents
and businesses.
You have everything to gain by vot-
ing" Yes" on Measure B ... and not one
red cent to lose. Get out and vote.
VOTE
~11 YES"
ON MEASURE
B
Sponsored by ~
Newporc Beach Committee
for"Yes" on 8
]
' .. ~);
•II
•' ,.
(•
.q
., .,
• •
\' .
•!
'• ·' "
11
"· ,.
"'
ii
Lynn Vandekopple
skated from car to car
taking food orders while
tunes such as "Chantilly
Lace" and "Cryin' in the
Chapel" filled the air. .~--='--~~~~~~..J-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ '1
one
~ AH we cut is the price!
You stm aet Uotted's famous Royal HawaJlan Service. Yuu can savor
authentic Polynesian delicacies. Sip exotic diinks. Watch a great first-
run movie and relax with stereo-all in exclusive Royal Hawaiian style.
You sdll 1et UnJted's Advance Chtck·ln. WhenJou fly United. you can
reserve both your favoiite seat and your roun -trtp boarding passes-
in advance-with just one call.
You sdll 1et the most wldebodles to choose from. Every day, United
offers 7convenient 747$ to Honolulu, plus the only flight to Hilo.
Choose from these departure times: 8:00 a.m .~ 9:00 a.m., 10:00 a.m.,
11:15 a.m., 12:00 noon~ 1:00 p.m .. 4:30 p.m., 6:35 p.m.~t (Honolulu)
and 12:00 noon (Hilo).
You still wodt find an easier way to make reservations. Call your favorite
Travel Agent. Or call United anytime. anywhere. And if your plans change. ~ .. ~w:
just pick up the phone to get your new reservations -its that easy.
And bat of all, you11 tee Hawaii throuah the eyes of the people who know
lier best. The people of United. Nobody brtn~ the magic and the mystery
of Hawaii right on board the way the friendly skies can. Your hosts-
many of them native Hawaiians-share it all with you on your way
to 'our little comer of the world'.'
Act IMt for Unltecl'a Hawalf Summer Sale. This fare has no restrictions;
it's good on all Coach seats, on any day, on any flight, and applies to
travel between June 14 and July 15. If you can't get away then, United
has another great low fare starting July 16,just $145.
Surcharie will be applied during Christmas Holiday
period. SO ,call your Travel Agent ol\.United today. ,
Flythe frlendlvsldes of United.
c;n-y;;itravel A1ent. .
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~~t~':.:! TUBE TOPPERS Will 111 IM ,.., • Moun-··•ulNOMI ....
The IMf 00-IMNnd the
1ron.cut1111\ lo.....,..• ~1411 thel .. *'**' ~
••••lt "T"-~
Alt °°"'*"' T .............
Alw eom.it" It_, c.1 ~. .,,. ....,. lllnt..
11 I '-It\'
-EVEN1tO-l;001•• Nawl CHAlllUJ'a ANOILI I WHITI IHAOOW
THI AnU110Ha
• HAWNlfflN
• CNV4'1Aey
"The Widow«" GuM I
tctor Tom Boeley. (AIQ
• IJHDEMTANOIHQ
HUMAN HHAVI09'
.. Pw1Uatiot\ ..
(I) CU HEWS
<!) AllCNEWS !=:EWS
* * • * "Ae~rrecllon"
(11180) Ellen lklratyn. S.m
Stiac>wd. Allw 1 new-fatll
11110 accident. e women
llndl lhll 11'9 .... the 11>111-
ly IO hMI Oll'>efl but ii I*·
eecuted t>ec:euM or '*
relueal to dllm e divine
Influence. 'PG'
8:30. ALL IH THE FAMILY
• NEW88EATWITH
Cl.ET£ A08£RT8
G 8USINE88 REPORT
(l)QINEWS
0 BARNEY MILLEA c11feox1i:to
.. Nellonel Collegllle Auo-
cletlon Ftn1ls.. The belt
colleglele box W'S In I 2
weight cl..-compete r0<
lhe OlllOnlll Utlea
8:40 (Z)CHAAUE CHAPUH
COMEDY THEA TM
.. The FWeman ..
7:00 8 C88 HEWS l ~~Y8AGAIH
A.8CNEWS
C1J KOJAK m M'A'8'H
The •077th ,~.... IWO
bolllM or l()()tch r0< eecrat
surO*f}I Ind a tanlt 10
tcare olf 1nlper1.
• JOt<EA'S WILD
• 84181NESS AEPOA'T
G PORrAAJT8 IH
PA8TEL8
··~1anf'
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
@ ENTVITAIHMENT
TONIGHT
The eecond part of e IMIM
on drugt In H~
looks at the portrayal of
drug abuee In lllma, eum-
mw ~ P<eYlew: an
Interview with James
Cun
Qt THE MUPP£T8
Guest· llt>s-
(C) MOYIE * * 'LOOll Bed< In Anger ..
( 1g5g) et.Ir• Bloom. Rich-
ard Burton BaMd on the
play by John Osborne. Al
ll>e 1u1 moment. a man
di~• ,,,., he loWI
and needt his wife.
(lJ)MOW * * * ·~ "The Four S..-eone·· ( 19811 Alen Alda.
Carol lklrnell Tlv• oou-
plet, all CIOM. long-time
f rienda. experience pro-
lound cnano-In their
rellltlonlhlpe """*" one ol
the marriages dltln-
!!PretM ·PG·
<Z.JMOVIE * • ·~ ·The frlte0 Kid ..
( 1g79) G«>e Wlklef, Harrl-
aon Ford A Polish r.Obl
flnd1 hl""911 lnvollled In
wild lrontlef ml-.dven·
lutM With a danng bet>lt
robbef when he travela to
San Francisco to talte OY«
• ,,...., congtegatlon. ·pa·
7:30 trJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Featu•ed a l)f"orile of ructt
Sptlnglleld. recording
eupers1ar and TV matt,_
Idol on '0..-81 ~
,., .• e looll at what hap.
pent to contestant• of a
pegeant which pldc1 top
model• D Qt FAMILY FEUO 8 LAVEAHE & SHIRLEY
&COMPNtV
laYerne and Shlt1ey poee
u weight-Ion cou....ior.
at a fat farm
8 EYEOHLA.
Futured· a profile of wom·
CHANNEL LISTINGS
fl KNXT ICBSI 0
GJ KNBC INBCl l
8 l(TLA llnd l lo
e )CABC IABCl c
0 KFMB ICBSI ' 0 KHJ TV !Ind.I " 8 KCST !ABCI e
• KTTV !Ind.I ,,
'e KCOP TV (Ind.I a
.• KCET IPBSl •
• KOCE I PBSI
BIRTHDAY.SPECIAL -Bob Hope
celebratet his 79th birthday in a two-hour
special tonight at 8 on KNBC (4).
an ooxer•, a r990<1 on
people round guilty of
nolorlou1 c,,,,.,.. who are
up ror parole m M'A'S'H
Hawlleye and Hot Lip•
oome uno.r neavy wtlli.ty
fire In lnemy territory, with
Hewtleye rec.lvtng a leg
wound (Pwt 2)
• (I) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
I!) NEWS di YOU ASKED FOA IT
Fe1tured 'Mummte•
Come To Liia .. and .. Cana.
dlan M ountie Sabra
Chat .•
1:00. CE 900t< OF U8T8
HOii Biii Bltlby and •
repertory company dellYer
monologues and perlonn
sketch•• and muelcal
numt>era baeed on mat9rl-
., lrom the ··9oo11 Of
U.t• ..
DQtaoeHOf>E
BIRntOAY SPECIAL
Chrittle Brinkley. Roger
Staubach, LMry HolmM
and Gerry Cooney .,.
among the ~· joining Bob H099 to c:.iebfete hie
791 h blrtnc:tay 8 MOVIE
•a a .. Coogan·e Blult''
< t9e81 cunt ENIWOOd. L•
J C<>bb wnen an Arizona
deputy wr'-In New Yorll
to capture an eec:aped
mu•dw•. he rellee upon
hit badl-homa etrat9gy
and method•
8@ HAPPY DAYS
Fonzie contempllt• put.
ting hie llllng gr80dmothet
In a nu.-llng home. (R)Q DMCME
•• "Whet'• The ._....,
With ......,,?"' ( '971) Deb-
bi• Raynold1, Shelley
Winter•. A woman
'"'-'-to ltll her tK*-
-pw1ner -'*' the lM· tet WMt.I to ...... and glll
marrtad.
• P .M. MAGAZINE
a look at the !Mt lll'OWlnG
.._.., di-called
nerpe1; Shlfk·huntlng
along • 11.-.tch of CalltOt·
nll'1 COM1
• MOVIE
••·~ .. Framed" (1g74)
Joe Don Bak•. Conny Van
Oyt<e All• lour ~ of
bnttal prl90ll treatment. •
gatnblef ·-· '~ on the thugs, crOOlled
cops and !><*I~ who
Ml hlfn uP
• OAHGEAUXB
Btlan c;onlronll • bomb
w9doe<1 In the ""all of e
burning bulldlng and It
rflc>(lmanded by hie a.\lor
oltteef IOf hla rec:kleaa han-
dling of the task (Pwt 2)
(RIO G JfOllA
"TMt Tube Babies .. The
1e1erw:. behind the con-
ception ol human t>ablee
outaloa the womb la in....
®~Q
a* a .. The Ametlc:8nlza.
lion Of Emily" (1"4)
Jame1 Garner. Julla
And1ew. Romance grows
bet_, a Bt111"1 war wld-
On-TV
z rv
HBO
1C1nemax1
IWORI NY .NV
IWTBSI
!ESPNJ
I Sl'lowl lme l
S9QUl9hl
fCilt>le News Nelwo•kl
ow and • non-heroic oft!·
oar Nalgnec:I to provide hla
aupwtora with the luxut1ee
ofhOme.
Cl)MOVIE • • * .. Cullar'• Way ..
( 1g81) Jonn Hurd. Jeff
Btldgee A maimed Viet·
nam vet and t.i. beet
trtend, a IOQal dropout,
toeue their -~ on
IOlvlng a mvtO.. cue. ·R'
CIMOVIE * * * ··Oh Godt Book ti ..
( 1980) G•orge Burn1,
Suzanne Pleehette. God
return• to Earth 81\d
chooeee the young daugll-
,., of an .overtlalng exec;.
utlve to IPfMod hi• rnea-
MIO* to the world. ·po·
1:30 8 9 LAVERNE AHO
8HIAL£Y
A banlo. robber hand<:UHI
Shlney to him -'*' he
ncapee lrom the pollc9
(RIO • Ail IN THE FAMILY
Archie and Edith Introduce
a rlch widow to Barney
Halnet alt« hl1 wile rune
away again
l:OO 8 Cl) MOVIE * *'A .. Stand By Your
Man.. ( 1g81) Annette
o·Too1e, nm Mclnllr• The
raga...to-rlch•• 1tory of
country muaic lier Tammy
Wynatte le dr-.tlz4ld (R)
8 9 THAEE'8
COMl'AHY
Jedi trlel to win • South-
ern belle o-by -enec:1-
1no '* una. '*window.
but lhe wrong glr1 "10wl
up to lhaok him fOf the
attention (R) O
• MERV GRi'FIN
··Medical Md Sden'*
8rMkthrough1" Gu.ti·
Or RlctoMd Ellenbogen.
Or. MlcflMI Edwetd1, 0.
H1told Karpman. Or
Altlert Hlb«l9. Ole* Tw•I.
• AMENCAN Pl.AYHC>t.9E
"C>wenhelm«" Opper>-'*"* .. given Illa -'ty
c:INlanc:e and the Iden-
,.... of the Manhllttan
Projeci and theft famlllee begin.,. In the Army bat· •adl• atmoec>'*• of L04I
A1-(P11113)0
• DAHOE1' uxs
Brien conlronta a bomb
-'gad In the wall of e
burning bulldlng and II
r99f1manded by hlS IWlkw
officer tor hi• redtteu han-
dling of the ,.... (P1111 21
~~ * * a "Le Cege Aux FollM
II .. ( 19801 Ugo Tognazzl.
Mletlel S«raul1. A mkldle-
aged gay couple .,.. the
Quany of a MCl'et organi-
zation trying to glll Illa
ml«oflfm the! one of them
-allowed 'R·
(aJ THa COUNTRY OIAl
Faye Oun-ay. Olcl< Van
Oytte and K8f1 How1td ltat
In lhla per10tmlltl09 of Cllf·
lord OOef •I play about the
complu raletlon1htp1
betwaan en atcohollc
ac10f, hl9 wife and e thMI·
r~I dlrectOf
(%)MOVIE. • * ·~ "HanoYtlf su .. r ·
(197g) HatrllOfl F0<d, IAl-
ley-Anne Down An Aman-
C*'I plfol falt In io... with •
married Englleh nur-.. duf •
Ing WQf'ld W11 II, than
emt>vkl on a daring mt.-
lion to rateue hef hutbllld
from enemy IOf'cae. ·PG' •.ao 8@ TOO CLOSE FOR
COtiWORT
Henry and Murlel ~etly
plan to .,,_. oH to a
romantic: hideaway for
their 25th annlv..-eary,
unaware the glrle,ara ptott·
lr>g a IUfpria. party at
home.(A)
lltMOVIE
"' WI • HnUlr tmllMI .... .,, old blttl8 .. d4
ullon enoroacNI °" 11'11
CtnNIM ~ '" 10:00 G 8 TUIVlltOH'I
'OMATUT
OOMMINML.t
Hlgl'lllOhl• from tele\llllOtl
1<1van1.-nentt ot the PMt
lhltly yMt• .,. -· ld McMahon and Tim Con
wayhott
••••• NIWI 9 HARTTO~
Jon1than Hatt'• tooil·flik•
111\d hit ll'lllQlcllt\ bfotlw
PIO! to murdet JonatNln
;~HOMllANO ...,.y
··aeuino Myteltt Tooe111-
.... Throogll ~· and
monologue1 the com•
poaed, Ru~ Dee on..
hef lhOughll on a Vatlaty
of tubjac1• Q
(B)MOVll
a a ,_. "The l"an·· ( IH ti
Lauren Pao111, J1met oarner. A populat tllm ltet
le vlotlMlled by • peyc;t\Ot IO
admirer ·R·
(I)~ L0\1£AT
THI CAOIMOAOS
(P111 31
10:30. NEWI
CONVERSATION
Guaat· Blehop Ju1n
Arzu be
ID AMERICAN
PlAYHOUaE
.. Oppenhalm•r· Oppen-
heimer 11 gl...an hll MCUrlty
clearance and the aclan-
t1at1 of the Manhattan
Project and !Mir lamlllae
begin Ille In the Army l>M •
rack• et~• of Loe
Alamoe (Pwt 3)Q
{I) Pl.AY80Y'I
Pl.AYMAT£ AEUNt0N
Richard Oawaon noeta the
25th annlveraary celebra-
llon of Hugh Hafnw·1 mag·
llZl.ne et the Playbc>y M-.
llon WMt In Holmby HM .. ,
California
11:00888(1)08
NEWS
• 8ATUAOAY HIGtfT
Hott· Onl Arnaz. Guaet
o..IArnuJr
Ci) YOU ASKED F~ IT
FNtured .. Clrcua OoM 111
Trlclt1" and .. Swimming
Pool FOf HOf-•• m M'A'S'H
The olflc«•' weakly p<Hter
game 81 Iha 4077th 11
lntetrupled by lhr• MC>•·
rale-genclel.
8) BEHNYHIU
Benny aa11ru" a n1m com-
pany called .. Cneapo
Flim.:·
• DICK CAVETT
Gueeta: Joan Plowtlghl
and Laurance OIMer (Pert
2)(RI
(C)MOVIE * * ·Tna Man With
Bogart'• Face.. ( 19801
Robert Sacc:nt, OIMa Hu1-
My. A man~ to
cnanoe hi• ltteetyte and
phYtiCal appNtanca to
r-ble hl9 aa..., Idol
'PG'
(%)MOVIE * *'A .. Ceaat And Rosal·
le .. 11g121 Yvee Montand,
Romy Schnelder A French
female wtllt muat ~
bet-two IC>Yerl.
1 1:30 9 (I) ALICE
Vera tall• • ~t by
GaOtge &mt to be a ...W.
tellon from on high. (R)
DQITOHIOKT
Holt Johnny Caraon
Gue1t1 Suzanne
Plalhette, Argus Hamilton
8 9 A8CNEWI
NIOHTUNE D KOJAK
• THE J£FF£A80N8
• IAHfOflO ANO SON
• NEW88EAT WfTH
CLETE AOeERTS
ID CAll'TIONED AllC
NEWS
(lJ)MOVIE
.... Sunny" ( 1980) ...
rt)y Wyett. Candldt Royelle
A mothef eno.-• wom·
an to dl1trac:t hef eon lrO<n
hi• purault Of pure unadol-
•••ted ~ DMOVIE • • * "Cutler'• W•y"
(1981) John .... d. Jeff
Brldgal. A maimed \Ile\·
Nm Yet and hit beet
friend, a IOClal dropout,
locut their ~ on
aolving a mutdw ceM ·R·
1 1 ::t&(B) MOYI€
•• "Death Hunt .. (11Hl1)
Chatlatl Btonaon, L• MM·
Yin. In lhe 1g30s, a Moun·
He end a lrontl« criminal
wage an old battle ae dYllf.
zatlon anaoeenee on the
Canadian~ 'R'
11:46 (S) MOVIE
• • .. Ten-or Train" (19801
Ben Johneon. Jamie L•
Curtl1. A coflega lretaml-
ty· 1 N-Year'• muqu..--
ade pe;ty turM Into a
nlghtmere wl*I a Yindlc-
1,,.. guee1 tterta 11•1ng off
the party~ ·R·
-Ml>NIGHT----
12.-00. ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
The MCOnd part of a ...-
on drugs In Hollywood
Now, 30 years from sponsors
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Here's an unusual new special on
NBC. But tint, a word from our
1pon110r.
nm ie brought to you by thoae
wonderful fo1u who brougbt
you more than 30 yean of
television commerclah -
commerdala that annoy.t you, «
amuaed you, but tbrouah
repeUtlon wonned their wa.y in.to
the bMk of your mind.
"Televieloo'• Greatest
Commerclal.!J" wbtcb NBC
~ 4 WW broecblt at 10 tor1f&ht, ta the tint M'bM look
the medium t. ever taken at
..Svertltlna. J:d McMahon ind nm Oinway .... tbe botll.
"W• tm ... ai the ~ and the art ot the commerdal.; ••1• Scott Garen, who ex>-~....S tbe tpldal W'lth hill wi •Joie Albtec!hl. • .. it'• alto about bow
~ rt&dl om lodely,"
.. ,, )(tu Albrecht. '.!In · the
l950a, women's commercial•
were all aimed at the hou.9ewtfe.
To the liberated people of today,
that might teem to be looking
down OD women. but it'a juat a
reflection of the times."
"Televilton'a Greatest
Commerdall" ahowl bow TV Ilda
rdleC?i chana1ni attitudes toward
men and women, childrm and
psi.. and 1ooka at •Wna wtth
eex, claealc commerclah,
unforJettable trademark
c:hanlctirs, '*"""-~ humor
andjnC)es.
"~throw away their
matertaJ. eo we h.cl to pt a lot of
material out of ardUYti.. It w.. a
wry t.ouCh llhow to put t.oQ9ther beciawe .,..., oc:immerdal Md to
be ci.r.d wttb tba IP:\'lllCIF.
"'lbe ..,.,.... were afnid It
-... to be a •Urtcal .... But lt'• runy an aff.euonate
tribute, even thOUJb we're
hrAQa fun wtth It. he ..,..
'-n.11 la Pill to IUr up • Jal of
memories. When ~look at one
oJd movie like blanc.a,' a
wave of noata1gia 1weeps over
you.
"Here the noatalai• la
compounded," Garen aaya. "You
haven't 1een a commerdal in ~
yean, but it'• been tnarafned by
a hundred repetltiom. We find
an immediate reapome. People
start to remember the tune to,
•you'll wonder wbtte the yellow
went.'"
Miaa Albrecht aaya,
"Pertonne:n have done a lot o1
takeoffa on commerctale. We
abow the oaialnal commerdaJa. 'Mothlf, rd rather dolt my.ell.'
from Amdn. 'I can't belieYe l e111
the wbol• tblna,' tram Alu
Setu.r. 'Let Berti ~t '°" in the driver'• _.,. from Beru."
The 1how •110 lncludH a
=:.~.~~ -.mmt tU:tnc ~ b'om tM
crid)e to old ....
K.NXT (2) 8:00 -.. Book of Llltl." HOit
Bill Blxby and a repertory company
perform numben hued on material from
the "Book of Llata."
KNBC (4) 8:00 -.. Bob Hope Birthday
Special." Chri1tle Brinkley, Ro1er
Staubach are amon1 1ue1t1 Jolntn1 the
comedian to c.-elebrate h1I 79th birthday.
See photo, left.
KCET (28) 9:00, KOCE (60) 10 :30 -
"Oppenheimer." Part 3 of a aeven·part
eeriet about the controvertJal American
phyelciet, known aa the father of the
atomJ.c bomb.
KNBC (-U 10:00 -"Televtaton'a Greatest
Commercials.'' Highliahta from television
advertilementa of the put 30 years. See
story below.
IOOlll 11 the portr eyal ol
drug abuM In 111me, autn-
mer moYIM preview; an
lnt1t11l1w with JemH
Cun 8 9 FAHTA8Y l8lANO
Mr Roarke batllee with the
cNYll for the Illa of I beau-
111\11 woman, and Tattoo
gra011 a man Na lantuy Of
t>ecomtng an lnttant mll·
llonalre, (Al
• MOVll!
• • • "Aher The Thin
Man" (1935) Wllllarn Pow-
ell, Myrna Loy Nldt and
Nora Charlee try to locale
a mleelng friend In Chin•·
town
•• LOVE. AMEAICAH
STYLI!
.. Love And The Mlttt-"
H11ry lnYh• Bruno and Na
milt•-to dinner "Low
Ar>d Aocld8fltal Paa.Ion"
Jiii nu an autornot>lle aoc;t.
dent.
• EXPLOAINO
l.AHGUAOE
12:06 trJ Cl) MCCLOUO
McCloud 1u1pect1 •
recording executive ol
Ullng rulhl9aa and ~
umee fetal t.cl\ntqu. to
gel the 11111a11 11'9 wanta
(R)
12:30 D Qt LATE NIGHT WITH
DAVID LETT£AMAN a.-· comec:uan Jeff All·
man
• COUPl.E8 C1J MOVIE * * * 1h "Father aoo..··
( 1965) Cary Gr.,.t. Laelle
Ceron A Wortd Wet II
drlller la aaalgned to -up
• watdl 1tatlon In the
South S-, ..... he ..
Invaded by a perky Franc::tt
IChooltaectoar and '* ....,.
an lively your>g female tt1>-
denta
12:56!=
a* * "The e..;i· ( 1g781
Rldl11d Ctenna. Jo.nna
Pettet A tlnlatw and larrl-
fylng force ~ lteell
~lh a trap door In a
reputedly "haunted ..
hOuae 'A'
1:00D MOVIE * * '"1 "The l(.,,1ue111en ..
( 1955) Burt Lancaal•. Dl.--
na Lynn A man and hll
eon fight their wey ICrOM
the Kantucily Tetrltory Into
Te11u
• MOVIE * * a "WMd ii The Wind"
( 1g571 Anna Maonal\l.
Anthony Quinn Tr~
avpea -'*' a young man
fall1 In io... with the MW
wife of hll guardian.
(%)MOVIE
• ""-Knowt You're
Alone" ( 1980) Don Seardl·
no. Caltlln O'Haetiey A
P9)'Chotlc mutdw• .....
att• ac,,ve young brldel-to-
119. lllantly and lethally
lluhlng the4r draema of
wadded bit .. 'R'
1:10 8 MOVIE • * * 'The Panic In ~
die P111t"· ( 1971) Al Paclno.
Kitty Winn A heroin eddlct
becomM lnYOlved with •
nafve your>g woman. and
when 11'9 bac:om. eddlcl·
ad they turn to crime lo
IUj)pOrt the habit
!II NEWS
1: 15 <Bl ON LOCA TlON
"Robert Klein Al Yale"
1:aoDQtNEWS
())MOVIE
* a * "The 8"-8'0411-
ere" ( 19801 John 8elu"1l.
Oan Aytlroyd Two l>"-
alngar1 mu11 contend with
Iha Cltle4igo pollce, the
CIA, lffo-Nazlt and the
U S Army 10 pul together
• t>enelll concert to ralae
mOfWY lot !half partlh 'R·
.MOVIE * *'h "Th• Poatman
Alway• Ring• Twice ..
( 1981 I Jack Nlcholaon,
JeNlca Lange A young
woman and her lover ptot
to murdw '* hutband ·R'
2:10. NEWS
2:25 CC) MOVIE * * a * ·Tm All RIQhl,
Jack" ( 1990) Ian Carmi·
chMI. P1ter Saller•. In
trying 10 do a good jot> for
hll uncle In a lactory. •
well-meaning bumbler
actually upHI• the
cr<>Olled ~ hit uncle
nu ao cat91ully planned. 2'~· MOVIE * * * * "Victory At BM ..
( 1g55) Documentary Nllf.
rated by Ale.and« Sco<H·
by The Wotld War II naval
axplott1 Of the Alllae ate
raYlewed
2:36 (%) MOVIE
• • 'h "Hano11er Slr•f·
( 1g1g) HaHlaon Fotd. L ...
lay-Anne Down An Am..-f.
can pilOt 1114• In love With •
matTl.cl English OU<M dur •
Ing Wortd Wat II, then
embarlll on a dating mt.-
alon to raacue her nutband
rrom ...,,,Y torcee. ·PG· 2:401 NEWS
2:46 MOVIE
a• • Frankanataln, The
True Story" (Pert 21 (1g131
Mldlael S11rai1n. J-
Muon 0. Franklllatein
CfeelM hll Image of the
perlect man and woman
(B)MOVIE
•• "The Hand .. (1981)
MIChael Caine. AndrN
Marcovlccl Baarre Ind·
dent• and nlghlmara1
begin happening In • Cat·
toon111·1 Illa after he
eull.,.. the IOU or a hand
·R·
ame MOW. • * ·~ .. De1ert Fury"
(1947) Burt L~tw,
Lizabeth Sc.oil A refonned
garnl>ler ,.... In love with
the da!Jghtw ol • c:ulno
fYW(tef
:t!30DMOVIE * • "Death Hunt .. ( 1981)
CNit1ae 8'onaon. ~ Mii·
vtn In the 1g30t .• Moun-
tie and a lrontlet crlmln411
WAQ9 an old battle aa cMll·
zetlon anc::t oachM on the
Canadian wl!Oer,_. ·R·
3:46 Cl) Pl.A Y90Y'8
Pl.AYMA T£ AIEUNION
Rlctlatd Dawaon hotta the
25th anntveraary <*ebta-
tlon of Hugh Heiner· a mag-
Ulne at tne Playt>oy Man-
aion W•I In Holmby Hlll1.
CelU0<nta
4:111 (C)MOVIE
• · Gradulllon Dey
( 1981) Cnrltlopher
George. Petch MacKenzie
High achoof tr "°*t •lhlet•
are beinQ lltwally .. cut
lrom the t~" by an
unknown kHI« 'R'
4:215 (%)MOYIE
• • • .. Stevie" ( 1g78)
Glenda J"°*taon. T reYOr
Howwd. Eooentrlc Brltllh
poet... SteYle Smith I•
prolllad. 'PG'
Cll)MCMI
•• • 14 "The ,_ ....
90nt•• ('Ml) Alan Atde.
CwOI 8ufMU Thi• OOll-
.... 1111 OIOM, '°"f·U!Tle
IY!enda. .. ~ PfO-
IOUlld ~ In thelt
r•tlOMfllClil when one of
the 1narrlagH dl1ln-
tagrat• 'PG'
Wf!dn.-•da11'•
Da11tlm.-Mortl.-•
---MORNl«i -
f:IO (.I) •• * • '"-urreo-
llon .. ( 111801 Ellen Gur1tyn,
Sain 81\epard All« •
na1r-feta1 auto acc;ld«lt, •
WOMat> llndt that 1he ha•
Iha •l>llfty 10 heal Olherl
bul la per-.1ed t>eeauee
of '* relutal 10 Cl9lm a
dhllne lnnuenc:. ·PG· D .... Together?"
Jacqueline B1 ... 1. Maldml-
ll•n Scnell A young wom-
111 trlet to l>U'-a CAl"-
deapill the chauvlnltt altl·
1udee of ner riv.in IOY9f
·R·
I: 111 (%) * * .. Lovtng Couplee'
(·1980) Shlrley MacLa1ne.
Jamat Coburn A married
couple end • pair ol young
alnglae 1wlteh partners In a
gem. ol t11Mtyle aampltng
and romantic revenge
PG
7:00 (CJ •*• .. Panelope ..
( 19661 Natalie Wood, Ian
Bannan A neglected wife
dac:ldu 10 dlegulee haraelf
and rob her nu1ban<1·1
bank
7:30 llt * * 'The Apple Dump·
ting Gang Rldee Again"
( 1g1g1 Tim Conway. Don
Knott• A pelr of -•etn
oullawt try to walk the
llrlMt and narrow ·o·
1:00 CID *••;, Salem'• Lot''
( 1979) Oaond Soul, James
Maaon A novet111 relurna
IO htl boyhood hOme to
l>UI an and to t1oul>led
mamorlaa but llnda that a
11n111er myatery lhrood1
h11 town PG·
CZJ * .. He Knowl You re
Aione· ( 1g80) Don Scardl·
no. Caltlln o·Heaney A
psychotic murdeter atalk1
attractive young brldal-to-
be, 1Uently and lethally
aleshlng their dreams of
wedded blla1 'R.
.. '00 (C) "Se• And The S•ngle
Puent • Mika Ferrell
Suaan SI J-A couple
find out the reallliu of
1tart1r>g over wf18fl they try
to merry and their Chlldren
bloelt the way
t-.30 g) • • ·Parld1ee Can.
yon .. ( 1g351 JOhn Weyne,
Manot1 lklrna A ladetal
agent traci<I down I gar>g
of counter1allart operating
along the M .. tc:an border
D * • .. Lovet• And
Liars .. ( 1g101 Goldie Hawn.
Glancal"lo OJannlnt While
traveling In Italy. an Ameri-
can glt1 meet• and falltl In
'°"9 with a mwried man
·R•
.. .36 (%) * • • "My Little
Chlcllldee" 11g40) W C
Flelds. Mae Weal A wom-
an aearcnee for • rlcil hY1-
band but geta mi.ad up
with a mulled bandtl
10:00 (S) a * '"1 A Thuodef Of
Orum1" ( 196 I) Rtehard
Boone, George Hamilton
/" seasoned captain of the
U.S. Cavalry rldet hard qn
e gr..,,, young lieutenant
""' out or Wee1 P01nt
11:00 CC) * .. Roller Boogte
(1979) Linde Bl11r. Jim
Bray A rlCh and talet'lted
mualc 1tudanl aeta out to
win a •ollet·sk•llng dance
contest belOfe r-.mlnQ
her studies PO
(%) a a 'Brealtlng GIUS
(lg80) Han! O'Connor.
Phil Daniell A Brltlah punk
pop 1111'1 llt•lyle ullf.
metety leads 10 tragedy
·PG·
12:00 C1J • • • 1"1 .. Tha O•·Bow
lncldanr ( 19'3) Hanry
Fonda. Dana And...s. /"
lynch mob lrac:Q down
and exaculN thr• inno-
cent men while In Hatch ot
a klller
C ep • Cod te1ldt11t1
beooml lnvolwwd "' "' lnt.,tlallonel ll'lddent -.,
11 mladlrectad tOllltl eul>-
marlne ac>P*l't 11'1 In.It
wel..-1, • * • • .. ,or.., e.,..
apondent (IMO) J oel
MOCr ... l11allle o.,.. An
American repon• btWI!•
~ 1 epy rtno In fnglal\d.
(ff)•• "from Htll To Vlo-
lotf. ( 19791090rge Hll'l\lf.
I on George Pappl(d '°"'
l11end1 from dllf•rtnl
countrtM Muel .....,. Pertl
in 1 g39 to liOh1 lot their
1ndMdua1 counlrle• In
World Wat II 'PO· (() • *'"' ••81ubakW''
( 1980) "°bert Aedlotd.
Yapllet Kono A rtform
minded Wiiden U/ICO¥atW
w•dHPtttd corruption
wnan ne enter• hit new4y
a .. ion.o pr'-! potlnQ ..
en ll\mate. 'A.
12·30 llt • * • • "Fa1nw Of
The Bride" ( 19601 Spencer
Tracy, Ellubetn Taylor A '""*' ••perleneee .. Of 1ne IOY• and heed.a.
lnvOlved Wllh the P<*PAr•·
llOnl for hi• daug'"-'··
~om1r1g wedding.
12:35 <Z.J • "Ha KOOW9 You're
Alone ( 19801 Don Scatdl-
no, C..t11n O Haetiey. A
payetiotlc mur '*• 91.alkt
111ract1ve young l><tdea-to-
l>e Sllenlly and lethally
1lash1ng thatr dream1 of
wedded bllaa 'A.
1:00 IC)••'• .. Biiiy Jaclt"
t 197 1) Tom Laughlin.
OelOtet Taylor An .,..
Green S.el nell-l><aad
ChltnPIOtll lhe C8UM of I
lreedom 1enool IOf runa-
weys on 1n Ar IZOl\I Indian
r-vation
2:00 0 * a ,.., .. Smokey And
The Bandtl 11" f 1980) Burt
Reyno1<11. Jackie Gtaaaon
Sn.111 BulOfd T Justa
calts '" 1111 two lawman
brother• to ttoP a retired
boo11egg111 lhe Bandit,
from transporting a t>aby
elephant 'PG
2 10 IZJ • * 'LOYtng Coupiaa"
( 1g80I $1\lt'lay Mac:L-.
Jamee Coburn A married
couple and a pelf of ~
a1ngtes sw11cn partner• In •,
oame 01 u1 .. 1y1e MA'lpilng
and romen11c revenge
PG'
2•30(tiJ • * '~ flolkM .. ( lg80)
Roger Moora J•m••
Mason A dapp« woman-
na11ng trcoman •• c:alted 1n
to thwart the P1an1 of
••tort1on1111 who nave
hljaclted a 1Upply "11P end
118 llWNlanlng IO deetroy
""O Nor1h See Oil rlga
3:00 C1J • • '" "Madron
( 1971) RIChatd Boone.
LMlte CatOI\ A gunhgni.
and a Frenc:h..Canad1an
0U11 wtio survtved an lndl·
an massacre M1 001 on •
de1ert trek lo elude
Apache •arrtora
3 50 Z • • B<M1<1ng Glass"
(lg80) Ha .. O'~not ••
Phtl Daniels A Btltlah punk
pop s1ar·1 hleslyle um-
m111ety lead• 10 tragedy
PG
4:00 ~ * ••. Penelope ..
( 11166) Netalte Wood. Ian
Bannan A nag6ac:'8d .....
CleQd9I to d19gUIM ,_..,,
and rob hef huaband'•
bank 0 ••a .. Let II Be"
( 19701 The Beatles JOO/I
Lennon. Paul MCC"'1ney
George Harrlaon and Ron-
go Statr are IOllOwed
through rehearsals •
rec01dtng MISlonl and an
1npromptu c<>nc:«t 'G'
4•30 1 SJ • • ·1nvad111s From
The Deep f 1981) Puppets
The World Aquenaut
MCU<tly patrol and c:omblt
cralt S•IOQ••Y ballles an
army ol aquatic aleens wt>O
are determined to lalce
over me planet
5·25 (Zl • • • "My Lillie
Cntc;1o.adee 119•0) WC
Foetd,. Mae Weal A wom-
an seara-tor• rich nu.
band but gets mixed up
wtlh I maaked bandit
11:30 0 * • a '"' My Body-
guard' ( 1979) Chris
Makepeace, Adam
e.ldwtn The ,_ k•d at e
Chicago high 1c;hool
makes tnend1 with the
scnoo1 outcut and togetn-
., I hey stand up to the cru-
el o•no which had par-
MCuled them both ·pa·
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk
~~~~~~~~ .......
CAL.M OO'f-IN,C~LE ...
1T16 NOT -rHA"T 81&
A DEAL !
--------,
. BEGINNERS WFLCOME! ,..
REGISTER .NOW for internationally f~us Ice Capades Skllting
School.Whether you've Ice sk.eted before or never Ice skated In
your llf e, one of these classes ls for ~u.
rr -5-_o_ rle_Off_ ---~Mesa Vtrdt Cinttr
1 ~ I 2701 Hlrbor BIVil. ~ ,.,w1c .... ton et HIM I AdlmS
t Ice C-p•da a.let t Colla lliA
I ,.__&peNe~';,1;r'ne. I 9791110 I.!: ..... --.-. .-. ~ ... .--:!J
PUBUC SKATING EVERYDAY. ONLY A BUS RID£ AWA.VI
.
TUllOAV, MAY H , 1tH
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
Laguna Jlug Club:
t
• Keep on squeezing
ONLY IN LAGUNA, DEPT. -Since Laguna ~ ia
the Art Colony of our coastline, and constaered "" the
nativ,a as an environmentally sensitive place, it i1
undentandable that certain of the citizenry consider the
town to be filled with tree-buggers.
People-buggers are a bit more of a surprise.
But 90 it was as reported in ibis sterlinR journal only
yesterday, that members of the Hug Clu6 gathered at
Laguna's Irvine Bowl for a Hug-In.
It was alleged that the Laguna Hug Club got started
because regulars who ·walked the Main Beach Boardwalk
became acquainted and ~
would hug each other. •
Well, the Boardwalk's as • ._
B2
87
Erma BOml:Htcl( praise
the colorlul, lashionable
Jossins attire in vogue
today. Page B2.
good a place as any to get r.\
'I =~hing like that TOM MURPHIJH ,~t,
I I
r
ACCORDING TO THE report, everybody had a good
time out at the park in putting the &quee7.e on fellow
citizens, except the cop assigned to keep the peace who,
when given a friendly clasp, warned the perpetrator,
"Don't do that again."
There has to be at least one aorehead in every crowd.
You have to wonder in the first place why they would
need a cop to keep the peace at a hugging oonvention.
Muggers, yes. But squeezers?
Bunch oi Laguna Beach H~ really doing theU thing ....
Clearly, it's difficult to find high crimes and
misdemeanors in plain hugging. Oh, you may have been
irritated at times when you see those bumper stickers that
admonish, "Have You Hugged Your Kid Today?" That
kind of placard could cause a real gut-wrench to the party
in the following automobile whQ just suffered some tragedy
involving their child.
THAT UNPLEASANT thought aside, a hugging club
aeems hannle9I enough. You oould have a lot more
damaging avocat:ionl. Like the guy who swaggers into the
local saloon and after the first gulp announces, "I can lick
any puny man in this house."
rm always pleue when that slob gets bounced over
the head by the female bartender.
Others have a hobby of being practical jokers. They
always greet you with an electric buzzer for the handshake,
or make certain they slip a whoopee cushion into your chair
or let you have it with a squirt of water from their
illuminated bow tie that lights up to say, "Hi. Cutie!"
These guys should join the Hugging Club and get
hugged by Godzilla the Gorilla.
IT'S FAIR TO suggest that there are all kinda of
distasteful organiz.ations you can join, like the people who
spray graffiti on walls or belong to hubcap theft rings.
Seldom, however, do you find these kinds of ualY
organizations visiting the confines of Laguna Beach.
Lagunana would rather be saving a greenbelt or preserving
the whales.
About the most violent the organizations get ia the
Polar Bear Club of Treasure Island where members leap
into the chilled Pacific every New Year's Day. And that
violence is usually oonfinecko the one frigid entry.
AS FOR BUGGERS of the world, we welcome them.
.U there wae a little more hugging going on right now,
we lllight have a lot te. fiahting.
Lord knowl we need that.
Education unit seeks
parents, volunteers
con1ortlum; Fountain Valley,
Hunt1n1ton Beach City. , HuntinatOn S.ach Union Hilb
Ocean Vlew, Seal Beach and
W..antnltet.
c.om.ntu. 1NIDbtn .... the
ftnt w~ of .ell month.
Parenti of handicapped and
non-handtcer.ped ltUdentl ma~
a.nly. Dud Dil lor reeeipt Of
time bml .. l'ttdaJ.
rorm1 can be obtained by ~the 1cbool '111trlct,
PARKING LOT -A portion of the private planes tied down
at Orange County Airport ii shown in this aerial photo. The
. ----l coJnty's airport commission will take up proposed changes in . I o~tion of this area tonight. . I
~~~~~~~~~~~~-I
Only contested raee Airport's I
Four seek judge post tied own
rules eyed By DAVID KUTZMANN °' .. .,.., ......... They are moetly in their early
to mid ~Oa. Collectively, they
have more than 70 years of legal
experience. One man ia already a
judge on the municipal court
benCh. Another is a Los Angeles
proaecutor. Two are general ·
practice attorneys.
Together, they are con~
for a highly coveted Orange
<Aunty Superior'Court judgeship
ln the June 8 primary. It ii the
only superior court race where
there ia no lncumbent. The aeat is
being vacated through the
retirement of Judge William S.
Lee, who aerved for 20 years on
the Santa Ana bench.
In 16 other superior court
ofticea, the incumbent.a faced no
opposition. Their names won't
even appear on the ballot.
The candidatea running for the
one, 6-year term are William
Farria, a Tustin attorney and a
director of the Orange County
Traruit District; Weat Orange
County Municipal Court Judge
Robert A. Knox; Los Angeles
County Deputy District Attorney
Joseph Barilla, and Anaheim
lawyer Sherman S . Weber.
Farria and Knox appear to
have the best chance of facing
one another in a run-off election
next November. Both men have
maintained high visibility in
thdr communities -Farria as a
three-time congreaaional
candidate for the Democratic
Party and Knox as a judge and
school trustee in Huntington
Beach.
Barill.a, who haa spent 19 years
on the District Attorney's staff in
Los Angeles, la running a aecond
time for an Orange County
Superior Court judgeship. He
placed third two years ago in a
race won by North Orange
County Mwlldpal Court Judge
Jamea Cook.
Weber, who spent many years
as a certified public accountant
before joining the legal
profetalon, aaid he would only
terVe one term aa a superior court
jud1e because of bis strong
feelings that the judiciary needs
"freah blood... Thia la tiia first
a~pt ~t oftlce.
Fo11oW1nC en brief IWIUnaries
of the t:andldatea and their
beclqp'ounda:
-FARRIS: A practicing
at1ome)' for the pMt 22 years,
the 62-year-old Farria aay1
half-joklnlJy, ''l wouldn't mind havtna another career."
That would be •• Plae, • job
he tald moa active trial lawyen
Hpire to. Hi1 back1round
lncludel six yean on the dty of
Oran1e Plannin1 Commlaaion
and eeven ~ on the tnnlit
district boara, six of tboee u vice
chalrJnan. Throu1h hi1 law prac1lce,
Futll aaJd, he hH aalned a
l1l'Onl know~ of the ''full ~"oflllPl--· In hll cmdktit.'• ltatanel\.t to
wt.n, he llkl he a.un. that
"toush•r law1, 1tron1er law
enforcmwnt and~ )ldae"
would mHn fewer vlctlm1.
hrrtt mt he .., bitBtftil 1n
~~~.:J.h"•r 1ent•actn1 of ..
The former congreaalonal
candidate estimated he would
spend about $10,000 on what has
shaped up u a low-key race thus
far. He has the eervices of an
unpaid political adviler.
Farris sa1<1 more campaign
issues would likely emerge in a
run-off between the two top vote
getters in November. He expects
those two candidates to be
himself and Knox.
Farris is married, has 3
daughters In their 20s and a
four-year-old granddaughter.
-KNOX: "Thia Ls a very
natural thing for a municipal
court judge to want to do," Knox
says of his candidacy for the
su~rlor court.
The 54-year -old Huntington
Beach resident, a municipal court
judge in Westminster for the past
five years, said he was running
on the basis of his qualifications
and experience
A former deputy distric t
attorney, Knox practiced law for
18 years, handling mostly civil
litigation.
N a 20-yeer Orange County
resident, he abo became active in
local school board affairs. He
served as put president of the
Ocean View Elementary and the
Huntington Beach Union High
School bi.strict boarda.
Knox said h e considered a
superior court judgeship a "new
challenge" because he would
handle a broader type o f
caseload. The municipal court, he
18id, la more of a volume-type
tribunal.
Accordlna to Knox'• candidate
ltatement, ne •tron.alY supporta
prosrams to compensate victims
of crime.
He said he plans to spend
between $15,000 and $20,000 for
bl1 campal1n, much of that
money for atana.
Knox, a vice ptelldent of the
California Judaa Amoctation. la
married and .hat four grown
children.
-BARILLA: "I think I'd be a
hell of a ;..cs,.:• the Loi A.naelea
atte ~tor •YI Oatly. "I
feel I m th• moat qualJfied and eoertenced oandldate runnJ.na.'' A 12-year realdent of
Huntbwtort ee.ch, Barill.a Mid
he actfvely campa1(1'~ for •
auperioc' court JudellllliP ln the 1980 UctkJn. but Dlaold third. Tbl• tlme, he H1d,:'be was
runnlns a more low-key :•ra and relylnc on the iO--hilim , •.
He iillcf\he· .. not ~
'*1?Z =-=-tqht .....
courses at W estern State
University, Mt. San Antonio
College and Citrus College, srud
he is determined to be a supenor
court judge. "U you're looking
for the most experienced ana
mo8t qualified man, that's me,"
he said.
The Los Angeles prosecutor,
who works out of the District
Attorney's Compton office. said
he is so committed to becoming a
judge that he plans to continue
running for office until he is
successful. ''I'm never gome to
give up," he said. "I'~ going to
be a judge.V
The 55-year-ol.d attorney said
that, if elected, he would try to
ex p e dite cases without
jeopardizing anyone's
constitutional rights.
He said his nearly 20 years Ln
the Loa Angeles District
Attorney's office, as well as his
experience as a personal injury
lawyer with the Automobile
C lu b, give him a broad
background. Barilla said he also
has knowledge of labor law.
The father of five sons said he
is emphasizing his experience,
which he believes makes him the
best candidate in the four-man
field.
One of Barilla's sons Is a
deputy with the Orange County
Sheriff's Department.
-WEB'ER: Of the four
candidates, this Anaheim
attorney is the most outspoken
about the tenure of juctRes.
Weber, a former CPA who
wrote a novel about the
judiciary, said he believes in
limJted judicial tetma to help
rejuvenate the ayatem with "new
blood.''
"I want to be a judge for ju.st
one tenn," he said.
Weber, who want.a to spend
lesa than $500 on his campai8n,
u.ld he would be "aocaaible'' u a
judge and would attempt to
reform the system fJUD within.
Weber also said that, H a
judp, he would attempt:to be
lmParttal and open-minded. '1Thia la a profemional nioe1 not
a polltlcal race," he aald.
04QuaUflcation1 are the main th1na to ltrel9... •
'Weber worked for 26 yan u
an tlCICOUl\tant tn the J..oe An91lea
area. A UCLA ,r.duate, he later
attended Soutbweaurn
Unlvenlty lAw School. He bU
been • lawyer fot 14 ~·
He iild ·an ~ lhaUICI •
=lly tnineCl bifcn .... GD • 1-nth a. tlld he Uo WCWd
~·~to. thrcKUlh. on•·1•.ar latern1hlp before
---~· pnctkijt. W•ber Uv" with hl1 wlf•,
NOl'IMt In ciiltnl AMhmn.
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL oflhe Delly Plot llaff
Revised tiedown policies for
private aircraft situated at John
Wayne Airport will be subject of
a public hearing tonight before
the five member Orange County
Airport Commission.
The meeting will be held at 7
o'clock at the hearing room in the
county Hall of Adminiltration
Broadway at Santa Ana
Boulevard, Santa Ana.
Num e rous c hanges i n
o p era ti on o f the 500
county-<:<>nt.rolled tiedown spaces
at the airport have been propoeed
by an ad hoc committee.
One change proposed by the
committee would rescind an
existing policy requiring aircraft
ownership as a prerequisite to
gaining a place on the lengthy
waiting list for tiedown space at
the airport.
The committee ha proposed
that an "open eligibility" policy
prevail by which individuals and.
commercial aviators would
qualify equally for gaininc
tiedown space.
Under th~ proposals, there
would be no limit placed on the
number of tiedown apace1 a
single individual or commercial
enllty could hold.
But the committee is calliJ\I for
a policy that would outlaw an •
ex15ting rule that has perm.ltted
the transfer of tiedown or hangar •
space wh e n the aircraft
occupying the space ls aold.
However, under a J?ropoaed
"grandfather privilege, praent
tenanta would be permitted to
transfer tledowna with their
aircraft for a period of one-year.
Under the recommended
guidelines, commercial aviaUon
enterprises, such as firms that
rent planes, would be permitted
to continue to operate from
tiedowns located at the norih end
of the airport and hangars en the ~
aouth end. l .
It ii auggested. however, that
action be taken to relocate 1
commercial operator• to a
county-owned property on the '1
alrpoft'a west side, a IDOft that 11
would free up tiedown SpMll9 b
lndivlduala at exisUnC 11:11& *'• toe:. dona. .
-... ---· ~.
Ofa_noe Coll• DAILY PILOT !Tueldey, Mey 18, 1NI
•!RMA BOMBl!CK
•HOROSCOPE
oung lovesick woman harrasses former suitor
ANN LANDERS: I am limply morttfled ••u-way a }'OW'I woman ii maldna life tor a aood friend of mine.
He Uled to date her occuionally, but
were never intimate. When he ltopped
llll:lna her out, about two months -ao, ahe
letten threatenina auJdde. Now ahe
outside h1I office in her car and
1Kmlmll'9 him after work to reetaun.nta and
ea of acqualntancea. He hu turned
-Rll'llD la...a movie and aeen her lining
ind him. Lut Sunday she 1uddenly
ared in the pew acrou from hlm, ..... ,""'uui she is not a member of that church.
I •
She never attempts to speak to him, just
ows him everywhere. Ia this against the
Obviously the woman la off her rocker.
•WINGING AFTERNOON -Crystal ~ral. 2, of Huntington Beach, with her r ther Laura 1ake an afternoon swing in Lake
But II ahe ctanaeroua1 Muat he wait W'\til ahe
doea IOmeth1nl blzarre -Uk• maybe ~ta
him -bef<n he can oom~lain! P1eue
advt.. -CONCERNED IN HUNTSVILLE. ALA.
DEAR CONCERNED: ne mu .~, ...
report .... womu '° th pellce. ne curse
-1aar .. 1mut.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am getting
alck and tired of read1na Jett.era in your
oolumn from wives who oomplatn that their
huabanda aren't attentive enough ln the
bedroom. They always threaten to look
elsewhere unle11 their eexual needs are met.
It seems to me that the whole world has
0., PIM ....... lllr ...._. ec......
Park. Huntington Beach. It was a rel.axing_ way
to spend a quiet afternoon.
:~irgo: Wish fulfilled
I
1 ARIES (March 21 -April 19):
Pollars--and-cents issues dominate; you learn
what works as contrasted to mere illusion.
Emphasis on property, home, family
relationships and the finalizing of
longstanding negotiations. Pisces, Virgo
persons figure prominently.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You gain
needed information -relatives, calls and
trios figure in scenario. You may feel
teatricted due to added responsibility.
l\eward factors multiply. You will be
.,..orking towards goal. Money and love are
~of cycle.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You're rid
of losing proposition. Path is cleared for
increased income. You'll have wider
working area and can gain additional
reoognition. You seme public trends and can
be right place with product. Wat.ch Aries.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Questions,
requests are answered in affirmative. You
get what you want, new contacts and
projects lead to success. Scenario highlights
independence, creativity, ability to get to
heart of matters -and strong relationahips.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Insight gained
relating to situation which has been
obscured by false claims, deception and
mystery. Some of your own fears and doubts
.,,,,,,
By PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna Beach
HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
will be erased. Intuition is on target, family
member decides to cooperate and health
report is favorable.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Burden is
removed, member of opposite sex confides
feelings and wish is fulfilled. Social activity
increases, communications improve and
travel plans are solidi.tied. Added source of
income is reason for optimism.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You gain
solid foothold in connection with career,
prestige and emotional involvement.
Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo persons figure
prominently. Superior seeks your
cooperation in connection with rebuilding
program.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis
on travel plans, long-distance
communications, education and spiritual
values. You gain insight into abstract
principles of law. You'll hear the word
''karma" on more than one occasion. Bead
between lines.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Lively family discussion ls connected with
money, budget, purchaaes, sales and relative
apparently consumed by emotional
involvement. You' 11 get to bottom of
mystery with aid of one who initially
opposed you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go
alow, maintain low profile, become familiar
with legal aspects which include apedal
rights and permi11ion1. Focu1 a110 on
partnerships, negotlatlona and marital
1tatu1. You'll be dealing with unique
individual who apparently la psycllic.
AQlJ~JUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Older
indlvidua,J. aida in aetttna Job oompleted. Focua on dependents, buic chqrea. pm and
a reladonlhlp which bM weedmed the
atonn. Be aware of apedal al>POlntmenta,
employment pr08pecta and oblJ1ation to
lndlvldual wbo ha1 inveated time and
money.
PISCE8 (Feb. H•March 20): Flnilh
rather than initiate project. Look bejond the
lminedlate -your appeal could be
unlvenal. Focue on creaUvlty ~and the
~Ola relatknlhlp. You'll be~ ~tA.M individual wbO tad~,~
~~.
IOM aex-cruy. Ia lt becaUM of the tllnw,
mapzlnel, TV, adve~ta for jeans or
what?
If wive. would expend more time and
eneJ'I)' dolnl houaework and spend more
time · ln the kitchen preparing wholeeome
meals Instead of buying frozen and
dehydrated foodl and oarrying ln junk from
the deli, they would be too tired at bedtime
tobelOde~.
No wonder women live lOJller than
men. They have nothJna on their minda but
eex. P1eue dQn't print my name in your
column . Juat sign me -X IN
BAKERSFIELD
DEAR BAKE: Don't worry aboat ,my
prlaUag yoar aame la t•e colamll. I
wo.icba't wut to be respoaalble for wbt
m11•t bappea to yo• If yoar ldeaUty
beeame bow.. Yov atUtMe la ao oatclated
I bad to wipe die mold off die letter .. to print
It. May you eonvlctloa1 reat ID peace, Dodo
Bird.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's one for
"Both Wife and Other Woman" who adviaes
the wife who ls being uaed to tell her
half-a-husband to move out.
After 27 yean my flnt husband and I
were divorced. Shortly thereafter I married
a man whoee flnt wife was an alcohoUc. He
had the reputation of bein1 a terrific
womanizer but I wa1 convinced that a
devoted, intelligent woman and aaper 1ex
partner would keep him at bm:ne.
'
We &ot along perfectly -WlUl one day
lut aummer after two yean of what l
thouaht wu an ideal marrtaae1 I walked in
on hiin and h1a female architect with whom
he always claimed he bad a prof..wnal
relationship .
He abeolutely refl&8e8 to dt.cuaa It. They
continue to aee each other for lunch to "talk
buai.ne91." I'm stuck -no money, minimal
income and the house ls his. So, bow do I
kick him out? He tell• me I have no
alternatives. I'm still in shock and going
crazy. I want out but I don't want to starve.
Can you off er any suggestions? -
MISERABLE IN TIIE SOtITHWEST
DEAR S.W.; Don't let la1m bamboolle
yoa. Yoa DO llave-alteraatlvea. See a
lawyer and find oat what dley are.
How younJl is too YC>Unll for a child to
learn about sex? That's just one thing you'll
find in Ann Landers' new booklet, "How,
What, and When to Tell Your Child About
Sex." For your copy send 50 centa along
with a long, stamped, self-addreased
envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, Ill. 60611.
Dressing for the part
I think women have done all we can do
for jogging. We've taken a limple apon of
throwing Ol).a pair of boxer ahorta and white
T ·shirt to run around the neighborhood. and
elevated It to couture status. EIMA IOMIECI
AT WIT'S END We've coonlinated shoes to match the
ahons, stripes in the ahirt to mat.ch the
headband, warm-up trouaen and jackets
with designs that belong on a Paris runway.
And that's only what we wear in the
supermarkets to shop in. Who knows what
the ones who run wear.
think fashion and sports don't mix. The
other morning I came down to breakfast in a
lavender leotard, pink tights, yellow
headband and a fiesta-striped warm-up
socks crushed just below my knees.
FRANKLY, I WAS GLAD when tennis
fizzled out. It must have taken us six or
seven yean to turn that sport around.
Remember those plain mid-thigh white
dreaes and boring gym shoes?
My husband had just come in from
jogging and was wearing white boxer shorts
just above the knee like he had just run off
the set of "Chariots of Fire."
I had one outfit that never failed to stir
attention wherever I went. It was pale pink
and the shoes picked up that same shade in
the sboestringa. The cap was like a little
bonnet with a viaor. Even the panties had
little ruffles on them and a cute saying. All I
needed was a sweatband to mat.ch the bootie
sox with the little balls over the heel. I
finally found both in a sporting goods store
on the west side of town. The salespenon
said, "How's your racket? In the market for
a new one?''
"I give up," he said. "What are you
supposed to be and where is your treat bag?"
"Don't 'be rote," I said, sip,ping my
coffee, "this is-my aerobics outfit. '
"Aerobics?" he said. "I didn't know you
exercised."
"Don't be naive," I said. "rm dresaed to
drop off the sweeper to be fixed!"
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
I said, "Are you crazy? I don't even play
tennis. Thia outfit is for picking up my child
at achool in the afternoon."
EVERY TIME
l TRY
TO TAKE OUT
A NEW LEASE
ON LIF9E1
As for goU, remember when people
went to the matches to watch the game?
Then women came along and jazzed it up
with short skirts, bright T-shirts and
great-looking sun hats. But like everything
else, I got bored wearing that ailly short
skirt and cut-out glove to the beauty shop
every week.
THE
LANDLORD
RAISES
THE R£NT.
MEN DON'T UNDERSTAND it. They
• I ~ .. .,,,,.;;,.,.~ ........ ...._..... -·-~--...
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deala.
NORTH •ao
c;;iAKJ5
OJU •su
WF.ST EAST
•l10871 •Qte c::11011 c;:1 QT41
O t4 0 10811
•&JI •At
80tJTR
•AK "' .. OA&Q7
•QtOH4
Tbe bldd1n11
..... W.t N_..IA.&
1 • ... I~ PMI
.INT ... INT P .. ......
Openiq lead: Jack of •. ·
If the avtrap dtllen ....
1pot.a before hla •1•· bt
would be ••ll adYIMd to con·
1uJt hll optometrllt. ror tht
ntra1• brld11 pla71r,
laow .. tr, kHplllf 1pota
befcn h1a .,.. .. •"1
.ouda4.tet. soat• Md two .. tlaoda of ·~ Ju. sood ...... OiM WU to ,...,.. WU. two
d•a--..., &M ~ '° ,..,
to, .. 90 ......... " ....
the lat.t.er beeauae a nine-
trick contract rated t.o be
ea.Jer to make than an
eleven-trick one.
Weat led t.he top of bis
spade aequenee and declarer
could count eight trtcka. He
rejected an7 tbou1ht of look·
Ing for hia ninth trick In clubs
-even if a nu... for the
jtck WU IUCCftaful. the
defeodera would have their
1pad• 1ult tunninl before a
cf\lb trick could be eatabliab·
tel. Hearta 6l'9d a moN
reuonabl• proep.M 91 eet.1
tinr up a ninth trick. eo af\.tt
wl.uliDI tbe t1n1 of 1191de1
declattt ...,eel a bean to
tbe jack. Eut WOil ud forctcl
out declarer'• rem1lllln1 •Pld• 1topper, and declaNr
could m.U• ... a.ON than the
tifht trtcb be bad started
out wtUa.
&lPdi IDcl lllatl mJpt not
be ....... ~ YlhM la the
PGtat oount, but ""' pl&.J an lilaportnt role Ill th
·~ ti uteb. ReN, .......... ~ ..........
'" bf ···ut'.Wialiq bit. 1111 ·M .ot Muit .._... a
Mooid .... a. mu• a
abitl triekJ bil&iiied Ot ,.i.
am.:~·· .... ..,. ...... .. ..... t.e .. ....,.. ..... ..
to hold the queen of heart.a,
declarer could have played
Weit for either the queen or
the t.enl
At trick two, declarer
1hould have led the nine of
heart.I and, lf W11t played
low, nan It. A1 tbe cardl lie,
that would have fetebed tbe
queen from East and the jack
of heart& would have been
the ninth trick. But even lf
&be nine of bearta 1o.t to the
ten, declarer could atJll have
fallen back Oft I MCODd heul
ftnelM for Ilia contract. And
obvlou1l1, lf Weat. coven the
nine of beu1.a wttll tbe tea.
the etslat la tbt fU.UllHaa
trlek, a.ad dec1arw CU UD•
m1le h1a tU.. heart tricU
beea\111 tht Jack of diamoada
la an entry to cl\UUl1.
Oranoe Oout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, MIY 11. 1H2
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lowest fare when one call to Associated Cardillo
Travel Service GUARANTEES you the lowest avail-
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Baltimore and Washington, D.C. •
'· I '•
J. ..
..
..
-'
,,
.. ,,
.J.
,. ,
.·.
soar tomorrow for 'A:nnle • -~D-8he1 1 *' • OQlnAo atrtp darllna for ~ ota WM a nldJo raYortte
• · Broldway lowd h•r. But 1•Ann&e,11 the curly carrot-top&>ed ~. ll ~a coot reoeption f"1m criUm ln Mr MW vent""
-the mcJlt expel\llw mullcll
f'WI' filmed.
Crl1ic1 cool to bis budset movie
'llme fMIUlne Mys II I Ann.le'
hM • dark, dou.r, l!MJU\-tplrtted
.tOne -'Oliver Twill' u retold by
J'la1ln" while New1week
COIJ\pl,Um that ". . . tor all the
dtlfaent work, 1omethin1
-.ntlal h.u been at -the
1tory11 almple, all-American
warmth."
Loi AnaelH Tlmea crltic
Sheila Ben8on becan her revlew
thia way: '6Qolly, Annie, how
cc>uld they have put you lh the
moviee and left out your heart't"
And New York Times critic
Vincent Canby, tl'Yina to be nice,
said "lt'a not a movle that'• u
aaUaf~ aa It could have been."
premltNI In New York, Loi
An1•lff, Dellu, Toronto and
Newport Beaoh. It opened In
thole atU. Friday, but lta fate
won't be known until after June
18 oPtn1n&I tn l,000 American
and Canadian ~ten. expected to railt more ~ ts
million for public televlaion
channel&.
Studio oftiolala have been
dlaappolnted in the early
reviewa. Even \he trade papen
found "Annie" lac~.
The Hollywood Reporter Mid
the movie wu devoid of "any
real mqtc." Dally Variety atted
lta btg budpt -reportedly $39.5
million for production and $9
m1111on more foe marketing -
and concluded lt'a "a lot of
money for 10 little picture,
probably impomible to pt back.
"The critic• aeem to be
reviewtna the budpt, not the
picture," d1rectori John Huston
said during an "Annie" party at
the Beverly Hilla Hotel.
m1Wona of people, rather than on
mlllil• which can deltroy them.
''The araument for •Pendlna on mlllil-. auper·bombtn .na
th• llkt l1 that It creatH
employment. Well, •Anni•'
cneted employment, lotl of lt, an4 wW hopefuUy create mote 1n
theata"I when lt playa."
Llk• HUPon. memben of the
caat, lncludtn1 Carol Burnett,
Albert Finney, Bernadette
Peien, Oeotf rey Holder, llttle
Aileen Quinn and Sandy the doc.
were on the premiere trail 1ut
wHk 1ellin1 the movie. Only
Sandy .:aped queationl about
the film'• blr.d review. and hi&h
OOlt.
Maryk•Y Powell, Raatar
marketlna vice preaident, aay1
"The actual coat waa $39.6
million, Which Wll $4.5 rnl1l1on
over the orlainal bu.dpt."
Why dla "Annie" coat 10
much?
But It a still to early to tell
whether "Annle" will capture
Hollywood. & her song says,
"The aun wlll come out
tomorrow," and it will be 1everal
tomom>wa before the American
P'lblic pta ita chance to judge.
Columbla-Rastar's "Annie"
made ita debut last week with
"They seem to be uklJl8 why
ln these periloua times would
anyone spend 10 much on a
movie? It's a perfectly logical
question, but I would much
rather spend money on
90mething that might entertain
Columbia paid •9.~ mllllon fot
the rights to the muak:al, and
Huston aaya "I believe the studio . thinking la that a . areat deal of
money should be apent to ju81'.fy
the investment." In addition, an
early production start due to a
threatened dlrecton atrike added
to the cost.
The
Airporter Inn Hotel
Presents
0HisBand
Opening WedneWay May 26th
Airpater Inn Hotel
(714) 813-2770
THE
PERFECT
BLEND
OF MUSIC
Z4HOURS
ADAY
••. Md for ln-d9pth cover .. or loQI
news u. In "A Oo11r Look'' this
SW1daly 11t 1:00 AM.
•
Kai Warner
Anita Kerr
Les Reed
Nell Diamond
Bob Thiele
Peter Paul & Mary
Cyril Stapteton
Janis Ian
Ron Goodwin
Peta Jaffy
Jimmie Haskett
Eddie Rabbitt
Bottk:elff
Mamas and the Papas
Nataon Riddle
Nana Mouakouri
Tim WtMsbet'g
Muon Wiltiama
Martin Bottcher
Dan Fogel>erg
Werner Muller
The Eaglet
Andre Kostelanetz
Ctyatat Gayle
Tony Hatch
Roger WllllM1I
Bfiln M8Y
Ftri Slneera
Robel1o pelgldo
Amlftol .... ...... .....,. Mlndr9I
"And there were a lot of DIOl>l• involved, not jult extru.
but danc•ra and member• of
many un.lonl," the dJ.rector 11ys.
11Workln1 with crowda 11
tlmt·con1umln1. Yet 'Anni•'
flnJlhed on echedule.'' ~ premjerel LMt week dJd
llHJ. to IOOthe the M'1'YOUaM9 tn
the Columbia PictW'll bulldlna at
Burbank Studio•, where
encuttv• are ..,... to make a
1ood 1howln1 durln1 the
important au,mmer eeuon. They
t.... acrutlny from new ownen
Coca-Cola, whkh paid S7~0
mlWon to break tnto the movie
buainela.
Without aellln1 a ticket,
"AMie" hu eamed money: '10
m1Won from Home Box Office
for pay-TV; •10 mUUon from
NBC for free-TV; $20 mil11on in
advance paymenta by theaten.
M'laa Powell reported an
encouRlina advance aale in New
York at-$300,000.
••••••• SMILING NOW -Aileen Quinn and her dog Sandy may
have little to smile about if the early reviews of "Annie," the
moat expensive musical ever made, torpedo box office
business.
"Annie" a1lo facet formidable
competition in the summer
marketplllce.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTllY
•••• t ...... ,...
ltZZ HAlllOI IUD.
COSTA MHA -141-111 ..
IN 70 MM 6 TRACK DOLBY STEREO
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: edwards NEWPORT CINEMA !
~ASHIONISLAND,NEWPORTCENTE .. .. it Near c ... t Bl,.way. lletweea MaeArdlar A la•lteree .. ..
•
i 644-0760 \ .........................•••.•...•...............
l'lrSTftlCTl D _,, __ _
...,..,.,._.°'*_
NOW· DAILY
M.L am NfD Ill'"-.., AEa rvt
n.E IE.toL OI THt MOTIOH l'ICTURE
CODE Ol IELF llEGUlATION
we call It the Wholesale
Party Plan.
NxJ It wtn save a partv of
tEn a whooolng S745 on
roundb1p airfare to the San
A'andsco eav 1vea. we can it wholesale
beCaUSe tt wens like Ymole-sale: the more you buv. the lower the unit pe1Ce,
For example, If tt-.ere are
t\\O In vour party to San ~the savings are s28.~ ttee are ttne.
the SCPJlnos are S69.00. N'td so on up to ta\ and that
huge $745 savings. .
11 :a• A.M •• 2:H • $:M • a:H • 1 e:a• p .M.
EDWARDS PRICES FOR "ANNIE''
$Q50 . $~00
0.114 Ua4er 12 l'ill Geaeral A._. d
f\AlfftR[
f1JESf1U
And ttiat same percentage
of savings hotds true wher-ever AlrCal flies.
b Qual~ buv roundb1p
tickets at least sewn daVS in advance. Seats are limited.
Entire patty must travel
together and length of~
reStridions ~'So If yOU
and at least one associate
are flVlno ~through September' • call vo.xliYet ~or.AJrCal. 1!11 ResieMltSons \()U haYe a ft1end In the business ¥Alo
told vou he can oet It fOr
YOU 'lklolesate: Afteal.
.,
(
Orange Oout DAILY fllLOT/Tu..aay, M1y 25, 1912
Slieh Wooley keeps looking ahead
•1me.w•
If AIHVILLI -8heb Wooley b11
appeeffd lft DO movlH.1. l'ffOrded th•
' pop hit "~ P90~ Uter'' and WU
QI\ the aid t.lev\alori ahow 11Rawhict., II
8\&\ at •I• 81, th• actor· ~n er-comedlan-1on1wrlter·rKord
ucw-televlaion producer, 1Ull a1ml
rMP·talenta at achJev.ment rather
than rtlUna them on hla 1i..ck of laurela.
"1 don't like to bani on to th1np ln the
paat ," the
wavy-hatred Wooley
uld durln& an
ln tervlew ln hla
Mualc Row offlce.
"1\11 too rmtrk:t.ina· I to on to the future -
day by day."
Wooley la probably
best remembered, al
leaat to people in
their 301, aa the WOOtUY
singer o( the 19~9 hit "Purple People
Eater," which aold three million copies in
three weeka.
.. The space age was upon us," he said
about the era when the song was
recorded. "Everyone was thinking about
rockets and wondering if may"be we
would find people up there. I still
wonder if we will. People heard the song
and ~ IQC'M kind of belnlt.''
The llJM y.u, M beP.n appeartna M
Pttt Nolan on the teltvlafon ah-ow
"Rawhide." Ht eta~ on that we1iem
for flvt INION. OM of hie fellow act.on
wu • aritty, ruued youna fellow named
Clint INtWood.
"Wt call.cl him 'Mwnbl•.' " Wooley recalled. "He didn't 1pMk h.la worda
Yer'f loud. Tho IOUnd man wu alwa)'I
aayt.na, 'Kid, 1peak u~I' But he mU.mbled
h.la way to a fortune. '
He remembera Eastwood for hi•
contrasUn1 temperament.
"l aaw him ,et anaey an=tant director, get of h.la hone and t him,"
Wooley 18.id. "But another someone
\brew a rock at a lizard and he uked
him,. What dld he ever do to you?'
There was a gentle aide, too."
ln the movies, Wooley ia probably best
known for hi• role a1 the
whiskey-drinking killer in "High Noon"
with Gary Cooper. He also was In
"Giant," with James Pean and Elizabeth
Taylor; "Man Without a Star," with
Kirk Douglas; "The War Wagon," with
John Wayne; "Distant Drums," with
Gary Cooper. "Bugles in the Afternoon,"
with Ray Milland; "Rocky Mountain,"
with Errol Flynn; "The Lusty Men,"
with Robert Mitchum: "Sergeant Hook,"
ENOUGH IS ENOUGHI
Thlewee. Plmpe. ProetltutM. And*"" .... ,......,..,
John D'Angelo wlll
do MWthln9 to mab hle~ufe.
wtth Joel Mt<:rea; and "Kellpte.'' with
Sterlina Hayden. Of the ~ he nwde, he
can only name about a dozctn off the top
ot hi.I head.
"I tried real hard once and only
rememberd 40," he laid. And there'• no
Uat ln hla ottke to refreth h.ta memory.
Fourteen yeara a10. he wrote the
theme eona for the tefevition ahow "Hee
Haw," and wu a member of itl on,tnal
cut. And he'• been a country mu.ic:
atnaer for many ve-n wtth .,.,,. auch •
11Tliat'1 My Pa," "Are You Satlafied"
"Don't Go Near the &k.lmol," 0 He°"tio
Wallt No. 2," "Still No. 2," "Detroit Oty
No. 2," "I Walk ihe Llne No. 2" and
"Talk Beck Blubberlna Lipe."
He now makee penional appearances
at fain and parka u a ainler..comt!dlan.
And, he atill wrltea 1on11 and 11
producing televilion epeciala.
"I want to be 1ucce91ful ln produdna
television epedala and the th1np we're
involved in now'" be aald. .. And rve
been encouraged to write a book and I
might do that smne*1e." Ria proudest achievement?
"rve been able to maintain my aanl~
when everything around me was chao9, '
he aald. "f got tfuough the whole me..
It's jult another buainesa and a way to
make a living; it's n~thing to get your
ego blown up."
PA'NIC -It'• an
anxioul moment in the
Irvine Community
Theater comedy "Sar,
Goodnlaht. Gracie '
for (from left) Lenore
Stjerne, Steve Fox,
Peter Stone, Catherine
Denney and \Voody
Jones. The play opens
Friday for four
weekends at Turtle
Rock Conununity Park
ln Irvine.
*BARGAIN MATIN88S *
Monday thru S1turd1y
All PtrformancH before 5:00 PM
(Except Spedll En911111111nta 1114 Hllidayal
1 A Mt~.AIJA ...-Ail
LA MIRADA WAl l<·tN
"•YOUCOULDIU
WHAT I •AA" (NI ------
Mirocto 01 to1ec10111 •••·2•00
"WJ'OMG II RIGHT" c-i ----··
-·~·· .... ~ --..-...... ~~~'!~
Nlf f'te~ ,._ Klllla-uY
'°CHUIOT8 Of' '1Ra" tl'OI IUl.H9 ue.1• ...
"THe ROAD WAJUUOW' c., -----
&.------------.1
• Economy Seat1n1 $2.50 tll 3:00 PM Unltu Ot!Mtwi• Nowd , s 11•t.t#a·x • .t161~ '25ss1~~. J * FOR FUOI EXCfTEmEnTI V1s1tOur ...
ARCADE of GAMES• ::."r-:,."!:.·
Plt:::iJl m
121152:154!111:151:1510!15
1W1nner• .,__iuttl .. ~ J""""\c,..~r. ~CTOR 1/id#U4 Pl'f_IJIRI OF THE lt-Mll'!:!Z:~!~ !Eli 1!45 4:30 7:20 9:45
c:om4.113,12J6,~ 92s21~:::s-)
l"ITIJ u,,rafl!~T = I y~ ~,!~ ~
I.as. ""pul 1:15 Atl:IO..,._ 10:15 II AllM (R) 1:00 CJ
.. 10:00
THIE ISLAND (R)
m going all the wav
PRIVATE LESSONS (Rl
C LASHOI" m THI'. TITANS (POI ~
D~~!'TH~&.UES ~' BROTHl'.RS (R)
STRIPES~
i't?~ ... \ ~'i!!c~,, •
ORIVE·INS OPEN NIGHTL VAT 7:30
Chold••n Undt• 12 FREE Uni~'' Noien
"A final pursuit sequence
as breathtaking as
the big chase in
'Raiders of the Lost Ark: ..
· Playboy Magazine
NOW PLAYING
UIWAAOI -ft·ll lnUN WllTMOOll lOWAllll WOODUllM NUCW .. , .,,, GorOI" Gto-rt S30 u o1 ...... SS• 06SS
• .,_ llllU l'LU.I ClllOOllf ....... ,. IMll'fl.fll
Btu S19 S339 OtlllOI tH 7SS3 -119 N~
lDWAllDI C.... CllTlll lllWAUI IAllkO.ICll Ml·WllT JI •tft•
CosUI Mesa 97' "" El l0to U T SHO Wo!.1->lt< 891 3693
QW.lllOIMllTOl eo.uloleu s•o 7H4 ""'-''""'"" ___ ,
You'll be glad you camel ~
10th :~~IOUS -~~ Jl~
'n-HEF
WARRIOR
GLADIATOR
KING
·~· .... "'' .... , .. ,
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"PORKY 'I" {Ill
12:al::ll.4cal,lclt,UI,-
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALi( IN
"DI.AD MIN DON'T~ PLAID" CN I -----,-
... YOUCOULDIU WHAT I HUlr (PO)
1:tl, a:ao. l:M, .....
LAKEWOOD CENJEll
SOUTH WAl M ...
"'1GHTING 8ACK" Ill) ------.... -
focvtty ot Corwttewooo
21J/H1·9110
"POAKY'I" !WI ---,...,-
"f ANT Al&A" 1•1 _ .............
"WRONG II NGHT" 1111 ............. -
"F1QffTING UCK,.1111 '"CHANOTI OP ,_.. --.-.-.-... I ..,-.-.-.-.-
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ANAl<fl ...
ANAHEIM DlltV E-IN
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ev!"'" ~"~'
BUENA PARK DRIVE IH
A ""'It.. A
LA HABRA D111.1 ,,.
"1'1GHTIMG •ACK" IWI -'°THI WAllHUORI" 1111
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ORANGE O lllVI IN
.. .
MISSION l'IJIV I 114
. ..
..,,.. ........... •s-c-.. 1.H·7022
I
:41
10 , '•
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rl
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:The
worst
' weve
ever
done
is50%
• a year.
Each January, Hanna
Tulving sdecu a list
of underrated silver
dollan.
In 1981. while bullion ,
stocks and real estate
went soft, our list still
managed 50% appre-
ciation.
We've done beuer.
1978's list appre-
ciated l 13ll'o. 1979's, a
remarkable 231~,
231% m one -year
~ven more remark-
ably, 1978's Ust 1s, to
date. up 1094~
Compare that to
any other 4Yz-ycar
investment
The mck 1s fmdmg
the right coins And
Hannes Tulving is one
of only 18 recognized
experts on Morgan and
Peace silver dollars
And we're the only
U.S. rare coin firm
that deals exclu.sit•ely
with investors.
Every rare gold or
silver coin we sell
comes with the indus·
try's strongest grade
and buy-back guar-
antees. our 60-day
money-back policy and
rhe best liquidation
programs available
For more on our
managed personal
rare coin investment
portfolios and' rare
coin-backed pension
or profit sharing plans,
call 800 854-6016
In California,
(714) 851-8202.
Or return the coupon
for a free information
packet
And do it soon.
After all at 1094% over
4~ years, imagine what
you're losing each day
you delay,
HANNIS 'ruMNG ~·
4400 MtcAtthur Blvd
Sui~ J20
Ntwpon Buch CA 92660
t7HI 8S"'8202
Ouoidt c.li'-'r"i.
80().IS+6016
0 ~ concan me I
unclmond you rcquln: 1
$S,000 M1t1lmum ll\Ytt!1"ttnl
0 PkAM •nd more lnl'onnatlon
on your ™' co4n ponfnlio.
• project
• bought
Coppertree Buaineu
Parle, • 111-acre,
2U,000-1quace -foot
mixed UM ~ park
ln c.o.ta M ... , hal been
purchaaed by a jolnt
venture ,ro1,ap for tale
price ln exe.11 of •t5 inilllon.
The partnere are
Coppertree A11oclated
and One Brook hollow,
both baled ln 'Santa Ana,
and Bankere Life
In1urance Co . o f
Nebraska.
The project waa
purchased from the
Moreland Development
Co. of Los Angelea and
Tarnutur/Hamllton
Development Co. of ------------------...:=.::...:.....___J
Cotta Mesa.
Ted Snell and Jeff
Wood o f Coldwell
Banker Commercial Real
F.atate Services, Newport
Beach office. handled
the transaction. ·
FREE BOOKLET -Downey Savings and
Loan, based in Costa Mesa, is offering its n.ew
job-hunting advice book free at any Downey
Savings branch. The 130-page guide details
creative approaches in securing employment. It
will be available June 7.
Grand Opening
To celebrate our Grand Opening. Balboa Coin Galleries
wlll present a free gold· plated coin medal hon to our first 25
customers beginning May I 8th. plus a free personal VIP
Discount Card to everyone who bring!> In this dd Tht>
Discount Card entitle!> the bearer to ma1umum discount
allowances
At Balboa Coin Gallenes you'll find the finesL guaranteed
• l 4K and I SK gold chains,
necklaces. rings. bracelets.
charms and coin jewelry At
discount prices.
• A wide selection or <J.S.
and rorelgn gold and sll~r
numismatic coins.
• Krugerrands. Maple Leaves
and the Gold Coins of
Mexico.
We also buy dnd !.ell gold
and Sliver bullion bars com<.
and scrap and offer complete
privacy for your lran~ctlon!>
~~,,, ~ ,v (\ ~ --·-' ~~ ~~
Ne>rt door to West Coa$l Metal~ lnlerndt1011al
Open 10 00 ~ m to 5·00 pm
!M'i:! All CONDfllC ••
IOlAI WATll MIA7-
U TMIOOM --..0
S. le 111ti7
leMce Time Ill_,. 91 YOlll Door
(Cal Slo<e -Yo.. ArMJ
COSTA MISA 641-1289
UH~ ......
Mt~ VllJO 495.()401
HHtC--.c ;I www <'-.... ...., ... ...,...,.,
• • • • • •
Turn your
unusables
into
usable
cash. can
Daily Pilot
classified
642-5678.
MEADOW eAKS RANCH
5 to 7 Acre Estate Properties
Pktv,. the Collfomlo d r-11e~r-lhe propenles T~ minimum .5-oae
dme d the "Dons ... the tOnchos ond the ptopertt.i. wlll occommodote your own
eOlfy mluloru. Hon.s 9rozlng under the evstom home ond gu•st houM (sukt
shade d on old ook t,.. (5<>me d OUt orchll•ctuol conttol) tennis court,
ooks hove t>.en he,. sl~ chat time). horMs. vineyorch. o;,ocodo ond dwi.
Soft. gentle br9eus. cooled by the groves. 1 :> mri.s from the ~n. 7
oceon. core~ the wnny doys ond star-mlt.s weu ot I· 1 .5, In hlstollcol w•i.t
fllt.d evenings. A. s.le<:t few (only 40 Jlde "oncho Collfomlo Oust north ot
porceb oYOlloble) wlll know ond enjoy thb follbrook)-the "Gold•n Corrldo(' from
woy ot lh ot MU.DO.., OAIU Mt4CH Los An9el•s 10 ~n ~go. Minutes
... o beoudful, prtvote, got•d communltY from Jodi Hlctllous' new O.Or C,..k ot 2&1 gencly tolllng. ook·dustered. Oet9s. Golf Oub. Commuting dlstonce to
divided Into ':> tiv. ~tote·stt.d mojor business ond lndusulol c.nten.
PREVIEW PRICES FROM $85,000. TERMS.
SHOWN DY CONFIRMED APPOINTMENT OHL Y
• Set Up a Budget, or
Keep an Inventory
e Educational-UM aa •
Math or Typing Aid
e Ptay Action Gamff
e LeamBA&IC
Progrwnmlng
• u ... I Wide Ylrlety Of
RitlMiY-to-Run lnetant·
Loedfng Program P•ka
e AtteohM to Your TV
rtad1& /haek
----··-····----··-................ ·-----·-... ·--· _ .. _________ _
Now you can't afford not to
buy onet It's l ~r the whole family Wltl enjoyt 28-300t
Or. Geors• S. McCu of Newport BHch hu
been appolnt.eid a dlrector of Eattrprt11 NattoaaJ
Baak (ln or1an.l11Uon).
Pllllllp_ R. 011&av10D ha1 Joined TH11t1a
Carbide Mf 1., Tu1Un, a dlv1'lon of Smith
International, lnc., u vie. Drtlldent of fiMnce. He
wu employed by Price WaterhoUM of Newport
BNch. MJcuel A. Ttmma hat beeD named vice
pr11ldent of Hle1 and marketln1. Dr. Peter
Scllwarlkopf hal been •Ppolnted vice pl'Sdent
ttichn.lcal and enatneertna.
Donald 8 . Scbu11 of MIMion Viejo haa joined
Slpal Luclmark Properdea, lac. u vice prwident
ln charse of ruidenUal marketins. The
Irvine-baaed firm i1 aelllng homH at nine
developmenta ln Southern CalifomlAa.
Joe D. Harrie hu been appolnted reaional aalea
manager of Pearl Cralae1 of Scaadluvla. Harri.a
will be reeponalble for a aales relfon cove.ring San
Diego and Or&Jlle cou.ntlea and the state of New
Mexico. He will be baaed ln Tuatin.
Rockwell lntematlon.al hu preeented a "Pride
Award" plaque to Cllarleea Morsu, president and
owner of Morgan En&erprllea, Anaheim for
superior performance from 1977 to 1982.
Brace O.elaad of Huntington Beach has been
named vice president of marke~ by Centa.ry U
Real E1tate Corporation. Tbomu Klemen• of
Irvine has been promoted to chief fina.nclal officer.
Gary W. Cooper ii the new chief operating officer.
Compater AutomaUon. lac. has named Haak
Llpowltt aa corporate manager of information
systems and haa begun the reloc~\lqn of its
corporate data proceaal.ng facilities to Boulder from
Irvine. The company moved corporate headquarters
to Boulder ln September, but the in.fonnation
systems organization has remained in California
until th.la time.
Soatb Coast Reper1ory has ciimml81ioned Tiie
Cox Ir Buell AdvertbbaS Company of Newport
Beech to help kick off ita $9 million fund-raising
campaign.
Rlcbard C. Cordon hu been appointed to the
board of directors.of Eldorado Bucorp, a one-bank
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
f ~~ OUITAVllON
It
holding company for Eldorado Bank. He la an.f
executive vice president of Eldorado Bank. it .,
Wilfred G. Parker haa been appointed ~"
appralaer collateral analyst ln the Irvine office of ·~
Barclay1Americaa/Bualne11 Credit, lac. He was an ~
independent fee appra.iaer In Los Angeles. ~
Uoyd Ro111 president of lrvine-bued Saffell & •
McAdam. Inc., Builders, of Irvine, since 1976, haa ::
been elected to membership in the Young :;
Presidents Organization. C
~
The American Consulting Engineers Council re.
armounced that the Newport Beach baaed firm of !t
Born, Barrett & A11oclatea has been named a b
national w inner in the ACEC eng ineering ·~
excellence aw.arda competition. The firm received .l• ~
the award at ceremonies ln Washington, D.C., for ·1: ~ ~he design of •.potable water system for a remote ·~~· ;.
1Bland commuruty ln the South Pacific. '7 · ~ ... ~
Jobn B . Saaer has been appointed vice
president and general manager of Rep•bllc
Development Company, Covina. He previously
headed h1a own firm, Brentwood Homes, Inc., and
was fonnerly with Broadmoor Homes, Inc., aa chief
financial officer, vice president-finance and a
director.
-AN>f•• Miiier" Pell• WI SNIFll
F•l•Nl>l• xr.wue AllMMQ Purtell 511~ BloRJO WI --ASlr -~ p-·
Andf1i ' Utll,..,,
'°"""" P.,M>llOI
H«wy ' lloaR'ICI un FmtSY9 so.-1•0 NIFound
Ct<W1I
""-""" TIW1mP,
_,,,.
Pnol'S ..., 1n11ns1 KMS lflCI
~re.=,.
Meln>T~ Veta
"'~ ICNM un
Almo!>A. ~ .. ~ C.IQuldr
lnY'HCO FIA.Fin
S6 T Ind _,
QltlPrlnt
UPS
L.to•:, ' ;";'l UP Pct..,•
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2 • •• Vo Ul l '-Vp 14 l ,... ,,,. uo 1))
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IS • l lJp I t l'• • .... uo .... IS· 1 • I Vp L•
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l.ASt °" Pc1. -~ °" lDO , .. , "' °" .. , , .. ... °" .. o t01·J . .. °" "J 11 • °" IB , ... "' °" IU
J·~, "' °" IB , .. " °" 12.0 , ... ~ Otf 11-0 • .,, °" 111 , ... Ott It.I , '• Olf " ' 1 '• Otl "' 101 )' 1•. Otl I0.4 •.. ,, Oii IO.S
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MUTUAL FUND
t.
• t " ...
NL
NL NL NL NL NL s ...
;:
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,
NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
lllfU'IOlill IMC'-llOI ,. ....... , ....................... •ac1111c. 'IW, IOUO!t, .. ,..,, .... CllllCUOllATI IYOC• II liAlltft• Altt U l"OIHO 1¥ llfl OH A•b llillflMIT
Tract houses
off the market
SAN DllllGO (AP) -~ In San DieF
County are convertln1 to rentall or haltln1
conatructlon on about 6,000 uact-houtln1 unltt
becau.e the Ml• market la llO aJow, a newwpaper
reported today.
The houalna· frame or lfllded lot tta.ndl alcnt, abAndoncd for now, In about halt the CMell. In mont
than 2,000 othen. the San Dleao Union Mid, projlcta
were completed but oonwr1ed to rental unitl becaute
of lnabWty to tell them M c:ondomlnlwna.
''There are alabt all '1Ver the county," Mid Alan
Nevtn, eeniot vice prelident of the Goodkin Group, a
reeearch firm not Involved ln the aurvey.
Printronix to market line
Prlnt.ronix Inc. of Irvine has announced an
acreement to market a newly developed matrix line
printer from Y.E. Data Inc., a aubtidiary of Yukawa
!:lectric Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Tokyo.
The agreement covers worldwide mark.eta, except
for Far Eut ooun\riea.
Salari revenues drop
Lion Country Safari, Inc. of Irvine reported lower
revenu. and a larger io. for flnt quart.er than in the
comparable 1981 period.
Revenues fell from $366,970 to $334,184, and the
la. per ahate grew from 13 oentl to 17. The net io.
went from $267,122 to $326,812.
CM bank plans dividend
Citizena Bank of Coeta Mesa haa declared a 10
percent atock dividend, payable June 29 to
Stockholders of record May 28. The announcement
was made at the annual shareholders meeting, where
officers and directors were re-elected.
Computer syst~ms due
Al;pha Microtyatema of Irvine announced it I.a
expandinC itl line of integrated computer l)"lt.eml with
the planned Introduction in June of a desktop
rnlcrooomputer, the AM .. 1000 model.
The ayetem ia baaed on the MC68000
mlcroproceuor, the same proceuor used in a
large-acale Alpha Micro ayatem. which will alao be
introduced in June.
The company plans to introduce the AM-1000 at
the National Computer Conference in Houston,
beginning June 6.
Frontier mileage up
Frontier Airlines flew 301,027,000 revenue
puaenger miles (one pauenger carried one mile) in
April, an 8.6 percent increaae from the aame month in
1981.
Frontier'• load factor (the percentage of seals
filled) WU 66.~ percent in April. up from 62.1 percent
ln April 1981.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
• It. -~ "' + \l't _,
-\II " _...,
HIEW \'O RK I Al"I F l fte l Dow Jenet ••tt tor _,,,..,.. MllY ,.
ITOO(S
JOI"" 'l:,,:r.,.~c. ~
JD Tm m4l DS4' m.i. m--. 2• UU11 11141 IH.Ji 111 CIO 111.11 ~Sflt J11.10 JJO.°' llU2 J27 40-0.1' lndUl J.JllJl)O Tren t,OH.IOO Vtllt 1,066.-~"· S,S.IJl)O
WHAT STOCKS DID
--O«llreo
UncherQld Tolell-IWW~ '"""'-~' <WfXOIO
HEWVOAK IAPI MllYlA
-..ad O«lll't!d UnCNngld
Totell-IWW~ -·-
T-y • DI J,Q
Hill 7 17
-ci;;. m ,.
111 • D
Sil VER Haftdy a Ha, man, H .Hll
~troy ounoa.
GOLO_QUOJ A TIO NS .,,... ,..,..,._
......... _.. .......... MoNlllr:
&..-.. momtr19 llldnQ; IMUI, 'IP to.11.
&.--.. .,..,_ ~ -..ao. Gllf .... 00 . ...,._, •ftefllOOfl flxlftg: 134t. 19, UC) au•. ,, ...... .,.. ••• Mp .....
:Dlrtllll Late t1111ng: W1 .00. aft 14.00
-. 9)40.00 --H•HJ I ...,_ .. : only deity q~•
l1M.IO. °" ... oo. •:t.••u * '1Mt e1111y CIU'* uae.eo. ""' .oo. Inc n •~4111y..,._.:•t 8'11&.4S. alt .. .IO.
SYMBOLS
J ..
1
s ,
...
Former higher tar smokers affim1 MERIT choice for r
taste, ease of switch, and long-tem1 satisfaction.
The research results are
overwhelming.
Latest National Smoker
Study provides solid
evidence that 'Enriched
Ravor;M MERIT offers a
satisfying alternative to
higher tar cigarettes.
MERITTuste
Sparks Switch.
Nationwide survey reveals
over 903 of MERIT smokers
who switched from higher
tar are glad they did. In fact,
943 don't even miss their
f on;ner brands.
Further Evidence: 9 out
of 10 farmer higher tar
smokers report MERIT an
easy switch, that.they didn't .
give up taste in switching,
and that MERIT is the best-
tasti.ng low tar they 've ever ·
tried.
·Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
MERIT Clear Clioice
In Latest 'Jests.
In addition, extensive
unmarked-pack tests con-
firm that MERIT delivers
a winning combination of
taste and low tar when com-
pared against higher tar
leaders.
Confirmed: The over-
whelming majority reported
MERIT taste equal to-or
better than-leading higher
tar brands.
Confirmed: When tar
levels were revealed, 2 out of
3 chose the ME~IT combina-
tion of low tar and good
taste.
Year after year, in study
after study, MERIT remains
unbeaten. The proven taste ,
alternative to higher tar
smoking-is MERIT.
0 l"tllll' Moult Inc 1911
Kings: 7 mg ''tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine-100's Reg: 10 mg "te('
0.7 mg nicotine-100's Men: 9 mg "tar:'
0.7 mg nicotine av per cig111n1. FTC Repon D1c :e1
\
• .
. ,
DlllJ Piiat
TUl80AY, MAY aa. 1ee2 .
lASSlf
Goltz,
Mauch
OCC, GWC poised for tourney.
,reunited
Pirates, Rustlers open play Wednesday in state ~lirninations
From AP cl1.1patc~ea
I R ight-handed pitcher Dave 1 Goltz, cut from the Loi Angelet
1 Dodgers while they still owed
I him $1. 7 milllon. signed with the
J Angela M onday for the
major-leaiue minimum annual
salary of PJ,M>O.
, Whatever Golu, 32, earns with
1 the Angela will be subtracted
: from the amount owed him by
the Dodgers, a apokesman for the
Dodgers said.
1 Mike Port, vice president of
I the Angels, announced the
I signing of the veteran pitcher,
who will report to the Angels on
Thunday.
By CURT SEEDEN .
Of IMO.-,,.._. lleft
LONG BEACH -It was just
one year ago that Orange Coast
C.Ollege had a run in with Laney
C.Ollege in the st.ate community
college baseball tournament here
at Blair Field.
And the F.agles from Oak.land
promptly handed Coac h Mike
Mayne's No. l seeded Pirate9 a
season-ending 8-5 defeat. in the
tournament semifinals.
Well. the same two teams are
back again for the 1982 version of
the state tournament, but this
time they'll square off in the first.
round -Wednesday afternoon
at 3, again at Blair Field. Joining
them in the eight-team field are
Coac h Fred Hoover's Golden
Wett C.OUege Ruatlera.
GWC, the Southern Cal
C.Onference champion, la seeded
fifth in the tourney and will
square off Wedneaday evening
at Blair Field against No . 4
leeded LA Valley, a perennial
visitor to the a1ate toumamern
which came the cloeest to a state
ch ampionship two years ago
when OCC beat the Monarchs in
the championship game.
Wednesday's action begins at
11 a.m. at Cerritos C.Ollege when
No. 3 seed Canyona (27-8) faces
No. 6 seed Merced (28-11). At 3
p.m. at Cerritos, it will be No. 7
seed Citrus (25-14) -which
nipped Saddleback C.Ollege in the
....... .,.
Miasion C.Onference Shaughneuy
playoffs to advance -against No.
2 seed e d Sacramento City
C.Ollege (30-6).
Despite its No . 8 seeding,
Laney, second place fl.nisher in
the Golden Gate C.Onference, has
the ability to knock off anybody
Mavne warns. "1J~hey're not a power-hitting
team, but they hit the ball well
and they have excellent team
speed. We'll have to play a eolid
game to ~t them. We can't
afford to give anything," Mayne
says.
The Pirate9 (32-7) advanced to
the state tournament by winrung
the South Coast Confe rence
championahip and then knocking
off Cerritos in their third
Shaughnessy Playoff game.
Laney advanced the hard way
-finishing second in its
confe rence and then winning
four s traight Shaughnessy
games, including two o ver
conference champion San Joee
City C.Ollege.
Outfielder R eggie Mosley,
labeled a one-man wrecking
crew , leadJI Laney with a .434
batting average, 11 double., 43
RBI and 26 stolen bue9.
OCC is expected to go with
either Ken Santoro (3-0, 2.76
ERA) or Rich Sorenaon (l-1, 5.34
ERA), in the first game. Mayne
says he'll save ace Jack Reinholtz
for the second game in .the
double-elimination tourney.
The Pirates boast 1l .312 team
batting average and a lineup
which includes .300 hitters at
every position except first base
where Scott Darling is hit.ting
.293.
1 THE ANGEU alao anno~
M onday that right-handed
reliever Don Aase was suffering
'from a slight strain in hia right
elbow and he should be ready to
r
pitch when the club returns from
a road trip ThUl"9day.
A 20-game winner with ~Minnesota in 1977, Goltz never
LA can't find
deliverance
had a losing season in the
American League, where he had
a 96-79 record. Relievers rocked again
Following the 1978 sea.on he
jbecame a free agent and signed a
multi-million dollar contract with
Los Angeles, estimated at $3.1
million for six years.
He was only 9-19 in the
National League, including 0-1
with a 4.91 earned-run ave rage
this year before being released.
"PETER O'MALLEY
(Dodgers' owner) recommended
we sign Goltz," said Buzzle
Bavasi, Angels' executive vice
president. "Al Campanis
(Dodgers' vice president) told me
the same thing. He felt Goltz
would fare better in the
I.American League where there
are fewer artificial surfaces."
Port added. "It doesn't seem
(
equitable to sign a player of
Goltz' stature to a minimum
figure, but really that's the
3tandard induatry policy that
we're just following in this
particular instance.
"We feel a player ahould be
paid what he's worth. However,
ln the past we've been burned
twice. We're still paying Jim
Barr under the terms of our
contract, while San Franciaco is
paying him the minimum salary.
Two years ago we released Ken
Brett and the Dodgers signed
him for the minimum."
Goltz will be reunited with hia
fonner Manager. Gene Mauch,
1w ho was the ma nag er a t
1
Minne9ota. .
The pitcher· said: "My main
reason for signing with the
Angels was Mauch. I feel he
ws me and vice versa. He's
going to know whether I can still
pitch. There i5 no question in
either of our minds.
"It should be an easy step for
me to take, coming back into the
American League. It's not like
jumping into a new league. I
know a lot of the hitters."
Johnstone cut
NET RESULT-UC Irvine's Maria Myers and
Jim Snyder recently participated in the NCAA
Division I singles championships. Myers and
Snyder are only the seventh and eighth
players in the UC Irvine's 17-year history t.o
qualify for the event.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Chuck Tanner, the manager of
the Pittaburgh Pirates, sounded a
little like t h e man in the
aftershave commercial who slaps
his face and says, "Thanks, I
needed that."
After th e P i rates' Don
Robinson had hurled the club's
f irst complete game of the
season, a 9-3 victory over Los
Ange les o n M onday night,
Tanner remarked, "We really
needed that one. Yeah, that was
something we really needed, and
Robbie threw hard all night."
Robinson, who e ffect ively
acattered 10 Los Angeles hits to
recrd hia fifth win without a loss,
said, '"n\at's the best I've thrown
all yeM."
Dodger Manager Tom Lasord.a
might have said the same thing
about hia 81arter, Dave Stewart.
but not about his bullpen.
With the score tied, 2-2, after
six innings, the Pirates erupted
againat the Dodgers' relievers,
parading 11 batters to the plate.
Eight r eache d base and six
acored.
Tom Niedenfuer, 1-2. who got
the loss, entered the ame with a
0.82 earned run average but by
the time he left, seven batters
later, it was 4.63. .
Lee Lacy, the former Dodger,
broke the tie with a two-out.
two-run double.
"I've gotten the opportunity to
play the last two weeks with so
many guys disabled." he said.
"Luckily. I've come up with some
big hits. But we do miss Dave
Parker."
Jason Thompson slugged his
12th homer, in the ninth inning
off of Ted Power. the fifth Los
Angeles pitcher.
Prior to the game Los Angeles
announced that. veteran pitcher
Burt Hooton was being placed on
the 21 -day disabled list.
retroactive to last Tuesday. and
the I>ocfRers had purchased the
c ontrac t of 39-yea r -old
nght-hander Vicente Romo from
Coat~coalcos of the Mexicall
League, where he was 7-0 with
five shutouts .•
Pltchmg the second game of
the series tonight will be former
Dodger Rick Rhoden, 2-4, for
Pittsburgh and Fernando
Valenzuela, 5-4. for Los Angeles.
Winfield
to sue
NY owner
NEW YORK (AP) -New
York Yankees outfielder Dave
Winfield is suing club owner
George Steinbrenner, charging
that he failed to donate nearly
half the amount of prescribed
money to Wmfield's charitable
foundation.
Winfield's lawyer, Lawrence
S . Blumberg, said he planned to
file suit. today ch arging that
Steinbrenner contributed only
$1 55,000 t o the David M .
W in f ie ld Foundation . H e
contends that Steinbrenner was
supposed to donate $300,000 a
yea r under t e rms of a n
agr eem e nt r e ach e d when
Winfie ld signed a $21-million
contract with the Yankees.
"He hasn't fulfilled some of hia
basic obligations to us," Winfield
Satd Monday night. "This has
nothing to do with Winfield
playing on the field, but it's
setting us back, especially with
kids in the health<are area."
Steinbrenne r could not. be
reached for comment., but &:twin
T. Brodenck, general counsel for
the Yankees, confirmed that he
has been discussing the issue
with Winfield 's lawyers.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Los Angeles Dodgers have asked
waivers on outfielder Jay
Johnstone for the purpose of
giving him his unconditional
releaae and recalled outfielder
Ron Roenicke from Albuquerque
of Uie Pacific Coast League. the
NaUonal League club announced
Monday night.
Stepping up to the big time Top honors .to Dvorak,
NCAA championships: an experience for UCI's Myers, Snyder Laguna Beach
By JOHN SEV ANO Both UCI participants survived first Snyder, who is self described as a "grit
ln>nically, the move, effective
Tue9day, was announced after
the 35Jear-old Johnstone
ollecte his firr.t hit of the
tealOll, a run-IC'Oring double, in
Loa Angeles' 9 -3 lou to
Piu.burgh Monday night.
' Johnstone wu l-for-13 thia
year after batting .289 as a
pinch-bitter laat year and
delivering a key home nan tn the
fourth pme of the 1981 World
8eriea.
M'ttw o.-, "°'Slaff round contest s before hit.ting their and gnn· d player " can do almost anything Prior to this season. only six players in ' d the 17_year history of UC Irvine had ever respective walls in the second. on the court. In fashioning a 33-12 recor
"I'm going in there to play the ball and this year, he won the PCAA singles title
qualified for the NCAA Division 1 singles not the person on the other side of the net," and was named the conference's Most
championships. ted M "F l time l Val bl Pia In 1982 alone, the Anteaters matched oommen yers. or a ong w was ua e yer.
one-third of. that total. more into playing the person than the ball. THE 5-4, 110-POUND Myers, who ended
Jim Snyder and Maria Myers may no\ "It's totally a mental game. The big her campaign at 26-11, was able to play
have achieved what they .et out to do last IOme of the top players, unlike Snyder,
week -which was win their respective What I have to do is learn eerly ln the 8e8IO'h but lacked t.he intestinal singles title._ but what they learned from fortitude neoemary to beet her foes.
their ----rience may be of fu greater to play one match at a time. I "What I have to do la learn to play one -~-match at • time," aid Myen. "I have to importance in the future. have to take it as little steps take it• little steps toward a big goat
toward a bia uoal. "I want to be No. 1 ln the nation. That's WHAT THE TWO of them hopefully e e -M.na M)w9 the ultimate pl for me. But what rm
..t JU walked away with was a better 80lnl to b.ve to do to ,et that la a lot of ai~GELS, SOX underltandina of t.hemllelves, their game work. If I can team just to get out of the
' ~.lthe. quality of competition at the top rwne9, the people who were ooc:ky, U8ed to wayerand .• , let It MPJM111 it will be 80 much 1J' ASHED AW ... Y 1e~'5'. affect me. But not anymore." eaah
Both playen, just before leaving lut Part of t.he duo'a difficulty tn ptepari.na Myers ficuns abe!s on • par with the
P,.. AP ...... tdlet week, expre1ud almilar v1ewa -ancf fean for such an event, Snyder pointed out, wu other players physically, lt'• the mental
B08'n>N -'nVJ An&U" pme -u to what it would take to play agatn.at the PCAA'a inability to provide quality edge th.t aem them •put . . . and abe teela ;!!"~ ~i;-s ~UM w:f ~IT;Ven't been able to play thw guya oppm.ition. she'• clme to attainlne that level, too.
nlD and the pme will not be and when t°" don't play the beat lt's hard SNYDER, RANKED No. 40 In the ''I REALIZE NOTHING eeparata me
1•teecltiAW until a lat« Wilt by to improve, aafd, Snyder, tdd1na that tbe collept.e ranks, Mid It'• dlfticult to ~ now fl'Oft) the other' p1ayen except fot the
thl ~ P.c-10 la ~y rePrded • bOMUna the to a hiaher Nndard of plal .when you've mental to&•....,..," Mid the 19·yMr4d lniDi KilGD. 3-0 for &he -.i belt talenL ·~. lf you Pla)' weiabr parddpeted at a ~er Net for much of the junlot. 11Jl'al' me, IUOl:lm II a journey, not
II .._,.,*' to to up .,.u.& ~your pm. 11 IO&na to dl'Op off!' lleUOO. the deldnldon." wi.;bander Bnace HW'lt (1-0) lt WM a l>lc-10 player -"Ab6~t mid-~ I WM up around 30,"' Snydet'1 pl W11 to wtn $he nadcnaJI,
......_ UCLA'• ! l'teeman. the tow'nament'a he Mid, ublct that'• when we ~ pi.)'lnl but he Wiii allo ~ ~ to lhrua
·: .. fte ~ 28-16 ~out No. 2 ..t -that bumped Snyder frun ncn-confennce rnatlobee and the oppoll~ off anY1hllw ._ 1han thllt.
ol .. AIDlrbn I up Welt • 1:anpeddon wtth a M, 8-·1, &-1 victory. WM ltlffer. •-n,e naaonu 11 a .,.S tow'namlnt, but
llld bJ~a:belf ~ by virtue o1 · ''When the oordel•a ltarted l had no you c..n reNly Ill ~ there,"
ttie ..__ • "1+LW' (27·11) MYm. TOO, w beNW hlf lltbldl when to IP bUt dOWn, ~~the explUMd U. juNGr. ~ w. bow mAn1 ...... S....Qtr, a.1, ~. bj •~to oppc_imnt • 8cantord'• 12-. comnMltian 11: Foci. In order co rQOYe up people rem•1Dber who mad• th• JJw11n woo 1-2, M . ,,. ~iW:-aot to p.y q,.10p p&aym. '' quar1erflnill 1Mt ,_.,... '
• -
Rudy Dvorak leads a quartet
of Laguna Beach High volleyball
stars earning All-CIF honors
with Pl.ayer of the YeM laurels·
after leading the Artists to their
se c o nd straight CIF
championship.
Dvorak, • letter I is pined Oft
the firal team by middle
blocker and hitter Neil Riddell.
while second and third team
honon go to junior Leif Haneon
and senior Chris Larson,
respectively.
Allo eam1n8 tint team honon
fnm Uie Orange Cout area arc
Marina Hiah'a Andy Klumnann
and c.o.ta Meu'• Mark Amold.
Paul Coenen of Costa. Mat
WU 8J'Ulted a lleCOlld team berth, ~008 wit.h ~ Hiib"• DcRit
Pinckney' • JUnlor.
'lb1rd tMrn bonare weft\ '° Fountain Van.ta John Kmty.
Dvorak becom• the teeond
~t Llpna Be.:h --.., Mm -p)ayw of the Year bcmra:
Cd.M game moved
BJ:LLJU>WER -Q;iooM CW
Mar :lfh'I CD' l-~Nk· 'llll~~wtth ..
bllli IWtid.ed '° Olln.itMn Pin. ~-It.. d1 'dldb
BOUfteld In ...... a
·1
I
•
Is Tony Conigliaro
making a miracle?
From AP dlapatclaea
BOSTON -former baaeball Ill etuarer Tony Coniallaro, ln a coma for
more than four montha, hu talked to
family memben, and docton were
''caudoualy optim.latk" about tiia recovery, h.la
brother 11ld Monday night.
"It's amulng. 1t really ii. We've been giving
him vitamins," said Richie Conlallaro, the
brother. "I uid to one of hia docton today, 'Well,
I think it mutt be the
vitamina.' He said, 'lt'a not the
vitamins. It's a miracle
· becawie I can't exnlain how
he'• dolnf thia' .''
Dr . Maximilian
Kaulbach , ConigJiaro's
phyaician, waa not
immediately available for
comment.
Conigliaro, 37, was
001111uoMO admitted to Massachusetts
General after suffering a heart attack Jan. 9. His
heart had stopped for "perhaps three to five
minutes" before he got to the hoepital, where the
heartbeat was restored, DeSanctis said. ·
A lack of oxygen to the brain can cause
braind~e.
Quote of the day
Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns, on his team's acheduled game with
the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders next
season: "Maybe we'll send the defense to
Los Angeles and the offenae to Oakland."
Favorites roll at French Open
PARIS -The French Open ~
Tenn.is Tournament got under way
Monday with few surprises and no
upsets.
Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia and
Argentina's Guillermo Vilas and Joee Luis Clerk,
the second, Uurd and fourth seeds, respectively,
posted straight-set victories to move into the
second round of the two-week clay court
tournament at Paris' Roland GaJTOI Stadium.
The 22-year-old Lendl, who ia attempting to
win the first Grand Slam event of his career,
raced to a 6-0, 6-4, 6-1 first-round victory over
Fernando Maynetto of Peru.
Ho~ record• ninth atralght win
Laaaarr H•J'· \he maJor 1....-·1 Ill WinnJ.nlMt plu:Mr. no Md h1I ninth t.rataht lttum • t.h4t Wh1t.e ;ox d•f11:r!'Kinat ~onday
nl1kt. 3· l. to take 1011 po1H11ton of the
American lMIU• Wett ie.ct. Hoyt extended h1I
two-IC'UC>n •trina to 14 vic\ori• without defeat
and now hu • ca.nier mark of 10·0 at ComJaltey
Park. Hoyt, a 27-year-old "&ht-hander with 1
27-6 caner record, 1Ca\1.ered -a~ eljht hita. walked one and
atiuck out etaht. Ht hu a
lMIU•·lMd.lna 1.45 ERA . . .
Altan Tltonloa'1 thrw-run
homer 1n the flnt lnn1na and
Le11y Barker'• four-hit
pltchlna 1parked Cleveland to
o 9-2 vlctory over Minneeota
. . . Gary ROeDJokt had thrw
hlta, lncluding a home run,
and drove In two runs,
ht-lping Baltimore top Toronto, 7-~ ...
Mlnneeota outfielder Jim Etaenrelcb worked out
with the team Monday, the fint lince entertns
the hoepital for a nervous dilorder May 9 . . .
Outfielder Larry Henadon of Detroit railed h.la
batting average 39 pofnta to .329 lut week and
wu named the league'• Player of the Week.
Herndon had 13 hita 1n 26 at-bata, including a
double, two triples and three home runa.
Hooton sldellned for 21 days
Burt Hooton was placed on the II Dodgers' 21-day disabled list Monday
and veteran right-hander Vicente
Romo was obtained from the Mexican League u
a replacement for Hooton, who I.a undergoing
treatment for a bone spur in his right knee.
Hooton is 1-2 with a 4.94 ERA ... Ebewhere in
the National League Monday, Bo Dlai homered
MOOTON
and drove in three runs to
help Steve Carlton beat
Cincinnati for the first time in
$re than two years, 9-1 . . . Blll Gallickton and Woody
Fryman combined on an
eight-hitter aa Montreal
stopped Houston, 2-0 . . .
Ellis V alenttne drove in his
first runs of the seuon with a
two-run homer as the New
York Mets recorded a 5-3
victory over Atlanta . . . Rappert Jones went
3 -for-3 with 3 RBI and San Diego took
advantage of three Chicago Cubs errors to record
an 8-2 win . . . JoaqalD Aadajar pitched his
second shutout of the aeaaon with a six-hitter,
and Wlllle McGee led the St. Louis attack with a
single and triple as San Franciaco went down. 6-0
. . . Pitcher Randy Jones of the New York Mets,
in boosting his won-W.t,record to 6-2 ~week,
was named the leagues Player of the Week:
Jones had a 2-0 record, including his 19th career
shutout, a four-hitter against the Astroe ... BW
Buckner of the Chicago Cubs and Manager Lff
EUa got into a fight Monday night after the sixth
inning of a game won by the San Otego Padres,
8-2. "I had some words with Mr. Buckner and I
didn't like the way he responded," Elia said of
the shoving·match.
Baseball today
On U'\JI das. 1n blileblll in 1981: ff.lahly touted New YOC'k Olanta' rook.le
WWle Mayt w nt 0.fOI'·& in hi.I major
1 .. 1u1 debut H the Olante beat the
Philadelphia PhlW• &-6 at ShJbe Park.
On thll dlw in 1937:
Detroit catcher-mana1er Mickey
Cochrane waa beaned by New York
Yankeee' pitcher Bu.mp Hadley, an injury
that would end hla Hall of Fame playLna
~r.
On th1I date ln 193~:
Babe Ruth ol U. Boston Braves belted
three homers, lncludina the 174th -and
lut -homer of h.1.9 career. a towertna drive
off Guy Buah that landed on thca <liatant
naht field roof at Forbes Field. Ruth'•
three homers weren't enou.ah to keep the
Brave• from 101lng to the Pittsburgh
Pirate., 11-7.
Todaf• birthdays:
San Diego pitcher John Montefueco is 32
Howston pitcher Bob Knepper it 28.
Knight to coach U.S. Olympians?
Bobby ltnt111t of Indiana • Univenity has been recommended to
coach the 1984 U.S. buketball team in
the Los Angelea Olympics. The
recommendation was made by the men's games
committee of the Amateur B asketball
Aaeoclation-USA, and ia expected to be approved,
according to oommitte chalnnan Brice Durbin
... Undefeated Gerry Cooney sparred six
rounds during two workout
aessions Monday for his June
11 World Boxing Council
heavyweight title bout with
champion Larry Holmea in
Laa Vegas . . . An athletic
board subcommittee endorsed
an investigative report
clearing the Florida State
basketball program of most
charges leveled by a former
KllllCllfT player but called for further
investigation of a cheerleader's visit to a potential
recrult . . . Doctors say they will not operate on
Baltimore Colta linebacker Mike Woods, who was
fe lled last wee k by a bullet that left him
E>aralyzed from the neck down ... Metro
Conference athletic d,irecton rejected a coaches'
proposal for a 30-aecond shot clock and a 19-foot
three-point play ... The Denver Nuggeta have
withdrawn their contract offer to veteran center
Dao l11el which reportedly was in the $500,000
range, thus ending their efforts to sign him
before the National Basketball As!gciation's
free-agent market begins. "It wu a gOod offer,
but it's been rejected and withdrawn.'' lssel said.
"There's the chance I might wind up with less."
Television. radio
TV: No eventa dleduled.
RADIO: Baaeball -Anaela at Boston, 4:30
p.m .. KMPC (710); Pittaburgn at Dodgers, 7:30
p.m., KABC (79b).
Lakers bored, want to play again
From AP dJ1patcbes
The Los Angeles La.ken, who have spent more
time waiting than playing during the National
Basketball Aseociation playoffs, are glad they will
face the Philadelphia 76ers in the ~pionship
series.
The Lakers don't necessarily believe the 76ers
are an easier opponent than the Boston c.eltics
would have been. It's just that Loe Angeles has
been prepariJll longer for Philadelphia.
"I really didn't care who we played.'' said
Lak.ers C.oach Pat Riley. "But we had been gearing
up to play Philadelphia ever since they took a 3-1
series lead. We knew it was a real possibility that
we•d be playing the Sixen Sunday in th~ first Jame. ao all our prepe.raUona were ln that d.irection.
I'm just relieved that their aeries is over."
If the 76ers could have beaten Boston in the
fifth or sixth game of their Eastern Conference
final series last week, the championship aeries
would have started last Sunday. But on that day,
Philadelphia, which collapeed against Boston a year
ago aft.er taking a ;j-1 lead, had to play a eeventh
game, which it won, 120-106 at Boston for ita fourth
and clinching victory.
Now, the opener of the final aeries will be
Thursday, 12 days since the Lakers finished a
Indy requires one more test
New coupling valve may prevent fire in the pits
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Four-lap time trials
were not the final qualification' runs for the 33 cars
that will start Sunday's Indianapolis 500. The crew
membent of each entry still must~ one more test
before the can are allowed to race.
The objective is not speed, but prevention of
fire in the pits, the dreaded result of an errant drop
of racing fuel ignited by the intense heat from the
cars' engines.
It's a new test mandated this year by the U.S .
Auto Club, to make sure each crew is familiar with
the operation of a new coupling valve between the
fuel tanks and the cars. It's a,15-minute procedure
that could save lives.
"WE WANTED a positive locking connection
that could be broken away from the car, with a
8eClOl\darv safety valve behind it to limit fuel
spillage and fire that could re.ult," aays Dave
Ayres. president of the California-hued Induction
Systems, Inc., and the designer of the new valve.
''The way race can are today. any fuel spillage
results in fire, period.''
Except for a brief practice lelSion Thunday,
the lndianapoU. Motor Speedway track will be cl~ until race day. USAC, however, will be
tarting the crews on the new fueling operation
throughout the week.
'the development of the valve, which aea1a
automatically if there's any trouble in the smooth
delivery of fuel to the race car or in the coupling
and uncoupling of the fuel hoee, was prompted by a
eeriou8 plt fire lut year dw1.nc a refueling atop by
Rick Mean.
NCAA pairings set
MISSION. Kan. (AP) .-The National
ColleJlate Athletic A"ociation on Monday com~ a 36-t.eam field for the 1982 Dlviaion I
bM ~ champklolhlpa by R1ect1nc nine at..larJ9
'-ma foe ~t repmala.
A totaf of 24 conference champlona bad
received au&omatlc berth. in the poet-aeatOQ
t.ou:rmment,' bu1 an eddltlonal at-Jarae team wM
9llecMld atw ti. Southland Ccinference dedand
t..miM' ~ble foe Ulill& Ul inellalble playet'.
At·laf1• teama 11lected Monday included
nartda Stat.. ~ Ohio State, Ok1a.boma. Old
D ••• ~ S., bee:> State, Stanford mdlMllCllL '
MMnwhU., Arisona s~ ... Fresno State,
Oh' 'W* Scew, Tew and WICll1111 8ta1e wen
....... tor~ OColllPl'ftkiri ~,:?'-tD•t.-&.c; \tW'lttZ~~
lm~llmOwiit.._JW;.;
Mears. the 1979 winner and the pole-position
starter in Sunday's race, suffered serious facial
bums when fuel splashed onto his car's engine. He
• and two of his crew members who also were
sprayed by the burning fuel were hospitalized after
the incident.
·There were several other incidents involving
fire during the Indy race and at other Indy-car
events last year, although none resulted ln an
injury as serious as the one to Mears, who has had
to undergo two rounds of plastic surgery and says he
eventually will have more work done on his
disfigured noee.
"Obviously, the thinking about a new fuel I valve started right after the 1981 Indy race," Ayres
said Monday . "Why were we having fire?
Determining various cauaes takes considerable time.
"I TOOK THE ST ATE of the art that we have
achieved and looked at the areas we had problems
in,'' ne eontinued. "I tried to run a situation where
we anal}'7A!d the complete system. from the tuel
tank to the car and back again."
o. ............. -.... -.... ....-.. -..,.,._. ...... '-~ .......... __ ___ .. ._._ °"-
·---tl•M•
four-game sweep m San Antonio in the Western
Conference finala.
"I can't afford to. worry about a layoff," Riley
said.
"We just have to keep working. We have
veteran ballplayers and a layoff won't affect them
as much as it would affect a younger team. 1'The players are bored and just want to play.
h 's been ao lo~ since we played I just hope we
remember how.'
The La.leers, who beat Philadelphia in six
games in the 1980 championship series, have
ahowed in thla year'~of& why they had the
best regular-ae&IOn (~24) in the Western
C.Onference.
The NBA record for consecutive playoff
with four-game sweeps each time, to become the
first time in NBA history to capture two straight
best-of-seven series without a loss.
The NBA record fr consecutive playoff
victories is nine, 11et by the Minneapolis Lak~rs.
who won the last game of the 1949 playffs and the
first ei~ht of the1950 poet-season.
Painful ring?
PITI'SBURGH (AP) -Will all those Super
Bowl victories be too taxing for the Pittsburgh
Steelers?
Steelen officials and players say the Internal
Revenue Service recently notified players that
thoee members of the 1979 and 1980 championship
teams must pay federal taxes on the value of their
Super Bowl rings.
. The rings, made of gold and diamonds, are
worth several thouaand dollars each.
IRS officials refused comment on the matter,
but a spokeswoman in Pittsburgh said, "We
consider the value of all goods and services
received, not just wages oc salaries, to be income."
"I certainly didn't know I had to declare it as
income.'' one former player, who asked not to be
identified, told The Pittsburgh Poat-Gazette
Monday.
Zorn has
sights .set
Olympics her goal
By CURT SEEDEN Ofrhth'tr,... .....
For penion with l'yeaight dlqnoeed at 20/~,
17-year old Tri.cha Zom oC Mission Viejo hu her
al"h" &et on some clearly focUled goal.a.
A swimmer for the MINlon Viejo Nadadores
ai.N:e the age of rune. Trlacha ha.a a busy year ahMd
of her, with the Long C.oUJ11e Senior Nationala 1n
lndianapoU. and the World Games trials 1n Mimloft
Viejo
THERE'S ALSO her freshman year at
Washington Sw.tc University, romplimenta of a
swim scholarship And by the time ahe'• 19, there'•
a shol at the 1984 Olympics.
That's not a bad itinerary for the future of a
girl who is considered legally blli)d.
"I don'l l'Onsider this a handkap. My mom
hasn't trea~ me as a handicapped pel"90n," ahe
was saying Friday, momenta
before partic1paung m the South
Coast League swim finals at
Saddleback College
Besides swunmmg for the
Nadadores, Trischa swims for
Mission Viejo High -as many
Nadadores do Her specialty IS
the backstroke She looks like an
ordinary sw1mml'r but hardly
swims m an ordinary fashion
TRISCHA WAS BORN without irisis in her
eyes, a condition known as amridia. Her eyes are
always dila~. and the sensation IS one of intense
brightness.
Her swimming L'i unaffected. Last year as a
junior. she finished third tn the l~ backstroke at
the CIF Championships. She was sucth in the 100
butte rfly at the same competition. This past
campaign she went 1 :00 04 an the 100 back,
flrushmg second in the champ1onsh1p finals to help
h er Mission VieJO teammates to the team
championship.
lt's obvious Tnscha has fit right in with
winners, whether lhcy be on her high school swim
team or on Mark Schubert's acclaimed Nadadores.
HER SWIM career began when she was six .
Her older sister Lisa brought home a newspaper
clippin.g noting that the Tu.sun-bw1ed Southern Cal
Swim Club was interested in new members.
It was while she was competing for SoCaJ that
Trischa saw and mel the younger age group
Nadadores swimme rs She soon joined the
Nadadores.
She had her share of problems when she first
started swinuning, especially the backstroke.
"When I was httle, I'd rruscount the strokes and
run into the wall," she recalls. "lt's kind of a
SCtence. It took me several l.Jmes to get 1t nght, but
I finally got ~t •·
TRISCHA WILL be 19 when she attempts to
qualify for the 1984 Olympics. There was a time,
when that age signaled the over-the-hill era for
many Olympic hopefuls.
"A couple of years ago. they said that once you
become 19 or 20, you're gomg to be burned out.'~ she
says. "But now, it seems the college level girls do
better than the younger girls.
Trischa is swimming at 5 a.m. every morning.
and by the time the day is over, she's put in 5 Yi
hours of swimming
Her goal is to major tn physical education at
Washington S tate. She'd ltke to specialize in
physical education for the blmd.
SHE'S PARTICIPATED tn the swim nationals
for the past three years and doesn't figure on
nus.Wlg this year's nationals at Austin. Tex
Trischa lives a normal ufe She attends Mission
Viejo High, r~ads books with enlarged printing and
uses a special magnifying glass t.o see things on the
blackboard.
When she goes to Washington State as a
(reshman, she'll live in a dorm and share her room
with anothe r swimmer. Connie Michelson of
Seattle.
"It's an athletic dorm and l'U be with a lot of
mcoming swfmmers. And, all my classes will be
pretty close together It's not a huge campus at
Pullman. so it w1U be a lot easier to get around," she
adds.
Skeet shoot slated·
Hoag Memonal Hospital's 552 Club will host
the hrst annual lnVItational St.a~ Shoot Wednesdav.
June 9, with proceeds benefiting Hoag Hospital.
The skeet s hoot tournament will be held at the
Coto de Caza Hunt Lodge in Trabuoo Canyon.
Using the standard trap and skeet 1hooting
range, the shoot ww oner vanous games which
have been crea~ t.o provide target practice for
wing shootmg. Offered at the shoot will be: duck
tower, crazy quail, mini-scrap, and continental.
A raffle will be held and more than $4,000 in
prizes and awards will be given to event winners
and door-pnze winners.
Boards8i1ing soars
amid controversy
{ Wind1urfing battle• patent right•
B ALM~~EY can compei. with any brand of ....., ..Uboard the own, u op~
la probably th• t h • o n • • i • • t 1 n t y p • o't
f..-t arowtna water sport jn competltlon, where only th•
the world, but lt l1 atlll frau,ht 11W1ufacturert board can be uMd
wtth controversy. . in a reptta.
, Boardlalllna ,ot lta atart in
Southern California wjth the
a dve nt of the WJ ndaurfer, a
surfboard wlth mast and Nll, but
it hQ grown futer in Europe
where there are more than th.ree
million participants.
I But It ta on the rt& in this
countr aa mo r e than 30
sailboard brands have entered
1 the U.S. market in le. than a
1 year.
• The controversy involves court
battl es in which Hoyle
Schweitzer and hi.a Windsurfing
International claim patent rights,
1 and has even slipped ovM into
1 the Olympics where there la a
• flap going on over the aallboard 1 selected by the International
1 Yacht Racing Union. It has met
lwith opposition by both
board.sailors and the Windsurfer
who say that their patent rights 1 prevent the German built
Windglider from being imported
1 to this country.
1 Comes now a new organization
\known aa Boardaaillng USA
whose aim la to promote
, open-class sailing in which sailors
I ...
~ . . " ..
MAJOR LUQ&Je 8T ANCMNQ8
Amerk:an l.Na• WHTIJIN DMlfON W L ...._ Q9
laat year the board1allln1
butlne11 wu loaded wltl\
controverty. Patent battl.81 were '
belna w-ae<t by eome ..Uboard
companlet while othen became
patent llcenaeee, accordtn1 to
Boardaallln1 USA executive
dJJ'ector 0 . Michael Fair who
believee the patent diaputel hu
forestalled the Loa An1ele1
Olympic OroNsina C.ornmittee'a
final approval of the 1port'1
lqclualon ln the Olympic
Yachting pmes.
Boardaailing USA wu created
this year by five major eailboard
oompanie9--«lme with a patent
license and 90me without-that
recognized the need for an
impartial, no~-profit to help put
boardaaillng in ita proper
penpective, according to Fair.
Founding sponsor memben of
BUSA are Bic Leisure Product.a,
Inc.; Freesail by O 'Brien
International (a Coleman
company) and Magnum
Downwind, manufacturer of
Sailrlder.
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t.JplMw, Toronto 3$-131 18 47 .341
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I Oranoe OoMt DAILY ,ILOT/Tuliiday, Mey II, 1tea
HIGH FLYIN' -~ BeaCh Htgh'a Lila Fergaua diaplaya
be~ form in the blgh jump event at Jhe CIF championships
W'll'Tt~ ~ FrHno 81 144· I 1) v~. Pepperd ln• (44-lt-1)
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Saturday. Fegraus finlahed aecond in the women's 2-A division
with a jump of 5-4.
-(_ > .
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Sea Kings
take third
in CIF golf
CAMARILLO SPRINGS
Solid depth provided big
dividends for Corona del Mar
High'• golf team Monday aa the
Sea Kingl finished third at the
CIF team c hampionahlfa at
Camarillo Springs Ool and
Country Club, qualifying the Sea
K1naa to compete in the state
finaia June 7.
Redlands High captured the
C IF Southern Section
championship with a total of 378
strokes, one better than Loyola.
Corona del Mar was third at 384
and Arcadia waa fourth. The top
four qualify for the state finala..
C«ona del Mar, which waa
eea>nd to Univenity High in Sea
View League play, went after
the par 71 ooune in methodical
fashion.
Ted Norby led the way with a
74, followed by Roecoe Schmene
(75), Jeff Wright (76), Jim Li&}lt
(77) and Cary Spadoni (82).
"We played very well.'' said
CdM c.o.ch Jack Errion. '"Thoee
are very good 1COreS on a 69.2
rated courte. ••
Wright, Norby and Spadoni,
qualified to compete in the
individual CIF finals at El Prado
in Chino.
The top 22 from that
oompetltlon qualify for the state
finals at gi t.:abailero m Tanana,
which al8o incl~es team play,
which Corona del Mar quafified
for on Monday.
Region 144
sign-ups set
American Youth Soccer
Orpniz.atioo (AYSO) Regjor1 144 will hold sign-ups foe the 1982-83
IJeUOll June 5 and June 12 from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Univeraity
Park Community Park (behind
the llbn.ry).
Thia region includes all Irvine
younpt.en (bo)'I and girls) 5-15
years of age, who live IOUth of
Barranca. Every effort la made to
place kids on nei1hborhood teams. but it la not l\W'Ulteed.
Pee Wee tNml (thoee klda born
in 1976 or '77) are c:o-«1.
The $30 re1l1tration fee
lncludee 1hirt, ahorta, socks,
photos and trophies. A birth
certificate la requlred for thoee
new to the refdon.
A YSO'a pfillOBOphy la that
evel'yme play.. ID ln Cider to do
that pare11tl mmt volunteer to be
coachee, a11l1tant coacbee,
referees and 1uppor\lve
penonneL Tnlnlna 111 r' cm ere
liven yearly to li•1tlf:velop cmchlna and ret... !'Gt' fUrtber lnformadan, pbol»
752--2870.
Berryhill honored
I
I
..
,., ... ..,._...
LINER -New York Yankee third baseman
Graig Nettles can only watch helplessly as
bunt by Minnesota's Ron Washington stays on
the line for a base hit Sunday. Yankees won
game anyway, 4-2.
DIATH NOTICIS
NEWLAND by his wife lrleen, sons Gary
WILLIAM T NEWLAND and Ronald, sisters Velma
ll1 , a res1den l of Huntington Scheve, Vivian Dales and
Beach. Ca Passed away on Be tty S he leny, broth ers
M ay 23. 1982 at Hoag M aurice a nd J i m ,
Memorial Hospllal Mr grandchildren John Eric,
N e w la n d was a lhi rd Corey, Kerry, Erica a nd
g e n e r a t Ion o f one o f Jonathan. G raveside services
H U)l t 1 n g ton B e a ch' s will be held on Wednellday,
founding familtt'S He was May 26. 1982 at Harbor
employed for 26 yean by Lawn Memorial at l l:OOAM
Southern Cali!onua F.duron w I t h P a s t o r D i r k
Company. Mr. Newland was Van-Proyen, the Coast Bible
born m Huntington Beach, Church officiating Services
Ca. on August 15, 1917 u n der th e dir ect ion o f
Beloved husband of Vtrguua Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Tharp Newland. beloved Mortuar y of Costa Mesa.
fat h er o f W ti I i a m T 540-5554.
Newland IV of Park City,
Utah, also survlvtng ls cfne
s is ter Dottie Joll1rte of
H u n tington Beal·h, Ca
Graveside serv1c."et will be
conduted on Wednesday;
May 26. 1982 at 2:00PM at
Fairhaven Memorial Park
Pierce Brothers S miths'
M ortuary direc t o rs
536-6539
ANDREWS
RUTH A. ANDREWS, a
n!Sldent of Coeta Mesa. c.a.
for the past 25 years, aft.er
bemg a long time resident of
Glendale, puled away on
May 22, 1982 . S h e la
survived by he r children
Marion Andre ws, Teague
Andrews, Judy Wolfe and
Charolette McEwen. Private
FALK servtces will be held wilh
LY D IA V FAL K , a final 1n urnment a t the
resident of Cost.ill Mesa. Ca family plot in Glendale, c.a.
for 23yean Passf'dawayon The family s uggests
May 23, 1982 She was a don.auons m memory of Mrs.
m embt>r o f the Lad1u Andrews rruay be made to
Auxiliary Post # 1249, World the Childrens Orthopedic
War I Veterans She ts Hospital. Los Angeles. Ca.
5Urvtved by her husband of S e r v I c e s u n d e r t h e
59 years, TPddy L Falk, direction or Baltz Bergeron
daughwrs Eleanor Anderson Smith & Tuthill Mortuary of
and L.aVeme Aiello both of Cost.a Mesa. 646-937).
Costa M esa . Ca , <I
g rand c hildr e n . B
great-grandchildren and I
g rea l ·g r ea l · g r andch 1 Id
Services will be held on
Wednmay, May 26. 1982 at
2:00PM at the Harbor Lawn
Chapel w1th Chaplain John
A L indvall off1c1ating
In ter m ent se rvices
immediately fo l lowing
Services under the d1~uon
o f Harbor Lawn-M ount
Olive Mortu ary of Costa
Mesa 540-5554
TAYLOR
MAY BROWN TAYLOR.
a r<'S1dent of San Jose, c.a.
Passed away on May 22,
1982 at the age of 85. She la
survived by a n ephe w
Calver t Leatherwood or
Bullhead City, Arlio na, 3
rua'e!I, J uanita Cordeiro of
Costa Mesa, Ca., Virginia
Kennedy of Goleta. Ca. and
Haul Tankersley of S an
Joee, Ca. and 18 grandnieces
and nephe w s . Fune ral
services will be held on
LANGDALE Wednesday, May 26, 1982 at
RO B E R T EA R L l .OOP M a t the P i erce
LANGDALE. a resident of Brothers Bell Broadway
Santa Ana. Ca Pa.seed away Chapel Wtth putor Aaron
on May 22. 1982 Survived Buhler of Harbor T rinity
8a,Pt11t Church offict•'""'· ----------~Interment at Harbor X..wn
McCOltMIQ MOHUillllS
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hill!\
768·0933
San Juan Cap1scrano
495·1776
~ LAW..._MT OLIVE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
'11tlCI UOTHUS
l&l UOAOW.AY
MORTUAIY
110 Broadw•y
Costa Mesa
642•9150
IAlnlMHIOH
SMITH I TVfHILL
WllT~CHANL
4~1 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
&4&-93?1
Mem orial Par k . Pierce
Brothers Bell Broadway
Mortuary directors.
HEATH
RALPH E . HEATH ,
ret1ident of Coeta Mesa, Ca.
P aesed a way on May 22.
1982. Born Mareh 26, 1910 In
Kansas. S urvived b y hla
wife Virginia Elliott Heath,
daughten Mrs. Rube rt•
Wood of El Toro. Ca., Mrs.
Patricia Klleu of Freemont. c.a. and Mn. Sue Bright of
S ant a An a, C a ., 10
•r•nd c h l ldr e n , 3
grea t -gra ndc h lldren'
Grave&ide .ervices will be
held on Wedne9day, May 28,
1982 •t l:OOPM at Padtk
View Memorial Park,
Newport Beach. Memort.i
aervlcH will be held on
Wednaday. Mal 28! 1982 at
7:30.PM at the Pl'e9by1et1an Cbu~ of the Covenant,
Cotta MeM, Ca. with Rev.
Bruce A. Kurrie oftldatina.
P•clflc View Mortuary
dlneton.
DEATHS
EtSEWHERE
filC11110UI .......
NAiil ITAft•NT Th• rouowlf\O Perton I• doing buelneM u:
SPORT OAM'8, 973 t Cltl'l«l)I Clrcll. H\ln!Cngton leaoh, c.llfotnla 82141
Oh1tlH 01oro1 Cllatabl1n,
8'31 CaChey CltOf1. Huntington 8-dl. CellfOMll hW nw ~ 1a conducted by 111 lndMd\lll,
Ctlaftla G. ~
.,,. ft..,.._I WM NICI wlltt the
County Clerk ot Orange Couney on
Mey I , 1882
't.-m PublC•h•d Orange Oo11t Ulll)' Plloc. May 25, J\H1e 1, 1, 19, 1MI
2192-U
rta.te NOTICE
~TmOU• .......
Mm ITATDmNT
Tiii fOllOwlng l*ton• .,.. doing
butllnMe la:
C'E.ST LA VIE CAFE, 373 Sou1h
Co111 Hwy .. Laguna BHch, Ca.
02851
C .L.V. Inc. (t C1llfornl1
00tporat1Qn), 373 &. Coaat Hwy ..
1..11Qun1 Mecti, Ca. 82651
fhll bullneee II cond119ted by a
COfporatlon.
C.l V Inc. By lta Secty/TrMIUtlt
Thlt 1tatem.n1 wu flled with the
County Clet1t or Orllf'OI Count)' on May 21, 1882 ,,_
Publltflld Ora nge Co111 Dally
Piiot May 25. June 1, a, 15, 1882
2'02-82
Ml.IC NOTICE
'9C"1'T10UI llU ..... ...._ITATUaNT
The follow1no peraon 11 doing ~-RIO STAR, 183 Promo ntory
Drive Wfft, Newpoft lkadl, Cell·
IOtnll 82eeo
Jacob Rablnovlcfl. 17871 Teak-
wood '--· lrAne, ~ 92115 Thie ~ II oonducted b)' 111
lnclMdual.
Jacob AaDlnoW:tl
Thie atatement -flled wlttl IN County 0er1c of Otanoa County on May 5, 1982. ,,_
Pubtllhed Orenga Cout Detty PI-
iot. May 11, 18, 211, JIMI 1, 19412
3072-82
PICmlOUIW ..
MAm ITAftMIJO' Thi fOllowtno panon• .,. doing tlUllnlM M:
,,.HDOM .,o .. ra. ~00
Wept Oo•;~tiwey, Newport 9lliatl, QA C*1111 "9linMd Wamodt, t4t
"OOflHter It., Coeta MeH. CA ftt27.
Warw!ok JM1111ty91\, 2t782
CadanM, MiMlofl V11110. CA 12ttt, TNll buelMll le oonductecl .,,. a
91"1'el~.
C. A. W9l'fli(ll$
Thie ttatement -lllld \lflttl Iha Col.WI~ Cleftt of Orange COunty Ol'I
MayS, 1882. , ....
Publllflld Ofange COUl Dally Piiot,
May 4, 11, ti. ff, 1112
1-...2
'IOTmOUI W..q IUNNOlll COURT OP TMI
NANI ITATWlllWr ITATW OI OA&A'OMMA '°" NU llTll
Tiit lollowlng per1on 11 doing '"'COUNTY OI ~
butlntM 11: NO. A1'-NOTH:I OI fMltTll'I IA._. KIM'S IMPORT, 3001 HtrbOI' OMU TO IMOW OMNI Loan No. 714-ftl/UJCAI
llvd., Ooat• ...... CA 92127. '°" CHAMM °' MAm T 8 No 641)2.3 KIL a oo KIM, IUO Au•h In the M .... Of IM AQollcltlon of N!WPOAT HOM! LOAN, INC .•
lu.tlllCMt COURT OI T1tl S1r .. 1, A~. CA 91770. DAHteJ.. ICOTT lllllM, a Minot, au1y IPPolnled Tru11 .. und•r th
lfATI °' o~ Thie butlntM I• ciondue1ed by Ill by DE•O .. AH •• MALLAMO, HI• rottowtno d•acrlbed dHCI of lru1 '°"'"' llldMdu81 P.,.m. ,Ot Ct*'ll9 of iwn.. Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTIOI COUNTY°' GRAMM KM Soo Kim Tll• 19plfoaflon of DANIEL TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOi
1111 ........ If.. Thie ataterMm wN fllld wlt.h the ICOTT IElll'.RT, a Mff'IOf, b)' 0£. CASH (payable 11 tlnM or aale I•
,..IUllR fll County Cl«tl of Ofange County on IORAH I . MAU.AMO. Hie ,ennt, tawM mooey of the United Statn
llfA lllAMAMf..,... May 1,, 1882. ,,_tt tore Cllhan9I ot llllM, ~bean aN right. tlllt and lntereet conveye. ,.,~..:~ ,ut>lllhld o r.noe c o11t Dally ~~=·.ri::~~n ~~1n:r~~d1::;=rt!:~
CM1D1111TO1ttOW OA.Ulm Pllo4. Ml)' 19• 25• June 1• 9• 1812 SCOTT~ hie Cled an..,._ 1n11t., deactlbed '°" CHANQI 01 MAM1 2132-42 eatlon PfoPOllna that hie 1WM 111 TAUSTOR GEORGE C LUCASj TN tooleltlOn Of "'TA MAAQA. ---.. ---.,.-..,,.-TV'C----of\anoed. to DA~llL aeon MAL· • IMllQN man MT WllMMA few o111ng1 of nt!IM, ____ .-_,,. ___ ""-'-114---l.AMO. BENEFICIARY NEWPORT HOMf
tievtng been nted In Court, •net II ~nnou• IUllNIU ........... " le -~ Ot-o.-LOAN TRUST No 194 IOOllMG from Mid IODllclnt hi lltAMm ITAT'lmNT rid IM ctlrteted, ttlat ell pertona Recorded Jenuery 28. 1te1 •
RlfA MIO,.OARET Wll .. SMA tiu The followtng petaon 11 dOlng In.._., In Mid rMttw do~ lf\tlr No 32610 1n 1>001C t3928 peg. flied en ~tlon prOpOllna that IM.I"'-.. blllore Ihle court In Depetttnent a on 12oe or OlljcjaJ Aecotdt 1n 1111 offlc;o
""L''""l\ll'l'IY • bl ctlenged lo An"A DI SMITH & SON PLUMllNO, 328 the 11th da)' ot "'-· 1N2 llf 10:30 of Iha Aecotd .. ot O<ange Count) "" Unlv9ttlty Orlve 111 Coat ......... o'clock 1.m., of .. Id dt)' to enow H id dHd ot 1rut1 d11crtb11 th• NoW, tfweboe, It la tierltly Ofdil-CA 82&27 ' ' 1 -. OIUH whr e11cll eppllOlllOn for roltoWlnQ property
red and dtreotecl, thet ell Plfton• GARRY SMITH 328 lJnl\'lnHy ohano• o n1m1 etiould not b• Lor 5 Bloctt 2? or Newpor =:=In~ Of~ ~a 1aM~2::7en "'r:":c'~ ordered thlt I OOf1'I Of :::~ Tc:~11; ~~~~'. ~
IN lltl dly Of Jww. fM2, at tC>.30 lndMdual Ihle Order To 8hOW Ceuet bl pu-Calll0<n1a H per map recorded 11 ------------1 o'oloolt 1.111 .. of H id day to 1tiow Thlt e1it-t wu llled with the bllahed In the Of•llOI Coaat Diiiy book 3. paga 29 o l Mlacellanaou rtaJC NOTICE OtUH why 1uoh applloatlo n for County Clefk of Orange County on Piiot, • lllWIP191' ol ""*'el c:*W-Mapa. in the ot11ce of th• count
------------1 change of name ehould not be M•y 14 1892 l•llon, printed In Hfd GOunt)', at recorder 01 N IO county
grant.cs. ' ,,.1t IMlt once MCtt w..it tor fow tue· 2208 OcNn Front Avenue. New
'9CTITIOUe w.. II It fUrthlf Ofo..d thlt • oopy of Publl•h•d Orenga Co111 Dally olMlv• WMke prior to the day of port Blach, CA 92962
MAMI ITA.,......, Ihle Order To Show Cauaa be pu. Piiot, May 19, U • .June 1, 8. 1982. Mid i-tna. "Cll a atreet aodre11 or comtnO< Tiie follo'#lng Plf9001 are doing blleh•d In the DAILY PILOT In 2135-82 0.tad Ihle 7111 dey of May 1812 d111gnat1on la ahown above. nt
bull,_ u : Cotti M-Call1omla e ~ FRANK OOMENICHINI warranty 11 glvan 10 •la complete
THE LAGUNA BEACH COM· per of gener9' olroullUon, printed In P\8JC ..,.TICE ~of Mid neu or correctneul ..
PANY, 1120 8. COU1 Hlohw9Y, la· Hid oounly, et 11111 onoe eaoh "" ~Court The 1>«>111e11ry under llld Dee<
guna 9Moh.L Cellfotnll ,_t -w• for fovr conMCutlve wMkl 'JCTTT10UI llUIMU ~ I VWMNA ol Tru11 Dy rea10n ot a bt•ech o ~ l:n~, Inc., • CllC-prior to the day ot Mid '-1f10. NAm ITAT'lmHT m ................. 4• d•l•ull '" .,,. obhgat1on1 H <:ur•(
fomla oorporatlon, 900 ~-. Oa1-d Ihle 30th day of Aptl, 1882. The tollowlng peraon 11 doing L.a ......... C ... ,_ -.t1 lll«•t>y, lletetOf«a eucuted w ~ lledl, Cllfomla tMet Blwe W. Sumner bull,_ u PutilillMld Orenge CoMt o.lly ~ de t1v1 red Io I h • under a lg ned ,
Thl9 ~II condUct.cl by• JUOO-of Mid EDWIN KRAUS ASSOCIATES, lot, Mey 11, 19, 26, "'-1, 1t62 w11t1en Oeclarallon ol Default an<
COl'POf•llOn. 8uoeflOr ~ 2977 J ac111and• Av•nue, Co111 307M2 Demand'°' Sate, an(l written nottc.
8Mdl En~ Inc Publlelled Otaoge CO.I Ody Pl· M .... CA 9202t -----------ol breach and or etec-11on 10 caus.
JMlla '· Aobana. lot, May 4, 11, 19, 25. 1M2 E o w t N KR A US . 2 8 7 7 rtaJC NOT1C( 11141 unoeraigned to Mll said prop Prelidln1 2084-82 JllCllandA A..,._, Coeta MIN, CA etry IO sat11ly Hid Obilglltona. 11><
Thie 11-'-1 -fled '#Ith IN ------------i92t2t ACTfT10US 9'.f ... 11 lllerealte• the underatgned cauM< County CMrtl of Orange Count)' on Pt8JC fl)TIC[ Thia bu'"-11 oonduc1ed by 111 N.u. ITATE•NT u 1d nouce ol Dreach and or elec
May'· 1882. --------------i lndlllldual. Thi ro1towtng l*'900• 111 dOlng hon 10 be Recoroed June 15. 198 OlllOM. DUMM A CllUTCMIR ~TTT'IOUI IUSMIS Edwin Kt-t>u11nM8 u. u lnatr No. 22757 In book 1'1C ~ NAm ITATDmNT Thie a1at-1 -fled with the PRINTING UNLIMITED, 10537 PaoA 797 ot llld Otftclal Aecctda.
• ....,_. C.W ~ The tollowlng ~reon 11 doing County Clertl of Orange Coun1y on EMii A--. Fountain VI/lie)'. Call· Sl'd sale Wiii be m.o. but wit" ,.0. ... ... l>Utl,_ M May 14, 1M2 fomll 92708. OUI <:O\ltH\1111 Of w1tranty. •JtPtes!
....,_. ....... OA -FAST ANO FAIR. 423 Fw OfM '~ Frid J Smith. 21072 Amber· or 1mplled, regard1nQ utte. posses
,_,. •204, ca.ta MIN, CA 92829 Publl•h•d Orange Coa11 Delly WIClt ~. Huntington BMcn, CAN· 1ton °' enc:umt>l'ancee. to pey tl'M lot~ OfMOe Co.er Delly Pf-Abld Latif, '23 Fw om.a •204. Piiot, May 19, 25, June 1. a. 1882. fomla 82e..te remaining principal aum of tht
· ~~ 11, 11, 26, "'--1, 1N2 Colt• MIN, CA 92t2t 2134-82 Prl1ellla K Smith, 21072 Am· nole(SI HCured by said Deed o
3071-82 Thie ~ le COl\ducted b)' an -----------betwlck Lane. Huntington Beech. Trust Wllh intar•t as 1n uoo not•
lndlvlduat P\8JC NOTlCE c.tltornle 8204e provided advencea. 11 any unde
111-.,. Mft-Abld Ulllf Thia 1>ue1neH 11 conducted by th• terms ol Hid Dee d ot Trust ----:=::'"~:=::~=-""~'=-.=~-Thll 11tatement waa fllad with t"41 ~• .,_.. lndtvlduale (Hlilband & WIMJ r-. Chergec and e11pen-ot th• ACllllOUI ....... County Clertl of Or1nci-County on NW ITAT'lmlfr Fred J Smith TrullM an(l ot Iha trusts created b• t NAm ITAT'lm#T May "· 1882 The following pereon I• doing Thia 1111-1 wu flied with the ...0 OMO 01 Truat
TN lolowlng pereone .,.. dOlng ,,_ ~ u: County Cl«lt ol Orange County on Sa 1 d •a I• w 111 be he 111 or ~ -Publlahed Orange Co11t Ollly DAN IE L S . EV ANS & Mey 3, 1982 Wednesday. June 2, 1982 et 2 O<
AUDIO A LA CARtt, 3404 VII Pltol. May 18. 26, June 1, 8, 1882 ASSOCIATES. 1182 S.E. Brletot, '1 Pm , at the Chapman Avenue en
Oporto, Sult• 8, N9wport ISMch, 217,-82 811111 Ana, CA 82705. Publlahed Or1ng1 Co11t Dell lrlnoe to Ille C1VIC Centtw Building
CL 82883 -----------DANIEL S. EVANS, 2242 Piiot. May 4, 11, 18, 25, 1992 300 E111 Chapm1n Avenue 1n 111<
Joltn A. Caldwell, 1ot 27th Pla.IC NOTIC( Channel Roed, Balt>oe. CA 82ee1. 2090.9 City or Or•noe
111_.,. 1111\ftt'r street,~ Beec:tl, C&. 12ee3 ---:==~~~...,..-----Thll b\iW-le oonducted by an -----------~ At the time or th• 1n111a1 pubhca1 ----'"----""..;..;'.;.;;.;""-;_ ___ 1 eruce k. MCJLOUd, •73 Linda ACTrTIOUS llUIMIS lndMdual Pt8JC NOTICE lion or th11 noHce. the 101a1 amounr
f'ICT1'110US IUIMSU Mm ITATUmNT
1•, Nlwpor1 a.di, ca. t2983 HAm ITATDmNT Dlllill S. Ev11n1 ---:==~~------! ol the unp11d balance or the obit
Thie bYllnlle le oonduc1ed b)' • The lotlowlng P•teon le doing Thlt ll•t-t wa flied wllfl the ACTinOUI 9U ... U gallon secured Dy the above de /
Tiii followlng ,.,_ .,. doing ~ ~. ~ ... Count)' Clertl of Orenge County on NA8-ITArn.wT acnt>ed deed of truat and es11ma1ec John~ PETRO KING, 9,5 Paulatlno May 14, 1882 The tollowlng peraon 11 doing cosll. upensea. and 1dvences it Thie*""*"' wee Ned wltti 1tte #8110, eo.te MIN, CA 82e2t. f191M ~ u : l201,730.5a.
County aatk of Orange County on Jotln (Jedi) Calvtn King, 645 Publlehed Orange Cout Dally OE LUX CAR CARE, 31991 To det•tmlne the opening bid, ~-APPRAISED PAOPEATIE8
1112·1, 2ooe Court Av.nut,"'-• POfl BMdl, CA t2983. May 3, 1N2. ~trio #B 110, Cotta ~. CA PllOt. Mey 18, 25, June 1, 9, 1N2. ~ Way, Souttl Laguna. CA you,,.,.,. cal (714) 8S20Me. ,_t . ...,"' 21~ 92477. Dall April 27 1882 AST flnenelal. Inc .. a Callfofnla oorporatlon, tl101A SUMet &Nd., Publlllad Of""09 Coaal Delly pt. ..... ~~"'-le conducted b)' 111 -----------PA T RI C K RA Y M 0 N 0 NEWPORT HOME LOAN
lol M ' 11 ta ... 1...... ............. ·-"' llllft'IV't WOLLENBERG, 31981 Virginia INC PacCflc Plllludet, CA 80272 ' Thll~la~by• lf'f ' ' '-. -2091-c JICll C. KlnO '"~ ""'"' WI)'. South Laguna. CA t2t17. as ... d Trust•
TIU lt•letMnt -fhd with.the "''moue. ..... Thia~ .. oonducted by an By T 0 SERVICE COMPA
llmlt9d '*11• ""'· AST Anandal, lnG. ---.. ---.,.lllftTll't--.. ---Cour\ty Cler1I of OrWlge County on .... --·-lndMdull. NY, .--"'11"4 May t4, 1882 ,._ .,,.,_, Pl1rldl Ill Wollenberg IOl"I
A. Scott T flT'V
PrlliOenl
_______ ....,;;,,,___ ,,_ ~:wing per1on I• doing Thll lt.M-t -flied """' tfll 81 Cindy Stioonov.
Publlehed Ora~ Cout Dall)' CAA CARE CLUB, ssn Sum-County Clltlt of Orange County on ,.._,.,,, S«:retr, n. ltatemant -flled wlttl .,. County Otat1I ot Ofanot County on
May a. 1992
N:iillOUI ..... ...._ITA.,......, Piiot. May 18. 25. Jutll 1, 8, 1882 ---""· ,..~ ....___ ,.. .. --May 14, 1882. One Ctty Boulevwd West. 217$-82 ., __ , ""'"....,... -""'"--.... ,,_ O<enge CA 926458
St-=. san ~ Publl1hed Q,ange Cout Oell)' Tet 1 14-83!>-8298 ____ rtaJC ___ NO_na _____ cirn:--._.,_ 11 ~ .,,.., Plot. May 11. 25. Jfne t, e,211~ ~b~·,~.~~~'21~
1
'i:;si oa11y ,_ The ro11ow1ng pereona .,. dolno ~-1•1 H & D AUTO SALES bl H. t<. Publlhad ()renoe eo.t Dally Plot, May 4, 11, 11. ~.1182 MO'rOAS. 8891 Garden Grove Bl\ld., No. 200, Gll"den Oto¥a. Call-
lornle
-.~-TW~~..,--~-rT-------lrldMduel. ~. TA CW wmc»flAWA&. SleW A)'WI -----------3002-42 ~ ,AlmlQ..., n. eta1emant -11ec1 ..,,_ "" Ptll.JC NOTICE Ptll.JC fl>TICt
....
Han KOOi! Motore. Inc.. a c.11. fornl• oorporatlon, 482' OUMn
'llotor1ia, Wood19nd ..... Ce1tom11 91364
~=°-"':':" ...._ OOunty Clltlt of Orange County on ----------
Th• follow Ing pare on haa May 3· 1•2· ,_.. ~nnous ~.. -----------
withdrawn u a QlfWll pal1Mr trom Pvblllhld Ofange CoeM Delly Not, ,... ITAff....-T tUNNOfl COURT CW
Han Kook Mot0ta. Inc.
J-P.Aeld,
A ttom.y In Feet T & A PAINTING, 1131 Badl Tlllt atwternent WM fled with the ~d .. "119. ~ BMch, Ca. County C1eftc of Orange County on 9
Thomae Allen H«!ln, 23646 San May 7• 1"2· ,..,_
Jacinto Ad., Oulll VrJW(, CL 82380. Publlttled °'7. Cout '>;: Pl Aober1 John Heflin, 23546 San • Jacinto Rd .. Quall Valley, CL 82380 lot, May 11• 1', ' JI-. 1, I 2
Thl8 ~ ta conducted by 1 307M2
g«llt81 par1nerefllp. .._ ... llllftnl'C Thomae Allen Heflln ,.._ ""t ~
the perlnttwhlp 099'1tlng un<Mr 1"41 May'· 11, 19, 26, 1882 .... ~ followlng.... peraon1 -doing CA.LJF()RNIA llctltloua butl,_. name of MCO ~ .,....._ COUNTY CW~
PROPERTIES. at 4 100 MacArthur REAL PROPERTY INVESTORS, IN PROPRIA PERSONA. KAREN Boulev1td, Newport Beach, CA ---.. -... -.,..-Mftftl'r-----1101 E Otangewood. Suite 150, LEE Ml YNARCZYK, No 3 Swill
92M3 ~ nv1-. Anaheim, Celttofnll 92906 Court, Newpor1 BMctl. Caltlomla
The tlclltloua bu1ln111 neme --'1C--Tm....,.I0--4.l~ll~IM...-UM,,,,_.,=u...--Richard L. McO.rmo tt, 1942 tn the Maner of the ~tton of
Ital-I lor the partn«ehlp wu NA• ITATUmlfT Omega. Senta Ana , California IV\REN LEE MLYNAAClYK, No. 3
filed on Febtv'""' 29, 1""'2 In ,.... Th 1 II 1 I d 1 82705 S will Co urt Newport Beach County o t o7an o• Fi'LE No": ~ .:.w no pereon 1 0 ng Wllllam Ottermlller, Jr., 933 Catllornta 92ee3, For Chang• oi
Fl'402I. AMENCAN MACHINE PROO-Udo Par11 WI)', Unit 1· New'por1 Name,
Fu" Nam. 111<1 Addr-of lhe UCTS, 16841 Product Lane, Unit ~· ~fotnl•!~ ........ ..., Pereon Withdrawing. A7 Hun"--·•on a-11 Ce.12t49 .. _ .,_,,_ .. .....,.....,..,_, w• • CHARLES o. DALY. '100 • vnw• ' 0--81 part.....tllp
Thie ltM-1 -Iliad with the County Cllr'lt of Ofanot County on
May 21, 1882
Mac Arthur Bo ulevard, Newport Oevld Sllnley Glov•'e!!:,1 Rlohlld l McDermott
'tlCtiiiOUI .,_.. a.en. CA 82M3 ~=~riv., HunUngton ' Thie atatemen1 -flied wtttl the
Mm ITA~ Publl1hed Orange Co11t Dally Thie~ i. c:ondUeted by 111 Count)' Cletti of Orange County on ,_
Publlthed Oreng• COHI D•lly Piiot Mey 25. June 1, a, 15, 1M2
2131.a2
The following per1on la doing Ptlol. Ml'f 18, 26, J\HW 1, 8, 1882 lndMdual Mii)' 1S, 1982. ~ U: 2181-82 6.wi s. 01cJwW .IACKIOM, KIDDP A IUC«UNQ
TAAOEWCNDS EHTEAPAISES, Thie statement -Cled wttt1 ttll :::-::. ~, ............ 181 E. 11111 Sl, No. 30, ea.ta.._, , ___ NlJC ___ NO_ncE____ COunty a.rtt "' Oflftgl County Ol'I -.......1C:... ~ ---CA~. May9. tM2. -_ ___.. CtA:litleW POlJC NOTIC( ..,..... Allen Treylor, Jr., 181 E. --~-mlOUI---_,-._--.. --r-~-· _,, 18th St., No. 30. Cott. M9N, CA ...._ ITATDm>IT Publlltiecl OfW1G9 COllll Delly,._ IJ1.._ "'""'°" COURT 82927. lol May 11, 18, 2( Jl.w'9 1, 1982 Publl•hld Orange COH I Dally Of' CAUPON&l Thie bu1ln1A le conducted by The following l*'IOnl .,. doing 20l7.a2 Piiot. Mey 11. 25, June 1. 9, 1912.
OttANQI eouwn an lndt~ ~ • -----------1 219'-82 1'0 CMI c...-°"" ... Drftd A. Traytor "' E & M EQUIPMENT LEASING, rtaJC NOTICE ..... AM. CA _,,., Thll .._...,_,, -fled 'with the 444 Lenwood DrM. Colla Miii.
PlAINTlff: County a.ti of Of-.noe County on CA 82927.
OE .. ALO L. HO,MAISTEA; M4IY s 1tl2 Rlc:tlerd N. Eaton, '44 lMtwood ,.. ... ,.. M ........, .. .., a-.. ' . ,_. DfM, Cotta ....... CA 92527. WENDANT;'°"'"'"1 '"'" Publeflld Orange eo..t Dally Plot J~ Mannina. a DNntwa
81LL JOHH OAATTAN lndlvl· May'· 11, 19, 25, tM2 ,...., .. ...: ~ 1~ !2~ed ..., 1 di* lftd clolna ~ .. GRAT· ·-"9£ WT TAN OEVll(J°,MENTi O. D. DE· ---.. ---.,.N()-iftl'r ____ g.-8I ~~·Elton
SIGN AND CONIT,.UCTION; .--·1~ (Oenetll Partner)
BRYAN l . llCK: FAHMONT IN Tiiie etatemenl -ftled wltl'I"" ~~·i~ A~~~~~ '10nnout IUH•U Count)' Clerk ot Ofange County on
AND OTHEfl BUSINESS ENTlflH Mm ITATIMINT Ml)' 1,, tH2.
VI THAOUGH )( Tiie followlng pwaona 11e doing Oer9ld A. GarNtt C.. ....._ ~ ~ M : A Uw COfllOtetloll 14"1MOM (11,0URT14 OIMINSION _...._.~._Drtw9
NOTICll YH IMl•e M..-e.M, SY8TlM8 t21,<>Vf'TH DIMENSION ~ 'e"• -· TIM -.t _, ...._ ........ ,_ COMPUTEM !SI 4-D 8Y8TEM8 141 ,,_ .. -· •
wltMvt , .. ....,. ~ Vl'lllM 'D MANUl'AOllJAING (I) '0 Diil· PubAehed o:.Tu 04ut,~ ,_ ................ -,.. _., TRllUTION, 8100 W.W.,.,., lultl -·• IM., .... ,.... ....... 7, Santa Ana. Ca11ttorn1a '2704 Pilot, Mey 18, 26, une 1, 9, 1812
tt you WWI to 11e1t tM ICNtoe of 40 MICAOTECHHOLOOY INC., 21~ -----------
en attorney In thle "''""·you • CaHfomla corporation, 3100 W.1------------~ do eo ~ eo tnat )'Ollr W1tlllf, Suite 7. Santa Ana, Catt· Pl&.IC N0T1C( --------------= :-· In)', may bl"-~ ·=-ta oonduet9d by a IUNW C°'*T °''"' ~TmOUI WM
AYllOt UaeM 111 .._ MMM• OOfSl«etlon. • ITATI 01 CA160NU ,_., 11 tr~ ... -..wtr '° Mb'O*lflilOlouY Inc. "Oft TMI ..... IM.ell1u.._.,_ ~~ COUNTYOIOMW =. 't:.i :::.:.·· ~:: == Tilll ••••rt ... fled wltll IM ~,-= .,• .. 11 u.d o.. ealdlartl OOftMtO County ca.ti of ~~on LOM1-WY1W1 "n.oP
di un ~., .... ..umo, o.. MIY tO, tea. -. A.1_, o:-oe:..n ='
I, ...
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Tiii
r~••t~
ClaCIJI
"YOAJ guys hafto cut out the noile. Grandma
laid there's always a quiet befor9 a storm."
by Brad Anderson
"In case you didn't know, hammocks were
not meant to be jumped onl"
MOON MIJLLIN8
53MlllM
57~Sunda ...
51 Orderlll 5t~
11 Odln'•ton
--
')·~ ~
"A mot01Cycl1, 1 motorcycle. A klfttdom for my
motorcycle."
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
AUNT FRITZI I \.t/OULD
YOU LIKE POT ROAST
Q 0 0
OH, I 'D
0 LOVE
IT, DEAR ANO ALL THE
TRIMMINGS
FOR DINNER? ooo
Fl.JNK~ ttlNKER8EAN
DR A BB LE
~.snNO ~ llUE._
\ ~tl'f fO 'fA~ 'W,
f'\C1UU t.lt 1'~ fl\'f tlEW
IMS'fAM'f' CA~A ! i
8EHIND BJER'J CJ.0001M~E'5 A SILV~ LINING .
BRING YOUR PURSE---
THE CAFE DOWN THE
STREET HAS IT FOR
TODAY'S
SPECIAL
by Kevin 'f agan
' I
!
II
I
I I I
I 1
~.~· Tiie folloW1110 penon I• dotno ....... AOTION IALH, 1121 , N. Cltanct Avenue, lanla Ana, Cellbnla lt70I
T ... Anne Keuftwlwo. mt I . J0An1 No. C, lanla Ana., ~tnoe Thia Ill.in-la oonduc*I by an
lnclMdult. T..-A..~g "'* ... .,,.,. ... llled wlUI the c-itv Claftl of Oranoe Couniy on Apt"· 1..a. ,,_,
PudaMd Oranae Cout Dally Not. Mey 21, "'-1, I, 15, 1912
noo-t2
PIClHIOUe IUH•ll Mm ITATllmfT
The toltowtno 1>«eon I• doing ~-SPECIFIC SPORTS SALES, 117 E. 21tt #5. Coet• MMe, ce.
82t27
Kendell A. WlllNI, 117 E 21at aa., eo.ta Meaa. ca. t2.a1 Thia ~ le conduc:1eo by an lndMdUat.
Kendall A. WanMll
Thia 11atement -llled with the
County Claftl of Otanoe County on
Mey 21, UNt2.
'1-.J Publlehed Drano• CoHI Delly
Piiot May 25, June 1, 8, 15, 1882
229142
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
MARIAN A. CALHOUN
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER EST ATE NO.
A11H5t.
To all heirs, benefidaries,
creditors and cont1n1ent
credltore of Marian A .
c.aLhoun and pttlOfW who
may be otherwbe int.ere9ted
in the will and/or el1ate.
A petition hM been Wed
by Jeanette Taylor in the
Superior Court of Orange
County requelting that
Jeanette Taylor be
appointed as personal
repreeentative to adminiater
the estate of Marian A .
Calhou n (under the
Independent Administration
of Enata Act). The petition
ia 1et for hearlna in Dept.
No. 3 at 700 Ovic Cent.er
Drive, West, in the City of
Santa Ana, California on
June 16, 1982 at 9:30 a.m.
IF YOU OBJIX:T to the eranuna of the petition, you
ahouJd either appear at the
heartn1 and state your
objections or file written
objectloru with the court
before the hearin1. Your
appeeranice may be in penon
or by your attorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR of a oontinBft\t
creditor of the dfnenud, you
mun file your claim with the
court or preeent It to the
puaonal repreeentatlve
appointed by the court
within four months from the
date of flrat l11uance of
lettera .. provided in Section
700 of the Probete Code of
California. The time for filina will not explre prior to
four monU. from the date of
the hee.rlna noticed above.
YOU t.!A Y EXAMINE
the We kept by the court. u
you are ln~rnted in the
estate, you may file a request
with the court to receive
1peclal notice of lhe
inventory of MWW UMll
and ot the peUtionl, ~ta
and reporta deacrlf>ed ln
Secelon 1200 of the
C.itfarnla Prabete Code.
Mtll l*l:m•ttj A.....,.
•• Law, IN&. l1tll...,.....
..... Ill C.C. ...... CA nm; ,,1,. Mt-nM.
Publ.a.Md Onmp Cout
o.Qy ~ May 21, 28, June
l, lfa 2306-82
Pale llJTIC(
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o.,ia .. "'"' o..-1 .. uo1 A,UPI"" Alt> t:ofwo
A,U "'"".,. l.,., ---·-d Hauf.t.M•.t• c--· --·•...ub v .. .._11_a1o .....,. .. a.,-.. • c.,_, ___
Otllrt _...,
--.i ,_" ... _ .. :::::.t---..........
llS*ESS, llMST·
1100, flMAtfC( ==-::=~, . .., ....... ._ .. _.
-...n.Tnt
ANNOUMCOUNTS,
POSONAlS &
lOST & rOUNO
A~me.t. Cw l'ool l..qaJ,..1<n i-... _
P~· Soro.I Club.• Tu vet• I SEIYIC(S s.r ..... °''""-'>
I EMPlOYllENT &
NEPAIATION s.--.1_,__
J4*Wtaled• ........ -.. ,
MEICMAKllSE
~
"""'-=·--· c.-... ·~--c-a 0... mo .. , .. rw-.
c ..... ---c-. ~ t..vftltOrk . .._, -. ......_ .... _ • ._.,,...,_¥•
OOIH ........ (4 .. p ...... :..-::~~c= ~c---. .. -..... , ~.T!ct...H1Y•.Sl•rto
BOATS & MAllME
EQUIPMENT
C-al
............ Si-rv•«"• -. ......... £ ...... -. .........
---·-CllanH .... .SOii ~Ooru -=·"· -... llANSPOIUTION Awrnft ~~·-=~s-.n· "-"·--·-~Troffl =..~"'1>
0.-.. ~OllOlllE
--Cl&NIH ._.,..,. v.aocw. :=:.--~ ..... °"'" Trwu v-
"-l.uo"'' -·-Alli$, IMPOITED
o-.i Alf•S-• A• " ..... ...,. .... c • ..., ~ o.-. .. '"r•r• ..... -· J..r-....r J-· KullY nn f.ih1• IA t .....
M•&d•
>hrt"f'l·t-Q ""'"' :WO MOii
Opoj ,.,...,.
Pfll•.-ot .........
lla.wll "411.t RO)M
"°'" = -... ,., .. ,,......,.. v ..........
ve1 ..
l ...
ID ,.,,
1•11 1• lliao
~{!.'f!f •....•....•
IOUA~ ~ 0''01UUNITY
::P1H1111r'1...._
lt.M ~" rMI .... te adYertltfd
:: In thl1 ~ 11 aub-, .. l!_!!..!~_ thl '•deraJ '•Ir 1• ~Act Of 1111 wt'6Ctl :~ m•kN t m.o.ito adYer· ·-u .. "Any ~ioe. Ifni. :::: tatlon or dl1orlmtn1tton 1• baead on raot, ootor, rel·
:: gton, Mll Of national orl·
1• gin. or 1ny Intention to 11• make 111y 1uch preferen-ca, llm l tet lon or
:: dlacrWnlnatlOn ...
una.p
IWIDl•WT
UllTI WllW
• IA , fem rm , "Ctlarmer". l1t1111ted on
lg tteYeted OOl'llW lot In ••otllent nelghborhOOCI
neat lhot>Plno a achoola.
Sell., w/au111 w/
ft~. 8225.000 . .,...
te ChaM LM 84'e.too.
(A45). ti: Macnab -Irvine
·-l ;i~AY LOH co.
I ' ::: Thie new1p1per wlll not
1• knowtngly 11C09Pt any ad· ~= vertlelno for real Htate llUI YllW
1a which la In vloMltlon of the tnt• J: lew. 4 Br, 2'A 81. V1eW home :;: liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil over Io ok Ing P avl 11 on,
lDI lllllll Advertl-C1tellna and nne lltH. IG W• n,.tve an l~t : sera should check •ppra1111 tor 1320.000. := their ads dally and Try s20.ooo down untll
: report errors Im-r:' :J1,:;:r..=. Ow·
11• -UDD ------J1lt ----... o• .. .-.. .. --.. Ult ---,.,.
111$ ----
$100 auo ~ .. int w. ---'19f) ,,. -...
••$ -9$ --------
medlately. The .......,11
DAILY PILOT at·I~~~~~~~
sumes llablllty for
the first Incorrect
lnaertlon only.
llPEI llY
112,IM Sf)ICIOul 1 atory OOOdo, 2 Bdrm, lu.h greenbelt, --------1 pool, uuna end spa. •n ........ 20% down. Peyment•
Well fft1bll1hed neloh· 1&42 mo. eel 546-2313
borhood of more expen.
11119 llomM. Exdnt owner
flnendng. 3 Bdfml. For·
mat D.R. Lis backyard. Only $23&, 00. Binnie
D1Xon'1 11tJna. 751M100
GEORGE ELKINS C
Fii Fii
TIE F&m.ft
In tNe large, bMUtlfUI 4
Bdrm pool home with
1pa, In M•H d•I Marl
Beet buy In the lll'M. not
•noth., llke It. Asuume
111. owner wtll carry ba.
l•nce et low rate. $135,
... .,.. ..... ,171 ril!l3t1!1
THE REAL
ESTATERS .,
lllllMWI
Unbell•vabl• t«m• for Ihle deluxe 2 Bdrm
townhome. Upgreded Ille
counter•. wood floore,
mlrrOf'ed wall. Cozy ftf9-place. Two pool• ptu1
clubhOUN and ex.,a ..
room. Only 2711,500. Cal 873-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
5% DOWN! ......
lllmPlll 11•.-ft.Lm A oorgeoue V ...... on
2 & 3 BR Townhomel the golf COUfH with en
eo.ta Meea Hpeelally lovely patio
lnauda9 ---"" and lewn. Thia home .. In ~·--., exc*lent condition, hU
FROM •137,050 an a11umabl• First TD
Furn. Model Open and the owner Wit U111t
11 lO 5 OellV. with eddltlonel flnanclng.
AYOC*So It FllNIN Rd. j~~~·~·~·~-~~~~ 141-JZH l ~
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642·5678
!'.~!!!!. {'.'. !!.'!....... !~~!!!. ~~ h.'!....... !~!!!! .{'.~ !!'!....... ~ ... !~. '!!. !!'! ...•... ,...,,!!! .!'!. ~! •••••••
,, ... ~~~t ........ !.l_ql f!.-.f!.~t ........ !.~I l!!!!.'.t ........ !.'.f. fl1!1.!m ...... !!Af ~m!!btt! .. l.'M
•••••1t1 Setler now off.,, t.,me on one of the belt ~
In the upper 11ok l•Y arH. IHutllul custom
built 4 8drrn 2 bath poof hOme With fabulOUI YIN of Newport'• upper ...
..... end olty llghtt. Wet
m1y cerry fln1nolng or trad•I Well prloed at
1210.000. Cell ford•· ..... 146-1171
THE REAL
ESTATERS ----
us... 11.21~ nnancJna av1111-
ble when you take over
u1111ng loln on the ..... gant. 8r ueou1M hOme
thet hM beef\ U1~ prepered for entertal·
nlng. One of tew homM
In the .,.. on FEE LANO.
2870 San Mlguel Or.,
Newport B••ol't. 768-21801 Of 752-7373.
~ Walker & Lee
,.. ..
un
Coeta MeH uporeded home plua newer re•r unlll A11ume 11l loan
and motlYlted ...... nnanca st low rate. Only $185,000. Call now,
046-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
PllllllU 11111 .. -.. ,,. ... "l1UL Hr, 1'1411, 1111,000. lfll .,..... te.ooo dn. Auume , ... ,
Prli.t Wnt 8:l bllyfront. SU~ for 2 boat.I, 1.1"4 OWO bel at 14"-Lovely Ira • Id, pro•.
mod I_,. 3 3 ... _ h $1 oo ooo ee1 "'*It. !J41.10« deooratH' w/poof, ..,., re e ""' rm. ...t , . . . oltY 6 ~ "'*' A MAL
--...,... IA,.QAIN'4TONLY Ocffn & Jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm. 3 4 bedroom home with HH,6001 Won't l11t. bllth, 3100 aq.ft. tl,31&,000. OcMntront form.I dlnlne • ..v eooeee, Cell dlr90tl1 to '•trick
coV'd petlo, fwnlly room Tenor• H1·UH or Liii llU •••n end more. ~ft. n•nolng. Aeduoedto . ·-''· ·.· ,,
t'rinw Lido Nord bllyfront. S bdl]ll. S Yi bath 1122,000.
Lae L.R .. 2 boat allpa Sl.500,oo<r. R&IM~
Remodeled 3 bdnn. 2 bath + la.rje rte. rm.
beam ~ihnp, fumlahed, pauos. $420.000.
Lllll llLI IAYFlllT
...agoon view from 6 bdrm, S bath, playroom.
dark rm. dt-n, Boat slip. $1.35-0,000.
llYSIDl COYE
Spectacular bayfront vtew 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br.
2 ba dn 2 boat allpa $1,900,000.
COROlllDO CAYS
C-Oronado bland CUit. bayfront lot. 85' boat
dock. Plana avail. $425.000 w/terma
ILIFFI Ollll
Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba
on largest grttnbelt. $250,000.
Piii Liii
3 bdrma, 21h bllthl condo near pool. $145,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
'41 ~. t'"J• D• •. ', " bl~ 6ib l
NEW VIEW TOWN-
HOMES. 2 Muter W--113£ifi tH. View of Ooean &1 Dramatic re modeled
Night Ughta. ~ Ar9. home. app'OJl. ...... 4 Park•, open apacee. Bft, pool. •pa. Park e
1125,800. Onty 1~ dn. c.,. I R.V. Or•t IOC9· >On1'1n. Hal or Pat'*-' tlon. KHp 3 hOrtH,
Agt. fn-7300 maybe more. on your
-·· .
\ f >I l / 11 /:'II ... ·' .. .., ... ... ,..
.. llill!
.... 1111'• .... ...
T•k• edvant•g• of the
.... lllllf <>wr. ,...... oeef\, d9'I
enttque 1YPe --. 2 er. 1 e.. 1C11i111r kit • ...,_ det90hed 09ft09 .• ,,,,
000. 541-1041 eve• &
.,,., t31..a620 --
greet flnenclno ot1 thl• =
8panl1h bHuty. 3 be-11 .. l*IWJ
droorn, lltge fernl)' room By owner. Orutle price llrepl1ce, huge mast., reduotlon for lge down· suite with 1unk•n tub. peynwnt. f40..1tt0
Loft, POOL deck •nd iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii much mor•. 1113.tOO. Cal today! t7t-23IO .......,
TARBELL, REALTORS By owner. DrHtlc price If IWm reduction for tge down-
llU ¥1111 peynwnl. 640-7"0
4 bdrm, 2 ba, 2755 ... ~E.04 .... ~Ba. pool Gannet Or. Coeta Mela. .,.,..om -· ~ . Prln. only. 1114,500. J1ou1~I. kol pond, 3 714-657-1398 fr g! C: S , $4 7 5 , 000.
MANAGER'S CHOICE -8-1-6930--·-----e.t buy In C.M. Sharp 3 .... ....
bdrm w/pool. No quall-ll•H ...... M ~~~ns . 8111,tOO. Bkr 3 b ~ b 700 drm, a ,
epa./covered atlo.
• • 9'9Ra1 1 Beaullfully decoreted. • ....... ~ loen wtth 5%
on golf courN ln~reat dn. •22t,&OO Fee By oondlUon. Only •1 ,ooo <>wr.. o~ w/t.rme. Try lo ctwn. Cal --------today Patrick or Fred 1K .... Tenen, agt 131-2711 0t 1K ....... ...,
A 211 3 BA 2141 ba. aiper loca-
own propetty. Or•t fl. • .,_..._ um to tod.y'1 CIMatfled nanclng. 1211,000. A ... ....,_
don. 8-* Bey .. front row. May leaN option.
UH,000. 875-2478;
72().()621
f 0 r th. b. st buy I D•bolt-Shlp .. y ll•tlng. ,..,. 1141
Want Adi Cal .. 2·&118 642·5'71 1-..100 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 er. Adutt Condo. Walk
Bltff S
PAULA MODEL, exC91·
lent eond. Fee ... By Owner. c.,1 aner & PM RCTaylorCo
640-9900
Wl&TA•••rmn
Lovely mountain and dty Ughta
views, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath.a. formal
dining room, dramatic wet bar,
eeparate family room. All this and a
low, low price in pre1tlgioua
Spyglus. Add good~ and a
motfv.ted le1ler -•terrific buy at
$495,000!
RCTaylorCo
640 -9900
GE ORGE HKINS ;:o to •torH, bank•, etc.
S4800 dOwn, lllMUfM tow .,,_... te200 111. owe
balance et 12%. Total
... Price 170M. P .P .
IN OLD CdM • Elegant _546-3 __ 212_. -----•
home plua lncom• • lnllll IHf
eouth of Hwy. French •••••••••••••••••••••• doors, vaulted ceillnoa, Woodbridge 4 Br. Det. courtyard. Excellent fl. home. cul·d•·HC, •le.
nandng. '476,000. Own/ Agt. wlll finance. 1
Uf!llllOOf 11() ... fl Belo'# mnct 11 1110,000. Raeriora, a1MOOO 1·· _M5-0 __ n_9 _____ 1
-1181111-...... " Baokbay loc1t1on,
~~or .. 2-7045
RNll._
3 bdrm, 3'~ ba. LA. OR, FR. 3000 aq ft. Oat•d
PttY. StrMt ... 2-4430 .........
1226,000. 10% down,
10~% lnterNt. 3 Br. 3
Be. OCMn Ytw Condo In
Newport CrHt. Pool,
epa, tennla & Wiit to the
beedl. Open~~
1-4. 27 Ima Loe Ccut.
TSl Pl operUlll
842-1903 HX~O' lot wltll two 3
Bdrm ,.__, oereoaa a
comll. Orelt t9"N.. ~
2 Story Greentree. Con·
venlent to community
pool, pet1I .., lhos>I:*"' 3 bath• end dbl g•r.
THERE'S MOREi Stet, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
r Ice 82 611, 000 .
1-73
too Cal t1NS10
\ f >I l I tl F tf
' \ •,I ••••,· ......
8Nutlfully upgrad~ • Bdr 3 Ba home. Low -.,,, --•1 m.. =:n '==' s~~~-4~ffes· mill TIW DUI Corona del Mer owner ..,. ""GAT a. P011.M-----1
11••••a Y9'd. OO'lf9-red p1tto. Cul·d•·aac,
walk to school•. park,
oool I tennle. F111taatlo long term financing et
low lnter"t rHte. Full
price $239,000. 761-3191
....,._
8l1uated on a t>eautlNI
greenbelt. 2 prtvate p&·
tloe, new carpet•. xlnt
cond. 3 bdrm, 2 bath,
elnol• 1tory "Bonlt•" .
Near pool, echools &
Mopping. Good Income
ptOperty. 1215,000.
Ii "''~ --aT ------
.... --------tlN tl:IO ...
11• ,,. , ..
ll'lt ... -... -IUt ---.,.. --
ml .,.
'"91 rM "" flll mt rm tnt
111» t7• "771 '11111 """ t'lll! -n• "1411
"141 "''" 111 ..
"1•1 ,,.
YIM "" tr!M "" .,.. = ,,.
""' -""1
-· --•ia •If -= -----.... = --= = =
TWo or-i mut• bdnn9 must Mii nowt '**'tty 8 ....,_ .._. -' .._
With print• bathe, Ideal ~uced S&0,000. Pano-lout """"4IM _.. .,.
for co-ownere. wood· ramie ocean and night ""' "' '°"" +o.ir ..,... -•
burning llreplacea. l)lue llohl• view. 4 Bdrme. f• I I
'h bath downstalr9. Att. mlly room. Now aekln11 I 0 OI MI E Tl' S I* ched 2 cer garege, prl· $350,000. Call 87U550
vat• patio. Excellent fl· THE REAL
ESTATERS ~~3 1110,000. C•ll r ...... K_O _P_R_E__.l l•
. 11 1~ I I . 1 THE REAL
ESTATE~S
-----
Wl1 TIO 1¥11 nm .... nn
Cal Vlnoel Aq«tt.
MMlH
EllDTl•lll
llLmT
Seautlful upgr•ded 4
Bdrm, 2700 eq.n. of lu·
xury SIM. pool and 199-
Good Htumabl• lo•n.
Owner wlll carry. Call now, won 't 1111.
646-2313
THE REAL
ESTATE~S
*Uffmf * MAlU ......
WOWI LOWtat priced
b•yfront home ON BAL·
86A COVES. Large •
bdrm, 3 beth. double
llreplece, covered peUo
plua much more1 Wiii
AITD Of trade for EHi·
bluff· Baylhor• 0t ???II .... .., ..... .........
*111-l•*
~
WavH cruhlng on the
roc:ka balow. A 1N1gnlfl· cent Httlng for thl•
l>Mutlfut Cameo Sl'lot'M
Home. Lovely troplcal
gardenl ptua '*of glut to enjoy th• vlewe. 4
bdrme .. famlly rm. and lorm•I dining rm. $2,
ll00,000.
l714t 67l~OO
121>1 ua.21u
HARBOR
A 1>1\ '''on or
llJrboi lm~lmt'lll ro
•.. ..,. ...... .. .... n .. , ........ .., ,... itarter ............... .,,., ... , ... . .................. ., ..... .... ..................... ....,,.
.... 1 .............. .. .. ,..., ... ., .... 111·1-...,
I F L 0 A C 11 I'm wonled about our educ.
I Ii I I tlon•I ey11em. I 11ked the new . . . . ! l)'plll If Ille !lad apetllng In
IOhOOI. 9119 .. Id )'ff, bu1 INI
,..I _U_P_l _A_N_D_ ..... , d•)' 11141 Wll --.
·I I I r I .•~~:-.... ~~ .._....._....._.....___..__. ........ -;:...;;:..-,,,;;, .... ND ' belo-
FllEM
M C A M E E J U T N N N A A I M A R W
R 0 J U I H U T E 0 E C 0 M 0 T T 0 C
H I E H R E M H S A C R C S [ H 0 P H
A U A N I M A L U T L A E M L K M L A
II JU H HT NU H 0 P~P M HEM C I K L L A E A 0 0 T C H I M E H P N A R
C A II H H S E G A T E 8 L E E S V I M
R A M 0 E R R M T Y H E S A C I A V A
N 0 T T 0 C E 0 A A I R L 0 V H I C C
A W 0 B 0 L T C H C L A I 0 C V A I
H R I R H A L E M A C 0 C M 0 S S 0 T
0 H L A M A L A M P 0 U F T I H H M U
M 0 I A P R H 0 M L H L T L M E T U J
E R E L H S A C C A A E K ! H A I R U
L L A M U C 1 V H X I S R 0 0 II 0 M R
....... ._., ........,, ,;:z ...... •It ·1
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CatM ..... ""' U-AM H....,
~ ""'"'9: MiNlt et """
..,an mn 1111
C:.'11 11 l 1
-1"" J •q ( 11't ''' I '1 ........
3 br, 2..+ ba twnhH In
C ....... E Hwpt Hgt1 .,... Aa9un1e Anxious corpor1t1on 1--------ofteMQ VA terme on thl9
V908nt 2 8dr home onr!: oorl* lot. lnc:ntdlbly
ced at only IU,5 O.
...,,.._
4 8d, lo ctwn, QOOd toerie
and owe. '••land.
U16!..000. Pattlok or
Ft9d TenOl'e, M1-<2711 . '
R&"M~
_,. tow lnl loen. Pnoe 1180, co•t ooo. AGt 815-11551.
2 bdrm, 2 ba. Meth•r --====-==::iii Model. Perfect for th• AINll msT 1mall famlly or 1tnglel. 2 Bdm\, 2 bath. den, ~ Almo1t new home up-nlno room, large doUtJle gredee throughout. garage. Elect. opener.
Prime locatk>n '*" UCI Quiet end unit. Walk to end~-•1es.ooo. the beech. 11t5,ooo. .., ........
141-Tilt
I ,
F!i~.~.
''"· m1nte11, kit. Olbl· nett, fllHd p1n1llftG,
doore, booko .. ••· rt· mod. l 1dd0 ona. >Clnt ,..., uo. 1341278.
"6-2318
~I ~1J&.-M Crown mouldlng, entry ~............... • ...... i:•~i:-;..... dOOf't m1nt111 bOOlt· ~ ,.,.~ot ~wZ.i~ 01Nt.' ceder llned olo·
-=.tt'=1iL ·~~ __ oorn __ AOb_· _a.._1_~~;.....;.;,.. Mtt. Wood tOlutlont to ,. wood probl•m•I
A.U.&TAff ll'AV1HO Concrete: "•move Old, 131-1521
911'aoct111g-Stt1P1na ,...,110• New. lmllg1 1---------....,.CoriwnJ"-'d. Job9.~ ... Ma12 .._H uo , .. ,_ 4Mt-1111 :-;, .................... . AJM C.,, Df1rfWN..l/ ACOUSTIC Dwt.....,.,, Onldlng •••••••••••••••••••••• Aeptlrt, new & old. 11 I,__ Co. "9t/Coinl. Mom/AN lft my home, Yf9 eicp. Bud W.e6U
UO •'le4 ~17t0 petMlme, 12.50 ~ hr . .,__._, __ , CdM. 840-7211 _If' ..... ........... ,,,..._ __ , ······················ ~ _, Chlld Cere, my home. £1.ECTAIOIAN-Prlced
.... Mon-,rl., C.M. erea,. right, lfff tttlmtl• on ••• MANNiiiRViCU... f)lp. IN>thlt. 879-7315 large Of trnel )Obt.
...,... 'llnt. ¥9mlefl. C..ti ... ,J UC. 391821. 873-0358
T•..f'\lb.Wlx. ...a-t7M .... ~ .. • .. ••••• LIC'D ELECTRICIAN R£MOOEL/ADO-ON8 Quel, WOf1l.Aeu. rttet
.... ..... & Cerpentty. Uo'd. 28 Fr .. tet. 131-5072 Tom f':...-:C:T' .= ywa. lrwln 14W718 TOP QUALITY
eel hudyman work. Fine llnlthed carpentry, ELECTRICAL WORK 971-7M1 remodeling tpeolalltt. AMt. ratat. 531-5065
Lie. 418617. Randell ELECTAICIAN .u.n 720-12t0 5m1 JobtlRepaira. Uo.
•••••••••••••••••••••• COMM'L/RESID. 2331oa.c.10. 641-5203
........ "-...... A4wnocl-Add'ns-Repeln Look~ a home bulo V«Y r.... Lie. 300250 fltllla/..ftlt
der'?E p I cell Rendall Jack H. a.Melt, Jr. ··F·OR··:~:·cou····~::a·· . re1 •Y· Jr or Fred Gen. Contr. 852-8142 '"'""'" "'~ w II. 0 n . par II v It w Bonded I In ed Topt/Ca.blneta refaced
Homet, lno. El Toro. 1------*---Free Mt. 142-5357
581-1790 Went Ad• call 842-SG78 Sell Idle Item. 842~78
!!lrftr ••••••••••••••• ~········· ~ ............. . ~~ ~~-.... 1 ·~:=• EI. WW:= ~:::1'1.~:: ~~.·l ...
t 141 tOll(Memcl) ,.~.itty, .,.. IJUMloeClll.Cel Aw.A~"-• . • I?~ In ~ -... ... -4111 Chet WYM :.:::!
------1 ltilYO'I ~NIHQ l.a ..... M 1'ltll MOlll.l _,.W>I .... ""flnfft "T0\11 YWCI C.." HA' VI.ING and local mo-:t.mu«a.......... No l'»1MI IH.a .... m-..1. ~ ..... .... AiR.l91HtTM.I. •• ~ly. 111..ent 91\'9 vlng atucMn~ Wltll truok. .. ..,..,. ITAAVIHG cou.IQI :::r;r-':e~........ NII/CM Offt, ...,...... oar..-drl. HlrdWWe. L ... 118-1 IO lod, tptlnllter l t~tub ITUOIHTI MOVIHQ NMI pa'°"91 I ....,,..
DMIOril'IMt .... , .. ~........... HAUUNO.OAADINGI lntlttll1tlon. Our •10rlt co. uo. Tt~. ..... ... ltl-1Clt '~············ HOMI IM,._OVIMINT dtmolltlon, olHn•up. any lookt expen1 ve. I,.,,..,, ... t .... t? PLAITfA ,ATCHINQ .lpf1nk .. ,._ •
... ...,.. llW'N .. """UMllNCI CoNret•. tteef9MOWll. ~our· .. ~~ WATCH UI QN)Wt AHIUOOOI. Int/ext. so Ael,/OCNM\. OOtlWMrol9' :;;"~............ Heeti-, oer-try. e1eo. Ouk* .-v. ...2.1aa ,_ .... _,. •• ...,....,. ..,.... 'Ill --""' ,......°>Job I .... .. ftlall-Vf9. NMt. ll'IUI 148-2177 ~tf1 ... Lawn-tt9HM1b IMtll :."'::~i1~ too "-•'-tMr. Uo 204111·14f.1Ml •h••-::P.••••••••••••• lD'I Pl.AITIRINQ T · ~ ' :7.'iltiili ..... eu••• -Nllfm All TYfll!I INTllXT 1/.-i..: ~tottlllna C41rpentry. Muonry Want I AIAll.Y 01.IAN ~I0-"°'°'*'10 by .. loh1rd llnor. I.lo. ,,.H EST. 84MHI ... .--. ............... .
""-lllWMt• MttOll ,.00ttng • ltlumblna HOUH? 0111 Qlngh1m 8prtnk~ 2IOM4. 11 ~ ot ~ L.attlo,,.....,..ltuooo
Of'yweil • Stuooo • Tiie Qlrt. Fr .. Mt .... Mt2t Dew........... *-I cutomera. ,1.ASTEAINQ leittur ... Thin W ..
K&D ~ ~t. Aemodej. J.I ...... '"° R081N'8 01.EANINQ M ... M2tf Think )'OU, es1...-10 INT/EXT. AESTUCCO. atuooo lrtc*. UO'd. ~/Comm. Oteln-up. ,..____, .__ ....... I t~0410ht'I 81oek w•. 8118-4812 ' G--18?-47M u Haullnl a..1-241t ---Mlln!eMnoe -·-• '""iwo.;oea ~ MM,.,_ -· ~WN °CARI o=1a.:C.::a'? .. ~H~OU .. ~Cl.IA ....
7 u••p;•.:=; .... ~~~.:....~ r!!J.f!ffl~c!:!r.!!f. f.'I.'.'}!. ........... ...
Comm/relid Nwpt/CM ' ,._... -. ""'" ,,.,-.,.._,~llM --· "-,_..,, ..,_ QUALITY oommktt, t2 180 p« lolMf. Greeting l >Ont.,.....;.. WOf1l, lXPE.AT HANDYMAN Relltble, reft. ,, .... ,. Cll 17WSM, 78t-11MM ..,.,,. tes-Ot11 '** yr• up. Aep1lr/remod planter mhl IVlll. Fr ..
OM/Oflf, lkrry 846-7412 carpentry· "ooflna Call 24 IWe. Ml-2411· PA.INTER NUDS Aeft. "lter ._ hHter l del. ~ N?·t&ee
l! G ....... JA.--.. ~ .•. 842...013 Wiii CIHn your hoUM or ··--WON<I 30 Yf9 exp. lnV ....., ..... lrWlM ..... __,_ !~~~.... I ...... OW-L.ET'I GET ""' offlol. Elee., painting, It ~w·' ..::":.~·.:~·= ..... _ Aoouttlc ~ I·---· ..,....,,._, .. .,....,, _,. "'" ...,.. Mt-IOOe ~ vnn. ...-,.,.,... ~·, ..... ....., ,. .. 1 ,. · POOl PA08L~87 •••••••"••••••••••••• DomlNo ... 2-4151 DIEi He aan fix anyttllngl plUmbiftO, ~. eo.ta MMI. ..,.. .... -•u•"' ... -For quellty melnt l re-Moel eubjletll, K-t4
414-t168 JQan'• C1eM1n9 ..W... lrYlne.,.., 11W17S ....., ....... pair, call tor lrH ttt. Dey~ w11•• f 10wtl 1IDI 8MAlL JOH: plt.lfnblng, HOUIM,~t., Rentllt, Cullom 8'1dc, ltont, tni'ludveyneltltler Kem 411-1263 Mt. Morgen. .-W11t
Topped/removed. Cleln =t· eleo, 015f:'l~[i· Of'ftOll. t217 IMoc*, eonorew. 1tuooo. (IXOY'E) 751-ltM •-"-WJU"' /!&aa•l-
up, lawn f9fl0¥. 75t.s.41t Free Ill. ? EJcp'd -~ ~. Free eet. 64t-Mt2 COLLEG.f STUOEHT Ex· ~,~:_~•••••••• ••.~t;:tt;;~·:i~:·
MOWING -CLEAH UPI Cerpentry, Ctblnett, Hon9t -~t CUSTOM BNCKWON< pt'd Int/at pelnUno. Airy M .._ .,10 Aoofl"9 c .. ~ W1ndOW
Hauling • ~ EJlctr'lo9I. 'Plumbing, Etc. The beetll e7s-7 12 ew SMAl..LILARGl J088 J 0 b f 0 r I•. t I A I•. lie ,..:z-;-·.~ ~2~ CtMnlno. Ltd. 11411 8153
F,.. ttt. ...2~"°1 Don llM-0148 Qulllty ~ Npt/CM. A9t9.1146-M12 484-ttH or 552-0231 '...-· _,, 20% MontNy ~
MOWING ft()..f1&420 GENERAL HANDYMAN w/a per90MI touctl. , ............ I If ..... A9f9. ROOf FIREPROOflNG •R£SIO£NTIAL. '*
Haul/Oumplng 115/12() mttonry, carpentry, Irv, HB. Beth 8~ .......-.1&-... EXTERIOR PAINTING Mtg. I'*· of oNmlcal. Avg 1 ety 930·, Avg 2-. MI,~ roollng, home Improve-•---~•1.z-H Cuttom WOf11. Fr.. .... 00 IT NOW. Fr .. 1. MS Chr1e 88? ..a3l8 _,
78'-88041965-0096 mtntt l repelrt. ~.~I. ••••••••• Blookwtlll.bttak.ttone, R .... +llnelnt,&ttel-o.MPtlnltng84 1H · · .._Mt pt .... __.. IS1-7882 • ._. Ill• l concrete. Outllty nlng, st..,. 547-4281 REPAIRS 125to1188 •F1NE8l IN o.c.• ~·I _, -WOf'k t i r ... rt*-Uo'd, F t "'•'I anytl Ron't WlndoW Wtthlna
Exp'd, qu1llty work •t """'-' n..n ILTDUTIYI Free tet 878-9027 1. •-'• '~:T_r n0-212sme. Reeld. A-. eso-nf1 re•t. rat••· Mafnt. & •••••••••••••••••••••• • .~h..~l••••••••••••• 1---------•·--------landtctplng. NB/CdM HARDWOOD FLOORS Llw In NCUr1ty ...,_ma-Flreplactt -Pl1ntert • Fanhlna lntertor Det1gr1 HUber Roofing-Ill typea Orenge Coailt Wlndowt only. Ron't Gardening, Beautifully cleaned ....-BBO't • Pttloe l Veneer. HANGING 110/ROLl New-recovet-dech "We IMv. you wttl't a
675-9388/842-MH and waxed. 832-4881 lure lovtng care tor pell Ref'•. Fr• eet. 848 0464 Oualtty. Uc/Ina. Strip-ue. #411802. 548-9734 rbdgllt• outlodtl"
•-U ~ ... ~ ... "''ttert. ··~-~Diec .. on paper. Fr .. ettlme1• '30.a111 Mow, edge, reke, tweep, -• a• ..,_",_, ,....,._.., nuf. VI ., __ •~ •--~&.• f''-
tprlng oleert-up, lltul. ••••••ill•••••••••••••• (Since t878) 831-1234 •••••• ••••••••••••••• """'" .... 5-932& ~~.~,(•••••••••
Chucll 842-2873 att 4 DUMP JOBS HOUSESITTINO Ou~~C:~'~. ASA PAPERHANGING BUDGET RATES/Llc'd ~~..':1~1 Reep., prof. teactler. F 40 Fr• .. timet ... S82~10 7 yrt Ioctl exp. Guer. Low min. Sml Job• Ot<. People wno need People yre, wlll 111 your home, work. PrlcH tttrt et Free .. t. Int. 141-7581
lhat'1 What the HAULING-ttuelerit hat gtrelen,r.t•. Nontmkr. Htvt you reed today'• II/roll. Alec 781-7027
DAILY PILOT lge truck. Lowett rate. 62M13 aft. 8 CltHllleCI Adt? If not. Reed the clueilled ads for SERVICE DIRECTORY Prompt. Call 759-1878. you're mlulng th• belt SELL Idle llem• with. lhe bell deal• In aptrt·r
11 tll tboUtl Thenk you, John. Went Ade CtJI 842-5878 bargtln1 In townl Dally Piiot Clutilled Ad ment renltlt 642-5878 .
To place )'OUf metUOt
before the
reeding pubOc,
phone Dally Piiot
Clastllled. 642-5878
DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Sell your no-longer-needed Items for cash.
If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3
OLLA RS
INES days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads.
Call today for full details.
(Moa ,.. 11" . htrt "'-11.00)
3 3DAYS
CLASSIFIEDS642•5678
COUNTRY ClU8 LMNO IN NEWPORl BEAai
A C1elu111 community on
the Bad! Bey. Club ~
.. & "* 7 Poe*; • i.n-
nl• oourtt; doee to ~
,_ ' llhOpptno.
UnlUmlahed 1tudloa, 1 &
2 br. apartment., town-
ho!AMt
S54o.t1000
•several 1tudlo1 & 1
bdrm. unite .,.. flrnllhed
wllll fin• dMlgner tuml•
lunt&~Mow
In today or reMrve for
IUl'nmtf monthl. Smet1ty
furnltn.d mOd .. t open
dally.
Forfarther information
I reprcun, advertl1ln1
plliement in the
Sehoole a ln1tructlon1
Dlreetory -eall
Louiee Griffith
642-5678
ext 330
lt1nt to It A
TRAVEL AGENT Momin,, afternoon &
evemng classes. P ac;b :Jravi j . :Scfwo/
610 E. 17th St. s.ta AtlO
(714) 543.9495
h .. llllled 19U
Financial Aid Programs Accrectited by
the Accrediting Commission or the Na·,
tlonal Association or Trade & Technical
&hools.
American Airlines Sabre
Computer fiainin&.
CR&\ TIVE COLOR
Poclflc• ... ...,,.. ...
• Color c•H•lt•tloa ....... Le.. .. • ..
aim-.. ~ ' wer4r•~• for ••• ..........
Am, kit. pnv., C.M. etvt.
tlan home, nonamkr, uao mo. 1 100 dep.
e46-3872
Call 645-1308
or 851-9352
for Info.
Lt1rn How to u11
Wang, IBM 058 & Oltplaywrlttr
Xeroxeeo
Cll
014)5sa
C11l11fTnlllll,,.._...._
DfJ' • In•· • Id .,.
IAIN MOU MOMIY
Become a Word Processing Specialist
Excellent CarMr Opportunities
WOAD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION
2232 S.E. 8r11tol-S~~f W\,,ta Ml. Ca tt70/
'A ..... tl(.._ ... ...,_~ ...... ., r•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'
1 · lntern•tlon•I Youth 8occer 1 1 ~ •nnounCH It'• I
1 ~ Reeptlng appllo.tlon• for tta 1 I SUMMER SOCCER CAMPS I
1 for Qlrl1 and Boy• •I• 1-17 yra. 1 I July 18·23 Leguna Nlguel; Ooeanvtew I
I High lohl, Huntington BNoh I
I July 28-30 Leguna Niguel, Huntington BMctt I
I , Aug. 2·1 Laguna Nlguel, Unlve111tr High I
I Sehl, lrvlne I
I Aug. ""13 Laguna Nlguel, lrvtne I I Aug. 11-20 Laguna Nlguet I
I Aug. 23-21 Laguna Niguel I
I We ott.r en outatandlnt ooechlnt •t•ff of profffslonal coachn end plaJ.,. from I I •ntl•nd, •urope, United 8tatH. ''•-r .. letratlon .. • muet. Call tor ,,.. broohure I
a1-111t. I I we ofter • ••rtetJ ot w tremlnt propama .. .....,.. "°"' beltftwa to eclYenoect. I • per chlld per ........_ Teem retee alao ........... Por .._ broclMn and MtMr I
lfttormetton on Pf9-Nlletnltlon conl8ct lruoe Hand. Dhctot 111·1711. I L-••••··~··•••••••••••• ••••••••••
JOLEE MILLER
VOCAL l"R.~ININ\, f)IL'TION
Has openings for students of all
ages and levels. Graduate
Westminster Choir College,
Princeton. N .J .
141-1111
SUMMER SCHOOL
-4
DAY CAMP
HICJh SchOaettle ....... T1 .. flrHI 31'• s...ci. ............ ,
(714D7892
INTIRNATIONAL
TRAV!L
INSTITUTE
Tr•ln '°' . An ixottlng Ca,.., In Trev .. .,, ... , ~,.,, ...... ,. .. ,,. ......
.... llld Cal Cllltft offerM.
·~ ......... " •... . , ... , ..... .
lnroHlng NOW for dar •nd
evening ol .. MI
Cll w write lodlJ ftr 00 e1t ..
(714) 851-7797
IRVINE CAMPUS ma MldltllOll Dr. htne, ca 1ma
r
•BALLET• TN'
• JA11. • TRIM TO AHY'MA •AEROBICS
• CHILOAEN • TEENS• ADULTS .................
CleMt ''•r-™.., I '"'.!'~::.::..-.., ... .:.r.::c.. .....
-961-5440-
INDMOUAUZED PROGRAMS
SUMMER SCHOOL
hading
Moltl
~o
ComprehenelOfl
Qrommo1
Study Sldllt
Summtr Schoot . . Summ" Camp
••
m~r Jfatrmant &c~oal
ORA.'Uif: CO( \'TY S Ol.DE:ST
& 1"/.\'l":S'T f'Rll'AH: .llC/IOCJL
Remedlel or Accelerated
CIHses
Tral\_..llWlevelt-.
IM7 W. Mobil•. Anuh1:1m Phonr 774 \1152
GET AN
EDUCATION
MONEY
CAN'T BUY.
PLUS
$15,200 FOR
COLLEGE.
ARMY.
BE ALL YOU
CAN BE.
l.lflN ... 7q..szs1
Tllltit
731-04&1
,.< -~cos----) >
Newspaper
Car[iers for footes
in ~ntington Beac:h,
fOUntaln Valley & N9"1>ort Beach
I
Orengo Oout DAILY PIL.OT/T\letday. May 25, 1982
lltl.IMIC .... 1.tft 1Mt.91lt\'C ... !.tff lti.~ .... !.(ff •• 'P!!. ....... l!.ff l!'!!!llf!'!•t ••• l!ff ~.'!1.~t ..... IMI Tn.~~~ ....... ~,.l.~fl M'!!l.~1!!!~ ...... ~1.'!!.lt'.illtft ....... ~1.tr..lfl.mtfl ....... .
V.,.._Oolt,tot ~~·**'BUY** fl•r l el•l'lltl'ftbertll1P'" 7T'Albl(IV ... 'U 'H~Oflt\l,UN4'W"'f• a.,... It••• 1144 •.J'--M .,. ._ WMeek Vlll'IV "°""¥1~ fennleoiub Dal 1n1>rd. NWpl t110.1oe-.,,,~cut.="~ rnTm ............. n nr:' .................. :.-;;-.-."twm ••••• r;.i:,1 ~ ._ Ml erea. "wlal"' ffl\llnt Ooect u..-''11nll11re A CCll'llact 1~uet If decl ltUOO Ml..:tNI f.t u";~rt 'o '63 UNI , .. ..
WWII""' ••• ~.. ffftf11, lttttlnt 14 llf, A..,_. Of' 1 • ... Inter• I N~CAA" feet tQUI 'd ~ ... ·.;;.;;..------! _.., all
I 0 •• HO·"" atwl\ oi llU ... YOU ·~u· JH,. • Cert • f w/oatm ,ec.n. modi' • 171 DelMI fltlup IJIOl*I, RESTORED Work ln OW' Nn ~ profll· IO.HAM. IU'9t 1111'111 Ioele. Menv 1•11 flor 111r 1ueo WkdYt t-1. ..,,d, iunroof, ftllf
oUIC't u a 'tltphontnl .. pr oUon '"!II .. 11~11111 ltl 1111 IQ.llH ~•r 110.00 ''' fnfo 4t7-6e13 "1an :.",':: ti~~.~7~t-~~;~ HIOO. mint cond . wlr• Vtlrf ~
cltrk for 'h• a1N'I flnt1l n 1pe~r. :~P ~xo~vx I llY M26iW 1312193 t.1M1 IXT UM f3' Rowlnf motor' 1111. an ePM =: ~~'T,0:: ••·:;r;;,;;·~.:,·0
Oftty requlremant " • \elephont ~ ~ "'"'· :.:. L.M .. ., .. ,.. Otd ratl'lloMd btl~tub. '4I0/~78~t2 ,,., llfif mor• a....1
11
.. ....._ ........
Yole9 and tnlh~ 1 Coeta Meta Oall 1.H. '404tt4. f\11.otiM INlltr .. ""· ltH/080. ••••••••••••••••••••• , ,,, ........ _,, Ofttc.. •~ 110, New queen elu , 17 .. 1170 II, 1111' '16 ·OodQ• Vtn• Oood .f!f!Y.•••••••••••··' ._._e..._ ,....a.a..Uff •100. 7S0.9132 A&-&... _,, COnd "280 or bel l Of•
........., . ,......,., •••••~•••••••••••• Seate , ... type gee lawn• -•• -"'· ~TER .. .... ,..,_ Mii Am«. ltO mdl. ,... mower 195· Good oondl· ~i9$iip;·.;·:.;;.-·.;i. ~o-t:m --.IO-O_A_T_S_U_N_200 __ S)(--I a.::•· ...... ,.. .... ·~~~""'~t.i~;:w O•d•t OVll Mat. fa.It" tlon. t4&~115 Harbour. up lo ...... A•lll w,.114 "" *""aw.• ,. /1111 •&4.00 for ftrll Wtek: \htl\ thare In rad wool ru\.' 11 •11' bge, a11e. M2·6202 tvt SEARS YARD VAC sq. n. 21"5116-5182. •••••••••••••••••••••• Super IPOf1 model. Auto, t36$1 Harbor Blvd. pennerthlpU'°_::-... C1; ~~0C:::~i. 1c:: ~~i..p~•3;~~8 v97.I~~'°" :::i1:~~. -.::::it·~:~ WE PlY :;,~'r~:.t•t!~~~~i ....!;:t.~'~•lll .... _.••ta......
11
p1a7t_~~~fhlng OynHty) "42·13N/t45..o326 ANTIOUI BATHTUB 1t.,.6'. feo-teM TOP DOLW NHd rellabl• patty to 11• 111-1111 ...... -14 .,,...,. OIUT tp IUWDI Wltll Olaw toot It make amall monthly 1--------1 ... 1111. Ma-47'5 llD a IU ... 1111 GUI pmtl. No old oonlrllClll IO ·so Portche t24 Turbo ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Antique Oak Buffet with US. -2·,Mllf.48-0320 We have 1paoe avl. al lW ....... u1ume No back pmtt '110 Poreone 824. Both : beveled mirror, 2 dt•· oubl• bed .. ,. Matt. a ea· u~ Orapeat•k• fen· our s.i.a doekt In Lido -du t . A 1 k 10 , R 01 • loaded Tak• over I•• K=~t~~~,;= •.:: ~u.Alatma.. ,IT,, .~ttr~. ::;~ 160 ;~·1~~Jv':·. boUprlng.QCSoond,136. ~~·.~1 u:ri '."oo:u:!~g VIII. tor therp. detlrable NITIAl/borlllUt 142·4400. Ull-1001 payrnentt. 714/H&·tlOt ::-:r· ... hrl MM, 2t ~~~·~If.,;.~ .... f.42-"37 ""· 1142-1Slt. e4S.03J5 87&·2e0P • ::,. Of NII boat•. 40' ' 242&~~ ME:~d. Proto 1./M. ·eo Poractle 814 TurbO ' __ ...;.....;...---+--
" • • t /14, mutt 10¥9 ~_,1 • O u1llty dining HI, round B!AUT.,Ul.I. v tlnl•h•d TAADe WINO YACHTS MMHI 'll ITATill WU '80 Porecne 124. Both 'tt 01. w/tUNoot. Imme·
anlma11. Atll ror Oewn, a... ~TGO~•••••••••!. emok~lu1 & ollrom• plcnlo lbt, ' matching 8711-0007. M0-17211 tvt ut-Hll Arn/fm oaH a/c new lo•dtd Tak• over IH wt•t• Mutt Hlllll 111,
N:::: Harbor Anim.I Al llltlt .. ,. HARBOR AREA 1260. 6-81111 bef\ehea MS. 540-1736 BOAT Sl.IP8 AVAILABLE -, paint. 11760: 1131:e11ee payrnenta. 7t4/12&-1eot 700 080. Of.4.7078
, ~.M. 1S1~1'c: .,. ... Dr, ="~::.! .. ~": e::~~~~~ Ull NII ~t unUMd IE I WI I I 2 1 I Newport 8Hoh 20· a WI llf 9119 ·~s ~ache 3SC, grey, A•lfl Uu4
1
-.... -a-mtn need•ct for retell .. .....;i .. ..,._ ~'4017 eof• bed. 5 pc bdrm 40'.1142-41144, 9-SPM M 1ra11 aa•s '78 WAQON 210. Orig 111· 7~:c:t~ r.., Plrt• •••••l••••••••••••••••
--·-• ..... • Haletant mgr. ......--Mt COflternciorr,i:•' ... ~ .,... owner. malnt rctdl S Ip, s"~2~ .;.,.111 dy1 , laltk Hll Min. a y.9tl fem~~ pc& Mwt ~w Od· retal I "'APft.111111 ~wt. orig I t • MO 8 to 20' long, set per ti. fr11Uwl1LIM .. TllOll t /O, •t•r. rack. 53K ml. .. ................... . ~· O.C. ~. &afatY ptua L• Ml.a133 A !'!,~=-~-= 775-1491 any\lme. ••••~••••••••••••••• '4000. ph 6<65-7383 alt 5 '74 914 1 8 rebll ·new ' Ill ft
..._ ~ beMlt9. oOfl'lm. a com pan~ b•· unit ... ,.. 1eeo Ill II lO ·1• e210 Hlcllbk, ••cell ~!~ ~ t ~ 54 0 0 0
1 a Y • IOI' the i..-1 and 11e1t
9elary commenturate neflte. Only qual tied Kitchen Aid Port. 0 1•11· a. ....,.. Remain• ot Movlnv Sale ••••••••••••••••••••• • ....... oov-v232 ..... 1142· M5 .--wltll ••~enenoe. Call h G d 11 lncludlng furniture. art. " .. Share In '7" T" 10 In oond .• t ...... Snrf. lllck ' ••l•ctlon ol new and pereona nted •PPI". wai •r · 00 • •P•· --... • ,. "' • 499 27"''" 1·97 " Meg at 1·1234. Apropot , 2t Fathlon Ma, 841·2909 an 8:30 -•• .._ mllC houllMld 11111'11 6 O C A 1 rpor I Exec. • "" .. t 1 1000 mllH on u1ed 8 ulok1 In Ota"f41
...... ... l1lend, NB. or call: 18 cu ft Cold1pot refrlg/ Bent\1ood rocker SH. or Set May 29th 8 am to Corp Complete IFA ,. -10,. ahow car 113.000
Sofa and low IMt 1200: 1g potted tr ... ~2 Hangar. Subchapter·S f.''·t It•• total rMtoratlon, collec· C~today1
Ma1Ul9. ...,...._IOed and '44·2652 freez«. tro1t-tr .. 1100 coif" table S30; lamp 2pm equtf. $4000 p1u1 ,.., mo ~;;•F•1;i"12r•·d~~;~·;;, 49s.1oe2 att 7PM
honHt. lvenlng1 and SALESPERSON to Mil...._ 75l·2280 table •20: boc*CIM 180; I ... ti 'd 1111 llYU 0 _..-. !Mt-
1422
r--thelvlng unit u o: 2 Ladt.a 3 apd blk• pym • n •• r ra no req 1 1 orlglnal m11... p11·1. p7·, 6 NCT'1 =l~n°:'s:~~o~; Stove hood S36, waaher lampt SS; 13 In blk and St&. 1173-e582 Top dollart lor Sport1 ShOUld Ml for S1200 Of PLUS I PERFORMANCE ~Pmll Ptu.a.714-t28-1&4e $75,dryerH5,5gal whl TV S 25 . Cell 759·0970 •ltti1'41lkn 1140 Cars.B~1,Camper1, offer 840-78t4 & 7ta..834-8997
Oenertl maintenance _.;,.... ____ .....;. __ , plaltlc buettet $2.50. 55t-8711S Operating Table. Stain· ••••••••••••••••••••• 9l•'t , A l'I C .. 873•
1585
'78 P<>tlChe 9t tSC, petrol •I I~ Or-,, C_..,
llnowl•dy•· Expat. In ••• ·--750.7802 uch Sport, m~ l"P• Aatl tor U/ MOn I ' 11·•7 blue & "'k, IOa~ ..... P-7'1, • 2925 HarbOr BNd __.. Haitian cotton 7' I01a & 6' lau, Hydraulic, with 1.V. ' 'IM M•RIH ,. 1 11 .,. ....., electtlca &plumblng fOfhlghqualltylradltlo-1---------lov ... et Llkenew$300 Stand Sll0.8'40-78t4& wl\e9l1,run1&1 axlnt • -•••••••••••••••••••••• 1unrl,etc $19.900 PP. COSTAMESA ~r,t:·,~~~·~~~.t•[Zci ~~!,~~~·~~to:.l~~~i1~~: w~~ l2t::, ;~: 494·t9611 . 1173-t685 $31500. 1:::,81111.1-• 18~~~~~!~. WE'RE ~5l.ol3N511111• 11• II· 911-2111
Bot\, 411-4477. E.O.E. telllg9rlt, ln1«•ted per. waat\11 $t00. 64f.&a48. Sola Bed, 11and1rd, rull. lfJ1nJuaHt11 nov ..--HUNTINGTON BEACH " " •i••m ton. Mutt dre1t n .. tly. $76/oller. 775-8327 or W.••I-" IOll Like ~7.;,1~81. $.400. 1•2•21H Red, 5 1pd, xlnt 1hape, 7 t Skylark, brown, r•· -·-·-'Ult °'3S/1tme evall. A.... WASHER 788--01t6 .,. " • ...,,,.. .. DEA LIN' 80K 16995 846-9805 cond. tran1. radio, ale. Food H rvlce. retell ... -Clea ~... 1 1---------•••••••••••••••••••••• · S950/otte<. &4f.84M PIY: 9: to 5:30 way.. n, -#Ol'kl gpod, 75. MUST SELL. couch, good BALBOA BAY CLUB 81 HONDA Pa11port. lo Wll"leDI '811 Porsoh• 912. good --------·-~ contaot mgr of 21 Monarcll llay Plan, 541-4415 c;ondltlon 175, 0 ._,.,11uf· MEMBERSHIP WANTED ml, xlnt oond. $496. 15 fUurNITE boely & Int, bad 5th gear. '79 Regal, pa, pb, am/frn
operatlone. HSJ L•ur• &.ao. NIOI* fed chair •15. 0..k aul-Retuon•bll. 720.1808 848-2402, 8'47.et26 lllftlUlll\ 13750 0t vw catnl* 0t C&ll, ale. landau lop, lo
C.,,yon IMI .. Paoolma, SllUs;erton for cNldl'en't DRYER (GAS) table tor chll<lren 115 Or bUO + cuh H0-5543 m I.
111
n t con d · ~1~ 3 3 1. ( 2 13 I ttcn. ~ retail Clean, S:::~· 195 beet otfe<. 1142•5293. •f· #11lt1l tlottr~lfl/ DELIVERY ON · S5700/0BO 9t3•H40
MECHANIC-with Jaguar
or BrttWI cat ...,_. Muat ,,..... own tooll. Benetlte.
951·toel2
only, par\ time. Petit• ter llpm. luln91•1• IOl3 kHl•11 llSO l.1/1 •-1111 _...,_, ------•••••• ~/:.·...... ••••• c,,,JJI.•· Hll
Marone. C.M.1142-4714. ST=VE. QUEEN Siu waler bed. F;;·;;i.~·,;;;;·~;d ·;;-i(;~~~·.·k·t.a·;ooo·J~ MOST • SALESPERSON. auto a w<>nl• • 175. frame, heater. pedMlal, Allek PA 1y11am. •11 or $2995. 5800 mllH. llke I •1 DCALCR IN U.S.A ····-····1~~~· ..
truck I~. commie· _..86 175 OB0.1142-4230 part. 2 1pkr bottom1, 2 new. Everything lnclu-, ... ...._ •• , rY"'1V CARVER --·-
tlorl + 11. Call Mr. 2 poalllon brown naug horn• plu1 Pevey 300 d9d 855-4894 c .. tellkw MODELS l\UI OUIUAC't Olcken1 for app t. uher. New Wlllrlpool racllner w/hHler & vi· Ampt Other equipment . 3 "•o tJU• l ... fOJ TY'I ( C.~ We 1peclallte In IHMI 1142-1944 S225, Stlll on warranty brator, IOOM beck eofa & a v a II C a II Rob at 75 Huaky eo. 8 •~d. l'IL..)l.LJ l'k..11\....C.: for the bu1lnff1 execu·
secreta ry •d•d with WhVgaa. 957-1se& , loveeeat. 548-5532 114e.7174 ~ ~11o .. 'r~ltan;5~~-WI llY SAVE ....... :·: .. ::-~ t1Vt11& .. r:._oftllllonelltl1zM1M. ~.Eci1 backP.'~ui"d •: F ' Id ' o ' •rm au .. n Size bed OIJJn l•nilu1 I 1142-3495 USED CARS a TAuet<S c.toi10 ~UNo•o .......... 1n'"'2
en •our an """ • r g •re ryer, wh te. complete S 150 EvH L.l-••I IOI$ 1980 Harley Oavloion. COME INOA CALL FOR •· •II ~~deltl.Strongtyplng t'odcond.115.Call 842 -1tt5 ·day1 ••• ";1~-""•••••••••••• Gol<MnAnnlvefMtYllml-RUAnl&IS&L AT Mid 11-OIMMI & "" 1 th or •peed wrl· 7•15e8 1142·1M77 · 5 Orawedeaal1lielocklng ted edition. factory C«ml«-Oellllo •••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~
ting '9qUINd. Waterfront b 1 THE 1112 offtcelnPMwpoltBeach.Refrlg .latemd lWe11-911SLOANPlllow101a fll e c abna t 1100. cu11om.S850palntJob. OlmtuT HONDA I NA ~ 11000/mo. Call Terry at lnghouae. troit-frH w/ w/Hrth tone tapHtry 775-8303 Many. many extru. Iota 18211 BEACH BLVD IRE HERE! e1s-1221. lcemaker 1225 upn1t$300 780·1995 ltll IOIT ofctirome&go1c:tp11t1ng HUNTINGTOfllBEACH (:i\()ILLi\ ~
... / ....... ~ 1142·2623 Dine elegantly on I •••••••••••••••••••••• $7,000 or baal offer 141-tlll, Ut.1111 800 aerle1 3 doors. 4
P"AAOT M8-19b'4 SANTA dOOl'I & Turt>01 available I ••lH ,, Ill\ 1
-.... ··unique" din rm 111 " -...-Npt,. Bctl. Mult heW op Alrlean grey. very ~oung Better than 1 Moped, T Doi nowl Com• In & drive 1 ..,, , , .. "'' '>-l<• '"'
Conv ·long term oue 1klll1, Including word ............... ., table exl. to 128", w/ & tame. $180 Honda CL 70. &125 op ar Roao & Track Maga· Jl!!!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!L
exp. req'd. Excell. WOf· proc ... lng, preferably $25. 759--0970 cuetorn ped•, 4 llde & 2 947 .53113 1145-71134 ev.a lloe'• ~of the BEST ktnn cond1. & t>enetlta. C,T Svetem. 2 lra. law arm chairs (uphol.), Paid .......... Mdtn of the 'llOll 1972 ede>. conv. Fir• mlat ..• ' buffet/1erver, ~· ht•d B 0 ANA ...,..... "_,,. n-t otf-F/tlme, 7-3:30, 3-11:30. or tax 1cc;tg. 0 c. exp. REFRIGERATOR ABY M LUCCAN No r .. aonable offer refu. IUOI --TS .r-...... "' 714-&42-8044oraoolY1n req'd. Salary s l ,800. llk• l'IW. 2 dr, lroat frM, china & b .... S8 llrm Hand fed. very attectlo· Md, '76 360 CBT e-~. For Your Carl _..Vft 769--0708. t«-5742.
person: oe Flagthlp Call: Mr. Swen. (714) $185. 893-9060 546-2009 n1te. 3 ~7: .. ~3 · elec. etarl. good cond JllHH 1 ltl N~P~~ :~~H Tm 1 a•IUT
Rd. NB 944°8614 blwn 8:30 & Mu1t tell whl dulgner .,.... _.., Lo ml. $500. e.42·21123 u ........... .., Parts & s.rvice Open All .,_. ~~~~~~~~~1~9:~.30~AM~.~=~=~1FULL 1lze Refrigerator. couch & match. chrl, Jtlnl COCKATIEl 82 Honda Goldwlng, 211211 H1rt>or Btvd. Day Saturday 152-0900 IEUCTIOI OFFICE Pweon, typing, & SECRETARY· AECEPTIO-good condition S100. conc:t. 1 yrold. O..perate 8ulpher cruted. e mo1 lnt«atate. 220ml.'5400. Coate M... &40-6e30 30t w. Werner Ave. 1---------of late model. low mf ....
cuatomer relatlon•. Be-NIST, acO\lrate typlat. 751-3231 S400 Kg 11 bed 175. old. hand tamed. '449 6'45-744'4 (1 blk. weet of Main) S•Nn 1111 oe Cadlllaca In SOuthem
neflta. Hundngton e.cn. Call L~nn for appt I'' .1 •-aRecllnef 1100. Gold WlY 1147-6863 '711 Harley OtvldlOn 250 ....... fJ':l~YP~~ ~·r 540 7430 •••••••••••••••••••••• CllHornlal S.. ua today! 53&-4&91 "42-oMe c.M.. · .:!T!:!! ••••••••• ~'r: C)CC)M. ctY m .1n1.id w ... --· ..... -. Salff-~Le&11ng •a•ir•s ---:r.-=-=:::::----1 . .::::::::::::::..=::=:. ____ INl1hlkl Olymplo lnt'I 10 coft" tble, ndl varnlttl NEW Wrcwght Iron cag•· oc $500. (foreign tlr domettk:) IAllLDIGI w •t·• ~~-~ ';;'.;:' ~':.:11, ,., :!,'=:' ~· l\~t.'.;~:'; ~·,~;:: :'.'.; £ii:J;''"" '· ,11 ,::;.:·;.... '"C'u~:.i"'" 7:,~~.c ~~,:; ~1 -Diii' Ao"
able penon, 18 or ld'lelart aecntatytor Cott $450 Sell $225 2-tler dreaef 1175 . ...._ ,,,.., I,._,., lllfO Dirt bike, xlnt oond . 833-6572 H1·lMI 4tMMI ~~~·
older. Pulllng part• or-rep l'f growing com· oeo. wer oak 3-drawer dr••· •••••••••:::1......... • .. 7 ....... 11ot &40-1111 der'l In amal ~ patrt. Good"'*'°-oMce
7
54-MIM Hr S75. 2 1ml 1tereo1 Steinway 5,7 .. Mdl M. .., ,,. ......,.. · II Honda Accord, air. fntll 1111
C.M. 549.5574 (1-4pm) •Itta. commufllc:atfon 1 $50 .. Mlac. ~ Watnut 1923 Xlnt cond • t •--~ •·•-I radio. auto, new tlr••· ··-'••••••••••••••••••• ---------E.O.E. orgentz.atlonal 1klll1 r• laJw..J 1tem1 & auorted kit sea50, 652-7316 ,., fl_,_, I 3 9 50 0 8 0 · '78 TOYOTA CELICA '78 Sevllle· Ork gr.en, quired. s.wy CClft'lfl*.. gooc11. 842-2823 lnJlll••• 1111 114-540-4110 *Mm SEU* IHther. loaOed, 1tlnt
•
-1urale w/e11p1r. Call .,,,n.i. 1111 .Lei-•e~IOIZ •••••~·~•••••••••••••• ond ,79 p ~ 5 ..... Sport model w/6 1pd cones . low ml 873-0444 Alf •-t7t-1470 •••••••••••••••••••••• Glrtl wtlll• vanity tetite :O:O:i:JI••••••••••••••• For rent: 20' motor home. a r • ...,..., Total car In xlnt 1hape 6-tc>m. ~youth IM"tl 1111 .-in StO 759'-0970 SIN<llR Antique Sewing Very clean . Compl. loaded, reg. gu. red AM /FM ta-. iow mllla· "·--·• HIT
II fl h
SECAETl#t'f _,,.___, e ... Xlnt cond. 1 5890 ,.... -count• no rm •• :='.: 8dl ad Good Mlectton se-114 Soanl•h Couch & love-mad!IM (treadle) 175 --· .7'"61.... 543-t330 or 551-4059. ge (3 tllRFY) Neild r....,_ •••••••••••••••••••••• opening• for 3·6 thatp ~-~ FrM del¥Wy apeclal. ...1. 110001ofter 845-4796 • .u • , ll~I ble party to make ame1 'H Cemaro 327. auto. outgoing meture ~ -·-w 2515 Laguna canyon Rd. n• ...,.,.,, 11-.uns. 1T~n1 '' ---------79 Accord Htcl'lbk, AIC, monthly pmlt No old amlfm atereo. P
11
· p/b,
to motivate ambltlou1 ~ ellp. Laguna fk:6. 4°'4-4784 ~ 1V la'1t •••••••"'••••••·~·•••• belga lnl/ut .. excell. contract• to_,,,,. No ~tape SlllOO
10· 13 yr o ld•. c •II M1~ •• a·· trw Obi• bed w/hdbrd, $50, Bili ,;,,.. ,,., ":i:t~h:a':.:'::i~d:,:,~~~ ~!t~,.~~~ ...... eond Mull NII $.41100 back pmll due A8k for ___ 114_2_·9_t_26 __ _
2·5pm. 942-4321. ext. 1---------f 01r1o Jtlnl conc:t Muat NII •••••• ~................ ••P• 8 fold• f9r •a•y Adi 11' 840-e931, ne-4021 Ao•• 8 4 2. 4 4 00. Cilt'l'fl•I ,,,, •8'43~~· ~AM~tor~¢"'~~,...~~~i .-JllT/08. Redwood 2xe decking, t..e32..a&e2/855-11827 8EAUTIFUl 25" RCA pulllng' GrHI for l•ml· •••••••••••••••••••••• 79 reel Accord 4dr, auto. 1-5511-__ 1ooe __ P_r_ot_o_Ll_M __ •••••••••••••••••••••• -Flnanct.l irw.tment""" 4-20. ~ redWood Amer1can Martlnl'Vllte Color TV ..... 2 yr wmty ..... s2spo. S.f.44117 ·77 Audi, iunroof 4 dr. Orig 39t< ml, mint cond. '78 Corolla dlll. S0,000 ml. SE£ IS ,.m Pll1'I WWWID for 1ducator1 flencing. Jim or Ken Din Ml. 8 chalr1, retell 1148 Free dell\'efY • auto. xlnl cond S4ooo . '5.250 780-0358 auto. AC. llke new, $2, we have a good HIK·
fxJ* In 1 hr colOf pr1n. Ptn/comm.dept. aaer.: anytime, n5-1491. 121100. mu1t Mii 11300 TV John'• ~e-17ee A•l• l1m111 11111 113~1ee •It 5 30PM 750 845-8044 tlon of NEW & USED
ting req. APPLY IN PeR· tary. Excel typing and C.·-i·•ai a 1-&32-85112. 85S-8827 Penaeonlc rac:eN«. turn-I Attflltrifl HOO '12 a-~t ._.__ J•••V f130 1 t• CheW01et1t SON. W91kdeya. IN A.NO 8/H required. !xecutlw - • • End l Coft .. Tablea table & 27" 1pk11 Like •••••••••••••••••••••• ,._. ._ ••'••••••••••••••••••• I • ftfetl Wteta OUT PHOTO MOfetarfat expt. a muat. L.l ... •I UJO Some IOlld mara:, 115 to New $300. 494-t969 LITE SOOY WORK & S350/bat 643-4319 'll Ll12l AM/FM. auto, Irani. gd CONMRL
CHEYIOlET
~11..rt .. r II .·I 10052 Adema Ave, Non-1moker pref. Call ••• ";l~~tt•••••••••• paint/up to 60-/e off your 963-4840 & 641·129t cond Auna xlnt. St 150 Huntington 840-0123 $25· 1142•1388 845-0325 body atiop Mt. 536-0832 lllW 1111 'll y ...... _ OBO 861·2220
e.ch. 993-5900 IUD• Bedroom Ht complete "''' A ll•tl•• ---'---'------•• •••••••••••••••••••• ---lll'Y l llWPT • Start your darkroom to-St75 B1bylln• whit• r...1 .. 1at .. / 1 •-J I' ~·J,,t)U:f.~ 59.000 ml EQulpmenl la Tri•••• 1111 Proeluotlon L.eac:t With une Small law offloe epeclall· dayl With a 8eeller 23Cll complete canopy $150 ••• ";1 • .,.--. •••••••••••• !'."..'!.:~.~.!........ ,.; -" auto. PS, PW, Pwr dr ••••••'•••••••••••••••
experience . Full time. t ing In tax mattere. enlerilng 1en1H, 1811. Ilk• MW. 1142·3888 ..,,,, ll•l•l••••tt IMPORTANT NOTICE lock1. Lea Int . 8 track. '&8 TR Spitfire, 2 top• • ...;:;=======;:... Enolllfl tpeaklng prefer· Hlgh·accuraC" typl1t. llAhl fllt _._... I TO READERS •NO Wht Wiien. Orig owner clean S\
9
00 OBO. Call "'""' _.., red.Cry11alCraatlon1, ' "'' ••.-·ron c 4 Upho111ered Peaoh l1tritf IOU " $7500 Answer Ad •575. "':":~.-;,# ,,. 711 W. 17th. St. Suite Word proce11lng d•••· timer. varlou1 •U•I• & wood arm chalra S26 •••••••••••••••••••••• ADVERTISERS X731tn8t9c75o nd 6'42·4300 24 l'lrt. ·1·s· c·o•·•oo••••••••••·:~
87
C red, but not required. every type of darkroom each 17141 4117•11329 M11tn• Electrlolan Tile price of ltem1 ad· • · R VA Black ..,.,.,
' 1 IST A \1 ~ ~. \
546-1200
i
iii.iii.Mi.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Mutt llave car. Salary ~ lm&Olnable. All Oea1qnlln1ta1llrepelr vertlMd by vehicle dH· ... .6 IT"I Vtlkntin• 1110 V8, loadad. lo ml, xlnt. 11~1200 cMlpelldlng In >Ont Cond. Wiii Mii u HIDE·A·BED Couch. dou-Olty w0r1c 549-2520 eva 1er1 In lhe vehlCle ciual· S&Ul..$0YIOl ,...,., '* •••••••••••••••••••••• 12.700. 957-0030
Real Estate on quellfloatton.. Call Ma package only. &4 75 ble, Ilk•,_ '40 lled ed~lllng column• •••••••••••••••••••••• '118 B•l• Bug, reblt eng .
___ , .. _.... Coope r or M• Mullen, 751-8408 -· (714) 638-7950 ,,,,,, JllariH dOM not Include eny ep-Wllll new tires. clutch. battery C.mll• nn
'""time withe J.M. Pet· 844-1151' bet. 4&11 pm ...... , I H30 pllcabl• IUH, lloenM, 83t·2040 495-4940 ms Rece1p11. Am/Im CHI ..................... .
en Co. Real E1tat• 110 M-F. Cambo sc 4x5 CerMra 6 '411/.' hit Ull ... ";1:'.P.!!~.......... tnn11er IHI, finance SUllEIAOI ID 1tereo, lact 111rf, •treat & • •tElll
req'd. Contact: Sandy 1-aiiiiiiil~--1 mite. 11350. •••• •••••••••••••••• 8' dinghy, FIG aver wood, cnargee, ,_ tor air pol· 28402 Marguerita Pkwy aMOO legal. S2800 080 1 .. 2 llW! Connott. 720-1018 btwn .... a 497-2621 IEW nu paint. oars, St25. lutlon control device Miiiion vi.Jo 845-&373 01111 top•. lo•d•dl
to & ePM WiW luml FOR YOUI 993-2559 certlflcauona or dealer (Avery Exlt on l..S) (2021). Perlectlonl ~~~~~~~~I needed In adt-"'9 mf9. C.IJ •Jf Wl1111 documentary prepare· Open Sundays '78 WMtptlalla Camper •Y 111,Jll
....
............ ... pi.nt. 1537 Monrovia , •••••-••••••••••••••• tlon charge• uni••• Lo ml, new Ur•. am/Im -Npt. Id\. • Free klttw s ..-1, long Lii's late I Uled Ted Kayak otherwlH apeclfl•d by cua se100. 857-2.524 .. Ill LSI ...
W• ha¥I an ...--a-. felt hair, nrey end whit• larMt •-1.. ~97 an 5 PM IM..,.._,_ HI us f1 "---'""' ...... ..... two W911 dr.;:;di~e11t-SHru.T Houra & Grea1 ~ >allv l>I -..,....,. ' JOl YOUI • '78 ~ Edit. Sol-~-.. ...
gent H IHperaon110 Pey. 8P9"4S your daYI Otl l---------1 sTh.•,.0c 1
1Y111111c0a'tGI arag1•11 "'''· 1tn1 tOfO Aall-n/ MUT101D• rooco AM/f:M caa. air. (Hf.~ .. ' 8tlatoll work In th• Newport th• beaoh & your eve-Hlmllleyan epev9d female, • on w •••••••••••••••••••••• •-Io m I. v• ry c I•• n . -----------Harbor ., .. In commet· nlngl With me. Call Jeff In '"'yr. old. Loat CdM 6-21. haw • new look ·· 11ar· WUTD Cl,.,J,. llZO nw IT I '5500/bet otr. 973-6492
clal .. 1 .. a ndtor r... La 0 u "• •ft 1 p M . Reward. t73-8593. ~~r T;.~~·~·:i~·ry!:d 20 to 30 n t>oet 1n c1ea.n •••••iiiii:i·~i;;t••• CREVIER • n ... _...,...,.-· _114_2_· 1_oe_1_avs~--~ !'!'A! •••••.••••• !!~!
ldenllel aalea In t1'le more 4t7""111 a.-ltHO .._..,, Mt•t• NIM, ate.) cond 117:J...04&0 SNly replloaa. plctcupe & fACIUTTI ·79 Sclrocco. Red, xlnt '80 omni 4 dr, lo ml, pal ==~~ 0:: Tltl•llll-:-;'A.................. wlll be cl&Ml1led by City. GrNI t>ey boat. te' Thun· coupH. 4 to'c hooH FIMd lel•.tt. ltn 1'&11 p ctlll llUI 1411lli In/out, am/frn cw, ttr, 4 pb. auto. ale, rw defog.
greauupport1fyouar1a u.1119 llal•..., maklng11...-r0tOally derblrd,walk·Uvu,IMt. frornl(00117118)(Slk .............. IC)d.mu.tMll.$5900,or 1un~Tc/~,1m/fmater.
Mii •tarter and• hard Part llm•·3 ehlfta-wlll PUPPY. 8 week1. AKC Piiot cl1111flad ad1 to 8, 40hp Evlnrude, run• "3093). Pnc.1tattlng at 8aJee..~leetlno t974 Maida RX·4• new ::~.:~~ 1140-8850 or ~ ~·~~~.g~
worker. PleaM cell me treln, 1160 par WHll. reg. &38-29&8 work for you. per1. $t800. "3·3927 HLY 11,•t ~:~~.•In Euro· tlrM & battery. Llk• new •~--------1 487.f01Q
felt a pertonal, oonflden.. lmmed opening. Mu1t "PETS "R" PEOPLE ...-· ln1lde l out AM/FM '78 Conv. )(Int cond. AM/ ---------tlat ln1ervlft In our pr• type. Ofb located near Exotic v1cat1on1, hair PUS '78 27'.ltfl BAYLINER ,::: !!!!!"81m CUMtt• atereo. Manual FM ce ... S7500/offef, dV MUST Sell, '88 Dart Sia.
"10IOl'9 ~ center OC Airport. Call MIH 11y1 .. & 1pec bath• for "Victoria." Fly bridge, __. 4 af>C1 1ran1. NHdt eng 875-4740, ., 916-7772 W'tO L..ool(t ' ruN Xlnt. Offtce. 81atl for appt. akin prot1lem1 at Sher· If you pay for your O•· VHF radio. ball tank. tal-1111 work. lfOO/b1t ofr. ·ao Aabt>lt. 4 door. tun· _l_
7
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7_s-_3
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LEO ti.ANHA 71~&53 ry'a. Poodle .,..,.,., T«ip, rege Sale ad In aovanc.. d~thllnc:ter, outrlgg:•· 209 W. 111 082-5355 roof, low mllea. Priced 1td Hfl :•L";~ ,,......... Ul,;~ln 4 ule. ::!l~~~~.3 day•1~~:.e-~t~~~;l~l~e~r·~·~2~2~·~0~0~·~J;;~~llll C~aS~~:ay • '78GLC DELUXE ~~:~k H ie. 8uck ••••111;·;w;·• .. ••••• --10 ,Glow up, no o06d Ollla. p I s I , ______ ..;___ 63,000 ml. Sac. $2500 • d I
,,_,.... PIT. co.ta ...... otc. '°' •d Ort• lb•r an HU•· ... • CHOICE INVENTORY 988-2218 .. •P • r•b I •no. 'd --.-.-IPJ--/-'1-fPll-n---1 Info c.JI t3t-7200. Mk klea. Ch b4oodllnll. AKC ,...1 13 ' 8 011on Whaler. 40 ·49 Ply. cpe, Kint cond, nu VOLUME SALES ---------'ll "9AlllAll cond. Average 25 M Q for Mr. cw.on. reglttered. 1350. Vet. hp/John1on. Xlnt cond. mo Io r . mu 1 t 1e11 • & lhnMn Jni 1140 Gr•t oond. Stll50. 11300. 495-1948
Qd. typing lllllte, ~. exam lncld. 752·8300, 2 FREE 111t 11" Garage S3700tofr Ken Kelly lt500/080. 1142·2923 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1173·5809 nee. Fill time, Mo!\, ttw Y~NO·P•rt·tlme,. Lido t65-0250. Bale Sign•. 1_4_9_7._3_33_1 _____ _. :.'!'l = 1 l----------i '117 Ford L TO, auto .. 72,
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,,.._ l850. Pert9Ct to 1 Offtt. 714-At-1706 rat•. Call eu-uu 4 Labrador Pupa. e wk• lfyouWhlobOfflecitor ... ·-VHld "" I I I •• Lll E ... Xlnt oond. 11600 oond. 838-4
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• I 1111111, ~ old,3bleok.1brown. your ad , JUll call OAVCR1UISEAWf1.!'port •••••••-~••••••••••• ... ftl... 5MOI05 '1tLTOll:4df,elc.p/b.
-· 1111n t---------1 ree .. reb.lee & dlttemp. &42-5e7t & on• of our •poll •· •IMP••· 228 l/aoatlon Special 1t71 ..,. ... .., 1-.---------1 >ant. $2100. ~
IOf arolllteotural firm. Unlmltiad needa IN*. f.46.14'1 (4-tpfn) friendly Ad·Vl1ora Wiii Mete Cttr 110 with l&n• QMC Vtn eonveralon. ~eMlnO Compare HOUH of ltn· 19 BUI Brwn/Tan. 2 ~~~!.!,!!!nt, Ulln' & fytl & p&tMlme ••per hefp you, dem trtr and t,.1194 top. Obie Bubble top. Self· HOH. leedl elvO. portt Olrwot ..... and eo 1nrf1, 01tm Int., mint .__ ,,,,
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The cometltOM c... FM! TO 0000 HOMt CLASSIFIED AD8 27 ' ••vtlner, aunbrldgt, '75 Jeep waoonneer LOW I ..... lllxt••• la 213 OI 7141937-2333 apnd. '3()00. mOff. COtM .... "'Y
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rant: eHl•tal\t mafia· llllf "81 Fr. 8elly 8unnlea. wWte. "" :~u car,~ ttlr S: Spd control, good ooncS'. enougll to own a Mer-·ee vw. rnuet ML 9*7303 ..,...::::,!.,,...,__ T• llllil 1• pe11 Sll)CQ. • ...................... 121,500. 71 .. 9411.ion. U.,'1~~ but ofr. ~ cedH Benlt Don't let Moo/080. -.7-2-Marqult---.-4-df-.-10K--ml-,
-t1oeC1 W.',.~toldd • MM211 warm Ulal .,.ea2.f212 •---------~ 11111_:r:~J*ll~ MO-t141, 1t4412t Jollneon malntelnecl. :!:!~~:::1:,:-::.r:~ ~=.~:., == c-M IOttenl. ,.,.. to you. w/ltand a1eo 14CM717 "llee1tl0 , .. ttw". "450. 4 RHI,,,,.. NII r1ntHt::'.1e:1l:' 0~ ~to~AAAIT~""""''"'c;..:oNV--..:. -17;;.;480--1 ,rw, lift,~ 'OIMn.
only, IPm to lpm, for on-clfl work In tti. 5'1-1017 J~-#11 8eit & lnQUlfW 2080 ..._. ujll;CUTt•P;;ce•a0 It• S.Moe-Leulng mocte11 & coton avalle· or 1~50 \.ta~e ov,er :=·::.~IO°'
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......_ --Ol•1rt'«I IJd Ml_,.11 t42·M78. .-op~ oenw. Inn. no.Giit lft ~ W ~~1-n4"11?7 _,_~UM.
..
USTANG G
HO ENGINE
WILSON -FORD
LIST PRICE
S1Ull YOUR
PRICE
$10,535
'82 BRONCO 1982 FUTURA
2 DOOR COUPE
Can't find what
you're looking for?
We've got it!!
6 l lcres of
• Selection
'79 LTD STA.
WAGON
VI, auto., pwr. •t.. pwr. br., air cond. (279XVG)
BUYER ON DUTYI
NEED MORE
FOR YOUR TRADE
CALL HAllY TUINIULL
842-6611
'79FORD.RANCHa
Auto. tlW\I., w cond., AM/FM, V8, pwr. steer.
(Uc. 1W735e2).
5 4182
I I
2 DOOR DEMONSTRATOR
LOADED EXECUTIVE
VEHICLE
2 YEAR, 24,000 MILE
COMPLETE MAINTENANCE FREE
WARRANTY
(#1235) (#104250) (#1270) (#11393)
P .S. FINA LL VII
GRANADA WAGONS
ARE HEREI
YOUR
CHOICE
'79 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON
4 dr .. r spd., radio, air cond. Lie. 546YHF.
'79 FORD
PINTO
• cyt Stk. tic. eeewRo.
4 dr., auto .• pwr. etr .. 2-tone pM'lt,
AM/FM radio, 3,583 ml .... (1CMF820) s
'78 FORD
THUNDIRBIRD
VI, atuo., pwr. 1tr .• pwr. br., air, light blue beauty
(578UOV).
'72 OPIL
GT
Very well cared for. Wiii be a Cluslcl
(10M0057).
'79 DATIUN
CPI. FASTBACK
AM/FM, 5 epd. (900YOL).
'80 OLDIMOBILI
OMIGA
4 cyl., auto., 1lr cond .• am/fm radio.
(Ser. f 128645).
'81 FORD llCORI
'79 HONDA cvcc
4 cyt., 4 spd., 2 dr., •tereo. (891WYK).
'81 MIRCURY CAPRllRS
Auto., pwr. at., air. pwr. w .. stereo. (Lie.
#BUY104).
SERVICE AFTER THI
S.ALE IS OUR #1 PRIORITY G.Y91 .1•••••• ...............
ltAaYllnAm
·---.-...
IUlll allT YIUI HDllTllWI llllY PIPll
1111 · llA\' MA\'·" 1'111.' O H A N C I \:OUN' 'I' C ALlrOnNIA 25 CENTS
HMS Antelope dies in Dames
Ship's last .moments described
Quake
rattles
coast
By ROBERT BARKER or .. ~ ..... ..,.
An offshore earthquake with a
magnitude of 4.1 on the Richter
Scale ratUed through portions of
Orange and Los Angeles counties
and the northern part of San
Diego County at 6:45 a.m. today.
The earthquake, centered
about 13 miles southwest of
Huntington Beach, apparently
caused no damage and very litUe
alarm on the part of Orange
Coast residents.
Local police departments
reported only a few calls from
people wondering what was
going on. There were no reports
of damage.
However, Huntington Beach
Fi.re Capt. Roger Hosmer said the
tremor struck with sufficient
intensity to awaken him at his
home near the Huntington Beach
Civic Center at Main Street anp
Yorktown Avenue.
_, .
Details
heard
on Coast
A graphk deecription of the
last moments of the British
frigate HMS Antelope before she
sank at San Carlos Bay in the
Fa.lklanda was broadcast by BBC
World Service Monday night.
"Only a few planes got
through the strike force against
HMS Antelope," a British
correspondent reported in the
half-hour news broadcast
monitored on the Orange Coast.
"But the frigate then made her
way slowly up the bay, trailing
smoke, with the main mast off at
an angle.
"There were holes in her side
as she made anchor about half a
mile from ua.
"Helicopters with searchlights
were overhead and landing craft
came alongside to lift off the
crew. We could see figures
crossing the deck, silhouetted
against the flames.
"There were explosions and
flames. Sparks flew into the air
long into the night.
"Other ships and helicopters
crowded around to pick up
survivors.
"It was a quick, sharp jolt,"
Hosmer said. "It felt l i ke
90methi.ng large like a truck had
hit the house. It wasn't of the
rolling variety."
"I felt something shaking, like
the floor was swaying just for a
second," said .Kandill Norton,
night manager at a 7-Eleven
stoce ln Huntington Beach. ,
FURY OF WAR -The British frigate HMS Antelope
explodes in flames in San Carlos Bay off East Falkland before
sinking Monday. A bomb disposal man was killed a1 he
attempted to defuse an unexploded Argentine bomb lodged in
the ship's engine room during an air attack.
"lt was a courageous and
orderly rescue."
:Earlier ln the day, the same
BBC radio correspondent had
been aboard a helicopter that was
nearly trapped by an Argentine
air attack that reportedly
included waves of more than 30
warplanes .
"Th e r e was n o noise or
anything ao I wasn't sure it was a
quake -sometimes I just feel t.hinM8 ••
However, some residents in
other parts of the city said they
didn't feel the tremor.
Hosmer said the fire
department took its customary
precaution of removing about 15
fire trucks from the stationa in
cue a aevere earthquake should
follow.
Edison o fficials at the San
O nofre Nuclear Generating
Station said ground motion
instruments at the plant three
miles south of San Clemente
didn't detect the quake and that
1 there was no damage.
Fee increases
proposed for
UC, colleges·
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Bi.g
booat1 in student fees at the
University of California and the
California State University have ·
been proposed by a legislative
comnuttee.
Fees at the nine campuses of
UC would be increased from
a bout $1,000 a year to from
$1,200 to $1,500, and fees in the
19-campua state university would
be booated from about $270 to
from $300 to $600.
The proposal was submitted by
a eubcommittee of the Senate
Finance Committee headed by
Sen . Walter Stiern,
D -B akersfield, to the full
committee Monday.
WORLD
Mesa wins
round with
feisty artist
By DAVID KUI'ZM.ANN o< .. o.tr,.......,
Cost.a Mesa's long-aimmering
feud with colorful Iranian
"sculptor" Ali Roushan is
probably headed baci( to the
California Supreme Court,
Roushan's attorney said Monday.
In a ruling issued Fnday, the
state's 4th District Court of
Appeal upheld the city's
development review codes as
constitutional, both as written
and as applied in the Roushan
case.
The ruling was a clear-cut
victory for the city and a setback
for Roushan, whose attorney,
Meir J. Westreich, said he would
take his case next to the state
high court.
Roushan has been locked in a
testy legal battle with Costa
Mesa officials for nearly two
years over his right to erect
towering, red-metal sculptures
on his industrial property at 1550
Superior Ave.
The scrappy little welder came
under fire when he erected three
of four structu res w ithout
• seeking City Hall's stamp of
approval first.
He argued that he ii entiUed to
free artistic expremion without
government interference while
city officials claimed that the
iowers -aa 1tructure1 -
required the n ormal building
permits and safety checb.
Deputy City AttomeY. Stephen
WUey said the city obtained
several court orders to prohibit
(See M~A, Page A.%)
Fir~ kills 67,000 animals
'IOKYO (AP) -About 67 ,000 anbnal• and birds,
lncluding 60,000 turtles, periahed Monday when
flames awept through a pet breeding center in
Fujioka, a small t.own 50 miles north of Tokyo, police
reported. today. .
Jet splits on landing
BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) -A Brazilian Jetliner
with 112 people aboard broke ln half on 1andinc at the
BrasWa airport Monday night In heavy raJn. ldWna
two peopJe and injuring 15, a1rport oftidall Mid today.
..
Thatcher: Invaders
must leave islan.ds
By Tiie Asaodated Presa for hie historic ahc-day vtait.
The Falkland Ia1ands war will Vatican sources said he may
not end until Argentina make a "balancing visit" to
withdraws from the South Argentina, where 95 percent of
Atlantic British colony, Prime the people are Roman Catholic.
Minister Margaret 11\atcher said The pope has unaucceasfully
today. pleaded for a oeue-fire between
In some of he r toughest the warring nations. It was
language in the seven-week earlier feared he would BCrap the
conflict, Mrs. Thatcher a1ao told trip to Britain to avoid angering
Parliament that Britain will ve1o the Argentines.
any cease-fire _proposal by the -" In Waahi.ngton. Secretary of
U.N. Security Council meeting in State Alexander M. Haig Jr. told
New York. , a White Houae meeting today
"There can be no cease-fire that Britain is approaching a
without full withdrawal of all position to bring the war "to an
Argentine troops," she said. "Our early conclusion,'' House
objective is to retak e the Republican leader Robert H .
Falklands. They are British Michel reported.
sovereign territory and we wish
to restore British Admin-
istration."
Her remarks hardened the
stance her government took
during talks on at least seven
peace plans following the
Argentine invasion April 2.
Thoae efforts collapeed last week
and Britain invaded the islands.
Asked how Britain would react
if the Security Councl.l puaed a
resolution calling for a halt in the
fighting, she safd: "U PV"CeMary,
we shall have to w.e the veto."
In fighting Monday, Britain
claimed it abot down eight more
Argentine planes, but aaid it lost
ill third major warship, the
frigate Antelope blown up by an
Argentine bomb.
Despite the lateat battles,
Vatican officiala aaid today Pope
John Paul II was definitely
traveling to Britain at week's end
STATE
He offered no details, but
Brl ti sh mill tary officials
predicted they will retake the
heavily defended Falklands
capital within daya.
At the United Nations, Ireland
submitted a resolution to the
Security Council calling for a
72-h our cease-fire while
Secretary-General Javier Perez
de Cuellar made another attempt
to negotiate a peaceful aolution.
British Defense Minister John
Nott aaid earlier a truce was
impomlble until Britain'• troops
retake the lslands.
In Buenos Airea, the military
junta warned the war could
expand and hinted it may seek
help from Latin allies and the
Soviet Union . Defense
Minister Amadeo Frugoli told
the United Statu t o atop
s uppo rting Britain in the
seven-week oonflkt.
Riding rails for work
Rail-riding hoboe are movina over as famillee
with children and men out of work hop aboard trains
ln aearch of work and a bright.er future. Page A7.
l 00 protest at Livermore
LIVERMORE (AP) -About 100 ~tr.ton
staged a brief, peeceful proi.t outmde Lawnmce
Uvennore Babontory today• military md indmtrtal
leaden met lDllde t.o dllcum the lat.en bl conventional
Wellponl technolOI)'.
Citibank cuts
• p_r1me rate
to 16 percent
NEW YORK (AP) -Otibank,
the nation's second-largeat
commercial bank, cut Its prime
lending rate today by one-half
percentage point to 16 percent.
"It's ln line with our view of
the money market," said John
Maloney, a Otibank spokesman.
The reduction, the first by a
major bank since early March,
followed recent declines in other
short-term interest rates that
dete rmine banks ' cost of
acquiring funds. Some rates fell
by al.most a percentage point last
week.
Also, the average return on
new Treasury bills auctioned
Monday sank to their lowest
levels since December. As a
result, the maximum rate banks
and savings institutions can pay
on six-month savings certificates
fell nearl y one -quarter
percentage point , to 12.47
percent.
The declines in s hort-term
rates partly reflect an easing by
the Federal Reserve System of
credit conditions since early May.
The prime lending rate is that
charged to banks' most
creditworthy corporate
customers and.. although it does
not directly affect consumer
loans, it indicates the direction of
interest rates in general.
The prime hat stood between
16 percent and 17 percent since
the start of the year. It hit a
record 21.5 percent in December
1980.
INDEX
"I was caught on the helicopter
during the latest raid," he
reported via shortwave. "The
helicopter banked sharply and
dived when the pilot realized he
waa caught between the (British)
Rapter missiles and the targets.
"One missile missed us by
about 100 yards. We moved down
and blended into the hillside and
watched two more waves of
warplanes come through.
'"l'htte (Argentine) Skyhawks
{See BBC, Pace A.%)
White stuff
spills from
drain in NB
U.S. Coast Guard and Orange
County officials were trying to
determine just what it was that
spilled into Newport Bay
Monday afternoon from a storm
drain.
A milky white substance of
unknown origin reportedly
spilled into the bay near the
Newport Arches Marina, 3333
W. Coast Highway, said Senior
Chief Carl Lux, of the Coast
Guard's Marine Safety office.
"We'r e not sur e of the
quantity, we're not sure whether
it's toxic or just what it Is," said
Lux.
Lux said that both a Coast
Guard i nvestigator and a
representative -ot the Orange
County Health Depertment were
in the area today trying to
determine the nature of the
aubatance and how it got lnto the
bay.
At Your Service A4 &ro.x>pe ~
Erma Bombeck B2 Ann Landen B2
Busine98 86-7
Califomla .u
Cavalcade 82
Cl811ifted ce-10
'Camfa c.&
era.word C6
0.thNodcM 04
l'.di tiarial AO ·~' JM-&
SPORTS
Movtee
Mutual Funds
National Newa
Public NoUcee
Sports
Stock Maritn
TeleYWon 'n.ten
WeaU..
World"""
. .
84-5
B6
A3
C4--5
Cl..S
B7
A8 Bf~
A2
Aa
I
..
BBC C0VERAGE • • •
report monitored SuNsay niaht,
perhas-ln th9 U,ht of the !om of
HMS Anwlope. .
The BBC cla1mld ~ •Den\Y
plane• ahot down aft.er belnt imaaa-d by ae. Harner aircraft,
mlilil• and naval cw»· Another enemy plane WM .. n
leavln1 th• San Carlo& Bay
bridiehMd ANA, trail1na lftk>kt,
the BBc report laid.
MESA SCULPTURE· •.•
etectlon of the b'rlaht red
attucturea, but Rou.Jhan went
ahead and built.then\ anyway.
'?bat led to two oon~pt o1
court convlctlona a1aln1t
Rouahan In Orange County
Superior Court last year. He was
letltenced on one of the dtationa
to five days in Orange County
Jall and fined ~00.
However, im~itlon of the
sentence was delayed while
We1treich appealed to the 4th
Diltrict Court of Appeals. which
turned him down once, and then
to th• 1t•te Supreme Court, ·
wb.lieh ~ the Cllll bec:k
to the appeU court.
Frlday'1 dedlioo UNI became
hla aecond appeah court
reJecUon. WeetreJch noted but he
said he.would Mk for a re~
and then take the c.-blCk to
. the state Supreme Court.
If that provee ~ he
uid, be would take the matter
into the federal COW1a.
"The decl1lon by the (4th
District Court of Appeel) totally
mi.ea the point.'' Weatrelch said.
Sophia Loren facing
mental collapse
ROME (AP) -Six days of jail
have put actress Sophia Loren on
the verge ot mental collapee and
doctors have prescribed drugs to
help her cope with anxiety,
Rome's leading daily reported
today.
"She is very, very depressed,"
MIH Loren's sister, Maria
Scicolone, was quoted as saying
by D Mesaagero.
The report could n.ot be
confirmed.
Mias Loren, serving a 30-day
aentenee on tax evasion charges
at a small women's jail In
Cuerta, 20 miles north of Naples,
"doesn't sleep. doesn't eat and la
very upeet," D Messagero aaid,
quoting family and jail IOW'CeS.
The paper ql'ott:<f the jail'•
Council to· ~eigh
Laguna's budget
The first public bearing OD
Laguna Beech'• propclliied f7. 79
million budget for next year wW
be held tonight beginning at 7
o'clock.
The City Council will oooduct
the hearin« in council chamben.
Final adoption of the spending
packase la expected in mid-June.
director, Liliana .lJe CNtolaro. •
saying she waa "1erlou1ly
concerned about her paychic
state."
The report said Mm Loren
was visited Monday by Dr. Roa
Caduto, who later d1-gnoeed ''a
11erious depressive atate."
"She I.a very shaky . . . to calm
her a bit I bave preecribed her
90IDe tranquili:era," the doctor
said according to the newspaper.
Giovanna Cau, the actreft'
lawyer, sakl her cl.lent wW aak
for ".emi·llberty" status, which
will allow her to leave the prillOn durin8 the day and return at
~e 47-year·old actrea hu
uk.ed President Sandro Pertini
for a s-rdon. but that does not
appeu Ukely.
Under Italian law. the will not
be elJa:tble for "aeml·llberty"
until abe completea half her ........
11 Metta~ quoted an
unidentified • •ylng the
a1nm '11 paytna the price lot her,.... ..
"It'• a gr'OCelqUe llltuatkJn. Any
other per1on wouldn't have
ended up in jail for a 20-year-old
tax evuion ca8e," \he friend WU
quoted u saying.
• sirens
tested
Southern Qal.Uomia EdJlon c.o.
offSctala Mid the tmeraencY alren
1y1tem 1urroundln1 the San
Onofre Nuclear OeneraUna
Statton worked H they had
hol*S durln1 a teat Monday
afternoon.
For aboot Uve mlnutH
bqtnn1na at 2: 16 p.m., the atmw
wailed out their warnlnc ln
commu.n.lU. with.in 10 m11eil of
tbe nuclear plant, aald Dav• Ba.rron,:. Southem Califomla
Eds.in • . tWJ>*D.
.. On a DNUmlnarY bllll, we
conatder Ct a 1ucicea.," Barron aaid. .
Tht warf\tna 1y1tem w11
,.telted Monday after more than S1 m1llJoo ln modlflcaUona were
added followtna an earlier test
that WU rounaly critict.r.ed by
oblervera. The total COit of the
alren war~';H. 1y1tem la now
around $3 on, Barron Mid.
Improvement• included
enhancing alren volume and
adjuating the area.a in which they
could be heard. he said.
While the findings of aound
lnatruments placed ln San
Clemente, Capistrano Beach,
portlona of San Juan Caplatrano,
Dana Point and C.amp Pendleton
were not yet available, Barron
said all sirens ln the system did
operate during the test.
Grandmother
sentenced on
drug charges
A 75-year·old Costa Meaa
grandmother deacribed by an
a11lstant U.S . attorney as a
"toufh old lady with a hard
edge' wa aentenced Monday to
three years in prison for
AT!u gllng cocaine into Loa
International Airport.
elJodora Saenz., a Colombian
dtiz.en, who had been living with
her daughter in Costa Mesa. WU
convicted la1t month of
smuggling 2 ~ pound.a of cocaine inside a fiilae bottom suJtcue that
she claimed to have received
from an unknown woman
ln~ta.
U.S . District Judge Terry
Hatter said he hoped that the
tt1ff aentence would &how drug
trafftckera that no one,
~ of their age, will be
lnunune from proeecutlon.
Amiatant U.S. Attorney Jamea
Walth Jr. said he is convinced
that the grandmother of 12
knowingly smuggled oocalne into
the country tastl'eb. 26.
Searching for sun
Coastal
Continued overceat mllh
e.ty-momtng dnUle llllety.
CoHtel, Inland Iowa 80•. eo.tal high 88. Inland 74. w ... ,.
13.
uElll••••'lirw•n•, light verieble nlallt
and morning wind.a ~omrno _. to~ ~to 15 ltnota.
Wht - 1 to 2 IMC. W..wty ..,.. 1 to 3 IMt. Moetty cloudy
end hay -41h morning log Ind
drtlzle.
V.S. summary
The~ lhundanltor?N In
ttie .,.._ "" r-.-. lod8Y wltll lloodlng. tomedoee end MM. wtil .. riven apre1d frOfl'I 1Mlr .... In '°OIW ....,,....._
TlllO -... klled In ~
..tien a "' end a pie*~ ""'* -" out of control In --on U.S. 111 nHr S an and
~ In a dl1dl 9lll'ollefl br Mven Inch .. of rain Monday
nlgM. About 20 m•mber1 of a
KMltuc*y NltloMI Ouerd """ In -"'* CM1'> at ~ SN!by. ............... ~wMn ~ lltrUdl ,.., ..... .,.,
... loedlnO a 1rvdl. Three ... ~. A Cout Ou1rd llallcopter
,__, 10 flood vldtnll ~ 1n '°""' r-. wller9 about 100 ..... lted n.lng -'*-"°"' up io iO lnCMI of rlln, wfllle mcwe downpour• In 01tl1hom1
threatened to br••ll an =~r-old record lor May
1nr-.• ~...,..
••• potted today for 011111. Tamnt Md Dentor1 oounOll Md
--lloOClna .. ,..,.,... In MllN Md~ Qty. r....... ... #Md ,.., sen Analt01 .......,., Ind Ila lama."°""°' DlllH, bllt n~ cfamit• w•a
~...,.,. ..,_, nee 8116 ,._."-It,....,_, T-
Iit M•brHU, flHll·flood
.efnlnta ..,. poated '::.:l
..... Ultl9 ... -. ,.. .... ~. ,,.,......,
MlllN. ....... ...-.a.r. '--Md~ ocu-. In
.. ilOudllnt ~Of ...... Thi
..... .. -.... .,,. tloocl ..... et O.W-, ~t, 1IO
--....... Of OmlN. Md •• ...,. .... lqld to mcNe •• ....... .. ....,_ f"IUNI·
" ~ ,,... M •Ill 11 • T7 • .IO 1• • .. .. .. .. .ft .. " .. •• ,. .. .. . . ..
n
eo 48 64 51 .19
85 74
71 S4 .01
52 50 .04
8 1 40
81 ea
81 83 19 ee .s2
s1 ae .04
8 1 52 19 eo ee a.
IO "4 .oe
74 64 83 52 2.112
72 57
54 42 .12
70 58 .01 ee 64 ee 43
93 81 70 58 .01
70 3a
73 40
51 51 .12
75 44 ae 1•
81 74 72 67
88 '° 410 88 10 .10
71 65 .18
86 t7 112 ..
78 5'
IO 57 .17
83 M 1.43
11 74 .OI 58 45
53 71 .20 ... 12
IO 70 .05 51 55 .23
73 .,. 1.02
16 42 .18
15 eo 1.14
IS8 ea .n
IO et .31
NM M 1oa 11 7t •
11 • .sa . ..
IM 82 .M 12 .. .31 a.,. .,. 47
ti •. 04 1• IM .. .
'2 M .OI 11 a
• 70 .1' 11 ..
he Forecas1 For 7• .m. EST Wedne9day. M9y 26
Low T
a3
M .. .e.3 ..
70 .55
81 .01 58 .02
I t
PtllNdlne 78 57
AMr8ldt n 57
San lemlrdlno 80 M
Sen Oebt1al 78 5t
Sen JoM M 81
lent.I Ana 73 81
Senta CNr eo 51
T lfloe V""'1/ 74 48
Smog
Nt qullty ... be ~
for~~T~ln th• euburben San ,.,nendo, Senta Clartta, IM Qabtllt end P~Wahlt~MMI• In ~and a.t .. i8cllii0
with polkltlOfl "•ndard Ind••
tallnOI of 111 Ind 8er"*'ll ""' • PSI of 125, Ute Air Ouellty
M1t1etemant ot.trlct NPC!f1ed ~· Air quall1y •Ill be tOOd
....... """ ,., .... Of 41 alotlt "" ...... Ill ... ... In IN h4Dh ....,_ IO Ill .... °""*' County, 17 lft .....
....,. t2 "' .. --::---.... MalMI .. and 1 In ........
and LAM Elllncn.
.. -
Vidal
speaks
'at OCC
IN BUDDLE -Zoe Ann Anand.a of Newport Beach (right),
Ustena to comedian-political activist Dick Ore1ory as they
confer 1n the rotunda of Illinoll State Capitol Monday during
ERA hunger 1trike. Ma. Ananda was reported as being very
weak.
Coast ERA striker
weakened by fast
Newport Beach resident Zoe
Ann Ananda, in the eighth day
of a hunger atrlke in Illlno" for
the F.qual Righta Ame~.
waa described today aa behl&
exuemely weak and confined '"'!
a wheelchair.
The Newport woman la pne of
aeven women futln8 in support
of the ERA. which la three atatee
short of being ratified. The
constitutional amendment must
be ratified by June 30.
The women, ataying in a
Springfield church and camping
out daily in front of the state
capitol building, have been joined
by 90dal activiat and comedian
Dick Gregory.
A spokeswoman fot' the group
aald 9evera1 of the women are
beginning to display medical
p~lema.
~he said Ma. Ananda, who
OWN a bookatore in Newport'a
Cannery Village, is the weakest
of the seven and has . trouble
walking without 881latance.
· Another of the atrikera,
excommunicated Monnon Sonia
Johnson. a1eo la confined to a
wheelchair.
Another hunger striker, the
spokeawoman aaid, has a gum
infection and still another
reportedly woke up Monday
with a noeebleed that lasted 45
minutes.
Several specialists have
warned the women they risk
serious injury if the fast keepa
up. The women aald they will go
without food until June 30.
In earlier comments, the
Newport WOUWl aald the strike
WM called to focus attention on
the ERA. She said people had
stopped paying attention to
rallies and marches.
She said Illinois was selected
becaU8e it ii the only Northern
industrial state that haanft
ratified the ERA.
State officials probe
college TV courses
By PHIL SNEIDEBM.AN oftM o"'1j ........
Coastline College'• television
oounea, currently under attack
by some local instructora, have
n ow come under scrutiny by
state four.year college offidala.
Representatives o f the
CalitomUI State University and
University of California systema
have asked the Coast Community
College Dist ric t f or
documentation showing its
television counes are equivalent
to the same oouraes taught in
regular claasrooms.
l>iatrlct officiab say a 70. to
80-page review of its telecoune
program will be mailed to state
college officiala and others within
10 days. Diatrict officials say the
document will prove that
Coa1tllne'a telecourses are
equivalent to clauroom
lnstruction.
Along with Coaatllne, the
Cout District operates Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa and
Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
Concerns about the quality of
television oounea were ·railed in
a March 8 letter written by four
OraJl8e Coast College professors.
In respome to that letter, the
A c ademic Senate of the
California State University
system has asked ita chancellor's
offic~ to investigate the
telecoune iasue.
Charles Davis. a spokesman for
Cal State Chancellor Glenn
Dumke. aaid Cal State officials
already have written to Coastline
President Bernard Luskin,
requesting information on the
television COW'IM!S.
Coaat District spokeaman
Richard Simon said a similar
inquiry has been received from
the University of California
system and from other education
oUidals and pattnts .
Cal State and UC officials are
concerned becauae these achools
grant transfer cred11 to students
who have taken courses at
community colle ges such as
Coaatllne, Orange Coast and
Golden West .
By STEVE MARBLE Of•Dllr ........
Slt\lna in a car followina a
routine delivery of polltfcal
one·llnerl to atudenta at 0nnae
Cout Collea• Monday, Senate
hopeful Gore Vidal did 90me
thinking Aloud.
The poll tlcal 1y1tem ii
corrupt," he offered while
waiting for hla driver to ahow.
"It'• ~pletely corrupt."
"The polltlclan1," the
Democrat went on, "are all the
same. Democrat, bpubUcan-it
doesn't matter. They don't want
to change and they don't lib
people who do. Uke me."
Low in the polla and frustrated
at the cost of runnlna a
campaign, Vidal admitted he baa
had trouble findln,I a broad bue
or support. He suggeated
students like him.
"l enjoy speaking at college
campuses becaU9e you always get
a good turnout," the author-
turned-politiclan aald, "but
students don't vote.
"Do you know where my best
support comes from?" asked the
liberal, anti-nuclear, pro-ERA
candidate. "Blue collar worken
and blacks. It'1 a strange world.
The knee-;erk liberals don't like
me."
Vidal came to the college
campus at the invitation of the
Alliance for Survival, an
anu-nuclear group. Nearly 300
showed up to listen. He started
by decrying nuclear energy and
the defense buildup.
"I'm not a war lover," he said.
"I don't like the cheap poUticianl
who keep saying the Russians
are coming. They (the politicians)
are the enemy and they have
taken over the White House.
They may govern DOW but they
won't govern forever."
He suggested the United States
will "either go broke in the arms
race or blow itself up by
accident." He said the Soviet
Union is too weak and too bosged
down with its own problems to
worry about the United States.
Then came the pokes, jokes
and one-liners.
-Naclear Wute: "By and
large we aeem to like to put the
stuff on faults. That way lf we
have an earthquake it can spread
easier and we can all g)oW' in the
dark."
-IDtertor Secretary James
Watt: "An absolute loon. He
believes the Lord II coming any
aeoond now and if we don't cover
every blade of grass with
concrete we'll all go '°hell."
-Gov. Eclmad Browa. Jr.
(his Democrat opponent): "A
little weasel."
-Moral Majority: "Every
generation or ao a group like this
swings down from the trees. One
came down in 1919 and brought
us prohibition."
Future of three
schools weighed
Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified Schoo l District will
consider recommendations
tonight for the future Wies of
three district schools that have
been cloeed.
A citizens committee ia
scheduled to make publlc a
report recommending win for
Corona del Mar, Lindbergh and
Woodland elementary schools
du.ring a 7:30 p.m. meeting at
Harper Community Center, 425
E. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
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·wooffi[OO
'Israelis down 2 S}'!Fia~ jets .
Iran · gains Persian Gulf victory
m:nu.rr, Lebencn-Iran laid 118 forcee routed
the !Mt pocket8 of Iraq1 ~ In the J)Ort dty of
Khorrunahahr today, and Iniq OClladed the fall of
lta laat atron1hold in Iran'• oil province of
KhUllltan.
The INqi edmWloft oonfirmed lran'I ~
victory tn the 20·montb-old 'war on the nonbem
flank of the Pentan OWi.
A mllitary communique from the hl1b
command ln s.,hded laid Iraq1 ton. early today
comp&Jted t.belr withdrawal tram Kbornn:IMahr.
Andropov to replace Brezhnev?
MOSCOW -The appointment of Yurt V.
Andropov, the 87-year~ Chlef of the Soviet eecret
police, to the 10-man -=retariat of the Canmunist
!>arty Central Committee appeen to improve bil
chances of aucceedlng Preaident Leonid I.
Brezhnev.
Andropov'• new J>09ition waa announced
Monday after a lpedal meettnc of the Central
Canmittee. He fW. the place left open by the death
Jail January of M.tkhaU A. Sualov, the No. 2 man In
the Soviet leldenh.lp.
Soviet rocket docks ·at station
MOSCOW -An unmanned cargo rocket
docked today with the ~ting Salyu~ 7 lpece
1tation. bringing fuel and other supplies to two
Soviet cmmonauta In the 13th day of their rew.rch
milBion. T .. aaid.
"Mutual aearch, appro.ch, docking and linking
~UffiU~
of the ~ were carried out on commanda
from mlmion control center and with the help of
on-board automatic ~·· the offictal Soviet
news apncy uJd. ProtPw 13 delivered fuel few the
ltatioll.
Bakersfield mercur,Y at I 07 degrees
A 107-degree reading Monday gave Valley too. Stocktoii recorded a 1~ hUEh.
Bakersfield ita hottest day f!Vef thia early in the Lemoore Naval Air Statinon 102 and~ 10[ ·
year, the National Weather Service reported. . Temperatures ahould cool into the 901
It waa hot everywhere el9e ln the San Joaquin Wed.ne9day, the weatherman aaya.
FedMart to sell phar:macy units
SAN DIEGO -FedMart Corp., which
announced in April it WM adnl out ot ._.._, lw
qr-eed to .u the phannwuUca1 lm.atar ... In 2'1
ol ita stores to Genco, a Gemco ..,.,+•1wa lw IUd.
rnffiTI~ rn [~J
Budget uriit eyes spending plan
WASHING TON -Bruahlng aaide budget
blueprinta propoeed by Democratic llben1s, the
Howie is shifting ita attention to a oomervative
California Republican'•·~ plan that attempta
to eliminate deficits immediately.
The HOU8e headed for a vote today on a
pl"OpOMl by Rep. John H. &u..elot to balance the
budget next year with J.arae cui. in domestic
tpene.ttnc. The plan a1IO anticipated tax rwenuea
oonslderably higher than thme in forwts by
congremlonal eoooomlsta.
Tr~asury security "yield falls
WASHINGTON -Yielda on short-term
Treuury aec:wities have fallen for the seventh time
in eight weeks. hitting their lowest 1evela since last
December, offida1I ttpoC"ted.
About $4.9 billioo in six-month T .bilJa were
aucticned at an averace d18count rate of turn
percent Monday, down from the 12.187 percent of
1-t week. The aovemmmt a1IO sold about $4.9
billion in three-month bilb at an averqie rate of
11.48 percellt. down from 12.189 percent.
Hinckley once talked to actres~
WASHINGTON -John W. H1nddey Jr.~
away from a brief campus encounter wftb actraa
Jodie Foster in 1980 convinced that if he lbot
Prelident Reagan. "she would de9tre him. abe
would feel be waa a hero, she would .love am
respect him." a paychiatrt.t tsUf1ed today.
Dr. Thomu C. Goldman, a defenae wttnela
who h:u inter'Viewed Hinckley three times in bil
jail cell aUw:e bla trial bepn in U.S. D11trict Court
oo Aprll 27, uJd that a few months later, Hinckley
returned to Yale Univenlty and stalked Miii Foster-
wbile CUTytnc a Jmded IUD in hla pocket.
Goldman aaid that after Hlnc=e '• initial encounter with Mila Foster at Yale In ber
1980, when be stopped her to ask ' he
believed "1hey had a relatkJmhlp ...
ORANOE COAST
D1ilyPilat
CtHalfted~ .... 71~
AJt otMI dep•rtmenb 142-4121 81.275 trillion ,
ThomlaP.H-.v ~ -Cllirl '-Oii-.
t;:/r,~
-~-~ TomMurphlne ...
=.r~ tQn t I
=-~ ~
MAIN OfflCE .... .., ... c-c. --.CA. ..... ~ ....... c-c.--.CA. ....
~ ~Or911!1CWI MMl4~. __ ......,,........., ....... IMlllW ...
_............,........., ..... 9 ;• ......
............ 11111 -~--
debt ceiling?
WASHINGTON -The ~ edmin18'1'adon ~
Mked eoaa-today to r.-tbit
naUoml &tbt Cll1lri.I to tl.2'75
ttilUon and ..aid the leden1 debt
will wwcb that IJmlt by the
end ol bal 1eea.
The NQUmt to rm. the llmlt 11
the third made by the
edsntnllbatlan ... taldn8 ottke
18 moetbl ..,_ The debt ltood at
about ttaO bllllon when the
adndniatratlon made It.a flnt
requHti:.::n week after Ptllilklllrt w l'WCl'D in.
w.'re l.Mtenklj •••
Orange Oout DAIL V PILOT /Tue.day, May 29, 1Na
/# ........
BEADLIND -Thia ia how four British papen played the
latest reportll of fighting between British and Argentine
troop. in the Falkland Ialanda.
f 12 million setup
Tw-o women seized
on bookie charges
Two ~ out..of-<lOWlty
remdenta indk:tecf by the Orange
County Grand Jury for alleged
operation of a $12
million-per-year bookmaking
rin1 have been taken into
custody.
Three people surrendered on
aimilar cbaraa !Mt week.
Sh.erlff'a Lt. Wyatt Hart
identified the two latest ampecta
aa Sandy Lou u.htfoot. ~. of
Paramount, ancJ Barbara J .
Sheperd. 42, of Harbor' Oty.
Hart eaki Mila Llahtfoot. who
alao 1oea by three allaaea,
1W tendered to On.nee County
authortU. Monday afternoon,
She wu booked lnto Orange
County Jail.
Mias Sheperd already waa in
CUltody at Loe Angela County
Jail on another' charge and will
be brought to Orange County ..
.:>Oil .. abe f1niahM that term.
Hart aakl he didn't. know how
long ahe baa remaining on her
aentence in Loe Angeles.
The five alleaed bookmaken
were all 1ndJctecl by the Oranae
County Grand Jury last weelt.
An indictment la a fonnal charge
made aoinst a peraon. It does not estabUah guilt or lnnooence.
It ia alleged that the
Mblgn.ekh\8 ring accepted beta
on h orse racea at tracks
throughout the United States
and aim aaoepted beta on various
lpar1lna ewnta involvtoa collegie
and profemional teams.
Woman convicted
in child sex case
A Loe Alamitol woman waa
found guilty in Orange County
Superior Court Monday of four
felony charges which stem from
a Huntington Beach child .ex
c=-involving alJeaed acta with a
9-year-old girl and" a 13-year..old
girl.
Superior Court Judge Myron
S . Brown convicted Patricia
Lombardo, 21, of the char1es
after the Cllle ..... aubmitted to
him oo the buia of prellminary
beutrur ni.:ripta.
1 Mia Lombardo had waived
her richt to a jury trial. Judae Brown took aewn other
.xual milOODduct oounta .ptn.t
the defendant under autwnjwlcn
Miii Lombardo w• one of 11.x
people who had f8Ced trial oo a
total of 132 counta involving
alleged aex acts with the two
)'OWIC P'IL
, The activities were alleged to
have Uken place in the
Huntington Harbour home of
John Steen. 56, and h1a wife
Chriati, 30.
Both have pie.ded no contest
to aexual ml9conduct oounta and
face proceeding• on whether
they qualify for mentally
d1.mrdered .ex· offender atatua.
Steen had been de9cribed by
authorities aa a retired
buainenman who enjoyed
videotapng the alleced 8eXua1
encounters involving hit wife,
other women and the children.
The aix defendants were
arreated a year ago after a
relative of one of the )'OW'8 girla
intercepted a letter in which the
girl dMcribed the alleged .exual
activity.
Sentencing proceedings for
Mi8a Lombardo were acheduled
by Judge Brown for June 17.
.AirpOrt J
strategy ..
mulled ~
' By J'ftEDBJUm 8CllOBMERIJ or .. ....,,......,.
Oran1• County 1upervl10l'9
wlll meet ln cloHd HHlon>
Wectne.day to deYile ttratee,y Ins
the wake of a federal JUdet••
refUlal '9 approve a pc'ODC*Ct
plan to re1ulate whlc~
commercial airlin• may aerve
John w~ Ahl>o!1-u .s. Dlatrlct Court Jud1tff
Terry Hatter, followtn1 fl-1
lenathy heartna ruled Monday
n11nt that the cou.nty'a latno.,)
plan wu unconatitut.lonal and1•
unfairly benetidaJ to the twoia
dominant carriers aervtna Oranae
County AlrCal and Jrepublic):>
Alrllnea. 11
Hatter'• ru1ing delivered a12
1tunnln1 blow to the county't'l" ,
efforts to aevaae a ayatem tool
allocate the 41 jet departureas
permitted 1ifat among canien who dealre ta. 9
The ruling marked the aecond
time in eight months that Judge"
Hatter baa blocked the county 1d
from implementing an airline
acce. plan at the airport. ~
Hatter scheduled • June 28• bear1ni for county offidala to _
return to h1a court with what he
termed a "non-dbcrtminatory"
aooeea plan for the airport.
And the judge added a caveat.
Should the county fail to adopt·
auch a plan, ~t muat permit
Continental Alrlinea to begin rl
8erVice with two flighta ct.eny ~'
using Boeing 727a, an aira'aft Jb
currently banned from the f
airport for nolae and weight'fi
rea90t'\S. ',J A Continental attorney
contended during the heartna M
that the airline baa been 1rytng,a
for 14 years to gain entry to Jobii d
Wayne Airport. He did notl
apedfy which routes Continental
would like to Oy.
In ruling from the bench,
Hatter a.Id he doesn't oppme the ::
county maintaining the 41 flight )
per day cap on jet departures or ~ ..
•Pt:Cifylng noise levels with ,1 which air carriers must comply. 1
But. Hatter bluntly aaid any 1.lf..
special treatment for the
dominant carriera must be j
deleted from any new accea
~this grandfathering_!
(permitting AirCal and BepubUc
to malntabl fllcht allocatiana) .. -1
aolna to have to go, tbat'a all." .T! Rauer said. .cf
Under the county' a P"'OP*d · n.
plan. AiJCa1. which operates an
~of 23.5 flight8 daily, and :11
Republic, which operatea, 11..5, f'l
would have been atripped of ~
their exilting flight guarantees at
a rate of 10 percent~ three _
mootha. I
Fligh ta yielded by the J
incumbents would be placed in a
pool for re-allocation among
carriers desiring to begin aervice '
at John Wa~ with new and
qu.leter jets.
Board of Superviaora
Chairman Bruce Neatande, •
reacting to Hatter's ruling, aakl.
"Of coune, It's fair to say we're ._
all disappointed... -
Neatande uid supervilon wW ~, ,
meet Wedneaday with the "
county's privately retained •
airport i8aes coumel. Michael :
Gatzke, to determine a coune of ~ I action. • ..
Nestande said he would favor '.:
the county joining with AirCal in 1 an appeal ol Hatter'a decision last J
September blocking
implementation of the county's ~
original acceu proposal. That .
action ia scheduled for a
oomideration June 8 by the 9th "
Orcuit Court of Appeal. -. .-~~~~~~-"--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;_~~~~~~~~~~~--~
@
~&EM ~WllE
•• n
~· 1l
1
-\I
..
No booze
•
Tlirow old tax records out
or cars
for prom
OR.AND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)
-A loud rock a.nd wW play
until dawn at thh year'•
IP'aduation put:y for a aubu.rban
JUah achoo! -but the punch
won't be 11)f..Qd and U... won't
1queal ln tfie })U'kina lot.
&1..!tl, '2."£.Wl'r2
DMR R&ADl.RS: U your cloeeta are bul8ln.I with old tax recorda that you're afraid
to ihrOw away, the IRS hu IOlfte ~lcome
advice.
Most docwnenta need to be kept only
thNe yeen from the date your tax n tum wu
lUed, or two yean from the date the tax "'• Dald, whkhever la later. In other WOC'da. il you lUed your 1981 return by April l&, 19a2, you
ahould keep the related recorda until April 15,
188&.
Same recordt do need to be keDt Jonaer.
Real ..iate record.a, for lnatance, ihould be
kept aa lon1 aa they can be UHful in
detenn1n1na the ownenhlp buia of a piece of
pl'Operty. 'l"hia Information la needed to cla1m
deprmation or to report the gain or lom on the
pn>perty when It la 90ld.
Copies of put tax retuma ahould be kept
1f you think you may Liie income averqina to
compute your tax on a future return. To u.e
· the income averaging method, you need
Information from four prior years' retuma.
Good flnandal reoordt are th~, key to
effect.tVe tax planning and will help you fill
out your tax retuma with eaae, according to
IRS. Organiz.ed rt!!OOrd.a alao can aave you time
and money lf your return I.a audited.
For more infonnation on record.keeping,
IRS offers a free booklet entitled, "Publication
652, Record.keeping Requirements and a List
of Tax Publications. Request the booklet by
phoning (800) 242-458~.
DMV closes loopholes
DEAR READERS: The California
Depertment of Motor Vehkles haa announced
that it haa cloeed an administrative loophole in
f'el\llationa which had pennitted IOIJW! Wepl
registration of "new" vehicls purchued out
of state and brought ln to California.
Ail of April 19, 1982, California residents
and bu.tneaaes are not able to register a "new"
mocor vehicle with le. than 7 ,500 miJes on it
if the vehicle baa not been certWed by the
state Air Resource.a Board re1ard.1ng the
detign and performance of the vehicle'•
exhaustion control system.
The OMV al90 h.u notified out-<>f-state
SHOITIST LINH IN OIAfiaGI COUNTY
.. IXTIA IDGI" GAIPflLD IANK -=
Theres only one
FMCrowDs.
JI01 EAST COAST HlCHWAY
CORONA DEL MM. CA
(714) ~.-Olll
SHUTT I•
lllST ALLA TIOll
dealtn that they may be subject t.o ttvil
penaltiet for auch Weaal lal• fo California
reeidentl or bualnemM In the future.
OMV Dlrector Dorta V. Alexia Mid that
the Health and Safety Code defln• a new
vehlcle u one with 1-Uw1 7 ,600 mil• on
the odometer. She pointed out that lt la lllepl
for a California ,.ident or buainell to import
for regtatration, UM or ule any 1uch vehJcle
which hu not been cert.ltled by the Air
Re90u.rcel Board ln Cal.llomia. '
A vehicle'• certification atat\.11 may be
ktentified by efl4Pne compartment labell at the
point of purch.ue. These vehicles allO will be
-verified by Callfornta'1 1mog in1pectlon
1tationa, which are aupervt.ed by the Bureau
of Automotive Repair.
Mra. Alexia said ownen of 1uch
non-certified vehlclea may not lawfully
regilter, u1e or re-1ell the vehicle tn
California, and are subject to fines of up to
~.ooo for attempting to do .,, acoordina to
Health and Safety Code Section• 43151,
43164 and 43166. Gary Ni.ahite, the DMV'1
Reldatrar of Vehicles, pointed out that any
dealer ln any state who aeU. a non~rtified
vehicle to a <Alifornia resident or bualnese alao
may be subject to a civil contract resilaion
action by b'&lir who cannot register the
vehicles in omia. Anyone ulia\lna ln
such activities allo may be subject to civil
penalties.
The OMV dlreci.or noted that there are a
few very limited circurnltances under which a
new, non-certified vehicle may be imported
by a California resident. The resident may
import such a vehicle if it la acquired: to
replace a vehk:le which wu damaged beyond
reasonable repair or 1tolen whfle out.aide
California; as a result of an inheritance; or a.a a
result of a divorce, dissolution or legal
aeparation.
• Got • problem~ Then writ4! to P•t Horo-·
-_, wiu. P•t will cut rNJ tap#!. 6etting the
ill An1Wets and action you nt!ed to aolve ln-
equitla in fO'l«'TllD#!nt and buainea M.n
your quiiitloll6 to P•t Horowitz, At Your Service,
Qrazwe COMt Dally Pilot.. P.O. Box 1~. O.c.t meu,
CA. "f>26Z& Aa many let~,.. u poaible will be ana-
wen!d, but phOMd b.quiries or Jett.en not including
the ~r'• tulJ name, •ddn!u •nd bu.iness hours'
~ number cannot be ron.s/def'Nl.
Senlon at Fore1t Rilll Central
Hiah School decided to live up
boor.e and can, at leut lor the
ntaht, to make tuN &here la no
drlnklna and drlvil\I. In return,
parenta are pkkina up the $4,500
tab for the Jµne 8 party.
"They'll jult kill their wheell
aoodbye at about 11 p.m. and
won't tee them .,atn until about
7 a.m. the next day," laid Dullel
Robertaon, chairman of a
parenta' IJ"OUP that railed the
cuh.
Senion will leave their can at
the achool and ride bUle9 to the
party -which will be held at a
aec:ret location.
Decal.lie beer, wine and hard
liqu or frequently 1how up at
1tudent aatherln1•. parent•
decided thia year, "there mu.t be
a better way," aaid Leslie
Loul.lell, director of prevention
1ervice9 for Project Rehab, an
alc o h ol and drug abu1e
prevention and treatment
program.
Robert8on said parentl decided
about six month.a .go to h09t the
party. They eet up a tax-free
fund and began c ollectlna
donations.
The IChool provided bu.ees, and
echool bua drivers will donate
aervlces as chauffeun.
"Most importantly, we have
the support of the kids," aald
Robertaon, whose 10n will be
among the graduates. "There are
250 kids. We're positive we'll
have over 200 attendlna this
lhini·" A survey by Project Rehab and
Grand Valley State eon-. of
1,223 studenta in lOth, lltll and
12th grad ea found that 74
percent u1d they had Uled tJauor
and 22 percent Mid they drl.nlc at
leut once or twice a week.
APn .......
MOBILE HOME -A 91-year-old, 300-ton brick howse is
moved by truck along Blossom Street in Boston to its new lite,
366 yards away. The resident physician's house belonging to
Massachusetts General Hospital is being moved to make way
for the construction of a new medical research building.
Reds not stronger
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Although the CIA baa increued
tu estimate of Soviet military
strength by a millio(l men, the
Red Army really isn't any
stronger than before, Rep. Les
Ailpln says.
Asp1n said tha t the h igher
figure 11 the result of improved
estimates by the CIA and doesn't
reflect Soviet buildup. He said
most o f the 1 million are in
n on -comba t areas suc h as
conatruction , civil defense and
internal security. ,
THE LYRIC
ASSOCIATION
OF ORANGE
COUNTY
CARMEN
RIGOLETTO
LA BOHEME
Diamonds
Save 50°/o
CARID RIGOLETIO
by Blz1t
Newport Harbor tlch
Friday, May 21, lpm
by V•tl ...
Newport Harbor tl&h
Friday, bit 4, lpm
Reserved eeata $12.50. Season tickets for all three onty $30.
Group discount• avallable. For advance tickets and more Info call
494-~ 494.3944
TheM p!'ogram1 mede poealble by • Mobll Found•tlon Grant
TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY SEASON J 96i J 98l
1922
A Tr•dHlon
for 60 Yeara
1982 x
145-1077
. OVl!R a HOT a COLD ENTREl!S
112 lltlPORnD a DOltlESnc WINE•
Flwt of Yul, lelected IMf, ''"" IMtood a Pou1trJ
CLOSING DOWll
PUBLIC AUCTION
• LIQUIDATION OF HANDMADE
PERSIAN & ORIENT AL CARPETS & RUGS
a net w ...... n & FrenCh ......
~ Order of the loaril .. Dlred•• of Globe lnternotlenol
I
Selected diamond jewelry.
45 styles . Choose cocktail
ring, pendants, earrings,
bridal sets and more. All
finely crafted with t he highest
standards of quality.
Ladles Codd.8H'Rlng
. 13 tot~ weight
orig. M99.00
Sale $249.50
De.mond & Sapphire
CIUIW E..,.,. . 25 toal ...Wiant ottg. s 121 6.00
s.e. S608.00
Mens t4K R"'e .40toc.I~
orig. SH72.00 s... Sl216.00
an sales subject to stock on hand
no speclal-Drders
14K' Wedd~s.t 14 toUI wel t
orig. SI 175 .
Sale $587 .50
• TVllDAV, MAV 25, 1812
· 11am1111111 c•m CAVALCADE
STOCKS
82
87
Laguna Hug Club:
• ·Keep on squeezing
ONLY IN LAGUNA, DEPT. -Si,nce Laguna ~hill
the Art Colony of our coutline, and oonaiClered by' the
natives as an environmentally 1en1itive place, it i1
understandable that certain of the dtif.enry oonaider the
town to be filled with tree-huggen.
People-buggers are a bit more of a surpriae.
But ao it was as reported in this sterlhur journal only
yesterday, that members of the Hug Clu6 gathered at
Laguna's Irvine Bowl for a Hug-In.
It was alleged that the Laauna Hug Club got ltarted
becaUl8 regulars who walked tne Main Beach Boardwalk
became acquainted and ~
would hug each other. ·
Well, the Boardwalk's aa • ._
good a place as any to get ~\ =~hing like that TOM MURPHINt~lt
ACCORDING TO THE report. everybody had a good
time out at the park in putting the 1Quee7.e on fellow
dtizens, except the oop assigned to keep the peace who,
when given a friendly clasp, warned the perpetrator.
"Don't do that again."
There haa to be at least one llOl'ehead in every crowd.
You have to wonder in the first place why they would
need a oop to keep the peace at a hugging ~vention.
Muggers. yes. But equeezers?
PARKING LOT - A portion of the private planes tied down
at Orange County Airport ta shown in this aerial photo. The
Only contested race
Erma BOmlHHJJt J1!WIH1
the oolor.lul, la1bionable (/,.,.
Jossing attire in ¥ogue
today. Page B2.
o.lrNIC ........
county's airport oomm.ission will take up proposed changes in
operation of this area tonight.
. •
Four seek judge post
Airport's
tied own
rules eyed
Clearly. it's difficult to find high crimes and
mi8demeanon in plain hugging. Ob. you may have been
irritated at times when you aee thoee bumper sticken that
admoniah, "Have You Hugged Your Kid Today?'' 'That
kind of placard could call8e a real gut-wrench to the party
in the following automobile who just suffered some tragedy
involving their child.
THAT UNPLEASANT thought aside, a hugging club
1eem1 harmlesa enough. You could have a -lot -more
damaging avocatima. Like the guy who swaggers into the
local aaloon and after the first gulp announces, "I can lick
any puny man in this houae." rm always pleale when that slob gets bounced over
the bead by the female bartender.
0th.en have a hobby of being practical jokers. They
always greet you with an electric buzzer for the handshake,
or make certain they slip a whoopee cushion into your chair
or let you have it with a equirt of water from their
illuminated bow tie that lights up to say, "Hi, Cutiel''
Theee ~zd~d join the Hugging Club and get hugged by · the Gorilla.
IT'S FAIR TO suggest that there are all kinda of
distasteful organ17.atiom you can join. like the people who
spray srafflti on walla or belong to hubcap theft rings.
Seldom, however, do you find these kinda of ugly
organizations visiting the confinea. of Laguna Beach.
Lagunana would rather be saving a greenbelt or preaerving
the whalee.
About the most violent the organizatiom get is the
Polar Bear Club of Treasure la1and where members leap
into the chilled Paci.fie~ New Year's Day. And that
violence la usually confined to the one frigid entry.
AB FOR BUGGERS of the world, we welcome them.
If there wu a little more hugging going on right now,
we miaht have a lot te. fiahtinc.
LOrd knows we need that. .
.Education unit seeks
parents, volunteers
cooaortlum: J'ountaln Valley,
HunUn1ton Beach ~!_t1 1 Uuntinaton Bach u.uoa HJ1b
Ocean View, Seal Beach and w-·..,..... c.aaDIUM .......... IDMI d'9
tint w......_ Ot'wb-......
Parenti of handicapped and
naa-IMN'~ lt\ldmt:I ma1 1_pply. i. ~ of
-blillilfttdu. Por., ean\be olttalatd by
c= th• tetiool dl1trlct, ~. -.
I
By DAVID KUTZMANN or .. o.tr,......,.
'nley are mostly in their early
to mid 50.. Collectively, they
have more than 70 yean of legal
eXJ)erienoe. One mania aire.dy a
Juage on the municipal court
benCh. Another ia a Lott Angeles
prosecutor. Two are 1eneral
):nCtice attorneys.
Toeether. they are contending
for a hl1hly coveted Orange
County Superi« c.ow-t Juda-hiP
in the June 8 primary. It ia the
only superior court race where
there ta no incumbent. The 8eat ta
being vacated through the
retirement of JOO,e William 8.
Lee, who aerved for 20 yean on
the Santa ~bench.
l!J. 16 other superior court
offfoea. the l.ncumbenta faced no
opposition. Their names won't
even appear on the ballot.
The candidat.ee running for the
one, 6-year term are William Farria. a Tustin attorney apd a
d1rector of the Orange County
TranBit District; West Orange
County Municipal Court Judge
Robert A. Knox; Lott Angeles
County Deputy Dlatrict Attorney
Joseph Baritla, and Anaheim
lawyer Sherman S. Weber.
Farria and Knox appear to
have the best clwlce of facing
oae another in a run-off election
next November. Both men have
maintained high viaiblUty in
thm communities -Farria as a
three-time congreaalonal
candidate for the Democratic
Party and Knox as a judge and
school trustee in Huntfngton
BMch. Barilla. who baa spent 19 years
on the District Attorney's staff ln
Lott Angeles. ia runn1nc a 8eCX)lld
time for an Orange County
Superior Court judgeship. He
placed third two years aao in a
race won by North Orange
County Municipal c.ourt Judge
James Cook.
Weber, who spent many years
u a certified public accountant
before joining the legal
profemion. aa.ld he wpWd only
terVe one term u a superior court
judge because of hla 1trong
feelings that the Judiciary needs
"fresh blood." Thia ii his finrt
a~pt ~t office.
Followini are brief summarlea
of the candlda\ea and thelr
t.cqrounda:
-FARRIS: A practicing
attorney for the ~ 22 years.
the 52-year-old 1'a,rl1 eay1
balf-Joldnaly, "1 wouldn't mind bavbic anOther career."
Tbal woWd be .. a Judie. a Job
be taJd most llCUW trial lawyera ~lre to. Hl• back1round
udea lix ~ on the dty ot
Oranc• Plannh'I Commtaton
and MW!\ yean on the 1nnlli1
dtltrlct baud, llx of thole .. vb
chalnnan.
Tbroup hi• law practice,
1arria 1&Jd, he hH 1alned a
...... ~ O(,U.. ••full
lplCtnlm" ol JiP1 .....
Ill bis~· ttataawna. to ~he liiad be Wtw9 tNit
,.tou1tier Jaw1, 1tronpr law
....... Wit ind~ ......
would mHD fewer vlot1m1;
J'llfttl iiid hi .. ..... •• tn
~::c .. •r 1enlenotn1 of
The former congre11ional
candidate estimated he would
spend about $10,000 on what baa
shaped up u a low-key race thus
tar. He has the BerVices of an
unpaid political adviaer.
Farria aau1 more campaign
ialues would likely emerge in a
run-oft between the two top vote
getten in November. He expects
those two candidates to be
him8el1 and Knox.
Farris Is married, has 3
daughters in their 20s and a
four-year-old granddaughter.
-KNOX: ''Thia is a very
natural thing for a municipal
court judge to want to do,'' Knox
says of lua candidacy for the
superior court.
The 54-year-old Huntington
Beach resident, a municipal court
judge in Westminster for the pa.st
five yean, aa.ld he waa running
on the basis of his qualifications
and experience.
A former deputy district
attorney, Knox practiced law for
18 years, handling mostly civil
litigation.
Al. a 20-year Orange County
resident, he alto became active in
local school board affairs. He
eerved aa put president of the
Ocean View Elementary and the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District boarda,
Knox said he considered a
superior court judgeship a "new
challenge" because he would
handle a broader type of
cueload. The municipal court, he
uid, la more of a volume-type
triWnal. Aocord!na to Knox's candidate
statement, ne •tronalY · aupporta
PfOll'&IDI to oompemate vidima
of crime.
He 1ald he plan• to 1pend
between fl~.ooo and 120,000 for
hi• campalan, much of that
money few qn,.
Knox, a vice ~t of the
c.nfornJa Judael Amodatlon. LI
married and na• four arown
chUdren.
courses at Western State
University, Mt. San Antonio
College and Ot.rua College, said
he la detennined to be a superior
court judge. "li you're looking
for the most experienced ma
most qualified man, that's me,"
he aaid.
The Lott Angeles proeecuto~.
who works out of the District
Attorney's Compton office, 881d
he is so committed to becoming a
judge that he plans to continue
running for office until he is
successful. "rm never going to
give up," he said. "I'm going to
6e a judge."
The 55-year-old attorney said
that, if elected. he would try to
expedite c ases with o ut
jeopardizing anyon e's
constitutional rights.
He said his nearly 20 years in
the Loa Angeles Distric t
Attorney's office, as well as his
experience as a peraona1 Injury
lawyer with the Automobile
Club, give him a broad
background. Barilla said he alao
has knowledge of labor law.
The father of five sons said he
is emphasizing his experience,
which he believes makes him the
best candidate in the four-man
field.
One of Barilla's sons is a
deputy with the Orange County
Sheriff'• Department.
-WEBER: Of the four
candidates, this Anaheim
attorney la the most outapoken
about the tenure of judges.
Weber, a former Cl>A who
wrote a novel about the
judiciary, said he bellevea in
limited judicial terms to help
rejuvenate the 9)'lltem with "new
blood."
"I want to be a judge for just
one term," he said.
Weber, who wanta to spend
1-than $500 on h1a campaign,
aaid he would be "acoellible0 u a
Juda• and would atternpt to ref9"ll the l)'ltem from within.
Weber allo aald that, aa a =· be would ·=· be ~ .. ~~-not a pollt1c11 race," he tald.
11Qu11Ulcatlona are tbe mafn
th1na to au...'' W-et.r W«ked few 20 ,.an • an aecountan' ln the Loa~
arM. A UCLA arectua•, be later
1tt•nded Southweltern
Unlwnlty WW School. He hl9 bMrl ... ...,.. fOi 14 ,..,..
Hellkt~tlMIUld-~ .... -::9.:*-"..4C ........ ...,. ......... , .. oD•·t~r latern1hlp befOre ---~....-.. Wetiit' U... wtU.. ba. wife.
....... In OIDtl'tl AMbllm,
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL or the Dllltr Plot ,...,
Revised tiedown policies for
private aircraft situated at John
Wayne Airport will be subject of
a public hearing tonight before
the five member Orange County.
Airport Commission.
The meeting will be held at 7
o'clock at the hearing room in the
county Hall of Administration
Broadway at Santa Ana
Boulevard, Santa Ana.
Numerouf c hanges in
operation of the 500
oounty-oontrolled tiedown spaces
at the airport have been propo9ed
by an ad hoc committee.
One change proposed by the
committee would r escind an
existing policy requiring aircraft
ownership as a prerequisite to
gaining a place on the lengthy I
waiting list for tiedown space all
the airport.
The committee ha proposed! that an "open eligibility" policy
prevail by which individuala and
commerc ial aviato rs w ould
qualify e qually for gaining
tiedown space.
Under th~ proposals, there
would be no limit pl.aced on the
number of tiedown space1 a
single individual or commercial
entity could hold.
But the committee is c.alling for
a policy that would outlaw an -
existing rule that has pennitted
the transfer of tiedown or hangar
space when the aircraft -
occupying the space la aold.
However, under a p,roposed
"grandfather privilege,' pn!91!Dt
tenanta would be permitted to
transfer tiedowns with their
aircraft for a period of one-year.
Under the recommended
guidelines, commercial aviation
enterprises, such as flrml that
rent planes, '!Nould be permitted
to continue to operate from
tiedowns located at the north end
of the airport and hanpra on the \
aoutb end.
It is suggested. however, tha'
action be taken to relocate
commercial operators to K
county-owned ~ on the
-·-·· west slde; • move that 11 ............ .._ .,.1 would free op tfedown •s--... ..
l.ndlvlduall at exilttnC e-Wlde locatiom. w
>'(
~I
'tlO Tledow11 poUdet a' the alrPan have been under revlew fo-r
aeveral malltha by bOth COUlrt7 t.' ~ otttdall Md ti» county d;J ~Jury.
·::> 0
•ERMA BOMBl!CK
•HOROSCOPE
'
I
oung lovesick woman harrasses. former suitor
I ANN t:ANDERS: I am tlrnply mOrtltied · But ii ah daNreroua? Mwat he wait unUl ahe
t the way a ~una woman ii mak1nc Ute doee 10methb\a btzarre -Uke maybe ahoota ell fOI' a 8ood friend ot mine. h1m -before he can ~lain? Pleue
He Wied to date her OClCUlonally, but adviM. -CONCERNED IN HUNTSVU.LE.
were never intimate. When he •topped ALA.
...,"'lll her out, about two months qo, ahe
te Jett.en threatening •uicide. Now she
ta out.aide hia office ln her car and
~11man1 him after work to re.tauranta and
qmee of acqualntancea. He haa turned
in a movie and aeen her sitting
Ind him. Last Sunday ahe suddenly
~peered in the pew acrosa from him, . l'l~h ahe ta not a member of that ch\ll'Ch.
• She never attempts to speak to him, just
opowa him everywhere. Ia th1a aaainst the
yv? Obviou&ly the woman la off her rocker.
SWINGING AFTERNOON -Crystal
Korporal, 2, of Huntington Beach, with her
mother Laura take an afternoon swing in Lake
DEAR CONCERNED: Tbe mu 1boald
report the woman to tbe police. Tbe cbarae
-llara11ment.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a~tting
Wck and tired of reading letters ln your
oolumn tram wives who complain that their
huabanda aren't attentive enough ln the
bedroom. They alwaya threat.en to look
elaewhere unless their sexual needa are met.
It seems to me that the whole world has
Deir ..... ""°'°"' .....,.. I(...,
Park, Huntington Beach. It was a relaxing way
to spend a quiet afternoon.
Virgo: Wish fulfilled
ARIES (March 21 -April 19 ):
Dollars-and-cents ~ues dominate; you learn
what works as contrasted to mere illusion.
Emphasis on property, home,. family
relationships and the finalizing of
longstanding negotiations. Pisces, Virgo
persons figure prominently.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You gain
needed information -relatives, calls and
trios figure in scenario. You may feel
restricted due to added responsibility.
Reward factors multiply. You will be
working towards goal. Money and love are
part of cycle.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You're rid
of losing proposition. Path is cleared for
increased income. You'll have wider
working area and can gain additional
recognition. You sense public trends and can
be right place with product. Watch Aries.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Questions,
requests are answered in affirmative. You
get what you want, new contacts and
projects lead to success. Scenario highlights
independence, creativity, ability to get to
heart of matters -and strong relationships.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): lnstght gained
relating to situation which has been
obscured by false claims, deception and
mystery. Some of your own fears and doubts
.,,,,,,,
By PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna Beach
_...
• HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARR
will be erased. Intuition is on target, family
member decides to cooperate and health
report is favorable.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Burden is
removed, member of opposite sex confides
feelings and wish is fulfilled. Social activity
increases, communications improve and
travel pl.ans are solidified. Added source of
income is reason for optimism.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You gain
solid foothold in connection with career,
prestige and emotional involvement.
Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo persons figure
prominently . Superior seeks your
cooperation in connection with rebuilding
program.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis
on travel plans , long -distance
communications, education and spiritual
values. Yo.u gain insight into abstract
principles of law. You'll hear the word
"karma" on more than one occasion. Read
between lines.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
Lively family discussion is connected with
money, budget, purchases, sales and relative
apparently con sumed by emotional
involvement. You' 11 get to bottom of
mystery with aid of one who !nitially
oppoeed you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go
slow, maintain low profile, become familiar
with legal aspects which include special
rights and permissions. Focu s also on
partnerships, negotiations and marital
statu1. You'll be dealing with unique
individual who apparently ii peychic.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Older
indiVidual aids in getting job completed.
Focus on dependenta, basic choree, pell and
a relationship which bu weathered the
storm. Be aware of apedal appolntmenta,
employment proapectt and obl11atlon to
individual who baa lnve•ted tlme and
money.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Flnlab
rather than initiate project; Look beyond the
lmmedlaM -your ap,peal could tie
unlveraal. Focua on creativity and the
~ of a relatbwhip. You'll be lrwpU:ed
by Arlel lndlvldual whO ii d~. ~ and~
scm• •x-cruy. la lt becawae of the fllma,
mapz.lnel, TV, advertilementl for jeans or
what?
If wives would expend more time and
energy doing hou.tework and spend more
time in the kitchen preparing wholesome
meall 1.nuead of buying frozen and
dehydrated fooda and carrying in junk from
the dell, they would be too tired at bedtime
to be '° demA!\(ling. No wonder women live longer than
men. They have nothing on their rnindl but
eex. Please don't print my name ln your
column . Just sign me -X IN
BAKERSFIELD
DEAR BAKE: Don't worry about my
printing your name la the c olumn. I
woaldn't want to be re1pon1ible for what
ml1bt bappea to you U your Identity
became kDowa. Your attitude la 10 outdated
I bad to wipe tbe mold off tbe letter to print
U. May your conviction• reat ID peace, Dodo
Bird.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's one for
"Both Wife and Other Woman" who advises
the wife who is being used to tell her
half-a-husband to move out.
Alt.er 27 years my first husband and I
were divorced. Shortly thereafter I married
a man whose first wife waa an alcoholic. He
had the reputation of being a terrific
womanizer but I was convinced that a
devoted, intelligent woman and super aex
partner would keep him at home.
ANN LANDllS
We got along perfectly -until one day
last summer aft.er two yeara of what I
thought was an ideal marriage, I walked ln
on him and hia female architect with whom
he always claimed he had a profeaaional
relation.ship.
He absolutely refuses to diacuss it. They
continue to see each other for lWlCh to "talk
business." I'm stuck -no money, minimal
income and the house is his. So, how do I
kick him out? He tells me I have no
alternatives. I'm still in shock and going
crazy. I want out but I don't want to starve.
Can you offer any suggestions? -
MISERABLE IN THE SOUTHWF.sT
DEAR S.W.: Don't let blm bamboozle
you. You DO have alternalivea. See a
lawyer and find out what they are.
How yoUnJt is too younJ( I or a child to
learn about sex? That's just one thing you 'll
find in Ann Landers' new booklet, "How,
What, and When to Tell Your Child About
Sex." For your copy send 50 cents along
with a long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, Dl. 60611.
Dressing fQr the part
I think women have done all we can do
for jogging. We've taken a simple sport of
throwing on a pair of boxer shorts and white
T-shirt to run around the neighborhood, and
elevated It to couture status. ERMA IOMIECI
ATWIT'S END We've coordinated shoes to match the
shorts, stripes in the· shirt to match the
headband, warm-up trousers and jackets
with designs that belong on a Paris runway.
And that's only what we wear in the
supermarkets to shop in. Who knows what
the ones who run wear.
think fashion and sports don't mix. The
other morning I came down to breakfast in a
lavender leotard, pink tights, yellow
headband and a fiesta-striped warm-up
socks crushed just below my knees.
FRANKLY, I WAS GLAD when tennis
fizzled out. It must have taken us six or
seven years to turn that sport around.
Remember those.plain mid-thigh white
dresses and boring gym shoes?
My husband had just come in from
jogging and was wearing white boxer shorts
just above the knee like he had just run off
the set of "Chariots of Fire."
I had one outfit that never failed to stir
attention wherever I went. It was pale pink
and the shoes picked up that same shade in
the shoestrings. The cap was like a little
bonnet with a visor. Even the panties had
little ruffles on them and a cute saying. All I
needed was a sweatband to match the bootie
sox with the little balls over the heel. I
finally found both in a sporting goods store
on the west side of town. The salesperson
said, "How's your racket? In the market for
a new one?"
"I give up," he said. "What are you
supposed to be and where is your treat bag?"
"Don't be cute," I said, siP,ping my
coffee, "this is my aerobics outfit. •
"Aerobics?" he said. ''1 didn't know you
exercised."
"Don't be naive," I said. "I'm dressed to
drop off the sweeper to be fixed!"
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
I said, "Are you crazy? I don't even play
tennis. This outfit is for picking up my child
at school in the afternoon."
EVE~Y TIME
I TRY
TO TAKE OUT
A NEW LEASE
ON LlF'E I
THE
LANDLORD
RAISES
As for golf, remember when people
went to the matches to watch the game?
Then women came along and jazzed it up
with short skirts, bright T-shirts and
great-looking sun hats. But like everything
else, I got bored wearing that silly short
skirt and cut-out glove to the beauty shop
every week. THE RENT.
MEN DON'T UNDERSTAND it. They
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. South deala. NORTH
• 541
<:?AKJ5
O JU
•US
WEBT EAST
+Jl0872 +QH
<:?toes <:?Q7U
0 ., 0 1080
•KU •Al
SOUTH
+AK
<:?H
O A&Q7
+QlOtU
The biddlnr.
~ w .. t N_.. Eut
t • .... 1 <::> ....
INT Pue INT Pue ........
Openln1 lead: Jack of •.
If the ave,.,. dtls.u ....
1pote befo" hit e7N, ·he
would be well advlted to con·
1ult hit optometrtet. For the
• • averara brld1e pla7er,
however, lleepln1 1pot1
before hit e,.. It almpl1
eouodadvtet.
SoUU. bad two metllocla Ol
•~ bit ,ood Uod. OM wu to rewert1 • WtUI' &wo clla•••·· Uli OUler to Jump to two DO trump. SOu&ll elloee
the latter because a nine·
trick contract rated to be
eaaier to make than an
eleven·trick one.
Weit led the top of hie
spade sequence and declarer
could count eight tricks. He
rejected any thought of look
ing for hi• ninth trick in clubs
-even if a fineue for the
j•ck wa1 1ucce11ful, the
defenden wouJd have their
1pade 1uit running before a
club trick could be eatabl11h·
ed. Heart.a 6"d a mo,..
reaaonable pr:oe~ of 11et~
t.log up a ninth trick, .o al\at
winning the king ol 1ptdes
declarer uaayecf a heart to
the jack. Eut won and fore.cl
out declarer'• remaining
1pade •topper, ~ ded&rer
could make nq more than the
elcbt triw he bad 1tarted
out with.
Elatata and Dinn ml1hl not
be aulped •ll1 nlue in the
ootm count. but tt..1 play an
Important role In Uat
developln1 of triw. Her.,
deelaNr'• '*'1 boldlq ...
Uat b7 to &M ~UM.
1111 N 'ol ....,... otr.r.d a
liCiood dPeil to 1llUt • ·~ triekl 1M&Md of P'I'· Uai.°aJl Ml .... ta OM
bNbt. &.. .. ~ -""'
to hold the queen of hearts,
declarer could have played
Weat for either the queen or
the lenl
At trick two, declarer
should have led the nine of
hearts and, if West played
low. run it. As the c&rd1 lie,
that would have fetched the
queen from Eut and the jack
of hearts would have been
the ninth trick. But even II
the nine of hearts loet to the'
ten, declarer could 1tlll have
fallen back on a eecond heart
fineaae for Ma contract. And
obvloutly, If Weal covere the
nine of hearts with the t.n,
tbe elsbt 19 the fulfl.lJ.ln6
triek, and dedarer can un·
tanste bit three heart triw
becau.ee the jaek of diamond.I
la an entry to dum1n1.
'1
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Mi i'
loss deepens
The fl.rat American J'lDandal Oro of Sant.a Ana
reported It operated at a &o. durtna tr.. fl.m quarter.
Revenue tot.led t2~,962,000 compared with
$29,049,000 for the fint qu.ner of 1981. Net to. for
the period wu $919,000. or ~ oenw per ah&re,
compared with 1 net to. of $448,000, or 27 centa, for
the thttie months ended March 31, 1981.
The boerd of di.recton declued a dividend of 12 \!\
cents per share.
Stock sale proposed
Printronix Inc. of Irvine IUUlOlmCed it filed a
regiatratlon statement with the Securltlea and Exchanae Commiaion covering the propoeed sale of
505,000 ah8ft:9 of common atock.
Of theee 380,000 will be offered by the company
and by eel.Ung shareholders. The offering will be
manaae d by Robertson, Colman , Stephens &
Woodman.
Prtntronix des1gns, manufactures and market.'I
medium and low-speed line print.era for uae with
minl-a>mputera, microcomputeni and other small
computer systems.
Business shows set
"Freedom '82," compute r shows for amall
busineaees spol'l.IOred by IBM's national marketing
division, will be held at four locationa in Los Angeles
and Orange counties this week.
Show locations and dates are: Disneyland Hot.el
Convention Cen ter , today through Thursday;
California Apparel Mart (110 .East 9th St. in Los
Angeles), May 26-28; the Los Angeles Airport Hyatt
hotel, May 26-29, and the Pasadena Center, also May
26-29. Show times at each location are 9 a.m.· 7 pm.
Nestande to speak
Orange County Supervisor ch airman Bruce
Nestande will be the speaker at a luncheon of the
Orange County Regional Purchasing Council on
Wedneeday at the Conestoga Inn. Anaheim.
Irvine firm relocates
C harlto n Associates has moved rn to its
15,000-aquare-foot pilot facility in the Irvine Industrial
Complex-F.ast.
lnstallation is proceeding of a proprie tary
three-step integrated production line which will
fabricate and certify rigid 5 V.-inch di.9cs
Computer seminar held
More than 100 executives from en ergy,
engineering and financial corporations and
organizations attended a seminar on advanced
computerized project management syl1.ems held by
POINT 4 Data Corporation of lrvine during the
Offahore Technology Conference at Houston.
New program announced
DPCS, lnc. of Newport Beach has Introduced its
SYSGUARD program, an approach to providing
clients with systems programmers on a retainer fee
basis.
Design firm hired
INTERRARC, an architecture, plann.i.llj and interior
design firm of Beverly Hills, has been oommi.ssioned to
prepare space planning and working drawings for
CUBtorn showrooms in the $12 million Design Cent.er
South rising in Laguna Niguel
Construction began this month and completion is
scheduled early 1983 for the 400,000-square-foot
commercial furnishings complex at La Paz Road and
San Diego Freeway developed by Birtcher Pacific,
Laguna Niguel, developers of Pacific Design Cent.er inn
West Loa Angeles.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
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SILVER
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.
J , . •
I .,
\ • '
Goltz,
Mauch
reunited
From AP d11pa~et
Right-handed pitcher Dave
Goltz. cut from the Loa Anples
Dodgera while they a\1.ll owed
him ~$1.7 million, ataned with the
Angela M onday for the
major-leaaue minimum annual
salary of $33,500.
Whatever Goltz, 32, earns with
the Angela will be subtracted
from the amount owed him by
the Dodgen, a apokesman for the
Dodgen said.
Mike Port, vice president of
the Angela, announced the
signinJ( of the veteran pitcher,
who Will report to the Angela on
Thunday.
THE ANGELS a.1ao announced
Monday that right-handed
reliever Don A.aae waa suffering
from a slight strain in his right
elbow and he should be ready to
pitch when the club returns from
a road trip Thunday.
A 20-game winner with
Minnesota in 1977, Goltz never
had a losing season in the
American League, where he had
a 96-79 record.
Following the 1978 aeuon he
became a free -sent and signed a
multi-million dollar contract with
Los Angeles, estimated at $3.1
million for six years.
He was only 9-19 ln the
National League, including 0-1
with a 4.91 earned-run average
this year before being releaaed.
"PETER O'MALLEY
(Dodgers' owner) recommended
we sign Goltz," said Buzzie
Bavaai, Angels' executive vice
president. "Al Campanis
(Dodgen' vice president) told me
the same thing. He felt Goltz
would fare better In the
American League where there
are fewer artificial surfaces."
Port added, "It doesn't aeern
equitable to sign a player of
Goltz' stature to a minimum
figure, but really that's the
standard industry policy that
we're just following ln this
particular instance.
"We feel a player ahould be
paid Vfhat he'• worth. However,
in the past we've been bu.med
twice. We're atlll paying Jim
Barr under the terms of our
contract. while San Frandaoo is
ying him the minimum aalary. ~o years ago we released Ken
Brett and the Dodgen signed
him for the minimum.''
Goltz will be reunited with his
fonner Manager, Gene Mauch,
who was the m anager at
Minneaota.
The pitcher said: "My main
reason for signing with the
Angela waa Mauch. I feel he
knowa me and vice vena. He's
going to know whether I can still
pitch. There is no question in
either of our minds.
"It should be an easy step for
me to take, coming back into the
American League. It's not like
jumping into a new league. I
know a lot of the hitters.''
Johnstone cut
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Loa Angeles Dodgen have asked
waiven on outfielder Jay
Johnstone for the purpose of
giving him his unconditional
release and recalled outfielder
Ron Roen.icke from Albuquerque
of the PecWc Coast League, the
National League club announced
Monday night.
Ironically, the move, effective
Tue.lay, was announced after
the 35-/ear-old Johnatone
collecte his fir~t h it of the
~ a run-acorina double, in
Loa An1ele1' 9 -3 loaa to
Plu.burgh Monday night.
Johnstone wu 1-for-13 this
year after batUn1 .289 aa a
pinc b -htuer last year and
deJiverlnC a key home nan 1n the
fourth pme of the 1981 World
Seriea.
ANCELS, SOX
WASHED AWAY
l1llJPllat
TVllOAV, MAY H, tlH H/F
C8
OCC, GWC poised for tourney
Pirates, Rustlers open play Wednesday in state eliminations
By CURT SEEDEN .
ottMOelfr ...........
LONG BEACH -It WU juat
one )'Ml' ago that Orange c.out
Collep had a run 1n with Laney
College in the state community
college bueball tournament here
at Blair Field.
And the Eagles from Oakland
promptly handed Coach Mike
Mayne's No. 1 seeded Pirates a
~-ending 8-5 defeat in the
tournament semifinals.
Well, the same two teams are
back again for the 1982 veralon of
the state tournament, but thla
time they'll aquare off in the flnt
round -Wednesday afternoon
at 3, ap.1n at Blair Field. Joining
them in the eight-team field are
Coach Fred Hoover'• Golden
W•t Colle1e Ruatlera.
G WC , the Southern Cal
Conference champion, la .eeded
fifth ln the tourney and will
aquare off Wedneaday evening
at Blair Field againat N o. 4
leeded LA valley I a perennial
viaitor to the atate tournament
which came the cloeest to a state
champlonah lp two years ago
when OCC beet the Monarchs in
the championship game.
Wedneeday'a action beg1na at
11 a.m. at C.errltm College when
No. 3 eeed Canyons (27 -8) faces
No. 6 seed Merced (28-11). At 3
p.m. at Cerrltoe, it will be No. 7
aeed Citrus (25-14) -which
nipped Saddleback'College in the
~on C.onference Shaughneeay
playoffs to advance -against No.
2 seeded Sacramento City
College (30-6).
Despite its No. 8 seeding,
Laney, second pl.ace finisher ln
the Golden Gate Conference, has
the ability to knock off anybody
Ma~ewama.
• fhey're not a power-hittina
turn, but they hit the ball well
and they have excellent team
speed. We'll have to play a aolld
game to beat them. We can't
afford to give anything," Mayne
aaya.
I The Pirates (32-7) advanced to
the atate tournament by winning
the South Coast Conference
championship and then knocking
off Cerritos in their thira
Shaughneley Playoff game.
Laney advanced the hard way
-finlahlng aecond in i ta
conference and then winning
four stralRht Shaughnessy
gamea, lnc ludln1 two over
conference champion San Joee
City Colleee.
Outfielder Reagle Moaley,
labeled a one-man wrecking
crew, leads Laney with a .434
batting averqe, 11 doublea, 43
RBI and 26 atolen ba.ea.
OCC la expected to go with
either Ken Santoro (3-0, 2.76
ERA) or Rich Sorell90n (1-1, 5.34
ERA), ln the first game. Mayne
says he'll save ace Jack Reinholtz
for the aecond game In .the
double-ellmlnation tourney.
The Plratea bout a .312 team
batting ave rage and a lineup
wt)ich includes .300 hittel"I at
every position except fi..nrt hue
where Scott Darling is hitting
.293.
LA can't find
deliverance
Relievers rocked again
NET RESULT -UC Irvine's Maria Myers and
Jim Snyder recently participated in the NCAA
Division I singles championships. Myers and
Snyder are only the seventn and eighth
players in the UC Irvine's 17-year history to
qualify for the event.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Chuck Tanner, the manager of
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 90Wlded a
little like the man in the
aftershave commercial who slaps
his face and says, ''Thanks, I
needed that."
After the Pirates ' Don
Robinson had hurled the club's
first complete game of the
season, a 9-3 victory over Los
Angeles on Monday night,
Tanner remarked, "We really
needed that one. Yeah, that was
something we really needed, and
Robbie threw hard all night."
Robinson, who effectively
ecattered 10 Los Angeles hits to
recrd his fifth win without a loea,
said, "That'• the best rve thrown
all year.''
Dodger Manager Tom Laaorda IJli&ht have aaia the same thing
about hia starter, Dave Stewart,
but not about his bullpen.
With the acore tied, 2-2, after
aix innino. the Pirates erupted
against the Dodgers' relievers,
parading 11 batters to the plate.
tight reached base and six
scored.
Tom Niedenfuer, 1-2, who got
the lQll, entered the ame with a
0.82 earned run average but by
the time he left, seven batters
later, it was 4.63.
Lee Lacy, the fonner Dodger,
broke the tie with a two-out,
two-run double.
"I've gotten the opportunity to
play the last two weeks with so
many guys disabled," he said.
"Luckily, rve come up with some
big hita. But we do miss Dave
Parker."
Jason Thompson slugged his
12th homer, in the ninth inning
off of Ted Power, the fifth Los
Angeles pitcher.
Prior to the game Los Angeles
announced that veteran pitcher
Burt Hooton was being placed on
the 21 -day disabled lis t.
retroactive to last TueBday, and
the DodRera had purchased the
co ntra c t o f 3 9 -year-o ld
right-hander Vicente Romo from
Coatzcoalcos of the Mexican
League, where he was 7-0 with
five shutouts.
Pitching the aecond game of
the aeries tonight will be former
Dodger Rick Rhoden, 2-4, for
Pittsburgh and F e rnando
Valenzuela, 5-4, for Los Angeles.
Winfield
to sue
NY owner
NEW YORK (AP) -New
York Yankees outfielder Dave
Winfield is suing club owner
George Steinbrenner, charging
that he failed to donate nearly
half the amount of prescribed
money to Winfield's charitable
foundation.
Winfield'• lawyer, Lawrence
S . Blumberg, said he planned to
file suit today charging that
Steinbrenner contributed only
$1 55 ,000 to the David M .
Winfield Foundation. He
contends that Steinbrenner was
supposed to donate $300,000 a
year und e r t e rms o f an
agreement r e a c hed when
Winfield signed a $21-million
contract with the Yankees.
"He hasn't fulfilled some of his
basic obligations to us," Winfield
said Monday night. "This has
nothing to do with Winfield
playing on the field, but it's
setting us back, especially with
kids in the health-are area."
Steinbrenner could not be
reached for comment, but Edwin
T. Broderick, general counsel for
the Yankees, confinned that he
has been discussing the issue
with Winfield's lawyers.
Stepping up to the big time Top honors .to Dvorak,
NCAA championships: an experience for UCI's Myers, Snyder Laguna Beach
~JOHN SEVANO Both UCI participants survived first Snyder, who la aeli deacribed as a "grit .._Prioo..,~~~ onl six 1 ln round contests before hitting their and grind player," can do almoet any\hinR
r to wua eeaaon, Y 1DX Payers respective walls in the second. on the court. In fashioning a 33-12 i-ecord
the 17-year history of UC Irvine had ever "I'm going in there to play the ball and this year, he won the PCA.A singles title ci~ to~ 'the NCAA Division I linglee not the peraon on the other side of the net," and waa named the conference's Most
c In P;~~~ the Anteaters matched co~nted M~ers. "For a long time I was Valuable Player.
third of that,to1al. more into playma the person than the ball. THE 5-4 11 .. POUND Myers who ended °iim Snyder and Maria Myers may not "It'• totally a mental game. The big her campalgn at 26-11, was ~ble to play
have llChieved what they aet out to do last ..-ne of the top players, unlike Snyder,
week -wblch waa win their respective Wbat I bave to do is learn early in the .-on but lllCked the intestinal singles titles -but what they learned from fortitude nerN1ery to beet her foes.
their experience may be of tar greater to play one match at a time. I "What I have to do ii learn to play one
importance 1n the future. hatte to talce it as little stej,s :k~t :! u~pa~=-~ i:i~ to
WHAT THE TWO of them hopefully toward a big goal. "I want to be No. l tn the natbi That'•
walked away with was a better -Mlw1a~ the ultimate pl for me. But what rm of themlelv.. their .,._ ao'nc to have to do to eet that la a lot of
--• w~ U I can learn juai to get out of the ~,the q ty of competition at the top names. the people who were cocky, U9ed to wayrand .• , let ti happen it wtn be 90 much .. ~ affect me. Sut not anymore." euSe
Both playera, J,llt bei.fore leevlna lut Part of the duo's dlfficulty in prepartnc Myen fllw-lhe!a on a par with the
week. exsa e ed limilu'vlewl -ancf fears for IUCh an event, Snyder pointed out, wu other playen pbyllcally, tt'• the mental
-• to what lt would take to play .,.tnat. the PCAA'1 lnablllty to provide quallty ~ that •ta them apart . • . and lhe feela '~l~ven•t been able to play ti-. IUY. oppc.iUon. . ahe'a clcm to •ttalnlna that leYe1, too.
and when you don't play the belt lfa hard SNYDER, RAN~l'!D No. 40 ln the .. I REALIZE NOl'lllNG ...,....-. me
to 0lmprow.11 M&d Snyder, .&l1na that the eollepate rankl, Mid it's dlfflcult to adjust now from the other~ eaepe for the ~10 ii ,.....Uy reprded • bioMUnc ~ to a bicbel' standard of play when you've mental ~·· 11'9 the 19-yw-.old
bllt .i.nt. ''ObYloullY, tfei Y. pla~br ~pac.d at a Jower Nit fell' much ot the junior. "J'ct' me. •am II a jowMy, not
• pme .. to °"·" tellQD. the dMUnadcn." WM a 0 player -''About mid HMOll I Wiii Up around 30," SoydW• pl Wiii to wtn the na1lanall,
UCLA!t ......,_-,\be tournament'• ht llid, "but tbat'• when we wwe .~ but ht .,.. UC> reallillC ~ to th""I
No. 2 lied --that tMlmped Snyder fram non~ matobel and the oppolldcln off an.YthlNI 1-tlMiD .-.-. ·~tkii wtth • M. &-1, &-1 vtctiory. 'w• ld.ftw. ""1be nad'ONll lta.-t ......-.-. but
''Whm tbe '*"-IDOi "*"* I had no JOU cu ~ Ill ovailllduwed t.Mn,t' when to 9f' bu& cloWn. &v.i ~ the , ~ tM )mlar. "I -. bow amiy
OCllDDl'd1kiD II .,.d/ln Gidlr' to~~ people t•••mber who made th•
yww·;ait ·to Jli!IJ.;. top ~" quarwflnall 1111 )'llU'T"'
Rudy Dvorak leads a quartet
of Laguna Beach High volleyball
stars earning AU-{::IF honors
with Plarer of the Year laurels
after leading the .Artista to thar
aecond straight CI F
clwnpionahip.
~rak. a eetter, la j>ined on
the Urat team by middle
blocker and bitter Neil Riddell,
while aecond and third team
honon go to junior Leif Hamon
and aenior Chria Larson,
rapedively.
A1.o eeminc tint team hcmon
from the Ora.nee eo.t area are
Marina Hlah'• Andy Klumnum
and Costa kea'• Mark Arnold.
Pau.l Coenen of Costa MeM
Wiil IJ'Ulted a .xnd team berth,
alone wtth r.tanda HIP'• Doua Pinckney, a junior.
Tblrd team boon went to
Fountain Valley't John ~·
Dvorak beco!M9 th• MOOftfS ltni&ht Llluna BMch .... to ...,_ -P&ayW of tbe Yew bonon.'
Is Tony Conigliaro
making a miracle?
From AP dttMtCbtl
BOSTON . -ll'ormer \)&Hball •
aluger Tony Contallaro. ln a coma for more than four montha, Ml t.alked to family members, and docton were
"cautioualy optim.latlc" about hi.a recovery, hi.a
brother said Monday nlaht.
"It'1 ~·It rnlly la. We've been atvin8
him vitamin.a,' aald Richie Coni1llaro, the
brother. "I said to one of hi.a doctora today, 'Well,
I think It must be the
vttamlna.' He said, 'it'• not the
vitamin•. It'• a miracle
becau.e I can't exolain how he'• dolna thia' .••
Dr . Maximilian
Kaulbach, Conlsllaro'a
pbyaician, waa not
immediately available for
comment.
Conialiaro, 37, was
co-m1uo admitted to Mauachusetta
General after aufferfna •heart attack Jan. 9. Kia
heart had stopped for "perhaps three to five
minutes" before he sot to the hospital, where the
heartbeat waa restored, DeSanctis said.
A lack of oxysen to the brain can cause
brain dam.&${e.
Quote of the day
Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns, on hi.a team's acheduled game with
the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiden next
season: "Maybe we'll send the defenae to
Los Angeles aod the offenae to Oakland.''
Favorites r~ll at French Open
PARIS -The French Open ~
Tennis Tournament got under way
Monday w1th few surprises and no
upseta.
Ivan Lendl of Cz:ec.hoalovakia and
Argentina's Guillermo Vilas and Joee Luis Clerk,
the second, t.hlrd and fourth aeeda, respectively,
posted straight-set victories to move into the
second round of the two-week clay court
tournament at Part.' Roland GUT'09 Stadium.
The 22-year-old Lendl, who ia attempting to
win the fihit Grand Slam event of his career,
raced to a 6-0, 6-4, 6-1 first-round victory over
Fernando Maynetto of Peru.
Hoyt reooide ninth etralght win
............ ,.. ihe ~ ~·· Ill wtnn1npl\ pttchec'. "*hid hll Nnth
•tnllhl t.rlum M the WhUa
lox dtfea&:f'xanu ~onday
nt1ht1 8-1, to take IOle pOIHlllOn Of the
American lMiUe Weit \Md. Hoyt extended hll
two-leUon l\rina to 14 vict.ortM without defMt
and now hu a caner mark of 18...0 at ComSaby
Park. Hoyt, a 27·yev-old riaht-hander with a
27-0 career recotd 1eattered tlfD~ etsht hit.a. w~ one and
ttnack out elaht. He ht.a • Jeuue-lMdin.1-1.46 ERA ...
Wn 'ftonlM'1 three-run
homer ln the fin\ tnntna and LHDf Barktr'~ four-hlt p1tch1Jll lpl.l'ked Cleveland to
a 9·2_~ over Mmn.ota
. . . Gal')' ROnlckt tuld t~
hit.I, lncludina • home run, "°" and drove ln two runa,
helplns Baltimore to(l. Toronto, 7-& •• ,.
M1nnet0ta outfielder Jim Elaeonl9 worked out
with the team Monday, the flnt ance entertnc
the hcepUal for • nervaua c:lllo.rder May 9 ...
Outfielder Larry eena. of Detroit ral8ed hi.a
batting avenge 39 polnta to .329 1ut week and
wu named the lfque'1 Player of the Week.
Herndon had 13 bita in " at-beta, includina a double, two triples and Uwe home runa.
Hooton aldellned for 21 days
Bart Booton wu p1acecl on the •
Dodgen' 21-d.ay dJ.ubled llat Monday
and veteran riaht-hander Vleeate
Romo was obtained from the Mexican t.ea,ue u
a replacement for Hboton, who la Wlderaoina
treatment for a bone aj>\,&r In hia right ~
Hooton la 1-2 with a 4.94 ERA ... Ellewhere in
the National League Monday, Bo Dlu homered
and drove In three nma to
help Steve CarUoa beat
Cincinnati for the flnt time In
more than two years, 9-1 . . .
'Blll Glllllcbon and Woo4y
Frymaa combined on an
eight-hitter aa Montreal
•t()pped Houston, 2-0 . . .
EW1 Valeadae drove In bia
fint runa of the aeuon with a
two-run homer u the New
MOOTOM York Meta recorded a 5-3
victory over Atlanta ... Rappert Joaea went
3-for-3 with 3 RBI and San Diego took
advantage of three Chica&o Cuba elTOl"'I to record
an 8-2 win . . . J~ A.adlllu pitched his
second shutout of the 11eaaon with a slx-hltter.
and Wlllle McGee led the St. Louis attack with a
single and lrij>le u San Franciaco went down. 6--0
. . . Pitcher Randy Joees of the New York Meta,
In boosting hi.a won-lost record to ~2 last week,
waa named the league'• Player of the Week:
Jones had a 2-0 record, including h1a 19th career
shutout.. a four-hitter apLnai the A.stroe ... BW
Bacber oft.be Chicago Cube and Manager Lee
Ella got Into a fight Monday ni8ht after the aixtb
inning of a game won by the San Diego Pad.res,
8-2. "I had some words with Mr. Buckner and I
didn't like the way he responded," Elia said of
the shoving match.
BaeebaU today
0n um datie tn b••~ Ln 1861:
Htahly tou&.td New ark Olanta' rook.le
WWJi Mayt went O·for-5 Jn htl rna.Jor !_~a1u.• debut H &he Olanta b11& the
~lphla PhWMI 8-0 at 8hlbe Park.
On thJa date ln 193'7:
Detroit catcher-manaaer Mickey
Cochrane waa beaned~New York Yankeell' pitcher Bu.mp , an lnJw'y
that would nd hil Hall of playtna
career.
On thll date ln 1916:
Babe Ruth ot the Baeton Bnvea belted
three homen. lnclud1na the t74th -and ' 1ut -homer of hla career, a tdwel'l.n8 drive
off Guy ~ that landed on the ClJatant
rfaht field roof at J'orbtl l'ltlcl. Ruth'•
thrM homon weren't enouah to keep the
BravH from 101lna to the Pittsburgh
Pirata, 11-7.
Today'• birthda)'I! ·
San Dlee<> pitcher John MontefUICO ii 32. Hou.at.on pitcher Bob Knepper ii 28.
Knight to coach U.S. Olymplana?
Bobby ltal1U of Indiana • Unlvenity has been recommended to
c:oech the 1984 U.S. ~teamln
the Loi Anaelea Oly,mplc1. 'l'he
recommendaUon waa made by the men'• games
committee of the Amateur Buketball
A9odation-USA. and ii expected to be approved,
accordina to ClQPlmitte cha1rroan Brice Dubin
... Undefeated GerrJ Cooney sparred alx
rou.nda dUl'tng two workout
lelDona Moncfay for h.ls June
11 World Boxing Council
heevywelght title bout with
champion Lury Holmes In
Lu Vegas . . . An athletic
board aubcommittee endoned
an lnveatlgatlve report
clearlna the Florida State
baaketbell J>l'Oll'UD of most
~ leveled by • former
-.cf player but called fol' further
Investigation of a cbeerie.der'a vildt to a potential
recruit . . . 0octora aay they will not operate OD
Baltimore Cotta llnebacbr be w..a, who wu
felled laat week by a bullet that left him
earalyz:ed from the neck down . . . Metro
Collfereaee athletic directon rejected a COllChee'
propoal for a 30-eecond ahot dock and a 19-foot
three-polni play ... The OenWS' Nucgeta have
withdrawn their coninct offer to veteran center
Du hael which reportedly waa in the $500,000
range, t.bua ending their efforta to sign him
before the National Buketblill A.oclation'a
free-.,ent market beg1nl. "It WU a food offer,
but It'• been rejected and withdrawn,' I.el said.
''There'• the chance I mlaht wind up with le.."
Television, radio .
TV: No eventa acbeduled.
RADIO: Bueball -Ancell at Boston, 4:30
p.m., KMPC (710); Pittaburah at Dodgen, 7:30
p.m., KABC (790).
Lakers bored, want to play again
Frem AP dlapatct.ea
The Loe Angeles Lakers, who have spent more
time waiting than playing during the National
Basketball A.odatlon playoffs, are alad they will
face the Philadelphia 76el"I in the cfwnpionship
series.
we'd be playing the Slxen Sunday in the fint ~ f0ur-game sweep of San Antonio ln the Wesiern
game, eo all our preparadonl were In that di.rec:tion. Conference finals. .
tm just relieved that their aeries ii aver." "I can't afford to won')' about a layoff,'' Riley
U the 76era could have beaten Boston in the said." . fifth or sixth game of their F.utern Conference We just have to keep wor~. We have
final seriee laat week, the championship aeries veteran bAilplayen and a la)'Off WCJO t affect them
The Laken don't necesearily believe the 76el"I
are an eMier opponent than the Boston Celtics
would have been. It'• just that Los Angeles has
been rreparin& longer for Philadelphia.
would have started last Sunday. But on that day, as m~ as it would affect a younger team.
Philadelphia. which collapaed against Boston a year , 'The players a.re bored and juat ~ant to play.
ago after taking a 3-1 lead.' had to play a eeventh Its been ao ~ 1ince we played I just hope we
game, which it won, 120-106 at Boston f9C Us fourth rememherTh. Lakhow. ho L--t 1DL11_..1_1 ... r..1 .. In · " really didn't care who we played,'' said
Lakel"I Coach Pat Riley. "But we had been gearing
up to play Philadelphia ever since they took a 3-1
series lead. We knew it was a real poeaibility that
and clinching . to e era, w uaa ~ w..a.-.M: .,.... 8lX
V1C ry. games In the 1980 championahip aeries, have
Now. the opener of the final aeries will be ahowed ln th1a yeu-'1 plaYofb why they bad the
Thunday, 12 days since the Lakel"I finiahed a beat regular-aeum reCOrd (68-24) in the Western Conference.
Indy requires one more test
New coupling valve may prevent fire in the pits
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Four-lap time trials Meara, the 1979 winner and the pole-position
were not the final qualification runs for the 33 can starter In Sunday'• race, suffered aerloua fad.al
that will start Sunday's Indianapolis SOO. The crew bums when fuel 1pl.aahed onto hi.a car'• engine. He
members of each entry still must pus one more test and two of his crew memben who al8o were
before the cars are allowed to race. sprayed by the burning fuel were hospitalized af1er
The objective is not speed, but prevention of the incident.
fire in the pita, the dreaded result of an errant drop · 11\ere were several other inddenta involving
of racing fuel ignited by the lntenae heat from the fire during the Indy race and at other Indy-car
cars' engines. events last year, although none resulted in an
It's a new test mandated thia year by the U.S. injury as terious as the one to Mean, who has bad
Auto Club, to make sure each crew ii familiar with to undergo two rounda of pluUc surgery and •YI he
the operation of a new coupling valve between the eventually will have more work done on his
fuel tanks and the cara. lt'a a l~mlnute procedure di.sfi~ ncl9e.
that could save livt!ll. ''Obviowly, the thin.kina about a new fuel
.. WE WANTED a posltive locking connection I valve started right aft.er the 1D81 Indy race,'' Ayres
that could be broken away from the car, with a said Monday. "Why were we having fire?
aecondarv aafetv valve behind lt to limit fuel Det.ennining various cau.es takes considerable time.
1ptllage and fire that could reault," aay1 Dave
Ayrm, president of the CallfornJa'-baaed Induction
S)'lt.e!N. Inc., and the designer of the new valve.
"'11le way race can are today, any fuel spillage
resulta in fire, period."
Except for a brief practke .-on Thunday,
the lndJanapolla Motor Speedway tnck will be
clmed until raoe day. USAC, however, will be
fating the crewa on the new fueling operation
throuahout the week. ·
1'M! development of the valve, wbicb aea1a
aut.omaUcally lf there'• any trouble in the smooth
delivery of fuel to the race car er in the coupllna
.. and uncoupling of the fuel hme. ... prompted by a
~ pit fire 1aat year durina a refueling st.op by
Rick Mean.
'
"I TOOlt THE STATE of the art that we have
achieved and looked at the areas we had problems
in," M 'continued. "l tried to run a 11.tuation where
we analyzed the complete system, from the luel
tank to the car and back apin."
I
The NBA record for conaecutlve playoff
with four-game tweepe each time, to become the
first Ume in NBA hi8tory to capture two straight
best-of-aeven eerlea without • lo..
The NBA record fr conaecutive playoff
victories is nine, aet by the Minneapolia Lakers,
who won the last game o1the1949 playfia and the
first eiS(ht of the1950 ~
Painful ring?
PITI'SBURGH (AP) -WW all thoee Super
Bowl victories be 1 too taxina for the Pittsburgh
Steelers?
Steelen offidala and playen say the Internal
Revenue Service recently notified playen that
thoee memben of the 1979 and 1980 championship
teams must pay federal taxee on the value of their
Super Bowl rtnp.
The rings. made of gold and dWnonda, are
worth aevenll thouand dollan each. IRS offidala refuaed comment on the matter,
but a 1poke1woman in Pittaburgh said, "We
con.alder the value of all aood• and 1ervicea
received. not jull w~ or ulartes, to be income."
"I certainly didn t know I had to declare it as
income," one former player, who asked not to be
Identified, told The Pittaburgh Poat-Gazette
Mooday.
Zorn has
sights set
Olympics her goal
By CURT SEEDEN Ofltw.,._,......,.
J'or a pel"IOn with eyeal,ht dlalJ"ClNd at 20/~, • 17 -year-old TNcha Zorn o Mllaion Viejo baa her
liahtl aet on aome clearly fOCUMd .coals.
A awlmmer for the Ml .. ton Viejo Nadado,..
lince the ap of nine. TNcha haa a busy year aheed
of her, with the Lona Coune Senior NatJonala ln
lndl.anapolia and the World Gamet triala ln M1ll1on
v~~. .
THERE'S ALSO h e r freshman year at
Washington St.ate University, compliments of a
swim acholarahtp. And by the time ahe'a 19, there'•
a •hot at the 1984 Olympic.. ,
That's not a bad itinerary for the future of a
girl who ii considered legally blind.·
"l don't consider thia a handicap. My mom
hasn't treated me as a handJcapped penon." ahe
waa saying Friday, momenta
before participating in the South
Coast League swim final.a at
Saddleback College.
Besides swimming for the
Nadadores, Triacha swims for
Mission Viejo High -as many
Nadadores do. Her specialty is
the backstroke. She looks like an
ordinary swimmer but hardly
swims in an ordinary fashion.
TRISCHA WAS BORN without 1.ri1ia in her
eyes., a condition known as aniridla. Her eyes are
alwaya dilated, and the sensation is one of intense
brlghtne81.
Her swimming is unaffected. Last year as a
junior, she finiahed third in the 100 backstroke at
the CIF Championships. She was sixth in the 100
butterfly at the same competition. Thia past
~ampaign she went 1:00.04 in the 100 back, .
finishing second in the championship finals to help
her Mission Viejo teammates to the team
championship.
It'a obvious Tnscha has fit right in with
wtnnen, whether they be on her high school swim
team or on Mark Schubert's acclaimed Nadadores.
HER SWIM career began when she was six .
Her older list.er Lisa brought home a newspaper
clipping noting that the Tustin-based Southern Cal
Swim Club was Interested in new members.
It was while she was competing for SoCa1 that
Triacha 1aw and met the younger age group
Nadadore1 swimmers. She soon joined the
Nadadorea.
She had her share of problems when she first
started swimming, especially the backstroke.
"When I was little, I'd miacount the strokes and
run into the wall," she recalls. ''It's kind of a
science. It took me several times to get it right. but
I finally got smart."
TRISCRA WILL be 19 when she attempta to
qualify for the 1984 Olympics. There was a time,
when that age signaled the over-the-hill era for
many Olympk hopefuls.
''A couple of years ago, they said that onoe you
become 19 or 20, you're going to be burned out." she
says. "But now, it seems the college level girls do
better than the younger girls.
Triacha ia awimming at 5 a.m. every morning,
and by the time the day is over, she's put in 5Yt
hours of awtmming.
Her goal is to major in physical education at
Washington State. She'd like to specialize in
physical education for the blind.
SHE'S PARTICIPATED in the swim nationals
for the past three years and doesn't figure on
missing this year's nationals at Austin, Tex.
Trischa lives a normal life. She attends Mission
Viejo Hig'h, reads books with enlarged printing and
uses a special magnifying glass to see ~ on the
blackboard.
When she goes to Washington State as a
freshman, she'll live in a dorm and share her room
with another swimmer, Connie Michelson of
Seattle.
"It's an athletic donn and I'll be with a lot of
incoming swtmmers. And, aU my classes will be
pretty cloee together. It's not a huge campus at
Pullman. .a it will be a lot easier to get around," she
lldds.
Skeet shoot slated·
Hoag Memorial Hoepital's 552 Club will host
the first annual Invitational Stag Shoot Wednesday,
June 9, with prooeeda benefiting Hoag Hospital.
The skeet ahoot tournament. will be held at the
Coto de Cua Hunt Lodge in Trabuco Canyan.
Uslng the standard trap and skeet ahootina
range, the shoot wlll ouer vanous games which
have been created to provide target practice fol'
wing shooting. Offered at the shoot will be: duck
tower, c:rary quail, mlni-ecrap, and continental.
A raffle will be held and more than $4,000 in
prizes and awards will be given to event winners
and door-prir.e winnen. . . I . . . • ' • " . '
l
.. '
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114 a 4 ' I
cu .:::r:f' wub 1n1 tnnd of
ea1l they own. 11 on • tD the Ofte•detlJD t7 J• Of
competition, where only the
man\&facturen board cu be \met
1" • ,...na.
Laat yeu th• boa.rdulllna
bu•lnHI WH loaded ~tth, COQtlOYWIJ. Patlllt batdll ... beAnl wqed by 1ome .UboMd
comp.nlel while othen beaMne
patent Ucen.tee1 aCC'Q(dtnc '°
Boardtalltn1 USA executive
cllrecWr G. Mk:hael :hJ.r who
beUeYw the patent dilput81 Ml
forestalled the Loa An11l11
Olympe OranlDna Oammlttee'•
final approval of the 1port'1
lnclu1lon ln the Olympic
y llChtina pmea.
BoudalJJna USA WM cr.ted
tb!a year by tive major aallboarcl
campanm tDllle wfth a patent
l.lcerile and 80lne withou~th.at
reco1nlsed the need for an
impartial. non-proflt to help put
board1ailln1 In ltl proper
perspective, 8CCOl"d1ng to Fair.
· Fou.nding Spon80I" memben of
BUSA are "'Bk Leisure Producta,
Inc.; Freeull by O'Brien
International (a Coleman
company) and Magnum
Downwind, manufacturer of
Sailrider.
• MR••eo • 101111
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HIGH FL YIN' -Laguna Beech High'• Liu Fegraua dllplaym
her form in the high jump event at the CIF championahlpe
'
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Saturday. Feg:raua finished aecond in the women's 2-A division
with a jump of 5-4.
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Sea Kings
take third
in CIF golf
CAMARILLO SPRINGS -
Solid depth provided big
dividends foe c.oroo. del Mar
High'• golf team Monday .. the
Sea K1np fWahed third at the
CIF team champion1hifa at
Camarillo Spring• Gol and
Country Club, qualifying the Sea
K1no to compete In the state finaia June 7 .
Redlands High oaptured the
CIF Southern Section
championahip with a total of 378
ltrOlus, one better than Loyola.
Carona del Mar WU third at 384
and Arcadi.a WU fourth. The top
four qualify {(¥ ~ .iate finala. -
Corona del Mar, Which WU
seoood to Univendty High in Sea
View 1..-gue play, went after
~ 71 oou.ne in methodical
Ted Norby led the way with a
74, followed by &.:Ge Schmene
(75), Jeff Wrl&ht (76), .run Light
(77) and Cary Spedooi (82).
"We played w:ry well," aid
CdM C.ollCb Jack &rion. ·'Tbme
are very good 9COreS on a 69.2
rated oou.ne. ''
Wrtaht, Norby and Spadoni,
qualified to compete in the
individual CIF finals at El Prado
in Chino.
The top 22 from that
competition qualify for the state
finala at .l!.a l.:aballero m '.l'anana,
which alao includes team Cilay, which Corona del Mar qua fled
for on Monday.
Region 144
sign-ups set
American Youth Soccer
Oronization(AYSO)Regioo144
wtil bold m,n-ups foe the 1982-83
IMmr1 June 5 and June 12 from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at University
Park Community Park (behind
the library). •
Thia f'ellon lncludea all Irvine.
Younaster'I (boya and pll) 5-15
yeus of 9, who live IOUth of
Barranca. Every effort la made to
place kld1 on nei1hborhood
teame, but It ii not guaranteed .
Pee Wee teams (thole kidl born
ln 1G78 or '77) are co-ed.
The '30 regi1tration fee 1
includes 1hirt, 1horu, aocka,
photo• and trophle1. A blrth '
certificate ta required for t.boae
new to the l'e8lon.
A YS0'1 p6Jloeophy 11 that
everyone playa. IO in order to do ~t panntl mull YOhanteer to be
coach••· aaalatant coacbea, > referee• and 1upportive a
ptl!l'IOlmel. Train1na r .aom are " liven yearly to lie~c::velop f
cnechlric and ~--l'or turtber infonnatkln. phone
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·
1
111. Piiot, Mflt ti, Nnl 1. I. 111_1~ Ttlll ... ,....,. .. w Nld ..-IN ty °""' of OtlllOI Coul!IY on ----..MUC---NO-TICl ___ ...;..1 21u.u
U1!0-ll ~ Oilftl Of C>nilWI County on May 14, 1812. -~~TITl~MMl~~,..;.;.;....--1 Alltil ft, ,Ill. '~ PIO I.,._.. IUNW OOUWT OP 1'MI
1----.. -.,-.,.-------"'"" Publltllld Orenge 00111 Dilly NAlill tTAftlll.NT ITAT& OP 0AUP0NU '°" t----~---""-'-----Pllbllflld Otlrlll ~ Dlltf flllot. Pllo, MtY 11. H. June 1, 1, 1"2, Tiii tottowlng pe11on It dolnt 1'MI CCM*TV or OM.Miii Mey 4, 11, 11, II. 1ta 11P .. 2 bl.lliMM u . -·TO· ~0 .. ,_ ION-a KIM'I IMPO..T.J. IOO, Hlltl« --------------P\11.JC MOTIC( l!Yd., Oolll M--. '-iA t2t:17. Pott 0MAM0a OP MAMa
;;mnoue.,... ..
..... ITATDmCT
The followlnO ~ -doing ~u.: C'EST LA VIE CAFE. 373 South Cout Hwy., L1guna Baacll, C1 .
t28'1
PWlJC NOTICl KIL aoo KIM . 1210 Ru111 In the Mentt Of t11e ~tiott OI IUNlllOR COURT OP 1'M1 Street, ~. CA 11770 OANll.L ICO'l'T KIMM'. 1 Minor, "°'"IOUt ..... ITAft °" ~ Thie bu9IW It oond\IC1ed by tn by OH09'AH •• MALLAMO, Hit
.... .--·--flOA THI lndMdull. P-.nt. '« otMlftQI Of ...,,., -...... _. °°""" °' Of'ANCll KM IOO Kim Tiii 199lloeflon ol OANllL ~~ ..... per90lll .,. dOltlO • .. ...... .. .. ™" ttattMtftl ... Ned wlttl IN aeon KMIPT •• titlnOJ, by DE·
'"HQOM 8'01US, 200 AWi !1 II County Clertl-' Of.not County on 110AAH I . MAUAMO. "'-~. ~ ~o..att Hl_allwey. M1wport !!~...._WllMllA May 14, 1tH ,_tt tor• d*'ll of'*""'~....,. _ ....... '""· ,.._ -.. -Put>ll•lled Or1n11• COHI Dilly fllld In~ end tt ~"' ll'orll
Ollftl9 ~ Wernotk. 141 _..,.'tc,~,.CAUle Pl!Ot, MIY 11, 21,JIHM 1, I. ,"2, ~JP~~o~~DA~
"ooll .. ttr I .. OHll Me .. , CA '°" CHANCll OP NAm 2132-82 a.uon prODOllna lhlt lllt ~ bl ~erwtotl Jernet ~. ttfU Thi. eoolaetlon of MA MAMA-P\B.IC N0TIC£ cfletlaed to DAlitllL SCOTT MAL·
,......_.., • ........._ .,..... ,,,., ......,.. MT WllAIMA for ctll!"9 ol '*"'• LAMO. ----. _, ·~..,... """.....,.,, h1vln9 been fllecl In COUrt, end II flCTmOUI .......... HoW, ~1 It II l\lreVy or-. ~~ OOf\dUCtld by. IOOMMo fl'ofl'I Mid llllOllOlnt ""' ..... ITAT'lmNf r.cl Ind dlr.otea. tllel Ill penont
O. fl w""°-* ftltA M~"QA .. IT Wll"IMA hat Tll1 followlftg peraon le dot~ ln'*-"9d In Mid "'9tW do...,.,_,-Tilll Ntlmlnl fl9d wtdl Che alld Ill .l&IOllclnlon ptoooelfto thlt buelrl9lt -. t>tfOr9 1Nt oour1 In OlipertlNnt 3 on County CWtl °' ;-Ooumy "" neme' &. ofllngld lo NTA DI SMITH & SON PLUMSINO a2t the 1a.tl MtJ ol Jllnl. 1112 .. ,o:ao M9)' s ttU .,,.. °" LU9'Y. UnlYlrlltY Ofl-le 11 Coe1I Me.a. o'clock 1.lft., of 11ld dty to .now • • ,_ Now, tnerlfen,.lt .. ~ or-. CA 12t2' • • OIUH •"r tUOll 1pplle11lon lor
f'Ubllltl9d OrMOt CoMt Diiiy No\. l'9d lftd dlfteted. ltlet Ill penon• OARRY SMITH 32' UnlYef9lty c111n91 o n1m1 tllould not be
*Y 4, u , 11, ft. 1M2 :..-=.i:=1n~'r:: Or!Ye. 11. 009\•--.. CA 92e27. gr::c'fUru-or--' thlll oopy ol '~ IN tth MtJ ol June, M2, et 10:IO ~ 11 oonductld by"' lhlt Orelef To 8Mw C&UM bl ~ -----------1 o'otooll '·"'·· of Mid day to IMW Tllll .~t ... Ried with Ille t>lllhed In Ille Orenge Coul DlllY P\alC NOTICl OIUH •"r IUOh 1ppllo1tlon for CO\lflty Cl«tl °'Or County on Plot.., .... ,..., of gll*9I drw----------.;..;.;~---10"1ng1 o n1me thould not be May 14 1182. 9"09 l11lon, printed tn 11td county, et grwrted. • ,,..,. ..... onol MOtl ...... fOr 10Uf INC-~~.., .. .,_.. It Iii NrtTllt Ofdltld tMt 1 oopy of Publlahed Ottng• Co111 Dilly etrMIVI w.Mt prior lo Ille d1y of
-.. ftmNT ttllt Order To Stlow c.u .. bl pu-Piiot, Mey 18, 25, June 1, 8, ,982, tlld n.Ma .
NOTICI °' TitUtTll'I llll.I l.oen Ho, 7 .... '2/UJCAI
T 8 No. 84132-3
NEWPORT HOME LOAN, INC u duty appointed TrullM undat Ille
lollowtnl deacrl~ dMO of trull WILL S LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
TO THE HIOHEST BIOOEA FOA
CAS H (pt yt b .. " lll'lla ol 1111 In lawful money of the Unl1td I tal•)
aN rtgM, tllle end lnllf"I convey9d to ana.now held by It under H id
Oetd Of Trull In Ille Cl'C>C>«ly hat•
IM!ler OMCttbld
TAUSTOR· OEOROE C LUCAS ,
• •lnGle m111 BE~EFICIARY NEWPORT HOME
LOAN TRUST No 184 Reco•dtd J1nu1ry 21. 11111 u
lnatr No 32510 In booll 131129 P• t20e of Officill R«ord• In ,,,. office
of the ~dar ol Or~ County; H id dH d or trull dttcrlbH the
following rcpett., Loi Block 22 of Newport
8Hdl Trecl In Iha City ol N9wPQr1 8Mch County ol Orange. Stal• or
Clltforn41 u per map recorded WI
book 3. peg• 28 of MlacelllMOUI M1p1. In lh• olllce of th• counly
recorder of 1110 county 2208 OcMn Front Avenue, New·
port Beach, CA 1128112
LINER -New York Yankee third baseman
Graig Nettles can only watch helplessly as
bunt by Minnesota's Ron Wuhinaton stays on
the line for a base hlt Sunday. ;z ank.ees won
game anyway, 4·2.
O.L.V. tno. (• C1llfornl1
oorporallon). 373 8. Coal Hwy.,
Lag11ne BNctl. Ce. 112tl1 Thlt IMilllll la conducted by I
corporation.
C.L.I/. Inc.
By llt 91oty/T~
Tllll at•l-1 wu Ned w11t1 Ille
County Clertt ol Orange County on
May 21. 1182 ,1_
... !!'-followlno penonl .... dOlno bllthtd In th• DAIL y PILOT, In 2135-82 Deted lhll 71tl day of ... _ 1982
.,._n111T ... E 11LA: OUNA eEAC Cotta M .... C111fornl1, a ,_..,.. FMNK OOMEN~HINI .
" H COM· Pl' of OIMfll ~ ptlnted In --.,. NO-JudOI of Mid P/oMY, 1120 I. co.t ~y. La-Hid county, et ltHI once Heh ~ llW. 8uplftc)f Court ~a:::"' ~ 12961 WMtl for tour conMCutlve w .. 111 l'tCT1110UI .ueMM IOml8T a vaMMA ~.,,,,..,.... tnMr_.,,.._, Inc., I Cell-pr10f lo the dey of Mid n.Ma. MAim ITATlmWT 117 ................ •W tomla -.c:::.on· 800 ::-=·· O.ted thlt 30th dey ol Apttl, lM2. Tiie tollowlng ~non le doing '--.,...._,~SIMI m1' ~=-~~. :::·!:"* bu~:·t<RAU8A880CIATE8, WJ#..~~;:,.~"-
OOf'POf • ~Court 2177 J actrtndt Avenue, Co11a 307M2
"(II • atrMt llddr"• or common dttlgnetlon II 111own abovt , no
wtrrt nty 11 given to Ill compltl•·
n"' or corrtclnet•I " The t>enallclery unaer Hid Deed of Trull, by reuon of t breech or
dal1ull 1n the obllgtllone -.cured
thereby, her1lof0fl uacuted and
dellvattO 10 1111 und1ralgntd t ~lltan O.Clerallon of Oeltull end
Dlmand tor Sale Ind ..n11an nota
of bfMCh and ol aleetlon to c.ute Iha unae<11gn.d 10 NII MIO P<<>P-
erty to aautfy said 01>11g1llo,,1. end DEATH NOTICES
Publlthed Or•no• Co111 Oelly PllOt M~ 15, June l, 8, 15, 1M2 2302~
= r:::: Inc. 0rlnQll Cotllt Diiiy Pl--.,.., CA tme. ftZ ~ · lot,May4,11,18,21,1M2 E DW I N KRA US . 2177 "9LJCN0uw.
Thlt ...,...,.twee fllld ... --2084-82 Jecarend• A~. eo.ta ..... CA 'ICTITIOUe .,..... lherN l1•r the undenlgned c:auaed
NEWLAND by his wife lrleen, eons Gary
WlLL1AM T. NEWLAND and Ronald, aiaters Velma
Cil , a resident of Huntington Scheve, Vivian Dales and
Beach . Ca. Passed away on Betty Shele ny, brothe rs
May 23, 1982 at H oag M au r i c e a n d Jlm ,
Memorial Hospital Mr. grandchildren John Eric,
N e w la n d was a third Cor ey, Ke rry, Erica end
g e n e r at 1 o n of one o f Jonathan. Graveside eervica
H u n t In gt on Be a c h ' 1 will be held on Wedne9day,
founding fanulies. He waa May 26. 1982 et Harbor
employed for 26 ~ by Lawn Memonal et l l:OOAM
Southern Callforrua F.dtSOn w 1 t h P a 1 t o r D i r k.
Compa_ny. Mr. Newland wu Van-Proyen . the Coast Bible
born in Huntington Beach. Church offiCLating. Services
Ca. on August 15. 1917. u n der t he d irect ion of
Beloved husband of Virginia Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Tha rp New land, beloved Mortuar y of Costa Mesa.
fa the r of W i II i am T . 540-5554.
Newland TV of Park City.
Utah, al.9o surviving tS one ANDREWS
sister Dottle Jolliffe of RUTH A AMDREWS, a
Huntington Beach, Ca retJ1dent of Costa Mesa. Ca.
Graveside sel'Vloes will be for the put 25 yeaR. after
condu ted on Wednesday. being a Iona time resident of
May 26. 1982 at 2:00PM at Glendele. paa;ed away on
Fa1rhaveJ\ Memo.rial Parlt. M ay 2 2, 19 8 2 . S h e i 1
Pierce Brother s Sm1th1' survived by h er children
M ortuary di r ector s Marion Andrews, Teague
536-6539 Andrews, Judy Wolfe and
Charolette McEwen. Privat.e
FALK services will be held with
L Y DI A V FALK . a f inal inurnment at the
resident of Costa Mesa. Ca family plot in Glendale. Ca.
for 23 years. Passed away on The fa m i I y a u g g est s
May 23, 1982. She wa.s a donations in memory of Mrs.
member of the Ladtea Andrews may be made to
AuXJhary POil # 1249. World the Children• Orthopedic
W ar I Veterans She 11 Hospital. Los Angeles. Ca.
survived by her husband of Se r v I c e s u n d e r t h e
59 years, Teddy L _ Falk, direction of Baltt Be-rgeron
daughters Eleanor Anderson Smith & Tuthill Mortuary of
and La Verne Aiello both of Costa Mesa. Ma-9371.
TA VWR
rtalC NOTICE
flCTmOUI IUeMll MAMI ITATUmNT
Th• lollowlno perton 11 doing
~11:
RIO 8TAA, 113 Promontory
OrlVI W•I. Newport 8Mctl, Call·
lomle 12890
JICOb ~. 17871 Tllk·
wood Ulne. !MM, Celbnlll 92111
TNI ~ Iii oondueted by an
lndMdt.Jll. Jeoob AablllcMCll Thlt ltatlrMnt ... fled with Ole
County Clerk of Orll!OI Counly on
Mey 5, 1M2. ,_
PWllilMd Orenge COMt Deity pt.
IOI, May 11, 11, 25, "'-1, 11162
3072-82
M•nlOUI ...... MAMa ITAftlmfT
Tht lollowlng P«Mn8 .... aolng
~-APPRAISED PROPERTIES
1M2·1, 2009 Cour't AVll\Ue, New·
pot1 a..it\ OA tate3. MT ffnant*il, Inc .. I CllforTlla
oorporetlofl, )&101A 84.wwet 8t\ld.,
Pldflc P~ CA 90272.
TNI bYllftllt It oonduOtMI by t
lmned pat1Nnhlp.
MT Flnlncltll. tnc.
A. Scott T «rt
Prllldlnt
Thie ttatemeftt -flltd w1tt1 Ole County Clerk of Orange County on
Mays. 1"2. ,,_
PuOllNd Orlnal CoMt Ollty Plot.
May 4, , 1, 18, fl. , .. 2 --
....... -----------l:M211 County a.II of °'M9I County on •-.,. NO'IV'C Thia 11u91,_ la ooncsucted by 111
May •• 1e:-. CMITCMmt r--.n. •nA Individual -.qM. PtC'TITIOU• MllMll EdWin t<teut ~ NAMI ITAftmN'T Thlt 1t11eman1 -Ned wttfl the :.:_ ... ,_c..w °""" The tottowtng parton 11 doing County Cleril of ~ange Coun1Y on
-..__.... 0 • -1>u11ne11 11: Mey 14, 1ea2. ~.-· _,. .. FAST ANO FAIR. 423 Fllr OfM ,,_.
PublllMd ~ OOMt ·~~ 1204, Cottt Mela. CA '2e2t. Publlahed Ottnge Cout Diiiy
.... ..._, 11 18 2 .. _ 1 , Abld utH, 423 Flit OfM #204, Piiot. Mey 11, 21. June 1. e. 11112.
'"" ~, • • • .,...,. • Cotti.,.., CA t212t. 2134-32 ~7M2 Thlil ~la conduc1«I by.,, -----------lndMduel P\8.JC NOTICE -----------t Abld utH Thie 1t1t_..t -Ned with the flCTTTIOUI Ml H•U
Hehl'°"' 9'111•11 County Cllf1c of Orange County on um ITAW um ITA,,_..,. Mty 14, 1982. The lollowtng ~ It doing
The fo1oW1n9 ~ -doing ,,_ ~ 11: ..,..,_ -Publlalled Orenge COHI Dtlly D A N I E L 8 . E I/ A N S & AUDIO A LA ONnW, $404 VII PllOI, Mwy 18. 25, June I , 8, 1"2 A880CIATES, 1112 S.E. 8rletol.
0..,...0 8 It 8 N r1 •-·-h 2174-e2 Santa. Ana. CA 112705. c&,"'tiets u 1 ' .wpo ..._ ' DANIEL S. EVANS, 2242
JoM A. C1ldw•ll, 101 27th "8.IC NOTlC( Channel Ro9d. Balboa, CA 1129411.
Strwt, M1WPOft a.di, ca. ~ Thlt ~ la conducted by 111
Bruce H. McLoud. #73 Lindi ~.~II lndMdualOtnl.t a. Evww
•,;. ~.:-.~~.... Tiie loll owing pereon 11 doing Thi• etat-1 -flied with the ....,,._,,_ v, 1 ~ 11: County Cler1l of er.,. County on
lllMfll ~ PETRO KINO, 1145 P1ulatlno Mey 14, 11182
Thlt 9tetemeftt -fled Witt\ Oii 18 110, eo.ta U... CA 92829. ,_M County a.ti of er.,. County on Johll (Jedi) CaMn IOng, 1146 Publlahed Ottng• Coul Dally
Mey 3, lllU. Paulenno •8110, Coeta MeM. CA Piiot. Mwy 11, 25, June 1, 8, 1112. ,,.., 1zeae. 214&-t2
Publttlld OfW1IQ9 CoM Diiiy"' ~It oonduGWd by.,, 1-----------
lot M11y 4, 11, 11, 2', 1112 Jeck c. King 209,~ Thll atat-1 -fled wttn the ---,..-al-IC-~-----County Clertt o1 er.,. eouniY on -------""~'._.;.;;. ___ 1M.y 14, 1982.
HCftnoul_, ....
...-ITA~ The foltoWlnO pet90l\9 .,. OOlrlg
~-~~ H & D AUTO 8A.l.U b) H. K. "8JC ll>TICE
M OAS. HI 1 Oerden Orove ITATDSWT OP ~WAL 91Yd., No. 200, Oardln Grow, Cell-r-ftOlll ,...,,.......
fotnle Of'OATIMO ~ ---.. ---.,.------1 Han Kool! Moton, Ille., e CeD-flCTmOUI .,_.. ..._ ~ NOT1Cl 1ornl1 corporellon, 4124 Ollffft The 1 11 1 11 ------------1\llc:tOftl, Wooclalld ... Clltofnla o ow ng p1 r ton a 1 AC11TIOU9.,..... 11364 ' wl1hdr_, II I gener'll partner ffom
MAim IT AftmNT Hen Koc* Motor-. Inc IN pettnerWtlp oper'ltlng unOlr tile
The folowlrig l*'IOft9 .,.. doing ,.,_ p llleld · flctilloul butll-. NYM of MCO buair"91 M: Attorneov'ln FeCt PROPERTIES, 11 4100 MllCArttluf -----------
T & R PAINTING, 1131 8-* fhll8 ~ -llld with the 8oulevtrd, Newport BHch, CA
8rt Rd .• 1111, N9wPQr1 Beech, ca. County Cllf1t of Orange County on 921183. tMe3 Mq 7 1M2 The flcllllou1 bu1lne11 n•m• Costa M e s a . Ca . 4
gr andchtldren , 8
great-g randchildren and I
g reat· g reat· g randch i Id
Services will be held on
Wednesday, May 26, 1982 at
2:00PM at the Harbor Lawn
Chapel Wlth Chaplain John
A . Lindva ll officiating
Inte r ment serv ices
Immediately follO\wing.
Services under the direction
o f Harbor La wn-Mo unt
O live Mortu ary of Costa
Mesa. 540-5554
MAY BROWN T AYLOR,
a resident of San Jose, Ca.
Passed away on May 22.
1982 at the age of 85. She le
survived by a n e phew
Calvert Leat herwood of
Bullhe1d City. Arizona, 3
rueces. J uaruta Cordeiro of
Costa Mesa, Ca .. Virgin ia
Kennedy of Goleta. Ca. and
Hazel Tankersley of Sen
Joee. Ca. and 18 grandnieces
a nd n eph e ws. F une ral
11ervice1 will be h eld on
Thomel AJWll H«lln, 23546 San ' · ,11911 at••-• tor 1"8 1*1nerthip -
Jaelnto M .• Quall Vt//wf, ca. t2380. Publehed Orange Cotllt Delly "'-flltd on Fet>Nery 211. 11112 In tile
Aobwt Johll Hellln. 23545 Sen lot May ,, "· 21. June 1 11162 County o f Or•ng• FILE NO
Jednlo Rd., Oua11 Vlll9y, Ce.112380 ' ' ' ' •307M 2 Fll4021 Thia "'*'-Iii conclUC'9CS by a Full Name lf1d Add,_ of Iha
OIMfll pattnlnNp. Pereon Withdrawing: ThonlMAJlenH9111n CHARLES D DALY, 4 100
Thia etat_,I -fled wlttl IN MtcArtllur Boute111rd. Newporl
County Cllrtl ol Or1nOt County on HCTmoul • II •M Beecl'I. CA 92te3. Mwy 21, 11182 ..... ITAftlmfT Put>H•hed Ortng• CoHI Delly ~ Th• tollowlng pareon I• doing PfkM. Mey ll , 25, June 1, 8, 1992
Publl ahed Ortnge Cout Dally ~ • 2111-112 PllOt May 25. June 1, 8, 15, 1981 TAAOEWIHOS EHTEAPAl8ES, 2131-82 19' L '"" It .. No. ao. Costa....., 1---.. ---.,.-NO-fl_IC( ___ _ -----------I CA 12927. .--.. _.,. NOllCl David Allen T,.., "'·· 181 L _ ... --·· ___ ...-_________ 1 18th 81 .. No. 30, ~ Meea, CA "°..AM.n11.'ftiir'Nr
_.,...,..COURT tm7. OP ~ Thia bu11n .. 1 I• conducted by TM followlng '*'°"' -d04n9 OllANM COUNTY an 1ndMduet. t>ullneu u: LANGDALE Wedneeday. May 26, 1982 at
R O BERT E AR L l :OO PM 1t t he Ple r ce
LANGDALE. a resident of Brothers Bell Broadway
Santa Ana. Ca. Passed away Chapel with pastor Aaron
on May 22. 1982. Survived Buh ler of Rerbor Trinity
Bapllat Church officlatina.
-----------Interment at Harbor t..wn
McCO.Mtal MORTUARIES
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Captslrano
495-1776
M emor ial Park. Pie r cl'
Brothen Be ll Broadway
Morruary directon.
HEAm
M CM1 C..... OrM .... o.'ltd A. Tl'fttor Jr E. & M. EQUIPMENT LEASI~.
leMa AM. CA 117't1 Thll ~ _. lltd 'with Ole '-"' l.enwood Or'IYe. Coetl Mell,
P
• ... ~. ,. _ _,~of""'-,,.__... on CA 1121127. .....,""'"'"' =~· 1112 ..,._..,.. __ ,,, RIC:tlMd N. Eelon. '-"' Lenwood OE .. ALO L. HOFMAISTEA; _, •• · ,,_.. OrM, Cotta..._, CA 12521. ~~MAISTER Publttlld OrMOt Co.I Daly Not. JOMP11 Manntng, 8 Delen._..
BILL JOHN OAATTAN lndlvt· Mey 4, H. ti, fl, ,IU o.-tw. IMM. CA 12'114.
dull 1114doll1ll~11 OMT· 1942-82 Thlt ~It oonduCWd by•
TAN DfVELOPMENT; 0 . D. OE· .. _..,. -gtnetll~·Eaton
llON AND CONSTRUCTION; ~ ""'~ (Olnerll Pllrtnar'I
8AYAN L. HCK; FAEEMONT IN· Thlt ttt1..-il -flled wt1t1 Ille
DEMNITY CO ... PANY, DOES I rw:rrnOUI 9lllll.ll County C11t11 o1 Qfange Coun~ on ~T~~~S~NTl~J um ITA......,,. May 14, , .. 2
I/I ntAOUOH X Tiie f°"°"'"9 pltlOfll •• doing ~ A. Glmtt C... ....... ,,_, buMfllll 11! A &AW CW,.llMn · MMMONI 111 FOUAT .. DIMENSION _...,.._c-..,ome MOTICll~~..._MIM. ~~.~=. =:,1
:Atr71I ~--r :~:::-~.::: •D MANUFAC'TUAINO (I) 40 018-_.
NAiii ITAT'lmNT H id nohc• ofbrHCh 1nd of el«·
The lollowlng pattor\I -dolog tlon lo be Rec:orotd June 1S. 11111 bvtlnatt ... 'II lnatr. No. 22717 In l>OOlt 14'0 PRlNTIN~ UNLIMITED, 10637 P191 717 of Mid Oft'kllll Aeoorda. Elll1 A.,._, Fountlln l/lltey, Clll-Slid Ille wilt be mtd•. but wttll-rorn11112708. OU1 QOVetlent or wtrrenty. •llP<tlU
Fred J. Smllll, 21072 Amber· or Implied, regtrdlng 1111•. po._.
wlCk L-. Hununo1on e.ecn. Cttt· 11on °' eMUmbflnCM, to par 1nt fornll 112848. • rem1lnln9 prlnclp11 1um o th1
Prltcllle K Smith, 21072 Am· nota(I) H curad by H id OHd ot
betWlClt Lant, HUl\llngton a..ch. Trull. with ln\lfnt u In ulcl note Clllfotnll 92641. provided lldvtn~•. ti tny. und9'
Tnl1 bu1tne11 11 cond ucted by th• term• of H id 0.•d ol Trull, ~ (Huilband ' Wlf•). ..... Cf\Mgell and p~ ol 1"8 Fred J. Smith Trull• Md of Iha INlll crNled by
Thia tt.....,,.,,1 _, flleCI With IN Mkl DMd ol Trull County Cter'k ol Orange County on S t ld 111• wlll b e ht ld on ~ty 3, 1182. Wedna•dey. June 2. 11182 •t 2·00
' Pftl . 11 111e Chapman Avenue a n-
Pub ll1hed Or1ngt CoHt D•ll tr9"09 to tile CMc c.nter Bulldtng
PllOI. Mty 4, 11, 18, 25, 11182. 300 Eut Chaprnlll Avenue. "' trte 2060-8 Cl1y of Orenge ----------~ Al Iha !Ima of the lnlUal publlc•· "8JC NOTlC( llorl ol 1hil notice. the total amount ----------~ ol the unpttO bt l1nce ol th• o bti· ACT1110UI 8U ... ll gttlon 1acured by the 1bova d•· NAMI ITATEmN'T ecr•t>ed deed of trut1 and Mtlmattd
Th• following ~rton It doing co111. ••panHt 1nd 10111nces 11 ~ -'201,7'0.ll. DE LUX CAR CARE, 31181 To determlfte the opening Did,
Virginia W.y, Soultl Laguna. YQll IMY c:.11 (714) 9320MI. 92fn 0 •1• Aptll 27 1H2 P A T R IC K RA Y M 0 H NEWPORT HOME LOAN.
OlLE"9E .. O, 31911 VlfQlnl INC.
Way, South ~ CA 921171. as Mid TrvstM Thia~ II conCluCt9d by en By TD SERVICE COMPA·
lndMdull NY. Petric* R. Wolenl>wg agent
Tillt tta~I wu filed With the By Cindy Sl\oorloller,
County Ollrtl of Or-. County on AQlll\ant Secretary M1y 14, 1M2. Ona Clly BouleYard. West. ,,_ Qfenge, CA 112668
Publlttled Oreng• COHt Dally Tel 114·835-8281 Pio«. Mey 18, 21, JIM 1, I , •112. Publl1lled Orange CoHI Ot lly
2193-42 Plot. M9y 11. 18, 2tl, '* t------------1 3002-82
HAUOtt LA W~M'T. OLIVI
Mortuary •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
RA LP H E . HEATH .
resident of Coeta Mesa. Ca.
Paued away on Mey 22,
1982. Born March 26, 1910 ln
Ka nsai. Survived by hl1
wtfe Virginia Elliott Heath.
d aughter• M n . Ruberte
Wood of El Toro. Ca., Mn.
Patrlda Klietz of Fn!emont,
Ca. and Mn. 8ue Bright of
S en ta Ana , Ce .. 10
arend c h l ldren , 3
I rea t -1ra ndc blld ren .
Graveside mervicel will be
held on Wednelday. May 2e,
1982 at l:OOPM at Paclfk
View Memorial Park,
Newport Beach. Memorial
1uv lcea wlll be held on W~y. May 261 1982 at
7:30PM at the Preeb)'Wlan
Ch1.ar!h o f the CoveMnt,
Ccs1a M-. Ca. wt\h Rev.
Bna A. Kun'le oWdadna.
Paclftc View Mortuary
d1nciOn.
,_ ,..,_. .-• .,._,..... 1'118UTION. S,00 W. Wttf*, 8111t9 Publlthed Ortngt C-' o.ty tM .....,UMlt:ll ..... 7, a.n. AM. C1Matn1a t2704 p11o1. Mei 18, 21. JuM 1, I , 1M2
N you~ to 111k Ole tdvlo9 of 40 ~TlCHNOlOOY INC., 2180-82 -----------
tn 1Uorney In 11111 lftltltr, you I Calltomll eotpofetlon, 3100 W.1-----------eflOUld c1o '° promodY '° tNt 'f04ll Wt/'Mlf. 8ult• r. 11n1e Ana. Call· MJC NOTICE ----------Costa Mesa
54~5554
,_ClHOTMH5
18.L .. OAOWAY
MOITU.UY
110 Bro•dway
Costa Mesa
&42·9150
IALT1 IHOllOH
SMITH & TVTHtU
WISTCU" CMAPll
427 E 171h SI
Costa Mae
846-9371
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1.
Quake
rattles
coast
By ROBERT BARKER or ... .,..,,......,.
An offahore earthquake with a
magnitude of 4.1 on the Richter
Sc.le rattled through portions of 0ranae and Los· Angeles counties
and the northern part of San
Dleao County at 6:4~ a.m. today.
The earthquake, centered
about 13 miles southweat of
Huntington Beach, apparently
cauaed no damage and ve~ little
alarm on the part of orange
c.out residents.
Local police department•
reported only a few calls from
people wondering what was
going on. There were no reports
of damage.
However, Huntington Beach
Fire Capt. Rqier Hosmer said the
tremor atruCk w ith sufficient
intensity to awaken him at his
home near the Huntington Beach
Civic Center at Main "Street and
Yorktown Avenue.
"It was a quick, sharp jolt,"
Hosmer said. "It feft like
something large like a truck had
hit the hou.e. It wasn't of the
rolling variety."
"I felt 80lllething aha.king, like
the Ooor was awayinQ jwrt for a
second," said RandilI Norton,
night manager at a 7-Eleven
store in Huntington Beach.
FURY OF WAR -The Brithlh frigate HMS Antelope
explodes in flames in San Carloe ~ off F.ast Falkland before
sinking Monday. A bomb dis man was killed as he
attempted to defu8e an unexploded Argentine bomb lodged in
the ship's engine room during an air attack.
"There was no noise or
anything 80 I wun't aure it wu a c_;;--.netbnet I ju8t feel
H0w..ver, eome reeldenta in
other parta of die dty said they
didn't feel the tn!mol".
Roamer said th e fire
department took ita customary
precaution of removing about 15
fire truCb from the statkloa in
cue a avere eu1bquab ahould
follow.
Edison ofliciala at the San
Onofre Nuclear G enerating
Station aaid ground motion
instruments at the plant three
miles south of San Clemente
didn't detect the quake and that
there was no damage.
Fee increases
proposed I or
UC, colleges
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Big
booata in student feet at the
University of c.aHfomia and the
California State University have
been ,eropoeed by a legislative
comnuttee.
Feee at the nine campuae11 of
UC would be increased from
about $1,000 a year to from
$1,200 to $1,!SOO, and feee ln the
19..c:mnpa state university would
be boosted from about $270 to
from $300 to '60().
The propoU.l was submitted by
a subcommittee of the Senate
Finance Conunittee headed by
Sen. Walt e r Sti e rn ,
D-Bakerafield, to the full
committee Monday.
WORLD
Mesa wins
round with
feisty artist
By DAVID lttrl'ZMANN or ... Dmlf,... ....
Costa Mesa's long-simmering
feud with colorful Iranian
"sculptor" Ali Rouaban ia
probably headed back to the
California Sup.reme Court,
Rouahan'a attorney said Monday.
In a ruling issued Friday, the
state's 4th District Court of
Appeal uphe ld the city's
development review codes u
conatitutional, both aa wrinen
and as applied in the Roush.an
caae.
The ruling was a clear-cut
victory for the city and a setback
for Roushan, whose attorney,
Meir J. Westreich, said be would
take his case next to the state
~ baa been locked in a
testy legal battle with Costa Mesa officials for nearly two
years ove r his right to erect
towering, red-metal ICUlpturea.
on his industrial property at 1550
Superior Ave.
'The acz:appy little welder came
under fire when he erected three
of four structures without
aee klng City Hall's stamp of
approval f.ir'lt.
lie arg\,led that be ii entitled to
free artistic expre9Sion without
governmeni interfeTence while
city official.a claimed that the
tower• -as structures ~
required the normal building
pefll)f ts and safety checks.
-DepLLty Cit;y Attcir»ey Stephen
Wiley said the city obtalned
several court orden to prohibit <See MF.SA, Pase A!)
Fire kills 67,000 animal's
'roKYO (AP) -About 67,000 anhNJa and bUda,
lncludlJil 80,000 turtlet, perilhed Monday when
flamee ewept tbrouah a .pet breedll\a cesiter ln Fu~ a anall town 50 mn. north of 'f"okyo, police
repon.d today. •
British jets strafe
Falklands airstrip.
By 'l1le AIMda ... PNll
Brltl1b Jett attacked the
aintrtp at the Falkland Ialanda
capital of Stanley today and
Britilh wanhlp1 that down three
Ar1entine Skybawka, the
Defense Mlniatry ln London
announced.
Ar1entina'1 official Telam
newa aprry aald that Aqentine
anti-aircraft 1UJW downed two of
six Brltlah Harrier jets that
attacked Stanley. The Brltiah
aald none of thetr aln:raft were
shot down.
At the United Nations,
Argentine Foreign Minister
Nicanor eo.ta Mendez told the
U .N. Security Council hh
government waa prepared to
comlder a ceue-fire, but British
Amba11ador Slr Anthony
Panona aJd any call for a truce
WU totally unacceptable at Ion&
aa Arpntine troope remained oo
the Falklarvk
In London, Defeme Miniltry
apokesman Ian McDonald aaid,
"Thia mornlna in the Falkland
Islands, naval and RAF Burier
aircraft from the task force
a~ the runway and mllitary
in1tallatlon1 at Port Stanley
alrtiekt. They were fired at but
not bit. Our aircraft completed
their -and returned l&fely. "Earlier ln the~. one of
the tMk fortle lhljil .~ IClme
AraenUne Skybawka. one of the
planes wu brQuaht down. The
othen did not pre8 home their
attack. The Royal Navy abip w•
unharmed. .
"Subsequently , in the
STATE
Falkland Sound, Royal=
ahlpe wen attacked by a n
of Ar1entine Skyhawka. Two
Skyhawk1 were certainly
broupt down by lhip milliles,
apin with no c:la.imp to our tuk
fm::e. One Skyhawk pilot ejected
and WU reoovenici. ''
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher told the House of
Common• before the
announcement of the latest
flghtlnf there would be no
cease-ire without total
Araentine withdrawal and that
the ousted British aovernor
general might return to the
Sou th Atlantic colony to
re!mpme Britiah rule.
Ar1entina celebrated the
l 72nd annivenary oC ill first
independent 1overnment by
declarina its forces woµld wipe
out the Srttiah belchbeM on the
l1land1. Milltary analyata in
London speculated that the
~:ntlnea mt1ht be planninl blg9t air attacb yet.
'1be PNl6dent of the Araent:tne Junia, Oen. Leopoldo F. G"altieri.
told joumailsta ln Buenos Aires, ·-nm May ~. like that of 1810,
will m.:ribe it.telf ln Ar,entlne
hlatory. The country wlll
continue advanclna without
givlna up • lln&le lncb of what ii ours, either in territory or ln
IO\'el'efcnty."
Secretaiy of State AleJC.Ulder
M . Hala Jr. told .President.
Rmpn And otben at the White
Houae that the Brltlab were
~MDc the polnt al brlnClna South Atlantic filbtina "to an early eonclullon."
flidiiig railt lor wor.IC ·
. Rall-ridina bobo9 are inoYtna OYW M famOIM
with chlldrenAnd men out of wori bop aboard tn1m
in IMl'Ch of work and a tirilbter fiatun. Ptae AT.
Citibank cuts
prn.te rate
to 16 percent
NEW YORK (AP)-Qtibenk.
the nation'• aecond-lar1e1t
oommerdal bank. cut its prime
lending rate today by me-half
percentage point to 16 percent.
"lt'a in line with Ou.r view of
the money market," said John
Maloney, a Citibank spokesman.
The reduction, the fint by a
major bank since early March,
followed recent declines in other
short-t.erm interest rates that
determine banks ' coat of
acquiring funds. Some rates fell
by aJmoat a percentage point last
week.
Alao, the average return on
new Treasury bills auctioned
Monday aank to their lowest
levels since December. As a
result, the maximum rate banks
and savingis institutions can pay
on lix-rnonth savings certificates
fell nearly one-quarter
percentage point, t o 12.47
percent.
The declines In ahort-term
rates partly reflect an easing by
the Federal Reserve System of
credit conditions since early May.
The prime lending rate ii that
charged to banks ' moat
c.redit worthy corporate
cummera and. although tt does
not directly aflect consumer
loans. lt indicates the direction of
in1erest rates ln eeneraJ.
The prime baa stood between
16 percent and 1 '1 percent since
the atart of the year. It hit a
record 21.IS pettent in December
1980.
INDEX
Details
heard ~
·on Coast .
A araphlc de9cription of the
last momenta of the Britlah
frlote HMS Antelope before ahe aaDk at San Cub Bay ln the
Fa1klanda WU broedcaat by BBC
World Service Monday night. •
"Only a fe w planes. so oit
through the. strike force agalnlt
HMS-Antelope," a Brltllh
correspondent reported ln the
half-hour news broadcast
monitored on the Orange C.out.
''But the fripte then made her
way slowly up the bey, traillnl
arnoke, with the main mast off at
an angle.
''There were holes in her aide
u abe made anchor about half a
mile from ua.
"Helicopters with 8e8.l'Chllghts
were overhead and landing craft
came alonglide to lift off the
crew. We could aee figures
crossing the deck, aUhouetted
against the flames.
"There were explosions and
flames. Sparks flew into the air
long into the night.
"Other ahi.. and helicopten
crowded around to pick up
survivors.
"It waa a courageous and
orderly re.cue." ·
Earlier in the day, the same
BBC radio correspondent had
been aboard a helicopter that was
nearly trapped by an Argentine
air attack that repo rtedly
included waves of more than 30
warplanes.
"I WU caught on the helicopter
durin1 th• lateat raid:' be
rer.orted vta dlortwave. "The
heueopter ben1ud sharply and
div~ when the pilot realized be
wu caught between the (British)
~ m1ISiles and t.tie targeCB.
• One miuUe mi•aed us by
about 100 yards. We moved down
and blended into the hillside and
watched two more waves of
warplanes come through. '"three (Argentine) "Skyhawk:a
(See BBC, Pase A!)
White stuff
spills from
drain in NB
U.S. eo.t Guard and Orange
C-ounty oftidala were trying to
detennine just what it was that
apilled into Newpo rt Bay
Monday afternoon from a storm
drain.
A milky white substance of
unknown ori1in reportedly
a&>UJed into the bey near the
Newport Arches Marina, J333
W. c.o.t Hlahway, aid Senior ~ Carl Lux. of the c.o.t
Guard's Marine Safety office.
"We're not sure of the
quantity, we're not aure whether
it's toxic or just what it is," said
Lux.
Lux aald that both a Cout
Guard inveattfator and a
repreaentatlve o the Orange
County Health Department were
ln tbe area today trying to
determine the nature of the
substance and how It aot into the
bey.
BB~ COVERAGE •••
wen ~l>Dlna bombt 11 they ...pon mon1tonld Sunday nicht.
w.t anc:f inaonlnesun tu. and perhaJ11 ln the Uaht ot th• ic. ot
txDlolton1' could be heard from HMS Antelope, .
lhl hWalcHI. · · · The BBC alalrMd llYtn enemy .. w. \houaht they were aoma plane• ahot down after beln1
to ltnfe UI but they tuJ'Md away encaaed by Sea Harrler alrcnft, owr \M hll\t.opi, with traill ol millll• and naval sunt·
m.111&111 followtni them.11 ·Another enemy plane wu IMD
I T h e JtBC worl d Hrvlce leavln1 the San Carlo• Bay
brolldcut monitored here seemed bridaeheed ·area. traWna amoke,
more aubdued than the war the BBC report said.
MESA SCULPTU~E · • • ••
erection o f the t>rlght red
1tructurea, but, Rouahan went
&heed and built then\ anyway.
That led t.o two contempt of
cour t convictio n • agalnat
Ro uahan In Oranae County
S\.\perior' Court last year. He was
aentenced on one of the d t.atlona
to five days in Orange County
Jail and fined $500.
However, im~1ltion of the
sentence waa de layed while
Wellnlch appealed to the 4th .
District Court of Appeals, which
turned him down once, and then
to t¥ atate Supreme Court,.
whk6 ~ \M ._.. btdt
t.o the •PM!a court.
f.riday'a ICiectlk>c) thua became
hl• Hcond apptala court
rejection, Westrelch noted. but he
aald be would .. fa.:. reheartnc
and then take the ca1e bllck to
the state S\lpreme Court. I
U that prove. W\IUCICe8ful, he
5'1d, he would take \M matter
into the fedenl cow11.
"The dedalon by the (4th
Diatrlct Court of Appeal) to1allv
miMea the pomt," Westreich aaid.
Sophia Loren facing
mental collapse
ROME (AP) -Six days of jail
have put actress Sophia Loren on
the verp of mental collapee and
doctors have preacrlbed ~to
help her cope with anxie t y.
Rome's leading dally reported
toda_y.
"She la very, very depfe88ed,"
Mias Loren's s iste r , Maria
Scicolone, was quoted as saying
by Il Mesaagero.
T h e report could np t be
confirmed.
Mias Loren. serving a 30-<lay
sentence on tax evasion charges
at a small w omen '• jail in
Cuert.a. 20 miles north of Naples,
"doeSn't sleep, doesn't eat and la
very upset," D Messagero said,
quoting family and jail 90W'Cea.
The paper Ql'Oted the jail's
Council to · weigh
Laguna's budget
The finrt public beartq 00 Laauna Beach's propcl9ed $7, 79
million budget for next year will
be held tonight beginning at 7
o'clock.
The City Council will conduct
the hearing in council chamben.
Final adoption of the spending
package la expected in mid-June.
director. Liliana 1Je Cristofaro, ..,
saying s he wa• "1erlou1ly
concerned about her psychic
st.ate.''
The report said Mias Loren
was visited Monday by Dr. Rau
Caduto. who lat.er diagnoeed "a
serious depressive state."
"She la very abaky . . . to calm
her a blt I have pn!9Cribed her
some tranquillr.iera." the doctor
said according to Ule newsp.per.
Giovanna Cau, the actreu'
lawyer, said her client will aak
for "semi-liberty" status. whk:h
will allow her to leave the prUlon
during the day and return at
night.
The 47-year-old actreu bu
asked President Sandro Pertini
for a pardon. but that does not
appear llkely.
Under Italian law, she will not
be elisfble for "semi-liberty"
until •he complete9 half her
aentenDe.
11 Meua~ q uoted an
uniden~ -•)'ina the llCtn!ll "ta paytnc the price for
her taine.··
"lt'a a IJO'-llue attuaUm. AJ:Jy
other person wouldn't have
ended up ln jail foe a 20-year-old
tax evasion cue," the friend was
quoted as saying.
Southern Calitomla l.dJ.eon Co.
otfldala Mid the emerpncy llren
1}'1tem •urroundln1 the San
Onofre Nuclear Generatlna
Stadon worked 11 they had
hoped durlnt a t"t Monday
afternoon.
for about flve m lnutea be&inn1na at 2:1' p.m., the lllrena
walled out their warnlnt ln
conununitle11 within 10 mllea of
th• nuclear plant, aald Dav•
Barron, a Southem c.atJfomia
l.dllon •pokelman. ·~ a pre~ bu'8t we conalder it a •UcceJa!' Barron
M1d,
T h e warntna n•t•m waa rete9ted Monday after more than
$1 mWJ.oo in modifioatlom were
added followin&. an earlier test
that WU roundly critiicbed by
oblerven. The total coat of the
alteri warnln1 1y1tem la now
around $3 million, Barron aaid.
l~provementa hacluded
e nhancin1 alren volume and
adjultlng the '-reu in which they
could be heard, he said.
While the findings of aoWld
Ln•trumenll place d In San
Clemente, Capistrano Beach,
portions of San Juan Captatrano,
Dana Point and Camp Pend.let.on
were not yet available, Barron
said all sirens in the system did
operate during the teet.
Grandmother
sentenced on
drug charges
A 76-year-old Coata Mesa
grandmother de.cribed by an
a11l1tant U.S . attorn ey aa a
"toufh old lady with a hard
edge' WU 91!lltenced Monday to
three yeara In prison for
1muggUn1 cocaine Into Loa
An8eles International Airport.
Hellodora Saenz. a Colombian
dd.r.en. who had been living with
her daughter in ea.ta Me.a, Wal
c onvic ted lalt month of
smuggling 2 ~ pounds of oocalne
insicfe-a ~ bottom sultcue that
abe ~laimed to have received
fro m an unknown w o man
ln~ta.
U .S . District Judge Terry
Hatter said he hoped that the
stiff 9e1\tenoe would 9haw drug
traffickers that no one,
regardless of their age, will be
immune from proeecution.
Matatant U.S . Attorney Ja«lee
Watah Jr. said he la convinced
that the grandmother of 12
knowingly smuggled cocaine into
the country tast-i-eb. 26.
Searching for sun
Comtal
Continued overc•1t mlth
~ dftnle 11119')'
Co•tlal. lnl•nd IOWI 801. c:o... hlgfl ea, lnlMd 74. Wai.-a .
Ellewhere, light variable nlclM end morning wind• becomrng
.,. to aoun-t 5 to 15 knots.
Wllld -1 to 2 ,__ Waetarty
.... 1 to 3 r.t. M091ty doudy
Md hay wlUI morning fog and ......
BolM
eo.ton 8'~
8ufta6o
lkdnglon
Caper
Ctlat1eln SC
C'*11tn WI/
CNrttte NC ~ CHc:ego
Clndnoell
C1eYellnd
Clmbla 8C
Columbus [)91-Ft W'ltl
Oeyton o.n ....
O.Moin.
Detroit
Duluth
B Puo
Farao ~ ...
Her1fotd
Helene Honotulu
Houlllon
lndNplll == KMll City
L.-VegM Little RoQk
LoulMlle
l ubbodt
Memphlll
Mlalftl
~ ~8\.P NeetwMla .._onaarw
New Ycwtl
Nottoll
No Platt• C>elle City
Omehe Oftendo ==-~ Pllnf 0'9 ~-::~
MtUIM .. "'*""'° ...... .... .,.°', ---..........
ltP-T .... .........
80 48 54 51 19
85 74 71 54 01
52 50 .04
81 4()
81 ea 81 83 79 ee .52
51 3e 04 81 62
78 eo ea 54
llO fS.4 .oe 74 S4
83 52 2.82 72 57
64 42 .12
70 68 01 ee 54 et 43
93 81 70 59 .01 70 33 73 4e 51 51 .12
75 .... ee 74
81 74
72 57 ea 70 10 Ill 70 10
71 15 .18
116 17 ~ ee
71 59 eo 57 .17
13 65 1.43 81 74 .oe
5' 46
&3 71 .20 ... 82
90 70 .oe
55 56 .2t n • 1.o2
86 42 11
75 eo 1.14 se es .t2
90 • . 31
51 M .at
102 1t 11. 11 • •• :: : ...
12 .. .31 .. .. 14 '7 • l '°' T4 •• .. .. .oe ,.. . .. 70 .1a 7t •
P8Udenll 78 51 ~ n57
San BamerdlnO 80 M Ian 04lbr1el 78 1541
SenJoee " 11 s.nta Ma n e 1 8lnta en.cz eo 56
Tahoe V'*'t 74 41
107 IO ---------10ot -74 48
101 87
... 71 70 12 101 n 103
" " 53 101 73
M 58
100 116 72 81 M fS.4 78 52 12 57
71
102
100 ..
80
76
Smog
Nt ~ ... lie untlelllflM
tor ~ ,,.,.. n,... In
the 1uburr.an I an ,.,nandoJ
Senta 018tffa, Ian CIMfW .,,.
Pomone-W*"'l .,.._..a Wll a
In ...... lnd a.i .........
wt111 Poflv110ft alandartl tnde•
ratlnga of 111 Ind ""'*'8""" • PSI of 125. th• Air Oualllr
Manaoemen1 Dlatrlet ~ed
Mondey. Air quality wlll be good
..... .,. • Wlfl 1'81 =i:.°' 42 -. the.... .. .. .....!..'!
In the ........ llJ In ·-~-~ . .,In .... ~.n• .. .....,.1• :&.Ga MalMa lr9llnCl 100 111 HlfMt
and Llk• Elillncd.
BUDDLE -7-oe Ann Ananda ot Newport Beach (right),
Uatena to com~-poUUcal activllt Dick Gregory as they
confer in the rotunda of Dllnota State Capitol Monday during
ERA hunger strike. M.. Ananda was reported as being very
weak.
Coast ERA striker
weakened by fast
Newport Beach resident Zoe
Ann Ananda, ln the eiahth day
of a hunger 9trike in Dllnoi.a for
the Eiqual Rtahta Amendment, ~~=rlbecl today u being e 't!IJlel)' we"Jk and confined to
a wheelchalr.
The Newport woman la one of
seven wiomen fasting in support
of the ERA, wtPch la three stat.ea
•ho rt of being ratified. The
oonstltutional amendment must
be ratified by June 30.
The women, 1taylng in a
Springfield church and camping
out dally in front of the state
capitol building, have been joined
by 80Cial acdvilt and comedian
OickGrepy.
A spokswoman for the group
aaid several of the women are
beginning to display medical
p~lema.
She aald Ms . Ananda, who
owns a bookstore in Newport'•
Cannery Village, is the weakest
of the seven and hu trouble
walking without asslst.a.nce.
Anothe r of the atrik era,
excommunicated Monnon Sonia
Johnson, al.lo la confined to a
wheelch41r.
Another hunger striker, the
spokeswoman laid, has a gum
infection and still another
reportedly woke up Monday
with a nosebleed that lasted 45
minutes.
S everal apeciall1ts have
warned the women they rlak
serious lnjury if the fast keepa
up. The women aaid they will go
without food until June 30.
In earlier comments, the
Newport woman aaid the strike
was called t.o focus attention on
the ERA. She aaid people had
s toppe d paying atte n tion to
rallies and marches.
She said Illinoi.a was selected
because it is the only Northern
industrial state th at h asn't
ratified the ERA.
State officials probe
college TV courses
By PHU. SNEIDERMAN M ... 0.-,,......,.
Coutllne College'• television
counea, currently under attack
by 101De local instructors, have
now come under scrutiny by
state four-year college officials.
Representatives o f the
California State University and
University of California systems
have asked the Coast Community
C ollege Distr ic t f o r
docume ntation s ho w i ng i ts
television courses are equivalent
to the same couraee taught in
regular classrooms.
I>iatrlct officiala say a 70-to
80-page ttView of its teleoou.ne prosram will be mailed to state
college officiab and others Within
10 days. Diatrict offidals say the
document will prove that
Coastline'• telec ourae1 are
equivalent to c la11roo m
ina1ruction.
Alon g with Coastline, the
Coast Di.atrict operates Orange
Coat Collesle ln Costa Mesa and
Gold en \\'eat C o llege i n
Huntington Beach .
Conoerna about the quality of
television OOW'llea were ·raised ln
a March 8 letter written by four
Orange Coast College profesaors.
In response to that letter, the
A c ademic S e nate of the
California State Univers ity
system has asked its chancellor's
office t o invest igate t h e
telecoune iasue.
Charles Davis, a spokesman for
Cal State Chancellor Gle nn
Dumke, said Cal St.ate officials
already have written to Coastline
Presid e nt Be rnard Lus k in ,
requesti~g information on the
television coUl'lilet.
Coas t District sp okesman
Richard Simon u id a similar
inquiry has been received from
the University of California
system and from other education
officials and parents .
Cal St.ate and UC of fici.ala are
concerned becauae these achools
grant transfer credit to students
who have take n courses at
community colle ges such as
Coastline, Orange Coast and
Golden West.
Vidal
speaks'
occ
By 8TBVE MARBLE 0"8111 0.-,NeCltlllf
Slttina in a c.a.r followlna a
roualn1 delivery ot polltfoal
one-llnert t.o 1tudenta at Onnce
Cout Collece Monday, Senate
hopeful pore Vidal dld some
thinklns aloud.
The poll tlc al 1y•te m l•
corrupt.." h e offered while
waiting for his driver to •how.
''It'• completely corTUpt."
"The p olitlciana," the
Democrat went on. "are all the
same. Democrat, Republk:an -lt
doesn't matter. 11\ey don't want
to change and they don't like
people who do. Like me!'
Low in the polla and frustrated
at t h e coat. o f running a
campaign, Vidal admitted he has
had trouble finding a broad hue
o f support . H e suggested
students like him.
"I enjoy speaking at college
campuses because you always get a good turnout," the author-
turned -polit ician said, "but
students don't vote.
"Do you know where my best
support comes from?" asked the
liber al, anti-nuclear , pro-ERA
candidate. "Blue collar workers
and blacks. It's a strange world.
The knee-jerk liberals don't like
me."
V idal came to the college
campus at the invitation or the
All ian ce f or Survival, an
anti-nuclear group. Nearly 300
showed up to listen. He started
by decrying nuclear energy and
the defense buildup.
"I'm not a war lover," he said.
"l don't like the cheap politicians
who keep saying the Ruaaiana
are coming. They (the politicians)
are the enemy and they have
taken over the White llouse.
They may govern now but they
won't govern forever."
He suggested the United States
will "either go broke in the arms
r a ce o r blow i tself up by
accident." He said the Soviet
Union is too weak and too bogged
down with its own problems to
worry about the United States.
Then came the pokes, jokes
and one-liners.
-Naclear Watte: "By and
large we seem to like to put the
stuff on faults. That way if we
have an earthquake it can spread
easier and we can all glow in the
dark."
-Interior Secretary James
Watt: "An absolute loon. He
believes the Lord is coming any
second now and if we don't caver
e ve r y blade of g r au with
concrete we'll all go t.o hell."
-Gov. Eclmud Browa, Jr.
(his Democrat o pponent): "A
little weasel."
-Moral Majorl,J: "Every
generation or so a group like this
swings down from the trees. One
came down in 1919 and brought
us prohibition."
F u t ure o f three
schools weig hed
Trustees or the Newport-Mesa
Unified Sch~ol District will
con sid e r recommendations
tonight for the future U8eS of
three district schools that have
been closed.
A c itize ns committee is
scheduled to make public a
report recommending uaea for
Corona del Mar, Lindbergh and
Woodland elementary schools
during a 7:30 p.m. meeting at
Harper Community Center, 425
E. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
EVERYTHING IN OUR SHOP --
·2&% OFF
•COPPER .•COOKWARE
•CUTLERY •CUISINART&
•COFFEE BEANS •COOKBOOKS
•COF,F.EE MAKERS •PORCELAIN •BUTCHER BAKEWARE
:rABLES •GADGETS l
•BASKETS MUCH MORE
••
Israelis down 2 Sy;rian jets
I) fte AIMc&llM Prell ~ llnel.I rslhot cjown two Syrian MlO .,wmment IOW"C..9 lllid one p1arM aNhed north of ayer v. mWtal'V camroand Belru~ but Uw pUot bailed out and w11 hospitalized. =~ Avtv. .'ft8MJd~ tar.ell planea had The fate of the oth r oUot waa not known. '*" °" pacrol and retwned •fel)* to bUe. Syria kee111 a 22.000~ army ln Lebanon to
'n.. Syrian aovemment ln Diunuaua IA1d two police the armiatice that ended the 1978-76 civil
of lta plariea were .. hJt" tn the cluh. LebaneM wu.
Iran · gains Persian Gulf victory
Bl:IRU'I'. Lebanon -lr-11 Mid lta f orce1 routed
the I.alt pockets of lraql rw.iltance ln the port dty of
Khornmahahr today, and Inq conceded the fall of
lta laat 1tron1bold ln Iran'• oil province 1of
KhUJiltan..
The tr.qi admimion confirmed Iran's biggest
victory tn the 20-month-old war on the northern
flank of the Peraian Gulf.
A mlhtary communique from the high
command ln &ahdad aaid lraql foroes early today
completed their withdrawal from KhoJTamahahr.
Andropov to replace Brezhnev?
MOSOOW -The appointment of Yuri V.
Andropov, the 67-year-old chief of the Soviet aecret
police, to the 10-man eecretariat of the Communist
Party C-entral Cornm1'ttee appears to improve hi.a cban~a of aucceedina President Leonid I.
Brezhnev.
Andropov's new poaltion waa announced
Monday after a special mffting of the Central
Committee. He filla the place left open by the death
laat January of Mikhail A. Su.lov, the No. 2 man in
the Soviet leaderahlp.
Soviet rocket docks at station
MOSCOW -An unmanned cargo rocket
docked today with the orbiting Salyut-7 apace
station, bringing fuel and other supplies to two
Soviet cosmonaut.a in the 13th day of their research
mission, Tua said.
"Mutual aearch, approach, docking and linking
of the spacecraft were carried out on commands
from nllaaion control center and with the help of
on-board automatic sya1ems," the offid.al Soviet
news agency said. Progress 13 delivered fuel for the
station.
Bakers£ ield mercury at I 07 degrees
A 107-degree reading Monday gave
Bakersfield ita hottest day ever thi.s early in the
year, the National Weather Service reported.
ll was hot everywhere else in the San Joaquin
Valley too. Stockton recorded a 104-degree high,
Lemoore Naval Air Statinon 102 and Fresno 101.
Temperatures should cool into the 90a
Wedneaday, the weathennan says.
FedMart to sell pharniacY units
SAN DIEGO -FedMart Corp., which
announced in April it waa going out of buaine9a, bu
~ to aell the phanmceudml invent.oriel in 27 ol it.a stores to Gemco, a Gemco spokewnen hM aid.
Gemco spokesman James Koerlin would not
di8cusa the terms of the aale, but dJd acknowledge
the transfer of atock and cua10mers' files began
Monday.
Budget unit eyes spending plan
WASHINGTON -Brushing aside budget
blueprints proposed by Democratic liberals, the
HOU8e la shifting it.a attention to a conservative
California Republican's spending plan that attempts
to eliminate deficit.a immediately.
The House headed for a vote today on a
propoaal by Rep. John H. Rouaelot to balance the
budget next year with large cut.a in domestic
spending. The plan alao antJdpated tax revenues
considerably higher than thoee in forecasta by
congressional economists.
Treasury security yield falls
WASHINGTON -Yields on short-term
Treasury aecurities have fallen for the 1eVenth time
in eight weeks, hitting their lowest levels since last
December, officials reported.
About $4.9 billion in six-month T-bills were
.,
auctioned at an average diacount rate of l l.671
percent Monday, down from the 12.187 percent of
Wt week. The government alao aold about $4.9
billion in three-month bW. at ad avense rate of
l l.48 pera!nt, down from 12.189 percenL
Hinckley once talked to actress
WASHINGTON -John W. H1nckley Jr. came
away from a brief campus encounter with actress
Jodie Foster in 1980 oonvlnoed that it he ahot
President Reagan. "ahe would de91re him, ahe
would feel he wa a hero, ahe would Jove and
respect him," a psychiatrist testified today.
Dr. Thomas C. Goldman, a defenae wttneea
who has interviewed Hlnckley three times in hia
jail cell since hia trial began in U.S. District Court
on April 27, said that a few months later, Hinckley
returned to Yale University and stalked Mill Foster
while carrying a Joeded gun in his pocket.
Goldman aaid that aft.er Hinckley'• initial
encounter with Mia Focter at Yale ln Sept.ember
1980, when he •topped her to ask directiona, he
believed "they had a relationship."
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
CIHltn.d a~rtl1lng 714,1142-M71
All other departl'Mfttl 942-4321 $1.275 trillion
debt ceiling?
Thom9a P. Ha69v
,....... ... Olllf '-""" Olloer
WASHINGTON -The
Reqan ad.m.lnl.atration fonnally
uk.ed eon.re-today to ralle the
national debt cellinl to $1.27~
trillion and aa.ld the federal debt
will apprmch that llmit by the
end of fimca.l 1983.
VOL 71, N0.18
The request to ..me the llmlt •
the third made by the
adml.nt.traUon alnce taldna office
16 monthl .,o. 'nle debt ltood at
about $910 bllllon when the
admlnlatratton made l~ first
reque1t, one week after
Prelident Reqan •• IWOl'I\ in ..
We're l:.lstenllig •••
•
,.
Otqe Coat DAILY PILOT/Tuetd1y, May 28, 1812 H/f
""" --~ • -~, • 1
•
.......... ----...........
UWlf.,.,,...
HEADLINES -This is how four British papers played the
latest reports of fighting between British and Argentine
troops in the Falkland Islands.
~~~~~~"--~~~~~~
$12 million setup
Two women seized
on bookie charges
Two remaming out-of-rounty
residents indicted by the Orange
County Grand Jury for alleged
operati o n of a $12
million-per-year bookmaking
ring have been take n Into
custody.
Three people surrendered on
similar charges laat week.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart
identified the two latest suspecta
as Sandy Lou Lightfoot, 43, of
Paramount, and Barbara J .
Shepard, 42, of Harbor City.
Hart said Miss Lightfoot. who
also goes by three aliases,
surrendered to Orange County
authorities Monday afternoon.
She was booked into Orange
County Jail.
Miss Shepard already was in
custody at Los Angeles County
Jail on another charge and will
be brought to Orange County as
soon as she finishes that tenn.
Hart said he didn't know how
long she has remaining on her
sentence in Los Angeles.
The five alleged bookmakera
were all indicted by the Orange
County Grand Jury last week
An indictment is a fonnal charge
made against a person. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
It is alleged that the
bookmaking ring accepted beta
on horse races at tracks
throughout the United States
and alao accepted beta on various
sporting event.a involving college
and profemional teams.
Woman convicted
in child. sex case
A Los Alamitoa woman was
found guilty in Orange County
Superior Court Monday of four
felony charges which stem from
a Huntington Beach child sex
cue involving alleged acts with a
9-year-old girl and a 13-year-old
girl.
Superior C.ourt Judge Myron
S . Brown convicted Patricia
Lombardo, 21 , of the charges
after the c.aae was submitted to
him on the basis of preliminary
hearin.ll tranacripta. '
Miu Lombardo had waived
her n,h t to a jury trial.
Judge Brown took seven other
sexual misconduct counts agalnat
the defendant wlder submission.
Mm Lombardo waa one of six
people who had faced tr1al on a
total of 132 coun\I Involving
alleged teX acts with the two
young girls.
Atter tM A.G.8. Conclave In
New Or1ilerl9 I tOOlt an auto tnp up tl'llOugh the South. OM of the mllln ltope WM the lake .,_ In
Tenn••••• where John Latendr .... and hf• J~ p.,tnera are ou ltlvallng
,,......, .,..,., ~ hope '° '*"-' their ftm ,... crop thll
,.. and haY9 them on the~
Milt 'l*ftt· The locetlon of ... OUh\nd ..,t tlrmt II nw the b tow!'\
of Cemder1 I • • ~ 40 mlel weet of Nuttvllle. The clllmat•
and .. t• temP«•ture I• wry 1lm111r to that of Lake Blwt,
JlfM, ..... ,. ........... '*"' have bHn •~ltlvat.cl by the J.,_,,... f9' mMY YMn· The wetete Of Lake ltwa Me ..... ,__. ..... llhcl
aro"n ih• IUt I• belno reotetlfted tot rtoe wope. TM ....... ~·~ .. ,..., ="~p:c.~= ~:ood'To':'t • lar:: of ... . Lat9ndl Ill I .. ~ • .,....,,. ..............
naturet Ametlotft L~ler
.... Md It II :\n•1 ml1 'tMt ................. ... ~ ............................ .
ot • • ~mertoeft frtelfw11ter ~-... -~~ ......... twllftty,41..... ... , •
mtta11r1 ltMlt OM be uiliet tO
The activities were alleged to
have taken place in the
Huntington Harbour home of
John Steen, 56, and hia wife
Christi, 30.
Both have pleaded no contest
to sexual miaconduct count.a and
face proceedings on whether
the y qualify for mentally
disordered sex offender status.
Steen had been described by
authorities as a retired
businessman who enjoyed
videotaping the alleged aexual
encount.en involving hia wife,
other women and the children.
The aix defendants were
arreated a year ago after a
relative of one of the young girls
inten.-ept.ed a letter in which the
girl deecrlbed the alleged sexual
activity.
Sentencing proceedings for
Mias Lombardo were scheduled
by Judge Brown for June 17.
@
~EiEM WISS
Airp~r.t
strategy
m ,ulled ··
' By FREDERIC& 8CllOntE1111 or-..,_,......,
Oran1• County 1upervft01'
wlll meet In cloaed HltlOI\
Wedneeday to deviM ltnf.el,Y II\
the wake of a federal Jud&e'•
refuaal 19 approve a propoeed
plan to regulate which
commercial alrllnet may aerve
John Wayne Airport.
U .S. Dlatrlct Court Jud1e,r
Terry Hauer, followln1 a1
lenathy hearin& ruled Monday
ntcnt that the county'• lat.est 9
plan wu unconatltutlonal andt•
un1alrly bene&ial to the twola
dominant carrien aervina <>ranee
County AlrCal and lrepubllc•·J
Airllna. ff
Hatter'• ru)ing delivered a ~
atunnlng blow to the county'••
efforta to cievaae a 1y1tem 'tOnJ
allocate the 41 jet departura.t.
penniued dally among ca.rrien
who deaire flighta. ,2
The ruling marked the 9eCOlldH
time in eight montha that Judgea
Hatter has blocked the oountyuJ
from implementing an airline
~ plan at the airport.
Hatter acheduled a June 28~
hearing for county offk:i.ala to...).
return to his court with what he
termed a ''non-dlacrimin11tory"
acceas plan for the airport.
And the judge added a caveat.1
Should the county fail to adopt•
such a plan, It muat permit
Continental Airline• to begin
service with two fllghta daily d uai.ns Boeing 727a, an aircraft iJ
currently banned from the'~
airport for noise and weight' H
reuons.
A Continental attorneyct
cont.ended durinJ the hearing
that the airline has been tryingM
for 14 years to gain entry to Joh.D IZ
Wayne Airport. He did not~d
specify which routes Continental
would like to fly. •n
In ruling from the bench,
Hatter said he doesn't oppoee the':J".
county maintaining the 41 flight J ;~
per day cap on jet departures er ~,
specifying noiae level.a wtthtJ'
which air carrien must comply. JV
But Hatter bluntly said anyup
special treatment for the
dominant carriers must be)
deleted from any new access
~ thia grandfathering I
(permitting A1rCal and RepubUc
to maintain fllgbt allocationa) la
going to haw to go, that'• an.·· J
Ratter aaid. 'Tl
Under the county'• ~ -<1
plan, A1rCal. which operates an °
averase of 23.5 flighta-daily, and 'J
Republic, which operates. 11.5, ·'i
would have been stripped of
their existing flight guarantees at '°
~~:t•: ~=te;: ::]
incumbent.a would be placed in a
pool for re-allocation among
carriers desiring to~ aervioe·
at John Wayne with new and
quiet.er jeta.
Board of Supervisors
Chairman Bruce Neatande,;,
reacting to Hatter's ruling, said, 1
"Of course, it's fair to say we're ?
all disappointed." , I
Nestande aaid auperviaors will . 1 meet Wednesday with the 0 I
county'• privately retained L,
airport i.ues couneel, Michael •
Gatzke, to detennine a COW'1le of ,
action. ..
Nstande aaid he would favor ':>
the county joining with AirC.a1 in -
an appeal of Hatter's decision last I I
September blockins
lmplementation of the county's ·
original access proposal. That ; I
action la scheduled for :1
consideration June 8 by the 9th ~
Clrcuit Court of Appeal. ,,
.,
~ • ..
II • ft
~ I I ' i ' ' ' I
I ' '
.,
No lJooze
•
Throw old tax records out
or cars
for prom
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP)
-A loud rock bl.net will play
untll dawn at thla year'•
,reduation party for 1 suburban
hiah IChoo( -but the punch
won't be aplked and t1ret won't
9e1ueal ln the j)U'kina lot.
~~ 9:2.R:JIT'l
DEAR RIA.DERS: U yow-cla.tl an bulidna wtth old tax recordl that you're afraid
to ilu-Ow 1way, the IRS hu eome welcome
Ml vice.
Moet docwnentl need to be kept only
Uwe yean from the date your tax return wu
filld, or two ye1r1 from the daw the tax wu
paid, whichever ii later. In other worda, if you
Ned your 1981 return by April 10, 1982, you
lhou1d keep the related record.a until Aprill&,
1983.
Some record.a do need to be ~pt lonpr.
Real eatate reoorda. for lmtance, ahould be
kept aa long aa they can be uHJul in
determinina the ownenhlp buil of a pl.ece of
property. nu. lnfonnatian ii needed to claim
depredation or to report the gain or lam on the
property when It la llOld.
Copte11 of put tax retuma ahould be kept
if you think you may u.e lncome 1verqlna to
compute your tax on a future return. To -I.lie
· the income averaging method, you need
in1ormation from four prior years' -rewma.
Good financial records are the key to
effective tax planni.na and will help you fW
out your tax returns with ease, accord1na to ms. Organized records alao can uve you time
and money if your return la audited.
For more lnfonnatlon on recordkeeping,
IRS offers a free booklet entitled, "Publlcation
5~2. Record.keeping Requirementa and a Llat
of Tax Publications. Request the booklet by
phoning (800) 242-4585.
DMV closes loopholes
DEAR READERS: The California
Department of Motor Vehicles haa announced
that it has cloeed an adminlatrative loophole in
regulations which bad permitted tome Wegal
reg:latration of "new" vehicles purchaaed out
of state and brought in to California. '
As of April 19, 1982, California re.identl
and bualnesees are not able to ~r a "new"
motor vehicle with less than 7,500 miles on it
if the vehicle has not been certified by the
state Air Resources Board regarding the
design and performance of the vehicle'•
exhaustion control system.
The OMV a1ao haa notified out-<>f..tate
SHOITIST LINH IN OIANGI COUNTY
"IXTIA IDGI" GAIPllLD IANK -=
prlng-tlme ls
Theres only oae
FMCrowns.
3901 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CA
( 714) 760-0331
FREE SHUTTIR
INSTALLATION
cMa1en thal they may be 1ubject to civil
penaltl• for auch w.,11 Ill.II to Callfomil
reaidenll or bua1nellel 1n the futuN.
OMV Director Doria V. Alexia uld that
the Health and Safety Code deflnee •new
vehicle u one with lelti than 7,500 mll• on
the odometer. She PO(n~ out that lt ii W.,al
for a California resident or buainem to Import
for repu-auon, UM or lale any such vehicle
which bu not been oert.lfled by the Air
Reeourcel Board in Callfomil.
A vehicle'• certltication atatUI may be
Identified by en,lne computment label.a at the
point of pu.rch.Ue. Theee vehJclee a1ao wW be
verlfled by Callfornia'1 1moa lnapectlon
1tationa, which are aupervt.ed by the Bureau
of Automotive Repair.
Mra. Alexia said ownera of 1uch
non-certlfled vehicles may not lawfully
regi1ter, u1e or r~aell the vehicle in
California, and are 1ubject to finee of up to
$~.000 for attempting to do so, acoord1ruz to
Health and Safety Code Sectlona 4SltH,
431M and 431M. Gary Nlahlte, the DMV's
Reidatrar of Vehicles, pointed out that any
dealer ln any 1tate who 1ella a non-certified
vehicle to a c.tlfomla resident or buainem a1.ao
may be subject to a civil contract resialon
action by b'C!.Til who cannot regiater the
vehicles in omla. 1 Anyone 8111ating in
~ 1uch activities a1ao may be subject to civil
--penalties.
The OMV director noted that there are a
few very llmlted drcwnstancea under whJch a
new, non-certified vehicle may be imported
by a California reaident. The resident may
lmport auch a vehicle if It is acqu.lred: to
replace a vehicle which wu damqed beyond
reaaon1ble repair or stolen while out.tide
California; u a result of an inheritance; or aa a
result of a divorce, di11olution or legal
aeparation.
• Got• problemr Then wri~ to P•t Horo-·
... ~ wit.I. P•t will cut red tape, getting the
ill amwen and action you ne«l to .alve in-
equities in ~t and bu.sine9. M.n
your quHtlon• co Pat Horowltr, At Your Service,
Oranp CQuc Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1'80, Cast.a meu,
CA. 9~6M. Aa many letters u poalble will ~ aJV-
wered, but phon«I u.quiries OI' letw's not includiIJ6
the rHder'• lull name, addreu and bu.sinea hours'
p~ number cannot be considered.
Senion at Fc>n!st Rwa Central
Hiah School decided to ldve up
booze and Cll'lt, at leut lor the
niaht. to make 8Ure there ii no clrlnkina and drivtna. In return,
parentl are picldna up the $4,500
tlb for the June 3-perty.
''They'll juat kill their wheel.a
aoodbye 1t •bout 11 p.m. and
won't .., them aaa1n until 1bout
7 a.m. the next day," uld Daniel
Robertaon, chairman of 1
parentl' aroup that rabed the
caah.
Senion will leave their cara at
the achool and ride buaes to the
party -whJch will be held at a
secret location.
BecaUM! beer, wine and hard
liquor frequently ahow up at
atudent gatherings, parent•
decided thla year, "there muat be
a better way," aald Lea lie
Louilell, director of prevention
eervicet for Project Rehab, an
alcohol 1nd drug abuse
prevention and treatment
program.
Robertlon aaid parentl decided
about six montha .,o to host the
party. They set up a tax-free
lund and began collecting
donations.
The achool provided buaes, and
achool bua drivers will donate
9ervice9 u chautfeun.
"Most importantly, we have
the support of the kida," aaid
Robertaon, whose 10n will be
among the graduates. ''There are 2~0 kids. We're positive we'll
have over 200 attending this
thing."
A aurvey by Project Rehab and
Grand Valley State Colleaes of
1,223 students in 10th, 11 t.n and
12th grades found that 74
percent aid they had Wied liquor
and 22 percent aid they drink at
least once or twice a week.
,, ...........
MOBILE HOME - A 91-year-old, 300-ton brick house is
moved by truck along Blossom Street in Boston to it.a new site,
366 yards away. The resident physician's house belonging to
Massachusetts General Hospital is being moved to make way
for the construction of a new medical research building.
Reds not stronger
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Although the CIA has increased
itl estimate of Soviet military
strength by a million men, the
Red Army really isn't any
stronger than before, Rep. Les
Aapin uys.
Aspin said that the higher
figure is the result of improved
estimates by the CIA and doesn't
reflect Soviet buildup. He aaid
most of the l million are in
non-combat areas such as
construction, civil defense and
internal security.
THE LYRIC
ASSOdATION
OF ORANGE
COUNTY
CARMEN
RIGOLETTO
LA BOHEME
Diamonds
Save 50°/o
CARID
by Bll1t
Newport Harbor tllh
Friday, May 21, lpm
Rl60l.ETTO
by Vll'tl
Newport Hwbor tllh
Friday, .._ 4, lpm
LA 80tllE
by Putcti
lll'N Beach tl&h
Sahl'day, ... 26, lpm
Reserved seats $12.50. Season tickets for all three onty $30.
Group discounts available. For advance tickets and more Info call
494-9446 or 494-3944
TheM PfOguima made po.al~ by • Mobil Foundation CMWlt
TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY SEASON 1962 · 1982
A Tt•dhlon
for 80 Ye•ra
' /
1982
Serving Nlghtty
TII 1 A.M.
.............. ......,
tu1111t1d
145-7017
, OVER fl HOT A COLD ENIHEES
1U IMPORTED A DOMESTIC WINES "9Mt of v..e. 1111ctect IMf, ,,..,. INfood a Poultry
We Mve, bMf'I lnttruoted by GLOBE INTERNATIONAL, a -lllrge art
dlltrtbUtor, to liquidate at auction It• enttre •tock of bronat and Ortent.e ruoe.
Selected diamond jewelry.
45 styles. Choose cocktail
ring, pendants, earrings,
bridal sets and more. Alf
finely crafted with the highest
standards of quality.
Ladles CockUft Ring
. I 3 to~ weight
orig. S499 .00
Sale $249.50
DWnond&~ CJuster E
. 25 tot.II wef0h1
orig. SI 216.00
Sale $608.00
Mena 14K Ring . .a total 'M'loht
orig, S2572.-00
S111e S I 286.00
all safes subject to stock on hand
no speclal orders
14K \IVeddaSet 14 tot<ll t or19. s I I 75 .
S•le $587.50
JOF?enney
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
ellt1ATI .. , OIC\.UOI ..... , °" " ................ ..,. HC.,IC, ..... IOtl'Ott, '"'°'' .... Cllll(UUIUI noet I •CMA ... H AMI U-.aHD ev '"I liA'9 Ulll lltlflltlT
.. ,,
I
• 4
181 1NI N
Dow Jones Final
OFF 1.81
loss deepens
The Flnt American Financial Corp. of Senta Ana
reported It operated at a io. durine the tint quarter.
Revenue totaled $26,962,000 compared with
$29,049,000 for the fint quarter of 1981. Net W. tor
the period wu $919,000, or 53 omta per aha.re,
compared with a net 1<>111 of $448.000, or 27 oente. for
the three montha ended March 31. 1981.
The board of directors declan!d a dividend of 12 ~
oenta per aha.re.
Stock sale proposed
Printronix Inc. of Irvine announced it filed a
registration statement with the Securltlea and
Exebange Commilelon ooverlll( the propoeed aale of
505,000 aharee of common stock.
Of theee 380,000 will be offered by the company
and by eel.Ung ahareholden. The offering will be
managed by Robert1on, Colman. Stephens &
Woodman.
Printronix designs, manufactures and marketa
medium and low-speed line print.en for wie with
mini-computen. microcomputen and other small
oomputer systems.
Nestande to speak
Orange County Supervisor chairman Bruce
Nestande will be the speaker at a luncheon of the
Orange County Regional Purchasing Council on
Wedneeclay at the Conestoga Inn, Anaheim.
New program announced
DPCS, Inc. of Newport Beach bas introduced ita
SYSGUARD program, an approach to providing
clienta with systems programmen on a retainer fee
buia.
Irvine firm relocates
Charlton Associates baa moved into its
15,0QO-.quare-foot pilot facility in the Irvine Industrial
Ccmplex-F.ut..
Installation ia proceeding of a proprietary
three-step integrated production line which wlll
fabricate and certify rigid 5 ~-inch cmca.
Computer seminar held
More than 100 executives from energy,
engineering and financial corporations and
organizations attended a seminar on advanced
computerized project management aystenw held by
POINT 4 Data Corporation of Irvine during the
Offahore Technology c.onference at Houaton.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
l't1. Oii II.I
Oii "·· Oii II.I Oii .. Oii IU °" u °" ti ~ H 5' ,,
I°" ~1
~
METALS
NEW YOAK (AP) -Spo4 nonfwroue mNI pr'-toct.y.
c....., 7~78 c.ita. P<IUl'O. u.::s ~
lAiM 3-27 C*l'9 • pound
Zll'I S5 c.nta • pound. o.ll\w9d.
"" te.5527 t.Mt• w.-compoelt• lb. AA .. ._11111 .... ., __ 76-n c.ttl e pound, H.Y.
__, '370.00 I* .....
....._ '318.00 troy OI., N.Y.
SILVER
Hendy & Hermen, 18.525 per troy -
GOLD QUOTATIONS ~ morning tlUlg: 1329.00, off
13.00 .
..---tlftwnoOn tbrirlO: mJ.ao, °" 11.10.
..... afternoon llldng; ~.... off ... 18.
PtwttdWltl 1328.00, off 11.01. zww.: La• fixing: 1328.00, off 12.00 ~~.00-..S. • ...,_ odt Mlly quo-.
1321.110, off 11. 10. II~•'-* odt dlilly qllGW U27.IO. off I .10. .. :i:;e * frit ~ qllGW ~ 8344 • on tu&.
SYMBOLS
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Former higher tar smokers affirm MERITchoice for
taste,.ease of switch, and long-term satisfaction. .
The research results are
overwhelming.
Latest National Smoker
Study provides solid
evidence that 'Enriched
Aavor;M MERIT offers a
satisfying alternative to
higher tar cigarettes.
MERITTuste
Sparks Switch.
Nationwide survey reveals
over 903 of MERIT smokers
who switched from higher
tar are glad they did. In fact,
94% don 't even miss their
former brands.
Further Evidence: 9 out
of 10 farmer higher tar
smokers report MERIT an
· easy switch, that they didn 't
give up taste in switching,
and that MERIT is the best--
tasting low tar they've ever
tried.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
MERIT Clear Choire
In Latest 1ests.
In addition, extensive
unmarked--pack tests con ...
firm that MERIT delivers
a winning combination of
taste and low tar when com ...
pared against higher tar
leaders.
Confirmed: The over-
whelming majority reported
MERIT taste equal to-or
better than-leading higher
tar brands.
Confirmed: When tar
levels were revealed, 2 out of
3 chose the MERIT combina-
tion of low tar and good
taste.
Year after year, in study
after study, MERIT remains
unbeaten. The proven taste
alternative to higher tar
smoking-is MERIT.
0 Philip Monlt Inc llltl
Kings: 7 mg "tar;' 0.5 mg nicotine-lOO's Reg: 10 mg ·"tar:'
0.7 mg oicotine-100' s Men: 9 mg "tar:'
0.7 mg nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Repon Oec :e1
MERIT MERIT Menthol
Filter
Ki$&100's
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