HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-06-03 - Orange Coast Pilot••• r1t1s
•
-County
will pay
UCI tab
lca.iJyon Hoad fatality I
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL or .. .,..,,..., ....
Orange County government
haa aareed to pay the University
of Califom.l.a $13.75 million to
end a prolonged disrute over
provi•ion of medica care for
indigents at the UC Irvine
MedJcal Center.
Of that sum, county Board of
Supervisors Chairman Bruce
Nestande said Wednesday, $5
million already has been paid.
The remaining $8. 75 million will
be paid by June 30, the end of
the current fiacal year.
Superviaon agreed in principle
to the massive payoff during a
closed-door session amid
i.ndications that at least one board
member -Roger Stanton,
opposed the negotia.ted
settlement.
,
The county and the university
since 1979 have been battling
over issues surrounding care for
indlgenta for which the county Is
finan(lially responsible. Care for
thme patients hu been provided
at the university-owned medical
center in Oranae under a 1976
contract.
The bulk of the dispute
focuaed on about $8 mll1ion lD Uf\f veraity-iaued bW8 the coanty
hM retu.ed to pey.
LAGUNA CANYON FATAL CRASH -Wreckage of truck
and small foreign auto is strewn across Laguna Canyon Road
near Sycamore flats Wedneeday morning after a head-on
c.rUh. Driver of the car was killed and a truck puaenger
Dllr ......... "' ........ " ......
remains in critical condition at Mission C.Ommunity Hospital.
A dog belonging to the woman driving the auto abo was
killed.
In ita action Wedneeday, the
board also agreed to a
replacement contract whereby
the opunty would make lump I. sum payments for emergency ~ QUtpatient Care and standard1z.ed
daily rates for inpatient care for
indigents treated at the medical
center.
County officials say this
alternative approach to the
current patient-by-patient bi.lllng ~tem will be more efficient ana Im costly to administer.
Nestande, speaking to
reporters at a midday briefing,
declined to say lf the board's vote
was~.
Later lD the day, Stanton issued
a statement in which he said, "I
do not inlend to comment on the
board's deciaion at this time. The
board will be voting publicly on
the l88ue later this month. At
that time I will cast a vote that
will reflect the position that I
took during the executive aemion
which was held today." ,J
'nle UC Boerd of Regents If
ICheduled to take action on the
1ettlement And the new c:ontract
prop()88} at a meetlng June 17 And 18. .
The propmed settlement has
been endol'9ed by UC President
David Saxon in private
conversations with Nestande.
Two die in crash
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The coroner's office said
identification would be discloaed
today of the two women who
died in a fiery explosion cal.Uled ·
by a brakelem, runaway truck in
a c:rowded central San Franc1aco
neighborhood Wedneeday.
STATE
Reagan meets
Mitterand
I-or parley
PARIS (AP) -President
Reagan conferred today with
French President Francois
Mitterrand on the Middle East,
Central America and the
Falkland Islands war, but
sidestepped serious d.iacussion of
the stubborn e<:onomic issues
dividing their countries.
On the eve of an economic
summit of major industrial
democracies at Venailles outside
the French capital, Reapn said
he and Mitterrand deferred
"heavy d18cussionst• of econornJ.c
issues straining America'• allies
until thel' join the leaders of
Bri'8in, West Germany, Italy,
Canada and Japan this weekend.
The leaders met over lunch in t'he splendor of the Elyaee
Palace. Reagan wu ~ at
the pa1ace by a military honor
guard and a aalut.e from a drum
and bugle corpa. He and
Mitterrand shook bands and then
met privately in a chandellered
salon over a lunch 1eeturing a
salad of amort.ed ahelWah, veal
with truffles and three French
wines.
A White Houae aide aaid that,
as is customal}' for presidents on
foreis!t _ ti:f.pa. Reapn brought hia
own drtn.k1ng water to the lunch.
Re-san aaid he and Mitterrand
only ''touched on'' the economJc
issues, includln1 inflation,
unemployment, recession and
(See REAGAN, P .. e AZ)
San Diego suburbs Beek unity
Five conununities just nOrth of San Diqo m,ay
incorporate, with the new dt;y to _be named San
Dieguito, Spanish for "little 8ml J:>iego." Page A12.
Cal-State probe
Profes~or of sex
class quits post ,
BULLETIN Dorla Dehardt and Michael
LONG BEACH (AP) Connor. Singer at the time
Embat1lecl "Paycbology of Sez" threatened to sue Ms. Deha.rdt
profeaaer Barry Sla1er, wllo and Connor, alleging slander, but
offered coarse credit for senal the statute of limltations for such
experlmentatloa, llu realpn -If sutt baa expind.
from Cal State Loa1 Beacla, Univ er• it f officials
aDJvenlty offlclal1 annoanud investigating Singer's course
today. ~ were expected to decide today
LONG BEACH (AP) -State
university officiala are deciding
whether an educational film and
two videotapes bear an
investigation of a controversial
"Psycholoo of Sex" c:oune.
Dr. Barry Singer, a tenured
profesaor, was suspended
without pay for a month last
week aft.er he revealed he had
been "romantically involved"
with student. in his courae,
which ottered credit for group
sex and gay encounters.
The film being reviewed wu
, made tbil year by Sinaer and
atudents in hb class. Entjtled
"Who'a Doing It: American
Sexual Attitudes," the mm
reportedly conaisted of
lnterviewa with persona about
their teX llvea.
The videotapes were of
dlscu11ion1 about htaher
education that occurred two
years ago between Slnpr and
two other psychology profe.ors,
COUNTY
whether the film and videotapes
were pertinent to the probe,
triggered by complaints from a
53-year-old woman who sat in on
a cl.ua aesaion.
The dean anda.odate dean of
the School of Social and
Behavioral Sciencea and the
chairman of the paychology
department viewed the film and
videotapes Tuesday after a
reporter from the Long Beach
Presa-Telegram uked to see
them.
University spokesman Robert
Breunig said that any material
deemed relevant to the
investigation into Singer's course
will be retained by the university
until the matter is resolved.
Ho'¥ever, if the film or
videotapes are not judged
pertinent, they will be released
to the public.
Breunig denied a report in the
J>rell.Tefegram that university
offidala ordered faculty members
and other employees not to
diacun the Singer caae .
Historical society gets home
The Costa Mesa Historical Society f~{. has a
home of ita own to store its boxes of memora . Page
Bl.
Woman killed
in Laguna
Canyon crash __
A Beverly Hills woman was
killed and her Laguna Beach
passenger critically injured
Wednesday morning in a head-on
collision on Laguna Canyon
Road.
Carol Ann Hatfield, 34, ol
Beverly Hilla was driving out the
canyon road near Sycamore F1ats
when she apparently crossed into
oncoming lanes shortly after 11
a.m., polioe said.
Her car collided with a truck
driven by Kevin Andre Parks,
21, of Anaheim.
The woman, and her small
dog, were killed in the crash. A
puaenaer, Sunny TeJ>per, 29, of
Laguna Beach. WU rushed to
Mission Community Hospital.
She remained in critical condition
today in the hospital's intensive
care unit.
Parka, driver of the truck, was
reported in stable condition at
Saddleback Hospital in Laguna
Hills.
Police said today they are still
investigating the crash to
determine what caused Ms.
Hatfield to apparently swerve
into oncoming Janes.
Rotary reve~al?
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -
The Birmingham Rotary Club
bu reconsidered its policy of
barrina non·white member.a,
after preaaure from national
headquart.era.
INDEX
A4
B2
C6-7
B2
C8-12
BS
BS
C8
Control
all high
ground
By Tiie A11odatecl Presa
British gunners dueled with
Argentine artillery batteries
around Stanley today in the
buildup to a possible Britlah
usault on the Falkland la1anda
capital, military sourcea and
broadcast reports in London aaid.
Britain's Independent· Radio
Newa said the attack was not
expected before the weekend u
the gunners, backed by offahore
navy bombardment and Harrier
air strikes, softened the estimated
7,000 Argentines around Stanley.
Reports in London indicated
the British control all the hUla
surrounding the town and the
key passes to the west through
which reinforcements were
advancing.
Argentine troops, driven back
into a "horseshoe" defensive
position, were firing back at
Royal Marines shelling Moody
Brook, 3 miles from Stanley and
believed to be a forward
headquarters for the Argentina.
As shelling continued,
government sources in London
said British planes dropped
thousands of leaflets on Stanley
telling the Argentines their
poaition is hopeleaa. Defense
Minlatry aourcea said
Spanish·speaking Britom were
among the forward troops to
negotiate aurrendera around
Stanley.
British helicopters lifted
105mm guns, with a range of
10 ~ miles, to the hilltops west of
the town while British Scorpion. Ifgn -~moved into polition
and Snowcat transport vehicles
brought supplies and
ammunition across the boggy
terrain. •
A senior Britiah def'en8e IOW'Ce
in London said the buildup was
expected to take "a few days ...
"The position of our forces in
Puerto Argentino (the Argentine
name for Stanley) has been
consolidated according to plan
and the men await the battle
with spirits renewed by a rousing
apeech by their mill tary
governor," the Argentine
military command aaid_ µi a
communique Wedneaday night.
The command acknowledged
akinnisbing between Britiah and
(See RALKLAND, Pqe AZ)
Mesa fish I ry
starts Friday
Why is the Costa Mesa Mb
Fry such a popular evfnt over
the years?
Some say it's the "secret" . I
batter used In preparina the l·
9,000 fish dinners. Othera go fat
the parade, the carnival, the
beauty and baby contests, or the I
entertainment. ,
The fun starts Friday niaht at '
Lions Park and the Daily Ptlot'a l
special section today on the Flab
Fry and Carnival gives reeden a
rundown on the three-day event. i
Ann Landen
Moviee
Mutual Funds
Public Notices s. c.l. Focua
SporU
Stock Marketa
Telmlion
•,
Al0..11
Bt-5
82
82
. 11"9wa
82
B4-5
C8
BS; Ct,8
A9
Cl-4
C1
8'7 ~
A2
A3 NATION W•t.ber W«kl Newt
hJih ln..._ rat.. that wW bt
dJlcuMd ln deD\h at V....W..
.. Duptte polCtlcal dlfftrencet
b1tw11n the conHrvatlve
Amerloan prealdent and the
ocl1U1t. J'rench leader, the
i'Otflotall have a c:ordlal workins
elatlonahtp baaed ln part on
their almJlar backarounda aa
political "oullict.rL"
Even ao, eenJ6r Ftench of&iala
aald Mitterrand wUl oppo~•
Rea1an'a effort to penuade
America'• trading partnera to
llmlt their credit ta.lee to the
Soviet Union, whlch these
officials characterised u a
m.iagulded and unrealildc policy
aimed at forcin1 the Soviet
economy to ill kneel.
Before the luncheon that
began Reagan'• 10-day _:European
tour, his fint since taking office,
French officials voiced criticl.an
of the anticipated U.S. effort to
dissuade the Europeans from
extending credit to the Soviets at
,ubsidized interest rates.
• One official referred to "this
frenzy on Soviet credits," and
another accused the United
States of a "one-sided obeession
with the credit issue" without
acknowledging its own extensive 8J'8.ln trade with the Soviets.
Before talking with
Mllterrand, Reagan met with Mrs. Charles Ray, the widow of a
Jnllitary attache at the U.S .
Embassy who was killed in a
terrorist attack Jan. 18. White
Houae deputy preta 11eeretary
Larry speu.e Mid Retpn to1e1
~~~~:-= to full colonel.
~?.:' parentl live ln Newport
Th• Lftlident allo conf«ncl wllh Secretary of State
Alexander_ Hal1 and TreuW'y
Secni.ry DonlJd T. Repn on
awnmlt r.u..
R1a1an, who arrived here
Wedneeday nt1ht for a 10-day
European trip, had a lel.IW'tly
1ehedwe today u he adjt.wted
from jet lag. Aalde from hta
conference with Mitt.errand, the
president wu to meet with U.S.
!:mbaasy emplore••· and to
attend a forma dinner for
Mitterrand.
Reuan. accompanied by hia
wife, Nancy, arrlved at Paria'
Orly Airport with little ceremony
shortly before midnight local
time.
The offldal party deeoended
from Air Force One ln a
thunderstorm, and the Reagans
were protected by umbrellas aa
they walked on a red carpet to
the VIP terminal, where a
rnoton:ade awaited them.
French Foreign Minister
Claude Cheyuon greeted the
Reaprw, who draft immedlalely
to the home of U.S. Ambliltador
Evan Griffith Galbraith to spend
the nlghl
l' FALKLANDISLANDS ...
I ................ ~..,~
TONY'S TRmUTE -Actor Tony Curtis waves hit "Jove
balloons" at the Harbor Island location of his movie "Balboa"
aa the ca.st and crew sing "Happy Birthday,. to him. The actor
is 67 today. Balloons were supplied by Newport Beach's
"Love Balloons" firm.
Br TOM MURPHINE or .. .,.., .........
Brtt.llh troopt are ao cloee to
Port Stanley fortlflcaUona that
with blnoculara "they can watch
~tlne aoldiffl eattna lunch,"
the BBC world newa aervic4!
rePOl14d Wednelday ntaht.
The 'BBC broadc:Mt, monitored
on the Orange Cout at 9 p.m.,
acknowledaed a newa blackout
on eventa m the Falklanda from
both London and Argentina for
two daya.
''There ii little new offldal
information on the ground
offenalve releued b y the
Ministry of Deleme," the BBC
re~rt admitted.
'There has been eome action
on Mount Kent, which overlooks
Port Stanley. British artillery ia
shelling the Argeptinea' main
garrison at Port Stanley and they
are returning fire.''
One theory on the lack of
blttle news, according to a BBC
correspondent, waa the weather.
"Today's action has been
hampered by overcast and low
clouda which protect the British
from air attack although it it cold
,nd milerable for them,!' he said.
''The pound la being chewed
up ln a way that reminds
everybody of the trenches In the
Greet War.
"But convoys of British
vehk1el are moving everywhere
with the confidence of
ownerahlp.''
Laat indications from the
battle zone, the BBC reporter
aald, were that the 1round
temperature ii 2 below zero and
the vt.atbWty le11 than two m.llel.
The Brluth broadcaat reflected
11 ttle opUmJ.am that a truct! or
oeue-ffre mlaht develop before a
m.O>r battle 1or Port Stanley.
The BBC quoted the Afsentine
Army commander ln the
Falk.landa as saying, "U each and
every man fights for hla country
with hb Tifle, machlnegun QI'
cannon, then we are certain of
suocea."
The BBC said the commander
Indicated his troop1 "Must not
only defeat the British, but do so
in such a way that never apin
will they attempt to attack the
Falklanda:''
Brltlah Prime Minister
Margaret Thatc her WH alto
quoted, however, as aaying there
is no need for a battle for the
island capital.
"If the Argentines agreed to
withdraw within 10 to 14 daya,
there would be no need for the
battle," she said.
But the prime minister added
that she feels the Argentine
junta would not withdraw.
Now that the Argentines have
experienced some of the blttlea,
she said there might be hope the
Argentines would reconsider.
British newspapers, the BBC
said, focused on Mrs. Thatcher's
statements as being a I.alt chance
for the Argentine forces to
withdraw peacefully. ·
~ntine troops. but gave no
etalls.
British correspondents on the
Argentlne troops eating their
lunch."
One correspondent reported
British troops have taken a total
of 1,600 priaonera, and more than
6Ml Argentine dead OI' milling
have been reported. Britain
acknowledsed 138 of lta men
were killed.
'Nudesweek' raises -eyebrows
In other war news. the BBC
reported that durin.g removal of
abandoned munitions at Gooee
Green. which had been captured
by British forces , aome
ammunition explodelt~ kllli~g
three Argentine priaonen.
\attlefront, whole reports were
•ubject to military censorahip, Magazine features topless painting on cover
British troops controlled the
gea overlooking Stanley,
l.lding the 1,535-foot Mount
nt, the highest position 12
miles from the center of the little
Aown, and the Two Sisters ridge,
' 3 miles closer. J
, Independent Television News
torreSpoodent Michael Nichobon
liaid eome British units "could see
'through their binoculars
At the United Nationa, British
Ambauador Sir Anthony
Pa.rBON threatened to wield bit
nation's veto in the Security
Council today to block a
Latin-American resolution
demanding an immediate
cease-fire in the undeclared
Falklands V(&r.
orker missing after plant blast
I
GULFPORT, Mias. (AP) -There ls "a pouibllHy that
d spills and ' pockets of fire aome of the injured will die from
pered searchers' efforts to burns and the traWl)ll from the
a mlseing worker today after exploalon," .Harri.On County.
~ explosion killed two people c.oroner Ed L&ttle-lllld aft.er ~
and Injured 6:> at a plastics blast demolished the factory.
factory.
-
NEW YORK (AP) -Thia
week. Newsweek didn't fit the
mold. It undraped it. •
Three million copies show a
woman with an aloof frown.
She's ai.o toplets.
It's a painting, "Portrait of S,"
brought from the muaeum wall
to the country's newsstand•
under the heading: "Art lmit.llel
Life; The Hevival of l\eallam."
lnalde, the cover article beglm:
.. At flrat glance, William Baiiey'a
'Portrait of S' quickens the eye."
The cover has done more Gum
that. ~ • It's drawing a few gasps of.
1urpri1e at newsstand•, and
prompted Dick !Mkina. a
Sa ra-•o ta, -l'-1-8-;, .,,....~
wholesaler, to apply gum-backed
Continued fair
Coaslal.
ISmll craft ldWory In eft9c:l
-outer -t• wlten lrofll Point Conception to Sen
ClefMnt• 1118nd fer llClitl .... teri)
wtnde 15 to 30 knol9 wlltl 5 to I
foot 1111 tllr~i1'9ll today. a.ewMre ... to IOUtt-9 10 to t6 llnota tn elternoon.
Southwut 1wet11 2 to 3 feet.
Pettty NV1Y in-an.moon.
~
8lrmlnghm ~ck
8oiM
Boston ikitt81o
Bur11r1tton a..nsc CNt111n WV
ClleriUe NC
E ~
Clmbla 8C
ColumbUI
Dlt-Ft Wltl
o.yton
Denwr ~ U.S. summary g:r:oinee
Wet WMtt1er ntended from the OIAll"
northern Aocklel to IN IOUINr'll El Puo
P1e1n1 on WedMedlry, Md IN FelrbenM
-·· ftf'lt ttopic81 Olptellon Fwgo fonn«I CY'W the Gulf of MexJoo. • AecP1afl
Report• from Ill Air Force Gr .. t Fllll
rec:onnaluance ptene over 1'111 HertfOfd
IOUUINlt•n Gulf of Melllco oft Helenai
the Yucatan Penloeul1 tnd!Clli.d Honolulu
1111 depre11ton'1 broad end Houston
poorly deltned oent• -loc8ted lndnlClllt eboul 100 mil•• north of Jeeklfl CO:zumel. Mexico. ... ....
The clepreNion WU tn<>Y1119 ICM'i City
1-d IN north et about 6 ,,.pi, LM Vega
1nd 111 hlgllHt wind• were Ut1le Roell
e1tlmated 11 30 111pll, and L~"8
fo r ec11tar1 1eld eom•, M~
11reng111enlng wu po11lbte. A Miami
tropical depreHlon becomet a Mtlw8uk•
troplCal "°"" wMn ltl wtndil 1111 Mp9-81 p
39 mpfl. Hwnc.ne lofoe wtnde NMfWllle
.. 74 mph Md atxw.. " Ille ....., Ol'telN clepr~ becomet I llot>ICll Nft Ycril
.torm, tt _., be rwnecl Altl9no. Nof1olk
In Aoflda, most of the Mlltnl Ollle Qty
.,.. oot ""' '° a lndlee a1 • Omat1e w.dneedly momlnO· Ottendo For todey, 11\chHr• and Ptltledptlle
tllundtnllc>wef• were for~a11 Ptloentll
from Arkan••• and Ill•· PlttlbutOll ~MIMllllppl Vllley lo Aorida, P!land, Me
Md tyorn tM central Ptall!e INO Pdend, Ott
Moni.nit ~-
Souttltm Cellfomta wltl ~
molll)' fair tlltOUGI\ l"ftdey. lltOl9t
for night ancf morning tow
~. Hlgtle 1n Orange County .. to
74, loWI 48 IO 6'. lnlltld -.,. cen ~ lllON ,,.. 70, IOlllae In 60a.
Nor111ern dHert1 will lltve
ao-ao • ~ ...... """' 71 to 90, !OM! II to 13. eoue-n
""'° Alc:hmOlllll
Sall L.alt• a.n~ S..ttte = It~
StP·TaMPe 8pCM(Me
~ Toe>«*• TUC80ft
TUIM Wllhlnlllft
Wlcflfta
90 n
17
97
74
71 87
69
88 71 as
82 ..
75
74
t3
1' 17 73 72 97
71 55
"' 41 ee
IJI
54
79 eo II
92 75
83
91
82 .. 71
71
83
79 eo .. u 92
79
71 13 .. • 79
100
72 11 .. 71
71 18
73 ..
t3 •• .,
72 ee
I& 10 eo
16 f7 71 • ...,, ..... ta to t7. \AMII In
~ few 1t1owera lltlety OYtt '°"'*"~and. CINfiOe of lflOW8f'I CV# ~ ....,.
tllrouoh Friday. MoeUy fair
• CAWONM ..
11 IO .,, .. ,..,. '" N•~::r • Cent'91 c.-...... ' ......
Md "*'*"' ---...... ., ... and velle)'t. ~
I ~ OOlf,.
" &3
68
38
44 l sa 74
56 ee .
39
51
53
47 .. .. es 52
49 ,..._.. WM!Nf s.r.-c. 1 ISO· AA VS O!IOI OI C-c.e 47
35 Front~: Cold.,. Wltffl WW
=-------------------------------------33
30 45
61
41
65 70
49
62
73
51 61 sa •57
61
73 ... 41
63 n 11 ..
63 641
74
80 10
63 .,
12 r.: ..
41 70
41
80 ., ..
16 ..
50
N 61 SI M 61
13 72
ff 711 70 77 eo
19
72
72
91 70
511
91
113
68
93 70
90
72
77 76 eo
7'
94
70
73 TO
&T
94 71
71 .. ..
14 ,,
12 10
" PANAmllDAN
62 Monl-00 &ay
50 Mautlan
IO 611 113 ee 93 ...
IM
90 ae
88
73
73
13
41 73 73 75 ..
75 75
29 Merida •2 Mexico Qty 52 Montsrey
55 N__,
41 HL Sen Juen. P.A.
IO Tegucigelpe
52 Trinlded
M VeraCna
61
60
52 ....
91
69
52
51
ff
51
47 54
52 41
50
60 11
82 eo
52 17 ... ..
41
Smog
Th• Air Ouellty M•neoemem Olltr1Ct pf9dlct• good .., QUeltty
todly fOf Ill 11-of the South
COel1 Air BMlft.
A Pollutant Standerd Index oC 92 II IOfeCMt IOf tM Sen Gebtlal
and Pomone ¥1llle)'I and a PSI Of 75 l e f o re c aat f o r th• ~ Bertwdlno ....
A PSI of t2 .. ~ IOf the San Fernando and Slntl Clwtt• ..,....,., and 42 fOf all other .,...,
lncludlna.=opoutan LOI
AngelM, .,..._, °' .... Coiinty, the GOellal ..... 111111
and lOw cteMnl. ....... &Me
Ind the Hemet-llllnote NO'Oft,
65 -------------------...
61
54 M
..... ~xtp~d_ed
·forecast
= ~ 12 • 11
" ..
11 •
nutles to the woman'• breaata, '1'ib a bilc:ini .•• F.d\c:im thought lt
wu a nice-looking cover, but-
noted Florida law prohibita
frontal nudity on magazine
covers. · '
The beholders at Capitol Book
and News in Montgomery, Ala., a
store with a policy of not stocking
magazines l.bat show nudity,
mentioned the cover 1'more in
1urpri1e than offense," said
owner Cheryl Upchurch.
"One man said we should put
it in a p~ brown wrapper," Ms. u pchu.rcti s..id. .
In Lynchburg, Va., the Moral
Majority hadn't leen it; l~:'
WU ltill in the mail. But 0
had heefd about-it.
"I'm sure the cover waa c~n
solely to appeal to the artistic
depths and interests of the nation
and that Newsweek had no
Inte rest at all in Its prurient
appeal," aaid spokesman Cal
Thomu.
"Now, lf you belie4.re that," he
added, "rve got a bridge in New
York l'd like to sell you."
A• for Newsweek, Editor
Letter J3ermtein_ views the OOYel'
portrait as "a beautiful painting
Wuat.rating a distinguished article
of art crlticlam." adding that
"any d.i.fbu'ent view of it ia in the
eye of the beholder."
Newsweek received only about
a dozen calla from readers
unhappy about the cover, said
spokesman Neil Hershberg.
Making the cover of
Newsweek "is not an artist's
dream and certainly not ~.··
said Balley, 51, a professor of
painting at Yale.
I
"A painting ia a single object
and for a painter lt'a a very
private thing," he said ln an
interview Wednesday. "To eee it
in that number of copi~ makes
one feel Ven' vUlnenlble. When
you have paintino in front oi>
mass audience, one wonders how
they see ~e thing."
16 climbers fail
SEATTLE (AP) -A
16-member expedition has failed
in an attempt to become the f1nt
U.S . team to conquer the north
f ace of Mount Everest, the
world'• highest peak, a
•pokesman foe the group said
today. One of the climbers, the
only woman on the team, was
killed in a fall last month.
There were British casualties
in the blast, the BBC said, but the
extent of injuries or deaths was
not dlacloeed.
"Argentine ammunition is still
strewn around Gapse Green by
the pound," the BBC said, "in
areas where children are running
around freely and picking up
pieces as souvenirs."
British sources blamed the
explo.lon on faulJy Argentin'
munitiom and said Ar..sentine
officers admitted they had been
having trouble with their
ammunition.
Duo get high
I or-wed-ding
RENO (AP) -You could say
that Allan Fox and Roni Palm
are going to new heights to get
married.
The two Reno window
washers. both 22. plan to tie the
knot Friday while dangling
outside a 15th-floor window at
the Sanda hotel and casino.
Hotel spokesman Ed Spoo~
said the two met about a year ago,
while washing windows at the
Sands.
TheOri~al
,JOBBERS®
·.Shert
•
Is perfect for beach. boat bike,
hike, walk, rock or 'NOl1<. Jobbers
can do It all but it's up to you to
do it well. Avaiable in Jobber's
8 unique cdors.
I
l
WA.aHINOTON (AP) -lv1
in ...... tkNl ~··· "bluepl'.lnt tor '"'rylyal 1 11 callln1 tor
11M11une \bat 10 tar beyoncl
"""8t .,. .... eontrol etforta
lnohadln1 ellmlnatlon of ~ n-udear Md cMmict.1
w..pon1 from Central Europe
wlthln 18 montha.
The eomma...ton, headed by
Sw.dtn11 former prime m1n11Wr
OJof Palme, aald lri lta report that
there 11 no detenH a1ain1t
nudeu WMponl. '4There would
be no vtctore ln nucleu-war and
the klea of flahttna a Umlted
nuclM.r war la d.anproua, 11 the
panel Mid.
bwlt .,,. the Une. he Mid,
NATO cammanden would have
to make .. a very difficult
dedldon.''
Vance welcomed, .-.nwhoe, Relan'• dlcNlon earlier In the
wHlt to honor th• unrat.Wed
19'12 trHty with the Sovl•t
Union Umltln1 lon1-ran1•
bombers and lntercontlnental
• balJJIUc ro.lllfltl.
"It pull ln place the
corner1tone on which other
bloclca can be added," he uld.
At about the time Vance WM
1peeklna, the Pen'-IOD dl8clmed
the Unf ted Sta• Ia lncrealn& ~uctlon of nucl!ar wnpona to
replace tha1e conaidered obeolete. The report allo warned that
1'the world may be on the brink
of a major' new anm nice In
chemical weeponry!' It .-Id the • ''There would be
whenabauta ol ~ "hJdeoua"
cheralcal we•pon1, includin1 no victors in
oon'8Ct .... and .nerve aaenta.
ahould be dlrloeed. J " The report, ln preparation for n uc ear war.
over "!O yean, WM eent to a
number of world leaden,
includina Prelident Reqan and
Leonid [ Breshnev ol the Soviet u.uon. In an effort to lnfiuence
their' pol6cle9 Fonner-Secretary
ol State Cyrua Vance wu among
thoae wno serve d on the
c:ommJ..aon.
.
Defenae Department offlclala
aaid the U.S. nuclear ltockpOe
hid decreuecl slnoe ~ta highe1Jt level in ~ mld-1
A Peni.aon ''fact &heel" d
not live the current stockpile,
aaying the Information was
cluaifled. h a fint atep toward universal dfaarmament, the commtuion Under the diarmament plan c:~ !~i:!:aJ!:~~ ~A~ ~ !heww=
weapona from Qmtral Europe by irtoup also would sharply cut
the end of 1983. • . 6ack their forces while eetting up
No nuclear weapons would be the nlaclear-free r.one In Central
permitted in a zone ext.ending Europe.
150 kilometers on both aides of The oommiaaion recommended
the divld!ng line between North that fOftign ministen meet to
Atlantic Treaty and Waraw Pact oonclude negoUatlonl on troop
forcea, and there would be reductions held for nearly 10 on-aite lnapectlol)J to iuard years ln Vienna. ·
~~d.na· Vance told a news conference
Tueeday the idea b "to remove
80IDe of the danaer of early uae
of nuclear weapons " in a
conventional war in Central
Europe. If Warsaw bloc forces
'"nM! umlea whk:h are pobed
against each other in Europe
today are much larger th.an
would be neceaitated by realistic
appraisal• of basic aecurity
needs," said the ~eport .
Orange Oout DAILY PILOT IThurtday, June 11 1881 8
11Common Hourtty would be
enhanced by drHtlo, mutual reducdonl. ••
The commlaa1on wu ~rawn
from 17 nati<n lndudUW the
United Stat .. and the S'oviet
Uniori. CeUecl the Independent
Comma.6on on Dtaarmurient And
Secwity llluea, it eatd all nadonl
of the world "mUlt cooperate to
att&ln the Umltadon, reducdon
and eventual abolltlcn of anm."
While moat commiulon
membere are not directly
connected with their aovemmenua, the pa.rtidpat1on of
Q~ Arbatov, a aenlor advller
to. Bifthnev, may lndlcate eome
otfkial Soviet auppon for the
tindlnp.
Th• commiulon called for
~ •core of meaaurea
-'nie reopen1q and rapid ~ L-_......,;...,_ __ ,_
oonclUlion of -necotlationa on a
c8mprehenalve nuclear test ban BATl'ERED CITY -Thia la what was left of
treaty. K.horramshar and Iraqi fortifications after its -lmmedtate etepe to halt w reeapture by lranlan forces. Flush wlth victory
nillltariz.aUon of apace. especially after pushing invading Iraqi forces out of
A .. Wlrepttolo
Iranian territory during 20 JnOnths of Wdr,
Iranian tr'10ps now ~e poised along the lraqi
border, thejr next move in doubt.
anti-aatelllte aya1ema.
-Rap1d proare11 in
, U .S.-Sovl~t na1otlatlon1 in
Geneva on reducinl or elimlnatinl nuclear mlllilee In
Europe.
-Resuming U.S.-Sovlet tallm
on chemk:al warfare ln an effort
to ban theee "hideot.ul" weapona.
While much of the impetua
for controllina nuclear weapons
would remalri with the two
1uperpower1, the commlaaion
recommended atrenat.hentng the
authority of the lf.N. Security
Council and the
eecretary-general.
"Regrettably," the report aaid,
"atatea have tended only to tum
to the coundl aa a 1ut re.ort
when c:onllict baa already. or is
on the verge of breaJc.iDB out."
Meanwhile, Reagan already
baa embraced some of the
prlndpal goals, including ·a new
U.S.-Sovlet treaty to ma1te deep
cuta in strategic nuclear weapona.
Klt&Wa
50
KR UPS
''Tc h . '' OUC -It Electric Coffee Mill
• Oval shaped grinding chamber and specially
designed stainless steel blade produce perfectly
uniform ground coffee
,.
• Fut grinding action prevents heat build-up,
assuring full coffee ffsvor • Grinds evenly with no waste-coarse to powder fine,
S1l1
S18.ll
with nnoer tip control
• 2 oz. capacity (10-15 cups)
• Double action 111fety system
• 1 year limited warranty
Prtce. Good Thru 6-9-82
Nearly $1 million cOllected . ...... .
..,, CROWN .
.HARDWARE for one Senate primar.y race
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Nearly $1 million bu been
eoDec:ted for an J!'Mt Loa A ...
Democratic primary campalp for a state senate aeat that ,.,.
$28,111 a year.
The battle h between
A9emblyman Art Tones and
incumbent Sen. Alex Garcia.
"It appeus that Cal.tfonda will
experience ita first million-dcllar
~ Jlrilmr7 battle in tbe
Qirde..'l'clrn. ..... " .... l'ldr
PoUUcal Pncdcle Com•leelon am m Tam Howtian .ad. BouatQB aatd the prevtou.
record waa In 1910. when teo1,a10 ... rataed for a
Democratic primary battle
between A9emblyman J'loyd
~-Pleaaanton. and
l'h.a aw-ie. Santana. Mori
Berkeley ~arriers
to traffic illegal
-
.SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Oties do not have the right to
decide which atreeta may be uaed
by traffic nor do they have
complete authority aver traffic
control within their boundaries,
the California Supreme Court
h.. ruled.
.
Newman wrote for the majority
in the court'• 4-2 declalon
Tuetday.
The action WM filed by Byron
Rumford Jr., Otizena For Legal
Action Apinat tl)e Barricades
and others. 't
Everyone baa an equal right to
uae at.reeta for travel, ·the high
court said, and a dty baa no
authority over trafffc control
unle9a expresaly provided for by
the state LftPalatw'e.
The q>Urt upheld an Alameda
County Superior Court deciaioO
which barred the city of
Berkeley from placing Ila
ciontroVenial traffic barrien on
lta -*ta. The 41 concrete and
redwood barrier• installed in A dty mil)' cl09e any road aver
1974 and 1975 to ahlft traffic which' It hat ;.a.rt.dlcdon when it
away from certain' local atreeta believes the' road la no longer
wW have to be removed. needed for traffic, the court said,
''The streets of a dty belong to 4 but there b no au.thorlty for the
the people of .the state," wrote kind of partial closure Berkeley
Juadice Frank Newman, quoting impoaecf. Without authority,
from a 1920 state Supreme Court localltiea may not determine
decil'Qn. ""n\e rlght of con1rol which traffic ahall or shall not
over atreet traffic ii an exet'Gbe u.e atreeU.
of a part of the 80Vereign power The dillent of Chief Justice
of the state.'• Ra. Bird, joined by Juatice Cnu
Berkeley'• barriera "cannot be Reynoao, aaid the majority
• juatifted under either its lpored legillatlve policy that
•uthc*lty to cl09e streets or ita dUes may adopt traffic plana to
authority to regulate traffic," meet local needs.
ORNGE <XWIT Diiiy Piiat
Al Storee open 7 Deya
WMtcllfl Plaza
1024 lrvtne Ave.
Nft'PC)rt Beech
842-1133
CoroMclelM.r
3107 E. Coat Hwy.
873-2800
W.-c:lltf T1ll 8:00 Thura.
Herbor View Center
1614 San Miguel Dr.
Newport Beach
644-8570
. ~nahelm HJll8 .
5820 Santa Ana Canyon Ad.
(at Imperial Hwy.)
90e..5282
,
Crack into a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. Try a generous serving
of our new spiced cold boiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcorn"' shn mp.
And then do it again!
It's all you can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is served with your choice of a crisp cossed safad or
coleslaw, baked potato or rice pilaf, and another favorite , sourdough hrcad
All you can eat. All week long.
Alaskan SnOw Crab Legs s All you can eat-................ 15.45
Popcom1'Shrim
All you ' can eat .... ~ ....... : ... '7.75
New Spiced Cold Boiled SbrimP
All you can eat ............. ~9.45
. '
..
Byrne p,lays har.dbaU
8Y PAT llOl\OWITI Callforn. la haa reviHd and rel11ued lt1 or .... 1111 M :: --:-C1Dn1WMr riehtl ~Dhlet, "What Should l D&Aa PATt J .U1 ..... a. Mn&Oi .. Know About Dtvarce'f'•
Dtot•••r IHI 11• f'' Ht la Deoem•er TU new verelon lncorporatea recent ltlt. It U trH U11t ••Ht 1U11~1t fer dianamJn Cdfomla marttal c:UlloluUon lawi •oatltal treatm•t _.,, Vttvu1 ~•mlall· ~~ the jO&nt Chlld-<.'Ultody option ano cra8'9 btMfltat n.:.....:... th• ertterta loi' aettana. a dlvorw Without
Bui 1hi1" lime tori pony Jeape match
• CHICAGO (AP) -Mayor Tlml. 14, liood~~hu ~ Ja.ml....B w beck in the mayor pt Y to ~"" · Jftl•• C.brlnl=n hoUlina cocnplex. Byrne Wamm1 •
where th• lived few • wh.Ua lu\ "Be careful, wttb me you
yeer -but th1I t1nw lt wu Juat never knaw 1 where 1"1 ao'nl. to
to play buebAU. 80·"
Drell8d in a baby,blue 1u1t The bell Iii.led owr the plaw
and hJah heea!h the mayor W-.w -but w1y up, ~ than Tl.me' out the tint co open the pony he.ad.
I>~··• Hun _. IOlnl to court. 'l'i91pan\pblet &i.o •XDlalnl 11w VA explalMd chat blnet!ta7 how-property and dlbtl are dMdid: and
11"1 dtnitd Co ptllOllll ..,.... Sept. • t dldlianl IN iWWde Oft '/ and IU
1980, If they do not complete -e lhorter of 24 • how lot'8 tt iabl to 191 ::r-n:e and we;
montha canUnUOUI dve duty or the fUll Pl'" per.m may remarry, ;. ""~u 11 ou~
riod for which they lllned u~ not briefly the l.,al ~ lnvolY9d ln ,.tt1na an
apply to~ whO ~ tor 1 anriulment or a lePl tepU"atioo lnltMd of a dliabtllty Incurred ln line of duty, for th• divorce. con:=a of th• aowmment or for reuone Slnale cop. l'MY be obtained free by
PITCHER -Although
the know1 nothing
about bueball, Chicago
Mayor Jane Byrne
threw out the tint ball
for a pony l~e match
anyw~.
buebell l..,ue at newly built
Canon J'teld. When lhe wu told Timi took a IWlna, Ju.at for f\11\,
the ~ to throw It from the and the mayor had 1 Jtrlk'e.
pitcher'• mound, the replied: When the pme between the I
''You'd tietter tell me where it Plratf!I and the C.brini-Ol'Wn
11. 1 don't know anythinj about Reda aot undtt way. oUidally, I
thil. '' the mayor took a teat in the
The Cabrini Pirate•' Harold bleeche3.
of p. lendlna a ltunped, Mlf·addretied envelope to
G h • • Pamphlet., COmmul\katton Dlvialon, State et anot er OpJDJOD Ber of California, 6H Franklin St., San
DEAi\ PAT: I laave Jut over H ,otO mUea
OD m1 ~.,. ud a meeUale told me tlaat I Deed
a new fael p•mp. I tllo•1rat tlley l11ted tllroap more mun. Am I wroa1T S.T •• Foutabl Valley
Get another oplnlon before You.MO ahead
with this repair. The state Bureau of
Automotive Repair advlaes that an average
fuel pump should last at least 50,000 miles. lt
suggeata having a 1u1plclou1 fuel pump
checked aa aoon u poalble by a reputable
garage with proper lnatrwnentatlon. Fuel
pn;eaµre of aa little as 2""4 pounda per aquare.
inch can be normal. If ln doubt, check with the
tervlce department of any c.ar agency aelllng
your model for the correct fuel pump pressure.
Unscrupulous service station operators or
garage owners have been known to aqulrt raw
guollne on a fuel pump and claim that the
pump haa failed.
Divorce tips available
Franci8co 94102. MUldple c»ple1 for publJc
d1atribf,&ti0ft may be ordered It cmt-.11 per
100 and '86 per 1,000 -by lei'Mi1na a check or
money order to State Bar Pamphleu, 661 Brannan St., San FTancilco 94107.
Canceled stamps valuable
DEAR PAT: Someone lD my clab laa1
bear4 yOI cu .ell eaaceled 1*8mpe. We t1t"P' "11 mlpt be a 1ood tuc1-n111a1 project. WHre cu we flDd Ht aboat W.?
T .N., Hattactoa Buda
General informaUon about types of
canceled stamps that can be aold, neoemary
sorting and other detalla can be obtained by
wtjdng to H. E. Harris and Co. Inc., 645
Summer St., Boston. Mus. 02210.
• Got a proble~n writ,e to Pat Horo-' -_j wiu. Pat will cut red tape, getting the
I *" I *" • ,.99.,. •SJ
Z Good IOf three pieces ol 1u•cy ooioen I GOOd 104' runt pieces of 1u1cy golden ~ orown Kentucky F11eo Chicken plus brown Kentucky Fried Chtcken. with
single servings or cole slaw. mashed I rour rolls. a large cote slaw. a large
potatoes anc gravy and a roll mashed potatoes and a medium gravy
I 1Jm11 two oilers per purcl\ist C°"9Qn gooo I umu 1wo ot111s Off ou1tfllse Col.pon good Ollly toi cOll!b~hon wMe/curk ordefs bllfy IOl com0<n.a1oon wMe tdlrk t)(dets
CuSlomtf PIYS -~ Al)Q10D'e Sl1fS II• Cur.tome• pays all lppl!Ublt Ults lb l Otter explret June 13. 1982 I Otter expires Jone 13. 1982.
P!.Cts INY ••ry ., l)4r11C1~1<ng iotltlOllS
I Col.Ptll gooo only 1n So\ltht1n I Prices rmy vary J1 p1rt1c1pa11n?, 10ca11011r
C11tforn11 w111re Y1MJ n• 1n1 mem· Coopon gooa only 1n Sou1n1rn C111 °'"'' whtr• oersn10 sul of int Ktnlucky you HI 1ne memoeun1p su l ol 1ne Kentucky
Redeem this coupon lor a c.trry PK~
IOlded wtlh lilleen pieces of 1u1ey,
gofden brown Kentucky F11ed Ctucken
DEAR READERS: A couple considering a
divorce often are faced with a number of
tough questions, ranging from who pays the
credit card bills to where the children will
live. ..-L-. To help consumers understand a nuuu-r
of legal issues that may ariae, the State Bar of
•
anawers and action you need to aolve ln-
equJtJa ln government and businesll. M..U ;:,r que•tion• to P,t Horowiu, J\t Your Service,
~ Coast Da1Jy Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, a.ca mesa,
CA. 92626. A.s many lettel'I u possible will be am-wered, but phon«l b.quirie. or letters not inclu<fkw,
the reader's full name, addrea and businetl!I hours
phone number ~t be comidered.
fr..o cnicu n Associaloon 1 Fro.a Cll<ck.en Assoc!Jlton p
~Dtuckjiriid CbiCk~
WASHINGTON (AP) -They
occupy the demilltariz.ed zone in the
political wars over Social Security'•
Infirmities. but few of the 15 dtizml
on the panel 1eekin1 bipartlHn
reforma are non-combatanu.
Many of the National Ccnvnlntm
on Social J;ecurlty Reform memt.a
were ln the thick of battlea W.,.S ID
the past year over bow to repelr' the
venerable but creaky 1y1tem that
taxes 116 mllllon Americana ud
IUpports 36 millloo othen. seven sit ln the HoUae and Senate
and lead the pivotal commltteel that
will have to pua judgxnerlt on any
refonns. Two are fomler lawmakers.
~ president of the AFL-CIO sita on
the panel next to the president of the
National Asso ciation of
Manufacturen.
U all were bound to positions they
or their organiza~ staked out in
eeven Democrat• on tbe panel.
RMI"!'• other' cbokee wen: -Ort••••••, 56, a New York·baHd economUit who waa
cblllrmm of the 0-mc:U of Ecanomk:
Advtlen ID the Ford ~tioo
and 11 a member of Reaaan'•
r«nomk PoUc:y Adviloey Baud.
-JH D. Wa11eaer Jr., 63, a
former nlne-term Democratic
concre-man from the Shreveport,
La. area. A bank consultant, he WU a ~tive on the Howie Ways and
Means Committee in the mold of the
aouthem Democrats. .
-Robert A. Bed. 56, chainnan of
the board .and chief executive officer
of Prudential Insurance Co., the
world'• largest private inaurer. A
Republican, he also sit. on Reagan's
Export <:ouncil. .
-Mary Fahey F•ller, 40,
outgoing vice president for finance of
the Shaklee Corp. in San Francfaco.
Ma. Fuller, a former Citibank vice
pnsldent and private pension expert,
eerved on the 1979 ~ Counctl
on Social Security and OD Reagan's
tranaltion taak force on Social
Security.
Senate ~ty i..e.der' Howard
Baker, &-Tenn., appointed:
-AFL-CIO -PreeideDJ Laae
J.Unlud, 60, a Democrat well
in the lntrlcacles of the program.
KU-kland ~ been a loud critic of
Reaganomfca in general and of
Reagan's lh~lived Social Security
.reform proposals of last year in
particular.
-Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., 58,
' chair.nan of the Senate Finance
Committee. Dole has a reputation as a
filcal conservative, a moderate on
aocial l11Ue1 and an artful
~Olla BelDI, R-Pa., 43,
chairman of the Senate Special
Committee on Aging. Heinz, who is up
for ~ bu good Uea with grou~ repnemting the elderly.
-M.oJailwa. 65, la Ibo up b
re-election. A fonnidable orator, be
Jed the Senate rebellion ln May 1981
that prompted a 96-0 Senate vote
repudiating the-Reagan reform
package. Moynihan la the ranking
minority member of A.-rpatronc'•
Social Security 1ullammitt.e.
Howae Speaker Tho~u O'Nelll'•
choices were:
-Rep. C1a,.o Pepper, [).I'll., ~1,
the o1delt member Of ea.icrw .nd
one of lta atronpat'foel of any c:uu ln
Social Security. Pepper, a former
aenator, chair• the Hou..e Select
Comml~ on Aalna. -Rep. Bane-r Co•allle Jr.,
R-N.Y.; 59, th• -~anklna minority
membu of the Waya and Meana
Comml'U••· Conable loa1 has
fldwcatild paytlic half ol JillldlCare :=~:-.. ~
'°to the old .. iaid ~fun&
-Rep. WllllUI ~. 1\-~
M. -llu'dla 8 . ll*"-&1, I former
Democr1tic con1reanfom1n from
~ -...... edvocat.e of Im~ bmefi111 tiw WonMD. She 18
married to Rep. Andrew Jaeobe,
SOLID BRASS "2•WAY" CANDLE
SAUCER a CLEAR OL.ASI
HURRICANE CHIMNEYS
Stunning, versatile t===:::i,
braaa saucer from
fndla can hold •
claaalc 14 • dla.
taper or a 3• dla.
giant round. r=R--~
I' o I
I '
I I
I I
O I
I I
: I
O I
I I
S~UCER
I I I
I
Wltf'I remo¥able~._
taper holder.
1· dla. 6.77
13• x 17• s· deep
5.79
IJll!;l~ililiili'\1 NATURAL WOVEN
SPLIT
IAMIOO
T"UNKS Hi1~r1~"iIJ From China
a.&utlful
trunks have metal
hinges and double
layer construction.
4 SIZES
12· to 19• tall
NATURAL GOLDEN f'ATIAN l!A
CHEl"S From lncSoMtla
Sturdy wOOd reinforced cheata are
mad• of thick r•ttan. peel rattan
edging and hidden JMtal hl"Off.
14V."x 21V. •x 12• tall 29.89
11•x 31 Vt •11 18" 1•11 49.89
88.18
I).~ •••• , ••• ••111 ,_•~. Social
~ COii» • 'arm ll'CllD 1• '°
1971. ~llll!'iill~
Super aoap la strlk·
lngty packaged
and nicety sc;ented.
2• bar g
2.85 oz .• 3
~
For towels, ties, mugs, caps
or coats. 2 19 With 8 pegs. 24 • long •
OPENWORK CHROME PLATED
NAPKIN ETC. HOLDER /)..
From Taiwan / / ',,
Keep toast, letters // ',
or napkins In /
proper order. / a· wide /.II!! ... ~ I / .99 <L-l!S~~r
HANDCARVED
SHESHAM WOOD
PICTURE FRAMES
From India
Elegant frames are
surprlslngly dellghlful
with today's color
photos or yesterday's
black end whites.
214 •x4Va"
Image size
5.74
On ship or
shore, mix
or match
this short
sleeved blouse
with the tiered
skin . Navy with
white trim or while
with navy trim.
BLOUSE With
snap-on·bow
S·M·L 11.99 r-----t SKtRT
With button
closing and
elasticized
back waistband
S-M·L 16.99
JUMBO SAFETY
WOOD MATCHES
From Spain
Handsomely packaged
matches with kitty
cat or fan designs.
PAXO SAGE & ONION
STUFFING MIX 3 oz_
From England .&5
l\11 a 0111 Gt the lhow mua\
10 • b three "Low Boat"
H\Ofl burned ln a f rtak
llClllldln' an TwiMtY lnYOlvlr\I h~·tmed 'balloont. rrt• Gr •••11.~rt1 tewtt and N are
beck at work a.her they WeN injured when a cl1ar1tte
lpLlted one or more hjdropn
balloona lnllde a ta>dcllb ln
which they were ridinl, a
spoke.nan for Aaroa 8peDta1
froductiona uid.
· Grandy, who playa
"Gopher" the puner, wu the
moat aerloualy hurt wlth aecond~ bums on hla
handa and face. Mila Tewes,
who play• cruise director
Julie McCoy, had
aecond-desree bu.ma on the
rtabt hand and blisters on the
leh. The fire ainaed the hair
of Lange, wl\o playa
bartender Iaaac Wuhington.
Nebraska Gov. C)arlea nou acknowledges fle'a not
"the flamboyant type" but
di1pute1 a Time magaitne
article labeling him a
"colorlese COJ'\lervative."
Thone said he would
must go on
deHrlbt hlmatlf aa
''down-to-earth.''
The arUci. ald Thone and Illlnota Gov. Jam11
Tllomp1oa ut the two
Mtdwttt Republloa"
1overnor1 factn1 a touah re.elect.ton run tn November.
Commerce Secretary
Malcolm Bal•rt11 may have
received more than U .15
mlWon ln lncame outaide nil
government aa1ary lut year
-which would be hfaher
than any Cabinet member has
reported for lut year.
Aooordlng to hla flnandal
disclosure report, Baldri1e
had an outside income 1n 1981
of more
than $1.15
rnUllon -
poaaibly
more than
$2.5 mil-
lion.
Of that,
at least
$1.4 mil-
l ion and
p e r h a p s •AUNltoa
as much as $2.3 million, came
from Scovill Inc., where he
had been chairman and chief
executive officer until jolnlna
the Reqan admlniattaUon in
January 1981.
Former Htronaut Jack Swl1ert, now runnin1 for
Consr-ln Colorado, •YI he
wlll flnlah radiation
treatments June 15 for a cancerous tumor in hla noee,
and hla doctort expect him to
make a,c:omplete recovery. t
At a newa conference,
Swtiert said he was making
the dlacloaure because be
believed Republican voters 1n
Colorado's 6th District were
entitled to Information
relating to his abWty to 11erve
ln eonarea.
"l have experienced
lncredible rreonal growth .. a result o thia brush with
cancer," he Mid.
"I strongly believe that
God has spared my life
twice," he said, referring to
hla cancer and a1ao to his f 970
Apollo 13 moon shot, which
was aborted 1n apace becaUle
of an oxygen exploelon on
board.
CUT F ROM SHOW -Anita Morris, who
plays Raul·Julia's mistress in the Broadway
musical "Nine," demonstrates one of the
body. gestures that the CBS Standards and
Practices Committee banned for broadcast
on its 1982 Tony Awards show. A sequence
featuring four boys will be substituted on
the Sunday night show. Miss Morris,
nominated for best featured actress, says she
was heartbroken.' "!=================================~ AP Wlrephoto ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----
J
sio.99
Robinsons ' .
s2,000,00Q SEMl·ANNUAL
LINGERIE SALE STARTS TODAY!
SAVE ON VANITY FAIR: VASSAREnE: OUM: WARNER'S:. MAIDENFORM: FLEXNIT:
DIOR INTIMATES: HENSON KICKERNICK: BLOOMERS OF CALIFORNIM
AND MORE.
' Yol):,11 save on hundreds of styles of bras, girdles, panties, camisoles, slips-every_ilem of intimate apparel
yGli could possibly ne(td-every one from a famous maker. Ifs a wonderful opportunity to replenish your
dainty lingerie stacks at savings. and now. through July 17 you'll find all your favorites in
Robinson's Foundations, 5WL1ngerle/Oaywear, 91~
To order. call toll·free 1·800·345·8501.
s10.49 ·
Reg. $13. #4324. Vassarette Inner
Glow-Undershaper• Quintessence~
underwire bra. In white or nude nylon
tricot. 34-388, 32·38C. Also 32·38D. DD.
Reg. $14. Sale S11.99.
Reg. $1 2.50. 175·278. Vanity Fair
Underg_lows• contour decolletage
underwire bra. In white or beige
Antron• 111 nylon tricot. 32·36A. 32·388. C.
In capuccino. 32·36A. B. C. Also 32·360.
White or beige. Reg . $13.50. Sale $11.49.
3/S16.8Q
Reg. $7 each. #83501 Christian
Dior· logo lace tops a sleek hipster In
white. beige, pinl<. blue. peach. s1l•1er or
black nylon. 5.6, 7.
SlQ.49
Reg $12.50 #412 Olga's Secret Hug
Wonderwear· girdle with lacy waistband
and tummy panel for firmer support In
white or nude nylon/spandex S·M·L·XL
,, ' ; '
I
I
3/S14.25 SlQ.49
S6.99 s4,39
Reg $5 18500 Ftexnit's Something
Else· brief tor lightweight support In
white. black, taHy, be19e. searoam coral
reef or rose quartz spandex with cotton
Reg $5 50 each 12633 Henson
Klckernick Sk1mp·Skamp· single-seam
panty that hugs for sleek fit and super
comfort. In nude or bisque
spandex/nylon 5.6.7
Reg. $12.50. 1344. Olga's No-Seam
Bodys1lk '.,. lightly padded bra with front
closure. In beige r:iylon/spandex. 32·36A,
B. C. Also 1345. Bodys1lk'"' No-Seam
padded shell cup, 32·36A, B. In beige.
Reg . S13.50. Sale $11.41.
Reg . $8 50. 11017 Warner's Body
Slicks~ a silky, stretchy plunge bra with
front closure. In white or beige
nylon/spandex. 32·36. panel S·M·L·XL j
I
Reg $16.50 1320. Olga's No-Seam
Suddenly Smooth• underwlre bra in nude
nylon/spandex 32·38C, 0 , OD.
.
S13.49
Reg. $15. 11256. Warner's No
Exaggeration• underwlre minimizer bra.
In white or beige nylon crepe tricot ·
32·42C. Also 32·420, 00. Reg. $15.50.
Salt 119.11.
,
..A
l
.IO
>q
ll.i
to
'l'l
IQ
tW
:iJ .,v
&1
.: ~
'"' w
.J1
IT
!iJ
~ ·M
"JO
rl.f
. ·R ecession trBBS debtors
Many .Americans ·overextendeH in credit
11.=~D'P ..
NIW YORK -Credit ~ J*'Yade the Arn9rk:en ' eoond'iny, rarm and factory,
tndtvldual ancl corpoutlon,
borrower and ltnder, bil builnm -.nci arnall, Miler and
buyer, public eector and private.
Sl~ lt hu eo much to do with
the amount or money and debt,
and the overall monetary policy
· of the country, the Federal
· Relerve Bank ii lh one of lta mmt
powerful and crtt.lcal rolee.
· Anyway you look at lt, and
wherever you look, you hear a
too-famlllar 1tory about the
lh*w of debt:
Recea1lon hat taken away
1 income. And dlalnflatlon -In
• eome cues even deflation, which
ia an actual drop ln prices rather
than a drop ln the rate at which
prices are rising -hu reduced
the value of ueeta.
One common respon1e to the
problem ia to borrow, but if rates
are hlsh and a11et1 weak
borrowlns i1
difficult and
costly.
And dan-
gerous too.
Farm fore ·
c l osures
are rising.
Business
bankruptcies
have reached
levels unseen cu•00""
since the Great Depreaalon.
Sellen of homes often must offer
loans that, three years later,
bu yers cannot repay .
Consider the farmer. .
A few years ago crop prioel
were hi.gn h aJ and the market value
of fannland waa riling. Many
farmers borrowed on exiattna
land to expand their acreage.
Then farm prices began fal.l.lng.
Moreover, collateral 1hrank.
The U .S . Agriculture
Department reporta that altec
rising 16 percent in 1979 and 9
percent ln 1980, farmland values
fell an average of 1 percent from
Feb. 1, 1981 to April 1, 1982.
Consider homeownen:
Havine seen market values
double in a decade, and feeling
certain the trend would oontinuez
many BOld existing homes ana
J:!..:,h• money Into bt11u
To do IO, thty took lar11r
mort1ape at hl1h•r lnterut
rat11. Now, ln 1ome ftttlhborboodl. altbouah not 1n
the country• a whCU, ownen
u. llelnl an iic1ua1 deellno tn
market valu11 .:._ but not In
CU'l'Yinl OOltl. ....._ knowa all •bout the
con11quenca of expanalon and
debt. Amona cuualta .. art AM
Inttrnattonat.t:bl• Brooks,
Braniff, Itel. I J.W. Ma)'I.
McLout h Steel, Saxon In-
duatrlea, White Motor. Wlckea.
And many larae companJee are
endanaered, not•bly
International Harv•ter.
The level of abort-term
corporate borrowina during the recemon ia far in exceaa of what
many economiJtl had foreeeen.
With general economic
weaknea. inventory llquidationa
and the low level of corporate
investment plans, such u now,
the demand for fund1 by
corporations la senerally
expected to be weak.
however, eoonomiata at Chaae
Manhattan Bank point out, BOme
oommerclal and industrial loans
from ban.ka, and non-commercial
paper outstanding has grown
since January at an annual rate
1m111tn11
of about 23 percent.
Much of it •ppeara to bt
dtltrtu borrowin9, and
dtbt•tO•HHt ratio• on •
book-value bu1t have rt.en from lell than one-thlrd ln the early
19701 to more than one-half
todly, uld the bank'• economiata.
They explain: "Aa proflta and
cHh-flow have deteriorated
because of .. 11tn1 con1umer
1pendin1, theee flrml have found
themiielve1 ln flnandal diatre91,
needlns to borrow an
1.ncreasinaiy greater amount to
finance heavy lntere1t
oommltmenta ln order to avoid
bankruptcy.··
Mo1t companie1, like many
indlvlduala and farmen, are
caught with short-term debt and
long-term obllgationa. That
meana debts constantly must be
refinanced, some of them ·at
higher and ~r rates.
So pervasive la debt, individual
and inatitutlonal, that Federal
Reserve policy, It baa been
suggeated, may now have more
to do with the economy's future
than anything done by the
president or Congress.
Home foreclosures
high for quarter
WASHINGTON (AP) -
M~ on about 100,000 U.S. homes were "in the process of
foreclolure" in the first quarter
of this year, markina the highest
foreclosure rate in at least 30
years, says the Mortgage Bankers
.Aaociation of America.
The lenden group said that it.a
fint...quarter IW'Vey &180 showed
payment& on 5.35 percent of
American hiome loam were 30 or
more day1 paat due In the
Jan~-March period -abo
the blgbest rate since the group
bepn oompiJ1ng such figures ln
1953.
'lbe forec1olure rate of 0.53
percent compared with a rate of
0.41 percent ln the fourth quarter
of last year. according to the
group. The delinquency rate waa
up from 5.18 percent in the
October-December period.
Thomas Harter, the group'•
chief economist, aaid,
"Hiat.orically t the last payment
that. financially a train ed
homeowners will mill ia their
mortgage payment, but th e
continuing recesaion and growing
unemployment, unfortunately,
are showing their effect• on
mortgage delinquency and
foreclosure rat.ea."
Commodore · ·
VIC·20 · Computer
Video game and home computer In one.
Features full-size computer keyboard. ex-
pandable memory cOpobtl(ty. bullt-lf1
BASIC computing language. Ploys car·
trldge games. also works with discs and
cassettes Vlc·20 -"Tl'le Wonder Com·
putej of the 1980'1 ·• On sole at K mart .
Invitee you to put your graduate'•
future ''on llne'' with an Apple II+
Computer· from Computerland of
Laguna)Hllla. ·
APPLE II+
48K PACKAGE
INCLUDES:
•Two Diak Drives
•9" Sanyo B/W Monitor
•Apple Writer 1.1
•Typing Tutor
ALL FOR
•Speed Reader
•Personal.Finance
'3269
Manager
•Plue FrH
MX IO Printer
w/lnterfece
end Cebl•
Golden Apple Gift Certificates now available.
We know small computers.
Let us Introduce you.
Ootr outcH·~LGimn.,,.nMfu
• OF LAGUN A HILLS
Excellent Financing Available
OAKBROOK VILLAGE
242.41 A"9Nde De La Cerlola
Sulla C·2. Llltuna HIM1
(714) 859-8912
HOUltS MOHDAY-n.uasOAY 10 IO ••FltlDAY ~·U.TUltDAY IH•CLOSl!D SUH
SUMMER "
CLEARANCE
50%
OFF!
Now Thru
Saturday June 4
ENTIRE
STORE
Women's Apparel
& Accessories
YOU ALWAYS SAVE A MINIMUM
25% OFF REGULAR RETAIL
' • .;., .fl. .,
' I '·• ., , _._ ~ . . " '
•
lncldea_t occurs · after matin6 dance with ma'\
MM8001 wt.. (AP) -A 11 plcky about danctn1 whh Vtifidal lntemlnatlon, but hOnt
,.... w~ cru,e named Tex cranee u 'hx 11. hatched.
wt.O 1'tNnlla ihe'• 1 penon" hal "You lOR your prtct. pretty atwn blrUl to her ftnt clUck fut tn thll bullMll," ht once Archibald moved ln wt th Tex ltw ilx WMkl ot pttformtna a told an interviewer. an APril 1 and lived wtth her
rnattn. danc9 wtth her human Archibald formed a bond wtth until May 20, taldnc walkl wtth hbe9~· Tex ln 197& after villtlna Ml at he&:.and htlplna her build a Mlt
"lt'1 flnally= off," Scott tht Patwcent Wild.lift lfeeeeroh ln lddition to danctnC wtth her • tr-man, a 1 tlmM for the Center tn Maryland. J'reem.n eeveral t1mel a day.
lntemat.lonal ane Foundation, aal\'l Archibald noticed that She laid an tU May 3.
e>Nlted Wednetday. althou1h 1he didn't appear "When 1he laid, Oeorae atayed
The five-inch chick named Gee impreeMcl with male crane., 111he up all nlflht wlth her.'.' Freeman
Wh1I. which wu hetped out of had a very •tronl lntereet in male aaid,
the ea Tueeday n11ht, la in aood human betnp."
l}uape, ne NJd. Tex waa tran1ferred to the
Tex hal received international p riv a t e l y f u n d e d c ra n e
att.entioh atnce ahe ahowed an found0&tion ln Baraboo, and
attachment for human1, not Archibald danced with her
cranea, u a chick at the San re1ularly for aeveral wefkl
Antonio llOO ln 1967. during the aprina breedln1
"She th1nka ahe'1 a pelW>n," aeuom ln 1917, 1978 and 1979, l'reeman explained. but waa bu1y and unable to
Tex won't perform the matJ.nc dance with her ln 1980 and 1981.
dance wtth another crane. The
blrda muat dance in order to
become excited enough to
produce an egg. '
Wlth only 115 or IO whooplnfl
cranes left in the world the
&-foot-tall Tex can W afford to be
IO choosy about boyfriends.
Fortunately, foundation
director George Archibald la not
Expt:nses
of cars
detailed
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Tbe ooet of buytni
and driving an
in termed ia te -si:ze
American car 120,000
mi lea over a
12-year peri o d ia
•28,640, or 23.8 centa a
mile, a government
publication reporta.
That eatimate includes
the $7 ,449 prlcetag;
,1,699 (excluding taxes)
or 6,314 fallona of
1aaol1ne; 6,033 for
inaintenance and repain;
•3,991 for insurance;
•939 for parking and
tolls, and u.~86 in .
automotive tax.es.
The fiauree are ln a
new Fecferal Highway
Admi.nl.stratton booklet,
"Coat of Owning and
Operating Automobiles
ind Vans, 1982."
The publication alao
reveals it OOltl 26.6 centa
per mile to drive a large
aiz.e car; 21. 4 centa for a
eompact; 18.9 oenta for a
a subcompact. and 33.2
tents for a van.
The booklet said the
iverage age of an
American car -6 .6
years -ls higher than at
any time since just after
World War ll, and that a car or van usually paaees
through three or mo~
owners during Its
tJtettme .
Tex has become IO Infatuated
with Archibald that ahe will
attack people who come lnto1the
territory the two have ataked
out.
"She drew blood on one sur,
who got too cloee to Georse, '
Freeman said.
Over the yeara, Tex laid
several eggs with the help of
Sandhill cranee lhcubat.ed the
ea and foundation worken pve
Tex a fake ea to take care of,
hopillfl it mlflht inspire her to lay
aaatn.
~ the male ha.11 of the pair,
Archibald helped incubate the
phony ea. littin2 ln a fold.lna
chair nearbr w6en Tex tooll
IOl'De time of .
Dr. Geor1e Gee at the
Patuxent center helped obtain
the crane aemen used to
lntemlnate Tex, so foundation
workers ln Baraboo named the
tiny chick after him, Freeman
lllid. .
Thus U....name (;ee. Whiz.
. The figures are baped
on a study tracing
n felected vehiclea and ~ their costs throush a
12-year life apan of ~ 120 000 miles, which the -~'et said la average.
1be OOltl ln that study
reflect price• in
iuburban Baltimore, but
<:I cl
f.t
0
Ji d
~ ,
can be converted to any
other 1ocaJity through a
trorkaheet oontainea in ihe publication.
Single coplea are
available fro.m the
Co111umer Information
Cent.er, Pueblo, Colo.,
81009. Quantities may be
obtained from the
Federal Highway
Admini1tration'1 Office
of Public Attain HPA-1,
400 S,Venth Street SW,
Washington. D~. 20~90.
Building up
BAKERSFIELD (AP)
-In the face of a
hctt11lon and hiflh
lntereat rate•~ con-
ftructlon activity in
Kem County ii at record
levela, the Boar~ of
Trade announced-
ktlvlty reached $107.7
lbOllon for the f1nt four
tnolltht of ~ •• reocrd.
(J
•
• prices
decrease
SAN DJIOO (AP) -
The Pl1at of houMnc ln
the Ban D~e o area decllned In A f« the
t1nt tlm9 in ~ the
Greater San Dle10
Chamber of Commerce
aaya.
A aurvey conducted by
the bualneu 1roup
ahowed a decline of 1.7
percent to an avera1e
price of $125,000 du.rtq
the alx-month pertoa
ended ln April.
The atudy uid houslnl
prtce. ln real term&. or
conat.ant doilan. declined
on an lnflatton..actjusted
bMla by 3.2 pen:ient in
that period and 9 .4
percent the paat 12
montha.
San Diego la ~ only
county amons •even
....,;-w Southern Callfornia
A# Wlr.,iMto
FOR THE BIRDS -George Archibald performs mating dance with Tex,
a whoop_ing crane. The ritual has paid off with the bird giving birth to
her fiist chick.
countlea surveyed to
ahow an overall decline
in houaing prlcel the last
year, a spokesman said.
In an unprecedented move that stunned the travel
industry, Continental has de'clared itself th$! Official
Airline of Suiiinier-. -
Can we do that? Well, we've done it.
And what timing!
Starting JW1e 16th,
you can fly anywhere
in Continental's U.S.
at our low, low
summer fares. (Now
that we have Tuxas
International as a
partner, that means
more places than
ever.)
Oh, and plan on
bringing your kids. If
they're between 2 and
11, their fare is even
lower.
So pick your spot.
Then make it official:
Call your travel
agent, company travel
de~entor
Contin.ental.
YOU'LL NEVER PAY MORE
THAN $199 EACH WAY FROM
L.A. INTERNATIONAL,
BURBANK OR ONT ARIO
WHEN YOU FLY
IN THE CONTINENTAL U.S.A.
DENVER $11950
HOUSTON $139
CHICAGO $17350.
BOSTON $199
LAGUARDWNEWARK $159
KANSAS CITY $139
FINISHED -Construction has been
completed on the Von Karman office building
in Irvine. The 38,000-square-foot building.
built at a cost of $1.3 million, wlll be occupied
by the Smith Tool Co.
BOSTON (A Pl -Dootora are anP''tt" "-1~-lnltancefor 00: ~ .• y_Onla e''2~ ll1t1nln1 to the r own advlct, a uw-... 1a1 ., -·-·• Huvard rnldy_ lhowl. MOit of the UM lleeDtnl pUIJ more thari thrte
doct.on on tM Harvard MtdJoal School t1mel a week.
faculty, at -.i, watch their wetcht. Tht docton Hem 11peclally
have re1ular ohec:kup1 and even concerned about 1mokln1. Only 8
buckle their IHtbeltl. percent currently u11 cl1arette1z
And thelo don't 1huw m\lch althouah 38 percent are reformea
enthUllMm or dietary tada -most ~ three..quanen of tM docton
never 1hopped at a health food 1tore, ..... _ ... ,_ -•ibellta ... ln •'--•---. popped vitamlna, doeed thermelvet """" .... --.. -.K"u -· With vitamin C u a oold remedy or Goldfl'naer 11ld doctora are
took uptrln in an effort to P-revent •peel.ally aware of the dan&er of auto
heart attacka. • accldenta.
"I wu aurpriled by the extent to "Meet people don't even think ot
SUSPENDED
Former Atty. Gen.
Richard Kletndlemt
has been 1u1pended
from J>racticin1 before
the U.S . Supreme
Court.
which theee people teem to be takJn1 aeaibeltl when they think of health,"
care of thermefve1 and abldlna by he 11id. "If you ju1t vl1lt an
practica that are Judaed to promote emergency room on a Saturday n!Cht
1ood health," 11ld Dr. Stephen when the aklohol la fiowtni and tee
Goldftncer. who dl,rected the 1urvey what coma in oU the roaidJ. you 1tart
for the Harvard Medical School wearlna leatbeltl." -------~
Health Lett.er. Among other flndlna• of the No1"se stud1·ed Oo1dfinaer aurveyed ~5 memben IW'Vey;
of the faculty on 26 health hablta -Only 14 percent of the docton SAN FRANCISCO from dalJ f dental no. take dally vitamlna or Ute vitamin C 1 _.,,_Yp~~.0 · to ward off coldl, and 7& percent uy (AP) -'The city of Sen ............ u. wuu th _.__ in ._ __ ,th food Joee muat provide mol'!
He found the docton to be careful ey never •nup n-.& ltorel. Information about how
about what they eat, e1pecially foodt -Only 7 percent take a dally doee aircraft nolle would af-
high in cholesterol, which hu been of uplrin, which aome ~ hu feet nelghbortn1 Santa
linked with heart dl..aeue. linked to prevent.loo of heart attack.a. Clara before ltl planned
According to the survey, 79 percent -M percent had a routine phyaica.l e~on of the mW\ld-
eat no mo~ than three egp a week; exam durtna the put two yeara. airport can proceed. a
69 percent wie margargtne inlt.ead ot -Half aald they ~ or do other urt of Appeal hat ru·
butter; 44 percent reatrict their strenuoua exercise at feist three timea ,..l_ed. ______ _
consumption of red meat. And 71 a week.
Ex-university VP gets pris~n
URBANA, lll. (AP) -Former University of
lliinoia vice president Robert Parker has been
sentenced to five years in prison for stealing
$600,000 from the school and spending much of it
on female companionship.
Cireult Court Judge Harold James accepted the
recommendation of Champaign County State's
Attorney Tom Difanis, who recommended the
five-year term and a $10,000 fine. Dlfanls said
Parker should go to jail because his crime was
''absolutely outrageous" and becauae he violated a
public trust.
Motnents before sentencing, Parker wiped
tears from his eyes and told Jensen he was sorry for
his actJona, but still did not undentand them.
Defense lawyer Art Lerner asked Jensen not to
send Parker to prison, but to assign him to public se~lce work and perhap1 try to arrange for
restitution.
Parker, 60, admitted embezzling the money
and spending much of It at a ~area nightclub
and on women he met there.
However. during his two triala, the defense
contended that Parker was insane, and therefore
not responsible for his actJona.
The first trial, in Mount Vernon, ended in
February with the jury unable to reach a verdict.
Parker Wait tried again in Rockford in April, and
-;-···· was convic(ed on 15-, counts of felony theft.
Parker, a 29-year veteran of the university,
was accueed of taking the money durlna a 2\.\-year
per:iod ending in ~Y 1981. He resigned 1n June 1981.
Parker wrote checks totaling more filan
$90,000 to the Club Tara~ ln Franklin Park.
Manager Ronald Martin testified that he accepted
13 university chec:ka from Parker during one year.
Martin said cuatomera like Parker would buy
bubble bath at $60 a bottle, which side--stepped laws
forbidding employees from ael.llng their time td
customers. A botUe of bubble bath entitled Parkel'
to between 10 and 15 minutes of companionship
with women employeea, who doubled as strippers,
Martin said.
Cableless 'cable'
cars OK'd in SF
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -"Cablelesa" cable
can got the Board of Supervt.on' OK 81 tourist
shuttles during the two-year overhaul of the real
cable can.
The board approved an amendment ~ the
police code allowlna motorized "cable'~' can to run on dty ttreetl. While the real can out of
commlllion, private companiea could up t.o 30
IJl()tOrized can on route. between downtown San
Frandlco and the Fisherman'• Wharf-OhirardeW
Square area. But they wouldn't wie the hilly, roller~
route. real cable can take.
The overhaul is due to start in $et>tember.
Mrs. Dymally on panel
SAClJ,AMENTO (AP) -Alice M. I>ymally,
wife of former Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally, hu been
named to a state education c:ornmi9ion by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. She will aerve on the F.ducation
<;?ggortunltie. Cornrnmion.
•
Parker also gave much of the UI money to
Chicago-area women, Including $208,000 U> one
woman with whom he reportedly engaged in sex.
percent uy they are no more than 10 -41 percent uae dental flam dally.
pound.a overweight. -93 percent say they don't have
Call 142•5171.
Put a few words
to work for ou. They are alto cautiout about ~ more than two akloholic drlnb a day.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
~-~ .. ...._.._...,..~ ,.,..,... ___ .~
STARTS TOMORROW "z~
AT A THEATRE OR DRIVE·IN NEAR YOU
SOME ENCOURAGING WORDS
FROM WEICHT WATCHERS.
~A/tu UyJ n.irry did rMtJaod irwe'::l.from hypno.ia toacu·
punctun, I found ~if/U Watchus.
It rmlly worlu/ And if1 tt0eaay to
follow -wen wlwn I eat out.•
-Ly. Margold
(bt381b..J
(~N ENCOURAGING OFFER.) ••••••••••••••••• JOIN NOW OP 6/3
tb ....... Jaae S:&, Ste.I
SAVESS00
on your first mHtilig and registration fee.
Still only $5.00 per week, no contracts!
for the cla11 nearest you, cell:
I
I
.I
I
1 ..
835·5505 I I I -----------------------------I Ofl ... n lld ontywttll tl'll~--In Orwtoe • ..,_.,.,SM lenwdlno WICI left OieOOCounllM. • I •VVEIGl-fTVVATCHERS• I The most successful -9'• loss progia1n in the world.: ~ ............. ;.; ••••
NEWS
from all over California is rounded up each day
10 the Daily Pilat
s "" (' ~ .:= (., (' ~·
l}l 141' /90
I ..:J")
"MAXINE" ~fifli,
STEP INTO PALL WITH \.• u
THE CLASSIC SLING
PUMP.
Avt1l1blc 111'1 tau~ 0t
bont lutm calf allO • uupr. 1rq-0t Wll1l4" whirt _..
I
.'flUBUTES PAID -Flags, flowers and
f..-vent alngina marked the Memorial Day
ceremonies at Barbor Lawn Memorial Park
in c.osta Mesa. Cecelia Kripner joined in
singing the national anthem as Warren
Delly ,... ........ 'r P8'1toll O'OenMll
'Bliven remembered a World War I comrade.
Below, Joseph Mariaca1 read the Gettyaburg
Address while Rep Paul N. McCloskey Jr.
studied his.
Jobless end up on streets
Many among the new homeless are families
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
increa1tng number of_ people
aqueezed out of their jobs and
homes by the recession are
joiqing Skid Row alcoholics and
~oth{no~.city streets, says a USC
eme Stoner, an assistant
r at the USC School of
Work, said that among the
neti!omeless are families, inc ing many single women
wt children.
" from the types of
peoP,le now turning up on the
......, the recession ls starting to 1oolt like a major depl'e98ion,"
Mr.: "Stoner said.
,.,.he Salvation Army is
opeUfng bread lines, and small
cbu+ch groups are sheltering
~and individuals cast out
of tj\etr homes by unem-
plo&-ment, soaring rents and
dwihdlina public aid. But theee
vol~nteer agencies are hard
prened to meet the growing
need.''
A backlos of applications for ~housing bas forced the Los
AJ)geles Housing Authority to
·refuse new requests for housing. had more than 400 residents,"
"It's our market. as I tell our Mrs. Stoner contrasted the
staff," said Homer Smith, the homeless of the 1980s to those of
authority's executive director. the past 20 ye.an.
"Our vacancy rate' is down to Until recently, moat of the
one-half of 1 percent even in the people who ended up on the
public housing projects which streets were individuals estranged
tend to be our least desirable from their tamilles-and iaolated -
housing." from IOciety by bizarre behavior
Salvation Army Maj. Joaeph or chronic disabilities," ahe said.
Viola, who heada the Los "Great numbers of people
Angeles branch, said hb agency's became homeleu becaute
480 downtown beds are filled to changing public policies returned
capacity and some needy are mental patients to communities
bems referred to other agencies. wjthout providing adequate
Normally, h e added, the suppor;tive services."
Salvation Army has open beds at But now, she said, a number of
this time of year. people, including familleti with
"Sometimes the job• these children, are joining thoee living
geople hold aren't considered on the streets because they "have
that important in society," said simply been shut out at the
Viola. "When the recession hitt, bottom of the socio-economic
they're the first to go." ladder."
Mrs. Stoner said Loe Angelqs M rs . S to n er ca 11 e d on
is not the only place where the charitable organizations and
receaion I.a forcing people into otberJroup• to unite in a
the street. nation \x>al.ition working for
"Denver, another affluent Sun legislation requirtne gov-
Belt city, recently opened a emmental bo4ies to provide a
shelter for the homele88," .tle specified ttandard of shelter for
said. "A week later. the faclllty ' any pet90n desiring It. . •. -
.......
·CIUflRllA f
Public UtWtiet ~on. But er coul~ ~ dE!4f at any time b~ a tiew enio~. 10 the
drl for a citizen board continues. 1 1
*' , The Idea I.a not new. Wltoonain h.-1 ,auch a
.Jince 1979, funded by voluntary con tiont
from utility customert. Lut winter'• huge electric
:""~U: l.ncreues spurred the notion ~to
But the rate increues really are not the retult
of poor representation of consumer interesll. They
stem from PUC policy decisions and federal energy
regul.ationt.
Since the PUC was formed more than 60 years
ago, the main role of its technical sta,ff has been to
represent consumers. And the ttaff has done well at
its task. Last year, for example, it recommended a
$174 million rate hike for Pacific Telephone, when
the company 10ught almoet $800 million.
A PUC policy decl.alon. not poor consumer
representation, cauaed Pacific~ wind up with a
$600 million increaae.
Customers also are rep ted regularly by
city attorneys of three large citi Loi Angeles, San
Diego and San Franci8co. The wotk of one deputy
San Fr-anda:o city attorney produced more than
$500 million in telephone rebatee two yean ago,
giving consumers an average of $30 MCh.
But the cities are only Wlited in telephone
cues, aince each I.a served by different pa and
electric utilities. And they only oertldpate In phone
cases Involving Pacific, which generally leaves
customers of terms like General Telephone,
Continental Telephone and Sierra Pacific Power
with only the PUC staff as an advocate.
A citizen utility board would work actively ln
all thOIJe cues. Its mission would be identical to the
oriRinal purpoee of the PUC -to make sure
utilities have the money they need for providing
adequate aervice, while assuring the lowest possible
rates for consumers. ' ·
But that mission contains aome serious internal
confllcta. The interests of rural customera, at the
end of very long and expensive supply lines. can be
at odda with thoae of city dwellen. . \)
If a citizen utility board represents residential
cuatop'tera, can it also 1peak for· buaineu and
industry? Thoae interests al.ao are In frequent,
terious conflict..
Today it'• the PUC'a job to reoondle th-OR
interesbl, arriving at constructive compromi.es.
Would a citizen board be at all u.e1ul lf it., too, were
lobbying for oompruniaee?
ln the Wi.aconsin experiment, the new_ croup
works only for residential cuatomera, who fimnce it
by responding to letters included 1n monthly utility
bills.
If that happened here, the It.ate Chamber of
Commerce or .me other bwlinem gi-oup would
probably feel compellectto eet up Its own lobby.
So ~ citizen ulllity board would likely aerve mainll to muddy the waten.
I Gov. Brown's eventual succesaor really
wants to cut utility rates, he can do it -by making
the right appointments to the utility commillion
and not treating it as a backwater .agency, 8f did
both Jerry Brown and Ronald Reagan.
He keeps
a1manac
honest
f'ICTTnOUI .,... ..
....,..n•~
FICTITIOUI tU9'Ntlat Th• lollowlng .,.,son 11 doing
NA• ITATIMJm' 1>11"'-•: I Tht tollowlng perton 11 doing TRACEY EHTEAPRISES, 2700
1:11111,,_ a: North Mllltn Str•, Senta ANA, CA
THE GLASS BALLOON. 1774 112701 New Hatnplhlre OrlWI. Coate Maa. Hiii T~. 3 Mhwoe>d. !Nine,
CA 92e2f CA 112714.
Cynthie lrtnt Aenger. 1774 Thie bu*'-le conouctM by en
New H11mP9h1r1 0rt¥e. eo.11 Mela, ~. ... .... T CA 112926. ..., r__,, 1.
Thi• bualMSI II CC)('ldUC:led by en Tiii• ., .. _, -l1'ld with -
lndlvidUll. County Clerk of Orenge Coutlty on
Cynthie 1 Ranger J11ne l. 11112.
Thia lltlemefll WU lllecl wttll ti-. ,,_,1 County Cl9rk of Ofenge County <#! P11bll1hed Orenge Cout Delly
AprN 16 11182 Pilot, June 3, 10, 11. 24, 1912.
' F117138 2442-82
P11bll1h1d Orenge Coast Delly l'\ll.IC M)T1C(
Piiot. Mey 13. 20, 27. Jone 3. 1982 l---:===~==:---3096-e2 '1CTl'10Ua WM
...-nA~
NI.IC Nena The followlng ~ -doing ~-: --AO--TITl---0--Ul-MJ---.,.,~.~.--TIMELESS TREASURES. 371 um l'TATlmNT North Vie Mlleno, Anaheim, CA
The lollowtng person 11 doing 112808. ~ -SNwnmer1 ........... 378 North C O S T A M E S A M E T A L Via Mlleno. Anlhelrn. CA ll2IOe.
PAOOUCT8, 17233 Monro..ta. &Ille 8et1le ....,... ~. 378 Nof1fl
8 Coeta Mela. CA 112t27. Via Mlleno, Anenelm, CA t280t.
' ~ Wiiiem Shelton. 2112 Thie ~ le conducted by •
Eetller Strfft. Coate Me11. CA generlll pertnenhlp. 112&27. ~ ....,.,_
Thie~ II conduct9d by en F~
lndMduel. Publlahed Orenge Cout Diiiy
R.W. Shelton Piiot. June 3. 10. 17, 24, 1982
This ltlt-t Wll llJed with the 2387-32
Clerk of Orenoe County on
1982. "~ PtB.JC M>TICE
llMd Oreng• CoHt Delly NOT1Ca OF APPUCATIC*
Plot, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1982 T 0 11 l l Al C 0 N 0 l IC 2421-82 aEVERAQI .• ----------·~ PtB.JC NOTICE To Whom 11 May ConQem: -~==~===--MARION E. BOWEN, le epplylng '1C11TIOUI ..-U to the O.p11tment of Alcollollc MAim l'T~TlmNT Be¥wege Control for The following person It doing u40••
~-: • OnStlea-BEACH TOWELS PLUS, 238 to Mii 11Co11o11c .,._egee It
MarW A--. Belboe lellnd. CA 18 Fllr Or.,
112983. Cal9Mrte. Chari" Ca,.,.nt11 Allen Jr.. ca.ta ~ CelNornla
306 Lugonla. Newpot1 8-:11. CA P11bllslled Orange Cout Deity
·112983. Piiot. J\IN 3, 11112. Tl* l>ullr*8 II conducWd by en
lndMduel. CMrtee c. Allen Jf. PtB.JC NOTJC(
,.... etMement -Ned with the ----------County oin of orange County on
ACMIOUS9411_.I Mey 13, 1982. ,_.. um eTAT'llmNT
Publlehed O<ange Cout Dally The lolowlng s--ie -doing Plot,~ 3, 10. 17, 24, 1912 ~ -2427-82 8Ell FAMILY PARTNERS. 215
-----------::----&et a.I Aoed. ANhelm.CA ~. rtllJC M)T1C( FfWlk M. Bel. Trullae of Ille ..crmoue amr•M Frri M. end .i-.. o. e.11 True1. MA.. IT TW dated Matdl 21~ 1975, 432 Vflt8 ........ .....__,. A ,,.....,.. Pweda. Newpot1 8-:h, ~
.. .. ~~ .. perton8 -~.. 1129CIO. ~;-:PAIN CLINIC. 1801 ~·C!::l~~~:.2° Cortez.
Newpot1 BcMwerd. ca.ta ~ Krtltln C. 8-, 1&40 Edadfl.
CA *2827. La.~~ 9002f.
AMlben Hoflhl. 1254 Hllcr-1 F111M M. Bel, Ifft, 2751 ac-i_
Line, F.-Wook. CA 92021. Car1ebed Callfomle 92008
Or. Rendell R. Keith, 43~1 Thie~ II condudlld by•
Pelol'Mr. Flllbrook, CA 92028. generlll pertnershlp, ~ ~ II ex>nd0Ct9CI by 8 Ff"'* M Bell ~ pertnerlNp Trust• i>f the
Atiuben Hof9'll Frri M. 8lld Jell'I G.
Thie ltat-t WM filed with the Bell Trust. det9d ~ ol Or1119 Countr on Mardi 'D, 1875,
M8y 25, 1912. PertMr
-f'tl0174 Tlll9 ltlltetner11 ... fled with the Publletled Oreno-Cout 01 County ca.ti oe 0nnge County on "'°'· Mey 27, June 3. 10, 1~ ~ 111, 1982. ........ .,.-..~
rtllJC M)TJC( ........
---------AU.hillw ........
f'ICTITIOU8 llU ... H '"" 1 I !Ill c.c:=~ NA•tTATHIENT =-~ Tiie following persona are doing ~ 11e9c111. CA ._
bullMQ u : .. .,.
LA CREME. 11112 Olllaxy Ottve. Publl•ll•d Orano• Cou t Dally ~~~· ~~~2T~N. 1100 Plot. w.y 20, 21. J\IN 3, 10. 1182
Ber1llfllre ~. Newpot1 Beech, CA 22~
~VONNE SHEN. 11112 GelHy ---==Ml.JC=,,.,.,...llOTJC(.,..,.,.,=~--Or!Ye, Newport Bach. CA 1126e0. ACTTTIOUS IUAelai
This buelneu II eonduct9d by • NAm tTAT'EmNT
general ~~l:.n ~:::-wing pereon le doing
Thie ,1~tw~":"1ect wllh the C . O. M. OE SIGNS, 3 2 14 Montena. Coell ...... CA 112e29. COun1y Cler1' of Orange County on MICHAl!L W. MULLEN, 3214
Mey 11. 11182. F11t1• Montena, Colt• Mesa. CA 112829
P11bll1h•d Or•ng• Cout D•lly Thia ~Is conduc:ted by en H E A R I N G Plot. Mey 13, 20, 27, June 3. 1982 lndMdlllllMldleel w. ~
CHANGED -Arthur 2123-82 T11111t11_. ... 111ec1 with Iha
Bremer, convicted of :::::Nl.l:::c::M>:TICE::::::: ~~.~.°' Orenoe County on a t t e m p t i n g t o ,,_. F1C'rn10Ut au..... P111>ll1h1d Orenge Co11t Delly assassinate former. ..... ITA,....,.,. PHOt, Mey 13, 20. 21. June 3, 1982. Alabama Gov. George Tiie fotlow}ng p1reon 11 doing 3054-82
Wallace, is entitled to ~.'tArro. 1212 DMuvlll• l'tllJC M>TICE
a parole hearing in DrM. HunttnlJIOn Bledl. CA-....
June 1985. OHA"lH WA"REN SAITO, ACTmOue IUH•• -"'----------=-1212 °"~'"· ~tlngton ..._ ITA,.._., ~.:r.... 11 oondu*d ~en ~olt~wlng per.on fl dolnff,
gets tnctMdlllla.-W lllto 0 A AN 0 I 00 UN TY "IU-
Tllll lt.a'9mlnt W.. ttled .-. tM TAUAANT MVIEW, 1266 ~ ~ Qlft of ()nil1ge eounty on DftVe, OOl'OM Oii Mir, OA ntn.
-11 1112. • ,,..,. JolW'I R. ~1226 ::z:r'
Publl111ed Oreng• Co11t Dally ~ c=:..cse:. ~by.,
Piiot, Mey 13, 20, 27, .NM 3, 1M2 lndMdllll. • ~42 Jotrn"R. .. 1-8 BIOLA PWlJC N011C( ,.,. ..... , ... ,, w "' {R(;
County Qlftl of ()r • Dr Cook IU .. _ a. 1ta. • d I ,,. wa1 rec
PvbUIMd 0rencunCler1radu1
Plot. Mey 20• rr. "'IJ'•duate intei · -------ttuds. at aw
I
' Huntiµgto'ii will aid
1 most gifted students
I The Huntln1ton Beach conetderation by oollepe.
1 Union Hlch S8hool Diatrict will The aim ol educ.ton ii to
atart 9: ,l?"OFam Mxt fall deqned e1lm!Mte the tendency of the top
to quaury ltl briahtett and hardest atudenta to take euy COW'lle8 10 u
workl~I atudenta for the moat to not jeopardize their arade J>Ol!lt d~diftl colleaee. averqe and pollible 1e'holarah1P..
It la Called the DlatinguJshed In addition, valedictortana and
Scholars Pro1ram and wtll aalutatorianl and graduatet wtth
provide the moat rigorous honors wtll come from the
academic claseet that the dlatrict pf'O@am.
hu to offer. l>latric\. offlclala alao wlll
The course of study la so a11ist partlcipanta ln gaining
rigorous that students will be colleae admlaalon aa well aa
given special inducement• to helping them find Jobi in the
participate. community while going to achool.
For example, students But the top benellt of all ii
completing the program will flnlah putting the hi&hest priority on
at the head of their cl a as learning instead of merely getting
automatically, giving tbeqi top good grades.
School use solutions •
Deciding what to do with
Corona del Mar ·ElerAentary
School is proving anything but
elementary for officials of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Diatrict. •
First, district officials met stiff
resistance from homeowners who
live near the surplus achool, which
· was cl.oeed a year ago because of
decJining enrollment. A~IHY
residents objected to a flan call1iig
for the University o Southern
California to operate a satellite
business school at the emp.ly
camptss.
The state Coastal Commission
refused to grant a pennit for th~
USC graduate achoo!. That left
local school officials with little
choice. They had to let the
university out of a lease
agreement that would have put
the surplus property on a paying
basis to the tune of $69,000 a year.
NQw a citizens" committee is
recommending that the Carnation
Avenue acbool site be converted to
residential uae. The matter will be
d.lacuaaed by the school board June
8. A decision ia expected June 22.
Homeowners in the area have
su1ge1ted clearing half of the
3. 75--acre IChooJ aite to make way
for about 22 homes. while keeping
thee~ playground. Some acbool officials are Jeanlng
toward that idea. The school
district could uae the· money, if a
developer can be found.
However, there are some other
considerations and some other
pomibilities.
Unlikely as it aeems now, there
always is the chance the achool
could be needed again. It is, aft.er
all, the only school aouth of Coast
Highway in the Corona del Mar
area. Homeowners aay that, lf that
happens, a sohool could be built on
the 1.8 acres that would be left 81
a p1-yground. That doesn't aeem
terribly feasible.
In Costa Mesa, another of the
school district's surplus campuses
-Rea School -is being leued as
a community center. Tlils idea is
working well at Rea, but the
situation is different in Corona del
Mar, where two commul)ity
centers at Grant Howald Park and -
the OASIS already exist just
blocks from Corona del Mar
School. It's doubtful a third is
needed.
Leasing the surplus campus 1o a
private school has been suggested.
Nothing has developed on that
fron~ ,
A museum with a tea room W81
advanced as a pcw:!ble. use. That
was rejected 81 too commercial for
the residential character of the
neighbc.-hood.
The biggestjX'Oblem 8eelD1I to be
traffic. The neighbors don't want
to add to the traffic in the area.
Buildin& homes on the echOo1 lite
hardly would 10lve that prbblem.
If you've ~t any ideal about
what could be done with a aurplua
8Chool lite in the middle of a
residential neighborhood, you ·
might consider aClvancing them at,
the June 8 school board meeting.
Be prepared to defend younelf.
Funny thing -that USC
business school is looking better all
the time.
Reserve this weekend ~ More than 60,000 people are . The Fish Fr). parade~--at
expected to attend the 37th annual 10:30 a.m. Saturday-;t ~bor
Costa Mesa-Newport• Harbor Boulevard and WthloD Street. i Lion.s .\Club Flab Fry Friday More ~than a dozen bands,
I througn Sunday. . lncluding thoee from F.atancia and
1 Over the years the eervice Costa Mesa high achools, are
' orgahization has raised more than expected to participate in the
~5,000 through the Fish Fry for parade. Benny Ricardo, a former
various local charii:ies. Orange Coast College atudent who
The three days of festivities plays football profasioDany for
in downtown Lions Park will the New Orleana Sain~ will be ---1---,_ e &Deauty con~a baby grand maraha of this year's
contest, carnival rides and games, parade.
' I
l
drawingl and of coune the famous The Fi ah· Fry is a fun
fish dinner for-$4. tradition. See you there. .. . .
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit·
ed. Address Tile Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone Ul•O
642-4321.
~ t · L.M. Boyd I Separate vacations
' How do you and your matrimonial inherited a buaine11 that your
mate feel about taking '9parate ~ bad started at the time of
vacations? Sixty-one percent of. the Chrkt, and that ·businela had loet tl
couple• generally approve of thia million a day ever atnce with no
notion now. Big jump over 20 years expectation of change, lt would aUll
ago. Thell only 37 pen.-ent tboulht it a take you and your deacendenta
good idea. Our Love and War man ii another 700 years tO loae the fint $1
not locked into an opinion on thil one, trillion.
except for the obYloua conclulioo that
pain ~ho doll't want separate
vacations cleerly have the stronger
marriages.
If Cr .utter that ailment known • low pUn. ~ the apot just
behind the a., bul8e on the outer
edge of the ankle . A
eounter4ockwlle Nb for about 1&
~.:it to dolt. So advile the
• A debt of • 1 trilllon, ls a p1'etly "'8ble debt. Ol.nt ~ How much
' le lt, an7way? Try thl1: If you
Claim la l9fDe of the TarahwRara
Indiana on IOCICer team1 in northern
Maico run • many • l&O mils
d~apme.
You knew that 1001 "La
Cuc..-acba" waa about a cockroech,
certainly. But dld you know tt wu
aboui a cockroach who couldn't
neaouate properly beca~ tM had no men nmt)lanl to mnob?
Q. How many bathtubt ln the
White H«iMm now?
A. Thirteen.
••
Politicos again flying high
WASHINGTON -Rialng · Phoenix-llke from the ubet of federal
frugality, lbe Ai.a Force'• 89th Airlift
Wing la once .again flyina bllh-
Little known to the public or Kremlin
spies, the 89th la well known and ~Y
regarded at the Pentagoh and oo Capitol
Hill. lt'a the bigahots' favorite unit, 1n
fact; for its aole mlasion la to provide
luxurious -and free -tranaportaUon
for VIPs and their wives wherever and
when e ver they can find a
halfwai-te~Umate exeu1e to fly. The u9th a past) air-taxi service for the
elite coata the taxpayers about $10
million a year. To avoid embernm1na
congressmen and deptt81ina ~ the Air Force deetroY. the S9th'1 t
records afte.r 30. days. But my te
Peter Grant aaw a copy of the March
manifesC. before they hit the ah.redder.
ONE HUNDRED trips were Jogaect by
the 89th in that one month. Heft are
aome of theee all-expemea.-PRid junkets,
straight out of the reopnb that had been
markea for destruction.
-Two dor.en members of Consre-
and their wives new to the elegant
Ocean Beef Club on Key Largo, Fla., for
a meeting with a Canadian
parliamentary delegation. The tab came
to •~.ooo. including room and board for
the Canad.Lan junketeers.
-Rep. Don F\iQua. o.na., ta chairman
of the HOUie Science and TechnoJosy
Committee. So he and five other-
commlttee memben -with their wives
-hopped an 89th jet down to Florida to
ae the 1pa.ce shuttle take ofl. 'ftler\,
·------------------~ JICI 11111111
after a aide excunlon to California,
where they ln.apected a ..olar·energy
project, the congJ'elliona1 couples arrived
in New Mexico in time to eee the shuttle
land.
-Air Force bram hats UM the 89th
llke an airbocne limousine service.
Robert Mathia, the vb chlef of ataff,
took hil wife on a trip to F.ngland and
Spain. Gen. Robert Marsh, commander
of the Air Force Systerm Command. took
hia wife on a 12-day tour of the Far East,
which included four dayw ti) Hawaii. An
Air Force spokesman aaid wtvea are
allowed on tbeae trip• for protocol
purpoee9 and to confer with dependenC.
. on "quallty-of-J.l!e laluel." -The 89th ia al10 available to
congJ'elliona1 ataffers. The Air Force
invited-25 Capitol Hill aides, a1mmt all of
them female, to Colorado Sprinca for a
tour of the Air Force Academy.
TllF3E EXAMPLF.S were all from
the month of March. In January, Rep.
Peter Rodino, 0-N.J .. led a group of nine
Democratic'congreamen and their wives
aboard an 89th jet for a twC>'Week.
$U~.OOO-pl~ junket in Italy. They visited
Genoa. Venice, P1sa, Florence, Naples
and Rome to "show America'• ~
for Italy as a atrong NATO ally, a
Rodino spokeeman aafd.
Alao in January, Rep. James Jeffords.
R-Vt., a member of the F.ducation and
Labor, Agriculture and Aging
Committees, fOf eome realOD ~·the
89th to France. Germany, Italy and the
Netherlanda while his comtltuenC. were
shoveling snow. A Jeffords spokemwl
u1d his bom ''hM a general policy of.
avoiding congre..tonal junkets unle.
abtrolutely neceuary." Coupllnir the
words "junkea'' and ''Qeceerary'T" ia a
lexioolofPcal breakthrough.
Though the $10 million budget for the
89th Airlift Wing la a drop in the $258
billion Penta.goo bucket. it probably cmta
the taxpayers hUl!om more Jndirectly.
What congremnwt is going to be eo
ungracious as to niggle over the defense
budget after a luxurious flight on an AW
Force junket jet?
UniOns didn't kill the 'big bands'
To the Editor:
On your editorial page of May 24, waa
a very d1agust1ng article by :Earl Waters.
Mr. Waters baa the gall to at.ate, in
print, that the reuon that there are no
more bJg bands is due to featherbedding
MAILBOX .
by local unionl when the big bands came
to town. Nothing could be further from
the truth!
I had the good fortune to be a llidemm
1n many, many f.amoua ·~bands," with
20 yean' experience on the road in every
kind of band. and never once did I aee
the lrresponaible activities Waters c1aima
happened in the big band era. It ia
simply not true!
ONE OF THE th.lnp that did dertroy
the big band era waa. first of all, four
long-haired youthl who started to tum
the entire mUISic basiDNI around with
the llCivent of the rock era. No bi8 band
had ever been able to draw a quarter of
a million people to a field in Wooct.tock.
and that ia one of the things, that killed
the big banda.
We are haJ>PY to report to you that
every major ind minor Ital', and the bulk
of. all profemional musidanl do belonl
to, and enJol memberahip 1n a union, the
American Federation &f Mualclana.
lnaccuraclee lbould not be allowed to be
dJ9emfnated throuah your publkaUon.
B. DOUGLAS SAWl'ELLE
Prelldent
Mutd.clans' ~ tn, A..l'.M.
Leave cars at home
...
3. U.e only local water. Most of our
water b shipped over deserts at great
expenle. .
4. No 1ewera. Waste should be
~Idea nllgbt teem a bit extreme,
but our Southern California climate b
very delicate and touch meuu.rea must
be taken to protect it and brine lt beck. u
people want can let them live In
Mlimeaota and towa wliere they can
have all the mlChinel they want. But 1f
people want to live here they must pve
up 1ome of the thingt they take for
lfUlted in the rest of the country. Not
only will the. atrona ~dean up our environment, 6ut they will alJo promote the quality of our life rather
than the quantity.
MIKE MANG
TELEPHONE Y-OUR
LETTER TO THE.EDITOR
See Instructions below
Rule side-stepped
)!\) the F.ditor:
Contrary to your editorial on May 21,
there II nothing '4outmoded" about the
&00-mUe rule for John Waynte Airport. /I.a we are all aware, the{'!! la more
demand for commerda1 aervioe at John
WayM than can « tbould be IJl'OYlded.
By .-vk:inC Denwr in the lint place.
even with a atop in La Vet19t Frontier
bat circumvented the Intent of the
~mile Diie. To ellmlnate the rule will
merely ~ other c:anien to do
the same, eddtftl to demand~ at
the airport.
Wbat 11 rea11y needed 11 tame couraae
on the part of Onn1• County
Su~ to.,.._ on and 11DPJ8mnt a
new lite. Until tMy "bit. tbe bullet", the
IDl!ll at John W.,m .,m oont1nue!
BUlt!l ALLroAERT
More memories
memories, as I grew up -in Corona de1
Mar too. I was 13 in 1956. Back then, we
not only had squirrels and gulls, but
skunks, f>OM' nos, quail and roaa runners,
too.
OLD CORONA del Mar grew wild
flowers ~ spring, instead of homes.
The dazzling array attracted hundred& of
species of butterflies.
Yoa-ooukl catch fish, ~ and
lobster with just a ~ in six feet of
ocean. We never heard of smog. The
roads were clear and you could park
an}'Wbere, except foe summer vacation.
Big Corona Beach had~ of tar all over it, quite often, then. It is
alwayw dean theie days. It would be
terrible to foul up our beaches. You are
right, Jane. But I still wish you coo1d have .een the "Crown of the Sea" when
the ~y dirty thing about her waa the
beach!
MICHAEL STEINER
Save Social Security
To the Editor:
Treasury Secretary Regan ba1
publicly stated that Sodal Security will
go broke after July 1983 unte. chanaee
are made to make the .ywtem financWly aowwt.
Thja surely means that the time II now
to realize the total lnJulUce and a:\ 1k.id•I
impld from IUch a "happenina." It al8o
mMnl that federal ~t mutt
fore1tall 1uch eventuality to avoid
financial diluter and 90Cial reYOIUtion.
ONE OF THE optiom available to
Prelldent Reapn, Concre11 and the
Senate 1t·to tab ~Uw Ktioa to meet I Soda1 Security oWiptflom and lll'ClallY
reduce or efimlnate the whopptna
national debt by offerin1 public
..i..tie.. ol hd8n1 Janda wbk:b are
not euentlal for national defeue,
ecoloa « for endanped "*'-· Sven tax-free lo"•riet would be
pre(enble '° adl ........ Uwil -The 8a:ret.ary of Ta-..., .......... OfflhonoD~~
..
with tuch a rea.Utdc-~ toy IUD had
a feel of ua11nem to tt that w• a1mon
palpable. Tfie boy WM too 10W\& ever. to
knOw what to do wtth the tun; he just
wavea lt. and the burel moved ~
in val"ioW d1rectionl. taJc1na aim all over
the mall.
I
I COULD TELL that I wun't the only
penon who WM DOtidna th.II; many-
other eye. were on, the gun. It struck me
that t.bil wu not IOIMth1ng )'OU eee very
~ .n.yinan: • parent alvtnc • child •
to) hancaaun . to carry around. I haven't
read any ttatistiq on th.ii, but you 1ee a
L8rp number ot children on the streets
theee daya, and you 1ee very few guns.
During the Vietnam War, there waa a
small and moderately publicized effort
on the put of IOrne parents to stop their
chOdren from playing with toy guns. It
wu ~ of the anti-war feeling; it had a·
vaauely political tone to it. Now, thouah,
the war ia at home, on the streets, waged
by other Americans carrying handguns
-and it aeesns that parents, to a degree
not aeen before, are wary about letting
their' children pretend to be shooting one
another.
1 asked a couple of young parents at
the mall about this.
>fl won't allow toy guns in my houee,"
one woman told me. "It'• just a feeling I
have. It's a funny thing, thQugh -I
have two'Chlld.ren, a boy and a girl And
when my IOfl is playm, outlide and be
I TllJNK SHE'S rtaht. '1bere ii no
1uarantee that a chlld ·who carrle•
iround a toy platol II gotna to end up
ahootlna eomeone w~n ~wa older. A. a matter ot fact. he won't.
But in thll .. of handcun , lt
aeems almost diarea~tful to allow
children to uae toy Handiuna for play
value. It eeema to mock all reverence for
life; maybe in the long-aao, children
could have innocent tun with toy cum,
but there doesn't aeem to be anythlrJ8
lnnocent about it now.
An organization called IWno&a Cltbem
for Handgun Control spooaon a support
group for the famillee of people who
have lost their lives to handgun violence.
I apoke with three modiera whoae
children were killed by handguns; MCh
of them said that, when they were tint
bringina their children Up. it WM an accept.ea practice to let the children play
with 'toy guns. F.ach said that if they
were doing'' again. they would ban the
toys from their homes.
"It was a foolish, foolish·thlng we did..
letting our children play with '°y sw-,"
said jane Swoboda. 51. Her 29-year~
aon, David, was shot to death in 1980.
PAIO POUTICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
...
Ofange Oout DAILY PILOT /Thurtday, June 8, 1H2 ~··
-ba.,.wy tun atVen to U\Y Child in WI that lunlly.
• l\&I\ ii th. No one pta bu.rt • , 'N deed,' and when .. JU$T THINK about it on wen the P1aYUme ii OYet' the other boy ,.ti up ltmplelt level. U a amall child ta tauaht and tM)' walk hacM tot19ther. that• sun ta• toy._ and tt ~in fhtt
family hu • ~ ""' and the child
comet acro9 lt -thtnk about that. Even
the lieht of a water plltol ~ me now tn a way lt MYel' d1d before.'
Carolyn Budde, whoee 19-year-old
IOll, Steven. w• lhot to death with a
handwn f.n A"l\llt 1980, aald, "wtwn
my oJaeat eon w• a child, we uaed to let
him play with a toy IUJ'. Now we never
woufd, lf we had It to do over. A child
with a toy 1un feela like he'•
lndemucdble. '!be ""' will protect him. '"nlat'a not the way thina• are. It
~ me feel tad, ..ma the puenta
who do le\ their chUdnn pLtY, with toy
IUN· What are~trytna to teMh ~ childreh18 · u a parmt who
had the experience I . . . When 10"
la. your paentl, you've at yOW' s-t-
But when you loee your child, you'w
Iott the future. I can't even t~ ~a child to play with a toy ,un."
THOSE THREE mothera would
haw been uddened to eee the little boy
at the mall. But they mJS)\t have been
encourapd to watch the c:lllapprovtnc
reaction from the other ahoppen. It WM
clear. In the worda of the one youna
parent to whom I apoke, the tether who
let hla aon play with the 8\Ul w• stupid.
He waa uncool .
•
' Marriage the best solution after all? ...
I think we can Mfely hTJ ot ~ what Wlmt.on Chwc aaid about
dernocraey: that it ii a tenib1e form of
aovernment, but everytbtna •lae ta
w~.
Youn1 people today teem to be
recoverfna from their avenlon to the
~
IY-1-11-Y U-1---11-1 -~
marital de, wlUch luted all ot the past
decade. Marrt.aae ii mce more becoming
faabionable, even thouah the de81re to
have children haa abated in the light of
the thermonuclear threat.
THERE MAY may be as much
experimental "living together" as th~
waa, but after a brlef period these
relatlonahipe either diaaolve by mutuai
consent or convert themaelvea into
conventional marriages.
Psychologically speaking, living
toptber on a t.ent.aUve bull falll to
utllfy acme of OW' deepest needs, and
therefore ii bound to be unaatiafactory in
the b\I run, and maybe even in the
ab«t.
What we uk from another ls a basic
commitment -and thia ls the PM thina
that ii withheld in such a relatiOnah!p. a
we aay t o another, explicitly or
implidtly, "I will stay with you only •
loJia • you oootinue to pleaae me," it la little different from buylna a ault or
dre9I "on approval.'' to be returned or
di9carded at the tint di.atiafaction.
THE HARD FACI' ia that people have
to "learn" how to be married, just as
they have to learn to acquire any other
skill. While it ia a natural relationship in
all aocleties, it ia by no means a natural
condition, but a learned response.
through trial and error.
Of course, there are marriages that
are frightfully wrong from the
beginning, and only' a maaochist would
want to perpetuate them. But the plain
fact la that even a ao-called "good"
marriage is a bard one, calling upon all
our mental and emoUonal and aoda1
reeourcea.
Yet nothing elle outside the nuclear
family can provide the warmth. the
security, the aenae of place or the
guarantee of permanence which make
for what cl.iniciana call ''mental health," vaaue and diffuae though that phnae may be. ·
THE WHOLE romantic tradition,
eapeclally in American aociety. baa
enc.ow-aged us to aet our expectations too
unrealiatlcally high. Our films and
popular novels end with the amoroua
clinch -which la just where real life
begiru in earnest. Europeans. on the
whole, take a more aober and aocepttng
view ot t.he marriage bond; and,
expecting leea, they often receive rpore.
No integration is harder than that
between men and women, partly for
biological ·reasons and partly because of ·
cultural conditioning baaed on hiatorica1
male dominance. We have a long way to
go before the sexes reach an eaay
equilibrium, but it seems clear to me
that, ultimately, we have nowhere elae
to go.
Major crimes In California Increased by more than
51 % since 1975, and the problem Is getting worse.
Something must be done. . ..
I ATIENTION:
,,. f ...
-· Endoreementa:
RALPH CLARK, Supervisor
County of Orang•
DONALD HOLT, Mayor
City of Placentia
DON GRIFFIN, Coun~llman
City of Buena Parle t:
That's why we're supporting Biii Farris, a family man,
civic leader, an~ experienced trial lawyer, for judge.
Biii Farrta ls fair, hardworking, and tough-minded.
He believes we need tougher laws, tougher law
enforcement, and TOUGHER JUDGES.
Biii Farria suppo'rts the Victim's Biii of Rights Initiative.
Please Join us In voting for Biii Farris on June 8th.
PAUL CARPENTER, S.nator ROBERT T. REIER, Polle. Chief
State of Callfornla City of Buena Parle
DON ROTH, Mayor Pro Tem LEONARD HOUAHD, Councilman
City of Anaheim City ol Garden Grove
JESS PEREZ, Councilman NILANE LEE. Member
City of Orange N.O.C. Community College Board
U>ett'-1 lltl)
You'll respect him ...
criminals will fear him.
Ft1enda ot BMI Fama 1501 Awllbuty. Fuler1on 92833 L Loumald9. T,....,,.,
ANNOUNCING
THE GllEAlESl SALE E'IENT
IN ClfRPET HISIDRY .
FORMER FED MART
CUSTOMERS
FEDCO
PROFESSIONAL PHARMACIES
WELCOME YOU
YOUR PRESCRIPTION IS OUR BUSINESS!
THE CHOICE OF A PHARMACY IS YOURS -
BUT DO YOU KNOW WHAT FEDCO HA~ TO OFFER?
D ., OVerall IOwer prteea on prescription drugs and FDA-approved
. ..I. X generics;
~ Fedco membership not necessary to use Pharmacy services:
~
~
Eaay transfer of preacrlptlons on flle at other pharmacies by phone;
Telephone answering Mt'Vlce available tor you to leave orders
after store closlng hours;
· D _ Pharmacy personnel present before store opening to check
..I. X prescriptions with your doctor;
D _ Llcenaed, ex~rteneed pharmaclatt to counsel patients about i.x medication use;
,.
~ The fattest ~lbte Mt'Vlce with Fedco's tradltlonal concem tor the .. •
cul1omer.
I
I
t
I i
IAN DmOO <AP> Volilrl ln ftw San DI• Cou.nlY Lf \he n.w dty aa vm.. nonh of Bu\ DMeo are dlc:ldlNI ~pproved by t'"udlU, ~notnl,11. w~ '° lnC!orpora• M ·~ Town ol OUWnh&ln. Leucadia and VWaet Park. Bu DfielU!'°-" 8~ for Uttle San Althouah lncorporaUon woWd take 1lltlOi • new M'Hde dcy cowrtni ae effect July 1, San a.so C'1Unty tw.
IQUIN mllel. ,,..--a1rHd to continue provldln1 1uch
'lbe Wwdlna on \be ~ e1'ctSon ltMcel 11 law enforcement anCI rotid
ballo\ TuHaay 1ptcUlH ••town•• matnienance until the followlna July.
al\ho\lth \he 40,000 retldtntl would All \he money railed by San IXtcuito
m.i. up U.. ttlhih larplt population ln ln that 12-mccth ~ woWd 10 lnto
San DMao Couftb'. the bank. In eddldoft. San a..N!to ..
Bob Nortman, chairman of \he expected to 1en1rate more dian •e
Cammunlt)' Alliance for lnconxnUon, mlll!on In revenu• wt\h expeftlM under
•Y' 1-W. hope to incUclte the rural $6.4 million.
character of the ..,.... by Cl111na lt a The voters ln nearbY... Solana S.h
town. rejected dtyhood Jut Novemberk.~ ~t'•
_A_blrthda _ _..Y_.pr_ae_n_t_ll_be_lna...._o_ff•_tred_b_,y,____no_t _CONldeNd certa1n that San Uleplto
ADVICE -Former
President Richard
Nixon s ays Sen.
Edward K e nnedy
must lose 20 pounds if
he is to win the 1984
Democratic presi-
dential nomination.
WEIGHTY ISSUE -
The sisters of Sen.
Edward K e nne dy
agree with forme r
President Nixon that
t he ir brother is too
fat. T h e senator
agrees.
. I Nixon, Kennedys
. f ·want Ted to lose
I
j
BOSTON (AP) -The Kennedy• are in
~t with fonner President Nixon that Sen. Want M. Kennedy ahould abed a few pounds.
Nixon recently said ln a television interview
that Kennedy will wln the 1984 Democratic
presidential nomination but tint be must 1oee 20
po.Inda.
Kennedy, ln an interview with the Boston
Herald American, aaid hia allters have been after
him to Joee welght.
'"lbhl II one of the few time9 the Kennedya and
Nixm have been In ~t.," he added.
Ni.xpn a1IO predicted In the aame Interview that
President ftea3an would beat Kennedy In the
general election.
OC fir:ms to host
•• estate seni1nar
The Newport Beacb-bued accounting firm of
Coleman & Grant and the Santa Ana-hued law
firm of Luof & Swanaoo will ~ta lf'IT>inar on
estate and taxation plannina Tuesday at Big
Canyon Country Club in Newport Be.ch.
Jamee Skorbetm, in charge of eat.ate planning
at Coleman & Grant and Gregory Beck. a tai
attorney at Luof & Swamon. will speak.
ea.ette tapes of the eeminar will be made
available without charge upon request through
Coleman & Grant at 75!-6616.
Seat belt drive opens
CHICAGO (AP) -The National Safety
Council, citing statista that indkate 12,000 lives-a
year could be saved by aeat belta, JaWIChed a
natiotlal "Make It Click0 ,campaign. 'Ille drive will
l'Uh from Memorial Day through Labor Day .
"--'"'
Window Fashions
C¥t1tom Draperl•• CU8tom
SALi 30~-60~ OFF ~-louver Or..,.Oel Mar-Graber
FrM Home Eetlmatn
Helping With AH Your Window
Decoretlltg ....... .
~.L-111-1112 ... ~-
The Newport Harbor High
School Girls Athletics Teams
· thank our f am Illes, friend•, and
the following bu1lne11e1 for
. their 9enerou1 support during
-our lat~le of the Sports
Fundral1er.
Join Bradbury,
• • Studio rrve
'Alclael Liq110r Store
Multl-PC>.itlon banana chtlae
made of strong, comfortable
vlnyl strapping over steel
frame. Reg. 14 95
stick wltb 1'11 OH
"Thenno·grlp" tlectrlc glue gun, gives
qulctc glutng powtl' for aJmolt lf'IY1hlng.
1203 Reg. 11.78
l"•lf lllr1otl11
Oualtty-bullt directors chair.
~~.:!:.·folds flat. Blue orange & 19,,
Reg. 29.85
Clamp.on umbrella ........ 2.99
J acMie named
book editor
• NIM' YORK (AP) -JS JC.nnedy Onulll 11 ltepplnc u ln U\8 pub world.
For four y...., ~., been an te ed.ltor at
Doubleday and before that Wll A ccnultinl ed.lt.or
at Vlklna Prell.
Her promotion -to editor ~ w11 announced
W9dnmday by Doub~ 1polqlwoman Nancy
Tuckerman. Commentinc on the promotion, Ma. TUdumum
aid:
"It'• eome\hlna the'• earned. obvioully ."
the stain that won't
wash outt
Glidden's Best Exterior Oil Stain.
Comes in solid and semi-transparent.
Many colors to choose from .
Reg. 13.99. 1 O!!
"ltlatchfng" Glidden
Bouse & Trim Pcdn.t
Excellent trim point that exactly
·matches Spred Oil Stain. Reg. 19.99. 11~~
oll1nwl11 'oll1n111l1w'
Sturdy propane BBQ. with
tank. Convenient, clean. and
POr1able. Sell-cleaning 169'' #7130. Reg 223 95
• some classy brass
for your door
"TYLO" by Kwlkset Bel·air design entry
locilset tor exterior doors. Anract1ve
brass linish J400 BCP a•• Reg 1199
RIMA'S ''WHILE THEV Wf' DAILY SPECIALS
• THURS ONLY: Wooden Yardltlck Reg. 1.31..................................... 69$
• ,Al. ONL V: "Flret Alert lmolct Alet'fn" Reg. 21.H
Plue addttlonat l'.00 Mfl . .Rebate ............. \............. 17 .88
• IAT. ONLY: Rubbermaid Stove & Counter
M•t• 13 314• 1t 112 a 17 112 • 11 .................... 1/2 OFF
• IUN. ONLY: Home/Garden Spray Bottle 14oz. Reg. 1.59............... 89$
• MON. ONLY: SoJdertng Gun #730120 Reg. 11.H ........................ 6.99
•TUES. ONLY: 3M Dirt Trep Mat 11112" a 30" Reg. 10.91 .............. 5.00
•WED. ONLY:
It's ID tlll 111
Lawn Chltf 21" rar baO '*Y
mower. 3Yl h.p. N1
Reg.199.98. 119''
llnect tank liner In the
lnduatty.
'111••
THUMOAY, JUN! 3, 1112
See Robert Macnau6hlon
of Irvine Jn new tel-ti
adventure 'film with a
touch of Pe1er Pan. BS.
0
0 CAVALCADE
COMIC8
TELEVISION
I DON'T KNOW ART, BUT ... Seems like only
yarterda~ actually a couple of decades back, when eome of
the lea women civic typee of Newport Beach decided
they didn't care much for Chy Hall. So they chanaed il
In thia instance, lt wun't the uaua1 political stuff that
cauaecl people to aquint their eyes at the body munldpal
contained in Newport Beach City Hall and start grindlng
their teeth. The women were, aa lt turned out, cOnoemea
about the hall iteelf.
Put plainly, the drab, often barren walls inside the
local political establishment were more suitable for a local
lockup or warehouse than
for the cherished seat of
local government. -
· So the women decided
----·---r-' .. to chante all that by
mM MURPHINI .~~~ =~~pat~~~~ye~:J
hanging some paintings.
REASON WOULD SUGGEST that ~gardlela of art
quality, it would be better than looking at fly speck.a or
two-year-old voter lists, still tacked up, yellowed and
frayed at the edges.
With a little coaxing and finagling, the ladies got the
powers-that-be to say well, go ahead and aee what you can
do.
Now mind you, after the first harlgings (of art)
happened at Newport's government aeat, there were 10me
mild complaints. ·
One crusty municipal worker remarked, "I feel like I
gotta whisper around this joint now . . .''
Taken on the whole, however, the borrowed artworks
were an enormous improvement to the slabs of interior
plaster, and greatly appreciated.
NOW TBA T MODEST artistic effort in Newp0rt City
Hall has bloaomed into really 10mething over the years.
Newport now has .e City Arts Commiasion, doing good
t works for art all over the place. They even have their own
.811 .festival now.
And this cominS Sunday, at Bis Canyon Park, the City
Arts Commission will be holding a preview exhibit and
honoring five outstanding citizens for their contributions as
volwiteen for the arts. ,
THOSE BEING HONORED are Dorothy Berry,
Florence Schumacher, Elaine Redfield, Penny McManiga1
and Bud Pashley.
Dorothy Berry is immediate past president of the
Orange C.ounty Arta Aa.x:iation and baa served on its board
for four years. Floaa Schumacher's contributions are
virtually too numerous to mention but she is a leading light
with the Orange County Center of Performing Arta (mUsic
center), Metropolitan Opera, Orange C.ounty Philharmonic,
KOCE-TV (channel~) Foundation and Pacific Symphony
Orchestra. ;.mt to tkk off a few.
Elaine Redfield is a founding member of Orange
County Philharmonic, a "friend" at Cal State, Fullerton
and al80 a leader a't the performing al1a center.
PENNY McMANIGAL is an artist, with nine
one-woman ahows to her credit and five years service as a
Newport Beach dty arts oommiasioner. Another artist, Bud
Pashley, ill past-president of the Society of West.em Artilta
and president of the Coastline College Artll1a A..odation.
So here'• a Coast Tout to the five honoree& and to the
growing pte9tiae of Newport's dty 81111 group itBelf. You've
come a long way, kids.
No longer are you just covering fly specks on city hall wan.. -
I .,...,...,....."0.,~
MASKED MEMORIES -Betty Beecher, president of the Santa Ana Army Air Base period of city's history, now on
Costa Mesa Historical Society, admires exhibit of uniforms from display at permanent location.
Society's ·banking. on history
~
Deposits of memorabilia at new home are saving Costa Mesa's heritage
By JODI CADENHEAD or .. Dllllf,... ...,.
The front yard is still just heaps of fresh
brown earth. Half the boxes are unpacked.
Betty Beecher runa from oNf pile lo tbe
next won~ w~t to put away.
After years of livfnc out of atx private
homes, the Costa Meaa H1storical Society
finally baa lta own home at the comer of
Plumer and Anaheim avenue9 ..
It looks like a sleek new wood-finished
bank -exactly what it Wied to be.
Last year the dty purchued the Orange
Cout Savmo and Lcian building at Adams
Avenue andMeea Verde Drive lor $80,000
and moved It lock, stock and steel vault to
the new location.
"The dty feela that history la just aa
important u recreation or community
pJ'Oll'ama," aald aulatant dty manaaer Allan Roeder.
Mn. Beecher, pnsiderlt of the aodety
that WM ltU1ed in 1966, ltill can't believe
her aood luck.
"lt'a just a dream," ahe said. "We had
been looking just for a vault to keep In a storage bulldlng .••
Since October volu.nteen have been
working to evaluate, file and catalog all the
collections that trickle into the new home.
Every equare inch of the newly carpeted
building tells a story.
The old wooden crates resting in the
comer once held Judge Donald Dodge's
prize apples when the crop flourlahed
briefly in the eu-ly 1920a.
Piecea from the put Include a wood um
fnm the First Methodiirt C\ureb U8ed to
hide valuables, a pair of wooden cart
wheels and ~ fnm Mildred Fisher's
1932 c1-at l.Jndberah Elementary School
Yellowed copU!9 of the weekly "Costa
Mesa Herald" newspaper tell of when
bre8d wu 10 oenta a loaf, a 3-poUnd bag of
rice IOld fot 25 centa and a do:ien cans of
milk went for $1.16.
HMClllDM from the 1922 newspaper told
of a fire wagon oomlna to Colt.a Meaa, ~
population reaching 4, f67 and 340 enrolling
at the new Meea school.
One of the most establlahed collections 80
far centers OD the Santa Ana Army Air
Bue that covered 1,283 acra in the dty
dwinl World War II.
A book on the Army bMe by Costa Mesa
historian Ed Miller helped apur the
donation of many uniforms, medals,
p6cturs and 8Wlll a tamo..w 17-foot mural
that once hunc at the bMe.
"We've .een ao much of our recent
b1story cUsa '.. a.kl Ow-la Beecher, when ~y Costa Mesa'• pMt ia
important. "We've lived here llinoe the
194-0a and have aeefl J}eafly all our howle9
torn down.''
With 80 much emphuia on the put, it
might be euy to fcqet the preeent. But
hiltorica1 eociety workers collect current
information that will be important to future
generations.
What la needed are oJd and current
photograph•, diaries, manuscripts,
a:rapboob, directories, maps, community
brochures, bualneaa carda and political
campmgn material.
''Thll" bulJd1na la goiJli to become small
shortly," aid Mn. Beecher, Jookins al'OWMi
at the boxes waiting to be unpacked.
HARVEST BEU> -Smudge pots
.were common when orange groves
were more prevalent.
UCI groups
designate own
merit scholars
PAST WAS ROSY -When Judp Donald they were dJlplayed with pto or packed and
Dodge's prize apples flowilhed 1n the 1920.. lhlpped ln wooden cnta.
'
i· 'I ,. ,
·:' ~.
I l l
DIW\ ANN LANDJ:RS: About 100.000
ohildNn are abducted MCh year ~ ~ntal ktdnappln1. Another ttUmatid
50,000 children are taken by •tr~n. n-. are children WMler the • of 12. 1be n.. to 1.e million when we lncluca
way chlldren. May 2& wu dellanated •,
anal Mill1nl Children Oily'' to ralll
the awanme11 of the public.
Pventa CAN take 1tep1 to prev~t
abclucUona. Here they are:
1) Make certain your child knowa hi.I
full name, your name, addre11 and
telephone number.
2) Have plcture1· taken yearly. For
pfe-achoolera, four t1mea a year. Pho~h
birthmarks.
3) Keep records of footprinta,
fingerprints. dental information.
4) Get your child a pueport.
1 5) U you are aeparated, obtain legal
I C\lltody.
• 6) Inform your child'• principal if yqu
1 are the only one to pick him or her up from
ICbooL 1 Pl~ lnf~rm your readera, especially
•HOROSCOPE
UMt Children that a non·protlt orpn.l.latlon
iWDid Q;ild.J'lnd. Inc., wt11 ~p ~hpm.
ind permii locate 8ICh other. CbOdrilri have a= fl'M number to call. A child c.-n dial 1· J-000&. .
PaNltl INl'Ch1na for their children can
contact Child-l'ind by dlallna
1·914-20&-UM8. (11w 800 number muat be
.kept clear foa"chlldreft only.)
We are Mklna pu"'!ntl and telchen to atve IOm9 ~t to the 1~,000 ~
children and encouraae them to help
educate chUdren in a non-fcrenlng, ma~f ·fllet way about their aafety
and abductiom. ·
YoU reach IO many children adult.,
we feel youz column ls an ideal IOW'Ce for
helping families tlnd one another aPln. -
A(.ICE BYRNE, EXECU"TIVE
OOMMI'ITEE CHAIR, NEW YORK AREA,
NATIONAL MISSING ClULDREN DAY
DEAR ALICE BYRNE: Bere't yo1r
letter -I llope P'one• 1tart rtnpq all o.er
.. e eoutry ... ud I am ave tHJ will.
,.,_.......,..
FINE TUNING -Clarinet maker Karl-Heinz East Germany. Markneurkirchen, a traditional
Rahm (foreground) a nd tuner Juergen center for production of musical instruments, is
Komnick put finishing touches on aome of the hosting a musical festival which opened last
top-level products manufactured at Sinfonia's month. '
music3;1 instrument plant at Markneukirchen,
. I '
abductions
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A certain
nwmber of our tamlly ta drivina me cruy.
She la an lmmiature, aelfilh. spoiled woman
who lovw to talk on the Dhone by the hour,
delCl'tblna her lit.any o1 '1lllneuea."
She Ml a habit of mak1na pl.anl' to come
for dinner or the weekend « a fatnlly party,
a date for the l)'mphony or ballet, and
alwa)'I at the tut minute ahe callt to say her
colit.11 II wone or her .inuaee are acting up
or her hemorrholda are unbeuable.
She never bu anything a penon co
1ee. It'• al~fu' a 1eratchy throat or a mlara1ne or frcm a hysterectomy that
toolt place a year aao.
The 1ut time the called I wrote down a
lilt of eight d!fferent doctors ahe was seeing.
Here'a what I ICl'lbbled on the phone pad:
internist, proctolo1l1t, gynecologis t,
ophthabnologlat, dentist, endocrinoloJfst,
dermatologilt and psychiatrist.
Thia woman entertains beautifully ip
her own home, ls the perfect hostess and
look.I terrific. But she can't eeem to keep a
date to go anywhere. Can you figure it out?
-OOLUMBUS, OHIO MYSTERY
-DEAR MYSTERY: It 11 not po11lble to
evaluate aayoae eJ1e'1 pain. U tile womu
aaya the It 1affertn1, who are you to aay oe
la not?
Her Inability to leave ber bome
aage1t1 1be may have agorapbobla. I bope
ber paycblatrlat cu belp her.
"Sexual freedom" presents a difficult
decision for tam-agers and their parents.
Ann Landers offers down-to-earth advice Jn
her new booket, "High School Sex and How
to Deal With It -A Guide for Teen1 and
Their Parents." For each booklet, send 50
cents plus a long, stamped, self-add..ressed ·
env~ope to Ann Landers, P.O. &x 11995,
Chicago, m. 60611.
Mystique soon fa des
In the movies, it's always a big sce~e:
The boy picking up the girl at the prom will
have a box containing a corsage in his hand.
He's standing at the bottom of the stairway
looking awkward and uncomfortable talking
with the girl's·parenta.
Suddenly, she appears. Their little girl
has emerged from her pjgtails and jeans into
a woman in a long, flowing dress. She has
usually developed a bust and the braces are
off her teeth. Everyone is struck speechless
as a 68-piece orchestra comes out of the
woodwork and she makes her poised
entrance down the stairway.
IT'S A GREAT SCENE if you're the
mother of a daughter.
But no movie has ever filmed that scene
in which a son emerges from the bathroom
on prom night wearing white tux and tails,
an aacot tie, wing collar shirt, top hat, gloves. whit~ patent leather shoes a nd a
coordinating walking cane ... looking like
he just fell off a w~g cake.
There are no violins with a son. No
mag)c moment when your eyes meet and
there aie tears in them. No moment when
you throw your arms around him and
declare him full-grown. A boy runs around
like he has starch in his underwear.
He tries to oe cool about the outfit, but
you know him well enough to see the
anxiety.
Will the toilet tissue clot the blood on
his face he got when he cut himself shaving?
flMA IOMlfCI
ATWIT'S END
Will his palms sweat when he dances?
WAS THAT SPOT ON THE ja~ket there
BEFORE he brought it home?
Will the corsage smell like the garlic tn
the spaghetti next to it in the refrigerator?
Will he have enough money at the
restaurant?
Will be have to write a check at the
reBtaurant?
' Will they cash the check before he gets
a job?
Will be end up killing the jerk who
talked him into a white satin tux with no
pockets?
Wi1h a aon it's corny to take pictures.
Besides, he'a late. You have to remember It
all. The peck on the cheek. The slam of the
door.
The mystique of the boy turned man
lasts until you reach the bath.room. Heavy
steam settles over 15 Band-Aid wrappers,
eight w~t towels, foam~vered sink, three
ramr blades, shampoo and soap oozing down
the drain, garment bag, boxes, tissue and a
bill for $56.75 impaled on the white cane.
The child lives!
Capricorn: Restri~tion temporary POT SH01S
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
Friday, Jane 4
ARia (March 21.April 19): Intuition
and the occult figure prominently. You gain
rare insights and discover aecrets. Aquarius,
Leo, Scorpio key roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Examine
various facets of any propoeed -areement.
partnenhip. Diacern motives, ask questiom,
make inquiries and doub~eck IOUl'Ce8.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gain
cooperation of family member in completing
basic tasks. Focus on nutrition, health,
medical-dental a_ppob)tmenti ·
CANCER (J\me 21-July 2~: Much that
occurs could be based on wishful thinking,
romantic notions and impulaes as amtrastecl
to logic. Insist on definition of tern-.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Test material -
concentrate on quality, durability. Focus on
structure, safety, eecurtty and the windup of
lonptand.ing negotiations.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Enlarge
HOIOSCOPI
BY SIDNEY OMARA
horiJ.onl, get rid of unnece8l8r)' bu.rdent,
streamline techniques and' improve basic procedures. . .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You'll have
new, more ortlmiatlc outlook due to
reaumotion o cash flow.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Firat
impl'ftllom are on taraet; cin:umatances
favor your efforts and you'll be at right
place at crucial momeni.
SAOmARJUs (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Much
activity takei place behind ~ -aura of
excitement, confualoo exis1a. Gemini and
another Sagittarian play lmpcrtant roles.
'CHiPs' cyclist takes a lijke -
Q; Hu Erik Estrada walked Mt -...
"CBlPt" TV teriel apfa'? -Mude ..._,Su
Mate..
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Wish
has actually come true, although you ~y
not be aware of it. Feeling of restriction is
temporary.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):
Prof e11lonal 1uperior aeeka review,
revil:icm, cbanas and reamurances. Focus
on career, ambitions, ~ride, prestige and
standing ln community.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Ssnneone is tantallzlni you with pl'Olllilea which cannot
be fulfilled ln immediate future. Know it,
take charae of your eecuri.ty.
--,. -
l'LL NEVER
FORGET MY
AMNESIA.
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
vulnerable and tbe cardJng to the two.
dub tricb alread1 played
made it look almoat eenain
that the suit was goinr to
split 4·2. Since West wu
unlikely to have led the
queen of dubs against a alarq
from an original holding or
Q·9, declarer decided to pla7
hJm for four cluba.
The rut wu eaay.
Deduer rutrtd a club. eu~
ed lbe king·ace of bean. and
ruffed another dub wit.h h1a
remaJnlng tru .. p to briQI bla
tcKaJ to twelve trick.a. The •
1ut trick wu won by Wnt
-11"111 ..... --~ W.vu•pud Eut wU.11
Jtii.JUP h .... --
. . . .. • •• 0
"Could you UM I llttJt 1hadt'r'
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENAC,t; Hank Ketchum
~
4 ' I
r .
I
' • "I don't blame hlm ... lt scares me, tool"
8HOI "
1'M SO<~ 5f1"1M' ~ 1'1~ a.{) MIU< CRA'fi. ...
NANCl'
NANCY, THIS
NEW BOTTLE
OF COO LIVER
OIL 15 EMPTY
-·-•
' 1HJl •e:HPTl,M/61
IV.,
""'¥~' Aita'l.01
ho~' ~,,
~ ~ ~I
~
'at& Otlli ~.
~-tAEL CA\.LU M£
lt~\Mf M>'Tf.~
9&01\1.1 \)tft~ ~
U>CA~!
.,,.,_ ... , ,.
I
by Ernie Bushmiller
I OILED MY CAR
WITH IT
by Gus Arriola
6N THE TOWN -Movie
actresses Candice Bergen (left)
and Jacqueline Bisset enjoy a
stroll along 57th Street in New
,,..,,, ....
NllW YORK (AP) -He .... ln I
mkUoWi\ l'tltaurant. w.artna blue ~
Ind "JPlnl a aoft ~.M.rdly th.
Imai• of a 1ymphony orchHtra Oonducvr.
But the bekll\ la Davtd Stah111 Ufe. He
hll been oand~ prottlllionally anc.
197•. when he maae hll °'1nelie Hall
ct.but at ... M.
He'• now 32, and hu )lat reall.r4d
another Pl by oondUC'UIW an opera Sn
Palermo, Italy. The workne cond~
WM BeWnl'• operatic variation of th•
RorDIO and Juliet It.Ory, 11Capuletti I
Montecchl."
"Romeo and Jullet" ln !ta varloue
fomw hu played a ma~ role ln Stahl'•
life. Conductor~m·
pmer Leonard Bem·
1tein, whom Stahl
oon1lden to have
been one of h h
menton, choae the
Youn& Stah1 to take
over the mualcal
directonhlp of the
recent Broadwal
revival of Benwtein •
"West Side Story." ITAHL
allo lm~ crtdcl with hJI condu.MinJr ot the Tc~ "Romeo anc1 JUliti1'
and the Prokofiev "Romeo and Juliet.''
He um met Bemateln ln 1975 at
Tanalewood, Ma11., the informal
1WMW bOme of the Bolton Symphony
OroMatl'a.
"I studied whh him there u well 11
with condUCtcn and compmen 11.ke Setjt
Ouw1, Aaron Coj>land and M1U1lav
Roltropovlch," Stahl 11ld. "And I
conduoted Copland'• 'Appalachian
Sprln1' Ul\d•r bl1 1uldance w'tJ'l an
orcheetra ol 1tudent1.
''The important key · 1n my life wu
Bematetn after that awnmer of 1976," be
IAld. "I became hit uaiatant, and Sn 1976,
the Uliltant conducior of the New York
Ph.l.lharmonlc." .
That ume year Stahl wu ,appointed
auociate conductor of the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra on Snvlt.atlon from
that aroup'a mu1lc dlrector, Thomas
Schippers, wh.om Stahl conaldera
another of h1I mehton. Schippen died ln
1977. I
Then I ~t to Queenl eon'll and Wiii
able to form my own orchlltra ~
\he *'*'ti·" Tb• next 1tep for Stahl wa1 the M~ COll4in of Mu8'c ln New Y~
where he 1tudled f« hla l'Dllllter1 delne.
built ue. ~ rtpertotre and met conduct« PietN BoUJa. who tnvlted him to au.net
rehearaall at Llncoln Center'• AYflf'Y
Ftaher Hall.
''I watched to many IJ'Mt conduct.on
from Lhe little v18'V'lnl room over the
orchestra ln Avery Ftatle.r," he 11)'1.
It wun't lone before Stahl made hla
Carne1ie Hall debut, conducUna the
Youth Symphony Orchfftra of New
York in Wa1ner'1 Overture to
''TannhaUler.'' It wu hla ti.rat piece on
the P<>Cllwn u a profe911onal.
"( wanted to make my firlt piece one
by W_,ner, becaUle it WU W.,.,er who
turned me on to wantlna to be •
conductor," he 11ya. "I can't be1ift to
de9Cribe the thrill of belna on the same
11-ge where ~ the IJ'Utl conducted.''
A. a rault of hla International travel,
Stahl aaya he haa learned that ltandarda
,pf muak: Sn the Unlied Statlee are now
great.el' than Sn ~.
York City following a luncheon at
the R~ian Tearoom. The pair
starred together in the movie
"Rich and Famous."
If ted to m lntemaUoaal tofu. with
Bermteln'1 version of the Romeo-Juliet
theme, hlah aitlcal pralle for Stahl and
tnvltatlona for court and opera
appearancea throughout Europe. Stahl
While with the Cincinnati, Stahl allO
became conductor of the St. Louie
Philharmonic and found himself
commuting between the two cities.
"I made up my mind at 15 to conduct,"
aaya the New York-born Stahl. "Music
wu always ln my home. My father
played piano for 'fleuure. I took le910na.
"Americana have an inferlorltr,
complex that t.h1nca fottip are better, '
he 11id. "Not 10. 1 find that mualc
training in thia country now la far.
superior than one can get overaeas."
.
"APOCALYPSE ••• POWI LUXURY THEATR S
fco1101tty Sutl .. 12.50 tll 3:00?M Unltss 1hlltrwhl Nott•
S lll3f11jfI•X11ll6i6J~ 255s/~~) S
FOR FUfll EXCtTEmEnTI V111t0Ur... * EXHILARATING
ENTERTAINMENT."
90W~(Jlfl«Tit& ~ •
, •• l20
DRIW·INI MIN NIOHTLY AT 7:30
Ch1ldt1n UrlcM• 12 FREE Unleu Noted
~ ' ~ •.•w1f'l --.
BEGINNERS WFLCOME!
I REGISTER NOW for lntemationally famous Ice Ca)>ades Skating
School Whether you've Ice skated before or never Lce_skated Jn
your Jif e, one of these classes Is for you.
rr-----------il
1 50¢0ff 1Mesa Vwcle Cent•
I . I 2701 Harbor Blvd.
any public MM1oi1 at twbar I A..a...-
1 Ice Capada a.Jet 1 ~ _....
I Pr..-coupoA for dlecount. I Costa fllesa
L: --~~"~~~~ - -:.I 979.aaao
* 8ARQAIN MATINEBS •
Mond1y thru Saturd1y
All Ptrform1ncH before 5:00 PM
(Except lpeclll Enl' .. llltftt• end Holldeya)
l -' M15'~l•A ._._11 MllOdO ot 10 .. c10111
LA MIRADA WAlW IN tt•·2MX>
"I' YOU COULD Ml
WHAT I HLVr' tN1 --. ...........
... , "ClUM ....., -·' "CKAMC>Ta 0# FN" Cl'OI --"'--y ........ ~.A.11.
"PORKY'&" Cll)
1tll,UI, ..........
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WAllC IN
"DeADMaN
DON'T RM ftLAID"' cN 1
___ .__,_
... YOO COULD au WHAT I ....... (PQI
1:11, a:IO, .... 1:10, ,..,
LAKEWOOD C ENTUl SOUTH W/llM ,,,.
""'""I M ANAHEIM OlllV(·IN
f•••WOJ fl 01 Lemofl II
179•9150
~ROAD WANUOR" 1111 -----
~•ACK"w ------·
fo1:1111y at Cond•-ooa
21J/lal·tll0
"PORKY'S" .., -----
"FANTAllA"c91 -. .. , __ ..
"WRONG •• RKIKr' Ill) .............. _
lollftl Cocnt lftwcry ) ollfOOOWOV
494-1514
"FIGHTING UCK" 1111 -~ WAlllNORS" 1111
Cllll·fl-------------------
"PAM.,,.... 1111 l"SOMa K~ HOO" t111
"HAD a~ 111> '1tAIWMM"t111
c.. " IOUllO C1llt " SOUllll -autN.A ~•"•
BUENA PARK DlllVI IN
~°'" ..... -°' ""°" , 121-4070
~ IH THl DiUKDT ~ OFM UMV£k5£.
A WTU IS ADOUT m DEGIM.
1PUBUC SKATING EVERYDAY. ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAYI
~ •I "-4 A • ""'"
FOA $OME IT YIU IE THOP. ~ MISSION.
FOA OTHW IT WIU DE TH£ LAST.
-
..... -'
LINCOLN DRIVE IN
l-oln A•• W•ll ol anon
121 .... 070
"'! ...... , 1,.,
Iii WA Y 39 (H/11( IN
"PORKY'S"Cllll -"'GOIN" ALL THI WAY".,.,
lllt<h "" .. " Oollllft 0111\'t ff-.
191·3693 . ',,. . ~· DON'T~ PLAID"'"' aop~ (It)
aUll IROT'HDS" '11NYAft LaMOMr' (fl)
C* " SOUND Cllll ·II IOllllO ___ _
. .. . ~ '
LA HABRA . ~1\! "
"P'IGHTIN,!. UCK'""
"THI WAIWORS" 11111
Clllf·"-"DUD-DOWT WM PLAID"" -. ----·---·-..,~a.Ult M01'MIM" 17MMI ---. ,.
ORANGf (lL;,\, I '"'
&'JO.I~
Wlthtn \he next few wMlll. ta.
madMll that .w.pt tht naUon'• kidl
(and adulta) d ......... the 11Sw W111" _.... wt.U be ahAre h.11 llem witb'hla older blother
IWM'lll' of five YMn .., (lrvtna'• Boben Maanauahtoo) and manlf .. ttna ltaitlf~aa•Jn u .. &.T." younier elater (D...w Barrymore).
bMme down to movie \heat.en llCl"om The ex""-~-· on thetr flCel when the oounvy. ...-bo-t.lo The full Utle 11 .. l .T., the Uwy fin\ be ld E.T. are dneml
l:xtra·T•rrHtrlal,'' and It 1bould ~~·~~'lo~~rf~: ...Uy IOU' Into that rarifltd box office ••
atmo1pher1 brHthed by 11Jaw1," '•· "Star WJr1" and "Raiden of the Lott Thelr mother (marveloully enacted
Ark." It'• the ultimate cl\tldren'1 by Dee Wallace) II kept ln the dark
. tantuy f1iclc which can be en.joyed 1bout the hOUM l\lllt throulh much
wlth equal abandon by the older of the ~. wlUch _.. up .ne ot ~ration. the ro0vle'1aupemttve11quenc19 of
What creator·dlrector Stephen cumedy. On one OCClllon, ahe tcana
Splelberft dld for 1cl•nce flcUpn • the boy'1 room aft.er hearina a noa.e, movtee ( Cloee Encounten of the and the camera pan1 the~ of
Third Kind'') and hl1h adventure ltUHed anlmala, aldpptna over &.T.~
("Raiden") 11 alreedy a maner of face ln their mldat. On another, the
cinematic hiatory. Hll "E.T." ii a ldda try to itwe their leCf9t wl\b
comblnatlon of both with a more Mom. who ii too buty to take notice,
u.nlvenal appeal than either. and knocka the cnatwe lpl'aWlinl
Spielberg, who admlta to beina a when abe opem ~ refrtaerator door.
1 o rt o f Pe t e r Pa n • mo n I Thertt would no.t, of courser be moviemake-· focu.es "E.T." throui."' ·... .,. much of a 1tory without a crisll -and the eyes 'Of a youn1 boy whoae thl1 tran1pir11 in the form of
adventurea will etrtke a responllve t ( l itl U chord with anyone .who'• ever had a p;::r:;:~.W:~~ toeeem:m~a~
stray dog "follow him home." In tbe · c•se of lb-year-old Elliot (Henry kid's-eye penpec\ive) ~ down
o.itr 11ttot 1'8ft f'Mto 'Thomas), the stray 11 a gro~ but the lnterp~tary visitor. E. . must
ON SCREEN -Fifteen-year-old fri·ndl~1!fi· from another pJ.ane• be put on the next 1paceehlp home
Irv ... .., before the Bid (hays catch him, and Robert Macnaughton of ine is left be . w en his speceahip made dolns 10 require• •very bit of
featured in the new movie "E.T ." a quk:k getaway. im.-1lnatlon aod ingenuity the
as. one of the youngsters who i:--.u t brin-•'--.--.. t .. -home and' y~-can ..1.us•-~o • .._.. UD: ~ ..... _., 6• m """· _...
befriend a space creature. hides it in his room. but !pOn must conflict comee to a head ln one -----'--------------------------oi the molt breathtakina chue ICenee
ABBA group
a conglolllerate ..
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -Eight years
ago, four fresh-faced Swedes won a music contest in
England. Their winning 90ng, "Waterloo," became
an international hit and launched the two married
·couples aa one of the most popular tinging groups in
the world.
fl M \
Including
alnce "The French Connection" as
Thomas, Macnaughton and their
frienda mount their b1cycles (with
E.T. ln a front basket) and lead the
federates on . the merriest of chaaes.
Kids have never outwitted adult
authority quite 90 delightfully.
But it lln't the freewheeling action
AA ABBA. the four have built a music empire,
and have become one of Sweden's wealthiest
groups. Annifrid "Frida" Lyngatad, Agneta
Fali.kos. Bjorn tnvaenus and Benny Anderaon
have each amassed personal fortunes of aqout $4
million.
But they have little interest in their finandal
matten, leaving that end of the buaineaa to their
producer, Stickan Andersaon, who owns half of the
group 's. holding company, Polu Music
BEST ACfRESS -Katharine: Hq>bum
BEST ACTOR -Henry Fonda
International. · Last year, Polar and lta six subsidiaries earned $12· million. • I The Polar group now ranka ninth among
· Sweden'• Top 10 and has made lta debut on the
Stockholm Stock Exchange. The members of ABBA are majority ahareholden in the three lilted
companies. The llstiog of a fourth ii planned for
this year.
While ABBA'• finand.al empire continued to
grow, the marriages of lta four members fell·apart.
But the group still alnga. uaiog that d.istinctive
four-part hannony and clean, crisp sound that made
such songa u "Dancing Queen," "SOS" and
"Mamma Mia" instant bita.
You '11 be glad you cam et
~ _(f_f}'-~~8
llTH TERRIFIC WEEK
AU. am Nl/O 111,IL ... llECLflYl
THE MM. Oii NE MOTION '9CTUM
COOE Oii SEV llEOOl.A TIOH
**************************************************
.. edwards NEWPORT CINEMA ·
~SHION ISLAND. ~EW--~BT CENTE
I
'90 much •the warmth and MnltttVity
of tht children for their 1tran11
friend, and vice vena, that adv"
"E.T ." lta epecial ~le. Spltlbirt
tllcltl a ma1ntflc.nt performance
from youn1 Thoma1, whll•
Macna'-lhton tnd Mt.. 8arrjmoN are totally believable in IUpport. ~ Wallace (who hu n'OW1\ markedly
al.nee •'The HowUnc.,.f ·i1v. a moet
natural ln.'*'Ptetation of the mother,
U1hUn1 the p•iP. of a recent
eeparatlon and pu)lod tn 1everal
directlON by work and children.
And then ihere la the John
Willlama ecore. The mwdcla.l ...,tua ===============::::::., who created the. •ttrrtna 10unda of 11Jaw1," "Star Ware,•• "Clo1e
Encounter1," "Sunermal\/' "The
Fmplre Strikee Backf' Mel "Raiden of
the Leet Ark" ~ hja audlft\C'e
with yet another devaatatinfi theme,
thl1 one perhaps wielding ~ore
authority than the othera, putk:Ularly
during the bike chue ecene when tMe
mualc: ,nearly llfta you out of yoUI eeat.
"E.T." ii clearly another gem for ·
the Spielber1 treaeure cheat and
ahould be the one movie every kid
will have to eeo t.hia awnmer, at least
once. And there doubtleu will be
more E.T.1 waddllna around the
atreeta at Halloween this year than
any other creature.
HD student sings
Randy Hill, a junior e¥change
student at Dartmouth College, the aon
of Mr. and Mn. Richard L. Hill of
Huntln,gton Beach; recently sang with
the Dartmouth Chamber Si.ngera ln a
combined concert with the Dartmouth
Symphony Orchestra and the
Dartmouth College Glee Club ln a
performanc e of Brapms'
''Schlckaalslled.''
~--~~-....--y _. - --• ---.. • ·-r--~·----.----- - -9' _. ~ ,.. s • •·
r.':ml Ii M!fJOAN clliilr~ r Bl&tra. --Md•ijqotdee\h ed
..... OWi' .....
tVWcl front E!L honOt UNI of hollow.. •t ttaftnl hUcSnn wltb mate auck 1111
wllhboard 1iomr.chl dylna
1 ~ thOUMndl tvvy day oT
IWC>ltMn tta.Natlon.
~. You hardly hear the anymore. Even the Bicht of
~~ton• from tht mape.
' t l"MCh of the Gulf of ' • on· the old Wett African
• ·tla1 cout i1 now called the • ll&lht of Bonny. lt ta u lf the
~ phen had. tried to wipe
' t d\e memory of the ~eleet of · dvil wan, whld\ claimed two
'tnlllloft li"-and lhattered ·the
ederation of Ni1erl1, Black
· rica'• lhowptece democracy.
·' "That WU a IAna ni8ht ..,. ..
lnueed the' Mo1t Rev. Brlan r&ru" Uunca, the bJahop of
~bar, wlth an audible llgh.
.'Brother figh.Ung against
brother. Fortunately, Africans
~on't ruminate. We get on with
life. You never hear the word
·p iafra an)'more, except in a '
_. •fieroptory way. ln -t,he heat of ·~~t, a polit<ctan might call
, ~ op~nt •a Biafran,' meaning 'f dlsaident or a secessionist, even
r a traitor." . 1 . : Tbe bashop and I were having
'br••kfut· in the llote1
r·Presidentlal in Enugu duripg ~Pope John· Paul H's visit to
·Nigeria. Enugu was the first
tapital of the breakaway
~l,)Ubllc of Biafra. The hotel,
e>nce the most luxurious in
WAR'S VJCl'IMS -Faces such as these haunted the world
duririg· the 30-month horror of the Nigerian civil war,
1967-70. Thousands died of protein starvation as the conflict #
~frlca, hu been-stripped by
oo.ters when the city fell to
ederal forces a few months after
war broke out in July 1967, It ~ been restored. to ~ '?f ita old elepnce. 1 was sµrpriled to glimmered out the window on runway ughts came ori for only
tind ''11ie C.Ollected Spee,ches" the 65-mile bus ride to Onitaha, a 30 seconds, but we landed ;oo "Random Th.oughts of Gen. later Biafran capital where the without hearing a shell fired.
J,:meka Odwnegwu Ojukwu" on pope said Maas on a forgotten Uli once billed itself as
ble in the lobby. battlefield. "Africa's busiest airport, with
' Oxfol'd-educated Ojukwu was Out there was ''the~" the llpwards of 40 flights a night the leader of eastern Nigeria's endless green savanna of boabab bringing in food and arms, often predo~inantly Catholic Ibo and palm oil trees where those on the -same plane. In the year ~pie, known for· their clc:.ely l:latlesa ltaring children with the beginning Mareh 26, 1968, when
Jtntt, 1uccesa-oriented family strangely copper-colored hair the first relief plane landed on
~ that. put a premium on w4dted to die of the protein the jungle strip, Caritas alone
tctucaUon. Before the w e deficiency disease called new 1,900 flighta with a total
1. lbos had more than a million ·kwaahiorkor, a Ghanan word · ~yload of 40 million pounds of [ Chil~ in parochial echools run meaning "red man." A Swiss ~ food .
1 1noJtly by Irish· missionaries. en-voll<eer told me then that In the tin-roofed "stafe house"
I
!['hey held more than W percent once the hair turned red, it was at Uli, my passport was stamped
pf the civil ~ jobs and 75 too late to save the child. Now "Enugu," although the capital
fircen.t ot the anny commiaions the roadside was littered all the had fallen a year before, and a
roughout Nigeria, although way with tin cana, auto wreclcs, he a 1th officer checked
boa numbered less than oil drums, untreated garbage, the immunization records while
one-fourth of the nation's shocking refuse of the oil boom customs men went methodically ~01lem-~ominated 5S million that hat made Nigeria the through the baggage. To the very ~pulatlop. . _ world'• sixth largest producer end, the bureaucracy taught
• O)J.kwu called them back to and resulted in more abandonded them by the British lived on in
iheir ea.stern homelands and fanns than the war ever did. dying Biafra.
aimed the Republic of Once again~, lush enough · Policemen in crisp khakis
on May· 30, 1967, &fter to ~ the natj,on, is importing directed what little traffic was
tinous Moalem troops, mostly food to feed its own people, left. Bewigged and robed justices
the have-no~ rival Hausa fl}though not with rickety relief held court in jungle cle.arings.
t!_ibe, slaughtered 30.000 Ibos. planes bravingSpviet-made MiGf Radio Biafra urged citiz.ens to
piie.e grilly massacree, occurring and Hritiah anti-aircraft guns to "take a flutter at Biafran football
pver a period of pM>Dthi, were land at Ull, the kerosene lamp-lit . pools."
~ cubninatlon of aeveral coups stretch of highway known to the The veneer of nonnalcy kept
· •nd counter-:qoups begun pilots as "Airstrip Annabelle." people's minds off the MiG =by young Ibo officers During the war, I had landed fighters and Ilyushin bom~n
rtd the govemmen_ t of at Annabelle from ~ Tome, and Sov\et rockets that were
then a Portuguese island. in a ahrlnk:ing Biafra from ~ the
t all did seem "a long night rusting Dakota leased by Caritas, eize of Ireland to the siz.e of
.'' but .for this repOrter, ,"!ho the Vatican re.lief agency. HOW"I Delaware, while the world
ered, the war and returned for before we took of(, the pi10J had argued the moral question of
e s u r render, a half -borrowed my typewriter, then whether it was more. hwnane to
· me.mb.e.red landscape aakec:Ubetowime..hiewill~ run .the blockade and feed the
, jue .£e~ls his ,garde~ grow
t PIULADJ:LPHIA (AP) -On momino when tires, old bathtubt. even toilet bowls -90 he won't
wakes up to find it raining, George Jones ia step on them. -
bapp.y for his tomatoes and squash, but "Everything la where he can feel," uid
1dll1a1>1dnU!d that he won't get to visit his garden in Slanche Smith, the garden'• oveneer.
ttbe ' .
.._l On clear day., the 73-yeer-old mired railroad The containen ai.o mean Jones doesn't have to
· worker tdlda bta anail plot ih .. fenced-in west bend down aa far, and they make it easlet to
Phl1adelpbia community garden. Since he la almdlit allocate limi~ space •
• ~blind, Jora must work gingerly. The garden ii one ot 326 citywide ~ j ms tl8lt bas been made ealier becau.ee his I under the federally hmded Urban Gardening ';~ are planted in upraised 00ntalnen -Prosram-Fifteen other dtiel partlcis-te.
f • . ' , l
• I ' • ~-' ~i
; ' • ,
. I
roed f wtth a cottln on till t.;k.
Two •lclan ~ hall drunk on palm oU wine, trybtj tO
MW hWMfted dollar billt~ . (die)'
were alwaya paid in cuh) Into
th• 1!_~_!.~t bind of thtlr
undennone. '
n)inl lnto Celabu ..... 1y aa
tM eventna, l •w dw N~
delta .,iow with the hundredl of
1aa-flarin1 oil derrick• that
eventually nelped bind up 1he
national wound• of war. The
brtakaway republic of Blafra
had hoped to win hard currency
ind forei~friend1 with the
delta'• gua bladt Sold. but
Calabar, Port and &ht
other oil areas fell tq federal
amphibious ... ulta early in the
war. Nea-r the end, the Ude
almolt turned for Biafra when
C.Ount Carl Gustaf Von &.ea. a
60-year-old retired Swedlah
commercial pilot, organized a
tiny. volunteer air force of
rocket-firing, Jow-ilytn1
Swedish "Mtnfcun" e: to shoot up Niprla1.-·M1G and
oil etora,e tank&. But lt was too
Uttle far too late.
'Ilhe oil boom, which baa made
Nigeria second to Saudi Arabia in
crude exports to the United
States, has brought great
prosperity and vexing problems
to Iboland. No one wanta to dig
for yams anymore. Jobs in the
cities and the oil fields pay more.
l#wnptloto
destroyed the nation's economy. Today, reunited: Nigeria is
enjoying the fruits of the oil boom, but prosperity bas brought
new problems to -b).ack Africa's most populous nation.
"The oil boom baa relegated
agriculture to the background
with the result that this country ·
can no longer produce enough
food to feed our ever increasing
population. Consequently, huge
sums of money in foreign
currency have continued to be
sunk into the importat_ion of
food,'' bemQIU\8 Deputy GOv. Boy
Umenyi.
children at the expense of arms the war, but we have not
flowing in ~ or shoot down the • r e c e i v e d .o u r s h a r e o f
relief planes and bring about a government jobs. There ia still
quick end to the suffering. 10me auapidon of our loyalty,"
Onitaha, where the pope in his said Keyin Abo to, an Ibo
outdoor M¥8 _prayed for vtctima photographer friend. Aboto had
of the war, 1howed few worked as a stringer for several
remaining signs of the 30-month British newpapera during the
struggle. "'"The $20 million Niger war. We reminisced about our
river bridge, destroyed at the previous meeting when I went to
outset of the war, had been interview Ojultwu at Umullhia,
rebuilt. Its towers loomed out of the last of Biafra's peripatetic
The Catholic bishops of
Nigeria, in a joint pastoral letter,
dealt with the movement of
people to the already
overcrowded cities, "llliJ in a bid
to get their share of thl so-called
national cake derived mainly
from the growing petroleum
business ... Consequently,
people become affluent
overnight and there is a tendency
tp accept materialisrn as a way of
the yellow smog in the distance capitals.
beyond the pope's altar.
.lif .. e.
The pope blessed the sick at St.
Charles Borromeo Hospital,
which had been badly damaged
by bombs and rockets during the
war. The patients included a
number of wartime paraplegics,
but no r~-headed victims of
kwaahlorkor.
"Some of the ltal'Ving children
you saw who managed to survive
are waJ.ldni around now witJt
pennanent brain ~·" said a
nun at the holJ>ital. 'There ia
nothins we can do for them."
The Onitaha market, bombed
with great lcm of !ife just before
the city fell, when rats, mice and
bai, were sold at the meatless
meat atalls. bas been rebuilt and
again claims to be the largest ir)
West Africa. No tr8'le remains of
the execution poatl where
Ojukwu ol'dered a firtng equad
for eight civlliana and two army
officers convicted of selling
"buah meat," human flesh. at the
height of the famine. ... ,We Ibo.-~since
"Did you ever get your knife
back?" he" suddenly asked,
recalling the Swiss army knife
confiscated during the pain-
fully .personal security search
that all visitors t.o the bearded
Biafran leader had to undergo.
The ravages of peace and
prosperity, judging from the
roadside equator, the shantytown
slums, the polluted skies, the
abandoned farms, have left
uglier scar.a on Iboland and the
rest of Nigeria than the war ever
did. . 11 'No ,'' I answered, The years have brought
remembering with guilt and ~changes to the survivoa
embarrassment how without the fu that half remembered wartime
knife I was unable to open the landscape, althOuah many of the
canned goods all joumaliata had lead actors in the tragedy of
brought in with them from Biafra have moved from center
Lisbon. We always ducked staBe.
behind trees to eat, away from Ojukwu lives in exile in the
the staring eyes of the starving. Ivo ry Co~st, where he has
The memory of the knife filled become a millionaire in the
,my mind with images of the transportation business.
-Biafra tha~ was no more. The Gen. Yakubu "Jack" Gowan,
posters urging people to eat the Sandhurst-educated Baptist
grasshoppers, roaches, snails, preacher's son who went to -war
waape as a aource of protein. The -to keep the federation of Nigeria
total at.ence of dogs and cats. together, was toppled in the fast
Vultures perched in the trees. An · coup and aeems to have become a
Ibo family fleeing a burning pennanent student at Warwick
village with all their worldly University in England, despite
goods balanced on their heads. invitations from President
An old man staggertng-dbwn the-Shagart to return.
.. .,.
\ '
ti
weNeA~1191W ~
OltM .t, ll'lllllcltlphla 11 Yll••· ll.:1AHML1
TM A~ .,. hlt9d to
Pfotellt entw1alnet IMll'flY o.vte Jr ..... Ill ~
II mede to llldNO llttrl.
• 'MllAINT' "Tiie M...., ....,, ..
.'Ml........,.
o.otge Ind lou99 hew •
hlige flgfl1 on Iha Mt; ~
llf• to be Int~
Aout thtlr .. ~ .. nwlt-,....
• HAWAlt flMl.O
Denny Ill lndtc:t.cl lof n!W•
derlno an apparently "'*"* .._. ~·
• CAWNGN'•
~l(.~tht
Cf1rnlnel ~ lnlttatMI.
• fMT F'O#MAll/IJ
''a.cttlclty And Energy'.
Fv!Ul'e llnpllcallone of lM
~\tlnlhal!Mof 1
alactrlcal energy era
I·~=·= NeCNaWI
MOYW * * * * "I'm All Right.
Jlldl" ( 1MO) Ian Cannl-
d\MI, ,...., ~ In
tryklo to oo • good job '°'
hit uncle In • laiCl°'\I. •
w•ll·m••nlng bumbler
ecluelly upHI• lh•
crooked achllfne hit uncle
hee IO catefully pltnned.
(l)MCMI
• • ··Mao. In Pena ..
(1"8) ~Mwgm. Louie
Jourdan. A Perle ~
...._,. a IMhlon buyat off
harlwt.
t:IO • AU. .. THE fAlltlt4. Y
h'• Archie·• btrthOay and
ha'• more IUfl)flMO by
whet h Nye on hit birth
certlltcal• than by hi.
9IKpriM perty.
• NIWMIAT WITI4
ClEn**Rll .
• ;"..:::' MPORT D BAANfV MIU.DI
Olatrlc;h o.l\M BarMy by
attending 1111 111111-nuctMr
~ o.monetrauon and
wind• up on Iha wrong
8'de of Iha law. (Part 1)
CID ctWIUE. TNI LONEIOMe OOUQM
A lumbermlll'I 8do9ll and
,..... "' orphaned COUQllr
kitten. (PIWt 2)
.MOYll * * •J.D. And Tiie Seit Flat
l<Jd''
, •• N9CN!WI HAPPY MYI AGAIN
The Foni ""*COIN to the
-when ....... eur-tnghem'• car er..,_ Into
Al'a~.
• M!CNaWI
• KOJM(
KOiek .. not M1lafleO wtth
lM ~ s>e*'1t1nO to •
,,.,.. ganoater .. belnO
rHponalbl• lor Iha
•"*"Pied .....inetlon of
~hOod
• M"A"l"H
Ht1Wbye Ind B.J. auepac:1
Frri of lltllng a wounded
qolonel' • antique gun.
I ..IOKDfl WILD
9UIM81AEPOlll'T
MAGtCCWOll
PAINTIHQ
"a-IAoc*a" (I) , ..... MAQAZIHe
A top 1eaNon modal who la
-50 ...,. old: • 21·
)'Mt-old rnaatat ~ .......
0 INT'Bn'MNlmlr
TONIQHT
Alt Int.mew whh ,,_.
l<Jno. 8TNIMUPNTI
~:Leo&eyer
(D)MOYll
SERIES ST AR -Daniel J. Travand
pl•Y• Captain Furlllo In "Hill Street
Blues'' aeries airing at 10 tonJatit on
KNBC (4).
*"'''On The Rlgflt Track"
(1911) Gary Coleman.
MlcNal lembectl A IOCiel
wotll• trtM to llnd • "°'"
n\11 home fOf • train ., ...
lion ahoelhlne bOy with •
talent for plcklno the ~<Po·
(J)MOYll * * * ''The c-1 FOi I(~" (1980) Paul
Mcewtn.y, Tiie Who. A
hOlt of rc>c* performer'
many of wtlOm get togatf\.
at In 1111 •ll·ltllf roc:tc
~ .. are INlurecl Ill
thll record ol • ....-ol
~held tor Iha~
ftt of rellef to war-raveged
C8mboclla. r:ao I Gii FAMtt. v nuo LAV!Nfl & 8HIRL.EY
&COMPANY
Squlogy lalla In kMI wtlh •
greedy and unc>"lnclpled
i !VaONLA
M"A"S"H
Rader borrowt Chef1ea'
record• pla~ and •••
-a tM M0A·s·H Cll9C
llOC*(i)' TIC TN; OOUOt4
~/LEHMR
"8'0ftT
• NlW9 0 YOU AIKED P'OR IT
Featurecl: "Vuhur• Thal
Eat OUt Of Y-Hand"
and "limbo Roller
Skatat." CIDMCMI
• • "a.yond me RMr'
(11111) Denton Ka'na,
M-'*'-'· A poiyn..
alen-American girl who hu
been educated In the u.s
~ to her leland home
and ,.... In loYe with •
~OIYat.'PO' t:OO. Gii ICAMPS
An .-Y-9C*'O wrhat .....
on IN running of en .n.-
-Cflld car. cent.er. eMCME
• • • "Incident '" a...
Ff •IClaoo" ( 1870) Rlc:Nrd
~. awta Connely. A
-II he60 '9llpOnllble for • ,oufl'• deMll ..... lie
trtla to...., an old man. ....... ...,.,
Mlftand ~~
~tobe~.(R)
• rcn mWHY '°"" 9CID • ON DRUOe ,,. MllloNI ptotl6em of
dr\IQ ... ~ ~ .,.. .. ..,,..,.
• P..M.MAGADNI Ort tM roed with the rc>c*
•GUP Journey. a 21..,..,.. old ,,_.., eec..,e .,,..., .MCMI
• • • "Th• Brambl•
llwfl" (1MO) Rlctwd Bur·
ton, eart.a Ru9fl. A doc-
t°' llruQOIM with the
~Ion of au1haneaie ..
N9 Clk:I tn.ld, wNt II terri--
M/#y Ill, beoa to' die ano
lleve the doct°' marry Illa ....
~awa .... ...,. ,,.,,... .. .,,.
~ ... of Mo
,...,, end an1wer1
.....,.... ~ atloltt
~-prolMlma.
• 1N1Nt PMVIEWI "°99' Ebet1 end a..
Sllllel ~ .... lllma
that nearty evetybOOy
ml1Hd th• flral time
around Including "Fin-
o-a.'' "Galel Of ~ ..
end "TM Onloft Fletd." (A)
(I) MCMI
• • "lltannlgan" ( 111711)
John Wayne, Richard
Attanborouoti. An Amatf.
can pollce detective
att~ to IOcal• • raok·
ata•r who h•• been
abcluc1ed "°'" '* hldlno ~lnlondon. CC>MCMI **Yt "TM Wendaren"
(111711) Ken Wtktl, Unde
Manz. TM mernWI of •
touoh 1M0e ....... Oll19 In
the Bronx dlaoo¥W ttMlt tM
pr-of orowlnO uo
and lalllno In loYe -mucll mor. Olfflcull .. ~
-than Ill'/ of the rum-blea the(w ta11en part In.
'A'
(l)MOVIR * * ~ "HOlkN" (11180)
Roger Moore. Jame•
Ma.on A daoc>ef, -
hating frogman 11 called In
to tnwer1 l"8 pWl9 of
ut<l'tlonlata who Mvie
hllllClled • ~ .. and
.,. llvMtenlflO to o.tro.,
two Monti Sea oll r1ga. 'PO' .MOYll
•••• "Necwotll" (1971)
Fey• Dunaway, Peter
Flnc:tl. An 9'11 I....,,
-*'· .._ rdnge
-11-tlly ~ II turned Into • ranting
prophet of the ---by
• crafty 1-male progtam-
mlng executive. 'A'
~Ii=.=
Kip and Helvy ,._.. their
INll ldenlltlee to thelt ..,._
low hOtel reelclatlte. (flt) Q
• AU. .. THI PAMA.Y
The 81Mcl -lflodled
when tNy -toNt tNt ArcNe Me Joined the
rank• of the netlon'•
w~.(Patt1)
• INIAKPM'IWWa Roger Eber1 _. a...
Sllkll ,...,.... IOl!!.9 ..
that neatly .-ybody
ml...O the flrlt tlrN
wound lndudlflO "Fin·
..,.., .. ··0atee Of ~··
Ind "Tiie Onloft J:Wd ... (A)
• LAl'Tct4AHCa
CIAMGE
Brad a-. -• clao-,_.lc oornput• fOf •
Cemwo ~ -i dllm-
onstr.... how to teat a
bat1ery.
(J)UCMI **Yo "Stw Trek -Tiie
Motion Plciure" ( 19711)
Wiiiiam Shetner, L.eorierd
Nlmoy. The former com-
mender of the u.u .
Etltspl'lae ru• _.,... ..
old ct.,, _, -. off on •
mlMiOn to find the mpleri-oua WMll ,........,.. fof
IN deltrUctloll al IMMr•
oua FedarllMon ............
•QI
..... 'Ml~ ....
AbemitlU~ed ,.....,. ...._,to
"CHANNEL LISTINGS
collect a judgment tor
Aodtford rW1'81 ioaa '*
entire llfeatyte. eaowwr
ITROICD
9 KNXT <C8SI
8 KNBC (NBC)
• KTLA (Ind.)
• KABC (ABCI
e l<FMB (CBS)
D KHJ·TV (Ind.) a l<CST (ABC)
• KTTV (Ind.) 'e KCOP·TV (Ind.)
.a KCET (PBS)
a KC-:E {PBS)
r1I) On-TV
<I> Z·TV
(II) H80
re:> !Clnemu1
Cf.) IWORI NY. N.Y.
@ IWTBSI
IJ'.J !ESPNI
())!~Imel
• 5'>otlloht
• <C•bl• News Network I
IOmber1y la ottered • mo6-
~In P ... (A) Q 8 0 IMNIY tAL.81
A llr"l)la erreat INde to
tM 12th preclnc:t being
ftooOed by llOlneleal peo-
ple wtio .,. foroed to
rwneln , ....... --of • bllnard. (A) Q
• M.&.Y 0MHMt
~-• ....v .....
"Ufe Extenelon" ~
Ourtl ~-. Or. ~ Deno Ill•. Richard
..................... L"'ll..: ::. ..... .,...., .. ---m= • •mr T...,,,_,. ...... , •.. Ne
--~ ........ ~0-IM'I .......
•land 'lllt llflde'• ....
~an tfta6t ~ ~"41M· l'1111 l)Q •••'-......... "" ... ..., .. (1N0) Oo1C11e H...,,
lllean .,....,.. A .......
-~_.,...,.... -..... """" ...... "" tfl8 ... al ..... ................ <r..:. ...... ~ . .,.,.... ..
(1174) He~ ...... limon
Wllfd, A )'OW'IO -*' le
wrorind by a WOlant
~ wtlo...,... "°"' ........ ~'"' l'M88 ... AINAK
Ori 1111 IM ...... ~.
thadllef ..... ~
outtodlnrwata-......n
,...._ Ill an 9ftcWi to
!Mlle .. INlllOfY ...
~.(A) eO TAXI
Jim ...... hie llgendary
~.,_.to.,...
hit .._ for OM of 1111
,.,.., • lllltWOtll ~
wtioae job .. Ill ~·
~~MDOOMNI
"A CMbad Man" ICM't'I '"""°"' to lmprow '* gradea and .... oolaga
~ .. ~byllll~~
eotlool.Q 10*>. (I) tMGINUM. , ...
Magnum 11*'8 a PfO foot·
111111 a-In Wlfllno to
Pfoteof en otd buddy wt1o
la being Ylctlmll9d by 1111
~-.(A)
8Gllt&.L8TMIT
ILUa
Captain """° con9dan
hiring 1111 -laWyer to avoid becon*'O •. ..,,.
ment ac..,eooei. Ind Hll
end fllenko llMoOma under·
UV!. ...
CU>laJP
"J. Edoat ~· TM
~ of the FBI Ynder
onc:t°' J. EdOat HooWr
-probed In Ill~
ttvie report ~ fllm from .._,, F8I ~
with ,_ lntorrnetlon --rounding 1111 OOltb Cl'l'W9llll
ear-; Marahall Frady
'-'*· eroTHI~
IOflH
~ ~,..,..
Aldlard of .. manol1lll
OUttaa when Ill ltlnarWlt
wcwt1er MIO ti. WOftled for
her In prevloue yeara
r•uma.
(C)MOYW ** "You light Up My Ute" ( 111TT) Didi COM, Joe
Sliver. An 11plrtno
aongwrltef ...... to oope
with the ttv. "*' Ill ..
tltawhle ..........
own Identity. •PQ·
Cll mMM
"Panda,,......-.MCMI ••'Ao "Zorro, The 09¥
Blade" (1911) GMrge
Hal!\ltoft, llUl'eft Hutton.
The'** eon of old c.a..
fornle'• f-. ,.,.._
fight« II llapecfl.._, by
a riding lllJury. '°"*" ... ~ bfOOlat to daft ...
tO:I01~==-=PG· ::=:::c.
JONATHAN wrN1'IM
~Janet LAltgf\. t1.ooeee(J)OGll ....
• IAT'UN)AY MGHT
Hott: MlchHI Palln.
Oueata: The Dooble Broth--e VOU AIGD IOftlT
Featufed: "!Wno Fu ~
dne Show" end "a.le
8rown: Behind The ac.-." .... A•t•H "°' .... ~ tM ..017tlll
llM no~. IM
...,ttle .... plcQ ••
It'• bedl to~. .... e-..v .....
WMdl tor 8ennY• IOOll el
Hollywood end ttw ·~ •
"'I Of TN Y-J&.rnplng
OoMall."
I DICK CAVITT
lHSL.AMWCIM
Corr .. pondant• Linde'
W"""91mat and Coltle
Aobef1e )ojrl Paul DIA!e tor ..... ~~mlf)' ol Conorffelonal
ac1MtieL
(D)MOYm
•••• .,.~. {18M)
OOClumentaty. MlchHI
~.Eduardo Paolm·
II. The lnalde ~ of two
deaf-mute friend.I la
Cir'..:.
Orlnff OoMt DAILY PILOT/Thul'lday, JUM S, 1812
I
••• ·-n. lllolt!O Hori.-"*''' ('911) ~ ,_,.. ford, ,,.,,_ ~ A lM
v.-~--·••a ~ INW019'bNd hotaa
to 11119 1111n "°"' hie r--~·llQ' *** "MoVloer'' (tNO) Roger Daltry, Adem ,alttl
TN trw al°'\' of 1ktt1a11
oM*W JoM MoVloer'•
.. '" pnaon. 1111 ..,..,. anOhlll,_llteontlleout-
lllda .. Ohl Oi c.d. ....
tt:ID. QU9CY
QuNy dlao4WW'I !Mt 117
lllcfllN of I )8llner OIMll
In ttle OONll died ol
r.~
~ hollt! Joan Rlvw•.
Ouaeta: Pote Barbuttl,
Mimi IC.-cfy. edMCNaWI ~ e MCMI ** "The lummertlme !<MW' (1113) Kart Meidan,
Chrlatopller Mitchum.
8eethlrlo wttfl holtlllty IMf
hll tlltlW'• deetrl year9
befof9, • youno """ ....
ofl on • l!\IM6on of r-.
puralOd by • ,.. ..... --cop.
• THl&IEllONI a-g. clMli. with the
KIM. e IAM'ON> AHO ION
FNd gate • jot> ... but
~"'•~topoy
tor• IOen.
.... tl .. TWITH
CLDIWll
• cwnoNIDM!C
NEWI ())NIA~
QM9
0-4, 1-111 and Ille to
be~.
CIDMOYW *** "8bipee'' (1MI) 8111
Mwr~. H9'okl Ramie. A
New YCl'll cebblo loc*lng
tor udtement OOOWIOel
1111 beat lrlend to )ojrl him
In anllellng In Iha U.S.
Army. 'A' .MCMI
• • • "Cutter'• Way"
(1M1) Jolin ~. Jalt
9rtctgae. A ~ Viet-
,_, -and .. bo9t Irland, e aoolel dropout,
9ocl.-thllr -vi.a on
IOMflO •murder-'A'
t1M(C)MCMI
• .... "Kii Or .. l<Jlad''
(1M0) --AyM. Cher· ~ Mec:Mlle. A format .... _ ... wflo !oat
Ill~ um. IMldl
to IN.....,._. dultnO IN
........ to--..1111
.... II')' .......... .
mio fl.I ...... "°"' around .. ....., Ill• taur-
-.t. 'PO• ,... 9'r'IM'••rr
TOlllllllT
AA ,,_... wtlh Alan
·iiavaw
A haled ...-1tar II
tfW .... ted with mutder
""'-' ha ~ • IMIOr
tOUtnllNN. (A)
.UCMI *** "They Ware
~·· (1M5) Aob-
ett Montgomery. John
Wl)'N. The bOrnblnO of
,.... Hllftlor oi-......
of PT 11oata tM lone •wefl·
ad ~ to ptOVl9 .........
• LOllW. w•oC-N
8TY\.I
"Lo¥e Attd Tllo Happy a.,.-· Alctlle fell In kNe
f« IM h tllM.
• IJCl'\.OMtG
LAHGIJW
tl:tO G 8 LATI MGHT WfT'H
DAVID L9TTMMAN
Ouet1t1: IUfVlval .. .,.,,
Tom •rown, •woo•I•
l<urU, o. Oordoft UOdy
IF
••14 "Loulou .. (11111) 1 ...
belle Huppert, Oerard
Depardleu. A )'OUflO wom-
an falll In io... wfttl • man
aha met In • dllCo but can-
not aooept hie lrr9eponei-
bl•. carefree attitude
towwd llto.
12:40. MCYU.AH & WIA
Mac wltneeaee • murder In
• llOaPtel but can't ftnd
any evidence to bacil up
whet ha-· (A)
tl:IO CID MCWll * * "TM l8Q4llld Of The Lona Ranger" (1980) l(Jln-
ton 8plilbury. Chrtatopher
L.Joyd. The Lona Ranger
end Tonto pur.-their
arch-enemy, Butch
C.Wftdlltl. ""° hM kMS-
ftlC)ped the proltdent of IMU.8.'PG' , •• MCWll
• • • "Tiie llo ()ock ..
(1841) -.....,, M-..-0' ..... A MWePe·
permen .,.. to ... the only ..,..,__ to lfle rnurO. of
..... glr#rtand.
• lttCMI ••14 ''The ............
(llN) Ken' Senara. Yurnl
8'*9-. A O'OllP of hlOHY eYOf¥eO ....,. of
aupertor lntalllgence try to 1•• -Earth to petl)Otu-•t• their clYlllzatlon. (l)UCMI
• •• .,. "Alice, SwMt
Allee" (11171) Lind• Miiier,
Paula SMpperd. Memberl
of an ltallen-Am«lcan
famlly -Ylctlmblad by • paydlotlc murdorat In their
mldat. 'R'
1:108 MCWll . **Yo "X From Out•r
Spt.09" (111M) Toanlya
WUllll, Poogy Noel. A
apore brought to Earth
from the moon llbaort>I
electrlctty and growa lnlo • -· != ** "The a.tan With
80Qer1'a Fece" (1810)
AoOer1 SeccN. OtMe ~
My. A man daddea to
dlanga ..... ~ and
pflyaloel l!PPW•-to ,__ 1'111 acr-Idol
'PO' ·=-1::w'
•• ''The Dilapc>w•ioe"
DonMI SWlenlnd, Frar.-
dne "--tta.A top hit man
tor an International rnur -
dot-0.,-hlre °'Oanlutlon
dlaccw9rs Illa wife .. mi..-
lng and b•comea
ob...o whh finding her.
'A'
l';2IO CJ) MOYll * * 14 "Th• Mirror
Cllldl'd'' (tNO) Ellub«h
Ta,40(. KJm Novell. 8uaO
on • atoty by Agatha
awtat6e. A atranoe murder
llMlMrlt t'fvlll Hollywood
.......... pi-.111111
!"9llfl ...... 'PO'
... MDVII * • .. Tomtl Of The LMrJ
....... (1t70) "°"" ~ ~ P9ttlJIOM. A
remo4o tllMd II rumored 'o be IN dwlllrl8 p-. of
JOHN DARLING
• gtlMlly .,.... .... Ill ••
"" ara1n1lllld of • ~'*""' ,. "9erOftd TM ~
(ttltJ Oenton ••'fie, Mw9fi ~. A ...,,..
....... lll'lcan Oltt ........
-. ....... 111 .. u.t ,.,,,.. .......... '*"'
and fllll In IO¥e wltll •
11 """"' 'lllO' M» • NIM .. MCMI **'-"Jannlf•" (1"3)
Howetd Duft, Ida Uiptno A
~ "" -· dine .... •• lM drafty old
INIWoll ..... en. WOtll•
(J)mAMa
..,.,_ Meter"
l:GO. MOYW •i.t "'4lrt>ldOen Heaven"
(tHI) CharlH l'arrell,
OhartOlte Henry. An Arnet·
IOan dllllOat trlea to main·
t . ..., dltcrotlOn In hat love
attalr with • .,.·known
lrllllll pollllcel ~,
.MCMI * *"' "An Eye F°' An Eye .. (11111) Qluok N0trle,
Ctlflelopher Loa A Sen
Franollco cop quit• IN
loroa to •verioe the murder
of his pannat by "*"btf'
of a OrU(I Mo 'A'
l:GI CC> MOYll **'Al "The Wandorat•'
( 1179) Kan Wahl. Unda
Manz. The "*"t>erw of a
lough IMOI .,, ... gang In
tno Bronx Oleeowr that the
pr-of O<owlnO up
and lalllng In loYa .,.
much more dltllcult experl·
-lhllll any of l"4I rum·
blea lll0)''\19 taken per1 In ·
'A'
1:108 MOVll
• • • "Copacabana"
(11147) Grouel\o Mara. Car·
man Mlrlll'lda. A MOdy lel·
ent agent manab-to get
hll cffent two )Obe at IM
lamoua nl;ht "'°'· 1:111(.l)MOV!e , * * • "Cullar'• Way"
(11111) John "-d. Jatt
9'1dOM. A maimed Viet·
nam vet and hit beat
friend, • aodal dropout,
locum their -glee on
aoMng • mwder cue ·~· ~CIDMOVll •••'A "Private Benllt-mlri" (1980) GolOla Hawn,
E"-t &annan A well-to-
oo young -rnlal•·
anly ~ Iha Army follow·
Ing the ONth of hat ,_
lluaband on their wedding
~~~
1' *'~ "An Eye F0t An
Eye" ( 11181) Cllucll Norrie,
cnt1at0f)hor l.. A San
Francieco cop qulta the
'°'°'to~ the mwder
of hie pertnat by mamt>erw
of a drug rlflO. 'R'
4:IO. VO'f AM. TO TH!
BOTTOM~ THE Sl!A
"Monlter From The lnlar-
no"
• Mtl8K>N:
...~
Tllo IMF racaa aga!Mt lime
to pr_,I Illa .... ol a
container ol nuclMt mat•
rial.
Frida•'•
Da11tlme Ho.,IE'• --5':10 ~ • • • • "I'm Al Right.
Jadl" (1MO) len CamV-
chall, Pocat Sellers.
1:10 (I) * • · 'lllundatt>lrdl To The ~ .. (11181) Pup.
'*'· l:OO ••• "lnvedor9 From
The o.p·· ( 11181) Pwppol•
<Z> ••• "0 ludty Mani"
(11173) MfllOOlm ~,
A9ipt'I Alc:Nro.on..
7:IO CH> • *'Ii ''The M)'lterlout
Stranger'' (11112) Chrl•
Makepw:e, Fred 0wynn9.
9:CIO CC> ••• "Don't Go,....,
The Water" (11187) Glenn
f«d, Ola Scala. WOl1d
W• II Mllort In Iha Sou1h
Paclflc find that they l'IMd
only • '9CtMtlon haH 10
complete their peradtM.
Cl) * * '4 "TM Nakfd
Kia" (111&4) COnatance
Tower, Anthony Elatoy.
When a glrl II err•led IOI
murder, her ahad)t put II
reYM!ed. ' t:10. * * "The lonely Tnill"
(11138) Jonn Weyrte, Ann
Rutherford. A 01119 of out·
lewt t.,,.ort:zea local ranch·
•• untM one man tall•
control .
• *** "L .. Cltrle" • (1ff7) ~ Kelly, MlUI
Qaynot. An AmetlHn I
mutlOel llloW h"• tN luroC19811 oltOUl1 W9*\
ciomplicallOl\a ......
10lOO * • * "la Olrle" ( IH7) ~ Kally, Mltll 1
Qaynot. An Amor loan •
mveloal .now ltlll the
lurOINlln Clf°'111 When
oomptlcetione .,..
10'.IO CJ) * '4 ''Tiie l.Mt en.." ( 1N 1) LM Me)ore, CMe J
M•ec>MOt
t1t00 (I:)*** "Tribute To A
Bed Man" C •He) J-c.oney, lrtne ,...,.., TWO
conolfned people etternpt
to OOtWlnCe • rlnOI* 10
alop -llllng ruetler'I.
lltOO G * * "VIiia;. Of TM
Olanta" (1H5) Tommy
Klrlc, JOhnny Clawtord A ~
,.... bend Of I~ '
90«• lnoM<t • "maOIC"
potion lh•t ceu-~
nomonal growth. • * * * 1..i "The Dlwy Of Anne Frank" (Part 2)
(Ifft) JOMClh ScNtdtlraut,
Mlltto Patldnt A diary Olt-
COvered In the •ttlc of en
Amtteroam tectory PCI'·
lraya the plight of • JowWI
refugee lamlly which Mved
there In hiding '°' IWO
YMfl • * * '..\ "Fhle GOiden
Dragone" 1111cm Aobtf1
Cumming•. MatgateC Lea
' An A"'4lrlcen dllettanl• In
Hong Kong getl ewept up
in Ille e>perallOna of I ,
MCrat lnla<natlonal not·
WOrlt Of amuggler'I
(I) • * * * "Ooo Dey
Atternoon" ( 11175) Al Paci· •
no, John Cuale A New
Yorll Clly bank robbery
eacalataa Into a near·
clrcu1 when community
actlYlll1 JOln In t'o atage an
anti-police pr0t .. 1 during
the Cape<
12: 111 CJ) * • '"' "Prince Vallent"
( 111541 JlmH Muon.
Janet lAIOh. The Vlklno
atl brlngt lwO rlvela Into
dlracl conlllct.
t2:30. * * * 'h "Manheltan"
( 1117111 Woody Allan. ~
KNton A New York City •
comedy wrltat br.Ua up
with 1111 IOng-Uma gil1·
Irland to aqulra around 1111
lnlellactulllly v9'>1<1 ,..,. '
R' •
1:00 C!r·Famlly Man" Ed
Aaner Anne Jackson Only
aflat hiving an attlllr does
1 O\M rMla a 1111 Utalong
reapoe1bH1t._ to other•
CID •*'"' eon11nan1a1
Divide ' C 1981) Jonn .
Belutnl. Blair Brown
2:00 Cl) * * • "Slrlpet" ( 11181)
Biii Murray, Harold Rernll_
A New York cebbla IOolllng
for a.1clt-t conw-t
1111 beat Irland to join him ·
In anllatlng In Ille U.S. '
Army. 'A'
2:30 (I) * * .. The lncredlbie
Voyage 01 Stingray" '
( 1118S) Puppeta Capt. Troy
Tempeat and the mighty '
lhlp Stingray try 10 atop
the avll -IOld, Tllan.
lrom laking ~ Iha world.
8:00 CID •• "The OeybrMlc-~
.,,.. ( 111711) Glenn Ford,
Sam Elliot. The Sadlott
brOlharl tlnd adVentura ""'*' the)' travel -• lrom
their T-~.
'PO'
1:46 CJ) * *Yo "The Hued
Klei" (1"4) Conmnoa
T-, Anthony Ellley.
When • Olrl It arreated tor •
murder. her ahad)t past le
r.....iao
4:00 C/J "WM a ~Of
Summar" (11173) JHn
s.batg, Frederldl Stat..-: '°'° Constant quwreling
and ~ ... the C8Ulll
of a """ and • -·· un.'\lloplllNI.
• • • "Invaders From The Deep" ( 11181) Puoootl.
.t:IO (I) * •• "Wind• <>f" ~ a.noe .. ( 11178) Animated.
5:00 CJ:) * * * * "Orlllld lllu-
llon" (11137) JeM Gebln, "
Erlcfl Von 8trOIWm. World '
War I ~ l)(Jrlfllc1
wttn I German CQmfT\1111-
denl.
I: ti(%) * '"' .. The Lael Chue" (1M1) LM Majotl, Chrit
Mak..,._. In a world of{
.. Mure. • former r-ear drtloer end • 1~
ciompuMr Uper1 fight I.he .,_,_,., proec:rtptlon
of automoblla 'PO'
by Armstrong & Batluk
d
11
... -----------------------.··
Documentary probes FBI-, Hoover
...
~ .
" '' •' ·-
FRE
II II II
.
®
•
E~R IC.A'S
ST ICE CR EA
A Carvel Sten is an Ice Cream Factory Provicln1 Retai and
Wholesale Opporbrities . . .
You -:an make over 90 ice cream flavors fresh at the store.
You can provide yu customers with an array of Ice Cream
Cakes, Lois, Pies, Novelties and Take-Home Containers as
wel as a ful lne of Cone and Foootain Treats in both soft and
hard ice creams. With Carvel you can offer the widest (by
far) variety of custom made Ice Cream products avaiable
anywhere I
You can wholesale al of yu products and create any Carvel
ice cream desicns for voklne accounts.
You can expand yu factory buslless by produci11 al of the
products for satelte outlet sales at other locations. The cost
of settin& up yu satelte operation is only a fractior1 of yu oriciial factory Investment. Yu factory produces and sets
.. whle yu sateltes sel more and more . . .
We •• acceptin& applcations for Orance and Riverside Coooty
Carvel Factory owners.
Clloioe lto.tlen 1ow 1wail1•11 • .... , ......... , .............. .
Ft1t irfonnlllon 1bout Cnll
Pho11 (l14) 141-1111
4 Nearby Locations
.
. · SllTA 1111 Al,_ .......... cen ..
· 2131 louth ......... .,. .. (et Werner) ........
(714) 111-cm
•
NOTHING BUT WINNEBS -Laguna Beach High's tennis
team swept to the CIF 3-A championship Wednesday, dropping
Calabasas High at Laguna Niquel Racquet Club. The doubles
Baden's
farewell
einotional
By JORN SEV ANO
oftMDllJPlltlWI
As Pat Haden was preparing
hta retirement speech at hia home
Wednes day morning, Cindi
Haden, his wife, aaked her
husband if he planned to get
sentimental about the whole
affair.
"No, I don't think.:>," Haden
told his wife confidently. "I
should be able to control my.elf."
Well, Haden waa wrong. Tbe
six-year NFL veteran not only
couldn't control hia feellnga at
the noon press oonference, be
could barely finlah what he Md
to say.
"TRIS IS MUCH more difficult
than I thoualht it was going to
be," said H.aclen. aa he slowly lost
hta emotions. "1 thought it was
going to be easier than thta.''
There's nothing easy about a
player who feela be'a retiring in
..... the prime of his career. At age
29, Haden felt he had at leasl five
more good yean of football left
in him.
But the injur ies, the
controversies, and the turmoil
finally took It• toll on the
~lieve rm better than
70 percent of the other
o..; ........... .., ...... ~
team of Ted Brandt and Rick Leach (above) and ainglee star
Dale Willard (below) led the onslaught.
'
C9
sight! •· ID
Hassler, Aase injured
By CURT SEEDEN or .. Deir,... ...,,
Dave Goltz made hia tint
. appearance in an Angel Uniform
Wednesday night and quickly
diapoeed of all five Detroit 'ngen
he faced over the final two
innlnp.
U only Manager Gene Mauch
could get that kind of
performance from thereat of hit
relleven. In fact, Mauch will
probably be happy juat to get any
kind of a perfonnanoe from hta
bullpen.
Loaina 5-4 to the Tigers
Wednesday night was bad
enouah news. But Mauch has
allo bt -temporarily -the
8lrYtc. of hia two top relievers
-Don Alia and Andy Hassler.
"I waa here (at Anaheim
&ecffum) at 1 today and ., was s.-.. He looked like he was
about 80 yean old. He was all
bent out of ahape," Mauch said
after the game.
Hauler. W'-f placed on a
day-to-day bMil(. after luf fering
what wu de9cnbed u mU8Cle
spurns in the m1ddle part of hil
back.
AASE, MEANWHILE,
replaced start.er GeoU Zahn in
the sixth innl.ng and allowed jult
one hit while llrik:ing out two
over l 'h inninp, which wasn't
bad for a . pitcher who waa
making only hil 1econd
appearance since sitting out 11
days because of a sore elbow.
But like Haaaler, AR.tie too came
up lame after aetting two out in
the seventh inning. IIi.a d.lagnosia:
A re-aggravation of the earlier
injury of~ right elbow. He, too.
la on a day-to-day basia.
Laguna captures
CIF tennis crown
And then there'• Doug
Corbett, whom Kirk Gib1on
tagged for a two-run homer in
the eighth inning to give the
Tlaers a 4-3 advantage. Mike Ivie
foTlowed with a aouble and
Larry Herndon singled Ivie
home and that turned out to be
the winning run.
IT MARKED the aecond time
in the series that the Tigers
roughed up Corbett, and Mauch.
for one, ta just glad to aee the
Tigers on their way back to the
Motor City. By ROGER CARI.30N
ofhDellJNot•llllf
When you usually run
roughshod over the competition
by such ICOres as 28-0 or 24-4,
maybe you loee IOme perspective.
"That was a nail-biter," said a
relieved and happy Art Wahl,
Laguna Beach High'• tennis
ooech Weclne9day afternoon.
Hia team bad juat taken a
14\.i-7 1-d over Calabuu High.
clinchin1 the winn1nl margin
and gtvtng hil ArUsa the CIF
3·A championlhip, their aeeoad
such effort at Laguna Niguel
Racquet Club in three years.
The final margin for Wahl's
unbeaten Artists (Calabuaa was
Laguna Beach's 24th victim of
the year) WU 16 \.i -11 \.i, but the
verdict had long been sealed
·when Eric Schantz put Dan Si:ar
• away in a singles match (going
over the 14-polnt plateau).
"Rick Leach," said Calabasas
Coach Joe Trahan, "he was the
difference. We just couldn't keep
it away from him."
Wahl put Leach in second
ubles_witb Ted Brandt and the
combination crushed both
Calabasas doubles teams, while
Wede Perry and Bill Capobianco,
playing in the No. 1 doubles
alot, picked UP' a 1plit. apinlt !¥x>tt Fielder and Mike Torgan,
. winning 6-4 in the opener, to
open "the door.
That gave the Artists 7 ~
points in doubles and with
foreign exchange student
(Vancouver, B.C.) Dale Willard
playing his usual unbeatable
tennis in singles, it was a breeze
for the South Coast League
champions. .
For Leach, it was a seemingly
effortleea role, as he dominated
the doubles with hia slick play,
cutting through again and again
with anuhes to put Cal•bHas
away.
"Alter losing last year (a 14-14
tie in the 1emifinala lost by a
102-99 margin in games to
eventual titlist Riverside Poly).
this is really exciting," said
Leach, who was in Italy when
the CIF eliminations got under
way, competing in the juniors
division of the Italian Open.
"There was a lot of pressure on
Ted {Brandt) with so many
spectators here, but he really
played well," continued the
17-year-old junior.
It was evident early that the
two-time CIF 2.-1\ cham1_>ion
Calabasas crew wasn't really a
match for Wahl's outfit as
Willard led a 3-1 ainglea sweep
through the first round.
Schantz picked up a 6-4 victory
over Todd Lee and Craig
BNmfield swept to a 6-3 victory
over Kevin Feinbloom. .
"Detroit kicked us in the butta.
You can't make a pitch that
doesn't either find a hole or the
seats," the Angel skipper
lamented afterward.
"We'll work it out, though.
We're going to have to watt
another four months before we
know what Corbett can do and
what the Angela can do," Mauch
added.
Detroit could do nothing
wrong ln the pitching
department Wedne9day night.
After 9Cheduled starter Milt
Wilcox hurt htmeelf w~ up,
Tigers' Manager Sparky
Andenon decided to start Kevin
Saucier, who carried a 3-1 record
and 1.42 ERA into the game.
And the Angela opened a 3-1
lead against the berky jerky left-
hander which waa probably the
worst thing they could do.
Anderson replaced Saucier
with right-hander Aurelio
Lope%. whoee 6. 75 ERA aver juat
nine lnningl of work eeesned like
the perfect tonk for th& Angela
to map their thre&-game losing
streak.
Lopu pitched 4~ solid
innings of relief. holding the
(SH ANGELS, Pase Cl)
uarterb11cka in the NFL,'' said ~ "I realize I'm wasting a
1 talent that I have but I think in
the ~ run thta is the best
decl8'm for me now."
Best in U.S. play • ID Laguna
Kris Kollenda saw a 5-2 lead
melt in a 5-7 loss, but the
diaappolntmenta were few . for
the Artists.
Leach, who will be back with
, the Artista for his senior seuon,
admitted he prefen singles. but
when it comes to the team finals,
doubles is just fine.
JAEGER UPSETS
EVERT LLOYD
PARIS (AP)-Andrea Jaeger
upeet the favorite, Chril Evert
Lloyd, 6-3, 6-1 todat:::!t. reecbed
the final of the Open
tennis champlonahips. Revitalized Olympic volleyball team plans exhibition
SPORTS EDfTOR
CRAIG
SHEFF
"Whatever helpe the team.''
said Leach. "Six points la better
than four points."
While Leach's domina1icm was
the focal point for the crowd, he
preferred to pass the credit
around, including Willard in ~~~ done that in sina1es all
year," a,aid Leach, who also
admitted be felt pretty good
about hil own game, too.
Willard said he entered
Laguna Beach thia fall without
(See LAGUNA. Pqe CZ)
Lloyd, 27, who haa woo the
French title four times and w•
once rated invincible on thele
slow clay courts, played
inconsistently while Jaeaer
ICal'Cely made an error.
For Jaeser, one day abort of
her 17th btrthday, it Wal her
third victory over Lloyd in five
meetinp thia year.
In the other temlfl.nal, Mattina
Navratilova downed Hana
Mandlkova. 6·0, 6-2.
Lakers, 76ers vie
Philadelphia needs this one badly
,.
..
,. .
•i .
-\
Chief Wahoo labeled
smiling, du~H savage
Prom AP dl1petclan
CLEVELAND -Lawyera for II the Cleveland Indiana b&MbAU team
and the Cleveland Indian Center .. Y
they are near a1reemen\ on a I
1ettlement ln a lq-Nnd~ dlapute over the
portrayal of the te.m'• eymbol.
The center tiled auit ln 1972 ln Cuyahoea
. County Common Pleu Cow1, uklna •9 million
damage9 and eeekJ.na lnjunctive relief 10 make
the team alter mucot, Chief
Wahoo, from a "amlllng,
dumb 1avage" to a
dlatlngulahed representation
of an lndlan.
Harley McNeal, a lawyer
for the team, said an annual
Indian Day at Municipal
Stadium la one method of
settlement being considered.
Terry Gilbert, who
CM, WAHOO represents the Indian Center,
said the center would receive a cut of that day's
gate receipts.
"We would a1ao 'want to uae that occasion 10
promote poeitively the ~e of the AmeriCU\
Indian," Gilbert aald. "We would expect lt to be a
regular event with appropriate public relations
and promotional effort to advertise it.
"No other nationality group or race would
lOlerate such a caricature of themselves nor
--should they be ex~ 10. Why does lt have 10
be a clown? Why can't it be a dignified symbol
that ahowa the heritage and pride of the
American Indian?" Gilbert said.
Quote of the day
Oscar Gamble, Yankee outfielder, at an
off-day workout ordered by owner George
Steinbrenner the momina after a 13-inning
km to the A'a: ''F.rnie 8anb ia the only r:. who would have ~ happy to be
Eichelberger just mlsaes no-hitter
San Diego's Jan ElcJlelberger Ill fired a brilliant one-hitter Wednesday
and the Padres acored all their nan.a .
on a dropped Oy ~ to notch a 3-1
National League victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Eichelberger, 5-6, yielded his only hit on a
questionable call in \he eecond inning when Scott
Tllompaon hit a 1rounder to second. Tim
Flunery slowed the ball down, but lt bounded
· off hia glove into ri.ght field
& and oflicial scorer Dave
~ Nlpdllgale of The Sporting
News credited Thompson
with a hit . . . ftD Nletro,
Atlanta's 43-year-old
knuckleballer, hurled 8eVeJl
bitleu inninSB before Bob
BaDor sinaled for the first of
New York'• four hita as the
Braves defeated the Mets, 3-1
IDCHIUDQEJt • . • Alu AUby drove in five
runs with a three-run homer and a two-nm
double to back the slx-hit pitching of Nola.D Ryu
and Dave Smida and lead Houston to a 6-4
triumph over Montreal . . . Pete ROie doubled,
singled and ICOn!d twice and Garry Maddox
homered to help Dick R•daven to .his fifth
straight victory, a 4-2 triumph over Cincinnati
... "loeqala Aadlljar fired a six-hitter for hia
third shutout of the season and K.eltb
Heru.ade1'1 third-lnnlng single gave St. Louis a
1-0 decision aver San P'randaco. It w.u Andujar's
eighth career shutout.
llumplng ,,..... fire Rodgera
u. ==~=-:'~Frrl:t ~
Dlayotf befth ewr Jut HUOn,, wu -bNd Wtctn.ai~ iinlct.t a alump In
which \he team had l~l 14 ot 21 aamea. llantJ a ..... \he Brewera' batlln.I lnltructor llnce
1871, waa named Interim man11er ..• In
A.merialn Ltlpt aot!on Ku.M'• flret venture u a manaaer found Milwaukee wJnnlnc, 5-2,
behind Cecil Cooper'• two-run homer at Seettle .••
..... , ahtctr 1ma1hed a
~ aWn hotner ln the top
if tM 13th ~ to power
the New York Yw .. to a
wtld u-e vtctory over
Toronto. It w11 Murc•r'•
HVtnth Carter lf&ftd tlam
. . . Aadt• ...... hocnered
ROOODt tor the fourth 1traJaht 1arne
to apark O~land to lta lOt.h
con1ecuUve triumph; a 4-2 dec:l1lon over
Mlnneeota, extendlna tht loetr'• lollnl ttttak to
14 sames ... AmOI Od1 deUVered a run-acorin8
linlle with one out in the 11th lnnlna to Ufi
Ka.nlu City to 1 '1·8 win over the~ Wbtte
Sox, extendlna the ~ lOlll\8 ttttak to Ille
1ame1 . . . Rooki• Dan Hostetler hit a eolo homer and Fruk Tuau pitched a four-hitter u
Tex .. defeated Baltunore, 4-1 ... Dway11e
Marplay and Davt Me&ay alammed two-run
homera and Miile Norri• pt~ed h1a flnt abut.out
of the year with a four-hitter aa Oakland dealt
Boston a 6-0 1etback . . . Lamarr Beyt of ~
White Sox, the only nine-game winner ln the
major leeguee thil aeuon, wu leI.ect.ed u the AL
Pitcher of the Month for May .
Baseball today
On thla date ln bMeball ln 1978:
Phlladelphla'• Dave Johman became the
first player tn modem major Je.acue hlatory,
10 hit two pqw:h-hlt ~ homers ln one ~.lila ninth· blut off Terry
Forster &tvtna the a 6-1 victoi;:y
over Loe ~ at Veteruw Stadium.
On thla d&te In 1932:
New York Yankees tint bueman'" Lou Gehrta hit four IMJme nma ln the Yanks'
20-13 rout of the Philadelphia A'• at Shibe
Park. Meanwhile, back ln New York, John
M~raw retired after 29 twnultuoua yean
.. ~of the Giants, handing the reins
<1Ver 'IO first bNeman BW Terry.
Today's birthday:
Cleveland pitcher Ed Glynn la 29.
Connors bounced at French Open
Jo1e Hl&HrH of Spain upset •
top-eeeded Jimmy Couon 6-2, 6-2, .
6-2 Wedne9day to lldvance into the
aem1finals of the French Open Tennis ·
Tournament. The Spaniard, 1eeded 14th,
outmaneuvered Connors on the slow red clay
court in tc0rchlna heat ... Pat Eddery rode
favorite Golden F'leece 10 a clear-cut victory in
the 203rd Derby classic at Epsom. The winning
time was 2:34.27 and the margin of viclOry was
two lengthl over Touching Wood . . . Fines
leveled against tennis •tar Vita• Gerulalti1 for
three allesed ot.cene gestures at the French
Open have been rescinded in a move that will
allow the 27-year-old to compete at Wimbledon.
Television, radio
'FoDowtng are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Rau.a,. are: v v v v excellen~ ..., v v
worth watch.lng; .,....., fair; "' forget it.
S I p.m., Claauel ! """'"""'"""'"""'
NBA CHAMPIONSHIP: Philadelphia at
Laken.
Anoacen: Dick Stockton and Bill au.en.
The Laken aim for win No. 3 1n the fourth
game of the aeriee tonight. The key foe the 76era
la atopplng LA'a herald~d faat break. If
Philadelphia can do that, or at least a1ow it down.
the 76en will be in the game. The fifth game
will be played in Philadelphia Sunday.
• RADIO
Baalcetball -Philadelphia at Latten, 6 p.m.,
K.LAC (570).
f:rom Page C1
AKERS. • •
~-48 at halftime, but that Wat 81
~ u they got .. the Laken
..-ent on a 13-2 ram..,e 1n the
~ 3:39 of the~ half to
~ any auapeme. .
LasOrda erlipts
after 8-7 setback
The teams return to Philadelphia. where the Lakerl
won the eerie. opener 124-117,
for Game 5 Sunday afternoon. A
cl.xth game, lf neoe9IU')'' wtll be
f>layed here next 'l\laday night.
· McAdoo had a Jot 10 do with
Pia club'• convlnctng victory in ~ame 3, 8COrlng all 14 _gt_ his
points ln the fint half, 12 of them
while Abdul-Jabbar watched.
"Being at home sure helped a
lot," said McAdoo. "The fans
really got us going at the start.
We knew we baa 10 put four aood quarters tosether tonight
and we did that."
Philadelphia Coach Billy
Cunningham gave the Lakera
~t, but made It clear that h1a
club wam't at the top of ita pme.
He ai.o expremed the feelinl
that tonl1ht'• contest will be
another matter.
"We pt did not play well • a
team." he said. "'I'bey playe(t
out1tandln1. 1 know that la
~ thlnp. but that .. 4iDttli'wlia:f.t .... w. will be t.ck. You ... a dlffennl
club Thunda nllht.'! Loe A,.i. cmdt Pat Riley
aped.
441 think It'• tndJCaUve that
whm a c.in lCJMt • th.II leYel
tt1 -.. co.1wpoud witb •much
bettll-effort," he 11'4 aft.tr O.me a; ..., I expect ~ tp
--tlick In. cllfttl•l lnilDI.,
niimd ~ ~' ........ , 101q to han to be Jut u
tousl.I:-"
au.1 ·•• •••d .... i..uu \Mt &be J·hnn .,..,,~:I ---~·--Pllll,... ..... ........ rn~ ~ , :::I: r::: ....
•
the ball goee down the rightfield
line. You tell me about the
breaks. U he gets the guy out, the
gaine'a over."
Rlck Monday's three-run
home~ in the flm inning gave
the Dodgers l 3-0 lead off Eddie
Solomon. Ron Cey and Mike
Scimcia lin8led home runs in the
thlrd inning H Loa Angeles
moved ahead 5-2.
The Pirates, who ICOred twice
ln the bottom of ihe first off Bob
Welch, added two more runa in
the third to make lt ~-4.
Sax alngled home another run
in the fourth to give the Dodgers
a M 1.-d. Thelr advam.ge stood
at 7·5 going lnlO the bottcm of
the 11eVenth.
Dale Berra. battlina a alump
that hM dropped h1I aY'efllle to
.188, lln&Jed bOme •Pirate run In
the wventh to cut the 1-d 10 one
run.
..
INJVllED -Don Aue ii on
a day·to-day baels after
re-aggravatina hie rlghi
elbQW,
Sun set nine
faces Moore
LONG BEACH -The flnt
annual Sumet Leasue vs Moore
League All..atar buebell aame ii
eet for Baturday ni&ht (7:30) at
Blair Field, here.
A total of 19 senior playen
from each league will go at it ln
the affair. apomored by the Long Beach Klwanla Club. Price o1
*1miafon ta $2. All proceeda will
benefit Klwanl1-1ponsored
charities.
EdlaQn Hlah Coach Ron
LaRuffa will Coach the SUNet
team, aaalated by Fountal.n
Valley'• Joe Miller and
Huntington Beach'• Mike Dodd.
John lferbold of Lakewood will
coech the Moore League team.
Members of the team include: IOllOM -Mllre 0.8enon, p-ot; Joe Kwdlk, 3b; Gr9G aon.y, p; Tony 1.JnO«d, c.
POUWTAM YALLn -81-Jontr."Wd, •: Tim MerUno. 2b; OMl'I Aober1a, ~ 111N11NA -Trell Bennen, p; K.W. Biter,
3b; Ken LMdo. ... ~ YllW -l<.wi 8t.nley, p; Fr9d
T uttte, of: Elto A1W1o1tz. of.
HUlf11NQTOM 9'ACtt -Orto ~. c; enen ...,d, or: Orto o.v• ... •tTial llTD -~ Aottl. p; Oererdo
U.., of: Den Wong, Sb. •
From Page C1
LAGl)NA • • •
any. knowledge of the Artists'
prow~ in tennis. "l waa just
hopi9'1 to play tennis," Hid ·
Willard. ''It 'turned out pretty well." .
The loa enm Cala~' teaaon
with a 17-6 record (incl~ two
forfeit~).
SUPER MJf!,,JS
llMITID WOITSMIM
STOCK CARS Ftt., Jwe 4, • ,. ..
Anp co J\.llft one run and iNW
hlCI tO p6ck W' hit ftnt ~ Of
\he ..-n.
But he nHded help from
Olb1on, who ironically WAI
havlnJ hi• 1hare of problemt
wi\h Mpl pltchtna.
"rve~ ~ at the t~ ~J°}~l:,l -~~~
not IUN what pit.ch I hit. I wu
;.t lookina tor a pttth ln •
cert•ln area. They have been
opentna me up with • lot of
alldera down and In IO I had to
adjust my ltanoe."
Ola.>n then adjusted the 1eore
ln the Tinn' lavor with' hll
home run tliai found lta way into
the rtaht field aeac. for a 4-3
advantaae.
The Angela scratched for
everythlns they could get. In the
thlrd, Tim Foll walked, Bob
Boone sacrificed him to leCOlld
and SOt>t>y <!rfoh whacked an
KW sing.le for a 1-0 lead.
Their two runs in the fourth
From Page C1
HADEN R E T I RES • • •
playoff game against the Dallu
Cowboys. In '79, he s uffered
another broken finger in the 10th
game of the regular season and
was replaced by Ferragamo, who
eventually led the Rams to their
only sueer Bowl appearance in
the club a history.
In 1980, after winning his
sununer battle with Ferragamo,
Haden broke his finger again,
this time in the opener. When he
returned, it was aa a n
understudy. Finally, last season,
he outlasted Pastorin! and Jefl
Rutledge, only to go down with a
knee injury that took him out for
the aeuon ... and his career.
"If there are any regrets it's
tllat I had a loslng aeaaon last
year 10 end my career. I had
never played on a losing team
before. And my last game against
the Gianta, which we lost. When
)'OU leave like that it tends to
~Ve a bitter taste," he aaid.
"~ for thrills, I guess my
biggest one la that I had eome
fans and friends name their kids
aher me. And, l was very
fortunate to bring aome smiles to
faces that don't have much 10
smile about.
''1 don't think I'll miss football,
but I will mils the people."
Haden wu the starting
quarterback at USC for three 1ea10na. He played one y~ tor
the Callfomia Sun of the World
Football LeaJiue before joinlng
the Rama ln 1Wr6. Hia best aeuon
may have beeh 1977 when he
ranked aecond in NFL ~
eflidency and threw orily six
interceptions all year.
Haden, however, was never
totally acce pted by the fans.
Continually booed at Anaheim
Stadium, one of Haden's low
polnts had to be when he waa
cheered for being injured in the
Ram.' opener in 1980.
"In my own mind I've had a
s u ccess Cu I car eer for two
reasons," he explained. "One, I
always tried to play my best. I
may not have played very well,
but I tried my best. And two, I
never gave up.
"The whole thing has been
very, very wearing. I think I
would have been a much better
quarterback lf the Rams had
given me the ~-I don't think
there's any doUbt I could have
played better if I wasn't
constantly looking over my
shoulder.
"It's hard to imagine that at
age 29 I'll be working in an
office. That's going to be a hard
adjustment."
SATURDAY
JUNE 5
) '
' '
•
I
.1
lt..'1!.~ .
At dtl Mar m.h\ you don't edd tennia ~ M a ~ 1\icte fOC' IUCCW -you
OOW\t U. io... they're Miler to tceep tnck. And for tM PMt two __ ~_tht 11tbldca
number two -to Mlralelte Hflh'• Marauden, the deftndlnl CD' 4-A champlON who ended the 8eA lanal' ebc·Y9U' n&p M No. 1 in the CIF tenn1I worTd. ,
l'riday the two duh aaaln, tot the 1982 4-A crown, at Jeck Kramer Tennll Club 1n Paloe Verdla.
The match befd.na at 3 and It maldM two
i.rm with a oom6ined NClOC'd of &0-1, the one
ee\bldr. a 17-11 non-lucue M.lnJeN win over CdM
TENNIS
when the Sea K1no tried to dolt without David
Gerken. MiraJe1W la 26-0, CdM 2&-1. A )"1(11' aao
CdM WU 24.o before nmninC lnto the Maralxlerl,
who are all blick foe another title abot. 1
"We've worked i.1 hard ~ last inontll oc 10
ae~ reedy for daia," •YI CdM eo.ch Dave
Heffren. "I doo't need to •Y an.ythtna to my
players. rve never leeD' any group of b:ll thia
excited. We've chan&ed the lineup around a Utt.le
and we think we're ~ where we need to be
atronpr.
' "WE JUST HAVE to go out and play tennis
well. Whoever'• hot. when you have thia many
· gOQd P1ayen, la aolna to wtn.
'"I'he eeventh and eighth playen are going to
make a bJ.8 difference in th.la one. We think we have
an edae at the lower part of the ladder. '"l'hia ovenhadowa everything el.le," continues
Heffren. "We had no competition the rest of the
year except for Miraleste. Thia la the only time
either of UI bu to be entirely up for it.
"U everyone keeps their heads and just plays
tennla, we'll be all n,ht."
The Sea Kinp, delpite another glcmy record.
aren't in the happieJlt of moods. First, Mira1este
destroyed a poteotlal per fect aeason, after
dethron.ina the six-time ch.amps a year ago.
AND, IN THE CIF indMdual elimlnatiooa, the
No. 1 doublet teem of Oreg Hayward and John
Washer, oomldef'ed a good bet to win the title, wu
ousted becau.e of a m1lundentand1na when they
failed to show up at the ICheduled Ume for what
wu expected to be just another step toward the
title.
Heffren bu added a new twist to the finals by
getting the CIF to agree to WM! six referees, one at
each court, to help pouible dilputet between
playen. •
I Three coache1 from each lea'-ue will be
::r=·~u::t~~:O~tT! Gary 8*l
A year ago Miraleste'1 No. do!abJM l.-d
"gamesmanship" to a very cl1tUnct advantaae
against Corona del Mar eophomol9 Brien SUWvm
and Jeff E'wtna. allepdly caWnc obvloul Im ..
outs, and geum, away with it.
TBB COi LINEUP lncludea HaY.Ward and
Waaber, Sullivan and Ewing. eophoa;c•w lm Aler,
Scott Brown1berger and John Hoetetler and
Gerken, a amlor.
. Hayward. a amlor and 'No. l reprdlem of
' where you play him, ldng1el Ol' doublee, ii heeded
for Brigham Young Univen:lty. Ria .erve and
volley are his bmt -is and for his a.. nearly M ,
he bat exceptional qoiclmew.
Gerken. bound for Princeton, ii a four-year
letterman and ii a~ from the m.Jine with
an improved volley, while Wuher la beat at
~ with his aerve, volley and ltn!a2th,
Sullivan ii perhaps the fastest on tlie team of
eight rfght-handen and Ewtna la another with
excellent doubla potential, with his aerve and volle~ right. ii a ~ and can hit with
~anyone on the' teem. while Aler, althouch ·fl••hv-t
and with the ability to come up with a:Jtne auper
wtnnen, la atill worldnc on his comiltency.
Holtetler'1 anooth. all-around game . blends
well tn the CdM attack. .
"'Ibey (Miraleste) have playen ranked ahead
of oun," •YI Hef(1en. "But in one aet of sln&)iM
an~ am happen. And 11 for doublea. wen. we tntimd to ... "
Heffren cut hUme1f lhort. 'That lnformatiion will be forthcoming at 3 p.m. Friday.
NO DEALER SALES
AD STARTS THURS.
FREMWIBE
CLEIRTlllERS
PllT Im 89•
, G'"' f~ letto-nn or plan yow Im! 119
meal• cm.ad and chuck th• QUOT Im
matt lD cpntalnen. (If a man
eat•datk.••h•cou•wnlnsr z aum I a•.
Ume?) 111£
.._,r;:;:==::::::..----------------------.... ORTBO LI Wll FOOD • •• 4.6 LBS.
Aa nourlthlng aa grandmaa chicken noodle
aoup lor the lawn thats got the llb.
s n. 1112
PECIY CEDIR
127
Makes a great fence. Cao you lmagtne that thla
1tuff growa lD auch a way.that the peek boles
cue already there? (Woo. wool)
McCULLOCH
ELECTUMAC 1 8" ELECTRIC
Cllllt SAW
25~! ..
~~ .~
Takn care of most
cutting foba around
the bouM (really? I
thought my
mother-in-law dld
that), v. HP motor.
manual oiler. and
front band quard.
BLUE POLY
DIE-STU POLY
SEILllT
3 .,.,
IOZ.
Put 901De OD my CCU. Protec:ta lt
tromdeterventa. bug1. ta:r. ocean
spray. and more. Lasts 2' JDODtha.
Liquid or paate.
llTIES
15 MllUTE
FL.IRES
47~
You....., know what will happen to you out on
the road. htter be aaf• and carry IOGle of th•M
wttb you.~ may ICn'e your 1u ••
~_...
PEllZOO. MOTOB OD.
. •WT. 88•ot.
llW/41 WT. 98 t Of.
Don't beputotf about~
yovownoU. You can cbaag. It
ln i.te Uaaa a baUtMMarCIDCI lt
llClftieJOU a lot of lloutrla.
'
-'
Orange COMt DAtLY PILOT/Th\lridl)', JUne 3, 1112
I WHe~eD '/ou
Go TI:> SCHoo(_
LA BReA ~~p,fs?
•
DOUGLAS FIR-n"IW'lll
r.
2 X 4 18!.n.
2 X 6 28!.n..,. ~
Okay. okciY. hold your horse•. Now who'• first? The guy in the green
tlght• and cape want• to build a fence around hla flower garden? 545,
atandard and better.
PERMILOCI SECURITY
~dJ 18~.
..q,.,.·, on tor ya. baa a l" double deadbolt with
a puah·pull key to lock or unlock from the
outaldit. lnslde operatff with 2 spring handle•.
IYLOI
PlllT 11usm:s
r 49•
3W' 59t
... 69•
Did you beur the story about RoblmoD c~?
lie 1~ed th• CO.bow work w .. k and had all
bJa work don-by Friday.
.lCUtythlng. moTfftheair out at l~CFM(bow
about that?). Heu an automatic tbermo1tat that
awltchff OD at lDCr and ofl at 95•,
.. MUBBIY BICYCLES
llEl'S 26"
QI.IOI
CRUISER
BUG SNUFFER
45~8#UB50
Zapaak .. ter1. dive-bombing m ... and more. (So how come
everybody baa It out for the little
bug1. huh?) Llmlt9dQuantltiea.
35aa
Holda two 32 gallon lraab catl9 or pool 1uppllea
or gardeo tool1. You get to a11emble. Mea1ures
,. IV." x 2'1" x 2'91~". U mlted C{llantih ...
CART
TYPE
'1 .. pa the hoM not you wound
up and running In cltclH. (I find
cleqlllng up around the hou ..
and the yard colm1 me down.)
• i
I t ,
~ . ' "' ...
MAJOA LIAQU9 IT ANDINQ8
Arnettoen L ... ue
W..i.nt~ W L M 09 31 20 IOI
H 20 513' 11' ,, 21 ~ 114 ~1:o KanHa City
Oalllelld S..llla ,_ 21 17 4e1 •14 25 2' 472 1 15 2t 341 1214
12 41 2H IO M"'-11 ... ._.~
C>Mron
&oeton New YO<k ~ M..,_M
BIWI lfnof e
l0f0f110
31 17 ....
30 It •12 114 25 22 »2 S\4 25 23 &21 6
24 24 aoo 1
23 25 419 •
22 27 >Mt .....
"
. .._.,..._...
0.1r0115, ........ 4
New Yoitc 12. 'loronto a (13 ~l Teua 4, 9alllm0t• 1 c~ 4. MtnnMota 2 KanMI City 7. Cfllcego I (I 1 l!'lnl"Q9)
o.kl-5. eo.1on O MllWMM 5. S..tl .. 2 , .. ,..a-
Naw York (John 4-4) al T0ton10 (LMI 3-3~
Tuo (Honeycutt 0·11 •I Beltlrnor•
(Ftanaoan 3-4~ n
Only 0-ec:hedvle<I
Net~Leeaue
W•lwfl DhWilft
W L ...._ -AUMta 2t 20 .692 Ben D1egO 27 21 .MS 114 .,._.. 211 26 Ato 5
Hou9tOn 22 21 .440 ~
8#1 FIW'IClloo 22 30 .423 1141
Clnc:inlwlt 20 2t .40I •
IM4ilnl~ :: ;~ :m 414
26 22 .642 4 \4
27 2.S .IMO 4\4
20 'r7 A2t 10
21 30 .A12 tl . .......,...._...
PlllllllM'llh I , Dodfate 1
San Diego 3, CNcaoo I .._,on I. MontrMl 4
AIWlta 3. Hew Yorll 1
PNledelpNa 4, Clndnnell 2
St Louie 1, San Frenc:19co 0 T~eO-MonlrHI (Ao9ere 7-•I et Pllt1bur11h
IAoblneon $-11, n
Onlye-~
AMe"ICAN LEAGUE T1aen 5, Angele •
D4mlOft' CAU#OMIA .. , .,.... .. , .,. ...
Lemon.rt 5 0 1 O l>wMIJ,11 4 0 1 0 Cati.II 31> • 1 1 o c w-.11> 4 o 1 o Gl~cf 4122 Orldl.21> 5011
Medi\ 4220 ~.,.,rt 3000
Herndon " 3 0 2 2 Snquz,rf 1 0 0 0 Per,.,, c 4 0 0 0 Bylf.Cffl 4 0 2 0
8rolm1 2b 1 0 0 0 Lynn.ct 3 2 1 O
Whllallr 2b 2 0 0 0 o.cnc..3b 4 I 1 1
Wcknl• 1 b 3 1 2 1 FOll,M 3 I I 0
Mlllw Pf o o o o eoon..c a o 2 1 o.Johtl .. t 0 0 0 ,,_ .. 2 0 0 0
HaOnar lb 2 0 0 0
Tot... 35 5 10 5 TOlele S4 4 10 3 ._.._,...._
Oelr011 oocr 110 030-5
Ce1Hom1a 001 aoo o~
E-Seucltr. P-Oetroll 1, ~ 1. LOB-Oetroll 5, c.ltomit t . 29-Mll I, lyno. HA-Olbeon (51, WocltanNM (1). SB-DaClnca s-eoone. LJ'W'.
o.tr.11 • " " • -80 S..a.t 314 1 J 3 I 2
l.09G(W,1-0) ·~ 3 1 1 2 2 PUndwwood .... 0 0 0 0 0 T~ (S.21 ~ 0 0 0 O 1 ~
.z.M 5';\ 5 2 2 .;z 2 AaM , .... 1 0 0 0 1
COftlett (L. 1-'l .... • 3 3 0 0
Goltz 2 00001
Cbr11atl pUc:"9d to 4 ba!IW11 In Ille 811'1
Lopez pllched 10 1 bitter In the tth WP-loplir T-1:04. A-27,3N
......... 0,....,.,
Tea.. 020 110 000-4 1 o
BaltlmOt• 000 001 000-1 4 1
TllMNI end Sundb«IJ; 81_,, 0 . 0...... (51 end OernpHy W-Tanene. 2-7
L-81.WWl. 5-4. HR-T-. Hoelat•. 2 A-10,4118
lftdl-. ... T'#IM 2 MinnMota 000 011 000-2 8 2
CleYaiend 301 000 OOx-4 I 0
B. CHtlllo. Felton (7) and Laudn•r;
S..ddlfl .. GlvM (91. Whit~ (Ill and Huwy,
N1horodny (7). W-8utcllff•. 4-1 L-9
C 1111110. 2 ·3 8 -Wll1t1on (2)
HA1-MlnnH 01a. Werd 15) Cleveland, Thornton (11). A-11,475 Y.._12._.,..
Haw YOl'tl 003 000 001 020 6-f2 15 1 Toronto ooo 120 010 020 0-I 14 3
Ouldty, Freal•r (7). Aawley (10) and
Wyneoar. c11noy, II L Jecklon (8).
MCL•UIJlllln ( 11). BombKk ( 13) and B.
Maritnez, Wttltt tt). W-Alwl•Y. 4•2. l-Mclauglllln. 2-3 HA-Hew Yon., Ml#ow
(3). A-20, 181
..., ... ., ....... 8 Cl'tlcaoo 003 001 001 to-• 15 2
l(.an City 300 010 100 11-7 11 1
Troul. ..,Ojat 19) and .-. Froet. Cr• 14).
OulHnberry 1•1. Arrn1trono ( 11) and
Wa11\en W-,.,,.,,..rong, 2~ \.-BerOjat.
1·1 A-17.aG7 ..............
ao.1on 000 000 000-0 4 1
Oalllend 220 100 00.-5 II 0
Ecllenley. Af>onle (I) -o.ctmM: Noftte and~ W-Nonle. 3-5 L-Eck...,,,
6-4 HA-Oeltland. Mwphy C 11). McKay (2) A-15.205.
............... t
M""°*M 011 001 020-5 12 0
S..ttle 000 011 G00-2 1 2
Cafd-11 ind llmmon1; '· B1nnll1at, Stinton (e), B Clar~ (II and 8ullln11.
W-CaldWell, 3-4. L-F. B1nnlt1ar, 5 ..... HA-S..11 ... 0 llwldarlolt (I) Mtlweul!M,
Coop« (t). A__..931#
c......1 ........
San Freneleeo 000 000 000-0 I 0 81 L-001 000 00•-1 e O
LMlll'f -Mq. Andulet and "-W -A ndu ler, 6·4 L-Lnkey, 4-3
A-1:un ...... ::. .... ... " .. -156 • ., .. 0 12
53t1'01 1N 21 4t 1 21 150 • 43 1 20
200 32 51 10 l4
180 24 " 2 " 1 .. 17 .. 2 24
, .. 22 .. 1 30
292703 1112 22 ., I 20
155 20 36 1 111
24 2 5 0 0 14 a 1 1 3 7 0 1 0 0
411 4 1 0 2
I 2 0 0 0
1727 21t •53 43 205
.....
.a11 .aoa
.296
'"1 ·'· .17& .274
242
.241
.Ht .Ht .20I .20t .let .IN .000
.212
Wo.N ™"' ............ Kai. L.atNm dfll JoM Sculthcwile. M . 6-0: Cfw19 ~def. Jtdlle Klldl, 1-7,
l ·O. l ·:S. Elllnor• Llghlbody def. Tarry
Holaday, 1-2. &-7. e..2. ~,,.... der w.n
611 Trl'f L...._ 7-5, 1 .... M ; MM Hobbe
del Cllhy Ofury, 1•1, f.2. t.4: 8tecy M~ daf. Tracy llrannl\lll, S.0, S.O; 8uM11 Lao def SMrry HUI. W , 14: Btandl Aarnlllon def VMM Wlleon, 1-1, Ml.
HIGH8C~ C9' I-A F1Mle
(et~---....Ctllel ue-._..ii~. crr•n• 1t~ ......
WlllFltd (LB) ci.t. Nellon, 1-3; def. Lea, 1-3; r: ~-. IH; di!, f'alnbloom. M>: 8cNntl 8) lot1 ~-1: won M . 1-2, M . KOllanda B) loal 0-6. 1-8. 6-7. 1-1: Bturnflelcl (LB)
toel 2·1. 5-7: won W . W .,.....
P•rty-Cepoblenco (LB) toa1 10
Seb•l·M•y•r. 11·7. 3-8; 1pllt wlttt Flelder·Tot1JM, M , t-1: ~ (LBI won 6-2. •1: won 1-J. 1-1. ..... r .....
L.o,oll 1m. lMSefnl °"'
Misc .
Nlqme:r 'teps
• area entries
State meet begins Friday
SACRAMEN1'0 -Unlveni&y Htah't Polly
Plumer wW be favoN<t to Win her th.lr'd •tfa!aht
11600-meter dtlt, l*\n1t Durand of Laiuna Beach will be the favorlt. 1n the 800•meter run and
Sharon Hatfleld of Fountain V.U.y wt1l be amona
the tqp cont.rlden ln four evenw •t the 11.ito aF
track and field championahlPI here Friday and Sa~y. . •
Plt.Q¥r II a two.tJ.me defendJ.na champlon ln
the metriC equivalent of the mile run and hu been
run1'llhg well ln l'eC'ent meeta.
Mille the lirla clom.lnato Oranae C.OUt area
entries. five boY1 will ai.o be cornpetlna. Dave
Andenon of Coron.a del Mar and Bo6 JilriCklon of
Fountaln V.iley a.re arccorded the bait chance of 8C.'Or1nc polnta.
A.ndenon hu one of the better timel (4:13.16)
1n the 1,600 metere ln the state. Two othen from
TRACK'
the ~uthem Section finiehed ln front of h1in
in the Masters meet and only one Northern
C.Ufomla runner has a Luter clocking, making
.Anderson the fifth best off comparative times.
· Ericloon baa poeted a 9:02.57 ln the 3,200
meters, finishing fifth ln the Southern Section
qualifying meet. Only one Northern runner ia
faster, mak1ng the a1xth fastest in the at.ate.
Others from the area compe*'na in the meet include Ocean View's Rex Brown ln tn6 200 (21.70);
Randy Kendrick of Huntington Beach in the d.i8cua
(169-3); and Lance Betson of Newport Harbor in
the pole vault (14-2 ~ ) .
Jolnlng tfie top three woman athletes are
Teresa BarriOI of University ln the 3,200-meter run
and Lisa Fegraua of Laguna Beach in the high
jump. .
"I feel I can improve m)' third lap time and do
better," Plumer said followtng her easy victory in
the Mastera meet. "I felt pretty strong but I was
able to work on my ~ lap a little bit in that race.
"It's a lot easter to nan when you have aomeone
in front of you io pull you out."
Du.rand waa an easy winner in the 800 with a
2:09.4 effort.
"I really wasn't happy with my time but I was
able to win and qualify for the state meet." she said.
A year ago she al80 quall!led. aeemingly, but was
diaquallfied before the meet.
Hatfield will maintain her Ntied pace of
competing ln four events -both huiale races. the
high jump and long jump. She got a bad start in the
100 lows and finished fourth in th~masters meet
then 'came back with a strong JOO.mew hurdle race
to place third.
In the high jump, she tied with two others for
the top qualifying spot. (5-4). Fegraua al80 cleared
that height but had a miss at an earlier height and
. WU placed fourth.
In the long jump, Hatfield bit 18-5 on her first
eUort but didn't improve. She bas done over 18-10 UU...an. .
Barrios finiabed fifth in the 3,200-met,er race at
the Maten in 10:33.12.
, From MIHlon Viejo Uigh will come the
faVortte ln the hiah hurdles, St.eve Kerho. He alao
qualified in the 300 low hurdles.
Jacque Norton, a1ao of Mission Viejo, qualified
in the dilcus with the best throw, 162-4, in the
qualifying meet. But she failed to make the field in
the lhot put.
Tanya Ranlon of El Toro posted a 55.97 to
place aeoond in the 400 meter quall.fyi.ng race.
Weekend
TV, radio
Satarday
TELEVlSJON
11 a.m. (5) -wcr TENNIS.
11:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -San Fta.nciaco
at Chicago.
2 p.m. (2) -BORSE RACING -the 114th
running of the Belmont Stakes for three-year-olds.
Included in the field are Gato Del Sol winner of
the Kentucky Derby, and Aloma'a Ruler, winner of
the Preaknem.
2:30 ,P.m. (7) -SUGAR RAY LEONARD'S
GOLDEN GLOVES -Teams representing the
Rocky Mountains and Kansas-Oklahoma meet in a
~ofbouts.
3 p.m. (2) -WOMEN'S TENNIS -The
lingJes final of the French Open.
3:30 p.m. (7) -PRO BOWLING -The finala
of the Seettle Open, taped at Leilani Lanes.
4;30 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Third round play in
the Kemper Open. Taped.
5 p.m. (7) -WIOE WORLD OF SPORTS -
Renaldo Snips (22·1·1) VI. Tim Witherapoon (14-0)
in a 8ChedUled lO·round heavyweight bou~ taped at
Lu Vecu. (11) -BASEBALL -~ra at St:
Louis.
RADIO
~ll -Dodgers at St. Louil; 5 p.m,, K.ABC
(790); Boi1on at Angela, 7 p.m ., KMPC (710).
Hone Racina -Belmont Stakes reports, 8:40,
9:40, 11:40 a.m., f 2:40, l:40, 2:25 p,m., K..NX '(1070),
Tl!J.J.IIl.!YJU.l.!Jl!r.t
TO T .. lfA'1 .. Ale '°" ntl COUNn Of OllWMI, ITAft Gf'
OAUl'OIW*A. H.AI MIN DtVIOID ANO IMITNIUTIO fO VANOUI NIW.,AHllll 0' OINIMI. CMOUUTIOM ,UM.t'H!..,O .......
COUNTY,'°" l'UeUOATION Of A~ ,.,...CW ... uQM Of' IAIO NCW.,ANlfll.
In 11111 1111 lhl IOllowlng abb(evlallOnl lft \!Md
A, -AIMllOtl Map 'AllCaL NUflml-.0 '"°" ~.,., IVITIM UP'\ANATIOM Ille 8100ll ..1-u AtHHOr'• '-'•P '•rotl 1111-111ttrftl l(uml>er wlltn uMCI 10 dHctlb•
f':fo -Nurnl>tr ptoOtJ(ly In INt lltl, relttt to Ille
l'IW-NOflllWMt ' Auat1or'• m•p book, th• mep
Por-Pot110n PtOt °' blocllt numw If' Ille llooll
A-Range end Illa Individual parcel numbtt on
Seo· 8eotlOll Ille m1p i>•o• or within the block, A
S-8outh parcel number •• for tXlmple. SW Southwell "044·383-06" would -Book
T Townthlp 44 of 11141 A•N•tor'• Mapt. B!Oc:ll
Und Vndhllda<I 383 (m•p Peoa 38. blOCtl 3), Ind
P11ca1 6 wllf\ln 11111 block Tlla
map• reltrraa 10 ere a111Hable for
lntp1ct1o n In Iha olllc• of 1he
A~
Ail prop•rty 1n Iha Town1hlp
South and Range W•et of San 8em 11d1no B•M ano M«ldlan
llOTICE
In puttu-of L8W, publlC notlOt II htftby g1-. 11111 on the lel day
of July. 11182. II Ille l'IOul of 10 o'ctoc* Im., of thll dly, Iha Utldtteigned
Tu Colleclor-Trauurar of ltte County of Orenga 11 hla office In tne aty
of 8anla ANI. Sllll of Celilorlllt. wfll deed IO ,,.. Stal•. unleH -rtdeemed. or an lnltallment plan of rademptJon It lnlllalld H prO'lldld by
1-prl()( 10 6 p m on Ille tut bultlnHI d1y of .NM. 1H2, the r_,
pr(l9erty hlfl!Mtttt cMecrlOed upon WNcl'I ci.ia ftvt "' mora ,_,. .. hew alapMd lrom tne dlltt af CM Mii of Mid property lo tne State. Thi
amcxinl lor wNc:tl CM deed Wiii be 11...o Wlll)>e Int 1oc11 -nt due fOf
wnletl II w11 .old 10 ltte Stell, Mid amount btlnQ Ml fot1h In Int ~•
and oet1t1 oppotl .. lllt OMorlpUon of Ille propeny. II Ille property le deeded to the Stata. IM rlgllt ot •4"1tmpllon wlll termineta upon any
11.1b11tquent tlla °' other eoovey1nc:e by Iha Slat• Ae provided by llw. the llall lflell ~'fl Iha IOle IFUll'lo<lly to rec:*ve all
"'""· 11euee Ind ptoflt• w telng In any mtrnner from Iha property eo dMded to lhe S11te
All lnlormallon concttnlng rlld«nptlOn or the lnlllallon ot an tn11a11men1
ptan of rectempuon wlll, upon raquett, be lurnllhed by Rot>erl L Ct1ron.
Tax Collecl&-TrMIYttr Ind Redampllon Olfw, 110 Fln1t1Ge Bldg . 630
N. Broadway. (P O Bo1t 1438). $1ftll Ana. C1tllorn11 92702
Detld thll 131h d1y of MllY. t982
ROBEAT L CITRON
Tax Collec;tor·Tr_,,.,
of Orange County
Stata of Callfoml1
The proper!,.. to be deeded lftd tubjael of 1h11 noftee tire 1ltua11<1 lfl ttle
Couoty of 0rll!Qa. Silt• ol C&lll0tnla. and parllcularly dncrlbect as
fotlow., to wtt
PROPERTY SOLO TO THE
STATE IN THE YE.AR 1977 FOR n-tE TAXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO
OTHER CHARGES OF THE FISCAL
VEAR 1976-17
HUITllllTOI IUCH cm HUml&TOll IUCI
SCHOOL DISTRICT
No 35 -Sall No 77-13'"32 No 79 -Slit No 77-689230.
AP 023-012-02 S393.M AP 118·561-35. $&44 IHI
No. 3e -Sate Ho. 11-1~. AP
023-110.-01. M.24
No. 37 -Sele Ho. 77-135044, AP
023-119-02, M.24
....., 311 -S.No. n-1354911. AP 02$-187~. t87t.72
No. 39 -Salt No. n-13'430, AP
024-122--08, 15.087.ft
No. 40 -Sele No. n-t42208, AP 114-1~. M ,117.82
No. 41 -Sala No. 77°142207, AP
114-180-68, $27 ,345.50
No. 42 -8"' No. 77-1'3274. AP
14&--0et-22, 1557.~
No. '3 -Sele No. n-150091, AP
157-402-37. 11.025.oe
No. 44 -8"' No. n.103290, AP
142-121-25, 17.893.M
No. 45 -Slit No. n -115001, AP 111-381-19. 144.12
No. 48 -Salt No. 77-111-453, AP
157-331-75, 157. 12
No. 47-Sela No. n-18a31l5, AP
151-446-11, 11, 180.14
Ho. 48 -SIN No. n-118118 • AP 151-522-24, S2UO
WUUIUCH c1n
No 49 -Sall No 77-211005,
AP $41..()$3.-1'. SS0.20
No. 50 -Sale No 17·212512
AP 641-373-t7, SSS 32
Ho 51 -Sele No 17·213083.
AP &41-401·19..l~.08
No. 52 -~No 77-21446-4,
AP &«-123-16, 12208
No 53 -S• No. 77-2tll050.
AP 844-.404-11, $48 42
Ho SA -Sele No 77-218053. AP 844-404-14, $70 02.
· Ho. S6 -Siie No 77·211132G •
AP $44-425-13. $35.80
No. ~ -Salt No 77-218555
AP 844-442-0S, M2 74
No. 57 -Saia No 17·218563.
AP 8"-442· 13, S 14 20
No 68 -Sate No. 11-21asa1.
AP 644-444-03, S14.20
No. 59 -Sale No. 77-219072,
AP 644·•53-0t, S137.B1
No 60 -Slit No. 77·21111711.
AP 64.._.57~. 114,20
Ho 81 -Slit No~ 77-219180.
AP 6« .. 57-07. t14.20
No. 62 -Sale No. 17·21111M ,
AP 844 .... 57-13.114.20
Ho. 63 -Sall No 77-21112.42.
AP &«-482-24, S 14.20
No. tw -Sale No 11-219243,
AP 644 .... 62·25. S 14.20
No. as -s. Ho n -2192n . AP 8« .... &4-11, $3&08
No. 86 -Salt No. 77-2183,5.
AP e«-485-13, 1294,78
No. 81 -SM No. 11111.
AP 956-0t2 .... t. ~.2t
IEWPORT IUCH
cm
UGUll IUCH
UllFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT No 80-Sala No 77-890137, AP
06$-193-33, 18.82
Ho. 81 -Stilt No, n-e1101eo. AP
05&-183-eo. 112.N
Ho. 82 -S... Ho. 77-tlllOMe, AP
OS&-2t5-15, Sll37.54
No. B3 -Sala No. 77-893302, AP
05e-041-e<l, 15.48
No. 84 -Sale No. n-tl933e6. AP
OSI-OS 1-38, 15.48
No. 85 -Sala Ho. 77-89402.4, AP
05e-088-83. 15.48 CIPISTUIO UIHFIEI
SCHOOL DISTRICT
No 86 -Sale No. 77-720252. AP 740-021-16, S6 58
No ll7 -Sale Ho 77-722242.
AP 653-073--02. I 1.363 66
No U Sela No 77-726450,
AP 613-192-08. S6 08 No 811 -Sall No. 77-727173,
AP 123-075-09 $317 69
No 90 -Sell No 71-127174.
AP 123-015.11. s1eo 59
No. 111 -Sale No. 11-12111•.
AP 123-075-13, I 11M,89
No 92 -S• No 77-732515,
AP 682· 103·31 le 12
No 93 -Salt Ho n -7391117,
AP 933-26-008. S 1, 1S8 80
No 94 -Salt Ho 77-742410.
AP llCM-071-31, $2.0.88
SADILEllCI
VALLEY UllFIU
!C!~8~!!~~!Ia.
AP 842· 111-35. $324.00
No IHI -s ... No 77-748353,
AP 842·112-17, $489.86
No 97 -Sale No 77-7520488.
AP 621 -161-88 (formerly
82°'¥-161-85 02), S6 ~
No. 98 -Sale No 77-752112.
AP 621· 162-6-4. S34 80
Ho 99 -Sale No 77-752180.
AP 821-163-88. S40 1(J -
No 100 -Sale Ho 17-754490,
AP 932·20-131. '403.74
Ho 101 -Slit No n -7164lM.
AP 5111 ·014·03 (formerly
814-190-431. SJ.10
PAOPEATY 80LO TO THE
STATE IN THE Yi;AR 1976 FOR
THE TAXES. ASSfSSMENTS ANO
OTHER CHARGES Of THE RSCAL 't'EAA 1Cl7S-78.
SUL IUCI cm
No 103 -Sall No 7~.
AP 217-148-04, $1,AM.118
COSTA IESI cm No. 68 -Sele No. 77-241312. Ho. 104 -Salt No 76-473245,
APG45-0&4-05.S2.310.14 AP 421 -1'31 -14 (formarty
SI. CLElmE 118-0?'3-141, 1389.se
cm HUITlllTOI IUCI
880-412-48 (fonfttrty 06MICM1).' ~~~s0.!l~..'.!!~7~7A
AP 118-564-03, '543.54
PROPERTY SOLO TO THE
STATE IN THE YEAR 1875 FOR
THE TAXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO
OtHER CHARGES Of THE FISCAL
VEAR 1874-76.
COSTA MESI cm
Ho. 1oe -s... No. 7M47372,
AP 115-330-581 1577 02
PROPERTY SOLO TO THE
STATE IN THE VEAll 1874 FOR
THE l'AXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO OTHER CHARGES Of THE FISCAL
YEAR 1173-74.
NlnlllTll IElll .
11 r
•' I
I
'-
\CONSERVATIVE
INVESTMENT! ..... ,.
19%
· OR IORE!
• s.c.M " ,. °"*
new Ml Abram• tank and lnfantry ftahtlna
vehicl• aplnat ·~by flxld and rotary wtna 11.rcratt. .
l'ord Aeroal*I ta neartna oomp1-uon on two
new DlVAD Dtvlaon buUdfn11 to handle tht
proaram -a 240t000-aquart foot buildln1 In
Newport Beech ana a aecOnd 100,000-aquare foot
~.
YORK system, named for World War I Medal
of Honor winner Sgt. Alvin C. York, contain.9
twu 40mm guns and sophiaticated electronic
controls.
• CllnlttM " MldJll/ .... c.11 l'Mdpel ona '°' oiie.llt
LOWEST
PRICE EVER!
loll~ .. ,.
II••• ,..r,. .•..•... ,,
eu .s.
For a..ifiecl Ad
ACT10N 1
Cell
A DAILY N.OT
... WtlOI
642-1678 ~
'
Was $159.95
In Cat. RSC-7
• UM•• C.lculator, or Prognun for Complex Problems
• UM "On-Stte" In Real Estate, Engineering, Bualneu
The TRs-80 computer tMt goee where you go! More power-
ful, yet ....., to UM th8n • pt0grammllble calcue.tor. Add one of our lnterfKeS •nd .., optioNtl recorder Md you can
UM our Mlection of rudy-to-run cassette 80ftw•re. Pro-
gnmmllble In BASIC, too. Only"/" x 61/e x 2¥•" -put one In
your pocket tod9yr
ftad1e /haek SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
A OMSION OF TAHOV COf'IPOAATION OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
PRICES MAY VARY AT INdMouAL STORES AHO O£ALERS _
JUMBO C.D. OWNERS
~
TIRED OF PAYING TAXES ON
YOUR INTEREST EARNINGS?
Now, from Charter NatlonaJ Life Insurance Company
a brand new Investment alternative for C.D.'a,
savings accounts and municipal bonds.
-13% TAX-FREE RETURN .
-Prlnclpal 100% Guaranteed
-No Sales or Administrative Chartea
-Interest Compounded t>r Withdrawn at Your
Option
-No Interest Penalty for Early Withdrawal If Rate
Falla Betow 12%
F OR A BROCHUR E AND PERSONA L
ILLUSTRATION DESCRIBING THIS
EXCITING NEW INVESTMENT CALL:
PEISlll Fllllll 111 FllllCllL
(714) 720-0170
· NEW ISSU E
This is not an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy
. these tecurities. The offer is made only by the Offer ing Circular.
260,000 to 3 12,600 SHARE'S--:--~~-
•
COMMON . STOCK
bu!ldinl ln lrvtne, with a comblned lnv•tment of f20 n\J.Won. Both AN IChedWed for completion U\11
11.UN'MJ'.
Htnry E. Hookt lmt r, prt1ident of Ford
Ael'Olp90l u!d1 ''The DIV AD to-ahead C\llmlnatee a
very ~w four-year effort."
Be1lnnln8 in 1978 wit h the award of a
development contnct.. Fotd Attoaprice eced
prototypea in competition with General .
After a terie. of competitive tetta ln 19 , Ford
Aen»peiQe wu awarded ln May 1981 the contract
tor advanced en&tneertna development.
The production effort will be performed by the
corporation'• DIV AD Dlvt.aion, Newport Beacl\, for
the Anny'• Armament Reaearch and Development
Command, Fover, N.J . The DIV AD Dlv1alon ii
he.ded by Delbert W. Panona, .vice president and
general manag~r.
The Anny aNlOUnced that the iUJl 1yatem was
named ln honor of World War I Congresaional
Medal of Honor winner Sgt. Alvin C. York, the flrat mapr Army system named for an en)J.ated man.
The eystem la mounted on a modified M48A5
tank chuela. Its armored turret containl two 4-0mm
guns with eearch and track radar, a fire control
cen ter with laser range-finder and a digital
computer.
The system has optical tracking with laser
rans i ng , e nhan ce d e l ec tr o n ic
counte r -countermeasures, a utomatic target
claaif.ication, prioritization and engagement, and
the capability to search, track and shoot on the
'nove.
12%
Tax-Free Municipal Bond
Both Federal und Stul4' E"empl
AAA Roted and In urt•d
V.~ Morgan "
Olmstead
Kennedy&
Gardner . ..... ...,. ........ ,,. ........ ··i·
SVt>(·
t .. A,.._. ... 4 '•" t,...,,.,., '"""' lt1tt. • .,~._.., ~•" 'i••-· ••I-.•• f •••li
,,.,,._,,, lWMii.. l'•I• \hw • --''•"4 U1t\. t .t1I\# .. ,,. ••
e,., • ....,..-..~o.u...i...tr:ue
Co II ( 7 I 4 ) h 1-1 ~ I <)20
or ..... d for 1nfurma11on u••nit '""I"'" IH·l11"
----------------------
Morgan, O lm1lf'11d, Kt'nnt'J) & (,11rtl111·r. Im"
500 l\t'wport t.rolu Or.. uUr t>50
l\rwporl n ... rh. CA '120.>0
0 Plrau M"nd informal ion ''" J 2'JI., 1 11 • I '"' n111111r11wl
boud ..
0 PlraH •rnd ba•ir inlurmali1111 011 nt111111·1.,ul honJ•
'o obllt1•tlon. of ruur..-
'----------~ , ....... ___________ _
u., ______ ,,.._..,. ____ ,,p __ _
r.i...i----------toff.,....1 f t ...... , The Anny has three yearly options to acquire
276 system.a with the total planned acquisition by
the Anny of 618 systems. I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;;;;;;;;;==:::==::::===~
The batteries will be part of the air defense
battalion in each o f th e Army's a rmor ed
mechanized d ivisions. The first ba ttalion is
Piiot Logbook -D ·1 p·1 ~ Candid commentaries
exclus1vely m the 81 J I DI echeduled for deployment ln 1985.
Exchang__e the Trust ·Deed You
Took to Sell Your House •••• for
a We, Insured Savings Account.
Republic's Trust Deed Exchange Treasury-Mate A~count
can get you safely out of the unfamiliar mortgage loan bu siness .
And put you into a high-yielding. insured cer-first or second trust deed loans
tificate. You collect the interest and we do the For complete information. call or visit your
worrying for you. Inquire today about current nearest Republic Federal Savings office.
discount rates on our purchase or residential
iiiil&& Your savings 1nsur~d to St00.000
Rt~ REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS t·SLIC · 11111111 Al.TADENA (213)791-1281 .• nd loJn .issoc•.•"o;Al..M SPRJNGS (714 J 323-279~
.....
I
ANAHEIM (714) 956·8290 PALJo\ SPRINGS (7141324-9591
ARCADIA (213) 445-2600 PASADENA (213) 793-3463
B<JRBANK (213) 843-6300 PASADENA (213) 798·0893
CLAREMONT (714) 621 -3~ PICO RIVERA (213) 949-6621
CLAREMONT HEIGHTS (714) 621-9537 SANTAANA (714) 541-5286
HACIEl'IDA HEJGHTS (213) 968-1487 THOOSAND OAKS !805) 492 3~?-l
LAG<JrtA NIGUEL (714) 495·0850 WESTMINSTER (714 J 894-5347
LOS ANGE1.£S (213) 624-1404 WOODLAND HILLS (213 ) 888 3553
Heed Oll1ce Al.TADENA 2246 N LitM "'~ (21)) 791 1281 b8J 6611
13.16% 15.300;6
AMual Yitld Annu;il Y14!ld
1256% 14.50%
Annual Rate 3 Months, $1,000*
1 Year, $500
Annual R11te 2~ Years, $500
Our money market thrift certificates pay higher
iqterest rates than Federal law allows on com(>arable
plans at banks and savings and loan assoaations.
Interest is compounded quarterl~ Early withdrawals
earn 6% annual interest ... theres no fOrfeiture of up
to three months' interest or loss of principal.
High interest is only part of our story. ~ will ii~ )'OU $10 cash when you purchalt a thrift certifi-
cate tor $500 or more. This Offer is ii a limited time
only With one cash bonus ~r nouaehOld. JnterniJ
transfer of funds is not mcluded. Available to California residents only. Rates offered on 8(X()Unts opened~ Monday. ~
,
""" _ .. _ .... ill.Ii·-... ~\\:[~~ ~~-~
t. h¥1 W~Mlll, \J01 .. ,..,_, L._ N. a.i Lee, '"° W. ~.,... '9119'11&; z= .... ,. ='•i111t 11ve1 .. laftl• A11e, "°'°' .. , ~. eo... nlll "™ ..... ~. "''' '°"' t::.. °"""'Mellow, 103l1 HeMIW fir'• Mlitlofl vi.t•. 0 oi11li tNe 11 °'"INllllCI ~ • ~ Qerd•n CJfove, Oalllornle
Ur. ~''"" Oorclove•, 11 Ot • t:.':i.~ AM• Marl• unnon..1_~4071 Yl11t.,. WtY, It Toro, O•lttornll Tiiie ,,...._.. Wiii -"" 1"9 ......, 11,..., II T0to. uvtcwnla
...... ly Cllttl of ~ Couf,ty on uao ' TNt ~ It ~ by a May 111 ttta, Luen M1Jflr1, ao 1 \HU"
twrel e'f:0n l'u1111111ee1 Or•111• 00.:1'!!= A~°'O:.'~'=AV9nUe,
TNI ... lel'Mnl WM lllold with tllt "'°'· Ma110, U , JUnt t, 10t tNI Orl~ll·~ ........... eounl\ 011ft1 of Orl/lf9 County on 111e..u ,.el PMtnereblO ....,...,...,.., "' •
-1 ' tHI. ,ue. 09"" Loull N. lalnl \.01
llubll•hed Orang• OOHI 0•111 P\lllC llntCf Tiii• llatemenl Wll flied Will\ lllt
filot. May IO, 17, June 3. 1g\:_\\ lOTmOUe ..,._11 ~Koi':e"i.°' Orange County on NMll aTA,_..., ,_
.... ft fl)TIC( Th• tollowtng ~rt0n 11 doing Publlahad OranQ• CoHt 0 1111
...... buTa':h"ITA"lAL IERVICI!, Ptlol, M1y 27, JuM 3, 10, 1~~~r/2
l'IOTmOUe IUIMll 3007 Clubtlouel Cltde. Cott• Mell.
MAm ITATl•NT CA taut. '"'9 followlnQ pet1IOnl -doing HolW lemlle, 9007 Ctubftoule "'*'-II! Cltcle. Coll• MeM. CA t2t2t.
VIDl!OTl)(/AMl!RICA, 1375 Thie buliftlM It eonO\IOted by"'
lunnow. Avenue. Co••• MH•, tndtvtduel. ...._.__~ Celltomle tnat Nonie _ ..... e
Tll'ft•I Mirror Vldeoll• Thia •1•1-1 -ftled wtth the
l•tvlou. Inc 1 • C1tllornt1 "°"nty CWlt of~-. County on CNmelt TO IHOW CAU• 'Otl oorpor1tlon, 1375 Sunflower Mey 14, Itta. CHANGll cw~
Avenue. 00111 MH1, Calllornl• 0 ,. ,,....0 1.., In tllt Maner Of Ille ~llOl't of f2Gt Publl1llecl r1nge uOH1 I ., MIGUEL AL~IO "E'VES. IV, 1 lnfomef1, 164 Menon II,_., PIM>l, May 20, 27, .AIM 3, 10, 1112 Mlnof, by ANA ESTH!R R!YES. Hie
Toronto. OnletiO. Cenadl M4&-3A8 2238-412 P1n1111, F-0t C1llnOe of Name.
Tllll ~It conduCIM by I CAM NUMllR A11-
gerw.t S*tnlrlhlP. PlaJC I011C( MIGUEL ALFONSO REYES. IV. 1
rtm. Mlm>f '1CTmOUe -H M1n01 by ANA E8THER REYES. hel
V1deotex Setvldel. Inc. NMm ITA~ lllecl • p«ltlon In 1hll ooun lot "'
Outlllm J, Monema The lollowtng peraon 11 doing cl« lllowlno 1>9lltlonet lo oNnoe Al9lllt111t Secr91etY buslnMI II' nern1 lfom MIGUEL ALFONS"O
Tllltllll!llMnlwllllleO'Mlhlhe R·X R.ESEARCtt. 1548·0 REYES. IV lo JOSEPH MICHAEL
County Clertl of Orange County on Adema Ave .. Coale M111, CA REYES. Mey 1'7. 1882. 12828. II 11 hereby ordered 111•1 111
'1... Judllll Mueller 1750 New I lnlerettM In lhl 1n1ttet Publl1tled Orang• CoHI Dal~ HllnPlfllre Cott•,... CA 92828 ~ appew ~or• Ihle OOUrl
Piiot, MllY 27, June 3, 10, 11, 188 . Tllll 11u.i-II conciUc1M by.,; Depertmenl No. 3 al 700 Civic
_________ 2_33_7_·8_2 lndlvldull. 1n11r Drive W111, Santi Ana.
Judltfl Mueltll' lllfomta. on July 7, 1982, JI 10:30 Mt.JC fl)TICE Thlt 1111-t WM tied ..nti lhl o'clodl 1.m .. 1nd then 111<1 th«•
NOTICm TO IY Cletlt of On1nee Councy on CllU... " 111y they 11 ...... why
CMDITO..a CW M1y 18, 11112. .,.Ullon for change of n1me euuc TMNIPU' ,1'f701 not be gr1nted.
(eeo. 1101 .. wr u.c.C.) Publl•ll•d Oranoe Co11t Delly 111111110n.:J~ fo~~hl~•'u~bo~ Notto• 11 hereby given to lh• lot, M1y 20. 27. Jwlle 3, 10, 1982 Ctedllort of FRANCISCO J. SOTO 219$-82 ubllahed In the Delly Piiot, a
a n d 8 E R 0 I 0 C 0 R R E A 1------------of general clf'cutlllon,
RODRIQUEZ, Trantferort, whoae rtaJC NOTICE blllhld In Ulla county •I .... ,
home llddr-le 4378 Lu Flof• • week lor four coneec:ul.,... Avenue. City. of Yorbe Linda. 1' .... Sll H iia prior to the dey of Hid
CouMy ot Orti:!g•. Slit• ol NOTICE OP' DKATB OF
Clllfomle t1111 • bulk lrlrnlMt ta THOMAS VERNON 0 RR ffl~0 ~:-%'~~~Nf:fc?A': AND OP PETITION TO
Tr_.._ whoM "°"" ldd..-11 ADMINISTER ESTATE NO.
1oee a.. Bluff°"""· etty of co.ta A·llHH .
..._., County of 0rlllQI. State of To all heln, benefidaries,
Clllfornle.. The property to be trenefwreel 11 creditors and contingent~nllllf'I"' 9-ft. CA~--
deaalbed 1n v--11 -All 1toc1t 1n c:ttditon of~ Vernon et > N7·taa lrlde, lllllur•. equipment and good Orr and penona who may be Publllhecl Orange Coul Delly
wtll of t"-1 Liquor Stew.~ otherwae lnierest.ed in the . Mey 27. June 3, 10, ·:~
II nown •• "SO u TH WOO O will and/or atate: LIOUOft''. 2230 Harbor IMI., City
of eo.t• MIN. Coutlty or 0r.,.. A peti&n hm been filed rtllJC NOTICE s~.of b°::':i~nefer will b• by John M. Weia in the IUNNOft COURT OF
-m11et1 on or .,,., the 211t Superior Court of Orange c~
dtiy of June, 1N2 et 10:00 a.m. •I County req\M!llU.na that John llt ._ ::=!. C:. OIU.NOll WESTERN MUTUAL ESCROW M Webs be ap ....... ted as C 0 R P .. A It n : M e r I I y n ' _.., ftf111l11•111 el W•1tnorelend. .,_ edd,_ .. personal representative to K__. a., MoNaiiMre
14081 S<Mh Yorbl Street. Suite adminl1ter the eatate of ter C-.. el......_
101, Tueltn 92t80, o.llfornll. 'lbomu Vernon Orr Cana ..._ A·1tll00 Tllet the 1Mt date for filing clelmt ' CMtDl'ft TO IHOW CAU8a In the -ow referred to heteln ta Me.a, Californla (under the •UT7 June 11. IN2. Independent Adminiatration Wllereu. KENNETH GARY
so ,., u 11 llnown to th• of F.ltat.es Ad). The petition =·J:='ot"=. ~
Tr1neferH1. all bu1tnH1 nemH la aet fer heutnc in Dept. tor an order cn.notna hll nern1 lrom
and •dClrHHd UH~ by the No. 3 at 700 Civic Center KENNETH OAA~ ~cNAMARA lo !!~on for the peal tht .. yMl't MlcNAMAAA _ ...... . Drive WHt, San• Ana, ~~=~0 tMt 111 ~
Oeled: MllY • lt82 California '2701 00 June 23, lnlerntecl In the above enlltlad =.!, '°'°-1982 at t-.30 ua. metwr appew !*ore tt111 court at
Tra.._w IF YOO <mlllCT to the 10:30 an the 7th day of~· 1182 In
Publl•hed 0flftQI CoHt Dally grandnl al &bit p.dtion, you dlp9rttnerll numtler s It 00 CMc Plot,"'-s, 1882 -L-.u et•.__ _ at the C«tler !>Ylve Weal. 8•nll An•.
2358-12. ....,..._ -~ Celtornle 112701 and lflOW ~. If hear inc and •ta te your eny. wtty 1111 pec1t1on tor ciW1Q1 of
P\11.JC NOTICE objectiona or We written -~not ~
NOnc. °' TillUITU'8 IAU objectlona with tbe court 0:, '!. ~ 10 Show = ~..., ,.._14 before the hearin,f. Your tie publll1eC! 1n the OrlflVe County
T.& Mo. 711'7.. a~ may be ln penon Delly Plot, e 1'19•1P"* of genetll
SUPERIOR TITLE SERVICE u or by your att.orney. clrculallon, prlnt•d In Orin~ ~~':.c,"":'t~ IF Y 0 U ARE A~= :ior-: tne
WIU &al AT PUBLIC AUCTION CR.EDITOR er • contingent dme ... tor '-1na of petition.
TO TKE ...OHEST BIOOEA FOR Creditor of the d« : f J ! d., you Date: Mey 29. 1te2.
CASH (Pl)'lble It time of .... In muat file your claim with the '-* D• , , , A l9wf\.ll mon9Y of IM ~ Stltee) . ....... el .. ......,«=-'
11 right. t1t1e and tntereet conveyed oourt or pnment it to the .aama • KIM. ua.
10 Ind now held by II under Mid personal representative 1-......,....,..
'1Im'#,~' TN,._,.....,. ... _,.
~ ..
"'0001 AND 8'1"1TI OP MIXIOO"-~. Ht \.owe' 01111 o!.a:1u111 101, ~ llldl, OA 1,..1. AtnanClo l1nohea o. 14tt 1 ''•~lcllo Dr., L19un1 Hiiie, OA
tff63 J•~•r lo••· lt4H Oryclook Co¥e, LIQUfll Nlouel. OA Ht.,.7. l hll bUek-. i ooncM1ed by an
untncorpo111ed IMOOlatlon olllet
tt\W\ I Pll'l~tp, Amando lenoMI O.
Thie .. li«Mtll wat flied Wltll tllt
County 01«11 of Orenot CountY °" May 1a, 1Na. , ....
Publl•h•d Orang• COHI 01lly Piiot, Nlay IO, 27, June a, 1~1 1NI
u42·82
PUii.iC NOT1C£ ''°TmOU• IU99mll NMm ITATlmNT
fhe followlng pereon 11 dotng
~ ... (A) OHCE ANO FOR Al.l -(8) THI AIOHT WEIGH, 2300 FelNlew
I'd , y.203, Cott M .... CA lnat
lehavlor al Proor1m
Con1ullan11 , Inc , • C111lornl• cotporallon, 2300 Fairview Rd ..
V-203, CO.II Meal, CA 92$28 ™• bullneal la ~ by • oorporlllon
8ll'\IVlorll '"'•"" Contultanta, Inc:.
David Tl\Ofneeaon
Preaidenl Thi• 1talemenl WU llled With tlle
County Cter11 of Orange County on
May 18, 1982.
~ Publltll•d Orange CoHI 01lly
Pilot, May 20. 27, June 3. tO, 1N2
2146-82
rta.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUllNEll
NA•ITATaM&NT Tha lollowlng pereon1 are doing
bualneu ••: KILOOR, 177F RIYeralde Ortve,
NewPorl BellCll, CA 112863.
JOE KILLEEN, 209 • 4111
Street, Newpo<t 8Mcll. CA 926e3.
RONALD C. DORDONI, 209 •
41at Stra•t. Newport Beach, CA
112863
Tiii• busl,..... la conducted by •
gener Ill p1ttnerthlp. Ron Ouren Thia atetement wu hied with Ille County Clertt of Orange County on
M1y 11, 1982
F1"217
Publlahed Orange Co111 Dilly
Pilot, May 13, 20, 27. June 3. 1982
3060-82
PlB...IC NOTIC£
flCTITIOUI 8UllNE99
NAME ITATEMENT
Tile following per1on Is doing
bl;sl""5H'
COMMERCIAL GRAPHICS CO , 1700 Newport Circle, Santa
Ana, CA 92705 DAVID W TUBMAN, 853 N.
OtaSMI, Orange, CA 112667.
Thia busl114119 .. conducted by an
lndMdu1I
Oevld W. Tubmln
Thia 1111emanl wH llled wllh Iha County C141rk of Orange County on
M•Y t 1, 1982. ,.111211
Publl1he<1 Orenge Co111 Dally
Pllol. May 13, 20, 27, June 3, 1982.
305&-82
Nil.IC NOllCE
1(00051
flCTITIOUI BUllNEH
NAMI! ITATEMEN'T
The lollowlng person 11 doing
buatnesa u : LA NCAST ER f;NTERPRtSES.
3152 Yellowatone Drive, Colla
Meal. CA 92628 STEVEN P LANCASTER, 3152
Yallowa1one Oflve. Cotta Meal, CA
92828
Thia bualneu 11 conducted by 1n lndMdual
St-P Llnclster
Thie atetemenl ... Ned With the County Cieri! of Orange County on
May 5, 1982
,~
PubllaheO Orange COHI Dally
Pllo1. Mey 13. 20, 27, June 3, 1982.
2120-a2
~~ J!.:.:t!:.: Ill• properly !~thJnpt>i~ted by .!~~\&rt ..._ ~ ~ ._
TRUSTOA: WILLARD MEAR8, 1n wa 1ou.r IDOlha• UUUJ I) NOTICE OF DEATH OF
"n"' 1 r rte d m 1 n , Ho PE date of flrat iuuance of Publl•hed Or1nge Coaet Dally EMMET L. JONES, •-•
HATHAWAY. 1n unmantec1 worn111 letten as provided in Plot. Mey 27, June 3. 10, 11, 1993 EMMET LLOYD JONES
8 :\~~:Y: ~~~ F~~'!"~ 700 of the ~ Code of 234W2 AND OF PETITION TO
A8SOCIATtON, 1 eot1)0l'atton , California. The time for PtaJC NOTICE ADMINISTER FBTATE NO.
Recorded March 28, 1881 H fllina cl.a1nw will not expin! ACTmOUS .,..... AllHl7.
'""'· 1::, ~~ ~c1e1~ prior to four montba lrom ....-ITATDmlT To all hein, benefldariea, Z, of the Aecorder of 0teng9 the date of the hearing Ttie tollowtng '*'°" 11 001no crediton and conttngent
County: Nici deed of tn.11t delcflbe9 noticed above. ~ 11: creditors of ~ L. Jones,
lM ~property. YOU MA y EXAMINE RUNAWAY TRAVEL. 2304 w. aka Emmet Lloyd Jones and
963 1!'1-=:: ':,:;: ~~ the ~ kept by the court. U SL '=1eP18!:~~~.~ per 1 on a w b o may be Bodi 19, P-oe 42 ol ~ you are lnteres1ed in the Pl., Sent• Ana. CA 92704. oU\erwtae interested in the
,.,..... NGOfca of OrlnQI Couney, eataie, you may file a ftlquest Tl-4 ~ It conducted by "' will and/or atat.e:
C11Jfoml1, deeet!Mct u 1o11owa: with the court co receive lndMdull.;..... .... .,_ A ..-utlon haa been. filed
Plf'Otl 6 M ._on I IMP tlled In 1 l f h ·--.....,. ..-loolt ... Paoea 1o Ind 11 of p'"* ape c l a n o t c e o t e Thll Nternent ..,. fl'9d w1tt1 111t by Barbara Jones Cook in
.._. In the ofllcia of "" County lnvmit.ory of ..iase and of County a.t1c of OrlflVe County on the Su per lo r Court of
flllconMr of lllld oour1ty. the petitiom, .acounta and Mey 18• 1982· Orange County requesting ~ ~ n::.r~:~ =~: repor1I dacribed iD Sec:lbl Pubtllfted Orange Coe:i~ that Barban Jones Cook be
1t11. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACT1QH 1200.6 of the Callfornfa Piiot. ~ 20. 21. "'-3. 10. 1812 appointed aa personal
TO PAOTICT YOUR PAOPERTY. rr Probate <:ode. 2177-412 ~pre.ntative \o adm1n1ster
MAf M IOU> ATA PV9UC IAl..E. LAWB.ENCZ A. SNYDER. PU8UC NOTICE the estlte of EDlhaet L. Jmee If YOU NEED AH OPlAHATlON ESQ. d h I d d OF THE NATURE OF THE •1•1 w 1.a.a. St ..CTITIOUe~H (un er t e n epen ent
PAOCUOINO AOAINST YOU. YOU .. • • --• MAm STA\"UmWT Admlniltration of &tat.a
SHOUl.O CONTACT A LAWYER. Torruee, CA M5t4 Th f 11....a 1 ... 1 Act) The petition la eet for 1128 ~Dr .. Coate MeM. (lll) l'JS..Ull ~0,;:-·no peraon 1 .. ong ~ ln Dept. No. Sat 7()(1 ~'(lf~.,,.... ~ or common (lll) HJ.NII ,OAK ST. SKATES. 212 Mlllft Civic Center Drive, West. in
ffllonltton la ahown 1bove, no Publ.iabed <>ranee Coat St., Hunllngton 8eech, CA 112644• h Cl f S t A
w1tr1nty It g iven II I~ 111DalJ.yPilot,June2,3,8,1982 ~~cn=Ellla. ~on2 ! J.:: :0, 1:2 ~~ o::":I' D9ed 241M2 ~..._II condUC1M by 1n at 9:30 a.m.
of T""'· by r.-on 1lf a bN1Ct1 or •-.,. ..,._ ~ f' Hlmllton IF YOU OBJECT to the
def9ult In ttll obllgation. MCUred r-"'1'1-..._,_ • *'"'" f •t.-peUH-thetMJy ... olofe llllllOUted aid . r ,.,. llllement WU fllld 'Wtll\ Ula fP'*D-.. 0 WIC ....,.., you
dellvllf"4 to the underetgned a P1CTl1'IOU9 Ill 111 IEM Coun~ Clerk of e>ranoe County on should either appear at the
wn11tn o.cw111on o1 Detlllllt Ind ..,... tfA~ MllY 8• 1882· hearing and atate your
DaNnd for Sele ll'ld wrtnen notice Ttle follOWlflO ~ I• dolflg 'ttf70I b I fil i of bteectl and of eleclton to_,.. ~ • Publlthed Orange Cout Dally o Ject ona or e wr tten
tll• underetgned to Hll H id WE s TL AKE VILLAO E Piiot. MllY 20, 21. June 3, 10, 1982 objection.a with the court
property to •t"'>' Mid ob4tglrtlonl, APARTMENTS, 111 .... 17th 2181-82 before the hearing. Your
ind lllerHlter the undettlQnecl 8tnMll, No. 112. COila MeM. CA appearance may be in penon
CIUMd Mid nottce of br.ot1 Ind of n121. rtllJC NOTICE .-ctton to be recorded ~ Rtcllard "· C••tretl..t_e or by your a\tomey.
22. 1N2 • in.tr. No. 82~ 1175 tn ~i NO. 104, ...,.,. Oii ...,. '1CTlT10Ua ........ , I F Y 0 U A R E A =.. ~ . of Mid Thie .-.,_ 11 ~ b't"' MAm ITATDmfT CREDITOR or a contingent
81ld 1111 will be made, bul lndMdull.. The following pereone are doing creditor of the decealled you
wllhout cov•111nt or w1rr1n1y. THI .....:"'.: ~ the ~=ISTAATIW SERVICES must We your claim with the
..... Ot ~ ~ ""'· -,.___ INC., eee Biiiet Stt•I, CO.II M.... oourt or pr-.ent lt to the
pt 1lm. or ~ to ~3, <:_ Clf ----"' on CA 82828. peraonal repreaentaUve C: the ,_..If prtnapet au111 °' .,_,.,. Heller 1, tnc . a C1tllornte appointed by the court Tl'Ult~'::::~D.edric: fl'ublllhed 0r111g1 eo... o.»y ~oration. 1014 C1nnon•ur wtt.hlRfourmonthafromthe pr~ • ......._ If .,.,.,, Wiider Not..,._, 27, .-. a. 10, ~~~ rllli ~~~·by 1 date of flrat laauance of
.. llrma of ...ci OM of rn.t, .._ GOl'pol llllon. lett.en aa provided in Sec:Uon
ollaro•• 111d expenH1 ot th• -..C llnll ....._ 1, MG. 700 of the Probate Code of
Tn.-.. Ind of IN tNllbI ClreMed "Y Frn J . ...._ California. The time for -:.~:::'::it be ll•ld Oft iliii . Thll ltlternem WU flied with 11\e Im .. ~ c:1alma will _...,_ ~ .. _ 1~ 1 ........ ..._ MftTIOUI• I • ~ a.'11 of OrlnOf county on ..-,. not ..... _ .. • _ .......... -...... ...,... .,.,_, May 11 tN2 prior to four months born
p.m. 01• CM1pm1n Avenue 'The ---.. ,......., • • ,,.._ h d f h b l .atfano•. to tlle Clvla Oeftt•r ~ ......... ---_..., Publllllad Orange Coaat Oill t e ate O t e eat na
:ultdlllf\ =~:t Cllapmeft MUl.l.IQAN'• IHW l'OT, Pflo4, M~ U . ~. 21, "'-I, 1N1 notlc9d above. ~. "'"' or ~:'fn'11111 l1041 &A,_,_.. MD. A...._.. ata2.f2 YOU MAY EXAMINE
pdlDMll I of IHt noc1oe, a. ...... ~--r.· ~ ~ Cellfomla __ .,. -the file kept by the court. U ....,.of-.~...._°'._ ~ ..,,-. you are lnfereated In th•
• l'I '1 I --:r .... MCM ,...,1 Jelle '~~~~ UHi • estate, )'OU may ft.le & nq\*t
, ... ,11tec1 dt•d o tru•t '"d :.:.:'.=-· · NlfUef, ..CTn'IOUe ..,..... wtth the court to receive
""9, _,.,..,.._, end ~ L ,,._, MM La • MAim tfA~ l l I f h tOl.001.14. = UitWM-... Cellfornta n. toltO!iltftt ,_.,, 11 dolno •P•t a not tt o t e ....... tllel, ~ .._ • ln\ltntory Of •tate .....
'91!1 f.t•1 •1..oeee.-..,._.:a ,,._ t41h t,.a WN .. ~ NOi and o1 the petldoni. eocoun11
Dllat ~ ;9i :T'o " T t T I. I ::8:# L..-• ...... : Cldlls,,. =.A~• .. N"'°" ... • OA and repor.. deacrlt>.d ln
mwa ,,. .......... , ''¥• Mi-.~''*°'"-Sutton UOO of th• •,.. TNlllle.. ....... t = 4 ~,..._. . ....._,CA.... cmlferila Prot. .. a.de. ,..;JI.' .CJ . llRVIOI 'ill. .... Tll!t ............... ..,.. •••Tl& • •••Tsa ~-tt"""' 11••·•• ... ..,..._ AU•n•J• at Law, Ht~ ~ ... ,._NMu.. -·-=--.-........................... , -o-.' ..... .. f:.:1. "a.-.. a..• Let •~1•••!t. Callf•r•••
'!""'J'. "-"' ~ • •at. Nr Cln) "'"""
... -..:...:lCll:--. ,.=1 o... °""...: "'=•or.,. ~"I: NWllbed ar-.. c.... r..=,,,;; ....... 'Wll ...... , • ., ..... \11 Dilll7~-..1.1.:::
JTT Jahco PtM,ecta, a unit of lnternat.lonal
TU~ and T•Je.inph C«pont.ion. •Pl>Olnt.cl ftoau W. 1n.lbDtr 11 lndu.ui.ll prod'Uct UM
~· & Wll c.b1et ~ fOt \ht Tri.clover dJYWOn of the Lldlih Company.
F. Ltlf' lra•~•m h11 Joined Car•tr Muac•m• S.ntc.a of Santa Ana u • CX>n1ultant.
He wu an lnltruat.or/career ClOWllelor at Cal Poly,
Pomona and a career manaaement COnJUltant Jn
privaw pracUce.
Th• Clock Coattnctloa Compuy, of Irvine
bu rwned Adrlua Loa1 mark•tina adm1n.l.ttntor.
IUcunl A. Watton hat been named ecruor vtce
1>reatdent and executive creative dlrector at Well• Rte~ Greta/Towaaead, Oranse County·b11ed
advertillna qency.
Jerre Blodaeu haa been named 1eneral It\' AN LONG VAN O.M MAO
·manager of GraPhtca Ou, a nat1onal franchile prealdent, haa been tranaferred from Philipa
c:ornpany headquartered ln Santa Ana. He lw been Medical Syat.erna, Inc., Shelton, C.onn.
ln the county graphiar field. Rober1 L. Georse U jolna the company u
di.rector of fi..nance and admfnl.11ratlon.
Grabm Joaet haa t:M!en named 8en1or vice BJen vu deJt Ber1, of Million Viejo, ulttatonJc
president of manulacturina for SmJdl Tool, Irvine. product man~er, transfers from N.V. Phtlipt'
He WH· preaident of Wlllla, another Smith Medical Syatema in The Netherland.a.
International dM.ton ln L..ong &e.ch.
ltadlryn G. ThomptOD of Newport Beach bu
been appointed a dlrector of Eate~e National
Bu.k (ln organir.atlon), Newport h. She ia
president and chainnan of the board of A & C
l>roperUee, Inc., an Orange bued firm spedali.zing
in condominium convenlon• and building
management and development:
First Interstate
to boost charges
Three executive apj)Olntmenta have been made
at PbWpt Ultraaoand, IDe., Santa Ana.
Ray Ryu, of Mi811.on Viejo, new senior vice
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Flnt Interstate Bank
of California will boost charges for a number of Its
lll0!8l popular services, including checking accounta,
the bank announced.
Pension funds urged
SAN LEANDRO (AP) -Penalon funda should
be uaed to ~vtde below-market mortgage rate! to
revitalize fomia'a construction industry, Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, the poll-leading
candidate for govenor, told labor unionists
Wedne9day.
Effective July 1, monthly checking service
charges will amount to $2. plus an additional 20
cents per check. Free checking will be available
with specified minimum~.
It'll cost 15 cents to uae the 24-hour teller. A $6
service fee will be charged to First Interstate United
Account cuatomen who do not maintain a minimum
balaooe, the company announced.
Bl'adley said pension fund.a, which he said
totaled $65 billion in the state, should be targeted
toward firat-tiroe homeowners by providing
lower-than-market interest rates.
It will al.lo be more expensive to pay bW. by
telephone, as the company said there will be a $1.50
per month service charge plus 15 cents every time
telephone billing ia uaed.
MUTUAL FUND
NIEW ~ CAl'l Ta.... I.JI 111 HI Y1c1 t.11 Nl. Inv Sel 6-M I Cl) -n. ~~ C.TNT tl7 NL LI NU\ 7.a NL Inv V• 1.41 I.Joi ....... ._... ~ 0., P\lrlln 10. t4 NL Inv Retfl U1 JM .. ~ All Gt'lll l."f L1J Thrlft •.11 NL 1*1 12.M NL
etloft .,, ~ EClllM s.n 6.H r.-U.16 NL J':7 ~ ,',·?? ,.N.!; ~ w.. -Chenc..ilor a.--. Fln.MClll Proa: -•• ... -IN ill'tc:. .t wNdl HIYlCI L74 t.J1 Oyrw .... NL JP ltlClO 7.lJ 11'
-MCur'ltlet HIMurl tlA7 IU4 FnclT• 1UJ Nl. J-am NL cAIUN ,_ .... HOie 11.a IJ..17 1-J76 HI. ~~~.'.1,74 -(---TuM IS.IS I.... IMOm 6.1' NL ~ 9--:; , ..... .,.I,.> fJ/I ....,,. Cnt SM 10M NI. Fflt 1,.,...,,.: .,. -w• ,... 1¥e4.. plWI Mlel (Nf1 Fe! '6.a 1'.10 Incl Ao IUJ IS... US G¥I L It U7 c:N••> Wild_ O'll Dir 1w." NL Oltc» us '·" Tex Eli U.S •.It Sell .... 0.U-JUf NL Grwtfl t.ofl 7.0t Kellfrm l.05 NL ~ 140D Iii. ~ .....,., lncem 6.CIO , ,. K•"-,,_, "'°"' F 22.411 NL ,.._ to.ti tel... Natlllls s.m s:... lncOl'n 1.25 1.11 ADV 1176 NL Gf'W9I 7.04 7... o.itn s.• 6.AI Gr.M HI IOa Alutur. IUJ NL HI Yk1 6.10 U1 Te• r~ HI Yid L64 •M AIM ,,._ ~ .,. J,•I l.tt lnUFd 11.01 12.llJ
CvYld iu1 tl.G ~ t~ t: :: :'.fr<' 1~ 1;: Mun 8 U7 7.Cll Edlon us ,,,. Tu Mg , ... ., •.Al Fnd Glh ..,. s.ar O~n 11.4112AI
HtYld Ml l.tt ~u Gift IS.SS NL F~ ~· S-15.fS 17.G A.lllN F l4Jll NL II\ A& 1.10 I. 1' Grwll\ 6'7t NL Tedi 10.CIO 10.t:I 4 111'9\T 10.ll 11.&J Ill CO 1.16 IM IMom 12.11 NL Tot RI IUI It.a. ~!Uri Fl.fD. c:.-nc> .. l.IJ 1.74 MUtM 7A1 7.12 USGvt Lil US ~A lel US.I I !-!! a1Fcl 1A7 t .11 Specf 11M ~ "-.,,_Mill: s.n _... 11.jt NL ,...,."" ~ Cus 11 IUJ M.U I 10A1 11.-t1aa1 GIN: A.OE a. ie U) CW 82 M.111 11 f6
8ond 10.tll tl.'5 Fund I0.1' IUD OflfTC 11.tt 140! CllS &I U1 1.M H lnY 7.Jt I.SI I-UO 6 4' ~rwtfl 7.IO 7,17 Ci.a Kl .... 1.• GfWtll UO IQ.al Mun Id U7 6.lt 1Gn S.o1 J.4 01S Kl Uf U5
llOC4Pn a.at ~ ll.42 II.a U Its 4111 SM 0.. SI U.tll tt.» tCA 1.n I.AS o 12.01 "'-rnc0tn 1.n 1... '"' SJ w "" N "'" Uol 1. ~ UD ML us OW 6A .... Oa Sol 4M S.IS Wlfl Ml 6.7' 1 Olp 11\4 M.21 c..11 6.05 6.,t1 I~ Ut 4 • AlrlM Olfwll: · ~· E4Mt U7 J.a. TuFr 6.1'0 ... i:,:' 1t,:; IJ.ll ~ It.SI IUt T•xFr . s.t7 UJ MMe 10.2S 1"11
HI Yid l.J t.» --1~ ,.: ......... lllC. LOI L11 ~'1:' ~~ lo.IS Muri a M. U... Ta "'-SM 6.1' ~ 7.SI 1.1' Geoldlld U1 V..., It. n. Ditta YO 1'A GT flllC 1422 NL GMllM 7. It ' 10.• = l.14 NL 0.... 0. U.tll NL 0rM 1.JI JUii ti llAIS NL CO. e. fllV• II-\UJ Nn l.7J t. • 11.fS NL !~Tt ,._:., UMnr 1l.J1 = IUf tf.tfl.. R!:!!'...!"° IJ.A1 Ml. fUl'll ... ::.:: ~ ~: ~ ~ ~°'ti_. NL "-S L4 i::;: :t ~ ~
A ~ !~ 1 P!!!!. It.II UM SIC t,5' NL Lord M*tft: ._,.. ., NL HfE. 1'.AM 1UI T tA H\, AfflM 7.lt
s. ~.::;
V"5
Last °'9 '"" . ..... '"' + y, 1411'> • 1'h J"' • .... , ... 1 .v. . \ili.
...... • 1
t\... • ""' 2V. + \M ,. • 111'1 ,, .. -
Siio • .... S'll • .....
jl!t • .,., sv. • ..... ~ ....
11'4 • I , ... .... , ... ...
~. "" 1~ • " J • ''-
J • "' 4..., • " ' . ...
Pd.
Up JO.I
Up •
Up ... Ut> IU Ut> to Ut> lli Up IU uo 12.J Up IU Ut> 11A UP II S Up 10.S "" .. uo ...
Up '" Up 'lo.o Up ...
Up t..S
Up u
VP '"' Up t.J
Up t.1 Up ,_, Vo ,_,
Up ti
Pel Ofl 4U Off IS.I Olf IU Ofl IU
Ofl IU ()If fl 1
Ofl II 1
()If 10.7
Off 100 Ofl IG.O Ofl t .S Ofl t.S
°" '·' Off fl
Ofl '·' Ofl t.I
Off l.J Off u
()If ...
Ofl l.O
()If 1.1
()If 7.7 Ofl 1.1 Off 1.1 •
Ofl 1.1
Ofl 1.1 °" 1.1
.,, PT~·~ S3 NI. Str=: 1""56.lt NI.
S 17 IMdT 14 '° flf L fed J7 • NL Furtd ... NL In-SlO SJ.a l!'<om 1 J3 flfL "-~:
Pru SI~ '40 '° 11 Am Ind UJ HL P\ltNm f<.rodl• AS-.. NL C-11 ... 12.tt lnYftl 1 J1 NL Int EQ 11 -14 It 0<-s.a ftL 0-V II.It 11.tt Stein Alie Fiil:
G"""' 'n 10'3 Uen 11.22 NL HMllll IUS IS.CIJ Bond l.IJ NL HI Yid 1l ... 14.10 Cep Qp 16..tl NL lncom S,7' ._11 S~ M.M Nl. t"vet 110 LO SlnSlll U.S NL t>sicn 11.Jt 12.4$ Smf'tt UJ NL ..,, u:a
11.1' NL •.a Ul7 14.52 15.17 tt,17 NL i.01 ... -.11 11.et ....... ':ti NI. l~A1 ';l us .. ~
-•
8
Corp.
awarded pact
Archive CorporaUon of Colta Meu hll been
awarded a $1 m.tWon contract from Plexut Computen, Inc., Santa Clara.
Plexus wlll Jncoreorue the 20 me1abyte
lJ\teWgent Sidewinder ~ ·lnch •t.rum.lnl cartridae
tape drives lnto P/26 minicomputers. The Sidewinder
will back up 8·lnch Winchester dllk drtves with 22, 36
or 72 megabytes of formatted capacity.
Record home closing noted
The Irvine Company reported that Its residential
communities in t,he cl ties of 1rvine and ~ewport Beach
captured a reo6rd share of new-home cl011i.ngJ tn
southea,gt Oranse County during the flrat'quaner.
Donald E. Moe, director of marketing for the
firm's community development division, noted that
the 193 new-home cl<l9inga repreaented 31 percent of
all sales in the area IOUth of the Santa Ana River
lncluding the Saddleback Valley.
The closings represented an 18 percent increase
over the final quarter of 1981.
Real estate seminar due
Realtor Jim Wood will speak at a real est.ate
symposium he's titled, "What's Going On Out
There," June 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the Irvine Coast
Country Club, 1600 E. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach.
Wood is founder of Unique Homes, Inc.
For information, call 675-6000.
Taylor Realtors list sales
Ron Taylor, president of R.C. Taylor Company
Realtors, Irvine, announced that as of April 30 his firm
bad a sales and listing total for the prior 30 days of $45
million.
These were reached through activities in
corporate headquarters and branch offices in Palm
Springs, Rancho Mirage and Newport Beach.
Accounting for the highest sales tally were
residential sales in the desert area and Orange County.
Wells Fargo officer featured
Corrine Young, escrow administration officer for
Wells Fargo Bank's escrow services, will be the
speaker at the June 16 meeting of the Southern
California chapter 12 of Certified Commercial
Investment Memben.
The meeting will be held at the Airport.er Inn.
Irvine.
For information, call (213) 943-3771.
Swedlow sets record sales
Swedlow Inc. of Garden Grove achieved record
sales and net income for the fiscal year ended March
28.
Net income increaaed 61 percent to $1,710,000, or
$1.38 per share, from $1,131,000, or '91 cenia, in the
prior year.
Swedlow Inc. is a manufacturer of proprietary
acrylic and annor products for a variety of military
and commercial applications.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
•
HEW YORICCAPl FINll ~-. tor -.. Jvfl. 1. STC)Ct(S
JO lnCI <tr. ::r.,. .%:.:. ri:::. ~ lO Tm S1t.J2 m .•1 >11.00 m.1•~ t.AI u Ull 109.13 110M lQt,jt no .. , • OAI •5 Stk J11.'7 DUt Jw...17 Jt'.ot+ Ulll lndln •.429. 1C» Tr.,. 1.D0.1Clll
Ulll• 1.ICll,JOI 65 Slk . .. . . . . .. ,,Ml,G
WHAT STOCKS DID
Wed. 1b ~ .. 11'4 • ti
W1<.-1 AME.aDO
NEW YORK l"'PI J.,.. 2
Wed. us m m , ..
1
"
METALS
Copper 7~-78 cet1t1 a pound. U.S.
O.Slln1t1on1. l.Md 26-27 C«'lll a pound.
Zinc 35 c:.nta a pound, delhlwed. TI.. 16.2963 M1tlt1 W .... compcMtte
lb.
Akllftlnuftl 7&-77 centa I pound. N V
~ $370.00 per lluk. lltaltftwft $29«1.00 troy oz.., N. V.
SILVER w~
Han~y 6 Harman, H .055 par troy ouncie .
........... ~~ ..... ill'llllt----..-"'--_.... ....... ,. .................... __ _...._..,.,_. ...,.....,_ ......... ..._. .......... .....
......... Ill .......... ...._ .._._ ......... -.... ............ ............. -o._ ....... 11 ..... N 1•-..0..-... ..., ........ .,_.. ..
~-,.. ............... .......,.,,... .................... ~
......... _ ... IPr -------·----t.o-· = ....... ,,-r:--..... 1111 .......... 1...-._,.. ...... _._...., .. __ ............ "'"'---•IWll..__ .. ~ .......... _ ........ _._ W: _.. --_..,,.... -~ ...
ca
SAN OIJ)O() <AP) -ln a
move almed at boo1Un1 San
Dle10•1 alllna tuna lnduatry,
1upervl1on tiav• approved a meuu.re that would put more
tuna on the menu at county ja11a
but a correcUona offl.dal wamed
a lot could 80 to wute.
"Untortunately. lnmatea have
been unreceptive to tun.a d.lahee,
creatln1 conalderable wa1te,"
uid lnapector Cliff Powell In a
report to 1upervilon evaluating
tho popularity of tuna.
"We've 8el'Vod tuna over the
yeen, and lt'1 ju.at not a real
popular cUah," he aatd. "You can
aenerally tell whether 90l1H!One
likes eomethina by how much ot
lt ends up In the garbage can.
We're just trylnc to aay what the
facts are."
The measure calla for the
county to try to spend about
$200,000 on tuna In the filcal
year 1982-83 •tarting July 1.
• That ls almost 30 times more
than the $7,600 spent on tuna last
year.
But Powell warned superviaors
that ~experience with five jaila
and 1,800 Inmates lndi~tes most
Inmates prefer red meat.
Powell said the county
cafeterias would increase the ,
tuna allotment ln keeping with
the approved measure, but
cautioned superviaors a lot of the
tuna would go down the drain.
The tuna industry -which
has been troubled by oversupply
and sagging sales -generates
about $500 million a year for the
San Diego economy. San Diego is
also the home of the largeat
seiner tuna fleet.
"'~ WHO ARE THEY KIDDING? -On the day Braniff
International Airlines stopped all flights, Pe nWell Publishing
Co. of Tulsa, Okla.. was completing printing of the May
in-flight magazine issue. Debra Gwyn leafs through one of
the 115,000 copies. The fate of the magazine is unknown.
Ford • • raises prices
Charges up for options, delivery
DETROIT (AP) -The Ford
Motor Co. has announced it
raised the prices for o~naJ
equipment on aome cars, ted
the base vehicle pricea of its
Mustang GT and Capri RS by
$89 and raised destination and
delivery charges.
Spokesman Bill Peaoock said
the Increases, effective
immediately, put the base vehicle
price of the Mustang GT at
,8,397 and the Capri RS at
$8.196, he said.
Ford said that option boost.a
included white sidewall tirea for
Ford Granadas, now $72 from
$66, and air conditioning on
L TDll, now $707 from $685.
Destination and delivery
charges were raised an average
of $15.
PUU IDTICI PWUC 111111 ~ ...
'inA=r ~~ iJ&#Am' ""' ,o11ow1ne pettoM .,. -. •MilmfBiifr .,,,_.1,..... ,...... ..
The lotlo'#lnt 11«eon1 .,. dOlno ~ ... Tn. ~o '*'°"' •• dO"'t ........ ~ , := ~ 11 HAlllllO" T"IHIT"Y tut1nMt 11 .... 11il'INll AL OOAIT AUTO "INTAL ll'IHIOHOOL AHO OAYCA,_I LOI 'ANOHO'I 4Pt '201 I OONT l O'oiihNYl ION
""VICI. IHO dba TH"'"" "INT CIHU"-1no ... ,.,...,, Colle Mc,,~,.,,,. Ana, CA 11709. INYl~~L o~iii~ A OA ... U 10 lrv1ue Avenue, MMe, 0A tltlt, IMA•l I. QU'ir.AN tUJ I • .IANIT A#'t;
''feWllOl'I leeotl, CA t.2MO Hartlof Trlnl1Y JtptleJ4~, :l'"'4, hnta • da.' h1N. INYlfllONMINUL OGMT GL OOl•I Auto Atl\lal htvlce lf\O,, 11SO U11t II,_., Cotta , OA J\.IA lOlll , 9-0 l ut lAHOIOA'I 00.; Mt•atOH
• OllilOtnl• OOtPotlllon, 0010 ltVlne eam c ').-.ntl All•iOA 9170t INYU,OHMIHTAL OON't'"OL
.... N~t IMon, CA eaMO Thie~ le OOftdUGtM by"' OuAOALUlll '· GUZMAN, l.AHOIOA'I ~ 00.: Tiii• bUllnffe .. oonMted by. Ul'llN*l>Oftled 1MOCl1t1on otw ''" w. Q.,ry ltrMt, ,.,,,.Ant , Ind MtaltOH ·~IN'TAL
ci«j)O(allOn 1t1M 1 ~ CA t27CM ~OIOAll'I CO.. 100I ... 1M
Oout Auto "•ntal d ~ Thlt ?Aoonducted by I,.,._.,._ 04, ._.Me. OA leMol Inc ..,.,.. . 12701.
Mltla N1vll1,Pr~. Tlllt etatement wu Iii.cl with Ille tmlll I Ow.m1t1 l"UOI MA .. TIH WILLI.AMI, Thia -*814Nnent wu ltlMI Wl111 IM County~ of OrMOI Oeunty on Ollad11i.191' ~tmftll tit' I Country Club La ...
Countv Olerll Of Or11199 County on M1y fl. 1112. o.til Lot* Anehelm. CA HI01. Mey 11. t8U ,_,. Tllll elll-1 wu lll90 wltll IN J OYCI 1. YHNI WILllA .. I ,
,, .. 1. '1.tbllelled Oreno-Coell Delly County Clet1t ot Otante County on IHt !. 001111,,y OIUb Lelle,
P11blltf11d OrenQ• COHI Deity ~.Mey to,"· June~. 10, tH2 April ft, 1H' Aftahllm, CA tUOf,
Piiot, M•r 13. 20, 27. JUne '· 1N2 211MI '1171MJ "* IMllllll 11 OOflduolld ~ • 3077·12 . Publlehed Orenge Co11t Otlly llmlted HttNrltllp,
-----....... ------••.,. Mftnl'r PllOt, Mey 13, 20. 27. Jun• 3. 1982 1No1 M. ~ ••.,. llt\YIM' l"-.nt nu1-2121·12 Tiiie llalement ...... ~ 11'9
,._ nun,..-. 1'1Cln'IOU9 .,...., ----------C-ty CIR of 0r.,.. Ccl&Mtr on ·~ ...... ITA~ rta.IC NOTIC( """-t. 1112. ~~A~-:fl ~ ~ '*"°"' -dofnO l'ICTmOUI WU P11bf11hed Ofena-Oo~y
Tiie IOllOwtno pet90fll '" dotno MAMSILLE BIAUTY IUPPLY, MAMl ITATI......, Piiot, """'3, 10. 17, u , , .. ,.
butllMM u : 270 t Herbot l lvd., '·I , Oo•t• Tiie loUowlno perlOf't It doing t:r72"'2
COM! ANO on If, 2:1011 MIM. CA 92t21. • butlneM .. : Moulton ,.,11w1y. Lagun• Hiii• M I c HAE L HA "A I 8 0 " ( I ) R E c R EA T I 0 N & "8JC NOTIC(
c.iHornte 82~ CUNNINOHAM. 443 ,romontory I! N 'r E " T A I N M E N T Cert SI0\11 Cloe* Jr., 124 N. Ortv1 WHI, Newport ... ell, CA COOROIHATOAS: (2) (R.f .C.). 3110 l'ICmlOUI tun••
Lllao Drive. Ptecantla, Calllornl• t2teo. ~~ New0APolt2'1.z.!'O. · 312 .• NewPOl'1 Tha :!'oA~• d-'AO 92170 THOM ... S l!DWARD LEMM. ........,, IMIU bull,_ air. ,._ '"''
Emiko Clock, 024 N. Lilac 88t0 Al<lot Cieri Roed. AMMtm, John Steniev Dlllf, 3110 Perll SCIENTIFIC MANAOEM"'T, OttYt, "-ilia, Clllfomla 92170 CA t2801': Hewpc)tt, Ho. 312, Hewpor1 8Mon, 244171 La Hlr-Awnue. LagYna ™' bulllnlll le eonducnect by ™' ~ •• c;onduGted by • CA t2t«I. HiOI* CA mn
tnclMduelt (HUSBAND & Wife). D'f*al Olf1nerwlllp, ... ~~ .. concluCted by.,, Jotln KI U tanl•. 20 71 LI Cer1Cloc* M lo tlee l H1r rt 1 on ""'~ Emlllo Ctodl Cllnntngllem . Jofln 8 Outr ~ Av.nue, ~ HIQual.
Ttllt ... ,_,,WU ltted wltll tile Tiiie .... -' w• flied wltll IN Thie lt•t-• ... flied with IN CA 9an.
County Clertl of Orange County on County Clertc of Orange County on County OWi! of °'11199 County on Thi. lla~t ~~ wttll the
Mey 11. 1812. Mey 1, 1882. June 1, 1812. ,1_ County C6atk of Orange County on
J111711 • ,,_, -·• June I. 1812 PubU•h•d Oreno• COHI Dally Publll"-d Oranr Coa•I Ually Publl•hed Orenge COH I O•lly . . ·-P\tot, May 27, June 3, 10, t7, tH2 Pltot. J\1119 3, 10. 1 , 24, 1982. Piiot. ,II.IN 3. 10. 17, 24, 1982 Publl•hed Or"tnge Collt P•lty
me-82 2421M2 2371•12 Piiot. June 3, 10, 17, 24, tN2 ------------MUC--NO-TIC( ______ MUC ___ NO_TICE____ 2315-82
f'tllUC NOTICE NOl1Ca TO CMDfTOfll NI.JC NOTICE --·--·-...cnnoua .._ .. ..., , ,... vr ~ .. ,,.... MAIM STATllllllNT OP MIU( TJlAWU f'tC1810US .,._..
T 0 I I L L A L C 0 H 0 I. I C Tiie lollowlng perton le doing ( ..... ttett4t07 U.C.C.) MAM1 STA,.._., ~Gal ~ •: Notte• te hereby g iven to The fotlowlng per1011 t• doing t-1.. AR ANTHONY & SON 0841 credltore of Ill• within named ~ •: To Whom It M~ Concern , , ' trMlterof that I bulk tr-tw 19 VALLE VISTA ESTATES, 3080 MARION ERNEST BOWEN ••• ~-::.riv.. Hunllnoton 8eacll. about 10 b• m•d• on P•r•on11 Jll\ta Road, Colt• MIM. CA 12t29,
•pplylno to th• Depertment of Allee Rutll Antllony, 1941 prCJC*tY ""91nener deecrlb911. Tatehln Shok11tan Kabulftllll
Aloollollc: a.-~ .. ContrOI lor PTealdlo om., Huntington 8-lll, The,_ end ~ llddf.-K111111 (Tallhtn 8hottuaan, K.K) "to CA t2t4I ot tll• Intended treneleror tre: Japan, 3010 Java Rold, Co•t•
OH SALE Be.EA A1io. Ruth Anthony Alllrlad M. ~. 3312 W. Flrlt Mete, CA 92821. to ... licollollc bevatagea at Till9 atatement .._ flled wttll the> 8tr..,, Sen,. Ana. Callfomla 92543 Thie ~ te conduc1«I by •
88 Fair OrMI. Ho. 101,,, County Cieri! of Orange County on The location In Catlfomle ot the COl"POf•tton. Coat• ..._, Celtfomle b82t June ~. 1912. ofti.t exeoutlw office or Pf1nclpll Thie 91-1-t w• ftlecl wlltl die Publlelled Orange Co111 Dally ' ,~ 1>u1tne11 ofttce ot tile Intended County Clettl of ~ County
Piiot, June 3, 1812 P11bllllled Orange Co&•t Dally trerletarot la: Mrl'll • ebow. on June 1. t812.
2435-12 Pltot, June 3, 10. 11. 24, 1912 All other bullne11 nemee and
-----------2445-12 addr-uMd by Ille Intended p.-n rtllUC NOTIC( ,,_,.,()( within three Y99f9 last """'* L IC .....
• ..,.,. llftTll'r put 10 far u known to tll• A"'""''_. La. c.,... • ...cnnoua 9UtNNSll ...-..... nui.-Intended trarwt.r• -none. .....,_,.......... c.... N,,_ ITAT!mNT f'tCTinOUa waa The -end ~ addfw .._. ...... The followlng pereorr 11 doing MAim STA,...,,. of trle lni.ndad tr....,_ we: 11112 L 11'1111 ft.
~at: The following pereon 11 doing Abrahlm Ate All, 24452 .,...-, CA-J 0 H N 0 A V I D I A N & ~ ae: A«Slandl, El Toro, Cellfomla 82830 P11bll1"-d Otenge Coeet Dally ASSOCIATES, 1407 Cheltenllam MAN AGE MEN T AN o Thet the property pertinent Piiot, JllM 3, 10, t1, 24, 1982
Lane, La Habra. Callfornle to«l31. BUSINESS SERVICES (MABS) hereto le dMcnb911 In D'f*al M: 2.444-e2
J o II n D • v I d I• n. 1 401 2172 Dupont onw, Slllt• 17, !Nine: grocery etora and OH llellon, ----------.;,.;; Che l'tenham Lena. La Habra, CA 92715. Tonto'• Matkat and Andy'• GM "8JC NOTIC[
Callfomla 90831. Ciiia W. a.ton. UM Mounte1n Station and 19 toce'9d at: 3312 W. ........... ---••• • Thie~ 19 condueted by an L.ooo Tnill, Anahllm, CA 82807. Flr9t StNet, Senti,.,,.._ Callfomle ._., _ _.. ,._,_ • -
lndMdum. Thie ~ 1a conducted by an 92543 T .I. -. NIM John Oevldl1t1 lndlYklual. Tiie ~ -uMd by IN NOTICE 18 HE.REBV GIVEH, that
Thie 1t11--.t w• Hied with IN Craig w. 04lorl Mid ·~or at llllld loeellon II: on WednMdey, "'-23, 1982, •t County C6atk of Ofange County on Thia ltatamant wu tllad with the Torllo'• Mantet and Andy'• G11 9:00 o'cloc* un. of Mid day, In the
Balloons fly 7,000 Illiles
.... ,
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
year and a half ago, pupils at
Mariemont Elementary school
released 430 helium-filled, toy
balloons with return postcard.a
attached. Two of the balloons
made it to the Alps.
"Dear Friend Americana,
"TI1e most incredible story to
you I must relate about your
unique .Chule (sic) endeavor.
''We cautiously ucended the
heights, using our pinions and
various rock tackle to diaect the
mammoth nest.
Mey 11, 1812. County Ctani of Orange County on Station. room .. , H ide for conducting ......., ~a Hantl191oft June 1, t~2. Tllat u ld b11lk tranefer 11 Tnm•• Salle.~ ttwollcm of A'"' 11l1NI U. ~ '1tOll7 Intended to be oonumnwtec1 at die REAL ESTATE 8£0UfUTIES cm......,.._ ll'lllli•d Pubtlehed oranr cou t Dally oltlc• of: L• Cotta E1crow SEAVICE.. loollted II 2020 Hor1h lufte 10I Piiot June 3 10 1 24 1982 Corporation, 19112 MacArth11r Bfoedw9y, SYiia 208. In Iha ~ of ~ heotl, CA a.G ' ' ' ' ' 23t4·l2 BIYd .. Suite 160, INtne, California Senta Ana, County of OfMge. S\N ,,_ 92715, on Of'•"• June 23, 1812.· of Cetlfornla. SAN MARINO
Publllhed Orange Co111 Deity . NI.JC NOTICE Tiiie tMilk tr_.., 11 eubject to S A V t N G 8 A N D L O A N
Pilot. Mey 20, 27, June 3. 10. 1812 Callfornl• Unltorm Commercial ASSOCIATION. • Caltfornta 2241-82 ...cnnoua .,_.. Code Section 11oe. corpore llon. u duly appointed
-----------MAm STAT'lmNT The ,_ end addr.-of Iha TNllM under and purlU9rlt to the
School librarian Sharon Hagen
said Wednesday that a letter to
pupils Brent Chase and Kathy
Koumjian, postmarked from
Lichtenstein and written on the
stationery of the Palace Hotel
Luzem, In Switzerland, has been
received.
••your card posted came to my
person by a surpriae happening
upon traversing the Alps with
my acquaintenced (sic) friend,
Johnathan Mulle r o f your
country, Montana, Billinga, U.S.
of A.
"On previous excuniona we
have been obeerved a nest of
eagles mature which came to us
on this occasion that it was no
longer Wied and was"Bbandoned
for permanenL
''The most amazing ariicle iBt
(sic) a small length of sturdy
yam tangled around the poeta.l
cards enclosed to which we
discerned you wanted returned.
"We are on our journey to
practice our Alpine horn and
echo yodeling of the acoustics of
the Alps. I do yodel for you to
stay in schule. ·
"Wishing to be your friend.
"Wurnelos Davos Bucherer''
P\alC NOTIC[ The lollowlng peraone .,. doing ~ with wnom a.tma mey be power ol Nie conferred In tllat
bullneal ae: flied 11 Helen Plnnon. 18712 01rta1n Deed of TNll elltOUled by ACrtllOUI ..-u NAlmSTA.,......,
The folowtllQ l*90nl .,. doing
~-= T & J PROFESSIONAL SERVICES, 1"4 Port Provence
Pl-. H9wport 8-:ltl, CA 92MO.
Thomae L DeMott, 1914 POf1 Provanee Place, N9wport 8Mct't,
CA 82980.
WIL MOORE & ASSOCIATES, MICArtllur BIYd., Suite 150, lfvlne, 0 . VAUGHN MICKLOS, • mented
4121 w .. terty Plaa., Sulla 201, Calltomle 82115, end Iha LMt dey men, recorded Mey 12, 1980, In
H9wpOl1 Beadl. CA 92te0. . for llllng delrns by eriy cndltor ltlall Bo<* 13«14 of Ofllclll Aeoordl of
Newpott Weltern ~tton. be June 22, 1N2, wllldl It 11-Mid County, et page 10, Aeoordar'1
• Callfornte corpor1tlon, 4t21 buel n••• day b•lore ttle lnetnlmentNo.11331,by,_of
Weeterty "'*>I, Suite 201, Hewpor1 coneummatlon d•I• 1peclfled • bfeadl ot dafNI In :it ot 8aecto. CA 92880. above. pet1ormance of Ille ob lgatlone
Tllil ~ 11 OOl'lductld by • Dated Mey 21, 1812 MCured theteby, lnctudlng ttlet
corpotatlon. Abrllhlnl All Al brNdl or dafeutt. Notice of wllldl
Newport Wattem Corp. lnt.-ided Tr.,.,._ -reoorOed f*'*Y 5, 1~ 11 It said: '
College summer
calendar offered
Orange Coast College's
Summer '82 Community
Servic e Calendar
available to the public.
The 12-page brochure
details more than 120
differe nt programs
offered by OCC's
Commun ity Service
Office this summer.
The summer agenda
includes a children's film
festival, day excursions
to various Southern
California at.tractions,
adventure tours to
outdoor recreational
spots , lectures,
mini-cour1es, business
aemlnan, and ctasses. for
kids and teens.
Free brochures may be
picked up in OCC's
Commun I ty Service
Office, in the college's
Administration Building.
Brochures will be mailed
to individuals who send
their address. plus 37
cents for postage, to
Community Service
Office, Orange C oast
College, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa, CA
92626.
For summer
community service
information, phone
556-5880.
Mesan enrolls
at med school
Thuy, Nguyen, a Co.ta
Mesa High School and
---------~ Orange Coast College
HAUOll LAWM-MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gosier Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
,.HCI MOTHHS
llU. .. OAOWAl
MOHUill
110 Broaowav
Costa Mesa
642·9150 ·--c,
IALT%&1HGHOH
SMfTM & TUTHIU
WHTCUH CH.Ari\
427 E 17th St
Costa Meta
6•&-9371
P1UCI ltlOTHMI ~s· ..o•TUAllY
627 Main St
t-+.mt1n~on Beach
S36-6S39
graduate, haa bee n
aocepted into UC Davis
medical school thia fall.
Mis s Nguyen
graduated from Costa
Meaa High School in
1976 and will ~lve her
rnasier's degree in PUblic
Health from Loma Linda
University in June.
PlmUC NOTIC[
FICTTT10UI IUllN911 NAMllTA~ The IOltowtng ~ .,. dOlnQ
bu"'-aa: SECURED PROPERTIES LTO.·I, 17'21 Mltcllell, lrve, CA
927 14.
Donlld G. Zeltner, 124 Harbor
t1tand Dr .. Newport e .. ch, CA
92983.
Gery J. MoreflMCI, 87 I Sleepy
Hollow i.-. Laguna Beed\, CA 82861.
Gtry J. Scllneld«, 111 ~
Pl-. Leguna BMoh, CA 92061.
Thlt ~ 11 conducted by
Gaty J. Schleldar
Thie llat«naM -Med wtltl the County Clertl of Orenge County on
May 18, 1M2. ,1et70a
PubH•ll•d Orange Coatt Dally
Piiot, May 20, 27, June 3. 10, 1982
2114-82
f'tCTmoul waa
NA•ITAn.NT
The lottowtno '*''°"' ••• doing bu.W-u : PAYROLLER S ALES . 1918
SO\lth Rltelley StrHt. Santa An•.
CA 92705
Jam•• Murrey C ent. 118
Diamond Avenue, N-por; S..Cll,
CA 92182. Dentel George Venn. 114
E!l'n.,•kl Avenue, N-por1 Beac:h, CA 928e2. Thie bull,_ II conducted t>y • o-ral .,.nnanntp. ~M.Cant
Tiiie llltatnenl WU nled with Ille County Cieri! of Orenga County Oii
Mey 11, 1982 ,,..., ..
Publlt hed Orenge Coaa~ Delly
PllOI. Mey 13, 20, 27, June 3. 112
3057·12
I(.,.
F1CTTT10UI IU ... 11
NAMll ITATl•NT Tlla totiowtno pertone ere doing
bull-•:
LONQWOOO ASIOCIATH, tea E. 17111 8trMI, Colt.a Meta, CA
92821.
JAMEi W. MY, 11 Stonewall. IMne, CA 92714.
MICHAEL D. RAY, 408 Heral DNw. Cof0fl9 del Mir, CA 82925, Thie bullnlN le conducted t>y I generll ptttlllflhtp.
MICNll O. Aay
Tllla lttlemant wu Ned with IM
County C6atk al Ofenge County on
M-8. 1982. ,,_
Publlttled Or•no• CoHt D_111y
flllot, -ta. 20, '17, .--.. 1111. 111H2
.Jecqultyn LDIMott. 1M4 Pon
PrOYenet Piao.. N~ a..cto,
CA 82te0.
Wiibur Moore, Jr. Publtahed Orange COut Dally Recorder'• ln1tr11m111t No. Preatdent Plot, June 3, 1"2. 12~. W1U SEU. AT PU8UC ___ NIUC ___ NO_TICE____ Thie~ 11 conducted by an
lnclMdual.
24S&-82 AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ,.,_ 1----------~ BIDOEll FOR CASH, WM money
Publl•hed Orange Co11t Dally 1'ta.IC HOTIC£ of the United Stst•, ot • CMHlr'• -ST_A_T_l ___ NT_OF_WITHOAA ____ W_Al_ TNI Ital~ i.c,~ Iha
F:,::~ County Clettl of Orange County on
Pl!Ot, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1982 d-* drawn on• llat• ot nattonal
23n.a2 bank, • ••••• or faderal~lt
FtCTmOUS IU ... 11 NAm Mey 25. IN2. ,"'111
P11bll1lled Oreno• CoHt Deity
Piiot, May 27. June 3, 10, 17, 181~·
-----------NOTICa OP TMISTD'I IALS union, CK • atale OI' fredlral Loefl ... .....oA end loan -aatlOll domldlad
T .a. .... fnM.a ttlil 11~. al P9)latlle et die time of The l ollowlng pereon II••
wtllldrlWll MI general pwtner from
Ille partMrShip ,operating under 111e flctl1lou1 bu1lne11 neme of JMH
Elegtronloe at 9t5 Tl• Juana,
L.agune Bleoh, CA.
The flclltloua bu1lna11 name
1t11emen1 lor the plftnerlNp wu
t111d on 11·22·11 In tile CO\lnty or Or~
Fun N•m• i nd Addreu or 1he Pareon Withdrawing Jam11 M.
Horneck. P 0. Boa 13•1. Founteln
v.119)1. CA tnro8
J.,,,_M Homed!
,1114 ...
Publl•h•d Oreno• COH1 Dally
Pilot, Mey t3, 20. 27, June 3, 1812.
2124-12
P't0"1IOUl9Ull ... MAIMeTA~ OALIFORNIA LAWN &
GARDEN SERVICE, 320 Co1t1
MeH Streot, Coete Mall, OA
92927.
Dereron Clfton Mackey, 320
Coate Melll StrMI, CoatA Mete, CA 92t27.
Tiiie butlnMI It oondlloted by ...
tndl\'ldual. o.r.on C. MlldlCl)I
'RW lt8t_,_ -ftled wtttl Iha
Coun1Y Cler1I "' Orange ~ Oft June i, 11112. ,_
Publlelled Orange Cout Delly
PllOt, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1N2.
2~
fl'IC'"10UI .,_.. NEWPORT HOME LOAN, INC. M ..... .,.,.,, Ude and .,,..,_ held
MAIM eTA'nmWT duly appointed TNlt .. under Ille by It, H T"'llH, In 11111 rHI 2283-82 Ttl• lollowtno c>«•on 11 doing followtna ci-1bed deed of trust property Mtuat. In Mid County end -----------1 ~ M: Will. S!LI. "T PUBLIC AUCTION s ... e. ~ • loloM: NlJC llOTIC£ Sl/TTOH ENTERPRISES, 3931 0 THE HIGHEST 8IODEA fOR PAACE.L 1:
ACTITIOUI _.. MaoArthur Blvd .. Suite 201. CASH ~ et time of .... In The! portion of Trect No. 7530, In
Newpott 8-:fl, CA 92980. lewflll money of the United ~':I the city al H9wpOl1 &wll. County MAim eTAra.wT MARCIA KAYE Sl/TTOH, 940 Ill right. tltle end tnterwt of Oranoe, Shlte of Celllomia. •
Th• following Pef'IOn 11 doing trvlne Avenue, IA-311, N-por1 to and now Nici by " under Mid par map thareot reootded In 8oolt ~ ~D LAN D v I LL AG E BMctt, CA 82ee3. Oeed of Trutt In Ille property 2 8 7 . page 1 3 5 and 3 I o t
APAATMENTS. 711 W. 11th Street. Thll bualneM .. conducted by *' lleralnaftar daacr1tled; MlecellaneC>ll• M•P•. rtc:Ofdl of No. ~2• Cotlte ....... Cat..__._ lndMdull. TRUSTOR: 1510 BALBOA, LTD~ OrMQI County, 1homund defined '"" m• Merda ~ Sunon lln'iHed pertnenhlp I• Un It 1 4 on th at c •rt a In 92827 Thil llat9ment -Mad wttn the BENEFICIARY: BANK OF Condomin ium Plen ("Tiie
Richard R. Central. I NofttlltM County C1er11 of Orange County on AMERICA u TRUSTEE FO" Condominium Plan" herein) ~1104. MMna del Rey, callfomie June 1, tN2. CARUOH FORGE WORKS PROfTT alteched H an exhibit to tllet .. ,,_ SHARING TRUST. car1a1n Oec:1er1rt1on of c-wite. ~~ 19 oonducted by"' Publla"-d Oran,• CoHt Dally Recorded M.,ch 1t. tHO •• Condition• and RHtrlc11ona for
Ak::twd R. c.ntrel Plot, "'-3. 10, t , 24, 1912. Ntr. Ho. 10495 In boot! 13621, ~ 8w:fl TowM1I 1M1 ltd.
fN1 ~ WM Mad with the ~2 Ploa 1010 of Of9lc:W Aeootdt In tN (The "Dedar11lloh" ._,., ~ office of the Aeoofd« of Onlnge on M-r 1 t, t972 11 lftltn.wnant No,
County Qlftc of OrMge County Oft ..... Ml\-~Mid deed°'"'* da9oltball t1412 In Bo<* 10122. Pll09 313, Mey 25, tN2. •-._ nu1~ the propeny Of11c111 AecorcS&
l'1t019 ..cm100i .._.. Loll 6, , and 7 In Sloe* t 15 of PARCEL 2:
Publlehed Orenge Cout Dally MAim ITA~ Trtiet No. 2i4. par m.., recorded tn An unclMded 112llh lntel'Mt 1n and
Plot, Mey 21, June 3, 10, 17, 1982 The folowtllQ peraone .,. doing Book 13, p1g11 31 and 31 or to u-POI"'°"' of Lot 1 of Trac:t
2341-82 bullrlllll•: M•1•1*IUl,,...,.,lntheoftloeof 7530, ellown and defined ... ---.-... -.,.--Mft-TM'lr ___ __. CAllFO .. NIA MAIL ANO tll• County Record•t of Hid "oommofl-"(ltleCommoflArea
~ nu1rK MESSAGE SERVICE CO., 30218 Count}'. ll«eln) on die Condominium Pieri. -----IC-•• --, -----i Her1M>r 8outevwd, Coate Meta. CA Yw.,. In default under a Deed PA~l 3: ...cnnoua •••••• 92127. ot Truat deted Fabn.llty 15, IMO The exdull\le right top II ltm MAIM IT.A-Frank JtmH lovko, 18551 unlMI you take action to pt«*Ct end ocoupency of U-portlona of •-• PortamouUI Clrdl. W..cmin.ter. CA 'fO'.//r prOC*t)I, It mey be llOtd et• Commofl ,.,_ of Lot 1 of Trtict dolrlQ ~owing 1>«1on1 1r 82883. p11blto ••I•. If you need en 7510, d•••on•t•d on ttla
CENTEft T~EA, 333S Met 1...-Melot 8alay, 11564 Mt. ~ of the natur'9 Cf the Condominium Plan .. baklonlea. SltMt Colta Mw., CA t2t2t ~. FountMI v...,, CA 927ot. f PfOOMdlnO agalr.c you, you etlould patlol Wtdl« pordlM, n tf1oM1
0. 8 · Thfa bullrl9M la oonclUGted by 1 1oont8ct a iewy.. on Mid CondomlnUn Plen •being .J . egeretrom & 8on1, A tlmltecl Olf1netlhlp ' 1510 8111>01 81vd .. Newport ~t to Parcel 1. •
General Pertnlnlhlp, 3311 F Ffri .i. l.Mo 8aecl\, o.lfornla PARCEL 4:
Road, Coltl Mw.. CA tteae. Thll --~ wat Mad with tne "I" • .,... ~ or OOllWl'Mll'I The .-.M "8M 'o -end Andt .. d• C. Grant, 14721 Colin1Y a.ti al OrMge County on dMIQn•tton 11 ellown 1b0ve. no occupancy for wt1erf•1• 1nd "8.IC NOTICE Romenlafltaoe, Tllltln,CAntaO. June t. 1112. werranty I• 9lven u to Ill dod0ngpurpoeaeofllldlpai110ftof NOnCa OP INTWD T Henry T. Seo1ratrom, 1 ,_ oompletanMI ,,, OOl•tcill-)." IN Cofflmon ,.,,.... of Lot Cf nec:t ~ ~ r u 11 • • 10 r Tor• n H • n r Publlttled Orange Cout Detty ' The blneftcllry under .id Deed 75)0 et10Wn Ind dlftl*' on 1t1e -
llCT10M..,,. .,.-:::'~<J~~1:o'on• Drive, Plkn, June a, 10, 11, 24, 1911 ior Trutt"' by rMtOn of • bNeCfl 0t Condominium PIM • eoet :'t:
M014, CAWOMllA Henry T. Seger1trom. • 2afM2 !~. ,!:=~--= ~~1~11~':c, h:: Mino
,..:::.-:,. ~!t~!n'~l,:~;._o~~ ~ llOTIC[ 1=::•:.:i:,:=.,u~d~__: :1:=:.~ 1..,,-:'C:
,...,,. of '*-= FAAHCl8CO a.ma Ana, CA 12708. f'tO'ITTIOUI IUll... Dal'llend '°' a. Ind M1"an nottoa Oedelectol1.. ~0900R[G0u· uancr22
8
3'o"°H'° .. ~8 TONn Henry Seolntrbm. 1•1 MAim tTATRmWT of bftedl Ind ot tlll8atlon to C** ne atrHt addrM• or otll•r ~--• er..... lvd., Victoria Drive. Santa Ana, 0 ......... ....-.. --.......... thl und•r~d 'o 1011 Hid common d•"""'n1tlon ot the rMI ...... 11 ........ Callfomll. ' t21ot .... ,.....,_,.,.,, ..... ~---~.. . --Ntmee of 1ntandod trlnlf9f-· .. ;.. ~ ...__. ~Ml ~to Mid~ property•'* """"'llf'""""l8b0¥e"'---.0..,
tAANCISCO .i. SOTO end J08i vrct;'rl:nD";i';;''hfti8''r:i 1~ ,,.OCflllNO I.Al : an 111ere1ner lleunderalgned le~tob«4431W.OllllC
GARCIA 1088 8H lluff Drt111 t21'0t ' ' ~ Ol'1 ~; .-:lflOclolofbtwlhendof ~:..:.Y• Newport IUOh, co.. ....... c:.ittomtL ' ~ -..... AM~ PHOTO ~IOOIATION, IMetlOfl le be r900l"dacl F*'*Y Klncl of 1101fi. ln'41161d to be TNlllee fof ~~ ~ 2212 MltUn AvenV., hit• 212, 14, 1Hl.111n11tr.Ho.82.ol41~7.0f Ttl• 11nder1l1n1d horlby
traneferred: A!TAIL ,ACKAOE 1129 ~ Dl'1\te ..,... ,.,;,.,-·7• IMM. CA ~ti. Mid OllGlel AeoOl'da. dleclatme •II ll1bltlty for 1ny Of"F-8ALE GENEAAL '-ICEH8! 21 t27ot • 2·Ta INTlllNATIONAL, INC., llld .. ,. Wiit be mada, bl.It i110011•c•o ... "' ............... 103957. Hero.o T la9"1C1ort\ Jr a Cattlorn11 :oretto11, 2222 w1t11011t oovon1nt or t11rrenty, 0t otfllf' ocwntnOf\ ...,....._ ..
Totll ooneldtf'ltlon to be paid for TruetH tor Ttleodor• ·..,.ito Mel1ln A--, ~ta. WW.. CA ..,,,_ °' tmpled, ~ tMa. Seid ..... be ,.... .._,. ttl• buetnHI end Ileen•• 11 SeoentrOt'11 1121 ~· ~ 111111. lllllllllD 1, « ~ to warrenly, aaprHI or IMpllecl.
JU, 1 u .H . < 1) Cuh to be ..,,._,.,,., c,. 12.,., Tiiie ~. •. ~ by •
1
_. h •=:P llftndMI""" of t991rdl119 tttlo, P0'""4oft. Of dtpoeited 1n MCtOW eaoo.oo: (2) HetQ6d T le;awom. "' oorpou1llolL the "°'* by Mid Died of e11cun1br1noH, to Htltty th•
Dlmlnd nole for tM ~ oi TNM9 for...,"'-llDI It~ l·T'.i 11"911*'°'*, lho. ~ .,_.. .. In -6d note ..,..... .....,_ of ...... OI' Ollltl to be dlOoal'8d tn aeorow 11n..,..,.. Ol1lle. e.nt• AM. Kw 0 . HbcOn; • ecMno1e. tf ~1 uftdet ~ o~llaleton ...,,. llW Mid 111,000.00; (a) Oomlnd Noe. to be ff708, ~T,......, -••IN ..,,. °' .-:I Dl9d GI .,,,,.., Died of 1'NM, wllf1 ......... Md
1Ubflltute4 by two 101111 Mine ...,.. T l•D• •om. Jf .,.,,.. ....... " .. .._ """ttle ~ ~ encl ...... °' .. °"* MHM -~ ....... ;
......... Jool ......... "' 141 .................. ,, .... :l:'I'.\::. ............... -..::.'l:::.--c:.:::: .. -:..=;_~
ll'lomlmf"1 Note"""'°' of..,.. letWetrOfft 1111 ~ Ortw • ,._ ..., -... Ille._ on,._ .....,.._ enc1 ,,.. ..-.. Corr~• "odtltuea Hl,000.fO . ..,.. AN. CA er1'I. ll'Vblllllecl °'"'" COMt ft&-. June as, 1191 • t.00 p.lft., Ill .e encl_... ol.,. T of
TCIUI. tn, ttt.lt. ...., _....... ~ 114 W P'lo4i JIN .. to.,,, M . 1M -• ~ AwrM "*-. IO tto h "'* ~...... of
T ti t P I • 0 • w " •' o t II e ,.,,,., w.t Ul'llolt, IOW9 ta 111. ' ' ' ":;..._ OMct-~tef Mldlfte 800 1... Tf\lat TM tM .. ""°""' of ... =:::::.:.:.-:-.::: 11111:"0::-:.:.·,,,:~ . ~A--."' 'h '-of ••Ill ....... IMIUd9nl lllll MtJ
1a to be paid ta: WUTIM MUTUAL llPOI. l'9JC llJ11l:l Or--. Olllomla. Htllftat•d ..... 9"~ ....
nc.-ow CQAll'OMTIOM, t401t lllY ~lrW tiptAtOftll, t m -~rt:• tt111e o• tU lftltlof :c:: .... TNllle.11• ....
•. Yon. ............ 101 • .,..... ,..,. Miil. =Mao OA tl10I. 't:.1:l,_,. :.... .. .:~·=.=--= ft M .... ._. .. ~.~1C:.-:';;:'9,t~1~e n•'=~~'°"'· ~-==•114 ""°" ~.dolftt ~:'o~~ •• 'T.:: :r t':::1t~n': ~ :--_._.• ---etton for the ....,of h ..,_ a ~lptlO 800KKI~ ............... lilM''" lftf '-°"" :noN. ~=':."::o~== ..=.=.:••ttnua., ::::.c...:..J'~~'U:l ~~••• ,:/...;.. :.~~--4 :..:=:. ';::. C::,'* .... °':,...... .__,..._ L. OatpeAtW, 444 ~ ._ ... (7,.q 117 ... -: !i:.:.,~im .......... ...._ .... -... La .... • , ~ . ....,.. ..... o. ....... ..... u...... ~'9MCI;
lioldet: WHTl"N MUTUAL a ' Mo ,_...._._,, tltl •• '"-'·~......... :.,_.. .........
liOf'OW. ,., z·,-== . '· ....... -0. .... ---..... 101 T\1111\ ,.... ...... L 0..= •. _...., ~~1filWLXllL.. ~---· -.--... -~ .. If =" 1 ~ --.r .... I .. a....... ... °""" o..w. =·-I -· ·-a ..._ •t. -~ ;•e • " P-. r T-~· ,.:-.::: =· CMIC ._. ~_..., ot-. Ge.a •••• 11 °""'9~ ,..._ 0.... Di1r flullllil or..-. • --,.., ....... .,,. ... _ ............ ,.,,J ........... 1.-,..., ....... ,,.· ... .... .....
r
1
lOOAL HOUtlHO
O,,OllTOIOTY
,......., ....... ,
All ...., ""'' ldYertlMd In ftll• n1w1paper la
au~ to the Flderll Fair
Hovalng A ct of 1988
wtllch mekM It tflegll to
adverllae "any
prefefence, llmlt1tlon or
dlaerlml"atlon baaed on
r11C9. COior, rellQloo, Mill
or "'Ilona! ortgln, or any
Intention to meke eny
auch preference ,
llmtt al lo n or dlecrimln111on."
..
NlllllU 11111
Prise WNt Bay bayft0nt. SUpe for 2 boata,
remodeled 3 bdrm. 1.i bath Sl.200,000.
cnao &t j('tly viewl'M.tine room. 4 bdnn. 3
bl\h, 3700 111 h .. t l.38&,000 Ooee.ntront..
Liii ISll 1•11
t'nrM L ido Nord bayfront 5 bdrm, 5 1-1 bath
Lge L H, 2 bollt slips Sl.500.000.
Remodelt'd 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rtt rm
beam et>thngs, furru.shed. pauoe $420,000.
LlllA llLE UYFllllT
.....agoon vaew from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom,
dark rm. dl.'n, Boat shp $1 ,350.000.
BAYSIDE COYE
Spect.tcular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up, 2 br.
2 ba dn 2 boat slips $1,900,000.
CORONADO CAYS
Thi. MWSf>Aper wlll not
knowing ly accep't eny
adlle(11tlng for real ntata
.nlch la In viol•tlon of the law. Coronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil dock. Plans avail. Red. $370,000 w/terma.
ElltU1 Advertisers ILIFFS CDllD should check their a d a d a 11 y a n d Single st.ory end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba ( e p 0 r t e r r 0 r on li.rgelft greenbelt, $250.000
Immediately. Th Piii L•O OAtLY PILO assumes llablllty fo 3 bdrms, 2 'n baths condo near pool. $145,000.
the first lncorrec
Insertion onty. ...... ,,,,.,, ..............•.......
Y1EW LtTI oeatu Ill 1W1
Four contlguoua R· 1 loll
with bey & OONI\ vlewl
Qute1 Coron• del Mar
locatlon. 75% financing Gt.n ~ purch ... d HP· 11ately 1585.000 MCfl
1714) 67M400
IZlllU .. ZIH
MAABOR
A Ol\1~111n nl
II arbor lnw~tmenl Co
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
34'. Boy\1d"D""" N 8 67) 61ol
RES~TIAl REAi. ESTATE SERVICES
IUlll YlfW ltW 1141 ....
Attention: Builders & investors!
Ocean view, large lot, fee land,
super location & priced to sell!
Inc ludes 3 BR uncompleted
remodel with plans for completion.
Great potential!
...... ,
PAYlml
l'or alx monthl on li'Mr>d new townhome In COiia MMe. Featuring 2 m .. ,.,
au11 .. , enelOMd geregee
& prlvete courtyard. Only
$114,850 2t70 Sen Ml·
glHll Or, Newport 8Nch
759·1501 or 752·7373.
~ ·Walker 6 Lee
°''"A' Oet DAILY PlhOTIThurtdax, JY!]! 3, 1eaa , *
01ang1 Coa1t 11tldlnt1 "°"Oht 42% of
all new car• 1old fn th~ count11 IOlt ,,.or
1v1n through tMJI com,,nH onlv ~ of
the count11'• population .
.. . • • I • • .. • ,.
' . . . ~' ..:..>. ~ ' . .
P!!f!!!.f~. ~.~ .••.•...• r~ ..
f!!!l'.~.~~!!!e .. !.i.!1 •u11.,,.. !'!!11!!.~ .. l.~I
L!ASl!/LIAH Ol'TION .... 314 BIG CANYON Cono\fort1· Loe newly remod. 31t, •••••••••••••••••••••• bl•. •P•CIOUI Deane 2
1&1, tam rm In Irvine OC·A!HTAL.8 Br. 2 8a. tam, rm. 0Ulld
T 1 r r • I 1 5 O O I m o • 1·5br'a 1200.12000 g 1 1 e d . I 1 1 7 IS m o •
131·7l11, 145-0445 750.3314 Open 7·d1y1 840-l512, e7tt'91
Cflll, #,,, JUI · 1 IUe t1 ..... ~ o.n~ concso. a Id 2 •••• QC.'RENTAL8°•••• 4 bdrme. 2 bl home 81. 1895/mo. l'red Te·
Mbr'a 1200 10 12000 NNt ac:hoole, enopplng. nore, egt 831-2711.
750-3314 Open 7-days 1875 mo 851-8800 Beaullllll IAltge 3 bdrm. 2
BRAND new 3 br tor di• ba condo.. 1911~. 2 cw
Tll L-' nw crlmlnaung 111n11y Total· gar. ~12nr,".g-o« 11150 ly upgrlded. 2'A blka to 1_m_0_-_._ .. ___ _
A•"' In Cott• MH1'1 bch Nope11 11.200mo 100111111 1rfMtt. JIOO NEW E 8 T 0 ate d 2 0 AM/PM, 833-0145 ·····""•;¥............ Townhome VILLAGE <••--> IPPU YAU.IT COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br 3 Br. 2 Ba, lrg tenc yard By the month only BUT ........... 2·~ Ba 1soo.1eoo ~. h leOOtmo. Tu _,.,,, ol PIK• luxuni G11-. 4llt-11711 only 1900/mo. tor 2 Br 2 NMf new 4~. 2 bdrm. ·' ..,..... 8•. weltc to beedl Avail. 2 beth eech unit with hydro-tuba In muter 3 BA hOUM, wllk to bch, ffom June 20. nr-'~·. ·~•··.,. nauo, aul te, dining roome, eclloola, park mv1 ape/ 1 I ---...,._.. ...... .,.... ,... wood burning nr~. 14.lndeck, 1p1c, & more •· '"--•• Bffiutlf\JI 4 Bdr home wt garage, 11+'•-111 Poa. micro-wive oven•. prl· But thla, $785 mo JUIUIMIT
epectacular view. Excell CHh flow. Now $1511, v. I. p It I 0. & 9e0-1818 lll-1111
owner flnenclng. $4115, 500 Biii Grundy, Altr, yerda,gerdener prov•· --------1---------
et.OE LAGUNA CHARM 000. 7511·1114 evee 111 _8_7_5l.SRl~81il·iilifiif--ded. Efegant living only HIT Tl llf PW OC·AENTALS
Unique 2 bdrm floor 8PM. 15 mlnu1n.lrom Feahlon Get• you atarled In reel 1·5br'a $200-12000
pl1n. 1 bath. llv rm wt --1-deal--C-an-al-Fr_on_t__ AT Tll lllOll lal•nd. 7 mlnutn to S.C n tate ownerahlp 750·3314 Open 7-dl'fl
beamed celllnga, hard· 5 8A 3 BA w/frplc: home, Smell home on ComlMI'· Plue or O.C.Alrport. 2 Br. TownhouM with A\trKtlve 4 bdrm, 3 ba. 2 wood floora & cozy loo redecorated, eleo lncld. clal lot on the Penln. 1101 Ju at eut 01 Newport pool, H.B. 1575/mo6 alory, cuatom Newpon burning trplc. S t67.500 wooden Piiio wlamall trom bHch. Owner wlll Blvd. & ao. or San Diego 2 Br Nor1h Cotta Meaa Heighta lcMel for aherlng 111#1 /11 .. 1 IOOI Full Price. boat doclt. 2 cat garage. 11 13115 ooo AN Frwy. Stanltlo" HOO 1 14~5/mo alnglea. $1500 mo. •••••••••••••••••••••• MISSION REALTY 4 blU to OOHn, 1289. .;:;., 87~8700 • month. 831·8439, 2473 Let I get your lnv"tmeol 646-8789
Unique & ch1rmlng 3 br & 4114-0731 000. 714-831-8542 or 1-::----::-----:i="'I Orange Ave .. Coate lllr1ed. .,.--,--__..-----
loft. Lael opt or trade for --------731-2811 ,.,, •• ,,, .. ,,. l60d Meu. Agent &62· 1100 c L 0 s E T 0 B E Ac H . _:u::".:::":.:•._:8::,.:7:,::3:::·8::5::8:;5·:..._ __ ,l •-------•I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • • • • • • • • •• • ,-•• "' •• • • • • ahopa, achoota. 4 bdrm, --------•I SAVE$$ budget mlnftd 3 BR, 2 be, 1dnt 1re1. 2 2 ba, fenced yd. Children THnHOGI ILll • HH • llllll llDIE•T lllLLllEI 1br, ..,.,.Y P•Clo 1275 car g11. 2 ml. to beach OK No ...... 11 1 ...... r ,... c , ,,, IOZI PIRHmOI iiiii llTARI ~1-12&6 OC-RENTALS 750·3314 $750 mo. 982·71140 ... 's115s45.5089 .!.'.! ••• !~••••••••••• " flewia. '4 bdrm tlngle VIEW. Avlllable lmmedl•· ~~~~~~~~ •SA YUN Yeerly. I BA ground floor 3 Br. 2 Ba apllt level. NB 10 ltW•fl story on an ldeel low traf· telyl 3 BR. 3 lull beth•. llfT1 ....... 4 Bdrm 2 Be lamlly condo, 2 UT X"· Enct Condo, 2 gar-1poo11. lie s1feet In model home -u; ti ...,..,... • 25 a .. 1 -..-Hou1e plua 2 unlta. Prime condition. ProfeHlonally muter aulte wlretre11. Tride for N.B. oceen-home. Quiet arN. Avlll pa o . .,.,.,.. • • ...,, Cloae to Hoeg Hoap.
Eaattlde 20K below •P· 1 d .. d • V • r Y Pr Iv• t e • P •. front "'ome. Owner Immediately. Many eme-875-8120 Iv nltQ 1785/mo Bkr 848-7332. an eceped, .. an 'I man 1 $2900/mo. Bee Arnold " ltlee 875-41112 BKR p1al111, xlnt lnveatment ~age. 2 trlplel, commu-844..e200 (B50) 1800,000. 3711 Su· n · lnbu · 3U4 BLUFFS 3 br, 2•1o be, 2
QPPOf1unlty or tax llhelter. nlty pool, ape and tennis. ahore 873-8578 EXEC 3br, Prlv. atudy, •••••••A••••••••••••• aty e.autlfuUy remdld., IS~/mo neg wino down Only 5 yra old. Tranale<· Turtlerock Tax He~ Oueena kltch. ONLY Deerfleld. 3 8r, 2 B1, all extru No pell. R«'a
or breik even w/20% red owner will help fin•~ Luxurlove 3 BR fem. rm $600 twnhM, frplc, 2 UT 011 wlll be Checked Avt 711.
down $135.000 Owner/ ce An exciting new otte-office. deck. trl-level, OC-AENTALS 750-3314 !!~~.,;,,s-'1 1~ IP2p'!.~ (213) $ t ,200 mo on 118 ~~11~4!;!~8~~:1:e ~~WoJ:r""'el'f prlceel corporete rent11. 1 11. 3 er. 1 B• 111ge y1td. "~" ~ """ .... _840-__ 40_50 _____ _
eves O&U 144-l211 000 Income per yeer redec. 1963 Contlnentll. UNIV PK. apac 38r. 28a ... ,. ,__.., 3111 w/115,333 tnt"98t Mtn $700/mo. 5SP..5001. twnhM, gar, AC, frolc. no •••••••~•••••••••••• IUOM ti IWI Prln. S2H.OOO uaum Eastalde 2br Tr~ l>tl· ~ta. lie, 529-0384 2 bdrm, 2 be. ~view.
BMUlliul detlciled 3 be-U11 loan. PP Call tor Silo-Ito, Kida. TOoAY $430 Turtletock 4 St. 2 Ba. lam flrept.ce, gar, petlOI. ref
droom condo lltueted In ••••••i wlnt only Cell owner OC·AENTALS 750-33;4 rm, din rm, vu ot u C.I $790 4117·21411
Eutalde Coate Meu -egt. 851-3040 Ext. 5e Gardener, w tr & •••n
Hu 2'n batha. lhplace, 3 bdrm blrgeln for bu~ , .,, 1 •-• ••-2 &. enclllO g8f9ge, car-du 81 1nc1 d L 8 8" Wnt.Wl•t 1111
lou ot IUI*" upgredae. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii derl on extre wide lot with ~ ••• ~~.~~~ •••• ~ pew
1
ta
1
• drapeNa. 173 W. s 1 2 o o / m 0 Ag 1 •••••••••••••••••••••• Cua tom drtpH Pluah _. --· aunny patio. A muat to 1 0 n . 0 pet J . M 1_...,,32_ HOME FOR RENT
II H twl ""' •"-.... 1525 93 1189 "" 2 Bdrm $475. Garage. 1 cerpe ng. .. apa, ~ condo. 11t TO ..,...--'-"'°-·_1_ ... ___ 1·w-o_o_o_B_A_IDO-E_C_O_N_D_O_· chlld OK, no peu.
oat BBQ Three eeparate S35,000 Sale price $65, 2 &. y11d. no peu, child 28r, tncd yr-d, launO rm. 645-2000 Ag«lt, no tee. ::i~~~~.r S=~ ~00 terme or l.!.~·000 ok, West81de. 1550/mo. $600/mo, evall 811, wtlllng to ll11er1 to ottert ;uh to to.an. UWTNIAgt. 841-0783. 551-2554 C..#.U.J .. 1
1192,000. 1179·2390 1134~1~·20<>~~3 ~~~~~ 4 Bdr, 2 Ba. formal dining, _1_B_r-. -.,-c-. -,r-p-lc-. -w-a-lk-ln U•l•nl1t-4 34Zf
TARBELL. REALTORS l BR 2 OA W brld ~~~~~~~~ .... -family rm, 3 car garage, clo1et dllhwuher Rec R;;;.'_j1;;·;;,~;.-~;;.·~; -3-B-r.-,-B-a.-hou-H-on-ler_J:_ SFD Muat'aetf1 ...... ~~ = - -LIT 111811· 715· Reta req'd. IK . 5Sa·5050 · sc Plza. Pool, grdnr. 50 17"' 3 It 1 1 4 6 · "'1 1 •••• ........ _.,_ ninr $695 Incl. gardener. --------•• x " Un o · late. HELP. 857·2045 ~ _.,_ Panoremlc view on 559-8221 SpK upgraded 3Br 2~B• Dtv111 1Br. No pet1. -eo
Hamilton. Do not dlaturb --------Super lhAl'p 3 Bdr, ft· Newpor t Bay and ---------i twnhse, ram rm, AC, 2 & $35 ulll. 775-2580, tenanu. 1129.000. £11,01 lffoj JIHI mlly rm. den, formal di-Pacific Oc-ean. Prime 3Br 1ba angl fam $550, car gar, pool etc.· ldMJ _5_se-_1_6_2& _____ _
541-5041 evee & wknd,, •• ••••••••••••••••••• n1ng, beaot. pool, •P• & location. Over 8800.000 ht & laet. Weatelde 1oc end unit $795 mo
631-3520 wlcdys. UMOll patio. Excellent quiet of __.t>ae flnandnf. 842-2904 or 548-0590 752~5716 · · A rtll I Tin/. t-4
IUI Tu IOUll FamlSlyK~0L!!:E ~tAhEA~·" raaldentl1I locetlon. Be11 avallab0001e lot on •11 8 wkc:tys. Refs req. .'r.. ••• !~.! ••..•• .' ••••
" .. _ ... -· $1850 pr mo. $3~.000 IUdc'e· ••• 3b0. 1mw .. , ... "''•' 1111 5(1 DOWN! /NNE...,PORTCr&rr9R 3 bedroom rancti atyle and hill view• • good option prl,W. Agt. •Clean 1 br duplex, ott 2br. 2be seoo ••••••••••••••••••••••
I /() • ""' .... I... "WMtalde" home hU • loan. 1285,000. 78().9333 ·,r (114) 790-1900 •trMt ;>Mtg. Quiet. S350. 2br. 2'~b• 1711S..$800 WINTER RENTALS
lovely red brick ftrepl.ce I-... YHI-• • l -.. I _ __:~===!:::..-_N_o_P-';..._•_·_83_1_·_72_20_· __ , 3br, 2b• seoo AEOIA PROPERTIES UlllEI PAii 644-"'060 In thetemllyroom Ruatlc .._ -' ••SM. I-Spac;IOUs, clean. qu.let 3 3br, 2be S1400 Furn. Balboa lalend YU.WE '::I celling ,.etu,.._ AMr yard 411· 1111 Beaut condo In Bluffa, 3 HARBOR RIDGE br. 2 ba. Nr SC Plaza. 3br, 2be S725 Lag. Hiiia 87~ la luah with tree• end , • •in IO"• BR 2 Ba. fplc, 2 petloe. Pr1me vu. Sale/trade. $850/mo. 117~ 11142 2 & 3 BR Townhomea lhf1Jbl 8ttelt ftoor petlo wil.D• llUUI -plantation 1hutter1. Make otfwr. 759-0481 C.... lfl lfu 11Jl
Coe11 Mele and much morel Ot"'9 ua •• ••••••••••••••••••• charmlngl Reduc ed , •Br. 2'h twn rm condo. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••
Includes ""1ry amenity 1 call today and come ZERO IOWI! $179.500. 1 111.000 ... #•ul1h, Dn«f, tennla. pool, !K. 1at. lut 2 Br, 1·~ be twnMe apt
lm891n.blel FllD IPPll/ll. _,._•ST ... 1 take e lookf 1 1211.llOO Immaculate 2 Bdr 2 Ba tum lne 11 12%. annual ,_, Ull & • e c . S 8 5 0 mo Comm pool & tennla
FROM $137,950 _, --117~2390 mobile home In beautlful 1M $342. Ael1'00' '111. •••••••••••••••••••••• 848-0790 $750 875-1225 F~m. Model Open 2 br hOule + beCn.lof Anxious corporetlon TARBELL REALTORS L1gune Hiiia perk. Sml dWn, OWC bel. An-Lot 58 Tlihoe 111.nc:t Prti, .,.ChObt--,-... E-.llde--2--&-.-1-Ba.-I "-~. •-· n·•.6
-Avoca!,~6F~ Rd unit Owner will flnence. ottering VA terms on Ihle IWllR -· $800/mo pays all. Frplc, Jdoual Agt. 720-1280 Id no. 3 In So Ulk• T• enol. patio. dbl ger • !'!"!".':.!'!::: ......... ~!'
1531
-4
381 ~ YKant 2 8dr home on lrg _.._ wllk·ln ~ntry. AIC. p1ua, Drutic.tly r9duced PfQ hoe, lot dre't!" In 1982 leundry facll. Quiet GARDEN Apia. Adufta. No Hit jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij cor"er lot lncredlbly O&ll · plua. $38,000 total a.. on end unit condo In The lottery tor bUlldlng S.-ldulta welcoma. 1590 & peta StreMI & waterfall. ~~~=~~~~;1 Ill.ft prlcec:t
11
only $13,500. 2 Br I Ba.+ 1 Br 1 Ba. king prlc» Blvffa. 3 BR 3 8a. lge fllJ\ -& lottery I-paid. MCUI'. 84S..7234 45• pool, rec: rm. eeune. 2 ' 1"4 THE BLUFFS 751-3191 72x105' A2 lot Do not rg\\bod rm formal dining rm 2 135,000 CHh. Call eft br. $485 842-8e70 •lllOIAL Thll 4 Bdrm condo 11u It ctlaturb ten1nt1 1528 ~i br1dge •ty'wtwr~CNnd patio. 8PM, 9tM2&-48811 542 11111 PIT1 M
2 ator.,1 blodc 10 ocean 111 • 1>eem ce111nga with OrenW9 11211.000 Ruley Aaaumable 1oan1 01 Ill>-Fairview Dr, PlllC8fVllle, EASTSIDE 2 Br. g11age. Oil.UR PAii 6nthit••
25% down. Owner wlll edded akyllghls, upgra-=~~ :,-:.! wknda, 551 .3000 pro• $188,000. Aaklng _c_a_9_5e8_7 _____ 1 1595/mo. 842·25 to, 2 bdrm, 1 ba. hlghly up. JaMj 1141
cerry belenoe. S285,000I ded kitchen. centrel alr;------~---. _____ i_· __ lm BitrHu Ph\,lr~•11~ $225,000. s.iw wlhelp 'Jo lnt.,..t condominium, _84M3 ___ 48 _____ graded, flreplece. own ••••••••••••••••••••••
...... llJ ,..., conditioning With hUmldt-., .... tUllll nlT FllWIOIR llnenca. AM oftWI COflll. lndlan Well• Racquet Lg new 3Br. 2~8a Condo, Jee:. Nr pool 2 cat ger 1.1.'s FllEST • llhn ' tier, great locetlon, good Only 172,000 tor thl1 On thla upgraded 4Br W1 F1r•1I 1115 d«ed. Owner. 833-2009; Club. (form111y B1lboa many xtrn. 1vall June ~ily~.1~5~~7r>· Aval.I Spaniltl Eltete LMngt 1
financing and In move-In classic home Lrg 1 Br llome. Seller wllf carry •••••••••••••••••••••• 640-8379 Bay Club). 494·711117 15. 1750 mo. 41111-2300. ---=-.,.-,~,----I S.•ulllul park-ltke M.ir-*111-lOIO* Condition.
1249
•
500
· wlloads ot mahogany $100,000 •• 12'Y1 or PARI PUCE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I .• ,,,.... • 831·7100 TURTLE ROCK roundlnga. Terraced _ U,._.l()U1:11VMl:S1 moldln9. FeeturH In· A 1 T.O. al 12%. Don't 1fW Ull llll f., Ir• 2 Br. l 'lo Ba, pv1 patio, Townhome w/lriew, 2 br, pool Sunken g .. bbq,
Easy -see O'·agraml RHliors. 875-6000 coludwn'ewfr newlcelll 11"1n~11"P0'9,.· mlsYhls one! 1145,000 EITITEI Fabulouj n..,. home on Wutffl llOO a1mo1t new. $600/mo. ~cenbtae'r.2 .c8•0r0 gmior .• cr•,
1
c1 aparkllng fountain•.
• 631•7370 • Call W711·5370 .. Ill. 2,L i•. large atrMt-to-atrMt lot. •••••••••••••••••••••• LI n d a 7 6 o . 9 3 3 3. • Ir Spacloua roome. Sep•
,. n • Elegant muter aurte With AAA ••m IHIS ..:640-:::::..:e&:::.2:.:8·:-.----hri::95i;i1:;·-;:20;:;8:;.8:;:;. :;-;1AA"?'iii; rete dining arM. Wiik-in llUYllUI FlllPLD BETTER Tl-iAN flreptece 8nd balcony P1u1 -rvlne Grovee 3 BR, 2 Be clolets. home lfke 11ttm.
Attrlletlve Spanish 2 Br MODEL 3 more bdrm1 No ·~ EXc:hange for RN1 E.atete. 3 BA 2 Ba, frplc, doted condo, IH option or Mii er1 & cablneta. Welk to lurnletwlc:t 4-plex. No v• HAS EVERYTHING 18 ... aparld 10 ...,,.. mull be clear or near back yerd, 2 carlg1r.. 1725 mo. Prln only. Av! Huntington Center.
cenclff Good loc1t1on Cul-cl4Hec ltreet quality and granc:t men,_ dMr. $750/mo. 548-8195 •ft July 1, 549.391 e eva 1 Bc:trm·lurn, $505
South or Rlveralde. Exlnt 1_ ...... Sun & Sell !I Club to thle unueuai anc:t beau-'600,000 to 110,000,000 8:30 544.7575 dys. 2 Bdrm-tum from $605
term• Reduced to $129, '"'"n -•• 20 mlr1. to tllul prop«ly. your tax eon1ut1ant1 ep. -E-I --1-2-B--2-B-l....---------1 2 Bdrm TO'#nhoUae tum. 500 Saffy Shipley'• Ila· ---------1 Tl llU1 Newport Certter 142 1200 prov11 1oflclt1ted. Reta egan r · •· Executive home In Deer· from $875
ting 75g..9100 Aeiclbl9 nr,anc1ng on this $210,000 With 1160,000 • lum. Btcrs aubfntt. ereethtakln~vlew, ell field. 4 bedroom, 2'A be. No!>-'•.
I 38 h I t 12.,~ flM.,. •• & Ill--·-amenltlea. 18 Imo. 2500.,., 11 $1200/month UtHltlM Free! :!ct pa~lo, ~:i,: r~. • futly~.,;~ ,~..-..-PROPERTY HOUSE Inc. ~ol 'm•l"tenana. IOIUT lllLLllEI
831-12" GEOR'>E ELKINS C
Find CNI about Ila. high •.•• ... --I • earning real •lat• ..... -•• ..... c.reer opp6nvnltlea with Oulet. pafk-llkl aettlng.
THE REAL ESTATEAS Rm for peddle tennis and
Llcenalng achool tee• pool. OrMt for orchard.
completely relu"d•ble to Cul de l8C st 3 bdanl.
achool of yoor choice tam rm. 1379,500 fee.
Ex1ens1ve..,.. v1Jnlng. 144-4t11
For Information, c111
751..e1111
SELL Idle 1tem1 with a 0eW Piiot Clalelfted Ad.
,... .
TAY LOH CO I
,t ' ' -~ --
11~4' • 11~4' .. 11~4' "'· ....... ,, ...... ...,. .. ..., .......
...... '9aNfr 11 ..... 2 W.+ ...... .... , ........ f1~~ft~ .........
• ..... '""':~th @ Hl-1111M It. 1ff ........ 111-1•.
WATFRfRONT HOMES.I'« to \I Hiii'
I H I I• \j
!llHo \\ I ''"•I ti.,,
'•·1•'" 1i.-.. " 831-1400
IPflnlllet•. '"*'•'1 more. No polnll or qulllfylng. &42-3450 842•1010 end garci.ner. 844-5829, LA QUINTA HERMOSA
$129,500. Cell 11711-5370 • 77()..()347 IDT " "' PUii 875-2886. 18211 P111!alde Lii. 1 blk
.\·{>I l I tlFt/'
P~ A I "• ' '". t •, f f/,f ., "',
4 Br. U4 Bl 2 ltQfY. pool,
upgradee. 1~ Concord
St . ..,~5.000. Term1.
54S..3847
Aaeume t '-+% VA loan, 3
bdrm home, large lot
LOS Const. Co. $1111,000
8J3..12e5.
FHIOUHll W.l
MeH Verde • br. 6ntv
S 10,000 dwn. tl97-2338 Agt. .
PUIUTnlt
Mitt from the bHCh.
8-uttlully built Buccota 4
ri
Bdrm, 3 ba pfua family oom, formel dining room.
ocatec:t on cul de 11c
atrHt. BE CREATIVE
WITH THE FIN.ANCING.
Aaklng 1Hi 1,900 Cell
540-1161
· HERITAGE
IH /\I TOR'•
-~--
Owner/Agent ._Uh ~"you aterted 1n r..iex --ec:-. -home--4-B-r.-3-ea-.' w o: Beech, 3 blka s ot ~~~~~-~~~~ ·~~~~~~~~ •••••••••••• •••••••••• .. tete ownenhfp. fem. rm., !annal din. rm.. Edinger ,...,.,, J.;d JllS ..: • ..,., hn.JdM 2 Br. North Coal• Mesa. 2 trplc'e, ent ICNnt, Kol 141·1441 .• -•• .-.-................ ILlm •••••••••••••••••••••• 14751"'°· pond, covered outdoor -Q-u-le_t_J_u_n_l_o_r -,-1-B-,.-. IAlllll VIEW Slngle ......, lovely 3 8f C.... 111 llM 3111 2 Br. Townhouae with apa. In bHt part of From 1375. Pool. rec. 11,u.s w/encloeed yerd, pvt •••••••••••••••••••••• pool, H.B. l 575tmo. Tunletoc* For rental on rm., 11un1, encled ga· • petlo, on :uah gmbl1. QUALITY 3 80fW, derl, Let•a get your lnveetment annuli 1 ..... aoceee to rage. 17301 K-.on off
BrlQhl a alfy 3 Bel wlf1'/t Freehly pelntec:t, flftlly gwdener. Irv Ten-ece for •1M19d. tennla & poola peld. Slater. 142•7148. Mcluded "~ & Qtlf· Clif1>el9d. Onl)' 1222.500. tee. 873-3100 Ag«lt &62-1700 Gardener & pool clea· ---------
dent" Lrg menlcured 1 Selly Shlpley'a t11ttno. • •-._ 1111 12500 move• you In. nlng peld/11300 mo. "• ... i..A 1141
yerd on lee ~-$375. 7511-11100 aff....,., --· 1145,000 ,_ 2 & 3 Br. 2 A• f •• , • q . c I I I .. , .................. .
000 wl good terma. Pe-• •••••••••••••••••••••• Be. Condoe. 1650 ~· n.1_7_14_1_87_S-&804 ______ 1 Furn. Lagloun1 Beseo~u-,
trick or Fred Tenore Lrg 4 Bdrm. tamtty rm All amenltlet. Ctienc. of $950/mo. Woodbridge xury 11ud1 'epa, at .. nte 83 • cuttom pool home In • TV aauna maid Mrvlca c o u n I r Y • • t t I n g . • lltettme. L•ue option. Sycamore 2·•tv mdl. 4 h. • • • 11 51 k •
GEORGE ELKINS CO
12000/mo l•He. In· Phone 842·2000 or Br. 21+ ea. gardener. P one · • wee ·
GATE OIJAROEO HOME Cludea water, gardener & 1531·5055. comm. pool, epa. t.nnla, _4_911_·2_2_2_7· ____ _
IN SEA VIEW pool aervlce. Bkr. IUU nw 111 lake Inc.~ req'd. No ,,.,_,.... 1111
Thie well Cited for 4 ti.-831·7370 1>911. AvaN 713. 34 MM· ····""··············· droom tlome 1111 3 bath11·81-,-u-t.-t-ur-n-. -B-lu-ff-1-....,-n-h· 111 I I II T t WI· dowgreu. Ownr/ Agt
and lmprlMlve city ll'ollt me. 3 BR. fem rm, formll ... 559•822 1
and Catalln• aunHt dining 2•1o ba 2 1ge f1'lt
Vlewe. OOOd a.aum11>1e petloe & 1ge balcony
end Miier flnanclno le OYWloc>tllng pnme grnblt • :::.:;~able. 14115,000. S 1400 mo. 1 yr IN. Clll ..... ••a1 inan George Goldbaum. ..._ --Soutll lend Altra .
AlllLITllTUU -~--9-19-1 -------1 ____ ....;.... __ _
THE
''IOOD
UFE'' ~ ..
Socl•I AottvttlH
Olr1otor•Fr11 a und•lo ln.1oot1•~· .. ,~
mud! rnor9.
O"IAT RIClllATION1
Ten11l••l're1 an:.m
..
fer.!.~ •..•.•••
~~~~~~~!! 8~ I llllM ~. = Color bt1gllttnen. wllt
crp11 • 10 min. blMOfl. Hall, llV/dln. rme I 11: 1119
roon'I 11.ao: oouctl •10:
ctlt u. Ou1t. ellrn. I* odor. Orpt ....,.ir. 15 yr, a11p. Do work myHlf.
Reft, 531-0101
Al.hit • •• i;'S11~ ••••••••••••••
Oftwnya,:~ L°'
.. ~lte31-<11~
ALL8TAT! PAVING
lell00elln0-91rtolnll ~ COrnrn.IA.trd.
Lio Ot1Sla 84~8181
Den H811bef'g Oredlng
6 PirMQ Co. Aea/Cornl. Lio 391~ S.2· 1120
A•,._lln •••••••••••••••••••••• FINI SHINE AUTO
DETAILING. Guw.
Fr• PU/del. 642·~•9
... ,,, lllJalMUH/
lnftlf •••••••••••••••••••••• MARINE SERVICES
Mecflanle, P81nt, Ywnilt\.
TMk-r\11>-wu. 645-978e
Crptt lnttalllrepetred
r:lood d•m-ve. Slum ctng.154-1510, t13·858e
No 81tam/Ho ShMIPOO
8t•ln Specl•lltt. Fut
dry. Fr" •1. 83t-JH2
We cet9 C<pt ~
Sttam clMn & uphola. Trvck mount unit
Work OUlf. 846-3718
EXCEL CARPET CARE
Jiiek Buffington
Ownet loper•tor
Ciarpet, upl'IOI, w• NII
c:leanlng. WOflt GI*.
FrM Ett. 64S.171\1 --------
•••••••••••• ~~ ......... ~.,,., ........ lffH&............. •l•M'til ....... c • I ... •• =..~ Mllnl. l!flltntnOe ·~Houm'n'inl ' OUITOM llUCKWOl .. C •HIWANT'I•• vl101ft ""'· ::~~-ICottwtl ~ ""*'9 OeeorMlftA wia NftoNI '-*'· OM, IMA&.ULAAOI JOU W._lnt "9moYe1 ~ I """"* .,. . ....,
LI......,. ...._ ..... • Quality.*,,. 14M1l4'trV, "' .-MMllJ Npt/0114 ............... ,. All t;IMll. 142·'*"' :.;::.~,~.· M ~
MOWINCI • OLIAN Uftl l>Cf11RT HANO'tMAN HolJU = ... Wff .....,.... • ...... .m-i, ".... 0 •II • eo 11 I•. HtlUllnt . ~ -· o~""'ry . flloOflna cwwe.1. .r:=IOn· m;m ......... -. .... smimr.~........ .,...1111• ,,.. ._c, 141-ttOf ~. eM. ' ... 1..011 HlfgM 1 •Ato WVM'fO. Hiit ~I tmutel 1--------
.., .. or llNll )OM. MOWt~ i1w1 .. ato 1 KHOW-LIT'I QIT fleolftO Hou111lu1•11 ,~.::=~·0 '"' .... IQ.14" fltlfNln ........... .
LIO, HMU t7~1t HIUllDumt:llnl 111/UO IOOlll H!.:: fix eny• ,..!.Y!!.e!IP. ,·~1.J.-!917·0t .......... fll.MTIR flATCHIHG •lpMlttet-.W'*
M 1 , k tlltngl ~ ·--· ~· _.. *'" 1 ....... ""'""°'· 1nt/nt. io "'9 toomm. Co1111•dll UC'D WOTf'IOIAN 164-MCM/tQ.OOll JAOK Of' ALL TAAOU Yt:Nr l!W, ~oat, YOUf T~!Mllty. IHCNI aete Y"· Nett. 111111 141-2177 ~ ..,._ °'*-WOfk·,...._ rllte ..._ .......... , Cell Jd di)' 0t night o•rdertl We clean con• In •II yrt 'llCP· ID'I fl~ITIRIHO i----HH_T-t·-~-*---·-,,_ •, 131·6011 TOl'll W)r Ill pt.--•87"401•'* eoten\~. PIMN cell ltlft ""-ALL TYPH ~/00
TOft QUALITY ~:.·d, r:r:!11Yw':f~~ ~ IOMPL. HOMI MAINT. ""Mpf'n, •M-2921 NO !Me. no-1353 ,,.u UT. 141-1218 f!rm ••••••••••••••••
ILICTRICAL WOllll< ' · ' ,,_ ITA,.VIHO CO\.LIQI l.a"'°ftlaMet.-euooo PIMI r..... '31-IOll 11nd1.oe~ln9. Nl/OdM _..,, p!Unlb, pelm, Mui, t4ollMOitlnlng: MP'd, fe-NO PLASTtRl.Na Ttxt!H#-Thin w .. &.lllMMN_ a..-a1 onfY, ~. ChntenlnO. yd Olnu,p. ,,.. .... lllble ..... No tot> too ITUOIN'fl ~OVI INT/EXT. AHTUCCO. Stucco lttdl UC'd
r.n-;r.;;ea.l":':'tt'fl•• a-~~~~r~~ LIO 871-ts .. /e.42.14ee •ff.3at1 emall. Nlhr. Hf.3341 ~', u~~· Block Walle. ~lt2 08'Y t17.07" '
llllMOOIL/ADO-OHI '"',.....,..__... · ...._ .... -.. JOHN THI H .. NOYM"'N O r ~try, UO'd. ae 2S310l-Oo10. 64t-lm .... , ........ ,_ •• ·---· .. .. .....,HI_ WATCH UI QA WI lludlll• ,.,.. . _,. ..... ltWln Mlot1tt 1pr ng oletn·up, 111111. Plumblno-...o-odd .IOt>9 ••••-••• .... ••••n•••• •••• .. ••'••••••••••••• ,,. •• ··~ ....... ,.._._JW._ q11uo1C ••t·H7S b•I t Fr .. •llmet• 1eo-?et1 .-. ••'·"-u ILL Mt-1111 .. c~\:,;c;,-·1;: Fine '1nlthed c:upen~ ::::r.•~1.-:1......... am. 11.Tmll'M l:::"."n'A••••••••••••• *~ I UY* P t Celt Cnucll ~
Aemod. lp.o. Aand ,OAMICA COUNTIM Re1ldtnll•I. CIHn·up1, •-''--p111Y91 C:..~te75-1'40t•dyt Uc. <11tn1 720-1180 T099/c:aDlneta rehloed al ... ~.............. by A10111rd llnor. Lio. I ~ 1,1-i •.-I•
COMM'URUIO. ,,.. •t· 842·5357 p:~,:7~·.:' .~1i: OUMfl J08S Lift In MOUt'l\)t ptUt m•· 2806iM. 1S ~ ol l\appy .!!'!M.;;w."':Or.::... C!RAMIC-LINOUIUM
Aemod·Add'n .. Aeoeif'I • =·· 84 MOM(C.it WlllY) I 8m811 Moving Jobt ture kWlng oate for pet/ 100a1 euttomtn. a.l'n ............... T~. FrM _.,,.,.._ VfltY ,..._ Lio. 300210 , ... ,, • Cati MIKE 646-1181 pllnt.. Thenll you, '31-4410 ''" eet. A:;, ofloea, RM* Bob 81~5161
Jealt H. Bennett, Jr, I ""' IHIY0'8 OAADENIHO HAULING t d I h Certin.d HOUM 81t'*'9. •n• .,._ Ou81 work Lie 337tet. o.n. Oonlr. l&a·t1•2 ...................... "Totll Yard Care" -• u en 11 (Sine» 1179) 831·123' ~·-· •31·•23;6 ,,__,,
80ncled & lntured --· ., Motwldy. 55Ml232 tvt r,~~C.,~c;&:~.1;~·· 25 yr1 ~ ~ . .OOM1. v " ~p;-·k,;;:o•r;_i.;•A
."
• ... OMatlne I fd 841-7125 l.and~Yd Ctnupe Thank you, John. !1.'t'!!!f.fP.f .......... ~"3.ot~~ 1#/U• planttr ml• •nit. "r" U. ... Tree lflm.Expert "'81nt. nD aTlllftl _,......... • ..... , ............... del1 locelly 651·15et Lio. 308111. "•model, .,, ... ..., ,,,.,,. frAAatfon. Jim 851-0129 PROF. SERVICE • ,_ .. ._. .. ... b PAIM'TE" NEEDS ROOF FIREPROOFING • d d • n I o ab In e It ••••Ae••••••••••••••• ''V H•ullng • Ylfd cleanup ood, apr"..._ ... ni WOAKI SO )'l'I exp, Intl Mfg. gull(. of chemlcal. f•IW•
84MIM' ' REPAIR & INSTALL AWi.Lii ....... Qulek & deln. Fr• .t. lnll1118UOn. Our work Eld•. AcoWtlC oelllngt.. OO If NOW. Fr• •I. • ...... A ........... ..
G11r1199 dra. H.,dW.,., T rim ....,.,...., e7Ue.48 only loOkl e1pen1lve. "-vii Palntt.u. 847·5188 081111 P81ntlng 647·5188 M09t tubjectt, K·1<1 WAY CONSTRUCTION DMlgnlflalnt H0-1181 ,.. t • gen . ...,._.., Ct** our Pf1oet IMfore ""' ""' D•~8Ul'IUMr l10Wlt
Atmodel . Addltlont cement work, houu HAULING end IOcal mo-you &iuy, 0111 Mltk at EXTERIOR PAINTING REPAIRS 125 to 1186 Mr Morg8n 645-&Ht Lie. •20eo2 642·1200 ~ wrecking, ~9·1SO. Ying ltudent with truclt. UtJ't..,....... cu.tom WCN'k. Ff• alt. Free 191. c.i1 8"ytlme. . , .,., _ __.__.__.......,. ••••iliai•iiiiii•• Total'Ywd C.. by Ltwla e7~81IO UC 204618 . 641-15$f Reaa. +fine Int. & llM-WALT 110·2726
....._ .. ..,._ La~·~~·b lnit·" THE GRASSHOPPER HAULING.ORAOIHO ...... • -.a..•tu:c nlng. Steve S.1 ... 281 Hubel' Roofing-all typea. !'!~.~~~~ ..... FrM •t. Aeu. pr\OM. ...~.,_. .. "" .. , P81'tonai-Oeoend•blt d1mollt1on, clean-up. .-.. New-reoover·d•cb "Let the &intlllne In"
Oual. work. Lio. 337189. Tr• trim-removal DomlnlC 842-4851 Conorete I trM 1'9mOYal. CREATE A UN UE 11--'-Uc. ••11902. Ma.873"' C811 SUMlllne WlndoW 831-23'6 L•wn C819-Ro~otlll ENVl .. "'NMENT ••7.e°•711••••••••••••• • Oulc:tl ..V. 642·7'38 nv .. .,. pu111:aHANGINO --------i CIMnlng. Ltd. ~ Fr• •tlmatee • .,.u-.. Ken Conroy 875-0t<l 1 ""'" "'""""' G .,. JOHN HENRY CO.V' 20% Monthly Dl9count c. ... ffNlwrlblf LAWN CARE •• ...:l:tt:'············ ....... ,.. 1 yrt IOCal ••P· uw. Roofing fOr Fine Momee --------•••••••••••••••••••• • HOME IMPAOVEMENT ••••••••-;-::;:y ••••••••• ...,.. work. Prlce1 ttart at Lie. <116232. s.48-41213 •RES IDENTIAL* Crown mouldlng, entry Comm/reald. Nwpt/CM REPAIR-PLUMBING ROBIN'S OLEANINO •••••"'•••••••••••••• ta/roll. Mee 751·7027 MontlllyQtt1y D1ecount ... llLPll c. ... tlCatnlf .; doors, manUH, book· Xlnt. Nll•ble work. c....-.1ry, eleo, tile. Fr• 8«vlca . a tllof:= BRICKWORK: Small )Ot>9. ..~~u,,~-'-C CM• 957.a314 St~ ...... ft ........ bl,,._ •••••••'•••••••••••••• c Ml c-... ffft...., cl"--"'-·/IVV .. --.. •"'"7"12 _,....... u--.... ,._ M.... F---~ Int_.__~ _ _.. Ull _,, "":°:.::.:•,-~ C«neftt.ua.....,..u.Block • ' wv r ,._ ,,.. """' ....,,, -•T -..-,. •t. No Job tOO '"'811. cleen tl0u9e, 1 ,_.....,..,, """''' •• .,..,. ••••••••••• ••••••••• l deekt. ..._., _,,,. wa11s.o;;f'~ Uc Mtt. Wood eolut.lont to DellM 645-2811 lrvlne. Aef1. 875-3176 HA IHO 110/AO BUDGET AATES/Llc'd Ofange Coul Wlndowt
cal handym•n work. .. ... 1057 Ro. b ,.,.7· 2 • .;... wood pt'oblemtl G.,denlng WMted .io.n•a Cleanl"" Mrvtc. Quellty. Llo/11'11. Strip-Low min. Sml )obi OK. "We IMw you wtth a 8711-7951 .. ..., .,... • ...... 831·1528 Mowing, edging, r8k~, Carpentry · MMOnry ... · Cuatom Br'lck, Stant, pl~Olec. on P8P9'· Free ett. Ina. 641·7581 l>flohtar outlOOlcl"
0 I F t ......... _ • -·-bl~ HOUM8. 4f"· Rent81a, Block eoncr.t.. Stucco. Vt.o.-......... 645-9325 FrM -Im••• ....... • 111 Concrete: Remove Id, w-" ....... .....__....,._le •w••P•ng. r•• •• • ~'""' ......... noA..-.. 1287 ....... 'F -IUA ......... ·-.......... H d t d • -· ........... The t••l••I draw In th• Replace New. Smll~• --.. ·---~· t 645-5737 Oryw8ll -Stuoc:o • It ..,.,..,.., ....... ,.. _,, ........... , •v• you rea o •Y • w t O!,llt Pllol Hang.T.,,..Steef •tuda ma... .. __ ..... J B .,.. ........... Exp'd -b..w1d•ble AMd ... ctM•ltled .. for ClaHllled Adt? If not, CLEARVIEW WINDOW ~·~.~Today )ot>a. Repalrt. 64MS1 UC.~ 1·532·55"9 find whet you want In ,_,.......,. · · _...,...,""' Horieat[-lfiieiiioent find what'fou want In the beet dMlt In epert. you're mlaefng the beet WASHING. Reea. rtta
842..a87t. Sall Idle,_,. 842..ae7t Clmillid ~ 842:ei71 Olly Plot a.a111a The beatll 173-70'12 ev1 DalV PloC Q1a111a ment,.,...., 142.ef11 bargillnl In town! • yr1 1n .,.._ 642.s.4<1t
DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Sell yQUr no-longer-needed Items for cash.
If It doesn't aell, we'll run If '1\0ther 3
days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads.
Call today for full detalla.
( .... 11f1 f1Dl1 lllh ... 91..,
,',I ' l 1• I r•l ·
·. ·" .
-.. .
'3 ~t AYS
JINES
CLA881FIED8642•5678
OLLA RS
..
cn.eM 2 Futf time Poeltlona ...,. No exp. r~
Cell !or appointment.
75M577
COMPUTER: Part ttme. weekend HIHpiiraol\
wanted. Call: 5'1i-798T lllik tot Mr. Thom•
,.
CO"'l,...HL
(HEYi!::. f•
•. .
) "/, I ',.,, ----
WllTlll
&.11• MOdll To~llU, v~. "'°""'"' y.,., 01111.111~
~ .•.......•.. "-If
·11 c.ort. ve • 8pd, 1t1nt. SU7S, 1-822-4080
'73 CAPRI, .,.., gd. cond. ~MIFM, mutt Mii. 8 t,
ITS. 840-GOI e¥M
••• I
1 ..
Pertl l Service Open All
Dey Sllurday
301 W. Wt1N11 Ave.
( 1 bit!. -1 of Mein)
540-7430
'78 CYCC:, 1 owner, xlnt
cond. '3000/0 80 . Oya
213/372-4828, evu
873-e352
ATLAS CHIYSl.aft.YMOUTH
2121 tWbor Blvd., Cotta MtM. T•. 1546-1934. 3 bloc:tcal
eouth of San Di.ge> Frww111 ott tWbOf 81Yd. Complete
,body thop. &alel. Service. ,. S.Vlce Deot. open
Mondtiy thru Frldey 7:30 A_.M. to 5:30 P.M. end a A.M. to
I P.M. on leturday.
llACH IMPOITI
... Dow Street, Newport a.en. Tet. 752-0800. Cell w.
.... ,. the •P9Cl•ll•ta tor Alf• Romeo. P~eot. Sub I ,
Ma8!1fat I. •
THIOOOll IOllMI llOID
Modem .... ...vice, per11, body, pe1nt a tire depte. °"""9tlt.M , • ._ on ,_ a c111ty rente11. 2080 Hlllt>or
llwd .. eo.u. Meu. IG-<>010 or 540-C11. 1
MATCH THE MUMIEIS OM THI
MAP WITH THI MUMIBS IM THE IOXES
NIWPOIT DATIUN
8N Dove Str .. t, Newport IMch. Tel. 133-1300. At the
trlenQle of JembOr•, MecAtthur a 111eto1 behind Vlctorta
91atlon. Sllee, s.Moe, lMllnO I P#tl. We mike gN9t
deelel
• . MillllCAIMILAC ,
2loo Hett>or Blvd .. Cotta Meta. Tet. ~100. Or~
County'• Lergnt Cadlllec deller. a... Service. L.M. ·
. Ing.
• • DAVID .t. PtllJMIS IUICMaft'IAC-MAIDA s.1 ... 8etvic» • lAlllng
24111 Allcla Pftw9y •
137-2400
•
• SA& CHlftOLll'
IOO Soult COllll H..,._, ..........
~ ......... ,..,..
8Al£8 MOUN: Mon.~rt. •1 ..... K lk#t. 1H
4M-11'1
COSTA e.eA DATSUN a. Helt>« 8Mt., Colla Mae& Tel. 540-e410. Sefvlng er-. CcM#tty '°' 11..-.. 1 Mite So. 405.
•
.... &Miii•. INC. 71DW.1W.8l.C-.~SQl1 ... vou·,..,., •• .,..... .. ocw.._..
..
--A.clYertMln, Supplement to the Dall1 Pilot June 3, HG
-THE COSTA MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR
LIONS CLUB 37th ANNUAL .. . .
Fish Fry and C(;lrniv~l · -. -
' I -• I
I
I
I
I I
I I
! •
I
I 1
,!__
2 -Cotta M ... Fl8h Fry -An Advert!llng Supp~nt to the DAILY PILOT. Thursday, June 3, 1982
DRAWING A CROWi) -Events at the Plllh Fry and c.anuva1 attnct
hundreds f:>f onJooken, who enjoy a blt of aunahlne to boot. '.the 37th
annual Fish Fry bealm Friday night.
• • • r
See Our Linoleums
• ARMSIAONG • G.A.F.
• MANNINGTON
I •CONGOLEUM
Fish Fry starts
Friday night
The first of 9,000 fish dinners will
• be 1erved at Lions Park in Costa
Mesa Friday at 5:30 p.m., when the
37th annual Fish Fry and Carnival
geta under way.
The three-day event, sponsored
S c heduled stage attractions
include Band X. Friday at 7:30 p.m.;
Chuck E. Chel!R, Saturday at 1:30
p.m .; the Dorothy J o Dancers,
' Saturday at 4: 15 p.m.; the Square
Rigge~ of Carta Mesa, Saturday at 7
The schedule will end each day with
a drawing at 9 p.m. Friday and
Saturday and at 8 p.m. Sunday.
by the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club, wiD continue at 10 a.m.
Saturday and at noon Sunday.
The ICheduJe will end each day
with a drawing -at 9 p.m. Friday
mM1 Saturday and at 8 p.m. S&mday.
A. 1982 ~t.-Cbewtte and a
color televllkm are amaoc prir.el..
The $4 fish dinners include a
chance on the prUes.
A parade, entertalnment, baby
con111!St, and beautycont.cstwOl ap1n
be featured in the Flab Fry.
' will be beJ,d Saturday
10:30 '-Ill-Oil Harbor
frcm WU.00 Street eouth
to 19th Stniet, west to Anaheim
A.venue and IOUth to the perk.
p.m.; and the Arlee Higbee Dancers,
Sunday at 6:15 p,m.
The beauty pageant will be held
on the stage at LiOm Park beginning
at 2 p.m. Sunday.
The winner will 8t!!'Ve aa Mm
C-. Me. if lhe llvea, won.. or
FM to dMd In a.ta Mea Jud81na of tbe babiel will beain at
• 2:45 p.m. Suncl.ay. A.wards will be
preemted at 3:30 p.m. Refdstration ..
limited to l~ t.b6ee. ~ coot.est
comiltl of two cateaor1m -acee 6 to . ~a:-wt ... 13 throuch 24
. Over the plllll 36 yean. the Fiah
Fry baa rUed mere than $650,000
for cxmmunlty needs and activities.
FOR DADS and GRADS
For your wrltlnQ Instrument, choose
OM o( stx beautlfW hardwoods
scJec:ttd &om around the world for
workablllty, strmQth. appearance.
HaDmark Wood Wrtttna Instruments
feature walnut, cordla, wmae.
rosewood, tuBpwood and teak.
$45.00 set. S22.SO pen or pend!.
~ 111() HellrNrl( C&rdt. Inc.
-K.C: I ~--,Jr.. /HOP, Inc.
2300 Harbor 81.d.
Harbor Center
Coeta Me.a .979-1882
Cotta M ... Fllh Fry -An Advet1lslng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thuraday, June 3, 1982 -3
J
• .. ~
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
The public is invited to an
Exotic Display of Rare
Exhibition Automobiles
June 4 throu·gh · June 6
, displayed at various mall
locations.
. .
Two auto manufacturers -~ ..
Have chesen this event to · ·
, . ·introduce their _newest
models such as the Moselle II.
and :Clenet II. '
. .
Yo'1 will glimpse a rare looK:
at the 1982. Rolls Royce .''Lido''
.. ancf Maser~ti~ Fe~rari, Excalibur,
Corsair, Pantera, Zim~er . 540K
Mercedes-Benz, Heritage
and ~any qthers. . _
. \
R.s: V .P. not necessary. However fol-more information call 546-6682 ·
I ..
\
. .
l
!
4-~Mela F1lh Fry -An Advettlllng Supptement to the DAILY PILOT. 'Thund•y. June 3, 1982
,_------------~------------------...... ----,
While the ec.ta Meea-Newport
Harbor lJom Club WU formed back
in 1927, it wun't until 1946 that a
r'P of Ha members came upon the
idee of a Fish Fry and Carnival • a
fund ..-er.
Bob Sidles, a Liou Club member
who ai.o happened to be a former
carnival man, la credited with offertna the ~ The group aer'tled that proceeds from the Fiah
Fry would be used to build a
bMeball field in Costa Mesa Park.
While \tie firtl Jl'lsh Fry may have
been caDed "amateurilh." it was the
beginning of an annual event that
baa railed mere than ~.ooo fot
oommunity ldivitlea..
In UH?, the ll'OU~ a froe jumping coatmt a "t:.lloon
ucenaion." The frop reportedly
didn't feel like Jumping much that
day. The "balloon t>la1V' made beadlina in the pa .
Thia ii the way C9' It.or)' ii iold:
The dub aecured • lal'l(le t:.noan ••
man-1ised dummy ana aome ...
from the blimp bMe. Wheh the hour
came tor the great launch, the
balloon took otf toward the 1*S
Bay, barely dearinc ~ and
electric wirea .. the trip
Two weeb .-.eel and no word.
Then the club received a letter,
postmarbd in iw-, from m Irate
farmer with a aad and aerlou't
eompklnt.
Hie md the MJlOOri" and dummy·
. .
deecended while he, bis hones and
/his mowing macb1ne were hard at
work . The ho r 1 e • became
frightened, ran throu8b a fence and
damaged mower, bones and the
fanner'1 pride. He wanted to know
what the Lions Club waa going to do
about it.
When the let1er wa read aloud at
one of the meetinp, the memben
were in a state of Pf,Ullc. Should"~ offer a aettlement ot risk being ?
The club wu not lnc!lll'porat.ed at
the time -and not inlured, which
meant any or all the members could
be sued. I.Jon Theo Robina pve
President Les Miller a 30-minute
lecture about what to do,
A reporter from a Lone Beach
. newspaper called Miller to AY he
had written a fature ltm'y about the
miahap but w.n't IW'e whether. to
print the story becaute "it WU a iolll
way to~ ...
Finally, thtt_ truth about the t.no;::Y w• hvealed. Some boys had the dwnmy and balloon
near the Back Bay and had
oontacted Skllee (whole name and
phone number wen attached to the
dummy). He eave them $5 to remain
lilent and wttb the help of Lian
charter member Lloycl Br•ddy
w,-ote the letter and sent it to mativel In KaptM wbo maoed the
.. farmer'. protelt" to the dub.
Soon alter, the croup became
lnco~orated a1 the ~· M--wpwt Barbor I.Joni .
-
Something · Special
feminine fashions
250 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
645-5711 Super
Summer
SILE .
· *28 to.
'
50%0FF
• COTION
SKIRTS
• BASIC
BLOUSES
• TERRY
PLAYWEAR
• SUN ORESSES
& MORE.
(SELECTED MERCHANDISE)
We Specialae in Fashion For The
Missy Fjgure (Size 4 thru 18) . . "t.S~E DOES NOT APPLY TO SPECIAL ORDERS)
Don't AbclndoD The Dream! •
. You don't have to give up your dream of sailing just because the cost of owning a
r boat has sailed out of sight.· There's a low cost alternative that can put you
aboard your dreamboat for a lifetime of sailing p'easure. It's called "Calypso"
sailing and it's a sailor's dream come true.
, .
,,. ...
11"1~J~' ~ . ,
11111111 IDORS
I LnE
PINOVClllO -In une. Dorodly Bothchild played "PJnoccblo" • put
of the 0Uldren'1 'lbeater Group ~ Newport Harbor entry in the l'llh
Fry Parade. Saturday'• parade beglna at 10:30 a.m.
Btg tUrnot:J~ · expepted .
fur · Fis~ Fry parade
• aTAllT
VICTORIA ST .
.._:t_ 0 > • ..J
COST A MESA ; ;
·~ < ~ :c
ROUTE -Parade will prqp:ema
IOUth to Llom Park . •
Cotta M ... Fllh Fry -An AdwrtlaJng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT. Thurtday, June 3, 1982 - 7
. ~-....... GE'ITING A UCK -Benny Ricardo of the New Orleam Sainta
advancea on held ball in field goal attempt during National Football
League play. Ricardo let a record with a streak" of 29 comecuUve field
goaJa 1nlide 40 yards. ....
Ricardo returns
as grand -~arsfl a U
Kicker Benny Ricardo of the New
Orieuw Saints, a 1971 graduate of
Cc.ta Me.a High School. wW lead
the 1982 Flab Fry and Carnival
parade Saturday in Cc.ta Mae aa
\~manbal.
The perade ii ecbeduled to be8in
at 10:30 a.m. at the intenection of
Harbor BouJevard and Wlllon
Street. It will ~ to 19th Street. west to · Avenue,
and 80Uth to Uom Park, lite of the •
filh fry.
'The 37th annual Fish Fry and
Carnival, apcmored by the c.c.ta
Me.a-Newport Harbor Liom Club,
beglna Friday at 5:30 p.m. and
concludes Sunday.
Ricatdo, a six-year National
Football League veteran about to
begin hla third yeu-with the New
Orleans Saints, joined the t.eam .. a
flft aaent 1n 198o.
A ·lf8duate of San Diego State
University, he played with the
World Football Leaaue Southern
California Sun before moving on to
the Detrdt I.Jona in 1976.
In 1978 with the LloN, he started
a NatiCJnal roott.11 LeeiKue record
streak of 29 con.cutiw field pia
lnllide 40 yards. He tiftkhed &bat
year with 92 points, third ln the
National Football Conference.
Ricardo, 28, Wiii born ln Aalndoft.
Paraauay. After araduatton from
Costa Mesa Ht1h School, he
attended Oranee C.-Collep for One 1_eflr, and then tranlferied to
Sen Dle80 State. ~ •. I ~·11 w~ ~,.,
GRAND MARSHALL -Benny
Ricardo heads up Fish Fry
Parade Saturday.
At San Die,o Staie, he aet school
reootdl for molt field pla in a
~· ae.Jn. and career, and for lonpst field joel (51 yards). He helPed win the conference title foe
the school in hia senior year with a
lalt-leCOlld 45-yarder, and w• all
conference two years. · IUcardo and hit wife Karen live ln ~1::.~=o;:~-U()';• :
AND . ..
BIG.· SCREEN
SILL Ill
We've got to clear out our.
invento~ of V~R's a~
Projection TV's to make room
for new~ models. Buy now and
Save •.• Our loss is Your Gain!
RDA
"°" .. ,.
'1,111111
. ...,,,,,.....,..._. .... . ,.,,.........,, ........ , .... .,.....,,.. -
I ~ ' I
l i I -
i I I
I ' t I I
I I I
I
L r
~ I
~
I
I
I
(
.
8 ·-Cotta M.a Fllh Fry -An Advertlaing Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thuraday, June 3, 1982 *
l We -Make Shopping Easy
.
at Bristol T owo & .Country .
..
Anthony Schools • Arcapall Jewekirs
• Barclay Inn • Bed 'n Bath • Bontrevage-Halr
· • Book Vautt • Brtstol Meat • Calif.
· Acceaeory Lines • Clothestlme • Country
Lane• Discount Big & Taff• Dr. Wea
Kohtz-Opt. • Elegante Lighting • Frame ,
Hallmark • Fredericks of Hollywood • Gallery
Sportlque • ~ Ung Restaurant • Great
Eastern Enterprtees • H.C. Trading • Hair
Surgeon&• Ham's County Cookery
• Henneseey & Ingalls • Holubar
Mountalneerl.-ig •Home Savings & Loan
•Jaclyn's Brldal • Jaape(a • Jlm'1 Shoe
Service • Ken'1 Komer • Kida for l..ea8
• ~ of Diamonds • MeCleod'a.Pentont•
• Merte Norman • Nautllua Travel • Newport
Fashions • Olan Miiie • Osteopathic
Phyalclanl Medical Weight Control • Photo
Place • Quick Quick Q9PY Print • Repubffc
· Realtors • Roni Wind's Aerobic Wotklhop
• Ruby'• Boutique • Shapely Sweets • Shear
. Metro Hair Ar1I • Sheet Muelc • SOuth
Coast Chltopractlc • Sweneen'• Ice Cream
.•Tony's Nutfttlon • Uniform fll8cie •Weight
Watcherl •Winter~ Supply• World's
Lar~ Pet Store
* Cotta Meea Altl Fry -An A1"-«tlllng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thurtday..June 3, 1982 -9.
Tired of Feellng
RUNDOWN?
\lie Offer the llett foall* Selectlon In ·Nuufdon.
• ~te lne of Nua1tlon.i prodUal
• Natural be~ lllds
• Orpnk de-*tg produ<ts
• SUteh llodcer ••••
Tony's Nutrition
. 540-7953
In celebration of the Fish Fry
we offer you •
EYE ·EXAMINATION
SPECIAL -10~00 OFF~
Our prtoe9 brtng you In ... Our queHty brtnga you beck.
Lab on Premlw a.. Hllbla Ell***
Medical -l'*"'8ne8 PIM
One Dey SeMce
Welcome
DR. WES KOHTZ
3696 So. Bristol
Santa Ana
549 4343
OPEN 9 AM TO 8 PM
at dfscow1t prices
· 24 Hr.
service avatlable
Largest Selection
In Orange County
FATHERS DAY &
GRADUATION
CARDS & GIFTS
'
Save MONEY on
PRINTING &I'd
XEROX COPIES
LOW LOWER
Offset Printing XEROX 8200
100 • S5.81 Miracle Copies
100. 14.50
.. -....-.'"'' ................
LOWEST
Xerox 4000
Self Serve
4C Md!
no minimum
CHOOSE FROM OVER 80 DIFFERENT
PAPER COLO!,~ WEIGHTS & SIZES .. ""'* prtc.
'
-------------------------------. l SAVE 20%-0N ANYVELO-BIND :
\ or SPJ!!AJ.J1!!1~~DER : ·-------------------------------J
QUICK-QUICK COPY /PRINT INC. .eee-2401
Brlatot Town &Country Center 8:30 • 5:30 M·F
YI llfock NOlth of So. Coen Pt&u 0.-n .. t ~ 1
3790 S. Briatol(~ Buildl"Q)
Be Awaral
Aviaka, Allvel
POPULAR PLA'ITER...:. An estimated 9,000 fish dinners are expected
to be aerved at the three-day Fi.sh Fry and Carnival due to begin Friday
at Lions Park.
'Top. s~cret' batter
gets raves at fry . '
What baa made the Flab Fry and
Carnival such a popular event <111er
tbe yeut? Some •Y lta that Hbetter
better' Uled in preparation of the
9,000 filh dinnen at the three-day
ewnt. The "top llea'et" mixture ~·t
always been a part of the Fllh Fry,
though. There we.re a few yean
When the batter WM mfMIDC from
the fesdvitiiee apomored by the Costa
Me.a-Newport Harbor Uom Cub.
The better W8I fint Uled in 1i46
b~ the late Heim KaJler.
But a1 the l't1h J'ry grew in
(See BA'ITER, P .. e ti)
=Costa lesa Fish -Frr
MEN AND WOMEtil'S SPORTSWEAR
JACKETS, SKIRTS, PANTS, BLOUSES -DRESSES
SLEEPWEAR & ROBES -GIFTS -PLACEMAT SETS
MEN'S SPORTSHIRTS, PANTS, SPORT JACKETS
AA8T QUALITY -NAME BRANDS
BROKEN SIZES -BUT REAL GREAT BUYSI
LLOYD•!i
Darden shop
MARIGOLDS AND PETUNIAS
IDEAL FOR SUMMER SUN
PONY PAK Reg. l .09
White Trays Only O 690 • w ••
IMPATIENS AND VINCA
IN FULL BLOOM
~u.4.'lllx<A 1 111. Size Rec. 3.10
IOW $1,98
THAT'S IT
Lloyd recommends "That's
It" to control snalls. Easy to
apply through shaker top for
effective control of slugs &
snails.
1 Lb. Reg. 2.98
NOW •2.39
3 Lb. leg. 6.98
NOW *5.59
5 Lb. leg. 9.ff.-
NOW *7.91
HAl&ll& IASIET FUCHSIA
IN PULL BLOOM .
Reg. 22.98
••• '15.98
Den't Let lup Get Yeur Y-' Spray fllrit •
1 Pl Spectrlcide 9 't t ... 171t
1 Accu-Blend Sprayer ..._ 1 I Mii
~,r 1ow s1319 •
AGAPANTHUS
1
I
I I
I
• I
l
1
•,
~· . -· -;-------·-----------------------=~-----~----~-:"'ti--. .. ... _ -------
eo.ta Meea Fl9h Fry -An Adver1Jtlng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Thur.say, June 3, 1982 -11
7erde 6enter
-21 Shops and Restaurants for your shopping convenience
'
' /
-
I .
; C .. ! ! _ 41-----.-. _.__ a s : 12 -Colta MeM Fllh Fry -An Advwti.tng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, TI\ureday, June 3, 1982
..... ··-·
I oy
Stansbury chairs ..
Fish Fry committee
Johns~. a member of the
baud of directon ·of the University
of California at lrvine-Liona Eye
Bulk, heeds up the Liom' committee ~ of the 1982 ftah. Fry and
Stansbury, who allo serves u
id nt of the ~01ta MeH·
Harbor' UOna. ii • vice
t of the Harbor Bank of Belich. .
Hr and hil wife &eemarle live
Batter .. • •
(C...._. from Pqe It)
popularity, out1lde help waa
requJred and the secret recipe
apparently got lolt in the shuffle.
. When the LMlm Uub enllltecj aid
in 1072 to prepere the better, the
recipe wun't med, 1lnce it wu
dem.s too expebllw.
In 1976, Liana club member Steve
Perrin redileovered the recipe and it
•• returned to the preparation
prooeedinp
The food department at Oranp
Cout Colle1e now handlee the
better preparation cbora.
But the ndpi: hM remained .:l'et
aver the yeus, with fiw untold
~added to 4,000 pounds of
cod, 300 poundl ol flour, '12
. pllom of milk. and 120 pounds of ....
With their two chil~ In Newpon
Beech. Camnittee~ lnclude:
• Immediate PHt Preeident
Lester Becker, a dentist. Becker of
Costa Meaa la on the board of
directors of the Orange County
Child Guldahce Center. He hal four
ch.Qd.ttn.
• Fint Vice President Jim
Ferryman is owner of Traditional ~t)' in c.oe:ta Mesa.
Ferrym8n ·Is a member of the
baud of directon of the Costa Maa.
Chamber of <:ommerce, Hatbar Area
Girla Club, UCI-Liona Eye Bank. •
and the Orange County Child
Guidance C-enter. He ii the incom1ng ·
president of the Liam Club.
Ferryman and hil wife Mary live·
p with their three children in a.ta
Mea.
• Second Vice President Ron
Hayward ii an of:ficer of the Citbem
Bank of c.o.ta Mea. He and b.la wife
Barbara live With their two cblldren in~Mea
• Secretary Lee Gibbs. a ..W manaaer foe the Western 0rance
County Collection Bureau, i• a
member of the board of directon of
the UCl-Llom Eye Bank. lie lives in
a.ta M-.
•TreHurer Bob Wolfe la an
inaurance a1ent with Farmer'• Inlurance Group. He and hil wife
Fran live with their tbr'fle children .. in a.ta Mesa.
rrs IEIE IUlll!I
CAL'S CUEllS -SElll-llllllL
SIDEWALi SALE
1WI llYS •Y--llTmlY .. 4 I a.:..:.11 ~ .. I
•SflaAI. ~ -ONI DAY.ONLY -JUNI Sth 10 MM PM
LOW
Offset Printing
100 • S5.81
Save MONEY on
PRINTING and
XEROX COPIES
lOWER
XEROX 8200
MIJacle Copies
100. $4.50
LOWEST
Xerox 4000
Self Serve
4C .. ch
no minimum
CHOOSE FROM OVER 80 DIFFERENT
PAPER COL~~~~h~~~~.f!TS & SIZES
-------------------------------, : SAVE20%0NANYVELO·BIND :
\ or SPJ,Mb.P!t1~.Q~DER . :
·----------------------~--------J
QUICK·QUICK COPY/PRINT INC. He-2401
8:30 • 5:30 M·F ap.na.ts-1 Bristol ,.own &Country Center
'la llOCk North of lo. Coe8t Ptaza
3790 S. Brtato6(Back Bulldfng)
(
Featuring:
• Nautilus Equipment
• Olympic Weights '
.. • Life Cycles & Monarch Bikes
• Luxury locker Facilities
• Co-Ed Sauna, Stnin & Jacuzzi
. • 7 Aerobic Classes Daily
- -.......... . . -~ ~.,----
' Costa M .. Fish Fry -An Mvwtilma ~to the DAILY PILOT.,:fhurldaY, June 3, 1982 -13
HOBIE /CllS ..
ARE HERE!
.
PRE SUllER SILE
~14-18-18· ft. '
IUY IOW -
Ill SAYE S
world's ·most popular catamaran),
trallers, parts and accessories for all
' sallboats, llfe Jackets, OP, Llgtltnlng
Bolt· and Catch-It s~swear.
•
I
' l
I
' ' I
I
I
-I
-
\
~
14 -ca.ta Meea F18h Fry -An AdWHlllng ~t to the DA~ILOT, Thunday, June 3, 1982
•.STAR WARS ·
•ON GOLDIN POND
•TRllUH
•CHANGLING
r •PICNIC AT HANGING ROCK
•llA8TIMI
•AHINCI OF MALICI
•tAIT DITAIL
• NllGHIOllS
~ Match the Mttlnt to the occuJon I with......_.,. napldm IC/#,
·I· Lunchoon ... pldno lf/IM··' .: -;,
~~
~ Champapn Gla11• 25 to
a pacluap. ~ ... 4.29 on
Sale US
Judging set Sunday
In beauty contest
Twenty four CU\testmta ln the
beauty conteat of the Costa
Mesa.Newport Harbor Lions Club
Fish Fry and Carnival have been
announced by Liom offldal•
'Ille contest will be held on the
stage in Lions Park at 2 p.m .
Sunday.
The winner will aerve as Mill
Costa Mesa if she lives. works, or
goes tp school in Costa Mesa.
Participants mu.at be age 17 t.bl"ough
22, never have married, and never
have won a Flab Fry Beauty
C.ontest. .
Among the 24 contestants are
Edna Artigllo, Brenda Diane Branin.
Clndy Caye, Antolnette Cecelia
Capano, Leslie Colyar, Al{'!:j!
Gould, Tracy Grams, Sydney
Haley, LoriDda llicb, and Sonya.
Ann Hamm. Others c:ompeting are Julie Jipaon.
Belinda Kiq>baD, Chris Lang, Kim
Makl, Teresa Marie Melendrez,
Rene Nichols, Charleen O'Brien,
Mariko Palmer and Dawn Martin.
Also entered are Delia (Dea)
Sauleda, Suaan 'lbompeon. Michelle
· Wilson. Rhonda Symlngton, and
Beverly Willey.
..., ............
LlltE MOTHER, LIKE ••• Shannon Wlalna. whoee mother Marion
won the Fish Fry De.uty conu.t In 1974, waa the winner in the
lZ.to-18-month category of the baby ~wt at the fry in 1981.
r
Co®atulations
tDtheNew
IBSportsac
· · Gr8.d11ates
Our new collections of cglors
and oontours include a series
of stepped-up sizes, model after
model, carry-one to carry-alls.
LeSpor.tsac bags an~ luggage
do what they're supposed to
do; carry tl$®J for you, yet
weigh praot1~ no~.
Graduates
•
You'll find Ule entire
i.iportaac collection al:
Lelportaac
South Coan Pia••
carousel Court
·eosta Mesa, CA 92626
7145571263
•
. ;
I A r. .
I
I
.....
,.....
18th and Newport
GOME OUT AND. SEE THE
GIANT PARADE SATURDAY, 10:30 am.
Parade Route -on Harbor Blvd. ~ from Wilson, South to 19th Street, ·
West to Anaheim, South to Lions Park
BE SURE NOT TO MISS:
.
The Drawing for a New
1982 Chevrolet Chevette
2 · Door~ooter
June 6th
)
****
Bea~ComeSt
~---------~-----------------~ I ,. . -. 'SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
I ~ FllDAY, JUHi 4 PRIZES•" •FOOD•" •RIDES
I s:30 ,.. ·--······················ rash Dinners • start sen1111 I ~oo ,.. ....................... Cimini Rides a Gatna open
I 7.30 PM ................... on ~ X·Woftd'S l.lfsat
Non-tnatctq Mlfdline Band I ~ ,.. ................. <~ tiCbb-;u;t·iie· = I ----
SATUIDAY, JONIS
·I
I
I
I 10:00 Ml ........... -... ·-· Cammi Rides' Gllm .. 10:30 Ml ....... -........... -Lions Parada Spectaca I 12:00 Noon ..................... rm. Dinners -start WYil1I I 1:30,.. ...... m ............................ <itiie ~=
I 2:00 PM ............... Parade Anrds (1t stlct in PIA)
I 3=1~ ,.. ................. (-;~ii·tiCuts-Mit'~ .. ='
I 4:15 ,.. : ................... Dorothy Jo DMctrs <on ~> I &:oo ,.. ................. (;;;nire·tiCiiti"·;;st·bi· =
I 1:00 ,.. ..................... Sq111rt R111tts ot eosta Mm,
I 9:00PM ....................... ~=~on•-= I prizes Cwinni111 ticUb must be presem)
I
I
I
I
GAMES•" •BEAUTIES*" *BABIES
GRAfl> PRIZE ,
1982 . CtEVROLET
CtEVEITE 2 door scooter
•••••
OUTSTAM*G STAGE ATTRACTDS
•••••
WY C(JfTEST
Al contatlnts ..... t ...... ., before 5:00 ,.. Oft
June 3 · fteclstration blPll on lllondly, May 17. (Set ....................... ~)
••••• Ofl. y $4.00!
Don1tion1ives you 1 f1mous lions' fish dinner and 1 chance on II prim includint tile automobile. A REAL VAL.IE! _ ......
A* FOR All
The very finest C.nml Rides & GMlt Booths.
ltlmburpn. Hot Doo. Pop, DlsMft, etc. '
DeltT MISS 1ll AM ___,_.......___,, ••••• I
I I 3:30 PM .................. .
I
I
I I
..
llml1111 llBl/flllT~ll llllO
I l lllll'•l>A 'V JllNl I 1 ~111.' OHANC l COlJN I Y . C ALIFORNIA 2!1 CENlS
County tO pay $13.7 million UCI tab
"-
By FUDERIClt SCBOEMEBL million already hu been paid.
ot"• Dlilr,... Mlllt The rema.ln1na $8.76 million wW
Oran,. County• aovernment be paid by June so. the end of
bu aareed to pay the Univenity the current fllc:al year.
of Callfomia tl3.7G rnllllOl\ to
end a prolonaed dt1pute over Supervtaora agreed in principle
provi1ion of medical care for to the maaaive payoff clurtna a
indi1ent1 at the UC Irvine closed -door sesalon amid
alnce 1979 have been battUna.
over lllu• •W'l'OW'\dlna care for
l.ndJ.aenta for which the county ta
flnandally respe>naible. Care for
thoee patients bu been provided
at the university-owned medi~
center in Orange under a 1976
contract.
Medical Center. lndications that at leaat one board ~ rumber -Roger Stant'On, The bulk of the di1pute
· Of that 1wn, county Board of opp o 1 e d t he n e Io t i a t e d fOC\&led on about $8 rnilllon ln
Superviaors Chairman Bruce aettlement. unlveratty-llaued billa the county
Neatande aa1d Wednesday, $5 _Th_e_co_un_.;ty'-an_d_th_e_unl __ ve_rat_ty'"--_hu __ re_fu.ed __ to_pa.__.y_. -----
In lta lldion Wedneaday, the
board aho aareed to a
replacement contract whereby
the county would make lump
aum payments for emeraency
outpatient care and standanlli.ed
dally raie. for inpatient care for
indigents treated at the medical
cent.er.
County officials uy this
alternative approach to the
current patient-by-pat.ient bllllng
1yst.em will be more efficient and
le. COltly to admin11ter.
Neatande, 1peakin1 to
report.en at a midday briefing,
declined to aay lf the board's vote
WU unanl.moua.
Later in the day, Stanton lalued
a statement in which he aa.l.d, "I
do not intend to comment on the
board'• dectaion at this time. The
board will be-.¥Qting publtcly on
the iaaue later this month. At
that time I will cut a vote that
wW reflect the pollUon that I
took durln& the executive ~
which wu held today."
The UC Board of J\eaentll ta
scheduled to take action on the
aet.tlement and the new oontnct
propoeal at a meeting June 17
an.cf 18.
The propoeed settlement halt
been endol"led by UC ~t
David Saxon In p;;;h
converaat.iona with Neatande.
Parents, Assault looming
trustees
disagree
·British guns pound
.. Two Fountain Valley School
District trustees and a group of
parents who are concerned about
the diatrict's middle school plans
failed to resolve their differences
at an informal meeting
Wednesday night.
foe around ·Stanley
But Board President Cheryl
Norton, who attended the
meeting, said she will relay the
parents' requests for a
community survey on middle
schools and for reconsideration of
one school c108ure to her fellow
trustees at tonight's regular
board meeting.
A parents group, calling itaelf
"CARE." is considering plans to
.eek an injunction to prevent the
oonvenion of Talbert achoo}-. now
a kindergarten to eighth grade
site, to a middle school (grades
ape through e~:.=e f8Ii. The troup a1ao is· a paaible
recall campaign against trustees.
CARE 1poke1man Ken
Bndley said the parenta remain
frustrated despite Wedneeday'a
meeting with Mrs. Norton and
~ Carol Mohan.
"But the major thing we
(See TRUSTEES, Page A%)
Dr. Singer,
professor of
• sex, resigns
LONG BEACH (AP)
Embattled "Psychology of Sex"
professor Barry Singer, who
offered. coune credit for sexual
experimentation, has resigned
from Cil State Long Beach,
university officials announced
today. .
Dr. June M. Cooper, who was
conducting an invesUP.tlon into
Singer'• course, received the
letter of resignation Wednesday,
university spokesman Bob
Breunig said.
"On the same day, on behalf of
pnstdent "Stephen Horn who ·is
out of the country, vice president
foe academic afWn Dr. Glendon
Drake accepted Dr. Singer's
re1ignation effective
immediately, .. Breunlg a.aid.
Singer's coune raiaed protests
from politlciana and religious
leaders after it was reported that
he offered credit for gay
encounters. group 11ex and other
optiona such as going in ru-.g to
PY bus. The investigation came after
Singer revealed he had been
"romantically involved" with
three or four of hia students over
the yeera.
Singer was reported out of
state and unreachable for
oomment.
STATE
. °"' ........... CMrr Allllllwa
TONY'S TRIBUTE -Actor Tony Curtis waves his "love
balloons" at the Harbor Island location of his movie "Balboa"
as the cast and crew sing "Happy Birthday" to him. The actor
is 57 today. Balloons were supplied by Newport Beach's
"Love Balloons" firm.
Buller selected
Coastline chief
John L . Buller, a veteran
administrator in the Coast
Community College Diatri.ct, has
Mesa fish fry
starts Friday
Why is the Costa Mesa Fish
Fry such a popular event over
the years?
Some say it'a the "secret"
batter used in preQ.!ring the
9,000 fiah dinners. Otllera go for
the parade, the carnival, the
beauty and baby cont8ta, or the
entertainment.
The fun starts Friday night at
Lions Park and the Dally Pilot'•
special section today on tht! Fish
Fry and Carnival glvee readera a
rundown on the three-day event.
been choeen as interim president
of Coastline College.
Buller, a 54-year-old Costa
Mesa resident, will assume the
interim post July l, when current
Coastline President Bernard
Luskin takes over as president of
Orange Coast College ln Costa
Mesa.
Buller's appointment waa
made Wednesday night at a
aj)ecial meeting of Coast
Community College District
trustees.
Trustees aaid the interim
appointment ia not to exceed a
year in duratfon.
District spokesman Richard
Simon 111d the-U'Ultees have not
concluded plana for how they
will aelect a permanent C.OUtllne
(See COASTLINE, Pa1e A%)
COUNTY
By Tile Asaodated Prell
Britlah gunners dueled with
Argentine artillery batteries
around Stanley today in the
~uildup to a possible British
assault on the Falkland Islands capital, military aourcea and
broedca.at reports in London said.
Britain'• Independent Radio
News aaid the attack was not
expected before the weekend aa
the gunnen, backed by offshore
navy bombardment and Harrier
air strikes, aoftened the estimated
7 ,000 Argentines around Stanley.
Re in London indicated
the ~ control all the bllla
SWTOUnCilng the town and the
key pa.es to the west through
which reinforcements were
advancing. .Araentlne troops, driven back
into a "horseshoe" defenaive
position, wine flrin1 back at
Royal Marines shelling Moody
Brook. 8 miles from Stanley and
believed to be a forward
headquarters for the Argentina.
A1 1helltng GOntlnued, aovemment .:JW'Clel tn London
aaid Britiah planea dropped
tha.mndt of 1ea.f1eta on Stanley
telllng the Argentlnea their
position la hopele11. Defenae
Ministry sources said
Spanish-speaking Britons were
among the forward troops to
negotiate surrenders around
Stanley.
British helicopters lifted
105mm guns, with a range of
10~ miles, to the hilltops West of
the town while British Soorpion
light tank.a moved into position
and Snowcat transport ,vehicles
brought supplies and
ammunition acrosa the boggy
terrain.
A tenioc British defense 90UJ'Cle
in London laid the buildup WU ~ to take "a few days."
'The pcsltlon of our foroea in
Puerto Argentino (the Argentine
(See FALKLAND, Pace A%)
Cop chopper -
forced down
A Newport Beach police
helicopter was forced to land
behind an elementary school in
Fountain Valley Wednesday
when the pilot began losing
power, police aaid. n.e helicopter touched do~rn
at Harper Park behind James 0.
Harper Elementary School at
186H Santa Ynez St. shortly
afte.r noon. .
Pilot Ru...ll Sutter wu able to
reaume flight after a faulty
aparkplug was chaJleed, police
laid.
San Diego suburbs seek unity Historkal society sets home
Flve communities just nQl'th of San Diego may
incorporate, with the new dty to be named San
Dleguito, Spaniah for "little San Diego." Page A12.
NATION
The O>eta Mesa Historical Society finally has a
hoine of its own to 1tore tts boxes of memorabllla. Pace
Bl.
•
W• JD II
BATTLEGROUND -The ground where over 1,200
Argentine troops surrendered and laid down their anm Is
littered with helmets, weapons, magazines, ammunition and
water bottles.
School panel OKs
• annexation move
The dissolution of the Seal
Beach School District was
endoned Wednesday night by
the Oranae County Committee
on School District organization.
The 11-member panel
approved a petition by the Seal
Beach truatees to be ablorbed by
the Los Alamitoe School Dl.atrlct
in the summer of 1983.
The annexation, which will
have an effect on the Huntington
INDEX
A4
B2 a-7
B2
C8-12
B3
B3
C8
Al0-11
84-5
82
B2
Beach Union High Schoo
0
l
District because Seal Beach
youngatera attend Huntington
Beach High School. must now ao
to the state Board of F.ducat.ion.
U .iapproved, it would be placed
on the Nov. 2 ballot in Seal
Beach. -The petition previously was
approved by Huntinaton· Beach
Union High School and Loa
Alamitoa School Dtatrict tn<eea.
~ .,
Ann Landen
Moviel
Mutual Funda
Public NoUcee s. c.ai. Focua
Sporta
Stock Marketa
Televllion
Theeterl
W-.ther
World Newa
~ Y ALKLAND ISi.ANDS • • •
British
'poised'
tQ attack
aame tor Stanley) baa been
eon.aolldated •coordlna to plan
Md the men •wait UM battle ·wtth epirita renew.cl by• l'OUllna
•l>••ch by their military
1overnor," the Araentlne
mill tary command aaid in a
cximmu.nique We<lnelday ~ht.
• The ocmmand admOWTedpd
~ between Brtdlh and
.A,rpntine troope but pw no
Q.ialla.
! BrtUah corretpondenta on the
battlebult, whme reports were
subject to military ceNOnhlp,
aald BriUah troopa contl"olled the
rld&e• overlooking Stanley,
W:lUdlnQ the 1,536-loot Mount
Kent, die highest pqsltlon 12
oillea from the center of the little
town, and the Two Sisters ridge, a mile9 cloeer.
Independent ~ Newa
eo1r...-.t Michael Nlchollon
Mid aome Brtdlh unlta •tcou)d ..
throu1h thetr binoculan
Araentln• uoope eattna their
lunch."
One corrHpondent reported
Briuah t.roopa haw IAklli • total
of 1,800 pdlonen. and mon than
$50 Ar,.ntlne deed or mllllna
have bMn rtported. Britain
acknowled1ed 138 of lta men
were killed.
At the United Natlonl. Brltilh
Ambaaaador Sir Anthony
Panona thrMtened to wte1d. hil
nation'• veto In the Security
Council today to block a
Latin-American re1oluUon
demanding an Immediate
ceaae-Ure ln the undeclared
Falklands war.
B' .. "21~~
lrttlah troopl are IO cbe to
Port Stanley fort111cat1onl that
wtth btnocWara 11they can watch
A.rprltine toldlen •tine lunch,"
the BBC world newa Hrvlce
reparted Wed.awday nl&ht.
The BBC brmdcMt. monitored
on the ~ Cout at 9 p.m., acknow a newt bJerkout
on eventa the Falklanda from
both London and Arpntina for
two dayt.
''There ia little new oftidal
information on the ground
off b the
Miniltry of Defeme.' e
re~ adm1tt.ed.
T RUSTEES DISAGREE. • •
'There hu been aome action
on Mount Kent, which overlooks
Port Stanley. BriUah artillery ia
1hellin• the Araentinea' main
garrt.,Q at Port Stanley and they
are returnin& fire.''
mpllahed wu getting the
ml\ILnce to exchange ideu and
on a one-to-one basis,"
ad ed.
pcmtble experwes aaociated with
the middle tchoola. One theory on the lack of
battle newa, aoco~ to a BBC
coneapondeni, wu the weather.
• ~ Bradley said the group has
ked the trustees to delay
plementation of a middle
hool p~ for one year.
Mrs. Norton agreed that
Wedneeday'a meettna "did not
change any minda." Sut ahe said
she would preeent the parents'
concerns to the other board
members.
"Today's action haa been
hampered by overcast and low
clouds which protect the British
from air attack although it ia coJd
and rru.erable for them," he aald.
He said the board baa ]lot
operly surveyed the
unity regarding whether it
ts middle schools. He said
nts alao are concerned about
She said she believes there are
,no legal grounds for an
injunction to stop the Talbert
Middle School from opening. She
a1ao said she ia not worried about
threats of recall.
"The ground ia being chewed
up In a way that reminds
everybody of the trenchet ln the
Great War.,..
"But convoys of Britllh
vehicles are moving everywhere
with the confidence of
ownership."
esident. The trustees drew
criticism from instructors
:ver the manner In which
· uakin was selected for the
ange Coast presidency. .
~Bulle' ia cunoently the dean of
mlaaiona, guidance and
ormation aervtcea at Coatllne.
native of Weat Loe Anleles. be
ved his bachelor's degree at
C Santa Barbara and his
asters from Cal State Los
eletf.
·From 1953 through 1.957,
er taught at Whittier High
ool. After tWo yea.rs as an
rat UCLA, he came to
e Coast Community College
where he has lerved in
oua administrative poets for
district and its three colleges,
--"""'-Coast, Golden West and
1D>a11Wne.
Laat indications from the
battle r.one, the BBC reporter
said, were that the ground
temperature ia 2 below zero and
the vlalbility le. than two rnilee.
* * * BBC lauds
pope's visit -
British Broadcasting
Corporation's world newa service
placed h~vy emphasis on Pope
John Paul ll'a pilgrimage to the
British Islee and h1a pleas for
peace ln a shortwave broadc.alt
monitored on the Orange Cout
W~night. · The allo quoted the Daily
Mail newtpaper as aa)'i.nl U.S.
President Ronald Reagan will
find the pontiff'• vlalt "a ha.rd act
to follow."
Bull8 h8' been a dean at
tUne ~ It opened in 1976.
aftline bu admtnJ1tratlve
mfM• bl FountaiJl falley ~t
off ttr•' clades at •bout U<>
dona throUghout the district.
PRESIDENT -John Buller
of Coeta Ma. has been named
interim president of Coastline
College.
The Dally Mail commented,
"After the preacher, comes the
aherlff.
"And In thla brutal 'lf'X'ld. we
need p,rotectlon as well aa
ptfyer.'
Coastal
Mo1tty dear thll •H•noon.
HlgN 81 '° 72.. I.Ml night Md
.-ty momN IOW doudl '°"""' Ind Fndey. 1'11r tlwouGfl Aidly
Continued fair
wtttl lftOltly wnny •ftemooM. <MmWlt loM 41 to 61. ...... Frld•r 14 to · 12 . Huntl119ton-N•wport er•• ~,....,_ •• af
Temperatures
M to a lllatl af 81. Eleawll,ra, from Point Conception to th• Mexican bordlf 8nd out 80 ,,.. 8m8I
cnft ldvllOfy (NW outer .....
"""hOllti& l ...... af 11 to 30 llnOtl Md I to a-toot -.
1.DC811y, IOUltl to IOUltiw8lt ....
af 10 to ti knots thll .....,_
""" IOUCllW8lt ..... af 2 to * .....
e ~
Alllntl Au.ntc City
Aultln 881tlrncw9 = 9o6M
U.S. summary·~
l'hund81*'11• prodUoelS n.wy 8uttlk>
rain•, llall, wlnde, end eM«• ='on tornedOH In Coloredo tnd CNrlltn 8C ~ T:::.c.~ == ,a.tttn WV
.-....... 8nd = Chlrttt• NC ..... cnft In.. ..... ~ ...... ... ..... ,..., In Clnclnnltl
port att•r th• llret troe>toal Oe¥ltand dapra11lon of Ill• llurrlceM C1mbll 8C ~ -apoC'8CI ~ v..... 1>81-Ft wttl Tiie roofl of -~ _.. o.yton dem89ff Wedn .. day ~ In o..-= !:;.,~:.C,~ Dal~
n.e ... llO,.,,,."'...... = frclnl ltil tomedo .,.._ El Paao
TlU...,.__• Ooflllrlued OWi', Fargo
Aoftdl. 8nd "'°""" 8nd • ... RagNlf .............. ,..,. ......... ~ , ... froM ArllanaH to Iowa end Her1tord
Wltoon1l11. Tiier• wer• a '" .....,. "'°"" ~ tM •tMf'ft HonolUIU ...... Md .. ....,........ t4oUleOtl a.. .... ptWllld a.. .. ..... 111lddl• end 11ortllar11 Attentlc ..-..... Ml Coa1t 1tet ... and aoroH llle J.cklrwla
..,.,.... .,.,., af .. ~ ~ ~ ~around .. ,._,,,; LM V908'
• I Liii. AT rWIOld tOlft It Ill Llltla AOdl
.. •rquatte.L Mloll .• to 11 lft t:=-
•OllMlllle. 1--. Llltlbodl =-......... ~ California
UTIOM
.. Le ,,.,
72 48 17 48
11 54 .03
11 59
.. Ill 11 11 80 70 n 56 ,, 4&
87 Ill .01 17 40
74 44 n 11 1.21
80 71 17 48 et 51
51 44 .25
II n
71 " a& .. 12 44 .17
.. 44 15 It 74 57
13 11 17 11 .17
73 ff 72 ~7 .21
17 54 .OI 71 47
56 30
IM ti
.. 411
.. $2 54 43 .13 11 41 .03 11 11 .01 ...
•11 71 It
13 71
Front.: Ccld .,. Wllffl ..., Oc:duded ,,.-Stelionarv ..
~to 74 47
8lllnea ... 44
t:~llel 10 13
57 49
Sant• Barbar• 71 51
......,.. 78 51
..... ~ 112 71 .15
New Yortl 7t 5t
Noftoll • 11 13
No. """' 12 •11 .05 Santa Maria &4
8'odtton 74 51 • Olde ~ 12 59 .23 Omehl 82 47
n.mai 112
Ulcl8h 70 a..tow 13 12
Big Baar 16 2t
BllflOP 71 42
c.tellna • 10 52
Long la8dl 12 51
Monrovia 10 50
Mt. Wllol't 11 44
0'1llldo st 75 . 1 t
~ 1:~
~ 72 56
Ptl8nd, Ma 11 •e 1.41
Pt!Md, Ont 17 48
P'rcMdlllOI 11 11 .11
R8lltgll 16 ee ""'° 71 3-4 Newport 8-Jtl .. 58
Ont8tlo 70 11
Pllm 89rlngt 80 It
P8l8d8nl 72 S1 ~ IS
San lemardlno 10 50
Sin GablW 73 11
San JOM ... 12
Senta AM 11 17
UntaCNI II 54
TlllOIV*'t 81
,,, ... ,,_,] c _,. =r.= • 1t .. 11
8armudl 12 T7 ~.::o .. 11 11 7'
a.It Uke 13 48 ... Antonie> .. 72
...... 13 41
llw9WPClft .. 71 8iollll ,... • , <tO
8t Louie 12 51
at P·TMIP' M 74 2.20 8t ... ,,.... 41 21
IPoll-.... ~ 10 IO T~ .80 51 .'17
Tuoeon M 17 TlllN • ., 13 .47
W .... '9t11 7' &4 WlcNt8 • It .54
~ ... .,...., '° et lUNll8 llO .. 111 72
12 61
.. 11
71 .. . .. .23 . ~ 7t &1 FrMpOl't
Ool8ddll'n 11 .8-4 .. M
71 11 t2 IO
IS • .01 7' ., .. 2.01 '° •1 ......
~ 7251 "°'~ .... ... ~. 7' ~ . "'8dlle •
Oeklend 13 12 ....,...,.,... n .ea ,...,., ,. ..
"9dWOOd Olly to •7
Exten ded
loreCai t
aouTHIAN OAL.,OANI A· OOAITAL AND MOUNTAIN
AAIM -Y ...... loW dlNdl -............. '"°"*W ...... a... ....... ...
to -··-...... __ ,
"""' "' ...... -• to 1t. ' Lowt IWIOetly 1ft IOa. Moun= ,_.,. ........ .......
~ .... , ....
Sl8yer
seeking
release
Theodore Frank of V eniur..
who wu tried, convicted and
1entenced to death ln Oranae
County Supe1'°" Coult for &&.
torture murder of a 2 ~ -year.())d
sirl, should have hia convicdon
overturned, the State Supretne'
Court WU told.
The defense attorney 1Aid
Frank didn't lntend to kJl1 the
Utt.le girl.
MEETING -Presldent Reagan and French Preaident
Francois Mitterrand chat on the steps of the Elysee Palace
today before a luncheon hoeted by the French leader.
Admitting that h1a cllent."11 a
child molester, a udilUc ch1ld
molester, that he carefully p1lnl
and carries out molesta," Deputy
Public Defender Donald Kenon
argued Wednelday that Frank
nevertheless didn't plan to kill
Amy Sue Seitz.
The state's 1977 death penalty
law requires that murder be
deliberate and premeditated
before the death penalty can be
impoeed. Kenon aald that the
best evidence of Frank'• lack of
premeditation in the murder of
the girl he kidnapped, raped and
mutilated were the defendant•
own worda, relayed to a witneal
who testified at his trial.
French president
\Ve l co mes R e a g an K e rson quoted Frank aa
saying, "I got carried away. I .;.a.t
can't control. It's like this time
things got out o~ hand." PARIS (AP) -President
Reagan conferred today with
French President Francois
Mitterrand on the Middle East,
Central America and the
Falkland laland1 war, but
sidestepped aerioua dlacuaslon of
the 1tubborn economic l11ue1
divldi.ng their countries.
On the eve of an economic
aummlt of major Industrial
democracies at Versailles outside
the French capital, Reeaan said
he and Mitterrand deferred
"heavy dWcuasiona" of economic
lllues straining America'• alllee
until they join the leaders of
Britain, West Germany, Italy,
Canada and Japan thia weekend.
The leaders met over lunch in
the splendor of the Elysee
Palace. Reagan was greeted at
the palace by a military honor
guard and a salute from a drum
and bugle corpa. He and
Mitterrand shook hands and then
met privately in a chandellered
salon over a lunch featuring a
salad of aaorted •lltlah. veal
with truffles and three French
wines.
A Wblte Hou.e aide said that,
u Is customary for presideota on forelcn trips, Ragan brouaht hla
own drlnJdni water to the lunch. ae.c.n aid he and Mltternnd
only ''touc;hed on" the eponcmic
l11ue1, including inflation,
unemployment, receaaion and
high interest rates, that will be
diacu8led ln depth at Versailles.
Despite political differences
between the conservative
American president and the
socialist French leader the
offici.ala have a cordial wo~ld.ng
relationship based In part on
their similar backgrounds as
political "outsiders."
Even ao, ttenior French oflidala
aald Mitterr-and will oppose
Reagan 'a effort to persuade
America's trading partners to
Um.it their credit sales to the
A notw tlult offm/lntt
/Jvdltlonol sfJ<)'tSWOr for
IMlt, womtn and bop.
Sovie t Union. which theae
officials &haracterized as. a
mlagulded and unrealistic policy
aimed at forcing the Soviet
economy to ~ta ~eee.
"That was argued to the jury
to suggest there waa no
premeditation.
Summer school
at Ocean Vie w
The University of La Verne
will conduct a summer IChool
program for students ln the
Ocean View School District
and neighboring
communities.
Registration will take place
from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday
and Thursday, June 9 and 10;
at Park View School, 16666
Tunstall Lane, Huntington
Beach. Additional 1lgnup1
will be conducted from 8:30
a.m. to noon June 21-24, also
at Park View.
Late registration ls slated
from 8:30 a.m. to noon June
• The West Orange County
YMCA is sponsoring a trip
this summer for horse lovers
to the Mammoth Lakes area.
Signups are being taken at
the YMCA, 7262 Garfield
Ave .. Huntington Beach, for
24 at Spring View School.
16662 Trudy Lane ,
Huntington Beac h . An
additional $5 will be charged
for late registration.
The summer classes will be
· conducted from June 28
through July 30 at Spring
View. Tuition ls $79 for one
90-mlnute course, $128 for
two 90-minute courses or for
the three-hour primary
program for students in
kindergarten through aeoond
grade.
More Information can be
otJtained by calling Doa
Devor at 847-6008.
the Horse Ranch Caravan
scheduled June 26-July 2.
The session ia open for boys
and girls ages 12-16. The coat
ia $265 for members and $275
for non-members. Call
847-9622 for more
infonnation.
TheOri~al
.JOBBERS®
Short
Is perfect for becrll, boat, bike,
hike, walk, rock or work. Jobbers
can do tt an but it's up to you to
do tt well. Avaiatle in Jobber's
8 unique colors.
J
' I
I •
~Bombs hit B. S. firms
•
Rome terrorists continue series of ,.ttacks
., ,.. Anoctated Pm•
ROMI -Tf.-rorilt bombl bluted ui Amertcar
Exprem bank. a J'ord automobile ahowroorn and tht
ltora&9 room of an American firm., ca\.Llini damai(
but no CllUaltlel, pollct Mid today.
, ' No~ lfO'{p olalmed l"ellpoMibWty foa
the bombtncl Wedneeday nicht, four <MYI befott
Prellldent ~ la echeduled to make a one-da)I
vtalt to Rome on June 7. '
Wednelday11 attacb were the laie.t in a aeriet
of bombinp apinlt American taraeta here.
Soviets oust Greenpeace ~hip
MOSCOW -Two Soviet tuft r.uahed a
Greenpeace yacht carrylna 28 ant -nuclear
prot.elten out of LenWrid harbor and into the
open IN after the trew rifUled to leave voluntarily,
a apokelwoman for the environmental group uid
today.
The crew and pa11en1en of the Skua, lncludlna American peace activist Daniel Ellsberg,
bad been warned by Soviet offidala to leave the
harbor by 9 p.m. Wec:lneeday but refuaed, Elaine
Norrla, 1poke1woman for the international
Greenpe11ee environmental orpnizatioft. told The
Amodated Prem by telephone lrom Parla •.
Ellaberg uid on Wednetlday that the yacb_t
would not leave Lentncrad voluntarily until tdl
if'OUP received ui answer to a telqram they lent to
President Leonid I. Brezhnev. He uid the telegram
demanded that Brezhnev declare a unilateral freeze
on the testing of nuclear weapona.
A:merican wo:man freed in China··
PEKING -An American woman detained
le'V'ell <Mya for 8lleged spying agalnat China waa
re1eued today and given 48 hou.n to leave the
country, U.S. and Chinele offid.aJB uid.
One Chine.e aource said China had serious,
eolid evidence ~ Llaa Wichaer, 28, of Den.ver,
Colo., and was releasing h e r only to avoid
aggravating U.S.-China relationa.
A Ch.1neee Foreign M1nlatry apokeanan said,
"Conaiderlng that Lisa Wlchaer has made a .
oonte.aion of the crimes ahe had committed and
pleeded for leniency, our public eecurity authorities
have decided to releaae her at 6:00 p.m. (3 a.m.
PDT) today. She la ordered to leave China within
48 hours."
NBC wins 7 of top I 0 ratings
LOS ANGELES -Perennial third-place
network NBC won le'Ven apota in '!:x,.io.,a 10, and
pu.ahed CBS Into third place for the week in
a row d~ the May sweepa, figures from the A.C.
Nielaen Co. show.
ABC took top honors in the weekly Nielaen
television ratings, finlahing in first place for the
week ending May 30. ABC won all fOu.r weeb of
the May.sweeps period.
ABC gJaced first for the week with a rating of
l 3.8. NBC waa lleOOlld with 13.~. and CBS waa third
with 12.7.
Part-ti:me Legislature rejected
SACRAMENTO -A Republican's measure to
turn Cali.fomia'll fulltime Lefdalature back into a
part-time Leglalatul'e waa killed by a state Senate
committee.
State Sen. H.L. Richardson, R-Arcadia,
maintained Wednesday that h i ~ proposed
constitutiMal ~t would save money and restore a ~cltlRn ture."
8\at the Senate u1es Committee voted 3-0 to
kill it.
Teen takes bla01e in arson case
VENTURA -Jamie Means, 7, saya his friends u the older youth said Jamie tagged along at bis
abandoned -him once be became known as invitation to Bill'• Trailer Hitch, a ~ yard
patenu.Dy the younsest defendant in Califomla where the trailer and. two motorboats were bu.med
iu.tory, but one 16-year~ld companion la claiming on Jan. 29. .
he tel a trailer fire for which Jamie is charged with Jamie pleaded innocent April 26 to three
felony anon. . counts of feJony anon and 14 mlldemeanor counta
Jamie fidgeted in Superior Court Wed.ne8day of malJdoua miechief and petty theft.
HOus~ braces for budget fight
WASHING'roN -With Pretident Reaon refU1Anc to "split the difference" on the lNa
budaet, Democrats and Republlcana are lJnd.na fer
another had·to-head duh on the Houae floor.
blueprint aa the vehkle for the ahowdown.
. ln addition, Democratic leaden appeared ready
to P'.wh a more liberal budget plan than ::f had
aapported last week. while Republicana they
would nxwe in a more comervative direction. The Democrat.' strategy lnclude9 a plan to
reYiye &.pn'• nearly-fcqott.en original cpencttna
.
Oil 1ir:ms !ncrease gasolin·e prices
NEW YORK -Americana lured back to their Thank• partly to atr~r dem•nd, oil
can by cheaper auollne th1a apring inay pay for compani•· are ~ whol prices rapidly.
their new drlvtng-babia when pricee rlii ~ 'lb.at ahoUld tranllatrtnU> • few mon cents per
unmer, •Y oil industry analyata. gallon at the pump thla 9U1Dlllier, the analya1a •Y·
ClaMllN ........ 714MM171 .
All MMrd11111t11Mnta M2-4U1
llAIM Qfllla •
....... k ,C-.MIM,CA. ........ 1 .. 1•.c-.--."' ..... c..,.... ... 0r-.. c... .......... ~__ ......_.,.........,.-...te,,.,..., ... --·:u=•..,.... ,.., .. ,...,..... ........ ...... ,.. ........ ~---
News agency sold
to ~ew company
H/f' M .,
W.ife hela
n. wUe of a Martne Ccir,. ~t from ~p Nndleton. d..crt~ by her at'tell'nly 11 •
"battered wUe," ha• been
indicted on charpe lhe lhot Mr
hUlband tq death durtnc a family
argument.
A federal arAnd Jury in Sen
Diego indlctld' Mary Loulte
Player, 30, on a fir•t·d•1ree murder charge Wed~y bl .,
connection with the May 26
ahooti.ng of her hwblnd. s,t.
Joeeph 'Player, who WM t.ed at
Pendleton. • I U.S. M•giatrate J . Edward
Harris .et bail at $50,ooo t« Mn. I
Player durlna a heuinC ~)'
but her attorney Mid 0.. mother I
of four wu itill in custody at the ·
Deir ........... .,, ....... ~
CAT NAP -An unidentified carnival ride operator catc~ a
few extra win.ks. before starting to set up the attractions for
the Cotta Mesa Fish Fry at the city's Lion's Park. The
three-day event opens Friday evening.
Metropolitan C.orrect1onaf Center I
In S4n Diego.
Aiaiatant U .S . Attorney•
Stephen Pet.eraon and Pamela
Naughton had ur1ect custody,
with no bail.
-.
KR UPS /
''Touch~it'' Electric coffee Mm
• Oval ahap«J grinding chambtlr and speclslly
dMlgfHtd stalnleSa steel blade produce perfectly
unlfonn ground cofftltl
• Fat grinding action prevents heat build-up, ,
a.4.1rlng full coffee flavor
• Grinds evenly with no waste-coarse to powdtK fine,
with finger tip control
• 2 oz. capacity (10-15 cupa)
• Double action safety system
• 1 year limited warranty Sall
$11.11
Price Good Thru 6-9-82
@D CROW•
HARDWARE
All storee ooen 7 OeYI
W•tclltt Plaza
1024 INtne Ave.
Newport Beach
842-1133
Coront1 del Mar
3107 E. Cout Hwy.
873'-2800
WMtc:tlff Tll 8:00 ThurL
H.-bor View Center
1614 San M~ Or.
Newport 8Mcti
6«-8570 .
Anaheim HlllS
5620 S1nta Ana Cinyoi) Rd!
(at Imperial Hwy.)
99&.5282 .
Crack into a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. Try a generous serving
of our new spkeq,cold boiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcorn• shrimp.
And men do it ~gaint •
It's all you can eat. Every day of the week .
Each s~ial is served w_ith ypur choice of a crisp tossed salad or coleslaw..-ba~ed potatO-Or rice-pila~d•nother favorite, sourdough bread.
All ~ can eat. All week long.
l
•
t •
(
I .
•
.
Huntington will aid
most gified students
The Huntington Be ach
Union Hfah School Dlatrict wW
1tart a prosram next fall deal.peel
to qu.llfy lta b~test and haidett
workl~J 1tudent1 for the moat
demandlnl coll~
It la called the ~hed
Scholars Program and will
provide the moat rlgoroua
academic classes that the district
hu to offer.
The course of atudy ls 10
rigorous that students will be
given special inducements to
participate.
For example, students
completing the program will finish
at the head of their class
automatically, giving them top
conalderation by collepa. Th~ aim of educ.aton la to
elimtnate the tendency of the top
1tudenta to take euy counea 10 u
to not jeopardize their grade point
average and polilble acholarshipa.
In addition, valedlctoriana and
aa1utatoriaN and graduatell with
honors wlll come from the program. (-
. District off iciala also will
assist participants ln gaining
college admiaaion as well as
helping them find jobs in the
community while going to achool.
But the top benefit of all is
putting the highest priority on
learning instead of merely getting
good grades.
X-~ated video debate ,,
. ..'O'iie can appreciate the
dilemma facing the Fountain
Valley Planning Commission
when it was asked to approve
plans for a new home video store.
The plans drew strong
protests from local residents
because of the store owners' intent
ta' sell X-rated video tapes along
with family films, video
equipment and electronic games.
The opponents said they
objected to the X-rated material
on moral grounds. They also said
they tear these items draw 1lll
undesirable element into the city.
The protesters said they had
no objection to the video store
itself but wanted the Planning
Commission to stipulate that the
store cannot carry X -rated
material.
The store owners said the
adult films would only account for
a small percentage of their stoc~
and would be kept behind a
counter. Bu't they insisted on the
right 'to carry the entire 1pectrum
of video tapes -from Disney to
adult.
No planning commiaaioner
endoned the X-rated ~terials. =a emotional level, the
p ~ to side with the .. . But the majority of the
commission conceded that they
had no legal grounds for
restriction of the X -rated video
tapes, which are not obscene
under state law, according to the
city attorney.
Further complicating the
decision was the fact that the
P1a.n¢ng Commission earlier had
approved two similar video stores
(carrying adult material) without
incident because no community
protests had been voiced.
Believing they had· no power
to prevent sales or rental of adult
tapes at Star Home Video, the
COllllll.i.-ioners opted to regulale
themanner in which they are sold
and rented. These stipulations (to
which the owners agreed) govern
the age of customers for adult
material (age 21 or older) and
prohibit tape previewing or sale of
adult magazines on the premises.
Even so,· the permit was
approved only by a 3-2 margin.
(Opposing oomm.laaioners believed
the community opposition should
carry more wellht.)
The matter might. not be
lettled yet. The w;!:f PY residenta
have yawed to ap the decision
to the Fountain Valley City
C.ouncil, .
Th"e Planning CommlNion'•
compromise qnemerit aeetna fair
enough. It should be supported by
the City Council.
Speak up on , budget
Some yean when it comes
time for annual hearingl on the
Huntington Beach city bud~t,
hardly anyone mows up. .
Thia year's public hearing la
scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Monday
and there seems to be plenty to
talk about. ,
That's because several
suggestions have been nu.eel by a
special c:ommit1ee as poatble ways
to meet def iclta. caused by a
t,tght.filted state government.
Officials plan to eliminate
about 10 city jobs but that's not
eno~ to stir controversy
are several ideas suggested by an
ad hoc committee of city
employees.
The suggestions include
possible chargea for paramedic,
aervk?e~.PC1!11ible elimination ot the
polfce netfCQJ>UJr aervice, possible
charges for trash collection,
possible increuea in the city's
utility tax and possible charges for
library use. ·
There'• a ~. too, t.o
impcJee a dtywide tippler'1 tax on
the sale of aJcohollc beverages.
These poaaible revenue-
raiaing steps have not even
reached the recommendation
stage. They're only ideas but
surely they rate a comment or
two.
You'll have your chance
Monday. -. .
Opinions e)lpressed In the space above are thoSe of the Dally Piiot. Otner views ex-
pressed on this pa9e are those or their authors and artists. Reader 'omment Is lnvit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. phone (714)
642-4321. . J
L.M. Boyd I Separate vacations
How do you and your matrimonial
mate feel about taking separase
. v.catlona? Slxty-ot\e percent of the
couples generally approve of this
noUon now. Big jump OYef' 20 yean
a&o· 11leD only 37 percent thou.aht It a aood Idea. OuT Love and War man la
not ioclced into an opinion oo OU. one,
except for the obvtoul c:onclUlf.oo that
pairs who don't want separate
vacadc:llW clearly have the st.ronpr
marrlqel.
If you IU.tter 'that ailment known •
low bide ~ ~ the spot just
behind thl Jona bClJ&e on the outer
ed1• of the 1nkle . A
counw..ctockwt.e n1b for •~t 16 ::,*~ to'do tt. So edvtle the
lnbei:lted a bu1lne11 that your
ancestors had started at the time of
Christ, and that -bualnell had lost $1
mlllion • day ever since with no
e~tion of chaJlae, lt would still
take· you and your descendent•
another 700 years to 1oee the firlt •1 trillion.
CJaIJn ii IOlne of the Taraliumara
lndiam on IOCXler teama 1n northern
Mexico run as many as l&O m1lfe dUJ"tna • pme.
You knew that 1on1 "La
Cucar1eha" wu abo\.at a coc~.
cer1&lnly. But dtd you know It w•
about •'cockroach who couldn•t ,,...te'DrooetlY becaUM he hid no mc:n·mirf~ '° llDOb?
Q. How m•"Y bathtubs in t~• •
Whitt HcM.m nOM A.~
· USEDCAR5 \ USEO .(~RS.
'
Politicos again flying high
WASHINGTON -Riling
Phoenix-like from the ashes of federal
frugality, the Air Force'• 89th Airlift
Wing ii once again flying hiah·
Little known to the public or Kremlin
spies, the 89th ii well known and lllghly
..Jeiarded at the Pentagon and on C..pitol
Hill. It's the bigshota' favorite unit, in
fact; for ita so\e mission ia to provide
luxurious -and free -transportation
for VIPs and their wives wherever and
whenever they ca n find a
halfway-legitimate excuae to fly.
The 89th's posh air-taxi aervice for the
elite costs the taxpayers about $10
million a year. To avoid embarrusing
congressmen and deprelSing taxpayers.
the Air Force destroya the 89th'1 flight
records after 30 days. But my a.odate
Peter Grant aaw a copy of the March
manifests before they hit the shredder.
ONE HUNDRED tripe were loaed by
the 89th in that one month. Here are
110me of theae all-expemes-pald junketa,
1traight out of the records that had been
marked for destruction.
-Two doz.en memben of ~
and their wives flew to the elegant
Ocean Reef Club on Key Largo, Fla., for
a meeting with a CanadJan
parliamentary delegation. ~ tab came
to ~.000, lncluding room and board for
the CanadJan junketeen.
-Rep. Don Fuqua. O.Fla., ia chainnan
of the HOU8e Science and Technology
Committee. So he and five other
committee members -with their wive.
-hopped an 89th jet down to Florida to eee the apace shuttle take off. Then,
JICI 11111111
after a aide excursion to California,
where they inspected a aolar-energy
project, the oongre9aional couples arrived
in New Mexico in time to aee the shuttle
land.
-Air Fon:e bra. hata U8e the 89th
like an airborne limousine service.
Robert Mathia. the vice chief of st.a.ff,
took b1I wife on a trip to F.ngland and
Spain. Gen. Robert Manh, commander
of tbe Air FOl'Cle Systems C.oinmanc( took
h.la wife on a 12-day tour of the Far East,
which lncluded four days in Hawaii. An
Air Force spokesman said wives are
allowed on theee trips for protocol
~ and to confer with dependenta
on 'quality-of-life 1-uea."
-The 89th is also available to
congrt!8lional sta.ffen. The Air Force
invited 25 Capitol Hill aides, alr_n9st all of
them female, to Colorado Springs for a
tour of the Air Force Academy.
TBF.sE EXAMPLF.s were all from
the month of March. In January, Rep.
Peter Rodhio, 0-N.J .. led a group of nine
Democratic congreamen and their wives
aboard an 89th jet for a two-week, $1~.000-plus junket in ltaly~They visited
Genoa, Venice, Pisa, Florence, Naples
and Rome to "show America's support
for Italy as a strong NATO ally," a
Rodino spokesman said.
Also in January, Rep. James Jeffords,
R-Vt., a member of the Education and
Labo r , Agriculture and A1ing
Committees, tor 90IDe tealOn flew the
89th to France, Gennany, Italy and the
Netherlands while his constituenta were
shoveling snow. A Jeffords spokemMm
said his boas "has a general J>Olk>: ot
avoiding congr~onal junkets unlea
absolutely necessary." Coupllnfi the
words "junkets" and "neceau.ry' ia a
lexicol0£ical breakthrough.
Though the $10 million bud.get for the
89th Airlift Wmg is a drop in the $258
billion Pentagbn buclret, lt probably cost'.a
the taxpayers billions more l..ndirectly.
What ~ la '°"" to be 90 ungracious as to nJu1e over the defense
budget after a lwo..&fowa flight on an Air
Fon;e junket jet?
Unions didn't kill the 'big hands'
To t.he F.ditor:
On your editorial page of May 24, was
a very df.s8usting article by F.arl Waters.
Mr. Water11 has the gall to state, In
print, that the reason that there are no
more big bands is due to featherbedding
MAILBOX
by local unions when the b(g bud came
to town. Nothing could be 1u.rther from
the truth!
I had the good fomme to be a at<t-nan
in many, many famous "blg bands." with
20 years' experience on the road in~
kind of band, and never once did I 1ee
the inftponlible activities Waten claims
happened in the big band era. It ia
simply not true!
ONE OF THE things that did destroy
the big band era wu, first of all. four
lona-hai.red youths who started to turn
the entire music businell around with
the advent of the rock era. No blc bed
had ever been able to draw a querier of
a million people to a field in Woodstock.
and that is one of the th1np that ~
the big bends.
We are happy to report to you that
every major and minor 1tar, and the bulk
of all protellional muaiclanl do be.Iona
to, and enjoy membenhip in a union, the
American Federation of Mu1ician1.
Inaccutaciel ahould not be allowed to be d.illemlna~ thl'OlUZhl your publication.
B. OOtJclLAS SA WI'ELLE Prelldent
MUli<:iaria' Local #'I. A..J'.M.
Leave cars at !Jome
3. U1e only local water. Most of our
water ii shipped over deserts at great
expeme.
4 . No sewers. Waste should be
""th!:· ideea might 1eem a bit extreme,
but our Southern C..llfornia climate la
very delicate and bJCh mealW'e9 must
be taken to protect it and ~ it back. U
people wah.t cars let them live in
Minnesota and Iowa where they can
have all the mechbwa they want. But lf
people want to live heft they must give
up some of the thina• they take for
P'*Dted in the rest.of the country. Not '
only will thae atroag IDNSUl"el clean up
our environment, &ut they will alao
promote the quality of our life rather
thM1 the quantity.
MIKEMANG
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Ste instructions below
Rule sid~-stepped
To the Editor:
Contrary to your editorial on May 21,
there ii nothing ''outmoded'' about the
500-mile rule for John Wayne Airport.
& we are all •WAN, \Mre la mote
demand for eo1ntnerdal lervice at John
Wayne than can or ahoukl be provided.
By leMcinC Denver in the lint place,
even with a stop ln LM Vee-, FrOntier
bu circumvented the lnten\ of. the
500-mUe naJe. To elimlnate the Nie will
merely encounp other carrien to do
the same, eddlnt to demand pn!llUl'el at
the airport.
What la reUly needed la 80IM ccurap
on the part of Oran1e County
SupervWonl to.,,_ on and Implement a
new alte. Until \be)' "bite the bullet", the me. at John Wayrte will conUnuel
BURR ALLEGAERT
memories, aa I grew up in Corona del
Mar too. I was 13 in 1956. Back then. we
not only had squirrels and gu)Ja. but
skunks, pcasums, quail and road runners,
too.
OLD CORONA del Mar grew vwild
flowers every spring, lnstead of horiiet.
The dazzling array attracted hundreds of
species of butterflies.
You could cat.ch fiah, abalone and
1Qbster with just a mask in six feet of
ocean. We never hearcl of llfOOi. The
roeda were clear and you could park
anywhere, except for awn.mer vacati.oo.
Big Corona Beach had..P>ba of tar all
over it, quite often. back. then. It ii
always clean these days. It would be
terrible to foul up our beaches. You are.
right, Jane. But I still wish you could
have seen .the "crown of the Sea" when
the only dirty thing about her was the beach! , •
MICHAEL STEINER
'
Sa¥e Social Security
To the Editor:
Treasury Secretary Reaan baa
publicly stated t.ha\ Sodal s..-urtiy will
go broke after Jllly 1983 unlela cbanlel
are made to make the •)'Item fiJ\andally
·eound.
Thil IW"€Jy means that the time ii now
to reali%e the total lnJuaUce and P•~J
impact from such a 0 happenln&." It ._
means that federal ~ DllC
forestall such eventuality to avoid
financial disaster and todal rewlutlan.
\
Chief Wahoo labeled
smiling, dumb savage
From AP .. dl1patdaH
CLEVELAND -Lawyera tor • the Cleveland Indlanl bueball team ·
and the Cleveland lnd1an Cent.er uy
they ar• near a1reement on a
.ettlement ln a long-atandlng dlapute over the
portrayal of the team'• 1ymbol.
'l"he center fUed 1u1t ln 1972 ln Cuyahoga
County Common Pleu Court, uklna $9 million
damages and 1eektni injunctive relief t.o make
the team alter maacot., Chief
/ Wahoo, from a "smiling, .J -aumb savage'' to a
:!1:t~ representation
Harley McNeal, a lawyer Ii . far the team, said an annual ~ Indian Day at Municipal
, / Stadium is one method of
-../j lettlement being considered.
. Terry Gilbert, who
CHllP WAHOO repreaents the Indian Center,
said the center would receive a cut of that ~·· gate receipts.
"We would alao want to uae that occasion t.o
promote positively the image of the American
Indian," Gilbert uld: "We would expect it to be a
regular event with appropriate public relation1
and ~motional effort to advertise lt. 'No other nationality group or race would
tolerate such a caricature of themselves nor
should they be expected to. Why does it have to
be a clown? Why can't it be a dignified symbol
that shows the heritage and pride of the
American Indian?" Gilbert said.
· buote of the day
Oscar Gamble, Yankee outfielder, at an·
off-day workout ordered by owner George
Steinbrenner the morning after a 13-inning
loss to the A'a: "Ernie Banks is the only
person who would have been happy t.o be
here."
,'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
,I .
·1 Elchelberger Just misses no-hitter
. ..
· ~ Diego'• Jm Eicllel~r Ill fired a brilliant one-hitter Wedn y
and the Padres acored all their runs
on a dropped fly b8.U to notch a 3-1 ·
National League victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Eichelberger, 5-6, yielded his only hit on a
questionable call in the second inning when Scott
Tbompaon hit a grounder to second. Tim
Flaa.Dery slowed the ball down, but it bounded
,•
I
off his flove int.o right field
and of lclal scorer Dave
Ntptblgale of The Sporting
News credited Thompson
with a hit . . . PW Niekro,
AHanta's 43 -year -old
knuckleballer, hurled aeven
bitleu innings before Bob
Ballor aingled for the first of
New York's four hita aa the
Braves defeated the Meta, 3-1
I
!: i
1 ECHEUPOCR . • . Alu AUby drove in five
l runs with a three-run homer and a two-run
1 double to back the lix-hlt pitching of Nolaa Ryan '--and Dave Smidt and lead H~ t.o a 6-4 ~ triumph over Montreal . . . Pete Rose doubled,
l' singled and scored twice and Garry Maddox
· homered to help Dick Ratllvea t.o his fifth
: straight victory, a 4-2 triumph over Cincinnati
: ... 'Joaqllln And•Jar fired a six-hitter for hta
third shutout of the season and Keltll
Ben:aucln'• third-inning single gave St. Lou.is a
1-0 decision over San Frandaco. ft was Andujar's
eighth career shutout.
I
a1ump1ng a~ .. n ... ROdQerl
~llft 'ReUen,wholed • the Milwaukee 8Nw1r1 t.o the(r flilit
p~tf berth evel' lut llNIOC\, Wll
flred WedMlday amkllt a llwnp ln
whJch the tMm Md loet 14 of 21 pm.. Ha"•>'
KHU. the Brewen' blttinc lnltruc1or 111.ce
1871, WH named interim mana1er ... In
American Le.,ue ection Ku.nn'1 flnt venture u
a mana11r found Milwaukee wlnnln1. 6·2,
· behind Cecil Cooper'•
two-Nn homer M S..nlt . . .
l1bby Marctr amaahed a an.net llam homet" ln tM top Of the 18th~ to power
t.he New York YAnkMI to a
wlld 12-8 victory over
Toronto. h WH Murcer'1
aeventh career arand 1lam
. . . Aadte 1'ontoa homend
·~• for the fourth •traicht pme to 1p&rk Cleveland to ltt 10th
conaecutlve triumph, a 4-2 decl1ion over
Minneeota, extendlna the ltmr'1 10l1na streak to
14 aamea ... Amoe "Odt delivered a run-ecorina
lin&le with one out in the 11th lnnl.na t.o Ult
Kansas City to a 7..0 Win over the Chicago WhJte
Sox, extending the ~ lOllna 1treak to aix
1amee . . ~ Rookie Dave Ro1tetler hit a tolo
homer and Fn.U Tuua pitched a four-hitter ..
Texu defeated Baltimore, 4-1 ... Dwayae Murp•y and Dave Mclay a1ammed two-run
home.rs and Mike Norrll ~~ed h1I tint shutout
of the year with a four-hitter aa Oakland deelt
Boston a ~-0 -~· ... Lamarr Hoyt of ~ White Sox, the only nine-game winner in the
major leagues th1a eeuon, waa aelected aa the AL
Pit.cher of the Month for May .
Baseball today
On th.la date in bMeball in 1978:
Philadelphia'• Dave Johlwon became the
fint player in modem major leegue h1ltory
t.o hit two pinch-bit grand'41am bomen in
one eeuon, h1I ninth-lnnina blut off Terry
Fonter giving the PhlllJes a 5-1 victory
over Loe Angeles at Veterana Stadium.
On thJI date ln 1932;
New York Yankee9 tint bueman Lou
. Gehrig hit four home rum in the Yanks'
20-13 rout of the Philadelphia A'a at Shibe
Park. Meanwhile, back in New York, John
McGraw retired after 29 tumultuous yean
aa manager of the Giants, handing the reina
over to first buesnan Bill Terry.
Today's birthday:
Cleveland pitcher Ed Glynn it 29.
Connors bounced at French Open
Jo.e Hlaaer .. of Spain upset Ill
top-eeede.d Jimmy Couon 6-2, 6-2,
6-2 Wedne9day to advance into the
aemi.flnala of the French Open Tennis '
Tournament. The Spaniard, seeded 14th, ...
outmaneuvered Connors on the slow red clay
court in ICOrCh1ng heat ... Pat Eddery rode
favorite Golden neece to a clear-ait victory in
the 203rd Derby claasic at Epeom. The winning
time waa 2:34.27 and the margin of victory was
two lengtha over Touchi.ng Wood . . . Fines
leveled agaiNt tennis star \'ital Geralaltil for
three alleged · obecene gestures at the French
Open have been re9Cinded in a move that will
allow the 27-year-old to compete at Wimbledon .
Television, radio •
Followt.nc are the top lpor1I events on TV
tonigbL Ratinp are: "t/ v v excellent; v""'""'
wQ!th watcbing; ....,., fair; ""' forget it.
S I p.m., Claaanel Z "" "" "" ""
NBA CBAMPIONSBIP: Philadelphia at
Laken. .
Anoueen: Dick Stockton and Bill &u.ell.
The La.ken aim for win No. 3 ln the fourth
game of the 98rie9 tonight. The key for the 76era
i1 stopping LA'a heralded fHt break. If
Philadelphia can do that. or at leut alow it down.
the 76en will be ln the game. The fifth game
will be played in Phlladelphia Sunday.
. RADIO
Buketball -Philadelphia at Laken.. 6 p.m.,
KI.AC (~70).
• •
· ~8 at halftime, but that wu as aa they got as the Laker&
Lasorda erupts
after 8-7 setback
I ent on a 13-2 rampace in the
3:39 of the aecond half t.o
any suapenae.
.. The team• return to
lJuladelpbla, where the La.ken ffon the eeries opener 124-117,
~ Game 5 Sunday afternoon. A
9xth pine. if necell8I')'' will be
Klayed here next Tuaday night. r McAdoo had a lot to do with
bi.I club'• convincing victory in
ame 3, ICOl'ing all 14 of his
ta in the first half, 12 of them
hile Abdul-Jabbar watched.
"Belna at home IUl'e helped a
lOt," aald McAdoo. ''The fans
rfally got us 101ng at the start.
We knew we hac1 t.o put four
gipod quarters together tonight &.nd we did that."
Philadelphia Coach Billy
Cunningham gave the Laken
cttdtt. but made it clear that h1I
club wam't at the ~ ol 11a l&Jlme. U. alao expr ! 11 ! d tJit t.ling
tllJt tonight'• conteat will be
llbother maUer. 1t'We jult did not .-, well aa a
-.,,.. be aakl ·~ played ~utandin1. I know that ia sfnm11Mna uu.n,a. but that ii ~i what it w-. We wW be bid&. YOU will .. a cllfferent
club Tbunday ni&hL" We Anplea cc.ch Pat Riley
, .peed.
I f •1 think it't LndJcatJVe that . wmn • teal --at ... a.wl ~~ to rwpond with a~
"be ... .tfaro.m.
al 1i .....-PMn:W~lll to ~lialllJii.aclMiiWtniiliol ~;~ ~ m wn. •*• la•Te to .,.. juat al ~· ~~~'=I 0.-. tblll:mf did at ........... .......... tlM
pmtllo-et. I
PITl'SBURGH (AP) -In the
last month, Tony Pena'• ~tUna
average has fallen from .325 to
.262.
But the young catcher gave
himself and the Pittaburgh
Pirates a big lift Wedneaday
night in a game that dropped the
Loe Angeles Dodaen beck below
the .500 mark.
"I haven't been hitting, and
the team hasn't been winnine·
But I hope we can change that."
said Pena, whoee two-run atngle
with two out in the bottom of the
ninth gave Pittsburgh an 8-7
victory over the Dodge~
The win booat.ed the Pirate.
out of 1ut p1.ce In the National
Lea1ue Ea•t. Meanwhile, the
defendlna World Seriu
champion Dodpra fell to 25-20
on the~.
"Without a doubt lt'1 touch·
y OU lee how I feel." Dodaer Manaaer' Tom 1..-rda Mid after
the free..9winainl aame which aaw eech lkle rap 14 hltl.
When be entered the locker'
room after the 1oel, Luorda Jet
off 1team by 1boutlna a few
choice worda to no one In
particular. He later ipOke briefly
to h1a playen.
01 told .them not to h.anc their
beedl becawe ~ have nolhinl
to be aahamed Of, llSd t..orda.
'~'ll I» '-* ~." M idd9d. ~ ahMd to a --ln St Louil.
LilioriSa ---tbt ~ -~ ilc:iiiil bi • ""' .... ~Mdcwo.-.r••• • belaehliil•r?t• .UIM....," be llltlL -.. oea a .._,,, .._
out ................ ..,
(hii) ............. -,llmlll
........ -i ..... =
...,. "" --tii& iliid
\
the ball goes down the rightfield
line. You tell me about the
breab. U he geta the guy out. the
g&nle'I over.''
Rick Monday's three-run
homer in the tint Inning gave
the Dodgen a 3-0 lead off Eddie
Solomon. Ron Cey and Mike
Sdoecia aingled home runa in the
third inning H Loa Angele•
moved ahead 5-2.
The Plrata, who ICOl'ed twice
in the bottom of the first off Bob
Welch, added two more runs ln
the third to make it M .
Sax llngled home another run
in the fourth t.o give the Dodpra
a 8-4 lead. Their advantap stood
at 7-5 going into the bot10n:\ of
the le'Wnth..
Dale Berra. battlina a alump
that hu dropped h1I averap to
.188, alncJed hOme a Plrate run in
the .eventh to cut the lead to one
nan.
INJURED -Don Asute la on
a day-to-day b.lsis after
re-aggravating his right
elbow.
Sunset nine
faces Moere
LONG BEACH -The tint
annual Sumet League va Moore
League A.ll-ctar bueball game la
eet lor Sat\U"day night (7:30) at
Blair Field, here.
A total of 19 aenior players
from each league will go at it in
the affair, 1pomored by the Long
Beach KiwUlia Club. Price of
ad.million 1a $2. All prooeeda will
benefit Kiwanl1-1pon1ored
chariUes.
Ediaon High Coach Ron
LaRuffa will coach the Sunset
team, assi1ted by Fountain
Valley'• Joe Miller and
Huntington Beach's Mike Dodd .
John lferbold of Lakewood will
coach the Moore League f:eam.
Mes:nben-of the team include:
IDllOM -Mike O.Benon, p-of: Joe
Kwolttt, Sb; Gr'9Q Clontir. p; Tony Ungent, o..
POWITAlll VAL.UY -81-Jolw••d. 1t; Tim Mwtlno, 2b; 0-.. Rot>tm, .
llAMtA -Trelf a.nn.tt, p; Kevin Eltl«,
3b; Ken LMzlo, a
ocaAN V9W -KMI 8Uonlty. p; Fr.ct
T uttie, of; El1C Aeintloltl. of. ~ llACtt -Oreg 8hlttey, o; an., Btlrd. ot. Oreo o.v ..... ftllWllTD -Lllnoe Aoki, p; O.Wdo u.mee. ot. Den wong. ab.
From Page ·c1
LAGUNA • • •
any knowledge of the Artists'
prowess in tennis. "I was just
hoping to play tennis," ia.id
Willard. "It turned out pretty
well."
The lam enda O.labasas' IJea9011
with a 17-6 record (including two
forfeit loaes).
01
ANGELS LOSE AGAIN •
• AnpJa to jult one run aM Urie
bita to pkk up hta flrlt victory of
tht IMIOn.
But he needed help from
Olbaon, who ironically waa
havinJ bl• ahare of problema
with A.npl pltchlna.
.. I've been •~Una at the ~tob(a~~t!°}~ldei' ~~
not aure what pitch I hit. 1 waa
just lookinl for a pltch in a
ccirtaln erea, They have been
oi>enlnl me up with a lot of
aliden -down and in to I had to
adjult my 1tance."
Glblon then adJuated the 1COre
in the Ttgera' favor with hla
home run that found ita way into
the right field seata for a 4-3
advantage.
The Angels scratched for.
everythinc they could get. In the
third, Tim Foll walked, Bob
Boone aacrlficed him to eeoond
and SOot>y G'rlCn w~cked an
Ktil single for a 1-0 lead.
Their two runs in the fourth
From Page C1
HADEN RETIRES • • •
playoff game against the Dallu
Cowboys. In '79, he suffered
another broken finger in the 10th
game of the regular season and
was replaced by Ferragamo, who
eventually led the Rams to their
only Super Bowl appearance in
the club's hlatory.
In 1980, after winning hie
summer battle with Ferrapmo,
Haden broke his finger again,
th.la time in the opener. When he
returned, it was as an
.undentudy. Finally, last 9ea80n,
he outlasted Pastorlni and Jeff
Rutledge, only to go down with a
knee injury that took him out for
the aeason ... and h1I career.
"If there are any regrets It's
that 1 had a losing aeaaon last
year .t.o end my career. I had
never played on a losing team
~fore. And my last game aga1nat
the Giants, which we lost. When
you leave like that it tenda to
have a bitter taste," he said.
"All for thrills, I guess my
biggen one is that I ~ 10me
I.ans and frienda name their kida
after me. And, I was very
fortunate to bring some smiles t.o
faces that don't have much to
smile abouL
"I don't think rn miss football.
but I will miss the people."
Haden was the starting
quarterback at USC for three
9eUODS. He p1a_yed one year for
the Call(om.1a Sun of the World
Football Leque before Joln1na
the Rama in 1V76. m. best 1eMOD
may have been 1977 when he
ranked leCOnd In NFL palming
effidency and threw only a'lx
lnteroeptiona all year.
Haden, however, wu never
totally acce~ by the fan1.
Continually at Anaheim t Stadium, one of Haden's low
points had to be when he was
cheered for being injured in the
Rams' opener in 1980.
"In my own mind I've had a
successful career for two
reasons," he explained. "One, I
always tried to play my best. I
may not have played very well,
but I tried my best. And two~ I
never gave up.
"11\e whole thing has been
very, very wearing. I think I
would have been a much better 1
quarterback if the Rama had
given me the reins. I don't think
there's any doubt I could have
played better if I wasn't
csmstantly looking over my
shoulder.
"It's hard to imagine that at
age 29 I'll be working in an
office. That's going t.o be a hard
adjustment."
SATURDAY
JUNE 5
'
• I
I
~ . ' . · "
11UJOR UAGUI tTAJIDtNG8 ~o~:Z:'9 W L ,.._ oe
i1 IO ,tot •• ao .'83 1"' 17 t1 .M3 , ....
H 27 .. , ..... 26 H 472 1
15 " S41 12\'i 11 41 Ut IO hetwll.,..,....
o.IY011 31 17 ....
&o.ton )() It 112 tit
New von. 25 22 w a ... ~ u 23 521 • ............ 24 24 900 1
lkilllmOre u 25 479 •
f0f0f!10 U 27 44t 9'-'
• • .. '('w .....
OelrOlt 5. ~ 4
New von. 12. l oron10 6 ( 13 lnnlnQtl
Tuu 4, Baltlft\Ote 1 Clewlancl 4, ....,_ .. 2
KM ... Olly 7, CNcago 6 ( 11 lnnlnga) O•llind 5, Boeton 0
MllwMll! .. 5. SMnMI 2
Tedey'e 0-.. New VOflc IJoM 4-4111 Toron10 (LMI 3-3). n
T .. H (HoneyGu11 0·9) ti 8el11mort (Fl.,,...n 3-4),"
Only a-ed!«Nllld
.... lonel l.eMw ... ""' °""""' W L · fle4. -Atlanta 29 20 ... 2 .., DlleO 27 21 .M3 1\t ~ 25 :ze .490 5 ,_,,, 22 21 .440 7 ....
San Fl'WIClleoo 22 ao .423 '""
Clnalnniell 20 29 ·'°' 9 ...... ~
SL t..oo.-U It .127 Montt9el 25 21 . 543 4141
PN11d1-tola .. 22 .542 4 ... New Voftl 27 21 MO 4i.
P111-.rg11 20 21 .421 to
CNcego 21 )() A 11 11 •.•.. ..,,..._...
Plt~l.0-.-7 Sen Ol9Qo 3, ClllcllgO 1 Howton I , Monlreel 4
A11en11 3, New YOflc I
PNlecMlpllle 4, Clncinnetl 2
St. Lou1a 1, Sen f'rendlco O T.-,..O-
MonlrHI (Rogere 1·4) el PH1eburgh (~S.11.n
Only Q-ec:MOuled
AMeNCAN LEAGUE
n.n,~.
O«T9'0I\' CA&60MllA
•rlltM •rll M
Ltmon,tf 5 0 1 0 Ownng.H 4 0 1 0 C.1>911 3b 4 I I 0 C.,_, lb 4 0 I 0 Olb-ci 4 I 2 2 Qnell,2b 5 0 1 I
Me dtl 4 2 2 0 AeJUl'l,tf 3 0 0 0 Herndon tt 3 0 2 2 ~ I O 0 0, P-.hc 4 0 0 0 Bylr.dll 4 0 2 0
8tokne 2b I 0 0 0 Lynn,c:f 3 2 I 0 Whltellr 2b 2 O 0 0 ~31> 4 1 I I Wellnlt lb 3 I 2 I Fell.• 3 I I 0
MltWPf 0 0 0 0 " Boone,o 3 0 2 1 DeJolvl • 1 0 0 0 Tremml M 2 0 0 0 .....,,. lb 2 0 0 0
Toe• S5 5 10 5 Totm 14 4 tO 3 ._.._, ........
De4rOll 000" 110 0»-1
caittom1e 001 200 o~ E-Saudet. P-OWolt 1, Celfarm 1.
L08-0e1rolt II, ~ I. 29-Me I, Lyftft. HR-Olbeon (5). WoekeftN• (1). 88-DeClllcee S-lloone, L)'V'.
a.troll • " " • • eo Seuc:ter 3... 7 ' • 2 2 LotNll{W,1-0) ~ 3 1 1 1 2
p Undtnoood "' 0 0 0 0 0 T~ (S,2) " 0 0 0 0 I c:.m.n. bM 5 .... 5 2 2 2 2
..... 1 .... 1 0 0 0 I
Cor1*1 CL. 1-4) .,., 4 3 "o o
Oollr 2 00001
Cortletl pitc:fled lO 4 Defter-. In 1he 1111. Lopei pl1ched 10 t b•11•r II' tll• '111. W"-LoplL T-.3:04. A-27,aet. ,
.......... 0,..,...,
l•• 020 110 000-1 0 a.tllmcn 000 001 000-I 4 I
T-end Sundwg: S'-t, G. 0.... (51 end Oemp .. y, W-hn•n•. 2·7 .
L-81...,,, S-4. HA-T-, ........ 2 A-10,451
......_._T .... I
~ 000 011 000--2 • 2 ~ 301 000 00.-4 • 0 e, CHUlto, Fellon (7) and Leudner: Sul~~ (t). ~ (t} end H-.,, Nall0todny (11. W-lutcttftej 4·1, L-8. Ou1ttto. 2 -3 . 8 -Wll uon (2). HR1-Mlnne•ol1. Werd (5). Cle ... tend,
Thornton (101. A--11,oi75.
Y-*-tt.-•• ._ Y«k Q0G 000 001 020 5-'2 15 1
Toronto ooo 1ao 010 020 o-• t4 3 Guldty. f'rbtef (7). Rawt.y ( 10) end Wy11eoar; Ct•nc~. R. L. Jeclllon (ti,
Mclaugllfln (111, 8ombec:k c1a) and 8. Mtrllnu. WlllU (II. W-Rewley, 4·2. L-Mc~, 2~ HA-.... York, Mwoet
(3). A-20. 111. •
ONceao ""= 7bo~,..,~-· 15 2 i<.n. Ctty aoo 010 100 11-1 11 1
TtOUt. 8arojaa(t) end 19; Frc.t.er... (4). QutHnbeft'y (I). Armetrong ( 11) end
W.illen W-~. 2-4. \.-..... 1·1. A-17,.-07 ..... ..._ ....
9oMon 000 000 000-0 4 t ~ 2:20 100 00.-t 9 0
Edlattley, ~ ''' ""' oeon-c Nomi end~ W-Homa. W . L-Edt..-ey,
M . tiR~. ~ (11). Md(ay (2). A-11,205. ............... ....... 011 001 020-5 12 0
Seattle 000 011 OQ0-2 1 2 C.~ "'° llltlme>ft1; F. 8annlt1et, Sl1n1::;,~ 8. et.rk (I) end auttlng.
W-C M. L-'· laannltt•, 5-4. HA-........ 0. lfellltel'IOlt (3~ ~ ... ~(l).A.4,t.U,
NATIONAL UAOU. ,.,.... .. 0a ... ,. 1
~ L09MGaa•
. • , -~ l • , "" Moten0ctl220 lulZtl •121
t..aeyl1 3220 Olle11 •110 J."-21> 51S2 '"""'8el1 IOOO J.Tlllleft 10 I 1 1 1 ,,.,...., ft> I 1 I 0
.....,, • 1 a a ~. 1ta 1 1 a
9'rra• •011 ~" 1010 ~flflOOOO C41rlll It I 1
"·"'""" llf 0 1 0 0 ~ el • 0 1 1 "91t&• 2000 ...... p .oooo .. ,.,,_11 1 0 0 0 .NIM!teptl t 0 0 0
lcurryi> 0000 v...,..o 0000 MoMnrapfl t 0 1 0 ---0 4 0 1 1 ....... 4010 ..... 1010 ~ p 1 o o o v,"°'"', o o o o ...,_...,0000 ......... 1000
W19anflfl 1 0 0 0 w.ldlp 2 1 I 0
........ 0000 ,.,..,, 1000 ...... 1000 OU.-111010
...... p 0010 T ...... 1O1 t
•• T ... If 114 I T ..... 40 714 1 \.GI~ .... " ":r * 100-1
.....,,... . -010 10t ..... . .,. .......... ""' ..... a.;...,.._, ..... ~-.... ......,.. ,, ~oe-1. .. A"""" 10. ,..,""''" 11. ee-u.r . ...,i..l·"*""• .. -..-. 0 ........... __ ...,,.,, .........
M -ti1011fa, (I). 1a-IH, ..I.Illa,, ._.._ .. ._.._..,T,"9!a ....... . ........
•
~1 .......
,.,, f' t8nCleco 000 000 000-0 • 0
41. Louil 001 000 00•-I t 0 L .... .,. enc:t Mey; Andultt 11141 llnlmmer. W-AnOujer, 5·4 L-LeOey, 4.3
A-13,'77.
AngelftW .... un...
MllM ......... 156 27 4f 0 12 .31t
63 • 1• 0 •• 302 151 21 .. 7 21 •ne
11JO • ~ 1 ao .m 200 S2 67 10 N .Jte 1IO 24 44 2 13 .1t8 194 17 4S 2 24 .274 ,.. 22 .. 7 )() .242
29 2 7 0 3 .141
112 22 .., • 20 ·* 156 20 sa 1 ,. .m 242500 .20I
'43711 .20I 1 0 1 0 0 .15t .a 4 1 o 2 .tee
92000 .000 1121 219 463 ~ 205 .m
"'CtlllCI • H•IOW-&.DA 2 0 0 1 0.00.00
""" 19 10 10 1-4 o. 71 54'1> .. 7 21 5-1 2.15
63 .. u 21 .. 1 2.12 ·~ 32 11 M M 2.74 75... 10 11 24 5-2 2.11
4314 "' 22 24 u 2.tl 40V, 46 111 11 2-9 4 •
36'1> 42 14 23 1~ 5.45
479V. 515 190 207 31.20 3 02
Top10 ~--~= l-JCM •MllH,_ ...,.,.,., ~ .. 111 44 n .m
9onnel, TOtOfttO ~ 124 2t 47 .379
Cooper........ 47 111 S2 • .)16
..... ~ 2t 15 • 11 .8111 McAma. ~ Clly .. 112 u ., ,,..
W.~ City M 106 14 M .$43 ..._...,.,~ 36 t4 25 S2 .MO
~°"'"* .a 114 31 11 .m ..,.., ....._.. 41 ,.. 21 54 .121
....... ~ ..:,.111 ,. 53 .32:1
Tllom1on, Cleveland. 11; Roenlolle,
Beltlmore. 12; Hrt>ell, lflnnHote, 11;
Murplly, Oaklend, 11; Loweneleln, aalllmor•L~ Herrell, C•• ... l•nd, 10; .................. ...........
Thomeoft. a...lend." 1; McAae. ~
City, 43; Llldnalll. CNcJaoo, 41; °"'*· ·=-·-..= rir ...,_,.,., •. ~~ f:~Yort.7-1: aarker, Cl••t!!=4r t-t: Vukovtclt, •• ~N: ...... W:,.., ........... ~Qly.M.
MftOML.....,.
• M • N,_ ~ ... °"Ill' 47 ,.. 40 .. ~ .u, C"~ 110 ~ .. :a.1 ..... Yn ao t1 12 11 ,M1 .......,, ... Fr9fl. 12 1CM ,. .. .a1 ......... DllF n • za 11 .an ~...., l50,.. f1" .821 ....,., -.vn 43 1• 21 '1 .att
........ ........ 110 1• a 10 .311 <»-........... 46 ltl' 25 la ..a11 J.~. ~ •1 111 21 51 .314 ........
lfwpf!J. Allllta. 15: Klng!Nn, ...., vew11. 14; J.T~. Ptt~. 13; ~. Au.nta, 10; ....... ._....... 1'I ........
lfwpf!J, Allenta, 42; lforelend. ~ 3l~111en. Hew York, 31; 8.0 IH . ~37,J.~~. v . .......... (1.,......,
Fond!. ~ LoUie, t.I; Sunon. Houlilon. 1·2: P\lleo, New VOite, S.2; Roowe, ~.
7-3; y .......... ~ )-4; """'-'· Phi~. W ; Mwa. St, Louie, W : ..... -....... ....
2.10 uo Misc.
Plumer-. tops
I • area entries
State meet begins Friday
SA~ -Univenit)' H!cb'• Polly Plumer will be favored to win her th1id ~t
l,SOO.met.er title, a.ruiSe Durand of Lq\ana Beich
will be \he favorite ln the 80()..meter nm and
Sharon Hatblld of Jll®ntaln van.y w1ll be unon,
the top eont.enden ln four eventa at the .iate CD'
tnck and field ch.t.Qlpionahlpt here J'riday and Sacu.rdaY . Plwoer la a two-time defend.lna champion in
the metric eautvalent of the mUe run and hat been nannlna welf In recent meeta.
W6ile the pla dominate Ora.nae CoMt us
entrt-, five boya wU1 allo be ~ve
Andenon of Corona del Mar and of Fountain Valley are accorded the belt chance of
IOOrina Polnta. Andenon hall one of the better times (4:13.16)
in the 1,600 met.en in the state. Two othen from
TRACK
IOTICE
In purauence Of Lew, e>vbtlc nottoe It ~ glVll" ,,,et, on IN 111 dev
of JUiy. 1982. 11 Ille~ ol 10 o'doc* a.m . Ol 1"8t 08)'. •tie url<Stoigl,..~
Tax Collac;tor-Tr_,• Of the COunly of ()fenge. •• rllil ottloe In tne .... ,
Of Senla Me. Stale Of Calttamta. will deed lo Ille Slate. ~ -r~. or an in.tllllment peen Of r~lon le Initialed u pr0¥l<led by
lllW prlot 10 5 p.m on I.lie '-' butlneM <Sey Of Junt. 1N2, Ille rMI
properly ,...elnaftW clellll1lleO llPOl'I Wl1'dl det• 11¥9 °" -)'9111'1 .. haw....,.. 11-0ll'I "'-<Sate of "" ... of .. P'°'*1Y to .. Stata. The
t: arnouot tor wtlldl the o..o Will be ..,., wCll be the total emount <Sue '°' the CIF Southern Section finished m front of him wtlleh 11 wu IOld to uwi Stet• • .aid amount being Ml forth In 1ne cSoMert
in the Mattera meet and only one Northern and cen11 oC>POllta the <1Mortp11on o1 tN Pfot:l«IY. " 11ie PfOP«'IY It ,.._,.,._,_ -· .. --r '---a f.u•-cloc"' ..... -.. w .... <Seeded 10 Ula State, Ula right of re<Samption wll terminate upon eny ~uuua • ........ ,... ...,. ..... ,. .. __.... eubNQllent Nie or oti. conveyenoe by 111e Stai ..
Andenon the fifth best off comparative times. Aa 1>10Ylded by law. the 8111• eNjj ha~ ,,... tole euthorlty 10 receive ..
Ericbon has li't:Jted a 9:02.57 in the 3,200 rent•. '--anCS proflta ~ lri MY manner trom lhe prdpetty eo ~ 10 •he State. meters, finilh1ns th ln the Southern Section All 1n1ormallon c;onc;«nlng re<Sempllon or uwi Initiation of an 1n111111men1 ~ualf..fyina meet. ~ one Northern runner 1J plan of reclelnpllon w111. upon requ.1. be turnllhecl by Robert L Citron. -.1r1 .... •'--•--•'--Tax Collector-Tr..-.., and Redemption Offlcet, 110 Anenoe Bldg .. 630 aster, ........... ww ~test in \.nCI' state. N Broadwey, (P.0 Box 14381. Sant• Ana, Celltornla 92702. Others from the area competl.na In the meet o.i.cs Ihle 1stt1 d.y °' May, 1ee2 include Ocean View'• Rex Brown in tne 200 (21. 70); Roee.AT L. CITRON
Randy Kendrick of Huntington Beach In the diacua Tax Collector-TNMUr•
(169-3); and Lance Betson of Newport Harbor in r .. ~T~
the pole Vault (14 2 !,4) The ptopertlel 10 be deeclecl an<l tubjecl ot 1111t noOoe .,. altua~ In 1he
• · County Of Otenge. S1e1e of Calltornla. Md pattlcularly delct1bed u Joining t6e top three woman athletes are 1o11owt. to w11:
Teresa Barrtoa of University in the 3,200-meter nm PROPERTY SOLO TO THE
and L . ~ f T ,....,., .. ~ Beach in •'--hi"._ STATE IN THE VEAR 1977 FOR 1U £>egr&UI 0 -e.u-""~ &&• THE TAXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO jUmp. OTHER CHARGES OF THE F1SCAL "I~ I can improve my third lap time and do VEAR 1976-77
better," Plumer said following her eaay victory in HUITllliTOI IUCH IUITllliTll JUCI
the Mast.en meet. "I felt pretty strong but I WU cm SCROL llS1llCT
able to work on my third lap a little bit in that race. No 35 _ s... No. 77•134432, No 19 _ Sale No. 77-689230.
"It'• a lot euier to nm when you have aomeone AP 0~2--02. S393.&4 AP 111-sa1.u. 1&4-4.te•
ln fro~nt of OU to pull you out." No. 38 -Sale No. 77·1S6043. AP u~u11 IUCI .. ..i----in •'--800 with ~1IMI, at.i4 • was an euy wuu~ I.PC a No. 37-a.No. n-135044, AP lllFID 2:09.4 effort. 023-11t-02, SU.4
"I really wasn't happy with my time bUt I wu """ 311 -s. No. 77.1354"· AP SCHOil llSTllCT
able to win and qualify for the state meet," abeaaid. ~.8l9"°=:l:il:_ 17.138430.AP No. 90-a.No. 77..et0137, AP
A year aao she a1ao qualified, aeemlnalY. but was 024-12241. S5.087.t2 CJM.19S-33, SU2 -.... ,.,..,. l"".....1 L-1 th Ho. 40-S.No. 77·142208, AP No. 81 -SaleNo. 77-eee>t...,.,.... .._..,La •ucv ~ore e meet. 11._1eo-ee. se.117.a 058-193-eO. s12.te ,
Hatfield will maintain her ruued pace Of No.41-S.No. n -142207,AP 0:.02:t;&.=r: .. n...,_,AP oompetina ln tour events -both huidle races, the 114-18G-88, '27,385.50 No ... .,_._No n ...............
-No.42-SaleNo.n-143274,AP ..... --· -.,.... high jump and Iona jump. She got a bad start 1n the 144-091•22, wr.aa 058-041-«>. sue 100 low. and fin1alied fourth in the mutera meet No.43 -SaleNo.n-150091.AP No.M-SMNo.n..eesae6,AP
th '--_._with stro 300-ter hurdle 157-402-37, s1.02a.oe 056-05t-38, ss.4' en came ..,_.. a ng me race No. 44 _ a. No. n.153290,...,. No. u -a. No. n-ee4024. AP
to place tbird. 142-121·2&, S7,"3.tMI ~ S5.4'
In the high jump, she tied with two others for No. 45 -a.i. No. 77-175007, AP CIPISTlllO lllFIU ~ ~'!i~~~ <5-4). Fegrauws a11ohe,;1heaieciand 11~~~~·:!:!. n-1184~.AP SClllOL llSTlllT
wMn ·~·t but a.A a mills at an ear er "6 t 157-331•75, u1.12 No ee _ s... No. n .720252.
. WM placed fourth. No. 47 -S... No. n .18838fl, AP AP 740.021·18. S6.56 In the 1,_ .. jump HaCtield bit 18-5 on her fint· 151...,..11• 11•180·14 No 87 -S• No 77-722242. ..,.._ • No. 48 -8llle No. n-188188, AP M3.073-02, S1,3&3.M effort but dkin't improve. She bu done over 18-10 AP 151-622-24, uuo No ae _ sa1e No. 77-72&450.
th1a -.i. 1 alll!IU IUCI AP 513-182--0&. H .oa Bt.rrioe ftnJshed fifth In the 3,200-meter race at ..... No 88 -s... Ho. n-n1113 .
C AP 123..()7~. S317 88 the MMten ln 10:33.12. '" No 90 -Sale No 77-727174, From MtHion Viejo Hi1h will come the No 49 -s. No n -211005. AP 123,.(175-tt. suso 59
v~""" WM: e9, """""" · No 50 -Sale No 77-212512 AP 123,.(175-13, SllM.89 fa•--'•-in •'--~bu.nil $•--Kerbo ffe a1ao AP 641~3-18, SI0..20 Ho. 91 -SM No. 77·72717t.
qualified ln the Jow hurdles. AP 6'1·.373·17, '55.32 No 92 -Sale No 77-13251~ J~Norton. allo of Mi.ion Vleri, qualified No s1 -sw No 77-2t30e3. AP 682-103.31, se.12 in .o.L.-with •'--'---throw 1 2 .. in the AP M1-40M9..I. ~.oe No 93 -Saile No. 77-739197.
VIII:' '-"IC """"'~ • ..,, No. 52 -~ No~ n-214-464. AP 933-2e-<I09. St.158-80 qua1ify1na meet. But ahe failed to make the field in AP 644-123-18. w .oe . No t4 -s... Ho. n -742410. the abot Put. No. 53 -Sale No. 77-21t050, AP 804-071-31, Sa'°..98
Tanya Ra1llon ol El Toro posted a 55.9~ to A~~1 u:8N!,2
77-218053. SlllLEIACI
place aecood. ln the 400 met.er qualifying race. AP ~ 14, s10.02 YIWY lllFIEI
Weekend
TV, radio
$•turday
TELEVISION
11 a.m. (5) -WCI' TENNIS.
11:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -San Frand.:o
at Chicago. ....
2 p.m. (2) -HORSE RACING -the 114th
running of the Belmont Stakes foe three-year-olds.
Incl\.lded ln the field are Gato Del Sol. winner of
the Kentucky Derby, and Aloma'1 Ruler, winner of
the Prealmem
2:30 _p.m.. (7) -SUGAR RAY LEO~D'S
GOLDEN GLOVES -Teams repreaenting the
Rocky Mountalna and Kanaaa-OklahmMt ~tin a
aeriea of bouta.
3 p.m. (2) -WOMEN'S TENNIS -The
lingla final of the French~ 3:30 p.m. (7) -PRO G -'The finals
of the Seattle Open. taped at Lanea.
4:30 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Third rodnd play in
the Kempm-Open. Taped •
5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WORLD OP SPORTS -
RenaJdo Snipes (22·1-1) va. nm Witherspoon (14-0)
in a tcbeduled 10-l"OWldJ~vyweight bout, taped at
Lea Vepa. (11) -BASEBALL -Dodgers-at St.
LoWa.
RADIO
BMebell -D!;ldaen at ~l Louit. 5 p.m., KABC
(790); Boaton at Anae1a, 7 R-Jll., KltlPC (710). •
Hone Racina -Belmdnt Stak. reporta, 8:40.
9:40, 11:40 a.m., i2:40, 1:40, 2:25 p.m., KNX (1070).
\
No. 55 -Sale No. 77-218320 .
AP 8"--425· 13. '35.80 SCHOOL llSTllCT
No. 56 -Sale No. 77·218MS, No 95 _ Sale No. 77.749313,
AP ~2.()5, M2.7'4 Af 442-111-35. '324.00
No. ST -Sale No. 7J-2le563, .. o """ -Sete No. 77-748353. AP 644-442·13, St4.20 ,. '""
No. 58 -Sale No 77-218581. AP 842·112·17. S4r:.H AP 644-444..03. S14..20 No 97 -Sale . 77·7520488,
No. st -Sale No. 77·218072, AP 6 2 1-1 61 · 6 (formerly AP 644-453.01. $137.8 1 9:!1·181-8502), $8_04
No 60 -S.MI No 77-219179, No. 98 -Sale No. 77·752112.
AP 84~57-ot, S14.20 AP 821·162-64, $34.90
No. 51 -Sale No. 77-219180. No. 99 -Sale No. 77-752180,
AP &44~57-07, S14.20 AP 521·163-418, $40.10
No. 82 -Sale No. n .2191ee. No 100 -Sale No 77-754490, .... •i4 457 3 •1i 20 AP 932'20-131. $403.74
rw-.... • •
1 • • "'· No. 101 -s· ..... No. 77·786494. No. 83 -Sale No. 11.21n4a -AP~2·24,S14.20 AP 691·014·03 (formetly
No. 64 -Salt No. 77·2•9243, 814-190-031.17.10
AP 84~82·25, Sl4.20 PROPERTY SOLO TO THE
No. 85 -Sale No. 77·2112118, STATE IN THE YEAR 1978 FOR
AP &44~84-11. w .oe THE TAXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO
No. 66 -Sale No. 77-2183t5, OTHER CHARGES OF THE FISCAl
AP 84•-4&5-13, '294,78 YEAR 1975-78 Ar~2.ruo~ 1191
' SUL IUCI cm IEWPOIT IUCI No '03 -s... "°· 76-4090e8. AP 217-148-04. S1.488.M cm COSTA IESI cm No. 68 -Sale No. 77-241312. No 104 -Sale No 7t.473245.
AP 04~. '2.310 14 AP 428 · t:a 1 ·1~(1ormerly
Sii CLEIEITE 1IMitileni1 IUCI
No."_ J_f!! n.mM1. NJ SCIOOL llSTllCT
890-412.f9 (tormetty O&Mt0-61); No. 105 -S... No. 7M7*7A
Sl.OI AP 171-5&4.03, $543.54 No. 70 -S... Ho. n-332M2, AP ---190-412~ ('°"'*1y 059-010-52), PROPERTY SOLO TO THE uue STATE IN THE VEAR 1975 FOR
SUL lull Cm THE TAXES, ASSESSMENtS ANO
OTHER CHARGES OF THE f16CAL No. 71 -Sale No. 77.f18241, VEAR 1974-l'S.
AP 217-121-41, se.20 COSTA ilua cm COSTA .IESA cm No. IOI -Sale No. 1S-.•13n,
No, 72 -Sale No. 77.f71348, AP 115-330-51, S677.02
AP 425· 14 1-03 (formerly
111-313-03>. sere.,. ·
FOllTlll YIWY cm
No. 73 -Sele No. 7l'-t09525,
AP 143-513-11, Ml.02
PROPE"TY SOLO TO THE
STATE IN TH& YEA" 1t74 fO" 1
THE TAXES. ASSESSMENTS ANO
OTHER CHAAGES OF THE '18CAL
YV.R 1873-74.
lllTllllTlll llllf . SAi .1111 om
C ........ 11 om No. '°' -u. No. 74-12.•. •tllA AP 24·119r0t Uftd ,~(~
Ho, 74 -.... No. ,.,_., ... 14-n~.'N). Uftd 1•• 1M ln
AP ee.172•11. SIOU7 ~---°'1LN21•17
No. 76 -a. No. n.aee14, • 110, 9'10.11 AP 12MQ.OI, 11, 143.M -
No. 18 -Sale No. 77"'31111, '"OPU\TY 80t..0 TO THE AP 175-081..oe. M.44 llTAft IN TH9 TIM 1t1'1 '"°"
No. T7 -.... Ho. T7~11t7, ™& TAJCU. "!: 1119"8 Ml> ,_, ~ 11111 On9 OW.: IL OP TMI NOA&.
1m11T 11111 iiiiMr• ._ .... "". ll•IL 111Tm1 No:a -•Ho. n:m
No. 11 -... Ne; 1'~ A' tlf·341-U (fo'"'''h A' Ut-U t•tt 1t•r•erly ,,.,..,~ ... MT 6 11111 n
,............... ... ... MMl • .-UO.
~ 0...,.. CO. Diiiy llllot. Mir If, Nie S, 1MI
..
Or.ang. 0out DAILY PILOT 1Thu'9d.y, June a, 1882 H/F
NY E COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS ~,,. ...... n•nuH HI.DH ... , ................... .,. ••C.,IC, 1111•, IOITOlll, °' ' .. " .... c11tc1•1tUl UOC• I• MANHI AMt H .. aTtO t• ''" ilHO 411111 UCITl!lllt
Bad year tor I armers
f
'
Saffell &t McAdam. Inc. Bu.Uderl. lrvtNt, ti. been
1elected to OONtruct a U mWJon tddldon to the BUI
Medical C.enter, $400 W. Ball Rotid ln Anaheim.
h will add a aecond floor to the buUdtna.
expanding to a total of 30,168 oquare feet. The ooncnct
lncludea a 10,000-aquare foot around level perk.lnc lot
with it.eel columns au~~ the offlce9 above lt.
The &ll Medical la aero. from AnaheUn
General Hoepttal.
Projectors marketed
SOURCE Technologies Corporation, Mukilteo,
Waah., haa launched the marketing of ha V=
(TM) alideltound projection 1y11tem with the o
of a district sales office in Anaheim at 163 N. taa
Ave, •-' .. u--.i .... Marla H. Caprow baa been appo1n1.a1 """"wa;•
manager. She was aenior marketing repraeni.dve for
Xerox Corporation in Orange.
Western traflic rises
Western Airllnel May acheduled traf6c totaled
774 million revenue puaenger miles. up ~ percent
from May 1981.
May waa the first month of operation for
Western's new flight schedule, which included
development of a flight connecting center, or hub, at
Salt Lake City and the first Western aervioe to eight
cities, Baltimore, Boiae, New York. Mi.ow.a. Tucaon.
Fairbanks, the Tri-Cities (Puca, Kennewick and
Richland, Wash.) and Waahington'a Dullea
International Airport.
Also included waa resumption of service at
Spokane, Casper and Oakland.
Firm opens Grove facility
Walk.er & Lee baa opened a 4,000-aquare foot
resale office in Garden Grove with more than 350
guests attending the festivities.
Susan Van De Sandt la manager of the facility, at
Brookhurst Street and Orangewood Avenue. The
office is on the site that Walk.er & Lee has occupied
nearly 27 years.
Home-energy show set
Two major corporations will team to pr'e9ellt
aspects of the modem tolar home at the Home and
Energy Show on June 13 at J.he Mimion Viejo Mall.
The Mission Viejo Company and Reynold.a Met.ala
Company will explain the energy conaervation
features.
The Solar Systems display at the Home and
Energy Show c.an be viewed from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
June 10-11. On June 12, show hours are from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m. On June 13, the booth can be visited between
noon and 5 p.m.
For infonnation. call 826-1050.
New-home sales drop
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sales of new
single-f.amily hoU8eS, meager through the fall and
winter, plunged 15.3 percent in April to the lowest
level since the government began keeping such figures
19 years ago, official.a said.
And with interest rates still high, the Conunerce
Department's chief economist, Robert Ortner, said
Wednesday ''prospects for an upturn in the immediate
future are virtually nil."
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
\ .
NEW VOfOWIPI , ..... o.-JoN. ..._.
lor -.cs.. .-. J. STOCKS
JO Ind ~g.~c. ~ JD Trn 11u2 m .a to.• m.7•• 1.0 IS Ull IOU3 110 ... IOUt ll0.6h tAI '5 Stk 117.'7 Jiii.it J~ Jt•.ot• 1.G ·-......................... . Tr911 ........... .... .. 1.m.• ~·~ .:.:·:::::.::: .. :.:~· .. : ~:::
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK '''I J~ 2
~·
~ ... ... • "
NEW ~K lAPI JWI. 2
MflALS
w.d. m m m 10
1 u
........
~ IO -W1
J IOI
.......
1 DI 1't
1 2t
c...., 7lM-n ~ • pounci, u..e, ._.._ ........
..._. 3-21 oen .. • pound. a. 3S oente 1 pound, .._.
Tllltll.1130 ....... W..~
lb.
" .. llW 1 16-17 Glftt• • pouno, N.Y.
__, 1)70,00 '* .... ....... IZtt.00 tr'Oy m., N.Y.
SILVER H•ndy & Harm1n, M.Oao per troy .....
Orange Oo.lt DAILY PILOT /TI'K.nd~, JUne e. 1H2
Inmates'
l ··tuna
out
SAN DJJJQO (AP) -In a
move aimed at booatlnc San
Dle10'1 atUn1 tuna lndu1try,
1upervl1ora have approved a meuu.re that would put more
tuna on the menu at ClOW\ty jaila
but a oomeodON ottldal wained
.. lot c:oWd ao to wute.
11Unfortunately, trunai. have
been unreceptive to tuna diah•,
creatlna conatderable waate,"
Mid 1napector Cliff Powell ln a
report to auperviaon evaluating
the popularity of tuna.
"We've ael'Vt!d tuna over the
years. and lt'a juat not a real
popular diab," he aaid. "You can
generally tell whether 90me0ne
likes aomething b y how much of
it ends up in the garbage can.
We're just trytn.g to aay what the
f acta are."
The measure calla for the
county to try to spend •about
$200,000 on tuna ln the fiacal
year 1982-83 atarttng July 1.
That Ls almoet 30 times more
than the $7,600 spent on tuna last year.
But Powell warned auperviaors
that hia experience with five jails
and 1,800 inmates indicates most
inmates prefer red meat.
Powell aald the county
cafeterias would increase the
tuna allotment ln keeping with
the approved measure, but
cautioned supervisora a lot of the
tuna would go down the drain.
The tuna industry -which
has been troubled by oversupply
and sagging sales -generates
about $500 million it year for the San~ eeonomy. San Diego la
also the home of the largeat
seiner tuna fleet.
•
AP~
WHO ARE THEY KIDDING? -On the day Braniff
International Airlines stopped all flights, PenWell Publishing
Co. of Tulsa, Okla., was completing printing of the May
in-flight magazine issue. Debra Gwyn leafs through one of
the 115,000 copies. The fate of the magazine is unknown.
• • Ford raises prices
Charges up for options, delivery
DE:rROIT (AP) -The Ford
Motor Co. has announced it
raised the prices for o~nal equipment on 80llle cars, ted
the base vehicle prices of ita
Mustang GT and Capri RS by
$89 and ra.iaed destination and
delivery charges.
Spokesman Bill Peacock ea.id
the increases, effec tive
immediately, put the baae vehicle
li tce of the Mustang GT at
8,397 and the Capri RS at
, 196, he said.
Ford said that option boosta
lncluded white aldewall tires for
Ford Granadaa, now $72 from
$66, and air conditioning on
L TDs, now $707 from $685.
Deattnation and delivery
charges were raised an average
of $15.
College summer calendar offered
Orange Coast College's Office this sWnmer.
Summer '82 Community The summer a'-enda
Se r vice Ca I en d a r • Includes a children s film
available to the public. festival, day excursions
The 12-page brochure to various Southern
details more than 120 California attractions
different programs adventure tours t~
offered by OCC's outdoor recreational
Community Service spots, lectures,
mini-courses, buaine111
seminars, and classes for
kids and teens.
Free brochures may be
picked up in OCC'a
Community Service
Office, in the college's
Adrninietration Building.
Brochures will be malled
to individuals who send -::Dl=-=l=IH:=--:N=-=-:::m=-==-=c:-=:IS=--------their addre111. plus 37 .. centa for postage, to
• Community Service
NOURSE 123287 N . Sierra Hwy,
Office, Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. CHRISTINE C. NOURSE. Newhall Ca. with Ken
resident of Irvine, Ca. for the Poure, director of Hume
put 5 yeara, former raident Lake Christian Campa
of Lancaater, Ca. for 30 oftidating. Interment wW be•---f'tll.IC---..,-~---
yean. Pu.ed away May~. Saturday, June 5, 1982 at-------'""'----
For summer
community service
l'nformation, phone
556-5880.
State aided
LOS ANGELF.S (AP)
-California haa
received all additional
$1 lh million in federal
funda to help retrain or
relocate workers who
lost their jobs becau.e of
imports, the state
Employment Develop-
ment Department uid.
.. •
MririOUi ....... ...,
fllCTmOUI IUllNlll NAm ll'AlWNT PICTmCKll ..,._ .. -IM* ITA~ TM rollowlrlt l*'90l\I .,. dolllg MAMI nAftMIHT tflt ~ ,._. .......
The fottowlJIO PottOn• ff• OOlno ~ Ml Thi followtno pafeont .,. dOWIO ~ -bvelnMI 11 HA" I 0" T" IHI TY butlnoM u ._INION INVll'ONMIMTAL COAIT AUTO IUNTAL '"llOHOOL ANO OAYOA"I LOI PANCHO'I •21 110t I OONT .. OL COM,AHY.i MIUION
Hi.YICI. INC dbl TH"ll'TV "!NT ~I 1no .... an.c. 0.. M~.J ltnta Ma. OA HTOI ~Vl .. ONMINUL g0::= A OA", U tO It¥ I we Avtnut, ....._ '1A UtH. llMA&l I . GUZMAN, tlH I o.AL COMflAHV;
Newpof1 8olall, CA IHIO Hlrbor Trtnity 8eptlitt CtlufOlt, Qeny ,.._, lantaAM. CA t17CM, NVl .. ONMINTAL CONU!L
Cout AUIO Aolllll ~Inc .. tno ... ., •v•. eo... ...... CA btLIA LO I'll.-.. -.... LANOICA'I co.; Mlllt N
• Caltlornll OOfOOtltiOn. ntO trvtne t2tH. Ctr111111,lanla Ana,,_ CA t11Qt, INVl .. ONMINUt. CONT" L AvtnUe ~ IMofl CA HMO TN9 bUllntll la oonclucted by en OvADALUPI P. GUZMAN, LAHOICAN MAINTINANOI 00.; ~~II~ by a Uftll'IOOtpot•toct aaaoclatlon other tl~3 W, Oeuy 111111, lantl Ane, Md MllllOH INw.oNMIHT"L
COf"°'ltlOn 1114111 I P111~ OA tl104 LAHOICAN CO.. 1002 .... 1NI OoHt A\11 0 Atntat Ctlalmlan . Thie'"*'-' .. oonducted by • ..,., ..... o.a ...... AM. CA Serv!oa lno. ..,_.. ~ 12701. M161t N111all Pt.. Thie 1t1t11Mnt WM tllod wltll the lwnaal !. Cknmen IRUCI MA .. TIN WILLIAMI, Thia tllttmonl ... lied with the County Cleft! 9' Orenoe County on OlllldaklPI F. Qulft\lll IH 1 •. Oo11111ry Club L•H, County C"'11 of Orenge Oountv on Mey fl, 1M2. Diil• LOI* Mellolln, CA t2I01.
Mey 11, 1H2. ,,.,.. Tiil• 1111~1 wit II*! wllh Ille JOYOI LYNNI WILLIAMI. ""1" Publlalled Orenge CoHI Delly COUl'lty Clltk of Or•noe County on IH 1 I . Country Olwb Lant, ' Publl1lled Orenge 00111 Qally Pllol. Mey 20. 21, June 3, 10, 1882 Aprll 18, 1812. Anehelm, CA t2I01. PHot, Mey IS, 20, 21, Jvno S, 1912 2178·12 '1111U Tl\19 ~ II oonduotad by 1
S071·82 ncF Publl1hed Orenge Coe11 Delly limited ~.
-------------.,. """' Piiot, May 13, 20, 27, June 3, IHZ. 8NOo M. Wlllll'lll !--=--'"=-=~""~=~~·--2121-12 Thie llltofntnt WM tllod wttll U..
----------------P9CTTnOUe ....... County Clel1t. o4 Or--Collnty Oii MAim ITAftmNT "8.JC M)TIC( Junt 1, ltH. ~°"=4"° peNOl'll .,. doing ACnne>ua autM.. Publl1hld Oren,• oo.'.~:y
The ~ pottonl M 60111g MAMSIUI BIAUTY SUPP1.Y, Malm ITA~ Piiot, June 3, tO. 1 • 24, 1"2.
bullnOM Ml 2701 Harbor llvd .. F·8, Colla Tiie lollowlng .,_n 11 doing t.112.e2
COMI ANO Oil IT. 2101 t ..._,CA m26. . bullnltl M : Ml.JC M)llC[ Mowllon ll'erkway, L1gune Hlll1 M IC HA I l HAAR IS 0.. ( 1 ) R I! C R I AT I 0 N I
OaMfomla tfflS CUNNINGHAM. 443 PromontOfY EN 'r f "TA IN MI! NT ---;;e;;nc;~'i;!iiiiii"--Cerl Stout Clod! Jt .. 12• N. Orl11e WHI, Nowpor1 Beeoh, CA COOADINATOAS; (2)(R.E.C.). S110 ~~A~
Liiac 0t1v1, Piao.nu•. C1llfornl1 82te0. Pw11 Newpon, No 3t2 .. Newpon The followlnn poreon l• doing 82010 THOMAS EDWARD LEMM, BMdl. CA t2te0. bualnale ae: •
Emiko Clock, 124 N. LlllCI 8610 Ridge c. Rood. Anehelnl, John StanMy Dulr, 3110 Partt SCIENTIFIC MANA0lMlN1', Ortve, fltaoentla. ~ 92870 CA 92801: Newpon, No. 312, Newpon Boeoll. 24871 La~ ~wnua, laoi-
Thla bua1f-. II ooncluoted by Thie bu*-la conducted by 1 CA OZMO. Nlguel CA 92971
lndMduela (HU8BANO a Witt~ general pertnannlp. .~~II c.onducted by Ill\ John l(IUl•nl•. 24'11 LI =~ ~he e I H Ir r I I O n · John S Dulr Hermou A--. Laguna Njgull.
Thia t\elemtnt WU f1lad with the Thll •lllemant ... f1lad with thl Tllll "Lament w.. f1lad with tho CA 82177 John l<lt91111\11
County Clerk o4 Orenge County on County CWti of OrlnQI Cowlty on COUnty ..._,. o4 Orenge County on Thie ltllerMnt w• Ned with the
Mey 11. 1M2. May 1. 1M2. ~ June i, 1182 '1*1'1 County c.rti of 0renoa County on
Publl1hed Orange Coa:t~~ Publl•hed Or1n1• Cout Uelly Publl1ll.ct Orenge Co11t Diiiy June 1· IN2. ,._
Piiot, May 27, June 3. 10, 17. 1N1 Piiot, Juno s. 10, 1 • 24, 1982. Piiot. June 3, 10, 11. 24, 1H2 Publllh•d Oreng• COHI Dally
233t-l2 2429-82 2371•82 Pilot, June 3, 10. 17, 24, 1te2
PICTfTIOUI ~ .. NOTICI OP Al'PLJCATION ~ ITAn-..T
T O • I L t. A L C O H O L I C The followlng por1on 11 doing ~-· bullnaN ea: To Whom It May eono.m· A.R. ANTHONY & SON, 8841
MARION ERNEST BOWEN, I• ~'.:'::..~· Huntington Beech,
ACTITIOUl ..... U
NAiii STATPmNT
Tiie followlng per.on 11 doing
bulllloae ea:
JOHN DAVIDIAN & ASSOCIATES, 1407 Chellenhem ~. La Hllbrl, Celfomla 80831. John Oevldl1n , 1407
Chelte nh1m Lene, la H1br1,
Cllllfomle to8iS 1.
Thie ~ II oonducted by en
!Mlvldul!I.
John Oevkllen
Thie ltatamenl ... tied with .,,. County Claf1I of Oranoe County on May 18, 1182. .....__rc..-.aHar11ngtoft
A P11f111h 11111 Lew C«I* .......
a.Maoarthwlotlll11•'9 lue..111
Newport ....... CA ... ,_
Publlelled Ot1nge Coall Dally -----------
Plk>t. Mey 20, 27, June 3, 10, 1982
2241..a2
NlJC M>TICE
ACnnoulMIHaa
MAim ITAftlmlff
The follooMng l*'IOIW .. doing ~T I J PAOl"ESSIONAL SERVICES, 1"4 POf'I Pro,,_
'"*-· ~ ee.:fl, CA 82890. ThomM 1.. o.Mott. 1N4 Port Pr~~. ~ 8eech, CA t:zteO. ~ L.o.Moct, 1984 Port Pr~~. Newport a..ctl, Pre91cMnt CA 92ee0.
rtaJC NOTIC( 257M2
~
FMMCL.ac...... A ,, f 11 h Flit l.-Cerp. _....,,.......c.... .... ~ 17712 E. '"" T--.ca Publlllled Ora~ Cout Dally
Ptlol, June 3, 10. 17. 24, 1182 •
2444--82
~ °' 1'RU8TD"8 IAU T.a. .... MZM
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that
on W~ey. June 23, 1~ ll:OO o'dodl e.m. o4 Mid day, In room ,., Hide for conduc ng TNlt•'• S.., wlttlln the Ofllo9 o4 A£Al ESTATE SECURITIES
SERVICE. ioc.ted et 2020 Nerth
&foedwey. Suite 2.08. In Iha Ott of
8111\ta Ana. County of ()fenge, State
of California. SAN MARINO SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCI ATION .• Celllornl• corporetlon, H duly a,>poll\led
Trwt" under Ind punuant to the power of MIO conferred In thet
oarteln Dead of Truat necutac1 by
0 . VAUGHN MICfU.OS. a mwYlod men, tecorded May 12, 1te0, In
Bodi 18804 o4 Otftclel Aaccwdl °' Mid County, et P1G1 10, AooorOlr'I
lnstrumant No. 11331, by ,._ o4
1 brwach or default In peiwment or porf~manco 01 tho obllgetlofl1 MCUred theraby, lncludl1t9 th•t
bt...::tl Of dolault. NoCac. °' wtlk:tl --~~5.1te2.• Recorder'• lnltrumant No.
Thia~ II oondUcted by Ill\ • ,_ 1-----------
lndMduet. ~ 1.. DeMot1 Publl1hecl Oren~ Cout Delly f'tll.IC N0T1C(
aTAnMOn Of' wrntDflAWAL. Tllll ~ -Med wlttl ....._ Ptk>t, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1882 1-----------~0IHAJmUSMP "~ ~n~
1982 at the age of ~ ye.an. 11:00 AM at Pacific View '1CTITIOU8 _,... ..
Married 35 yee.n to Jama F. Mortuary with Bill Acton,. NAm aTATDmn
OPUATINO UMDa County an o4 Ofenoe County on -----------l"IC'TmOUa ., ..... ~ M4IY 25, 1M2. Nourae. Survived by Wilbur Bruce and Tim ~'°'=4ng penona .,. doing N011Ca Of' 1WllTWra .....
LMll .... IAL80A
The followlng per1on h•• P""71 Withdrawn .. 1 generel pertner from Publl1h.ct Or•ng• Coal! Delly children, Donald NourM, ~ ~. SECURED PROPERTIES
Michael NOW"le & Candace GINSBEJ\G l T0.-1. 17821 Mllohell, Irv•. CA T.a. .... "*4
l'ICTmOUe ._.. NEWPORT HOME LOAN, INC. M
MUC M>TICE
Nourae Veith : JEANETTE ETHEL 827~0 ~ 824 Harbor the pennerlhlp operetlng under the Piiot, Mey 27, June 3, 10, 17, 1~
llct1tlou1 bu1lnH1 n1me of JMH 2293-82
N.u. ITATW dUIY appoint.cl TNlt• under the Tho• followtng poraon 11 C!olng delc:rtbod dead of truat grandchildren, Dawn, GINSBERG, reaident of l1t1nd Or .. Newport BHch, CA
Micah, Aimee, Kimberly & Fullerton, Ca. for the paat 4 92ee3.
Jinuny Noune, all of Irvine. yeara after movlr;ig her~ Gary J. MoreMeci. 871 ~
Electronlce et 188 Tie Juen•. ~Beedl.CA. The flctlt1ou1 bu.in .. 1 neme 1t111ment for tl)e pennerlhlp w .. flied on 8·22·81 In tht County ol Ca.; sisters, Ruth Noune of from Loe Angeles, Ca. She ~:;: LAoe. l.agun• a.acn.
Corona d el Mar, Ca. & wu a member ot Boa.I Brith, Gary J. Sotlnelder, 1ee Nyee
Nancy Backus of Felton, Ca.; Hadaasah, and O.R.T . in~~ 8elch, CA 92851.
mother France. Ranaeler of both Paaadena, Ca. and 0 J ~led by
Baldwin Park. Ca. Member Chicago, Illinoia.. as well as a ™' •ta~t wee !lied with the
& pa• t pre a i den t of member of the A.A.R.P. of County Cletk of Orangt County on
Otenge. Fun N1me end AddreH ol the Per1on Wllhdrewlng: J1mH M. Hornick, P.O. Box 8348, Fountlln Vallty, CA 82708.
Janiee M. Hor~
P17141t Publlahed Oreng1 CoHI Dally Piiot, May 13, 20, 27, June 3, 1982.
2124-82
Lancuter .Junior women'• fuUerton. She la aurvived by Ma)' 18. ·1982.
Club & Women'• Club. Ovtt her aon David of Chicago,
25 yeara volunteer for lllinoia; daughter Susan
American Lung Amodatlon, Nehe& of Fullerton, Ca.;
'W7'1 Publl1hed Orenge Cout .Oally Piiot, May 20, 27, June S, 10, 1882 2184-82
pre.ently aerving on local, grandchildren. Paula, Brad•---~--~---atate & natJonal oommlttees, & Nicholas; ailter Bernice, ____ NIUC __ M>_TICE ___ _ f'ICfUllOU9 ., ....
& Board of Dlrecion un8. Kramer of Ch1caeo. D.linoia;
M ember o f South Coaat brother Alan Gimpel of
Community Church. There Florida. She wu preceded In
will ~ a memorial in her death by Paul S. Ginsberg.
n a me to H u m e La k e Private family aervices were
Chriatian Campa, PO Box held Wedneaday, June 2,
1888, Freano, Ca. 93718. 1982 at 5:00 PM. In lieu of
Services will be held Friday, flowera, family 1u11eata
June 4, U182 at 2:30 PM, donatJom be IMde "lo the
Eternal Valley Moriuary, American Luna ~don.
Sttvlcee t4nder the ditection -------------. f Harbor !Awn-Mount
MAim ITATDmllT
ACTfTIOUeMIHWN CALIFO RNIA LAWN I
..... ITAnMaNT GARDEN SERVICE. 320 Cotta
The following 1>«1ot11 et• doing Mell Street, Coate Ma11, CA
bull,,.. as: 82t27. PAYROLLER SALES, 1989 Darwon Clfton Meck~. 320 South Allclley Str .. t. S1nte Ane. Coata Mme Streat, Coate..._, CA CA 92705, IW7.
J 1m11 Murrey Cant 118 Thie~ 11 ooncM:ted by en • lndMduill. otemond Avenue, Newpot1 8-h, C ._._._ CA 92882. • oar.on • ~ 01nle l George Venn, 114 Thia lt.-nent -lllad wfth the
Emerald Avenue. Newpo(I a..ctt. ~ ~ of Orenge Coun'1 on CA 92682 ·"'-i. 1._.
HAJIOI U.W.._MT. Ot.IYf
Mortuary • <:emetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
COSljt Mesa
540-5554
rtllCI NOTMHS
llU llOAOWAY
MOITUAIY
t 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IALT1 & IHGHO..
SMITH 6 TVTMM.l
WUTCUff CHANl
427 E 171h St
Co111Meu
~Q371
,.e1.onms
IMfntl' MOITUAH
• 627'Marn St
~llnQCon 8eacn
53&-6539 •
ve Mortuary, c.o.ta Mesa.
FREED
MACK P. FREED, of c.o.ta Meu. Ca. Paled away
June 1, 11182. He la IW'Vived
b)' aon Wlllfasn Bartlett,
M.D. & 3 1randchlldren.
Private aervice9 wena held at
Westmln.ster Mernortal Park
Mo~ & Cemetery.
Thia bulllneM .. c:ondlloted by • ,_
~ pattnenhlp. Publl•hed Orange CoHt !)ally
Jemet M. Cant Piiot. Junt a, 10, f1, 24, 19&2.
Thll llllatnenl WU lllad wllh the 2AOM2
County Cleflt of Otano-County on "8.IC M)l1C( May 11, 1882 .. ,,.., ..
Publl•h•d Orenge Co11t O•llV Piiot. Mey 13, 20, 27, June 3, 182
3057 ... 2
MOTICI OP INTIMDllD
TMNlfllll UNDD MCTIOM8 *1S ... ~~~ ••Nm ~CON
NM* of~: "'ANCl8CO u.t J, 80TO. and SEAOIO OOM!A 'ICTITIOUI IU...... "OORIOUEZ, 2230 Hert>or llYCI., __ .,. -NAMI ITATIMIHT Colta ..._, Cellfornla.
~ ""'.-The fotlowlng pw90n1 .,. dolno Mamee ot 1ntendtld tr.....,...: bullnMI M ; '::.~A~.. LONOWOOO AHOCIATH. ~~~oi'i ~!0e,::;' =. The IOllOW!ng pat90n .. dotno 188 E. 17th Sir .... Colt• Meae. CA co.ta Maaa. c:.lltoml&. ~a: 92$27, • Ktno of --... imano.o to be
HOU>INOS INTl"NA~ JAMU W. AAY, 11 etOIW'llMlll, tr1n1ferred: Al!TAIL PACKAGE rmo.w DIM, , •• 0 ... u. ~.~:~t·~. RAY, 401 HaHI MWL& OlHIML \.IC~ at ~'t=e~.'m'a Of'l'4, Corona 6'I M#, CA tH25 l~.OONldlrltlon to be......, tor Tlllt ~ le conducted by a .. b t "":"' T...-~. H11ntlnfton e.aotl, -... .. ....,..,,_......, Int UI ntu end llOen.t II
CeltorNatae4t -~ ...-""' 111,112.11.(t)C••htobo ,,_ ~ la oondUcted by WI Mlltlael 0. Ray depoelted In _,,_ '600.00: <t> lndMia.& Thie 1~1 WU fllad with IN Oamend ~ for t"9 bailflCe of County OIOftl o1 0ranoe Covnty Oft .......... .... ...... :== 1n Leon T. Aoed! M-r Cl, 1tR l_,11.I00-.00:-. ,..~ ......., _,,to ow ,...... ···•w.".............. . ,,_ ,., ._ County Cllrtl Of 0Nnot county Ol'I P11bll1hl4 Or•~• Cout D~ll tul>ttltllted by twe loeM Mlflo .-fT. ttea. -... ...._. t• -.. ~ • , ta11a11 llltl!Mt to .. 1.111.tt: (4} ,_ .. _,., -., ..,, • --.., · "'om•ory Note In fe\lor Of..,...
ftvblltNd OrallfO Cooet Deity 2111-ta Correa ilodrltYt• IH,000.fO.
Maiyt1,Junel, 10.11, 1tla ------------1 TNll: Ma,1et. ... aM-12 Tfla plaot wlloro ttu
bu.ii-M: WIU AT PUBLIC AUCTION NlJC fl>TIC( SUTTON ENTERPRISES, 31131 0 TH£ HIGHEST BIOOER FOR
ftc:lihOU8-n M1cArthur Blvd_ Suite ~8. . ~II time o4 .... In MAim ITAW Newpon Boaoh. CA 82880. lllWful money of' the Unft~= MAACIA KAYE SUTTON, tMO .. right, lltla Ind lntweet The lollowlng poreon la doing lrvlno Avenue, 1 A.3 11, Newport to and now held by It undlr Mid ~ ~o l AN 0 v 1 l l AGE Boaoh, CA 92te3. D••d or Truet In th• proptrty
APARTMENTS, 711 w. 17th s....... ~ bullneM .. oonductld by en -i:us-rOA: ~~~l80A. l TO .•
No. 312, Ooata M..., California M&rda ~Sutton a llrnlted ~""""°
t2t27 Thie etatamant.., flied with Iha BENEFIOIAAY: BANK OF AlcNrd R. CantNll, 8 Northetar County Clartl of Orange County on AME Al CA •• TA us TEE , 0 R
No. 104, Merine dal ~. Caillfomlt June f. ttl2. LTON FOAOE WOAl<S PAOm 90291 ,_ SHARING TAU81'. ~bullnaal II oonduotod by en Publl•hod Or•noo CoMt Delly R~rded Merell 1 t , tHO H
....... _d A. ,.____ Ptk>t June 3 10 17. 24 1 ... ,. lnetr. No. 10496 In bootc 1S52t. ,,__ ....,,u_ ' ' ' ' ' 23is-e2 1010 o4 OfftcMI Aaoofda In the
Thia 1ta1-t ... fled .ttta tt1a :R:. °' tn. Aeeewo.t °' 0renoo ~ ~ o4 Ofenoe County on MUC Mme( ~u1c1 daed o4 truat ~ ,__ the P'°'*1Y Pu"''._..~ 0r c 0=7 '9Cnnoue ••11•.. LoCa 5, . lftd 11n 8iOdc 115 of .,.._..., ango Oett MAim ITA,,_.,.. Trlefl No. 2'4, ,.i' mep NCOrdod In
Plot. Moy 27, June S, 10, 17. 1 ~folowtoo ~ -doing Book 13, pag11 st and 37 of
2341.U ........ aa: Mllcallanaoul ....... In tho omcie o4 ------------1 CALll"OANIA MA IL ANO the County Recorder of H id NlJC fl)TIC( MUSAG£ ~ICE CO., S0211 County.
IC_-Hert10r eo..ri•d, C09ta ,.__CA You.,. In default under a Dead
-· t2t27. o4 Tl\llt dat.d F*ulty tll, 1MO PICllUOU8 _.. t l"renk Jamoa lovllo, 13551 un1aa1 you ta1!o action to Pfotool Mam 8TAW Portamouth Cina Woatmllwt•, CA )Q.r fl'Ol*tY, It may be ~ 11 a Tho foftowtng ponon1 •r t2t83. public 1alii. If you need an ~~ 8:Aa 8"MOI Lewie Mep ~ 11514 Mt. ~ o4 Iha na1\n Of tha
St,_, Coaca Mau, CA 12t21. ~ = t~J.:.:roe., =~you, l°" "'°'*'
C.J. l090'1trom a Soni. A llmhad paib•lf.-. by I 1510 Biibo• Slvd .. Newport a...t P•tl•lfllp, 1318 F ,.,..,. J L.OWo ·8oaoh. Calllof1M ~·~.._,cl C CAQ t2'2t ... ,.. Tllll .. IJnllm.;.. fllod .tit\ the ''ilt • ett..i addrw or oommon """'•• • • rant, 1 • t County a.ti Of Orenot County on dnlgn•tlon 11 •hoWn above, no Aome11U ...-.... Tl.tlttn. CA t2tl0. June t 19&2. ·warranty •• gl'nn •• to Ito H onry T. Segarlt r om, a ' ,_ comploMnaae onx>n"eG'lllMOI."
Tr u at•• for T 0 '• n H • n' Publllhod Orang• Coeat Qelty ,. Tho ~ wndar Mtd Oead Sooantrom.1.. _1tt4 VI010fl• Otl'le. Piiot June a 10 11. 2• 1...... . of Truet, by raaeon o4 • tlfWdl w Senta AM. "" t210t. ' ' ' ' ' ._ deflUlt In tho obllgattotie WW Honty T. 8ogoretrom, a . 237...a 1~. halwt~~ 9td Truat•• for Anton 01vld __ .,. ...,,._ dtllVtl'ed to tllo undtr•lgftecl a
aoventrom 1114 Vlo1or1• Ortw. ,-_,.. ""'-~ Ooclaretlon Of o.feult and s.nta AM. CA'. 1210a. "9Cnnow ..,11... Damenct tor .... w wrttten nottot r-Henry~°"'· 111 ~ aTAW .,,... Md Oi ~ to --v101or1a Orlvo, Senta Ana, C n. fOllowlnt l*'IOIW .,.. doing ha 11ndar:!Ci~ to Hll Hid
t27Ga. ~ -oporty '° Mid~
AntOl'I OIMd ~-Gill, 11t ,. " 0 0 I!. a I H G l A 8 • and ''*"""' llo IAl'ldtrlfOMd Vlctorte Orlvo, lanta Ane, C AMENCAN CWT ~ r.....s IOld ncMtot ~ iw..tl Mel of
ta70I. AMENCAN PMOTO MIOCIATION -.OW to bO r..wct ..._.. nu.t~ i:=~ Jt.. im Mtttlft A~, hft• 111: 2.4, 1Ma,•lnllr.No.ea.Ol474"~
112' ...,. DIM, '-*' AM.~. tMnt. CA llTtl. ..., °"'*' ..._..,
H7oa. 2·TU lfTIRMAT'IONA&.., INO,.
Hlto6d 't ...... Ofll • .It. Tr11tto1 for Thaodoto Walto '41tor1tr0fft..1._1121 lllWW• Dftft
...,.. Ma, W\ tl?OI. -oetelllllfl Hafotd T ............ Jr. lllillll,,__,.. T,._....,....,..._._ .... --..1
llllll m/ ... MI
By STEVE MITCHELL °' ... .Olillf ......... Attorney. for the Sierra Club
and the atate will aeek a
preliminary injunction in U.S.
Dlatrici Court in Loe Anaeles
Monday to prevent an offahore
oU leae sale 1eheduled for June
11.
U.S . Diatrlct Court Judge
Cynthia Hall h.u aQreed to hear
argument• from the
environmental group and the
atate to block the aale of oU and
pa leum on 858,000 llCl'fJI off the
Southern Californla COllt.
1be IUlt will be heerd at 10
a.m. in U.S. Diltric:t Court. 312 N.
Sprtna St. in Loe Anplea.
The Sierra Club au!t, whJch
WU joined by the Cl~ of Lquna
BMch, 1eeka to block the aale of
all 164 tracts contained in Leue
Sale No. 68 on June 11.
Included in that IUlt are the 10
tracta located off Laguna'• and
Newport Be.ch'• ahonlinel.
Tl\e atate'a lawau!t, whJch will
be hevd concurrently with tbe
Siena Cl~on, IMU to block
the tale of only 22 tnct. off
Southem California, lncludina run. of the 10 off i..,una and
Newport.
Leue Sale tf o. 68 coven 'an
area from Point Conception to
aouth of San Clemente Ialand.
The tncta are from three to 84
miles oU shore.
Cars swerve into onconiing Jan~
An UIOdate for San Frandlco
attorney Roaer Been, who la
mpawentiftC Uw Sierra Club in
tM IUit, liid the orpnlzadon
wm attempt to force lnterlor
Secretary Jamee Watt to take
Into account the environmental
1en1ltivlty of Southern
Callfomla'a shoreline, and "the
enonnot.11 oomeqqencea faced by
citlea Uke Laguna Beach and
Newport Beach in the event of
an uncontalned oU aplll."
Attorney• for the federal
1overnment are expected to
argue that there are aufflctent
aafeguarda to prevent oil apllla.
They alao wlll outline the
pPtential for up to 110 million
barrela of oil and 742 cubic feet of
gu from the tracts.
A apokeaman for the Sierra
Club aaid that, should the club
and the atate lose their bid for an
injunction Mo~da , they will consider an ap to the t>t.h
ClrcWt Court o Appeal.a in San
FranciJlco prior to the June 11
sale.
That tale la expected to take
place at the Loa Angelea
Convention Center, beg1nnlnJz at
10 a.m. At that time, iealed 6lda
will be opened and read. Federal
offidala will then review the bids
before awarding leaae..
Laguna crashes kill 1, injure 5
British
assault
1
awaited
By Tbe Aaaoclated Press
I Britlah gunners dueled with
Argentine artillery batteries
around Stanley today in the
buildup to a possible British
assault on the Falkland lalanda
I, capital, military sources and
broadcast reporta in London aaid. ~ Britain's lndependent Radio
1J News aaid the attack waa not
expected before the weekend aa
the gunners. backed by off.ahore
navy bombardment and Harrier'
air strikes, 90ftened the estimated
7,000 Argentines around Stanley.
Reports in London Indicated
the British control all the hilll
surrounding the town and the
key puees to the we9t through .. which reinforcement• were
ad~ Artentme Uoops, driven beck
into a "horseshoe" defensive
poaftion, were firln1 back at
Royal Marines shelllnc Moody
Brook, ~ miles from Stanley and
believed to be a forward
headquarters for the Argentines.
LAGUNA CANYON FATAL CRASH -Wreckage of car
and llD&ll foreign auto ta arewn· aero. Laguna Canyon Road
near Sycamore flata Wedneeday momln& after a head-oh
craah. Driver of the car was killed and a passenger
.., ........ 1( .....
remains in critical condition at Million Community Hospital.
A dog belmgi~ to the woman driving the auto alao was
killed in the a , one of two in Laguna Wednesday.
Aa shelling continued,
government 80W'CeS in London
aaid British planes dropped
thousands of leafleta on Stanley
telling the Argentine• their
position is hopeleu. Defense
Ministry sources said
Spaniah-apeaking 8ritona were
among the forward troops to
negotiate aurrendera around
Stanley.
British hellco,ptera lifted
105mm guns. with a range of
10 ~ miles, to the hWtope west of
the town while Britlah Soorpi"1
(See FALKLAND. Pa1e AZ)
Mesa Fish Fry
starts Friday
Why is the Coeta Mesa Fish
Fry such a popular event over
the years?
Some say U's the "secret"
batter uaed in preparing the
9,000 fish dinners. Othen go for
the parade, the carnival, the
beauty and baby contests, or the
entertainment.
• 'nie fun starts Friday night at
Llona Park and the Deily Pilot's
apecial section today on the Fish
Fry and Carnival giva reedera a
rundown on the three-day event.
STATE
Reagan talks
with French
president
PARIS (AP) -President
Reagan conferred today with
French President Francois
M1t1errand on the Middle F.aat,
Central America and the
Falkland Islands war, but
sidestepped serious dbcusslon of
the stubborn economic iuue.
dividing their Countries.
On the eve of an economic
aummit of major industrial
<kmocracieB at Venailles outside me French capital, Reecan aakl
he and Mitterrand deferred
"heavy diruwiQna .. of economk
issues straining America'• .Wes
until they join the leaden of
Britain, Weat Germany, Italy,
Cuwla and Japan thla week.end.
The leaden met OW!r lwlCh tn the aplendor of the ltlyaee
Palace. Reagan waa greeted at
the pelace by a mllltary honor
guard and a aalute from a drum
and buale cor91. He and Mitterrana ahook banda and then
met privately tn a chandellered
talon OYel' a lwlCh featwine a
al.ad of ~ lhellfilb, veal.
(See REAGAN, Pap Ai)
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A federal JlaQi.naled
today that the federal government llllll•Dy .._. the
financially troubled Fidelity Savinp and Loan
A.Noclatlon of Oakland, &Qd ordenid the thf!ft.
lmtitudon•• forced receivenblp lifted.
..
I
Hiiitop land
Laguna trustees
Deputy saves
man, 25, at
Aliso Beach mull task force An Orange County Sheriff's
deputy saved the life of a
25-year-old Mission Hills man
who apparently was attempting
to drown himself in the surf off
Ali80 BMch Wednesday nlgllt.
Lacuna Beach achool trustees
will conaider for ming a
community task force to explore
diapou1 ol more than 11 acres of
hilltop land when they meet at
7:30 tonight In diatrict offices.
The surplus land, located at
theinte.nectlonof ParkAvenue
and Alta Laguna BoWevard, is
zoned for residential use, with
much of it overlooking the
Sadclleb9ck valley.
The mostly flat parcel waa
purcbaaed by the achool diltrict In 1971 for $173,000 at a time
when the need for an additional
campus wu anticipated.
But decllnlng revenues, • well ... declinlnC atudent population,
baa forced the diltrict to consider
the tale, leue or trade for the
Alta Laauna property.
Trustee Carl Schwarz haa
1u11eated a commu~ taak
fcrce be formed to with
COUNTY
concerna of adjacent property
owners should a means of
disposlng of the land be found.
That puiel a18o would look De~ties St.eve Kent and Kevin
into maximizing the revenues Laughlin were patrolli.ng Aliso
from such a sale, lease or Beach about midnight when they
exchange and preaent a written were told a man was in the watet
report within six weeks to the off the rocks at Camel Point. said
achool board. Lt. Wyatt Hart, a sheriff's
"'~·--department spok~. \,,NUL"Un~ntly, Schwan aaid. an After initial attempts to rescue
appnlaal could be made of the the man with a life line failed,
property. Kent jumped into the water,
The achool board and the swam out and pulled the man to
Laguna Beach Oty Council w111 safety. ·
dJ.acuu the propoeed property Hart said the young man
diapoul during a joint meeting apparently wu despondent and
Tue.lay at 5:45 p.m. at Qty Hall. · "went into the surf to take his
own life." He was hoepitalir.ed
Schwarz aaid the task force for obeervation.
could lnclude two achool board
members, two City Council Rotary reversal? members, two member• of a
preYioua coounittee on aurplua
property, two memben of the
hilltop community and a resident
from another eection of tpwn.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -
The Birmingham Rotary Club
bu reconsidered ita policy of
barring non-white memben.
INDEX
Historical society sets home
The c.o.ta Mesa Hiatol'bl Society finally baa a
home of lta own to store ita bOxes of memorabilia. Page
Bl.
2 w-omen
reported ·
• serious
Two s eparate head -on
collisions in Laguna Beach
Wednesday left one woman dead,
two other women in serious
condition and three men
hQSpi t.alized.
'The first collision occurred on
Laguna Canyon Road near
Sycamore Flats about 11 a.m.,
when a car driven by Carol Ann
Hatfield, 34, of Beverly Hila .
crossed into oncoming lanea,
striking a truck, according to
polioe reports.
Ms. Hatfield was killed in the
collision, along with her dos-A
paaaenger in her car. Sunny
Tepper, 29, of Laguna Beach,
was taken to Mission Community
Hospital where she rema1na in
critical condition in the inlenaive
care unit.
Kevin Andre Park.a, 21, of
Anaheim, the drivk of the truck.
was reported ln stable condition
at Saiidleback Hoapital in
~ Hilla today.
The second head-on collision
(See CRASHES. Page A!)
Con men sell
911 number
'subscriptions'
Orange County authorities are
warning county reafdenta to
beware of phony telephone
aolidton who ask residents if
they are interested in sublcriblng
to the county's new 911
emergehcy telephone system.
The solicitations, made both by
telephone and mail, suggest that
residents can subecribe to the 911
number for a one-time
sub9criptlon fee of $9 per adult
and $7 per child, saki Lt. Wyatt
Hart, an Orange C.ounty Sheriff's
Department spokesman.
"Don 't give them your
m o ney ,'' said Hart, who
emphasized the scheme la a
phony.
He said the 911 number la a
county aervioe provided to all
residents.
S h e r i ff ' a d e pa r t me n i '
investigators have Initiated an
investigation into the ecam and
Hart urged anyone who baa t.ei
OOl'ltacted by the aollcitdn to call
police or U .S . poatal service
inapectora.
. ..
CRA:SH~S IN LAGUNA • • . •·
• ocourrect at about t:IO p.m. tran1port1d to Ml11lon. Hl1
. W1dn11day at Sou\b CoHt conclltlon WM Mid not -1oul.
, Hlahway and Laiuna Awnue. The driwr of die ~ car.
, Jlaa Va11nH, 84. of~· Jnjuted tn that oruh wai Btach, rtmaln1 tn 1tablt
" SUMI\ Low.t ~ II, of oondltlon at South CoMt Medital ' 8an Maroa.. who WU reoorteci ln
1ertou1 condition at Mt11lon Cep:Irce 18td Ma. Enochaon'•
J,CommunJty, IOUtbbound 1portlcar IW..Vtd
'. Her companion, J'rank Into onoomln1 la.net, ltrildq
1 Mean., allo of San Marool. wu Vaaenee' lldari.
1 treated at South Coui Medlce1 Both acotdtnt1 are under
Center In South L.,una and ln\Wtlption. poUct ti.Id today.
I ,REAGAN IN PARIS .••
~credit to the 8oYSetl at
IU in-.tra•
British
'poised'
to attaCk
• By TOM MURPBINE °' ................ Brttlah troopa are ., dolt to
Port Stanley fortlficadonl that
wtth blnoc\alan 11tbey can watch Arlefttine IOld.len •Una lunch,'·
the BBC world new1 Mrvlc•
reported Wectn.day na,ht.
The BBC bn»dcalt. monlsored
on the~ c.out at 9 p.m., acknowled • newt bi.ctmut
on events the FaJ.klanda from
both London and Arsenttna f«
two days.
11There la little new offk:lal
information on the ground
offen11ive releaaed by the
Mln1stry of Defeme," the BBC
report admitted. One offida1 referred to "thla
fremy Oft Soviet c:ndlta,'' and
another accuaed the United
States of a 0 one-ldded obH•lon with the credit 1-ue" without
acknowledatna itl own extensive
grain trade-wf tb the Sovietl.
Before talkin1 with
Mitterrand, ~an met with'
Mn. Chari• Ray, the widow of a
mUltary attach• at the U.S.
»n'-y-who WM killed in a
tenoriat attack J~ 18. White Houte deputy prea eecretary
Larry s~ Mkl ~ told
Mn. Ray he would promote her
husband PolthWDOUlly one crede
SECOND HEAD-ON CRASH -Three people
were injured Wednesday night when a
aportacar apparently swerved Into northbound
lanee on South c.out Highway, striking a
eedan driven by Jim Vagenea of Laguna. The
.,.., ..............
southbound ~toriat, Susan Fnochaon. and her ~nger. Fran Metzner, both of San Marcoe, wete al.lo injured in the crash. All three
remain hoepitalizeQ.
'"nlere has been .ame action
on Mount Kent, which overlooka
Port Stanley. Brit.iah artillery i8
shelllna the Ar1entlnes' main
garriaon at Port $tanley and they
are returning fite."
One theory on the lack of
battle news, according to a BBC
oonespondent. wu the weather.
. "Today's action baa been
hampered by overcast and 1ow
clouda which protect the British
from air attack although it ii cold
and miserable for them," he said.
Dr. Singer,
pro,,lessor o(
• to full colonel. '\ sex, resigns ~· parentl live in Newport
The J>nllident Ullo conferred •
with Secretary of State
Alexander_ Hats. and Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Repn on
IUIDmlt r.u..
LONG BEACH (AP)
!lmbattled "Paycholoo of Sex"
professor Barry Singer, who off~ counie credit for aexual
experlmentatlon, haa resigned
from CAI State Long Beach,
univenity offlciala announced
today.
Rtta1an, who arrived here
Wednmday nl&ht f« a lfklay
F.uropeu trip. b8d • w.urety
achedUle tocta1 • be lllijlllted
from jet lac. ~Ide from his
oonfennce with Mitlenaxl. the ~t Wlli to meet with U.S. DlbWy emploreea, and to
attend a forma dinner for
Minerrand.
ALKLAND ISLANDS • • •
Dr. June M. Cooper, who wu
conducting an Investigation into
Sln1er's course, received the
let1er of rem,natton Wednaday,
unlveralty spokesman Bob
Breunig said.
''On the same day, on behalf of
president Stephen Hom who la
out ol. the country, vice preaident
fer aademlc affain Dr. Glendon'
Drake accepted Dr. Singer••
resignation effective
tmmedlately," Breunig said.
Singer's counie ral9ed protem
from politicians and reupom
)wien after lt Wiii .reportea that
h•1 offered credO fot ol:z
encounters, ll'OUP -and optionl auch • goiDC in dnC to ,.be~~ came after
Singer revealed he bad been
"romantically involved" with
three-er four of bis students OYel'
·~yean. .
Sin1er wy reported out of
1tate and unrea~bable for comment
Con tin tied fair
Temperatures
MATIOlf
.. Le,_
72 ... 17 ...
11 S4 .o:s 11 58 .... n 11 to 10 77 56
11 41 17 .. .01 17 40
7• .... 17 57 1.27
10 71
11 ... Ill 11 111 .... .25
.. T7 71 56
n " 112 ..... 17 ......
75 11
74 17
• 17 11 71 .17
73 51 72 47 .21
17 S4 .OI
7t 47
86 ao M II .. ... .. 32 ...... 11
11 .... ca 11 17 .01 .. . .. 71
Tl • .. 11
t1 72 ....... ea 51 .23 ·,,_. • 11 ·: :: • LM:J:' .
7111 ~ ..........
II • .01 OIMll.e 7t 14 t.01 ,.. ....... '° 41 ,... ... .... ........ ~
71 .. ta 71 .11
7t M T7 13 u .a .05
1258.23 ea 47
19 71 .11
71 154 100 70
72 SIS 71 41 1.41
11 41 71 51 .18
le .. 71 3" 73 ...
• 72
a "' 19 71 11 40 72 51 .. 74 2.10
45 21 ..... 70 50 10 65 .07
" 17 11 a .•7 11 ... • 51 .54
Terrorlsm and Jewish
survival wlll be the topic of
Dr. Sabi Sbabta.l, ln a lecture
before the Jewilh
C.omrnunity Center of South
Orange County Sunday.
Dr. Shabtai, a CODIWtant
and lecturer to airlines, police
departmenta and the U.S.
• The lAguna Beech High
School mu.DC department will
• present ita sp~in concert Friday at 8 p~ ln Arti$'
Theater at tile 8Chool.
Participating ln the concert
wUl be the concert choir,
vocal productions, concer:t
• Registration for summer
recreational cluaes in Laguna
Beach begin Saturday at 9
a.m. at the dty'a recreation
department, 515 Forest Ave.
Summer ojferingl lnclude
aquatics, tennis, dance,
martial arts, camps, guitar,
e A prden party to raile
funds for the Temple Hills
Communlty Aasociatlon in
Laguna Beach will be held
S\,Ulday from 3 .to 7_p.m,
A $ 1.0 don at.lo n ls
armed services, is the author
of a novel "Five Minutes to
Midnight." •
He wlll speak beginning at
7:30 p .m. ln the Laguna
Beach High School
auditorium.~ Park Ave.
For more information, call
the Jewish.center at 497-2070.
band. wind ensemble and the
symphonic band.
The finale will feature 100
musician• pef forming "I
Believe in Music." Tickets are
$2 and are available at the
door.
photography and many
others.
Saturday's algnups
termlnate at 1 p.m ., but
l~tecomera can register
Mondays through Frldaya
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Classes an~ activities begin
the week of June 21.
requested, wit.ha no-hott bar
and hors d'oeuvres served.
The party will be held at the
~me o Bob and Estelle
W , 1609 Temple Hilla
· e. For information, call
494-7643.
·'The ground is being chewed I' up in a way that reminds
everybody of the trenches ln the
Great War.
"But convoys of British
vehicles are moving everywhere
with the confidence of
ownership."
Last indications from the
battle :zone, the BBC reporter
said, were that the ground
temperature ia 2 below zero and
the visibility leea than two miles. . .
The British broadcast reflected
little optimism that a truoe or
cepe-fire miglit develop before a
mijor battle for Port Stanley.
The BBC quoted the Argentine
Army c ommander in the
Falklands as saying, ''If each and
every man tights for his country
with his rifle, machinegun Cll"
cannon, then we are certain of
success.''
* * * BBC lauds
pope's visit
Brltiah B'roadcastfng
C-orporation's -t.rorld news service
placed heavy empham on P•
John Paul ll'a pllgrlmage to the
British bles and his pleas tor
peace ln a shortwave broadcast
monitored· on the Orange eo.t
Wednaday. nlgbL
The ·BBC also quoted the Daily
Mail newspaper as uying U.S.
President Ronald Reagan will
find the pontiffs visit "a hard act
to follow."
The Daily Mall commented,
"After the preacher, comes the
sberilf.
"And in this-brutal world, we
need protectio n aa well aa
prayer."
The Orig_in31
·.JCtB8ERS®
I
Short
Is perfect for beach, ~t, bike,
hike, walk, rock or work. Jobbers
can do It an but It's up to you to
do It well. AvaJaile in Jobbers
8 unique c:X>lors.
• .
The ~a1una Beach City developer to~ out of the bid, c.ounct1 h81i renewed tta puah to whieh would have meut about
eettle. the decade.lona municipal •&.4 mtWon to &Matty. hMdaiehe ml.led Sycamore Hilll. · But the MW council majority,
Lau week the council Juat momen'8 aftM betna 1wam
approved tend.inc out propoAla to Into office, launchtd lnto
more than 100 ckmtlopen ln hope ~Uant With the Lepl AJd
of findtna a buyer for a portion Of BoClety to "->lw the laWIWt.
the &22-*re parcel between The NM< wu a '.UDUla&n ~na Canyon and El Toro that w olty requJre at )wt 50
affordable .,eenior unite a1 a
82 The_~ padropoees 18~ • condition for any developer
•aicte ,... ... ~. jacent to Leisure lnteretted tn ~ the land.
World on El Toro Road, for the -That ecdompllahed the -new
development of up to 420 unita. council ~ toward eyentual The land u1e would go a long way __ , t th·~:~
in the city' a effort to pay off a ~• 0 e ... "'. ~ly $7 million mortgage on the Bid a from developers are
entire wedge.chaped parcel. expected by Aua. 6. What rema1na
A previou1 deal with a to be aeen ii lf there la enouah Newport Beach developer fell developer intereat ln t•kina a / through when the Legal Aid multi·mlW~ dollar albatrom from
Society of Oranae County sued'the the neclcl of Laguna'• taxpayen,
dty over the fack of affordable The council, in any. event,
housing planned for the site. deaerye1 credit for getting the
111it conflict, when tied to lon11tandlng debate off dead
bad economic times, forced the center.
Oil · lease fight joined
Lquna Beach has joined the
Sierra Club in a lawsuit against
the federal government to prevent
an offshore oil lea1e sale next
week.
· The city, along with Newport
Beach and San Clemente, already
has joined a state lawsuit against
Interior Secretary James Watt's
propoeed Leue Sale No. 68 June
11.
Newport officials are
currently considering joining
Laguna Beach in the Sierra Club
lawsuit, which ia much larger in
scope than the atate suit.
TM Sierra Club lawsuit aeeka
an injunction halting the entire
June 11 lease sale, which includes
856,000 ocean acres from Point
Conception to south of San
Clemente Island. .
U the injunction is s~
none of the propcad 164 leae
aales will be allowed. The state's
lawsuit would eliminate only -23 of
the tf8C'8 fram the aale.
1n aareetnl to join the Sierra
Club, Laauna Beach council
members decided the action would s~ngthen the state'a lawau.it, a'nd
hold the potential for all tracta to
be eliminat.ed, instead of only nine
oU the Orange Coaat that are
included in the state action.
The Sierra.Qub.and state suit
both seek to halt le~ sales until
1 ad e q u a t e m d n i to r i n g a n d
environmental protections can be
assured.
Neither suit specifically seeks
to ban all offshore drilling.
t.a,una'• move to join the
Sierra Club abow1 that city's
determlhation to halt lease tale.
off ita shoreline. Newport Beach
should follow suit.
·Laguna activists niourned.
Lacuna Beach lmt two•feisty
old-ti.men last month - a pioneer
physician and a tirelesa
en.vironmentaliat.
The f.lnrt. Dr. Paul E.linger,
died ~ay 20 f rol'n injuries he
austatried in a fall a month earlier.
The aecond, Betty Heckel,
died May 25. of cancer.
Dr. Esslinger practiced in
south Orange County tor more
tharr a halt a century; and was-for
years the only surgeon serving the
Capistrano Valley area.
He m&de almolt daily trips to
a hospltal ~ Sartta Ana, at the
time the only such emergency
faciUty JJerving south Orange
Couhty.
He later opened a medical
center in San Juan Ca~istrano,
donating the ~acility to a church in
1977. • ..
Dr . .Faalinier and his wife also
made donations of property to ·
several colle1•1 following his
retiremeirt.. ·
Betty Heekel ·clbnated 'time: Lota of dine. ·
She and a lrlend nearly
1tngle-handfClly opened AUao \
Beach Pm" .. rn 8outh Laguna to
the public, battlO.g county
supervisors for ~ yean.
She fought for the creation of
Main Be•ch !'ark in Laguna
Beach; a view 1J8rk at Cresceni
Bay Park and the Crystal Cove
State Park. ,
She attended dozem of local
and state Coastal' Comml11lon•
mee,ine•. inakln1 her views
known on a variety of
environmental '--·
Both of thele ploneen were
vocal, and both were controveralal.
And bcKh wru be mblled. ...
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of t~ 0.lly Pilot. Otn.r views ex-
pressed on tnls p.ige are those of their authors and artfst1. Re4lder comment Is lnvlt·
ed,:.,Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa MeM, CA 92'26. Phone (714) "··4321. ,
L.M. &yd I Separate vacations . ,
How do you and your matrimonial
mate feel about taking separate
. vacations? Sixty-one percent of the
couplet '8enerally approve of this
notlOn now. Ra JUmp owr 20 yeers
-.O· Then only t7 percent thou&ht It a
p>d Idea. Our Love and War man ii
not Jocked into an opinion on th.is one,
~ for the obvlou9 conclUlllon that
palra who don't want •parate,
YM'atklm deerly have the ~ ~·
-
inherited a bu1inn1 that your
ance9tOn Md Mart.ad at the time of
Qu1at., -tMt ...... bad at •1 mUllcn a day .,.... alnce wtth no
expectation of ctuina-, it WGUld IUD
take;you and your descendent.
llhOtMr' 700 yeen to be the tint tl tHlliOft..
Do you k.-. your car door JOdced
While ~ ·'ctmef &Mia out of 10
....-tell tablWa ~•.,now.
.
I I I
Politic()S ~gain flying high
WASHINGTON -Bhtna
Phoenix-like from the ashes ol federal
f.n.lgallty, the Air Force's 89th Airlift,
Wing is once aialn flytni hllh· Little kno\Yn to the public or Knml1n
ap!es, the 89th la well known and hlahlY
reprded at t~ Pent-ion and·on C..pUol Ifill. Il'• the bigahots' favorite unit, In
fact; for lta eole miaalon is to provide
luxurioua -and free -t:ranaportadon
-Rep. Don ~J'la., ii d\alnntn . ol the ffCMI and TechnolotlY
Committee. So be and ft .. other
commlU. rt.mbell -with theh' wlve8
-. hopped an ltth jet clown to '1or1da to aee the .,_. lhuUJe tak9 oil. Then,
for VIPs and their wtva whfr'ever and iii
w h e n e v e r t h e y ca n f l n d a IAlll •• ~&l9!hf.~te a:.:~ (or the ·~ I
elite coats the taxpayer'I about $10 affer a ttde ·e9cunlon to CallfomJa,
million a year. To avoid emt.rrumnc where they tns-..1 a eolar-energy
OOl1iftSllDeD and depremlna ~ ~-pies
the Air Foree destl'o)'s the 89th'1 t f:'i:! ~~=the== records after 30 days. But my te
Peter Grant •w a oopy of the March . land. Air Fon:e .,.._ bats u.e the 89th
manifeeta bef!oft they hit the lh.recldu. like an airborne Umou1Jne 1ervlce.
ONE HUNDRED tripa were Joa-I by Robert Mattda, Abe vb chief Of staff.
the 89th in tliat one month. Hen are took his wife on a tr1P to l!lftPind arid
eome. of theee all-expemes-Daid Junketa, Spain. Gen. Robert Manh. commander
straight out of the records that bad been of the Air Force Systeml C-omnlan4, took
marked for deatruction. __ .. wife on a 12-day tour of \lie Far EMt,
-Two doz.en memben of Oongi'iii which included four daya In 8aJ"all. An
and their wives flew to the ~t Air ~ tp0ltesman aald "#ivM are
Ocean Reef Club OJl Key~ ri.,, for atiowed on these trlpt fot protocol
a meeting wtth a Canadian ~and to confer with dependents
parliamentary delegation. The tab ..ane on ~ty-ot-IUe W.U.."
to $50,000, lncludiq ndD and board for -Tb, 89th i1 alao available to
the Canadian junketeers. ~ ltaffen. The Air Force
'
invited 25 Capitol Rill aidel. aJmon all of
them female, to Colorado Sprinp for a
tour of the Air Fon:e Academy.
THESE EXAMPLES were all from
• the month of March. In January, Rep. ·
Peter Rodino, D-N.J., led a group of nine
Democratic cong:reaamen and their wt\'es
aboard an 89th jet for a ~--.
$15,000-plus junket in Italy. They villted
Genoa, Venice, Pisa, Florence, Naples
and Rome to "show America'• IU~
for Italy as a strong NATO ally, •
Rodino spokesman said.
Alto in January, Rep. Jamee Jefforda. • •
R-Vt., a member of the Education and
Labor, Agricuhpre and A1in1
Committees, foe aom:e ree.111 flew the
89th to France, Germany, Italy mil the
Netherlands while hit constl"*'~ ~ ·lhovenn, snow. A Jtr= ... •Uolll aid hia boll "ti. a paliJ at
avoiding concn-1<> ~ ualeaa
ab9olutely neceuary." -Couptlni the
words "junketl" and"~ .ii a
le:dcoJocial breakthrough.
Though the $10 million budeet for the
89th Airlift Wtna ii a drop in thr '2M
billion Pentagon bucket, it~ CDN
it.· taxpayers bWiona nair4 lndlred11.
What oongremnan ii goint. to b* ., =ous as to niggle aver the defem:e
after a luxurious tqht on an Air
Force junket jet?
Union~ didn't l(ill the 'big bands' . . .
To the F.ditor:
On your editorial s-ae of May 24. ....
a ~ dJa&a.Una article by Earl Waters. Mr. Waten bu the pll to ate, Jn
prtnt: that the reuon that there are no
more blg bands is due to featherbedding
' MAILBOX
by local unions when the biQ banda came
to town. Nochtnc could be lurther frcm
the in&th!
I had the aood tohune to be a llcleman
in many. many famous "tile bands,•• wttb
20 yeers' exper!ence on the l"09d in fNf!1rJ
kind of band. 'ind never once did I eee
the ineapocmb1e llCtivttiea Waten clabm
happened ln the big band era. It ii almply not true! ' ·
ONE OP THE tblnp that did dl9lro)'
the big band era w-. first of Ill, four
lon&-haired youths who started to tum
the-entire music bullnem around with
· the advent of the rock era. No bic band
had ever been able to draw a quarts ql
a mlllion people to a field In WOOllltodl,
and that r. one of the thlftll that ldJJed
the big benda. ·
We are happy to report to you that
fNf!rY ~~minor star, and the bulk of all profellkiW muaidanl do beJoq
to, and en.Jo)' memt:ienhip in • UftkJn. the
American Federation of Musiclan1 ..
lN:ecur9del ahould not b9 aUQwed·to be
dlwminated throuah ywr pUbUcadan.
B. DOUGLAS SAW'l'l:LLS Pl """"8'1t Mulic:kna' Local #7, kl'.M.
..
water ii ""''ped OWf dt1~rta at peat
~· •• wera. traue •hoilld b•
~ ..... mliht lllllll a-bit mre.me,
but our 8out>tem California dlmate ii
vety delimte and tou&tl llMIMur'es ~ust
be taken to prvtect it add brine it t.k. u
peopte want can let them Uve in
Mlnneaota and Iowa where they can
have all the ID8clUnm the)' want. But if
people wat to live heft tDey mu.t atve
up some of tb.e thinp they take for
sranled lll the te1t of the country. Not
only w01 thele ltrcftl ......,.. daft up
our environment. &ut the)' will ahO
promote the quality of our life rather
than the quantity.
MDmMANG
More memories·
To the Mtor:
What• lovely letter JanerZ.leM!, 13, wroce aboul 8rOWN up in C.orona del
Mar (Mailbox~ May "17). She la worried
that oil drOllnc Wtl1 ndn our cout. We
all ...
Her Jetter brouatat ba8k fond mJmOrtee. • r ~_up 1n CMlna c1e1
Mar epo. l •• 13 in 1118. a.ck then. we
not only Md tqUbft)s and IEUlla. but
lkunb, ,,.. ..... quail and roacl runnen.
too. .
past several year~l9 oa a
profemional •well as ~ l
feel sorry that the La~·t1J9ttkt b
lGllna such an 'outstandJ.nc admlnWrator.
Yet, I am a1IO very happy that be 1'ill be
faclng exciting, new challenc• wlUch
will ultimately make him an even ~
adrninilt:rator.
DURING BIS tenure with the ~
LBUSD, Dr. Sancbis bu ~ed both ~
the aood and bad times; tile economic 6
pre11ures of a 1hrinkin1 btad1et ancl
1
,.
declining enrollmenta. In addit!On, be
hu had to cope, and work with. ...m.. who alto found themaelvee in an :
econoJnic box ~UM of the cliltri~'•
current conditions. However. I am
convinced that the situation wOuld be
even bleaker had it not been for the
1-de.nbip of Dr. Sanchil, blJ *" and the Board of F.ducaUoo.
The entlre community -parema. :
1
1
teachers, taxpayen and 1tuclenc. -
should hold a JPeda1 •tblrlna for DI-. Sanchia, for ln the end it wUl lie ahown
that be had the best intelwtl of all tblJe
poupe at heart.
He will be mi1ud, yet ....
ccntribudontr:n~ ..-nJ '*'9 will long be .
MICHAEL IOGDS
'
I lfllll'•llJ\ Y lllNI I l'UI,'
candidates l,
Followin6 are brief proltl• and Ch• views of th.rN candJdar.. tor
Che Irvine IWlch Water DUrrlct Board ol DI.rectors. 7ben are live
candldlitft tor t.111" etC. In n~Kt 7Wilda.Y'• eJecdon. Pro/U• And
views of Che ~mainlng two candidafel will be prnent«l l'rid.,y.
Swan tells
r--
Peer Swu. 37, of Tustin, la
treas~ for Pacific SdenUflc in
Anaheim. He haa a bachelor'•
and muter'• desrees in buslrlell
adrninlatratlon from Cal State
Fullerton. He curre ntly is
president of the Irvine Ranch
Water District Board of Directon.
Wbat 11 tile major problem
facta11dle Water Dlatrlct?
"The major problem la to
operate more efficiently and to
lower rates."
II tbere u eqaltable' 1olutloa
to 1ewer and water rates?
"I think they're equitable now.
They' re distributed in an
equivalent manner to the J*>ple
who uae them. I think they're
high becauae of the facilities that
have been inherited. The only
way you can meter aew..re ia to
meter the water going into the
house. Th.at'• not aa equitable as
it appears to be because aome
people use a lot of water on their..
yards that doesn't go into the
sewer and therefore ahould not
pay for that .ewer rate." ·
W.y are *'e rates golDg ap and
can tlaey be controlled?
(See SWAN, Page A%)
• • views
INCUMBENT -Peer Swan
of Tustin is seeking
re-election to the Irvine
Ranch Wat.er District.
Return so~ght
C. O"llle Relllardt, 70, of
Turtle Rock in Irvine, 'is a former
physical plant administrator at·
UC Irvine and a former member
of the Irvine Ranch Water
District Board of Dlrecton. He
bolds bachelor'• and muter'a degrees in dvil.~ from
the University Of llllnoia. -
WMt la dte 1mjw pnblem-"'
facta1 dte Water D&triet?
''I think the major problem Ja
in keeping 1he rat.es aa low aa l>C*lble-and to reduce rat.ea. I
ih.inl aervice has been very ilood
and planning baa been quite
jood."
la dtere an eqwltable aolatio.r -·
to sewer ud water ratel?
"There ia really nothing that
will come out that will be lair to everybody. There'• no way to
meter aewage coming out of a
bouae at any reuonable coet.
There's no way that you can
realt.tically determtne the
Q)l'.ltribution to aewage. For that
reuon there's no easy fonnulrto
charge people for exactly what
1 they uae." ~ (8" REINHARDT, Pase A%)
CANDIDATE -C. Orville
Reinhar<lt of Irvine is aeeldna
a teat on the Irvine Randi
Water Dbtrict board.
Ray Auerbach
. defending
board post
Ray A~ 37, of Deerfield
in-Irvine, is water ~
manager for the City of
Anaheim. He haa a t.cbelor's
detree in civil engineering from Cal State Loa Angele9 arid bu
done poeteraduate work in public
finance and public
admlniltration. He is currently a
member of the Irvine Ranch
Water Dtstrict Board.
Wlaat is die major pnblem
(See AUERBACH, Pase AZ)
STATE
DIRECTOR -Ray
.Auerbach, 37, of Irvine ii a
candidate for re-election to
the Irvine Ranch Water
Diltlict boud.
BJ PREDERIClt SCBOEMEBL °" .................
Or.nae County' 1ovenunent
haa 8il'9eel to pay the Univenity
of callfornla $13.76 million to
end a prolon.ted dl1pute over
provlalon of medical care for
ln:J:;rt• at the UC Irvine M Center.
Of that awn. county Boerd of
Supervlaon Chairman Bruce
Neatande aald Wedneeday, $6
ml1llon already haa been paid.
The rema1nlnc ta. 75 ml1&m will
be paid by June 30, the end of
County gets
• auction
flight plan · ..
A detailed proposal for an
auction syatem to diatribute
fllghta to air carriera desiring to
retaln or begin aervice at John
Wayne Airport waa aubmitted
today to the Oran1e County
Boe.rd of Supervilora.
~ to a fiQal draft of
the plan, no one air carrier could
bid for more than 25 of the 41 jet de~ now permitted daily.
F'llahll. or aJota. • they are
calleCl, would be awarded to
alrlina aabmltttna the hlabM
monetary blda. Second-round
bkldtDI would tAke place in the
event two alrline9 aubmlt equal
bkll fol: a llal
Aucdonlnc of the rit,hta la the
latat idea by county~· offkWI to comply with fedenl
court arderJ requlrtna that dw
airport be ~ to air eanieri
In a nondt.:riminatory f.Mhlcln.
Two carrlera, AlrCal and
Republic Airtinea, C\ltrently
control 36 of the 4 l jet
,departurea petmitt.ed dally.
• All •ii: carl'lel'I meetlnl
lped&ct r.me ttaDdardl woWd
be permiu.d. to bid f« fliahta.
1l'8 five carrien now .rvm. the
airport -AirCal, R~ubllc,
Frontier Alrllnee, Pacific
Southwest Airlines. and Western
Airllnea -would have no
• advan~ over other canien.
I
Unde-r the propoaal, slots
would be auctioned annually. No
estimate-bu been~..offered .. to
what a aJot might be worth, or
how much revenue the county
mflht · derive from the annual
auctiona.
Alrport Mamaw Murry Cable
aald today auctioning ia the
f.alnwt way to distribute what he
termed a IC8l'Oe commodlty -
(See FUOBT. Pa1e A!)
Mesa Fish Fry
starts Friday
Why la the Colla Meu Flah
Fry aucb a popular event over
the years?
Some aay it'• the "secret"
batter used ln preparin1 the
9,000 fiah dlMen. Othera go for
the parade, the carnival, the
beauty and baby cont.it,~ the
enter1alnment.
1be fun a:tarta Friday ntaht at
Llona Park And the Daily Pilot'a . •Pecial section today Oil the Fish
Fry and c.mtval 1ivt11 reedera •
rundown on the three-day event.
11111111m11
UllANLf C"OlJN l Y C ALIF OANIA 25 CENTS
the cwrent fiaad year. center in Oranie under a 1976
Supervilora aareed in principle contrect. ·
to the mllllve ~yoU dlll'inl • The bulk of the dl1pute
cloaed-door aeulon amid .i\ focused on about fa million in
i.ndlcaUona that at leut one board unlveraity-illued billl the county
member -Roger Stanton, has refu.ed to pay.
oppo1ed the neaotiated In ita ac~n Wednesday, the
aettlement. b o a r d a la o a g r e e d t o a
The county and the unlveraity replacement <;ontract whereby
aince 1979 have been battline the county would make lump
over 1aa\.lel aurrounding care for sum paymenta for emergency
~ta'for which the county la outpatient care and standardized
finandally responsible. Care for daily rates foe inpatient care for
thoee padenta bu ~vlded indigenta treated at th~ medical
at the unlversitv-o medical center.
County offlclala aay thia
alternatlve approach to the
current patient-by-patient billlna
system will be more efftdent and
lea coetly to adminllter.
Neatande, •peaking to
.report.en at a midday briefina,
declined to aay if the board'• vote
was unanimous.
Later in the day, Stanton muect
a atatement in wh.ich he aaid, "I
do not intend to comment on the
board's decision at this time. The
(See COUNTY, Pa1e A%)
British hit
• • pos1t1ons
a·t Stanley
By Tiie AalOCiated Presa
British gunners dueled with
Argentine artillery batteries
around Stanley today in the
buildup to a possible BriUah
assault on the Falkland Ia1anda .capital, military 1ource1 and
broadcast reports in Londolt uid.
Britain'• Inde~ndent Radio
News said the attack waa not
expected before the weekend as
the gunners, backed by offahore
navy bombardment and Harrier
air strikes. aoftened the eatimated
7,000 Argentines around Stanley.
Reporta in London indicated
' the Britilh control ·all the hilla aurroundin8 the town and the
key pu1e9 to the west through
which reinforcements were
............ ..,ca., ......
TONY'S TRIBUTE -Actor Tony Curtis waves his ''love
balloc:af" at the Harbor Ia1and location of his movie "Balboa"
as.the cat and crew sing "Happy Bh1hday" to him. The actor
la 57 ioday. Balloons were supplied by Newport Beach's
"Love Balloons" firm.
Candidates clash
on campaign funds .
Sy GLENN SCOTI' or ... Dllf .........
Larry Agran, purveyor of
politlcal herbs, aay1 John
Nakaoka was ''inattentive to the factl•• by raising allegations that
Agran and a ih1rd Irvine City
council candidate, Edward
Doman, violated election lawa
dUJine their herb offertnp.
'Tm fully familiar with the
law. I helped write Lt,"
incumbent Agran aaid
Wectn.day after leamtna that
Nakaoka waa aeeking an
lnveatlgatlon of bow the J>lantinp were reported in recent
campaip exper. reports.
Asran'• volunteers be50r pulinC out the plantings of
aw~ baail and -summer aavory
two weekends ago in aelect.ed
neighborhoods. On an attached
flyer the environment -
a 11 y o ri-ent ed Agran
asked voters to consider the
berba as "a living reminder of the
values I have str esaed as your
dty council member ...
During the initial weekend,
the flyer mentioned only Agran.
But last weekend, it included a
poNcript endorsing Doman as
well in the June 8 election.
Nakaok:a immediately charged
that A1ran waa giving a
niDIMDOnetary "in-kind" political
contrlbutlon to Dornan'•
(See CAMPAIGN. Pqe Al)
advancing. I -
Argentine troopa. driven back
into a "hone.hoe" defen.aive
poaitlon, were firing back at
Royal Marinea shenmc Moody
Brook, 3 miles from Stanley and
believed to be a forward
~headquarters for the Argentines.
Aa shelling continued,
government 80W'CeS in London
aaid British planes dropped
thouaanda of lea8eta on Stanley
telllng the Argentinea their
position is hopeleu. Defense
(See FALJU.AND. Paae AJ)
Con men sell
911 number
'subscriptions'
OraJ:ige County authorities are
warning county residents to
beware of phony telephone
solicitors who ask n!Sldenta if
they are interested in subecrlbing
to the county's new 911
emergency telephone system.
· The soliQtations, made both by
telephone and mail, suggest that
residenta can subacribe to the 911
number for a one -time
subacription fee of $9 per adult
and $7 per child, said Lt. Wyatt
Hart, an Orange County Sheriff'•
Department spokesman.
'.'Don't give them your
money,'• said Hart, who
emphasized the scheme la a
phony.
-He said the 911 number la a
county aervice provided to all
residents. •
Sheriff'• department
invelligatora have initiated an
investigation into the team 'and
Hart urged anyoM who haa beet)
contacted by the aolicitora to call
police or U.S. postal service
inapectora.
1·
I •
.,
v
'
I f r
.<
I 1
' ·.
f
j· \
Nine !"e IChool ltuderita Irvtne~-~ ln Irvtnt ve r9Cltved cmb c.=n: Elli~ award• from "protU1" ... .,.. -reall.led at the SoUth Cout ~~i Hlfh School -Ch11i Champion1hlp
~1ored by the Irvine 1.111 J•J 1llH1l, IA1dra • ber of c.ommerce. Greer, Maki C~rhtl•• The chill coo~off ral1ed Obmua and Laara L. a.. $7,000, It WU announced at
an award• breakh1t ~ ........ cMlnnari Wedneeday at the Re/ilstry of the :=p commltwe Hotel chaired by arry Jnd produ r of the chlll le_tlalaa. chambv prelldenL cookoff, alao preaented a Studentl hopored at the check fcw $1,000 to the lrvtne ~ tncludt'd: Police Department and 1tt S LF Alternative High Explorer Sooutl fcw their help School -IJu Au Mll•m. in traffic control at the event.
I
• Chriat C.ollege Irvine will honorary doctorates. ~uate 30 ltudenta at ita The~~will annual commencement ~o to the-Rev. llllam met tor 3 p.m. June 12 in rHmau of Rlveraide, a Founder• Hall, 1~30 former vice ~t of the Concordia. Irvine. Southern omia Diltrict Four UIOciate of arta and of the Lutheran Church-
26 bachelor of arts degrees Miuourl Synod, and will be conferred, aaid to llelae IMwt KIHler of Profeaor Mar11D Semmm, Yucaipa. founder of Lutheran along wi~ the college's first BnWe Worken Inc:
• A workshop on thnata, with pl'lllefltatlona by
preventing ~ will be ~~~L offered June 1 at Irvine's
Heritage Park Youth Services Acfm'"'on • free and open Center. to the r:bUc. Thole interarted The 90-minute aeaaion ahou d re1i1ter for the begi.nninc at 7:30 p.m. will w~~thedty'a focus on means for aecu:rlng F= Wdon at houses again1t bu.rglary. 754.-14.
rench president
elcOmeS Reagan
PARIS (AP) -President
eagan conferred today with
rench President Francois
tterrand on the Middle l'.Mt.
entral America and the
alkland hland1 war, but
pped 1erioua dlsc\mim of
e atubborn economic luuea
~ their ~tries.
On the eve of an economic
mmit of major industrial
"""'~an.· !'!II at V' enai1la ou1llide
~ .taL J.Seagan ...
--ltraininC America'• a1llee until they jotn the leaden of
Britain, West Germany, I1aly,
Caada and Japan thla weekend.
Tbe leeden met over lunc:h in
the aplendor of the BlyHe
Palace. Reepn WM greeted at
the pelaoe by a military honor
guard and a mute fnJm a dnan
and bugle corpa. He and
Mitterrand shook bandl and then
met privately in a cbandeliered
salon oYl!I' a hmcb fedlrtlll a
court test
l' .. '=1JI!?*'"· .
Attonaeys for th9 Siem Club
and the uate will 11•k a ~Um~ li\junctlon 1n U.S.
DllUict COurt in Lam Alwt*
Monday to prewnt an offMOn
oil Jeut lale ICheduled for June 11.
U .8. Diatrlct Court Juda•
Cynth.la Hall hae qreed to hev
araument• from the
environmental aroup and the
state to block the ea.le of oil and
1• l._ on a&e,000 ACl"9I off the
Southern Callfomla ClOelt.
The IUlt will be h.rd at 10
a.m. in U.S. Dlatrict Court, 312 N.
Sprtnc St. ln Loe Anplee.
The Sierra Club auit, which
wuJoinedbythea~ofl.-una ae.ch, eeeka to block the ..Te of
all 184 tncta contained in Leue
Sale No. 68 on June.11.
Included in that IUit are the 10
tractl located off Lacuna'• and
Newport Beach'a shoreline...
Dr. Singe1t,
jrolesso_r of
sex, resigns
LONG BEACH (AP)
Embattled ''Plyddocy of Sa"
professor Barry Si.nnr, who
offered oowwe c:redlt for eexua1
experimentation, hu restped
from Cil State Lona Beach.
un1veraity offtdab announced
today. J>r. June M. Cooper, who WM
contlucting an investigaUon into
Sluger'1 coune, received the
Jeuer of resignation Wedneeday,
unlvereity spokesman Bob
Breunig uid.
"On the ume day, oii behalt of
president Stephen Hom who 19
out of the country, vice pwldmt
for academk attain Dr. Glenden
Drake accepted Dr. Singer'•
re1l9natlon effective
immediately," Breun1a akl. ~· ~ railed pl\Alelna from poUUclana and religioul
leaden after lt WM reported ....
be offered credtt for 1•1
encounters.. lfOUP sex and odm'
opUolw IUCh .. .,me in drat to ban. . 88~ invesliOUco came after
Singer revealed he had been
••romantically involved.. with
three or four of bla atudenta ~
" •• 1C1rC::.rn" deferted ,,he.tvY' dirwiorw'' °'" ecoNJmio
..w ol ...tect 't::*' -
wtdl 1rUffJee -~ wiqa
· ~~ w• reported out Of itate ud unreaclaable for·
Coastal
M09tty c:teer 1'"9 •nemoon.
Hlgha ~ to 72. ...... nWit Ind :r;::.,:=:= wt1h moelty 141MY aftemooM. O\lll!mlGflt ..,.. 48 to ee. Hlglll
Frld•Y f4 to 71 .
Huntington-Newport area .....,.,.... ,... frOlft. ,_of
N to a Miii of •· El1ewllere, troM Polftt ConceJ11on to tlla Mulcan
bC1nMr Ind out IO m111e: 8mal
cnft ~ Oller °'*' ......
wtll llOiltcA "'" wll1dl of 15 to 30 lcncMI Ind I to Mooe .... ~--to_,..... ..
of 10 to 15 IUIOlt JNI afMrnoon ................ oflto3 ....
Temperatures
NATION
: .. Le ..
12 ... 17 48 11 54 .03 11 59 .. ..
71 11
90 70 T7 5$
11 46 17 ... 01 17 40 74 44
77 57 1.27 to 71 17 .. .. 51 51 44 .25 .. 77 71 55 15 ..
12 .... 17 ......
7S 81 74 57
93 17 87 71 .17
73 5' n 47 ..21 17 54 .08
• 7' 47 55 30
t4 • .. 4t
.. 82 S4 a .. 71 •
•i 17 •• .. 11 " . II 1t t1 72 UN ... , ,. .. .. .. 1t ., ........... ~ : J; Olldmlld ... , .. .
71 51
92 71 .15 7t ff 77 a 12 4t .OS ea se .23
12 47 .. 11 .11 78 86 100 10 72 85 71 4t 1M 11 ..
71 81 .19
81518
71 S4
73 ...
.. 72 a ... , • 71
11 40
71 5t
.. 74 uo
.. ti .....
10 so IO N .01 t8 17
11 t3 .47
11 .. . .. • &4
Seer-to T4 47 a.... .. 44 a.n oeaoo 10 es I a., ,randlOo S1 ...
a.ntae.-. 71 S1 . a.n.1 Mana 14
Stoaiton 74 81
TMrlNI 12
Uldlfl 70 .... ow ~ 82 llOIMr ea 29 =-71 42 70 u
Long 9Mdl 72 H
~ 70 so
Mt. Wiieen 11 ...
Newport 8aedl .. • On'8rto 70 81
Plllln IPftnp tO N ~ 72 81 u
8en ....... dlrl0 10 ao
San o.tMW 71 81
Sen Joat .. a Santa Ml 71 67 s.n1a Cna .. &4 TlltlMV*t 31
£%tended
forec.it
FLIGHT l(UCTION ...
Mlniatl')' 1ource1 ••ld
Spanlab·•puklna Brttona were
amona the forward troope to
ne1otl•t• 1urrendera aro\lad
Stanley.
British hellcopt•ra llf&ed
lO&mm IW"lt vttdi a ~ ., 10~ mllel, to the hllltopl W9t of
the town while Britilh ~ 1Jcht tanka moved lnto ,..u.
arid Snowcat tnuwport Wh.1det
brou1ht 1upplle1 and
ammunition acrou the boay
terrain.
tJuper 80 would be permitted to
bld.
The airllnes would be NQUJnd
to 1ubmlt lea1ed btda. Afrllnea
wlnnin1 1lot1 would not be
pennitted to trade them or .ell
them to other carrlert.
CAMPAIGN FUNDS • • •
A tenior Britlah detente IOW'Cle
ln London uid the buildup waa
·~ to take "a few dayt." "The ))Olitlon of our forca in
Puerto Arpntlno (the Arpntine
name for Stanley) hae been
q>D10ltdated accordin& to plan
and the men await the benle
with sptritl renewt'd by a rouatna
speech by their mllltary
1overnor," the Argentine
military command Hid In a
communique Wedne9day nl&ht.
camp&llJ\ and cla1med Doman
1hould have recorded It in
campail" expen1e reporta.
But. Doman and Aaran both
uld durln.g eeparate lilterviewe
Wednelday that the dedalon to
include Dornan waen't made
unW two daya after the May 22 fi11na deaclllne for the reportl.,
Bo1h Mid they planned to record
the tranaactlon In their next
reports.
Aaran ai.o araued that hia
contribution to Doman wouldn't
be more than the $2SO Umlt eet ln
the city's ordinance regulating
campaign donations.
Nak•oka hH aaked City
Attorney Roser Grable to
inveeti1ate violation• of the
ordinance. Agran answered that
he find.I it ''galllng that one eo
Inattentive to the tactl 1hould be
making theee wild charge.."
He noted that many of the
10,000 to 12,000 herb plantinp
haven't been dl1trlbuted and
thua would not yet be eubject to
any experwe reports.
Meanwhile, there were no
report• today of candidatee
offerinc a •pedal aeaaonal herb:
Election Th)'me.
The command ICknowledpd ekinn1ahlnR between Britiah and
,Argentine t.roope but gave no
tiPtAila.
British correspondents on the
battlefront, whoee reports were
subject to military cenaorahlp, said" British t.roope controlled the
ridgee overlooking Stanley.
AUERBACH CANDIDACY. • •
From Page A 1' ...
fac1.D1 tile Waser D11trlet1
"I think the major problem la
dealing with our eewaae
treatment and dispmaL In the
put we were a total reclamation
dlatrtct and that's a greet thing to
do aa far aa oomervtng water.
But i\'• extremely expensive. We
ahould have the Orange County
Sanitation District treat the
sew•·'' II dlere u eqmtable eol•doll
&o Hwer ud waler nta?
"I think our water rates are
very reuonable. The eewer rates
we h.lch for several reuona. One
la that we have a very Inefficient
treatment planL And you can't
meter .ewage the way you meter
water. The only way to do it la to
try and estimate I the amount of
water people uae in and out of
home. Other agendel have tried
other metbodl, but have had
more probleml in terms of people
laining about inequitie.. ... ~Y are die nta 1•1D1 •P ud cu thy k eoiatrollff?
"The Metropolitan
Water District tat.et \Wnt up IO'
our rates had to go up. The big
change in rates wlll happen
when we get more ground water.
It will alao make ua more drought
retistanL People ln Irvine don't
want to watt for thinals to fail IO
we had to nli8e the aewer rates to
aet up a replacement fund. Wiat II a.e t.cve of die d&yt
aewqe treatment plot?
.. All of it depends on what.
happens with our aaaodatlon
with the Orange County,
Sanitation District and what
kinda of funds we can get from
the Metropolitan Water Diltrict
to help our reclamation efforts. I
think the plant ls always going to
be there. We still need to ao n:iOft
to make It more effident."
Do yoa *ID pay for water
dlltrlet board memben la
ja1tlfted or aJutlfled?
"We are definitely one of the
busiest d1ltricta in the state and
state law provides for beJnc paid
for rileet1nga including committee mee~. There's no abuse aa
far as I m concerned. Our budget
next year la JlOlng to be over '40
m1llioo•and l'm -not sure what
impact th• total avera1e
dlrecton' fees of $25,000 • year ll
going to have."
REINHARDT
fty are tM nta 10J.as., ud
cu alley M coatroUed?
"The sewer ratea are high
becauae of the tre9tment cmta.
One of the alternative• ta to
deliver the sewage to the Orange
County Sanitation Diatrict. lt
theae untn!eted wastes coold be
treated elaewhere they could be
treated for leas than we do it."
Wllat ll die fwtue of die ~ty't
sewage treatmeat ,...t'? •
"I think It's going to be there.
Irvine has a commitment to
conserve water and one of the
meet effective ways Is to \.lie
reclaimed water. We're going to
have to pay for the oost of water
anyhow. I think it's the
community'• responsibility to pay
for It."'
Do )'H tllJDk pay for water
district board aaembera la
ja1dfle4 or ajutlfle4?
"I feel the ~y la justified and I
don't think Its abu8ed. It's really
not an issue aa far aa I can see. If
you figure what houri the boerd
is getting oornpemated fot it's '•
very low."
SW AN TELLS VIEWS • • • From Page A 't
'11 think they are contrOUed.
Water rates are go~ up becau.e
the charge to the diatlict ll goina
up. When weU. get built we'll
have the ability to have 30 to 40
percent of our water coming
from pound water auppUee and
that'• con1iderably cheaper.
Sewer treatment it an
energy-intense operation. With
the ex:lat1ng plant there's no way.
to change that d.ramatt<:a_Uy. t -
think one of the board's highest
priorities is to hook up with the
Orange County Slanitation
Diltrict..
WUt ll "e f•tare of t•e clty•a eewaa~ treatmeat plut?
"If we hook up to the Oranie
Coun\y Sanitation District th~
sewage treatment plant would
only provide for the current
demand for reclaimed water.
Solid wutes would be treated
elaewhere at less cost."
Do YH Wall tile pay for water
district ~oard members la
jaetlfled or j.aJ••tified?
1 'rtlilii) • .)'0'1 set what you pay
for. It'• a reaeonable thing to be
compensated. U I got paid the
maximum, f-or every sing e
month, that's half what you'd
pay for a clerk. I disag:ree that
compensation ia a main ialue."
COUNTY • • •
board will be voting publicly on
the issue later this month. /\t
that time I will cast a vote that
will reOect the position that I
took during the executive 11e91iori
which was held today."
The UC Board of Begenta ii
ICbeduled to take action on the
attlement and the new contract
propasal at a meeting June 17 and" 18. -
The propoee(f" aettlement baa
been end01"9ed by UC President
David Saxon In private
oonvenaliona with Nelltande_
. Is perfea for~, boat. bike,
hl<e, walk. r or work Jobbers
can do it all but it's up to yoo to
do it wel . Avalable i'l J~
8 triqlJe cdors.
. '
I I •
TM Daily Pilot ret'Ol'1\IMndl Nak•~rward Dornan,
Larry Acran and Barbara Wiener have ty. _
for election to the Irvine City Howwwr, N~ka hai two
CounCU In 'l\aeeday'a balloting. years ta\alninl on hil tenn u a
· IChool tnatM and atu>uldn't be • Aaran. the only lncwnbent awttchlnl from one local body to
seeking re-election, ls a cons· another without flniahlna hla clenUous public officail who hu
served his envlronrnental-minded tennDoman hu demonstrated he
constituent• well, even if his cannmaneffectlvecampallJ'l,bUt
positions occasionally h~ve seemed h , i d th f a blt extreme. He is intelligent, · aan t nve•te e yeara o
articulate and almost ·always well community tervlcf offered by
prepared to make decisions on otheOt the remaining candict.tea.
important city matters. Btll Po11l baa mounted a
Altho\.llh Mrs. Wiener baa commendable eampaign bued on
never held public office, she too , libertarian polldle but wms to
has d~monatrated over the put have little aupport. Madorie decad~ a genuine interest in the Ke~ left town In the mic:fat of
community. Her well-organized the c.ampatan and can't be
campaign shows •he has the considered 'aerlOUI ~eqer.
reapect of a broad base of Tbe eJedian of Aaran and
residents. Her promise to try to Mra. Wiener WQuld provide
unify a sometimes polarized needed balance to the council,
council ~ well for her. which includes Mary arm Galdo,
Two other candidates, John Bill Vardoulia and David Sills.
Water hoard selection
Peer Swan, Betty Olson and
Frank Hurd are the Daily Pilot's
choices for election Tuesday to the
Irvine Ranch Water District's
Board of Directon. ·
Swan, the current chairman,
is a finance specialist who is
known as a hard-working board
J l member. He was first elected four
' .years~· Ms. Olson was appointed to
I
. I
I
trustee, Hurd's tenure as a public.
offidal hu been characted.lld by
hia un~ to rubber-itamp
recommendations made by staff
memben. Every board, ~y
a low-profile water board, needs a
member ll)Je Hutd.
It phould be n~ted that
incumbent Ray Auerbach, who is
running for re-election, has ~ng ~
qualifications u well. He ia·water
engineeri'ng manager for
Anaheim ..
the board in January to' replace
Wayne Clark. A UCI profemor
·with a specialty in water
re90urces, she otters the board a
wealth of technical knowledge.
Her election al8o ensures that a
woman will sit on the type of
panel too often seen as a men's
club.
Hurd's election would be
healt})y for the water board. A
former dty planning commillion-
e r and 1rvine school board
The fifth candidate, ~e
Reinhardt. aJao ia experienced. He
ii a former board member who •
l.o1t hia poaltlon in th~ 1980
elections.
·The field of candidate• is
strong, but the election of Swan.
M.. OllOll and ffuwt would giw
the bciud the mix ~be.t lu.1'*1 to
the public'• lnteftst.
Measure A :merits suppor.t
Irvine Vot.8'1 should c.ji a
''ya" vote on bellot measure A in
the Tue.day's election.
The measure, if approvecS by
a majority.vote, would anow city
offid.ala to eell bonda to raise $1
million. That 1WD Would then be
available as matchin;r funds in the
strong likelihood tliat Irvine ia
chqeen for a $9 million state arant
to lower the Santa Fe Railway
fracka -into a landlCape<r-channel
through the develoryd p0rtion of
the city. .
. The grant would come from a
mate pot aet aside ~ conattuction
projectl to J>ftVeftt rail tracks from
croming busy streea. Under tlUa
proposal, the tracka would go
· under Culver Driv!l_ Yale Loop
and Jeffrey Road . .t"Jana call for
the channel eventually to extend
under Sand C-anyon Road.
In addition to doing away
with croa1ln1 ctelaya, the
~ channel .,ou)d offer
an tically pies stna treatment
for the tncJm and would muffle
mUch of t)w train nme for DMl'by
relidenta.
Accordlna to dty pi.m, the $1
million wouia be paid off fl'<Jm
annual relmbunemelltl of the
state 1a1ollne tax that are e-armarkecr f« romd-jnjecta. Thia
means no additkmal tue9 would
be required, but the channel
would for many years be locked in
as a top pri«ity ro.d oonatruction
project.
Reaidentl have the chance
to pledge f 1 million and pt $9
million in return. The key
question ia whether thil channel ii
worth the price. '
We think It la. Voee Y• m
~A.
-..
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Diiiy Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on tnis ~· are those of their authors and artists. Ae.-r comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo• 1S60, Costa Mew, CA 92626. Pftone <7i•O 642·021. .
.L.M. Boyd I Separate vacations
How do you and your matrimonial
mate feel about taking separate
vaeadona? Sixty-one percent of the
couples 1enerally approve of this
notion now. Bil JUmp avtt 20 yeen
..,. n11e1.-on1y 31 percent thoucht it a
pxl idea. Our LoYe and War man ii
not 1ocked Into an opbUon on tbia one,
eJa.'llpt fot the obvious conclusion that
p1lr1 who don't want aepatate
wcatlom dearly have the ~ marn.a-
inherited 6 bu1ihe11 that your
~ bad started at the time of
Christ, and. Chat bullnem bad ,bt $1
million a day ewl' alnce with no
expectation of chanp. it ~ atill
take you and your deacendenta
another 700 yem'I to be the f1M •1
trtWon.
I Do you keep )'OUr ear dool' b:lted
while you ~? Seven out of 10
people '*11 paDaWI the)' do IO 'ltl1W.
Politicos again flying high.
W~SHINGTON -Ritln1
Phoenix-like from the ~ of federal
frupllty, the Air Force'a 89th Airlift
Wing l.t once ap1n flytna blah·
. Little known to the publiC QI' Kremlin
spies, the 89th is well known and ~y
regarded at the Pentagon and on Capitol
Hill. It's i,he bigahota' favorite unit, ln
fact; for lbs aole m.lallon la to provide
luxurious -and free -tramportatlon
for VIPa and their wives wherever and
whenever they ca n find a
balfway-J~timate eXC\.Ule to Oy.
'n\e 89th 1 posh air-taxi 8el'Vice fer the
elite coats the taxpayers about $10
milllon a year. To avold embarnllina
congressmen and depreaina 3 the Air Force destro}'a the i9th'1 t
records after 30 daya. Bue my 11e
Peter Grant saw a copy of the Mech
manilesi. before they hit the lbredder.
ONE BUND¥J> tripe were loaed by the 89th in that one month. 1'ift _..
some of theee all-expemee-pald junlr.et8,
straight out of.the records that bad been
marked for destruction.
-Two dozen memben of CC.,....
and their wives flew to the eJeemt
Ooe6n ~Club on Key~ Fla., fer
a meetl.ng wltb a Canadian
parliamentary deleptlon. The tab came
to $50,000, including room and board for
the Canadian junket.een. ..
To the Editor:
0n your editorial page Of May 24, WU
a very dJl8uating arUcle by Earl Waters.
Mr. Wat.era baa the gall to atate, in
print, that the reuon that there are no
more big bands is due to featherbedding
by local unions when the big bands came
to town. Nothing could be lurther from
the tnath! I }lad the good fortune to be a sideman
1n many, many fll!DOl,,9 "hie banda," with
20 yeus' experience on the road in f!WrY
kind of bend. and never once did I tee
the irreaponalble activttlea Wat.en c1.almt
happened '1l the bi& band era. It ia
a&nply not true!
ONE OF TBS thlnp that did de9troy
the tq band era WM, flnt of all. tour
Jbng-haired youthl who ltu1ed to tum
the entire music ~ around with
t.lM! advent of the rock era. No tq band
had ever been able to draw a quarter ot
a milllon people to a field in Woodl&oek,
and that ii one of the th1np that kDled
the big bands.
We ate happy to report to you that
every major and minor 11ar, and the bulk
of all ~eaaior;W muRdam do beloftc
to, and enjoy ~p 1n. union. the
American Federation ot Mualclan.a.
lMccu.radea' ahould nof be allowed to be
dialemfnated throuah. your DUbllcation.
-• B. DOOGL.\S SAW'J'BLLE
PtMdettt
Muakianl' Local #7, AJ.M.
Leave cars at home
-Rep. DOn Fuqua, D-Fla., la chainnan
·of the &u.e sdence and Technology
Committee. So he and five other
commlttee members -with d\eir wives
-hopped an 89th jet down to ~ to
see the apace shuttle take off. Then,
.IKl 11111111
after a aldl! excursion to California,
where they l.oapected a l()lat-energy
&Jl'Oject., the cmgremlonal couplel arrived
In New Mexico' in time to ae the shuttle
land.
-Air Force brim hala Ulle the 89tb
like an airborne limousine service.
Robert Mathia. the YD chief ol staff,
tOOll .. wife 911 • ~p ~ ~ and
Spain. Gen. Robert Manb. cormnandes' ol the Air 7onie Systems Command. took
hi8 wife on a l~y tour of the Far !Mt,
which tncluded four days in Hawaii. An
Alr l'Ofee apokemnan said wive. are
allowed on tbeee trips for protocol
DW1J09S and to confer with dependents On f~ty-d-life-.......
-The 89tb la alao available to
~ ataffen. Tbe Air Force
Invited 25 Capitol Hill atcte.. 'a.lmolt all of
them female, to Colorado Sprinp for a
tour of the Air Force Academy. 1
THESE EXAMPLES were all from
the month of March. In January. ~·
Peter Rodino, D-N.J .. led .a group of rune
Democratic congressmen and their wives
aboard an 89th jet for a two-week,
$15,000-plua junket in Italy. They visited
Genoa, Venice, Pisa, Florence, Naples
and Rome to "show America'• support
for Italy as a strong NATO ally," a
Rodino spokesman said.
Also in January, Rep. James Jeffords,
R-Vt.. a member of the Education and
Labor, AgrlcuUure and Aalng
Committees, for some reaeon flew ~
89th to France. Gennanr,, Italy and the
Netherlands while his oomti~ were
shoveling snow. A Jeffonill ap+e-nen
said his a>e. ''has a general policy .,
•voiding congrasional ~ \lllleta, ,Absolutely necessary!' Coupll~ the
words -''junkets" and"~ ii a
lexJcolosk:al breakthrough. · Though the $10 millloo budget for the
89th Airlift Wing 1-a drop in the $258
billion Pentagon bucket. it probably cmca
the taxpayen biJ.llalW more fndirectly.
What oongJ'elSrnan ia aolnc to be 80
ungradoua u to niggle aver the \tefeme
budget after a luxurious flight on an AJr
Force junket jet?
water l.t thlpped over deaert.t at great Mar too. I was 13 in 1956. Back then. we
expenae. not only had squirrels and gulla. but
4 . No aewera. Waste should be skunks, poeaums. quail and roaCI runners.
recyded. too.
'f'bele Ideal might aen a bit ex11~.
but our Southern California climate ia . OLD CORONA del Mar ~ wDd
very delka~ and touah meeaaea must flowers every spring, instead of bcmea.
be taken to _protect it and ~it beck. U Tbe dazzling array attracted bundn!ck-of
people want can let tnem live ln speci~ of butterflies.
Minnesota and Iowa where they can You could catch fish, abalone and
have all the machines they want. But if lobster with just a mask in lix feet of
people wmn to live hen they must give ocean. We never beard of llDOI· Tbe •
up some of the thin11 they take for roeda wett clear and you coWd park
gnmted in the Nit of 1be country. Not anrhere. except for summer vacation..
Only will tt-strma ~ cleen up Big Corona Beach had JE)Qba of tar aD
our environment, &ut they will also over It, quite often. mat then. It it
promote the quality o( our life rather always clean theee days. It would be
than Che qumUty. -.... terrible to foul up our·~ You are
MIKE MANG . right. Jane. But I still wiab you could
have seen the "Crown of the See" when ------~--E-...;L;;;.E.-P..;..tfO_N..-;...l_Y_O_U_9'___ ~j1Y dirty thing about ~ wu the
LEnRR TO TH• EDITOR
S. la1tructiefts below
ftll~STEINER
Save Social Security
To the Editor:
Treasury Secretary Reaan bat
publicly stated Chat Sodal SecWtty will
go broke alter July 1983 urue.~
are made to make the system fi~y
sound.
Thia IW'ely means that the time la now
to reali%le the total inJwtkie and adridal lms*t from such .... bappeninc." \t. alao
mean1 that federal smnaaem-t mwi
foreatall such eventuality to avoid
financial diaMter and aoct.al rniOlutlaa. .
BJ PREDERICK SCBOIMEBL °' ................ Orana• Co\lft\y' aovern.ment
hll Ql'eed to pey the untvenaty
of c.i11fomla •t1.7& million to
end a prolon1ed dllrute over
provision o( medlca care for
indl1ent1 at the UC lrvine
Medbl <;enter.
Of that IW'll. oouniy Board of
Supervlaora CKalrman Bruce
Neatande uld Wednesday) to
'
British
assault
awaited
By Tbe Aaaodated Presa
British forces blitzed
Argentine positions around
Stanley with artillery, bombs
and surrender leaflets today, but
the Argentines ref~ to give in •
and battled Britiah commandos
six miles west of the Falkland.a
capital in fog, mud and snow,
reports from the front said.
Press Association, Britain's
domestic news agency, said
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher has made "one last
offer" to Argentina to withdraw
Its troops from the Falklands
before what likely will be a
bloody battle for the capital. It
gave no details and did not say
whether\tentina replied.
Brltis . overnment aourcea
said Mrs. tcher al8o has given
the British commanders approval
to attack Stanley "whenever
they are ready" and assured
them they will not be held up for
''political or diplomatic..reaaons.''
MJUtary aour~es in London
said Maj. Gen. Jeremy More,
commander of BritUh ground
forces in the Falklanda, la not
expected to unleuh the final
offensive until the weekend
while he moves up troops, ~V)'
weepona and auppUea to the high
gJ'OUnd west of the capital.
Brltnh correspondenu aald
Moore, lookin1 through
binoculars, viewed the blue and
white Argentine flag above the
former British governor's
residence in Stanley and ~uoted
him as telling hi.I men: 'We'll
holst the Union Jack down there
jun.as aoon as we can get there.
And believe me, it won't be
long." ~
Informed IOurces in London
reported firefights u British
Special Air Service aquada
probed the Argentine defense
perimeter about six miles west of
Stanley. There was no official
conflrmatlon or word on
cuualties.
British Harrier jets dropped
(See FALU.AND, Pqe A%)
Cop chopper
forced down
A Newport Beach police
helicopter was forced to land
~d an elementary school in
Fountain Valley Wednesday
when the pilot began losing
power, police aald.
The helicopter touched down
at Harper Park behind Jama 0 .
Harper Elementary School at
1888~ Santa Ynez St. shortly
after noon.
Pilot Ru.ell Sutter was able to
, reau~e flight after a faulty
IJ*kplug wu changed, police
181d.
STATE
I H l lll".111\Y Jll N I I 11 .. · ()IU\N I .L l: l)UN I y c ALIF OHNIA 25 CENTS
mWk>n alreedy hat been paid.
The remaJn1na te. 7S mll11on wt11
be paid by Jww 30, the end of
the ~t f1lcal year.
Supervilon qreed ln prtnctple
to the mueive. p&Yotf durt.na •
closed-door uaalon amid
lndJcatlona that at 1-lt OM boerd
member -Roaer Stan'ton
opposed the f\e1ott1ted
•ttlement.
The county t.nd the unlvenlty
~ 1079 have bMll battllnc
OYef .._~care for lndJtenta for which the county ii
ftl)andally ~. Can for
thole padenta hal ~ at the unlvenlty-o medical
center ln Oranp under a 1978 contnct.
The bulk of the dlapute
fOCUled on about $8 m1lUOn ln
unlvenlty-imaed bU1a the COW>ty hu refuled to pay.
In ita llCUoo Wednetday, the
board alao ••reed to a
replacement contract whereby
the county would ~ lump awn payments for emer1ency
t Uent care and standardized
rat.ea foe lnpaUent care foe
pnta ueeted at the medJCal
center.
County officials aay this
alternatlve approach to the
current patient-by-patient blllina
l}'ltem will be more eff.ident and
lees costly to adminlltet.
Neatande, 1pe~kin1 to
reporters at a midday brietina,
declined to say if the board'• voie
WU unanimous.
Later in the day, Stanton 6-ued
a statement in which he aald, "1
do not Intend to comment on the
board will be voting pu y board'• dec:la1on at thla ~
the laaue later thll month At
that time I will caat a vo1e that
will reflect the poiltlon that 1
took durtna the executive ~
which wu held today."
The UC Board of Repnta lt
scheduled to take action on the
aettlement and the new contnct
propoaal at a meetf.nB June 17
ancf 18.
The. propoeed aettlement hat
been endoned by UC Pre.Adent
David Saxon In private
conversations with Neatande.
Partnership_ sought·
'
Newport offering
........... ~..,..., ......
TONY'S IJ'RIBUTE -Ada Tcmy Curds waves h.la "love
ballooN" at the Barbor Jaland k>cation of hll movie 0 BaJboa"
as the cast and crew slng "Happy Birthday" to him. 'nle actor ·
ii 57 today. Balloons were supplied by Newport Beach's
"Love Balloons" firm.
Buller· selected
Coastline chief
John L . Buller, a veteran
adminlatrator in the Coa1t
c.ommuntty College District, has
been choeen aa interim president
of CoaatUne College.
Buller, a ~4-year-old Costa
Mesa resident, will UIUme the
interim poll July l, when current
Coastline Pre~ent Bernard
Luskin takes over aa president of
Orange c.oast College in ea.ta
Mesa.
Buller'a appointment waa
made Wednesday nifht at a
special meeting o Coa1t
Community College Diatrlct
trustees.
Truateea said the interim
appointment ii nor to exceed a
year in duration. •
District spokesman Rlchard
Simon aald the ~ have not
conclUded plans foe how they
will aelect a permanent CoMtllne
(See OOASTLJNE. Paae A%)
PRESIDENT -John Buller
of Costa Meta has been named
interim president of Coastline
C.Ollege.
COUNTY
truce
By STEVE MARBLE
"' ... D9llJ '1114 ... Representatives for Newport
Beach said today the city is
prepared to extend an "olive
branch'' to Orange County and
become a working partner in
planninl the future of John
Wayne Airport.
~ la an electric moment,"
au1geated attorney Pierce
O'Donnell, w~resented
Newport in ita " ul effort...\o
tum beck the county's airport
muter plan.
The announcement waa made
at a pre. conference early today,
ataged partially 10 that city
offidall could react publicly to
Orange County Superior. Court
Jucr-ge Bruce Sumner's final
order' on the city's lawsuit apinst
the county.
Sumner upheld the city's
ar1ument that the county'•
envinlmnental documents foe the
IUlter plan were inadequate.
•"!be county has been lroaen in
lta tncb." eaid Mayor Jackie
Hather, add.inc that the m.ster
plan now la "nothina man than
hlstorica1 documeJlta gatheri.na
dUlt on the. .&.rd of &ipervi.:n bookabeW... ..
She atreuf;d that the fina~
court order plohlblta the county
Con men sell
911 number
'subscriptions'
Orange County authorities are
warning county residents to
beware. of phony telephone
aolic:lton who ask residents if
they are interested in aubecribillg
to the county's new 911
emergency telephone system.
The 901icitad0na. made both by
telephone and mail, suggest that
residenta can aubecribe to the 911
nµmber for a one-time
aubecriptlon fee of $9 per adult
and $7 per child, said Lt. Wyatt
Hart, an Orange County Sheriff's
Department spokesman.
"Don't give them your
snoney," said Hart , who
emphaalzed the acheme ls a
phony.
He said the 911 number is a
county aervice provided to all
n!Sidenta.
Sheriff'• department
investlptora have initiated an
invesdption into the mcam and Har.i urged anyone who has been
oontacted by the aollciton to call
police or U.S . postal service
lnapecton.
.,,,
ffistoricaJ BOC!ety seta liome
'
.
The Co.ta Meu Hiltorica1 SodetY finally hu a
home of la own to store ita .,_..of memorabWa. Paae .
Bl..
• on airport
from increasing the daily
commercial jet flights beyond 41.
"The county la hereby on
notice," the mayor continued,
"that 11 the county fails to obey,
in f!!Very respect. the court Ol'dera,
the city can and will go back to
court."
Attorney O'Donnell said the
city now would like to alt down
with lawyers for the county and
construct a legally binding
settlement to the question of
airport expansion.
* * *
He said the city's chief goals in
such a di9cuasion would be to
establish a permanent limit on
daily jet departures. He added
that Lf an agreement waa not
legally binding, lt would be a
"short-lived victory."
O'Donnell admitted that the
city's policy of a 41 flight ceiling
ia not "written ln concrete." He
said the city might be willing to
accept more daily flights and, on
(See AIRPORT, Page A%) . * * .•.
County gets plan
for flight auction
A detailed proposal for an
auction sy1tem to distribute
fliehta to air canien deslring to
retain or begin Rl'Vice at Tohn
Wayne Airport was aubmitted
today to the Orange County
Boetd of Superviaorl.
Acconlinl to a final draft o1
the plan. no ol\e air carrier could
bi.d lo.-more than 25 of the 41 jet
DOW permitted daily.
oc alota, as they are
c , ould be awarded to
airlinel submitting the blghest
monetary blda. Second-round
bidding would take plact! in the
event two airlines aubmit equal
bids for a slot.
Aucdoning of the fllghta ls the
latest ldtt by county government
officilla to comply with federal
court orders requiring that the
airport be opened to air carriers
in a nondiacriminatory fashion.
Two carriers, AirCal and
Republic Airlines, currently
control S5 of the 41 jet
depertu..rea permitted daily.
All air carriers meeting
apec:lfied noi8e standarda would
be permitted to bid for fllghta.
'lbe five carriers now serving the
airport -AirCal, Republic,
frontier Airlinea, Pacific
Southwest Airlines, an.d We.tern
Airlines -would have no
advantage CYVer other carrien.
Under the proposal, alots
would be auctioned annually. No
estimate has been offered' u to
what a slot might be worth, or
haw much ~ue the county
might derive from the annual
auction&
Airport Manager Muwy Cable
aaid today auctionina ia the
faireet way to distribute what he
termed a ICll'Ce commodity -
that ii, the number of permitted
jet departunia.
Aa delianed by Cable, there
would be at least one round Ql blddlna. perhape two.
In the first round, only carriers
flying quieter ainnft. auch ..
the McDonnell-Douglas DC-9
S.uper 80 would be permitted to
bid.
The airlines would be required
to submit sealed bids. Airlines
winning alota would not be
permitted to trade ihem or aell
them to other carriers. .
U the 41 slots were not taken
during the first round of bidding,
a second round would be he1c1.
Airlines winning slots during the
.ec:ond round would be pennltted
to fly older and noisier aircraft
on thoee flights.
However, Cable aaid, he
anticipates only one round of
bidding. He said it would be ln
the airlines' interest to win alota
on which they could fly newer,
more efflc:lent jets.
Airlines winnina alota woulb
be permitted to pay off their bids
on a monthly basia.
County superviaors will not
(See FIJGBT, Pa1e A%)
Mesa Fish Fry
starts Friday
Why is the C.C.ta Meu Fish
Fry. such a popular event over
the yean?
Some say it's the "aecret "
batter used in preparing the
9,000 fish dinners. Others go for
the parade, the carnival, the
beauty and baby oonteata, oc the
entertainment.
The fun •tarts Fri~ rUabt at
Lions Park and the Dally Pilot's
special ledion todaf on the Flah
Fry and c.amival &1vea relldera a
rundown on the~ event..
j
f ·
I
I
1
~·the plan until tit U.S.
; 8th Dt1trlct Court of Appeall
, Niii an -.. railed In an ....i
.,of the fed.,al court oidera
,overtumlnc two prevtoua airline
acce11 plane. A hearlna i•
teheduled Tueaday in
!Sactament.Q. • ..
· If the appeal• effort fall•.
r1upervi1ora wlll conaider the
•auction propoe.al at a meeUng
Wed.naday, otflctala u.ld. t •
. Previous plane deslped by the
p«>untv -and rejected by U.S.
* * *
Dlatrlct Court Judie Terry• Hau.. Jr. woW4 haw l"l'.duall;y
ltripp.d A1rCal and ~ of
the flilht l\&Al'8.ftMI tMy ~
po9111.
A1 fllabt 1uarantM1 were
eliminated, carrlera not now
1trvln8 the .trpart would haw
been able to obtain fllahta.
Judae Han. conllltantly hal
held tnat any Dian that lavon
incumbent cArrlera tervtna. the
a1rp>rt " u.ncoNtitutioaal Md in conflict with federal aviation
lnduatry derelulatlon polldee.
BY ITIDVE MnalELL .,......, .......
Attars..,_ for the Siem Qub
and th• 1tatt wlll Hek a
prellmlnary injunction in U.S.
DilU1ct Court in Loe Anael• Mcaday to prevent an, offabore
oil leue M1e 1eheduled few JW)e
11 .
U.8. Dl1trlct Court Juda•
Cynthia ~ bu llreed to bear
ar1ument1 from the
environmenw aroup and the
state to block the ule of oU and
au leuee on 856,000 acsw off the
Southern Callfomla cout.
~AIRPORT TRUCE ... The 1uft will be heard at 10
a..m. ln U.S. Dlltrict Court, 312 N.
Sprlnc St. ln Loe Anplee.
the other hand, mtaht puah for
fewer departures.
, The county, which hlll 60 days
.to appeal Judge Sumner'•
declaion, haa not agreed to sit
down at a bargainfni table with
-ewport. O'Donnell aaid he
lanned to oall aUomeya for the
ty today.
The..Newport City Council,
meanwhile, ii expec!ted to review
the dty'• airport policy Jw.e 14.
Mayor Heather reveeled that
the city 1pent '$36S,OOO battlJna
the county'• muter plan. She uict the city, 1n the put two
fiacal yqn, hu •pent •~1.000
1ightfna airport expansion.
The Sierra Club luit. whJch
wu joined by the City of IA£una
Be.ch, aeekl to block the ule of
all lM tncU contained 1n Leue
Sale No. 68 on lune 11.
Included in that IUit are the 10
tracta located off Lacuna'• and
Newpon Beach'a lhorellnee.
OASTLINE PRESIDENT ..
'l'be state'• lawsuit. which will
be heard concurrently with the
Sierra Club action. aeekl to block
the aale of only 22 tncta off
Southern California, lncludin1
nine of the 10 off~ and
Newport. resident. T.he trut tees dr~w
criticism from lnatructors
ver the manner In which
uskin was selected for th~
ge Coast presidency.
Buller is currently the dean of
dmiuiona, guidance and
onnation services at Coutllne.
native of West Loa Angeles, he
ived his bachelo.r'a degree at
C Santa Barbara and his
aatera from Cal State Los
lea.
1953 tbrough 1957,
Buller tauaht at Whittier Hi8h
School. Afwr two yean 11 an
i.Mtructor at UCLA. he came to
the Coast Community College
Distrtct, where he hu aerved in
various admlnlltratlve poltl for
the d1atrict and ita three coDeees. ~~t. Golden West and
Buller baa been 'a dean at
Coutline since it opened in 1976.
Coastline baa adminlatratlve
offices ln Fountain Valley but
offers cla11ea at about 150
locations throughout the district.
Mesan, 71,
dies after
auto crash·
ALKLAND ISLANDS . . .
Lloyd Irvin neming ~ Costa
Mesa died Wedne9day when he
suffered a heart attack following
a beada(Jll colliaion in Costa Mesa,
police said.
F,leming, 71, of 3235 Michigan
Ave., was pronounced dead at
Fountain Valley Commun\tY
Hoepltal shortly after the 12.15
p.m . accident on Royal Palm
Drive in the dty'a Mesa Verde
area.
bs and th.ouaanda of leaflets
~lllir:· 1g on the Argentine troops to
urrender. Half the leaflets bore
'safe conduct paseea" in English
nd Spanish signed by Rear
dm . John Woodward ,
ommander of the 100-ahip
J)titish armada around the South
Atlantic islands that Araentina
ized from Britain Aprll 2.
Other leaflets called on the
tlmated 7 ,000 Argentines to
ake the "correct and
llbonorable" de.dsion to surrender
ike their comradea on South _,,,...... island, 700 mne. to the
t, who l')liaed the white flag
April 25-26, the Defeme M1n1atry
"~!81~~ver1e were
• photograph• of the .Argenttm!
f'cxmlnander on South Georgi.a.
Coastal
Mo•tlY CIMt thl• •"..-noon. Hight 81 10 72. Late night d
e.11 momna.-*'* tonlll'lt Md FrkMy. l'alr 1"rougfl ,.,_
Lt. Ondr. Alfredo Aatlz, signing
the surrender document on board
a British frlpte.
The leaflets said: "Think of the
daft&er you are Jn. Your ratiQila
and war aupplle9 are ln abort
supply because of the British
naval block.ade, Mattera will get
even wane. Think of your loved
ones and the home that awaltl
your happy return."
· 'Ibe leatletl Warned: "We do
not Wish to apm more blood but
. If there ii no altemauve we'wtn 'do.,,.. •
1'be Artmtlnee held fut and
fired salvoa from 1~5mm IUnl at
Brtt11b marine commendoa b~ away with lOhun IUDI rrom tile heights overlooldn1
Stanley.
Police said Fleming waa
BOUthboUnd on Royal Palm when
another car slammed into hil
Volkswasen.
The driver of the other car,
Molena ltasa Rader, 24, Santa
Ana. waa treated at Costa Meu
Memorial Hospital for cute and
brut.ea, but wasn't ~tali7.ed.
pol.lee aald .
According to police reportl,
Ma . Rader told traffic
investipton afle alowed down to
avokl blttina a car in front of her
when her lt'll Ford llJ>Uil qut of
control neer P;pper Tree Lane
and into oncornm, traff.ic.
Continued fair ·
wttll moetly aunny aftemoone.
o-ftlgtl4 loWa '8 10 M. HIQha Friday 84 10 72 .
HuntlnJ1on-Newport •r .. ' ...,,....... ,.. from• low of
Temperatures
Mto•llldllof•. l!luwller•. from Point Conception 10 tll• Mexfc•n bordW tM CUC eo ,..._ Imel
°""~-.......... .-, l'IOl1fta1~ ""*of 15 IO 30 kncM and I to Moot ..... loc91y, aoull'I to.,.._. w4rlCl9
of 10 IO 15 knoel INI ~
with ............... of 2 to 3 .....
U.S. summary·
Tllundentomw produo9d ~ ralne, 119!1, wind•, •nd ......,.1
tornactoH In Cotor•do and
llOl'1Mt'n T-today wtlle rain
Of9dulllly moved Into AlllMM9, ~Md LoulelM&.
..... cnft "' ... lows f1ortd9 81'11119 ... ~ IO ,__ In
port •lier tll• flr•I troploel d1pr•Hlon of the llurrloen• .-.on-..-... off Y-...n.
Thi roof9 of '°"" llOmm _.
d•meeecf Weclnetdey "''''" In ~. T ..... llHMlftUV bY ...... Md_ ............. n.r. ... "° reporta of ..... .........................
~· oontlnu9d -. "'°'*' and *'-" and • ... 111undl lllo••• ... .....,... from Arll•11••• to tow• and WIMOfl•'"· Tllere Wire a few ........................
"91111m ............ ........ Olis .... ..,....... ,,,,,., ..
miff,. end nortll-'ll AUMt,. Coalt 1te1e1, and eoro11 1he ............. °' .. UNlld
MATIOlt
.. Le .....
72 " 87 " 11 54 .OS
81 58
" ee 71 11
IO 70 77 S5 81 45
87 ... 01
87 40 74 44 n 57 1.21
90 71
87 41
• 51
51 44 .2$
.. 77
71 66 u ee 82 44 .17 M 44
75 ..
74 57 t3 ..,
17 11 .1'1
73 .. 72 47 .21
17 54 ·°' Tt 47
66 ao ... .. ... .. aa 14 ., .13
71 41 .Gt ., 17 .01 •• • 17 Tl • n 11
" 72 a 51 .. I' 71 • . ..
7t 11
It to a • .01 7t 14 J.01
IO 41 .....
Tl 51
12 71 .15 7t 5t 77 83
52 .. ,05
82 5t .2'3
82 47 .. 75 .11
1t 55
100 70 12 as 71 "1.48 17 " 71 51 .19 ....
TS 34 n ... • 72 ., ..
.. 71 ., 40 -n M .. 74 2.20
46 " .. " 10 50
IO M .01
" ST 11 a .47 Tl .. . .. .54
Secr-•IO 74 47
SlllnM ... 44
San DllOo 70 83 San Ffanc:9oo 57 ... 8an1•---71 51
Sante Man. ...
8toctiton 74 51
T'IMnNI 12
UIUall 10 a.rat ow '3 82
llg8Mt '5 n =. 71 42
70 52
Long 9-dl 72 51
Monro-M 70 50
Mt.Wlleon 11 44
N9wpcW1 BMcfl It .. Onltwlo 70 51
Pllmlpmoa IO • = 72 51
53 Ian ..,.,.. clllO 70 50
San~ n 11 san JoM ... 52 Senta Ane 11 57
8an19 CNI It 54
T9'1M V*'t 31
HATS-ON SALUTE -Whittier School
studentl ln Coeta Mesa all wore hats to ecbool
Wedrieeday to honor retiring Principal Bill
Ritter (center) who was always noted to wear
DelJ ............ .., &M...,...
a fedora when he came to campus. Ritter
re~ after 32 years in Harbor Area achool
systems. '
Woman seized !
on sex rap
at Atlantis
Students receive A Loe Angeles woman waa
arrested Wednesday night on
suspicion of prositution at a Costa
Mesa massage parler that ~
Orange County District
Attorneys office ls seeking to
shut down.
I
poster awards Yoko Denlae ~. 23, was
14 r re1ted by Costa Mesa
detectives at the Atlantis Health
Spa, 2112 Harbor Blvd. shortly
after 7 p.m.
Six Newport Beach
atudenta have received
award.a for their entries 1n the
annual city poster conteat,
aimed at fighting litter.
Elementary echoo1 winners
were Boue Lia. a Harbor
View sixth grader; Joa a.pea. an Andenon School
1econd grader and Clarta
Bammoad, a sixth grader
from Harbor View.
Middle school wlnner1
were Aaae Barlow, Cris
Bocla1d1Ud, and Blrotlal
Mollrl. All are aev,enth = trom Lincoln Middle
· All poster entriee will be
d.laplayed in local ~
the week prior to July 4.
Laat month, the Orange
County District Attorney'• OffiCe
filed suit against the owners of
the building in an effort to cloee
the muaage parlor.
A hearing is echeduled June 17
before Superior Court Judge
Thomas Crosby Jr.
Reagan, MitterriJiid conferring
PARIS (AP) -Preaident
Reagan confened today with
French Preaident Francois
Mlttemmd on the Middle !'.Mt,
Central America and the
Falklan4 blaod1 wa.r, but
aldatepped ~ dl8cullioo of
the stubborn economic iaauea
dividing their countries.---
On the eve of an economic
summit of m•Jor industrial
democracies at Versailles out.aide
the French capital. Reagan said
he and Mitterrand deferred
"heavy dbcua81ons" of economic
1-ues straining America'• allies
until they join the leaden of
Britain, West Germany, Italy,
Canada and Japan this weekend.
The 1e.adera met over lunch in
the 1plendor of the Elyaee
Palace. Reagan waa greeted at
the palace by a military honor
guard an4 a ..Wte from a drum
and bugle corp•. He and
Mltt.emmd abook'bands and then
met privately ln a chandeliered
mlon over a lunch teaturtna a
alad ol wort.ed lhellfiah, veel
with trufllel 9Dd three French
wines.
Reall.an, accoinpa.nied by his
wife, Nancy, arrived at Paris'
Orly Airport with little ceremony
shortly before midnight local
time.
The official party descended
from Air Force One in a
thunderstorm, and the Reagans
were protected by umbrellas as
they walked on a red carpet to
the VIP terminal, where a
motorcade awaited them.
French Foreign Minister
Claude Cheynon greet~ the
Reagans, who drove immediately
to the home of U.S. Ambassador
Evan Griffith Galbl"aith to spend
the night.
A White House aide said that,
as is customary for presidents on
foreign tripe, Beagan brought his
own drinking water to the lunch.
Before talk i ng with
Mitterrand, Reagan met with
Mrs. Charles Ray, the widow of a
military attache at the U.S .
Embassy who was killed in a
terrorist attack Jan. 18. White.
House deputy press seccat.ary
Larry Speakes said Reagan told
Mrs. Ray-he would promote her
husband posthumously one grade
to full colonel
Ray's parents live in Newport
Beach.
The OriQ![lal ·
.JOBBERS®
Short ·
Is peffect for beach, boat bike,
hike, walk, rook or work Jobbers
can do~ all but ~'sup to you to
· do ~well. Available in Jobber's
8 unique colors.
~ M~sa looks iowar:d
good economic year.
s~ retail ula in Cotta
M .. an allowina the city to look
ahead to anothet year of IOund bu~tlni for munlolpaJ aervtces.
City Manqer Fred Sonabal
hu propoeed a 1982-83 bucta.t
that inc)udea $28.9 million lor
opera Una expen1e1, up t 1. 7
percent, arid $6 mllllon for capital
lmprovementa, down 43.3 percent.
Total revenuee, estimated at
$35.2 miWon. include $13.5 million
from retail sales taxea, a 10
percent increase over last year.
In his annual report to the
City CowteJI, Soraabal called the
city's economic outlook "solid'' and
18.ld that the current recessionary
period could, at wont. flatten tht-
clty'1 economic powth curv..
While IOt'M ddel in Oranp
County are 1tru11Un1 to meet
expen.tet, Cotta Meu e>tpecta to be
able to continue lt1 pollcy of
malntalnln1 a 25 percent caah
reaerve.
It appe&r1 city government in
Calta Meta ii in good financlal
shape and that'• good newa.
City Council membera will
consider the budget at their June 7
meeting at City 1iall at 6:30 p.m.
Citizen• who would like to
comment on the document should
attend that aemon. '
School use solutions
Deciding what to do with 1 Corona del Mar Elementary
. I School is proving anything but
1 elementary for off icials1 of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
. District.
, I
I
I
t
First, district officiala met stiff
resistance from homeowners who
live near the surplus achool, which
waa closed a year ago because of
declining enrollment. A~gry
residents objected t.o a ·flan calling for the University o Southern
California t.o operate a satellite
business school at the empty campus. .
The state Coast& Commission
refuaed to grant a permit for the
USC graduate achool. That left
local school officials with little
c}lolce. They had to l~t the
university out of a lease
agreement that would have put
the surplus property on a paying
basis to the tune of $69,000 a year.
Now a citizens' committee is
recommending that the Carnation
Avenue school site be converted to
residential use. The matter will be
diacussedbytheachoolboardJtme·
8. A decision ia expected JW\e 22.
Homeowners in the area have
suggested -clearing half of the
3. 75-acre achool lite to make way
for about 22 homes. while keeping
the existing playtf:."j!d Some .chool o are leaning
I, to-ward that idea. The-school
d:istric:t could uae the money, if a
developer am be found.
However, there are some other
con1ideration1. and some other
pcmibilities.
Unlikely aa it eeema now, there
always ia the chance the achool
could be needed again. It ll. after
all, the only achoo[ aouth of Coast
Highway in the Corona del Maf
area. Homeowners aay that, if that
happens, a achool could be built on
the 1.8 acret that would be left as
a playground. That doesn't seem
terribly feaalble.
In Costa Mesa, another of the
school district's surplus campuses
-Rea Sc:hool -la being leased aa
a community cent.er. Thia idea ia
working well at Rea, but the
situation la different in Corona del
Mar, where two community
centers at Grant Rowald Park and
the OASIS already exist ju•t
blocks from Corona del Mar
School. It's doubtful a third ls
needed.
Leasing the surplus campus to a
private school hat been suggest.ed.
Nothing has developed on that
front.
A mUleW'D with a tea room waa
advanced u a pcmtble Ule. 'That
waa rejected aa too commercial for
the residential character of the
neighborhood.
The b6a9t problelri ..... w be
traffic. 'nM? nm,hbon don't want
to add to the t.rafftc in the area.
Building homel on the IChool site .
hardly would 80lve that p~em.
If you've &ot any ideu about
what could be done with a IW'J)lua
school site in the middle of a
residential neighborhood, you
might consider advandng them at
the June. 8 IChool board meeting.
Be prepared to defend younelf.
Funny thing -that USC
business school ii looking better au
the time.
Reserv.e tb.is weekend
More than 60,000 people are
expected to attend the 37th annual
Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club Fish Fry Friday
through Sunday.
Over the years the eervice
organization hu railed more than
$655,000 through the Fi$h Fry for
various local charities.
The thi-ee days of festivities
in downtown Lions Park will
include a beauty contest, a baby
contest, e&rQival rides and games.
drawings and of course the famous
fish dinner for $4. •
. The Flab Fry parade bea1na at
10:30 a.m. Saturday at Harbor
Boulevard and Wilaon Street.
More than a dozen band1,
includina thoee from l!'atand.a and
Costa Meta hi&h schools, are
expected to participate ln the
parade. Benny Ricardo, a former
Orange Cout Collece student who
plays foou.J.l professionally for
the New .Orleans Saints, will be
grand marabal of tbi1 year'•
parade.
The Filh Fry it a fun
tradition. See yoU there. -..
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex-
pressed on tr'llS page are those of their authors and •u:tlsts. Ateder com"'ent Is Invit-
ed. Address The Dally Pilat, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PDone (714)
642-4321 .
L.M. Boyd I Separate vacations
. -Inherited a bu1ines1 that your
~ hllCl ll'8r1l!d at the time of
Chrilt, and that b..llini!la had IOlt $1
mlllion a itay wer Since with no
~ °' ....... lt woWd ltW
take you and your descendent•
anodm' 100 ~ to -the f1nt $1 ~''
Politicos again flying high·
W A S H I N G T 0 N -R l a 1 n g -Rep. Don Fuqua. O.Fla., ia chairman invited 2~ Qapltol Hill aides, almolt all of
Phoenix-like horn the ashes of federal of the HOUie Science and Technology them female, to Colorado Sprlnp for a
frugallty, the Air Force'• 89th Airlift Committee. So be and five other tour of the Afr Force Academy.
Wing is once again flying bigh. committee memben -with their wives TBESE EXAMPLES were all from I.Jttle known to the public or KftmUn -hopped an 89th jet down to Florida to apiet, the 89th is well known and highly tee the ap.ce lhuttJe take off. Then. the month of March. In January, Rep.
reaan;ted •t the Pentagon and on Capitol Peter Rodino, O.N.J ., led a group of nine
Hill. k1 the bigahota' favorite unit, In Democratic congressmen and their wives
fact; for lta aole misalon ia to provide I aboard an 89th jet for a two-week,
luxurious -and free -transportation $15,000-plus junket in Italy. They visited
for VIPs and their wives wherever and Genoa, Venice, Pisa, Florence, Naples
w h e n e v e r t b e y c a n f 1 n d a .11111 11111111 and Rome to "1how America'• support balfway-l@aitl.mate excuae to fly. • for Italy aa a strong NATO ally," a
The e~'r. posh air-taxi aervioe for the Rodino spokesman said.
elite coau the taxpayer• about .$10 Al8o in January, Rep. James Jeffords, milllon a year. To avoid embarralling after a aide excursion t.o Callfomla, R-Vt., a member of the Education and
congressmen and depreaing taxpayen, where they lnapected . a aolar-energy Labor , Ag) i cu It u re and A I In I
the Air Force destroys the 89th'e fliaht ptoject, the congreaeional couples arrived Cornmitteel, ror some reuon flew the
recorda alter 30 days. But my .-idate ln New Mexico in time to aee the shuttle 89th to France, Germany, Italy~ the
Peter Ot'ant saw a cop>-of the March land. Netherlands while his corwtituent8 were
manifesta befOft they hit the ahredder. -Air Force braa hat8 uae the 89th shoveling mow. A Jeffords apo1i_. .. n
like an atrborne limou1ine service. said bis boll "hu a general policy ot
ONE HUNDRED tripa were Joaed by Robert Mathls. the vice chief of 1taff, avoldina congreaional junk.eta walf!9I
the 89th in U..t one· month. Here are took hJa wife on a trip to F.ngland and absolutely nettnary.'' Couplln, the
aome of thetie all-expenaes-paid junkec., Spain. Gen. Robert M.arah, commander words "~ta" and "neceaury' ii a
straight out of the records that had been ot the Afr Force Systema Command, took lexicotop:al breakt.h.rouch· "
marked for destruction. hJa wife on a 12-day tour of the Far F.aat, Though the $10 millJon hudftt for the
-Two dozen members of ~ whlch included four days in Hawaii. An 89th Airlift Wing ia a ctrol)infthie $258
and their wives flew to the elegant Air Force 1pokeaman laid wives are ·billion Pentagon &ucket. it probebly cmta
Ocean Reef Club on Key Largo, Fla., for allowed on these tripe for protocol the taxpayen billiom more lndinlctly.
a m e e t l n g w l t h a C a n a d l a n purpoees and to confer with dependent8 What congreanan 1s IOin8 to be .,
parliamentary delegation. The tab came on "quality--01-llte issues." st!us aa to niggle CNer the defenae
to ~.ooo. including room and board for -The 89th la al10 available to after a luxurious flight on an Air
the Canadian junketttn. oongreaaional lt.affen. The Air Force nk3t?
v \
Unions didn't kill the 'big hall s'
To the Editor:
On your ed.Itorial page of May 24, was
a very~ artk:le by F..arl Waten.
Mr. Wawa bas the gall to ttate, in
print, that the reuon that there are oo
more big banda is due to featherbedding
water la thipped over deaerta at great
e~ aewera. WHte 1hould be
~· ideM.milbt teem-a bit extreme,
but ou.r Southern California c:limate is
very delicate and tcM.ap meMW"a must
MAILBOX -be taken to protect it and bring lt blick. u
people wan~ca let lbem Hve ln , Minnesota and Io a where they can
------------have all the they want. But if by local unions wl\en the bta bands came people want to live here·they mull give
to 'town. Nothing could be lurther from up some of the thin11 they take for '
the truth! granted in the rat of the country. Not
I had the good fortune to be a sideman only w1l1 these atrooa rnMIW9 clean up
in many, many famous "big bands." with our environment, but the)' will abo
10 yean' experience on the ro.d in every prompte the quality of ou.r life rather
kirid of band, and never once did I aee than the quantity.
the irresponsible activltiet Waters claims
happened In the big band era. It ia
MIKEM.ANG
limply not true!
ONE OP THE thJ.n'8 that dJd destroy
the tq band era --. fint of all. four
J.OQg-halred youths who started to tum
the entitt music businell around with
the advent of the rock era. No bi& band
had ever been able to draw a quarter of
a million people to a field in Woodstock.
and that la one of the th.in&s that killed
the big bandl.
We are happy to report to you that
~ ma)lr' and minor ltar, and the bulk
of all prote.i.onal musldanl do belona
to, and enjoy membenhlp ln a unkln. the
American Federation of MU1lclan1.
~ ahould not be allowecl to be
• di81eminated throWrh your publimdon.
B. DOUGLAS SA Wl'l:LLE
Ptwldeut
Musidanl' Local #7, U .M. . . Leave cars at home
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR s.. Instructions bitow
Rule side-stepped
To the Edit«: Contrary to your editorial on May 21,
then ii DOth1nc "outmoded" about the 500-mUe rWe fee-John Wayne Airport
Aa we are all aware, there ii more
demlllad tot «llnlDll'dal eervb at John
W9""f ~ c.wn ar lhould be IJl'OVlded,
111 -•1cinl Demw ln the lint place,
eY8\ wtth • ttop lri Lii v...., l'rOntler
has circumvented tbe lnteat of the
500-mile Nie. TO .um&mte the rule wW
rn9ftly ......... other CU'l1ln to do 'the~~ to demand prwure1 at thi~ .
What ii~ iwected " .... OOUnet on the part of Oran1• County Su~ to..,_ on enc1·1.mp1mwpt a
new llitit. Undl ·u., "'b&llt the bull8t", the ~at Johri WaJM "'11 -*inuel
' BURR.AL~T
More memorie11
OLD CORONA del Mar grew wild
.flowen every spring, instead of homes.
The dazzling ~'frttracted hundredsd ·species of butter · . -
You could ca fish, abalone and
lobster with just a mUk ln six feet of
ocean. We never heard of llDOI· The
roads were clear and you could park
anywhere, except for swnmer v.catioo.
Big Coron.a Beach bad aloba of tar all
over it, ql.4ite often, baCk then. It. is
always clean theee days. It would be
terrible to foul up our beaches. You are
right, Jane. But I etill wish you could
have seen the "Crown of the Sea" when.
the only dirty thing about her WM the
beach!
MICHAEL STEINl!R
&r .. reo.eua ICHO&MBHL
Or8ftle County' covernment
hll uried to pay the Univenlty
of califomla t13,7~ millloo to
end a prolonced cUarute over
provl1lon of medJca care tor
lndl1ent1 at the UC Irvine
MedJCal Cenwr.
• ~~y .. i;~~ =.:.:~=-~ be .,.uc:t by June 30, the end ot ~ta for whJoh the county II
the current fllcal )'W'. tinandany rwpomlble. Care for
•• tbOli9 patlentl ... been" lll"OY'lded
Supervilon aareed in=~ at the uniwnlty~ medJcal ~o'!':d~~ ::f.'1'on ~.: "9ftler in Or:ana. wwier a 1976
lndiattlona thai at leut one board con~.
.. member -Ro1er Stanton The bulk of the dt1pute
Of that aun. county 80Uli of opp o a e d th• n e a-o t 1 at• d focu.d on about ta mll1Jon in
Supervlaon Chairman Bruce .ettlement. unlwnlty·illued bll1a the county
Neatande aald Wedneaday, tL =:"'~--..._coun_ ...... ty-.and __ the __ unl_ver_sl...::ty~-•...;._refuMd ___ to__:.pa..;..;y::.:.. ___ _
British
assault
a'Waited r
By Tiie A11oclated Presa
B rltiab fo r c es b li tzed
Argentine positions around
Stanley with artillery, bombs
and IWftnder leaflets today, but
the Argentinee refuled to give In
and battled British commandos
six miles west of the Falklands
capital in f<>s, mud and snow,
reports from the front said.
Pren Auociatlon, Britaln's
domestic news agency, said
Prlme Mlnlste r Margaret
~hatcher has made "one last
ffer" to Argentina to withdraw
ts troops from the Falklands
before what likely will be a
' bloody battle for the capital. It
gave no details and did not say
whether Argentina replied.
Brltish government sour~es
said Mrs. Thatcher a1so bu given
the British commanders approval
to attack Stanley "whenever
they are ready" and assured
them they will not be held up for
"political or diplomatic reaaona."
Military sources In London
said r.{aj. Gen. Jeremy More,
conimanaer of BrlU.h ground 1
forces in the FaUdanda, ia not
expected to unleuh tbe final
offensive untll the weekend
while he moves up troops. heavy
weepom and supplie8 to the hllh
ground west of the capital. 1
.... Mill ...
' > 11 I\ N • .i ' ' 1 u N I i LA l If 0 ll NI A :.> ~. Cf NT S
In fta action Wec:m.iay, the
board alao a1reed to a
replacement contract w.t\ere~y
the county would make lump
auin paymenta for emer1ency
outpatient care and ltandardbed
daily rate. for inpatient care for l.ndlaenta treated at the medical
center.
County officiala say lhla
alternative approach to the
current patient-by-patient bil11ng
•ystem will be more effident and
leaa COltly to admlh.later.
N ... t•nde, 1peaftln1 to
reported at a .midday brteflna,
dec11ned to aay tf the board'• vote
WU unan1moua.
Later in the day, Stanton Jllued
a atatement In which be aald. "l
do not intend to comment on the
board'• dedlion at th1a time. '!be
board wlll be voting publicly on
the ilwe later thia month. At
that time l will cast a vote that
will refiect the position that l
took durina the executive aeaalon
whJch waa held today."
The UC Board of fteemts la
acheduled to take action on the
aettlement and the new eontract
proPOM} at a meet1ng June 17
And 18.
The propoeed eettlement Ml
been endoned by UC President
Dav i d Saxon i n private
conversationa wlth Nestande.
Parfnership sought
1Newport offering
trtfce
BY STEVE MARBLE or .. .,.., .......
Repraentatlves for Newport
Beach said today the city la
prepared to extend an "olive
branch" to Orange County and
become a workingt.partner ln
~annlng the future of John
~~electric moment, ..
1u11eated attorney Pierce
O'Donnell, who reKreaented
Newport in its 11acoeaa u1 effort to
tum back the county's airp>l1
muter plan.
1be announcement waa made
at a p,re. oon.fettDCe early today,
1taged partially 10 that city
offidala could react publicly to Oranae County Superior Court
Judge Bruce Sumner's final
order on the dty'a lawsuit apinlt
the county.
Sumner upheld the city's
ar1uaieat that tbe couDty'a
mVirmvnentaJ documenta •the · mmter plap were tn.dequa1e.
'-nw county hM been Jiroaen in
Ua tradm," aaid Mayor Jadde
.............. that the maatel' =..,.•·~man than -.. dae\ilnenta aat.beltns
"dul& -the tird of SUJ)elrilon ~ ...
She ltreNed that the final
court ordei' proh.lblta the county
• on airport
from increasing the daily
comrnercia1 jet flights beyond 41.
0 The county la hereby on
nQtice," the mayor continued,
"that if the county f.ails to obey,
in every respect. the court orders.
the d ty can and will go bac.k to-
oourt."
Attorney O'Donnell said the
city now would like to sit down
wlth lawyers for the county and
construct a te1ally binding
settlement to the question of
airport expansion. ,
* * *
ffe said the ·dty's chief goals in
such a di8cusslon would be to
establish a pennanent limit on
daily jet departures. He added
that if an agreement waa not
legally binding, it would be a
"short-lived victory."
O'Donnell admitted that the
city's policy of a 41 flight oeill.ng
is not "written in concrete." He
said the city might be willin& to
accept more daily flights and, on
(See AIRPOR'.f', Page A%) .
* * * County gets plan . .
for flight auction
A detailed propoa.al for an
auction ayatem to distribute
fJJ&hta to air canien de8lttn.K to
retain or becln lel'Ylce at .f'ohn
Wayne Airport wu submitted ~ to the Orange County
of. Supervt.on. Aocordinc to a finU draft of
tbe plan. DO CIOI air curiel' eouki
bMi I.or more than 26 of the •U jet
would be at least one round of
bidding. pethapa two.
In the first round. only carrlen
flying q\&M!ter alrcraft. such .. -
ttie McDonnell-Douglas DC-9 ~ 80 would be permitted to • .
The alrllnea would be l'eQUire4 , •.
to .ubmlt .-Jed bkla. Attlinea
winning slota would not be
pennltted to trade them OI' eell
them to other caniera.
BrlU1b correspondents said
Moore, lookin1 through b~ viewed the blue and
white Argentine flas above the
former 'Drltish go"ernor'a
residence in Stanley and quoted
him as telling hia men: '1We'll
,hoist the Union Jack down there
just u *-1 aa wC-can ,et there.
And belleve•me, it won't be
TONY'S TRIBUTE -AdOr-Tony Curu. WllWa hll "loft
balloonl" at the Harbor laland location of his movie •'Be.Jbo9"
--the cast and creW tdn& .. Happy Bhtbday'' to him. '!be Idol' -~-='Lov=M.:.::e:...::~=aa=y=.=Ba::..."-=:=-=-• .___w_ere_su_P_P_Ued __ by_N_ewport ___ Beach __ •• , Con men sell .
now permitted daily.
oc a1ota, as tJiey are
c , ould be awarded to
airlines IUbmltUng the ~
mcmetary bids. Second .. round hlctctfn& would take place in the
ewnt two airtinel tabmit equal
If the 41-slots were not ~
during the tint round of bicidiq,
a second round would b\? held.
Airlines winning alota durinc the
wecond roand w<>Ukt1>e f>ermitted
to fiy older and noisier aircraft
on thoae flights. Jona." .
Informed aouroes in London
_upoJ'ted firefighta u-Britiah
.Special Air Service squads
· · probed the Argentine defense
i)erimeter about six miles west of
Stanley. 1bere was no official
. confirmation or word on
aaialties.
British Harrier jeta dropped
(See PAL&LAND, P ... AJ)
Cop chopper ·
fQrced «Jow~
A Newport Beach police
hehco,Pter wu forced to land ·
behind an elementary IChool in
Fountain Valley Wednesday
when the pilot began losing
power, po~ said. ~ 1be helicopter touched down
at Harper Park behind J~ 0 .
H~per Elementary School at
}1185 Santa Ynes St. shortly
8flel' noon. Pilot Bu..ll Sutt.er waa able to
reaume flight after a faulty
aparkplug waa chan&'ed, police ......
STATE
Buller selected
Coastline chief
John L . Buller, a veteran
administrator in the Coast
c.ommunity College District, bu
been chmen aa lnt.erim president
of Coaatline College. 1
Buller, a 54-year-old -CO.ta
Mesa resident, wtll 11111Ume the interim post July 1, when current
Coastline President Bernard
Luskin takes over aa ~~~~ Orange Coast College In UJSUI""
Mesa.
Buller'a appointment waa
made Wednesday nifht at a
s pecial meeting o Coast
Community• College District
truat.eea.
PRDIDENT -John Bulleri
of c.o.ta Meu baa been named
interim prelident of C.outllne C.OJJeae.
911 number ·
'subscriptions'
Oranae County authorities are
warning county residents to
beware of phony telephone
IOliciton Who aek residenta lf
they are lnterelted In aubecri~
to the county'• new 911
emergency te~ system.
The IOlicitadOna. made both by
telephone and n\a11, aagest that
residenta can .w:.c:ribe to the 911
number for a one-time
aubaiptlon fee of $8 per adult
and •'7 per .child. said Lt. Wyatt' Hart. an Oranae County Sheriff'•
Department apokelman.
••Don't give them yoa.ar
money," said Bart, who.
emphaail ed the acheme is a phony.
He 1814 the 911 number ia a
county 8'rvice provided to all
• l'ellidentll.
... Sheriff'• department
tnveetlpton have initiated an mw.Upuan into the .-n and
Hart ~·yone who hM been coni.cted the IOUdton to aall
~. .S. poatal •rvtce
bidl for a slot.
AuctioD1ng of the flight. ii the
latest lde9 by county pernment
Ottidals to comply with federal
court Olden requiring that the
airport be opened to air carrien
in a nondllcrimlnatory fashion.
Two carriers, AirCal and
Republic Airlinea, cutrently
control 35 of the 41 jet
deperturea permitted daily.
ftowevel', Cable 1ald, he
anticipates only one round of
biddina. He aaid it would be in
the airlines' interest to win slots
on which they could fiy newer,
more efficient jets.
Airlinee winning 11ots wou"IO
be permitted to pay off their bide
on a moothly bMia.
County aupel'Vi9ors will oot
(See PUGHT, Pace A%)
Me_sa Fish Fry
starts Friday
All alr carriers meeting
1peclfied noile atandaida would
be permitted to bMi foe flights.
Tbe five ~now eervlna the
alrport -AlrCal, Bepul>lic,
Frontier AlrlJnea, Pacific
Southwe.t Airlines, and Western
Alrllnet -would have no
ldvantage over otl)er canien.
Under the proposal, slots Why ia the Costa Mesa Fish
would be auctioned umually._No Fry such a popular event over
elltimate has been offered u to the years~
what a alot milbt be wOl'th, or Some say it'• the "secret"
bow much revenue the county batter u.aed In preparing the mtaht derive tram the annual 9,000 fish diMen. <>then IO for
auctiom. the parade, the carnival; the
Airport Mms•r Murry Cabla beauty and ~ oan--or the
eald today aucUonlna la the ~ •
falrwt way to dlltribute what be '1be fun ltal1I l)iday ntght'.at termed a ICU"at commodtty ,._ !Jona Park arid thi ~;.PIJOt'1
t.h.t ii, the iiUiDbel' ol permitted-. apecial -=*ion tGCliiy ~CID the l'Jeb. jail~ I Fry anc1 Camlwl:.._ rwtaa a theft~ rundown on the three-day wmi;
i
• -
German bomb blasts institute · .
TUEBINGIN, West a.tmuiY -Terron.ta 1et
off a bomb at the ~·Anaerk:an lnltttute ln
Tueblnaen Oft Thunday..::. the Jat.t in a eeries of
anti·American at~ \he wwk before Prftident Reeon'1 vtllt to Weet Germany. ~o one wu reported lnju.Nd in the pre-dawn
blHt, which cau"d $2,000 In damage to the
educaUOn&l and reeearch lnatltute, a spokesman for
the Karlan.the federal pro9eCUtor'a off~ laid.
The Revolutionary Cella, a terrorist grou~t
earlier thla week bombed four U.S. mJU~ ,
claimed responsibility for the blast at the lnatitut.e
in a letter to the local newspaper.
AIDerican ·wo1nan freed in China
PEKING -An Amerbn woman detained
le'Wfl days for allepd apytnc .,.mat China waa
releued today and liven 48 haun to leave the
country, U.S. and Chlne.e offidala said.
One Ch1neee IOW'Ce aald China had aerioua,
did evidence apinst Lisa Wichler, 28, of Denver,
Colo., and waa releaain1 her only to avoid
agravating U.S . .chlna relations.
A ChJ.neee Foretan Ministry spokesman said,
"Considering that Liaa Wichaer haa made a
confession of the crimes she had committed and
pleaded for leniency, our public aecurity authorities
have decided to relea1e her at 6:00 p.m. (3 a.m.
PDT) today. She is ordered to leave China within
48 hours.''
NBC wins 7 of top I 0 ratings
LOS ANGELES -Perennial third-place netw~ NBC won l8Yel\ apotl in ~~ 10, and pushed CBS lnio third place for the week in
a row d~ the May IWeeS-, fiCurea from the A.C.
Nielsen Co. abow.
ABC took top honon in the weekly Nlelaen
television ratings, flnlahlng in flrat place for the
week ending May 30. ABC won all fdur weeka of
the May sweeps period.
ABC placed first for the week with a rating of
13.8. NBC was aecond with 13.~. and CBS was third
with 12.7. -
Part-ti1ne Legislature rejected
SACRAMENTO.-A Republican's meMu.re to maintained Wednesday that his proposed
tum Callfomia'a fulltime LetEialature bid into a constitutional amendment would save money and
put-time Lepslatµre was ldlfed by a s_tate Senate restore a "cithen Legislature."
committee. Sitt the Senate l\uJes Committee voted 3·0 to
Si.te Sen. H.L. Richardson, R-Arcadia, kill it. ·
Judge -drops charges again~t 'boy, 7
VENTURA -A Juvenile Court judge has
decided to ~ three felony anon charges against a
7-year-old boy who WAI believed to have been the
youngest defendant in California history.
Judie Charles McGrath said Thursday that the
district attorney bad j failed to prove beyond a
reuonable doubt that young Jamle Means was
~illU~OO~~
responsible for fires that ca\.lsed $40,000 damage at
a boat storage yard last Jan. 29. '\
:rhe judge also dropped seven misdemeanor
counts of maliciC>Ua mllch1ef, but three counts of
malicious miachief and three counts of petty theft
remain to be considered against 'Jamie, who says his
friends have abandoned him since his trial became
public.
.. I . . .
House braces for budget fight
WASHINGTON -With President Reagan blueprint u the vehicle for the showdown. nfulina to ••lplit the difference" on the 1~ ln addition, Democradc leaden appeared ready
budeet, Democutl llnd Republimm are bndnc for to push a more liberal budget plan than they had another heed·to-bead c1asb on the ~ floar. aapported last week, while Republicans said they
11'e Democ:rata' strategy includes a plan to would move in a more conservative direction.
revive ftapn'a nearly-fcqotten original lpet'lldi:nc ,,
ff~ricane Alberto h~aded ·for Keys
MIAMI -Tropical Storm Alberto, after fcn:i"I the evacuation of thot-.ndl of people in
Cuba, today pew quickly into a hurriC'ane with
11-mph whm tn the Gulf of Mexico just IOUthwel\
of the J'londa Keya.
Hurricane warnlngl were potted for the Keya
aouth of Marathon and up the Welt C.oaat of Florid.a
to Fort Myen. Gale wamingl wett issued for the
rest of the Keya.
..... CJlllllC2 •
.... .., .... C ... l!leM.CA.
Mell.-..: .. 1M,C...MIM,CA.-
_,...~.,_ = C:.... '-t'1N I~ • ............ _, ·--...-.i~ Wf5 1 II ...... _.., .. ,.., 9 I P __ ,.,, .. ~-·
' News agency sold
t~ ne~ company
• ~ .... ,......., ..... I( ......
CAT NAP -An unidentified carnival ride operator catches a
few extra winks ·before starting to set up the attractions for
the CQeta Mesa Fish Fry at the city's Lion's Park. The
three-day event opens Friday evening. .
KR UPS
The wife of a Manne Corp.
terpu>t from Camp ~
delCribed by Mr atton.y M • I
"bat.tered wUe, '' J\H been
lndlcted on~• lhOt &.-husband to deaih durtnj • tamly
araument.
A federal panel ;wy in San
Ote10 indicted Mary Loulte
Player, 30, on • fint-de1ree
murder charae WedMtday ln
connection with the May 25
ahootfng of her hUlband, s,t.
Joeeph l>layer, who w.t b.ed at
Pendleton.
U.S. Maglltrate J . Edward
H.arN 1et bail at $50,000 for Mn.
Pl4yer dwinl • heu1nc Tue9day
but her attorney Mid tho mother
of four wu still IA custody at the
Metropolitan c.on.:tiona1 Center
in San Diego.
A11 lstant U.S. Attorney•
Stephen Petel'IQn and Pamela
Nauahton bad ur1ed custody
with no ball.
l'Tc h • II OUC -it Electric Coffee Mill
• Oval shaped grinding chamber and spec/ally
dnlgned stainless steel blade produce perfectly
uniform ground coffee
• Fast grinding action prevents heat bu/Id-up,
assuring full coffee flavor
• Grinds evenly with no waste-coarse to powder fine,
with finger tip control
• 2 oz. capacity (10-15 cups)
• Double action safety system · •
• 1 year llmlted warranty Siii
$11.11 .
Price Good Thru 6-9-82
Gt» CROW•.
HARDWARE
All Slot• OS*' 7 Daya
WHtcllft Plaza
1024 lrvlne Ave.
Newport Beach
642-1133
Corona del Mar
3107 E. Coast Hwy.
873·2800
Weatcllff Tiii 8:00 Thura.
Harbor View Center
1614 San Miguel Or.
Newport Beach
644-8570
Anllhelm Hiiia
562o ·santa Ana canyon Rd.
(at lmp_erial ttwy.)
99&-5282
Crack into a p late of hot, steaming crab l~g . Try a generous serving
of our new spiced cold ooiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcorn• shrimp.
And then do it aga in!
It's all you can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is $erved with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or
cole slaw, baked polato or rice pilaf, and another favorite, sourdough bread.
All you can eat. All week long.
,
4
I
.(
I
I
I
I
can
For the l8"0nd time ln ·-than a r;:· Newport BHch votera are be uked to approve an tncr..-the clty'• hotel and
motel bed tax.
The meuure. which would
1ncreue the bed tax trom e to a
percent, wu ntrrowly defeated
lut fall. A tax lncreaae ~ a
two-thlrd1 majority vote to be
aUOCftlf ul.
A bed tax is added to the tab
of hotel and motel g\.festa.
Supporter• ol Measure B,
who include most City Council
members u well as the Irvine
Company and SPON (Stop
Polluting Ow Newport), suggest
the tax incttaSe will make city
visito~ their fair share to help
keep streets and sewers in
shape.
The councU, further, has
agreed to put the roughly $600,000
the tax increase would net into a
special account for. street repairs
and construction of bike paths,
freeing other municipal f unda for
sewer repairs.
Opponents of the measure,
mostly hotel and motel owners
and manaaen, ~the tax hike wW put them at a cliadvantaae
with oth•r cf dee auch • COit.a Meta and Irvine where the bed '
tax 11 6 percent.
'nle opponenta alto t'Ol'Dplaln
that the clt~_doee not really need
the money. They polnt out the city
has a projected budpt reterve of t13 milllon.
Supporten counter by aaytna
most of the clty'a reaerve la
earmarked for 1pec1fio aocounta
and ii not limply exva money
tucked away ln the general fund.
Also, they say, th~ tax hike will
put Newport ln line with other
oceanfront towns such as Laguna
Beach and San Diego.
A potnt to keep ln mlnd is
that if the tax 11leUW'e pueee, the
increase will remalJl in effect for
only four y~ according to state
law. U the increae la to continue
beyond that ttme, it mu1t be
resubmitted to voters.
With that in mind, and the
::ity's pledge to put the tax
increase earninga ,into
much-needed street project.a. we
W'ge voters to approve M~ B.
· School use solutions
Deciding what to do with
Corona del Mar Elementary
School is proving anything but
elementary for officials of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District.
First. district officials met stiff
resistance from homeowners who
live near the surplus school, which
was cloeed a year ago because of
declining enrollment. Angry
residents objected to a plan cal1ing
for the University of Southern
California to operate a satellite
business school at the empty
campus.
The state Coastal Commi.llion
ref used to grant a pennit for the
USC graduate school. That left
local school officials with littltf
choice. They had to let the
university out of a lease
agreement that would have put
the surplus property on a paying
basis to the tune of $69_,000 a year.
Now a citizens' committee is
recommending that the Carnation
Avenue school site be oonverted to
residential use. The matter wUl be
dilculled by the school board June
8. A decision is expected JUQe 22.
Homeowners in the area have
, suggested clearing half of the
3.75...acre IChool site to make way
for about 22-homes, while keeping
the existing pla~ Some school o are leaning
toward that idea. The school
district could uae the money, if a
developer can be found.
However, there are aome other
considerations and some other
poasibilltlea.
Unlikely as it aeems now, there
always is the chance the school
could be needed again. It is, after
all, the only achool south of Coast
Highway in the Corona del Mar
area. Homeowners say that, lf that
happens, a 1ehool could be built on
lhe 1.8 acree that would be left as
a playground. That. doesn't .eem
terribly feutble.
In ea.ta Mesa, another of the
school district's surplus campuses
-Rea School :__ta being leMed as
a community center. This idea iit
working well at Rea, but th~
situation is different in Corona del
Mar, where two community
centers at Grant Howald Park and
the OASIS already exi1t ju
blocks froftl Corona del Mar ·
School. It's dOubtful a third is
needed. Leuina the surpiua campua to a
private «hool hu been aagested.
Nothing' baa developed on that
front
A museum with a tea room "WU
advanced as a pcmlble use. 'That
was rejected as too commerdal for--
the rellidential char8Cter of the
neighborhood.
The bia-t problem eeems to be
traffic. 'the neilhbon don'\ want
to add to the traffic in the area.
Building homes OD the acbool lite
hardl_y woWd ~ve that j>r'Oblem.
If youve Ft any Idea about
what could be done with a surplus
achool site in the ~e of a
residential neiahborhood, you
might conl&der advandna them at
the June 8 1ehool board meetln&·
Be prepared to defend younelf.
Funny thlng -that USC
business school is looking better all
the time.
Oil lease fight extended-
Laguna Beach bas joined the
Siema Club ln a lawsuit against
the.federal government to prevent
an offshore oil leaae sale next
week. ·
The city, along with Newport
Beach and San Clemente. already
ba9 joined a state lawsuit against
Interior Secretary James W,att's
propoaed Leaae Sale No. 68 June
11.
sales will be allowed. The stat.e's
lawsuit would e1imin.ite only 23 of
the t:racta from the sale.
In acreetnl to ;>in the Sierra
Club. La1una Beach council
members decided the action would
~en the state'• lawsuit, and
hold the potential for all tracta to
be ellminated, instead of ~ nine
off the Orange Coast that are
included in the state action.
Th~ Sierra Club an~ atate suit
both seek to halt lease iales untll
adequa.te monitoring and
environmental protections can be • assured.
Neither .Wt sptclftcally teekt
to ban •11 offs~ drilling.
Laguna's move to joln the
Sierra Club ahowa that dt~··
detei'rninaUon 10 halt --,.iet oft Ua 1hontllne. N~ Beech
1h0Wd follow ,IUil.
.1~,/f~'t> C~SsMAN.
Politi~oS again flying. high
WASHINGTON -Ri1ln1
Phoenix-like from the aahea of federal
frugality, the Air Force'• 89\h AJl'llft
Wing Is once again flying high.
Little known to the public or Kremlin
spies, the 89th Is well known and ~Y
regarded at the Pentagon and on Cap(tol
Hill. It's the bigahots' favorite unit. in
fact; for its aole milaion ii to provide
luxurious -·and free -transportation
for VIPs and their wives wherever and
when ever they can 'find a
halfway-le~timat.e excuae to fly.
The 89th 1 posh air-taxi eervioe for the
e llte coats the taxpayers about $10
million a year. To avoid embarrusing
congressmen and depressing taxpayers,
the Air Force destroys the 89th11 flllht
records aft.er 30 days. But my a.>c:late
Peter Grant saw a copy of the March
manifests before they bf\ the lhreddtr.
ONE HUNDRED trts-were JcJDWd by
the 89th in that one month. JHft are
110me of theee all-expen15·paid junk.eta.
straight out of the records that had been
marked for destruction.
-Two dozen membera of Coocraa
and their wives Oew to the elepnt Ocean Reef Club on Key Largo, na., for
a meeting wlth a Canadian
parliamentary delegation. 'nte tab came
to ~.ooo, including room and boerd for
the Canadian junketeers.
-Ree._ Don FuQua. o..na., ts chairman
of the HOUie Science Md TechnolOO
Committee. So h~ and five other
committee memben -with their wives
-hopped an 89th jet down to Florida to
see the 1pace shuttle take . off. Then,
Q.
-~IC-1-11-111-11-1-d.
after a aide excursion to California,
where they inspected • solar-energy
project, the OOJ13felllonal couples arrived
in New Mexico in time to tee the ahuttle
land.
-Air FOl'Ce bram hats U1e the 89th
like an airborne Umou..fine service.
Robert Mathia, the vice chief of staff,
took his wife on a l!iP ~ £n&land and
Spain. Gen. Robert Mani\. cammander
ol the Air Force Systeml c.ommand. took
tu. wtfe on a 12-day tour of the Far F.ast.
which included four daJI in Hawaii. An
Air Force apokesman said wtves are
allowed on these trips for protocol
DW"DmeS and to confer with dependents 0n "quallty-oMlfe t.uea.''
~ The Blhh ia also available to
OOJ13felllonal staffers. 1be Air Force
invited 25 Capitol Hill aides, almcet all of
then female, to Colorado Springs for a
tour of the Air Force Academy.
THESE EXAMPLES were aU from
the month of March. In January, Rep.
Peter Rodino, D-N.J .. \ed a group of nlne
Democratic congressmen and their wives
aboard an 89th jet for a two-week,
$15,000-plus junket in Italy. They visited
Genoa, Venice, Pisa, Florence, Naples
and Rome to "show America's support
for Italy as a strong NATO ally," a
Rodino spokesman said.
Also in January, Rep. James Jeffords,
R-Vt., a memt;>er of the Education and
Labor, Aariculture and Agin&
Committees, for some reason flew the
89th to France, Germany, Italy and the
Netherlands while his constituent.I were
shcvellng mow. A Jeffords spokeaman
said his boss "has a general poUcy of
avoiding congressional junkets unte.
absolutely necessary." Couplinll[ the
words "junkets" and "necessary'' ia a
le>dcological breakthrough.
Though the $10 rn1111on budget for the
89th Airlift Wing is a drop in the $258
billion Pentagon bucket, it probably costs
the taxpayen bill.ions more indlrectly.
What congressman is goina to be so
ungracious as to n.lggle over the defense
budget after a luxurious flight on an Air •
Force junket jet2
Unions· didn't _kill the 'big b3nds'
• ,To the Editor.
On your editorial page of May 24, waa
a v~ ~ article by :Earl Waters.
Mr. Waters has the gall to state, in
print. that the reason that there are no
more big band.I ls <\'Je to fea'lherbedding
MAllBltX
by local unions when the big bands came
to town. Nothing could be,further from
the truth!
I had the good fortune to be a sideman
in many, many famowt "blg bands," with
20 years' experience on the road in flVefy
kind of band, and never once did I aee
the irresponsible activities Wat.era c1aiml
happened in the big band era. It is
simply not true!
ONE OF THE tbiJlis that did destroy
the btg band era was, finlt of all. four
Jong-haired youtblt who started to turn
the entire music ~around wtth
the advent of the rock era. No b6a bind
had ever been able to draw a ~uarter of
a mlllion people '° • field in w~
and that la one of the thinp that
the blg bands. We are happy to report to you that
.very major~ minor star, and the bulk
of all profemional m~ do beloQa
to, and enjoy memberahip in a union. the
Amerlcan Federation of Muaiclan1.
Inaocu.rades ahould not be allowed to be
dlmeminated th.rouah your pubUcatioft.
'I B. DOOGLAS SAWl'ZLLE
Pl ......... t
MUlid,anl' Local #7, A.F.M.
SuplH,)rt bed tax
of the bed tax tnc:reue. And that was
without any active campe.lplng being
dooe on ita behalf. (The meuure needs a
tw~thirda vot.e to succeed).
It ii not aurprillng to find hotel and
motel owners oppo1in1 Measure B.
Howewr, I a,r-ee with Geor1l'f ;Jpraglns.
leader of the YES on B Committee,
when-he states he "doean't buy the
argument that an ir1cn•e of 2 percent
-which means only a dollar or two -is
gotrtg to tcare away hotel au-ta."
Laguna Beach anct San l>leao already
charge an 8 percent bed tax. \,.et'• join
them in asking toWista to pay their fair
share.
NANCY SKINNER, Member
Newport Beach Committee
for YES on B
TELEPHONR YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See Instructions ~low
Rule side-stepped
To the F.d.lt.or: Contrary'° your editoriel 00 May 21,
there la nothing "outmoded" about the
~mile rule for John Wayne Airport.
Al. we are all aware, there ~ ii more
demand for commercial llll'Ylce at John
W9JWe than cm or aboWd be ~ded.
By .-vtdna Denver In the lint ')>llic.'e,
even with a stop In I.a Vepa. l'rulUer
bu circum.nnted the Intent of the
500-mile rui.. To elilmnate the rule will
merely ~ other cinien '° do the~. adctinC to defMftd ~at
the airport
What .. ~.needed. tame~
on the part of or:,:1ie County 8'AJill Ytlon to fl'9' on hf'11MDt a
JWW llltm. Undl _...,.,._ ........... the .._ •• Jalln .,.,.. wll laBllm.le!
BURR ALLIOAERT
Mar too. I was l3 in 1956. Back then, we
not only had squirrels and gulls, but
skunks, possums, quail and road runners,
too.
OLD CORONA del Mar grew wild
flowers every spring, instead of homes.
The dazzling array attracted hundreds of
species of butterflies.
You could catch fish. abalone and
lobstet' with just a mask in six feet of
ocean. We never heard of smog. The
roads were clear and you could park
anywhere, except for summer vacation.
Big Corona Beach had globa of tar all
over lt, quite oft.en, back then. It is
always clean these days. It would be
tt:rrible to foul up our beaches. You are
right, Jane. But I still wldt you could
have seen the "Crown of the Sea" when
the only dirty thing about her was the
beach!
MICHAEL STEINER
Save Social Security
To the Editor: .
Treasury Secretary Regan has
publicly stated that Social Security wW
go broke after July 1983 unleaa chanaes
are made to make the system financltily
eound.
This surely means that thj! time ii now
to realiJe the total jnjwUce and 1ukidal
bnpact from such a ••happenina." It al8o means that federal rnanaaement ml.ml
foreatalf 1uch eventuallty to avoid
financial disaster and 90Cia1 reivaludon.
I .
•
Do_yv Jones Final
•
OFF 0.38
CLOSING 118.50
Saffell & Mc.Adam, Inc. Buildef"l, lrvine, hu beep
aelected to oonatruct a $2 miWon addlUon to the Ball
Medical <:enter, 3400 W. Ball Road in Anaheim.
It will add a second floor to the building,
expand.lng to a total of 30,168 equare feet. 'The contract
includes a 10,000-equare foot ground level parking lot
with steel colwnna supporting the officee above it.
The Ball Medical BuilcllJli 18 across from Anaheim
General H08pital.
New-home sal es .drop
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sales of new
single-fatnily houses, meager through the fall and
winter, plunged 15.3 percent in April to the lowest
level since the government began keeping such figures
19 years ago, officials said.
And with interest rates still high, the Commerce
Department's chief economist, Robert Ortner, said
Wednesday "prospects for an upturn in the immediate future are virtually nil."
Plagued ·by those high interest rates, the
new-house sales pace has dropped by nearly one--third
since December, according to the report from the
Commerce department and the Department oJ
Housing and Urban Development. The April sales pace
of 315,000 houses at an annual rate was well below the
previous record low of 335,000 in September.
Western tra f fic r ises
Western Airlines May scheduled traffic totaled
774 million revenue passenger miles, up 5 percent
from May 1981.
May waa the first month of operation for
Western's new fllght schedule, which included
development of a flight connecting oenter, or hub, at
Salt Lake City and the first Western aervioe to eight
cities, Baltimore, Boiae, New York. Miaeoula, TucaOn.,
Fairbank.a, the Tri-Cities (Pasco, Kennewick and
Richland, Wash.) and Washington's Dullea
International Airport.
Also included waa resumption of service at
Spokane, Casper and Oakland.
Projectors m ark eted
SOURCE Technologies Corporation, Mukilteo,
Waah. haa launched the mai;keling of ita Voyager
(TM) ~e/90und projection system with the opening
of a district sales office in Anaheim at 163 N. Cerritos
Ave. inted ~,__,_. Marla H. c.aprow haa been appo ........ ...,.
manager. She was aenior marketing repre!leltative for
Xerox Corporation in Orange.
Fir m o p e ns Gr o ve facility
Walker & Lee has opened a 4,000-equare foot
resale offioe in Garden Grove with more than 350
guests attending the festivities.
Susan Van De Sandt is manager of the f.acility, at
Brookhurst Street and ~wood Avenue. The
office la on the site that Walker & Lee bas occupied
nearly 27 years.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
~IW voi.K IAP)· s.les, J "·"'· prlee .... 111C dWngl Of Ille IMI molt Ktl• .Mw1C81 Sll!Clr h:d>en.. 1-. ,,.., 1"!11C1Nlly at more !Nin 11. s "7.JOO Siio -"-~ 747,100 M • 1"' =....... I 71,700 a-. -I
60,lQO S" -\lo "'·"° 12f\ -..Har S1AGO 17'1o + " .,..,,,. I SJ;100 10\li -~ ~-' !t:~ Uv.·-~
l9t ' ,.;ooo '"' -\lo
METALS
Hl!W YORK (API _: Spot nonftfroua "'9111 prto. IOdq.
C.,..., 7~71 llelltl a pound, U.S.
Cl..tlnatlonL
LMd 2$-27 oentll. pound. a. S5 C9ntl. pound, ~
,,.. 11.1130 ...... Week ~-lb. _,___ T&.n Cllnta a pound, H.Y •
.._, $310.00 I* .....
.....,_. t2M.OO ~or., N.Y.
SILVER
H•lldY & H1rm1n, St.030 per troy -..
t •