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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-06-01 - Orange Coast PilotI ( . . ·'Ji.'igh~ingnears Stanl~y • --.;. . . •· . r1.t1s . a .s- 81.DSING -Pope John Paul ll raiaes his Manchester, England, d~~ <>JM!ll-alr mus. arvis to 'a huge crowd at Heaton Park, d~ which the pontiff ~ 12 priests. POpe Visiting Scotland EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) ....... Pope John Paul II made an impauiobed plea to Scottl1h Protestant leaden today for reconclliaUon of the Chn.t1an faiths, a day alter he faced the noille1t, mo1t holtlle demonltradon apinlt hll BrtUlb tour. - -La~ •. op the next to 1.-cky of the first pai-! visit to Britain, he was to travel to G-.,W, Scotland'• J.araest .dty 38 ma. west of Edinburgh, wbere many of the 815,000 Scottilh Catholics were expected to attend an open-air ~ in Bellabouston Glaagow'a police were let for bartlle l>rotestant demonstrations and retaliatory Catholic attacks. Police said the)'. were investigati!Ji an overnight fire at • a rail stab lea than a mile interfaith differences, adding, from the park. Anti-papal "In following thJa road, we have aloprw were found painted Oil still to overcome many obstacles the ttadon walla: There were no oocuioned by the ud history of bUn1& put enmitia We have to raolve ln • mpuate "•nddent, four lm~t doctrinal illus. c:bBdnn retumhJC from a )'OUtb Yet already, mutual love, our rally for the pope in nearby will for unity, can be a ligrl of Murra1fleld were •=Y hope to a divided world -not ildured ..L~ ~ .£.-_. _ _. lny 1eMt In~ days in whi:h pmce when \ua&" ~ --•~ II ., IOl'ely lmperl)ed!'' G1 ·=~~ After the mominl meeting, In the pope rme Mcintyre llkl John Paul muSt be early to meet with the Rt. Rev. given pe"nonal credit for the John Mcintyre, moderator of the ecunenical pn>gre91 being made. General Aaaembly of the "Without him, I cbl't think Presbyterian Cbun:h of Scotland, the new open n e 11 in the and-other Protestani leaden-..-~ ecumenical movement--would- the residence of Cardinal Gordon ilft.ave oOcurred," he ..ut. · Gray, the Catholic archbishop of . Prote1tant extremists have Edinburgh. • failed to mar the papal tour, but John Paul lauded recent ~Rev. Ian Paialey, the bitterly Scottish efforts to resolve (See POPE, Pase A!) Carter speaks • • 10 area • • BY STEVE TRIPOLI or .. ..,,... .... Former Prealdent Jimmy Carter plugged hit new book and dl1cu11ed 1ome of the moat important moment• of hi1 pre1idency in an appearance Monct.y in Anaheim. Carter described hi1 book, ''Keelrina Faith: Memoirs of a Prea1dent," aa a "highly penooal" record wh1ch forced him to relive eome of the most C1 ~ta of hia White In a 1peech before the Alperican Boobellen A9odation and a ~ conference which followed, Carter said the Camp David peace agreement, the takina of 52 American hmtage1 in ken. nuclear dilarmament and the Panama Canal treaty ..were 1ome of the mo1t Important cballenaJel he faced in office. Carter revealed that at cne time during the Camp David WORLD talka be f~ for the ufety of the lale Egyptian Pre1ident Anwar Sadat at the hand&. of hit own F.gyptian ~ Cart.er refused to elaborate oo what type of threet to Sadat he perceived, aaying that it 11 detailed in his book. But he said • he considered it aeriow enough ~t be ll•mmoned the Secret Service and then-National Security Advi1er Zbigniew Brzezin1ki to his cabin and ordered that aecurity around Sadat~• cabin be increa1ed wit.bout the F.aJ>tian president'• knowledge .. Carter said worries about Sadat'• safety while lnalde Camp David caused him th.e only work-related aleeplell night of hia presidency ~-. "Wben I uw Piaident Sadat 'emerge from hia cabin for tu. walk the next momlnc I wu relieved~ I felt foollab about my precaution.a 1everal day1 later. But in view of what happened to him (Sadat wa1 ....mated in Cairo last year) maybe h wasn't 10 foolilh," Carter said. c..rter recalled Qpnp David .. an attempt "to me1h two 1tartllngly different men" -· Sadat and Prime Minister Memchem Begin. m called sadat "the ~test man I 've ever met • and Fhara~terized Begin a1 lntramigent. He aaid the two beads of_,iate did not talle to each other a00ut the .ooord for the Jut 10 of the 13 days they were there. The taking of the hoatagn began what Carter called "the worst year of my life" and led to what be termed the wont moment of hl1 presidency - when he wa lnfonned that the American ml11lon to rescue the b<JltageS Md failed. (See CARTER, P.,. A!) COUNTY ~ ... Ylll lllDlll lllllY NB OH AN(,( <:UIJNIV C.AllfOllNIA ;•, Lf NI S surre·n · er?· i Final assault ' . nearing By ·.nae AllOda&ecl Pre11 Brlti1h marines and ea~atroopera were reported fighting Argentine tl"ooJl9 today for control of a strategic mountain 12 miles w e st of Stanley in acUon that cd'uld pave the w~1t:~ the decisive battle of the F I.alandl. But government sources in London were quoted aa saying the commander of the Britiafi taak force, Rear Adm. John Woodward, has been given full authority to decide whether to give tbe Argentine• an opportunity to surrender before · launching a full-ecale ... ult on Stanley, the Falklands capital South Atlantic Oc;ean BRinSll DRIVE -British troops on drive toward Port Stanley have reportedly run into heavy resistance at Mount. Kent, 12 miles from Stanley. Two Sisters Ridge is three . miles cloaer to Stanley where British c1atm an advance. Unconfirmed reports have 3,500 troops from Queen Eliz.abeth n to oorth (at Cl'088). I The 1ource1, quoted by Britain'• domestic newa aaency. Pre11 A11ociation, an"d Independent Televiaion New1, said ,the British dkl not want to s ubject Argentina to a humiliating defeat becaUM of concerna ol wonenlng political instability in Latin America. The British Defeme M.tnlstry t.eported Monday night that Britt1h and Argentine troo1>1 were battling lor control of 1,500-foot Mount Kent, 12 milel Lagu~a . slaying · 1 • l suspect seized west of Stanley.· Pre11 ·Aa.aciatlon reported fighting three mU.. cloeer to Stanley Oil • ridge called ~ By STEVE MITCHELL Silten, lnd.lcattna the Britiah or .. ..,,....... . marinee and paratroopen may A Buena Park man suspected haw pllhed t.c:k the Aiaeuth• 1n\ tbe abotCiJb death of a Laguna perimeter. But there wu no Beech father early Saturday, wu official confirn:aadon. to be arrai.ned in South Coat -Araenttna 1n a communique Municipal Court" today on muecI .,.iy today Mid it8 lofts dMq!ea of murder. "cie1ected" BrlUah troops about The victim, John Lou.is Shank. 15 milea from Stanley. h l8id 38 was ahot in the head with a AJ:~ntine troop1 were Ullng ii.gauge abotgun at about 2 a.m. he~ to reinforce drfemive_ Sawl'day a. he prepared hil poaitiom around the town. beachfront apartment for • Report• from London and · birthday party for hia daughter. Buenos Aires said the AftenUne An-Med momenta later on ~ commander, Bri.c. Gen Mario beach below the apartment at (See F~, Pase A!) 789 Gaviota Drive, waa~ REMEMBERS-F~rme'r preai6ent Jimmy Carter discussed his memoirs in 0ranae C-ounty Monday. Gonzalea Sesma, also 38, of , Buena Park. ' Sesma remains in Orange County Jail with bail set at , $250,00(). He was to be arraigned today on charges of homicide. Laguna Beach police arrived at the amaU meet f1an.ldna ·aouth Coast Highway at about 2:20 a.m. Saturday after receiving a call of ahotl fired. They spotted a man standing in the meet with a shotgun, ana after apprehending the man, di8covered be· was a wtme. to the shooting in the apartment above. 'tile witnem, Who WU later identified u Shank's roommate, 1ald the two men wer.e decorating the apartment for a • birthday party when Sesma allegedly pounded on the front door. When Shank opened the door, be WU puabed back into the apartment by Sesma, the wttnela said, who demanded caah from the vk:t1m. Shank wa1 forced down a hallway to the living room where 'wttne.es said Sesma pointed the INDEX gun at the victim's head and fired one round. Shank'• roommaW aaicl he battled with Sesma and ftnally took the shotgun away from the ~ who then fled down a steep cliff to the beach below the apartment. I . J f ' I Officen found Sesma, who WU injured in a f.all from the cliff, at the beach, whett he waa arrested. l Valley officer • • 1mprov1ng after crash A Fountain Valley pollce officer, who waa critically injured in a traffic mi1hap Friday, was said to be lmprovtq today, though he 1till faces additional surgery. Officer Keith Levin, 30, a fo ur-year member of the department, wa1 reported in 1erioU1 condition at Fountain Valley Community H08pital with internal injuries and a broken right leg. Fountain Valley police officer K.evin A.mold said Levin was awake and alert Monday. He aid Levin underwent two operatiom over· the weekend· and face• addition.al surgery for repair of a ruptured kidney and the broken · leg. He uld the California Highway Patrol and Fountain Valley polloe are continuing their probe of the accldent: I ' 1 I I I ' l I . i . ! · 1 I Strategy with B':gin U.S. pollc:Ymaken ua a leCl'et pey~hological IX'OfiJe when deelina wtt!r t.r.ell Prime Mlnister ScboolsuperintendentcbaHenged ~ pollUc:al newcmmr from Irvine 11 c;haJlenilna the incUmbent in the June 8 electlm tor country aupertntendellt of ecboola. Paae Bl. ' At Your servtoe Erma Bambeck A4 B2 Ol.6 A!> M . B2 B2 B6 AS D2-3 A4 Cl-3 B2 ., kenecbem Bepi. Pace A6. • TV 'invasion' planned SPORTS STATE D'-6 a C5 D2 A8 BD B2 °' .JM BO A2 AS Mtri"cn~a. had heavily fortttted Mount Ktnt and th• nHrby rid . u tho Brilla}} c.ptu.red them.· t hoy w ould provtd• a • vantap polnt for llhellinl the inner ~ntJne defel\llOI. Th Bntl.ah Deferwe Minlatry aald today that 2~ Ar1entine eoldlera were kWed ln the battle · for Darwin and Oooee Green. British estimatea initially put the Argenune dead at abQut 100 ln the 14·hour battle Friday for the strategic settlementa on East Falkland island. Darwin and Gooee Green were recaptured by Britis h paratroopers. British lOMeS in the fighting were put at 17 killed and 31 woundeji Press Association al80 reported without 11ttrlbution that the • ~tisb landed their backup force. qt 3,500 Scots, Welsh Guardsmen 411d Nepalese Gurk.haa north of f.tanley, bringing thelr total land rces on the lSland to at .least 500 and outnumber ing the ~Jtimated 7 ,000 A rgentin~a ~ncentrated around Stanley. The Defense Ministry refused to confirm the landing report. ' . frcim \he San c.artoe ~ and another paratroop force comtnc from the aouth after capturtna th• OooH Gr•tn alntrlp and 1,400 Araentlnt pNonerl. • Brtdlh ~ repor11 Mid the two forotit \Md linked Up for the ... ul\ on St.N\Jey. Tbe mlnl1try Hld Brltt1h Harrler fl•hter-bombera continued to Pou.net the Stanley airltrlp ~ ~ 1nUe1 eut of the t own, and 111 number'' of Ar1entlne light planea were believed damapd. Prell A9odaUon reported that· Brltlah wanhtpe moVSld towithin two miles of the Stanley harbor to shell Argentine fortifications. PresidentLeopoldo Galtiert met for 40 minute. Monday with the Soviet ambe•ador to Araentlna • S e rgei Strlganov . The ambal aador told reportera he expressed "the Soviet Onion'• friendly feelings H regard• Argentina's dlfficU.lt fight" to holdthe~ .. Striganov said nothing about Soviet mWtary aid to Argentina. He said his government was "already helping Argentina politically and diplomatically in the United Nations Securitv Council." .... ~ Two Br1 tish forces had been advancing on Stanley, Rpyal Marines an d par~oopers moving westward b helioo t.er €ARTER PLUGS BOOK. • • Corter saW the hostage episode left "a disgusting feeling of impotence among the American people and in my-heart" because of the inability to resolve it. He ~d he received advice ranging from "getting d own on my knees'' to dropping an atomic bomb on Tehran in his efforts to resolve the cri.sfs. Carter's book opens with a description of the last hours of 'his term, when the release of the hostages was the subject of hectic negotiations, he said. • On nuclear arms reduction, Ca r ier said he ha s been d isco u raged b y what h e per ceived as t h e Rea.san Administration's indifference to . the arms control process. Recent pronouncements by Presid ent Reagan as he prepares to visit Europe h a ve been m o r e reassuring, however, Carter said. •· The growing movement for a nuclear weapons freeze in this ~ountry can be "nothing but })ealthy'' and echoes sentiments ,.,tdely held in Europe, Carter said. He added that his book reveals for the first time proposals for anns reduct.Jon that he made to' Soviet. Pres ident L eoni~ ~ in June, 1979. He said thoee proposal.a prove that the United Stat.ea baa been willing to take the lead in arms reduction. In other matt.en, Carter called the political battle over the Panama Canal treaty the toughest he haa ever fought, aald he hopes that Walt.er Mondale, vice pre sident under hlm, i• elected president in 1984 and said he does not regret any of the decisions of hia presidency. S ome· of the greateJt fruatrations aa president aside from the hostage· crisis included watc hing as the counfry "suffered from lobbyilta with more influence (in Congreu) than I had and more influence than the voters bad," and ''the . struggles I bad as ~uman being seeing my friend Bert Lance, my brother Billy and (White House Chief of Staff) Hamilton Jordan stigmatizes! -almost always unnece918rily." He said writing about the low points, including his 1980 defeat and the hostage crisis, was. difficult and painful toe him. ''Nobody Uk.es to get beat, aria nobody llkea to, be . rejected by people he loves as I love the people of the United Sta~'., Suni:iy_'.__ and-breezy. The For.c11t'For 8p.m. EDT A11nm anow(l) St1owet•El/l 'Fh1trlfff!i] - BEGGING PARDON _:_ Comedian Pat C.OOper leads a rally 1n 1Upport of jailed actrell Sophia Loren in New York's Little Italy Seven women vow to keep ER!i tasting . . ., ........... eection. Miss Loren is serving a jail llelltence in I~ on tax evasion charges. Court gives more leeway in car search -· .. Bl DIDR Villf I!. BIWOBKIDl'OBI!. . . ._ . \ .\. I~ iJVuke plant reactor incident 'stark reminder' • • MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) -a valve atuck open on one of the t'OQUna ayat.em to do lta work, The fim alarm eoundecl at 12:MS -pumps that feed water to the brinat"8 \J\e water lev41l up to a,m. In the next fO\U' minutea the veuel contalnln1 th• ru.otor'• 178 fncfiee .. The plant wu Mfe. r•Actor core· of the Vermont fuel. . When the pumpe ttnt turned Yankee nuclear power plant The pumpa are turned on off, the two operiton quickly ~ within 44 aeconda -and 111 a n u a 11 y • b u t tu r n o f f went to the main ructor control \hree aafety 1y1tem1 -of automatically when the water panel, located at th~ center of & stu1lnl a meltltown. level reaches 170 lnchea above V-chaped wall of llahta. a1.anm Any one of the automatic the top o~ the fuel, 1,4 Inch• and diall. afety l}'91ema wu auffident to above norinal. The ah1ft aupervilor beard the end the da.ngv, and they all At 12:56 the riain8 water level pumps alow down apd entered worked. The plant ahut ~wn led to a shutdown of the '91PP9· \he control room,~ the two aafely. The first alarm went off. Within othen at the main . Stlll, the April 24 incident six seconds, a control room The nudear ety ·engineer provided a stark reminder, in the operator had turned the pumps took a paeltlon at the computer t Orange OOU1 DAILY Pl l.OT/Tueec:tay. June 1, 1812 8 REACl'OR CONTROL ROOM -Thia control room 11 the nerve t'enter of the _ V ennont Yank~ nuclear power plant in Vernon, Vt. During an April 24, 1982, emergency at the tacWty, the reactor operators gathered around u••••• · the n\atn reactor panel near the cen~r of the photograph and ipissed important alarm signala on the left and right aides of the control room. word• of Pu bllc Service back on. comole, a few feet behind the DepartmentCo~miasloner ~2 ~~u~~~w~n ~~~~twu~~~~~~~~~-~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~i Richard Saudek, that "ultimately the pumps automatically tu.med the nation a wont conmercial It la humans who control th1a off again -the wate.r level had. nuc2ar accident in March 1979 at B :7 plant." reached 171 inches -no one U\ Three Mile Ialand. ust The Nuclear Regulatory the conJrol room noticed the The aafety engineer la Commill1on ..Pd operaton in the shutdown. By now their eyea iuppoeed to keep an overall eye control room were oU the aw::k were on the main reactor control on events and provide advice to ~ in guesaing what was wrong and panel. the operaton. 1 · S\.' allO failed to rea1i2:e how the Without any water feeding Investigation ahowa that the e ic a; plant had saved itself. into the vessel, the water lnaide operators tho\Jiht they had saved Probably the most serious the container began bolling off at . the plant by ualng the feedwater " operational problem at the a rate of about two inches a pumps, unaware that they had Vermont plant in ita decade of second. turned off again. producing power, the incident A loss of water, if unchecked, • • The three men in direct control alao was one of the most closely would lead to a meltdown of the of the plant alao were unaware documented at the plant due to reactor core, releuing radiation that the emergency core <iooling lnv._tigatlona by the NRC and into the environment. system had switched on -ana the state of Vennont. Twenty-two seconds after the had provided the critical water. ;rhe following reconstruction is second pump shut down, the The l1laln question raiaed was: baaed on NRC documents: water level was down to 136 How clole did the Vernon reactor ~ At 12:50 a .m., two reactor inches, and the reactor itself, come to a meltdown? • operators and the nuclear safety turned off automatically. When the emergency core en1ineer were in the control Fourteen seconds later, the cooling system clicked on. the room of the 540-megawatt water level hit 87 inches. The reactor core was within 871.nches reactor. The shifts h.ad just emergency core cooling aystem of losing its coolant. changed• and the plant operators switched on, pouring water into While the hardware gets good were preparing to lower reactor the vessel at 4,25~ gallom a marks. investlgaton were criUcal power from 100 percent to minute. It was the first time the of the workers, complalnlng that perfonn routine checks. plant's emergency cooling system the shift auperviaor became too Sometime before 12:56, with was used. involved In the actual operations power in the process of being It took slightly more than a and failed to step back to aee reduced to 75 percent of capacity, minute fo~ the emergency what waa going on. Flat tax rate gains support Plan would eliminate deduciions and loopholes Democrats unveiling a new flat-tax proposal. C·ELEBRATES OUR 10TH BIRTHDAY Join our weeklong party June 1st thru 5th each night from 5 p.m. till closing. • Rolled back prices on cocktalls • Seafood bar specials • Oyster shooters 25• • Compllmentary champagne and cake wfth dinner 10 Years On The Bay In Newport 2735 w. ·coast Hwy. 642-3431 . Newport Beach WASHINGTON (AP) - Coogre9sional interest appears to be growing in a simplified, flat income tax rate for most Americana that would eliminate many deductions and "loofholes." "A low-rate tax on broad hue of economic income ls an intriguing idea and bu aome merit," said Dole, chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance. Committee. Dole's intereat is too complicated for moat taxpayers to understand, resulting in a to. of voluntary oompllanoe with tax laws. The Treaaury Department ~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~ already 11 atudying the 'A though it ia. far from becomlng law, the controvOl:lial ldea picked up aupport with Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., calling for h"aringa this year and two · crucial for full congre111ional dfbate on tha ~ Dole and others contend that . the current tax system bu grown . . ~-~~· ABANDONED INFANT -Nune Rhonda Schutldn holds a baby girl estimated to have b.een born only eight houra before when found abandoned in a S\lburban garage in Milwaukee, Wis. The infant. reported in excellent condition at Columbia, waa discovered in a cardboard box. Police are aearch.lng for '1er mother. . . ORMGE COAST Dally Pilat TtlomM P. H8'ev • ,..., .. a.~ Ollollr implications pf auch a system. which would lmpoae an ~the-board tax-th the range of 10 to 20 ~nt, eliminating nearly all deddCtlona, e:dlusiona and other· apecial-intereat proviliona built into the tax law by Congrem. Dole aaid he hoped the department's study would be completed in time for bearings in the Finance Committee later in the current eemion of Congrea. · Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regall has expreeeed sympathy with the idea, but hla chief tax 1peclall1t, Aasiatant Secretary John. E. Chapoton, aaya the change would shift a major ahare of the tax burden from the wea-ltby to lower-and middle-Income Americana. In a related development, Sen. Bill Bradley; ~N.J., and Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., released detaila of a propcml to place a 14 percent tax on most individuala. The propoul would eliminate moat deductionJ but retain thoee .for home mor'tpge. interest.-charitabla cOotributiona and employee bUat.ne. expemes. Under the CWTent aystem, tax rates vary from 12 to 50 percent. ''lf people can understand the tax ayatem -which they certainly cannot today with all the emu.Iona, deductiom and loopholes -they trill "be more likely to support the tax system," said Gephardt, a member of the Wa"f9 and Mean• Committee, whlch handles tax matt.en ln the HQU8e. The plan would impose a 14-percent tax on a!,p,gle taxpayen with lncotnr"dp to $26,0DO and lor couplet with lncomea up to $40,000. Inoome above tN.e lew1a would face a andually riling '1aurtax" ranalna lnim e percent to 1• percent. 1lbe effect would cut the current 50-pemmt maximun\ tax'tate to A dOuble tax · bl-eak IOr Caliloi-D.ians ·only. No ' U.S. income t.axes. No state income taxes. " TAX-FREE . 11.43%* -'";~ . · Payable monthly Federal taxes. State taxes. The. more you make, the mor:-they take. But, now you can keep it all. .When you inve~t in the California Series of the Municipal Investment . Trust Fund, rou keep everything you earn. Nobody fakes a penny of it. Not the State. Not the IRS. It'~ completely tax-free*. And the current yields are attractive. 11.43% -·and that's after all sale's charges and expenses. And there's no management fee. We think that you '11 agree that the c.aJifornia Series of the Municipal Investment Trust Fund scores high on all counts. All of the municipal bonds in the fund are rated in the category A or better by Standard & Poor's or Moody's. Becuase i~'s a fixed portfolio you'll know exactly where your mo.ney is invested. And, because it's diversified, your risk is reduced. You may redeem or sell yo~ lµlits at any time without charge or interest penalty at th~ then prevailing market _ pi;iae. 1£ you 're a C.Slifomian in a high tax bracket, double tax-free income may give you a lot more spendable income. Write today for a Prospectus. It's free and without obJiiation. Just oall or mail the coupon. . .. .,.,,..,_ .. --' ____ __ -~_, .. ,_...,,...,._ ... .._ .. --. """* ...... ~,., -* • ,,_T 11, U&t. ......_ -...,.. .t J.f!L. •1ott.11 ,-_.. -<1 n• lo. • -.t 1101..._ rv. • .., • ...-... -.-...................... .1 .,.. . .., .. ., ... ~,,,, ........... . ~O,...tlfot~-.. ---.. -.. ......... .. ............ ,,_ ....... ., ... -"'-'"'---., ..... _,....,. ... ... .......... _ .,_.....,_,, -· ......... ""'*'-- 28 J::°~ belna wetclled . - In eon,r-e. would .now f!V'flry -------------------------------------------family iax-tree 1ncame ot about She IAmWlt:iln b 1i· $10,000. year, and then Wdnc .~.c.,, • .._._ Butte~ nc. all income other al one rate, -,_.. ...-..,.,,.., probably 19 percent. No tn•pott Seidt, CA ntlllO - deduction1 would be allowed. (Nif} Ml ... •Attn: Ed MoNMY Atiotber plan would cut the number of we a..a.ta from te to three and retain a tew of lbie CUITel'lt deducdonl. ' . IJa.!~'12.R£.WITI DIA.ft RIAI>&R81 lt yC)U eamtd w .... ln c.i1lfomla dwina 19?0 and have not tutd far a Ntuncl of the DtlabWty INuranct (DI) contrtbutlonl 1'0U made that )'eU', the atate Employment Development Department (EDD) whkh ldrn1n.llten the PI proeram. ur,_ you to fU. now. Your rifund ~ be at tuah • $01. . . . . &DD utlmated ln 1070 th.at approximately qht mUllon people would be eU11ble to claim the credlt and the ~yout would amount of $628.6 m1111on. Td date approximately 6.6 million people have applied for and received DI refunda totallna MOS million. EDD expecta to receive another 500,000 clalma by the final fillna date of April 16, 1984 and pay out an additional $24.6 • tnveUfll wtth ~11 cen eometimel lMd to \J'lltldy, warrw tM National Automob&le Club. mv.ry awnmv newt mtd1a reportl Cltll of an1mala d)1.nc ln par~ can from ~ or of ICddtntl t.tna· aauted by a· Joole pet that tnterf..-td witli the drtver. Thw n..d.llll event.I could be prevented by proper pJ.uWna and preparation or by leavtn1 your ~ fou.r·lelPd~~ at a boUd!na kennel. ., lf en honMt ap=I of You. your pet and the vavel plana te UM trip c:oul4 be accOmRlithed Hfely, NAC provldea the followln1 tlpa to make the journey an enjoyable one for all ccmcemed: -Make certain the anlma1 ii ln good health before leavtna llome and get expert advi~ from your veterinarian if it'• neoeeea~ to tranquilize your pet for the trip. Check wi mllllon. 'S' 1 Reuona why people have not filed for a refund appear to fall into two categories: 90me wor~n have moved from the state and are unaware of the refµnd; and IOJ1le view the refund aa a minor aum (EDD'a original eatimates show that almolt two mllllon people are entitled to $10 or leea). the. lodJdna accommodaU0111 along the way to see if they accept animala. -__ J._-;-On the road, take along famlltar IU'llCles for your pet 1uch u bedd.ing, food and -. DI la totally financed by California workers and all people who were a part of the atate'a DI program in 1979 are eligible tor the refund. To get the fund you need to either file a Fonn MOX, Amended California State Income Tax return for 1979, or write a letter fu the ' state . Franchile Tax Board requesting the refund. The letter muat include: name, address, social security number, and the amount claimed. In the years lmmediately prior to 1979, contributions to the DI fund exceeded the benefits., paid. .. To return the .excea money, legislation (K'.B' 298 -A.lister McA.U.ster) puaed In 1979 provided for a refund of 80 ~nt of all contributions paid into the fund tb4t year. In ):979, C'alifornia wage earners contributed 1 percent of the first $11,400 In wages to support the DI program which pays weekly benefits when workers are off the job because of sickness or Injury. The maximum lndiYidual contribution· was $114. Therefore, the maximum refund ia $91 (80 percent of. the maximum contribution). Watch ~ts when traveling DEAR READERS: Warm weather Chin~se rap cube wa\er dlahea and favorite toys. Carry identification tap, lnnoculatton certiflcatea • and current lioenae u well as a' recent picture of the animal ln cue your pet la !oat. -Animala require more oxyg.en than humans, espedally l.n warm wealbec. 90 it's vi\81 to provide them with fnleh air and good ventilation. Never leave a dog or cat (or cblld) In a cloeed car. When it la 74 degrees out&ide, the temperature in the car can exceed 120 degrees ln just 30 minutes, even with the windows open. -A prime factor In traveling with pets should be afety. U the anlma1 ia a poor traveler, it could be dangerous for both driver and pet. A properly aiz.ed cage will provide peace of mind to the driver and paaengera, as well as a private apd safe haven for the animal. -~ to establlah a regular feeding and exerd.se ~utine while traveling. Be cautious when other dogs or cata are a1oUnd aa animal.a react differently ln •tl"8f!Be surroundinga. • Got • proble~n write io Pat Horo-· -_ j witz. Pat will cut ttd tape, getting the • answers and accion you need to aolve Jn- equitie8 in government and bu.lmw. Mall your que•lions to Pat Horowlta., At Your Service, ~ Cout Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa .mesa, CA. 92628. At mJUJy Je~n u poalble wJn be ana- wered, but phcn«I b.quiries or letters not lnclu<llng the reader'• lu11 name, addrtta and business houn' phone number cannot be oonsi~ .. .,, ... CON~ERT -Pvt. Vladimir Tzapp, a· one-Ume 1er1eant in the RUlltan Army, hu sractuated from. buie trainin1 in the U.S .. Marine Corpe in San Diego. High-rise talk set for Mesa Alan D. Levy, exec-. utive vice pre1ident. and director of Ttahman ~ West Manasement Corporation, Will apeak to the lnltitute of~ Eatate Management on June 9 at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. Levy'a topic will be markets for higb-ri1e office development, leasing and ~nt. Beauty awards dinner slated The landscape beautlflcation award1 ceremonies of the California Land1cape Conttactora Aaaociatio~ Long Beach-Orange County chapter, will be held June 25 at the Disneyland Hotel, Anaheim . For information, call 633-7541. • Revamping _.of state's ~duCati9n plaii du~e Fewer than 10 percent of the 1tudent1 at CaUfomia11 community coll..-move on to the univeraiU... At the ume time, the lO~pua atate unlvonlty 1y1tem baa been fotetd to tiahten ~ 1tandarda and ralle r ... two mov• that wW 81"M'1)' reduce public aoceea to hiaher education. Thele reali~• come aa retporwee to PoPUlar demandl. Propoaition 13 and the 1tate'1 finanda1 crunch are behind the new lldm1llion requirementa and (ee lncreuea. And the change tn c:anmunity collep rolee ii a nsult of an intenae need for vocational ed\acatien and conUnuing education for adultl. The chan1ea 1ugfeat that a revamping of California 1 20-year-old higher education muter plan may be Jona overdue. · F"or the new realities demonatra1e how meaninglen the plan has become. In fact, the bhaeprint ta already belng changed, but on an infonnal, piecemeal basis with no real coordination between the variou1 educational elements. The idea behind the plan was for educators at various !YJ>et of public colleges to fill specific needs with little or no duplication. Community colleges were to provide vocational studiee and the equivalent of the flrat two years of college, giving equal attention to both joba. The ltate university 1y1tem would educate moat prospective achoolteachen and provide tuition. -free eduattion to the majority of California high IChool graduates. The University ol C&ll.fomia, meanwhile, would educate the cream of the crop, with highly~aelective admilaions. Adult education"was a minor factor in that plan. But now, with the aver~e student age ranging from 25 to 28, adult education ia a vital pa.rt of the system. It a1ao draw. the ire of skeptics who often oppose budget tncreaaes for the colleges. "Canoeing 1 and 2, Microwave Holiday Cooking, Comoanion Pet Care," snorts an "Alert1' from the California Chamber of Commerce. .. Tb-ese are 1ome of the many tax-1upported courses offered in c.automia'• 107 community colleges • ~Clllflllll IDIR u . •• a, aiJP\lticant percentaae of the course• ao not fulf Ul the oriafnal pW'J)Olel of the IC~te of th.la, Gov. 8rQwn..hu a $99 milllon lncreue ln $1.81 bQllon ~~et (or community colle1ea in 1982-83." Most of the adult educatioG c1alle9. the chamber noted, are tuiUon~free. Even the 1tate'1 Po1taecondary F.ducation Cornmlaalon recently began wondering if they should be. ' The ume 90rt of questiod la betJ>1 uked about the 1tate unlvenitlea, where tea. will jump to llbout $320 next year, even though there la ltill no tuitiog. • "To continue our current 1evell of aervice without financial charps for the students, we must llmit aoce9I to the university," aaya Donald Gerth, president of Cal State Domtnsuez Hilla. "Then we face anoth~r • question: Ia it better to limit 8'lCe9 to the unlvenlty or allow unlimited aocea but charge tuition for ttr: Gerth believes it'• time to rethink the entire financing of Calltomia'• ooll~es. · ''Pe~tual growth WU 8IBWDed in the 19691.'' he says. "But RrOWth la not Inevitable or even delirable every place at all times." Even if the higher education muter plan ia not formally rewritten, thae broad policy questions must be answered. The dedaiona lire being made on an ad hoc buia by college adminbtraton, without fµll public ~on. Their choices are reflected in coune offe.ringa, budgeta and new admilSion standards. • But the impact of thoee ded.aiom on hundreds of thousands of Callfornl{lna -taxpayen, students .. parents and employers -la 10 great that something nu>re than today's piecemeal approach clearly is needed. Elias is a columnist based in Santa Monica. PEKING (AP) -Rubik'• Cube, the colorful brain-teaaer Ulat has started to captivate the Chi- nese, is bel.ng.critk:iz.ed by a Pektng newspaper as a dangerous pastime that'can lead to divorce, abnor- mal behavior, high blood preu~e and aching flngm. "The Magic Cube pos1ibly i1 beneficial to sharpening intelligence, but don't forget that its side effects might bring danger," the Peking Evening News said, using the.pu.zzle'~Chinele name. .ur r·1se ae·! .-- Last November, the Chinese pren reported people were standing in line to buy the cut. in Shanghai, and that city already had held its first Magic Cu~ contest altho\.Cgh the toy hit the market onl a few months earlier. · Theres oalyoae ·FMCrOwns. , Surp1M ... at the hllgtlt of the 11.nwMt' ~ ... ,.. lwYlrlg e U1e on lope nS lhotta. Stytee In Jr .• mlMe' nS tul ~ ........ ~ you'l 1PS1190let9 .. IUl'llll'l8t1 ._ ........ .,.top. re;. se ..... ue. .. ~ lhcn, reg. 4.49 ......... . c. Soldlatrfpe Jr. top. reg. se ..... ue. D. Jr. o.mg ehotte, reg. S1_!>.r. .... Ut. L FIAi flgw9 "'* top, reg. ~ ..... 4.M • ..r.-. '·Tennie lhotta for U ftglnd, reg. 110, -I.It . . ' I • , .. ~· OranQ. Ooa.11t DAILY P1C.OTITUMdey. June 1, 1882 joli hunt " .. By JOYCE L. UNNEDY -J.B., Ala•• ... lll •. • I don'\ -1 th• del!'" "unmarketabfe11 but do ·~ a ch.Ma. of ='ve for your brother. 1'lnt. he afiould that the wooda are even more crowded with contemporary competition for I CAREERS · the few forester job openlnp than they were two I. yeara ago. Bue-t on a study, the Colleae Place.ment · Counc:il aaya lia expert.a can't predict wlUch way the job market for all oocu~tiona will flop f~ th.ia =~uatai becau.e a pattern ~not yet MAJOR LEASE: SIGNED -Digital #24, nearly the entire' structure. Digital Equipment Corporation has le•.ased 32,000 Equipment is the world's second largest aquare feet in Irvine Executive !_~ar_k_bu11 __ di_n_g __ man_· _ufacture _ _..;..· _r_o_f_eotn __ p_u_te_r _s_ys_te_ms_. ___ _ Still, a Ouija board l.sn't needed to know that to find jot., atudents and sraduatee will be required to campailn vigorously and lntelltaently. Digita~ inks Irvine Park Any reader who finds entry blocked to a choeen ~r field may want to comider the long view -a change uf perspective. You devote a year . • or so to the taak.. You begin by find.Ina the most m8J0r lease closely-related job you can find. To Uhuti:atel . perhaps you become a night guard at a timber.iana,-aite. You have gotten your foot in the forest. I> i g 1 t a 1 E q u i p m e n t The pay may be minimal but you have-. Co r Porat Ion, a major positioned ourself -by coming early and ataylng. manufactur~r of computer late -to meet people who know about jobs when syatems, hM leaaed 32,000 aquare they occur. . feet in the Irvine Company's PROMOTION -Angie Dickinson is helping promote California avocados this summer in a aeries of new advertisements featuring a new, longer copy selling approach. Executive Park office complex You begin to make friends in your field. You for the c omputer fi rm ' 1 J>In professional aocleties and trade organizationa. Southwest headq6:rten. Pacific Telephone to close in Mesa You are helpful at workahops and oonventiona by volunteering to help with arrangements. You read The lease for nearly an entire the appropriate trade journals. building In the five-atructure By Lrnmersin~ yourse lf in the people and complex, located at MacArthur literature of your field, eventually you'll find ~oors Boulevard and Main Street in open to contacts that can de velop into job Irvine, is the largest single office interviews. lease negotiated by the Irvine Come_any in aeveral years, /. Pacific Telephone will cloee ita Costa Mesa r.!Sldence business office at 250 Ogle Street on Friday. After June 4, PacTel's 42,983 CU810mers in Costa Mesa and portions of Newport Beach will be eerved by existing residence offices in Laguna Hilla and Santa Ana, AB leads develop, do your best to arnnge an according to Laura A. Roetvold, appointment with employen whether or not there sales manager ln the company,.s is a current job opening. Your aim ia to be commercial/industrial division. remembered once a vacancy oocun -or to create your own job once you've got inside infonnation. 'The c los ure is part o f a countywid' consolidation program designed to provide more efficient eervice to customers and a reduction in operation cost& Costa Mesa and Newport Beach~ with. 673 and 675 prefixes should call the Laguna Hilla I residence buSinesa office at 855-~111 for billing matters and fel"Vice inquiries; customers with the' 1 548, 631 and 642 prefixes should call the Santa Ana residence office.at 975-8111; and customers aerved I by the 645 and 646 prefbtE9 should call 97~8190. The reaidence business office closure will have I no effect on PacTel'a Costa Mea public office, a.1-> at 250 Ogle, or the Bell PhoneCenter at 3033 Bristol Street. ... Even In times of high unemplo)'JDellt and govenunent budget cuts -about one-fourth of forest.en work for the feds and others work for state and local governments -people retire, quit and die. But .you risk not learning of tlMl!le Jobe lf you're a stranger in.your field. You will, of coune, decide bow much time you're willing to com~it to your gamble ol attempting to alip In through the back door. U mor.e 'education aeema advisable, de~ on your field, a. new directory la intonrative: "WbO Offers Part-Time J)egree ~r· PublJabed by Petenon's Guides, the paperb8ck ia In boobtores or can be ordered for $8.20 Jirepald from the publlaber at P.O. Bo~ 2123, Princeton. N.J . 08540. I •·· • \Singer seeks 'top hit · ~-!~.; BOnnie Raitt loolcing for big breakthrough BOSTON (AP) -She's a concert rock statioos that never played me headliner from coast to coast, and her before. It's kind of thrilling JP not albums routinely sell hundreds of always be relegated to the dentist's thousands of copies. But after 11 years office." . of trying, Bonnie Raitt just can'\ come · T t>i ~ Bo a t on ah O·W • were a up with the tut smgJe she tanga tor. hotn'ecoming for the 32-y~ar-old · The bluesy tunes on her first singer, who started her career by several albums never cracked AM playing the blues in local coffeehoulles • ,iadio. A cov. er version of Del while attending Radcliffe College in Shannon's "Runaway" got her into nearby Cambridge In the late 19009. the Top 40, but no higher. Producer Tbe coun~ry bluea tunea that Peter Asher failed in his attempt to brought her W:ne are aUll pert of her turn Mia Raitt Into a alick popster live show. But they're overshadowed \wfth Ml' 1979 album, ''The Glow." by the loud rock that Mill Raitt uya This year Mill Raitt t down ~ t:;: bottled up inlide her for a her acoustic guitar, ~p with "lt'a a· definite rock'n roll band the hard ,r;ocking BullftP" Band and now,',.ahe aaid. ''The feeling I WJed to r~lease~ Green get at the tail end of my .et is what I L1ghta, possibly get for the whole set now . ~ . her beat al bun\ luckily, at a-~ when the country ta ~-But 90 far -moving towUd bard rock; and there 1 5UH no hit. . are more women in rock who are The eeonolIUCS getting succemful. Th.at ai.o happens of the record to be the time when I am wanting to are sue~ do more of that kind of music." that if you don 1 !fbe album is not a complete have a hit single, deP!lf'lUre 88 mid-tempo tunes, aucb the record will alt 9'NTT as llJ(eep' Thla Heart of Mine " and the.re at 150,000 Eric Ku' .. River of Tears," 'would copies and not ~en . go up to 3~,000 have fit on any of her other releues. becauae you cant get it played, Mila But these aongs 1tand out more Raitt said_ befote performing two Jharply .becauae they contrut with aold-out aho...., ~t the Orpheum all-out rockera, such 81 "Wlllya · Theater. Wontcha" apd "Me and the Boya." I "With the new album; "Keep Thia While the material may have Heart of Mine' didn't do as well as we changed, Mm Raitt still preeenia a • 1, ~as the first slngle, ao now we're MllY independent ~ on naae. tr)'ini With 'Me And The Boys,' " she tosabta off wbecracka and barbed laid with a atgh. "At leelt we'~ remarb about \he nuclear J>OWer getting • Jot more airplay on the tnduatry 1be baa lone cru1aded ~as ~ whole, with a lot of b.trd Brok.era for the lease were Seth Dudley and Dennia Plehn of Julien J. Studley, Inc., Los Angeles. Pre.ently located in Newport Beach, the Digital Equipment regional office prov1dea aales and eervice support to the company's marketa in Southern Call.fomia, Arizona. eouthem Nevada, New M~xfoo and areas of Texas. Executive Park la one of three new Irvine Company office complexes In Irvine and ~ewport Beach, and .everal 1eaes have been signed with national and international corporatiom . ··volunteers needed 1f or alcoholic test LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -Researchers at UCLA say they nc ?oed 200 heavy drinkers for a study of what makes alcoholics. The 100 men and 100 women 'should be over 4_8, Cu ucasian and never have been treated for alcoholism, said Dr. Linda Beckman of UCLA's Neuropsychiatric Institute. Volunteers will be asked questions about their beliefs reuarding alcohol, health and their drinking history, Ma. Bedanan said. Both men and women are sought in order to learn which pro lblema are univerJal and which may apply only to one &eX or t:he other, she said, adding that a small fee will be ~d. • The study is sponsored by the National Institute on Alo :1hol Abuse and Alcoholism. $1.5 miilion due for toxic cle8nUp SA CR.AMENTO (AP) -The Sena 1te Health and Welfare Comr.nittee has approved $1.5 million to clean up the McColl toxic wa1te dump In Orange Count!'· " The· author, Assemblyman RC* Jr ohn$on. R-Anahelm, said that .._.. w.ap-ta to make sure tlb e inoney in bis AB26 la spent t'O clean up the dump, not just to ~)' it. "We ?ve spent bundredl and bundre di of thousands of dollars on studies and nothing haa been done . . . We've talked aboUl it lon( enough . Let's do tOmetbinM.'' he aaid. :· The site in Fullerton WU u.eci to dispoee of add iludae refinery waates dwing World War ll and of oil field drilling muds between 19,1 and 1962. The .tate Health Service• Department baa proposed spending $1.5 rolllion on the ait.e in the 1982-83 budget. - f] I ,. Orange Coll' DAILY PILOT/T'Mlday, June 1, 1111 --------~, .... ------~--------~-.--------------'!-----------------'!'--------------..;.------------~ rn~urnm~ffi[L ~mIBj~: -L_aggard Co~gr.ess tnurst solve budget impasse~ 'rhree Umee 1alt week. budaet pro~ w.,. pl.Iced betore the United StatH Conareu in the m•rat>ton battle to produce a 1pendln1 document for the country ttiat w1ll reduce the IU:e of the federal .. defJdt and thereby help cut lntere.t. ratee. The1e three differing propm&la were placed before the Houae, variously supported by Pre1tdent Reagan, House Democratl, and :.ao~itlon of moderatee of both . And three timee, upon the votina. each went down to defeat. The American people, at thla juncture, are 'j:u1tlf led in wondering lf Congreea w1ll ever pue a budget package and lf there can be any silver lining to the cloud that hangs over the nation in the form of. heavy interest rates. Even an exasperated President Reagan declared that, "The United S-tates government's programfor8£1ivingatabudgetw about the most irresponsible, Mickey Mouae arrangement that any government body ever had." Thia remark, clearly borne of frustration, probably didn't do .. Ju1tlce to poor Mlckey . The· pre1ldent dld turn on •. more aertoua note to declare. ..I do believe moat members of the Howie want to ahow the 1r:l0\mtry that the tn1tttutlon la not paralyr.ed. The Important thine II tO ifve the HOUIO another· chance to get back on the track." Paralyied ii clear·ly the peroept1on that many Aroericana now have of the Houae bl. u:igetary ~ proceaa. There have bnen few clear sign.ala of leaderah·ip being exercised and certainly llt1 t1e heard from the Orange County congressional delegation. Let us all hope t,h,lt t:be Houae can shake off the a 1pparent paralysis. Perhaps the long Memorial Day ,weekend ·will have cleared congressional minds and given the leadership ti.Irie to pull together. Indications are that Congrea will get another crack . at solving the budget impasse tom• >rrow. President Reagan b1elieves the House can rise above petty differences and special parochial interest and pass a bud,1Jet. Let us all hope he 1S right. Donovan silence h1:J1rts Labor secretaries do not wield the kind of influence in an administration that officen such aa the secretaries of state or defellle do, but they are aenior members of the of flcial presidential family and run a department whose policies affect millions. That is why Labor Secretary Ra~nd Donovan should take stepe now tp clear the air -one way or another -about allegations he was tied~ reputed orgaruzed crime fi.gurea.Wore his appointment. While nothing has been proved and Donovan, like any other citizen, is entitled to a presumption of innocence, an. important public official who ia under a cloud cannot serve the public as effectively aa he should. And President Reagan, who ia fa~ a full plate of economic. defens.e, foreign and other pressing issues, does not need a penonnel problem to boot. For now, the president is giving Donovan full support. The Senate and a special Justice Depu1ment proeecutor are investigating allegations Donovan bad linlu to organized crime figures while an official with the Schiavone Construction Co. in New Jeney. . Triggering the current inqutrle. was an accusation by an FBI informant that Donovan witnealed a payoff by Schiavone officials to the pres ldent of a blasters union loca l In 1977. Donovan has denied tl: te charge. · The accusation a une a year after Donovan'11 Senate confirmation, which 'lne received only after giving ass\ arances that neither he nor Sehl avone were involved in illegal payoffs to unions. Other allegations include one that Schiavone delivE ired building materials to the borm ~ of Anthony Provenzano, a not.orio us Teamst.em official now in pria on for labor racketeering. Ad 'd in g to J) on ova n • s problems was the ~.relation that a staffer for the Str mate Labor c.ommittee, which i·a probing the charges, had recel lvect a death threat from an an01 l)'IDOWS caller. It has al.lo been revealed that Schiavone baa hirec 1 detectives to · investigate the ooa tmittee, wlllch, has infuriated S ·en. Orrin G . Hatch, R-Utah~ cb.ainnmrO'f-me panel. Donovan hns chosen to remain silent wbili t the committee and special p~ ~the • inquiries. We be Ueve Donovan should be more f!I~ and share with the A .merican people any information ht~ baa that would shed more ligt l t on bi's and Schiavone'• affai rs, li be is to retain the confide nee of the public and i! he is to be able to lel'Ve the president withou .t distraction, he should do no less . ln~anity def ens~ on ·trial .. On trial -this month. along with the loung man who abot I Preald~t Reagan. baa been the ao-ailled "insanit)' defeme•• which I attorneyl for Jobn W. Hinckley 1 Jr. hope will weigh heavily wt~ 1 . the jury. For leemingly · endlela days, psychiatriltl ancf other ~ in psycllo)ogy have paneled to the witnem stand to air their vtew. on tbe defendant'• mental condition before. during and after the lhootlne. we•re told ~ will be at 1eMt nll)e of theee experts, acme testifytna for the defenae, some · for the )Jl'OeeCOtlan. Paycblatric t.estimony always aeesm to be available for both sldee m a trial. Small wonder the public ls lri:ltated and jurlea oonhlled. 'l:he l,naa..nlty. ddenae ls to prevent unduly banh i for a defend.nt who committed a aime becau.e of mental lllneu rather than evil lntet. And um., of ~. abouJd be taken into conaideratlon in ~the -.itenoe .. . Unfortunately. a "not> luilty by ...-.i of lmanitY' verdict can carr1··areat ruk both for the ~ md the ft9t of l!Odety if . . the accused late11: la determined to have recovered his sanity and let looee again. Psychiatr Hats themselves admit there is no hard and fast rule to guarani tee the favorable outame of any treatment. _ Observtn,11. the p1ychfatric d.n:ul at the E iinckley trial, some legal exper1s ll iave suggeated that the first step ln a criminal cue should be so' lely to determine whether or r 1ot the defendant actually comn· aitted the crime in question. The HinC kley a.e la unusual in that the entire epilode W• filmed and tl Ile def.enC!ant freely admits the sh ooting. But in many caaee the de~ :rmination of guilt or innooence ia I D~ IDQl'e cmnplex. If guilt U I det.ennined, there la dine.. to~,.. the~ beelib"- of the accua eCf when 1e11tence la lmpo1ea. to provide-for hmpitalizatlc m if ,_ ery. aOd for aervtng out the 1entence if ... treatment PJ l'OWll effective. When lh tdal la muddied from the outtet by inaertlon of the lntanlty cw.teme With ita ~ of psychlat rte i.timony, the tllik of a jury becometa exceedlnary difJicult. .... Begin: lh.e inflexible zealot WASHINGTON -Israel' a embettled Prime Miniate..r Menachem Begin, though capable of ltatemnanahif• ''tenda to revert to hit fonner style o rf81dity and narroWDe81 of view that makee negotiations dJ.fficult." So wama a Mqet psychological profile prepared by l1.S. lntelllaence experta. , Tbe1r appraisal ia uaed aa a guide by top U .S. policymakers who deal with Begin. U the fsraeli leader should visit the White House, for example, the pn!8ldent would study a psychologlcal profile. BE WOULD BE told ~t Begin ls an actlvlat -a puncher rather than a count.er-puncher. ''A. an initiator, be ls apt to strive for the dramatrc to attract attention. When be reecta. however, he tends to be very cautious and prect.e." The reuon for this, the psychological profile suggest.a, ii tli.at Begin bu spent most ot lU.I U.te ·"ln the role of the oppoeer, the voice of a minority, an opponent of the establlahment." For five years. he bu stood' at the cent.er of the e.tabllahment. Yet he ltill bu trouble conoeivlng of h1nwe1f aa a leading actor on the world staae rather than'aa an angry wice from the wtno. The aecret psycboJoglcal. profile Ma been reviewed by my a.odate Indy Badhwar. H_represents the beat ~nt of Begin by experts on the Middle F.ut. Here are the highllghtl: -"Begin ia not considered, nor does he behave u, a man of oompromble or G -J.-.-•• -.-111-•• ----~ flexibility. Bia image in the put has been that of a pueionate believer in hla position and an outapoken and 80llDeWhat crude or wtrefined repreeentative of the Holocaust philolophy. He repreeenta the mentality of tlwee Jews unable to update in their perspective the Nazi treatment of their brethren." -Begin bel.levee that ••any expre.lon of curb8 on the aanctlty of the Jewith 1tate, or the .potential Arab 'infringement' on llraeli territory" ahould be ''dealt with le'Yeftly. -''To label hit views u paranoid ls tnaccu.rate," the analysll states, adding: ''At the same time one miaht admit that Mr. Besln is and Wiii Clefenstve and overly 19Ctive to l\ICh eo-<:alled threat.a. He haa built his ~Ure life and political career on this basis." -Even Begin'• cloeellt advt.en have warned him not to behave like the underdog he was for ao many years ln lsraell politics. They urge Begll) to become w spokesman for the IaraeU people as a w.bole, "rather than (fOI') a strident and · zealous minority" of ultracon8erVative religioul Jews who are outaide the mainstream of lsraeli 90Ciety. ''Their strength ls not great . . . but adherent.a may increue as the balance between Aahkenazi (Western Jewa) and Sephardic (Oriental Jews) changes in favoc of the latter." -BEGIN'S ROLE as the perennial outaider became evident in hi.a public appeannces with the late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat du.ring the c.amp David negotiations. · "Begin appeared to be under atrel8 and uncomfortable," the _profile states. "It WU Sadat's show and Beg1n behaved as ll be were not sure what to do next. He was not in control, therefore uneasy." Once this "unfami liar and uncomfortable" role waa over, the analysis noted, "Begin reverted to the 'minority behavior,' the strict and somewhat strident zealot'• view of Biblical rights and overproteftion of the Jewish SQIU!~' Requie·m for a beloved ·old off ice 'There'• a major renovation going on in the build1nc I work ln and it Joob aa lf I may have to moYe out of my office. The people in any ~pany who MligJl offtce. are always thinking of reuons why people should move. Everyone ahou1d remt them. Their reaeona are. UStJa.lly not ~ enQUgh, and they don't undentand wliat a .eriooa effect moving an office can have on a penon's life. rvE KNOWN aome P"C>Ple who don't lee1D to mind moving. They're~ executives with better organiz.ed than mloe . They know where ~ls in their office and they can move lt to another and 1till find thinga. That would not be the cue with me. I know that lf I have to move, there are tb1nga I'll never find again in my whole life. They'll be Jast at the bottom of a packing &ox and aome au.rvivot of mine down the road will have to go throuab the box and throw the ltU.ff out. 8e ' won't dare throw ·an~ out without lookina through lt beCaUle l often hide a . $10 b1il 1n a book or envelope around my office 10 that rll have aome emergency money the day I come to work without a nickel ... I don't know whAt'a wronc with ine but J.. take INnl,,,.te..objlda in my 11.f .. loo lerioualy. I le& to have quite an affection for a car tha~I elven me good eerviCe tJld rve alwaya bated to tum ooe like Lt over to the aeoondhand dea1en. I feel terrible thinking of aorneone who doesn't care, buying lt and then abusing it. How. can I be .o dJaloyal? That•• the way I feel about m)" of&e. To the building planners it's nothing more than IOl'De marks on a blueprint. It's f0ur ~ialJs that need painting, a worn carpet and a radiator that spits water I~"' -AIB_Y _RDl-11-Y -~ • from a bad pipe connec:tion when the heat is up. & far as the planner goes, my office is just another eeoondhand car. He'll get what he can out of it without a thought for what it haa meant to me. I can remember every office rve ever had. In 1962 I had ooe that I wrote a book in. Everyone called it "the submarine" becawie it didn't have any windows and was buried in a bu ement area of the building, but I liked it. 1be temperature WU nay to ~trol and It wasn't on anyone'• way to their own office, eo people didn't drop in ahd chat a lot. If you're trying to write a book., It's better if you don't Chat loo much. The office in which-I 1lt et thl1 moment ii one I've occu~ for 10 years. That'• my penonal world record for office occupancy and rve not only been in it 1ooger tlwl any other but I like it better. I've hid more profemional iucce9 in the r::.d'8 betw~n 1972 and 1982 than I ever before, and naturally I give a lot of the credit for it to this office. If anyone gives me an award of any kind and 8Bks me to make a spe«h, rm going to nwmtion this office when I modestly 1 start pa•ing credit around. "Without this office, I never would have been able to do what rve done." 11\at's what ru say, and all the people at the awards dinner will applaud me for my modesty and my office for it.a contribution to my ~. NO ONE WILL ever know this office as well as I do this moment. I can't tell you how many time9 I've leaned back in my chair, propped my feet against the right angle where my desk meeta the attached typing table, and simply stared at 10me part of my wall or ceiling. If anyone goes past my door when rm •taring, they get the impression rtn thinking about aomething, but rm not. rm just staring. A writ.er IOOletimetl hie to get quite a blt of staring out of bis system before he goes to work. I hate the thought of moving. This office hie been • sreet old friend to me l..osina it ia going to be like a de.ath in-the family. Building-planners don't undentand that.. They don't understand why rm not pleued. "'lbe one you're going to get la bigger ~ this. Got two windows and we'll put down new carpet. Better office." What do they know about staring. An unusual name can he a lifelong burdep If you have a first name that la 1tfan8e, or even 1pelled a little out of the ordinary way, you w1ll 80 tbrouah life either CXll'l'eCUiaa people or IUffert.ng in lllence. 1be one th1na you won't do (and -._ . -~ --IYl~IO~Ul~lll-~·JYJ. In America, where we-eftligrated when I wa1 ' little boy, hardly myooe of either 1ex wu stuck with that name, and it wu al.molt alway. apeUed with an '1." I have almott atven up on it.; Jut month onetJtmy booknYtewa~ b\ 1m ad in u. New Ya JteiuWw-« BooD. -and I made a feeble protett, but It LI about U'9 md of !DJ~ . Too often to ,...U. l hew IMD Ute old buebell ........ Harmby, referred to .... ~. tn prim. But m. .... , tbe wrtten took away from hi.I ume wu not JOit -tt WM addld on to~·· Soldier 1'1eld; which tnYvtablJ C*IW out II .. S,oldler' .. , . Oneof .. _m\UUtJ'•llMllll_...... men had the ftnt name of "Hermon." and ... ~ ... '° be llNtl:Md OD the mS ,blfon they woWd 1pt· that rwbt; and even when Uiey ~ tb• D n~th" oueh.!J~ ~ error and f<ccat«WG " to . -I baW • Old tnilid .-..ct ~" Halt of bt1 mall com• • ..,.... to ~ ... laid .. 6Cblr' Mil .. ua.-." It ta MIJ to un4lentabd whl.i21t Wad1tiw .,., ~lie ;:i1,: • Of talUall -WM OCMl ,~~Pm•r•O.w.-na.• w .......... _..,.,;Blllll&--=u11d11••••1tu, ... qw ............ without actuaUy looklna at them. One of thtt largest and.oldest com. panje1 in • j America 11 Procter & Gamble, but l w1lb I had a dollar for nery time I have IM!ll .. lt ln print u "Proctor".-and on ';t!i· ... ==to boot. _, .. -l ~ namn-ai• better 1eh: decent obecurity. I recall a ~ la •J town pMIMa a srooerY _., beUinc"'Oll lea wtndow ~ name ot U. prosin.tor .. · ..A. Swindler."' Amused,~· •tranter entered U. ltiOre and lllad the croc-If he didn't think bla full ftam•'WoWci make a betta' ~ "No. .. lakl Uie srocer ftnnly .. ft W6Uld b1a ~· Ny fint neme 11 ~" • .................. ..., .... IHI •lat ..... IMUl4 M 1 .. llM! ,...,,,, • * a~ • TUUOAV, JUNl 1, 1tQ CAVALCADE TELl!VISION ' ,. .. :Ann Landen provides 11afetr precautions for women drivers. B2. . , D 0 ~ ~'·. ' Schools' leadership at stake I ~pooks . like inland better· BOO, BOO, WHO? -Y-ou have to start aetttnc really weary, and maybe a bit jealoua. of all the apparitions that are gettlna conjured up in our inland county nelghborhooda. Now Anaheim'• lf,ttting 1pooked. First we had Buena Park oot. the hairy, unelly monat.er that was reported by numerous dthena to be drainage ditches. growling around in ~ 'lbe local Buena Park 4 flL constables tried to pass off ,...., Bigfoot u just an oversized ~,. tramp but you can bet the TOM MURPHINI -~ , people Involved in the ------------ night-time aighting aren't buying that. Bigfoot had no 100ner stomped off into the night than now we've got the Anaheim Houee of Speaking Spirita. THIS PSYCHIC MYSTERY surfaced after an Anaheim family put up their house for sale b.ut then decided they'd try a spook sleuth to aee if the live-in spirits at the place could be explained away. Acoording to news dispatches out of the oentral county, the family contacted one Harry Shepherd of Fullerton, who is president ot an outfit called the Orange County Society of Psychic Reaearch. Old Harry was pretty interested and gathered up aome of hia colleagues to probe the haunts who allegedly made their home in the upper story of the Anaheim residence. THE PSYCHIC PEOPLE barred all the doors and windows. placed microphones an<t tape recorders upstairs and then retreated to the downstairs sector to wait for any apirita to materializ.e. • ~me, .U, but would you lJ.b 1o mow your maChlne ahop to Colfa Mf!llar'' ,,,,,. ~~ DWing the long wait, every now and then, a member of the group would ask questions of the spirits. . Now, according to the news d.i.Spatch, when the tape recording was· played back.. 23 aucfible replies could be heard to thoae questions. "'" One in the psychic group asked the spirits. "Do you like It here?" • On tape, the reply caine in a male voice, ''Nooooooo." ANOTHER QUDTION WAS, ''Why are you tiere?" The voice reportedly replied, ''The daughter." In each caae, the ~lying ~wit'i voice waa mufflecl: but audible. ~ recorder, according to~ news rel>Ol'ti ai.o pcked up the voice of a male saying "Hah" and the aounda of mauning, banging anchunning water. Psychic Shepherd's analysis of all this wu that Disneyland doesn't have the only haunted house in Anaheim. Thia family place waa spooked too. & a matter of fact, the psychic declared there are two 11eta of haunts living .in this houae -ohe bunch up1talra and a IJ'OUP of lhd1an aplrita downstaira. 'That might have made you a bit creepy if you'd been part of the group that was staking out~ place downstain. ALL OF THIS just goes to show our coastal area ii still aettma badly upstaged in the weirdo department by the eentral county. · . We can't<even come up with a decent phantom ship or skinny -lerpellt. 1-teanwbile, Buena Park geta all the publicity with a hairy ,ditch-walker and Anaheim ii able to come up with wall-to-wall ghoets, upstairB and dbwntaira. . · It just isn't fair: .. 'Irvine educator seeks. to end .Peterson's ~ 6-year reign By DAVID &UTZMANN or .. ~,......,. The nice for Oranp County Superintendent of SchOola on th«! June 8 ballot la a subdued two-man &nteat tha=lta a four-term incumbent a political newcomer from . To the victor l'>el four-year adminJatratlve control of a low-profile office that hu a $40 mWJon annual budget, run.a 20 special education IChoola and acts H paymaater for all achool diatricta in the county. In thla latter capacity, the county Department of Education handles a payroll of $1 billion a year re~ting 50,000 llChool employee• from districts throughout Orange County. The incumbent la Dr. Robert Pe"J"IOfl. who I.a aeeklng his fifth term after 16 years in office. Opposing Peterson, 61, la Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School Principal John ~ a veteran of 27 years in Ora~ge County education. Thia I.a tUa tint try for. office. u there la anr one ilBue which bu emerged an an otherwise low-key campaign. It would be ltl'e1lgth of leaderahip. Critics of Petenon -including Inmon and thoee who endone him -limply say that stronger direction is necessary in the next four years. In particula(. Inmon aaid he believes that more active leadership la required to improve teacher ti-a1nlng and cuaiculum service programa and aao to make the office a atronger platform for apeaklng out on i..ue. important to teachers and studenta. Among Ua various dutiee, the · county achooh office la responsible for providing curriculum development and teacher training proll'ama for IChool districta in Oranae County. In an. it bas about 1,,00 leplly required dutlea. About 450 workers, mostly teachers at special education achooh, are employed by the office of «lucation. Fndonlna Inmon'• cand1d.acy ia the California Teacher'• Auoctation, whose Orange County branch has not oHidally backeq a candidate here tor 10 yeara, accord ins to a CT A spokesman. Chuck Stegmeir, a teacher in the Newpo._t-Meaa Unified School District and CT A political action chairman, aaid h ia organization belleve. the office of education waa not doing enough in teacher training and. ia top-heavy in adm.ln1stratora. "We had a strong feeling that the county Department of F.cfucation was not what it ahcAald be," St.egmeir aaid of Inmon'a endonement. Petenon c:lluareee. During his ur years .. county ~Net ........... INCUMBENT -Dr. Robert Petenon ls aeeking hia fifth four-year term as county school superintendent. superintendent, he said in a recent interview, he bas mad~ aoutid fiacal decisions which have savt!Q taxpayers money and has launched programs aimed at motiv&tfng atudenta to do better work in science, spelling, mathematb and·penmanahjp. He aaid hia "frugal but efficient" oountywide programs have proved P"'Cftlful. Peterson take9 particular' pride ln the varloua 1cholaatic competitionl he lnitiated. Example. of thia include a handwriting competition for fourth and fifth gradeu; a 1pelllns competition for eighth p-aden and high echool ltUdenta, and the well-Known "AcademJc nec.thlon," which he originated in 1968. It involves teama of atudenta countywide from grades nine through 12. Pete.non said theee types of prosrama, which go beyond the ' baalc duties required of the cowtty education office, benefit atudenta at virtually no coet to the county or participatfn& school districts. • A. to whether he has been deficient in promoting teacher training prosrams. the Santa Ana educator aaid hill office baa been extremely active "in accomplishing those very activities." He aaid workshops for teachen1 and auperviaon have covered all major areas . Especially productive, he said, have been workshops in wri~•kil1s. Another area of nt between Inmon and etenon involves the education department's purchaae of a 9-acre site in Costa Mesa for interim headquarters. Inmon bas criddzed the purchase, saying a leaaed school site was preferable. Peterion' maintained that the former boat ooostruction plant was a good alternative when tbe schools office~tually is forced to relocate. I current leMe in Santa Ana out in 1985. "It's a hedge on our part," the CHALLENGER -School principal · John Inmon has spent 27 year& In Orange County education. superintendent aaid of the land deal He explained that the boat works would be refW'biahed and uaed aa an interim headquarten until it was poeaible to move 'into better quarters leaaed on a llChool site. The $250,000 per year hia office now pays ln rent in Santa Ana, Peterson aaid, could be r.echanneled into educational programs. STICKING TO TRADITION -Indians consider a drum to be the oldest th.Ina they remember, something to be treated with ~oect and <li$tnity. Thia. ar'O\IP, led by Ralph .,.., .......... "..., ---Zotigh at left; 18!1g tribil .Onga at Oraqe County's 14th annual Indian Powwow during the weekend at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Coeta Mesa. ·When· is jail an 'appl-o/Jriate sentence? Challenger wants tougher punishment, judge says offenses aren't serious 8Y STEVE MARBLE or .. ~,... ..... 'Ibey're both Irvine reaidenta, neighbors practically. They're both young family men. And they both .,r-ee it'a a judge'• duty to be fair but firm. But aak Harbor Munclpal Court Judge Robert J . PoU. and his chaUenpr Paul S. ftobNN what the main 1-ue m their June 8 election ~teat la and they'll point to each other. Poli•, a former traffic ·sh F-ry seer..et's out .. ... •ERMA BOMBEOK •HOROSCOPE ' L Saf_et:y precaUtio·ns given. for wo~en driver~ . DJCAR ANN LANDERS: I read a piece tn Parade mqadne about "bumper rap1111 .. by Lloyd S~. The tnformaUon cOuld be of put value to your readers. Pleue print it. -WASHINGTON POST READER DEAR W.P.: T.lle piece waa lll1llly lalormadve, ud I dwlk yoe for 1e11dJj1 It oa. I tee Parade eve11 Sadly bat m1taed daat l11•e w~e travellq. Here'• u edited vent•. . "A b.amper raplat" la a mu wlao 1pot1 a womu drh1D1 alone ud ba.mpti tall VtMele (uully 1tolea) lato •en. Wllea .. , KOSMIC KOASTER -Jerry Jones. of Seattle, believes what th.la country needs is a rollP.r ooas1er for the space age and baa designed his Kosmic Koas1er model for such a ride. When "' · emer1•• from lier car to la1pect tile damqe ucl UcWlt Ucea1e1, h tkrtatea •er wltlt a bU• or ~ foreet lier mto ... car, drtvtt off, n~ Ud robt lier. • • Recently a Callforala maa was 1eate1oed to 111 yeart ta prl1oa for a11aldtbl1 more dwa two dosea wom• 18 a IO·moatlt period. Ja,...Uae Couor, tlae de,.ty d.11trtet attorseJ la Lot Aaatln wllo proaecated daat case, bt dais aClvtce for womea drl•ers lavolv4'd In bamper or fender accldeata: "Never atop yoar car In a dark area. H yoa do, never roll do"11 you window to "' ......... . built, riders would board a train of spaceships that wou)d take them on a computer-directed. 10-llght-year ride through the oosmoe in 10 earth minutes. Gemini: Victory seen Wednesday, Jae i ARIES (March 21-April 19): By searching for special papers yoµ could make diaoovery which reyeala surprise source of money. Be persisterit, dig deep and refuse to be influenced by those inclhwt to acoff. Older associate or family member is an ally whether or not you realiz.e it. • TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Leave details for another time -strive now tO ./ grasp picture as a whole. Overall view is necessary if goal is to be achieved. :r,mpbasis on legal documents, advertising, -public relations and ability to communicate views in effective manner. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What appeared to be a defeat can be transformed into a victory. Emphasis on basic issues, .mproved services and employment piupecta. Some material ~ revision . -know it, proceed aooo~ Keep eye on Scorpio. " CANCER (June 21-July 22): Favorable lunar aspect coincides with successful speculative ventUre, creativity, significant changes and profitable dealings with member of opposite sex. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius peraons figure prominently. -, LEO, (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on property, ~ty, ~-range ~pecta and impqrtant domestic adjUltment. Past efforts pay dividends. Older individual lends benefit'of experience. You may feel · remicted, but actually you are on brink of major move forward. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ideas are plentlful; key is to be 8elective, to cllOOc!Je quality. Define terms, avoid ael1-deception 8nd separate fact from wiahb.al thinking. Place• and another Virgo figure prominently. QmmUIUcation from relative need not be taken literally. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Fmphula on income, additiopal fUnda and a favorable financial 8ettlement. Cycle 1DOVe1 upwards , HOROSCOPE · ' BY SIDNEY OMARA and your. position is monger than might be anticipated. Cancer, Taurus, Capricorn natives play key roles. Relationship intensifies. ~ . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You•n reach a wider au'dience -'1ighl.ght confidence, maturity, auertivenesa and initiative. Wear bright colors, make peiwmal appearantes and at4te views in graphic manner. You'll be rid of unnecenary burden. Aries will. figure ~tly. . SAGITT-AR!US (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): .. F~ doubts will be erased; you'll make new start in new dlrection. Lunar emphasis on h~J>itala. institutions, organ.izationa and a special"' invf'tation which elevates prestige. Leo; J\.ries. Aquarius persons figure prominently. • · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. i9): What seemed out of reach is obtainable and you'll be aware of-it. You could form alliance with one whose vlewa ptt\!iously claahed wlth your own. Utiliz.e powers of persuasion. Wlah ii likely to come true. Wat.ch Cancer. AQUARIUS. (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Diversification is necessary if goal is to be reached. Refuse to ·be limited -your potential la great and popularity will increase. ()pm lines of communication, state view1 in dynamic. confident manner. Superior makee _!'OODl· • PISCES (Feb. 19,-March 20): Good lunar upect coincides with excellent long-ranp pro1pecta. Focus on travel pJam. ~~ta, ability to tranaform dn.m. into procedu.res. Aooe!\t..., on pu~lhhing , educaUon and commwlicadon. • rou1 111A1 '" . DR. PETEF\ J.:, ~TEI NCROHN . • ~•vene Wida die mu wlloae velalcle laa1 laH yoan. U yoar car cu move, drive to a police 1tadoa, a fill.bll atattoa, or some llpMd area 'wllere daere ~le. Do aot 1et oat of yoar car oa a way. P.ut oa yoar emer1eacy U1lat1 I yoar car la stalled." . ·lJ-1· Al#I UDIS attention. I see no point la latroctact.a1 a aew 1oarce of trouble. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband•a mother and two of his aunta died of heart attacka. They were all gromly overweight and smoked a lot. (Drank. too.) Doug is in great sha~. He jogs, P\1111P8 lrQn, c1oesn•t drink anythlng afuonolic and hat never touched a cigarette. Yet he is worried that he will die of a coronary becaUlle "it n.ma in the family." For some mysterious reason Doug thinks sex is bad for a man's heart. (Not for a woman's. he saya, becauae all she has to do is be there.) I don't know how to put this but I am not ,etttng en~h sexual satisfaction and a guy worli: with is beginning to look good to me. Will you please tell me what to do? I would never look at another man if my husband would look at me once a week. Thanks for your help, Ann.· -N<Yr A CHASER, JUST NEEDING MORE ATTENTION DEAR ANN LAND~: We live in a 1ubdivision where the houses are "close together. The problem is the people ned ' door have planted a garden and are ualng • manure to fertlliz e . The whoJe neighborhood has been su:,~c and we·are getting the worst of it, es · y when the wind. is from the south. rv~ considered s pe aking to the m but t-h e y might __ misunderstand. They are foreigners. Any adVice? -GROSSED OUT IN MICIDGAN DEAR NEEDING MORE: A91l Doa1 to talk to lall doctor. PerbaDt w~ lie laeart • from lall pby1lciu tbt exerclH of uy ktad (la moderation, of coane) b beMfldal to ... beart patients, be wlll be more companionable. Meuwlalle, leave tA.e ~~t war' oat of any convenatlou lo. t bave regarding yoar need or more DEAR GROSSED: To _a11ame dlat all f orelgners are Ignorant, aapleasaat or aarea1onable 11 rldlcaloas. Tell yoar nelgbbor about tbe odor·f ree fertlll1er1 available la tbl1 country and offer to llelp blm replace the manure wltb 1ome"1ag else. Ycni can catcb more rue1 wltll honey ~• than .wltb vinegar. · • What's prudish? What's O.K.? :1,,l':J aren't sure, you need some help. It'a a e in the booklet: "Necking and Petting - · What Are the L1mlts?" Mail your request t.o Ann Lan~.o. Box 1109,, Chiawo, m. 60611, encltlf'fng 'O cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope. Kids' refusal natural While standing in the checkout line last week, I noted that everything in my basket had a stalk of wheat on the package and was stamped '' 100 percent natural'' flMA IOMIKI ATWIT'S END ~ery box, every can, every package contained a disclaimer: NO SALT! LOW FAT! NO ADDtTIVES! LITE! POSITIVELY NO PRESERVAnvES! NO SUBSTITUTF.$! Never have I been so paranoid about• what goes into my body. Was it only eight or 10 years ago when we used to kid around about the late Euell Gibbons coming for lunch and grazing on the front lawn? research rats were living longer eating natural. (Or it seemed longer.) The first time I discovered· apples didn't grow in cans swimming in heavy syrup was a big day in my life. NOW I DON'T CARE what cereal tastes like just as long as •t has a log cabin with smoke coming out. of the chimney on the package and the words, "CONTAINS NATURAL FIBER." It makes me feel virtuous even though I haven't the sl.igh~ idea what natural fiber is. · Sometliing '.'ery weird has happened.to my buying hablfa. When the-kids were growing up I threatened to buy a trough with an entry starting at the stqve. It would snake around the kitchen table and return at the kitchen sink. It was my plan to pour the spaghetti, baked beans and chili from the stove to the table and what they di4Ji•t eat, hoee into the alnJt. They were meals of convenience. I never squ~ a tomato, looked for brown spots on bananas or put a cantaloupe to my ear to see what month of development it was in. -I I bought anything i'hat was stampe_d 100 percent sugar, vitamin enriched, made with pure cr eam, real ·butter, no skimping, artlf icial coloring added. ft was the American dream to eat natural foods that had been improved upon. Then everyone got on a health kick and word began to trickle down that all the THE KIDS DON'T want to come home anymore. They complain there's nothing· to eat. I told them, "Of cowwe there are things to eat. It's all just natural" They said, "You call blue milk, ice cream without sugar. peanuts without salt and bread so thin you can read a newspaper through it natural?" *.:.. Maybe it'~just the sh~ of seeing all of them in that trough side by -mte. · POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT IN RESPONSE TO OVERWHK~MIMG DEMAND, TONIGHT'S PERF"ORMANCE" HAS BEEN CANCELLED. GOIEN ON BllDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OM AR SHAR~ Both vulnerable. Sout.h de&ll. NO&T8 +KJ10l4\ <::;r AQI 0 1'11 •8' WEST EAIT +n +u O lUI '1:1 &115 O&JU Olt81 •QIUI •&Ut 80\JTB +AQH <:?JU 0 AQI ~· •All The bldd{qi ..... ~ ... INT P .. 2.~ ... , ..... OP'al.q 1-di Two of •. -' popular contract., reprdleu of what South clloae to open. The only difference wu that, at 1ome tablet, North became the declaHr. Where South declared, t.he . u1uaJ lead ... , a club. ,Declarer captured the kin1 wltb the ace. drew t.rump1 tn two rounda and then led a heart to the q\leen and Eut.'1 kine. • MOit Euta felt that lhe1 now bad to'clo 9'm1Uu.n1 "ac- tive." Invariably the7 1hitted to a diamond. WU\ woa the Ja• wi.eo declarer · pla,..cl low, aoct• CIOQld pt olf l.;d aafel7 wU• a bean.~ cleand tht 'Marta, U1en no aU Wt &.r\Milp9. Ht came dOwn to the &ce;qMto of d'-Oada uiid Ja.ck Of elobl 111 ~'-laUd. Wiit WM Weed dOft co kijil &llid UiDtMr ............ uid Ult ..... of d•liil. N .. ~~W.WW•t la I-a club, fondq a .... lato .... MeMI'"" ol dfsaa1•. le lea oel1 OM ............ ..s..: .... . ............. • ,...,........,&Qll.&aie .... ,. ....... , .. , .. ...................... ...... ., .... ,. ... ... .... ti ...... .. • SACRA.MJ:N"ro (AP) -Ten of C..UfQmla•1 ....... 1\and out ln \he law.t tabulation of the penona1 wMl\h of ~ton and 1taw ottlctala. But tabul1tton l>y the 1tate Falr Polltlcal Pracuc-Commillilon ll tar from predle -e1uact 1mOunt1 IN not required. The lndlvtduall U.ted were requlred to lilt the Yllue of their thvettmentl only by cat.epy, 1uch u from tl,000 to •10 000," ''$10,000 to tl00,000." and "exceeda $100,000.1' The outltandina 10 have all }1atecl two or mor:e hold.lnp wor\h more than $1oo;'OOO. Fifteen other lel(lalator1 lilted one holdtn1 worth more than tl00,000. The tabulation ahlo ahoWI that Chief Juatice Rem Bird. whoee aalary la '80,0M a year, Uats neither real e1tate nor 1tock holdln11. Nor doe. Attorney General Georae Deukmejian, whoee salary 11 $47,600 a year. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. .. -_, . . Uall only a State ot larael bond worth $1,000 to $10,000, and acreage 1n Nevada C-ounty. But Lt. Gov. Mike Curb 1l1ta investments in two phonograph record companies of 1MD -more than $100,000 each, as well as two parcell of real property in Loe Angeles and one in Hidden Valley. ._~ l .• ' ' .... The 10 appaarently richest legislators, six Republicans and four Democrats, are Sen. Ollie Speraw, R-Long Beach, with eeven investments worth more than $100,000; Sen. Ken Maddy, R-Fresno, with five; Sen. Alan Sieroty, D-Los Angeles, with four; Sen. H .L . Richardson, R-Arcadia, Auemblywoman Marian LaFollette, R-Mallbu, and Assemblyman Mel Levine, D-Santa Monica, with thrtre each, and Assemblymen Dominic Cortese, D-San Jose, William Ivers, R-Fllntridge, David Kelley, R-Hemet, and Lou Papan, D-Millbrae, two each. Moat of the 10 also listed numerous investments worth smaller amounts, as well as real estate holdinp, whoee values were not stated. Speraw's largest investments are in Century 21 Real Estate Two and other activities related to real estate. Outside income during 1981 included more than $10,000 from each of five 10urces. He also owns four parcels of real property and two acreages. Maddy 's largest investments are in Dutchhollow Land Development, Republic Home Loan Corp., Modesto Banking Co., and two Foster Farms holdings in trust, as well cw. . as seven parcels of real estate lncluding a Merced ranch. Sleroty's boldlno worth more than $100,000 · each are in East.em Columbia Inc. and the Sleroty Co., both real estate investl'J)ent and management firm•; Community Psychiatric Centers, and Manufacturers Bank. He also lists a full page of smaller invest:menll, and .even pan.-e1a of real r. property. Richardaon'a largest investments a.re in the California Counties Inveltment Co., Budrow & Co. )iVbolesale sales and hardware, and his Computer Caging Corp. direct mall firm. He al8o lists amaller investments in a number of mihlng companies. ·Mn. LaFollette's top investments are in the Coldwell-Banker real estate firm; LaFollette, Johnaon. Schroeter & DeHaaa, a law firm. and the Half-Hone Farm, bone breeding. She also lists four parcels of real property. ,, · • ~-Levine's top holdings are ln three family investment firmh He also llsta numerous smaller · investments in atocka and bonds, and two parcels of real estate. Cortese'a biggest invesbnents are \n a family farm and a family real estate firm. plus eight parcels of real property. Iv-era' largest holdings are in a family department store and a family real estate flrm. He also Usta 11 parcels of land. Kelley's largest holdingl are in ' two family cltrua operations, and he also llsta a smaller precious metals aa:ount, a stock account, and three pan.-ela of l'&l property. Papan'• largest investments are in the Peninsula Bank of Commerce and the International Spaghetti Factory. He also lists other stock holdings, and 10 parcels of real property. More wonien in 30s having babies · RUFFELL'S U'HOLST .. Y .. , ...... , -~ ltll *'IOl I LYO • COSTA MllA -14 .. 111" ~CON 'ERVATIVE INVESTMEN1'1 ....,,, 19% OR MORE! • s.cvM By Trwt 0... • lilislllttt4 By ,.._..,,AHM c.11 ,.,......,.. Oltect F0t o.tila . BoOC-tin M _,,_ I • If it'sgot e handles • you'll grab a sale • faster in e Daily Pilot e classified e ads. Call ' 642-5678 I • o.:anae OOUt OAJLY PILOT/Tueedey, JUne k1182 Wh~rl('~r a visitor to N~port Beach stays In a motel. hotel or In some other kind of temporary todglng, 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 wl~h the grow· 1ng cost generated by more and more tourists. Currently, 20,000 to I 00,000 peo- ple ~ w visit our city, drive on our str~ts. sunbathe on our beaches and picnic rn our parks. Six percent on their lodglng Is no tonger their fair share for sharing N~port peach with us. Measure Bon 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 nighj,room. the increased cost to the occupant is only s I . However, this increase would mak'e avail- able to our city an additional S3.000,000 over the next five years tor community improvements, including Improvements in our streets. traffic signals and bicycle trails. It's an increase in our city revenues that's long ove~due. And It will ease pressures to raise local taxes and tees charged to Newport Beach residents and businesses. You have everything to .gain by vot- ing .. Yes .. on Measure 8 ... and f10t one red cent to lose. 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To discover how easily you can saa.ie up to 7<1'/o on your next trade ... CALL TOLL·fREE 800-252-4010 CCallftnla .,,, . for your FREE Investor's Gulde Or mail the coupon below . " . . I •• I· I. I I I '.I I\\ -EVEMttG~ MO.NM~ GAMI . Qeme S, PNledeil)llll 11 IJall... . I • NIWI OtWW.a'I AHGll.I • THllAINT "lnYtt1tlon To Dinger" • THaJIP'nMONI • HAWAMPMMI · • OAMPAIGN'a The RMpportlonrnent lnltl· 111-10, 11 Wlcl 12 Ml • ullmlnecl by J1ttr1Y Kty1. e fUT '10f!NIA11J "LAMn" loml of the lltonWling poulbllltlM Of '--vv rlnQt from bloodlMa mlcr~ to pollutlon mMtuflm1nt. from .. ltlllt• lmeg1 tran• mlMior\ to hOIOOf'll&>hy. (I) CM NlW8 9 MCNlW8 • 1:-..wa • • .,. "Continent al Divide" ( fH 1) John Blluehl, Blair Brown. A • Chlciego n1w•o•p•r column18t tre....i. to the Rockie. to llCllOI eom, political hMt and lntlrllllw • reclullwt naturall8t. 'PO· UC>. AU. .. THE FAMILY • NEWUEAT wrrH Q1TE AOeEAT8 • •llMUAEPORT CllatNIWlt (!I llAMIY MILLEA (Z)eHAIW,U CHAMPLIN ON 11-AlM ICENE • 1:00 I N80 NlW8 HAPPY DAYS AGAtN ·~--.. M0A08°H -..ti Rader .,..._ home to hla mother wtllle Hewtt~ CM· ,.._ on loot ln9pectlon and Col. Potter g111 lllol In the b«lblde. I =-~ MAAICCWOll PAlmNG "Old8em" (I) PJol MAGAZINE A look at the 19809 U.S. baby boom;• Tena cow- boy who gr-up In the Bronx. 9 ENTERTAINMENT TC)tlOHT lnt1rvl1w• with Cert Reiner, John end Patty OukeAatln. at THE UUPPET8 o-t.: Krta KnltofflrWC>n, Rita Coolk!oe· ~wov. *'*'Ai "Thi Kida Are Alrlght'' (1970) Thi Who. Flm• of -of the tOdc band'• perfor111ar1c ... rellMllnO "'* notorlout proctMty tor destroying their equlpmen1 and the wlld antic• of their drummer. the late Keith Moon, are lnterapll'Md with Jntervt.w8 of the ~7="~~ FAfNC8 . mctierd Kiiey hoet• tl'll8 look at flmOUI humen oddlt,_, ualtlg still photoe and dramatic portrayall to tall tl)e atoriea of Tom Thumb, IN Ellpl\ent MMr Wld others. (D)MOY1E • * .. Spar111e" ( 1978) lr1ne Cara. Lanette McKM. During the 1t50e, Uvee bl8Ck .,...,.. from the ghetto blcome rnu9lc* tupln191'1. but -1ually .,,,_ from thl ~ of at•dom. 'PG' (%)MOW * •·~ "The Mirror Cr11di'd" (1IMIO) EllZ.ab«h Taykw, Kim Novak. 8ued on • atory by Ao-Iha Clwletle. A strang1 mutdlr lnvoMnQ rlval Hollywood ........ 04-lnllll Engllltl ... 'PO' 7*»8 QI FMM.Y fBJO ATTACKED -Lute-Mae Sanders (Stella Stevens) la attacked by an emotionally diaturbed son of a prominent~ in a two-~a~t pre_aentation of "FlamingQ Road,' l)egtnn1ng at 9 tonight on KNBC (4). • LAVERNE & 8HIAL.EY -a COMPANY Le-Qll• tflrown Into Jail alter ahl la eoeuMd 01 lhopilfttng at .... ••Clue4~ •tOfl. 81YEOHLA. FMturld: AQtlvltlM ol the Lo• · Ang1111 Polle• Oepertment'1 Vice SqU.O: atunt men and women: • llortat who dlltver1 flower• "'\,o the atars; an Interview with "HUltlet" magazine publlsher Larry Flynt. • M0A0 8"H The benndrlnl plll aian.a ,.._ to gl111 him aorne ~ hU ltr~ reMllta. Im (IJ TtC TAC DOUQH MACNEIL I LEHRER Al!POfn' l'i) NEWI (JI YOU A8KEO "°" fT Featured: "Au1trallan Camel Race" and "Neture'1 Great"t Ice Show." ._ Q at MET MAV£AICK Eutern nnanclal lntereet• try to gain ciyntrOI of SwMtwetw ae part of • town-by-town 1WMP of ti• Wwl.(R) • MOVIE ••• "Bllndfold" (1988) Rock Hud1on, Guy . Staolc'#9il. A ptydllalrlat become9 Involved with International connk:t when hi trMt• • ~ .... aouglll by two ~ govltr>- rMntl. 8 0 HAPfl'V OAY8 Joanll'• home . movl•• reaip .,,_ 1Ummer of 1962. (Patt 1)(R)Q D 8IU. Y GRAHAM ~ • P.M. MAGAZINE A tool! at the 1980e U.S. baby boom; a Tua C:OW· boy who gr-up In 1he &oruc. • MOYIE * "Encounter With The Uf'M-." (1975) Oocu- menWy. Narrated by Rod s.tno-nw. different IUpetT\Atural lncldencea -1'1-Cf'Mted. • CWtGER UIC8 "Jliil Like A Woman" Sri- ' en end Illa r~I• Ken' ...... ,..,, from • bomb dt.. poeal briefing and .,. dllpatd19d to defllM • boob)o-tnippad bomb In • adiOQl_.-(1. (Pll'\-3) (A) Q • NOVA "Liii: Patent P8nd1ng·• Thi promlaee llnd per1l8 ol genltlc ~ng llnd Ill trnpect on lnduatry, medl· cine and ~tltlw are eumlnad. (R)Q (I) TEEM-ME 8UICIOE: • DON'T TAY fT Academy Award winnet TlmOthy Hutton focu- thl nation'• attention on the l'IMd to comb41 ttw1 grOWlng ~ o( t.-. ®::=· * * * "S1'1pee" ( 1991) 8111 Murray. H11told Ramla. A New Yortl cabtlle looklng for uctt-t conVl- hla be9t friend to join him In enll8tlng In the U.S. Army. 'R' (l)MOVIE '* * *°" "Atlantic Cfty~ ( tHO) Burt Lancuter, Suun Sarandon. The •trlllgld lluaband of an oyater b9' wall!Mt 9'"'- wlth ,_ pr1gnan1 younget litter end 10m1 etolln heroin, which he went• an aotno hoOd to 1111 tot him. 'R' OM<>Vlt * "The Awakening" (1980) aiartton HNlon. Suaannah York. An archaaologl•I'• daughter beOOrnN pouMMd by the malevolent apltit of an ancllnt Egyptian q-. 'A' ~ 8 YMeA DA88A 000 a Bill Bixby tek .. a bahlnO- tt»---IOolt at IOml of thl 1tan df the animated cartoon WQrld and • •troll through the Hanne-8ar· bera "Hall Of Fame." (R) •9 LAVEANE& 8HIN.aY LIY9rM '-I pr1Cio4n earring white on a dall with a phony HOll'ywood ptoducer. (R)O • AU. .. TMEFAMllY Ari attrlCltw wait,...'• fllttatlona with Arcflle !Md him to trouble on the hOml front, (Patt 2) all H080'8 JUNGLE ~·Ill flMMQO AOAD Constance Carlyle undel'· QOM ~ 11ter ,_ fail. and Eudora O\lel'hMrt • tong.-k1&>I MC:tll. (A) D dJJ THREE'S COMPANY Jadl to.. ell conlldenc» In hlmMlf aftw Terry ua. ,_ kM•te eklb to - him fl'om being bilaten up by • dNl'lk et the Regal ~.(A)Q D CHIURN M WAR • MERVONmN "Nuclear Olurmament" GuMta: Salty Fllld, Liiy T9""1n. Of. Helen Caldl- cott. · ·•:-_ • AMEJllCAH P\.AYHOUIE "Oppenheimer" A 91te I• Mlectld for the first atom. IC bomb test apoeion, end PreMdenl Truman la facied with 11111 decMlon .. to wtien end how the bOmb wit! bl UMCI. (Patt 4) 0 l'i) DANGER UX8 "Jua,t, Utte ·A Womat1" &I· 1r1 end hit roommate Ken rllum from a bomb dhl- poeal bf1eftng ll'.ld .,. , ~llC>alchad to defllM a booby-treoped bomb In • klllool yard. (Part 3) (R) 0 (I) MOVIE * * • "Juggarnaut" (1974) Richard Harri•. Omit' Sllartf. A holiday eo1181 blComw • night· matl wtien the euthorit ... of • luxury llMf ~an omlnoua bom'1 tl)f .. I and 1r1 extortion not• demand· ~:::.~· • ** * "Gnllld lllullon" (1937) ~ · Gabln, Erich Von 8trotlllm. Wottd War I ~ confllct with a Gennall c:omfl\Mdant. (D)MOW I&:° OLOll '°". HefwY'••..,....,.." I Atlfll "'9Wf ltt40 1fla "'*' ~·'"' 1llOO • • NJ••o M>AO "Ytl•MH la114'1rt II .. taOkld ~ "" llT\OlloNl-ly dlttlktled eon of a prom- inent 'r:.o n · L llGro~.-r " JoMttltll 11\d JtllnllW1 II lM lt.c)k tot IM dltMlt of their PfQld t~bt9cl. -m)'Wllfled by 1 eudOln and unfavotat>M otiange In '"' odd•. (ffi Q • WfTM OMii AND ...,.., ••eh1oe90 P11bll•h•r•" 0.... Davia and Auby 0.. Int~ the ""'°' edllOf Of lbony fMOulne I.MOM BennMt 81\d the folln<ler of lhl lnttllllte of PoaltMt £Mallon. Hekl Mldl'tubu· tl.Q (II) MOVlll * * "Thi Legend Of Thi Lone ~" (1980) Kiin· Ion Spllabury, Chrletopher Ltoyd. Thi .).one ~ Ind Tonto ~ their arch-enemy, Butch C.vendlall, who "" kid· ntPPld the prllldent of thl U.S. 'PO' , t (I) AOMAHCa: LOW AT ' n1e QM>UAOA.08 (Part 8) r 9MOVlll **,,. "Blow Out" (1N1) John Travolla, Nancy Allen. A t®nd techniclll'I who wor'ka on hOfror n1m1 beOOrnN .lnvolvld In • murder mytlef:Y ""'*' hi wit-an ......ine- tlon. 'R' 10:a01• NEWS H6DOEH PLACb: WHEAi! Ht8TORY UVU. "Ancient Pl-" Hoat Ptllllp Abbott vlalll lhl Canyonllnd1 wlid«l'llll ol Utah and Hu.co Tank• In _..,... Texu ··two .itw whir• lndl1r1 roC:k art llal lndured for GenluON. (R) G!> AMENCAN Pt.AYHOUIE "OWlf'lheimer" A Ille I• Hlleted IOf thl nrat etom· IC bomb , .. , exploelon, llnd Preeldent Trumen I• laold with the dedllon .. to when and how the t>omS> Will bl UMd. (Part 4)0 (D) AOUEA 8KAT1! ~ Cl) t.AfF.A. THON A CO!Tledlan holl and four comic COl\INtlll\t• who compll• egaln•t one another are fMturld In thl8 unceneored comedy game .now. (})MOVIE + * + "Thi concien For KampudlM" (1980) Paul Mc:Cartneil, The W11<>, A hoel Of roctl pertormer•. many of whom get togeth- er In an all-4tlr roctc orot\Mtra, ar1 fleturad In Ihle reeord of a _.,.. of concert• held for the ~ ni of relief to war-nYllQld Cambodia. 11:00 ••• Cll 111 CIJ .... • IATUAOAY NIGHT HOit: Jodie Fa.ter. GUMt: Mr. Miki. D YOU A8KS> FOR n-GI U 0 A.0 8°H H1wk1y1 and Trapper an-enge fOf an unAt.llhor· tud but much-rieedlld ,_ Job fOf an enlllted man. • BENNYHILL Benny playe • court teeter ilnd aoon lolM 1111 head. g~VETT ........ "M1an StrMll" (1973) H~ Kallel. Rob- ert 0. Niro. A amall-llml hood and hla lrrl8l)Onalbll friend ftnd plenty of trouble In New Yori<'• Uttle llely. 'R' (D)MCME •• ··a-ting Couplw" ( 1080) Andtl Chu.I, Thi- wry De Brem. "'~ .,.. no tonger bored when they are tranafen'ed lo Partl and find lhl dlverM' ~ IUf'lofthedty. (l)MCME ... "OMlh Hunt" (1981) ai1111ea Bl'ONOn, LM Mii'· • Vin. In the 1930e, a Moun- tie and a front• crlfnlnal wage.,., old bettll .. cMll- z.atlon encf'oechlt on thl Cllladlan ~'A' 11:aoe AUCI aaTONIGKT· TUBE TOPPERS KNBC (4) 8:00 -.. Bret Maverlck.11 r.utom finandal lntAtNlta try to pin control of Sweetwater. KNBC (4) 9:00 -0 Flamlnao Road." In a two-part eplaode, Conttance Carlyle under1oea 1ur1ery after a fall, and Lu~Mae Sanderi ii phyaically attacked. See photo, l~ft. KCET (28)' 9:00, KOCE (&0) 10:30 - "Oppenheimer.'' Prealdent Truman la faced with the declaion of when and how the atomic bomb wW be Uled.' K.NXT (2) 9:30 -"Channel 2 Golden Anniveraary Special.'' Fifty years of entertainment are celebrated. ~ photo, below. 11:...S(B)MOWI *'•'A "Continent al Divide" ( 1981} John Beluahl. Blair a.own. A Chicago n1wapaper OOlumnlat trev.,. to the Roclllw to we.ape 10m1 polltlcal hlat and lntlrlllew a rlClualVe netlU'e ... I. 'PG' -M!p!IGHT- 12:00. ENTMTA.IHMEHT T'ONtCIHT~ 111 lntarvt•w• with Carl Reiner, Jotirr and PaJty Ouk1Altln. • 0 TtlE MANIONI OF A.MINCA Proeperoua In Phlladll- phla, Roty mart1M Rachel; he I• Joined by hit •liter Deirdre. who, ()Ol'IVlnced of the death ol Oevld, marrlll another man. (Part 2) (R) - GI MOVIE * * *'.t ~ Francllco" (1938) Cl~,.Bpen. cer Tracy. A Barbary Cout gambler and hla boyhood pal, now a prleet, hlVI dlf· fefent rMaona fOf' concem over a young alnger. • LOVE. AMERICAN 8TYU! "L.ovl And The Okf..FUh- lonad Fath4W" A/Ice Niia permlNlon to llPlfKI • WMkend with her boy- friend. • ECPLOAINO VMGUAGE DMOVIE **~ "The Fan" (t981) Lauren Becall, Jamee Gerner. A popular fllm 11ar 11 vlctl1)'MZed by • o-ychotlc admirer. 'R' (%)MOVIE *•'A "The Shooting" ( 1907) Mlllll Pertcln1. Jec:k Nichol•~. A woman enllatl the aid Of an llC • bounty hunter 1nd hit cohort to guide her on 1 r...,,tleea Journey of per· 1~rw:::~ Venua getl At;;tt; lOb offer from a rival radio lta- tlon:iR) 12:80 8 (B LATE NtQKT WITH DAW> l.ETTVIMA.H Oueat: apeclal effect• expert John Dytcatra. • COUPU8 1?;401~ McCloud blcom1a an ~ to • ctlml and on thl run from the leW when hie girlfriend klh • trucker. (R) 12:..a CS) MOYIE tt "YC>Ulfo Lady Chatter- ly" (1977) Hll'IM Mc&rldl. A young woman lnherttl her femlly'• huge man'lion and an ancestor'• diary detllllng numetOUI NJCUel ~111· 12:80~~ ••'Ar "Aahanll" (11170) MlenMI Caine. Ru H~ eon. A determined doctor Mii off eoroe1 thl Sahara In hot pu.rlUlt of • group ol . Arab .,,... trlden who ll~hllwlfe.'R' 1:aoe MOW ** ''Trlpol" (1950) M-rean O'Hat1, Joti;i Payne. The Mllt'lnl8 fight the Trtp.. Oll plret• to rllee the Arnaric:an flllQ on T rlpoll In 1806. • MOVIE • •'h "D.O.A." (1949) Edmond O'Btlan, Pamela enuon. When • men ,..... tzel that he hU bwn given • dOM oft~ polllon, he Ht• out to IOcate hi• klltet blfo ... hi• lft.endl. 1:2t(B)MC>Vm * * "Carbon Copy" ( t08 ti George 81gat 8UMn 81ln1 Jamee. A -ful whit• bualnaMman dlacover• '1hlt he hu a grCl'IWI ton who le black. 'PG' 1*1!~ • • 'h "Ride In The Whlrtwlnd" (1987) Camer- on Mltchell, JllCll Nlctlol· aon. Three cowboy• returning home alt1r a . rough cattle drive are mla- taken by • l)Ollll fOf mem- ber• of a gang of robberS. 2:00DMOVIE ***'h "Private BenJ .. min" (1980) Goldle Hawn, El'-t Brennan. A wetl-to- dO Y°'ll'IO woman millak· enly join• the Army fottow- lng thl death of Ml' ,_ ~ on their wedding ?;18·~ • • "Lolly Madonne" ( 1973) Aod 81alger. Roblrt Ryen. A ~ eruptl wMrl the GutlNllt and the F1ath1r1, mod1rn·d•Y mooilllNI,.. t, Illy C$elln to "" -parcel of land . 2:t0• MOW * *~ "Bom To 81 Bad" (1060) Joan.Fontaine. Rob- ert Ryan. A llUPlfflcielly Innocent WOlnlll\ II led to destrvctlol\ wt*1 ,_ true natUf'I It revealed. (S)MOVIE ***~ "Atlantic City" ( 1980) Burt LancHter. SuHn Suandon. The fttranged hu1band ol an oyst• bar Wlltr-IM'Mll with her pregnant yC>Ul'lgll' •t1r and -•tolen heroin, whlch hi wanll an aging hood to Mii for Nm. 'R' 2:608 MOVIE * * •~ "Sebutl•n" ( 1988) Dirk Bogard•. SUIMlnah Yorlt. A mental 9enlu1 find• hlm111t attractld to • woman who elto WOtll• In e decoding MCtlon Of Brltlah lntelll- ~u0w * * ~ "The Kida Are Alf'loht" ( 1970) The .Who. Fllma of eome of the rack bind'• performancH, rlVMllng thelt notor!Oul p<ocllvlty fOf de8troylng · tllllr equipment and the wild 1ntlc1 of their dnlmmet, the lata Keith Moon. are lnterapetMd with lnlerviewl of the group memb4n. 'PO' 2:ae (%)MOVIE , • * '..\ "The Mirror Crte*'d" (188U) Ellubeth Teylor, Kim Novalc. Baled. on a story by Agatha Clvtltle. A llrenge murder lnvOlvlng rtval HOiiywood ,,.,, tak.. ~ In an El\Qllltlvlllage.'PG' a:«» •. MOVIE ++'Ai "AIHkl SaH" (1054) Robert Ryll!\, Gene Bany. CB>'...OV. • * "Blyond Thi ~r· (1981) D1nton K1'ne, ~ JlnMn. A Pofynl- elln-Amerlcan girl who hat bMfl lducatld In the U.S. retUf'ns to her leland home Ind faltl In IOve with • pMr1 dtyer. 'PO' .. Wrd•r•daw'• a.,,,,,. .. 1'10.,••• ·- l:OO CZ) * *' "The Apple Dutnp- llng 09110 .... A.gain" ( 1t7t) Tlt11 Oonwey, Don Knottt. A P'tlr of we111rn outllwe try to wlllll ttMI atratt and narrow. •o· e:IO 9 * * "Thi KJd ,,om Not-ao-Blg" (1171) Jen.. niter McAlllttlf. Robert Vlh1ro. A 12-YMr-old gltl llnde herMlf in and out ot trouble Whlll running the town newapaoer. 7:41 (%) • • • "MCVlolt" (tHO) "09" Oaltry, Adam Feith. The tru1 llO<Y of Brltlah etlmlnet John McVl- car·a ltfl In prlllon. hit eeoape and hi• ,_ Ill• on the ouhkle I• otironlOlad. 'R' 1:00 (I) * * "Caotlln Scarlet V•. The Myateron1 From Mar•" (11181) Animated. The leldet of a 19-fleet I• chargld with the tuk ot .. vlng t:1r11'1 from en ettlClt by angry Martian• 1:30 (8) • * * "Ceveman" (t98t) Ringo Starr, Denni• Qu11d. The clownlatl mlm· ber ot • barely human prlhl1torlc trlba blglne to dllCOYlf that brain• llnd not brawn will ba the key to hi• people'• autvlval. 'PG' 0 * * ·~ "OYer Thi Edge" ( 1979) Michael Kram«. Pama!' Ludwig. s.ve<at tMn·eQI relldent1 of an exctU81111 CatifOf'nie community embark on . • rampage of harllNmlnt 8t!d dlltructlol\ when they fall to get their parent•' attention at home. 'PG' 8:00 CC) * * ''Birth Of Thi S.... llH" ( 1979) Stephen Mackenna, Rod Culbert· ton. Thi ttory of John, Paul, Ringo 111\d George from their obtlcure blgln- ntng to tl'ollr •tardom. t:18(%) • •• ..,,"Joann•" (1988) Oenevlevl W alte, Calvin Lockhart. A naive young woman becomel awept up In the aoc:ial whlrt of mod London during the 10CIOI. 'R' t::aO. *'A "Thi Trlllt B1yond" (1934) Johl- Wayna. Verna Hl"l8. 10:00 (II) •• ;,The Oeybfeek- .,... (1979) Glenn Ford, Sam Elliot. The~ brofhert find adven1ure when they \revel -t from their Tenne .... home. 'PG' CS)•• "NOrman ... 18 That Your ( 1976) Redd Foiot. PMll Balley.A dlltraught falhet 18 determined to l"lform hie gay eon. 10';309 *** "Strfpet"(1981) BIN Murray, Harold Ramil. A New Yor'k cabbll looklng fOf excitement convl~ hll blet friend to join him In enll811ng In the U.S. Army. 'R' 11:00 CC)*** "Blec:kboard Jungll" ( 1055) Glenn FOf'd, Anne FrlnCil. A dedicated young tMChtW attempta to rfttore Ofder In • big-city training echool where ,..,,... ·---llnd vaotenoe ha\11 taken root. 11:15 (%)**°""Star Trell - The Motion Picture" ( 1979) Wllllarn Shatner, Leonard Nlmoy. The former com- man~er . of th• U.S .S. Entetpf11e r..._,,blll his o;d er-and 9ata off~ • mlMlon to find the mytterl· OU8 YftMI rwponllbll fOf the destruction of numet· ou1 Feder1tlon •tarahlpa. 'G' 1 t::30 Cl) ••• "The 8luw Brothere" ( 1980) John Belultll, Diii\ Ayllroyd. Two bl~ 'linger• mUll con- tend wtth the aitcaoo pollcl, the C•A, Nlo-Nazlt and the U.S. Army to put togeth« • betleftl concert to ralee money for their .~'R' 12:ba'tfJ •• "The Awt .... Btlad" (1957) Scott Brady, Anne Bancroft. Altlr a ~.. Service eoent 11 klllld by a gangeter. the man'a ton attempll to .-. hit death. • + * * "The Ale On Thelma Jordan" (1949) Batt>ar1 St~. Wen- dell CO<ey. Ari aetlttant dlltrlct attomev'• '°"81tv 10 hit b.Mi...,.. .,.,..,. ,,~. Ne """ to '* defan•• when •h• I• Gfl•ve4 with ttle murder .. lletl!llllt. ••••• ..,. LAf'l.le'• The Artl Of Nolh" I tl71) Dool.lo mentary. Pttylloel •YI· dlnoe OOl'IOMllnQ the ..... t-of lM Cl' ... 1111&> (If blblloel ttoefld .. .... llllMCI. <Bl ...... "Oardlao Arrllt" ( ttfl) Gerry Goo- drow, Miiie Ohan. A bleoll marilet otMW•tlon that .... di-nbodlad ....... for trlNlplent1 le ~eel by "' oftblal holNclde ~·PO' • lt-.IO • t •• "lte\111 .. ( ,.,., Glenda JllGlllon, Tr- Howvd. Eocentno 8fttlall poet-Stevie &mtth 11 prof'*!. 'PO' 1:00 co ••• "8tlVll" (1171) Glinda Jactceon, Tt- Howard. E.ccenlrlo Btltlln poet-Stevie Smith 11 proltled. 'PO'---.-& 1:IO (II) * • "The H-M" (1980) Trlah VM Olverl, Jo .. ph Co11eil. A 1choottffcher trl" to ,_ from a nervoue brealldown at her late aurftltl home, which la baallgld by demon•. 'PG' CI> •• "Tfil Apple Oump- Mng Gang Aldee Again" ( 1979) Tim c-.y, Don Knotta. A pair of -tern oulhtWI try to wllllc the 11ra1t llnd narra.. 'G' 2;80 (I} * * "Dead M11t'e Float" ( 1970) Gr1g Roi. s.uy Boyden. Thi r..i- dentt Of • lftlAll A1.11trall1r1 town are endangwed by a my1tertou1 traveler who. comH to tllcYI)' the .,._tul w1tera. 9*** "t..tltBI" (1970) The S..tlee, John Lennon. Peul Mc>Certney, Geotge Harrllon llnd Rin- go Starr are lolloWld through reheartal•. rlCOl'dlng ~ end an ~omc>tu concert. ·o· a: 18 w • • • "Thi Concert FOf Kampuchea" ( 1980) Pel.II McCartney. The Wtio. A ~I of roc:k pertonnera . m81lY of wllOm get togeth- er In an all .. t11t roctl orcn.tra, ar• leaturld In Ihle rec«d of a NflM of conc4WU held IOf the ~ flt ol relief to war..-1118gld CamboOl.I. ., a:ao (II) • • • "caveman" ( 198 t l Ringo Sterr. Dlnnil Quaid. The c:lownleh mem- ber of • barely hum8n prehistoric tribe begin• to dllcover that brain• and not brawn WIN be the key to hit people'• IUMval. 'PO' 4:00 0 • "The Hero" (1960) Rlchtrd Herr11. Romy Schnelder. An aging IOCC9t' player prepar• for hit flnll momenta of glory. Cl) * • "Captain Scanet VI. The Myll«Oftl From Mer1" (11181) Arllmatad. The leader of • soece llMI 18 Chargld with the teak of uvlng Eerth from an at1ec:k by angry Martlana. 0 •• 'h "Over The Edge" ( 1979) MlchHI Kt-, Pamele Ludwig. Several ,_,_llQI reMdenll ot an ~ c.llfornla community embartc on • rampage· of IW-1 and o..tructlon when they f911 to git thotlr par1t1t1' 11tt!fitlon at home. 'PO' 4:48 (%) • • .,."Star Trelc - The Motion Pictur1" (1970) Wlllltfn Sh•IMr, Leonard Nlrrioy. The fonner com- mander ot IN U.S.S . Entlfl)dae r-blM hit old er-and Ht• off on • mllalon to fitld thl mystert- OUI,...... responaible tor ..,. .... the ~tructlol\ of numer- out ~Ilion ltllfthl9L 'G" 5:00 CC) •• "Birth Of The a.. 11H" ( t979) Steplien MackeM&. Rod Culbert· .on. The atory of John, Paul, Alngo and Glorge from their obel:ur• beglrl- nlng to thelt stardom 8:30 CS) • •"A ··z.ero To Stxty" (1978) Darren McGewtn. Oenlae Nlclc-. A mid- dle-egad dlvOtCed man, needing money fOf ellmony paymlt'lll, 18 f8Cld with rlPO'fllllf'IG a Mafia eat contllnlng • dead bod)' • part of 1111 .... part....,......, wlltl a t~-old girl . 'PO' CHANNEL LISTINGS •• "Hanger 18" (1080) Dan-an McGavlrl, Robert Vaughn. ~ctiet. at a Merel government ln1tal- l1tlon lnve1tlg1t1 the CllllM of a Mtalllte'1 tuef. den destruction. 'PO' (%}MOVIE • • • "Mc\llcl(" ( 1980) Roger Oeltry, Adam Falttl. The true •IOI')' of .Btltlell C()mlnal JolWI ~Vicar·• life In pr1eon, Ille ~ and hie MW llfl on the out• elde 18 ctwonlded. 'A' Gueet ~ Dftld Btenl*'. Oua•t•t Helen Gurley &OM!, Olcll, Shawn, Nell caner. eaA11C..:we NIGHTUNI , JOHN QARLING by Annstrong & Batluk 8 KHXT (CBS> D KNBC INBCl e l<TLA (Ind.I • e .KABC <ABC> eKFMBICBS) 9 KHJ•TV (Ind.I e 1<csT (ABCI e KTTV (lnd.l ~-KCOP·TV (Ind.I .• l<CET <PBS> .• KOCE (PBS) (!I) On·TV C1l Z·TV t'.Ji) HBO r1:l <Ci nernax > @) (WOAl NV., N.V. az> CWTBS>• (I) (ESPN) ( Cl) I Showtlrne) • Sc>ot11ot1t e (Cabl! News Network) t:IO 9 CHANNEL.I GOL.DEH NfWNfMNf'( tnQAL A IOeclill oelebratloll of KNXT'e 60 ~of lflter· t~ end MMce 10 ~ of Southern Call- fo<nll. with ~""* by Slelll Allen, MOflY Ainet«dam, Den Lund· berg, CMnnel 2 family _.,.,.. and other IPl- clal G MOVIE •"A "Terror Of Rome Against The Son Of Her· cutea" ( 1IMIO) Mll'll For· reet, Martlu TOlo. - • THEJllWW .MWON>AHDION e NEWaMA'T wrTH a.ETl ROIS ii• • CAPTIOHIP A11C .... (I) NBA CHAMPtONIHtP GAME Gan. a. tlWn• and llt• to bl announced. Mt;1re foreign shOws headed for U.S. networks we're all a bit more comdoua of bow :we can • . U.S. \'knVen.. many prod~ra qnie, won't maximise the dollars we do spend. By co-producing tOlerate dubbed PfOlfamS. a ·~ mill1on propadl,'I '*1·pay ~.000 for it, and .. We know the difficulty o19elllna in Americl:' maybe make another' proeram with the •vlnCJI." laid Fred Buttemtedt: a producer with the Wen A prime example ol the. intetnational German finn ~)f~• tbe1.....-J.t - -mr=prottattton 11 1he-l0....bvur "MaretrP"ol0'-~11.....,.not ~lab, t.betl' f1rat rwUon la that it hu to mlnberiea, recently broadcast by NBC. It wu be dubbed.' . • • l!::uced by a partner1hlp that included an In Cannes tbl1 week, Buttenatedt'• firm rican toap-m.lker (Procter & Gem.ble)" the ~ the ale tor a1*n $1 million o1 m Bentau Productlon Co. ot Jae._an, .the lt'1ian WWIUll co-prod.uction to the Boon Corp., which T~ ~k BAI. and the Feop&e'• Republic 1>1arw to brceckwt the .,_ en A.Bea Alpha ol. Olina. . ll•p•rtory :,-e1evl1lon Serylce cable •Y•t•m ••)UrQ) Polo" acist a repan.d taO mil1klll to wdmi this.,.... · &ftducl. and t.tund ID lta cmt AM Jlmcraft. Burt Called. ~ .,~ of Parma." it's a ~ind John OWaud. a-part ~ r01mnce, bMed on lbt DOYe1 b1 ,~ · a.-ia.uv.1 · of ltaty'• BAI ha llSd the _. .......... wl llMftDI Manhe x..u.. J1nenoed t., imnllldeif·tn. tDmtd In ~ eva ~ ~ ~ tr.. a._.,, Fnnm. ltalJ and tht ~"°· _.,,.n•wu , ...... Oii mi;n..; ... -.... lllniod In ,_ ~·TM aan..._ W11'9ti> .,..'l1qu11 .. -- bl an OWTr·.r....O.we IDd rr..Cb ·: .... ,.,..,.,:;rr. an~ C111t ..._ tbtlr m Wz•. eor ibatrtftl.-..,---. .,_ 1a llllr mllft ••·· "'*" --.. t.taM m ftill ~ .. ~ID '81111 ....... w --two .......... ~· bi9Y1it1 a all'IVPI •..allfllthlefll s1·1-.filttiltU•. -~91alA•dklft'tln,._111k.,IO' .... .._ ar.r. 111111wft1'm aa. ,..._en It al:•••••, ... , \un never wu'u ... .... .... • tlii.Vlll... ~,;;.;...~·---.......... ---~·· ~....... 411 ..... ..., ...... me,··~--........... .. ' • -MY~Uft -~'~i<-ot M.. U.ere'ft bffa IO ~ CathoUe·Ulemtd 1how1 her• that l ~Into the new.Ii -. ~ i\'d be much more fun to •o over Niaaara rau. ln t beer Urtdn. ' But mltadtl do OOCW', ~ad BrQ•dway'• .. Do Black Patent. Leather Shoea Really Reflect VP''' lit one, a warm breuy, dell1htful mu11cal that coven famWar lf'OUJ\d but wt~ refNlhlnl innocence and verve. Adapted by John R, Powers from hJa ftOYel of ~ ume name, "Shoes" iakes you on a tour of Catholic education, from parochial to aex- aegrega ted hl1h achool, ln a aerlea of moaily sunny vignettes. ataallecl ,wltb black· ........... ~ .. Yov clo 1•t hoary ,. ... Of IUCh th1n;p u ~ for a vocation, the Wiible tat.t awaldN tho•• who wea non·Cathollce, the awkward tlral boy·arlrl encoun&•ra at • hf1h echool hop where th• nuna Ult iultrt io kelp chutt diatancte between ~ predlctebly, Thacker , ln bl• wide-eyed ac)\oo)boy11 IOW, befrtenda. t.hen falla in low wtth fat (IUP9r~ pla~ from ty)~ to tHn·;r:r by =~ ~ Sven th• 1low or .... ) t..~~ ~· lupl'Y ~ -and uwl ICl'Mnuw ftMllt ~ tbtr• art • few -:.~~~Ji quickly yield to' btt where even the nw. Thomml• (licl Walah'1 wtar ah,dta or the whtm1lcal, n1ptred padre (R6ber't Fitch)• chor101raphy or the eruptSJ\I into • Joyoua, tutyi llwa)'I tmaatnauve 10011 • l Im bed Ray voca arr1n1ementa of Bolier·UU hooftnC tum, Larry Hochman. pr Thacker ln Mlke Nu11baum'1 (:onftNlon' l1menUn1 dtrecdon II unooth and tht unyteldlns chutity • u r • , • n d \ h ~ of C.d\Ollc 1lrl1 t))l1 ' multl·purpmt ~ of ,way: • Jamea Maronek are ''The 're like Whiffle affective. Yes, when lt begins. with lanky, red-halred Ruaa Thacker .ervt.na as the opening narrator and later as a 1ehoolboy, you have a sinking feeling of Here We Go Again. IN 70 MM 8 TRACK DOLBY STEREO 'All the old -ha t fugr:e(iients are present T the black-l'Obed huna (Including the feared, irascible old one); the kindly Irish priest who gently thumps the heads of boys with his breviary; catec~ clasa; the first Confeasion, and waminga of· alna venial and mortal, "impure thought" and even s~x. You'll recognize the kids, too -fat, shy, tormented Becky who bJoaoms into a beauty; Mike, the tall macho ' urchin wboae older brother advises him about dames; Felix, the stumpy class clown ~ Mary, the bright, pretty, blatant teacher's pet . . . nobody new here. Yet time and again, "Shoes" keeps sneaking up on you, ti~ou, affectionately kid an experience a few o er -Catholic-kid plays here in . recent months have . ·~················································ : ed~ards NEWPORT CI~E~A : :t"/\SHION ISLi\ND, NEWPORT CENTE • : Near c-•t ........ ,,. Betwee• MaeArtllar. , .... ree • • ~ 644-0760' . N·o·w·su·o·w·1NG I MON. ·TatJU. -. .... 51M, 81M, le&M p.a. EDWARDS PUCES FOa "ANNIE" I s2so s500 a.u• V .. er 12 Geae...i A ... . .. LUXURY THEATRES 11 lrj ijWu *·ii 6 l6w 911ot~'&r::) ... utlful an';";! SOun Ol'"t Te Your Cut ~THl~· ~~ THI: ISLAND (") A LI ll N I") DRIVE-INS Of'EN NIGHTLY AT 7:30 Children Urid .. 12 FREE Unleu Nored You11 be &lad you camel -~gw-.l'lm~ . ...~-... llTH TERRIF·IC WEEK *BARGAIN MATINEES• 'Monday thru Saturday All Pertorm1ncH before 5:00 PM (Exc.,t lpeclll Engagements end Holld1y11 llMtf ·-~o ~,,,.2;oo·0".~ ... YOU COULD U. ''WRONG II .aHT" oit WHAT I HeAlr'CN1 ....... --.-.. -.-.-.-.-.- •ll ~Ulll ·-~· UCHAIUOTI °' FlllF' '"°' u-,,..-.ue.•••• v .................. "PORKY'&" Cltl 11:11,1:11, ............ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN . .... YOU COW.Oen WAT I HUR" (PG) t:U, ....... •tO. .... LAKEWOOD C ENTER SOUTH WAI~ IN ""'A~f1~ ANAHEIM DRIV(·IN ft _,! ~A •A.Wt BUENA PARK OPIVI IN UMolft AM W ... et ll\olt 121...070 ------ "I ' •••• ""'' LINCOLN DPIV£,IN f "ntm ROAD WARIUOR" 1111 --.--- ..FIGHTING BACK" 1111 ------- Poc:utry or Concstewooo 211/531·9110 . "POfUCY'S " 1111 ____ ,...._ "FANTASIA",., ............... "WRONG II RIGHT" Clll .... , .... ..,_ . "FIGHTING IACK" 1111 -''l'He WARRIOftl" Clll "IOMI KINO Off .. ft0"1111 -"PAAADlll" (II) Clllt ft tOIJllO ·~•"1111 "GOtN' ~ THI WAY" 1111 • I t I -· I I I I I .., .. .1 I I ~ ~ j f J l I -l I I l t . BOSTON (AP) -U fOU w.. lldt. would ~ t'athlf MW a tl'eltmlnt tbat ~ • 80 percent chanot ot IW'Ytval Ol" OM that pc-. a 10 ~t Nk of deethf ' . The two tteatmenta are the eune, but.·~ that patlenta pref• rn.dioa1 optk>nl that are put to the ln terma of llvlnc, not d)1n8. Teat 1ubject1 were uked hypothetical -que.Uona about whether ~ey would chooee furgery I! they Md lun&. cancer. They were told either tharturpry had a 90 percent chance of aurvlval or that it had a 10 percent chance of immediate death. • • pos1t1ve , . Wll wblilhed in the New En;land Joun\al of Medidne. . ~ reepondenta were men wtth chronic problem• in • veteran•' hoapltal, radiolo1i1t1 taktna a poeiaraduate OOWM at Harvard and 1raauate 1tudent1 at Stanford Unlventty ~ School. U they were told about the chance of death, 42 percent chole ndiation over 1ur1ery. But lf the odda of IW'Vlval were ftnphull.ed, Ol\ly 20 percent preferred radiation. OBAtRMAN - Oranae Cout College welcftn1 prof euor Charle1 Bleah hat been lnatalled as chairman of the Long "We attribute th1a result tC> the fact that the rtak of peri-<>perat1ve death looma larpr when lt II pre.ented ln The hypothetical alternative to the temll of morta11ty than when it ia auraery waa radiation treatment, preeented ln ienna of IW'Vival," the which initially la aa'fe but hu a poorer docton wrote. · - Ioni-tenn' outlook for aurvlval With The docton expni.ed aurprile that aurgery, the Ions-term odd'-are the tendency WM Just aa stronc for better. radioloetatl and bullneet studenta aa it People were much more likel~ wu for the peUentl. • Beach-Orange County 1ectlon of the American Welding Society. avoid aurgery if they were told "We auuest that an awarene91 of waa a 10 percent risk of death rather the effec:ta of preaentaUon among than a 90 percent cbanoe of aurvtval, ph}'liciana and patienta could help the reeearchen found. reduce blu and improve the quality of. The study, directed by Dr. Barbara -medical deciaion-rnaking," they J . McNeil of Harvard Medical School, concluded. Sometime we'll get organized By GLENNA JOHNSON FOSTER or .. °"' ........ There are fewftheories that are accepted at face value, Any theory deeerves a aeoond look. When my phyidca prof_,,-tried to pass Etnatein'a theory of relativity onto the clasa, I wu the firat one to say, "Oh, yeah?" There are others who have refused to accept limply any old tJ;leory as law. Evel Knievel became rich trying to question Newton's theory of gravity. The theory of evolution haa been challenged in court 10 often that aome law atudenta are aklpplng corporate and criminal law and going Jtraight for the Darwin degree. I have alway .. FOeTD questioned the theory of o~Uon. The theory of organization states: 'He/ahe who ia organJz.ed. can aooompliah a multitude of taaka within a specified period of time and maintain a reaaonable amount of unity." IN OTBER WORDS, if you make a list of ·~to do today," you Vlon"'C ba~ to type copy •t 3 a.m., take your irorUng_ with you to the movies and wear clothes to tlte offia! that" have had 3 ~ minutes in the Pennanent Press cycle in the dryer. Well it doesn't work. Show me an organized peraon with a list and a clean house, a clean car, a clean desk and I will show you a peracm who cannot bake 42 cuPCakes for the aeoond grade with three minutes notice, who cannot drive on the freeway with a 100-pound bag of Bandini, six teen-agers and twelve Big Macs in the car at the ume time and a penon with a very IUSpidoua 00.. Orpnized people have a llmited rate of auccie. becat.1'8 they have a llmited workload capacity. U it•ia not on an agenda. they can't dolt. ·--I believe Secretaey of State Haig failed in his attempt to nesoUate a peace agreement between Great Britain and Arpntina becauae he called~ an appointment tint. A DISORGANIZED aecretacy of state would have '!,:fped ln on h1a way to another world c:rtm said, "Make up your mind. Magie, my plane ia double parked and I have to pick up my suit at the cleenen on the way to~Nres." - · By now you have probably guessed ~t I am not an orpnized penon. 'niat does not mean that I am lneffident. My dirty car doea double duty as a quick memo pad. Some of my mart important phone numben are written on the hood. The less ·important onea are on the trunk. My desk thowa dv! valiant effort I make to become a prolific writer~ even though I am a poor typist. " 'I Onlv in Home Federal Country will you find a pl1n, an lndlvklal Monev MalterPlan, .. for your financial well-being. NEWCOMER -Conatructlon baa been Instruments. The 96,0001quare-foot, two..t.Qry completed on thil ts.O million rnearch and structure ll located in the Irvine Industrial development facility of Racal-Dana Comp~ex. Return books or miss grades, diplomas SACRAMENTO (AP) - Student• who fail to r•turn textbook.a, tubu or tenn.La ahoe9 lent by their IChoola will have their gradea, dlplomu and tramcrlptl help up, under a new law. Golna into effect Jan. l, the law folfowa one J)Uled lut year which pennltl llCboola to hold up 1he gradea1 t ranacrlpta and diplomas of students who damage or vandallze school property. Under both laws, the atudentl -or parent.a -have to return the borrowed i te~•· pay for them, or make restitution for the dama1e, before their official d.ocument.a would be releaaed. . . . ...... ; ' .... . And by knowing all the tools available to meet them. Visit your Personal Financial Representative today. And' begin putting together your Money Mas-. · terPlan. Then using them. [ refu.e to d.t.cu. the condition of my 00..-became lt may become the object of a JepJ. lnV'eltiption. WELlrMEANING FRIENDS have tried to .en me on the theory of orpnization.. I have a frtmd, Poli. who la., orpn•wed that she will no& ..-1.be powdenoc:m uni.. it ii on her it,t ol "thinal to do today.'' .. Some people seem to have· an un- canny knack for making money. They appear to be especially clever. Or lucky. . Or both. With that in mind, Home Fed- eral has devmoped an important .re- source for your individual financial planning. It's an organized guide . that includes checking and savings accounts investment.a and the serv- ices whi~ make them more efficient -plus a personalized strategy .. The Mml8W MallerPliln orpnlmr. To keep your Money MasterPlan and important records up to date, you'll receive an attractive and To mUstr.te my polnt and to show you the lnefftdency of oromatton. Poll lnlilted • that I IMke ooplea of Tm appotntment lilta. How rldlcUlow! . -llTCiii't keep up wUJi my appolntmmt1, why lhould t keep ben1 In fact, their success st.ems most;.. ly from solid financial planning. · By establishing realistic short, medium and long-raJlie ~· _ By snticipating_ their...growing_ need&._ for oonvenie~t. ~~ · r-Cniail' needs.too. 'lb help you pinpo}nt ~ur needs. 1b help y,ou set meaningfUI goals. And show you how t.o start every day a little richer by managing your ·money for growth and~~ . -. handy organ.i7.er. Use it 1 with your Money Ma.s- t.erPlan to build (or fi- nancial success. l ·1 . ' j SPORTS GREATEST MOMENTS -Amidst the treasures of the sports museum are recollections ~f great football DlllJ ................. moments, among a myriad of other material at the Hall of Fame, which has found a new home. Hall of Fame finds new home Old mansion to house sports memorabilia, library By ROGER CARLSON O(aMDlllJNethlll LOS ANGELES -For years -through the late 30., the 408, 00s and 60a, the Helms Athletic Foundation waa a, place where the spor1a world gathered -the ultimate common denom!nat«. where the paae could be viewed and the pneenl. WU being celebrated. Now, 12 ye.an since Hehna Hall _... VllCated for what hu been a very tentative tucuN. ·the s-t hu been reborn with the eatabllahment of a permanent home for the foundatlm &It blcked by Paul Helms, saved by Peter Uebeuuth and now under the a~ of the l'lnt Interstate Blmk. Bill Schroeder and ....._t Jbldy Dye-have found a new bQme for the Hall of Fame, SpolU Muaewn and library, a renovated 22-rocxn mamicn .. .,.,,..........,,,.._~ __ ... ·~~~A '--• • - . -···blocla-west of westeii ~t t;;. nort!l-;;.t" of the Coliaeum. "IT'S GOING TO BE A beautiful place," says the 77-year-old Schroeder. ·~e'll have our award ceremonies there and complete food aervioes with a barbecue area. "We have an acre of land and plenty •of parking. It's going to be the way it U8ed to be," says Schroeder, alluding to the days at Helms Hall, when such Ulumlnarles aa Amoa Alonzo Stagg, Pop Warner, Sammy Baugh and Jack Dempeey, among many othe~ paid regular vislta. Schroeder, a native of Texas and araduate of Hollywood High, la a product of the days when catchers would pull a round potato out of their back pocket and aaU lt over third bae, a ploy to get the runner to ~ home (where the ba,teball awaited). HE HAS SEEN IT ALL and ia deeply involved in the Olympics and it waa his formidable collection which began what la today the finest all-around oollection of sporta memorabilia in. the nation. And, it's the oldest. It wasn't until a year after Schroeder, with the backing of Helma, got started that the Bueball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown broke ground. When Helms Bakeries went under the future of Schroeder and hla aporta museum, library and MAKE A MOVE -Bill Schroeder (left) and aaaistant Buddy Dyer will be 1J¥JV1ng in the fall to a new location for the Hall of Fame, Sports Museum and library. awards program became cloudy. United Savingll. then Cit.17.ens Savings took him and hla treasures tn, but lt was all coming unglued 18 months ago. · Ueberroth saved lt with bis guaranteed backing, DOW Flnt Interstate Bank. behind Don Crivellone and John F. King, have taken the reJna. THE ROME IS BEING DECLARED a hiltor1cal monument and it appears to be. the final reeoluUon. The 'ironical thing about all thia la that ·Schroeder worked for California Bank from 1926-36 and now be finds himself in the employment of the aame firm (although the name of the bank and all of the principals are long s1nce gone. Schroeder expects to make the move from the current quarters adjacent to Loa Angeles International Airport in £he fall -maybe in time to celebrate NO. 78 on Nov. 13. .. HOMECOMING-:--One of the Hall of Fame'a..most honored exhibits la the World Trophy. .. The ·Arti•t• paint a prelly picture on tbe tennis court • . s~e pase C3. ~his Tiger . . ··untamahle? Angels get scra~ched up BY CURT SEEDEN or .. o.ier ,... • ..,, With the game leea than two hours old and Detroit down to its laat out ln the ninth Inning, Tiaera' caicher Lance Parrish figured he'd be able to spend that much more time on Memorial Day with hla parents. Parri1h, like several of the Tlgen, lives in c.allfomia, and a game with the Angela usually means a rather large gathering of frlenda and family scattered about Anaheim Stadium. BUT UP until Richie Hebner stepped up to the plate in the top of the ninth with two out and his team down 3-1 to the Angels, several of the Tigers were figuring db a aomber holiday with their relatives. However, Hebner 'a single triggered a three-run rally off relief specialist Doug Corbett, and the Tigers went on to record a 4-3 victory before 42,417 very disappointed fans Monday. "A lot of the guys on the ball club live In California. They get pretty pumped up for games here," Hebner said afterward. Still, .the Tigers hardl}' looked motivated throu~ the fiht seven innings u Angel starter Mike Wltt -making hia first start lince May 3 -limited them to just one run on aeven hits while striking out five. THE TIGERS choee to pick on Corbett who had done everything right alnce coming to the Angela along with• Aob Wilfong in a trade with Minneeota. F~ the record. Larry Herndon followed Hebner'a bue hit with a m.naJe and Parrish walked to load the hues. That brought Up Lou Whitaker who squirted a two-run lingle to right to tie the game. Pinch hitter Jerry Turner then provided the winning hit -an km single to center. "A. aoon as we came here we were ready to play," offered Parrish, who lived in Irvine for several years before recently moving to Yorba Linda. ''Thia wu a helluva ball game. Even 'though there were two ouu, everybody on the bench wu ltlll pulling for the guy that waa up. That'• the way it's been all year with this club." That'• al80 one of the reaaona the Tigers (29-17) are ·cwnmtly battling B01non for the lead In the American League East. "If WAS really satisfying that we won thia game," Parrish continued. ''I · guess it's ~ like Yogi (Berra) says. It ain t over 'til tt'a over." The Angels can identify with I the Yankee coach's words of wisdom. It was ~t Friday and I . Saturday that the Angela pulled out dramatic victories over the 1· Milwaukee Brewers, rallying from three runs down in the process. -I And it was only Sunday that the Brewers returned the favor with a 7-3 victory after trailing II 3-0 early in the game. 1 Once again Monday the Angela staked their starting pitcher to a I 3-0 lead on the strength of I third-inning singles by Tim Foli, Brian Downing and Rod Carew I off Tigers' starter Larry I Pashnick. I DOWNING AND Bobby I Grich belted home runs in the fifth and sixth innings -j respectively, and Witt did everything In his power to pltch his way back into Manager Gene Mauch'a starting rotation. After Wi'tt allowed the Tlgen' first run in the seventh on a single by Mike Ivie, Hebner'• double~ Hemdon's RBI ~e, Maucp brought on Corbett to get the final lix OU 18. ' I \ "I thought he (Corbett) waa (See ANGEI.s, Pase CJ) -~Piiaies ~.;n-'t" take . Dodgers' charity 1 . . 1.J ·.· ~1 PFITSBURGH (AP) -The game' was up for grabs when rightfielder Jorge Orta of the Loe Angeles Dodgen dropped two fiy ba1I8 in a row: · In C seasons, that might have two errors too many against the Pittsburgh Plrata. But the Plrata are a last·p• team '° far this aeuon, and they failed to capitalize Monday aa the Dodgen held on for a 6-4 victory. "EVERYBODY IS doing everything they can. We're trying hard. We just haven't done anything," Pirate Manager Chuck Tann-er said after nis team'• 10th 1oa in 14 games. Meanwhile, the defending World Serles champion Dodgers climbed above the .600 mark with a 26-24 record. They have won eight of their laat 13 games. "My heart atoppedTour times during that game," SIPd ~ Tom Luorda. "Whew!" he added with a long .. deep sigh. THE DODGERS, led by catcher Mike Scioscia with a homer and a tie-breaking sacrifice fly, led 5-3 into the bottom of the eighth. Pittsburgh's Jason Thompeon cut it to 5-4 with hla 13th homer of the season. Then Orta'a erron on a ainklna drive by Johnny Ray and a ff y down the line by Dale Berra helped Pitt.burgh load the baaea with two out in the eighth. , But reliever Terry Forst.er got pinch-hitter Willie Stargell to fly out to retire the aide. I I j Wallach 'sizzling_ Erving: Lakers just another ream now "Hey, I'm just happy we won." said Forster, continuing bia comebeck from elbow surgery. "I just feel fortunate rm out there pitching~' THE DODGERS took a 2-1 lead in the aecxmd inning when Steve Garvey and Sdosia MCh hit .olo homers off Pirate starter Paul Moakau. I 76ers are brimming with confidence as they.get set for game three t()nigbt J INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Philadel~~ 76en have proved they can beat the Anaelea Lakera. The queatlon now b whether theY, can beat them three man times. The 76en. havinl ended LOI ~· record Playoff wtnnlna ~ at nine with a CQJlvindng 110-94 victory Sunday In Pb.llade1phla. try to take a 2-1 edae when the best-of-aeven National Buketball Amor»~ cbamplonlblp playoffl ISllDI --..1.1 u. l'atum. "WE'LL· BB s4cg wlth a 1ood attitude,'' IAkt Lakerl auard Norm Nixon. who bad ).Ill llx po6nw In the io. after I~ }2 dUdftc pOll HMOll 'play. ''The lolt dJdn t do anydllnt to U.Gl:llpt make UI huncn-"· We've ~ to ccinc-ttate betW, pnYtllt tl*D frcm cantroW.nc ta. bOMdi:" P.blladelptil•'• Jul1u1 Srvln1, ovet~•~ m pmt two. mowa UM Lakere ean be beaten, but are very ~ .,..,. .... , OUIWilwl bair to beet ............. dwf''-9 ~ ......... · · • bUt ...., ma tiidJ 'be aw I a ," ..td ............. M~mMdH .....,.. an • Ylc'°'1· 'ftli LMm, WhO ._ ut • M nmid In .... IWO _1.la1of II lt1••·• Ud to th• ital t''pe ................. . ..... routac ....... in..bela&IMI, 124-117 victory over Philadelphia · in laat • Thunday'a opener. But the 76en went back to the cha1kboud and came up with atraie,y to overcome the Laken' trapl>lna defeme and slow down~ fM\ bre8k.. ft worked. ;,I TilJNg WE'VE tauaht OUl'mlves how to beat them." Ervtna ukl. "Now lt'1 up to them to lld)lst. .. That'• pncilely what Laken Colch Pat Biley hM In mind. ~ ~ -"We wtD h8Y8 to mab ane ~.. .;:.---~llllllllal ·On TV tonight. ·chanoet 2 at 6 · In the first lnnina, MOlkau WM- atruck on the pltcbJ.na forearm by a drive off ihe bat of Dusty, . Baker. Thouih he ~ In the pme for another innina1 Moekau bowed to fell~f from Manny Sarmiento to open the third. '"Th1np ha • .. said ·rum.. ·'Lib toda)', c:.. '°' bit imd I hM tD tir .0 tbe-bU11pm _..... than I wanted. 8aradentb p&ta. 89 lnn1np • w.ek. lt ..... fl The Dodaen mowd. ahlld 3""1 tn the lcuttll on all RBl-tiiill_e by 1'cn c..y. But \be Pfn• did dJe IOCll"t at 3-3 ln the.t>oaiclm Ot lbe fourth on Tbo~ploa '• BBi doubJe MCI l\ay't ...crtti tg oft T«I Poww. who ....... -1M ~~r Jerry aeu.1 . ambidt . Thie .... the a..3 ... wttb iwo .,.... m die illlblb att lOllftl relleYer Kent I ~ i-1. ar-:W-cmt't =~r· Ml for f':I .... U'OUltd,,= T•k•lve, wlao Jlt,d1• = ........... Giii .. .............. tr bur / . . ' . . Or~ Oout DAILY ll'tLOT~. "'-1, illl ... jiiiij~ii!l!iii!!~l!!o!!!!---~~~--- • Gleveland not high on Drysdale's ·list • Brom AP dl1patc1t .. CLEVELAND -Don Dryld.ale .• uld he u•ually avoid• ataylna downtown when h1I iravela take him to Cleveland or Oet!'Olt. And after a weekend muatna lnddent in downtown Cleveland, the e,x-Loa Angeles Dodgera' pltoher aaid it wW be quite a whtle before he stays in the d ty again. Drysdale says he wu robbed and uuulted early Sunday morning on Cleveland's Public Square while ln town to broadcast the C hicago White .Sox weekend game9 as~t the Cleveland Indiana. Drysdale said he was robbed of a gold watch, which he said was worth $5,000, and a gold chain. He did not file a police report. DWYSOALI Drysdale, 46, said he WU approached by tWd men in the elevator of Stoulfer's Inn on the 1quare. He said o~ of the men had a knife, which Drysdale said he kicked from the man's hand: Dryld.ale-said the other man then showed a gun. Tbe fight spilled out onto the lidewalk, whe.re Drys'dale said he wu hit on the back of the head. -.... Quote of the day i,.on Ztmmer, manager of the Texas Rangers, answering the telephone in the clubh ouse (Eddie Robinson, the team's vice-president, was on the line) alter the Rangers mapped a 12-game losi.na streak with a 1-0 victory over Boston: "Bello. I.a this President Beagan calling?" SEC votes for 45-secoAd clock WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. ~ The Southeastern Conference voted m . Monday to experiment next basketball season with full-game WJe of the 45-second shot Qock. Other college basketball conferences have adopted similar game measures until the final 2- to 5-minutes of each contest. ·, Whtt• So>c Ott a Aoyal beating XUlil a.n w1111 wu.. • , ......... iMb ~ thNe hltl ~hUe Gib O.elfa• dri:MI In two tuna •• the ftoyali battered the ~ Whl•.~ ... 11~. co h.llhllaht Amene.n 1-1\ie 9CUon MOnally. The Ro)'all, who tntend the pme wtth an AL-1-dina .291 tMrn bltUnc a~, ~out 18 hlta oU thNe ~ pltch1r1 . . . &!"where, Rlok Miiler hJt a two-out 8i'and alarn home run tn th• fourth lnntn1 after OPland blew a double play oooortunlty to llve Bolt.Cm • a;2 wtn aw1 the A'1 . . . Rookie Pa91 Sena'• iecOnd homer of U'9 pme, a two-run 1hot with OD• OU t In th• bottom of the 11th tnnJnc, 1ave Seattle a &-4 victory over Milwaukee ln a pme WUOM spked by seven home runt , , . Voa Bay11 drove in five runa wtth a hclmer, double and a ~lc.ded walk and Aadre Tbortoa allo homered to apark Cleveland to ita ei1bth 1trai1ht victory, a 9-4 declafon over MJ.nneeota, whkh taddled the Twinl with theh- 12th 1trataht !om .•• Rookie Cal Rl~ea Jr. 1tole home to bttek a llxtb lnnlna tie, Al B~ followed with a run-ICIOl'lnl llnale and ~­SblpetoD hit a two-Nn homer u Bald.more edged Texas, 8-7 . . . Ruce M•IH•lh drove tn three runa with a ·pe1r· oM>ublel u Toronto anapped the New York Yankeel' three-Pm8 winning streak~th a M dec:llion. Sutton no match for Expos' Lea Tim. Wallac,, a UnJ1hnity High Iii and Saddleback Collea• product, drove in four rum with a pe.ir of two-run homen and CUrlex Lea _ti,red a four-hilt.er for h1a eecond atnUabt shutout, le.ding Montreal to a 10-0 bluUna of liounln to ,htghliiht NaUonal League llCtion Monday. 'lbe loaing pitcher for the A8troe wu DM S.U.. a Laguna Hills resident. Hia record dropped to 7-2 Ja..: , .. Elaewbere, EJllt _.. Vlleatlme belted four bits, incl~ a two-nm homer, and Jon StearM .had th.tee hit.a, three RBI and 1COred twice u the New York Met.· wh!l>ped Atlanta. 10-4 . ,_. R•ppett Joaes and Sisto Leaea•• hit .homer•, Tim FJaue1'7 drove in three runs and ,pitcher C.llrla Weltb LM knocked 'in a pair to lead ~ Diego to a 9-7 aluafest over the Chicago Cuba ... Third t.e.rr>an Jolmay Seid'• throwtna error in the 15th inning allowed PhDMlelpbia'• Bob Denier to come home with the wiJ:uUni run · as the Phillies outlasted the Reda, 5-4, {n a game that featured ·a bench-clearina brawl in the aeventh innings ... 011le Smi~, Wlllle McGee and Tito Luclnun drove in two runs apiece to highlight a 10-run fourth innll>Sl and aend St. Louis to an 11-6 dec:Ulon over San Franc:lm>. · . . . . Glddon1 uputa defending champion. DJ:AL, l'.naland -Char1-OlddoM ot Britain UPH\ d1f1ndlnt champion 11 PhWppe Plo\Uowc ot France 3 and 1 Monday an the openlna day of tht Bt1Uah Amateur aou champiOnlhip at the Royal Cinque Pont Club. • Otddona. a 20-)Wl'-old fonner atudtnt at the prett.t.soua HarroW School, had llYen bttcb ~ the lfhol•.,. played. PlouJoux, who defeated American Joel Hinch in 1ut ytar'-final, wu &-under-par after 11 holeie but led by only l·up. Ba1eball today On th1a dai. ln bueball ln 197~: ~ell flrebt.Der No=an t.led Sandy Koufax' major teque .-. by hurllna h~ fourth career no-1\tttet, • ntne-ltrlkeout, 1-0 1em over Baltimore. Dave Chalk lin&)ed home Mickey Riven in the \hi.rd lnnlna . for the pme•a only run. On thia date in 19&1. Cleveland veteran Bob Feller fired hia third career no-hitter, beatinl the Detroit ' Ttcen. 2-1. Titans draw Shockers In opener • Wtchlta State and Tew won Ill their re1lonab Monday nl1ht to camplete ~t;,t;'fna field for the . two-w~ tlcn ColJeae World SerW wblcb be8f.m Friday in ~ Neb. The other 9Cboola involved are Maine, Mlaml, Cal State J'ullerton. Oklahoma State, South C.aroUna and Stanford. The '11t.ana, who ahocked ddendina cbampAnn Arlr.ona State in West· Bea1cna1 II; will meet the. Shocken of Wichlta S'tate ln their tint game Friday . . . Jim ' Crala, aoalle OD the 1980 u .s. Olympic c'bamp6ol). hockey teMD' that imJlhd a nation, apent h.la 20th blrthdaZ. under investigation Monday alter a fatal coJJ on in which a woman died. Television, radio Followtng are the top •port.I eventa on TV toniaht. RaUnill are: .,....,...,....,... excelJent; vvv worlh watchilla; """ fair; .,... forget it. ~ • p.m., Cluumel l vvvv NBA CHAMPIONSHIP: Philadelphia at Lakera. Aaaoucera: Dick Stockton and BW Ru.elL The Lakera wW try to get their n.uluing game ln ~ aplnst Dr. J and Co. u the .erlea ta tied at one game apiece. The Lakera' lcm to the 76era Sunday WU their fint in 10 post...leUOll contesta this year. RADIO Bueba1l -Dodgers at Pittaburgh. 4:30 p.m., KA.BC (790); Detroit at Angela. 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). Buketbell -Philaddphia at Laken, 6 p.m., KL.AC (1070). • Some blame Mears /or crash ' INDIANAPQLI8 (AP) -Pole•ttter Rick Mean, blamed by tome tor a fiVMW mishap in an aborted start of the 1982 lndlanapoU. '°°· may have prevented aeriout injury by the p11e:it he '91 ln brirtalnl the 83-c.w ltefd toward the stan-tlniah line. ".Rick brou1ht ua down too alow," aatd three-time tndy 500 winner Johnny Rutherford. "Rlck tell too tar behind the~car." Meara said M Wat fQllo the lnftnM:tiana of race offidala "not to 1peed up, 1 a1ow down and 1peed up agal.n" and that aa the man on the .r,>le he could drive "u q~ or u a1ow u he liked. ' "On the bright side. they were lolnc fairly al.ow when the accident happened. And now I have aomething to UM u an example next year when I warn them (the drivers) about the 11Mt," said Chief Steward Tom Blntord. i THE ACCIDENT knocked four cars out of the race with 10rDe driven blaming Kevin C-opn, who was atarting in the middle of the three-car front row. . ''It looked like Cogan wu looking for trouble,'' said Mario Andretti who had his car eliminated from the race along with thaee driven by Cogan, Roser Mean and Dale Whittington. "He was accelerating and all of a sudden, he croaed in front ol me. l!e waa crowdJns Foyt and wasn't paying attention.'' Gordon Johncock, who acored his aecond Indianapolis victory by nipping Meara· in the cloeest. finiah in 66th running of the race, declined to blame anyone. • "We were rupnJng pretty slow," he aaid, ac:ld1na that the mishap might not have taken place on a wider track or in a race when only two cars are in each row. ''.Here be didn't have anywhere to go,'' said Johnoock. who was directly behind Cogan a the field moved toward the starting line for the green flag that would signal the start of the race, straightened up at one time. until he clipped A.J. (Foyt) on the left front. Then he veered over to the other side of the race track and Marlo hit him broadside." JOBNCOCK SAID it waa possible the accident. in which none of the driven was injured, might not have happened if Mears had been going quicker . "I think we should have a faster start,'' said Johnoock. "But that's up to the steward, to tell him how fast to go at the start-I don't know if that was ever diacus&ed in the meeting after the drivers' meeting. I wasn't there when they met with the front row. ·Mission Viejo .tournament to benefit CHOC "It's my opinion they should come down in third gear at 110 or 120 mph ... There's nobody to tell him 'you're going to be penalized lf you don't come down at 100'," he said. Irrelevant Week will kick off festivities with ·an J rrelevant J 8 _holes It seems like aimo.t everjwheie YG" tuni; there's one charity event or another bane ltl&ed- Coneen with John Jouglard (236); and Randy Smith with Dco Gn:.an (23e) .• It's like the monthly bWa, •••iehc7w they .GOlF a1 k ming HOWARD L 1n net action. it ,,, .. Ralph Quist with Kai wa~ = ~ are eome ~ta that are ; Wong (.196)· Ron ~ with Bnd Smith (197); wonhwhile and, at the same time, a lot of fun. HANDY and Jeff Minarik with1 Val Tar.dif. ( l.971 _ Such an event is slated for the Orange Coast . . . The Meadowlark Men• Golf Club will host !,.. ..... ~ ~~ •ho ~ cdebrity pro.am at ~... ~ . . ~ .th!l' second .a~nual Huntl~jtOn ~-:_a~h ~cit Vle'}o~un~r.iHY~:t.~~~~~ .... :-, '>w--<41 -~ "'• ... , .. _ ~"'is,·---.;J't ~ .. ~ -~·-~,~"'-..... - shotgun start. ho long It wW tak the tint touraoine to catch up the Meadowlark Golf and Country Club. '1 he event will benefit the Children's Hospital to~ high handJca e . Tournament infonnation aheeta are now available of Orange County (CHOC) and entries are now Oh es. the h=· this ~ around I.a from at m08t area golf counea or by calling 840-3006 being take n . Further information on the ~ta's ~ld ro team. the San Fn.nciaco 49era. He's according to tournament chalnnan Ron Cowan tournament may be obt~ned by calling Bob Tim w ... l.i!-..... from Fresno State in cue . , . The women•• club at Santa. Ana Country Club Burgoon or Ken Warner at 760-6226 or by_wrif:ini didn't ~~.,t~ller when the NFL draft = completed ita club championship tournament to CHOC Benefit Golf, 180 Newport Center Drive, leted rece.ntly. Mrs. Brian Toweney of Newport Beach No. 180, riEwport ~ 92660. oompU g.j-reall interested in ila . call Nick wu the wUmier with a 312 are for the 72-bole . The $200 entry fee will include green fees.~ Salata~ Be~ Bofu,rf at 64l-06l8. ~·~even event with Mn. Freeman Kinzie, a six-time former prues, awar(i banquet, complimentary beverage on find a wa to ou for laying _:: but don't count champion, the runner-up. Toweney ta the 1981 ihe Ct?llt'Se and a one year subecrtption to Suite Life it. Y pay Y P state women'• amateur champion. Mn. Gene Magazine, one of the major sponsors of the on Ronald wu thli'd and~· Glen Almquist finished tournament. • • • fourth. COGAN SAID mec:banical problems led to the m::r and Binford said he did not know wha~ ca the problem. "r ve thouaht back over it," Binford said. "Rick brought them aown very well when he waa on the pole before (in 1979), and on the .econd start (Sunday). Why he came down at that speed on the first start only he knows. "We like the cars to speed up gradually .. ~e safety factor is that they are generaily in a higher ---_.i~ . JQ~L . l6 ·~~'Peed. oi 170 •Ph 11~·. ,. good racing start. ti Cl~rc gains semis PARIS (AP) -Jose-Luia Clerc of Argentina became the first man to qualify for the semifinals of the French ()pen tennis tournament today when he posted a worlonan-llke 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 victory aver Australian Peter McNamara. · Among the celebrities expected to partidpa~ BACIENJ)A GOLF CLUB ln La Ha~ will be are Flip Wllson, Hobert Conrad. Jerry Quarry anCi the ecene of the third annual March of Dima players from professional 1eams in the area. pelebrity c1amic Monday with Jim, Youngb)Ood of "I was really surprised that I won ao easily,'' the No. 4 eeed Clerc said after the two-bo\lr, quarter-final match on the clay courta of Roland Danny Blbb captured hi• fifth club GamJS Stailum. championahlp at Irvine Coaat Country Club Among the women, No. 2 seed Martina recently with a 74-74-70-71-289. Paul O'Shea wu NaVJ"aUlova reached the aemifinall by defeating the numer-ue With a 291 with Dr. Frank Crtnella fellow American Zina GarNon. 6-3, 6-2 . • • • ·THAT ANNUAL SPOOF ON SPORTS known as Irrelevant Week will kick off actMtiea..with a golf tournament on Monday, June 21 at Irvine C-oast Country Club. The day will focus on high handJcap golfen from Irvine Coast Mesa Verde, Santa Ana and Blg Canyon Country <..1ubl. :Each club will have one : · ·representative, preferably the one with the highest handicap, competing in the event. ' In true Paul Salata tradition. the foursome will start on the fourth }\ale where water plays a major role. Tee-off la at 12:45 with the rest of the field getting under way at 1. Whether the featured f0W'90me will allow others to pla)' through or not hasn't been determined but accon:ling to Salata,. "if they don't, we may no\ fin!sh until the next morning." The big question on most playef!' minds la just the Rains b 'host. A total ot 36 fOUl'9ol'DM will each be joUled by a celebrity drawn at random with such Rams as Youngblood, Doug France, Pat Haden, I:arry Brooks, Carl Ekem. Bill Bain. Georp Andrews, Nolan Cromwell, Clyde Evans, KW't c.owna, Bay Malavasi, Preston Dennard. lvory Sully and Jack Youngblood slgnJfytng thelf lntenti~ of pla.ytng: The $175 entry lee includes 8feen fees, carts, tee prizet, beverages and lunch on the coww, dinner and,prizes. Tee-off ii at 12:30. For further lnformatfbn, contact Dorothy Sutherland at 979-~270. • • • CBIP SBOTS -Winners ln the recent Rancho San Joaquin men'• golf club member-gueat tournament included the following in gro11 competition: WW Sauerbray with John.Provemano <231); BW James with Jim La Braffe (232); Tom third at 301 ahd Peter Nelaon fourth at 309 .. •. A· The 23-year-old Clerc, ranked sixth milllan-to-<>ne ahot by Jim Gilmore dwin8 the first worldwide. waa leading in the final aet before the tournament held by The Irvine Clubnouse. a 26-year-old McNamara. ranked 12th, held his racquetballand health club, gave lµm a bole-ln..ane aervloe to love ln the aeventh game. recently. Gilmore bad an ace on the 13th bole, a r==~~~=-~-:-::-:-:-::--~-:--::-=::::-::-:::-:---::-:::-== 160-yard layout over water. The ball landed CUSTOM GRAPHS w/LASERCOLOR directly ln the cup with no bounce.-on the sreeri on Give us your numbers and we don 1111CUstoo1plhSldW1s1n the hole that bad been pk:ked for an extra prise foe 46-to-72 hOln. Han!~. Sides Of OYhd Tm. Beat manual cosis by »to-the event. 75'11 With exclusiYe, MIW computerllasef ledWlOIOgy. Phone, clred mal, tie-In to 'J04X computer, or visit our Wilce centers. COSTA MESA Graphics One 2000 Harbor OMS., Suile A.n4 Three area players have become eligible to win a free trip to Scotland for two and $1,000 u a result of 800ring a bole-in~. John Morton of Newport Beach and Joe s~ of o.ta Mesa each 8CIOl'ed their aces ai Me.a Verde while Raymond Cllme of INFOGRAPHICS .. INC. o.ta Mesa madeilll at WllJowick. ~====~(114:)~6~7~5-4:~~-=5~=====------------- We're Having a GDLDRUS:HI lntrOdtldng our new GOLD RUSH account wtth • bonanza of beneflti. Plus~ get an accidental dectth policy and etMtgeoc.y cash plan. ~ haYe oct1er ~programs alaif- able toOI They lnclta our regular cheddng ace~ ft lfirrrest b9ring CNf"f ACCOUNT, ~ balante aa:ount,; and senior dtJzens account ~ 'J04X chokZ. c~ b1J today alid find out .oout a&1 our <neck~ pr<>g1ans Ask yotX fWNI accOunb ~M>out~ GOlD RUSM«CO.W.. "'. tNf bOnlnUI----~ • • Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/T\Hteday, June 1, 1012 Cl .Net. result .is L~guna Beach's gain ,, ftOOD CAIU.ION alt•) ud four 1tral1bt 8ou\b Co.at puah lAeich on OC"CMlon. ~they couple ot yun aao.'' ~ Wahl. "But Of'"~If..., ~ .... "" ""'•"t ., , ... ~ champkinlh!Jiat which lnclucle9 • olftr probably the bllt 1-2 punch !n 3-A. what koepa me sOlJ\I heN la the ,,...t we re Dla.,.na ..... • •Y• -.-45·~ wtnn.1na ltN&k ln 1..,ue~~· kJI. I'm in tM rt,ht-place at the rtcht una B~~ch 'H!lh tennl1 coach Art La Quinta Ri8h wu Luw\a •1 BrwntJeld I.I a .een.tor wtth plenty of t1mt wtt.b a kid WUt Lach. 1bat'• a once Wahl, thtr• • only tw:> tH~I in latett vktim, the Alt.eel' un6eaten 1treak experience and he 11 an anchor ln am,lel. ln a Wet.I.me lituaUon." Southe~ California M cant beat. ~ped by a 21-T cMdllon. Perry and the left-handed Schantz are That • the .. ner.al attitude of the Tlie neare1t anyone h11 come to na1 bulldlne blocka ln the Lquna Buch So, can an~thina be WJ'Oni wtth thia Art!ah tad .. they pNL pare forNlthe!rlCIJ'T 3-A1 der•llln1 th• Artl•t• WH El Toro 1raenal ana Capobianco l1 a 1enior I ~~~~~~!""' • Artl•t• even sot the • ow own at •aun• au• •nn • (UH\-11 ~)ands.. View Leque power doublee •P"i•"tt. • _ .. _. Club a,aln1t the Cala.,_ ... OoyotH, Univeratty aot 11 c1oeeu 18-10". Ttie rmt "lt'1 poMible, with the home court two·time CD' 2·A cNmploN (1980 and have been hardly 1 match f« the Art!ata, Brandt, another 90phomore, haa been upect, to be oven'Onfldent," My. Wahl. '81), now In th~ S·A arena. delpite the abeence 1of Le.ach a Junior a 1urprlle th.la year and Kollenda •till "We're solng to make 1ure we don't Th'! two teama Wahl do8n't btlleve for all but 10 match•. ' ' bu another year to contribute. . enter~verconfident. hla crew can bHt ant coll1dlna at the I.A.ch l&one of thOle that~ alons "We've had 20 different Uneups ln our ''There wu a big aqpi of relief arowu:t ~ ~~ the).4-A .crown (Corona del once ln a blue moon and f~ to have 23 matchee," aaya Wahl, alluding to the here when lt wu learned we wouldn't ar at eate · • brilllant future aheed of htm. team'• verutillty. have to travel up there. But eometimet Unbeaten through 23 matcha, the ff• competed ln the Italian Open Should the Artittl iO wtt.b ~ach ln you play better on the roed. All the £irJ Artllta have hardly been extended with recently and hla left~handed delivery doublet, chance9 are Willard will be the frienda aren't there on the road. But, ihJa the flnt clUI execution of IUck i...ch. and all..around pme filwu to be the ian't exactly home for ua either and Dale Wlllard, Craig Brumfield, focal point Wedneeday. Art.lat.a' No. l linalet Wednetday againat hopefullv that wlll w'ork to' our 1ophomorea Wade Perry and Erle But th.ta la hardly 1 one-man team. Ca.labuu, which enters wtth Todd Lee advantage.t' Schantz, Bill Capobianco, Ted Brandt, Wahl ratee hla first lix u the best he bu u It.a chief weapon. CONFIDENT -Laguna Beach High C-oach Art Wahl feels h.la Artists will wln 3-A tennis title. Kria Kollenda and Chr1a Boehmer. ever had. Calabaau wu unbeaten in league The match la acheduled for 2:30 and h'1 Wahl'• firlt unbeaten team at th.la It bel1N wtth Leach, but there la play, but forfeits becauae of an ineligible t'he Laguna Niguel Tenni1 Club i1 point ln a 17-year career that lncludee foreign exchange atudent Wlllard player cloud the Coyotes' record. located on Crown Valley Parkway, five the CIF 3-A crown ln 1980 (at the ame (Victoria, B.C.), a right-hander who can ''l aa.id 1 wu going to be through a ·miles 90Uth of Interstate 5. ~ ' . " " MAJOR L.aAGue 8T ANDING8 Americain L.Meue , w....-.i~ llotton Ottroif' New Yorll Ctewlend a.itlmort Mllwauiee Toronto WL~Qll 31 11 .133 21 11 80ll 1'AI 25 21 6'3 4'AI 26 2t .490 7 23 27 <64IO l'AI 14 29 .32t 14 12 31 234 20 ........ ~ )() 17 21 17 24 21 23 23 23 24 22 24 21 21 .....,.,._.. 834 .830 533 500 ..... 478 .447 Ot4IOll 4, _,..... 3 Botton 6, OMlend 2 Toronto 6, New Yori! 4 BeltJmOtw I , T "'" 7 Cltwlln4 I. M~a 4 Kanua City 1t. Clllc:eaO 4 S.11te 6, MltwllUll• 4, 11 !Minge T........-ea-.. Ot4tolt ( .... '>' 4-3) •I ~ (For'ICll 3-0) New Yori! (Morgan 3-1) •• Toronto (OwWI 1-0) T-fl.,._ 1-n .. e.n1more 1st..w1 Ml • ~ (0. Jadceon o-6) • a.Mand (W .... ()-4) Cl*-GO (~ 2-4) •I ~City (lllut 2-3) eo.ton (Rainey 3-I) .. Otikltnd (~ ,.n Mllwalitl .. (VuU0¥1c:ll 5-2) ti SNltlt (NmaonM) omlat ........... , TtllM 021 000 004-7 14 1 8alllm0t't 020 102 03•-9 12 1 Matlack, Comer (I ), Oarwln (8) and Sllftdbtl'9: O. Mllr11MI. Stoddard (9), T. Mlr11nel (I) tnd Oemptey. W -0. 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A -20,08!3. ~tt.---1 81111 ~ 010 210 020-9 115 2 et. Lou9 001 1000 00.-11 14 , R. Mat11n. ~ (4). ~ (41 llnd May; Mure. J. Merl:ln (IS). Kut (II end SencftG. W -J. Mtr11n (4-4). l -R. MetUn (()..3). A -11,313. ............ 4 ClnclnnaU 210 001 000 000 000-10 1 Pttlla. 000 000 004 000 00 t-5 • 0 Soto, 0Prlc9 (1). l<etn (I), SIWtly (12) encl Trevino, 0'8erTY (10~ ~. Aeed (9), Farmer (7), brunt•• (I). l~I• (10). Allamlr-(12). MoflO' (i4) Md It. Dia. Vk"Qlt (I). W -M°"9t ~..o). l -~ ~~). HAI -(;lndnnall, Or*-2 en. A -2.7a.. .....,..~. HoumlOn 000 000 000-0 • 1 ~ 610 1Ji1 OOll-10 11S 1 auuon. LaCo•~· Molllit (I). ~~tl.r-~~~ ~. C7), Wlledl 2 (I). ,,. - 22..3M. · . ITeptl ~-·..:.= 'I I JCM .... " .... "'""'-C::... " 171 ....... 1oM11, Tor. 41 11t 14 4' .... ....... Clfoe. Ill' • I 11 .... =•!,!-41111 IO ...... ..... 41 171 21 ., .... w.w..n. fie 22 . • tt aa .Mr UL ·t::~ • nl 1t .... ~ . . ..,., .. ,,...,,. ........... .. ,.,. ...... ........ TIIOl'lllOll, Cte¥ttaftd, t4: flMftfotte, eatt•-·..:.a:..":.~· .............. 11; 'a:a:'\.u. .... ~~~ tO. ..... ..... . ,........~...,... KIMll °'!. •t; ~ II;~: ----..::..tr9' ... ..-.-..:;.a• . I ......air..,.I f;·~~""-M; ...... ~N: ..... N: ---. .... 7&.t: ..... ............. 9MftllML Loe Alemttoe llllOMDAY'S RUULT9 ( ..... ., .... ~---) NIT llAC&. ywdL Lubboclt ~ti (8rOOltal 17.40 l .IO 3AO IMntlty ~ (Ward) IS.00 3.20 a. (Cretgtr) uo Ateo r a ced. Martin Boy, Saye• Accumulator. O«ienacevl. Clvlo Pride. l.Mt'*'"9cll Clltr'm. Ledtr ~.Mr Fagan. Time: 20.27. a IXACTA (1C).7) ptld '511.10. .. COND llAC:C. 400 ywdL W==(W•dl a.40 3.IO 2.110 "-(Adair) 4.00 2.IO AodlAtlo ( I 2.IO Alto r90td: Pltnty of No1Nn9, PriOa of ~~20.21. 1'MllD uca, 350 y•dL Pay Tht l!llrd (~) 4.20 I.AO 3.00 ClluMy Otlllnll (Adair) 1UO 11.40 Cutltt In Tht Air (Ctrdoza) 3.40 Aleo r~: Olatlno1iv9 Doll. Mlle Mlgtlty Ruler. Wff Vlotorlen, Trev•I On FHt, 8ptdtl Slnn, Aiurt Toni, I'm A~ Too. Time: 18.0I. Alto r~ ~ KJO. Prune Pit, .......... °"' lefor9 dewn. l1mll: 1:16-111. • UACTA {7-4) Plld U17 00. •PICC &Ol (6-7-4-1·M1 plld .... 1!12.40 wt.ii 3 Wlnnlna 1lckttl (D ~). N ~ 81.x Co"901a1lon paid $437 .40 wttll 211 -wlMnO lllllttta. llCMfnt ll4C& 1 \t nlllt on tUlf, &plodtcl (Plncliy) 1.20 2.80 2. 10 Wnhl Gold (Ouwra) 2.40 2. 10 Tiit a.rt (0.W.GljlM'ft) 2.10 Alto raotd: a.-, Ranllln, °"''*' 0..,. TllM: 2:26-1/I. ....... 11-e1peld112.50. ...,." M CL 1~ rn11t on tun. P9ttt Jonte (Oumnl) 3.110' 2.IO 2.40 Oltci.lm (Ola) 1.40 4,00 C.. .._ Mister (Plncey) 3.IO Aleo raced: Montclair, Rtdout•blt, Glwll'lt-.FIWO. •• ·:·· ... \ # -· -.. lndJ 500 •tlndlne• OlllcHI etandlnge In Sund.y'e ~ 500. llellng ~. llOmelOWll, CM number, Chw• •lgilot. number 9f '-'9 _,..td, ·-· ep..cl In mlltt pet llOUt of tllt IOC> 10. enc1primw1nn1nge1or MC11 om.. 1. OotOon Joflncoclt(, Coldwtttt, Midi. No. 20. Wlldc•t·Coeworth. 200 l•P•. 182.02'. 129Q,eot. 2. lllck MHre. Bakerelltl!'i No 1. ,..,_~°"'· 200 i.i-. 11202t . ..,15,eae 3. PMChO Ctn•. llrOWNbolfll. Incl . No. 3, Mercll·Coewor111. 111 lap•. 111,327, $103,SM, 4. Tom &MYa. St>c*-. w..n .. No. 1. Marcll·Co••ortll, 117 lape, 110.1118, w .aoe. 6. Al U-. Albuquerque. N.M .• No. 10, Lon9llorn·Coawor1h, 117 lape, 111.836, M0,32t. I . Oofl WllllUn9ton, Fort Ltudtrd•lt, Fla., No. 11, March-Cotwor1tl, 1141 ltpt, 161.221S. ue. 11S1. 7. Jim Hlc:lunan, Clwwnblee, Qa., No. 42, Mercll·Coaworlh, 1111 ltpt, 161.112. $151209. • •rttlah Am•teur ~ahlpa (at DMI. ) ,.,.. "-'If Brian Wlnttrldge (BrlteJn) daf. Robert Albrltton (U.S.). wal~over; J.C. Robeon (Britain) dtt. JOMpft S.tyllo (U.S.). 2 and 1; LH Dt 8andtrt (U.S.) dtl, Oln~e Cl•r~ 18rttalnl. 2 encl 1; Ttny Foreman .8 .J Off. Flodttlcii Pttir (Britain). 4 lll'ld 3; avid Ray IBrllalnl dt l. Robert Tlmbrootc (U.8.1. I and 2; Ttd 9uctlanM (U.S.) Ott. Altn Olbaon (Britain). 2 llnd 1; o.na Vanot Bank• (U.S I dtl. M.H. Olxqri (Brltaill), 3 and 2: Otvld OtaMfltld (ertt.ln) dtf. Oontk1 K~nn (U.8.). 8 and 4; Wlcf\MI Sonallack (8'1taln) dtf. VlllOt"t Ht•d (U.S .). }·U~j l!nd9 MoMtnamWI (lrtltnd) dtf 11411 8lalocl< (U.S.).Wlllk-. wmr--1. .. (U.S.) Ott. JtmH Glover • C'~~p; 8tt¥tr1 Cleoo (U.S.} dtl. (8'ttaln). 6 and 4; l(l1IWI Mot (U.a.) dmf. PU Hec>pe (8tttAllnl. ....-. Antho"Y RoNlltr (Britain) dtf. O.or3• ...._ (U.8.). .... ovw; RlaNrd ~ (U •• ) d«. AIMdS Cawley (Cenada). walkcww; An'kt«rt p.,_,. (8ftmin) def. Otey Tunlt. (U.S.). 2 llnd 1; Ian "-(&nuiln) dtl. Cht111tlan KJlnQ (U.S.). 2 and 1; O.R. Kr.- (8rtlaln) dtf. JOiin Mcl<9¥ (U.S.). 2-...p; ~ thltlem.,,n (Wtat OttmaJly) def. Oevld Kargtlta (U S.). dlaqutllfttd; Mitt i.-.- (8rtt81n) dtl. Stani.y Thornpeon (U.S.). 3 and 2; Wiiiiam Htldtr (U.S.) dtf. MIChHI wtlarlon-4>.im.t (8rtlaln). 20th haM: Buddy Rob9t9 (U.S.) dtl. Roy Guy (MM'I). 1-...p. Arthur Pierce (lrtlano) O•I'" Ooneld OuBoll (U 8.). 2181 ~ M1c11M1 Huglltedon IRltlaltll dtl. Ktllln Batt..-.b\< (U.S.L ~ arid ... Gunner Bennett (U.S.I dtf. lliln Ouls:li. (8'11tin), 6 end 4; Johfl Hawltaworlh (Btttaln) def. l.awrtnbt 8ucnftalcl (U.S.). I arid 7 • . a. Joktnrr/ Autlltrlord, FOt1 Wot111, TUM, No. 5, Cheperr•l·Co•worth. 197 lepe. 'Nnelt Open 16017. N0.321. (Ill .... ) 11. H9rll'I Jol!Non, bu a.n, Wis., No. mM 2t ~. 1116 lapt. 150.4411.163.4$4 ,... ,.__ ....... 10. Howdy"'*'-· Arlt""'°'· Midi ,"°".. JWnmy c:on.-. dtl. Chip Hooptt, 11-1, 30. Mtr~h. lie '-'>•. 150 3 • l ·O. S.4; Oulll.,mo VllH dtl. AndrtH 14fi~ AINA.~~. No. 11. M-.11-2. 6-3, ll-1; .ic.e Htguwaa dtl. Eliot ~UCL 380 JWda.· ~ 174 laclt. 147..... Ttftadls. M . S.2, 11-0; Yennldc NcWI dll. =Toe>(Tonkal 1.00 3.IO 2.IO 12. Oaty •n•lf• ..... MomMa. Ind.. Wojtell ~bale. 4-9, S.7, 1-4. 1-3; Ptttr , ~· (...,,) 4.40 1,00 No. ~ 1•• ._.. .._ • .,. MoMMW• dtl Andree Gome. 11-1, 5-7, 8ardl s.oo i3.' t49C10t 1'ebaiiue""'." M:9'~··No. · 52 6-3. M. ,,... ..,.. Aleo r9Cltd: Cet1 ~. Jungle "'9y. MU w.r~. 150 llipt, $66, I 19. .............,_..._~ ...__ CHc, 9l'*V Benya. • 14. o.nny 8u11Y9n, ~ Ky., No. 153 --_..,... Time: 1,.7 M~ 148laclt.......... Chl'll .&tt1 ~ o.f. l..Udt ~ 15. a.Ip Oanutl. Pltteburgtl, Ho. 12 11-2, M . AnclrM Jtegtt dtl. Vltgllnla Auald. Wlldcel-co.wortll. 147 .. 145,111 1-4, IJ.f. ---~--·---~~-.... , •• ~.....,....-.. do--~~~·-~--· • .... --,. -);"'"'.r'• • -=-<=+ .. ~ ..,..~ Mr St lloO (Mlldtml) IS 4& ~ • __. ~· -()fl°"~ (Herl • 4 00 17. ........ • ~ . No. Ill. ....... ,... Aleo rllCtd· ~abl>'/ Debby Dtw ccX. ~. 104ltpt.141.219. Cliff er,.o.lt def. Roel uwr, 4-1. M . Weld! Mt Fly: Noby Ate>. Sllyt>e>, ...;.._Hot 11. Tom 8'gelow. ~.Ind .. No. 27, 11-2. (Ory9clalt Wine $10,000. i.._ ...... Shot. ~. lie .... 144.211. $11.000~ T 4513 11. A.J . Foyt, Houe1on. No. 14, ~PIM! ll~A·(7-lll ptld S5940 Mtt~. 15 '-"• •11,231. Oryad~l•·Owtn .Oavldeon dtl. Roy • • 20. Joktnrrt Plt'tCIM, lndlenac>Ollt. No J.4. ~la....,, M , -..3, 11-3. ln'DfTM llACL 350 ywdL M~h. ft faclt, 142.lll. or ... Court chempkNtehlpa No aw-At Al (Pint) lll.20 9.00 380 21. George Snider, Houeton, No. 3~. ( .. 8edll I ~ . M~. 17 llipt, 141,629 '"'"""" 91 llflet) =:~un~l::~) 9.40 ;:: lnt~e~.!!.~s~ 25, ·K."'" eun.... oat. Mwtr.i &romllMd, 11-2, Aleo rectd· f H y Mtntuvtr, More 23. Jerry S-. ~ Wwh .. No. 141. 6-3. OeVld Muattrd dtl. RMleeh KIWlnan, &-. IMlnll.,. Oft, Ofl1n Right, 8Mol la M~. 91 lapt, l40,831. 7-e. 7-11. Aue. 24. CNt ~. 0ione,. T-. No. 31, Tim« 17.11. ~. 10 1tc1a. '40,1531. • DACTA (M) plld $132.40. 25. PN H....,_, l.al8Y9118. Ind., No. Oii, ~. 38laoe.14Uet. :rt. Tony 11tnenn-. Ind~. No 11, ~h. 37 ltcla. l40.~21. v . OttWllt """-· Gardtne. No. 76. ~Mlodon. 37 '-"· l41.a11. 21: Oeoft .,..,.,_, Sen °""**' No. 21 Merdl c-111. 12 ..... $42, 131. ~I . .ioet1• Garn, Mt•lco. No 55. ~.1-.,.l40.49t. 30. ~ Cogetl. Atdondo llMch, No. 4, ~d.Ollpt.144,7• • 31. Meno MCltwtU. Naaretll. Pe., No. 40, Wlldc:M~ 0 ........... 21t. 32. Aogtt MtWt. ti.11"9fllld. No 31. ....... ..c-ui. 0 ..... 141.711. 33. OMI Whlnlnoton. OrtMdo, Re.. No 115. ~. 0 llpt. l40.354 ....... OUTDOOfl lllA80M .......,. ....... WLOf'OA•l"la. 9 2 29 16 25 71 1 4 22 11 .11 ea 6 4 ,, 9 11 41 2 7 12 20 12 24 ................... ffOf1 ~ I 4 IO 23 Tlltllfl8e., 6 1 11 24 TUiie 4 I 11 21 ~ • 1 14 11 ............... 27 79, \1 41 11 42 14 SI Ian Joaa 7 4 115• 13 ti A een °"90 a • ta 11 ,, 4t v.,,..,.., • 6 ti 11 ti • EdmOntOft IS I 14 17 1) 17 p.-no • • ti 10 • 21 ....... • 1 14 11 12 21 Ho..-:::C .... ..... :;=:. .... o..p ... ftaNng ...., .. ~_ ... ..,. ... (M'9 Uldne) -118 tngltr9: to bonito. 111 b .... 510 macttartl, 1· halibut 11S rodt !WI. ~ &.AM*•) - 2$6 anglWt: 41 boNto. 4.2 -bMa. 54 calco bMI. 1 ,.._. .. , 41 rock lllh. 41)1 ,,_..... . MOfl"O •AY {Vlrt'• L.a"4Jne) -41 ~ 115 rock cod, 26 r9d rock cod, 549 ollW bms. 1 r9d .,,.,.,., • -AVIU MY<"-' hfl ...._} -47 anglara: 1 !Ing ood ... r9d rock ood, 5e yellow beta. 510 rodl ood. LONG •IACtl ( .. l•oat Pier) -23 angltrS: 220 rock ood ..... -51 angten: 3 9"ld bMa. 3 ~ 22 bonito. 7 l\lllOul, IO "**"91. (0-'• Whlrt) -2n ~ 5 ,.._. .. , 25 batfecuda. IO bonito, 413 CellOo ~. 24 earlCI Illa. 10 htllbUI, 156 rock bait. MAL ~ -122 angltrS: 8IO rock ood. 30 9"ICI beft, 6 bOn!IO ..... -241 ~n9ltr•: 7 Hnd Mat, • btrrecude; 40 ~Ito, 10 hlltbut, 1IO rftldCtNI. 8AN l>llOO (MUI LMdlftt, .........._ ... l'oMI i.-a) -114 MQlart; 186 btfr8Qlda. 11 c.itco ~. 11 rocll 11111. ... ~ ............ ...,.,~.-~,.... - RALLY ST ARTER -Richie Hebner's single in the ninth inning started a three-run rally for the Tigers. From Page C1 ANGELS • • • throwing the ball well. It was. just one of those days, I guess. I really can't explain it." Parrish said . The victory went \o reliever • Elias Sosa (3-2), who held the Angela to just one hit ave.r the final three inning• and came away knowing exactly how Corbett must have felt. "The way I look at it, I have to go after each batter, one guy at a time," Sosa explain9'f. "When I've got two out, rm still not finished . Just look what Jla.L>~ned to Corbett " i'Y.4 ncORBETT WAS out- standing," noted Detroit Manager Sparky Ander90n, who also lives in California, just up the freeway in Thousand Oaks. "I don't ever recall beating him when he basically had the game won. He's always been excellent against us." "I sure didn't 'expect it,'' added an obviously disappointed Mauch. "You nevefexpect it, t>ut it will happen. Either they did aome very smart hitting to the opposite field or they are extremely lucky." While Carew went 3·-for-4 and Grich and Downing finished the day at 2-for-4, the heart of the Angel lineup -Reggie Jackaon, Fred Lynn, Don Baylor and Doug DeCincea -went l·for-15 against~ Pash.nick and the veteran . Added Andenon: "When you get three runs with two out in the ninth inning, you have to say aomebody up there lovee you." * ANGIL MOTii! trtH Dew11la9•a fifth IMfno l'IOme rvn -1111 10tll .of the YMr ind IH-him jual two thy of hit major ~ -lllQll of 12. Tiie Atlf'll !Ndoff ~ "" 12 lrl 11170 when he belled .328 for the Angell ..• From the who'• oountlng ~. tlla Angela bOeal 1ht *' fllldlllg P9r'C*ltw9 1r1 the Ametlcen League """ • .M2tt nwtl, oomper.o lo No. 2 S-ttl• with • .N289 SMN'Olfltaoe • . . Oattolt pll<lher Daft ....,,, whO wlll pllcfl lgalnll Iha ~· 1<4" Fondl In Ille MCOnd g.wM of tlla _,_ tonight. N,Ya he'• IUtpftMd ., Iha oommetltl rnade by IMmmlta .... ...,.. durtnO IM~·'­ vttlt to Tie-Stadium. Morrie. ~ fl'liOll' Neall, cllldad IM AftOll IMup • "cMd'' Ind ~ "'IOlftt eddltlonel oomi11•1ta from Mlnl9lr ...,., -~ .. , C1811'1 ....,,. lluft lllle 11181 ." Pelry-i ald of Morrl1' oomtne11.., ''You IOoll o-1'IM .._. 9"d you can Q1it lluft by -;tlody. There II no 11o1e 111 tt.'' ,,. '°"'* e l>OtMo HWi .. llld. Aftdereon. meanwtille, Hld tila . "...,.,,.. .... °'.oar-at,....~ lie tlld .. good plldMg .. ~ ..... toOd nl~-no 69!'.! ~ '° .. ~ -~-.. ··•-.ca."W1111r 'MIO ~ I.IP fdr lfle fl'atnllr ~ ..,.,_ I ~. fie Mgeee .. fnOl"9 1Mft 100.000 .,.., °' tlMlr ............. Of ,.,. """' • --~ ~ L.allfll9 Welt ... .. Oranges to sell . season tickels .. C4 • I . .. .. Oranoe COiet DAILY PILOT/TUMCSay, JUM 1. 1MI . Garage sales, yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what . you call them; the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER . NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way into a crowded attic or garage, or when you need a li~le extra cash, have a garage sale! So get into the act, clean out those unwanted items~ and make money doing it! It's fun. it's-profitable, and following these 1 O_ steps will make it simple. Decide o.n dates. Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your II sale. Weekend~ are usually good, but many successful sales have bee" held in _the evening, just after work. Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for any other large event that may attract potential buyers awayl such as fairs or community events. Have your sale run at least two days -some people may not tie able to come on any single day. , What to.sell. Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the II last year. If an item has antiq~e value, or is brand-new, or has unusual value, be sure to ask a healthy price for it. Get a pad of paper and search your wh'?le house. Look everywhere, and lisr everything. · Fwnitwe. This is your main attraction and your best source of' income. Be sure to place furniture .. where it can be seen from the street. Price · furniture low enough to·beat auctions and secondhand sales (check the classifieds for .. • compartsons), but high enough so you ccrn come down a litt1e when someone shows intetest. RockinQ chairs, chest of drawers, tables and chairs are alt ~ery successful at garage sales, so · feature them in your ad. Antiques. Smaller antiques should be grouped, and kept close at hand where you can watch and talk about them. Nostalgia ite~are very popular - display them well. Clothing. Make sure clothing is clean, and mark the price way down. Put as many things as possible on hangers. Separate kid 's things by age. Display adult c.lothing by sex and age group. Low prices are a ...t on clothes except for unusual items, which s~ould be tagged With an • explanation (like, "han~mbroidered flowers, dress worn by Mae West)."· · Appliances. These wi II sell .for a fair price only if they work. No one wi II take your word for it. Have an extension cord so they can be tested , or better yet, have radios playing, old TV sets-tufneo-on etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold "as is". PlalJh. These usually go fast, but keep them out of direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper, Maggie). and write a line orJwo on the name card aoout how to care for them: Write your ad. . · Here is a suggested ad: "Garage Sale -desks, II Bentwood rocking chair, toys. inf81)ts• clothing, 1922. Victrola in original cabinet, many sJadgets, lots of unusual items, rock collection. plants. Refreshments, a. a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 1 ?34 ~outh Anystreet, Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd." · Use this sample ad as a 'guide. Be sure to list unusual itfl!ms. Be as specific as possible. Give directions if . ·· ~,.....~~...;.;.:.,.:;.. neected Don't.use abbreviations -~n~ ~o~&e won 't bOther to decipher them.. CAUTION : Don t adveffise anything you don't really have. Every Item in the a'd must be on hand at the start of the sale .. ' . -. • . .. ·- -Where to advertise. ·Place your ad where it will be seen by people who live in !he area -most people shep close to home. The 11 Daily Pilot is read by 88,000 adults in Costa Mesa, ' Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide exposure. And with the Pilot, you ·r~ not paying for waste Circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to rurtyour ad 3 times or more, and start it a few days before .the sale so bargain hunters can ha\'e plenty of notice. Make a sign. . To help make your sale successful, make a few signs II from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good ·sign size is 14" x 22". Placing your sign~· The 'morning of the sale, but not before, place your Ill signs. Be sure and add your address and any directional arrows. This should be done about a half hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it canoe seen from both sides of the street by passing cars and pedestrians. CAUTION : Some towns have laws that restrict the placement and duration of garage sale · signs. Prease check with your town ~s planning dep~rtment or clerk. M~rkjng prices. Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office II supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers that work well, or you-can use masking tape. However · you mark them, make prices low. Garage sales are for barQain hunters. Remember, whatever you can't sell you II have to drag back in the house and store again for another year. ' Serving refr~shmenfs. -This doesnrt have to cost much, and creates a friendly II atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for expensive items like donuts, or the kids could go in business for the day, with a lerT)Onade stand: . · DisplClY.· Make sure everything can be seen . Have card tables or -II boards used as shelves between two chairs. Dotl't · cause people ~ bend over unless you· can 't help it. Use one table as a desk where you can see everything and take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes work fine) and make sure someone is appointed "cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend whp can help answer questions; relief for lunch., etc. . . . \ THE F4MILY c1ac1:1 · "Coutd we movt to Wickenburg? Their team needs o pitcher." by Brad Anderson : ~· '-: •• 1,1,, "And here are your after-dinner mints." .H.!DGE Pt\RKER ,... Jl'M~ MOON MlJLLINI l.ALK ABoUT USING MY SMARTS·· I LAIP IN A LOT Of STAMPS WHEN THEY oNLYCOST 18¢ .APl~CE . 11fft. ba1k1t? Th1t'1 where I c1ny my lunch." .. I • . ) °'"'°' Cout DAILY PtLOTITUMd1Y, June 1, 1N2 ( ' weRe "f"Hl!!A.S ANY OF 'eM IN l'T' "Y'HIS ~NIN'~ ... • . t>YTom Bat1uk . by Kevin Fagan bE'f 1"'4E. Sctsso«s, l'ki~CI(\ M~ 'f1f.~ CAU<.MT lt&~E~~~ DNA 8yat.,na, Santa aarbara·baHd malftafacturer of h&lh·perrormanc• •compu\er *phenla, -~ J..,.. AtMClat" lao. of fMn. M lUI acencY for adver\la1nl and public ..... Uona. Ntn• lnaur,nc• reprtHn\UlYH from Traa11mertca OooldHtal Llf• llnralo• Ctm,aay't Newport Beach branc)l office have euned the lndu1\r~11 1081 National Salea Achlevement Award. TMy AN branch manater C. Keat Pre•adt, brokera1• man11er Dlcll Sba10ae1Hy, .-.iant manapn Mlcuel HelrlDI and 1ou Harcar, and ... nll Barry Jamft, Jeffrey Paymar, Rober& Vatpin, Carl Marbery and Jolm AbdelDoar. Warrea M. GaDDOD of La Canada, a ~-Mirror Prell executJve, bu been apJ>Ointed viCle pre9iden\ and 1enerat manager of nomaa Bro1. "Mapa, lrVtne-bued maps and allaa publlahen. Well11 Rtclt, Greene/Towa1ud of Newport Beach h11 added three account management menben. Fred Wallace will work on the Century 21 International lklCOWlt. Robert M. Parker has been appointed an account executive on the Century 21 U.S. and Century 21-Canada-account. Bradley Reeves will be an eccount executive on the Photoworka account. Llace L: Weaver has been named vice president, corporate a.et management, in Wells Fargo Credit Corporation's Scottsdale, Ariz. Outside directory not .free Iii an effort to bring ita charging policy for out-of-atate telephone directories in line with other major telephone companies, General Telephone of California announced that beginning Tueada~ customen will have to pay for all directories from outalde California. The company will continue to provide all California directories tree. He rb Gasser, vice · president-service for the utility, said: "General will~begin charging custoltlera who request out-of-state directories between $2 and $20 each." Theee directory oosta totaled nearly $3 million last year, he said. ''However,'' Gasser explained, ''there will be two exemptions to the out-of-•tate directory charge. Theae include customen wboee calllng area overlaps into 'another state such with WATS .. ervice, and pubUc llbrarle. and accredited state colleges and universities which are open to the public." Big Macs not for the rich NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -·A developer hH dropped plana to ralle a pair of McDonald'• golden arches on mansion -lined Mill1onalres Row. 'Tm not interested in antaaoolzing the whole town,:' "'bavld G . Baaaraky aald in announcing plana to build two retail stores tmte.d. Buaraky h11 been delu,ed by prote.ta since be announced plana for a f.ut-food reetaurant near Bellevue Awnue. Amona the mamlonl near Bellevue Avenue belonalna to the nation'• auper -riCh II Clarendon Court, where helreaa Martha "Sunny" von Bulow fell Into a CDDI. Her hUlbervt, Claua von Bulow, WM convicted of trylnc to murder her. Hospital sold 140NTEREY (AP) - Tru1tee1 of the -Commurttt-y Ho1phal r 0 q n d'a~--On-tn-v ~~-~ Ho1pltal for $8.9G MP''mL • Tb• Sacumen&o- b•••d Etkaton baa owned tht 88-bed fadlty llnce 1975. ,,__ .,. bnetm•• ,,.,....." c.. ... , or S.1ta.1ra Ca1U1ral1 hu retained th1 Stoorsa Company of San Dte10 for mar•tetlna. con\11\unkieUonl and ~bllc relationl cowv1et Bren 1hvt1~\ la a Nbeidlary of the Bren Ccrnpe.ny. ca.arlH R. C•mmla11 hH bHn n•rn•d pnlklent iand chjef •ucutlve officer or ow a.ntcn. blcl., Anahelm. • He wa1 pn1ldent and chief .-cuttve offtcer of Coke Enterpr1-. lnO., Fort Worth, Tau. The Newport Beech oftic9 of Onabll> 6 EWt Commeretal 8ro-en11 Compay hat ·•PPGlnted Byroa B. WagODIJ' u lnvettment a.oclat.e. He wu wtth CB Inveatment Propertlee. CommerctBaU ypointed Rebert 0 1abNn of Oran1e u 1enior vlce pretldent/chief financial officer. Hew• 18Dlar vice pnaident/ch.lt·f financial officer at Hertta1e Bank in the .Anabelm headquarten off.tee. Fa:rm prices rise WASHINGTON (AP) -Prices ~d to farmers for oommoditi• they produce are atill depnll9ed bu\ are alowly ~ up 1o near year-mgo leve1a. according to the Aaricultu.re Departmen IL In May, offidals llid commodlty· prices in general roee 2.2 percent, leaving the index 2.8 percent below ill year-earlier averqe. The lat.eat gatn followed a 1.5 perot :nt increase in April. • { Golden W..est gets • • • m1n1-computer A mJcrodata mini-ciompUter hat been donated to Golden West Collep ln Hunttniton Beach by Standard Power, Inc., of Santa Ana -a lift which will allow the coUege to expand lta curriculum. Standard Power, a manufacturer of DC power suppliel, wanted to donate the equipment to a local college wblch offered couraea In bualneaa applicationa of mini-<X>mputen, accordlng to Greg Petch, Stancjard'1 manager of intormatlon services. Petch heard about Golden Weat'a offering9 throuah a student. The 90mputer w11 forma)ly presented to college fresldent Lee A. Stevena by Standard presiden Norman Fjeldated. Cities shun housing ·onus SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Lea1ue of Californla Citiee •YI a l\U"Ve1 count.era the notion often advanced by bullden that "local red tas-" la aJowtna howdni corwtruction. The 1-aiue eaid a Nrye)' of 32 count.lea and more than 21>0 dtiee lnd.lcatea that well aver two mill1on hou.11.na units -enouih to meet Callfom1a11 needa for the next .everal years -could be built ln developments already approved by local governments. It said 86 percent ot the housing developmento propoeall considered by local govemmen\I since the pa.Map of Proposition 13 have been approved, but le11 than a quarter of thoee approved are actually being built. Many dttee reported that projecW were being pOStponed for .lack of construction flnandng, or beca-uae of depre.ed aales. The league aid prices vary mostly from region to region, but very little among local juri8dJcUona in the same ma.rttet area -even though construction requiremenll may vary widely from juriadJction to juriadiction. ''This suggeata that local requirements, while undoubtedly a factor in home prices, are not aa significant as many people believe. It would appear that market demand, land coata, labor coat and other factors that are determined by region are the prime factors affecting home prices," it ea.id. -salem ... .. :· ·. .. Orange Cout DAILY 'ILOTITUllday, June 1, 1812 .. -. .. , . 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Ocean to Ocean service is, available from Los Angeles to New York, Boston, Philade:;,f1,p~h_:ia:;·===:::=;=====~ Baltimore and Washingt~n, O.C. • .. ~ _____ __;J. ___ _.....,. ____ _ ~ -___ ___,.._ - > •• ./ . . Dead whale found SAN DlllOO (AP) -A. rare · 24-fool Mlnk• whale found deed ln Sar\ DieSo Bay WU~ UJ> by marine biolo1l1t1 10 that the akeleton can bl donai.d to a Callfomla mUMum .. a 1pokeernan for the National Marine Jl'laheriee Service u.ld. A. member of the aalvaa' ~ theoriled the three to four-ton whale WU 1truck by a larp ahip outllde the bay and c.arrled lnto the natural harbor. It wu 1pott.ed fioatina tn the harbor Satwday near a pier where two Navy . aircraft carrten are moored. The 1malleat of the great whales, the Minke, a mem6er of the baleen family, !a one of the world's most heavily harvested 1pec:iea. They are common to many parta of the world but aeldom sjghted. "It's the first Minlte we've 1een -dead or alive -in Southern California tn the last 10-16 years," said Bill Perrin, a marine biologist who helped tow the whale ashore at the Coast Guard's air station landing. "We didn't want to aee it go to waste.'' Perrin said. He said the skeleton will probably go to a museum tn Los Ansfeles or San Diego. lJsing a whaler's stand.a.rd gear -a ffenslng iron and blubber hook -two marine biologists removed strips of blubber from the carcaaa Sunday. Dark gray with white bands on its flippers, the Minke whale, alao known aa the little pike, is a popular protetn aource in Jagm. Oil is made from its blubber and the rest is used for dogfood. Holiday death toll drops from 1981 I By 'hae A11ociated Pre11 More than 300 motorlata died _._ "'thirweekend during the long Memorial Day holiday, but the nation's death toll fell far short of the 400 to 500 fatalities predicted by the National Safety Council. . j l I . Last year, 378 ~ple died on the streets and highways over the three-day weekend, compared with 308 victims reported by early--today. The holiday period extended from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Monday. ,., ......... 1PROJECT MAGIC -Magician David Copperfield ~monstrates sleight of hand for benefit of Maria Pollak, 13, of Feasterville, Pa., during annual conference of the American Occupational Therapy Association in Philadelphia. The demonstration was part of Projec~ Magic, a program developed by Copperfield and the Occupation Therapy Department of Los Angeles' Daniel Freeman Hospital as a new. concept in rehabilitative medicine. r 2 weeks 'enough'' ·[or liear_t patien'ts CHICAGO (AP) -Patients recuperating from uncomplicated heart attacks can leave t he hospital as safely after two weeks as after three weeks, a study says. The results, reported in the May issue of the Archive• of Internal Medicine, could have widespread implications in reducing health care costs. The study is the first long-term follow-up of a group of patients who participated in an earlier study that showed there was no .more hazard for pa tien ta hospitalized for the shorter 14-<Say period. The original study, reportedwln 1973, .surveyed the heart attack victims at an average follow-up period of six months. Thh new study, which examined 89 percent of those patients five years later, confirmed findings that no significant differences existed between groups hoepitalized for two weeks and three weeks in temlS of survival. cardiac-related deaths, severity of cheat pains, subeequent heart attacks or heart diaorden. The report studied 123 patients -including 53 who had died - an average of eight years after their initial hospitalization. Last summer, the average charge for a semi-private hospital room in the United States_ Wa& $151.78 a day, according to the Health Insurance A.aaociation of· America. Staying one week 1ep would save more than $1,000 - not including any speciat expenses incurred tn testing and monitoring heait attack victims. Dr. Aaolph Hutter Jr., asaociate/rofe880r of medicine at Harvar Medical School, an author of the study, also said other stu~ are under way. • Orange Oout DAILY PILOTnliday, Junt 1, 1ei2 •• Ayii Ran·d.'s legacy live~ Author, philosopher marched to different drummer NEW YORK CAP) -She Wat a 1mall woman with an iron 1pint and a keen mind, a Ru11ian lmmlfrant who became an exultan and Llrelua advocate of rational aelfl1bnela, 1odle11ne11 and purt capltalllm. Now Ayn Rand 11 dead at aae 77. But her controversial heroes are immortal -fictional characters such 11 Howard Roark tn "The Fountainhead" and Dapy Tau art in "Atlu Shru11ed." And followers vow to keep.her phUoaophy alive. "She challenaed the p.hlloaopbic tradition of over 2,000 yean on all It.a euenUaJ points and provided an alternative," said Leonard Petkoff, her Iona-time aalOclate. Her alternative Included "reaaon u opposed to any kind of myaticlam, includln1 reliflon, and aelflahnesa aa opposed to any form of altruism or self-aacrlllce." On day, be predicted, her ideas "wtll change the direction of the world and create a new renaissance. In what pertod or time, I don't know." Pelkoff, 48, also said that be had assured Miss Rand that he would continue her work. Before her recent c:feath, she made two requests: that her favor ite musi c -1ay, tum-of-the-century tunes -be played when frtends lather at the fwieral home, an that the poem "U" by Rudyard Kipling be read at her burial. Miss Rand labeled her philosophy "objectivism." Its thesis was that only individual ability an~ effort account for real achievement and that laissez-faire capitalism provides the optimal environment for talent. Stie despised altruism as personal weakness and believed it responsible for much of the world's misery. Selfishness wu a virtue, she believed. Her views spilled from the mouths or her characters - always a stubborn, proud, talented.,_ atheistic man or woman wnose "own bapplnesa was the moral purpose of his life, with productive acllievement as bis noblest activity and reason as his only absolute." There was Howard Roark, the arcblt.,ect in "The Fountalnhe•d" who destroyed his own construction project SUCCUMBS -Author and founder of objectivism Ayn Rand is dead at 77. because others had altered its design. ''The Fountainhead" .waa rejected by 12 publishers, some of whom told Miss Rand it was too Intellectual , too controversial and had no audience -a fact Miss Rand noted in her introduction to a 25th anniversary printing of the book. After the book was published in 1943, Miss Rand wrote the screenplay and Hollywood agreed to cast her choice for the lead -Gary Cooper, who friends say bore a striking resemblance to her husband, Frank O'Connor. _ In 1957, in the middle of her career, she wrote •·Atlas Shrugged,·· a brilliant and-bitter tale of how men and women of selfish integrity escape a world falling to pieces. Her haunting phrase -"Who is John Galt" - represented the hopelessness or the masses and the vision of a few . She once said that "The Fountainhead" was an overture to· "Atlas Shrugged," and concentrated on non·fiction from then on. When she died, she was writing a television minl·series based on "Atlas Shrugged," wbkh Pel.koff hopes to finish. 'the purpose of her writing, she once said, was "the projection of an ideal man. The portrayal of a moral ideal, as my ultimate literary goal, as an end in it.sell." From the mouth of Howar<1 Roark came thl1 venkm ol htr phll~: "I do not rtcoplle anyone • r11bt to one mlJna ot my lile. Nor to any part ol my ener&y, Nor to any achievement of mine. I am a man who ddea not exllt for o0Mr1. I re~piM no obll1ation1 towartt men expect one: to re1pect tflelr freedom ... " In her ltfe, Mill Rand wat moat like Dafny Tanart, the heroine In · • Uaa Sbruned." She wrote in longhand on a blue pad ln her East Side luxury apartment, and spent many hours with her stamp collect.loo. She liked Agatha Cbrlstie mysteries, readln1 them over and over. She was an admirer of televtaion becau1e 11\e considered it potentially an Intellectual medium. However, she made sure she bad absolute control over the minl·sertes abe was wrlling. Yet she was a fan of "Charlie's Angels" in it.a first few years; "She tbou1bt the girls had a ruce spirit," Pelkoff says. And wbene.ver one of the o.riglnal Perry Mason shows came on late at night, she stayed llP for It. Politicians rarely drew her compliments. She disliked Ronald Reagan, who she. said was tying religion to politics and "any opponent of abortion cannot be a defender,of any rights." Miss Rand was born Feb. 2, 1905, in St. Petersburg, now Leningrad, and graduated from the University of Leningrad in 1924. Two years later, she came to Hollywood and worked as a movie extra and junior screenwriter. In 1937, she went to work without pay as a typis~ for-a New York architect to research "The Fountainhead." From 1951 until her death, she worked full time as a writer and lecturer. Her tiusband died in 1979, shortly after their 50th wedding anniversary, and friends say she never quite recovered. She had been ill since December, but "ane bad her strength and tenacity to the very end," Peikoff said. Two days before she died, she approved a news release announcing her last book, a collection of essays called "Philosophy: Who Needs It," which will be published in November. presents ltaugbt To You IY I ... I SEIVICCS s........0or .... , OIPlOYMOO & Plf PAIA TIOll s.-. ..... _ ..... JMWaMed• lklp'll'oot ... W • f MEICMAMOISE ~ "-::= .......... i. C-ru6""'4P..,..,. c.. Dep ~· Cw-s.&e --~ t:=. 111-, llllonl-llllaftll-'41ftlM ...... .,. __ .... ~,,., ... 1!.q ... , ..._.o.. .... S..VClllM'li•--......c--..~ ....... ~.'l!s... ... n.a.., .. nATS&MAltllf £011PMEMT Orang' Cocut r11ident1 ght 42 ~ o The marketplace on t1ie Orange Coo t ... 642-5678 oU new cora told tn .the count11 loll 111ar • """ through the11 comprile onl11 30% of th1 count11'• populatfon. · «f.!m.~!m. ..... ; !~ttff.W.~1!. ...... lttm.(I!~'' ....... '9~!!ff .{~~~'.' ....... !~m.!';~'1 ....... ~tt!f.{'!.!!'.' ....... ~~!1'..¥!1 ..... ,_._,m.v~~~.. !'lm.f~~ .. ~~ ......... !.!i ¥!!.~ ......... !.111 ~~ ......... J.«I P!!.~'.L ........ 1.1.fl ~ ........... !.flf ~!Pltl.ftl!A .. !.ftt &.'f .W..~~ .... !¥.f f!!!t.!fm ...... l.ldf !'!mt!.fm! .. 1.'t IHI llt•lf ANO!ul-'Y bMl.l1lfUI tit. IRA.ND HEW New ooe1ntron1 s •· ta. ••••••••••••••••••• ••• "911LA MU .. =-.. 1h Oreenlt• home, no •WNIT llUT 2 & 3 BEOAOOM mlly rm. a frplo .. )'Mfty down. 1124,000 or IN 2 l*m. a t>•UI, cs.n, di-TOWNHOMES 12500/mo. 6'M711 - ::: ::. ::: ' t SJ. Pri w n. .... t Sii f 2 boa 0 p11 0 n. 54 I. e 0 2 3 ' nlng room leroe double wtlh acc..-10 pe>OI, Je· 141 •t aay o.y ront. iPI or ti, Thia HOIUded 2 Br, 1 Ba. 815·1t18 gar.age. l'teo1. opener. euul, rec ., ... micro-BIO CANYON Ooml0t1• remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath •t.200,000. • Concto. on th• 0011n Quiet Wld unit. Welk lo wave er11. Microwave ble, 1peclou1 OHne 2 aid• of CoHt Hwy, 11 IEW the beeeh. •1es.ooo. and eutomellc garage Br. 2 Be. fem. rm, guard Ocean & jetty vie~• rQOm, 4 b<lrm. 3 perfect for the 1eoond a., ltl--.M-a"' 1111111 door opener A1Jthl1 wl· 11 • 1 • d · I 1 11 5 m o • bath, a100 "'fl. •t.W.000. Oolan.tronl. h•tl of your Ill•. On• UITlll ---.!! • thin walking dl11a~ to 840·1582. 11711"'4191 11~,. with a p11cefvl Ml-1'fn m11I NW LIT evetYfhlng ua-2311 0( Private 2 Br 2 ea.,._ view ol lhe Mle. A lll1lng 1~ Tunll Rock 4 bdrm, P•noran:11c'YCew on &41-2239 ct-...,.,,.. of Marilyn RouaHlol 2~ ba. Plan 3. GrMl In· thwport ••Y •nd .,.. munlly pool, tennle. ... , .. IU. ... .... Ull llLI llMU Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 51A bath. Lge L.R .. 2 boat lllPI $1.500,000 . 11$0 000 ' aide location. Ownet Wiii ll1fftlT IUOI PuUI~ OcHn l'tlMt OC-RENTALS 1900/mo . ' . help llnaM>I. C•ll today. 3 Br horM 1199,000. mtlon. Owf M00.000 1·5br'a 1200 to $2000 PROPERTY Houag U.-.IOOlfJ1{>Mrll thl1 won't 1 .. 1 long at Vlo Juhtn1kl, Broiler ~.~w::,~~ 7~14 Open 7-deya 642-3850 642·1 10 ::: ,......., ......... ::: All reel Mllll adwrtlHd •• In thl1 n1w1paper I• l:l: Mibject to the Federal Felr 1• Hou1lng Acl of 1888 ::: which meleea It Illegal 10 1• edve,1111 "any • •• preference, llmllallon or AMllor9 97&-80()() 1241.500 F•. 752-5111 845-8280 Walk to bch. 181, 181, '~~~~~~~~~ Rldp auao.ooo. MESA VERDE· 3Br 2b•. new ""II, no -11 .... .,.. ~eled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. nn. I~ ANNIVlRBARY I am r m . I 1 7 5 1 mo ..,.. ,..... _..., beam Ct'llln ... , furnished. n.aUoe. $420.000. ESTA.TH (714) 7to-1IOO 404-85114 0< 831-3155 m o. 576-2010 bt'#n •· ,... Thia rambling ranch 5PM-&PM LI.la I.LE U'f •• 11 "YlllAIWI" home 11 ldHI for llrat SAVE st budget minded --.--OT----- Elegant 4 bdrm & lemlly ' time t>uyet1 or lnWMllOfl. ••••••••••••••••••••• 1br, petty Piiio 1275 .,..5 &OaM rm, The perfect plan for NMd1 1 Hiiie TLC but IAguna Sh0<N, 1AG Bctl. OC·RENTALS 750--3314 Mftl .. U ....agoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom. ~11rk rm, dtin, Boat slip. $1 ,350.000. llYSIDE COYE Speciaeular bayfront view 2 br. 2 ba up, 2 br. 2 ba dn. 2 boat slips $1,900.000. COROlllDO CAYS dlacrlmlnatlon b111d on Ulll rece. COIO<, rlllglon. MX l: or netlonal Oflgln, or any 1<e1 Intention to make any l:: euch pr1f1renc1 . 1100 I I m I I • t I 0 n 0 r ::: dlecrlmlnellon." :: Thia ~ wlll not Coronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat me knowlngly accept any dock. Plans avail. Red, $370,000 w/t.erma. : edWf1111ng for rMI •llte ' 5 ~ 11 In vtolatlon of the ILIFFI Ollll : Single story end uni~ expanded 3 br, 3 ba -I a I I I I 1 on largest greenbelt. $250,000. n• Advertisers should : check their ads ,.. dally and report PWUll , 3 bdnns. 2\1\ balha condo near pool. $145,000. '"'!errors :wo lmmedlately. The 5 DAILY PILOT -aaaumes tlablllty : for the first BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J41 Bny\•d•• Orov•· NB b l S 6161 ... I = ncorrect Insertion 1111 • .,. llUllTI .,,. only. 8-ltlfUI llnOll 1tory 2 !: bdrm "~ Hlloflll" -condol Great central lllSE PIOPElln large or 1mell femlly, well worth Ill Large lol 11 High 1111on, S11,500. XEC 3br, Prlv. atudy, Prof. decorated lemlly young or not ao young. perfect tor garden• or A11um1 $8000 loan. Queena kit ch. ONL y home. 3Br 2'.t ba, lnnl Lge m11tar 1ult1 on pe>OI. Be creetiv. on the 499-SM8. $800 dining, lg fem rm. pe>OI. ground floor. Beaut. 'S>Ool llnanctng. 11811.000. OC-RENTALS 750-3314 Avelnmmect. $4000 mo/ and Y«Y pnv.ie petto.. •513 t.AMlusDl·fRVll( 84•7020 lt•llll 111 Incl 01tdenlr & poo1 BMI buy In Big Canyon LINGO REAL ESTATE •••••••••••••••••••••• Utlldl 2br, Tropic.I Pl· 1ervlc1. Schweickert Vacant. 81• anytime. OLDE LAGUN.A CHARM tlo, Kida. TODAY $4$0. ~tty 645-111« $7115,000. Unique 2 bdrm floor VERSAILLf.8/10% ON ~ BtUfl f11•J1jfl OC-RENTALS 750-3314 C ...... 2 BR 2be CO<net unit, • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • Big en yon condo, 2 Bd 2 11 g~•nm:CS b:.~in~~. r::'ar~~ ~!~~. ~~~nL•~v~·~~~ f!!!!.'..~~!.'f!! •• 1.{P. !'.'Ml!!~! ...•..... ~ ~!.~:!~~f~6~~~ re. wood l1oor'f & OOr/ log t 1 n g t 1 nan1 In at QUALITY 3 IDRM. dlll. 28r 2'hba. lrplc, gar l ~----'-----­burning lrplo. $187,500 S750/mo 11 lnv.atment g.erdener. Irv Tarr-IO< po o I , 1 pa, p 1110 . Belutllul large 3 bdrm, 2 1--,-------- l ~~AYLOH co I COLDWeLI. BANl(eRC ' . ~' . ' TllnllMI 1111,IOO Immaculate 3 BR home on • ~lful 1trMt In Turtl«ockl CU.tom win- dow covwtno• & • ~ Miit yard lnYn• you • the large. ueumebll 30 year loen wtH convlnoe you to Full Price. lie. 873'-3100 $825/mo 407-6455 ba condo. 81t·ln1, 2 c:er MISSION REAL TY property or move In oar All new dee«. $850 youreelf In 30 dlyt1. Sac· f, lfl V. H JZ34 M iiiiiiiii4it4-0iiii73i1iiiiiiiil rlflc• $HIUOO. Prlncl-!~.~! .. /.{f! .!~ .. .'! .. ~ .. ~ ...... _mo_. __ 2-_1_1_55 ___ _ pal• only. 2131374-,8022 su· VIEW HOME FOR RENT IUOI 10111 3 Bdrm.. Jl60. EenDe4 1'rn.nlOI IW 'PUHITill A flllWllM 4 bdrm llngfl atory on an Ideal low lrelllc 1trMt In model home condition. Prof ... 1lon111y land1ceped, han<Sy man·• garage. 2 frlplce. community pe>OI, ape and t1nnl1. OnlY 5 yr1 old. T ranef«rld t1W• net wtll help ftnanoe. An exciting new offering, competltlvlly prlc.d et 1315,000. ll&ll1 Former model: 3Br 2•11 yard & garage. Kida & (SIM .. ) b •• Oc •• n Vu. G.t.d Pill weloome 545-2000 By the month only BUT Marv•1ou1 Eeetblull onl $9001 t "er 2 comm. Many, many ex· Agent, no 111. Y mo. 0< ' home. LUii! buln 3 BR. ea. walk to t>Mctt. Avail. plul fem rm on perk~l.k• g:n... .. ..... •ti• & ·-~. BulUflt• lrom June 20. ground1. lmmecul•I• w/ """' ,........, ,.. ..-many lkylllll & UP• 111-0414 JH1j JJ4 ' W'UUJ i~9c~og-:r: ~~z:! Lrg 4 Bdrm. femlly rm ;·.;·bd;~·~~~·;e50 111 1 1 1 11wallT11• 1 ouetom PoOI home tn • mo. Pool, WI D. Ffed • n ng beach location. c 0 u n 1 r y 11111 n g . 993.11e32·. 811 .. 1689. ---------Priced at 12311,500. i..e. OC-RENTALS Hhold or 1327,200 In l2000/mo luu. In· VIiia Pac 3 Bl. Condo 2 1-5br'1 1200-12000 F • 1 I Jane Pa q u In dudel water, gatdlner & Be. atrk;m trplc 1ennl1 750-3314 Open 7-days 842-8235. (841). pool 1arv 1c1. Bkr. pool•. ape, nr 'ocun' 831-7370 847-3459. Blull1 condo 3br 2ba '800/mo. "Ot Tld Wu- !: UST OOITA MIU locetlon. Mlnut11 to .w Architect'• home.. Prhlat• 1hoppln~. b1ech11 & = entry courtyard w/•"'•· commun I)' actlvlll11I buyll Beckb•Y looatlon. &eX300' IOt with two 3 Bdrm houMI. g11agee l corral•. Great terme. Full 144-lllO pr Ice $2 511 ,00 O ·l~~~~~~~~~l OAIJ. 144-1211 ~Macnab -lrv1nel ••un u111.,.,,.. OC-RENTALS Hrman. 840-4840 & ••• •••••••• •• ••• ••••• • 1-5br'1 $200-12000 760-1900 la11ll 3111 750-3314 Open 7-<1ayt1 -4-b<-.-2-'lt-ba-ln_l_rvt_ne_T_et_· ...,. Value priced at 1125, ~ In LR.. F.R. 000. Call now1 846-1111 831·7070 I· Open fir plen Ideal fO( ,.. entertaining. Spec1ou1 ioio MBR 1u111. tU5.ooo. ·= •Binnie Dixon'• llatlng. -759-11100 --GEORG E ELKINS C lll'f um i:: Mell del Mlt'I belt v• )3llt lue In • apeolou1 4 bdrm. : 2 beth pool homll Gr11t -IOCellon for your fll'f\lly, -great 11rm1 for your budg1t1 Bergeln P<ic.d -at I 135,000. C.ell todey '°" ~ells! 846-7171 --•IJ -----.. -----"11 -.-... --.., ------ ::: ------ THE FCEAL ESTATE RS GEORGE ELKINS CO THE REAL ESTATE RS mlTHBIJ• -Beaullfully landeceped and mali'ltllned 4 9dnl'I "'° home. GT••I corner ::: loceuon w/1ic11ung RV t1• ICCllea. ~ wtll llNlet ,.. w/llnanclng. Full pric. =~ • 500 751-310 ••• -C::, ',f •I ' --t-' ~ ·~11 ·~'•,Jr~•, ... --·----_;.~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ IYll 11•----= - ''" -"" ,,. rlll rill mt "" ,.,. t'IZI -rm -tm mil ,.,. ,.,. ,, .. WTQ .'714 -nn "• -- ..... uu 3 bdrm. 2 bath ColMOe Park h<Jme. 8peclou rooms IMJout. New pool l •P•. BBQ, cov•r•d patio. Gr•' for 1at1 el· ternoon & evening get togethen. Very pvt. bac::ltyatd. A.eking S148, 500. Cell: ~2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS 111111 Fllll1 Then tNI neat & ..,, 3 8dnn lkJn'9 " Jul' '°' you. hc•ll. flnenolng wtlh • IUll ~ 11\ T.D. at t~%. F\11 l)ftoe 1138,toO. 161-31'1 c:..· .. ' --t-' '•. . . - -- THE REAL ESTATERS •IAfflllT* N&TIUP ........ WOWI LOWlll priced bayfront home ON BAL- BOA COVES. Large 4 bdrm, 3 bath, double nreplece, COYeC"ld patio plu1 much morel Wiii AITD °' trade for Ellt· bluff -Baytlhor• or ???II ... ~ . ..,,...,. .. ....,. •111-lOIO* c:::. '>f I f ( ' -f-' PIH 1Pl q' 1! '• TIUDI T 10~\L REALTY ·~ F1Ulltll .. When you take over llll11lng tit Truet Deed on thle ebaoMely beau- tiful Plan 4 In HE~ITAGE PARK. Thia f0<mer mod· II 1 .. 111<11 3 Br. 2'J\ Ba & 1xt1n1lve upgrading. Only I 151 ,50011 2870 Sen Miguel Dr .• ~ Beech 7511 -1501 or 752-7373 ~ I Walker 6 lee , NEWPORT HEIGHTS FIXER! NlcetJ lancl9caped r..ct with pool .a.,.. Thies Mel+ 111-.. a a M. ............................ ~ ... ..,... .............. tf 1111.-. @ 1214 ....,.. • ...., .... n11• WATERFRONT HOMES. M 10 \I 11111" ,._ ... Mt••, f't• 1•1 I • SUTQE I • I I 11 I 1J I CA££ S I I I' I I S"OGIPS 11 I I I ~ \ I >I I I ti F It . . ... I;. ' Wll11Uff Gather In the big country lrltchen end enJoy \II• gleam of handsome wood llOOfl, decorator wallpaper and dining er•• looklng out bay window to trelll111d lhldl garden. 3 bdfma. den and hobby room #Ith lovely decc>f' thr ouo· "°"'· Dellnltely 1 prl<I• of-ownerahlp homel 12511.000 with exoelllnt nnanc:1ng. 142-12JO j PETE ' BARRETf REALTY •••••••••••••••••••••• Exec home: 3Br, fem rm, race. Patio. Gardener I 1 • • r 0 4 M I 1olar hHted pool and Incl. S 1500. &48-23811 t IP• Loll of extra•. AUracttve 4 bdrm 3 be. 2 F~ I 1100/mo lae. Betty •lory. cuatom N-port Beeullf\llly fumllhld 5 Br Parker, Agt. 751-31111 & Height•. ldlral for lhltlng avall fOf thl m09th of or Mr Fletcher at 1lngl11 , $1500 mo. AugUll , 2 blOCkl to 984-3008 &46-8789 beech. ape, 211~-InU 3ZU ------- '3000. • •••• !................ Wnt•bt1m 3111 In Wiiilifln. UNIV PK, apec; 3Br, 2811 •••HOME.FOR.RENT••• ClubhM Dr 28r $1000 twnhM, gar. AC, trplc, no 2 Bdrm. $475. Garlgl. 1 Lido Ptc Dr 2br YU 11800 pell, .... 529-0384 ch II d 0 K • n 0 p. u . Bayalde Cove 2br t180C> momn Ill 2 IA 545-2000. Agent. no f11. llWPllT IUOI / Turtlerocle condo w/3 Ct•lt•S.l .. I , deck YU of city light• & In mountalo1. 2400' llvlng Ullf.nlJIM 341$ Npt till 31>< pool 11850 •p1c1. 2 cer gar w/ ~..;;·~;.-~;;;•-;; LAie.& IOl/flf'a, openera. bonus rm SC Plze. Poot, grdnr. Penoramlc view•. epa. Comm. pool/ t1nnl1 Olux 1er No pete $475 tam rm, 3Br: $2000/mo S 1 2 o O I mo . P • u I & 145 u't11. 775."2580, 955-2882 558-1626 W111rtronl Homee Inc. WOODBRIDGE CONDO ----------111-1400 1550 mo. 2Br, H~Be. 2 WALK TO SC PLAZA aty, cloM to...,..,..,, tennl•. 3 Br. 1¥. Be. Bullt-lna, ,........ dlhwer, upper. Water & c,,. .. l•l ll4t Jin ape. (213) 837-83311 gu pd. seooimo. p1u1 •••••••••••••••••••••• WOOOBRIOOE-$795 mo 11c. dip. PACE R.E. LEASE/LEASE OPTION 3Br, 28a, 2 car lltach 894-0682. Lge newlY rarno<I. 3Br. gar lrplc AC micro --------- 3ba, tam rm In lrvlne wave fncd yd 'c1oae .~ A ,.,. ,, , -t.&.~ T • r r . I 1 5 O O I m o • • · IM •• l.r-.N-831_ 7116 645-0,...5 PoOI. tennl1 & epa. (213) .,.-.-. .... •••••••••••••• • • 837-8331 lfDH ldul 3111 unterock 4 8r 2 Be. tam • ••.t•t_•I'!' __ ,,,,.._ C..tl #HI 31U · WINTER RtNTAl.S ....... ••••••••••••••• rm, din rm, YU of U.C.I AEGIR PROPERTIES II• If Gardener, wtr & u1n Belbol lllend TIE L._,, FIW du• 1 Inc Id . Le a 11 675"'4000 ,._, $1200 /mo . Agl , --------- A•nt In co111 Men'• 541 -5032. J.1'•• NEWEST gated 20 1---------.I Townhome VILLAGE WOODBRIDGE CONDO: l•.JM1J1 1107 COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. 2Br, fncc:t yrd. leund rm •••••••••••••••••••••• 2'.t Ba. 1600-1800 aq. tt. S600/mo, evall 8/ 1, OCEANFRONT of pure luxury Gar..._, 551-,554 BACHELOR h d ....-O/vlew nr Bllbol Pier y ro-tub1 In m11ter Speo 11ogradld 38r 2'AS. aulle, dining room1, twnhM. fll'f\ rm, AC, 2 ~lean , quiet, eecure. wood burning nreplacee, car gar, PoOI etc. Ideal S4d10 yrty lnctdng utlla. 1 micro-wave ov1n1. prl-loc .. end unit. 17115 mo. • ult, no pet1. 87~72. v. I. p. ti 0 I & 752-5715 ,, &I-I yerd1,gerd1ner provl-11••ruif .. ded. Ellolnt IMng onty lllTIU Jtuj 3141 15 mlnutea from FaetMon 2br. 2ba $800 •••• •••••••••••••••••• lelend, 7 mlnulll to 8.C. 2br, 2'..+b• $7!15-$800 QFulet Junior & 1 Bre. Pleza or O.C.Alrport. 3br, 2b• $800 rom 1375. Pool, reo . Jull 111t of Newport 3br, 2bl 11400 Fum rm .. eaune, em>lad ga- Blvd. & ao. Of San Diego 3br. 2b• 1725 Leg. Hllli s~w.1~~-17::.''°" 0" F~. Starting at 1900 1 m6nth. 831-5430, 2473 Orange Ave .. Coeta ....... ~1.~.~ ••• !.~H Furn. Lagun1 Beech tu· xury 1tudlo, ape, S.111111• TV, MUna. meld .....ioe. phonu. I 115/week. 498-2227. THE GOOD LIFE 145-1104 14M113 11~ .. llDPJ/' ~••••• flt7.iJtll•••••••••••••• ~"'••••••,.•••• ~~ifl\ ••••• ,,,,., ~~flff•••••••• ~••••••••••••••• f.lftlft~, •••••• lrtlil'!tlf •••••••••••• ••• H•••••nnt OOM,...: "9fr\O'le Otd, Wll ~ MOWlt40 . OL~ UN l KNOW-I.IT' I QIT Qulllty ~~ ·AIO MOVING· NMt Ptton. I lhlUf.. •IP'lnkl« "9pilf* •• llHMOU l'tPl•H New. '"'"'• H.,.._T..,.\MI ltUdt 100111 He oan f111 any· wit~ touatl~. Olllolc, o...Wt ~. frM.... ..,.,.,, ,..../oomm. COITlnWOlll · ........ ,....~, ~~. -~ Ml-M11 uo. ...... 1-Al·N4• "' ...... ' ......... Irv, HI lttft ----n ,r .... tllTlatM.552"°410 IM\dfe#f ~ ,, ........... __ ..........__ t M '"" -r"'• Pl.AITllll PATCHING t07·t3tt • _,. ___ ......_. ____ 7_, ftlltl &.... .......,.., MOWINQ tt0-t1MJO JACK 0' Al.I. TAAOll H~ dOM with •A-1 .... AHll.loooe. Int/ext. 30 fm'rel'n'tt••o••••••• nTin\W••••••, .... ,. HMll/DunlpinO 115/UO oat! Jactc cl• Of n!Of\I car•, ,..ct, perf9otlon. fop qultllly. loeclal cet• Y11 Meet. Paul 14t-2t77 ,,.,,. •••••HH•••u CHl'-D CAM ILIOT"IOIAN..,.ll'rlo~ t14 ark •915,.a()14* N8/0M Altn '41-5027 In llandllng. 28 yre up e 'I PLAtTIA NO .. •••••••••••••••••••• 1 .... -......;.. IN MY 11',V, ~t. rlg!lt1 ,,._ .. tlmtte on TM-tl04~ avpi•T H"e.OY .. "N •---... _.....,....,.._ ~ltlYt Aal• ' D..._ 1 Lt~ler•lt\IOOO -__.. '~ n ~-or lfNlll.,...... ..,. n ,.,. ...,. ,._,,.., ,...._.._,..,. No OYerilme 7.,. ...... ALL "Pl!I INT/IXT Tlllltur_. TNf\ Wt/A l.oOlllftt ,. • "°"'9 bull-... r"!"' ..... ... .......... Ctrr*ltry Aooflnt • -~. Xll'tl ,.... ' _. ... -FRU UT. 145-12&1 aeuoeo .... UO'd. dtrt,...... 0111 ~ Ctlldowe,myO.M,flOIM. ..U1• l73-036t ... ,,...... _, tttumblng, •. 642-t013 ,,..•Mc l.ctl 7 ... 1701 ITAAVINO COLL£0E p• ,..-... ...,,. Gii\' 557-07N I . ,_,...-. Jt or ,,... 1 "-ct. PNt. 3 Y" I "Po l.IC'D I' •oT"IC'"... ' lap d, quallty wort! et JOH•' TH• ..,,.NDYu"N WI DO CL.,. .. 1..,,. fTUOENTI MOVI..,. ..,.., ""',_ Wl11on7'1tu1t vi.: ~. f4M!OI,' au. .......... ';;. , .... , ..... Mtlnt. ' " .... ..... ..... ... """ co UC. T124-43t INT/!J(T AUTVCCO. '"' HomH . tno. It Toro. ,,.. ..t a1•801t Tom t1nct101~ln&a, NllOdM Ptu"'blna •o odd~ Good~· own trtn•. lneu<ed. 141..a.21 lloolc Wtllt. NMlt2 .................... .. 111-t?to f!!t~.... TOP OUAl.ITV °17:::.,64:=• ,,... lltlmat .. 760-111 1-1751 WATCH U8 Ol'OWI •luM.• P~~ g:w"et!.~ 9¥1 6-Ma. _ llllMOOIL/A ILIOT"IO.\L WORK •1.U.• •••m/HJ.. 10••••••'0 ••••••••••• 642-tll4te76-1408 dyt 1tt'ltt'li'i" .... Di....... l ~try. Uo'0.15 ,._., rat11. 531·11965 Mow, edQe, ''*•· .._, ••••••6"•••••• .. •••••• •••••0 ••"JTJ.••••••••• ••'•"-d ILL -Ml-llll 'INCU l OKI ...... p. ltwffl 64t-271t 1prtn1 oletn•up , haul. ' DUMP JOBS 1•11. l:To".'r.a••••••••••••• •tlllfT I ••t• CEAAMIC-UNOL.fUM Mll'tl AoblntOfl Con•t ,.. 'l.IOTllllOIAN Ohuoli 04Z•21H •ft" • Small Moving Jobe 11.munn -,..,.. -flle. FrM .. 11ma1. llnc4t 111ft. fl.4.0tA F=.::~·=2 2f,'11o~1~~~.k~ "Hld1ntl1I. Ole1n·upe, Ctll '"4ll<I 040-13'1 bio:l:"trd Sinor. Lio. It ,..,,.,,. 1l •1aa(1 Reu. Bob 176-5048 I!.,,_,... Lio, 419581 720-1290 garct.n Mrvlo., 11nalnt.1 HAULINO-lludent hll LI~ In M01Jrlty ptul "' .. I • 13 Yfl of happy ••• 'fr.o.T.11.";.r.':ioo• jialaalf r.-:r..-............... CO .._(/ l1nlJ111ftt. t rH trim. ,, .. Ht. ~ truotc. LOWMI "'-· tut• IOYlng CMe fOf pet/ ~~ o ~ ............ , Aw.~~· F.•r.!.IJ .............. . ••r.;n••••••••••••••• GMllnPOO & It.am oMln. M ' ,RE.O. •••••••;ir.::;t ......... 141•10M(Otill Wlll)1 rompt. C.U 75 .. 1971. pl.,,la. you, 1-441 • . ltO P« IO.-d Gradlnt a ""'---Pwtl~ot' Color brloht•n•rt wht Rlmo6-A~ ne-FOAMICA COUNTEM SHIYO'• ,. ....... NINO Thri yol.f, JoM. ~ HOl.IM 8 ... --fHm• Qual. work. UC. net. pl•"t•r mhc ' avlll. F'rM "",;;i7'1e11ooe . 'crpte • 16 Min. ~. VllYJ~H· ~~I ,!SO T~b!Mtl refllOed "Totll" y;'d0.,•'' PROF, ~AVIOe 11 °18711) 831~;aa4 ... ,_ • 831•2348 ~··~·"" 557-1Nt ..... 8 ............. 1 ~1.... ,._.. -........... .,.. F 25 Y11 exp, Lio. 403841. _, -...,.. ... --.. ._., 1111/dln, rme 115: tYO ti«\. oontr. ui .. 142 ,... Mt. 142-035 Molwkty. aa1-em ew HllUll'? • ywd eleenuiJ J 1 1 landed. 1ne. Ref•. Color IM/h ::m.t~~~.·.: BoncMd llnM9Cl ...... / ~Yd~ O\llctl .~54: .... -· =·~!!!f! .. 3 .. ~~ expert. "3·0911 Dick .AOOF~tREPROOFtNO. r.-.Mt'.rfa.l..b~···I(··::·· odor. °'1>1 ~. 15 Yr• ...,. la"•• • ... ,.... ... T .... trt,.,..~ n-1t. 17th. ,. ~a· -IL PAlNTER NEEDS Mto OUM of oMrn6ctll oet IU ,..,... • ... ••P· Do work myHlf. Lie 308888 A Od 1 •••••••••••••••••••••• Irrigation. Jim &51-0129 HAULIN'i and local mo-1 th, 118, C. feotou WORKI 30 yra •XP. Int/ DO If NOW. Fr .. •t.' Oay~eum"*' a1awt1 ~llSTATE PAVINQ • . s.a.ico.tlng4triolna ,..,,.. OOmmJ Aetfd. ~ 531-0101 edd'n•, 0·,,,~:.,:: .... , I •t Aft.Lii .... Hiii ~!':.. lt~\~h tNqk. troni R91ph'1). 03 ·5105 Exler Acouttlc Cllllngt. Davi• Pllnllng 847•5188 Mr. M019en, 046-5178 Crpll lnt1811/~red 845-MM • ClltlltlM 1 Ed 641-7825 Tr .. '""' gen clnupe. ,,..,,,,.,.,, Davia Painting t47~51ee REPAIRS 125 10 S185 WI " c1 .. ·•- Lio #397Ha t4M111 Oen Hlllti.r; Grading & p~ co. Rel/Comf. Uc 3117to4 642·1720 Flood dM141g9. Steam WA.Y CONSTRUCTION , o•m1nt work: ho141e HAULINQ..OAADltolG •••••••:ctt'· •••••••••• EXTERIOR PAINTING F,... Ht, Clll anytime, ••• -!.!! ••••• -;;or ••••• Olng.§54-8610, 973-tNt Rlmod91 • Addttlona ..,, .... ._.,_ Wfectllnt. 648-1904 demolition, ot11n-up. flft lmllm CultOITI work. FrM m . WAl,T 770.2725 "Let ttie SunthlM In" A1-.d" tic 420eo2 042 1200 •• .. ft•••••••r.;;:-;:.. Concr•te & Ir .. r9m0\lll Sod iprlnlcler 1 lhrvb AMI. + fine Int. & 1111-Catt Su~hlne Window ~~~=11~:.~eo . . R!PAIA & INSTALL • l~~"oi::,1.*0P~lA Quick NtV. 042-7838 lnetall1tlon. Our work nlng. Steve 547 ... 281 Hui:::w~o:,~~~=· C=l~On~~ ~~ dry. Fr .. •t. 839.1582 144'11-fttlp..a ..... =P:i'~ H=~aa PerlOMI-~•* a /-·-'-only look• upentlv•. 1•-"'• Lio'. ••11eo2. ~9734 1....; ___ ...,:.. __ _ Fr .. .et. Real.,lcea. Domin•• 2 ~••1 .... -a• ,Ch9ck our prlcll befOle •• 7.':":e!I••••••••••••• •RESIDENTIAL• W "··e Crpt c .... ·-~ ,...,_, ...-.... UC 71.aft p"" ~ ......................... h&-c-•1 M k t S30 2 • .._. --· -· ......... . -· a.M-1-ROBIN'S CLEANING you .... ,. -., I '"'h~ Interior ~n lu~l .. IU.f A~ t lty ; A~ l1Y •••••••••••••••••••••• FINE SHINE AUTO DETAILING. Guar. Free PU/del 642-5-Mt .. "-IHI-St~~tu=•· 831-2345 -.::-.~ ................ ..,,...: Service.• lhofoughly LltJ4'• ••4••.... HA ING S10/ROL, .... ooET9AATEStlk::;· $4 . Chrtt 1157-83 :tt"4'tt'e-::'l'uou• .... • Wotll QUiit. 645-3718 c ..... .,...!'!¥. gr UBI~ tt.":;'~l::::'.•••••••••••••••• c1Mr1 houle. "4(M)e57 Uc 204518 • 64&-t55f Quality. llc/lne. Strip. ~~min Sml ......., OK. 0reng9 C9Ut Wlndowl Rella~ 27 -P wlll • ,.., ... _....... ping, Dile:. on paper. ,.,.,. "We .....__ """'' ..... ,h 1 . . •. .................... lAwn-1~ Int all "' ... _., WUI ol9an '/OVt houM Of .... Vila-He Scott 8A5-9325 FrM .. ,. Ina. 8A1·7581 _... .~ .. . l)ylh, houleelt, P91 Ill; EXCEL CARPET CARE Crown moulding, entry Tree tf'lm...Nmovll Roofing · PlumblnQ otno. EllC. PtllnllnQ tt ..... ~ ....... ·....... br1ghter outloc*I" FIT tutM*'. 540-7082 Jeck Buffington Own/ doort, m1ntl•I. book· Lawn ~RototMHng Drywall -Stucco· Tiie ptUmtil~t005 ' llRICt<WORK: Small jobe. ASR PAPERHANGING lfrHU Fr .. lltlmet .. 830-f111 ,,.,,, ~ ....... , Opt c ..... c.dlr 111\H cfo-F,... .etlmat .. ~ ~. J.B. &46-MllO ~.Colt• M--. ' yra IOcal •xp. Guer. •••••••••••••••••••••• CLEARVIEW WINDOW ., '/ Carpet, Uphol,.,.. NG Mt1. Wood eolutlonl to o.n.tll Mllnlenenoe Joen't Oleanlng Mrvlcl. lrytne. Rell. 875-3171 work. Prlc•• 111r1 at MOBll..E SERVICE WASHING RMI. rll ... l«ftft dMning. Wen gu,ar. wood probl«nal KAO~ Malnt. Rlpalra & DlcoretJna HOUMa, Apel., fjenlalt, 1$/roll. Alec 751-7027 RMcreens/N9w KfMn• • I 642 5449 •••••••••••••••••••••• F~ Eat. 045-1771 831-1528 Rllld/Comm. CIMIH.lp. Quality .• Ray f40.4f« OlflcM. 540-12&7 Cullom Brick, Stone, NB/CM only. 642·11552 yra n lfM. • l&llM llLlll C... ~C Lt HIUllnQ. 548-2489 Exp'd • "--d•"''-Block, Concrete, Stucco. • I ·' You dOli't ___. a ,,.., lo Ar• you "'•"nlnn • -? , .. ' m's ....... ..._. ...... R•I•. F,... .et. 5-411-114112 rl•I ••nfU ,_, -· ...... .... .. ........ Steam clean lnQI. bllgel ....... u::.:::: ..... :":l'.":ffl.............. LAWN C.\RE COMPL. HOME MAINT. ~oneet • lnt .. lloent .. ,................... "draw f11t" when you Cl111lffed 1d1 Wiii point I dedca. M9dl A C«Mr'lt·M~·Block DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC Commlr•d. NwpVCM Cerp, plumb, paint, halll, The btllll 873-70"12 eve CUSTOM BRICKWOl'IK **BRYANT'S** !)lac. an ad In the Dally you In the right direction 011 handyman work. wane-Cwt. WO<k. uc. ~ ""' a old. 1t Xln&, rlll1bl9 wortt. yd ofnup. ,rH ••t. SMALL/LARGE JOBS Wll!cowflng Removal PIJot Want Adel Call now to find the home you 875-71151 #381067 ~ 547~883 yr9 PP: Bud 552·9512 Onf/opr, Barry 045-7412 411f..3291 W Idle"--642-6818 Npt/CM. Rift. 645-t512 AH IYP418. • 642-1343 / 642-6e78. f neect. 642-5878 Ptci:moue .-.. N.AmlT~,_, The '°'°"""' per-. .. Cl*g ~-. T.K.O. JANfTOAW.. 17f25 San Rloardo 8trMt, l~taln Valley, Clllfomle 821'08 Mary R. Co!NlOClk, 17125 8an Ricardo 8tMt. 'ountaln V•lley, ~82708 Cathy Hiii, 7812 Sycemor• ' A~ No, 8, Hunttnaton 8eadl, ~82648 Thie blllll*8 .. ~ by a oenerw~· Thie lt8lemen& -... with the County Clertl ol ar.,. County on May 24, tea. ,_ Publl•tled Orange Coaet Oafly Piiot. Jl#M 1 ... 15, 22, 1982 2381~ '111117 •~----------r Publlehed Orange Cout o.lly "8JC NOTICE Plot. Mtf1ZS.JI.-1, I , 16, 1"2 1-------...... ~--1 22N.a MOC NOnct I .. ' 6 4 2 --~ 6 7 8 D A I L y DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS Sell yQUr no-longer-needed Items for cash. If It doesn't sell, we'll run it another 3· days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads. Call today for full details • ... '9fllf11lllll1 btt• ... '1.00) OLLA RS INES 3\ 3DAYS CLASSIFIEDs642 •5678 -,·,I j • • II I l .·. . . I 110 to 3000 sq tt "No Frlll" Prleel Wllllam Cote, Bier. l14/lM-1• ••• ~!t ••• !!!! ... , ........ By ownr eea.-!230 appt, ftt!,ADmf .... Mft FWADS ARE FREE Cal: ....... ,. ~.I~ ••••••• ~ ... M.111C .... u• 2······• t111 ............. l!lfl 1.1t11J.lllrfl •• 1Jff •• lltlnffl ..... · •• !,'!~ ...... . LIVI IN 00M'AN'°" • •••n•Y °"' "..... ••IUHNlll•• "''' OUTI lrM1U ... .,,, ._, nM mT flll·• • • 1-'°' etWtVL 1.~·1. ~ ,,, ~1,., , J,''' •ffl•• =· '., "4-~. ,,.. I.Oii ,..r.:r, J~ i ·''=., mn ............ r •••• r,...... ................ 11 • 1Ne1 llf ••• "? ff ~:~11• ~~•t 1 ":"' ~·,,' ,,.... -.. /11N '""' MOO • ' 1411 UO 00 Mo1ltl .. 1 ..... 111UT ••Ill .,.. IT 1171 t -<t __.. ~oem, t»Nrd, oer , .. ; a..to~tlmeOot,Nov UHO wllltt CU ~tit•._,, ... ....,. MM .. /.. lferto0nd,0111ro"*PI Work lft our ~~proftt·makSni ,.,_. a tmt11 ~ ' 0.. i: ro°t w '·"'· ...._oven. Uk• ntw rmmT.r.T.'11 •• ~u llYll'flaY f nH ""°"· ,.., on fM Of••-u 1 .... ltp 0, .. 1 aa 11 ""'mo••on M••.,,.. Lady d•tlrecl: <II~ lllto • o k~ ec1c1.1 1100. ~"° hko. 141m. 11 •a:J 111.t~."'*....,.. 4.,.-41,. .,~.,,. -'"' _.. u M ........ ,_.. No11•1mo tr pref. Oel UllO Wllll ""I Pl vlflel»lt ~. , _..,a Meaa & tmfr.. clerk tor \h• 1rea•t rlnfft new1na-r, ~_,....._..._..._ ..... -t •tnv *Ith ~ • ,. •II· WNtherby .aoo fNOnl,lm l4t-IOH 141.1110 11ff Only nQUlNmtnt ii & load tele'Pi\ont llMlllllJ for detllll. t1a.u14• Wlhlw.7~=· l100. w/3.d ylWlablt ~ ..._... •w . .. •m•o••••lu YOUlt and tnth~ LOcU ODltA Miu Ntwport 1 .. 011 l•lon 11--a•y MOO.Ollltot»N1..otn. :::=i .......... T.-eu I.ti ltLlll"I JDTER· looking tor Ila Manloutllt _,_ UllO Wtllte 01 Coming _. •JLa 1tto ToYOll IN U! Offteel ~rained for em· "•pldly growlnt oom· toP "~ wttfl hood. Uk• Tr).i!i.,_, ad p1a11119, new It a llW ..... /Ult ....., =.....,. t. 111~ ~ peny In fountain v~ new MO. fao-oato • ...,.. w cMctt. XJnt Mfld, • ~ 1~t ""'"' ...,., .. .., .... t 9"1ilng pet90nable, ex· •• ••• e:"eeltt'uer.."a ..-o.e7ot or ...._0141 t"" N ............. Gardin Grow ,... ~ • ..., 11 tot perl1no•d HO'y wlttl Laro• oaptolty upright •IAUl"UL ti" "CA • "" ' _, • Ill .... W .... ,.. .... In~. oood omoe beol(grouncl trffitr. 1110. or llHI ootorTV ..... lyrwmty rw aHf lll·IUI llltt•llttht• *84.00 tor flrat week; then 1har1 In -IL llTIY l •• TW1na eo wpm. offer • ......,.,4, •1"· ,,.. cMillverY. :; ............... r.-.~· . 1111 1ft IHI LMllll _ _...._1 U':i'.,. .....,9°" IOIM~& pieelMt it\rn0ewlth Ill• I TVJoM'•Mto17M "fl llMt ......... •··-oot -•-...._ ....__ 11.a 11111.:•t 1•• .,... ...... -Mpl _.::· ... t:i" ~-Ofdpttf,Quet peri.noe. '°'Int~ •l.W., MUIT llL.L: M&11navox H,ooO-IN!et1 elr oond. -·' '-· --r·• -•1---•---•-•--type 71wpm Jff.1~ o • t I I 111 I e , ( 7 1 4) #1"'"'6 Mff armolre TV & etarto orui. oonlfll'. eJeot. r• 81aup_llt llereo, lo ml. 'IO POl'IChe 124 Turbo & .., ... .,, ut. 11 --'-'--------1 '4 .... 71 ~•'II. ••••h•••••••••••:::;u "ombo •1001010 frio. Pon ... Pottte. Many •13.tK>O. Oa 5"4t.01se1 ·eo Portclfte H4. lotll ..... NW II /n " · · o f ti • t ew 552·50t3 loaded. l•k• over '" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mu.It Iott Oonl/ Hoept. llmtAIY/llWf. • • ~1 : u ~ ~ ••. : 2 ~·,·. ,,,,.. ,,,. peymentl, 714/H6-110t ;: • acoept1n1i 1pp1icat1on1 Im. N.a, ofo. leo'y w/ ~=: :!, d~ .., • •~J 213"'31·179' , ••••••••••••••••••••.~ ll"r •-f•ff . at' fOI admlftlno IMrttll'\I 011too1na pereonallty, a. ca.. r It•-·•• u -ai.-.. 1 , ". I ally Pll ................... ···:··· Aocutat• typing lmpo pl\0(111, typing, a It. r.notng. Jim Of Ken L.J_,., A•IN fM"'. ,,.. . ~ ,, -•.••.••••••••••••••• tant. Muet llav. Gd.,..,.. ellortlland. lClnt. 1811 tf1Y1llM, 771-1411• ,.m;-~ •• ••••••••• ·•••••• ••••••••••••r • ........,. · '*t DEAlER IH·u.s:A. po,; wtttl petlenft a ,.. beneflte. Jtfl, t44-1NS C.lt Mlf "--'1 Hll WI PIJ mllte1. Advenoement llmlllf /IDI •••••••••••••••••~' ~~•••••••••••••••• a a a H&M 'Part time per90n to deliver Oalty opp~.'°' ""'P '*90tl. F1Mnolal lnvettl'Mnt iittn 8tl9dad 111wr...,.,.,, 10 ft.""~ t>oet/tr....,, wt TIP MLLAI ftllot auto rout• In Newport BMch Medl·C•I • Medl·Cat• , 0 r • du 0. t 0 r I . ,~J.! "'°'·.,...,.. ::'°"~~· ••• 1111 ...... 1 d~ per week, lbout 2'A hr8, •xP• "ef'd. Terry "4ad· PMl/oomm.del)t. MOt• t 11JOIVBU. 1---·----~1 '""' M F 2 30 PM S S 5 den, 41·3515. 11111 tary. lxoel typing and 167~7 .. ,, ,,,.,....,, AUi 111111 per ay, • ; : . at, un: F1ot1<1a at. H.a . e iH requlrwd. beoutlYe " ""111/111111 t 1...1.. & Vi:..."1' AM. Helpful but not neoeaaary to M •--Meretarltl eicpr • m1191 a.-• IHI l«rln HM UNI M S 11 In c t M e 1 __.,__ N • c · ~•··••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 24'0 H•bOI' BIYd. a:..;.;.;,;,.;.;;.;;.,i;ii~iiiiiiii;;~11du9 1111 - -"' v• 01 a •••. .-;;arn ng1 We are turning away 011-1mok•r pref. •II .. PETS "R .. PEOPLE Marine Elec:1riol#\ COSTA Ml!SA -•••••••••••••••••••••• ,._,. ....... $400.00 per month and up. Call;. bualnw and need 1 u · fM0.4123 ex.0110 vaoatlon•, hair DMlgn/lnttalllreoetr ........... ~~no DHIQ/-Dally Piiot, 842'4321, Hk for pr'clprot.nallecutptr ... UOllTllY/UllPT •tytee & epeo Wthl tor 0ttywor1t. 5"4g·25~0eve 14 .. 141'1 ·~~~~,2c:13i.~~ IUIUUll OUTCALL. 2A ).tRS. Bruoe or Foater. with a llttle lollOWlng. Top Liie ln1uranoe egenoy tlcln problem• at ltier-./ , _____ ..;___ ale, lier, rack. 63K ml, 111111 1•1-12•1 comm. or guar Hlery ~tad In lrvfne IOolll...! ry'1. Poodle pupe, T-oup, ..,,. 1"1n lffl WI llY 1389 363 Equal Opportunity Employer plUI •ddH. bOfWI prog-for • lllltled MO/recePt I oi•. m In 4. I• I• .••••• l................ OLll&M Ol I 5• ph 5As-7 H1·2UI ....... . ram. Eoucetlon avalla· Xlnt telephone teohnl: 5-4 2848 41' lfllT ftSlll """ R 1t'll llHH 1-210 ~ * '* ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT bles 1 Delltati quee • mutt. Company nu. IUttr lhf BH by Cotonlal In ·10. tw. 01 TllOll 4 lpNd. air, Xlnt c:ond. Y!U!!!!l!!'. ..... !~!f ltlMflll-·-• lJO WBAV ST •COSTAMESA CAt2U6 Souam~_ ...... ___ b•"•lll1752·t750bfr ... 1 •• 2 .. ,1.0rutdl• f ·71 '1, 1oeded wl S2500.7t4-Mtl-1188 'l•Mf191" °'*' H ~:4'~ ....... ~~.'.~''.~'. ~~~.".'.u.".''. ~ .E.~~'.~~~ ~... .. .. Alll for 0;;'546..7'1ee 2PM. ::....11on.' ... 11ec:c1-trTonrytc::...Own000r. llnan-'78 2eoz. 4 '90. ale:, 11n1 Convertible, good lhape. 7 deyt a.-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilSEWINO M.ACHINE OPE· .,..... 49'MIJ08 TRADE Wi'Nb YACHT& Im, SHOO. Top cond. New radiate 57,000 ml. 49 Oorgeou1 glrl1 to Auto SalM OUNTER HELP·Mature lmll A911 RATORS. Expet, qulilty AKC ml"letut9 8c:hn8lallt 875-e007 geo.1725 ...,.. 714/778-1139 $3000. 980-5873 eve =·~· ~·:=!:i IALll...... ~=1~0~~~::·~ Conv • tong ttm1 c:are minded, P1•0• ratH. pupplH , 2 mo. old. ·n 290Z. Xlnt conO. AM/ 1110 lllllT touriltt. 8anltAmer1o«d, ::=~~Munl&ty J':. Club In Irv. Evening ·~· req'd. Exoell. wor-Coeta MM '42·"52 970.2063 aft 5PM '78 2Nft BAYLINER FM. AIC. M.000 0 80 . 2 dr, 5 epa, alt, 1tereo Ma er Charge, Amer-baru ..._~Many potltlon, 5-10 Mon-Fri. k~ cond9. & beneflt1. Female Coc:k., 8panlel, "Victoria." fly bridge, 75-4-53~. 54Me75 end c:auette. Greet lean , Olnera. All llenefttt a very attractive Sat e-s. 973-0838, M Fl • 7-3:30, 3-11:30. SUMMER buff color9d. 3~ mo old, VHF radio, ball tank, Top ~r~port• Bi•U 1111 1hapa, Sao S44H. _.cori'lll 7141845-3433. pey plan. A gr .. t oppor-DENTAL ASSISTANT 714-642..,.. °' IPPIY In ihoti, pepere. t 1oo. depthflnder, out~•· •••••••••••••••••••••• 49-4-0135 or 497-2388 _____ 81_._c_M __ I tunlty to reach the hlo· Evet & SC. Mod.fl MW c~·~~: 488 Flagihlp 499-5004 ia~~·r. "2 • 00· ~::~: :~~i Cemper•. WE'RE '81 DIESEL Rabbit. dbl . ..,.... ·= hell pay ecele. Apply fn l1mlly prac:tkle In C.M. ~~~~~~~~J Siiky Terrier•, Chm llre & ~~~~~~~~ Alie for U/C MOR c:uhmera mat. All ex- .1.. •l• ••• pereon& Brighi, enthual11tlo pet· 1ti••ll JQBS dam, M. a F .. lhow or 35• CHANTYMAN • 12&1llt lrH. 18K ml. B.8. lor .. ... ., laptl ~~1~.!!:~ ... '~· .. ~~~Ude •. ' .. pet.551-3002,554-3151. Bnt>yAm.Matlne,llngle y,.,.•-••-DEALIN' ~~Sell 17,40!>. Gel that Golden Bronn 1.n.r Itri. If Piii "'"' ..... ", .,............., Expr'd 11•·7p. Cert. 6-71 A/P "ri~ny ....,,._ Tan~·"" alW9'18 war1t. ._...._ .... rlUf" aldee. Shift dllfe. FlH,. fff 1111 ., . 18711 8eac:h Blvd. 1111 I-M--...... II... .... entlal paid Small ••••••••••••••"'•••••• btldge. xlnt. lw-d HUNTINGTON BEACH -.n• adl It'• .. Eeey .. talllog --------Enthullutlc:, ~f 6 rh~~ .. ai . .,:..,_,_,., conb __ v.; $1 000 tO coc:k•t Spanlel. 2'1i yre or long dl11. crul1'g. • ••• 2000 111111:1\IATE Sliver, air cond, tape a tablet. 714-5$6-2804 Babyllttar needecl PIT for .,...., ,,,..._...,. • -' '39 500 -mwnt.11 5300 ml M300 (K 213-4134-1778. Golden 17 mo. boy on Of ""' organized w/bkpt exp. bay area. Call '°' Int.,. Ir .. to uod home w/ TRADE. WIND YACHTS deck. . . ~ ~.Bc:~~~2 :=: ~:e.....FWI· ;.~k. c. eu. ~:.:OS1,o-4 :30 pm . • ii 200 / --r;-.-,-~-g-:-:-d_20_h_o_m_e_: 575-~7 HG-1725..... ,:. :.. DELIVERY ON Vtln 553-J4M 1111 UY URIUlll Dry CIHnlng. Experlen-Part Time ~ I Beeutllul SlarneM F c:at II' •lllllFT I 11111111 Ull MOST •• ••••• ••••••••••••••• la-'-1 c:eO pereon tor pant1 •---/-=Ill PEA ONTH TO START l 2 kitten.. 897·7029 Aybrldge/SM &tiff #1 Y"'9 ltlltr .. ;r.';(::tt........... TAY-OUTS June 5 at Pf'elllng & counter wonc. _.,5_ 5•51•• Clrowlng 1ummer bull· New VII twin power I Ir ............ ,,._,,I 8AM. For Info c:ell s • n c I am• n 1 •. MM open1 up poelllon hnll81f IHI S19,500 AY &46-9000 I'"~ MODELS 1 111119 __ ,,, ,__.___61_ 9_. 1144-5921 John or Mike 409-3339. ..... ,... Mar In 3 de¢•. •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 -.iw-.,.. 1 -• 1-------O RS R W lllllU I.I, ULD, IB• •••••••••••••••••••••• Baauty Salon: Exc:tll•nl HAIRSTYLIST Oellrad '°' ,... .... V.lt •II• II KIN INNE P ING EX· '71, ........ glau, NEW 7~ l ·-L•11• TUTOR · 10 yn teaching opportunity, nHded buiy eelboa liland ... .... fltW. TRA FIRM mettr ... Ml, ..., • ~-s --5--- exper. Karan. 842~22. lhampoo ... 1. tor bu•Y Ion. 973-4013 Nal'I. leader tn telephone ...,,.., ..... e.•..a-1never1c:. ,UM<l248• ~.I. NS530ever' ~·v~· rr"th' "':·D·~e ...._ ___ ......_ AVE OVERSEAS DELIVERY 980-3283 talon, llcenM required, marketing 11 IHkl"g ..... " c • • 0• • 3100 w eoest H ' EXPERTS J'-L. • •• ~ •115 N • w Po rt B ••c h . llAJll STYLIST quellfled lndlv. r°' diver-vlutll. Mltltt uSHd quun H , worth ~Bimini w/enc:loeull Wiil llnre, NewPon a-en wy • • =.:::-:".'!:'. •••• !~... tl31-1380. W• .,. l~lng fOf ••• lffiad wonc on behelf or '11........ o!~~· s:~~lr~lyho'!~~ 15% ~~. . ____ 84_2_-940 __ s ___ I AT UIU .. YOUrtg marrted rMn would Beauty. lmrn.dlata Ope-pr'd prole11lonel heir = = ~~l~~~~~~~~~I 754-7350 TRADE WIHD YACHTS YkYI Ilk• odd Jobe evH & nlng1 M--..e, Feela-1tyflt1t to Join OU( ltalt, tnt-"'---, rNt\n 6 mo-Tll wal --------t75-~7 IMSG-1725...,.. WllTD! HONDA 1eee HMt>or BIYd. wttandl. Cen do a variety lltt, Hair Styll11t. Aent&I Mutt be highly quelllled .... ._.. * *' BUY** l d I T 'COSTA MESA of tlendyman Job•r or 7~ TM Duzlar'1 and able to work any llvated. 11 you quallty, Yll Ull • • • .,,. "'1 v~m~-0/~=: ,.._.,.. I• ... ., 972-9525 --. 8111 f<ll' Salon. 075-3828 day. Pd vacation, top plean oell: Mr. Clery, AMof1 lntarv811 le now Good ueect Furnltwe I n•••l•••••••h••••••• _._, _,.... • - 8111. IMIDDll ~:=:·=· 545-577& ~.gc':,t' /.J.b~~U~1:1 ~~ Wiii ... '!~. ~ l.af.':..!~: Cell ue toa.yt SANTA •el• ftulftl 1111 ExdullYe Newport BMd'I South COMt Plaza. PllT!Tml from 11a1n.1prn. 13450. ~255 ~!'!!1.!'!!. •••••••••• .e••'•••••••••••••••••• "°" II looldng for pert Alll tot Olor1e P•IOfl wwited 20..-o tire llllTlll ...,... Jflkj Hll Acc,...,tant time bookkHper with Ml-'1111 :::.:, :·~~~t know S7~06~~ ~f.~!ILY I• 1111 tn-MH 2T...~v~·~~ .................... .. vun prevlou1 experlenc:• In (213)433-10971438-1599 no ••P, nee• 926-2583 I llY ,...,. 540-34IO ANA SEE II Growing Newpor1 8eac:h retail operatlon1. Flexlllle ........ / ~ for the lergeet Md beet CPA Ami h8I lrrVnedlllte houre,. For appl call for cbM bldg. Part or PUT Tm 1UYIL ..,-Let, . t67-8133 LASER/Race r;Mdy. Roof 1elac:tlon of new and opening'°'"' lndMdual Tuee or Wed. &4().0980 I/time. A91. req'd. c.11: Evee and/or .-enc11. euay lrvlne agency need• New f\llHb• maltfell NI, rack, tole bfg, yellow ..!=:::===::=:::===:=::=!I Part• & 5eMce Open All ueed Buick• In Orenge ~ dlallanglng ,.... or IS40-0991 D . Cart• r, t · 1 2 , Reepontlble adultt, ovw Sallr•·tralned CO~-180. New queen tlze, hull. 11000 • 552 " 8107 WI llY _D_•_•y_S_•_tu-rd_•_Y ___ -1 ~odayt le • :0Coun1:"..::l~~n~ Can you mix llt1ln1 a IS76-el00 21, wtttl outstanding, at· MERCIAL AGENT. Min. 2 S100. 750-6432 -~-~----..._-1 USED CARS & TRUCKS 301 W. Warner Ave. dtverlfflecf c:lent ... Ex· br9wn, the Coeatl Hell-. PART/TIME trllCtlvt pereonatlUet lo yn. exp. Sai.ty comm. •• ·--.,. LASER 14 ft, hand lr1f. 2 OOME IN OR CAU FOR (1 blk. welt of Ma.In) cellent comp pre>Qram Saloon le lookln9 for .__ tor minor c:ere of work with youth (ag.. with exp. Call: Laurie, _.ru MMe. C#Var, l800. Fiii ......aL 540-7430 and WOl1I environment. ~ PWt~ ~ woman when relMMd 10-1•1. Call 2·5PM. 4 957-2580 . Mutt ..U. &44-a831 731·ee11 PM and Cormler.o.uto Public: acc:ountlng oper, ..,, •• 4PM. 1N1 .. , ...., from l'IOapltl&.142·2237 142-4821, Eld. 343. EOE MUST SEU: gerne table ___ '*_anda ___ --1 ~ 8«1d ~me to 5020 mlno Caplttrano, Ian H neectM Y....... w/4 c:helrl. wMM ped. II' "''WI m. 18211.BEACH BLVD. .•• i.°"-Pc....., Ca111pu1 Dr. Newport JuanCllpo.4M-8127 ·.:=.u&~ HIT.... • ... ,... -t>au .. l300/D80. Yr. ·n.~P. (2)Jdlo, HUHTINOTONBEACH 2925Harbor81vd. 8eac:h t2MO ILDlllL ·In pertorl, The BMctr 6-lls>m. Expending youth ,.., .... , .... ,_144-883 __ 1 _____ Polarte VHF. wind epO & 141 .... l, At401 ~-«JI m -C0$1'A MEsA Apt. Manager, Cott• Credit union or ........, ~ 919 8lellW Hd-counHlllng firm 1111 We'r• Mek.llla to bulld a v ....... Upllol. Chait direct .. dodger. 1hwr, V12 .. ~· 39M 2 plul 2 171-2100 M.... Seml-<etlreO cpl expertenc.. u.. ot °"" tow &.--. L.aeuM flMl::tl. = ::i.::.::,:: labor pool ol quellftad ~~·J::'ls f°'°'· loeded w/extru, ownr. Top Dolar ~J:=M. ~~t . ..,~: Air' -------- (50+) to meneue a 15 11ne tenntnal, 1<Mcey a HOUSEKEEPER to inotTvat• amb1tlo11a oraphlc: •rt• pereo"n•I ----·-----~wiN~~TS 873-4947. 57M930 CMJll Hll unit c:omplax. Lite me typing. Mutt work uve-ln. BHutlful N.8 . 10•13 yr old•. Call for on-c:an work In JN Moving: trpl drfe&( w/ 97s-80071MSG-1725 ....... Paid ••••••!!•••••••••••••• maintenance & llkkpg well w/pubtto. Full time home nHr bay. Non· 2·5pm. 842·4321, ext. pr.-pr .. .,... At ..._. tlutc:tl mirror, bkc:aH #ull 11 •119\.AW he1pful. Part111 'rent. entry paettlOn. MtlntlnO· 1moker, mu11 drive. $43.~forAndrea. C>neY'Mf'•txperlenoeln hdbrd. 1700/olfer. FOfYourCat1 •••••••••••••••••••••• .... , ... 5-48-0433 ton Beac:h City Em· Room, llcWd + ...i.ty. lypeNttlng, paete up, 75-4-7433 .. ,,, IU,, JI•• I .. -... ---' .... ........,..._ __ pllf' Credit Union. Reh. 523·4920 or cemera oper~llon or--------.... ,, .. •r=: We ~tie In ..._. ~·-5 17 • 575-3793. ' · platemaklng 11 neoH-Movtng: ovwttuff9d NIUQ. ltdP Hll ..,. ___ --fOf the buaJneat exec:u-11~ la:o • I wy. You rnult be_ lvalo-IOfa. lo'l'tlMt, c:halr, ot· ..... ~......... 2e2e Hlf't>or . tlv9 & profelllonal . ... _..,,, · -. lfllllllH !able.to wonc on a eub-toman, M25. 75-4-7433 II' ..... IHI• Coate M-. 540-5830 Ura• lelllltltl ShcMdn't SatllfY You COMPANY EXPANSION Coett Me9a rMall bettery ttllute or c:all-ln batll. Sola & iowe..t. W/boet. Nu c:helnl c:8nl Prer\'llUrn ~ I( ... 1112 we wou6d 9'(pec:t ~·d lhop nMdt"lWO l*IC)le. sarery depend• on ••· uce11. cond. '350. BalbOe Penn. B Slr9et paid tor any ueect cer want lo earn morel s u M M E R Experlenc:e necHtary. p«lerlc:e. Contact Per-79().84.40 Beat offer AV &46-8000 (foreign or OOmMtlc:) ...... '4000, '5000+. Alt tnnga ben9fl1a. Pey tonne!, In oood condition. .. II 1..-J n..·• r..ity no 11m1t for open. 93~1814. ·~ 1eatt 0reu1 dining rm Mt, 48.. Side fie s.. ua Arttl sn u1 the hlghly quelltled, OR UUL llmTllY Produc:tlon I.Md with llne Pitt round tbl w/2 !Mvee. 4 To 18 n M11cue CharlMI. l-01 TOUI =~~~o~::=r.:: Min. 3 yeen flrnlly law ~••P~·~~lprt~;: ~-.:. ~~t. ~t1':'a':i'y 'n!w-=:t St25. 573-81~ ....... HllTNAI04. llklnal •lCpe(lence o c Airport .._..... .. " ......... -'3200, win...,,°' 11350. DIP n & . CAREER Em,.;_,,:_~ . Cryetll Cre1t1on1, All :::.ea Opp!y Em...... 873-0779 Want to rent lllp In New-- -.. We need one talented .,.... . ..... , ..... ...,_,.,. 711 w. H'ttl. St. Sult• :;:: __ ::::!:, · POf1 Araa lor Claallc Al-,,_, ll'ldMdual ~ M your· Salary c:omma"1ur1te 87, C.M. C-r-lb_&_D-re-,-,-ln_g_T_a_b-le-den dellg" wood lloop, ' fAClllYI Hll plu1 3 good HI•· with experience. C.11 Vehlde Operetor. Dial-A· walnut 180 ' 3 o ft . c a 1 1 T I m . . l«n •II. CISU llW ..,, .. ., lfMl'I. Meg at 851-1234. IUl man 1&1.11 Ride, 8addleback VaPey 754-7433 aft 3. 71~75-3711 -- NABERS CADILLA'C l<'OO H.11111-. llMI ' (,....,,, '<\."'' ~40 °1100 . ...,..... we're movlngl II you ., tem•. over 50; two welkl,..._,, in.-Nc:Ol'd. Starttno S4 tw. Hfde..A-89d, klng 1lzed, ._ :.-ur Ir nl\·d l•---•tJ i••i '12 W "9 ..... ~ We're not llttlng atlll . . . $1 15' 0 LIVE 'N We hew an opening for area. 18 w/xlnt drlvtno _,8 I I be b I know.-. c:an cut It, c:.a f help drwa. INlc• meelt. g•"t ealHperiont to E.O.E. IS0-8191 btwn Herc:ulon plald. t125. •iUlaaiibflM t•oi1ta ;\h~a ~ 0330 -· •• Prtvate OWMr -w -.,..::: _.....t__. MW hlwr\ tor urn« NB. .. 10.11".. 754-7483 lft 8 •••••"'""••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • -• .... '"' -· _,..,..., ........ Mutt ha'l't 546-0805 work In tll• ,..ewpori """· • .,,,,_lft / -·--E · 534-0089 IUI 1111• c:ar. Harbor w In commer-w--1-..... •-~ "" ,. '/ A•• la~ ...,.... ·Pon'*'8ubeN PEA MONTH btWn. 1 L4. c:fal HIH and/or r••· OPE~ n......, ~............... lfHfml 1111 ..... 1 .... r.tt......... OlllJl'S TIE LJllEIT •• .. DlttrillutlOn ltatf NII Im-ldentllil ..,_ In the more ""'TO". Lenler No Wll ........ •••••••••••••• ,.,, 111 SILi ...... . mad. opening In varloul alfluenl.,.... probf..n. Laguna Hiii• =!•1 ..,.aa..1 '81 ~ Kl 1000.I, •••••••••••••••••••••• DOLlllYE .. .... Automolt'l't poe1tJont. for Ad Action LEO HAHNA Law Firm, 1yp1"g w1111 w,...... 1..., 840-tm 12985. seoo "*-. '*• lllWTI ot .. ,. model, tow m11ee-1Un LJm No exp, in SR VICE PRESIDENT tnd lru1t1. Mu1i have HO~ FOR SAL£ new. Everything lnclu-ge Cadlhc:t In Southern -.. 111 Cal • .., L '"* .. 1ttong IYPlno and ~ Mare • Appeloou a. dad. 855-4ee4. IEILEllllPI . Callfomlat SM ut 1odayt some fields a Aellton ~10 11'\U lk.1111. Call M~t. Arelllan, 6 yre Old. • ,. •--6-• We'll delfver anywhere In 11&1111 with O.M. axparlenc:e. WlrUlow. for •PP t. 11000. lnc:lucl .. laddl9 •• _._, Tutl the wortdt Come In and OUIWI !!P,.nPtllY..._~1t1.'"1md !!: 11• -· ··11 Daly Plot w191m11 831-10IO and .. tack. ' ,.,,..,., Hli ... UI tOdey at -H ........ -·o. -~k;1 See s;;: .---AD v~nn Pll IPIUTll . 7141751-8518 ··r.rr£080ovw0Rt<'&0 ' 1001 llNITI "cosi'A'MESA vtoe Manager 0ary Hut· • NUI\ RecepttPex <>per. n... ynalll.I' P£nDI r J~•-#11 pe1nt1119 to 5'"' off your 848 Oov9 st..-l_.l-1llO ... lnperaon. P90PtwtlelneadP90Pt 642•5678 ded lly Huntington UUl1\J Ul"Ll. .:;;..-,. .............. body.._eet,53&-M32 llLll-IDYlll -NEWPORTBEACH • I. --fllT1ll Thet'twMltht' 8eedl City School Diet. 8 DIAMOND8, 'M:eret 10 4 n1....-'""--"T , 14.. IU.. 11' 2•1110 DAILY PtlOT 12 mo. poaltlon. 11,015 ' ""-!it. lnvemt. quellty. ....-. .,..,.... o,o,a. • 831 2040 495-"949 '7' Calelt, eoK ml, lmmec. ...... ..... .. •• SERVICE DtRECTORY Pina what you want Jn to 11.280 per mo. d.. s u m m e r 8eloW wtltle. 497·1011, • 7 5~ b ••• 0 ". ··-··... W/111 option•. 11500 ..... ... It al lboutl o.ly Plot CtM11ftadl. pending on exper. Abtllty 4~7N 841· aft 8~ ..,,.., 1-1lj 114' flnn. te0-t347 --;::::;::;;:;:;;=;::::1;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;1:~~~~~~~;:;1 to type •owpm req'd . Al ~ Ind pwu: th 28402 Marguerite Pkwy •••••••••••••••••••••• "'·--- Apply: 20461 Cramer or ,., ton to dlenl. Rblt. ("~ Vlef0._.1 •• Jnftr1a ~ .......... ~!! Ln., H.8. te4-e888 SURPLUfije£f:s:•c;;;: tr•lll'nlllt0!1 from •1ss "c;p«, ~" IH4 ........ '78 Camero 221, lllver. R:!=~~ Career ~·~~.~~:: j::: __ ..;.$ __ _...;.__ .. ,-:.:.-:., loadad.m85-43oe lhlfta .-. 546-0795 (312)831•1'91 EXT.2239 ••••-•••••••••••••••• Compare HotrN or Im· Q.ntln llM 14 people r,.edad to fUI IMPORTANT Nora Porte Direct ..... and 00 •••••••••••••••••••••• llJll. llLll entry leY9I poeltlonl. ....... Ill .... !0 REAOeRS AND mot. Hntllll• pymta. Ill n Fiim APROP08 OF FASHION , ... . . ADV!:RT18E88 ' • Dfal 213 or 714; MER· We haw ' DOOd eelec· ISLAND ..-1ng creative 8 to 20, """"• * ,_ fl. TM price of, 1t9'9\1r ad· CREVIR C EDE 8 I• 2 1 3 or tlon ot Nl!W & USED background fOf Mlltno tet. In the vetllctt ~ ...... Ill.... H•vwft ~ W91ted IOog lndtvldual with fllhlon $ l, 125 ns-1491.ri'yttme.,.... ....,llad by wt11c1e dee-7141887·2»3 Chevroletll and teadellhlp l)Olftlon. WARDROBI! 8tHm•r fled llCMr1111ng oolUnvlt ~ enough to~. Mer-Exper. ,.q'd. Cal only I truntc. velWt llnad dra. dOH not lnolud• eny cad" Bens? Oon't let AM to Noon, 841-3N$ , were, Mnaert & lrOftlnO ~ t-. llceflae, Ihle oppottU1'11tY nw ..,,., •a•-..... .,.... bolfd fHO . (714} trllJlfer fffl, flntnH We ~;:;~o-by •.• lli:;t now1 wet;W.9 _. ~== 497~ llftef tlpm. OfWOM, .... tot air Pol-~-· . tentt1tlo .. 1eot1on of Enfoy ~ wtttt kJdl, I lutlon control device ·rnodetl a OOlort avwi.- CONMHl C.HfVROLP . . . ~41>· • 100 atlel w111111\o•••d .... ~ certinoattoM °' dMI« ••• _. 1m *· 11inoe. utlllt JOU' out• No 91CS11t' .. hctnec1111ry docurMntery pr9Jlar•· w _.111 • M •MHll _"---....;;;..-----=-,;,.;;;;-;;,._ aoW'G l*'90l*"Y. IMm II tome fWdt. tlon ollaro•• u nJe11 ~ --_ liow lo beoome e lfalned 11......,... E81H Leaded Tiffany OtfMlrWI• epectflad by IOI "'· 11t • ...... .. .................. .. eatet 0011n .. 1or. Call temp, ao". J,N. MaiONt.• the ICMrt.... ._,,. Anll 1301 ~ ltNet • llilfitii 2·5PM. 142-4i21, Ext. 01'1g. tlOG.. 8ao. •45. Oeo.d lundey NE.WP<>M MACH 1MI 11W1 341. l!OE 7tcM>nO CHOICE INVENT°"Y ....... Ola .. top•. loaded! VO&.UMllaAL.18 (2021). ,_,, .. ,, , ., '1"111 ~~·:.*·~ .. -.·~-,.. ....... ~:::i=::-. a..ou .... ) 'Ylll 11111111 UllY Ml llll '"'"' ,lllNI I 1·111 . OHAN(i( C.OlJN IV C AI It OHNIA 75 CEN TS ·A:rgentlnla~s .Jj~eparlng . lor· defeat · BUINOS AIRJ:S. Ar1en,lna. (AP) -AraenUna •1 mllltary Nlen .,.. PNJ)al'lna their people. for detea' {n the Falkland Ialand1. Bu' they ln1l1t any aetbaek wtu be wnpcnry. that Arll'mtlna hM done ltlelt proud. ancl that It wW eventually own the archipelaao. . Arpndne pollUona. .. ~ Go4 ~t that beyond the tortunea of the unequal battle a1aln1t the extra-eonu.rtental ~ and \tu. who support tthat the torch we ba~e ll bted to. illuminate the a of OW' America not be :· he . u.lc\. Prelf.dent Leopoldo GalUeri eet the new line Jn an Army Day . One of the pretldent•1 top 1peec:h Saturday after Britiafl , advhera 1pelled out the paratroop• had overrun key government po1ltlon to The •' Sco.tland welcomes I pontiff GLASGoW, Scotland (AP) - Pope John Paul ll celebrated MUI on a h!Ulide in Scotland'• moat Catholic dty today and paid tribute to generationa of &man Catholics who kept the fa.ith alive throuch the bloody Scottiah Refonnation. A..odated~ "We have alrMdy won.0 be Mid. "We could not have been e>epeeted to def•t mWtarUy the thfrd and fint moat powerful natlona In the world. 0 When we lcle. you will beu'. Galtierl, who fa now a Latin The cheers of 21SO,OOO people welcomed the pontiff to Bellahnuston Park, where he told the faithful, "You are beira to the sacred heritage. Your forefathers have lianded on to you the only inheritance they reelly prized -our holy Catliolic faith. On the fifth day of John Paul'• bi1toric 'British v.iatt, he paid tribute to the ''v.itant struggle for IUl'Vivalv of <Satholic Scots, who f.aoed penecution and exile under Protestant monarchl. APW1r1,h6e ltILLED IN ACTION -Lt. Col. Herbert Jones. 42, commander of Second Ba~on Parachute Regiment, poeea with wife,, Sarah and two sons last year at Bucldngbam Palace when he received the Order of the British Empire. He WM killed on the Falklands last week at Gooee Green. • "Be loyal to the ~ of thoee valiant forenmnera.' he (Bee POPE. Pqe Al) Orange Coast beaches busy; -. 88 rescued · Restaurant bandits hit again A llG' of nwbd and armed • bandfa who a" aedly have beJd up fine rmtaunnta throu,about Onie County and Lona Beach 1truCk again today, robbing employeea at Five Cro•n1 A sunny, bl'eezy Memorial Day Reniurant In CCll'CIU del Mar. afternoon attracted more than It WM the third time in a 150,000 people to Oranae <;out mont~ police aaid, the ~8: beechel but cool water -.59 have hit in the Newport degreM -and a ~ surf kept· area. reacue1 to BB wit no major Officers said the morning Incident.a, ltfeguar reported robbery at the 3801 E. Cout ._..._ u1 .. t.waJ. restaurant followed the wu.y. ~· 1 The sunny Monday followed pattern the bandits are believed 1lmllar weather conditions to have -u.ed in • many IS 10 Sunday, a day in which heavy ~ other morning reataurant overcut that baa made Orange robberiel. Coat weather gloomy for weeks The gunmen, pollce said, finally burned off. entered the Five Crowna after 9 , Sunday•1 surf ran high, a.m., tOck.ed employees in a room however in contrut to Monday a n d e 1 c a p e d w I t h a n and neari.y 100 people bad to be undetermined amou.ht of cub. helped from the water. 'There Nobody waa hurt. were man than 100,000 beach Last month, the pair held up Yillton Sunday aJooc the Orange the Le Blarrlts, a French CoMt. re1taurant off Newp9rt And the body of a Bell Boulevard, and eacaped with Gardena man, Albert Mendoza, a roughly $6,000 In cash after May 22 drowning victim, was locking seven employeea in a found Saturday morning at 19troom. tha Swfllkk, Only 10 days prior to t, the Mencka bad drowned after armed pair hit tfie Quiet Woman, JumP'na off Huntington Beach another Corona del Mar City Pier in an appanlllt pnnk. restaurant. The bendlta made off Hll body waa found by a board with about $1,300 after aecuring turfer In the water oft Anderton employees in a ltoraae room. Streei and recovered by Seal Detectivee said it la believed Beech police. the bendlta are responsible . for The largest beach turnout 1ix robberies in Long Beach. Monday wu ln Newport -Police l&ld they believe the 70,000 beach1oer1 with 35 ~~ held up the ~ re&'Uel. Hwitmctan State Beach c.ary ~ .. urant In Oranp 111-.. had 60,000 1unbathera, 13 bthef Laf.ayette1 in 1GardeQN G~ ....cuea; Hem~ .Oty Beach e ore mov ng nto ewport 49,000, t3 ~ i.a,w. BeaCb ~ .. of the = _, .. ao.ooo. eight rmcues. and San AD au ~ -...... Clemente 12,QOO. with aeven. the th1.14PJ have hit ore the "9CLllS. restaurant opens for buatnell. WORLD RESCUED -:-MF Squadron Leader Bob lve90n, 34, 90l1 of a World War ll bomber pilot, was hit and ejected from his Harrier Thursday over Falklanda, eluded capture and WM picked up by a British helloopter. Man arrested in ~tabbing A 22·year-<>ld Newpon .Beach man w.. in custod~oday .on attempted murder after be a11ertedly stab ed an acquaintance with an Ice pick two times during a weekend · dispute, police report. Kevin Vito Loftu1, an F.utblutf resident, la betng held in lieu of $250,000 baH at Newport Qty Jail. Police aid the Newport man report.edly stabbed Andrea Crum qxe tn the chelt and again In the .b8ck early Saturday. Crum was taJ&p to Hoag Memorial Hospital for wgeu;;y roam treatinent. COUNTY American here;>, •Y· 'Our la1anda to read wont-cue acen.ari01. have been occup&ed by rnNN of vuU~ 1Uperio( mWt.ary fbn.'e. I 1be Bµenoa Alrea newapaper .....,aate nothinC DOI' do I cede Convb:ion aid Monday: '"Ille any of our lellUmate demands. I adult Araentina should &et ready beU.V. tn the Ntaliatory power to Ullmilate wtth vtrile udne9s of ID)' people, and we wW ap1n but not with desperation and' recover the lalandl'!• much le11 with 1hame, the Ar=tne• who for week1 =l~~~d t:t~:u::e:a1::::: have terved a heavy &. of temporarlly re·establl1he1 by ancountCina newa -.. Vlctor'y0 hHdl1ne. and "We're winning!" force a colonial uaurpation.': maau:fne COYe1"I -are besinninc The paper, wh1ch bu cloee ties * * * * * * May ask sur:render to the navy, pointed out l)Olltlve effecta of the oonfllct: "With just what we've done up tUl now, • leaving uide the aurpriael we've yet to atve, we have acquired a dl1nlfied and 1ravitattn1 pretence In international aodety.'' It added that Argenti.nl baa al.lo learned the hard way who lta friends are and that the world \__ la run according to yeated interesta and force. * * * British troops nearing c·apital By 'Re Auodated Presa Briti1h marines and ~·~•troopers were reported fighting. Argentine troops today for control of a strategic mountain 12 milea west of Stanley in action that could pave the way for the decisive battle of the Falkland Isl.anda. But government aources in London were quoted u saying the commander of the BriUBh task force, Rear Adm. John Woodward, ~ been atven full authority to decide whether to give the Argentine• an opportunity to surrender before launcbJ.na a full-«ale a.ault on Stanley, the FallrJanda capttal. The 1ource1, quoted by Britaih'1 domestic newa agency, Presa As1ociatlon, and Independent Television Newa, uid the Britiah did not want to ·~!/,fact Argentina to a b tlna defeat becauae of caocerna c:L ~ DO)Jtlcal lmtabWty In LaUn America. The Brttiah Defeme Mlnlltry repOrted Mond~ night that Brltlah and Argentine troopt were battling for contrdl of 1,500-foot MoUD.t Kent. 12 mi.lea west of Stanley. Pren A11ociation reported_ fighting three miles closer to . Stanley on a ridge called Two Sutera, Indicating the British marinee and paratroopen may have pushed back the ArgenUne perimeter. But there was no of1ida1 confinnation.. Argentina in a communique imued eaJly today uid ita fOl"CeS "detected" British troops about 15 miles from Stanley. U said ~r_sen\ine troopa were 'iteing helicopters to reinforce defensive positiona around the town. Report• from London and BuenOI Aires said the Argentine commander, Brig. Gen Mario Menendez. had heavily fortified Mount Kent =.the nearby ridgel. U the captured them, they woul provide a (See F~. Pace Al) Newport thieves get-$50,000 haul A home in the Dover Shores aectior1 of Newport Beech wu bit th1a weeJcebd by bµrglan ,,..ho . s:aped with JDOl"e than $50,000 worth of bandguna. abotcuna and an ... tinent of jewllry. Police aaid the crook1 ~p~~y broke into Charlea M . Homlni'• houlle by pry1na open a alldina glua window. Ofticen aaid the intruden rana,acked f!Y«Y room tn the bouae. South Atlant1c Ocean \ AP BIU'l18B DRIVE -British troops on drive toward Port Stanley have reportedly nm into heavy resistance at 'Mount Ken 12 mile. fron\ Stanley. Two .Slaten Ridge is three 'm.ilel cJo.er to Stanley where British claim an advance. Unoonflrmed reports have 3,500 troops from Queen EJl:iabeth n to north (at croaa). Arraignment today Suspect in ~Laguna slaying captured - By STEVE MITCHELL o< .. Dllr ........ A Bue.A Park man suspected In the ahotgun death of a Laguna BMch father early Saturday, "VU to be arraianed in South Coast .Municipal Court today on char8M of murder. The vk:Um, John Louil Shank, 38, Wiii ahot In the head with a 12-puge lhcqun at about 2 a.m. Saturday u he prepared h.U beachfront apartment for a birthday party for lrla daughter. Anelted momenta later on the beech below the apartment at 789 Gavtata Drive, wu Alfred Gonulea Seama, al10 38, of Buena Park. Se1ma ·remain• In Orange County Jail with bail 1et at $250,000. He WU to be arraigned today an~ of bomldde. Laguna Beech police arrived at the linall atn!et flan)d~ &outh c.o.t Htahway at about:20 a.m. INDEX STATE Saturday after receiving a call of abota fired. They spotted a man ata.ndina in the street with a shotgun, ana after apprehending the man, dJaoovered he was a wttnelll to the shooting in the apartment above. The witness, who was later iQentlfied IS Shank's roommate, said the two men were decorating the apartment for a birthday party when Seama allegedly pounded on the front door. I When Shank opened the door, be was pushed back into the aputment by Sesma, the witntm said, who demanded cash &am the vtctim.. Shank waa forced down a ~way to the living room where wi~ said Sesma pohlted the gun at the victi.tn•s he9<hmd fiftd one round, .· ' .. l POPE IN SCOTLAND ••. t md1 hJI wordl echolna oftl'. -of yeUow ~pel flap. • John Paw ta the tlm pope to vt1lt pNdomlMntly Proteetant Britaln, when the et.ate rellllon -the Church of Enaland -wu t1t.tbU1hed after l{tna Henry vm broke with the Vadcan ln 1534. Outmde the park. .about lW Proteltant bardllnen led by the ~.Ian Palaley thwnped IMblee and ahouted "Antl-Chrl1tl Antl-Chrl1t!" H John Paul'• helicopter arrived for the M ... ~o violence wu repol'ted. , A day earlier, P•l1ley11 tollowen threw cotna. ea-and crumpled 90Uvenlr paQ.era at the today'• Glulow demonltr•doft I I th• lut nurrah of U~· hell·f'lilmlt .. "U WI handful if a11 tM)' can pt tocether ln a dty of thil U., compUed to the thouMndl lnllde there, we won't be hearinl much from them N'lY more," he Mid. · GlMaoW'• police were Mt for hOltile l>rotaiant demoNtratiON and r•tallatory auacka by Catholicl. Police eald ~were inveldptina an ovem.llht fire at a rail at.a~ 1-than a mile from the park. Anti-papal alopnt were found painted on the ltatiorl Walla. Search rules eased .. WASbGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supnme Court pve officerw fat greater authority today to ••arch the content• of automobllea without flra( obta.lnlna a warrant. By a l -3 vote, the court aaJd police can aearch even closed contalnen within a, car'• lnlnk any tlme an officer baa "reuonab}e cauae" to believe the cat contalns contraband. 1n an unusual move, the court overruled lta own 1981 decilkJn that n.ct required police to obtain warranta to aearch all closed parcela In car trunk.I. ~!i~~!.ff'1 motorcade ln ~~gh, and' several were Bus driver Jack Starnes, elping elderly Cathollca off h1a us and into wheelchain, called The pope traveled to thl• laraeat clty in Scotland from F.cilnb\lrlh, 38 miles eat, where he began the day with an impaaaloned plea to Scottlab Protestant leader• for reconciliation of the Cbrlatlan faith." BLESSING -Pope John Paul D rai8es h1a arma to a huge cr.:>wd at Heaton Park, .,..,,~ Manchester, England, durtna an open-atr tna11 durfn& which the pontiff Olda1ned 12 priest.I. "ln lh1I clul of caaes, a search ii not UllttUOnable If bMed on facts that would justify the laauance of a warrant, even thou1h a warrant has not actually bc!en obtained," Juat.lcie John PauJ St.evens wrote for. the County ~·t Stevena warned police · t hat there are llmita to the authority &ranted today. ALKLAND ISLANDS. . . Carter talks •• ID ant.age point for sheUJ.nc the of 3,500 Scoia, Welah Guardsmen er Argentine defenaea. and Nepale9e Gurkhu nor.th of IY STEVE TRIPOU The British Defense Ministry Stanley, bringing their total land' or._ Deir,...""" d today that 260 Argentine forces on the iiland to at least Former Preaident Jimmy ldlers were killed in the battle 7 ,500 and outnumbering the Carter pluaed ht.I new book and r Darwin and ,.~·Green. eatimated 7,000 Aroentlnea' diacu11ecflome of the most British estlma;_~tially t ....,ted around~· important moment• of his ~e Ar<YAntine dead at about ioo oonoen~~ • presidency in an a)>pearance e'"' The Defense Ministry re M-..a·y in Anaheim. • the 14-hour battle Friday for to confirm the 1 .. -..11 .... report. Y' ..... e strategic settlements on F.ast Two British f;;: bad been Carter described bia book, alkland island. advancing on Stanley, Royal ;.Keepina Faith: Memoin of a • Darwin and Goose Green were Marinea and paratroopera rea1dint,'' aa a "highly le captu red by B rH is h .......-..... estward b helico ter J)e1"11C)nal" record which forced = .. .., .. uoe w Y P him to relive --of the -troopers. British lames in the from the San Carloa beechhead, ~ ·---~ .ghting were put at 17 killed and and another ~ratroop force C momenta of hia White 3f wounded. coming from the aoutb after ~ yMl"I. ~Press Association also reported capturing the Goose Green In a speech before the tbout attribution that the a irstrip and 1,400 Argentine. ~ ~~~= tiah landed their backup force priaonen. .lollowed, Carter aaki the Camp • · -t>avid peace agreement, the Pl ? ta1dna of 52 American hostages ane crazy. !h~earc!:~~: some of the moa\ important Girlfriend 'buzzing; probed ~~~~~·one time during the Camp David talka he feared for the .Uety of the late Egyptian PrRldent Anwar Sadat at the hands of hia own F.gyptian delegaUon. 1 Officials at Marine Corpe Alr ~talion, El Toro, are ~vestigating charges one of their Pilots "buZ?.ed" his girlfriend's house 'in Alpine Monday, i,rrifying local residents in his A4-Skyhawk jet. A spokesman for the air station said today the alleged low-level antics of an El Toro Marine pilot '!is under investigation." t Angry residentS in Alpine aaid the A-4 Skybawk attack Jet repeatedly buzzed the mountain town east of El Cajon Monday~ 9CfDetimes flying below the Jeve1 ~houaes. ,• Na~ offldais denied \be pilot was one of tbein, and p1rined the blame on a Marine pilot on a supl)08edly '"routine flight" out of Q Toro .. A Navy apokeeman laid the oiJot, W'ho WU no\ identified. "wu juat aafing hello" to a. girlfriend 1n the Alpine area. -But the Jet'• low ~ on a quiet Memorial Day frilhtened many people, accordina to a florist who witne.ed the antp. "We thought it W• IP.ng to take the roof off. One of 11\Y custamen hit the floor, and the other two ducked," laid Johanna Zlmmerman. Carter refuaed to elaborate on what type of threat to Sadat he perceived, saying that it la detailed in his book. But he said he comldered it lerioua enough that he summoned the Secftt Service and then-National Security Adviser Zblgniew Brzezln1ki to his cabin and ordered that eecurity around Sadat's cabin be increased without the F.optian praidetlt's knowledge. . Carter aaid worries about Sunlly and breezy Cotistal Lightning atruclc aever•I ptltroieum .. ..,.. .. In ol wall ,_ Aahl9y In Wlll.*IOtOI\ County, mcplodlnQ an empty one• · and Igniting I btlaf ftr9 In • flll tank, 1utllor1t1 .. Hid. Tllr" ~ of '91 ftl In an hour • B•m•ftt, teavlng a Inell•• of Sunny and breezy att ... noon ltAlndlng ..W. • tod9y. Hlgllt 87 to 72. F* tonight __ .._ _____ _ =s== California ea 1o a w~ to tw1ny •nd wetmer ett9fnoon. TM N9'loNI W.... a.vloa HlaN w---es to 74. predict• contlnu•d morning !l•••ll•r•, from Point ...,_tiwloultlam~ Conception to t~ M••lo•n co••t•I tr••• W•dneaday, border and out eo "*-= ..,... follow.cl by • aunny, l>reuy tnft acMiory In ou\tr ..... wllll ~--~MNoli-iiel-.. ~ :.'°.;:::"to-:r~'°J: tonight tor w.et to northeat =::u~~ e to Moot -Inner ..,. wind• guatlng to 40 .mpll In Wllllll1Y a to ta llnOla. h:l.-111 mountain• and o•n.,auno ,f'Oftta: Cdd.. Wenn W. ~.... Stationlty •• 0111 afternoon nortllw .. t of N!'(fltonM In dMetta. Mnd9 -------------------l'Cewport BHcll and lutlno "'°'*' c1n*111t1 Wedll....,,. llwougll ttlla ,_q. Wlndl _,... ...... ~ tOlll 70 to ~ 8C crf NIWpDrt 11 to 20 tu-. Wt n Iii Loa ~ ~ • ChartMn WV llftamOori. Wind -of 3 to 5 9nd 74 • .,..._,from 58 w • a.ttl9 NC ""-Swlll ~ 2 to a.,.. In ""°"'**"' ~ .,. mid ~ ~. V-1able ~ todaY 70a .nd loW IOlln IMl'ilgft.... <:Nc9go tllrougll Wedneaday bul with and from N to ti In loW ci..ta. C1nc1niiwt1 N'"Y llftemoolia.. A 1m•ll·crafl wernlna la ClaY*ld .. U.S. 1ummary enadM tonlghl tor bc*er8 hm Clrnbla IC ..-Ottrt-eonoepUon 9.0.Vt~CC.....,.. Newpor\-B••cll, wll•r• Det-A Wll WIM.,IOi ltl#llt WI!* oould Ollit 0erton. to sa knqla and llllt1lp up ... to Oarl\W Moot -tan11ar ""' eo rn111 0ea ~ out. Delfotl By Hrly Wedn .. ~. wtnda °'*"*' "'°'*' clmlflllfl to 10 to· 11 tcnol9 a ,._, trom CM W19t wttll $-to II-toot Farto --=-'Fell HettflWd ·Temperatures :., =:-a ... ...... ~Qty LmV..-Ullll"odl ...,... l.tMolll =.: .. 84 .. • 158 71 13 13 .15 .14 .14 .14 .OI ~ ii 56 74 :: eo S1 158 oftMG~ 71 .., Aed Bluff 75 56 ~aty 81 56 "'"° 74 S5 ~ 70 4] ~ -.. 50 71 ea ""~ '157 ea aant...-. . .. ~ .... 17 71 llO Thar'rnel ... UklM .. ..,.ow t!I ll'ge-=. LIM~ LOftl"*" MoMMI Mt. Wlaorl ~ ..... ont-10 Palm ....... ,...... ..... ,. .. Sadat'• safety while IDlkle Camp impotence amona the Anwric:an • "Juat .. probable cau1e to David cauaed him the only people and in IQ)' heart" beau• beU...Ve that a 1&olen lawnmower work-related aleeplela nlibt of of the m.btlity to re10lve lt. JU may ~ found In• &ara&e will not hia' presidency. aaJd he received advice tan8in8 tupport a warrant to search an "When I aaw President Sadat from "1ettln1 down on my upstain bedroom, probable cause emerae from b1a cabln for bia kneel" to drol>Pina an atomk &o belleve that undocumented walk the next mominC I wu bomb on Tebrail-in 1Ua eUorta to aliens are belna transported in a relieved, apd I felt fbolilh aboUt r.olve the c:rl*. v a n w I 11 n o t J u • t I t y a n my precautlona aeveral daya unwarranted search of a later. But in view of what Carter'• book 0f.:tnt with a aultc.afe," Stevena said. happened to blm (Sadat wu ::n~~ i:, releue~ :,! But today'a ruling could go far ....mated tq Cairo lMt yeuo) --. in clarifytns the 1eope of the maybe it wam't ao foollah," =wuthetUbjectofhectlc police po~er to search c.arter akl. Uma. he aaid. automobllet arid packages within On nuclear arms reduction, them -a aource of Supreme Carter recalled Camp David• Carter a aid be ha• been Court conaterna ti on and an attempt ••to meab two nf··-'-in atarUlngly different men" _ diacouraged by what be co UDIUn recent yea.rs. Sadat and Prime Mlniiter perceived aa the Reagan Admlillstrat1on's indifference to Men.chem Begin. the anm control proce91. Recent He called Siidat .. the ~test ~ronouncementa by President man l'v ~ ever met ' and Reagan u he prepares &o visit characterized Begin as Europe have been mor e intransigent. He uld the two reassuring, however, Carter said. beads of ltate did not talk to each other about the accord for the last 10 of the 13 days they were there.· 911 line not for kidding Two Irvine girls probably · didn't get the answer they were looking for when they called the 911 emergency line. - The taking of the hostaaea began what Carter called ''the wont year of my life" and led to wba't be termed the worat moment of his preaidency - when be wu infonned that the American ml11ion to rescue the~ had failed. 'rile growing movement for a nuclear weapona free7.e in th.la country can be "nothing but healthy" and echoes sentiments widely held in Europe, Carter said. The girls, age 12 and 13, asked • if this was .America. t.:.arteJ' laid the bOltage epilode le!t l'a di1gu1tlng feeling of .. He added that his book reveals for the first time propoaala for anna reduction that he made to Soviet President L eonid Brezhnev 1n June, 1979. He said thoee proposals prove that the United States baa been willing to take the lead in anns reduction. 1 i r~ ' -~ u I rvil\e Police Sgt. R o n Flathers, who answered their call Friday, told them it wasn't, "not on the 911 line, anyway." The sergeant said he went to the girls' h ome whe re h e "chewed them out" and found them to be "extremely ~logetic." r • ---. 'I . IJ n. A1111daetd Prn1 . In a JetW to the W..t o.nmn .newt ~ J'RANKJ'URT. Weit Germany -Bomba DPA. the ~~Cella clalmed ra~ty rt~ three U.S. Army offlcera' clubland f01t the ~ • 0 we Will not wait W\Ul UW °''U.S. ArmY corpe before dawn Reapn oom-. Ila a ude to a hopetull~ today in what a lefUat terrorlat ~P claimed wu a eventful and unforpttable reoeptton. we a 0 pNluct." to Pi'9idlnt Re.can 1 vlllt next week. eome of the Mita of the U.S. mWW'y" In Welt No CMUaltiel WeN re~ in \hf b1aN. · Germl.ny. Polish Solidariiy-· plans strike WABSAW. Poland -Solldartty lMden ay they're plannin& n.rneral atrlke in Wanaw, Wroclaw and the 8 •n coal mlnel becawie lewr proteata have failed to force the martial-law aovemment to "bllck off trom repnmlon." Fucltive leaders of the l\apended union gave no lndieaUon of when they miabt call the atrike. n,ey l&kl In a J.eef1ei that wOC'ken in ........i Jlrie Wanaw factot1ea had Mked them to orpnble a general strike. They Wd they were al8o plannlna to extend the ltrtke to Wroclaw, a major l,nd\lltrial center ·in aouthweat Poland, and the SUealan coal m1nea, whlCh produce the country'a chief export. .. Two men rescued from vessel SANTA BARBA.RA -A U.S. Cout Guard helicopter plucked two men from their 38-foot fiah1na veaael, the Margret H. which drifted onto rocka at Santa Rau IS1and aft« •ita anchor line broke . . Petty Officer lst C1ua Ron Roberta aaid the two San Pedro residents, Roy Kat.er, ~. and Dan Hendrika, 19, were in good oOndition when reecued about 1:20 a.m. today. - The Marp-et H remained on the rocb. Roberta said, and Kailler predicted bia $2~.ooo veaae1 would be a total km. Canal backers attack CODlIDercials LOS ANGELE'S -Backers of the June 8 ballot proposition that would auihoriz.e construction of the Peripheral Canal atiacked television advertl8ementa which contend taxpayera would foot the bill and that the canal would divert 70 percent of the Sacramento River flow.· The media director of the pro-canal Citizeba for Water group, Leo McElroy, aaid he called ~ oewa Pet lion.ess chews PERRIS -A 33-year-o)d woman W.. in ltable condition today in Riverside General Hcwpttal after a 600-POUnd pet 11,PDem bit ott one of her arim. -Eileen Pl&sterriak'a.rtgbt arm w• cbewecl oil at the ahQuldeJ' .. she put it into the 1arp cbaln-link • conference oo Memorial Day -wbep lt was usu.red acme media coverage -to counter recent polla predicting defeat for Propoeition 9, which outlines the propoeal. " Ronald B. Roble, direc.tor of the atate Department of Water Resources, lnalated the ''rilodest'' project wouldn't depend on·tax revenue. off wo111an's arllJ cace where the cat waa kept,' a 1heriff'1 •pQkeswoman Mid. Bea1dee the lioaem, Mra. Pasternak owna a benp1 uaer. ita cub and a ooupr . . . N.ixon; Reagan will win in '84 WASHINGTON -Fonner President Nixon aaya Ben. Edward M. Kennedy t. a practical man who will "do what is neceiuryi' -f.o aeek the pn9idency in 1984, whether lt be lollng weight oc changing hil ideas. in any event, the Muaachuaena Democrat will km to President Reapn, who will decide to seek a · ~ term. Nlxm l8ld in an interview on the~ Evening Newa broadcast Monday night. Further excerpta were ld)eduled to be aired on the CBS Morning News tbJa week. Fonner Vice Prelident Walt.er F. Mondale ' doesn't ·even ~ave a chance of winning the I Democratic nominatiqn. Nixon aays. "No way. He'a just a warmed-over Carter." Budget ·deadlock hinders w'!rkload WASHINGTON -The ~ in the Houae which led the HOU8e to reject more than half a over a 1983 ~t blueprint tM>ldina up work on do7.el1 buctael ·Plans Jut week and aend the 1-ue legialation neceaaary to curb the flow of back to the Houae Budaet Committee. 1overnment 1ed ink -action ihe Reagan The House resuinea work Wednaday. Despite edmtnlltratlon and ~ leaden agree la indkationa late 1ut week that budget wrltera would vital to the nation'• eccaolDlc health. try to regroup aa early aa today; the Hou.e Budaet But • eon,re,. returned from ita MetDor1al Canmlttee bad no plans to meet until later in the Day recem. the ~ were not good far a quick week for pft)Jminary work on draftlnc a new dution to the poll and phOoaOphica1 divillona ~ plan. • . . ,. . ,, Revenge hinted in shooting death . . . ' ... LA.PORTE, Ind. -An intruder who cri1.ically on a pcmtbJe motive ln &.he ~wn abootingl • wounded Mayor Aloyllia J. Rumely and killed hla MondAy, but POSted • l\Wd ou1ldde Rumely'a room wife in a abooting at their home may have been while oo.ptal wuri= acceened vlllton. wkinc revenge, the Indianapolis Star reported RUU:~l, WM and h1a wife, Franc., today. 69, WM after.aomecne. pried open• dinlnl Police refmed, however, to cm>ment offid•lly room window in the rear of their ~ ~· Jl::'!·~~ ~:=a .. ..._.~ 'Tom MurpHne ... I 4 slot players I -hit big jackpots · . - LAS VIXlAS, N ..... -Four . alot mech1ne plal:: eollect.ed1 tt.W,271lna12-boutrealt' , . at fbur LM Vee-boCe11: ..... Oranoe Ooelt DAILY PILOT/Tue.day. June 1. 1Na ahead Valley cop i~jure~l in crash recovers :• .. A J'ountaln Villey police officer who waa critically lnJur,d in a traffic mlahap J'riday, WU aaid to be lmPIPVinl today, thou1h he 1till face I 9ddltional surpry. n.iptu.red kidney and the bn>keD 1iie uid the California Hitbway Patrol and Fountain Valley police are oontinutnc their probe of the aoddent. RELEASED -l\01e Kennedy hM been reJeued &am St John'• Hmpital in Palm Beach, Fla., after underao'nl a 1erlea of tem. · Ttie mother of Sen. Edward Kennedy ii 91 yean old. Officer Keith Levin, 30, a four-year member of the department, waa reported in Hrioua condition at J'ountain Valley Community Hospital with in~ injuriee and a broken right tea. .. Fountain Valley pollce officer Kevin Arnold uid Levin WU awake and alert Monday. He Aid Levln underwent two operationa' OVJ!r the weekend and facea ad_ditional surgery for repair of a Arnold aaid' poltce ar• appeal.tna for blood donadolll to help repl.ce the unlta u.ed by the injured offlcer. Blood donation appotntmenta can be made by caWna the Red er,. at 83~5381. He aid reaklenta can donate Wedneeday in Levin'• rwne at • Red Croaa blood drive alated from 1:1~ to 6 p.m. at the Church of Jesua Cbrlat of Latter-day Sainta, 17500 Bushard St., Fountain Valley. CELEBRATES OUR 10TH BIRTHDAY Join our weeklong party June 1st thru 5th each night from 5 p.m. tlll closing. • Rolled back prices on cocktails • Seafood bar speclals • Oyster shooten 2 s• ~ • CompHmentary champagne and cake wtth dinner 10 Years On The Bay In Newport 2735 w. Coast Hwy. 642-1431 . Newport Beach ·A double tBx break for Californians o:iily~ No U.S. income taxes. No state income taxes. ---Federa1 taxis. State taxes. The TAx:FREE more you make, the more they take. But, now you can keep it all. .Payable monthly When you invest in the California Series of the Municipal Investment Tru.St Fund, you keep everything you earn. Nobody takes a penny of it. Not the State. Not the IRS. It's completely ... tax-free•. And the current yields are attractive. 11 .43% ..--and that's after all .sales charges and expenses. And there's no management fee. We think that you '11 agree that the California Series. of the Municipal _ lnv~enJ Trust Fund scores high on all counts.· ~ .. · . AH of the municipal bonds in the fund are rated in the category A or ·better by Standard & Poor's or Moody's. Becuase it's a fixed portfolioyou'll know ezactly where: your money is invested. And, because it's diversified, your risk is reduced. Y.ou may redeem or'"$ell your units al any time. without charge or interest petialty at the then prevailing market price. H you 're a Ca.lifornian in a high tax braclcet, double tax-free. inQ.Ql1Je..may give you i lot more apendable income. Write· today for a Prospectus. It's free and without oblisation. Just call or mail the coupon. '7»,..-•--'-----... __ -"" ..-"""".,.,.., .....,,,... ,. _ .......,. .. --"""" ..,.. ,,.,,. ,.. • "' "'r n, l llQ. ...._ .... _,. .t .J.flt IJff .. 11,,..--' -ti1 II.II Ir • """' ,, ,,,,..,.. ,.. ..... ... ._ .... _.. ..... ~ ........... ,, ..... ..,..,"' ........... "' ........... .,. ~ a,..o1-.,...._.., .. ....,,_ .. ,.._ .. ......... __ , ··~---1r.-r1• ...........-.......................... .... ........... _ .,_....,....,......_ .. ..._... .... ,,.._ .,.........,.......,. ___ ....... ..., ' . • . . . ' . . • • • 1~ ~~~'2."a:m DIAR· R&ADJ:RS: U you ~ w..- ln callfomla du.rtna 1970 and have not flltd for a refund of tM-DtMbWty INUruw:. (DI) contribuUona you med• that yeer, \h4l ltate Employment O.wlo~nt O.p1111nent (llDD) whfch admlnili.tw th• DI p~. W'P' you to file now. YQW' re(und may be u ht&h -. t91. EDD •1ttlmated ln 19V9 that .approximately er1ht million people would be elJilbl8 to clalm the CMdJt and the payout would amount of $628.D million. TO date approximately e.o ml.Won people have applied fOl' and received DJ refunda totallna '40S mutton. EDD \ex pee~ to receive another 500,000 claimt by the final fllJ.na date of April U, 1984 and pey out an acfditional $24.5 rnllllon. Reuona why people have hot filed for a refund appear to fall into two cateaoris 80me workel"I have moved from the ltate and are UJ\4Ware ~ the re(und; and 10me view the refund aa a minor aum (EDD'a original estlmata show that almost two million people are entitled to $10 or 1-). DI la totally financed by California workel"I and all people who wire a part of the atate'a DI program in 1979 are eligible for the refund. To get the fund you need to either Jile a Form MOX, Amended California State Income T)lx return for 1979, or write a letter to the state Franchise Tax Board requesting the refund. The letter must include: name, addre111, social security number, and the amount cla.lmed. In the years immediately prloi: to 1979, contributions to the DI fund exceeded the benefit& paid. To return the exce91 money, legislation (AB 298 -Al.later McAliater) puled in 1979 provided for a refund of 80 percent of all contributions paid into the fund that year. In 1979, California wage earners contributed 1 percent of the first $11,400 in wages to support the DI program which peya weekly benefits when workers are off the job because of aicknea or injury. The maximum individual contribution was $114. Therefore, the maximum refund l.s $91 (80 percent of the maximum contribution). -Watch pets when traveling DEAR READERS: Warm weather Chinese ·:rap cube PEKING (AP) -Rubik's Cube, the co)Qrful brain-teaser that has started to captivate the Chi- nese, l.s being criticized by a.Peking newspaper aa a dangero\,1.1 pastime that can lead to divorce, abnor- =ha vior, high blood prenure and achin1 . "The Mag~~ Cube ponlbly la beneficial to sharpening lnteWgmoe, but don't fcqet that lta side effects might bring danger," the Peldq Ewn1na News said, using the puzzle'• Chlneee name. Last November, the Chinne prea reported people were standing in line to buy the cube in Shaft&h.ai, and that dty already had held its first ~Cube contest although the toy hit the mar~ only a few months earlier. travellnl wtth ,._~ oen .omtUmll IMd to tnpiy.'... ~~ t"9 National AutGrnob&» QUb. Every lNlnmS DIWI rMdia ~ '9ll Of anlmalt d~'~ .. fl'CD heat.. ot 11.'ddtnta ;1(11\91d by • Jome pet that lntemred wt ~':-..,. dttvftt, 'n.t nMCDill • ewnta could be tid bY per p1aMina and l>reparat on or by C:v1n1 your fOW'·~ trt.nd at a boUd1ftl Unftill. If an hOMlt aplftllU of 10U. your pet art<l the travel planll lndScetf the Uip coWd be accompl11hed taf•l)'. NAC pr0Vtde1 tht follow1n1 U))a to mak• the Journey an enjoyable one for all concerned: -Make ctrta1n the an1pW 11 1ft\ aood heelth before leavlna home and pi expert advice bun your wtertnartan lf it'• necnrr~ to tranqu111ze your pet for the trip. Check wt the lodO!a ~donl aioni the way to Me lf they accept animala. · -On the road, take alon1 familiar articles for your pet such aa beddlna. food and water dlahea and favorite toy1. Carry Identification tap, 1nnoculat1on certlf,lcates and current l.lcenle u well u a recent picture of the animal in cue your pet ii lolt. -Animals require more oxy1en than hutnana, especially in wann weather, 10 It's vital to proYide them with· fresh air and good ventilation. Never leave a dos or cat (or child) in a clOled car~ When lt II 'IA degrees outside, the temperature in the car can exceed -120 decrees in just 30 minutes, even with the windows open. . -A prime factor in traveling with peta should be safety. U the an1mal la a poor , traveler, It could be dan,proua for both driver and pet. A properly l1zed cage wW provide peace of mind to the driver and pueengel"I, aa well u a private and safe haven for the anlmal. -Try to eatabllah a regular feed.ing and exerd8e routine while traveling. Be cautioua when other clop or call are around u animals react differently in etrange IWTOWldinp. • Got • probl~ write to Pat Roro-. '9 '] wlu. P•t will cut red tape, ptlln1 the illatWW«t and action you need to IJO]ve ln- equldes In ~vemmtmt and busf...._ Mall you~ que•Clom to P•t Horowitz, At Your Servlct!, ~ eo..t DaJly Pilot, P.O. Bbx 1660, Cost.a 1DM8. CA. j~626. A.a many letten u poalble will be &111· wend, but phoned h.qulries or Jett.en not Including the t'Nder'• full tuine, addrea and bu.lne. hours' phoM nwnl»r cannot be CCllUldered. CONVERT -Pvt. Vladimir Taapp, a one-time 1er1eant ln the RUlllan Army, hu lfAduat.ed from bu1c traintna in the U.S. Marine Corpe in San Dleao. High-rise talk set for Mesa Alan D. Levy, exec-. utlve vice prealdent tnd director of Tilhman West Management Corporation, wW speak to the Inat.itute~of Real Estate Mana1ement on June 9 at the South Coatt' Plaza Hotel In Colta Meta. Levy'1 topic wUl be market• for hl1h-rl1e office development, leel1ng and management. . Beauty awards dinner slated The landscape beautification awards ceremonies of the California Landscape Contracton Amociatbl, Long Beach-Orange County chapter, wW be held June 25 at the Dhneyland Hotel, An a·h elm . ·For information, call 633-7541. Rev~mping of _state's educatio~ ·plan dU'e IJ TBOMAI ELIA.I rewer than 10 percent of the 1£udent1 at CaUfomla'1 community ool1epl move on to the univtl"llU.. . Clllflllll fllll At the 1arM time, the 19-campua 1tate unlvenlty 1y1tem ha1 been California'• 107 community colleael forced to tSahten adm.llllon atandarda ... a ailftlficant percen...,. of the and ra.111 tee., two movee that wW coul'Mt do not fulflll the orltlnal ll'MtlY reduce publJc acce11 to h.l&her purpo1e9 of the achooll. In 1pite of iducation. thil, Gov. Brown hal propoeed a t99 Thele realit:Set eome u re.pon1e1 to million lncreue ln hll fl.81 btWon popular demaridl. PropoelUon 13 and ~~et for community colleaea ln the 1tata'• ftnanda1 crunch are behind 1982-83." the new adml.llton requlrementl and Meet of the adult education clulel, fff lncre1N1. And the chance in the chamber noted, are tuitlon·fl'ft. community co~ roles ii a rault of Even the itate11 Pottaecondary an intenae need for vocational Education Cornm1-lon recently bepn education and continuing education wonderfna lf they should be. · for adultl. The same IOl't of queation la belnc The c'han1ea •UlfHt that a asked about the state univenitles, revamptna of California• 20-year-old where fee. wW jump to Jbout $320 hfPer1educat1on muter plan may be next year, even th---•""" there ii l1ill 1ona overdue. · · "'"6-'• Yor the new realities demonlU-ate no tu.ltlon. how meanlngleaa the plan baa "To contlnue our current levell of become. In fact, the blueprint la •rvice without flnancial..charges for the student.a, we must llmlt accem to already bein1 chan1ed, but on an the yniverllty," says Donald Gerth. informal, plecelneal bula with no real president of Cal State Dominguez coordination between the varloua Hilla. "Then we tac~ another educational elements. question: 18 1t better to limit acclell to The idea behind the plan wu for the university or allow unlimited educators at various types of public aooe11 but charae tuition for itr• coUeses to fill apecific needa with a little or no duplication. Gerth believes it'a time to rethink Community colleges were to the entire financing of Calllomia'a provide vocational ·stUCiiel and the co~egea. · equivalent of the first two years of Pt!rpetual growth wu uswned in college, glving equal attention to both the 1960s,". he aaya. "But growth (a jobs. The state Uhiversity syalem not inevitable or 4;,1en desirable every would educate most prospective place at all times. eehoolteachen and provide tuition. Even lf the higher education master -free education to the majority of · plan is not fonnally rewritten, these California h1ah achool graduates. The broad policy questions must be Unlvenity of c.alifonUa. meanwhile, anawered. . would educate the cream of the crop, The dect.iona are being made on an with blghly-selectlve admlllinna. ad hoc bull by college administrators, Adult education wu a minor factor without full public diacu8sion. Their ln that plan. But now, with the c)lolces are reflected In course average student .,e ranging from 25 offerings, budgets and new adm!Mion to 28, adult education is a vital part of standards. the ayatem. It allO draws the ire of But the impact of thoee decisions on akeptic:s who often oppose budget hundreds of thouaanda of Californians 1ncreues for the coUeses. -taxpayers, students, parents and "Canoein1 1 and 2, Microwave employers -h 10 great that Holiday Cooking, Companion Pet something more than today's Care," morta an "Aler{' from the piecemeal approach clearly ta needed. California Chamber of Commerce. "These are some of the many . EJi88 la a columnist baSed in Santa tax-supported courses offered in Monie.a. • • .. I I • Ban kins ~erger backed . ~lpha ·sales record level Alpha MlcrGlystem1 oJ. IMnt bu ~ NtlOl'd ia1el and eem.t.np for the ftmal y..,-lthd9d hbnaary. The eam1np aam. were acNeYed delplte a 102 percent lncreaH ln r•earch and d•velopment expendlturee. · Net lnoome of '1,520,745 for the year ref1ect.ed a 28 percent Improvement over fl8cal 1981. 'Net t.nciome. per 1hare, baaed on 8& percent more 1hare1 outstandJna, wu &4 centa compared wtth 67 cen'8 the Rrevioue year. Sales rOM 22 percent to .28.396,343. Wespac buys complex We.spec lnvestont 'Nust of Tustin hal purchued C-ountry Club Estates, a recently completed apartment complex in the c.ountey Club diltrict of ~. Ariz. Purchue price WU $6,595,000. The complex comiat& of 14 buJ.ldJnes with 200 units. ·NB ad firm honored • Lenac, Warford, Stone Advertising & Public Relations of Newport Beach won 15 awards at the Oranae County Advertiaing Federation Oet'elDOllies. llichard Holmes Advertialnl & Destan. had 12 awarda; Relaer Williama de Young, el&Jlt; Mealer & F.merson, five; and three each for Janaen Aaaodates · • and'BallO & Aaociates. Sporting goods store due ... Sportmart, an Illinois 1portln8 goods retailer, plans too~ its first Southern Callfomia ~July 9, at 7433 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. · The ~5.000-equare foot outlet la to be the first in a leries of stores in the region. AirCal offers $75 discount AirCal customen flying between 11eattle and the San Frandaoo Bay Area in June are being oUered a $75 unrestricted dDcount on roundtrip airfare. "AirCal la marking its one-year anniversary of Seattle let'ViCle June 1 and the $75 uvinp I.a an anniver1ary gift to c u1tomer1 , vice president-marketing and bu.lneu planning, IJlld today. ·The roundtrip between Seattle and the Bay Area for $165 compares to the regular roundtrip full fare at $240. .. Gish sells 845 stock units Glab BlomedJcal Inc. ot Santa Ana. manufacturer of diapouble mecUcal producta, reported today a public offertni of 845 unita hu been completed at a price of $1,999 per unit throuah underwriters co-managed by Paulaon lnwstment CC>. and Black & Co. Inc., both of Portland. Each unit con1i•t• of a $1,000 15 percent convertible aubordinated debenture due 1989, 333 ~of common stock and warrants for the purcbue 01 333 mares of common. Proceeds to the company from the sale of units will be u9ed to pay trade accounts payable and other indebt~neu, to purcha1e capital equipment, to firtaDa' .Product development and to ~ working captal. • Lear expands market The da~roducta divt.ion of Lear Siegler, Inc., AnilielJn, reports If' Ci expanarng.~-uuermmOJl:al market into South America. Computer firm relocates City Computer Corporation announced the relo- cation of corporate headquart.en to 1571 South Sun-ldat, Amhelm. f) G~!d,metals quotation8 B1 ne AHoclated Preti SeJected world gold prices today: Lolldoa: mornin& fixing: $319.00. off $6.25. Lo•.: afternoon~ $318.7&, off $6.50. PUii: afternoon : $320.97, off $4.79.· Praaklvt: $321.01, $6.96. Zutda: Late fixing: $317 .00, off $7.00 bld; $320.00 ' aaked. . llalldy 6 Barman: only daily quote $318.70, off '6.50. ~elbrd: only '!:!!t quote $318.761 off ·'6.50. Ellielbnl: only y quote fabricated $334.65. oU '6.&a . r . . . . . . . . ._ . . -.-. \f!j ·-. ' IOUAL llOUtM O""OltTUIUT~ I Prize W"t Bay btyfront. SUpt t« 2 boeta, mnodeled a bdrm. a beth •uoo,ooo. . Ocean & ,teu:v~vtewS:Miiin. ~.•bdrm. a blth, STOO aq.h: .l,111.000. OMn.trwtt. ......... .':1 TNa llOludtd a ., I 1 ... Oondol o" the ooHn •let• o Co11t H~. 11 perfect for the aeoond half of your llte. Ona atory with • 'paaaaful .. of ttM ....... ~-llltlng or Marllyn 11tou1Htot. Piime 1.Jcfo Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 6~ bath. •tao.ooo. Lae L.R .. 2 ~t .Upa tU00.000. IJ ... IOO~•e-eo1":,..jl,~ fWllton 17 Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath+ latie nic. rm. bKm ceW.np. fumlahed, patJoL $420,000. ------- Ulll llLI llYAllY ~~emlly ...a&ooh vifW from 8 bdrm, 5 bath playroom. rm. The perfect plll'I for dark nn. den, Boat allp. tl.350,000. laroa or tmaJI famlly, --------• young 0t not eo youno. OU>f LAOUHA CHARM llYSllE COYE Loa mdter aulte oo U~qua 2 lldrm floor ground floor IMuC PoOf plan, 1 bath, llv rm w/ Spec1aCW&r bayfront view 2 br, 2 be up; 2 br, and ~ ~'-= ,beamed c.lllno-. hard· 2 ba dn. 2 boat alipa tl ,900,000. Beat IMly In EMs, • wood ftoof'I I oozy loa OllUUIUO CAYS ••••••• ,,. Advertisers should , ... Liii : check their ad1 3 bdrma, Z't\ baths condo near pool. •145,000. = dally and report : errors -lmmedlately. The 5 DAILY PILOT -a11umes llablllty : tor the flrat BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR . J .l 1 ti , Y' '" o, , . •, e r,:" t. · 1i 1 ::: lncorr~t Insertion ... • m 1111111 : only. BMutttu1 -.. atOtY 2 !: bdrm "N9wport "4eigMa" -condot Great central :: EUT OllTA 1111 locatlon. MlnutH to -•hopping, bHchaa I -Arc:Htact'• ltoma. ,,......... community actlvltlHI -entry co..irtyard w/apa. Value priced at S125, ~ In L.A., F.A. 000. c.11 now(' 646-f171 Open ftr plen Ideal for _ antertalolno. Spaclowl .... MBR aulta. 1225,000. ieu Binnie Dhcon'a llttlng. : 1a~e100 --GEORG( EL K IN S C G E 0iH .• E Ell'C 'NS CO 6-•I I c:::. " -"t-' • 0 ' '• I I THE REA L ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATERS . -' c::::.' I I ' --t-'·Jl' •'•'· •', TR,\DI T 10\,\l RL\l T\ NEWPORT HEIGHTS FIXERI ~ a.dee .... ,.,. with pool a epe.·Thla a bed+ d•11 •a-. ................... , ......... .. ..,... ........ liiii .. ,, ..... @ 11\4...,... ....... aw WATERFRONT HOMES.IN( tU:\I.~"' ~' t(,,,..." .... 1,. ~"' ... -~~ .. :? «Mt V. 1:....1 ll•v lh M.,..,.. A« '"''""1 ~h . ~ .. hi.ind 831·1400 '7).6,.. ':z':'-sca\t4llA------..... "' ""' .. """""'-----.~ ......... ... ..., ••"al_.,,_. .......................... Vacaot. SH anytime. ~ trplo. e111,500 1116.000. ~ ........ ,. Ml88ION REALTY 4M-0711 \f .II I 11'/'1." ------~ f • . ... , .... • Ir home •• , .. J.000. Vlo JMhlnekl, •okar 712-1111 14M2et Walll to bc:h, 1Br, 111. new epta, no patt. '650 mo. 115·2010 b1wn 5PM-IPM I 0 ~.~ ••• !~ff Furn, Laguna a..c:t1 tu· . • xury atucffo, '"' SataMlt'e TV, --. romct ~ phonH. S 115/w .. k. ·•81-2221. ." ~ t. I DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS w ~ no-tonger-needed Items for cash: If It doeen't Hfl, we'H run It another S daye FREE. One Item l>'f' ad, ~ust be priced. ·Sony, no real lltate or comtnercial ad1. can today ror tun detaitt. • ....... ....., . PARK HIWPORT APARTMIHT8 l!!/RI. •••••••••••••• ,..,.. •--------"°°' FIA!PROOflNG •••••••A••o•••-..••' Mfa. guw. of chelnloel. Moet eubjecta, 1<-14 00 IT NOW ,,.. tilt Dey~ S10Wt! OeYll PelntlnO 147-61H Mr. Morgln, 145-5171 RePAIM'25 to ,,.5 rtlMMI Cltalar. ,,..~ C.at ~ ...................... . WALT 710.2125 • ·~::::::~ MuNr RDD""9 .. typa ~ l.td. Ml-ea&3 ... -NCCMr~ ~ MomNy Diloount Uc. #411t0t. ~ •RESU>ElfT1AL* ·~\19 1 stY '30: A\19 2 lty '4&· q,rtt 987-1381 ~ ... ~ ..•.••.... MOalLI tEAVICE ~--­NB/CM Oiftt'I, 142.l9562 You dOft'f iWd • QI.WI to Are YGU oWiNno • mtNe'1 "4r•w fut" wMn you ~ ad1 Wiii ~t oliloe an ad In the Diiiy YGU In the right dlteatlon Plot WantAdlt Cell now to find tti• home yeu I N2.ae11. need. '42-1871 OLLAR& ~~· Olahlt1utoralllp1 for nation•! flrand micro- f J FOlll> ADS ARE FREE Cal: 10·1111 , ............... No 1111. LOST SAT 5/22. "-ward. &44·2064 r.~ ....... P..ff Linda & Vicki's PllTI IHIU lllMfl/Ulllll oUl'fAL.l . 24 HRS. 111-0201 ' -ally Pilat ·· .. · ....... ········ .. ; Part time perton to deliver Oalty Piiot auto route In Newport 8Nch 7 days per week, about 2'A hrt. per day, M-F; 2:30 PM. Sat, Sun; 5 AM. Helpful but not necespry to llve In Co1ta Meaa. Earning• $400.00 per month and up. Call: Dally Piiot, 642'4321, aak for Bruce or Foster. Equal Opportunity Employer Beach WIMY USED J;ARS & TRUCKS COME" IN OR CALL FOR naanusu&. Connlw.o.ullo ~ 18211 BEACH BLVD. HUN'TlNGTON BEACH 141.-1, Ml4111 Top Dolar Paid For Your Clf1 -"'•••'"• Lll11ll..._, 2e28 Harb« Blvd. eo.ta MeN 540-M30 Prwnlum prloee pllld fOf eny UMd cw (foreign Of domMtlc) In good condition. a.. Ue Flrltl Hi i! ... -. ~mi~m·l!.fr ... .. .. , .... ,.....leMo9-.....-0 '*' Hertior .... U0 N. lelofl .....0. Gardin Gr0Ye 111 .. 1111 I 1 I 1 1 • I 1 rt I t t • tu!~~.!.~-71•=··· llaupkt 11ereo, lo ml. 'IO PcwtOtte t24 Turbo & 113.100. De 548-01&51 'IO PortcN ta4. 1o4h .,_ 5S2·110t3 loaded. Take ovet" IN P1rt1 & Service Open Ati Dey Saturd1y 301 W. Wlm« Ave. (1 blk. -1 ~Main) 540-7430 • #1 D£ALER.iN U.S:A. · ~ ..,.......,.,_,..(jtjllt -11.-oo '""'""°-•• "10MD WHOAU UIU.111 """ 19ee Hllt>of Blvd. COSTA MESA 141-llOI 141-Mll Aatlt UNI ••••• 1 ................ . •aid Hll ...•..••..•..•.••..... IEE II lor the i.tgeet Ind beet 11tectlon of new 1nd ueed BulcU tn Orange .todavt CONNHl :1-'EVP(!L!' ~·b I: ;')1', .. . t u1d. hil worda echolnl OYW a• 'todij'• 01-low cMmoNintion ot yellow pepal n.p, . "th• lattnurrah of th• John PW! !a the tirid pope to bell·rallln." 'vtalt predomlt.anUy Protettan\ "It tNI hlnd.tW la all they can Britain, wht,. the atate reUCSon pt ~er ln a dt)' of UUa U., -the Church of Enaland -wu compi.Nd to the thouMndm inllkSe fl~bllahed after Ktn1 Henry theN, we won't be hfuina much vm broke' with the Vatican ln from U""1 any more," he Mid. t153'. 0-.0W'• ~. were •t for Out.foe 'the park, aboUt 1&0 ho1u1.-Prote1tan\demol'llltndoN Proteetant hardliner1 led by the and retaliatory attack• by J\ev. Ian Pataley thwnoed Btblel Catholicl. PoUcl llJd they were •nd ahouted 11 Antl.Chrlltl lnvestiptina ~ ovemlaht tire at Antl-Chrlatl" aa John Paul'• a rail atadm 1-ihAn a mlle ·helk:opter arrived for the Mall. from th• park. Anti-papal No violence wu reported. a1opna Were found painted on A day •arller, Pahley'a the station walla. u ... .,. .... 1followen threw colna, eaP and The pope travel_,d •to tbl1 crumpled aouvenlr pmten• at the largest city in Scotland from p o n tl ff ' 1 m o to r c a d e l n F.dlnbw-ah. 38 mllel eMt, where Edinburgh, and aeveral were he beaan the day with an ..arrested. lmpaa1loned plea to Scottlab ~ Bua driver Jack Starnes, Proteatant leadera for ~elping elderly Catholics off hla reconcillatlon ol the Chriltlan BLESSING -Pope John Paul n rai8el h1a Manchester, England, d\J.l'\n8 an open-air masa arm1 to a hu1e crowd at Heaton Park, during which the pontiff ordained 12 priests. • ua and into wheel.chairs, called faith." ALKLAND ISLANDS ..• ~ Carter talks Wantage point ·for ahelllna the lnner Argentine defenaea. : The BriUah Defen1e Mlnilt.ry aatd today that 250 Argentine ~Idlers were killed ln the battle for Darwin and Goose Green. : Britiah estimatee 1n1Ually put Jhe Argentine dead at about 100 ~the 14-hour batt~e Friday for e strategic settlements on F.ast alkland island. i Darwin and Goose Green wen: aptured by British troopers. British loeaea in the ting were put at 17 killed and wounded. 1 Presa Association also reported without attribution that the fk'itah larided their backup force of, 3,500 sCoW.. Welah Guardsmen and Nepeleee Our~ nol1h ot StanJey, brtNdna their total land' forces on the llland to at leut 7;500 and outnumbering the estimated 7 ,000 Argentines· concentrated uound Stanley. The Detenee M1niatry refuaed to confi.no the landing report. Two Britiah foaus bad been advaneing on Stanley, .Royal Marines and paratroopera moving westward by hellcOpter from the San Carlos beachhead, and another paratroop force coming from the aoutb after capturing the Gooae Green airstrip and 1,400 Argentine pri&onen. By STEVE TRIPOLI Of"~.,..,,... ..., Former Prealdent Jimmy Carter pluged hla ·new book and di1cu11ed 1ome of the moat important momenta of his preaidency in an appearance Monday in Anaheim. Carter described hit book "Keeping Faith: Memoirs of ~­ Prealdent,' r·., a "highly pel"llOJlal'' record wbicll forced him to relive aome of the most Pl1nfll1 momenta of his Whlte liouae years. Plane crazy? In a speech be.fore the American Boobellera "->ciation and a • preea conference which followed, Carter said the Camp David peace agreement, the taking of 52 American hostages in Iran. nuclear disannament and the Panama Canal treaty were some of the moat important challenges he faced ln office. 'Girlfriend 'buzzing' probed Carter revealed that at one tlme during the Camp David Officials at Marine Corps AJr Station, El Toro, are investigating charges one of their pilots "buzzed" his girlfriend's house in Alpine Monday, terrifying local residents ln hla A4-Skyhawk jet. · · " ' A spokesman for the air station said today the alleged low-level antics of an El Toro Marine pilot "is under investtgatlon." • <J • Angn residents ln Alpine said the A-4 Skyhawk attack jet 1'ePeatedly buued the mount.in tbwn east of El Cajon Monday:· lbnetimes flying befow the leyel -~_]jjL~· Navy officiala denied the pilot talks he feared for the safety o• wu one of theh, and pinned the the late Egyptian President blame on a Marine pilot on a Anwar Sadat at the hands of his rupJ)09edly "routine flight" out own Egyptian -delegation. of~ Toro. Cart.er refuaed to elaborate on A Navy 1pokemum said the what type of threat to Sadat be o0ot. who waa not idelitified. perceived, saying that it is "wu juat aafin1 hello'• to a detailed ln his boo£ But he said lb'ltriend In the Alpbie area. he considered it eerioua enough art the Jet'• low pe11ee on a _Jhat he rummonecl the Secz:et · Qidet. Memorial Dll)' frilbtened Service and then-National many J>!Ople, accordlna 1o a Security Advjaer Zbigniew Oorllt who wftn rr d the antb. Bneiinald to his cabin and ·~e thoulht it wa aotnl to ordered thai sacurity around take the roof blf. One of tny Sadat'• cabin be increaaed cwtomera hit the floor, and the without the F.a'Ptlan prellident's ~two ducked." .akf Johanna knowledge. Zimmerman. Carter said worries about The taking of the hoatagea began what Carter called ''the worst year of my life" and led to what he termed the wont moment of hia pr.eaidency - When be WU informed that the American mi11ion, to rescue the boataaes had failefd. . <.:arf.ei-aaid the hostage epbode left "a diaguating feellng of • . impotence among the AnM:rlean people and ln my heart" becaU8e of the inability to resolve it. He said he received advice ranging from "getting down on my ~" to dro..PP_i]lg an ' atomic bomb on Tehran fu hla efforta to ft90lve the crlais. Carter's-book opena with a deecription of":lhe last boura of hla term, when the releue of the hostages was the subject of hectic negotiatrona, he said. On nuclear arms reductiort, Carter aaid be baa been discouraged by what .ne perceived as the Reagan Administration's indifference to the arms control proteas. Recent ~~:ouncements by President an as he prepares to visit Europe have been more reaauring, however, Carter said. The growing movement for a nuclear weapona freeze ln thia country can be "nothing but healthy" and echoes sentiments widely held ln Europe, Carter said. . He 'added that his book reveals for the tint time proposals fof anna reduction that be made to Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev ln June, 1979. He said thoee propoaala prove that the United Statee has been willing to take the lead in arms reduction. -r·~-~-~,.-~. --~·~~~" :-;:-,.. ·:;~-llj~:--.·. ___ ..:.;.....,,_--r...-.-,..-;~--~'-· -i• ---__ .-"Z_,,..._ Coastal U.S. summary I he MemOnli 0tr holldely WM 1 weekend to forget for 1torm--b1tl«ed oommunltlel In Sunny and breezy County. exptodlna .,.. empty one• Ind lgnttlng • bllef fire In • "* llnk, IUtllorltlH Hid. Tllrff lncllll of rein ... In If\ "°"' at -8•ment, l .. Yln_. 8 lnCllll Of Undtng .... California The NllUonlf w .... a.Moe 14 71 .03 .. ta .. ta .02 • at .01 nee IS M a eo .. . 12 11 • 71 13 .15 ., ta .14 t3 "* .14 • 51 13 • ta .... 14 tM 51 st' 41 7t 31 .,, 87 30 et ., .oa. 14 3t .. .. 11 17 11 76 ..... 17 71 1.13 ., ...... ... .., 11 .... ot 14 ... 17 72 64 17 14 .11 14 7t ... . ~ n .... 01 .... .JI ii 5s 74 • eo 11 58 71 ... 75 55 11 55 74 35 10 •1 • eo 71 ta 57 62 ..... ., 1• eo Ill • eo eo 35 14 43 :,c: 72 53 78 .... ...... .. H 71 so .... 74 eo ., .... 11 ... .. 17 A S3 o.f Rams Pat Haden. former 1uartln1 quart.erblck fOf' the Lo. ~­Rama and a atar at use. ha8 announced hi.I retirement from. profelllonal football. the Rama announced today. Hlldttn, 29, who joined--th~ ' : Rama ln 1978 after • aeuon ln the now defunct World Football Leaaue, threw for 32 touchdowns for the Rama ot the National Football Leaaue. During that time, he battled a aeries of injuries and survived several challences to b1a job. . A spokesman for the Rama aald that Haden will become a color commentator for CB.S teleVislon. Haden, who allo haa a law degree. spent parta of two years as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University in England lollowtng eraduatlon from osc. With the acquisition of 6-foot-3 Bert J ones from Baltimore, it was . apparent that the 5-11 Haden would not be the starting quartert>ack for the Rams this year. During his six years with the Rams, the NFL club had a i:ecord of 35-18-1 when be started~ He completed 731 passes ln 1,363 attempts but was beset by ~ irtjuriea. Quarterback Vince Ferragamo, who led the Rams to the Super Bowl in the 1979 season, leftthe · Rams after· the 1980 eeaaon to join Montreal of the Canadian · Football League. In 1981 the Rama acquired former Houston and Oakland quarterback Dan Pastorini. 911 line not for kidding Two Irvin~ girls probably didn't get the answer they were looking for when they called the 911 emergency line. The girls, age 12 and 1,3, asked lf thla was America. Irvine Police Sgt. Ron Flathers, who answered their call Friday, told them it wasn't, "not on the 911 line, anyway." The sergeant said he went to the girls' home where he "chewed them out" and found them to be "extremely apol?Betic." -~~ -~· .. .:;,_,.,.,. .. --··~ r BUENOS AIRES, Ar1entlna (AP) -Ar1ent1n111 mUU~ rulen are prepartnc, thelr people for defeat In th e Falkland I1lend1. Bu t they ln1l1t any MtblClt will be temporary, that AraenllN haa done li.elf proud and that lt wW eventually own the archlpet.ao. Prpldent Leopoldo Galtteri Mt the new line ln an Army Day speech Saturday after British paratroops had overrun key Scotland .welcomes ·pontiff LASGOW, Scotland (AP) - • John Paul n celebrated ~ on a hillside ln Scotland's most Catholic city today and paid tribute to generations of Boman Catholics who kept the faith alive through the bloody Scottish Reformation. The cheers of 250,000 people welcomed the pontiff to Bellahouaton Park, where he told the f.aithful, "You are heirs to the sacred heritage. Your forefathers have fumded on to you the onJy inheritance they really prl~-our holy Catholic faith. ~ On the fifth day o John Paul's historic British vi it, he paid tribute to the "valiant struggle for survival'' of Catholic Scots, who faced persecution and exile Uhder Protestant monarchs. "Be loyal to the memory of those valiant forerunnera," he (See POPE, Page AZ) Orange Coast beaches busy; 88 rescued WORLD AiJ,en tine pclll ona. · · • I May God arant that. beyond the f ortune1 of the unequal battle aaatr,ut the extra-continental ~ and thOM who 1Upport Mr, that the torch ·we hav~ll hted to Wumlnate the awak of OW' America not be e , " he aald. l One of the president'• top ad vlaera spelled out the government posltlon to The A9odat.ed Preaa. "We have already won," he laid. "We could not have been expected to defeet milltartly the third and tint moll powerful nation. in the world, "When we lole, you will hear Galtteri, who 11 now a Latin ,,, ........... KILL E D IN ACTION -Lt. Col. Herbert Jones, 42, cornmande of Second Battalion Parachute Regiment, poaes with wife, Sarah and two BOns last year at Buckingham Palace when he recei\red the Order of the British Empire. He was killed on the Falklanda last week at Goose Green. Restaurant bandits hit agai~ -COUNTY ... 11111111 di I fllll lllCD. <lHl\Nl;I <.OlJ l~l V <:Al If OllNll\ 2r1 CENTS Americu\ Mro1 My, 'Our taJanda to reld Wont-cut ICenariol. have been occupied by mean. oJ VNtly auperior military force. I The Bueno9 Alrel newapaper neaotlate noth1na nor do I cede Convicclon said Monday: ''The any of our le(ltlmate demandl. I adult Araentl.na ahould get ready believe in the retaliatory power to Ulimllate with virile aadnem of my people, and we Will aptn but· not with desperation and' recover the lllandl'• much le11 wlth 1hame, the Art=lnea who for week1 =l~~%s t:i•~u-:::e:s'::::.: have lerved a hffvy dole ot temporarily re,establlshes by encour.,tnc ~· -"Victory" headllne9 and "We''fe winning1" force a colonlal usurpallon." ~covers-are beatnnfna The paper, which has closet.lea * * * * * * May ask surrender to the navy, pointed out pmlttve effecta of the confllct: "Wlth ;.t what we've done up tW now, leaving aside the aµrprilN we've yet to give, we have acquired a dignified and guvltatina presence In International aod~." It added that Argentina ha al.90 learned the hard way who ita frienda are and that the world la run according to ve1ted lnteresta and force. * * * " British troops nearing ca_pital Newport thieves get $50~000 h a ul A home ln the Dover Shorea .ection of Newport Beech was hlt thll weekend by ~ who eecaped wt th more' than $50,000 worth of handcuna, shotguns end an a.ortment of jewelry. ... Police uid the crook• ~pparently broke lnto Charles M. Hominl'• houae by prying open a alidtna alua window. Otfloera said the lntrudera ransacked eJVery room ln the houae. South Atlantic Oc ean Arraignment today _ Suse_ect in ·Laguna slaying capture_d By STEVE MITCHELL or ... .,..,,.,. .... A ~ Park man suspected in the ahotgun death of a Laguna Beach father early Saturday, •vu to be arraigned ln South Cout Municipaf Court today on -charges of murder .. 1.'lie victim, John Louis Shank, 38, wu ahot ln the head with a 12-gauge sho1gUn at about 2 a.m. Saturday as he prepared bi1 beachfront apartment for a birthday party for h1a dauahter. Arreated moments la~r on the beach below the apartment at 789 Gaviota Drive, was Alfred Gonzalea Sesma, also 38, of Buena Park. Seama remains ln Orange . County Jail wlth ball aet at $260,000. He wu to be arraigned today on charges of homldde. Laguna Beech police arrived at the anall ~t flanklna South Cout Highway at about f:20 a.m. .... INDEX Saturoa~ receiving a call of ahou fu1d. ' They spotted a man standing ln the street with a ahotgun.. ana after apprehending the man, dis.:overed he was a witnes -to the shooting In the apartment above. The witNs, who wu !at.er identified aa Shank'• roommate, aald the two men were decorating the apartment for a blrt-hday party when Sesma allegedly pounded on the front door . y/hen Shank opened the door, he WU pushed back lnto the apartment by Sesma, the witnell said, who demanded cub from the victim. Shank was forced down a hallway to the llvibi room where witnemes laid Sesma pointed the gun at the vktim11 head and fin!d one round. S tr_ategy u8ed with Begin 1 School superintendent cliallenged t I . I ~ J I ••I , ... ' Or1n99 OoMt DAIL.V ,ILOTnu.d~, June 1, 1tla ================::=:;:;~~~~~ Pat Haden of Rams aald, hla worda tcholni CW.II a .. of yellow papal flql. J ohn Paul Ill the flnl poPf to vialt pr.c!omtnantly Prot"tant Britain, where th~tate reli&lon -\he C}\urch of land -wu eatablltbed •fter tna Henry vm broke with the Viltl.can in 1~34. Outllde the wk, about 1~0 Pro•tant hardllnen led .by the Rev. Ian Pailley thumped Biblea •n d shouted "Antl-Chriltl Ant1-Chri1t!" aa John Paul'• hellcopter arrived for the M ... No violence wu reported. A day earlier, Pal1ley'1 followers threw col.na, egp and crumpled souvenir poaten at the pontiff '• motor c ade in Edinburgh, and several were Bua driver Jac k Starnes, elping elderly Catholic:s off his us and into wheelchain, called ~Y'• GluF dimonatraUon "tht hit hurrah of tb• heU-ralllrl." "U thll ha$\dtul la a1,l they can pt totfe\her ln a city of thll llM, compAred io the thoUaandl inllde there, we won't be heutna Much from thellf any-mon," h• ..td. Gtaaaow'• pollce were aet for hoatlle l>roteetant demonattatlona and retaliatory attack• by CathoUai. Police aatd they were lnveettaating an ovemtaht fire at a rail 1tat1Ql\ lets than a mile from the park. Anti-papal alogam were found painted QI\ the ataUon walla. The pqpe traveled to thi1 largest city in Scotland from F.ciinbureh, 38 milel east, where he began the day with an lmpa11loned plea to Scottiah Protestant leader s for reconciliation of the ChrUUan faith." ALKLAND ISLANDS. . ·. ying the commander of the tish task force, Rear Adm. ohn Woodward, has been given authority to decide whether give the Arge ntines an portunlty to aurrender before unching a full-scale assault on tanley. The sources, also quoted by dependent Television News, tud th~ British did not want to !Ubjec t Argentina to a '\lmiliatinf defeat because of armcems o worsening political '9tabilitv in Latin America. ' Ar entina in a communlque early today said tta forces • ted" British troops about t5 miles from Stanley. It said , ' Argen tine troops Wt're using hellcopte~ tq reinforce defendve position4 around the town. Reports from London and Buenos Aires said the Arsentine commander ,. Bril(. Gen ~ario Menendez, had heavily fortified Mount Kent and the nearby ridges. If the British captured them, they w ould provide a vantage polnt for shelling the inner Argentine defenses. The British Defense Minlltry said today that 250 Argentine soldiers were killect in the battle for Darwin and Gooee Green. British estimates initially put the Argentine dead at about 100 in the 14-hour battle Friday. Plane crazy? ~irlfriend 'buzzing'probed B~ING -Pope John Paul Il raiaes h1a arms to a huge cr?wd 1tt Heaton Park, Carter talks ., .......... Manchester , WI.and, during an open-air mass during which ~!><!'tiff ordained 12 prtem. CQUlity • Ill ~ STEVE TRIPOLI Sadat'• safety while inside Camp µnpotence enong the Amt:rican tM Deir Not,..., David cau1ed him the only people and in my heart" because F orme r President Jimmy work-related sleepleae night of of the inability to resolve it. He Carter plugged hia new book and his p~dency. said he received advice ranging di1cusaed some of the most "When I saw Preddent Sadat from .. gettine d own on my important moments of his emerge· from bis cabin tor bis knees" to dropping an atomic presidency in an appearance walk the next morning I wu bomb on Tehran in liis efforts to Monday in. Anaheim. •relieved, and I felt fooliah about reaolve the crills. .. Carter d escribed his book;'t'" my precautlon1 aeveral day1 Cat'ter'• book _opens with a Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a late-r. But in view of what -las President," aa a "highly happened to him (Sadat waa ~~~h!i ~ ~ ~ i:! penonal'' record which forced UIUlinat.ed in Cairo lut year) h1m to relive aome of the 'tnost maybe it wun't 10 fooll1h'." boltaaeewaatheaubjectofhectic painful momenta of his White Carter said. ' neaodadonl. he uid. t llouse years. __ ,, On nuclear anna redllction, In a speech before the Carter n:ll;&U~ Camp David u Carter 1aid he has been AmerlcanBookaellenAssoc:iation an attempt to meah two diac:ou r aged by what be and a press conference which startlingly different men" -perceived as the Reagan followed, Carter said the Camp Sada~ and P.rime Miniater Adminmration'a indifference to David peace agreement, the MenaChem "Begin. the arms controI·proce11. Recent taking of 52 American hostages He called sadat "the m-eatest ~=ncementa by President in Iran, nuclear .d..laannament and man I 've e ver met r, and as he prepares to visit the Panama Canal treaty were cha rac te ri zed Begin as Europe have been ~o re some of the moat important intransigent. He said the two reassuring, however, Carter said. challenges he faced in office. ,heads of state did not talk to each Carter revealed that at one other about the accord for the The growing movemept for a time during the Camp David last 10 of the i.s daya they were nuclear weapons freeze in t.h1a S , Officials at EMarinl T e CorPs All' Navy offici.ajs denied the pilot talka he feared for the safety of there. country can be "nothing b u t ta\ ion, or o , are was one of theirs, and pinned the the late Egyptian P resid ent healthy" and echoes sentiments tpvestlgating charges one of their blame on a Marine Pilot on a Anwar Sadat at the hands of his The taking of the hostages widely held in Europe, Carter Pilots "buzzed" his glrltriend 'a supPoeedly "routine flight" out own Egypti$ll delegation: began what Carter called "the said. house in Alpine Mbn day, of £1 Toro. . ; Carter refused to elaborate on worst year of my llf<." and led to t.frrif~ local residents in his A Navy· 1~ said the what type oi threat to Sadat he what h e termed the worst He added that his book reveals · ~4-Skyhawk jet. oilot. who was not identified. ~ercelved~saying that it is moment of his presidency -for the first time proposals for " j t i h 11 " tailed when he was lnfonned that the anns reduction that he made to • A'spokesman fot the air station waa us aa:y ng e 0 to a e in book. But he said So'v' let nrealden t Leon id • girlfri nd in •L-Al ,__ '---'d red i rio ugh American miaaion to rescue °' I said today the alleged low-level e ~ PAUii: area. ue COuaa e t ae U1 eno Brezhnev in June, 1979. He said antic of an El Toro Marine pilot But the jei'• low J>&lleS on a that he summoned the Secret the hostages bad failed. thoee propoeals prove that the •tr. under investigation." quiet Memorial Day ~tened Service and then-National <.:arter said the hostage epllode United States has bee willing 1 , many people, according 1o a Sec1,1rity Adviser Zbigniew left "a disgusting feeling of take the lead in nred · to : A.nirY residents in Alpine said P'orilt who Witne.ed the antks. Brze zinaki to hia -cabin and anna uction. the A-4 Skyhawk attack jet "We thought it wu going to ordered that security aroynd repeatedly buu.ed the mountain take the roof off. One of my SadlM 'a cabin be increased tbwn eaat el El 9&Jon Monday,; customers hit the floor, and the without the F.gyptian president's ~~ ~~~~~fi'1~J~~~~ .. Wbf!}~;:=:~::':-·:·-.;o~ ~~v-•• ,._i.;-~ _,r.:..,-_..l'ftnlfft' . r Sunny and .. breezy Lightning 11ru" •••nral petrolawn ~ llnkl 8t en ol Ml Mir ~ ln~on1"-i!"'~;plt~.;m~-~--~~,;.;;. County, tiOIOdlni:l~M N Ind 1gn1ting a 11<1.f th a ful tank. IUthorlllH Hid. ThrM ~ of rtlln ... In .,, hour II( 8•ment, leavfng 5 lnchH of Sunny and bfMzy eft•moon l'lendlng wet•. · today. Hlgha 871012. Fw tonight ----------='.::,!;.to;_~~= California 52 to 5e. CIMrlng W9dnMday to tunny and warm•r all•r11oon. -TM Hatlontll W..ilw S«v1o1t Hlalw W9dnMday ea 10 14. pr•dlct1 conllnu•d mornl119 l I 1 • w h • r •. Ir om Po Int c:toudlntel lof Sou1Mm Celfornli Conc.pt1011 to th• M•alcan coa11a1 ar•u W•dn•1day, bofd9r and out 80 m11e9: 9m811 lollow•d by I tunny, brH~ c:nft ~ 111 out9'.....,. wMn eflemoon. we9t to nonr-t wlrMtl 15 to 30 • Trev.I 1d'(l9« ... ar• pc19t9d ""'*and pta to 35 1tnot1 with tonight for wnt to 11orttt-1 e to 9-foot .-.. ..,.,_ ....,. wlnd1 gutting to 40 mph In weatlf1Y 5 to 15 lcnot$. t11e1••ln11 mounta1nf' and 11•n•ratlng thl1 1h•rnoon northw,11 of aand1torm1 In desM11. Wind•------------------- N-port-itHoh and luUng "'°'*' ~_!_9dnelcllly·70 trvough "* ~ Wlndl IOUth ~ .. --b'Olft to oe N9wpOft 15 to 20 Motl in. 12 1n Lo. AngllM. b9tweln ea lftlrnOOn. Wind ~of 3 to 5 and 14 et~ Iron\ 51 tcl'A .......... .....,, 2 to 3 .... ~ mounlllnl, ~ ... mid todey. Vlttlbll doudlnMa tod8y • 10I and tow 80I Ill f'9 lllgll cs-t through W9dn11d1y but wllh and from A to M In low ~ fAINf'/ llft9mooM. A 1m1ll-cr1h w1rnln11 II .n.c1l¥I tonight for b09Nr9 lrOfll • • Point Co11c•ptlon 1011111 to U.S. summary ::..~~~eo::~ to 35 knota and wNp up .. to Moot .... 11t1t11r "*' eo ,,..... out. >I • -Bf tarty W.cll!Uday. wlndl ~ dlmlnlltl to 1D to 11 know from tM WMt wMll a-to 5-ioo4 wavea. 'Temperatures ... 14 .o3 ·~~ .. 82 .. 12 .en Monllf'9)' ... 68 38 . 0 1 4 Olkllnd n ae r.co~ 13 85 13 eo A9dWood Ctty .. ee Reno 82 81 8lcnr'MntO 11 13 .15 8lllnM 13 g:z .14 Sin Ol9go 13 43 .14 SWI ff1lnClaco • 59 c Senta 8#1>1fa a3 Senti Mene 82 ... .14 Stocllton ... l5t Tllemwll 59 41 Ukiah 71 ~ a.mow 57 BlgBMr ee 51 .03 8llhOp 84 31 Cltlllnl .. 85 Lall• ArrowllMd 11 11 l.OnO 8Mctl t1 75 ..... MolwO'<lfe 17 71 1.13 Mt. Wlllon 13 54 ... ~ .... ... ea Ontario 11 ea .OI '*" 8Pttnge ... .. . 17 ,...... 12 84 San e.Nrclno 17 74 .27 San.IOM 14 11 U5 Santa Cf\!& 71 41 .01 TW-V ... .... ..21 Ii 158 14 eo 81 59 11 46 75 55 81 155 74 a 1ff 47 • 50 71 1S2 57 52 et ... 87 18 50 .. 811 80 eo 35 ... 44 ea 54 ... .... 72 SS .. 78 411 ... 411 .. at 75 50 ... 13 74 90 71 .. 12 M ... 51 93 .U • • retires Pat Haden, former 1tartin1 q\W'terbaiek for the Loi Anplet Rama and a atar at use. hat announced htl retirement from prof .. lonal football, the Rama announced today. Haden, 29, who joined the Rams ln 1976 after a aeaaon ln the now defunct World FootbaU Leaeu e, thre w f o r 52 touchdowns for the Rama of the Nation al Football L e ague. During that time, he battled a aeriea of injurlea and survived aeveral challenses to his job. . A spokesman for the Rama aaid that Haden will become a color commentator for CBS televi.lion. Haden, who also has a law de~, spent parta of two years as a Rhodet Scholar at Oxford U'hivendty bl Eng).and following graduation from OSC. With the acquisition of 6-foot-3 · 1»rt Jones from Baltimore, it was ,. apparent that the 5-11 Haden· would n ot be the st a rting quarterback for the Rams this year. During his six yean with the Rams, the NFL club had a record of 36-18-1 when he started. lie completed 7~1 passes in 1,363 atte mpts but was beset by injuries. Quarterback Vince Ferragamo, who led the Rams to the Super Bowl in the 1979 season. left the Rams after the 1980 season to join Mont.real of the Canadian tootball League. In 1981 the Rams acquired former Houston and Oakland q~rback Dan Pastorlni. • 911 line not for ki(lding Two Irvine girls probably didn't get the answer ~ere looking for·when they the 911 emergency line. The girls, age 12 and 13, asked if this was America. Irvine Polic e Sgt. Ron Flathers, who answered their call Friday, told them it wasn't, "not on the 911 line, anyway." The 8ergeant said he went J.o the girls' home whe re he "chewed them out" and found them .to be "extremely apologetic." FRANKJ'URT, WHt Germany -Bombe • lipped thfoulh thrte U.S. Army officers' dube and the heedqUAl'Wn ot a U.S. Anny corp1 before dawn today In w,,.t • leftltt terrort.\ IJ'OUP clalmed WU a 11pte.1~" to Prelldent Reqan11 vtalt next week., WA.MAW, Poland -Solidarity leaden aay they're planntna a 1eneral atrike In Wanaw, Wroclaw and the SUeaian coal mines becaUte leller proteata have failed to force the martial-law government to 11back off from repression." J'uii\ive leaden of the 91uspended union eave no indication of when they mllht call the strike. No •UalUeit went ntported ln the tour b!Mta.' Jn another wave ot vloa.a polJce aa1d mtcht be connected to the military attack1, bomb1 exploded ln the off lce1 of IBM and another unldentlfMd computer firm ln Du.eldorf. Plans strike Th~ aa.ld ln a leaflet that worken ln eeveral tarae Warsaw t.ctones had aaked them to orpnize a aeneral ltrlke. They Mid th~y were allo plannina to e~nd the •trike to Wroclaw, a major Industrial center In aouthwe1t Poland, and the Sllealan coal mines, which produeie the rountry'• ch.l4!f export. • " ·Two men rescued I rom vessel SANTA BARBARA -A U.S. CQut Guard helicopter plucked two men· from their 38-foot fishing Vf!S8el, \he Margret H, which drifted onto rocka at Santa Rosa ISland aft.er Its anchor line broke. Petty Officer 1st Claa Ron Roberta said the two San Pedro residents, Roy Kaiaer, 4~. and Dan Hendrik:I, 19, were in good condition when .reecued about 1:20 a.m. t.oday. · The Margret H remained on the rocka, Roberta said, and Kat.er pre&cted his $25,000 veeae1 would be a total loss. ~ Canal hackers attack com1nercials LOS ANGELES -Backers of the June 8 ballot proposition that would authorize construction of the Peripheral Canal attacked television advertiaementa which cont.end taxpayers would -foot' \he bill and that the-canal would divert 70 percent of the Sacramento River flow.· The media director of the pro-canal Citizens for Water group, Leo McElroy, said he called~ neWa conference on Memorial . Day -when it was assured 80l11e media coverage -to count.er recent polla predicting defeat for Proposition 9, which outlines the propoea.l. Ronald B. 1\obie, director of the state Department of Water Resources, Instated the "modest" project wouJdn!t depend on tax revenue. Pet lioness chews off woIDan 's arm PERRIS -A 33-year-old woman was in stable cage where the cat wa• kept, a sheriff'• condition today in Riverside General Hospital lfter spokeswoman said. · a 600-pounc! pet lioneta bit off one of her anm. F.ileen Pasternak's right aim wu ~off at Besides the UOJ'lelS, Mn. Pasternak owrw a the MKNJder u ahe put it into the ia,. cbain·llnk • bengal tiger, ita cub and a cougar. .. I ' ·,Nixon: Reagan will :win in '84 ' WASHINGTON -Fonner .President Nixon Evening News broadcast Monday night Further RELEASED -Rote Kennedy has been released from St. John's Hoepttal in Palm Beach, Fla., after undergoing a eertea of teats. The mother of Sen. Edward Kennedy is ·91 years old. • JD recovers A Fountain Valley police ruptured kidney and the brob1l officer, who waa critically le,. Injured In a traffic ml1hap He said the Californl~ Friday, wu Mid to be lmDl'OYtna H~way Patrol and rountalq today, thou1h he atlll facei V y police.,. condnuJ.na their .&ltdonal IW'ler')'. probe of the ~nt. · Arnold aald police· ar• Officer Keith Levin, 30, a appea).inJ[ for blood donaUorw tq four-year member of the help rep1ace the units Uled J.>y department, wH reported In the Injured officer. , 1eriou1 condition at Fountain Blood donation appointments Valley c.ommuntty Hospital with can be made by ca1linl the Red lntemal injuries an~ a broken Crom at 8;l5-5381. right leg. 1 He said residents can donate Fountain Valley polloe officer W~y ln Levin's name at a Kevin Arnold uid Levin wU Red Cross blood drive alated awake and alert Monday. He uid from 1:1& to 6 p.m. at the Church Levin underwent two operations' of Jesus Chri1t of Latter-day over the weekend and faces Saint •• 17500 Bushard St., additional surgery for repeir ol a Founi.tn Valley. 'Rust}'. -l>eJica'l\ . CELEBRATES OUR 10TH ISIRTHDAY Join our weeklong party June 1st thru 5th each night from 5 p.m. till closing. , • Rolled back prices on cocktails • Seafood bar specials • Oyster shooters 25• • Compllmentary c~ampagne and cake with dinner TO Years On The Bay In Newport 2135 w. Coast Hwy. u ' • 642-J4J1 Newport Beach ' No U.S. income taxes. No state income taxes,. ~1---~.-Sllft""-M-ort,~ ..... pnietica1 .man eilGllptll ..,. ICMd•i1ed to be aired on the CBS • ~~ ~®i~ha. !~ "T~'t.'...~ ~'-tit; Morning NeM 0\11 week. . rr-;;===;;..;;;;;;;;;;;.;=;;;;..-._ _____ _.. ___ ...,e,_.,.e._r_s-r] ~ts-x-es. ta te Jtl.m -rbe ... .__. .. ., ......... ~ v TAX-FREE c~~~=--ihe MassachU11etta Democrat will does~~u:en 'b.v~~~~-!'r wf~n~~ more you make, the more they take. be to President Reapn. wtl() will decide to leek a. Democradc nomination, Nb<Qn aays. "No way. H''' But, now you can keep it all. aecoodt.erm,NixonsaidlnaninterviewootheCB.S 'juataw~~Carter~" When you invest in the California . Budget deadlock hintlers workload WASHINGTON -The deadlock in the HOUie over a 1983 budget blueprint la hoJ.cjiq up work on .-leglslatlo.n neceasary to curb tne flow of · government red ink -action the R eaaan admlnlatration and coogJ'el8ional leadel"'I apee la ' \'ital to the nation'• ecooomJc health. But as~ returned from its Memorial Day recea, the prospects were not good fw a quick eolution which fed the HOUie to reject more 1han half a dozen budaet plans 1ut week and lend Gle issue back to the HoU.e Budget Committee . The HOUie r-.amet wodc Wednel!lda'y. But the buclaet writ.en were trjing to regroup =bi with the liw Budaet Ccimmittee meeUnc 'I • e:erIJ_ aa this al1ernoan for preliminary work on drafting a new ~ plan. • .. • • ~Re~e~ge hinted in shooting death • LAPORTE. Ind. -An intruder who cridcally wounded Mayor Aloyl;iUI J. Rumely and killed h1a wife In a lhooUng at their home IDIY have been .eeldn,a l"eYel\P• the Indianapolis Star reported today. . PoliCe refu.ed. however, to coo:unent offidally on a polllble modve in· the pndawn thoot1np Monc1ay. but PoRed a pard outllkle Bwnely'1 room while bqlptal leCW'ity forcea m:eened visit.on. R"'kf ~l, w.. injMred and his wtfe, Frances, 69, was after IOmeOl'9 pried open a dining room window in the rear of tbilk' two«ory home. . Payable monthly . Series of the Municipal Investment Trust Fund, you keep everything you earn. Nobody takes a penny of it. Not the State. Not the IRS. It's completely . tax-free*. And the current yields are attractive. 11.43% -and that's after all sales charges and expenses. And there's no management fee. We think that you'll agree that the (;aJifomia Series of the Municipal Investment Trust Fund scores ·high on all count.s • All of the municipal bonds in the fund are rated in the category A or better by Standard & Poor's or Moody's. Becuase it's s fiied portfolio you '11 know exactly where your money i.s invested. And, because it's diversified, your risk is reduced. ' You may redeem or sell your units st any time without charge or interest penalty at the then prevailing market price. If you 're a OJlifornian in a high tax bracket, double tax-free income may give you a lot more spendable income. . Write today for a Prospectus. It's free and without obligation. Just csll or mail the coupon. · 'T»...-·----,,,.,,~--...... ~., ... ,.. ..... ,,_a-• ...... • ...., -. ,..... ..... ,... ,., _,., .,, rr. ,.,, ....,._ ...,..,,,,..., ,,., .. ,, ,.. .... _,, U-'S Jw • -' rl llOll.J6. rMt lo _., * ..._,. .. _.,,. .................. ,, ......... ,, ......... n. ........ .,. ~a.-,,.~.., .. ~ .. .,-.. ......... ti ,_.__,,,_., ... -' ... ...._..-............. .., ........ .. ........... _ .......... .,.-. .. ..ttlo'!"""'*",.._ .,., ........ ~---.... .a . • . • . ' , • , ( , • I i . I I ' f I I i I Alpha Mfciolyatema of Irvine hu ~ ~ alee and eam1np for the t19cal yM.t ~ F.t>tuary. The eaminp 1aJ.na were achk!:ved dnptte a 102 ·percent lncre-ate In research and development expendlturea. Net 1nconw of $U20,745 tor the year ,£eflect.ed a 28 percent improvement over ft.cal 1981. Net lnoome per 1hare, baaed on 35 percent mor~ shares ou~, was 64 oenta compared with 67 ~nta the · ptevioua year. Sales roee 22 percent to $26,395,343. AirCal offers $75 discount AirC.a1 cuatomera flying between eeattle and the San Franci8co Bay Area In Sune are being offeted a $75 unrestricted d18count on roundtrip airf.are . .. AlrCal ls marking Its one-year anniversary of Seattle service June 1 and the $75 sa~ Is an an n,i v er 1 a r y g If t to customer 1, v Ice president-marketing and busine11 planning, aaid today. 'The roundtrlp between Seattle and .the Bay Area for $165 compares to the regular roundtrip full fare at $240. NB ad /inn honored- 1:.enac, Warford, Stone Advertising & Public Relatl9na of Newport Beach w?f 5 awards at the Orange c.ounty Advertising Fede t:ion ceremonies. IIichard Holmes Advertising Design, had 12 awards; Rei8er Williams de Young, eight; Mealer & EmenlOl'l. five; and three each for Jansen Aaodat.ea ' and Baa.> & Aaaociates. ~ . Wespac buys complex· Wespac Investors Trusi of Tustin bas purchued c.ountry Club Estates. a recently completed apartment comple1' In the Country Club district of Flagstaff, Ariz. Purchase, price was $6,595,000. The complex consists of 14 buildinp with 200 uni ta. Sporting goods store due Sportmart, an Illinois ~ goods retailer, plans too~ Its first 'Southern Calitoinia store July 9, at 7433 mtnger Ave., Huntington Beach. 'nle 35,000-square foot outlet ia to be the tint in• RO. Of Storel in the region. Gish sells 845 stock units Gish Biomedical Inc. of Santa Ana. manu..tacturer of d.ispoul>Je medical products. reported today a public offering of 845 ~ti has been completed at a price of · $1,999 ~unit throu,h underwriters co-managed by l>aubon lnves1ment Co. and Black & Co. Inc., both of Portland. .J /.' · ~~c!t1''1lln•cdns1•u ...,,.;---~oo l& ~tWhft convertible 1Nbordtnat.ed debenture due 1989, 333 shares of common stock and warrants for the purchase of 333 shares of common. Proc!wla to the company from the aale. of uni ta W1111>e-U9ed to pay trade accountlf payable and other indebtedness, t, purchase ~tat ~me'!h~~ .. (inapge JHIOduct"dewlopment tOiii:ieiie wol1W18 capital Lear expands market The data products division of Lear SieaJtt Inc. Anaheim, reporta it 11 expanding ill int\rnaUonai mark.et into South America. METALS C.,..., 1-.1e cent8 a~ U.S. ~ ..... 26-21' Olrltl • l*lfld, a.s&centaa~ "" ... 4086 ....... w.. OOti4)0Cl9• lb. • - ---7 ... 71 09nta • pound, N. .,, __, 1170.00 pat .... ........ satl.00 tro, OL. M..Y,