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1982-06-16 - Orange Coast Pilot
\ . r '.\ I I It JI '.1 /\ • 11 I l'\j I ' I ' AP~o 'WATCHING' TV -Seiko of Tokyo has unveiled the world's first wristwatch with a black and white television screen. The watch can receive regular VHF, ·uHF and FM broadcasts and ·is expected to go on the market next year for a price of about $400. Miller due hearing on assault charge . . Former Orange County Supervisor .Edison Miller awaited a :decision by the county district a~mey's office today whether he will be charged with alleged misdemeanor assault and battery on hls wile, Carol. :Miller was freed from Orange Cpunty Jail on $1,500 bail 1'-tesday !"l°ming following his a~rest Monday night at his Oz.,ange residence. :ora~e Police Capt. Jerry Gi'aves said officel"ll took Miller into custody ·~ter Mrs. Miller ~e a citizen's arrest alleging: •ult and battery. :Captain Graves declined to ~vide details about the alleged i.neident. "Misdemeanor assault and battery pretty much tells the story," he said. Mrs . Miller, the former supervisor's second wife, was not &e!liously injured in the alleged altercation, Graves said. · Miller was appoin~ the county Board of SupervisOrs by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. in July, 1979, to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of former Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. The appointment immediately drew fire from veterans' groups who charged that Mille r , a fonner Marine colonel, had made anti-U.S. st4tements while a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Miller was defeated in 1980 for a full four-year term on the board by Bruce Nestande. Since leaving the board, Miller, an attorney, has been practicing law in Santa Ana and has not been visible in political circles. Earthquake felt ...... i:n five· counties . ANZA (AP) -A moderate eiUthquake felt across five c(iunties tossed items from a-lves, cauaed chandeliers to .Way and knocked pictures from W.ns but caused no reported hi;~.1uries or serious damage, officials said. ~!ruesday's temblor measured 4~ on the Richter scale and was centered beneath this small Riverside County community 90 nines aouthwest of Los Angeles, aecording to officials at the tieismology lab of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. The quake struck at 4:49 p.m. COUNTY in an area along the end of the San Andreas Fault. "It t\s pretty scary," satfi Linda Ellington, owner of Ellington's Anza Food Center, where jars of jam and boxes fell from shelves. She said damage was not major, however. "We felt it real good but we haven't had any reports of any structural damage, just tQe normal dishes breaking artd things like that," said Cindy Weirbach, a dispatcher Jor the Riverside County Sheriff's Department in Anza. (See QUAKE, Page AZ ) HuntinlJlon votes for November Hunilngton Beach casts its vote for city eleciions in November. Page Bl. , TELE VISION ABC's 'Hart' .leads way ABC's "Hart to Hart" was the top-ranked show last week, while CBS won the ratings war. Page A6. j 'ElepbantB' I or family Tonight's '-rile Lut Roundup of the Elephanta" feature• 1pect.acular foota1e of elephant buntt and flYen a panlde1 and ti dacribed u good family viewlnl· Paae }J7. ' By Tiie. A11oelatecl Preti Britain put J>retlW'e today OD1 Argentina to declare a permanent pe~ in the South Atla~tic, ayinl hundreds of capt en\ine troops on the Falkland Is ands could die-of exposure and illness lf there is more dela~. The warning came from the commander of the British task fon:e after Argentine President Gen. Leopoldo F. Galtieri and his two junta partners were the targets of violent demonstrations Tuesday night by thousands of Slain n1an had drug rap -.J Murder victim Barkley F . Hodges. shot once in the head last week in a John Wayne Airport restaurant, was scheduled to go to court later this month on cocaine-selling charges, authorities revealed today. The dead man, a brother of Westminster Councilman Gil Hodges, was arrested last March in Huntington Beach on the drug charges, police said. But Orange County Sheriff's deputies, who are investigating the June 8 murder at Delaney's Restaurant, said they don't belie,_,e drugs played a role in the shooting. They have not detailed a motive ih the episode. Hodges allegedly was shot once in the head while at the restaurant with his 32-year-old cousin and an un.ide~tified third man. . / The cousin, Laguna Bea~ resident Kelly Russell Daniels, was arrested iJ1 connection with the murder . He faces a preliminary hearing o n the murder charge June 25. Daniels, a sailmaker has pleaded innocent to the charges. Councilman Hodges, reached by telephone this week, said he is completely baffled by the shooting incident. He dispelled rumors that h e was the "myster y" third man at the restaurant. He said he was at his home, studying for the state bar exam at the time of the shooting. "The whole thing is crazy," he said. "They (his brother and co usin) were as close as brothers. Everyone at the restaurant says they w ere friendly, shaking hands -it doesn't make any sense." The councilman said it would be completely out of character for his cousin, Daniels, to be (See COCAINE, Page A%) tall HlllTlll IAllY Ml !lllAN<,f C'OlJNIY <Al IJ OH NIA ~5 CENTS seeks solid I • ·ID Falklands • ~ Argentines angered at the defeat in the Falklands. The junta has aald that if Britain reinstates British rule over the islahda there will not be peace in the South Atlantic. In a statement released by the British govenunent in London, Rear Adm. John Woodward said t~ care of 15,000 Argentine POWs on the Falklands poeed "a major disaster relief problem." "The Argentines must appreciate that I cannot keep their troops dry and warm and fed while we are still subject to attack. They muat face the facts and call a halt to au, repeat all, h06tillties," Woodward said. He said the prisoners, some of whom hav e been on the Falklands in wintry conditions since the Ar,.entine invasion April 2, were 'already suffering Crom malnutrition, exposure - In some· cases hypothermia (subnormal body temperature) - tre n c h f oo t , scabies and diarrhea." • Galtieri, forced to cancel a public appearance because of the demonstrations, went on national television to vow Argentina will never accepi London's plana to• reinstate Bri tlsh rule in the Falklands .. H e said Britain must no~ "proceed to establish a colonial regime, with which there will be neither definitive peace nor security. It will be Great Britain's responsib11ity for deepening the conflict." British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ruled out any future Argentine say in the running o! the islands, rejected a (See FALKLAND, Page A%) HAVE GUITAR, WILL TRAVEL - Country-Western singer Ray Nelson, if you couldn't guess, Jikes motorcycles and guitars. He stopped off in Newport Beach this week to show off. his new machine before embarking on a cross-country tour. The only trouble with his guitar bike, he says, is keeping it tuned up. Israelis cap~ure PLO base Lebanese Christians lend help to invaders By The Associated Press Israeli commandos, advancing under covering shellfire from Lebanese Christian allies, at-arme d and captur ed a Palestinian guerrilla stronghold near the paralyr.ed Beirut airport today, the state-run Lebanese radio reported: The report said the Israelis took the science faculty. campus of the Lebanese University, along the main runway of Be.irut International Airport. few hours of relative calm in war-devastated Beirut. On Tuesday, Israeli and Syrian tanb battled near the airport for four hours, breaking a four-day Paternity lea-ve nixed cease-fire between Israeli forces and their Syrian foes. The Syri'an re gular army, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area, was not observed intervening in the battle for the science faCAJlty. Private Lebanese radio stations reported that Israeli and Syrian forces were involved in artillery battles elsewhere in Beirut's mountainous outskirts. But those reports were not verified. Israeli commanders said their gunners did not take part in the . . Spotlight on Dad in special section According to the reports, the action was aimed at eliminating a major Palestinian strOnghold controlling access to the airpert and some of the Palestine Liberation Organization's enclaves in Moslem west Beirut. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Assembly has defeated a proposal to allow fathers up to six weeks off work -without pay -to be with their babies. two hours of heavy shelling that -, .. p~ed the reported assault on the PLO camp on the science campus. Associated Preu correspondents said most of the With Father's Day coming up, there's plenty of attention being focused on Orange Coast dads. For information that can help make his day a spedal one. turn to today's Daily Pilot section on The Man in Your Life. There were conflicting reports on which forces were involved in the outbreak of shelling and fighting today, which shattered a ( - STATE Voters make the rules Voters are overruling lawmakers left and right through the referendum process, says columnist Richard Reeves. Page ~· Conce_rt jus~ a 'Dream' A San Diego radio station's broadcast of a "Dream Valley concert of the mind" started many rock fans an a futile search for the "oOncert" and ~~ law , enforcement authorities. P .. B3. • · BUSINESS • Financi~6 too cre•live . 1 Mortpae defaulta are l'lllnl1 and l USC ltUdy bJ•rnM ''miatiw ~· and the W~ deda1on outlawfnl due--on..te cJa~ hie a . . . ~ • , I Assemblyman Art Agnos, D- San Francisco, said Tuesday his AB3370 would give fathers a paternity leave without the risk of losing their jobs, similar to the maternity leave guaranteed under state law to mothel"ll. The bill failed on a 32-36 vote, nine short of the r equired 41-vote majority. fire seemed to come from Christian artillery e(ltrenched in the hills above the airport. Member s of the Christian Phalangist militia Kataeb were fighting openly with the Israelia INDEX At Your Service Business A4 C5-7 82 A5 B2 Et-8 B6 B6 Et AS & Herb Caen California Cavalcade Claaaifled Comics ere.word Death Notices Edit.ortal Ebtert.ainment .Food . Dl-10,El-3 'I' SPORTS (See ISRAELI. Page A%) Horoecope Ann Landen Movie. Mutual Funds National Newa Public.No~ Sportl . Stock Marketa Televilion Thee ten Weather ' • 'DotJsers wm; Angeh·.lose· . The Dodge~,1 aot another 1ood pl tchtna performance · out of . Jerry. Be\.111 tn downina s.n· 06et9, S.O, ~t the Ancell fell to the Blue-,Jayt at horDe, 2.0. P• Cl. . { . l · l I , ( l l ' I • I t 8 c storl•• ISRAELI INVASION ... aaalnat thelr common Pal t.Wan enemiee for the f lnt dme .me. luael1• anny rea.ched the Beirut &r•fl In • 1 l ·day thrult northward to wlpe out Pulutlnlan suerrlllaa In Lt•bknon. C6rreapondents reported leOlna Phalanpt. Uaillon·otllcera ln o11ve-drab uniform• with Israeli unlta positioned all over Beirut's mountainous hinterland. An Israeli commander; who Identified himlelf only as Col. Amon, watched the ehelling of the airport from Bubda near the palace of Lebanese President Elias Sarkis and told AP correspondent Alex Etty: "The Christiana are doing the fighting, trying to take the· university back from" the terrorists. The Christians are fighting by themselves, we are not becoming involved, we are just looking." But the Lebanese st.ate radio report said it was Israeli commandos that captured the modem, six-story buildings. The fall of the campus "raiaed fears that< the Israeli forces would advance westward to take over the ~ and storm lntlO the ·refugee camp• of Bourj •l BaraJneh," the raclio aaid. farMll camm&nden have aald \hey would not tnvtlde Bel.rut becau.e they did not want to pt involved In bloody houae-to- houae fighting. A PLO communique aaid: "Our forces are locked 1n fierce combat with all weapons •1ain1t the laraell enemy, who ii trytna to capture the ICience faculty of the Lebaneee Unlvera&ty." The Lebaneee radio report Mid 10111 of the science campus de~rived the PLO of "a strategically important polition" commanding accesa to the airport, as well aa the embattled beach reeort of Khalde a\ the southern end of the runway, and the crowded Pal~ refugee camp in Bourj el Barajneh further north. The airport, once the buaie.t P"t the Middle .East, has been cloeed to traffic aince June 7, one day after the Israelis launched their invasion. It was damaged iJ) the fighting last week aro\rnd Khalde, where PalesUnian forward positions were still firmly entrenched. FALKLAND ISLANDS ... call from the Labor opposition ( Argentine for·c~s from the for a United Nations trusteeship l mainland would not attack and vowed she would "not British forces. negotiate on the sovereignty of "General Men~ has just the islands in any way except given me an assurance that there with the people who live there." will be no attacks from mainland "I hope we have restored once ArgeJ'\tina oh us or our ships or again the dominance of Britain aircraft in thia area," Moore said and let every nation know that in a British Broadcasting Corp. whe.re there is British 90Vereign radio interview. territory it will be well and truly defended," she told the House of Mrs. Thatcher said she had Commons Tuesday. sent a message to the Argentine British Defense Secretary junta through the Swiss Embassy John Nott said Tueeday night he seeking confirmation that believed the fighting waa over Argentina considered all but raised the possibility hostilities in the South Atlantic Argentina could continue to at an end. strike at British forces from its She said Britain w ould bases on the mainland. continue to hold some of the M~j . Gen. Jeremy Moore, captured prisonen, incl uding ~ commander of the land forces on commanden and officera, until a the Falklands, said T uesday oonfinnation was received. Nott night that the commander of the 18id Britain was entitled to hold Argentine garrison at Stanley, the priaonera under the Geneva Brig. Gen. Mario Benjamin Convention govetnlnc the rules Menendez, promised that of war. ' QUA KE FELT ..• "It was pretty jolting.· It shook. It didn't sway, it shook. It lasted about 30 seconds." The tremor also was felt in Orange and San Diego counties and as far north as Granada Hills 20 miles northwest o f Los Angeles. The Richter scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on a .....,,...,-.ph. Every inert I! of one number reflecta a tenfold i.ncr?Ue in magnitude, IO that a readina of 7 .5 abowa an earthquake 10 times stronger than one of 6.5. An earthquake of 6 can cause severe damage, while one registering 7 is a "major" quake that can-cuaae widespread heavy damage. --- 2nd term Newport Beach City P1anninl Comml11loner Allan Beek, a aomeUmll controversial P>litk:al ftaure tn the city, hai been . dented a second term on the P1ann!nl unit. Beek, the City Council vowel thJa week, will be replaced by David Goff, a former leader of the-Weal Newport Lea{ialatJve A.lllance. Goff, a mechanical enaf,neer, quit the alllance the aame day the groupannounceditwouldaeeka referendum on the Bannina Ranch development. He uid bi= could not support a referendum. • Currently .ervtng on a city environmental quality committee, Goff 18id be oomee to the eommiuion with an open mind on development. As a member of the alliance, he had been critical of the Banning development and. later supported the project when the council made modifications in the plan. • Beek, whose family owns. the Balboa Island Ferry and has interest in Beacon Bay, has been mentioned as a potential council candidate in November. He said he had not decided whether tQ .meek political office. Sale of state mansion OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -_ California's new governor's mansion, 1n which Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. declines to live, could be sold under a bill approved by the Assemb11. The bl l, AB2373 by Assemblyman Elihu Harria, D- Berkeley, went to the Senate on a 45-11 vote Tuesday, . It would order the Department of General "Services to sell the mansion and put the money aside· for a new mansion cloeer to the Capitol -if the governor to be elected this November decides not to live 1n it. ' Cons for highway maintenance OK'd S0ACRAMENTO t AP) - Californla prisoners could be used for highway maintenance, improvement and cleanup under a bill approved by the state Aaaembly. Tuesday's 53-4 vote sent AB2956 by Assemblyman Terry Goggin, D-San Bernardino, to the Senate. rm er Coastal L1ght verleble wind• through tonight except w.t to eouthwMt, 8 10 t5 knoll efternoon. South-I swell 1 to 3 fMt except locel combiMd -3 to 5 ,_. over outer weters neer Point Conception Con1lde1eble low cloud• and local fog exeept for p~lel •ft~ dewing. T emperatures· Albeny Albuque ~. Atlante Atlentc Cty AUit in Bllltlmore 8lnnlngllm Blemelcil BolM Boeton 8utflllo Burlington . NATION U.S. Summary 5~ S'-t end thu~• spread from 04dahoma through the mlO-M~ V,,,_., to the GtHt l•kH rilon end lower Ohio Veky on ~. with e tornedo ceualng d•m•g• In lndlena end -wind~ In perta of Mfuoutl ~ Clnannetl ~ Clfnbla SC CdLmbua o.FtWth o.yton Den\f9f 80 50 88 S3 55 44 89 88 19 eo 92 78 84 se 90 M 87 21 84 S3 73 51 711 55 75 48 82 n 85 52 112 &4 82 47 n 91 &4 59 && eo 88 89 83 5e. 91 75 113 91 81 50 71 65 8& 81 &4 52 1M 71 68 50 71 44 75 37 80 54 82 50 112 49 90 78 90 77· 8& 82 IM 72 IM 71 77 83 98 72 89 71 87 80 93 7S M 82 Front1: Cokl .,. Wttm ,... Occluded ~ Tom.wdo wetehel _.. 1-...d from eouth·c•ntrel Mluourl to aouthern Michigan end norl~tem Ohio. A ftMh flood wlleh wea IMUed for <*It,., end northeHt Mleao.irl, end flood warnlnga -• In effeot for much ol eou1heutam NebrM«a. Clouoy tk••• covered the northern Atlentlc CoHI •Iii••. part• ot \lie IOUlhem Ptelna ancl lower Mlufufppl Velley, end muCh of the northern end oentrel AocklM Ind Peolflc Cout. OM Mok1ee Detroit Oututh El PMO Feirbllnka Fergo Aegttatl Grut Fella Hertford HeleM Honolulu Houston lndl\eplla Jecktn MS For todey. ehowera end Jackanvlle thunderstorms were forecHt KM• City from eou111-centrel TexM through La Vegee the lower Mtalulppl V'*1y. lhe Utile Rodt T~ end Ohio Velllyl. the. ~ Lower Ore et L•k••· th• Memphle ~· end Hr# Englmld. .....,.,,. Sunny llklee -• torecell from ....._. .. the Aoc*IM to the W•t eo.., ~lP and pertly cloudy ecroH the N8lllfwlle northern Plelr1a lhrOugh the uppef .... ()Nena ~Lall•. N9wYortl California , orlno• County can expect Norfoll Old• Cit)' OnWMI Ortendo ~ ~ "-nd, Ore PTO't'tdelioe Reno Alctwnond ltltl.aka ..,. MIOf*> ~= s.ttle r~ St LOIMe StP·T~ ~ Syrecu. TOS*le Tuc:eori TulM · Wuhlngtn Wlchtt• 75 53 t2 72 70 54 N 87 93 75 117 511 711 52 77 &4 94 81 114 75 ee eo 83 eo ~ IM 52 103 74 94 88 et 50 79 39 111 52 102 72 69 $4 n se e1 50 M 96 95 12 n 91 72 l5e .. $4 78 58 .. 52 80 81 104 76 87 11 70 M 11 57 tol .. 71 .. N eo 80 M 101 70 72 M ee eo Sellou San &emerdlno San~ Sen Diego San Frendeco Sen JOM Sant• Aile Sant• Barbara Sant• Cruz Santa M811a Senta Monica Stoctlton Tehoe Velley Thermel Torrano1 Yum• Extended Forecast 69 13 78 71 59 111 72 &4 88 88 &4 100 77 101 71 101 Late.night encl ~ momlrll low oloud• elono tti• co .. t. OtMrWIM fllr. ,._ 1ttwnoon doudl "'* rnoum.ina. Hlat'8 .. beaoh•• 10 to 14 and fnl•nd' Vf/llfNIM to 18. Lowt &o4 to ta. llWle llt lN ~ 10. 71 lo 12 ln(ind, Lowt 51 to 82. Thur9daY ::C..72 lft ~. 12 to I& -. .... ------------------Mountifil ,_,,, hlOhe 12 10 eo. Lowt4110M. lllF RIPIRT • ~. ....... =::r:.-=ri =..... : ;: ; : = ==.o • 11 1 I 1W ~ 1 1 11 t 1 SW .... o.:::~~ .,_tnlUrfMd .... hflltM 1 AIWll ....... Movie ruled .OK for kids DALLAS (AP) -St•pben Spielbera'• hlt movie "Polter&elll" may contain "blatant. u.,rant violence," but. jury aays O.U.. chUclren ehould be allowed to aee it without their parente. Th• Jury deliberated for man than a"n hour Tuetday before declining a request by the Dallu Motion ficture Claaatficatton Board t.o prohibit children under 16 from aeetng the movie without parental guidance. The 21-member board sued Metro-Goldwyn Mayer-United Artists Entertainment Co., the film's Hollywood' dfstributor, co change the movi e's PG classification. "Poltergeist," produced by Spielberg, maker of "Close Enoounters of the Third .Kind" and "Raiders of the Lost A.rk," la about a suburban California family terroriz.ed by ghoste. ''I think our nnaI reasoning was that parents should have their o~ opportunity t.o make a determination (about \he film)," jury foreman Ernie St.over said after the trial. HUG FOR A HERO -President Regan embraces M/Sgt. Roy Benavidez, a Medal of Honor winner from El Campo, Texas, after he loo the pledge to the flag at a $1,000-a-plaw fund-raising dinner in Houston to aid the re-election campaign of_Qov. Bill Clements. The jury agreed that the film contained "blata1h, flagrant t violence," but di~greed as t.o whethe r that was reason to change the rating, St.over said. Two of the 12 jurors found the film unsuitable for children, he said. City firefighters watCh eatery burn During the two-day trial. the iury viewed and compared 1•Poltergeist" and "Raiders," which the Dallas classification board found suitable. ''The rest of the country thinks this movie is suitable for.viewing by young pe rsons," de~se attorney Ch.Ms Harvey said · · CLEBURNE, Texas (AP) - Firefighters from this North Texas community watched from 'their truck parked at the city limits as a restaurant about 100 feet away burned to the ground. The rest.aurant'a owner said he is furious that the firefighters did nothing to help as he tried to extinguish the flame. with a garden hose Tuesday. Tommy Wallace, an 88.\ist.ant chief of the Godley Volunteer Fire Department and a paid lieutenant in the Cleburne department, said city firefighters were prohibited by )aw from fighting fires beyond the city limits. The, restaurant, Charlie Perkins' Barbecue, burned before volunteer firemen could arrive, witnesees said. Perkins said in the 30 minutes it took for volunteers t.o arrive from Godley, 10 miles awat. the flames had consum ed his restaurant. W reckage cle are d Crom train c rash EMERSON, Iowa -Railroad crews worked through the night t.o remove the wreckage of an Amtrak ~nger train from the flooded tracks where it de.railed, killing one passenger and sending 16 others aboard to the hospital. Four committees have been appointed to investigate the derailment of the San Francisco Zephyr Tuesday morning. Rail suit filed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Southern Pacific Transportation Co. has filed suit in federal court in an effort to block the start of rail commuter service between Los Angeles and Oxnard. Per~ estima\ed damage at $200,000. "There's a creek that crosses the road at the city line, too," Perkins said. "U a man fell in there drowning on the wrong side of the creek, I guess they'd let him drown.'' The restaurant is about' three blocks from the center of town, but Perkins' parking lot ext.ends to the city limits. Johnson County is divided into rural fire districts. "We called the Cleburne Fire Department and they just laughed," said Bob Burks, an Arlington resident who recently leased the restaurant from Perkins. Burks was sleeping in a nearby mobile home when the fire began at 3:30 a.m. Cleburne Fire Chief Lloyd McVicar said the city sent a fire truck to the scene because the wind was blowing sparks from the blaze toward a · house in the city. "U a fire originates inside the city and goes outside the city lines, the ·fire department wiU fight it," he said. "But if it starts outside, as long as it's not endangering the city limits, the fire department won't fight it." Clt;burne enacted its law prohibiting city firefighters from answering calls outside the city limits after Johnson County offici.a.1$ refused to pay the city for making the calls. closing argument. ".Is the r . of the country. out of step with Dallas, or is Dallas out of step with the rest of the country?" From Page A1 COCAINE. • • carrying a gun. He said he believes his brother and Daniels had met to discuss a ~ible business venture involving the manufacture of windsurfers. "From what I understand," Councilman Hodges said, "he (his brother) had just flown into t.own. My cousin was interested 1n getting his h elp on this project." He said his brother, a forme.r . Westminster resident. recently had moved out of the state. He described him as an "entrepreneur" and a successful busines,,man who had dabbled in real estate. produce and had served as a vice president with several firms. Funeral services for Hodges were condu cted Monday at Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona de! Mar. Susp ect nabbe d BERN, Switzerland (AP) SwlSS authorities said today they are holding a Turkish national suspected of · being involved in the May 13, 1981, attempt on Pope John Paul ll's life. A-test h eld ir. Nevada LAS VEGAS (AP) -The Department of 't Energy today conducted an underground nuclear weapons test at the Nevada Test Site, the eighth announced test at the site this' year. It had a yield of less than 20 kilotons of TNT. mMMm1n1J11B11111R11~ 11.11mt -11m1nQH·j, 1,. · ...... &Y."Hat>PY Bither's ~!" with a gift from ffickor1 f'Gr,mi Delight Dad with a gift from Hick Farms~ We've got over 100 delicious~ to choose from, in almQSt every price range. And we'll gladly Jlandle all the details sending your gift. · FASHION ISI:.AND . Newport Beach ........ OPEN DAILY , WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th and I r vine, N ewpon Beach 842~972 .J Orano-Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, June 18, 1982 COFFEE, DONUTS AND BUDGET -President Reagan conducts a morning meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House . where donuts, coffee and budget ~ were served to bipartisan congressional leaders. From left are House Minority Leader Robert Michel of Ill.; Speaker of the u ~ Houre Thomas P . "Tip" o •Neill Jr. of Mass.; Reagan and Se~ Majority Leader Howard Bak.er of Tennessee. All four were optimistic that Congress will complete action on a budget by next week. GSA chief ge.ts loan deferral WASHINGTON (AP))- Gerald P. Carmen, head of the General Services Administration, has not made a payment in almost 12 months on a $405,000, seven-year-old loan from the !ooeral government, according to published reports. The Washington Post and the Baltimore Sun reported Tuesday that Carmen had been given two deferrals since July 1981, on repaying the loan, and as a result owes about $30,000 additional interest o n the 30-year, 6.5-percent interest loan Crom the Small Busin~ Administration. "Deferral is available to any American citizen ," the Post quoted Carmen as saying. · An unidentified SBA spokesman was quoted as saying, ''This is a normal SBA procedure when a loan client, through no fault of his own, finds himself in financial difficult)' and asks for a deferral. It is not a delinquency." ~ In a separate front-page story on patronage,· the Sun said Carmen's $59,500-a-year job is the "top of a stack of more than 35 patronage jobs paying a total of some $1.5 million' a year traceable to Mr. Carmen's role in the Reagan primary victory" -a reference to Carmen's work fQr President Reagan in the 1980 New Hampshire primary. The Sun said th06e with jobs -some in the GSA , the government's housekeeping agency, and some in other federal agencies -include Carmen's daughter, a friend of hers and two former employees of Carmen's tire shops. The paper said some of the people earn more than $50,000 a : year in such agencies as the Small Business Administration, and the Commerce, Housing and Urban Development and Health an d Human ServiC<e s departments. The Sun also reported that numerous New Hampshire Republican figures have been given jobs in the GSA, including several defeated congressional candidates. The newspaper quoted a former New Hampshire GOP official, who asked not to be identified, as saying, "It's wrong to look at this thing solely in terms of numbers. Everyone knows that's politics. You get the jobs. What is amazing and disturbing is the dubious qualifications of many of the people." . The Sun said the SBA's associate deputy administrator, the agency's No. 3 poet, is Robert Turnbull, deecribed as a (rlend of Carmen's daughter, Melinda. F.arning $58,500 in his present job, Turnbull is deecribed as a former bartender and political co~ultant. Carmen's daughter, meanwhile, e8Jll8 at least $54,000, Pholly documents cost. public $24 billion a year lost through false ·dentification WASHING TON (AP) -The use of false federal documents is a massive, growing practice that may be costing the American public $24 billion a year, a Senate Gov e rnmental Affair s subcommittee has estimated. A staff report by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations said it found in a 10-month study that "the 900pe of the false identification problem is enormous and its impac t on government and business is pervasive." The subcommittee also was bearing froltl a convicted forger who says he perfected his counterfeiting skills in a federal prtson prtnt shop. ' Sen. William V. Roth Jr .. R -Del., the subcommittee -eh.airman. said the . use of the phony documents is costing taxpayers billions in fraudulent food stamps, student loans and social security benefits. In addition, he said in remarks prepared for Tuesday's hearing, the illicit IDs "are used in sophisticated criminal conspiracies to defraud banks, "" credit card companies and other commercial establishments." A major contributor to the problem is the government itself, said Roth, whose subcommittee is holding two days of public hearings. "Federal agencies which are responsible for the documents continue to is.5ue them with an appalling lack of awareness as to their criminal use," he said. As an example of what he said is the enormity of the problem, he cited a recent study in the Denver area which concluded that half of the federal immigration docu111ents used to establish identity for Social Security benefits were false. Newton Van Drunen, a convicted forger serving a 10-year federal prison term in Chicago, told the panel that his coupt.erfeiting skills were honed behind &rs. Van Drunen, 54, said he began a criminal career of smuggling aliens into the United States in the mid-1950s. After he was convicted in 1973 for smuggling ORANGE COAST Daily Pilai _ Cle11tned edveftlalng 714 .... 2·5178 All other ctepertmenta 642.,,.321 Thomel P. H8'9v l'IAlllllw Md a.. t......... OMoer MAIN OFFICE alO W.st llay St •• c..-. Mew, CA. Mell...,_: 8cla IMO, ec.i. -.a. CA. fM3' c~....,. ,_a.-... c.st PllllHtlllflo ~. No ll9WS _..... llluttreu ... ._ edltortet......, or_. vort!M-U lwt"91n mev be ·~ WltMlll 141k .. 1 .,.,.,,..., Of COPYrltM-. VOL 71, NO. 1'7 in Mexican aliens, he said, he was assigned t.O the print shop at Sandstone 'federal prison in Minnesota. "Unbelievable . . . this shop did a lot of work for the immigration service," said Van Drunen. He said he learned in the print shop about the details for a new Immigration and Naturalization Service registration card to be manufa<.?tured by Polaroid. "l couldn't believe this information was actually coming through my hands while in prison," said Van Drunen. He said that, after he was released in 1976, he put the information to use duplicating the INS canb and it was easier than he thought it would be. "INS did not use as sophisticated a process as I had envisioned," Van Drunen said. . ' He also testified that for $75 he so ld a packet of phony identifications that included a Social Security card, a Texas state birth certificate, a baptismal certificate and a Selective Service card. "On a scale of one to 10, the 8oclal Security is a 'one,' said Van Drunen. ''It's just extremely aimple to reproduce." Tests voided·? 'LOS ANGELES (AP) Ethnic remarks made by two examiners during oral examinations 1Mt April of 470 pollce ~t candidat. may ca~ Ule a.ta to be volded and "9CbeduJed at a cmt of $25,000, the Qvtl SeMce c.ommmi.lon ..id. • Dllr .... Del•ety ............ We're Listening ••• Whit do-you like 1boul the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your ,.,,. .. ,.,. will be recorded, tranacrlbc!d and delivered to the appropri1te editor. The aame M·hour 1nJwtrin1 Hrvlce m1y be u.aed to record let· ters lO the ed6l0r on any toptc. Mailbox contrlbutort musl lncludt their name and telephone number for verfncaUon. No clrculaUon calla, pltue. Ttll ua what'• on your mind . .. 11 the paper said , handling complaints at the Commerce Department from U.S. companfes over unfair trade practices. She Is described as a young lawyer and one-time congres&onal aide. The Sun said that in an interview Monday Carmerf"said charges he has created a staU costing about $900,000 a year are exaggerated because many of the new stalf members fiJled existing job vacancies. Herb Koster, GSA public information director, said today, "I don't think he (Carmen) wants to comment on the Baltimore Sun stories because 1 think he feels they are politically biased." On the matt.er of the SBA loan, the unidentified SBA spokesman said Monday that 17,000 of 149, 750 loans made or guaranteed by the SBA are now late by 60 days or more, according to the Post. The Post and the Sun said Carmen obtained a $425,000 loan from the SBA in 1975, when an urban renewal project forced him to relocate his business in Manchester, N.H . Carmen's firm, Car-Go Horn.e and Auto Centers Inc., was sold in 1979 and has since gone out 0£ business, according to the Post. Carmen was quoted as saying he obtained a six-month deferral of the $2,700-a-month payments last summer and then got a second deferral, which expires next month. The Post said he has repaid $20,000 plus interest, leaving a principal balance of $405,000. "We expect to meet that commitment," Carmen was quoted as saving. He said he would obtain a bank loan to cover the payments, The Post said. The SBA loan was not listed as a liability, on Carmen's financial (disclosure statement 'he is required t.Q file, according to the Post. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cutified G~mologiat. AGS THE LARGEST DIAMOND isn't for ..Je The world'• largest cut diamond will never be bought foe EliDbeth n.ylor. Nor ,will a blc N"'ew York jeweler buy It and put It on = in hil window. Even an Arab will find thla atone beyond hi reach. The Jaraeat diamond, weichlnl.630 carata. II mounted on the royal 1eeptre of the Brill.ah l'mplre. It la part of Britain'• Crown Jew\!la. 'nte ....,. ._.. cur-from1he Cullinan diamond which. at uoe caratai WM the J.arwmt dt.raond ever mined. It WM found in l~ in Souih Afr1ca'• Premier M.lne and waa alven by the Tran1vaal 1ovemment to Enatand'• Kina Dtward vn ... blnhday prwetlt. (t w• later C\I\. up Into nine larte ltGMI and 98 sna1i.r ones ... The -.-cut •• ,.,.,.. che scar ot Afrfiea. The • otbm' --C'utl -........ &..-. ....... ~ Tbe 18 .,.,..__.. CUtl ........ u... Oll'ata. ObwtoUllY ........ ol Afriaa II • for U.1lo .. -"" ftMt _,__,bee ...... ol tf P'' j~ but II cmtllinlJ -1 ,..,,..... ~ -· Israeli, Viet criminaJ gallgs ·busy • ID SACRAMENTO (AP) - Crim.inal gangs of Israeli and Vietnamese immigrants are on the rise in California, says Attorney G e neral George Deukmejian. In his 11181 report on organized Cl"ime, Oeukmejian said law. enforcement officials estimate that 350 former Israeli nationals are members or associates of a Southern Califorpia-based crime group, compared to 150 in 1978. The group "does not appear to have a clear-cut organizational structure," but members are involved in drug trafficking, extortion of former Israeli nationals and other crimes, Deukmejian said. He said members have been linked to six murde rs in Southern California, five of which were drug-related. Three men identified in the repart as members of the lsraeli crime group were convicted last year of charges stemming from the drug-related killings of two pel"llOna in a Los Angeles hotel, Deukmejian said. In addition, seven members were indicted by a federal j;(rand state jury in Loe Angeles on charges of making false statements on lmmigration fonna, and 47 have been arrested in Southern California in the past year, the report said. Vietnamese gangs were active last year in Orange, San Diego, Los Angeles and Santa Clara counties, killing', robbing and extorting money from other Indochinese refugees , Deukmejian said. He said most gang memben were veterans of the Vietname9e military in their 20s and 309, but that younger members are being recruited. Th~report said a smaller number of organized crime members from Japan have settled in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Some have organized tour companies in San Franci9co that prey on Japanese tourists. In more traditional areas of organiz.ed crime, the report said, the Chicago-based c rime "family'' has expanded its influence in Southern California and is said to be seekinR control of in~pendent bookmaking and loan-sharking operations. Privacy of tax records upheld WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S . District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell has temporarily barred the Social Sec urity Administration from cutting off benefits of welfare recipients who refuse to sign away the priv~y of their tax records. Gesell issued the temporary restraining order Tuesday and conditionally avee<f to make the case a class action suit on behalf of the more than 4 million elderly, blind or disabled Supplemental Security Income reclpJentl. The National Senior Citizens La.w Center asked for the temporary restraining order Monday at an emergency hearing before Gesell. The judge's one-page order said that Health and Human Services Secretary Richard S . Schweiker and his employees "are temporarily enjoined from obtaining any tax return information from the Internal Revenue Service . . . and from threatening or instituting suspension proceedings against any member of the class for failure to sign an authorization for disclosure of information form." ~ll turned down the legal aid group's request for expedited depositions in the case. Mitthell Berger, an assi.Stant U.S. attorney, said .that means, "It's up to us to file a motion to ,. dismiss to move the matter forward." During the he_aring, Berger called the lawsuit "woefully premature" aiid said the government soon would flle papers to c:iimWla It. Berger said Social Security planned to give welfare recipients who balk at signing the disclosure form a 60-day notice before cutting oU their benefits. No one would be cut off the roUa before September, he said, and Social Security did not plan to ask the IRS for the data on bank accounts, stock dividenda and other ¥lCODle until January_. • The SSI recipients got letters from Social Security last month asking them to sign a form giving the agency the right to see the IRS records. Social Security told the elderly, blind or disabled welfare recipients they had a choice, but if they did not sign, ·"your SSI checks may be affecJed." _ In fact , the agency has instructed its field offices to cut off benefits to those who refuse to sign the form, said Bruce M. Fried, an attorney with the National Senior Citizens Law Center, which is funded by the LegaJ Se'rvices Corp. and the Administration on Aging. Social Security says i\ is trying to snare an estimated 88,000 people with unreported bank accounts who will draw $140 million in welfare next year. ' ' •I I I ~.I : , m . (f: It . l } I t· . ~ f l l· I ~ . ' ~ t'. l I I I f. t· • . . t ,. . .. BY PAT HOROWm or .. .,.,... ..... -DEAR READERS: American Expre11 Co., the U.S. POlt.al Service, the U.S. OffW. of Consumer A!faln and the U.S. Cona\.lmer lnformaUon Center have created a "Mall Order Rtahta ConaumerCard" to tell, 1n plain i.n,u.o, how to shop by mail and where to turn for help if a problem arilel. Although many mail-order tranuctlona are trouble-tree, the Councll of Defter BUlineel Bw-eaua Inc. reported that in 1981 mall-order-related problems were the number one consumer complaint received by thelr offices 8Cl'Oll8 the country -tor the ninth coNeeuUve year. The "Mail Order Righta ConaumerCard" r. being provided free to conaumera. lta deiachable ConsumerCard hiahllahttng legal rtghta is designed to be carried 1n a wallet for easy reference. For single copies, write to: "Mail Order Rights," Consumer Information Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. For copies 1n multiples of 25, write ·to: "Mail Order Rights ' ConsumerCard," Consumer Alfa.in Office - 16th Floor, American Express Co., American ExpressPlaza, New York, N.Y. 10004. Comb atting jet lag DEAR PAT: I'm going to Europe tlaJa summer and have beard a lot of people Save· 40% eom.aa1D aboet Jet la1. It daere uytklq to mlafmlae ltt L.C., Coreu •• Mar • Some docton aay you lhou1d have one day to adjust for each WM rone you cro11, but that luxury ll not alwaya P'*f ble. It you are travellna eut, IO to bed at leut an hour eviler tlaan uaual for eevenl daya before you leave. Try to arranae for a daytime fllaht H you are on yow-wa~ Europe •. You wW arrive 1n time f« a t everunc meal and bedtime at the~per . Anyone fi we.t ahoUld try to ttay u later the week be ore. tn either dlrection, it ~ lmJ>C?rtant to go lilhtly on food and alcoholic dr1nlQa on the plane and dwinl the fint day or eo 1n the new time zone. Ideially, you ahould • have a day to utake it NIY" before •tartinl tourl.at activities, even 1( it rneana flying on the weekend to begin the week refreahed~ It you have to fly 16 hours, try to break the trip into two eections. You'll arrive 1n better shape to work or play. . • Got • problemr Then write to P•t Haro-· .. j wiu. l>•t will cut ttd tape, 6•ttlng the ill &1Uwenr and .cClon you ne«I to .alvt: in· equities Jn ,ovemment and buai.ne-. M.i.J your que•tlon• to Pat Horowi tz, At Your Service, Ortu>p Coalrt l)aily>Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Q»t.t mesa, CA. 112826. Aa many Jette,.. u poaible will be ana-werecl, but phoned inquiries or letter. not including the tt•der's full name, •ddrea and bu.alnesa hoW'tl' phone number aannot be COIJ6/dered. on selected dressy blouses, prairie blouses and skirts. • Now17.99 Selected swimwear for juniors and misses . Now 9.99 . • ,,'MIST ilE" -Fred LaRue, a former Mll1l11lppl buelneuman who wae the fint to plead auilty ln the W•tergate ~dal. aaya he regreta h1a Involvement. Stones draw h uge crowd PARIS (Al') -The RoWna Stont. attracted-e \Ota! of 140,000 tana at two ~arft conc•rta markins the rock lfOUP'• tint appearance 1n France a1nce 1976. Ahi"ong the estimated 70,000 people on hand tor opening nlaht at the Auteul~ atadium waa French Cultural Mlnlater Jack Lang. He watched Mick Jaapr, dtttaed 1n red and white tJahta. atrut and 1tng 1uch vinta1e1 S tones tunes as "Unde r My Thumb" and "Time Ia On My Side." .. For. Father's Day ... Par Fou r.™ S I · { 9· 99 Par Four™ shorts and slacks. a e Polylcol!on belled 111C11.t N,. 30 42, r-o 123. a.le 17.M . ,. • 8ehd wllUng lhOt1ll paly1C011on 32 42. •-o $18 leM 1a.tt. "-9. l 1M14, Co!N«t·f..,.,,_ ~lot"*' ~~o::ncic:o~~:~: 20% off all men's casual shoes. In bCl4tl IOlde lil'd a'1i>M wllfl "* Ot l)IM:Mt Sport IMthet oKlorde. r-o $38 a.le 21.10 • oolw "'1111*' ..Y-owt ~119t/OOllOn °"9l9d Pigel<Jn oxlorde or Nc>ons r-o $30. a.1e 12•. IO~ wllfl the ,.., Four .i.d<l ll'CI ellOtla. In Moc toe -oe OJllOtde r-o $28 Sale 22.40. tMn'I 5-Mol·lCL.. Ii' I )' J I l , :· .. Ian DAtlO Sheriff Job Ody 11111/flCEI wanta PenthouM mafHl1'• to ~ •1eo.1e for a n.tahu ~ . Banta Barbara after be n1 1ubpoenaed bb:enthouH to Job 8 . ·Kais'' ProfH1ional t.eltlfy at it.I La ta libel trial lJ\ Joumallam Prosram to flnan<:e Compton. ~vanced 1tudy tor American Attorney Geoffrey ftoma1 of newa ~ 1tarttna ln 1984. ~ An1elea whote law firm The-milllo~t ho1'2-rina reprHent1 Penthouae, aaya the late foun er of Knlaht Du1ff'• bill lhould be rejected. Newafcapera, will re lace •• don't think we're Stan ord 11 reaponaible tor the aherlff'• pro!ram for overnlaht adventures," said ml -career Thomas. "Santa Barbara ta not 1ourna11ata euctlr, on the way back to San 'who ahow bieao. · promise of Dulfy cont.ends the subpoena m·a king . dJarupted plans to take a fl'ff significant flliht from San Diego to Santa future Barbara to attend a meetinj of contributions the California Peace Officers' to the field." Aseociatlon. The Jrant, KNl9tfT Stanfo officials said, will be When you have a famou11 paid over a three-year period. It name, people think you're will finance an academic year of wealthier than you are, says Paul study for 12 journalists. The Reaolr, grand8on of the famous program will carry on in impressloniat painter Pierre-perpetuity. A1:£1t Renoir. . npir and his family left 1Eeir Four children of R.obert A1p farm ln southern France in 978 set sail across the Atlantic in a to start a cheese factory south of replica Viking longboat, as they Edmonton, Canada. But about a try to fulfill Asp's dream of a year ago, he had to cloee the symbolic holllecoming for . business because of cash-flow Sca!ldinavian-Americans. problems. The Hjemkomst, translated as Renoir, 56, and .his wife shrug "homecoming," set sail from New off the _business 1ailure l;>ut the York for Norway with a slight pain lingers. breeze filling the main sail, flying --the U.S. and Norwegian flags. Asp, the boat's builder, died in Stanfo rd Universi .t y 1980. He patterned the vessel announced establishm.ent of the after a 900 A.D. Viking ship unearthed ln Norway a C:entury aao. Hla cbildren be1an their voyaae May 6 from Duluth, MlM., wtth a crew that lncludee alx other Americana and three Norweatana. The U.S . Supreme Court chanaed ita mind about ~ettms involved ln the tanaled af al.rs of deceased blllionaire How•rd "'''"· . In 1978, the court refuaed to decide whether Hugh&a was domiciled ln Texas or C.alifornia at the time of his death ln 1976, the key to decldlng which state gets to tax hil $1.1 billion estate. But the high court said this week it will settle the question, ruling 6-3 that a federal trial court ln Texas had no right to make the dedaion. Eugene Ormandy, conductor laureate of the Philadelphia Orchestra, became ill during the opening concert of the orchestra's 53rd summer seaaon. · Ormandy, 82, had undergone dental surgery la5t week and was · still weak, a n orchestra spokeswoman said. Actress Sopbia Loren had the sympathy of almost three- fourths ot l.taly when she was jailed for tax evasion, according to a survey. Thf survey, ap.Jfvaring in the Italian magazine• Smiles and Songs," said 74 percent of the --. .. -. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday,1June 18. 1982 Itallana aurve/ced ~proved of Mill Loren'• 0-day eent.enc:e. The Academy Aw~-winnina act.reel wu freed Jl.tne ~ after eervtna 17 4aya of her aent.ence at a women'• priton near ~et. She wu convicted in of fall~ to report $180,000 on her 1963 ncome tax returna. Two aiatera are competing for the title of Miu Georgia, and if one of them wlna, she could face yet another slater ln the Miss Amerl~ pageant. Cbrlltle Bled1oe, 20, will represent Moultrie ln the ann~al state pageant June 23-26 here while her sister,· Jonna, 19, represents Valdosta. The women are daughters of the Rev. and Mrs. Jobn Bled1oe of Toccoa. The Bledsoes' eldest daugher, ·Sberrl, 23, will represent Sumter. S.C., in the \Miss South Carolina pageant July 7-10. President Reagan says that staying in castles in Europe may have spoiled him for more routine travel. "Regular hotels are going to look pretty shabby, all except for the plumbing," he said during a meeting with congressional leaders. During his 10-day European tour, which ended Friday, the president stayed at Windsor Castle, the home o f British royalty outside London, and at the Grand Trianon palace at Versailles, Fl;'ance. UW!tephoto HEADING FOR STARDOM? -This 6-foot.. 2-inch el ectronic robot named SICO is greeted outside NBC's Burbank Studio by John DeLancie who plays the character Eugene Bradford on the n!twork's daytime soap opera "Days of Our Lives." SICO was in Burbank to audition tor a role in what NBC hopes will be the first robot story line in daytime television. The Robinsons Gift On~Bass inakes Weejuns. legendary comfort and traditional styling ... men's brown and black. 1052 Irvine Ave. Newp0rt Beach 5'48-8884 /? · · c. o Place Loupon aperj cv.iJ~1 [··-···················-··············-··-·············-, • i ' • • i i I VIDIO 'flPOT l lllmEl•IP MLY 112.11 (1 Jr.) i Discounts on rentals, accessories, b·lank ! tapes, cartridges, etc. : I . I . . . 11411 ., ... ,., .. , ....... , ... , PROl£CT YCU CMP£T WITH Host DRY EXTRACTION CARPET CLEANING ...... a.... -•I N -·-·---........ ,_ .... ___ ""'191 .•. ·-----••••••a.Yau& 10~ OFF W. c.lT I un DIY Me EDYFGl-lta .., ••• .,, --Cil9lf ..... & ....... CMl M rot A flll -tuTIClll a -· 11111 llllT IAIPIT Ull f~l-~l"w! . j ' . ' I I ' • ~ DIOR FOR THE DAD WHO LOVES THE LUXURIOUS IN LIFE. Our classic acrylic pullover is so soft and elegant you and Dad will think It's cashmere. Shouldn't your Dad have it for moments when a suit is too much, but ·just a shirt isn't enough? This Father's Day, let him own II in ecru, lig.ht blue. camel. pink, yellow. lilac. llght green or ra spberry. S·M· L-XL, $38.50. Robinson's Men's Sweaters. 195. to order. call toll-free 1 ·800·345·8501. .. \ -, ' l I I wiils ratings· ·I-ace Networ.lc takes 5 ol·10 lii6,best-rated shows NJ:W YOl\K (AP) -Cl& won &n th• n.etworaa• prlme·Ume COft\PldUon for tbe llooftd w.elc ln a row durln1 1 week 11omlaa.S by NNnl -only two 1how1 amon1 the 20 hl1n•t- nted had not *n broadcut before, ICCOtd1nl to aiw-from the A. C. Nlellen Co. · CBS' "to Mlnutea," with two I 1 ortp\al -cmenta and a repeat, I ~ ninth tn the ratlnp tor tM W98k ~ June 13, and . 1 the netwol'k'a bi'oedcut of the profe11lo~l ba1ketball. ChunDiomhlp pme between Lal Ancelet and PhU.delphia tied for 14th place with a rerun of· Jack Klugman ln .. Quincy" on NBC. ' f CBS had five of the Top 10· prograrna -ABC'1 "Hart to ~ Hart" finished No. 1 -and : cxmpiled an average rating for ~ the .period of 13.6 to .J.2.9 for A.BC : and 11.2 for NBC. ' .'I The netw~ka aay that means . i _ in an average minute of prime time during the week, 13.6 t of ·the coun 's homes • I t Fine dining. 3801 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA oa MAR. CA (714) 760-0l31 wttb t.elevlllon w.re watcb.lnl CBS. NBC had two ·lhowt amonc the 10 IDOlt·watched, tncludlni 11Hlll St.reet Blu•" ln •tchdi place, but the network'• ratlnf Wll the low-* NOOl"deei bJ My of the \hne ln nearly a YMf • The tadnc for .. Mart'° Hart'' . Wll 22.1. Nlei.. •YI that ..... man av.nae minute of tJ\e 1how , 22 .1 percent of the TV-equip~. bomel ln the country were tuned to ABC. In contrast to the high rating for CBS' ba1 - ketb8.ll special, "Monday Night Baseball" on ABC did not do well. Part of the country saw St. =uls lay Montreal, and.,the ret1t d and Chicago, and the e rating for the 'bueball program was 10.3 -good for a tie for 48th place. An NBC movle, .. Slater, Si1ter111 ln flrat ru~1 ·~H modlniely "~ -uea for 23rd -bUt other mm. on TV for the Urat time proved leu attndtve to viewwl. ••Harry and Walw Oo to New Yon" on A.BC and .. Another Man, Another Chance .. on NBC tied for 4etb plaice. A rerun tum, "The Mute of LUl&e" on A.BC, wu No. IWY. • NBC h.lid the five ·loweet-ratecl procrarna, •tartina with .. NBC Ma1aalne" In 6&th place and followed by .. Chlca.ro Story," "Father M~hy," T.Fit for a Ktn111 and an "NBC White Paper'' ·called "Facing Up to the ,Bomb." Here are the 10 highest-rated lhowa: "Hart to Hart," with a rating of 22. 1 ......... , 18.7 .,,.,,, ~ A8C: "Tiie J•ff•r1on1," ~1.7 or 17.1 mllllon, CBS: "Thr .. 'a Coftl'""y" end "Too CIOM lor Comtort," bottl 2f.4 or 17.8 mllllon, both AIC; .. T,llPC* John. M.O.," 18.7 or 18.1 mllllon, "M-A-8-H," 11.8 or 18.15 mllllon, Ind "Allot." 11.7 or 115.3 mllllon, ... CBS: "Hiii St,_ Blul9." 18 or 14.7 mllllon, NBC; "80 Mlnut11," 17.Q or 14.1 mllllon, CBS, end "Gimme a Break." 18.8 or 13.8 mllllon, NBC. It YOU'RE ADDING ONTO R REMODELING YOUR HOME USC's 6-wMk COUfM guides you through the decisions you'll have to make ... with skilled practitioners answering your specific questions. Location: Costa Mesa Community Center 1845 Park Avenue Dat•e: Mondays June 28. July 12, 19, 26, August 2, 9 ... 7-9:30pm r .. : $120 for series Call (213) 743-531 l. ext. 122 for information & registration, UNIVfltSITY OF SOtm!ERN CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OF C0NTINUING EDUCATION • •?• ii&C f ¥WW # y ; :+ 'J._ .. . . - ,,,,,.,..,,.,, .. $fnkt ..,. ,.,,. -"'* ...,,flt ''""" -r"""1ff • 4 111 ,.,., <• ""'*'' ..,.., ....,flt, ,.,,,,,,,,_ In Fountain Y•ll•y. 16835 Brookhurst .. (714) 962-3312 A PrlV•t• Schqol of Dl1t1nctlon Founded In 1942 Newpclrt Fashion lsl1nd 644-4411 Mr. Elliot's: South Cout Plaza 557~0 Open Dally 9-9; Sunday 10-7 TT~L ® ElliViSioN·· MASTER COMPONENT The heart of i~tellivision~ ... a computer-based system that transforms your color. TY set into .a f~m1ly fun center for games. entertainment, education. Sop~1shcated 16-bit microprocessor produces a wide variety of sound effects music and color. With 2 hand-held controllers, poker 'n bfack1ack cartridge' . . . K mart Sore Price Le ss Fac to ry Re bate· --$1-9- - Your Net Cost Aller Factory Re b a IP It I• LDcil K .rt ' Dygscan chiclCen I , WESTPOR}'~ Corth. (AP) -The Jln&1e could ao like thll: When you're out ot Art 'n' Art, you're out ot chicken. An outfit called Bradford Aaloclates haa come up with Ar( 'n ' Arf, a chic~en-flavored drink for doga. [t'a even 1old in atx.-packa and production la under way. Dick Wall, Thor Peralon and Daphne Walker aay they came up u ~ with the idea two 'Years NO HANDS -Workman Charles Tanner leans as o w hi 1 e a i pp l n.s through a window in the face of steeple clock m a r t i n i a i n M i a a at the First Baptist Church in Hyannis, Mass. W a 1 k e r ' I h o m e i n The face is being removed as part of a $5,000 Darien. They decided it· was time for a soft drink _re_n_ov_a_ti_on_of_t_h_e_1_50_-ye_ar_-_ol_d_cl_ock_. ___ ....., that dogs could aak for ••••••COUPON••••••• byrupne. I l~ 1 _C) I Wall said Bradford _ .JHE · GIFT SHOP WORTH FINDINGI S•YI•• '' to 11% GIT 'f'OUR PRR Gin --.. -.... Orang• Oout OAl~Y PILOT /W9dn • IOIOT COUN FOOD PIOCISSOI . • COOKWAll '==~· & SILVll • VILLllOY & IOCH and POICILAINI De PARIS CHINA • OOIHAM CIYSTAL ~ • TAii.i UNIN • INCOLAY GIFT ITIMS • SHlfflllJ) SILVB • FULL U"I OP KITCHIN UTINSILS 1~5 BABCOCK ST. COSTA MESA 642 .. 2427 X221 + .®•• ~eon ;, f.!d)nferior~ I ~_200.~test!1~ted~r~~! • Interior 0.119" 1! I 3 na.ch St I and he hopes to ave it ... -------------•I Ill 1113 372 11111 ' in stores by the end of I · Newport Beach I the tnonth. -. ~ ay. Jun• 1e. 1982 l ·1 BWllFUTIOI l ~--~-------L--------~--~ I I , I I Our Carpet Suppliers Inform u1 that there I I wlH be a pri~ lncrea" effective• July 11t. I Buy Now And •v• $$ I . OUR FUTURE WHOLESALE COST I I IS_ YOUR COST THROUGH JUNE 30th I I 8Rlt6 .. TIIS AD FOlt A FREE I I SAMPLE OF Tit: WORLD1 BEST CARPET CLEAID I I (No Pur.chue Neceuary) I ---------------- PRICES EVEll LOWER THiii ADVERTISED BY BRUCE I I I . Finish Color Price Village Plank Old English Mellow Brown 2.40 Villa Nova Plank Old English Mellow Brown 2.40 Hadden Hall Charter Mark 11 Mellow Brown 2.85 Herringblock Old English Mellow Brown 2.65 Jeffersonian Old English Mellow Brown 2.75 Cumberland Ill Old English .Mellow Brown 1.65 ! Cumberland Ill Old English Chestnut Brown 1.65 ~~ ~ot1 1~ @nterior~ 'A'-Interior OeJ19f' IJll .... It 557-7883 ~ ..... ® ~;cm 1~ rW11tuior~ lnte,,or 0..1gn l&l-7113 ~.Ji Get The Most FOr Your Money With. Bruce Hardwood Floors Save For A Limited Time Only 25%. Now you can be sure of a beautiful bargain when you select a beaut1luf new Bruce hardwood floor Don't miss this opportunity to save on Americas mos,r popular harcwood floors Savir1gs and selections have never been better V1s1t us soon and ldke advantage of these lantast1c values' SALE ENOS JULY 31st D11tr1buted by Virginia Hardwood Floor• Use ~Ai service when placing your ad .. : . .,Piil 642-5678 . " • During the past 10 years, Irvine residents have wanted a hospital in their city. And yet, Irvine remains the largest city in California without a hospital of its own. Our Gity' s population is growing rapidly, and so is the need for a centrally located hospital. In fact, studies have shqwn that by 1990 Irvine will need 320 hospital beds. People for an Irvine Community Hospital (PICH) is here to help. We're a group of Irvine citizens interested in our health care". That's why we've founqed a non-profit organization called Irvine Medical Center: to build a hospital with an emergency care unit near the center of the city. ' To accomplish this goal,. we need. your help! Call us for a sample letter you can use to show your support of the project. Spr~ad the word- ask your friends to call, too. Get involved·-join PICH. Volunteer to help in our n~w Irvine office. f~r more. information, c;all the PICH office, 857-65llor the Irvine Medical Center, 857-6500. Pich~ ~950 Barranca Parkway Suite 200 Irvine, California 92714 I . . . " . l• .. t . n unnecessaPy war akes a tragic toll Whllo the Mtdeut remains a ter ot war-torn strife, ut least o tiny bettlegound, on th icy, w nd-swept, birren Falkland ds, appears now to have seen cannons fall slleht. Argentina's garrison of an ~c1u.uted 16,000 servicemen has ndered to a British task force t wp dep~yed ln a 74-day paign cafCulated to re-take a itish colony of some 1,800 abitants that Argentina claims its own Malvinas Islands. ) It was a horrifying, costly ·ct. It was a war that never uld have been. In the beginning, back in -March, the entire conflict med as if it could have been the sc ·pt for a Gilbert and Sullivan ·c operetta. Some Argentine p merchants landed on the ds' de pendency of South rgia and hoisted their national But then at the beginning of A ril, Argentine military forces inJaded the Falk.lands and after a b'ief skirmish with an u~dermanned British garrison, c~t_u£ed the capital of Port S~ey. • Britain reacted swiftly and surely, assembling a task force w~ more than 5.000 fighting men al 100 ships and carrier-borne w planes and set sail amid cheers Cr m the home folks for a bc(ltleground more tha n 8,000 maes away.· • When the war zone was re+ched, any resemblance to comic- Opt?retta vanis hed forever. First, the Argentine cruiser Gen . • • Belgrano WU l\U\k by a Britiah torpedo, wlth lOll of .Ufe. Then the (ull reality came home to the Brltlah when one of their ~rlied frigates, HMS S h e f he 1 d , was at ruck by Argentine warplanes, burned, and sank. Again, with loss of life. Meanwhile, all efforts at diplomatic solution failed. The United States' efforts were fruitless. The United Nations seemed absolutely helpless. . And' what was the net result? The British have their frigid rock islands back today. By their own most recent account, British forces suffered 220 servicemen killed, four warships lost, an undisclosed number of merchant s eamen dead, and an also undisclosed number of Harrier jets and helicopters lost. And for the Argentines? A . disastrous military campaign, apparently prompted by a desire to divert .attention from serious economic difficulties at home to capture the rocks that had been a British colony since 1833. Argentine military dead are expected_tg.exceed 750 men with additionanOs.ses of one cruiser and more than 100 aircraft. When the fighting was over, one British news correspondent looked over the 15,000 Argentine servicemen who had surrendered and their huge s-tockpile of · weapons and. ammunition and commented: "We were incredibly lucky." Those who are not going home were not so fortunate. ll7 as canal a bargain? Now that the P eriphe ral C anal has been defeated . and along with i t the built-in protections of the wild r ivers ·of Northern C a lifornia. the Californi a Farm Bureau Federation, which was one of the chief opponents of Proposition 9, has come forth to mge the state to "t..hink boldly in terms of developing water." A spok@sman for the bureau admits, as had been suggested\ previously, that farm opposition to the measure did not stem from "problems with the P eripperal Catlal" but rathe r with provisions in the proposition that wo1,.1ld have locked out futu re wat e r development of the north coast rivers. With t hat b a rri e r to potentially cheap farm water out o f the way, the Farm Bureau spokesman sa ys an e fficient system to take water across the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta sun is needed, "whether it uses present channels or a new•canal." . The Farm Bureau. he adds, now is ready to sit down with all interested parties to map out a new strategy for completion of the State Water Project. 'Fhe project, it is suggested, could take another 20 years. Meanwhile, a study conducted at UC Riverside predicts California' water prices may go up 70 percent in the next 15 years principally because water rates are tied to the cost of energy needed for pumping and that cost could quadruple by 1995. The only answer to soaring w a ter costs, say university· economists, will be strict voluntary con servation on the part of consumers, and possible changes to agricultural crops which require less water, but have a higher value -and hence could lead to higher food prices. In short, the long-range water outlook, at least for the Southland, is hot encouraging. The day may come when we will look back on the "too costly" Peripheral Canal package as a bargain that was missed. Logical nanie for center. Perhaps there are good grounds for some settling down now on a permanent name for the future $59 million Orange County performing arts music center that will be built in Costa Mesa's South Coast Plai.a Town Center. The complex deserves a name unique unto itself and fitting of its development heritage~ :Earlier this year, the center's board of trustees shuffled the name from Orange County Music Center to the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The thinking here was that citizen patrons might confuse the future theater for ballet, opera, symphony and other performances with the nearby Los Angeles Music C.enter. This is possibly so, but the current name might also cause confusion with all kinds of "cdnters,. that exist in Southern California. The trustees, in fact, may have overlooked a name that would be both distin'Ctiv'e and deferved for the new cultural ~· · When dvic leaden who were pu1blng for the music center development conducted an exl\austive site search, they ev~ntually turned to the Segerstrom family of Costa Mesa. The family donated five acres of land. When music center supporters needed early contributions to induce other large contributioris, the Segerstrom family pledged $6 million. As a result of the significant early support and generosity of the Segerstroms, gifts to build the new complex total ll)Ore than $23 million so far. In addition to the vital earl>; support of the music center, it might well be noted that the Segerstrom family has had an enormous impact on the growth and development of Costa Mesa in a fashion that has benefited wider areas of Orange Cowity and the Orange Coast, and has drawn natiO(Ul). recognition to our region. Washington has its Kennedy Center. Los Angeles has the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Orange County should name Its new ccJmplex for' the performing arts the Segerstrom Center. · It would be a mo.t fit\lng tribute to the f~lly that has contributed so much Ito the .growth, development, and future cuJ.tural heritage of Orange County. f ORANGE COAST ~Uy Pilat Thomas P. H•ley Pub II sher Thot'MS A. Murpllln• Editor .._, .......... ., .. , el ,,,. , ..... Ut Wnt .. , :\I c..i• Mew ~· t.,,..~, .. le• w c.oti.Meu t 4•7'1ft . . ·t Barbara Krelbfd• Edilorfal Page Editor J08· ... ~,. PLEASE;. Voters ·overrule lawmakers· (. LOS ANGELFS -"There has never been anything like it.'.' said Ed Salzman, the editor of the California .Journal. of last week's election results in his state. Salzman, who is careful with words, wasn't talking aoout candidates. He was talking about referendums. It was interesting to catch up with the political fates of such as Jerry Brown, Tom Bradley, Pete Wilson and George Deuk:me~. But it was historic that the primary voters bverruled, by mass vote, four actions of the state Legislature. THE VOTERS, by almost a 2-to-1 margin, threw out the multlbillion-dollar state plan to build a ca.nal to carry water from the delta lan·ds between San Francisco and Sacramento down to the populated,. irrigated deserts of Los Angeles and San Diego. Then, in three separate votes, again by wide margins, the voters threw out stat e reapportionment plans ·-for the Assembly and Senate, and for Congress -which the Legislature had approved. Leaving aside the political factors that cau'sed those results, the votes themselves were extraordinary. In California, which is institutionally the most democrat.le of the 50 states, there had not been a referendum challenge tD a state law in 30 years. Last week, there were those four - all successfill. And there were eight initiatives -questiqns decided by the voters after being put on the ~ot by petition -decided the same day. Voters ordered the state to do such things, ge nerally conservative things. as eliminate inheritance an<l gjft. taxes and build more prisons. Those referenduma and initiatives were among more than 50 that will be RICHARD REIVES decided across the country this year. Most of the votes, of course, will be in November. . Voters five months from now will decide wh e ther, or unde r what conditions and circumstances, nuclear power plants c an be built in Massachusetts and Maine. There will be "bottle bills" -initiatives that would mandate deposits on soda and · beer bottles -in at least three states. Four states or more will consider advisory initiatives on the nuclear weapons freeze. California will vote on an interesting initiative to limit the number of handguns allowed in the state. In Montana, there will probably be an initiative requiring corporations to provide some compensation if they close or move plants employing 50 or more people. That number of ballot questions, more than 50, compares with 10 that were on staie ballots in 1968. There seems to be a steady movement toward direct democrat}' over the past decade or so. S i nce 1970, three states (Illinois, Wybming and Florida) plus the District of Columbia have added some sort of initiative or referendum procedure to their constitutions -which means 23 states plus the District now have aome mechanism of lawmaking by direct vote. HARD TIMES may have something to do with all that. First authoriz.ed in South Dakota in 1898, the use of initiative peaked during the Depression -in 1934 there were 75 questions on state ballots. ''There are several reasons for more interest in initiatives and referendums now," said David Schmidt, editor of "Initiative News Report," a newsletter published in Washington. "But the biggest one has to be decreasing confidence in government and in other big institutions. People are.more inclined now to try to do it themselves. And the more voter initiative is used, the more people will become aware of it. 0nce it gets started, it could keep growing." it could. [t probably will. A lot of people are afraid of initiative and referendum -direct democracy is "mob rule" to many -but the vo~rs of California were not among them last Tuesday. In California, the people spoke for themselves, and lawmakers will have to do what they were told. Why do state senators need badges? Every little boy, at one time or another, yearns for a police badge. Some fulfill those dreams by becoming pol.icemen when they grow up. Others wangle honorary "deputy" badges. But California's state aenators have suddenly bl08S0med out with their own badges. And nothing shabby about them either. The custom made specially designed shields are of gold. The badges, embossed with their names and senatorial clliftricta, alao have the word "senator" and the Great Seal of California along with a replica of a grizzly bear. Even so they closely resemble the shields U8ed by many police agencies. SINCE SENATORS have been without badges for 122 years, the expenditure of state funds for such a purpcte at a Ume when the legislators are havtng difficulties finding the money for essential services and operations, might lll!em a whlml1cal waste. But not according to Mel Aaaagai, the senate's prea agent. Accord~ to him the badges were obtained for 'leCW'ity purpoees." Just bow the pcmemlon of a badge will make the aenatora more eecure was not explatned but A..agaJ did say they p~ed the members with "a quick unforgeable ldent.Ulcation." Thatexplanadon lgnores the fact the senators elready hwve official identification cards bearing their photo~aphs and produced at far less cost than the badges. Assagai was uncertain as to the price tag of the IARl WATERS badges but custom made badges of the type purchase ranged from $50 tD $150 depending upon the quality. Perhaps the reason nearest the truth as to the desire of the senators to have badges was that stated by Senator Ollie Speraw who opposed their purchase. "They are intended to influence law enforcement officers," he said. _,,. - Recalling that quite a number of legislatDrs have made headlines in the past by being nabbed for drunken driving or exceeding the 55 mph speed limit, Speraw could be right. But lf that was the motivation the .enaton may be in for some surprises if they flash their badses under such circwnstances. For many cops are just as quick tD Rive a fellow officer a ticket as anyone else. And even those who are inclined to give a buddy a break are incensed at those who attempt to influence them with badges to which they are not entitled. -THIS RAISES the question of the propriety of the senate badges. Since senators are not peace officers they are not entitled to badges which resemble peace officer shields. That is the .clear intent of Section 538d' of the Penal Code which reads: "Any person who willfully exhibits ... any badge .-.. which falsely purports to be authoriz.ed for the use of one who by law is given the authority of a peace officer, or which ao resembles the authoriz.ed badge ... of a peace officer as would deceive an ordinary reasonable person into , believing that it is authorized . . . is guilty ol a misdemeanor." It is hard to see how the senators can get around that. They cannot pass a law to make themselves peace officers for that would breach the constitutional separation of the executive and legislative branches of government. And to amend the law to pennit badges for other than peace officers would open up another equally bad can of wonns. They should forget the badges. put them into discard before aomeone sues them for improper spending of state funds. Specialization contrary to humal! na'ture I remember when one of my sons was still in pu_berty, he was aaked that perennial question, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" He reflected for a while, and then said, "I want to be a •kin div~ IYlllY 111111 ~. 1Ummer, a teaephofte lineman ln spring and f~ and a .::lentiat in the winter." Amusine. 1 aapp0ee, that a Utile boy wanted 10 many dlvene vot!ational Uve1. Yet, in some way.· there la botli a phyalcal and a psychological truth embodied ln this childish dream that mmt of us have been forofld to ignore or eev~~preaa in our adult lives. S don la at the heart of our ~o ern industrial and commercial society. A. Adam Smith told us two centuries ..,_ lt la IPldaliution that makes J>l'OIJ'ell pml6ble, that briQO pro1perily, that olJa the 1moothfy wh.lrrine wheeJI o'. dvOJJadon. The COit of this, bowewr, la otten <1uJte hlih. •ped.aily ln termt of \he adult male personality. For there are deep and permanent needs in our nature that canno\ be satisfied by one kind of work -everr by the kind of work we moat enjoy doing and do best. A part of us remains submerged; usually, to make a bad pun, the skin diver part. This is no doubt why ao many men pursue their hobbies with fanatical devotion, from gardeni1'8 to woodworking to hu.nUng and fishing and tinkering with motol"ll. The office, the factory, the laboratory, gratify only one upect of the penonality, lf they gratify ua at all. For man ls a generalist by na:ure, U a specialist by neceaity • h was not toolilh for my son to have wanted theae inoompadble·careen; it wu mel"ely impractical ln our IOdal and economic system. But any lad in1tJncUvely know• that his body requires the exercbe the llnemt.n ,eta. that bis apUit needl the dW.J.ena9 faclna the sk1n aiver, even thouah hla m1nd Is atinCWld to the larply teaenwy Ufe of the ldend91. ~·.!..-.-. A ...... I*'\ ol aw urban -1tellt. and "crTme and dellnquency, I am pedUtllCW. IPriftCI from the dwtndUna oPl>Ol1W\lty to ,....._ vital powen ln • t.hO.modem mechanbed world. to make a .. dece'nt livlrig out o! it, and to be respected for it -unless you happen to be a star athlete, which many men secretly (or openly) yearn tO be. Our overall emphula on sportll and physical feat.a is a symbol of~ seme of deprivation we feel. u we ~ more mechanued, more a~ialized, more urbanlzed't more confined to roud.ne. Adam Smith feared It might tUm UI into brutes; 10 far, it has only transformed ut Into jogaers. Tboee who defeated the Peripheral Canal lhould be &he ant to -their water lf It c:iomm to tblt -and, they lhould pay for the lltemadve, wbatevw itls. ....... , ............ _......_. ............ . _ _..,, ................. J I ....... ... ,.... ... ......,, .... C)eily ~ , J '1 .. PROMOTED -A . Erneit Fl tzgerald, flred from the Air Force in 1969 tori leaking the $2 billion overrun on transport planes, has been promoted and given $200,000 for legal fees as a settlement of his suit over e ouster. GM trucks recalled DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. says it's recalling about 13,000 of its 1981 and 1982 Chevrolet a nd GMC trucks to correct a poeaible steering problem that could cause drivers to lose control of the vehicles. The nation's No. 1 automaker said it is notifying the owners of the heavy-and mediwn- duty trucks and school buses to bring the vehicles in to dealers for inspection of the steering asaemblles. GM spokesman Harold J ackaon said the recall was prompted by an incident in which one of the trucks went out of control, ran off the road and into a field. No one was hurt and the truck was not damaged in the incident, Jacl&n said. He said the incorrect at.eel may have been uaed to make th~ steering shaft yokes u8ed in some of the recalled vehicles, which could cause the , failure of welds holding the yokes -to-the steering shafts. GM deal ers will inspect the vehicles and replace the yokes, if n~. at no coet to the" vehicles' owners, Jackson sai d . The inspection takes about 15 minutes and replacement of the ~can take up to about three ~ours, he added. Chamber - pztesident to speak · Rick Van Alstine, president of the Laguna Niguel Chamber of Commerce, will be the speaker at the Kiwanis Club meeting July 1 at the Mission Vi ejo Country Club. Van Alstine will di8cuaa the formation of the new chamber, goals set at the first planning conference and future events. The chambe r , in existence less than six months, has more than 150 members. For information, call Carole Bowman at 496-3300 or C.G. Forrest at 496-1187. _ Prints required SACRAMENTO (AP) -'nlumbprinta will be mandatory , not voluntary, on California driven' licenses laued after June 30. Doria Alexia, director of motor vehiclee, laid a law require• the thumbprint or a flnaerprlnt, U the tbu.mt. are mJllinc, on all ltc'ln••• and kleD°dflcltk«t cards. JACQUES 'DESIGNER COLLECTION' SUNGLASSES REG. 10.00 TO 14.00 YOUI CHOICI 699 YOUR CHOICE Men', or ladies' plastic high fashion sun· glon41s with plastic or metol frames & optica l q uality gradient lenses. Sa ve big! STUART HALL '...-.lllw.....!O!!!FFICE SUPPLIES IEG. 1.99 99c. Sttiort Holl quality. fOf' home or office. -~-... -----. . " Or1ng1 COUt DAILY PILOTIWedMlday, June 18,. 1912 CELEBRATING OUR 3RD WEEK BIRTHDAY SALE VINYL SO"SIDE LUGGAGE ... 24" JI. TOTI. ••• 'VllMAM. 14•• Ill. II." MG. "·" 2 AMllY MlMAN Wint wwms. 24•• .... "·" Fashion right Brown or Blue. Refflforced handles. AYAIUIU M •O l TtlllITT STOIU COM,All TO TMOSE '8.LING IN Din. 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' I ' .,----------·REDEEM THIS COUPON ·----------1i OF OHIO® I r;-A~E &-· -: -We!I ~~you. t••t• of old..ilme:.countrygoodoe~™ : SOuth Coast Plaza With $5.00 P,urchase I : O~ Dally' 'ti.I 9 p.m. Sat. 'tll 8 p.m.; Sun. 12·5 M (i) ~ Offer good at South Coat Plaza etore only I '11'11~·11'1 rif~,. ~pon exp:=..:io: rrom thl• , : • Phone 540-8991 L--------------~----------~···--···------1 . /Stainless Steel Cheese Spreader .. f • • . CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82 ee 87 Sylve1ter Stallone wants ''Rocky" to come true. He's . manasins hea¥yweish.• boxer Lee Canalito. Page BS.. .. LOOKING BACKWARD DEPT. -Ten yean afo' Thuraday, there was this bunaled two-bit burglary a a Washington D.C. complex tnat ended up causing a considerable national sW:. They called it Watergate, named after the bullding involved. It houaed Dem7ocr tic heaqquarters. • Can it be possible that that scandal was an entire decade ago? Yes, indeed it was that far back. Even your faithful · ~ corrf1.spondent got the 4 tables turned on him ,....f yesterday, when staff . ~'r writer Rachelle Hall of the TOM MORPHINE ~ ' Fullerton News Tribune· " '~ called up for an interview. Rachelle said she'd been assigned to find out if creaky old news types who'd been around Orange County for awhile thought Watergate still has a political impact here. WELL, IT DEPENDS maybe on who you talk to. If you happen to speak to one of our newest voters, you have to remember that they were only eight years old when Watergate broke into headlines. . · President Nixon's Western White ·House was right downooast at San Clemente at the time, so there were ·a lot of Watergate ~~ ~d goings. · The late Martha Mitchell, wife of the then-Attorney Ge,leral John Mitchell, who 8lso got swept up in the Watergate awfulness probably turned i~ the mos\ memorable perfo~ce along our coastline at the tim~. MARTHA WAS KNOWN to act up and sheot off her lip · from time to time. Apparently Mrs. Mitchell learned that things were n9t all well for her hubby in the administration role in Watergate. As a result, ahe was reportedly saying some nasty things about Mr. Nixon. John Ebrlichman, and John and M.artba Mirchell . •I . Next thing anybody knew, Martha was making a famous midnight phone call from the Newporter Inn in , Newport Beach to UPl's Helen Thomas in Washington, claiming she was being held prisoner in a hotel suite here. The phone went dead at mid;-ronversation. It was alleged that some operatives caring for Martha pulled the wires.~ WE WERE FORTUNATE to have a reporter on staff at the time named John Valterza, who had some i.Dside lines of communication with personnel infide the hotel. ~ pretty_~cy details emerged. . I As the Water'gate scandal and Nixon's Plumbers and White House tapes with blank spaces and expletiv>es deleted all began to emerge, more and more details linking Watergate to our coastal region surfaced. · Qne prominent Newport Beach attorney who was cloee to Nixon assertedly exchanged bags filled with C8$h with another GOP-administration type operative on a hotel parking lot near Orange County Airport. Election Dar changes soug~t . Huntington wants November, . fl. l\OBERT BAltUR in June while Larin• Beach if ':i'J~n~~ Beach lcuy h~w!=:~ Jfi11idaia 18y offictal1 have their druthera, there are a couple of good municipal electionl will be held arsumenta apinat conUnuina to in November -not April u they hold the election in April. are at preeent or in J~ 81 One ta coat. Lau Afrll'• prevloualy oont.emplatecl. .., . Clty voters will vote on the municiea1 election cos . tax- pomble elecUon dat.e changett on payers •52,000. An election in ral hallo this ber November, becaute it la tied to th~ther ar!nae =ti~ the general ballot, la expected to -Newport BeaCh and -Costa <Xl8t be~een $9,000 and $14,000 .. Mesa -have changed their Another la low ~t. Only elections ·to November. And about 11.9 percent.~f. H~tington Fountain Valley ta looking into 1 Beach's 91,000 reiif,atered voten chaftifng the date from April ·~ returned their balfota in April. A either June or November after. a~uch higher turnout is expected turnout of 14 percent last April. in November. The Irvine city election is held Shirley Deaton, de puty • . Non-profit' agencies get tips on f nrids A countywide anti-poverty organization is offering workshops this summer to help financially-strapped non-profit agencies learn how to turn "profits. · Small-time profit-making has been a staple of many non-profit groups for years. Girl Scout cookies are an example. So are thrift stores. But participants in these _workshops will be encouraged to establish larger operations and even to manufacture products, such as home insulation, that later would be used in programs to serve the needy, sai~ Marge Pritchard, training manager for the Community Development Couqcil. • . · Better known recently for its efforts in distributing 1urplua 1overnment cheese jn Orange Coun~. the council la ,~ the workshops ln conjunction with the Delta Jn1dtute, a . business Consulting firm. Many local non-profit social eervk:es agencies fonnerly relied for at least partial funding from local government., btri they have searched for new lourcea as public funds have bii1on1e ecarce. Ms.· Pritchard -.id the profit- making approach la new \o Orange County but ii working Registration of mo-peds due July 1 Effective July l , all mo-peds, including those pre'Viously registered as bicycles, must be reptered aa mo-peda with the Department of Motor Vehicles. The July 1 deadline is the third of three aet down by legiaJation authored by Sen. James R. Milla, Chula Vista, in the 1981 1e1aion. The others required o~n~ra oJ mo-p.eda puicliued after. July 1, 1981 to repter them within five days of purchase and those purchased before th'at date had until Jan. l, • 1982 to regilter. elsewhere. Sh~ said J\fn Dodson, senior consultant for the institute, recently h elp ed a Vietnamese agency in Los Angeles open a d ry .cleaniQg business. These ventures, she added, must conform to a ll state regulations governing non-profit organizations. Two series of three workshops will be offered. All will meet at the council office, 1440 E. First St. in Santa Ana. The first session on becoming self-supporting wlll include workshops on June 18, July 15 and Aug. 12. The second, on agency development, will· have cliMIJes on June 24, July 29 and Aug. 5. · The all-day workshops tmd follow-up consultations are intended for directors, 'bQard memben and by fund-raisers. Fees are $50 per i>el"90Jl for a eerles or $20 per workabop. lnten!ltted penona .can enroll by ca1lln,r Ma. Pritchard at the coundl office, ..547-6801.. ., not Apr11 or June • I ' . . retriltrar of voters, says the June y reiiatered voter. pr1mery ballots are far more The Huntlngton Beach City confusing and complicated aa Council previously had well aa more coetly. · considered ·asking the vot.en to Mn .. Deaton aa=ere are 133 -:hange the election date to June ballot groups th County. when the coet la about 25 oenta When they are multip by the per regtatered voter. six parties in the ptjmary -But that was ch~nged to 0 e m o c J' a t , R e p u b 1 i c a n , November last week becauae of Llbertar;tan, Peace and Freedom coat and low turnout and a and non-partisan -it increalee co n c e r n b r o u g h t u p by the total to 798 ballot aroups._ Councilwoman Ruth Bailey The COit aavtng in November about the ctty budget . cornea because tlte ballots are She said if elections were held rela.~vely simple, she says. in June, new officials wouldn't If the election is changed to be in office long enough ~ November in Huntington .&.ch, · aertous study to the city t the <Xl8t ls expected to range which must be approved !y J y between 10 and 15 cents per 1. · Dmllf .......... " '-.... DUCKING THE ISSUE -Dr. Everett Olenick of Newport Beach lifts his dinghy t.o reveal a duck sitting 0~1 a nest of eggs. The ophthalmologist won't be rowing for a few weeks until the egp hatch. John Ehrlichman, another of the key Watergate fig- ures who wrote a book, allegedly hid out on Newport's Harbor Island during part of the rne.y affair. DMV -Director Doria VT Alexia-- said the registration oomiata of t'he one-time iaauance of a diat1nctive liceme plate. and an identification card for a $5 fee. ---NEWPORT TEAM -Gearing up for next week's Youth Safety Run in Newport Beach are (from left) Bill Leslie and Vern Maxey from University Olds, Nancy RU88ell, Mayor -~Jackie Heather, Danette Goldsmith and Maria Jiminez. Behind the car are officers Stall Bressler, Doug Kiner, Dave Petersen and ~ It was truly difficult in the tumult of Watergate to sort out fact from fiction, truth from fancy. There ii no umual registration fee, but there is a fee of $5 for application for a transfer of ownership. There Ls also a duplicate ID card fee of $7 and a aubstitut.e plat.e fee of $7. ONE KEY WATERGATE· figure met with several of our staff members at a secret lunch to complain about "bad headlines" he'd been drawjng in' this sterling .journal. The baaic purpo.e of mo-ped registration la to provide a centralized owner information file as an aid· in law enforcement. He looked us all straight in the eyeballs and declared he~d done nothing wrong and had nothing to be ashamed of. 1 ·believed him. · Two weeks later, he copped out to Waterate-related charges. . -Coastline I offers class . . . . • • •• 'Love Boat' theme 1n pa1nt1ng . eo.tline ~ wJD_o_Uer . . ~ ~ -of charity party ---eiltlt-Week cl.-in palntina on Wednmdaya, beednnina June 23, at the Robinwood Learnln1 Center, 5172 Mcll'adden Ave., ~untinltOn a.ch. play pmea includJ.nl tJ&n&o, 21, The I BID111 will~ held from dice tables .net roulette. Prooeedl 9 a.m. to noon. lnltructol' Ken ao to die Meclial Center, IUd an 8eford wt11 tlMCh ttudmta how awcill8ry ll'OUP ~· to ~ a DlindnC throuah Hilh polnt-ot ~ 18 a the UH of ll1ht, 1hadow, =~';,;. = ::.::: ~ :s...: ..... ,_far ~=~'°-=--~-~~ .._In ~ ... In .................... .. plrlt ot "" •h•••;""Hlil • 9-; ...,. la' Mm • lhl •PokHman for &he auxlUUJ ... --11110•111rsd111 mlUftj ,._.. . Caur'-~oa.. Bradley. ..,-• .,._ .Newport set_: to host car safety run • ' •ANN LANDERS •HERB CAEN •HOROSCOPE • Collllil unity's high abortion figures e~lained · DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently a reader who signed herself "Stunned in Yakima" said she waa abeolutely ahocked to read that the highest abortion rate ln the United States was recorded in Iowa City, Iowa, according to the Alan Outtmacher Institute. The figure was 150 abortions for every 1,000 women of reproductive age. By contrast, the comparable figure was 33 in Chicago. You replied , "I hope you're not standing on one foot waiting, because I don't have the foggiest notion why Iowa City emerged at the top of the list." You then said, "A state university is in Iowa City, which means there is an unusually ~ge concentration of females of child-bearing age in that city. But Chicago has several large campuses, and it has less than one-third as many." Your closing line, "I am baffled, nonplussed and without a clue. Any answers out there?" How about it, Annie? Did anyone come up with anything? -Al.SO STUNNED IN I DAVENPORT +. DEAR ALSO: Several responses were .. • ,, .. recleved, but moat of them were too long, too complicated, or too angry and not . aufflclently factual. Tbe beat letter waa from Jane Murray, 4lrector of communlcatlon1 and develof meot for tbe Guumacber lnatltute. Here 1 an edited version. (l did the editing). DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am replying to your appeal for an explanation for the curiously high rate of abortion ir\ Iowa City. It is important to understand that the abortion rate we are referring to represents the NUMBER of abortions that occurred in a particular area, NOT the number of residents who have obtained an abortion. The inflated abortion occurrence rate in Iowa City d oes NOT imply that local residents are obtaining more abortions than ' women in other parts of the country, but rather reflects the number of women who must travel f rom outside the area to obtain needed services. There is not a high abortion rate in Iowa City, but rather a lack of adequate Milwaukee. Anne tte has Hodgkin's disease, a progressive enlargement of the lymph system. Looking on are her pastor, the ~v. F .L. Taylor (left) and a sch OC!l offi~. Gemini learns ·I 1 ~ f bursday, June 17 • ' ARIES (March 21 -April 19): You'll encounter challenges, you'll have add ed r:.[ponsibility and chances for promotion, . eward wiV multiply. Emphasis on creativity ressure, special collection and increased com~ potential. Capricorn plays important les. • TAURUS (April 20-May 20): P eople ~nse that you can provide what they need. J>et:nands are made, popularity increases_. a )'t'ider a'udience is assured. You perceive 1>¥blic pulse -you could be called upon to fl~gotiate crjsis between special interest pups. .. ""' ~ GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Secret is revealed, area that had been shrouded in tery receives benefit of greater light. ute may have to be settled in court. eek files, be aware of source material and erify reliability of potential witness. ~ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Follow jhrough on hunch, rely on first impressions, 1ealize that you actually gain by sharing ~owledge. Capricorn, Aquarius and other Cancer figure promine ntly . mantic involvement lends change of pace r and spice to life. ' LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Project is '°111Pleted, you are ready for next phase, Juperior could outline new assignment. Key ow is diversification; look beyond the tnimecHate, check travel agent and renew tacta at distance or overaeas. • T HE PAST IS S UING; THE PMSENT ~DEBT, &v'T" MCANWHU,.r TMK ""•M..,,-t •• MeafNe THll ~. HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Study Leo message for valuable hint. Emphasis on communication, publishing. language , philosophical concepts and a possible spiritual revelation. You'll become more familiar with abstract principles of justice. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Utilize ability to balance, analyze, to piece together bits of information and to arrive at complete story. Foc4s on public relations, settlement of firumcial dispute and a romantic link. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go slow, be diplomatic, maintain low profile and make intelligent concession to loved one. Focus on home, legal affairs and adjustments based on acquisition of vital information. Libra plays significant role. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2~-Dec. 21): Not wise to delay basic decisions -chores must be completed, services defined and duties assigned. See places, people in realistic light. Others cannot fool you. but you can fall victim to self-deception. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Exchange ldeaa in vigorous manner~· fend beliefs, accept responsibility and acq to involvement in eerioua relationahJp. Y '11 be given additional authQrity and financial prospects will be brighter as result. AQUARij.JS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Property eettlement could be featured. You learn where you stand in connection with lone-ranee plans. F.mph.uil on completion, lncrea~ prestige and opportunU1 for promoUon. Met, Leo, Libra penon1 ltcure prominently. I I PllCBI (Feb. U-March 20): New oonwet leedl co thort jownty. a.dw Julcll - flow, _you obc.aln fr"h hope. rocu1 on wrmtWty,_ humor, .._..,it loal.i llDIMty anc1 pcllllble <anmmt ~vtns taldrtl ot ..,... Md mAnar ~. , abortion services being offered in th& adjacent areaa. Iowa City la filling the need . Actually, Iowa aty rankl only 98th among all the 306 metropolitan areas in the country in terms of the abeolute number of abortions provided. I hop e thi s cleara up the misunderstanding. -SINCERELY YOURS, JANE MURRAY DEAR JMjE: It certalllly doe1. Tlumk you for writing. DEAR ANN .. LANDERS: Our local paper printed an obituary of a 71-year-old bartender. The following appeared: "Survivors include his wife, ----, his companion, ----, a son, ----. a brother, ----," etc., down to great-grandchildren. . I have never heard of a newspaper including the name of a man's "companion." What do you· think of this? -NORTHERN CALIFORNIA READER DEAR READER: I think lt la moat , ANN WIDllS. anaaaal, etpeclally 11nce the man baa a living wile. Let u1 be charitable, however, and auame tile "companion" waa a llOaaekeeper-oane. CONFIDENTIAL to It's Bell oa tbe Grocery Blll: I'm not surpriaed. Let his new romance feed bla face. Too bad fOU didn't write to me 10 dozen eggs and 15 'pounds of bacon sooner. Don't get burned by a "line" that'i too hot to handle. Play it cool wiCh Ann Landers' guide to "Necking and Petting - What Are the Limits?" Send your request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611 , enclosing 50 cents and a long, stamped, self-add~ envelope. . I He's dropping names ., OUR LATE SPRING housecleaning drive continues! A few days ago we disposed of Namephreaks Forever, thereby clearing one corner of our desk (ao long, Dr. Les Grinspoon, cocaine expert). Now for a clean sweep, a final fling at Cuuuute Firm Names. The last batch: DECENT EXPOSURE, a public relations firm in Berkeley (Michael D. O'Reilley). The Ash Backward Chimney Service ·in Vacaville (Michael. Kramer). A likker store OI) 101 in Novato called Booze R Us (Jessica Hamlin). Near Seattle, ''The Glass Doctor -I Fix Panes" (Lenny Barton). Food Man Chew, a Chinese restaurant in Oceanside (Dick Arnolds). A chimney sweep firm in French Gulch called Flue Season (Frances Coleberd.). The Hernia Hauling Co. in Mendocino, wh~ slogan is "U Can Truss Us" (Christine Rouse). Uprisings, a Berkeley bakery (Virginia Leach). Something's Fishy Here, a sushi bar in Santa Barbara (Den)'R Fenelon). And - finally, all out. end of the lines! -a furniture store on Ashby in Berkeley called Oakey Doa.key (Janet Gore). NOT THAT I'M THROUGH forever with contests or collections. We ran off a list of well-punned .advertising slogans recently ("Next To Myself I-.Like BVD Best"), and that reminded Florence Olian of a great beer billboard. for the appropriate month in St. Louis: ''Thirsty Days Has Sept.ember." And I ~member an early massage parlor here that advertised ''The Paws That Refresh" ... Latest gimmick among local food fadsters. "Starch Blocker" pills -take two a day and eat all the pasta you want without gaining weight. Supposedly. Too soon to discover the side effects, but when your blood turns to tomato sauce, quit ... JOSEPHINE'S, the restaurant on Presidio near Geary, opposite the Muni car barn, is d edicated to the memory of Josephine Baker. You knew that. Driving West along Geary to Josephine's, you !>8-98 ·~ HERB MEN OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Baker and then Lyon before arriving at Presidio. Joeephine Baker was married to French financier J ean Lyon. You knew that too? RANDUMB THOUGHTS: Just when U .S . pos tage s ta mps w ere improving, artistically and also gummily, along comes the new blue -and-white "Consumer Education" 20-<:enter. These are so bad they make S & H Green Stamps look suitable for framing ... Nevertheless, the Postal Service is ok8y. I get more mail than I know what to do with and most of it arrives in due time without postage due. I CAN'T REMEMBER reading a story about a blind wine-tasting. in which the Fr.ench product beat out California's. Something fishy he~. I'm not suggesting bribery and payoffs among the wine experts. but the French still know how to make ~t wine and are entitled to raise an eyebrow ..:_ even two -when a Gallo Hearty Burgundy beats out a Romanee Conti . . . A wine expert is a guy who can tell a vin rose from a mouthwas h . No m a tter what the commercials say, that is NOT pronounced "Vinn Rozay." LAST ITEM, on e hopes, on the embarrassing auction of Bing Crosby memorabilia. Whe n KPIX 's Dave McEl.hatton asked Bing's son, Gary, if he planned to bid on any of the items, Gary replied, ''Only one -the studded leather belt that he used during the disciplinary days. My brothers and I plait to buy it and burn it." More than old junk is coming out of the Crosby closet. GOIEN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF East· West vulnerable. South dealt. · NORTH • J1076 ~1 <> Q82 •AK9U WEST EAST +9 •2 Ii? 6 0 ~ AQJI09852 <> AltJ916543 <> 10 • V.W • 86Z SOUTH + AltQ85U ~It o v.w • QJ1015 The bidding: s .. ~ Wfft N_.,. Eut l . 5 0 ow. , ... 6+PU1PU1PU1 O~nln1 lead: Three of c:::i. Moet tournament handa are computer dealt. which h11 led to a common com· plaint. from pl&yere. They claim that. comput.en pro- duce welrd dl1trlbutlona. To a certain ext.tnt, they ml1hl be COl'l"fft, The dMl1 art "dJf. feren&" from tboM d .. Jt. b7 band, but o~&aM &hey are t.nal1 ra when haDcl· dealt ..... .,. ..... u4 , ... , ._,.. ...,.., UM t....,_Ucal ~·~· •• .... ,...., v ........ ,, Knockout Team Champion· ship, which t!),tr,A(iBL in its wisdom · sche duled ·for Niagara FaJls last March, the boards were dealt by hand. This is one of those hands and it is far wilder than anything we have seen pro- duced by a computer. North· South were the veteran North American interna· tionl iat.a Edg~r Kaplan of New York and Norman Kay or Philadelphia. East and West respectively were Ron Von der Porten and Kyle Larsen of San Francisco, one of the country's premier part.nerahips. With a nine·, an eight· and a eeven-card auit a.round the did indeed have a nine-card suit, twelve of his cards were known, for he was marked with three heart.a. Was West's remaining card a spade or a club'l H it was a club. Von der Porten saw little chance to defeat the contract. So at trick two he shifted to a club. West ruf· fed for a very satisfying result. At the other table Sidney Lazard of New Orleans became declarer at six clubs. That con t r a ct was unbeat.able. t.able, the bidding reached R•ltlter brld1e el•lt• the bi1b plateau in abort .., • .,..._t UM eeu1try .. time. Not aurprtalngly, Kay &a.. fw411' ....... ,__.t. dld not Nli1h the proapeet of 0. ... , k..., -• ..... ,... defending five diamond• dH'tT Clilarle1 G•r••'• doubled, and hia atx apadN "f .. r·Oaal lrlqe" wlll w11 a reaaonable alto~. ~ 1• die w....-.1 ... Luten led th• thfff or cacda .. tW. ......... ... he&rtl. Von .. r Port.en ,..,.. dell ,... &Mt .,..,.. .. tM with th ace to fell the kln1. nn 1er ..... ,,.. .... ~ ..... Obflouely, W•t had to have Pw • -., ... a _....., • ver7 lo111dla1Hnd 1ult to .... ti.fl c. ~- leap ~'ht flo·level 0 .. 1." cau •f '"' vulWlile;aDcl thatwuoo•· •••fl fU, P.O. 1-. *· ._. "1 tM fie& Ult& Iii dM1 N ....... N.J • .,.._ awr. M& leM W...,11.att. -It W __ -~_.....,_,.o, " ........ ............. w .uw .. , .......... - r • 1 I - r. I ·I F&nta~y concert luntel Station tr.iggertS. search for "'Dream Val1eyi' IAM DllOO (AP) -forty-four Y"'* ~· a ~h 11brMm Valley," llkl police .. 9'W\ Bf11 faft'-1 Ndlo broldcut of "War ot the Worlda1 had ~. \ UNllNl1~ owr their ahoWdere for Martian ''The ~ the brolldcut ~-lnwt-.d lnWidln. wlth l•1ltlmate emeraency calla for Mrvlce," Male _. rock fuw U.terW\I to San Dleto Roblnlon Mkl. radio 1tatlon KPRI didn't expect a Martian The problilml bepn rrlday wbe Chi .. Dnam taWlll6on, \hey dkl apend a aood part of tho weellend Valley" broedcMt atantd. k>oldNI, for a fantuy roclt concert from "Dream The KPRI broedcut wu ao ~ that at Valley: leeirt 10rM Ul--.1.u.ct to nodce lalM ~lll'miltl'I I ~ fllC't, they were ao Intent on flndlna the had been d4*i for yean. rnaQ.belleve concert that they tied up emeraency "We played arUata that wen ._.. Mnda that telephone Unet to police trying to locate what they aren'\ toaether anymore -Janla )oplln1 Jim thoueht w• another Woodat.ock ln the San Dleao Morrlaon of the Doon, Lynyrd Skpy?d," Mill area. StraUll uid. £xlllllten lnt...tM .......... One aheriff's deputy pat:rollinR IOUthem San Nne~. the calls kept com&q ln to poUce. Dle90 County reported the nonnally placid rural roec1a were alive with traffic u eaaer rock f~ "In.a atreech of about two to four houn J'rklay, crulled the blacktops in aearch of the imaginary we received about 400 calla," aud Lt. D6ak Beed, a lite. He l9ld he wu stopped elaht times Sunday by Sheriff• Department ~ "&.. .n. came people eek1n8 him where the concert was. over the emergency tll number and It-I up out Shellee StraUIB, the radio station'•-assistant trunk lines." Jll'OtP'UD director, said as many as 2,000 people f9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilijliiiiiiiiii~ appuently tried to find "Dream Valley" after heartq portiona of the Sunday broadcast. '"the dllC jockeys really did a good job," Miss Stra\m aa.ld. "ft was very well done. We've had a few calla complaining about It, but most of the people wew heard from thought it was fantastic." SOAPS! An AmtrlCan Celebration But not all the station's listeners were happy. lhow: AUi. 21-21 -- LA. Convention Center Accordlng to Miss Strauss, one disc jockey had to be e9CQl'ted to h1a car past unhappy rock fans to leave. the nation at the end of the t.hree·day broadcast ~~while, San Diego police, the Sheriff's Department and the California Highway Patrol will be meeting this week to di8CUSS what action, if any, to take KPRI for its mock-ro.;k excursion Anticipated Attendance: 20,000 per day Call (714) 497-5317 I -·From Axli1'11 Shp11 ;;iin;&;111HAPPY FATHER'S II %' Spedll -16-.ln 22 ~ ..,..: .19 . ALL MENS' sHoEl:fy: -Good Through· Father.a Day June 20. - Limited to ou) 1tock on hand -AXLlllES SHOES . • lllYllE Heritage Pla10 Culver at Walnut 851-1311 ' \ ,. u••--145 ,.,... .... 414-21U 113-2313 • ··~'-'. -·I ·, .. ......--. - -·'J¥' > --~~ J FOR MEN .AND WOMEN ' ( ~ I '· Men's Sweaters Um8rWelght Men's Blazers " Wool and Wool/Poly Men'• Dress Slacks ~anow~ . . Men's L·ong Sl .. ve Qdord Cloth• Shirts lloodCk>th titl WMe .... Ton, Pink. Yettow Men•s casual Pants COfta. .. •""*"belts Men'1 OP lhOl'tl . t -. t Showhi'm he's. speciall , FATHER'S DAY, ~ .. SUNDAY, ..AJNE 20TH reg.' price $32-$36 $125-$175 $42-562 $19..$24 S25-S28 . $11-$31 ~ SAlE $26·$29 $85·$100 $32·M7 . $14·$18 ' forest fires destroy many homes. ·,~--- NUT.RITIO.N ~ VITAMINS &.9& 9.7& RICH LIFE . .... ·BALANCED B COMPLEX 3 95 WITH VITAMIN C 100 TABS REO. 7.95 I RICH LIFE =f'~,D 2.18 12 oz. REG. 3.95 e-~ RICHLIFE • ,,..r 1 ' 1111111 E-411 .,,~. . 100 CAPS AEO. '10.so -8.50 RfCHUfe L;rMt\11 1'11 3 9 5 90omt 30 TABS REG. 6.95 l I ''-~"'* RICHLI~ ,.s-l))!f IB.11111 " ~~~ 160 M.C.O. TABS REG. 6.50 3.95 GROCERIES . ' ARDEN . ..J;:;-; 11• lllD !.~ ;,· WHOLE BROWN RICE ~~"· ·15 WITH SEA SALT 1 4 oi. AEO .. 97 HANS&N'S UTIUL Siii •e GRAPEFRUIT• LEMON LIME 39 • COLA • MANDARIN LIME 1 12 L OZ. CAN REG: .55 CELESTIAL SEASONING llD IEUllT TU • ORANGE • MINT • LEMGN 1,45 24 TBA BAGS fEO. 1.75 HEALTH VALLEY PUllT 111111 CRIAMY LIGHTLY SALTED 11 GL REG. 2.51 I FOOD FOR LIFE ........ 8PACK ...... , . 14 OZ. LOAF • 1.59 .8& .11 SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA -557-6161 . LOwER LEVEL CAROUSEL MALL BULK PRODUCTS 1m lO ma Tl 111111 ,.. • SP.ECIALS· • .. .. • • ' J ' ILL FRUIT SllCI 7 GRAIN HOIEY GRllOU RAW SUIFLOWEI SEEDS PllUPPLE CORES 1.11 .. .93 .. 1.2&.: . 1.89 .. sp1oi1I Of Th• Wi•k lill Creek . IERATII SHllPOO .11 PL-. 1.50. COIDITiOIEll LUNCH COUNTER • IRUIFIST SPECIAL • TWI llT llOS, Iii Ell 111111, TlllT • CHOICE OF BEVE:RAGE • COFFEE, DECAF, TEA, MILK 2.15 • LUICH SPECIAL • EVERYONE'S FAVORITE -Y04Jf ehole9 of half a Hndwlch from the following: Egg Salad, Cream CheeH, Grlll•d CheHe, Llverwurat, & Chopped Liver, H8m or Tuna. PLUS~ 1 9 , cholOe of Helf a Potato s.Jad, Mlud G,...,, Salad, Cottage Ct!MM or Mixed Fruit 8 ; Salad. . Cj HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS VITA MINDER NCIO PACI HOLDS 60 TABLETS 8 COMPARTMENTS ~EG. 1.15 .71 COUNTRY ROAD lllPl.0111 llR .• NATURAL • ALOE VERA NET WT. 3 oz. REO. 2.29 • . ' J •Free Banquet Facilities •Fast Hot Delivery to Your Door COSTA MF.sA 17th And Tustin 646-7136 HUNTINGTON BEACH Beach And Heil 847-1214 'Talk of the Town' club.silenced in LondQn LONDON (AP) -Tht Talk Of Th Town, a top London niaht apot \hat attracted at.an llkt Judy Guland, Ethel Mennan and Sammy I>.vta Jr., c:loen tociay after 24 yHl"I -• vtct.Lm. of htah pl'lcl8 for bla name talent, • fa11-otf ln cuatomen and lnflat.lon. Show bu1lne11 lmpreaarlo Lord Bernard IDellont had run the Leicester " Square theater-rettaurant 11hce 19~8. In 19~8. Tho Talk Of The Town charsed It• customere the equtvaJ•nt of $6.215 tor a four-<:c>uno meal and Uvo c• tcrtalnment. • and turned It lnto a sJ.lttertna nJaht apot, where Ml11 Garland aave her Iaat performance before 1he died In London ln 1969. "Out of 24 yean we had 22 e¥cellent L.M.Boyd ' la we are now cha.rains 23 pounda ($40) a " UI ones but ud.ly we cannot ao on ... ~It in~onrtmhes Da1·1y P1·1 .. ~ head," Oeltont said Fricay. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;~~~~~-1-~ \ There's one thing about roller coasters.They go up. And they account, and are insured by the Federal Savings and loan Insurance C.Orporation -which itself is nQW suprx>rted by the fuJl faith an<l credit of the: U.S. Govftrnment. Safc:r than that. there ain't. T Brl.LCERTIFICATE f(Jll An,,....J114..J ' • IJ 12.753% 13.351% 1.,, II>(' p<:rlOJ of f•/l'/'t'" 10 f•/ll/Hl M INI T BILLCERTIFICATE u ..... '\1111u;ilu.nl Y 1dJ 12.248% 13.010% • h t.1<r p<'lll.J OI (>, 1\fHl IU 6/ll/82 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ comedown. In January of 1980 gold hit the lfJ.t1ntHS.l""il lor "<•">•.l.&\\iilldll. -.urhntr .. 1r Rt>tll-.4' t1nutut1h. •U"'~' Ill If ... ''°'" lht'tl l'fl"'•lh111( ~nit.,,,,, rl')IUbtlllfl.' r mhJbll (.00 1pt1u1ll1111l( ~lf lfttl"'l't"Sl on 1~· .ruxu11' Say "Happy Father's Day!" with a gift from Hickory Farms:~ Delight Dad with a gift from Hickory Farms~" We've got over 100 delicious gifts to choose from, in almost every price range. And we'll gladly handle all the details send- ing your gift. ff fckor1 farms ". OF OHIO• We'll give yo1 a taste of old-time country goodness~" Your nearby Hickory Farms"' is your year 'rouhd gift store: South Coast Plaza 540-6991 30% OFF WIDE LOUVER SHUTTERS ALL SIZES-5 FT. SUDER DOOR INSTALLED ' ~:~!~irn:~1~;e ::~~:~~c!=~ $ 3 9 9 finishes., truly expert inatallation af)G. , . . both guaranteed in writing 2 NA lull years. . 6 FT. SUDER, Re1. $768, 1499 lrut. 8 FT. SLIDER, R•1· 11028, '699 Irut . . -, ~ ,.......->.. CALIFORNIA SHUTTERS PHONE roD..4Y OR nYJ' BY ONE OF OVR FIYE BE..4UTIFVL SHOrROOMS PALM ORANGE EL TORO SAN DIEGO SAN UlllNG8 18ION.a..I 243181.n 1111w . ...-.. MARCOS 8'LArlMI 998·3496 951 -8799 276-7816 136N.PICllc llO·MOO ormv DAILi' UCll"I' IUNIMYI 941-7111 ---__ ......, ____ ...._ ___ dizzying height o'r $875 an ounce. OnJune8. 1982 it was selling for $331 an ounce. In the last couple of years a If youre looking for a safe. secure I way to earn a steady. reliable high 1 interest rate on your savi ngs. , Allstate Savings recommends our 6-monthT-Bill or 91-day Mini T-Bill. Both have guaranteed rates · of return for the full term of the TheT-Bill ha<; a SI0.000 minimum, the 1\llini T-Bill $7.500. Both arc: subject to a substantial interest penalty for early with- drawal . For further information about either account, or any of qur other financial services such as interest- earnjng checking. stop at any All- state Savings office or call collect (213)240-5913. Want thrills? T rv a roller coaster: Want safety ? Try A1 I state Savings. Allstalf -sav1nos We're all in thjs together: Allstate SavinKS & Loan. a member of rhe Sear; family. Over $3 billion in a ... ~·1' c 19H2 t\Jlq,J!t '-.,1\ 111).!' & f;>.i11 Newport Beach One Corporate Plaza. San Clemente 91 l So. El Cammo Real.Tustin 18232 lrvine Blvd. Westminster/Huntington Beach 540 Westminster Mall. r--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~ IYllY llNG IN Tiii STOii iS • 50~.ao:, scons JEWELERS 5984 EDINGER (COINH SPllNGOAlfJ MAIHU YILUGI ONTll MUNTHtGTON llACH A.M. SHARP! I SELL-ING OUT TO THE BARE WALLS , Orange Cout DAILY PILOY/Wednetd1y, June 11, 1882 . 'Rocky' bids for real · title TROUBLED -Rita Rene Stevens comforts her grandmother, Pauline Hague, in the drama 'IQoee Ties" at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater. Final performances will be given Friday through Sunday of this weekend with infonnation at 631-5110. TllE MA&AZIE'S COYfR STORY SALUTES '"ROCKY Ill' WINNER AND STILL CHAMPION!' ~Oi UrutldArtaats.tifiZW. NOW PLAYING PU COSTA MIU Miii*' WllJO OUllGl UA Movits Kit bot I win VltjO r.. 'in Or 111Q4! Or 1ve In 990 4022 631 3SOi 830 6990 ' SS8 7022 IUflll PllUl •IMITlllCITH lllCM •OllAllU WllTllllllSTOI B111N l'wk Orivt 111 Ed'W1tdS ~ CnedOmt EdW11dS C11ema Welt 821 4070 848 0388 634 7553 891 3935 • COSTA MUI llOUU lllCM '*"-.ccuTllHOUM4& _,.,I E~ BM~ Soutll eo.,1 540 7444 49' 1514 •Presented in 35mm(JC)laa....,..,I [PG~ A PARAMOUNT PIC1lJRE ·A · _ ............ ; / "' : ,..._ .... _~--. ·' . .. ,....._ --=-· ------NOW PLAYING ------ ~:~·~• 990.ol7 •::.,":~J:.IUCN = -- COSTA MIU e•e OlU , 6342553 -. ....., •CW Eow.,tK lllYllll WUTMl .. Tlll AHNfllll c .. ..,,. C.0111 [d,..,..Os w-iao. lowatds ""-°'"'"' 979 CUI SSI OUS C.-. Wnl 179 98~0 •COSTA MHA MIUIOll YIUO 191 39H WUTMIHTDI ~:=~~1~;1~14 ~~6~-; • 3llmm ~.~~~g O<i.ei. U TOllO Ed••OS ~ Sii SUO m--J ___ ,. __ 4 june Huntington Beach High School Marching Bind and DrHI Team This Is the lively musical "kick-off" event of the weekly lunch·hour series, "Fridays at Noon." Spend your lunch hour and enjoy the fun! 11 Sliver Strings Quartet Bach·to-Pop A performance of musical selections from the classical era of Bach, to contemporary "Pop." A lovely hour! 18 Cub Scout Fun Hour Local Cub ScotJt Packs will be performing skits, songs and games. Guaranteed fun for all! 2 S "Celebration Singers" Singing many modern songs and show tunes. Performed by the Church of the Religious Science • Choir. EnJoy your lunch and bring your f(lend1 to ''Ftlday •t Noon." &oh ffrlday, S.Cllff VIiiage and Ioctl community «o1n1Ut1°"' wm present coocerta, demonltretloM, exhlbltt, tPMkttt, end phyalcel fltneea for 'fOUf eNc>ymtnt. AotMtl• ttlr111 12:00 N0011 I" the 190 Court of leeellff Vllleot. II Vout oreantutton WCM*l llke 10'1porwor en tvent or be llatld 111 out °""""'"''Y calencMr p1 .... call (114) NEW YORK (AP) -~·~ St&Uane, the "IWlan Stallion" of three "Rocky" rnovM9. ii oow l1m1nl for • ...i hMvywm,ht chunp&onah.ip -by manuinl a boKer. S-talIOne •YI ttahter Lee c.anallto "totally repr-...nta what I would like to be ph)'llcelly -e man~ure of my (antMy, an exad duplJcate of what I would like to be lt I could rebuild mytelf. .. IV. beerl 1ooldna for eomeone lllat him for yun_. a contender, an balJan, an wwierdoc," •YI Stallone in the JUM 21 i.ue ot People rnao.z;IM. c.anauto, 28, la a former Unlvenlty of Houston football player and Houaton Golden Glovee titlilt. Stallone, 30, eaya h!a new movie -which ahowa how Rocky Balboa retuma to h!a rooa. after Iomn, the huvywelght crown and finally replna the title -par•llela Stallone'• own recent problems. "Suddenly I began worrying about lm1ng the material p1na that came with 1ucceee. I worried that everything rd done WU a fraud ... a fluke LUllURY THEATRES E.S. $2.50 1st 2 Matin• Showin11 Unless Noted S 113riljij•211fl6l63~ 2553 /~~,) FOR FUOI EXCITEfllEnTI V1srtOur... .A-* k;121M•lft1®ftJl~U1iMM M , Winner! OENB lJ &. 'DJUIJERI OF THE Wll.OER 119'11\Y. Bl ~iosr ARK !ml 01 L 0 " '1s~ ta:AU:OGl1207...0t0110 l :OoR:.~~~~3 . ' c ITY cenTER ~ t&\~ 1JA1,..·~-~-ET. l~~ci8° U ·t5 2•l5 41111 • • ln mm 1:111 l :f5 10: II ""I \IHlllHHI""'" STADIUm or.vo1n [:l 619 8770f ~'Dm lkaulltul Cine ~I Sound Direct To Your Carl ~ ntE ~ l!1 srAA TREK..lL 'T ntB RATH OF KHAN ~~~I~~~) • ,_.VICTORY(PO) Ital ;.:QiG~~ C£Nt: 1.1-.-lt~ WU.DER f"RIM'V'. Bl OILDA A l.o.i RADN£R ytJIA"7 II You CO\lld 5ee What Hear (POI Vlclor Victoria (POI \/\SmNG~ 1111 I \IH\TIHkt.'U'l\I Plu'~ l'llrHlle (Rl * DRIVE·INS OPEN 7:15 NIGHTLY Children Under 12 FREE UnlHs Noted · Put a few words to work for you in the . ~aily PiJat '642-5678 eJ\10y your .· ~;,:_lunch!, july Gary Pitta/YMCA Kuete Demonatretlon YMCA black belt karate In- structor Gary Pitts, holds the world's record for breaking bricks! Gary and his class will demonstrate self defense, free sparring and breaking. You will be amazed I "Celebration Singer•" Singing many modern songs and show tunes. Performed by the Church of the Religious Science Choir. 9 Tumbling Performance 16 Local tumblers. ages 8·12, will be performing to upbeat music from the Huntington· Beach "Community Services Department" Recreational Class I c ......... •nd -2 3 The Singing Good Timers of the Hunt· lngton Beach Senior Center wlll be, serenading. Don't forget to eat I I seacun JULe . ... .,,,, • "" It. ~· .. MMlt 94 ltiCffff Y+ttltl -Offftt ,.,.. , • . . . that I t'OUld not Uw up to expt(.1adona," aald Stallone, who wrote and ltlrred ln all three "Rock .. fl.lml, ''~n I bepn wrltlna about hll pt~k 'the eye of the r,' I wae l"Hlly provi 1 therapy for my~. It la not only what. u happened but la haP.penJ.na io me that la paralleled in the Rocky filnw, ,-he ..Id . Stallone said he aampled the pleasures of the 1Weet adence aoinlt several profeealonall while ~~ "Rocky m," but without notable aucceu. When he Wit hit for real by Eamie Shavers, who Iott a title ftaht to Muhammad Ali in 1977, "there wae an ecll1J9e." And aparrina wlth former llahtwetaht champion Roberto I>uran was "like belnl lowered headtlnt into a CUlasnart." OIWl8I UACllyo-N 53• 3911 •wtlTMl .. TIR Ectw~d-5 Cllllf1\a Wt51 891 393~ WHTMIHTEll Hi W1y 39 Otn e tn 17 HJ 891 3693 *BARGAIN MATINl!l!S * Monday thru Saturday All Perform1nct1 before 5:00 PM (~ lpedtl fftll'"'9ftlt IM Hllldtyt) I A. '-41.,.AI •A M A.II Mlroc:lo ol •0M<:ro n1 LA MIRADA WAlk IN 994·2400 "POLTERGEIST'' (PG) ----- "POLTERGEIST'' <'°> ----- "GREASE 2" IN ) -----··· LAKEWOOD CENTUl W Aii< I~ "ROCKY Ill'~ .. ,,_ D&,ay • 0 __ ... ,...._,_ "IT AR TR•K N: T. WRATH 0, KHAN" ,,_ OOUY ITSMO ('°) ----- LAl<EW OOD C f:NTER SOUTH WAI ~ IN NO..Nrto 211 614-9211 "HANKY PANKY" <N> 1111,----1 "T .. ROAD WAMIOR" ----"VlarnNQ "°""'" ... ,,...,_ "IT It TH4E WlllATM OF KHAN", 10liM OOUY ITIMO (PG) ........... -.- "ROCKY Ill" IPGI ---r-...,.,,.,,1 foc11lty ot Con41twooo 211/111·9110 "DW _.. DON'T RM PLAID" (PG) --.-.-.-.- "GREASE 2" IPGI .................. "GREASE 2" (PG> -------so11111 Coo•I Hlwoy J ot lfooctwoy 414-1514 ANAHl1M ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN 1,.e.,oy ti ol lemOll IL 179·9110 "'TMI ROAD WAMIOflr 1111 -"Ol.AntWl9Mlf"4'1) CINf Jt IOUllO h _, t Pt• I .&lof• BUENA PARK DRIVI IN Ul'IColft A'ff """' Ol llftOfl 121-4070 i"-l ~ ,... i "'". LINCOLN DRIVE IN llftCOlft Aff We .. ol •t>On 121·.4070 f c .JN ' .. 1N FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORI VE·IN Son Ofeoo lrwy ot ""Olhvnt (So) "ROCKY Ill" (PG) __ ,,._ .... , ______ _ C11tt J1 ~0 "ROCKY Ill"'"' -"CLAIH OF THE TITANl"CN1 "«. T ~ THI aXTIIA· TSNlalTNAL" t"I -~ U8fONMUfT" '"' "IT All TMlt •: THI Wltlnt OI' KHAN" tN I -"VICTORY" /N I I .. 2•2411 Cll!f 11 IOUltO ~-·-.___·_~_~_~t_1"_~_;_3:a_,_, "VIUTINO HOURI" Oil -"'TMI ROAD WAlllllC>tt" I'll CM Fl MlllllO ·-oMA•r ... , -.... W9DNllOAY" (Nl Cllll·FllOUllO ~ •• ;. Iii ' LA HABRA , • ,1 • ____ .._.. .... _ .... 17"1MI ---- .. ~ .. "'OL\D .... DON'T WllAll PLAIO" CNI -"CONAN THI •AMAfttAN"" (Ill Cllll Fl IOUIJO'---- ~TllWllT" IN> ,.. "MA WCM.VIS" "'91 CM ·Fl IOUllO ORANGE C>IO'I ,,, IN MIS\ION I•"'·' IN ...... ' •. J""'--·· • SIX·TAACK CIJl@!\'11@!1" PAESENTATION _, llMI ~ ........ -... .,.. -""-.,. , ... .., .~ ' ., . ~· \ ... ..... r . ' . "I didn't wanna ~ you mod, so I left them In the garage." · Mt\BM-'Dl.:KE by Brad Anderton . "I wish you'd use the car wash lnttead of our shower." Gt\RFIELD ACA08S 2 wordl 1 Sinll1 5 7 High Point• • 5Lyrlc poem 61 Fly llonl 10 G9rn 62 Army VIP: ,. l)W. eubj. 2 WOfdl " ....... t4GolcMI ti"°" on 85 ~ .. ~. ·---=· .. 17"~•·•11 ......... ·~ DOWN 1lelaed :o:.. 4LcM!Md ...... v •. tij Vlrgll Partch (VIP) IJ :l 1'1 ... .,. WlfttN I pony when I Wll I kid." KNNl8 TME NIENt\CE Hank Ketchum ~v-c .. _, . .,. by Jim Davis ¥00 KNOW "'>o'R£ Gf111N<':J OC..~ WHEN YOUR FIM>RrTE LATE N~T SM0W ~ TME SIX O'CLOCK NEWf> PUNIJTI by Jeff MactWUy ITtam'A urn£~ ... OH, SLUGGO--:. HOW SWEET GOB DO I THOUGHT YOU'D LIKE IT BUT WHY DID YOU DQ rT . WITJ..f C~ALK? Sane of oor qualifica- tims ibr~in the Trurnament <:I Bmes Parade are as 1hllows i (1) Top ho:nors in the stat;e' ooritest-1980, '81 , , 82. . (2.)~ in the .. ~·-· ThankagiVing Day. "' \ I t(*"1 11' lllJRt"~ 1t> .. 'M~t~' Parade. cl)f ~ i.a kl« J ,.._ __ _ ~LE.f1'~i~ 1*.'f'U. IE MOA£ ~·~~ (3.) bt bind cand\Y sold nationally, three yeva in & l'OI{! by Kevin Fagan . . . . \\I 11\.1 "II\\ ' :-ftWae-. I -•1••..we '. -~NfCllLI : • M'A"l'H ) ~ Hot Llpt phollll 1 from Tollyo to 11y 111«1'1 • "big n1wa," Fr1 nli I --11·1 111e expec1ed . f ~omotton. • HAWAII l'IW-4 A IMll wtlo II carrying bubonic ~ lvtnt up In H-all. lr\d 1 109-11etll mllJtary -.pon dilap· pearl. • ,AllT fORWAN> "lmptlc11lont" The ad"81'1C91 lfl compullrl and communication• tech- nology In lodey'• aocilly lll lltamlnld l 1== HOU.YWOOO BIH Harri. ~ti up· QIOll r9P0rta on I hi peo- ple Ind """" whleh .,. making new1 In the p<O· duatlon and glamour Clpi· 1 tll of thl movll lndut1ry. ~I DOOQeR DUGOUT ' CAMEMTHAH ' "Philip JOhnlon" Roll· i mond lllmllf lnlll'llllwtl dnn o :M1«1C•n 11chlt1C11 from his olflcl In 1111 Seagram building. hi• ltrnOUt "gllll howe" In COMICtlcut and hie Mao- haUtn town hou-(Pll'I 2) (R) ID Bl MllHEIS AEl'OffT (1)8NEW8 <ti MANEY MtL.lE1' While 8W91tlng word ol hlS promotion. B11ney ...... thl Nie of a IUlcldll flastllf Ind Woto WOtrill OYet hi. r~blMty for 1 large tum of money which la mlulflg. CID MOVIE * * 'h "Heidi" (1~79) A youflO g1r1 11 brought lrom hlr grll\df1111«'1 Alpine hOrnl 10 ltw In the Clly. Cl) PETER. PAUl & MAAY TM popultr folk trio ol lh• Ut'ly '60t perform many of tMif dlMic I-U Wiii u new materlll. "'!=-GAME f.:ot, 8 CU HEWS ' I ~ • I l l I H9CNEWS • HAPPY DAYI AGAIN Joanie gell more excill- menl thll\ 91141 counted on when the 8"41111 • out 10 • ""° o.vtlt Pfl'1'1 I MCHEWS l(OJN( Kol.Iii It determined to 11nd lhl killer of • amllttlme Ctr thilll whO WU 'murdered tor no eppatllll r~ • UIU"U LOI Al\Qllll Dodgers 11 Siii 01eO<> Pedrll I JOKER'I Wtl..D BIMIM88AIEPORT • MAOIC<Y'~ pAIH't1NQ ~ "Spring Soenl" 1 (I) P.M. MAGAZINE Dllgnotlng hllllh prob- leml tlWough hllr tnllytl•: • 4-yeer -old girl wllOM plrfrnlll ... chlmpllUll <ti ENTEAT AlfWENT TONIGHT An lnll<Yllw wllh Llnd••Y Wagner. ~THE MUPPET8 GU.St: Edglf Bergen atJMOV!E * • •;, "Harper V•ll•y PTA" (1978) Berb1r1 Eden, Ronny Co•. A ""Y 111>1<1ted young molnet with 1 g1111 ~ of 11x eppeal lnllflllo4\llly rlltllll the con~atlvl viewpoint of local achoot board memblf•. CIJ MOW • * "Thi F1nll Count- down" ( 1980) l(lrtl Doug· iu. Martin s~. A rnya- 1enoo1 storm II -trao- IPO'I• lhl llom!c-powetld 11«:<1fl cerrW U.S.S Nim· ATTEMPTS ADOPTION -Rich Thomas and Justin Dana star in poi t story of a single man who decides to a 4>Pt a handicapped orp~ in °To Find My Son," at 9 tonight on 'KNXT (2). IU blCk In time lo o-m· bet 6, 111• 1. pos1110n1ng lhl ....... bll-Pllfl HatbO<' Ind lhl ldYtnclng Jep1ne11 ltelt 'PO' 7:30 IJ 2 OH THI TOWN F111ured. lhl Village Peo- ple, LOI Angelle' Hancoelc P1rk 1rN, t>utlon qi lhl wlllthy 1nd powerlu); the Blllngu11 Foundation ot Iha Arll, founded by I ClrlSI C1tmen Zep111, Including 1 tour ol the Found1llon'1 unique th111t1 In th• old Lincoln Helghll Jell. D 8 FAMILY FEUD 0 LAVERNE & SHIALEY &COMPANY Thi glrll 1r1 ••died to Mir lht l "wlkf' Anfll Mlfle wUI 1llend their dlU reunlorl. II EVEONLA. F11tuted' • ptoll e of Mii B11nc. thl m1r1 behind 8ugl Bunl\y't Yoi<»; I report on child pomogr1- phy. 8) (I) TIC TAC DOUGH • MACHEL / LEHRER R90RT e:l KENHEDY CENTER TOHeOHT "An 01>1!'1 Gale: A Sllu11 To GIOrQe London" Opera 111r1 Including Joi n Sulhlrlllnd, M111llyn Horne 1nd Jarne1 MoCracken gtthef 1t t hi Concert Frill to p1y tribute to thllr men- tor ind colleague George London; B1Yerly Slll1 ho111. (11 YOU ASKED FOR IT Featured "King of"'11te Loggers " 1nd "The World'• LergHI Belly Dancing Scnoot " (C)MOVIE • * *•"Thi Wrong Arm 01 Thi Llw" (1963) Peter Sllllra. Lk>nll Jeffries. Thi lyndlc.ttl Ind lhl pohCI bendl 1og11h« to 11op 1 trio of th:llYll who l>OM as lllWmll'I g NOEL BUYS A NEW SUIT 1:00 8 (I) n4E LAST AOlJNO.OP <Y' THE ELDHANT8 Thi tt11. hfstory and pet· aonallty ol thl largeat land mammll, lhl A11111 ele- ph1111, ere 1111tnined In lhla 891C1-' !limed on S n Lenk• and 11\dll : Juon Robards narrlllS. o a REA.L PEOf>LE Fellured· a fashion show lor frogs, 1 man who sells ld...,..l&lng apace on his bald held; 1 400-pound go-can rllClf'. (RI 8 MOVIE • • • "For Love Or Mon· ey" (19631 Kirk Douglas, Mitzi G1ynor A wealthy wdtnan hlr11 1 lawyer to Ql•Y m1tehm1ker for her thr11 daughter• G 0 THE OREA TEST AMERICAN HERO Flllph, wilh his d u s on 1 camping trip In lhl moun- llln1, d111COV«I a booby- lllC)pld mine filled with gOl<I (RI 0 MOVIE * * • ''Thi Quiller Memo- rllldum" ( 19611) George Segll, Alie GulnMas. Brll· Ith tnlllilgencl hires 111 Americln 10 IOClll the hl&dquetters ol 1 Neo- Nazl O<'Qll'llUllon. ..... m 'fOUN8T Thi llYll ot • group ol AmlrlCln tourltll trlYlllng togethlr through Europe "' suddenly 11terld by lhl people lfllV m.et and 1h1 ll'ICldenll whleh hep· pen 10 thlm S11rrlng Lii Meriwether, B11dl0fd 0111· min AdrieMI B1rbe1u, 01v1d GrOh, MarlN Beren· son. JOhn McCook 1nd Laurette Speng.MoCook fD KE.NNEOY CENTER TONIGHT "An Oper1 GeJ1: A S11u1e To a.oroe Londoo" Opera 111rt Including Join Suthe!'l&nd, M1rltyn' Horne 1nd James McCreckan gather II 1111 Conclr1 Hi ii 10 p1y trlbull 10 their men· tor and cOlleague George London: B111erly Sllll hosts MOVl£ • * • "Stripes" ( 19111) Bill Murrey. HarOld R1mls A New YOl'k Clbble l<>Oklng tor 111cllemen1 conlllnc11 hi• blll f'rlend 10 1oln him In enllstlng In Ille U S A""'I. 'R' INZAAAE "Hurtz Rent·All" UMOVIE • • • ••,. "On Thi Town' ( 1950) G-Kiiiy Frank Si111trL A trlO ol sailors lllm UI) with I t&lli dt1Yer •nd 1n anthropologis t to flnd 1 l>eaulllul girl whOM • picture Is dllplayld In the subway 1:30 (S) l.Aff..A• THON A comedian host 1nd lour comic c:onteatenl• who co mp111 agaln1t one another 1re IHlurld In this 'uncensored comedy game &how 9:00 8 CJ) MOVIE *'l,'"1 "To Find My Son" ( 1118o) Richard Thomu. Justin 011\11 A young, &In- gle men 1Uempt1 to ldopt 1 troubled 7-yea.-old bOy (R) 0 8 THE FACTS OF I.Jn Nllllit '• gr1ndmo1her PIY9 I surp<IM Ind ul'IW9!· come ..Wt to Eull1nd (R) 8 0 n4E FALL OUV HOWll ilkll on 111 ipPll • en11y slmple CUI wl'llch somenow land• Colt tn l•JI lt>d entar>gln 1hl t....o In deadly lnllrna11on11 mtrigul (Part 2) (Al Ct)MOVIE • * "Thi Final Count- down" (1980) Kirk Oouo· las, Martin Sheen A MY'· terlous storm II Ml tran- sporll the atomic-powered aircraft etmer U S S Nom· llz back m time to Decem- ber 6, 1941, positioning the vessel between Pearl Harbor 81\d lhl advancing Japanese fleet 'PO' (OJMOVIE • * "Togttthlr?" (1981) Jecquelone Bistel, Mu lml- 11111\ Schell A young wom· an tries to pur-• car- desplte thl c:h1ulllnlst alll· tudes of hlr 11119-ln lover 'A' ... Of""',_,.. Well CloltlMn ---..,_ ""'°' .. """'*' ...... ......... ,...lllMlnlM '9111.. A"*IC*I ~ twl"'I IUlue ~ ll'd ~CVdinllt. 10:00. OUINDV Q\llnCy d!ICOVW't !Ml • trvctltf'• "'YI~ cMettl -AUted Dy • OMdlY tolelo tube*""' lllat ltol WU llegelly ~ ,_ i~ l(rytt.. It NIMcl to the ~ ... ··-tlfllll petl In I Of'VdOe -,_, and AMJJdt IMIM uP with II\ old ~ In • IChlmt to win ll4ak1 '**·(Al • MAoe IN fAl#N4 Chlnlff 11Ctr111 Hu Ying MOflO hOlll I loolc 11 I .... Ollllen~ T.W..O ~ In.. con1empor1ry end lrtdlllonll CJ\'-~lure. (P11rt 2) MO Vil s • ·~ 'Zorro. Thi 0 1y Bli de" I 11181) a eoro• Hamlllon, LIUren Hulton The hlfol<: •on ol Old c 111- l0<nl•'1 l1mou1 julllCI tighter ta lnctpeCtllted by I riding 11\jU(y, IOfclng hit loppllh brothlf to doll thl CIPI 1nd mull 'PO' S)MOVIE I * "The HelrM" ( 1980) Triah Ven 0.-1. JoMC>h Cotten A M:hOOllMCher trie. lo recover from 1 ner- vous bfMkdown 11 her 1111 1unr 1 home, which la bllllged by demona. 'PG U MOVIE ' S * * * "NetWO<'k" ( 1976, Feye bunawey, Pete r Finch. An aging l~vlalon newsman, whOll r1llng1 If_., llUdlly lllpplng, I• turned Into 1 11nllng propl\ll of the alrwa\111 by • crafty 1em1te progr11n· ming 1~ecutl111. 'A' 10:30 Cl) NEWS m JAZZAT THE MAINTENANCf> ~HOP "Greet Gult9" (No. 21" Barney KMMI, Herb Elllt Ind Ch1rU1 Byrd perform from th• Maln11n1nc1 Sl\o9 11 lowl Stell Unlver· Sii}' (R) 10-.36 (.0) MOVIE * • "Sp1rkt1" • I 1976) Irene Cira, Lon11t1 Mc;K11 During lhl 19508 thtll bllCk llttl fl lrom thl gheno blcoml muslcll tuperSlll'I, bul ....... tually sutler from lhl prenures of aterdom 11:00 &0GCI>08 MEWS D SATURDAY NIGHT Hos t Ot<:k C.vell. Guea1· Ry Cooder 0 YOU ASKEO FOR IT Featured· "Frenct> Box· Ing" end "The World'• Smtlleat Horii." m M"A"S"H Charles 11 sure he had 11 great time In Tokyo. If he could only remember whet tirl!ld. m BENNY HILL Benny'• veralon of "ni. 01rlc Numt>I< Flasher" glv11 him 11\1 ~I Ilg le•f of 111 6i) DICK CAVETT (C)MOVIE • • * "P1rdo n Mon Af111re" ( 1977) Jl8n Rochefor1. Anl\y Ouperery A htpptly married men con11mpl11H lnlld11t1y •lier Mling • bllutlfut moOll '" • p1rklng Qlfaoe 'PG' (%)MOVIE • * * "Your Thr11 Min· Ulll Are Up" t 1973) Beeu Bt1dge1 Ron Uebm1n. Two friends poM u 1 • mo...te producer and difec- lor 10 pick up girts 11:30 8 CJ) MOVIE • * • ,., "Paradise Connec- uon' (1979) Buddy Ebser1. M1rj OuNy A prominent attorney abandons his pr11c11ce and moves lo Hewell to search for his eatrongedl.soo (A) 0 Q! TONIGHT Hoet· Johnny C1r1on. Guests Llona Boyd, Oar Robinson. M1rgol l(ldder. 0 01) ABCNEWS NIGHTUNE 0 MOVIE • • •;, "On The Threshold 0 1 Space" ( 1956) Guy Madison. Virginia Leith. Alter a Ollt II ln,ured, hls ooctor fUnS onto • tlr•nge 11tulllon m THE JEFfUSOHS George goe• 10 greet length& 10 get 1 h:otel's c!Nning buai-at (Piii 1) Q'.) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE HAMMEL LISTINGS (S) SPEO'TACOl.AA EVENING IN CANADA Politic1I humorl•t 01Ye 8roadloot, lhl Company Roy1le 01ncera and female 1mpresslonllt Craig Aosllll lte l11lured '" • fabUloUt ..,.,,'"O ol enter· lllnment lrom Toronto {Z)MOVIE • * • • > "St1t1 0 1 Siege" (1973) YYH Montend, Renato SllYllOl'I. TurmOl1 and ·~nr11t ep1wn th• nllSlinlllon of 1n Amert. ct n olflclal In Uruguay "Love And Thi Ol11ppe111- 1ng Bo•" Thi gr111 mtg!· cl1n Elmo hu 10 cOfnl up with tom1 real magic. "LOYe And The FICI Bow" Leo end Naomi mlk• • big dlaooYlfY on thllr wedding I ' . i r ' fl ICNXT <CBS) 9 KNBC INBCI • KTLA (Ind.I 8 KABC IABCl D KFMB ICBSl 0 ICHJ-TV llnd.l ID KCST IABCI • KTTV llnd I Cl) KCOP·TV (Ind.I m KCET IPBSI S KOCE (PB$1 0 z " c ·•1 11) l s 0 • On TV Z TV HBO ICll\('ma,l CWOR I NY ,N V IWTBSI IES PNI C5now11me1 Spolflohl IC<'lble New~ Networlll < 9:30 0 Q! LOVE. SIDNEY Sidney II ICllt tio when I'll is ulled to )oln lhfJ tin club ol nla Idol, 1930• moYle qUlll\ Ver• Lonni· g•n (Myrn1 Loy} ~ tf()N.FICTIOH TU.EV1SION "Burden 0 1 Of11m1 The ~hi • 6ll CAME.AA THAU "Philip JOhnson" ROl8· mond Bernier lnl~lewa the de1n of American 1rch1tec1a from hll office In the Se1grem buil<llng, hi• 11mou1 "glasa hou11" In Connecticut and hll M1n- na111n town h<>ull (Part 2) tEiephants' good family show even further into the background, and ita numbers cut each year until the herdl that once roamed from Iraq to China a.re barely a memory .. "Bea!cal1y I'm an optim.l.at," he aata, "but 1 have become more petlimlstic about the willingnem of IQWmmmtll to help add protect anlmals." ll'onDUy. P1aae aaya, man ii both the sreatat threat to the elephant and ltll beat hope of eurvlval. The elephant baa been dometrtlcated fol' oenturle11 in Asia, and' ltll U1eful.nelS to man thould help aaure lt11 IW'Yival In eome way, he eaya. P1age took hie camera to northern India on· what he aaya wu the Jut oftldally unctioned roundU.p of wild eJtphantll for tr&ln.l.na. The hunt ii toll.owed by the tt1~f. \M =ta, whlch beclna with ·handlerl tx... the ' wtlll. It'• not a pntty "-"t. but U'l\loll\ that ll dOll -.ant.he elepHantl' ewvtval. TM ~ for ~ti and thMt .,_, ~ end dieN'>' II •pwnd ln lhotl Of a ~~sfout f•Uval ln lrt Wilke, In wh&ch 100 •llpMn• ....... In br'Wilnl. adomld wt&h Jtnll Ind up--. ... Wt ... ol honGI' ln • .,.., ,...0 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday. Ju.,. 18. 1982 TUBE TO~PERS KOC& (50) 7:30, KCE'r (28) 8:00 -0 An Open Gala: A Salute to Qeorp Lendon." Beverly Sil.11 ham two-hour l&lute to one ot the WOl'ld'a ,reat.eat bul-barttcna KNXT (2) 8:00 -''The LMt Round-up of t he Elephant•.'' A portrait of the e~ A.a.an elephant. KNXT (2) 9:00 -"To Find My Son." Richard ThOGU ltan 81 a linale man who attem/! to Mlopt a troubleCl 7-year-old boy. photo, left. KNBC (4) 10:00 -'tQulncy.'' Quincy diJcovers a trucker'• m~ deeth was cauaed by a deadly toxic substQnce. ID OAntONIO A8C NEW8 11:36 (ff) MOVll I • * * "Thi LU I Melro"_., ( 111ao1 Clthltlne o.n.u..... Gererd Olplrdleu During Worl<I War II, tile proprie- tors of 1 am1n P1rlr 11t1- 11r1 It)' 10 keep lhllr llll bli8t'ltnenl operl during lhl German occuptllon 'PG' 11:46 (S) MOVIE * * *~ "Ati.ntlc City" (1980) Bui"! L1nc1111r, Sua1n S1r1ndon The H lrltlgld hu1band of 1n 0)'9tlr bit 111tr1N errtv11 wtth net P'eon•nt younger 11s1er 1nd 1orn1 •lolerl hltoln, wtlleh h1 w1n11 1n aging hOod to 1111 for him. 'R' 12.1>0 D ~AlNMt!NT TONIGHT An Interview with Llnd Ny Wagfllf. 0 9 Lovt BOAT A fudge llnd1 her1111 111r1Cled to • 1rlg1ml11 lhl placed on pt'Obltlon, I nd an OY9tly expec:11111 l•thlf ~ Ooc'a love Ill• to tulfer (R) m MOVIE * * * 'h "NOf1~ Pu- 11g1" (1940) Spenoat Tri· cy, Robin Young Under thl oommand OI I brlYI llldlr, Rogert' RAnglrl endUtl hl rlh wl llhlr, 17.dllO 11t1Ck1 Ind prlve· tlon to open up lhl North- west Territory In Colont1I times. Q'.) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "loYI And The Happy Medium" Charl141 la 1 very lonely person. "LOY• And The S1xpert" Leon1rd hit a unique problem with Q!.!:l•. (,'tMOVIE ill-* 'h "Con lin1n111 Divid e " (1981) John Belu&hl, Blalr Brown A Chlc1go n1 w1p1per columnlsl 1r1Y111 to lhl Rocltkll lo llCIPI '°"" pclhlcll hell end lnll<Yllw 1 reciutlve n11urell1t 'PG' 12:15©J MOV1E • • "S1turday Thi 14th" (1911) Fbc:Mtd Benjamin. PllUla Prenllll A couple dlsc:<>ver 11\ll lhl houll lhly'w 11\hlrlled 11 being oocupled by v1mplr11, gtio.11 Ind ISIOrtld lnOI\• Sllr'I. 'PG' 12:30 0 Q! LATE NIGHT WfTH DAVID LETTERMAN Gues11· sex thlrlpiSI Of' Ruth W1alh1lmer. Tug McGr1w. comed11n G1ry Muledee< (RI D COUPWI m NEWS LZ)MOVIE • * '.\ "Blec k Moon " ( 1975) Cathryn Hardaon, Thef111 Griese. When bit· ter cMI llrll1 break• out In hi• country. • young girl tt-tn. w1rrrng SGll\I. 12:50 (C) MOVIE • • "The S1n1uous Nurae" ( 1979) Uraul• Andreaa, OuUlo Oii Prete Greedy r•tiYn hlf1 1 Mlltuel "Florenoe Nlghlln· gale" to 11111 Clfl of Ill agong count ·..,lferlng lrom • dllicat• helr1 condition 'R' 1:00 D MOVIE •• * "Come And Git It" (1113&) Joli McCr11, Willer 8r111n1n A cruel paper mlM owner 1eqvtr11 lh• ~ 10 conlrol lhl WI• ~n lumblf country m MOVIE • • * "Young Al Heart" ( 1954) Frenk Slnllr•. 00<'1• Oay Problem• l>Mel • young couple 1her lhl MIO 11 .. la hfl plt1ner'I ll1nC11 1:10 G MOVIE • • • "Oun Cruy" ( 111501 Peggy Cummln1. John Oell A 1111-IMng former carnMN girt trlel to con- vince '* m1rkam1n hUI· band to turn hi• lkllls 10 armed robblt'y llDl ,.lW8 1:30 0 Q!NEW8 (S)MOVIE * * • • "The S1Unl Man" ( 1980) P111r O'Toole, SllYI Rtll1back Wanted by lhl police, I dltturbed V!.ftn1m Yelerln llnda an ufituf1 heven on 1 movie Ill whet• • World Wlf I epic 11 being lllmld. 'R' 1:46 1) New& 1:60(8.)MOW * • * * "Oog Day Al1er- noon" (t975) Al Pac1no. JOhn Cazale A N-York City 1>1nk robb1ry ISCllllll lnlo 1 n111- c;rcu1 whit\ community ICUvtlll jOln In lo ••IOI I n lnli·policl prOlell dunng lhl Cl9I' 2.-00 0 MOVIE * * * "The Ao11" (1979) 81111 Mldlar, Alan Bat .. A dn,,.,, rock singer' a Ille In lhl IUI 11111 llldl net lrrl- Ylfllbly 10 dltlsllr 'R 2: 16 1) MOVIE • • "Munig1n'1 Stew' ( 19771 Lawrence p, .... mi n, All• Karru A high school footb•ll coach taku on the Jldded responalblllty of cerlng lor lour chlldren eller lhelr parent• dMI In a plane Crllh (C)MOVIE •*'It "Pulp" ( 1972) Mlch111 C1ine, Mickey Rooney A Midy writer la hlrld by an 1x-fltrn 1t1r 10 "ghOllWfill" hla l>trlly prlnlll>ll 1utot>logr IPhY 'PG' !Z)MOVIE * • •;, "Shoci< Corridor" ( 19631 Peter Brlci<, Con- Sl1nC41 T~•. A writer's commitment to • mentll lns tltullon r-.illl In I Pul· IUer Priu, but lhl bell· lngs Ind lhOcio a r11Ull In sctmopnren~ r 2:400 NEWS 2:4&m MOVIE I• "Thi Lui Blitzkrieg" 11959) Van JOhneon. Dick York. During World W1r 11 a Blllle of lhl Bulge. a gung-ho Nlzl end hie bend ot 11bot1ur1 lnllllr•ll Allied lroopa. 3:00 '1 MOVIE * * "MOdel For Murder" ( 1959) K1llh Andes, Hazll Coull An Am1tlcan offl~ eooura Britain ln,aearch of hl1 deld brothe<'• girt. lrlflnd 1nd find• hlmsell lnYolwd In 1 jewel heist 3;40 ($)MOVIE • * "Thi He1111" ( 1980) Trltl'I Van Oever1. Joeeph Collen A achoOllllCher trlM to rlCOllW from 1 ner· YOUS brllkdown II her la11 1unl'1 home , which Is belllgld by demons 'PG' t:ea CC) MOW *** "A F-In Thi Crowd" ( 1957) Andy Grif- fith, P11rlcl1 Neal A derel· . Ill ... "'°"' • jell Ollll 10 MlloNI ftlGOtl'lllOn °" the .. ,.,. .. of .. ....,_ 11141 ~lalellt ~~· Ale" (1M1) TOl'f'/ ·a.Na, Jelllca Wlil- • .....,.. otM9'1lent llOICI .... SU-alt'"'8 to .... ,....,. ~ '"'°' t*»CZ)MOYll •••'4 ''It• Qt .... ( ttU) v..... Mon I encl, ,._.to lalvllori. 1'l#fllOI lllld 11111'_. --IM ... ... 1ne11on of lft Al!Wt- CMI o lcl In UtUfU41' 4:M. ~ TO 'l'MI IOTTOM TMlf MA "0.ttoY • • MOVW * • i.t "Afffllr In "81\o'' I 196e) Johll Lund. Dol1I SlnQlltOf!. A lldy !>Ody· gverd•l>lc<>mM Ille obj.at ' of hit 1mploY9f'• attec· lloo•. IBMOVll * * * • "Thi Stun\ M111" (1910) Peter O'Tool1, St-Rtlll~. Wanted by thl Police. a disturbed V111n1m "''""' llnd1 an unsure hlven on 1 mo..i. Mt wn.<1 a World Wit I epic 11 bllng lllm.d 'R' Thur•day '• Do11fl•e ltlo.,le• 8!00 (?J * I••;, "Pr1Yll8 Bin· J1mln" ( 1980) Qotdl1 Hawn, Elleer1 8renn1n A w1tt-1o-00 young woman mistakenly joins thl Army IOllowing lhl d11lh of hit new hu1b1nd on their wed· ding night. 'R' 8:30 (CJ "Thr11 Tiles Dirk And Oanger<><d'' CS) * * "Rfl'YlnQI 0 1 Thi My11erons From Mara" ( 198 t) Puppets, Ceptlln Setrlet goes Into dll9 apace 10 1100 lhl d4Nldly Myslerons from deatroylng Earth 8:00 tCI •*•'•"Monty Python And The Holy Grill" ( 1974) Gr11\1m Cnapmen, Jann CIMM King Arthur .r>d hit bend ol knogl'llS enco unllr g11n1a. r1ddler1 1nd • lero. CIUS rabbit in lhl<r Mlteh IOf I hi legend try cup lSJ ·~ · Skatelown U S A " C 19791 Scoll BllO, Greg Bradford A htndlOml young skater lllllt In tov111 th• local roller-dllOO rink, -· hi II Chlllengld by a Mreel gang !elder In 1 ch -.plon1nlp oonlHI 'PG' (%) • • • "My Cousin Aachll" ( 1953) Othlla di HaYllllnd, Richard Burton Based on lhl n0\111 by Oaphlll du M-ilr. Tl\I heir to a conaldar•le for- tune attempts to llnd out II thl Womlf\ lie tovea 11 rlll· lya murdetlll. e.-ao D •• * "LAI Glrl•" ( 1957) 0-Kelly, MIUJ G1ynor An Am1rlc1n muslcal 1how hi._ thl European circuit when oompljcatlona ., ... 9':30 ~ * * "Thi JIU Sfllglf' ( 1980) Neil Olwnond, Uu· rence QIMer. A tMw York cantor btllka with lemlly tradition and 1111 out to 111\d IUCGe9I .. • pop mull<: 1t1r 'PG' 10:00 rHJ * t * 'Silver Strlllt" (1976) 0-Wtldlr. JIH Clayburgh A mlld · rnanfllred bOOlc lditof 1ccld1n1111y becom11 1nYOIYed 111 1 llnlaler trt ti.lei's bizarre plot during • croas-counlry lrlln ride 'PG' CS) * • * • "Far F'rom The Maddin~ Crowd" (19671 J ulie Chrlatle. T er1nc1 Stamp A willful young t1rm girl t>ellllf'S hetUll, bul d111roys three men In •he Pf'OC4llS I 10:30 0 • * "Flgurn In L1ndac11>1" ( 1970) Roblfl SlllW, Mlloolm McOowlll. In 1n unnamed COUfllry, two men 1111 their mlllllry pUr..-a In lhl hope thll they can rllcil lhl border blf011 caotura 'PG' 11: 15 (%) • • • '.\ "Otrby O'Glll And The Little People" ( 1959) Alblfl Sharpe, Sein Connery An Old lrllh Clfl- 'l"l' ... " ••• MIO i. .._,. IO .._ ... loll 10 • ~ """ ...,.. tM 111111 ., ti. ~~..,.... NM lo or111t ..,_ ...,.; ... HlJO CC> ........ .,. lllOn" (IN7) .lelll ~ ltldl Von It,._ WOttd Wef I PtleoM!t ~ .... Oermln ~ ..,.., ........ ._°""'* T .. " ("12) fi¥M ~. JMllM Cteln. TIM ~ tMllly Olt'fY on In IN ttedl· tlet beguf\ b1 tNlt flmOlll I •·"-· ···~"~lnThe Ah:•noon" ( 1H2) llley Miio I~,~ Cltt• All ~ demotld "' 1trtll• lllO 1no111« olftoer , .. tl'lllttl Ill the cavfllfy Md battlM Ne -v to t;J«y. • * *'A "Tiie llecll O"'hld1' (1Ht) Sophll Lor111, Anl"°"V QuWI, A llW•l bidlng bulineNmln Ind thl io....iy Widow of • !!~,., flll In love. (HJ *I "Thia TIMe FOffl'Y• er" ( 19801 c1.ir1 PIMpar•. Vincent Van P11t111. A FrlllCh-cllN<llen girt lllllt In tow with • btMfl Amll'l- Ctn ColllOI ltudlnt ••udV· Ing In Momt .... 'PG' 12:t0 9 * * I "Fout Pia(' ( 1971) OOIOll Htwn, ChlYy Ch-A Nbtatlet\ ~ta thl lid of Ill Jnept ~ d lllCllYI l fll r l h l ~ lnYOIYld In • 1>1Utr1 -* of ln<H~ Ind todnapplflO 1nernptL t!OO CZ) * *It "My eo..tln ~" ( 1953) Otlyll di H1vlttlllld, Richard Burton. BNld on thl nowt by Daphne du Maurlar Thi 1 heir to 1 oontldMable lor· tune 1ttemp11 to llnd out II Ille woman lie IOYI& 11 rial· ly 1 murder1n 1:30 lCl ***~"Monty Python And The Holy Gri ll" ( 1fH 4) Gr1h1m Chapman, JOhn Clelsl. King Arthur 1nd hi. bind ot knight• encounter ·goanll, rlddlarl Ind a fero- Ciul rabl!lt In their 111rcto Ill<' lhl llgendery cup. 2:00 (SJ *•'A "Zero To Sixty" ( t971) Otrren MeG1111n, OeniM Nldtereon A mod- die-aged diYoroed mll'I. ....Olng money lor 1hmooy Pll~··· .. 1-0 ... ,h r~ 1 M1H1 cat conlll!IMg • dead body as p111 of hl.1 new ptrtnerahlp with a 1a.yeer-old girl PG' 2:IO (tt) * * "S11urd1y Thi 14th" (1981) Richard 8-- l•mln, PMil• Prentl11. A couple dllcovlt that thl hOUll thly'w ln,_tted 11 bltng OCOUC>le\_ by YIM· pires. gt>ost~-~"ftuaorled onon11era. 'PG· g * * *'h "On Thi Town" (1950) G-Kelly, Frank Slnetr1 A trio ol Nltora llllTI up ..,,h a 1&111 dri.,.. 1nd en anthropoto. gist to find I 1>11u1Uul girl whoM picture It dltpl•yed In Ille 141bw1y 3:00 (C) "ThrM Tllel Otrk And 01119"0UI" (%}*I·~ "PriY1t1 Biii· jt m ln" ( 1980) Goldi• HllWll, Elllen Brenntn. A Wlll·lo-do yoo.lllg -milllkenly jOln1 thl Army f ollowV>g lhl dlalh of h« ..,. new hulband on their wed- ding nlglll. 'R' 4:00 " • * "The Flflh Cly Of P-" ( 1972) Richard John80n, Franco Nero Thi line ol a Pllf ol a.rm.,, POW1 la dlcl6ld In lhl IH\11 dl ya ol WOt1d War It. ($) •• "Revenge Of Thi Myaterone From M1ra" (1981) P\lppltl C1C>l11t1 Scal1ll goea into deep ~ 10 Slop lhl deldly Myateron1 from dlltrotlng Earth. •:ao g I** "L• Glrll" ( 1957) 0-Kelly, Mitzi Ga ynor An American rnualctl 1how hits Ille Europe1n circuit when compllClllona ari11. 6:00 CC) * * ''Thi Jazz Singe<" ( 1980) Niii Diamond, Uiu- reno1 Otl"* A New York cantor brllll• wlln lamlly trldhlon end 11t1 out to find eucc.e IS I pop mu9ic11ar. 'PG' CZ) * * "~ "Contlnlntll OIYld1" (1981) John Bllualll. Blair Brown A Chlc1go n1wsp1pe r cotumnltl 1r1Ylb 10 lhl Roclllll to acap1 some polttlcal ,_, Ind lnl ........ 1 r~·1111urlllo9t 'PO' JOHN DARLING by Annstrong & Batiuk WE'RE ~WITH THE >-CCL>.IMEP FASHION PESIGNER. MR. 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Men's Store: 65 Fashion Island 644-6500 • Women'• Store: 33 Fashion Island 644-2400 .. "' ' " r • I lllJPlll W!ON!80AV,0JUNI 1t1 1N2 I BUSINESS Fountain Valley Hlgb gets a new quarterback. He'a Bruce Tollner. CS. Van · Ho·rn: EpitOm ~ of a ~· l\ll-star H~ ~asn 't satisfie d with simply b eing name d to the teain •• The extra effort -lt'1 what every wu just wbeellna arid ct.lJ.ni, ahowtna coach, every foreman. eve~ teacher, PREP SPORTS 'em wbo'a 00. rtaht off the bat." ~ 00. la looking for, but too often ROGER Th.at'• the way Steve Van Hom went ~~wt.~· an all-1tar basketball coach · about thinaa· He wu honored to play In praya for. becawie " he getl it from the CARLSON the aame and prepared for it with a :r.e1t ..i .. h le hi.a chances f ...i .... 1 .. n few can rec:a1l beifli matched. worklna ... t peop o ............. are additional h""'·-In the ao.---....a-u1 .. i,.. mqnlfled to almost unbeatable 1tatua. .,... • .s:e-u ..... When it comes to all-:star games, most ever quite matched the eflorta that Van gym outside of the normal practice time. have alread_y given that extra effort, Hom displayed a _couple of years qo All-atar selections can puff up a which earned them the· honor of playing. in leadlluz the South to victory. It was penon'a ego pretty eaaily, but Van Hom U1ually, it's forgotten in all-star games vintase Van Hom. wasn't satisfied with simply being and usually the game suffers because of Van Hom dOminated the acorlng and named to the team. the lack of~· rebounding In dilplaying just why he "He bad really looked forward to it," Should someone come through with had been a two-time All.cIF aelection recalls Ezra· Van Horn, 11not aa an that total commitment Saturday night at. and Sea View League Player of the Year individual but because of the honor. You -Orange Coast College at the 17th annual as a senior at Eatanda High. know, he'd do anything, whatsoever that Orange County AU-star basketball game "It was juat natural," says hi.a dad, waa needed to help a team wip." be should be given an additional honor Ezra Van ltom, a former coach on the -call it the Steve Van Hom award. prep and community college level. ' He put In 80 much effort toward that _N;;..;..;;..o...:o...;..n..;;..e...:in.;.:_th._.....e...!p;...re_vi_o_us_l6--=g:.-am_es __ has __ ......,...._"_H_e_w_asn_'t_ou_t_to__,p __ rove __ an .. y._t_h_lng ___ ._H_e __ _.8._oal_-=-_winning--:-. _ , that when it came time to accept defeat, well, It didn't come euily. "He wu t.errtble to live with (after a )om) for a little bit," recalls Ezra. "A little like hi.a father." Hit IOD went on to play for furn at Fullerton College for a year, then on to Cal Poly (San Luia Obispo) before fate cut it all too short. While on a campout at Rosarit.a Beach eouth of Tijuana a oouple of months ago, Steve Van Hom tripped and turpbled aome 70 feet off a cliff to his death. Considered indestructible on the· floor, this 22-year-old proved all too humanly fragile, leaving a gaping void in F.stancia High annala. ~fter a. nightmarish wee kend 1in Mexico (his friends, Clark Guest and Keith Wheeler. aJon~ with their three (See CARLSON, Page C3) ALL-STAR -Former F.stancia High standout Steve Van Horn held all the blue chips. Insignificant daie _ 0.., ,._. "'9toe br RloMrd K...., THE PIVOT -Bobby Grich throws to first to · Tue!day night. The ..Angels lost, 2-0 in the complete a double play despite a rolling slide · opener of a long home stand. by Toronto's Garth Iorg in the third inning . · , Hungary set s World Cup m~rk El Salvador-blitzed, 10-1; Scotland tribmph s, 5-2 .· ' · MADRID (AP) -Hungary blitzed :&I Salv~or by a record 10-1 margin and Scotland dowded New SOC .. '~D 2'.ealand 5-2 Tuesday as the World Cup soocer finals t...1..1:.1..n erupted with an explosion of l{oals. After only four goals had been scofed in the _...Yugoslavia over Zaire in 1974 in West Gennany. opening four matches of the world's biggest soooer Laszlo Kiss scored three of the Hungarian . tournament, the championshlp produced offensive goals, all within a six-minute ·period, and ~Tlbor punch Tuesday night. • Nyilasi and Laszlo Fazekas each co1:Jected two goals, The day had started on llJiuiet note offensively while Joszef Toth, Gabor Poloskei and Lazar . when Peru and Cameroon drew 0-0 in a Group One -· Szentes also connected. match in La Coruna, but the two night games . Hungary, which now leads .Belgium, Argentina displayed a barrage of goals. and El Salvador in Group Three, conceded only one The Hungaria~ World Cup runners-up in goal as they romped to their lopsided victory, but • 1938 and 1954, had not looked particularly good in the Salvadorans Wer'f delighted by their lone goal. the qualifying competition, but the El Salvador Luis Ramirez ended El Salvador's record of ~: d 1 h c h · d never having 900red in the final sia,es of the team fall ~uin as ear y as t e ourt minute an competition by tallv;na in the 65th minute. never recovered. ,J --o The 10-1 margin bettered 9-0 victories by · ArgeniJ.ne Coach Cesar Luis Menotti, whoee Hungary over Korea in the 1~54 World Cup and by defending champiom have to beat Hungary Friday In Alicante to stay in the oompeUtion. WU among thoee watchina !n Eiche. Area -golfers qual~ CHINO -Six Orange Cout area gol eri qualified for the State Amateur tournament be held at Pebble Beach and Cypreaa Pomt aolf COW'9e9 July 12-17 du.ring rounda at Loe Serrm:. Golf CoW9el Tueeday. 5 Quallfylnc en the no w par la 71 and the coune ra la . , were Pet.enon ot Mesa Verde cc'?1ohn (M$erde CC); Greg Frederick of Huntington Seacll1f and Curt Bteitfyaa of lrvlne Coast OC. Breitfuu had to go an extra hole before quallfylnc. He WM tied with 16 other players at 74 bdt waa one of four players to bhdle the flnt e1C1ra hole. Larry Marpon of W811tm1Jwter la the fim alternate. MenotU said the Hurutarfan forward line gave him ''a complete su.rprlle.'T .. HuJlP.rim Coech,Kalman Meaoly said the El Salvador fam "Vied hard, but failed to play at champlomhlp tournament Nndard.'' _ 1 No one could ~ Scotland of that. The Scota, notorioualy vulnerable against lowly 1 ranked oJ>l)Olltlon, rallied in the aecond half to trounce ilie New Zealand part-timers 5-2 after bui1dinc a 3-0 lead. Kenny Dalgliah, with one goal, and John ·Wark, with a pair, ..-ored In the flm 32 minutes of the Group Six game In Ma1aaa, but the Kiwla battled t.ck to within 3-2 en pl.I by Steve Sumner and Stew Wooddln before John Rober t11on and Steve Archibald put the pme out ol l'MCh for the Sc:ota. . - Angels boW ~o June 15, Blue J ays By CURT SEEDEN OflMDeitrNMle.tf June 15 has never been an exceptional date for the Angels. particularly in off-the-field developments. . The date has traditionally signaled the dead.line for intra league trading. and over the years, the Angela have made some moves that really can't be classified aa bold. Who can forget 1965 when they dealt away PhJil Roof to Cleveland for cash and Bubba Morton? And then tht?re's 1963. On June 15 of that year, the Angela made an 11th hour trade that aent George Thom.U and c.aah to Detroit for Paul Foytack 8nd Frank Kostro. There will be no memorable June l&, 1982, even t.houCh the Angels opened their longest homestand of the y~ar aa the Toronto Blue Jays came to town. Not only did the Angei. skip the trades. but they also ~ked like they *ipped battfna pracUce in suocwnbing to Toronto's Jim Clancy in a 2-0 aetback to the Blue Jays before a sleepy · Anaheim Stadium crowd of 23.- 217. It took a two-run, ninth-inning home run ftom Dave Revering to decide the game which took a little more than two hours to 'cbmplete. And the reason for the speedy defeat was simple. Both Clancy and Angel starter Mike Witt mowed down hitters all night. Things were so slow for the Angels, that a two-out walk to Doug DeCinces in the fifth inning constituted one of their ou tstanding," Mauch said of biggest threats of the night. Witt. "Then he threw a couple of "Both those kids pitched great times in relief In fact, he was ball games," offered Manager perfect the last time. He went Gene Mauch. "That's about all I four innings and was perfect - can tell you. That was the ball no runs, no hits, no~g." game right there." "I hadn't seen him (Witt) pitch Revering's two-run shot in the fo r a bout a year ," add e d ninth came with Willie Upshaw Revering. "The last time I saw on first. It was the extent of any him, he was making some curve kind o f a rally all night. balls that were breaking off the Revering, in fact, contributed table. I was lucky to•tight.'' three of the Blue Jays' six hits. And eve n though Revering Clancy, meanwhile, was connected with a Witt fast ball downright fancy in scattering for his home run, he admitted five Angel hits to pick up hi& that even that pitch was giving seventh victory of the year him trouble most of the night. against just three defeats. And he "I brought four bats with me did it against a lineup he was ~on this trip &.nd he took care of unaccustomed to seeing. (See ANGELS, Page Cl) "The Angels have a real tough lineup -a different ball club than what it has been before," Clancy noted afterward. "I really thought we were going to go into extra i.nningll." , But Revering settled that with htS fourth homer of of the year, tending Witt down to his first defeat to go along with three wins. Despite the loss, Witt manage<! to turn in the third straight impreaive start for the Angels who received complete-game victories from Ken Forsch and Geoff Zahn in Chicago to wrap up a successful road trip. Witt was in command all night, so Mauch had no reason to pull him after he walked Upshaw to open the ninth. . "In his last st.art he threw up a couple of home run balls and the time before that he was just -F i r st p i t ch g a ve P a d res i ndicat i on SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego Padres knew the y were in for trouble from the moment Los Angeles Dodgers' left-hander Jerry Rew;., buzzed his first pitch across the plate. Reuss, 7-5, coming off a one- hitter agains t the Cincinnati Reds, threw a five-hitter against the Padres, stopping them 3-0 for his 150th major-league victory. "There's no doubt I'm back in the groove now ," said Reuss, who had los t four of five decisions before his current two- game winning streak. Reuss, who turned 33 on Saturday, used a pitch he resurrected from his high-school days to baffle both the Reds' and Padres' hitters. "I can't deecribe it," he said. ''I throw it like a curvebalJ., but it's faster than a curveball. It's not necessarlly a strikeout pitch, but I use it to set up strikeouts." Padres' outfielder Ruppert Jones, who came into the game as the National L eague's leading hitter but went O-for-3, just shook hia head when discussing Reuss. "He just throws a fastball that cuts, and another that runs," Jones said. "Anytime a man can do that, he's going to be hard to hit. Every time I see him, I know he's going to be tough." Ron Cey hit the first J)ltch of the seventh inning over the left. field fence to spark a three-run spurt in the seventh inning. Reuss was locked in a score:dla duel with San Diego starter John Curtis until C.ey connected for his sixth homer of the aeaaon leading off the aeventh. It wu ohly the third hit off CurUa, ~-4. who left with two outa in the inning after the Dodpra loaded the hues OD a walk to Steve Yeager, Reusl'1 bunt-8'ngle and a walk.. to Bill Ru.ell. Lula Del.eon relieved Curtis a n d waa greeted by Duaty Beker'• two-run alncle to center which acored Y~ and Steve , Sax, who had reached on a fielder'• dlok:e. Reua, who tn hia prevfoua atart a1atn1t Cincinnati had reUred 27 men In a row f~ • IMdoff double, earned hill third abut.out of the ~ to de him with ffomton'• J09qUl.n AndlQar far the -.U. Md. On the aouth coune, Mike Ivy of Meu Verde and David Hobby of Senta Ana cc QUA]Jfied. MJmkJn Viejo Country Ch.ib bad David Beatty, ar.t Oner and J'loed MllM, Jr. ~ while San a.m.nte bed Ed Harper and Rene Grtvet Scotland Manpr Jock stein, well aware of bJa t.eam'a dillM1 ncard In the 1974 and 1978 World • 8TRBAK CONftNUB1 -Rod ~ taa. off b1a ·~ Cupe. uld af1er the mad\, "We are atill the.,..._ aloYe • COllCh Bobby' ,Knoop ~ him lnltruc16ana. Carew \ nadon in the w<*d fot punilh1na ow.iv-," He &.d Jo.-. .. .-hill eonleic:utlve --bi"4 .... meak alive at 19 WM refeninl to the two defenillYe erla'I that r-• -IA .-~ ·-· San Dle8»'• IDlllt ~ tbrat --In tJ. ~tll --Lull Saluar opened wtdl .... and moved'to tbtrd two a..ttll ... CID allowed New ~ to acare. wtth • ..... 't. / ------.----~..-."-='- • ..... by Alan ·ww.am. ~ I ' •• ' t} J I • I ' , . . • Trading deadline • · f inds few d eals From AP cll1pate1Mt Quteenberry pick• up 17th eave . .,.. Q9& ..... "' p6.m.d the II tlnal 1 ~ to pick up hil ~-1-cl&nl 17th •W U Kan.u City defMMa MlnNlllOta, 7-4, tn American i..,ut bueball actJon. Qullen~rry. tbt former Celt.a MMI H_lch and 0ranp Cout~, helped · BH Black notch hll tint victOty . . . L1M1rr Hoyt fired ~... Jtter and became the major leque'• fint lO·pme wtJuwr • FalM tomedo report ~ , COLUMBUI, Oblo An • •l"l'OIMIOW lpor1I dells tape report \hat • tclrMdo had touctied down d\&rln• an Int•rnaUonel Lea1ue bulblJl pme iru.day niaht WU NCtlved b)' ~pea-" rlldio ancl televiakm stataonl and other bAllpuu wh.lch 1ut.c:rtb9 to the eervtce. There wu no tornado.. uJd • 1poac.man tor the ColumbUJ CUppen, wl\lch J)J'ovldn the lnfonnaUon from lta park. '"nwt ii ,totally lncorrect. We have OOlt'ected that on Che •porta dclcet," Steve Cobb. a Clippers lpokemnan. sa1d ot the tornado report. He wd the tlcker tape trammfulon WU unauthorised. ·''I tried to piece thl• thing totrether. I could not believe It," Cobb aald. He II.id he ~ not lmmed!at.ely give a more Complete explanation. ·7 area st ars . • sig n contracts No S-than eeven Oranp CoMt .,. athlnM have l1lned with major ~ bueball te&ml In tha put week. On.nae CoMt Collea• had three curren\ and two former players atgr\ oontrletl, while Golden West had two ex-playen ink pecta and Fountain Valley J!lah one. OCC 1lgnees Included Tom Dus1an, Don Smith, Chrl1 Johna\on, Dave Glick and· Mlke Empting. Ruatlena co lien w~re Sha.wn GW and Steve Springer, while Steve Jongewaard came MU>r }Qgue bueball's trad!ng deadline l>Uled with jult tWo minor aeala compietea before the ~line. th1a llellOO u the OUcaao Whl'-Sox defeeted Oakland. 7·0 ... Rookie Dave Hottetler llwared • pair of home runt, nl• third and b.lrtll In h Rm¥n' llll tour games, aa Texas rolled to a 6-2 win over Seattlt . . . Kea GrUfey'1 two-run home' ru.n -cap-ped a three-run eigbth innin8 rally u the New York Yankeet defeated Bolton, S-4. I -__ .......,_ the Foun1ain Valley campua. Veteran outfielder-flrat baseman Bill Rob&nlorl was re-acquired by the Philadelphia PhJlliea Tueaday night 1n a three-team trade that al8o lnvolved the Pittaburgh Pirates and the Toronto Blue Jays. The swap, announced by the Pirates one minute after the trading cut.off, a1ao brought 11 outfielder Wayne Nordhagen to Pittsburgh and aent outfielder Dick Davia to Toronto. Philadelphia acquired Nordhagen ffom Toronto in exchange for Davis, then the Phillies traded Nordhagen to Pittsburgh to get the 38-year-old Robinson . In the only other deal, lefthanded pitcher Dan Schat:u!der was re-acquired by the Montreal Expos from San Franc i sco for "cash considerations,'' Giants General Manager Tom Haller said. Robinson, who learned of the trade Tuesday 'night while the Pirates were playing the New York .~ets, was acquired by Pittsburgh from ·•· Philadelphia in a 1975 trade for pitcher Wayne Simpson. He was batting .239 with 17 hits in 11 •' times at-bat, including four home runs this season. Nordhagen, 33, played with the Chicago White Sox from 1977 to 1981 before being acquired by Toronto. Quote of the day "These guys are good, put if anybody , • should be traded, it's the owner. We had the start of a good team. Some of these players may not want to talk, but they don't want to play here, either," said Minnesota relief pitcher Ron Davis, criticizing Twins owner Calvin GrlffUb after the-team traded relief ace Doug Corbett and infielder Rob WWong to the Angels. Nicklaus bids for fifth Open title PEBBLE BEACH -The finest !I golfers in the land had their last chance to practice on the demanding Pebble Beach course today, preparing for the 1982 United States Open championship, an event many of them consider the tol(s crown jewel. ~ "Worldwide, per the British Open is more import.ant," said J k Nicklaus. "But to an American, this is the biggest event, because it is our nati<>oal championship." Bruce G0Ha1e, in relief of Tommy Joa, picked up the win ... RoblD Yout bluted a two-ru.n homer in the first inning and Milwaukee 'went on to poet a 6-3 victory over Baltimore. lie al.lo contributed a two-run triple in the eighth inning. Baseball today On th1a date in baseball in 1978: After three ninth-inning near-mla8ea, Cincinnati's Tom Seaver finally chalked up the flnt no-hitter of hia 12-year career, blanking the St. Louis Cardinala, 4-0. On th1a date in 1938: Boston slugger Jimml~ Foxx drew six walka as the Red Sox heat the St. Louis Browns 12-8. Today's birthday: Ch icago White Sox outfielder Ron LeFlore is 30. Braves win on Walk's\flrst shutout · Atlanta pitcher Bob Walk fired a a · four-hitter and Bob Boner drove 1n three runs to pace the Braves to a 7-0 . victory over Houston. In regiateriJlB' his flrst shutout of the year, Walk. struck out five, walked one and hit two batters : . . QllJ Davis singled twice anct ecored a pair of run!! and Joe Morgan collected three hits to pace San Francisco to a 4-3 win over et:pdnnati ln a game that was delayed . by rain three times . . "' Rookie WUUe McGee broke out of a l-for-16 slun\p with a RBI single with one Out 1n the 11th inning to lead St. _Lou.la to a 3-2·yictory over Montre.lll . . . Jay Job1toae slugged a two-run home run anOLeoD Darbam and Jo~y Davis drove-in two runa each to lead the Chicago Cube to an 8-5 win over Philadelphia. The triumph was the second straight for -the Cubs after a 13-game losing streak . . . Jason Tbompson rapped three hits, including a three-run homer. and drove in fiv~ runs to power Pittsburgh to a 13-3 victory over the New York Meta . . . The Dodgers announced that they have ae~t pitcher Ted Power to AlbuQuerQue and recalled pitcher Steve Sbirley. Walton, Cowens may return to NBA Bill WaltoD and Dive Cowns, ·Ill both of whom were most valuable players u cent.en during thelr NBA careen, are considering endlnB thelr retlrementa according to a publlahed report . . . Mah Wlluader, the current aemation 1n men's tennia, heada the Swedish Davia Cup aquad that will face the U.S. 1n St. Lo~July 9-11 . . . A poat.age stamp honoring B klyn Dodger great J ckle , Roblnton was unveiled at a ceremony at which the man who broke the major league racial barrier was remembered for more than bis accomplishments on the ballfield ... Two local busineaamen bought the Houston Rocketa of the NBA WALTON the team's general man.ager said. The buyers are CbarUe Tboma1, president o!,ra Ford a&tnCY an<i 20 car dealership• ln T~ an~ Sidney Slp,enker, preslden\ of hoe ~nt. • • ,. .. j Telev1slon, radto . Followfni are the \op· spocta eventa oo TV .. -tonight, Ratlnga ar e : """""""" excellent; """"""worth watdiing; .,....,... fair,"" foraet it. :ft . '1 p.m., CUuel 11 V' V' V' V' BASEBALL: Oddgera at San Diego. Auoucen: Vin Scully and Rom Porter. • ' , The Dodgers Will try to sweep ·the three- game eerlel 1n San Diego with Bob Welch (5-4) . taking the mound wnight against left-hander Tim 1..ollar (6-1).-San DiegO f~ 2~ games· behind the W~ Division lead.inR Atlanta Braves and the Podaers remained 7 ~ behind 1n third P9· ·, " . ~,. OTHER TELEVISION t 11 p.m . ...(34) --SOCCER -Gem'lany vs. Algeria. . RADIO . Baseball -Dodgen at San Diego, ?_P£!.l:i KABC (790); Toronto at Angela. 7:30 p.m., KMF(4 (710). TBURSDA Y'S TELEVISION ./ 8 a.m. (34) -SOCCER -Chile vs. Au.stria. 11:45 a.m. (34) -SOCCER -Yugoslavia vs. Northern ~ , '. Paid Advertisement Effor·11ess E·Xercise: Duggan, OCC's freshman third bM~man, a!gned with Seattle. A tint team All-Southern California selectlon, o....uan hit .315 for the PlraW.. Smith, a qght-hariOed pitcher who played tl,t OCC 1n 1980 and '81, qned with the Dodaen· He was 9-2 at Arizona State this put seuon. Johnston, who played · on OCC'1 1980 state . champion.ship team, WU inked by Toronto. He, too, played for the Sun Devils this year hitUna .302 with 17 home runa and 80 RBI. Glick, a second bueman for OCC in 1980, haa played at UC Irvine the past two lleUOOI. hlttlna better than .300 each year. He aianed with Oakland. Empting, who caught for tlle Buel 1n '79 and '80, signed with San Frand8co. He played the put two sea&Ona at the University of Oklahoma. Gill, a catcher, played a.l Hun~ Beach High and GWC before atce"ag the University of Utah. He was inked by the New York Meta. ~ \ Springer, an outfielder-infielder, played at Marina High and GWC before joining Gill at Utah. He was signed hY Oakland. Jollltewaanf. a shortstop, picked in the leCOfld round of the draft, waa signed by the Bolton Red Sox last week. t '· OCC's Ludovi se '1hle t e of yea r Barbie Ludovise wa.s named Orange Coast~ College's female athlete of the year thia week by vote of the OCC coaching .Staff . Ludovi8e ran on the Pit'a~ country and track teaJ'llli for the put twq years and gained top conference laurela in both sports. She was ta)>bed aa Cl'OIJ8 country athlete of the year for the South Coast Conference and runner of the year in track and field competition for the same circuit .. Ludovi9e finished first in the Southern California croea country championships and also won the Las Vegas lnvit.attonal. She finished third in the state meet, aiding the Pirates in winning the state championship: . During the track campaign , she was the. conference champion in the 3,000 and 1,500-meter runs. She also wqp the SoCal dtle in the 3,000 and finished thitd in the 1,500. She was third in the . st.ate in the 3,000. She holds the school record in the 3,00'.; ln 9:59.59 and has a best in the l,~ of 4:40.0. l\ She wiU be ho.no~ Thursday at a luncheon \ The Story Behind Electfonic Exerc'is~ " .. Using the muscle stimulator. combined with Bio-Health Center's favorite diet , Brad As pin went from a size 38 pant to size 30 in just 21h weeks. His mother Norma s aw s imilar results (size 12 to size 8) in the' same 18 day period. These are just two or the many successful & bappy Bio-Health Center customers. That's why people are flocking lo Bio-Health Center on 17th Street in Costa Mesa and be_c_oming regular participants of electronic exercis e with amazing results. , The principle behind this phenomenon is straight·forward. In a so-called "voluntary" contraction, that is to say during e .. eryday movement, the brain sends a signal along a nerve to the ''motor joint " or a muscle. This sighal, similar to a weak electric current, is a message to the muscles to contr act. lo e l ectro -muscular stimulation at Blo-Hnlt.h Center, electrode5 In the form of conductive rubber pads are placed on the surface or the skin oter the motor points or 16 major muscle groups. When a very weak electronic current is applied through the pada, the signal flnds its way through t.be skin to these motor points and causes the muscles to contract, just as if it had received a signal from the brain. During the contraction of these muscles ... the muscles are ~ctually expendin1 ener1y and doing the work. Patrons of Bio-Health often ~omment that the exercise feels Lborouah ad really worts the entire mwele. Most say )'OU have to try it to appreciate it. Doctors say tb.a\ :ts minutes of •timulatlon is equivalent to 800 to 1,500 1lt·u~ and/or leg rai.lea. Dea.Pile exercising your muscles 800·1,$00 times ln 45 m ln utes, pel"IOQI feel no pain du.rlDI treatment aad most don't even feel tbat famWar ~ like bl normal exercl•e, TM current ttlmulat• clrculaUOD '~~.:::r:=uat~ 1oxla1. llo·Healtta Ceate11 ~dpll!U.,... • "--:I Md l'binlal of Mr m&*lti ,••r1 oft•D after the 11\ ......... As Seen on C.hannel 7 Bio-Health Center ts currently treating men and women from the ages or 18 to 87 years old. Some come to Bio-Health Center just for the exercise firming up the ir flabby muscles and improving their .overalJ-body tone. Others. who a.Ye over· weight, combine this electronlc exercise with Bio-Health Center's favorite diet 'program allowing a substantial weight and inch loss. Ai first people say it feels strange and are amazed at how thoroughly it exercises the muscles. Then they relax and progressively work through their 45 minute treatment. Afterwards persons experience a five minute relaxation cycle that feels like a massage. Doctors are sending their patients to Bio-Health Center for this outstanding exercise program. In some cases, tbeSe persons are unable to do nonnll exercise due to back injury, etc., allowing them to now exercise muscles for the first time in years. . Bio-Health Center has a nominal charge to try this wonder machine. On your first visit a trained technician will do a full set of body meas~ements then let you lie atop a padded table for treatment. th~t will take approximately 45 minutes. During th1J time the technician will educate you further on what is transplrln1, which gives you further understanding of the sensations you are (eeling. Aft.er your first treatment, \be techniclan wHl remeasure & calculate the results. Finl time users have experienced incb lou varying trom 2" to t " ovenll. Thi.I chance ii primarily caused by the tonin1 of the muscle due to the extensive exercise it bu >uat completed. This t~ of equipment bu been wldelY uaed In both the medical fleld and tn areu ol prof e11ional 1porta. l tn medlolne' electronl~ 1UmulatJoa bu been wid•l11 UHd ln boapltall for tbe re-education of paralyaed • muclel. 1n ~ c ... , wMN volunhl'y. exerclle 11 • lmPOlliW., then 11 obvtoull.1 no 1u'b1tUute for eteetrlc1I ,umql1Uon. In cuH of paraplegia or homiplegia . following a stroke, e lectro. muscular stim ulation is invaluable for preventing loss or tone or atrophy in affected m uscles. . Other areas or medicaJ use include the treatment or bed sores by improving muscle tone art'd bloOd"circulation. '10 Sports, hamstring, muscle s train and other injuries have been treated by doctors without risk. Top soccer clubs in Europe_ have long known the benefits of muscle s timulation in the treatment of muscle and ligament injuries. The practical advantages of greatly redueing the tinte spent by top players inactive due to injury can be imagined. East Europeans became the foremost exponents of electrical stimulation for muscle power training. Other coun'tries are using muscle stimulation to train every type of athlete - rropi the endurance needed by long distance runners, to explosive power required by sprinters and-high jumpers. The fastest girl in the world, Angella Taylor, for example. uses muscle stimulation in train.in&. Electrook: exercise, however, is not for everyone. Tbe sUmulaUOn C\)uld interfere with pacemalers worn by persona wltl\ heart disease, pre1nant women and 1pe~ who Can')' metal ln their abdO'mena becaue ohurcery. · Lont IOM are the days when control ol. calorie intake was believed to be tbe only way to keep la abape. Modem thinkln1 now CGDc.ludea tbat exerclle ii an =fad.or ln the queet . for total bealtb. Bio·Heal Center In Costa · Mesa alto speclaliles in other .European concepts wblch lnclude CelluUi, Cont_rol utd u. v .A. Tanntnc Bech anCI &qulpmlllt. If you nDt to be mon a.ctlve, alive ...S '-" a put. looldnl IM>dy wttllDut UM clnaqerJ cl· ¥treDu61~ txerca1~ aad •eom1ortallle diet .....,.., r ta·--~-~. ............ c..... t..1'1\ I t.11~8 iiJL e.;n11. Kelly You ng Is In her bathing suit, catching up on the local news, while her mach ine Is keeping her in· shape with Its electrical Impulses. • I 1 . I t I 1 · :i L l ' 1' .j I • ' i ' 1· r· 1· ~ I I .. . . A=='.J:.1:9 W L M • Ill 14 ·-" 2t .114 ' 33 ff .... I U 11 .IOI I " 14 .... 20 M .ll10 IN 14 to .. ,, ai. ....,..,...... 37 12 .121 as 22 .'14 ' 31 21 .IH I ., 2t .117 .... 21 2t .IOO 7 ... 21 " .4'1 • 2t ll3 .4M 10 ~ ...... Toronto 2. ~ 0 OWolt .. C1e¥lltnd (ppd., rlln) Mlw9uk .. '· e.ltlmor• a ..... Vorti 5, eo.ton 4 KalMu Chy 7, Minn..ott 4 ChQgo 7. Otkltind 0 Tt••li. S..tllt 2 T.._.tO- Toronto (Stieb Ml ti~ (Atnko 11-1). n DetrOl1 ("9try 1-3) •t ~ (ac.- 6-5). n MllwtUk .. (Vuck<Mdl t-2) ti BelllmOre (0. 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Dim. ....... 1111==----.... n a 4.......,..4': . ~ "~s. .. ·~-r!-. ... ........ w:--.. ........ ........ ....,.._l....74; YtlJPJ 11, M.-....aL.cMl.M;Wlll. J. Nlllni ....._M: ........ ........ w. ~ f I .. . . " . .......,. ........ AUA*'TIAMI ... .,........ ,_ WMt (oata1J Vll!9,At':.fi' Ult-. , ....... ,, .......... (. , ......... Ar••U••• (Marl••h llaln• Howard (CyprtM); DI-Vigil (Cypr-); Regina &tahl (Oahrl; oltmlt ~andll-" (Oatderl Orow); Joela CU<-(Alllan\brt); ~ Holler (~); lltldgMt OcMlrlt (Ncadla); 8Ht• Krol (Tu~~rt~OOrt (l!I Oor9doi ~ ~Sindy =~~ .... );: tnelon (Altfletll); Ann Kardel (Fiiglletll); Clncl'y Claytor (El Dorado); o .. o .. Cleternot (Oardtn Orove); Elizabeth 8'9lanll , ........ ). Player ol th• Y••• -Kandy Foutl , (flgMmi w~ 8Mtyl Kamplt" (l• Habra); Monie• ..__ (Souttl Hiit); 8tttl CouaMnow (8 urrouoh•, Burbank>; K•llr Acl'dy IL• k abre); Monlda Atcher (8t. Jottph, llkaoood); u.. Outtl (8utfougN. llurtlaNlt. Ol•n• Oodd (la Hebra~.; Mar fUcll• (Vattncile); 8onnlt England (ClllllM ..... Hender.an (8urr311e· lkwt>en ; Kandi 81H'kt (8eutll Hill• : larbl• Sottorr (81. JOMOh. Lallewoo ); Ahond• WllNti.ot (WOf1tman); Tracey Hee* (Fon~); Dine BuccOI• (8oU1h Hiii•); Annett• Scott (Fom..); 8on)'a C.. (~ V~ ZJppy Tuc:tter (Cofona); tue Edrleh (81. JoHph, ltkawood); Stndrt Kl•PP (Rowtend): Valeflt Van Klr1t (Workman): T•-a_,, (Wlhlt). Pltyer'I °' the y--..... a.My (Ct\alfey end Mldll6t T-..nd (1..8 Wlton). ............. s-ttta Fore (Hatt); Silndy ~ (Calllornla); Klratan Smith JAltmany); MICl\elle Young (~): HI a.nMit (Centhl); Pattf Tltlltn (Monlelllr); Debtll ~ =); OeAIVl T• {Aemona); ~ (Monldllr); CMril' r-=enyl:_ M~ 0\#ln (lnlfftaculal• ); Man9 ...,.,,.. (Woodbridgt); ~'--t~~---er= ="..::.J'rn = =~'=='ra:::c: W:"=°~~ Merl'=- ~==~ I.II Hitt (Niii d Iha =!:'van N:aer=· = F-" IL.a Caned•); · _,~ (Inglewood); Stacey Shir• (81tllop ~J); I'.-NaMnd (Par..._ Ute Potter (Onteno awtttlan); f>9ttJ Ademt {E.ltlnore); Mery si.t.ro(Lt Cenada); Jealllt Ctl'l'~I• (Marr tlttr); Karen Ftuver CF ); V-8rWWIOft (81. Joetpfl, !IM), lne Holme (LA llae>tltt); Deb Ti-(Ontario ); Mlc:Nlt Ogle (Mary SW~ of the Y -'rraoy Miit (St. • Santa ...... 8tuert Cllt18tlan); Roxane Roll (Vltwpoln ); Amy llghlllont ~PH en• Poly); lch•ll• lopt1·8oyd Mandoc>a): MlfJ (Mtr~~ A. J. ylundam (Pattdena Poly); J9hnt Coc:twan (Marioooe); 8ttplltnlt F1lle (lli'lfltlO Ctvltt18n)t 8tllde Stlll (Mtlodyland); Karen B111nt (1Jerr8no); UM =(Mer9Mll ~ F~ Haney Farmer HM0191); Jllllt Benntt1 CMMI N:A6errr'/u ,._. !Mar hail fund• nt•I : Kelly Holm•• IM,!'~~ Dtr'!ltt 11t11 < tn0). of the Y -Serlh Fularton ~ l'rom P!A! c 'f\ CARLSON COLUMN. • • . I F=Jlll~.:.: ot murder), aome 800 the&r i,..t Nlpectl at ..W. n Tuatln, followed by the acatcertq of hll uhn within licht ol ftnd Street in Newport Bilich. J'or Swv. Van Hom, lt'• over. J'or t.hoM that waicbed him play, lt 1111\'t. No one could ever accuae h1m of doatni It. "He wu just auch a h4PPY kid," reca1la hia dad. ffe Wll II comfortable with a mentally retudtd kid u he wu with an honor student. He wu at MN with everyone." n.. complete athlete, with juat enou1h (aulte to keep him human. He11 &one now, but the Oranae County All·•tar same wU1 always rekindle memories of a player wt1l1na to go for it. e • • Tom DeKru.i looml u the No. 1 candidate to replace Fountain Valley High bueball C09Ch Joe Miller, .who waa recently diml1lled as the Barona' coech following a two-year tour whJch produced two CIF 4-A playoff teams. Miller is currently aeeking a spot u a pit.ching coach at 1JC Irvine or Chapman College and denies he waa· cut looee becau.ae of llleg~ workouts . "I had four or five kids who helped the coaches on one Sunday at a baseball clinic," say. Miller. "It was totally blo'Wn·out of proportion." tountaln Valley Athletic • Director Ken Quddrldf.e's ~nm were llffiited to, •rm just against off.campus coaching.'' • • • Mater Dei High's baaketball team , dominated by undercluamen and considered No. 1 in Orange County in the early, early poll, is being boi.tered by Capistrano Valley High transfer Tommy Lewis, a aoPhomore in the fall. Lewis, 6·5 and growing according to Capis~<> Valley Coach Mark Thomtoh, was the No . 1 player on Capo's -I From Page C1 I ' 1ophomor• team clurh'I hl1 trtlhman -.an. .. "-undoubtlldly would hav. Nn.d few ut." •YI 'nlamton, ••ffe'1 a ~. he'll be CIDI of the '** playen around.'' . . . =1 6r Collt e.oo.p Tandy UWuu.. UC I.rvtne -.t8tan Herb LlvHy and P•pperdln~ ..tit.ant Tom Allbury AN tlMi featured speak.en at a~ buketba11 camp at Martna pared toWard boya who wU1 entertnl 8l'ldet 5-P in the fall. : The live-week camp la fronf 7:30-9:30 a.m. l:laily and cm!a t6~ c.arn director swv. h Marfna Hl•h 11 a~=· a :f:!!~ 270) for ~furthe • • • NOTES -Eua Vu Ron be in au.ndtnct at Oranae Collea• Saturday nt1ht, the takee CJff for a alx·Week , throu1h weatern Canada o~ Sunday . . . The South hu beeni lnltalled ... 12-polnt favorite; . . . A 30 or 45-aecond clock b:~ be Ulled on an experimental , this comtn1 teaaon in prep buketball townarQentl . . • San Gorgonio High in San Bernardino 11 drop_pirig five sport.I be&lnnin8 in Sept.ember, lncludtng tnck and field, becaU11e1 of budget 1hortcomlng1 . . .' Marina HJ1h buketball coach Sten Popovic~ solved his problem with lack of entries in his tournament by combining with the Lakewood t.oumament . . . The San Diego 9eCtion will have reprae:ntativee in the state bHketball playoff• In 1983, which oomple1e8 the state picture for the first time . . . Costa Mesa High umtant Tom Ware has accepted a head coaching job in footbill at Was:o Hiab w~ of Bakersfield. Among Wur:n's foes le Lindsey High, coached by former Estancia usi.ll.ant Oris Vu Book . . . Lee Plemel, a junior in the fall, has replaCed two-year start.tt Bill McVlcar as Laguna Hills High'• No. 1 quarterback. McVicar has withdrawn from the Laguna Hills campu s according to Athletic DLrect.or Gary Carr. ANGELS 1BOW . • • two of them with Jast balls . What's left of them IB laying in the hall out theJ:e.'..'._ t - Clancy, meanwhfu\ scattered just five hits while walking arie and striking out four. One of the hits was off the bat of ~ Carew who~ his hitting streak to a career·high 19 ~ and r gave the Angel fans something to cheer about. "He's been pitchill.g great all year," Revering said· of his pitcher. "If we had saved a few games for him he probably would have about 10 or 11 wins now." "I was able to hit the spots all night," added Clancy. who Sof thall stars earn All-CIF Five Orange cOast area pla~en were named to the All-CIF women's softball teams as selected by the coaches this week. In the 4·A Division, four Sumet League players including two from &iiaon. were narr.c-d to the aquad. Angie LoSasso and Lisa Houk were picked from the Chargers along with Pam White, Ocean View pitcher, and Michelle Armstrong· from Marina. I n t.h e 2 • A D i v i a i on , Woodbridge's Arlene Hernandez was picked to ·the team as the lone area representative. b~ght a 4.47 ERA into the game and Wt with a 4.09 mark. Clancy ~ to_bold_bo._,,....L----"-1 Reggie Jackson and Brian Downing hitlem. Downing had hit aafely in 29 cf his last 33 games u the Anseh' leadoff 1 hitter, but he struck out twice Tue9day night against the ha.rd- throwtng right-hander. The Angels have now dropped eight straight games at Anaheim Stadium. They also saw their three·same winning streak snapped. and to make matte~ W<?~•eJ they fell a full game beruna ~ Qty in the AL West. * ANC111.L NOTl8: The Angele announeed they heW tlQrWS llft..flanOer ... KIJ!lp9r, their 11rst-rou0d"'8ctlon In IMt WMk't lnte llgerrt drtilt. Klpptr, a 17~~ ltandocJlo lfom AutOft C«ttral CethOllc High In llllnoll. complied • 21-1 r«:ord during the II.at two yew-a. TM .. 2. 175-poundar ~ 130 In eo lnnlnQa wtlllt alloWlnO jutt four Mt'ft8d rune tnd 11 filtt. :i:Dlree1or of SoOlrttng lMrJ aeye COfnl)ttOt to T~ 1 ltart•. ftt. "Wt '9*' Mllct t al th• Jame age H • fourth-round ftltCtlon tnd It toe* Nm 2'A ,_a to make "" ~ I'd ., ~ ... oomparabM protptct ... HllllH H id. Kipper Wiii b• MtlOl*I 10 the Angtlt Stltrn c:M> of the Nor1lwl LMQua • . • Mort on tn. df9ft. the Angtlt...,.. 18 °"* pleb. Inducting • of their top ,.. MllacUol.. Among "*" -.......... llr9t .,..,,., and .,.... lllal( I d 11 ~ r1Qltt-hendfd _1)ik:tltr, bottl from Ctl 81* Now1Mdgo ........... IW't· ~=~oo:::=-= ... ffOlft l.aVanw, -~ the South«n Callfornla pla)'t(S MIJM<I ... ....... ,...... It "" Mlty -AINrlcan ...... "°'9 pttor ~ outtltldtra with 237,112 Al«• ....... They .......... .......... ttCOnd M*'9 outfl9ldtr'I with • c119t8n1 170,206. T09 AL °'* pttor It tNrd .,..,., ........... "' ~ City with 432,841 ~ .•• OarM two ol the ..,... with Toronto tonlgllt pita ......... (5--1,~ tM Angtlt agalnet the 8lua .1ey1· ..... (M), Barons gain QB Tollner transfers to FV from Utah By JlOGEB CARLSON "' ............ Iii mmt anM ~ man'1 lotl IJ another'• gain, but for the Unlveratty of Southern Callfcmia and Fountain v..uey Ht1h Sc:hool, on.e man'• 1ain pnMdea aftOtber' bl& pln. USC football coach John · Robtrwan Ml 9dded Ted Tollner to bll ltaff 11 an --"tant caecb. and bmeflq tram the errtva1 of the former tutor of All· American quarterback Jim ~Mcll8baa at 8YU la FounU!ln Valley HIP o.:b MIU M&ns. 1'oDMI-bM mowd Into ..... DeYOawood &atau1 area of ruunta1n v.n.y, two..._ flan cm ...._. ._p11 • .nt t» ._ • brouabt with him bl• eon • ...... llNaa ToDmf. Tallall' 11 a ... 11, ~· W111D PIM IJllh rim ... , .. ..,. ................. ................... . , . ii ........... . ____ .. =w...~- MUD.... _.._,..._......._...._. ____ ......;NU..;:;;;;;;IC;,,;.,;.;,;llJo..;,;Ta..,; __ ...,...,.t:i!IL.. .~ J ... ..... .~oou:.r.. N0nCS OP D&ATB OP NOl'IC& OP D&ATB OP ......... LOUii J, YOL& °' .... A ~ Oii T'MI cm C.&CILU a a~NDIL THEODORE &LmlNSa, ~ !!:~ A'-~•r•~ • PST.JTION TO AD ·ap~llltHUlld=~ ~.,.!.!!'~!"~U!il~~NOTo.~ri~~o~i ·~ wre IMO .. •°"""*--="• ..., lllHllTSll DTAft NO ......... •,. ... ._. ot "'* OMlllt ~'Prii ~-••n ,..,., •111 .... M .... Ooele ~--.fNlllll -Pl.A 1 "-lNClt MIVI" •11nM WtU HLI. !tT 'UIKJO AUCTION CITY OP tllVINI LteNTI • •.111111 p s TIT I 0 N ., 0 ~ .. .,..c.:::...... · to Deed et TNll ...., 1N1 MIYI"--. 119. ,,. ' ... TO THI HIGMl.IT llOMlll flOA _..IWftNMICll Dtl'lalOT TMI "To .n ..._._ ......_~..._, _ _._ A.DIONllTBR EITATB NO. IM. a ~ , .. 1tl1 ,...,.. Mllf It. DIP IN 0 AN T : M 1 ll WAN To all M1rl. ~ OAIH ~ • ,_.,. of ... In I.IVY AND COLLIOflON OP .,.. ...,., ._ .... .,.~-A·llHH '°"*=· ... wlii.n:1~atN.ii. ' '1 .. •·NO: .... ,. 111 Meli ~ATK>N. INO .. .-" 11 ored lton and coM1nt•nt WM moiwy of 1M """911~= HllHMINTI TMIM• ANO c:redhon and conunaent T all·..._,_ ...___......., _ _._ o.a 1 ot1ifQ,,,Iil W .. --· uoet, pat• 4H, or Ottlol•I 11. ~ c:rtdhon ot LoW8 Jacob Volk 111 rlgflt, ttttund "'*-' T'MI OONIOUDAnoet wme Ult end lto n of Cece Ila B. 0 , ...... ~- n.i. ~ .......... IW • ~ "' die ..... " .. ~ °"°" OOM~: MAit d 'Nb rnay .,. to end now 1.-d by " !#Ider ll6d mm Oii am cowrrt Kandel and ~rlOM who cr•dlton and contlna•n• ~t.loft, lleOll6'1• • ~ec..., ...... 'T"ANllT, INO .. • 01llfotn11 ~=~ ln the o .. d of Ttuel In tll• Pfoperty 111\.1_ . :l'ftt~ ma~be othel'wiM tnieiwt.d cndltort of Theodor• ~•• lno· of 0111ttr~trl:eo11tJ1.!." oorJorellon..1 va. O"Olt will __ _., hertiMftet dlnrtl»edl WHl•t•tt ·~"o'i•y ,.~·-""" ... ,_ will __ _.,_--·-·. Kleiner and peraon• wbo JofWI '· l<INMl&W, OHA"Ll8 I.. Md,,_ DI, IMO AMT t : MI" MAN .....,QI' ...... TfllUITOft THOMA.I M. CU..,... " " ·-• ......,,..,., V1 ua .,....,..,. _.,._ L... ..-i.-.. •-inc.wted ~ • .-0~ ,.._Md...._ WILL T"ANl'O"TATION, INO. 1 A l)eUdocl bM been filllCI llnd 'A'TflllOIAA. OU"Tle, hUIMnd l\lltCltyOI 1N\M, by~ No. A petition hie been filed may V9 ..,...,_ ... _ 1'1111 ~· -lllld Wiit! the Hlt: AT ,011.10 AUCTION TO co11rorn1e oorpo,1Uon: T"ANI ~ W'awa N Volle ln tho llnd .-. ta.,.J ~ed on APfil 11. 1Ha. by ff4ttbort J. ~1 Sr. in ln tht wtU andloc ..i.w. Oo1111tY QMt Of Onnfe ~on HIGHHT 11001" fl'O" Cf~':! ,...,...~, C!Ot'llOfllol\, 1N1 &unarlor Co~rt of Or• .. •e llHlfl'IOIAlllV: llVl"l.Y HILi.i lnlll1tocl prooeedlno• fof tho th Superior Court of A petltlon Ml been flied June T, ,.... ,,..,. ~f:.t:.: .~r ... DOU 1 --Mli:rr~ County requHtina t~t ~~I~~ •• ~~ AN fOflHllOll •Of 1111 CllV of lfVln• 0r:nae County reque1t1~ by Mark Kleiner tn the Publl•h•d Orano• CoHI Oelly ftonl 1n1ranco to lull• 1, 11' 1 Git ...... ~ Nathan N . v 0 l k b. ~ctld ...,..,.,. ;11, 1M1.. ~.!:"~~·==:a•:. that Herbert J . Kandel, ~. c8uperttor Court 0 : Or~~ .-:.. l'llot. a. t&..13. $0, tt1a Town" coi1ntry Road, Qulrlga. .GAim 1• ap,pointecl aa aetJonal ln8tt. No. nos In boo11 ,.-11 publlO llOhtlnO '411!thln tllt City, encl be appotnWd .. ~reonal oun ty reque1t n1 ~ a 2&H-ta Clllfofntl. AA rlOflt, '""encl~ M01'Cm Y• ......, re-tatlw to ~ ~ .,., ~Ofllelllt--"-"* '" • oonou'"'1tl'f 1n1ttai.cs·11tooticllngl repr.-n\atJvo to tidmlnblt« Mary to.lner ti. appolnt-4 ---NUC---.,-lflC(----::.,~'°O:: ~='"by~=.::",.':'~::-~~ th~~~t• of Louil Jac:ob j~=~ruetot~':: ~ti·,=~ld~~nM~ the e1tat4t of C•cella 8 . M.pettOhal\'epreeentatlve to •-proPettY ettuated In Mid 00\ll'lty end ,.. ....-...... • .,._ .._. Vol IJ ( u n d er t b • tM f prOC*1'f: Dltt,,c, .. o. 'fa' therewith, ell Kand e 1 (under the admlnleter the Htate of -·· etale ~ • h Wiiia ai 1 --... Independent AdnWlJatration A Condomtnium oone1etln0 ot IM P\lf'IUlllt to tM ~ and lndependent Adminitt.ration 'nWIOdote Kleiner (Wlder \ho M 0 T~C I 0 P t L I M • 0 P 1.0t 71 o1 Tr• No. 6006. In It. If ~ _.,. '° 11ek 1M ed\llol Of -... Att) 'Ibo .-&don lollOWlng: LIOhtlnQ Act Of tt72: tnd of Eat.ates Act) The pet.ltlon ~t Ad.mlniatra~ TIC*U .. -.-.. ~ Coet• Mo ... County ot 111 1ttontoy In 11111 matt•r, you of --~ .. _,;,. .... ln....,~ ·t. (I) Unit No. HO of thel oortaln WHEM.Al~tllt ~t of 11 aet for ..._ .. ;.. .... in Dept. of t.ltaiea Act). "nle petition '°" TO ,_ a .... Of Cllltofnle .. per "'°'*' dO IO .... ~ 90 ttwl 'f04JI la -~or ---~ ,_.p CondOfnlnlum pt0j9ot cleeaf1bed In Street• hU tnd fli.ct with ·-~· " t ( he .. .i .... in Dept. . A Olll'ICI Map~ In look 1~. P9001 Wftttln ~ If llf't, ~ be No. S at '700 Civic Center that oortaln CondomlnluJn Plen Ille City 0 er 111• report (lh• No. 3 at 700 Civic C.tfltet N _,3 °[ 700Q!.-('.enter T'NI 11 to '"'°"" the publo thot. 17 end 18 ol Mlaoellol.-. Meoe. II\ fled on Ume. Drive w.i. lo the Qty of recorded In bOOll 1on1, PI09 A of "~") oontalnlng the ma~ Drive, West, in the Oty of o. • ... .., . under 1oot1on .. s.,. of the ,_.-the omoe of the County~ of A y 1 e o t u •I• 49 "a o t 4 a 8 • C llf l · ~ Aeoofdt. In 1M ofllol of the eoeclfled 1n ltr..U and HlolMaYI Santa Ana Callfornla on Orlvti, Wmt, In the Oty of and Aeoulallon• fof, th• Federal Mid COunty. 41ta-4.._ II ltlMNt ......-... iapta Ana, • orn a on °""'~ ,_oer of Otano-~ Code &ectlon 225t1 u dl(JC1._, • S t A California on 8M9 encl tMn Syeten\, Homo YOU AM IN Dl!FAUU UNDER /o ....., -. U& • •i"lii'i8 July 7, 1982 at 9:30 a.m. (euch Plan being here1n11tof Mid rMOIUllOn ' July 7 1982 at 9:30 a.m. • an a na, Saving• ot America, • '•d•fal DUO OF TRUST DATEO APRIL 13 ,.1111 w. u., ,...... ,...... D' YOU OBJllCT to the ret.necl to • ''the ~ by HOW. TMERl;.ORE, the City IJ' YOU OBJECT to the 'it 7• 1982 at 9:30 a.m. leWI08 ~~~d ~..;,!l!' 1H1. UHL.l88 YOU TAKE ACTION ---~ea "*-1• -IP"'~ of the petition. you Plan"), and •• defined In tll1t CounG11 of the City of IMne dote granting of the petition, you YOU OBJECT to the WMe!Wa ....,........_ • ....,. ... ..,......... TO PM>T£CT YOUR PROPERTY, n ...... lhouJd either t the •Olftllln Oaolatltlon Of eo-wit-. hef4lby r9801¥e M (ollowe ihouJd either appeer It t)w VU\tini of the petition, YOU ~!"eel en~ MAY8ESOLDATPU8UO~LE.lf ti U•t•d dtHI eollcltu el b l dappeo.rt t a 1.1condltlon1 end R .. trlctlon• of IEOTIOH 1. Th• City Council bearlns and elate your ahoWd either appeer at the wtttl tho.--. HOllW L.oen _ .. vou NEED AN EXPLAHATIOH OF OOflMfO ct. 1111 lbOoldO 111 _.. ear n1 an I a e your Newport Or .. t Homoown•r• •.OV~ t1te reorort .. filed b 1 d t te your loerd for '*" 1111 °"' '° eetablllh • T H E N A T u ". E o fl T H E • • u n t 0 • d • b 1 r r a h • o •, 1 o obEtlosu or fJle written A .. ocl•tlon, '•corded In book lnCWdlnO the .. 11ma1e ot the cottt obEtlon.a or file wrl tten ear ng an 1 • bfMGti oftlol to be i-tec1.~ C!'~ PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU ~ o. •• "**9. ob tJona wlth the court 10341. page en, of Ottlol•I of melnt-1C9, the ~em of the ob ttona with the court obElona or me written the lmmedlld• ~of, -,.... SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER ., reapueeta _..., 11 '-lloUN. be th h 1 y Aecofd8 of °'M09 County and In Oletrlct 8nd the rumment of Mid be ore the hearing. Y our ob Iona with the court 11th Street1 City of CO.. Mete. The •tfHt add, .. • end other puac»w regllllleda a tMmpO. ore e ear ng. our emendment '•corded In book ooet•. be in raori be o re the hearlng. Your ~Of Ofeng•. ~····of common dellgn•tlon," ln'f, Of the I. TO THE OUENOAHT: A oMI appearance may be ln per90l\ •1oau. p•g• 01 of Offlcl•I SECTION 2. Th• Cit)' Councll appearance may pe a pearance may be in penon ,... prooeny c1eeor1w ~ 11 oomplOlnt, '* belll tied by the or by YfNr attorney. tAecord-. end lllMndMent recol'ded hereby declu•• II• Intention to or by your attorney. 0~ bt your attoiney Anyone may write In favOf Of purported lo b•: 1139 cu.on p111ntlft 1Q11Mt you."~ wlatl to 1 J' y OU ARE A I'" boolC-10793, poga 1119 of Offlclel order Ille tormetlon of • epeclal IF Y 0 U ARE A · protnt of th• appllcatlon. Youf Str.et,CoMaMoel. Cellfofnia_ cla9endthilllwlult,yournuet,wlttllti CREI>rr<>R dngent Reoorde. ("Ille Deoleratlon") and uHumant dl•trlc:t to ta.• CREDITOR or 8 contingent I Y 0 U AR .E A ~ fM'/ ~but -not Th• ut1d•r•lgned Tru•t•• so day• after ttile •ummone le .............. 1 or a con the DecHtatton Of AnrMIJ!atlon for dHlgn11ed lh• "City of Irvin, creditor of the deoeued you CREDITOR or a contingent llrntted to, the ~t'• teCOl'd of dl•clalm• any lfablllty for any ~on you Iliad w111 tf1M ooun • wwwtor of the deceued, you 1Lot • ot TfHI Ho. 1111. (tlla LIQllllnQ M8'nteranca Ot8111c:t," the creditor of the deceued, you ~lnhelptnvtomeelthe ec:t,_,ofthewwtedd,_ .,ttien~totheoomplllnt. muetfileyourcla1rnwiththe Oeollfatlon of Annexation), boundarlu of wh1ch are mustfUeyourclaimwiththe fil claimwiththe Ofedlt need• of IU l oc:el llnd other common de81gnatlon, If Un._)'OUdo90,'fCAJ/ldetaultwll court or preeent It to the teoorded0c:tob«1111 1t12,lnbool! cotumlnou1 with th• preHnt court or praient It to the must eyour oomrnunll .... F0ut coplM rnu81 be eny lhowrl herein. be entered on app11cet1on a1 Ute 1 t tlv 10311. page 5111 of Ofllcl•I bound•rlM of the City. tnc1 10 le.Yy personal repreeentatlve court or present it to ~ r.c.tved by "Supervl8ory Agent, s'11d HI• w111 be made, but pllilntlff. and 11118 ooun may enter• penona repreehn a e Record•. In the oltlce of Ille oounty and collect 8P9Clel 111••mertt• f()( ap~lnted by the. court p e raonal r epr esentauve Federal Home LOM 8an1t of 4on wlttiout c:ov•n•nl or w1n anty. ~ llQl!net you for the rallef appointed by t e couz:t recotder of Ofange County. tile C08t1 and lnc:ldental expen8M wi f ... _from the appointed by the court Froncl8c:O, eoo CallfOfnl• StfMt. ·~ or lme>llecl. NQWdlng title, demended in the complalnt, wt11o11 within four months frcm the (b) An undtvlded 1110tti lnter•t In ot maintaining end 8«Vlc:lng pubflc our monu111 thin f ths fr the Po•t Office Box 7g411, .~•n poeHHlon, Of encumbrencH, could re1u1t In garnl•hmont of date of flrat l11uance of end to the common.,..• defined 11g1111ng faclllllM •lonQ ltfMI• and date of tint l11uance of wid · fourfl mot~ om 1 Ffancl1eo, Oallfornlo 9•120, by lncludlng fHI, chergH •nd MIGM. tllllnQ al money or Pf009l'tY let1era u provided ln Section In th• Oeclarallon end In Ill• publlc pl-wtlhln the etty. letters u provided in Section ate o rs issuance o ~26. 111e2.Anaddltlonal20day. ... of the TruetM and of the 0, °'"•' reOef requHted lri the 700 f the Proba1e Code of Deolu~tlon ot Anne11111on, being SECTION 3. Th• propoHd 700 of the Probate Code of l.ettera 81 provided in Section to •ubmlt comment• may be tru•t• created by Hid OMd of OOl'l19falnt. O Lot 4 ot Tract 7117, • per map Ollttlct would encompaae the enllr• 700 of the Probate Code of obtained, provided 8UCtl fequMt 18 TN8t, 1o pey the ,.,,.aNng pr1nc1p11 o...i March e. 11>12 California. The time for recorded In boo1! 309, PtOM S3 tnd City •nd be c:otermlnou8 with the California. The tlme for C lit I Th t . f fec:elv•d In writing by the 8Um8 of IM noto(e) aecurid bY Mid PM Newman filing cJa1me will not expire 3•. lncluelve of Ml•c•ll•neou• prHent boundetl•• of th• City. filing claima wW not expire f'~-.. 0!,~~: wille atmexplreor Supervl1ory Ag•nt by June 29, Deed of Trull 10 wit: 122,200.00 · a.ti. pri« to four moot.hi from Mepa, In the ottloe Of the oounty •xcec>tlnt 1rom the ••••ment of prtor to four months from aw'6 U&Uu. no e 1112. with Inter••• thereon ff om By: Lynn Hwnmond, b d "of h b 1 reoorder of~-. County. Mid co.t .. nd ...,.,,_. th .. rM of the date of the hearina prior to four months ~ Anyone Hndlng • •ub1tant11I Beptember ~4 ec-20.5% I* o..MY t e ate t e ear ng (c) Exclu•lve eaumenu alt pvbllc court-. publlc lllleyS, a11 _....,__, ..__ a the date of the hearing protHt may requHt an ofel ennun1 .. 1n utd note<•> ....., ... fl. llUCCIN, ML noticed above. appuneriant to Mid Unit No. 290. all puDllc •UHi•. ••Hmentt and ,.,...,.,.. auuv.:. noticed above • ~on the appllc:etlOn •NI p1u9 009t8 and eny adv8llOM •of -...... --. ..... A YOU MAY EXAMINE • "'°'9 pertlculaffl deflneCI In the rlOht1-of-w1y, all public perk•, YOU MAY EXAMINE YOU MAY. EXAMINE fonll In Section M3.2(f). Fof • '3.1SS . .W w111 lnt.-t. ......., c•••• _,, the file kept by the court. If Condominium Plan end the green belt• llnd ~Ir'<! alt the file kept b~ the court. If :::.\:~~.~.olt b!u:1ob:1:rr1~!n~ of ~::Tor'!":'.:!:cs°= ~::;;:'1or•""• Co••t Dall'f you are lntereated In the °i:),:~llltlu8M ....,,.,,, to oth•r publlo P'O"tty ueed for you are interested In the the file kept by the~-If reotNad on time. and conteln II delivered to tti. under•lgned a Plot, ...., zt, .;.;;.•2. t . 11, 1N2 estate, you may file a request UM the common ... encl fecllltlell :~.°:, ':!.-:i == estate, you may fUe a request yo~:re in tere~ reqan ~ IMtlt the folowlna: 1) •~of wrtttan Oedlratlon of defUt llnd 2321-12 with the court to receive of the pro)ect wtllofl hive belll or u111fty tlght-ot..-.y or -.ctric 11ne with the court to receive ea •you ma)' . the,_ for ihe proteat; 2> the Demand tor Sela. and • wrtnen special notice of th e wlll be dlvelcpect on Ute folloWlng rigtlt-ot-wey. 1peclal notice of the with the cour.t t.o r~eive 8'*llflC mettan obfeOted '° In the Notice of Dtf..it llnd aaeaori to rtllJC NOTICE f ' deeeribed ,... property. SECTIOH •. The public llQtltlnQ inventory of estate ueeta( s p ec I a I not ace of the appltcetlon or In tti. appllc.anl'• 8'1. The urldar•goed ca..c1 M6d loventory 0 el.late aaeta (1) Loe t of T,_ No. 7952, •per ~· ~ ::._r:,:1n .. t•l~81anorcl and of ... _ petlti....., ~·-·-inventory of. eat.ate a.saeta ~ -*-~ 3) ~ Notlol of DehMft llnd Bec1ior1 to MOTtCe W,,.,.,..... 8ALI and of the petitiool, accountt map reoorded In book 302, PtOM 1 _--.. -...,... uao: -·-. ........,... ... lndUdlnG tlft fW¥ent ~or w '° be feCOfded 1n Ole C01M1ty T.a.,.., ._ and reports described ln 10 9 lnclullv• of MIK•llaneou1 1mpr-l8 UMd °' UMf\11 tor the and reports described in and of Jhe petitions, ~ts flnlindeilnto111..i1on. wHch IUPPOrt wMr9 IN real property 18 loc:Mad. NOTICE 18 HEAEBY ONEH, that Sect Ion 1 2 O O of t be Mape, reoor08 of Orenge County, llghtlng of any publlc plac ... Sect Ion 120 0 of the and reports des.era bed in IN PfOteet and •> 81"1 ~ OAre M.y 20, 1982 on ~. June 30, 1te2, et ,..._111omia ~ ,.,,.,. Clllltomla. lncludlng orn•mental •tand8'd8, "-"1ornia Probate Code Sect lo D 1 2 0 0 of l he effect• on your org1nf11tlon Of ALL E G HA HY t:eO o'c:lodl a.m. of Mid..._, In the -....aa civuate ........ue. EXCEPTING THEREFROM that lumll)ef1et ........., 8UPPOf1S tunnel• '-"""" . "-"f -•-Probate Cod oommunlty wNdl ITltl)' ,..,.. from INVESTMENT co .. INC. fOOm ... ••Id• fOf co-;;'ductlng Nadau N. Volk portion of land lnc:luded within maMolet.' ~. conduit8. plpee: Mlclaael R . LLedbett,e7r~ a::;::.o ... Rot:~llO 1 • llC>Pf'Ollaloftheeppllcat~ 1111 Town & Country TrUl!lee'•Sllee.wlthlntneomc.ot AHO,..)' at Law Parcel 1 u •llown on• mep wlr ... conductor•, guy•. •tub•. Attoraey at aw, 1 ., L "tt~ You rMY look at tlle ....-Uon Roed, REAL ESTATE SICURITIES HH Wllalalre Blvd. reoorded In boo1! •S. pege ff of r,1111orm1. Dr•ce•. tr•naformer•. Labra•er DrHe, Co1ta Attoraey1 at aw, • ., •nd •II comm•rJt• flled at th• Suite 1, SERVICE. loc:eMd et 2020 NorVI 84llte lMI Parcel Mapa. In the offtoe of the n•ulator•. cont•c••. •wltchH, Meea Callfonla t%1%1. Sotatla Sepalveda Blvd.. No. Fader• Home Loen e.nk of San Ortnge, Cllllfomla 02e48 Broeidwe)', Suite zoe, In the City of 1 county ,_der of Or-.noe County. c •pa c 1 tor•. m • 1 • r •. "'·'"tSi7 %03, c.tver Ctsy, Callfonlia Francl•co, unleu eny eucll Tai: {11•1972-0eCM a.nta Ana, County of Oninge. Sia• Loe Aaaeles, Calif. Htl Cellfomla. communlc•tlon circuit•. •P· 5...-Or ,.___ HUO. (%11) Hl-HH. rnetertel8 -exernot by ft from By: $ar1 LeVoff, of Clllfon"-. BEU TfUJ8T DEED8, (Zll) IJS-1171 · (2) Lot• 1, 2 end 3 of Tr9Ct Ho. pllencH, •lt•chmenU, and Published ange '""""'"t Published Orange Coast publtc dllc:lotur .. ,, you heW 81"1 .......,.,,. 8ec:relary INC., • Colfornla corpotetlon, .. Publlahed Orange Coast 7811, .. per mec> feCOl'ded In bool! appurtenancae. Daily Pilot. JW\e 15, 16, 22, quutlon• concerning tfleH Publl1hed Orange Cout Deity dl///y appointed Truetee under end Dail PUo J e 9. lO l6 309, p•g .. 33 and 34 of. SECTION 5. fWfer.,,c;e I• hefel:>y l982 Daily Pilot, June l~ 16, 22, Pr OC ! du r • • · Cont •ct In• Piiot, June 2, t , 18. 1982. pur•uant to the powef of ,Hie 98 1Y t. une ' ' ' Ml8Cell•r14H>U8 Map•. record• of made Io th• report of th• 1982 J 5uper.1eoly Aafnt at the Federal 2307-92 conferred In that oertllln DMcl of 1 2 Orange County, c..tfomla. Superlntend4Jnt of Str .. t• on. ni. 2628..a2 • 2627-82 I '1 Home Loen BMk of San Franc:Mco. Truet exeouted by J-Devld80l'I, 2528-82 E )( c E p TING THERE FR 0 M. with IM City Clerk for • full ano Publl•h•d Oreng• CoHI Dilly Plll.IC M011C( • 8lrlgle rnen. reconMd June U. however, tny and •II exclu•lve cf•l•ll•d d••crlptlon of tl'l•1 rtll.IC'NOTICE PlllUC *>TICE Piiot. June 9, 111, 1982 _,,. --·· 1181, In Book 14110 ol Official rtalC *>TICE euement• •PPurtenant to •II Improvement• to be mllnlelned end ----------------------2482-92 ,.,..,,,..,... --Record• of Mid County, 11 ~ condominium unit. exoeptlng Mid Hrvlced, tll• boundarlH of th• \i NOTICI CW TIIUITIE'S IAU! ---111-ID-1 .,.-..,,. ..... -n-"r___ The f=:T~ doing 539, Recofder'• ln1trum•nt No. ~~ Unit No. 290 now or hereaft•r Pfopoeed dl11t1c1 and lll'Y ~ NOTICE OF DEATH OF 1 ---'"-UULJ\1--""-' ~----~ •: 32079, by reeeon of • brMc:h or U1I ~ ~to In the Oeclanllon or the 1 he f e In. and 1 h • p ropo .. d DAVID B. SCHWARTZMAN T.a. No. Mel1 def9ult In peyment or performenoe Oeic:laratlon, •emended. ~t• upon .-bla 1011 D OF PETITION TO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ltle1 F1CTITIOUI llU ... H CALIFORNIA PARTHE:AS, 1303 of ttie ob11gat1oM MCUf'ed thereby, ,....,_,CA (3) A Member•lllp In Newpl'lrl and percell and land wtthln the AN on Wedneeday, Juty 7, 1982. et 9:00 NAME ITATWMENT Avocado Avenue. Suite 220, lnc:ludlnQ lhl1 bf-=" "' defd, ,.......... VALINCtA..,. CrHt Homeowner• AHocletlon, Olalrtct. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. o'cloc* a.m. of Mid de'f, In the room The fottowlng per90nl .,. doing Newport Beech, Cellfomle 92eeO Notice of wlllch WH feCOfded Dal• dal t: D..-i. W. Dl..-R; owner'8 of ·-d of Paroel 1 M SECTION e. The CllV Counc:ll A-1111%4 NI ulde for conduc11ng TN8tM'8 bu~. 8!uTO SERVICE. 9292 8'blln sn.. .• -~~!.}~ 1= ~-to, 1991, In 8oott t•2M =:.:....,... 10, ._.. on that certain Parcal MllP l\lrthef hereby dec:laf• It.I lntentlori To all heirs, bene(lciaries, s.i... within the offloM of REAL ~~m1-... • w tmln ter ---_M_s_ , .... 220 °' Oflldal Aecord8 of Mid County, recclfded In book .a, PeQll ff of to order. upon formation of the City di d ti 1g t ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE. ._., , .. ,., ... --. • • · Avocedo Avenue, u te • at p•g• 1930, Recofder'• Peteet MllP'. In the offlOe of the of lrvln• Llgfitlng Malncenenc• ere tors an coo nd en loceted at 2020 Hort.II Broedway, 1 . 1 Callf~':i~dl'llcnlt, 71175 Ronakl ~~s¥:e~. • ~No. ttlSM. WILL SELL c~ ~enoe County Aeootder known• Ol8trlc:t, theCONIOIJdetJooof~811Q9 crediton of Davi H . Sul'9 :zoe. In the City of Senta Ana. C>ftvo9. Hunllng1on Beecti, Calffomle Georgia COf'POl•llOh, 19530 Venture AT PU8LIC AUCTION TO THE c-..... A.._ common .,.. B, the f9Cfeltionotll St.reet Uahtl~ Mein•-Dll1'1ct Schwartzman and persona County of Orenge. Slat• of 92&47 Bl'ld., Sult• 211, Enl*M>. Cellornle HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, NOTlCIJ Y• ............. lot. ~ No. 10 wlfh Mid Oll1rlct. who may be otherwise Calltornl•. a• duly appolnt•d Hal LH, t 33011 HunklH 9143t . lewflll money Of the UnMd St.._, Tiie _..., ............ ,_ YOU ARE IN DEFAULT A SECTION 1. Notice It hereby interested in the will and/or TnietM under end pw9U9l'lt to the Awnue. G8tden Gr0\19, Cetlfornle Tl* bullMaa • oondUcted Dy e or a C81111er'8 d** drewn on • ..... ,._ Miiie .......... 0 E E 0 0 F TR U 8 T •DAT I! 0 g'-1 thOt June 22. 111e2, II 7:30 pl)Wer of .. ,. confeJred In 1hat • i 92&40 oen-.i1*11•1Hp. :=..°'=~~: =: r::~ ... ""::.,._.._. ~~r.JH~~Y~ :f".,;.°6~of<f~~s:':'.!: ~te~titioa has been filed ~H~N';LT~.~':fE~ t ~II ~~~eel by 8 =:. i=.iltilp tader91..W. and loerl -t*lllCM• " you *' to --the ~ of PROPERTY. IT MAY BE 80lD AT A Aoed. lrvlne, Callfomla. -hereby by Arnold Greene, 0 .0 .S . in CANTLA Y. hu•b•nd •nd wife. ' P.a.!~ WllalaA•"'-domlclledlnthl88Ulte ... ~et an auorney In ttll8 mattet you PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU HEED AN fixed .. the time llnd ~for• th• Superior Court of r.cordecl June 19. 1981, In Book ,I • ._.. -the time df llllle, • t'lgflt. tlOt encl ' EXPLANATION Of THE NATURE pul* '-1nQ by the<i:tty Coundl "' 14107 of OfftcMll Aacord8 of Mid I Thil •taternant wu ,_, lll'fth the Thia IW• •..nt -tied with the in.. t.-i by It, .. Tl'UltM. In ilflOUld do 90 prornptl'f 90 ltlat 'fOAll OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST on the qu.tlon8 of the formation of Orange County requ~Ung County, 11 ~ 719. Aec:onjer'1 I County Cler1t of~ County Ot'I County Olr1l of Orange County on thel real property 81tuete In Mid ::r:i ;:oc-• M 81f1, ffllf'f be YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A .. Id dl•trlct, tlle levying of the that Amok! Greene, M .D. be tnetrurnent No. 29191, by r_, of .I J-1• 1982· ,,_=:..::.-·-CAM.ION County and Stele, dHcrlbell 11 AVllOI. U•U4' 110 •l4'• LAWYER. propoMd 8Pec:lal 1 m,.,.... end appointed as personal a bf-=" or defldl tn payment or C 0 11 -folowa: --• -..a-22 K.lllMlll Court, Newport leedl, the QOn80lldellon of Orenge COunl'f ·ti _ .. _,_,_._ performance of the obllgatlon1 PuDll•h•d Orano• 0111 a '1 a taAM>el.Ff The 8outtlw18ff)' 139 *'of ••afl4.cte. It lrt••-........-CA 92"3 Street Lighting Malnt-1C90tl1rlci ""l*eeenta veto.....,,.., ... ..,. Hcured ttiereby, lncludlng that Pilot, June 2. 9, HI. 23. 1982 A t.w ,..., ... .....,. the Souttl•~ 200 fMt of the dad*.....,. Ud. • •••..,a "(If• street addf-°'common No. 10 wfth Mid Olall1ct. \the estate of David H . breecll or defeuft, HotlCe of whk:tl _________ 23_ee.-e __ 2 "'" I .•c:..ci::, Not~2&4fMtofl.ot112of :-=:-~.:.":.:0.0:,:9~ dulgnallon I• •hown above, no SECTION e. The City Clerlc II Schwartzman (under the -reoorOad Mareh e. 1992 ... PllllJC NOTICE ::::: .. ._ Tr9Ct No. 300. •I* mec> f900fded ..._ • werr1nly II given u t~ IU hereby directed to glw notloe of Independent Ad.min1.stratlon Recorder'• ln•trument No. .... In book .14, peoee 11 llnd 12 Of "SI U•t•d du•• •ollc:llar •I C<>f'nP4et-or correct-). The Hid heulng b)' c•u•lng lhll of Eltates Act). The petition 82~79904, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC ACTITIOUI .,._II .....,.n .....,._, c•allle::. Mleoallel-.. rnape. __.... de 1#1 el>OaedO en .... benellclary under H id OMd of r .. olullon to be publlthed 1nd ia f ha"'"""" . De t AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST NAm ITA~ Th• •Ir••• addf•H or oth•f ...... _,.. • r r. ~ TN8t. by ,_, of • bf..ch or ad ... required by Street• .wt aet or ~ "'6 IJl p • BIDDER FOR CASH, lewtul money The follow! per90n9 -doing Publl•h•d Or•nge Coa•t Dall~ common dnlgnallon of th• feal ~: .. b :! !.t: ·~ def8Ull In the obllg8tlont Mc:Ul'ed lghw•v• Code Seo1lon1 22552 No. 3 at 700 Civic Center of the United Stat•. °' • cahler'• bu..._ u · no P~~._ M.8l •26• June 2· 9• 19• 1119 IJ(operty • ~ deacrtbed MCrtta. 11 hey algur\a. thefet>y. rier.tofore executed and end 22555, and, upon oomplellon of Drive West, in the City of ohectt drawn on • stat• or natlon81 C&L c·ARPET CARE. 11HO 2311142 18 purported to be 256-290 Sant• ~~ r-eatetrade • lMmPO dellveted to tti. und•r•lgned • giving notlolt, the City Cler1c lhall ni. Sant~ Ana California o n bank, • •l•I• or f•dar•I credit ~-. All9nue. No. A, eo.te Mee4, •-II' MftTUtC IMbelle. Coeta Meee. cellfomla. 1 TO TH£ DEFENDANT· i. dYtl wrlttan Oeclarallon of Default and wltti Ill• Cou"c:ll • Oecl•r•tlon Jul ~ 198•2 t 9.30 am union. or a •late or federal uvlnol c.llfornla 92627 ,._ nu'~ Th• u n d • n I g n • d h • r •by · · Detnend fOf Sate. and written notlolt Nill! forth the tJme and manner of JY ... • • · · and loen ...oc:lltlon domlc:lled 1n Verne A. Luaon, Jr .• 1570 ITATWMmfT w UAMPOt•mNT dl•clalm• all ll•blllty tor any ~.=~ =" "~ !r.ti ": of. bteach end of etectlon to'*-com lllltC4 with Mid requirement•. IF OU OBJECT lo the tlll8 1tete. all peyable •t the time of Orenoe Avenue. No. A. Coeta Meea, Oii U9I OP lllCOt'iectl-In Mid..,... addf.a defend lllWIUlt You mu.I within tll• und•f•lgned to Hll uld p SSEO ANO ADOPTED by the granting of the petition, you ...... right. 11119 and lnterM1 held • Clllfomta 92927 ACTTnOUI .,_ .. MAME or 04her common dellgnatlon. 30 d•Y• •fl•r 0;1• •ummon• I• property to Mtl8f)' Mid obllQallOn8. City Council of the City of lrvtne et• should either appear at the by It, H Tru1tH, In that rHI ., __ "--~~ ..... 279 Avoceclo Th f 11 ha • Said .... wlll be mede without -... 1nd tllerHfter the under1lgned r-•ler mMI""' on the 8th d•y ol • prooeny lltuate In Mid County and ,._,. ...,.. ...... -. ' • 0 owng P•f•on• v w•n•nty. expreH Of lmplled, ~on 'fOU, fie With u-court• cae Md Mid notice of breech Ind of ,;;:;, 1112. "'V hearing and state :your Stl1•. deecrtbed .. totlowl: ~··102• Coete ~ callfornta ==--= i-. of the flctltloua feQardlng tltle, poe .. Hlon, or wrttten ~to the. coniplMlt. alt :tton to be Aacofded ~ Dntd ca. .... objectloiu or file written Lot 22 ot Tr.ct No. 3380, Int.he Thie~ 11 conctuctect Dy• UNIQUE HOLIDAYS. tn•• encumbrance•. to ut11fy the ~t= c:.i 90~~ ::! 2•. 1982 •'""'·No. 82.--064745 Of ...,_of ttte City et !MM objections with the court City of Co•t• MHa, County of .._...... ~-Skypert{ ....... ....... 220 1rv1ne pnnctpel botence of the Note or ~. r-' ....... __ ....-Mid Offlclal Record•. NMoJ c . ~ bef th• h•arlna YoW' Orenoe. State ol Callfomla. • per -~-v. A. LMeon. Jr. Celllornla '9271'4 -' ' ' oti-oblaellol• llOUred by M6d )udornlftt•"' .,_ -·~·;;..: Said HI• wlll be made, but CIMI of IM ore "ma .. be {t,,' map ,_ded In Bo<* 133. P9g8ll Thl8 1i.temem -lltec:f with the Tiie Flctlllou• Bu•ln• .. Name Oaed OlfNll: with ~ end derNlllded'r':! :' ..,...~ wNdl without covanenl or warranty, Ctty et lrflM appearance Y perw>Jl 3-4 to 39, Mlecalleneou8 Mepa, In Covnty Qer1I of er.,. Covnt)' on referred 10 abon wu flled In othef 84.lm• 11 provided therein; could rHull In gainl•h,;,.,,, or upfW or lmplled, f90llrdln0 tltt8. STATE OF CALIFORNIA I or by your attorney. the olfloe of the County A8cofder of M9)' 21 1982. 0r9nge County on ~ 19 plu8 edvlnoaa. If tlf'/, under the taklna of or property pa1 n Ion, or encurnbreno111, 10 COUNTY OF ORANGE l SS IF Y 0 U ARE A Mid County. • ' ,,.._ 1991 ' ..,_ thUeof llnd lnlerWI on 8'dl ~·Ir reflef ~ted In th• pey tfle rernlllnlnQ.prtndpal eum of CfTY OF IRVINE ) CREDrI'OR or 8 contingent The •trHt 1ddreH or other Pubtlened Orang• Cout Diii)' CONWAY -O"NTRY. INC., a ~ oncl.plla ..... ctwgee ~ eq Ille note(•)~ Dy Mid Oaed of • a-editor of the deoeaaed you common d••IOn•llon of tti. r .. 1 Plot. June 2. 9, 19, 23, 11182 Cal"ornl• t«l>Of•llon 955 0.., llnd ~Of.the TN81M end of OeMd:.,.., 5 1M2. TN8t, with lnt.-t .. In Mid note I, NANCY c . ROWLAND. City .,._ _,_,_with the Pf009l'tY .. herelneboW ~bed • 2352-92 V""'1 DrNe Sult• 301 ·~ ...... the tNID a..wd by .., Died of Aobit"t 'R. M provided. edVlncee. " In'/, under Cler1t of the City Of INtne HERESY must ....., your ......... i. purported to be: 2935 Jrt9 Roed, -------------&ta-. c.itomia tcn74 Truat. The tote! amount of Mid a.ti the terme of ,Mid DMd of TN8t. DO CERTIFY th•I th• foregoing court or preeent It to the COiia ...... CellfomlL rtllJC NOTICE ThllbutlnW-oondlldedby• ol>llOatlon, lnctudfno reuonably aiertotte f.... f-. cllllrOI' and..,,.,_ of the Reeolutlon -duly~~ 1 personal repreaentetlve The under11gned hareby atlon. Htlmated feH, chlrgH and DeclUtY Tl'Ult• end of the tru8tt c:rMted b)' regular mMllng of the City C«#1dl 1 ted by t he court dl•clalm• •II lleblllty for .ny Ptc:TmOUI WU conw.,-oentry me. ..,.,,... of the T~ It the ttm. TW a...._. Mid DMcl Of Tnat. Said .... _. be of ttie City of lrvtna, held on ttie eth appoan lncorrec1neM In Mid ltr8lll eddrW um ITATDmNT E. E. Gentry, • °'.,._.""'**'°"of tNI Notioe, 18 Dia =•p6,... he6d on Tllundey, June 24, 1112 et de'f of June, 1912, b)' Ille folloWlnQ within four months from the or oet1er oommon detfOnllkln. The tollowll'IQ per.aN -doing Vice~ a 113',28().1& :J · "-2:00 p.m. at ttia ~ Awnuo foll c.it vote: date of firet !nuance o{ Said .... • be "'*'-"""°"' bulltlW..: Olllrmen of &oerel o.ted: June I, 1812 ..,.. .. Pht~ entrance. to the Civic Cent•f NMoy C. AowflMd let1er'J M provided in Section warranty, expfH• Of lmplled, JO ASSOCIATES , 124 Tl*~watllledwtththe 8ELLTRU8TDEED8.IHO., (1'14)~ Bulldlng. 300 EHi Ch•pm•n CttJCteftloflM '100 of the Probate Code of reg•rdlno tllle, poueHIOn, or &roedWly, Coet• Moel. CA 92927. Cler1c of Orange County on • Cllltomle OCJll)Ofatlon, Publl•hed 0 , ....... Cout Dally A_.., fn the City of Or8fl09. ae, et tmne C lif . i Th ti f encumbfencH, 16 •itlify thi DENNIS J. PIKUS. :te28 Viet• 28 982 .. T,,.._, ··..-At th• time of th• lnlllal a,..-.,..._. a orn a. e me or ptlndpal belance of the NcM or street. Long BMc:h. CA toe03. Mz,,;:J · ey: REAL ESTATE Plot. Mey 26• June 2• 9• 11• 1182 publtcatton of INi notice, the tocll De1N1J Cttr ea.ti filin& c:laimll will not expire ottw ~ Mc:Ur'9d by Nici JAMEi J. AHDEMON. 201• ~DIM ltCUAmE88EAVICE. 23n-e2 amountoftfleunoefdbalenceoftlle Publl1ti.d Oreng• CoHt Dally prior to four months from Deed of ffU8t, ~ lnterwl llnd Summafwlnd, Sant• A11•. CA ..., • • c.ornta OCJll)Ofetlon, rtllJC NOT1Cl obllQatlon MQlted by tM •boW Pltot, June 9. te, 1982 5-82 the date of ~the hearing othef •umt •i p<ovldad therein; 112704. '""'9. Callonlll 111'11 Its Aoant dHcflbed dHd ot tru•t and 241 plUa advllnQM, " ""'f, Ultder the Thll bu8lnele i. conduCted by • ,,.,_.. By: (8EAL) D . .J. ~. '9CTmOUe WM Htlm•t•d co•t•, expenM•. and W MOTIC( ooticecl above. E letm8 thereof end 1n1..-on IUCh gener81 ~ Publl•hed Orange Coa•t Dally Ma~ MMm ITA~ adnncH I• l1U,3H.H . To • YOtJ MAY E XAMIN adwncal, and plu8 teae. ~ Dennl8 J. P,!k~ with ,...._ Piiot, May M, June 2, 9, 19, 1~ 2.020 Nofth Bloedwey, The followtng C*'IOfl8 .,. doing de1ermlnef •) ,.1!:'97t opening bid, )'OU moy PtennGW ....... the file kept by the court. if and experw of the._}~~ ~ Thll 8tatement wu ,_, "" 2325-82 ~ 20I, bue1NM u : call 11 .. .,. -OOee. ~ MMm ¥A~ e intere1ted In e the tn..t8 er.tad u~ -._"" County Cter11 of,Oninge County on a.ma An-. CA H709 SHAW, TAL80T, BUOGE & 0 TED: Mey 26, 1112. Tiie following l)Jt'ton 18 doing ~~tear •n-...,\ TrU8t. Tiie total emounl of Mid ... .., 21. 1982. --.,. .MllWll'r Tllepttone; (11•) 963-el10 BIBIN. 1303 Avocedo AYlnue, &Itta SOUTHLAND COMP~NY, bualllale ---I you may ....... a requ.,. obllgallon. lncludlng r....-bl'f ,,.._ ... ~ '""'~ Pubtl•llad Orange Coa•t Dall)' 220 N-port Beach, Callfornla •Mid Trvet•. ( 1 ) 1 NT ER HAT 1 o NA L wlth the court to receive Htlm•t•d feu, chargH and Publl•lled Orang• Cout De.Uy Plot, ..U.9, 11, 23, 1912 9ii4io . . By T.O. SERVICE OOMPANY. SERVICES {b) GENTRY AUTOS 1peclal notice of the..,,..,... of the TNltM, It the time Plot,June2.9,18,23,1982 f'CIUIOU99U..... 1922-12 Donald w. Shaw, uoa 11g«1t INTERNATIONAL. (c) AUTOStnventory of estate auetaoflnfti.ilpubllce.110noflhllNottce.1t 2383-92 ..,... ITATW NI.IC NOTICE ~~~~o!:!l~O, t.:9'.:'~ ::n~~~w~::.~1.L <tJ) UANJ~~= and of the petitions, acL'OUlltl 17~:·:2!,,.,. 11. 1982. ---rta.JC....,r:---NQ-11C_[___ The~ per'80nt -doing J . Thomu Tllbot, 1803 One City Blvd. Weet. EUROPA (f) UNIQUE HOLIDAYS, and reports descri bed In Sen Mwtno Sftln08 PACIFIC COAST BOX OFACE. P1C11nOU1 .-u Avocado Avenue. Suite 220. Or8fl09, CA tzeee 117U lkrpetk Clrcla, lrvlne, Section 1200. 5 of the llnd Loen Aaeodeilon K-c10f71 17H Nawpor1 Boulevetd, Coat• ...... ,.,_,,,. ~ leadl, ~ taeeo T1•tl3M211 Celfomll '271• California Probate Code • Cellfomle ~ l'tCTTnOUI ~ ...... OA $2927. ~ ~ l*90N .,. doing AvooaJ~·:.:~u:u~~r ... 1:200~ ~b.J!:,."1. r.~.:. .. , Dall)' Aw.~~=z = A I• I• JI'. R 0. a ·,.. :: T=-~ Thi11=:T::='::'.dolng Ben C.L.eng,~~ar:: SAN OLEMENTE MOVING ~a..d\~'2tl0 2•2f"'2 V•~ 14 AUtfHJ at Lew, 110 9e0utttieaa.ntol ~ •= ........ SI* No. • CENTER, 310 Ploo Avenue. 8an MldlJll ,J.,...,, taos AYIOOfldo "* oonductad by"' "UtMre Blv• .. Salte u... • Cllforrlle OOlllOf8IJon THE EIGHT WINOWOOD Eric a. Sl)'lota. 2828 Horth ~~t2t7~ A--,~220.N.-port8-lh, "8.ICllmC( llidMOI* I.ti A•&•lee Callter•I• ltaAgent ~~~!:pez!1flndwood, fl•to~~·· Suite No. 200. Callfornla corpora~. HO 'a~ o.:;•:= • oonduC'9d IW e ~"'=·~· TNt8 Jt~fn:::"::. fled wfltl the ...... (%11) dJ.%1J ;, ::~Motver Cllelte o. W-'C:h. 1 Wlnd'loOOd. Thia ~ 18 oonduC'9d by 1 Plaoentla Aven11•. "•centla, ...,.. pert1•••· The fottowlnt pet'Hfl 18 do6ttg c-tty a.rt et ~ c-tty on PubU.hed Oran·Je C.O.. 2020 Nonfl ABl""oadwllf-- rrvtne. c:.11bn1e mt• par11 •llP Callfomle tae10 W9llll A. lucla9 bualllale • M11W M, ,.... Dall.Y P\Jot, Jlme Ji>, 18, 22, SU... tOe • TholW L. Cotfrnen, No. 18, i;i C. i_.ng Thie~ la ~ by • n.M lllll u1111l WOI -.CS_. the W MM IT ()le: (9) ..... 1111 c.....-z a ICAIDM 1982 8Mta AM, CA t270t tlMtt PJMden• Avenue, Tuelln. Tia 1ta11 Ta1I .. fled""" "" OOf'PO'•~ co of :'la.ti of Otano-~ on ......._ lalloe lalorld CA ilMi .H• ••• al La'* 2629-82 ~) '63-41110 ~ ..J.: 11 conduc1ecl b)' ' :M,C:.°' OtlflOI °::: == ~ ~-...... Mery :n~~~·tt:: = .... C..-DIM PWIJC WiflC[ rl:. June 11. o:r.T:. =-Deify geMrll pertnartNp. .--~~ 81:*'...,.._ luontl:Ja .. d by on OA .,..1• aitn.at Cellltt O. W9'dl ,u......., Otafltl COMt Delly Tlll8 .:="-fllecl wlC1I h --... ..... lrldftl11f'lll <""...._ NlmOiM" ll•H _.,. -"* ............ 111C1 WWI the ....., ft, ./lltra t. t , ~ 1.. ~ Qertl Of Or8fl09 Couricy Oft .... ,_ Mery G. O'Kieftt ,._. ...... ITI ~ ...-.., ,.,,_ C9""'Y Qlftl of Or9t101 COunly on 121..a. MAl't 20. tMI. w:rr:..-n.s 01•mtir-ft111 IUI :ail .... llld ..-.. flu&llJllU Or ... CONt Dolly 1111 ..... PftOl'll -dolr'I IC - .._,.,, •• 4 ....,,. ,_ ..... =ta.tof0ronga0ouney• ,..,.,._ .. .,,__2.9•1'i:!:., ~=Mlo•l<ETINQ. Ht1' 11'A~°!'~.:.•a1 r flubfllMd Ot1nge Cout Do ...:r.bll8fled Orat181 Cc:J Deity P11bfMMcf °'*'fl eo.at Deify Jurll ' 1•· ~ _ _.. -= =· Ug\lnl Nltuel, N:nncMM Ml ........ Plot. JliM a ••. tt. 2S, 1112 .... '!!!!!'!! .. -.. . """'2' •• , •• aa. , 14CIM2 "°" ..., II,.,... I.'· 1'ts1:r .. .!!'bt.!~,. °!,.ftl ~7· Daltw ~ ---o. ·-·-. IH71 Mariner Tiit foltoWlnt 1*90fl ClilJl!?°"ll uu.... _., ... w ,...... __ ... .a.Jo . ..., ,... Mm .. •• •u .---11e¥t ~-.... ... .. -----------The"':*"..-. .. dOlrW • fWl& ID1lC( ~ • • ffii."ii ..._MAW = i..,.. Hlguaf, c..tfon1lll 1tot.M ;;;r;;; _,.. u:....rAn ~ mTlf ONOINAL OQflt Jo1a HO. I, --11111C( 'nla ........ ,._... ...... MlollHI Worden, Ul11 MM.TOM It ttll Miia Vorda •n l.mtt ..,..., eo.ea ...... 'f:lr.Am ~ ==r; 1 Piil.iC 1m11CE ~ • ow .. .,,na, = L11un• Nlt11et, =..,bat. Cotta -... c....... ,."'";f.l'?•*ri'' ~=-""·. ,.. _ _. .. -¥•_,._ 9;,-..... ~l"i:~.-1~~·=~~ ................ Tilaflo11oou•b•et11 ... "aMJ • ,... = .. ..._ CaltfOritl• 0.,,.,.,..., ION ~ • ~WU......,. •....., ..... ,_.. ..._....... 'afon1ct to ••o" •~lled I" ...... • ,.... Af•••· Ht1t1Ut1ita.i laui-. GtM ~ ..,_ .,..._ 0A Nf'I ,..,._. -· TM • ~ NICMO&.M IC. DU1M1M. 114 :t-. D. 111o Caul!b °" te,1••• tttt, 0 '' ADYMT1141tte. 1111 OllllllrNI .e4I ..... ..--·· ... ' ........... QA '.t... ~-.. ........ .... ---XOAt.1119' UtfYa "'·· .,, 111.00111tflilliiLOA .':::-•• .. ..,... c•••••r~ '1&'···~a ~ ...... ,.e~..... ·..,. !A?•"= re;c::s.=e:=:.::.11::1.'Y' · L~•ta••" DON..aea..-rAUMHT"W~'' •• ~m:..--. .• ,....,.__ TNll~-·••••• ~~l~~::-i&;~·;~•• ._ .... "... ·~-.:.r: ;.ib~ MllM;~ .:..n:::t""w.'ft~'I ~r'l• ,nl'=le?i ~ ~'t4 ...Q.'.l=.'ltl.'lt: r i I . LO& ANOJ:LI:& (AP) -''er.tlw flnancln~blned with t h e economkl down may be about to trl11•r wave1 of home mort1•1• de(auUa, accordlna to a USC 1tudy. Default• on fiou1H purcha1ed under creatlw f1Mndna deell may .run 10 \6 20 percent hilher than ulee with oonventlonal rnonaaa-. uya the study, which b1amel much of the o'rob lem on the n ow-famou1 "Wellenkamp" deda.lon. The 1978 ruUna by the c..utomla Supreme Court ln 'Wellenkamp venue Bank of America invalidated the then-common 11d1,&e-on .. ule" claUlel ln home mortgages. Such clau1e1 allowed lending in1titutions to demand full payment of an outatandlna moJ11age loan when a borrower aold hla houae. At the time, many consumer groups h eralded the decision because it allowed a aeller to pa11 on hla old, lowel'-CIOllt loan to the buyer instead of forcing the buyer to take out a new rnor1pge at higher rates. But the USC study, titled "The F.conomic Effects of the Due-On-Sale Clause Invalidation," says both consumers and lenders have actually been hurt by Wellenkamp. Part of the problem lies in the house-of -cards approach made poaaible by Wellenkamp, the study concludes. I ttfany home ~ who coUktn't ..t adfiment conventional flnandna lNtead Mlwnid the 11Uer'1 old loan and a1lo took out eecond rnon,.,. which obli1ated them to intere1t- only payment.I for a period of time and a hefty 11balloon" payment at tbe' e nd of the 1oan. That "balloon " payment often me&n1 repayt.na the principal amo~t of t he second mor tga1e a nd many bu yeu are finding they can't do it. "When the 'balloon' payment comes due an d the hpme buyer 1eek1 financing, the new lender loob at the market value of the bowie, not the total amount of the e=loaN, and may come up short. ee y ln a flat housing market," aaya Dr. JrKimbaJJ Dietrich, uaoclate proft!910r of fiMnoe and businelS economics and prtncipal researcher of the study. Dietrich notes that aome buyers are simply walking away from their homes and the loans attached to them when they find they can't get new financing. ' "Wellenkamp haa caused mortgage rates to go. up.' he said. "Higher rates are necessary to compensate lenders for reduced casti flows from old loan yments." o7J I f;J C/) ~'I t)A J ,-70~. (I) ~a·tt. ifaJarren.a MEMORIAL WEEKEND APPAREL SAI .. E ~TO ~OFI! oµr beautifully cared for: • DRESSES • SKI RTS •SWEATERS •BLAZERS •BLOUSES • ACCESSORIES ALL FROM REGULAR STOCK no gift wrap or delivery THURSDAY, JUNE 17 FRIDAY, JUNE 18 SATURDAY, JUNE 19 3400 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT, CA 675-7810 H<US: 10-5:30 f»l •. L~ • ·y 0%otes!ional . lNM4\ · Florist · R.cRST 2915 Red Hill Avenue A-108 Costa Mesa Stone Mill Business Park 641-0810 At Last, A New Bank That 'ftµlg S~cializes in Business, Professional and Executive Banking You've heard it before -banks claiming to be "Business Banks" that wer~n't any different than the typical , retail, take any customer, bank. And what do you get? Long lines, indif- ferent service, and no true differentiation between business customers and anyone else who happens to waJk in the door. ,.. Liberty National Bank is truly a Business Bank. We do dif- ferentiate and you will see the difference. ----''Tu.king Banking To Busines.5'~11 is the motto of Liberty National Bank and we do exactly that. First, our bank services and programs are all designed from a business person's point of v.iew. We've taken the traditional attitudes and services offered by most banks and redesigned them to work more effectively in today's business ~rid. Secon~. we will literally bring the bank to you, at your place of business. Our AccoW)t Officers will meet with you in your office and will arrange for you to conduct your banking busi- ness from your office. Our Business Courier Service, Armored Car Service, Telephone Tran5f er Service and post· age paid Bank-by-Mail Service aJI work to give you easy.access to yo~r ~ank without having to leave your office. Call Mr. Gene Lesher, S.V.P. and Business Development Man- ager, for an Account Officer to come to your business. Or, if you prefer, call to arrange for an appointment at our head· quarters. You '11 see what a difference it makes when your bank is truly.a business specialist. ,., I Ll/Jertg-Nallonal Danit One Pacific Plaza, 7777 Center Avenue • Huntington Beach, California 92647 • Telephone 714/895-2929 Strategically located near the intersection of Beach 8-0u/(!l)Qrd and the San Diego Freeway • Member FDIC and Federal Reserve Lobby Bmldni Houn Sped.al Banking Houn Appoinbnent Hours 8:JO a.m. -5:00 p.m. Monday • f'riday funslctlon Hours 10:00 a.m. · 4:00 p.m. Monday · Thursday 10:00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m. f'riday Ex~·U·Ttllct.24 Hours A Day !Automatic Teller MachowJ Business Une Toll Pree Number 800--472-8529 7:00 a.m. · 10:00 p.m. Daily • 1:00 p.m. • 5:00 p.m. Weckmds DID YOU KNOW: We ~w ATARI You can own yow office space. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • You can stop yow r9"t from 1oinc 14>. You can own the land -not lease. You can rent with the .option to· buy. AIRPORT WEST BUSINESS PARK 245 Fhtcher MM' Red H'", C.M. Call Mr. Davia 751-7400 Broker Cooperation I llPIOYED llDlmllL UITS II limllTll IElll Excellent ptlce & terma for thw Iota, In rnMter planned development. AccmPTINQ~8 UNTL 712112 • , For more lnfonnatlOn oall: ATARI. . . ·tat Us Introduce You The experts at Computerland would like you to meet the computer that leed• two Hvee. By day, the Atari 18 a hard-working bu1lne11 tool. By night, lt'a a stlmulatlng educator and fMClnatlng entertainer . . . -· Golden Ap"ple Gift certificate• now available • • : CHOMP I I I : • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • 0 • ·• . . 8 . • • i 20% off 111 lt1ri ! : Softw1r1 : • 0 • • • . 9 ., • • • • i 11% off •ll·lllri i i '•••Iden ••~ ! : ~ ...... ,. : I · M with Ihle coupon ii· : '(__} offer good thru 8-11 • I ................................ ; l 1 .. • . • I I I Designed, Finished Installed --· __....,. IA9L'S .. , IllIMM,_ All llDl•ma1•11 --··-........ Mn900M--.. So. ll< 2176l7 .... T1IM ..... y-Door ICel .. _ ...... y-ANal COlfA MBA 641-1219 .. ,......,... .... ....... ""'° 495-cMOl 1-.n~c,· z cs-... -. .• .....,.....,., 28 Years.Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters .,FINEST QUALITY SHurrERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY.:. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Cell (7·14) 548-6841 or 548-1717 Every Sunday ' \ ' I HBllWOOD MAIUFACTOIY 19n Placentia Avenue e Costa Mesa. CA 'R.6Zl ' , dads day,jUT)ll. 20th from cur k~ privat<z. 1abz.1 col laction., ultra light pincord suit ... thz piria,ct l:esic fOr eprmeand~'M'Mr. tbl. ~ic blue pincan:1. suit comz.s in our trad1tlal0l 3 buttm mcrlelwith '?'kh p:x:kat.e. elwey.s e ~t.e. v $}45.00 ·) @)~@@)~@ 44 Fashion Island· Newport Beach · 714/644-5070 IOOI Westwood Bluel.· Westwood Vitlo!JfJ • 213/208-3273 NIUC NOTICE · "8.IC NOTICE K.-. FICTITlOOI 808INEll FIC'ITTIOUa _.. ...._ ITATl..wr NAm ITAT'lmWT The lollowlng ~· .,.. do;ng The following penoN -dc*lg bu*-M: ~-: TU$TIN MOVING CENTER. LI 8 E R'1'Y TAUS T AH D 1431 Lagune Roed, Tuelln, ASSOOATES, n77 Cent« AWi~ callfomla 92880 Huntington Beech, CA 92647. U-Heul Co. ol Orenge County, a Uberty Flnenclel Group Ltd .. a Celllornla corporallon. 11110 S . Celtfomla corpor9tlon, 7777 Cent. Placenne Avenue. Plecenll•. Aw .• Huntlncl'on Beecll, CA 92647. Callfoml• 9~70 Thie ~ .. conducted by e Thie buelnMt .. conducted by a corporetlon. ~t!_lon. Uberty Renc1a1 Gfoup -; -0-Haul Compeny Lid. of Otenge County Wltllem D. Gu1hrle P'9lldent Edmond P. Tro1t1e, Preald«ll , Thie stat.men! wa Ned w1U1 the Thie atet-1 wu flied with the County Clefil of Orenge Coun1y on County Cler1t of OrlllOI County on Mey 24. 1982. Mey 20. 1982. F~ F1-..0 Publlehed Orenge Cout Delly Pubttehed Orenge Coe11 D•tl) Piiot, Mey 29, June 2. 9, 18, 1982 Piiot, June 2. 9. 18. 23. 11182. • 22n-82 2407-lli NlJC NOTICE PICTTTIOUI • ,, ... ..,... ITATDmllf Tiie followtng perlOft 11 doing bulillleee • 8 "EH M '8 OE81GNER CAllNET8. 230 Eelt Dyer Aoed, lenla Ana. CA 92707. Roger Steven Brellm, 11 0.W.. r.., IMne. CA tV14.. TNI bu11r1eM 11 ooncM:ted by en ~. Aogwl,lf'elWn TNI Matuw1t wea fled .... ._ County a.tt ol Orenge County on -24, tta. ,_ ftulllelled Ofltnge COMt Delly ,..., -tt, June 2 ••• , .. tta n..aa NlJC NOTICE "8.JC NOTICE IC..._ AClmOUI ........ ..Cnnoul ....... U.. STAT-.r NAm ITA'-1 The fOlowlng .,._. .. doing The foloWlnO .,.,__ ... cSc*lg ~ w. bullrlll9 -STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY BACK BAY FISH CO .. 40e 13th SYSTEMS. LTD .. 33&& Via Udo, 4th ~~~~~a Huntington Beacll, =~~ NewpOf"I Beech, Cellfornla oevld Alen Renn, 408 13111 Oeleco Senior a~. 1nc .• a ~~ n:. Huntington 8Mdl. Celllornle corporatron, 33811 Via Robert Danie! Renn, 2t7&2 ~ ~· Newport Beech, lrookhura1, Ho. t , Huntington Thie ~ .. conducted bye ~ ~ .. ~ed bye llmltlld l*tr*lfllp. ...... ~--· Pertiw Diiie, Aober1 O AefW1 Preeldent Tiiie _....,,.,, -flled with Ille Thie 1111tement wea llled with the ='-c.tt of Orenc19 County on County ci.tt of Orenge County on ~-1 ...... Mey 14. 1992. """"' • ...... ,_ ~ Pubttetled <>reno-Cout Deity Publlehed Ore~ Coeat Dally Plot.. JUne 9 11 23. 30 1N2 Piiot, ~ 29, June 2, t , 18, 1N2 ' ' ' ' 24Jf.12 2320-82 r Economists joh tough Reputations could be r.Wned b y bad .call ~ JORN CUNNIJl'P =-~K -ThH• are rou1h tlmH for economic forecaatera. which ii to •Y the t1Jw demand d.a..tons. WW the econon>y bounce, or wW It juat draa ltMU .ion. u it hu been clolr'-' Or even l.all ap1l\? BaDJona of dollan conceivably ·c:ould be at at.ake. U, for lnltance, S.b..t econom iat foreaeea an lJnkc>wment. be nilifit tfp-hll company'• dedaton ln favor of plant expanalon. He can tip It the other way too. And, :you mlihi IUl'mile, lt he make• the w rona declalon he could tip himMlf rtcht out of • job. The heat'• on, preeenlinl lorec:ut.ert with the toughet\ job of all, which II to call a rum ln the economy. While many economlata aren't ln the foreceat.lq ~ thoee mo.t oft.en ln the public eye are, and their reputations could be Building firm breaks ground Hedley Builders of Laguna Hilla has broken ground on a two-story, 14,000-square foot oUloe and warehOU8e building at Goodyear and Fleming, Irvine, foe Dutch American Imports. An:hltecta for the fad.l.lty in the Irvine lnduatrlal Complex E asJ are DeRevere, Wise, Garak lan and Associates of Newpo'1 Beach. Dutch American Imports la a 20-year-old giftware importing firm owned and operated by the father and son team of Gerrit a nd J a ke Schep of Laguna Niguel and Laguna Hills. ruined by • bid call. True. the pubUc hall. thort memory, but corpora~ mana1en have lona onH; they aren't Inclined to forpt faulty advice. s..d on the facta, Murray Weldenbaum, chalnnan of the Pl'.lllldcnt'• councjl of economic advllerw, ~ one ooncluaion, Edward Yardenl, economist for E.F. Hutton, the leCUl'itiea flrm, reaches another. "Bullnele hu been reducing tnventori• at an extremely rapid rate," aaya Weldenbaum, who understandably takes a positive appl'O,llCh. "Me1nwhile, consumer 1pendln1 ln real terms has lncreued aligh tly." In a 1tatement to the Joint Economic Committee of Congreu, the Rea an aide expressed his opinion that the July tax cut will ex- pand consumer saving and spending . Thus, he said, an increasing array of buaineu fl.nna shou ld find cUNNW it necessary to replenish their depleted inventories. The resultant reordering is typically the key to beginning the recovery." Two d ._ys later, Yar deni began his w eekly "Eco nomics Alert" with the opinion "'The economy is falling off a cliff apin." No, he said, the economy, ia not coming out of tteelSion. It's going deeper into it. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS Ulina much the wanw at.a. Alona with favorite lndicatan of h.1a own, Yardenl expN9Md the optnlon that "the woret of the recetllon 1tlll lt• ahMd." While many of hll (fatemfty view the economy u •merlinl from 1Jv economic mud, Vardeni 1&ld, "Clearly, the economy 1t1ll hatn't hit rock bottom." lt will, he forecast. In earlier reporta, Yar<lent has commented on why he h negatJve. "Profit plunge exacerbates caah flow criala," he wrote in hll May 28 report. "No recoVery visible In new orders data,'1 he said. "lnf11ltion Is back." he declared, and referred to "the housing lnduatry!s Alamo," If Y ardeni is wrong, he will have been very wrong. Often, but not alway1, private sector economists are fr~r to declare their views. In fact, it may surprise some people to learn that mest of them~ to have litt.le interference from higher executives, everi when their forecasts might not exactly support the sales eUort. Jack Lavery. Merrill Lynch econom ist, says his only obligation is to be a good economist. Jim Griffen of Aetna Life says his commitment is the same - that he seeks only to interpret the economy correctly. There is Ii ttle question, however, that economists in 8ome oompa.nies have been called upon to supp5 rt their compiny's position. That is no different, however, th.an the position in which government econoanisf.8 have found themselves. often to their chagrin. HEW YOAK IAPI ClowQ> ~ 4" 1n1e1 JO\lt ~ ::::rt ..... .... SteroSt ~ ~E1 UPS AND DOWNS HASO!AO ~,._ Colr'TI• IJll!i I~ lnlr<E!V • 4\lo "4 '°"" Strew(;I ~l .. ~blda Co~ ).I• .. JJ lntll'Jlfl ~,. .. PeneEnt 12~ 13 Sul>eru •nd ._,. offe<'• ..., COMCIH 56 561'> Int med :rt .... ~ ....,,., ' 14\lt ,, tee• ~~"r!t ~ 12 13 lntmtGl ·~I~ Tet " ,, lnllk-..,.. •Y> lnclud9,.....1"*111o1P Cof\Pep 2-'l'J U •••SoVI ,.. 24\1. ,,,.,..-or conwn-Corell• ~17\to JemM\I IJV. ,,.,., luloft for T\Mdey CO'OlTre ., ""' Jerko 20 20'4 Slodl ltld Alli CllllrFd • Vt I •IJ l"V ).I• .... AEL Ind 11'¥t 12 gf~3:". J JI'> JOSl'rft • IMDV. AFAPnll !Wt t1 14'-·~ Kel•er , .,. l\lo AVMQ> J\lt Do 0.rtM $ """ 12 Ke men ·~ 1711. Aced Ins ,.,.... ,,.,,. Oher 3>-1• Jiit Kel.,S.. • u v. 2'1'> !~~;, II'>~ 0.111~ 14 , . .,. Klml>ell .. ,...., ..... 10 o.1cen " 12 Kln<alnt 1\'t lliio AdvR-•'I• ~ 0.-yEI l l l'J KloolG 20'Ao 20i,., All8$11 s """ uv. 01.cm n U'¥t ~~:l:v IS Ul'J Allcolnc Ml'> »lo'o Ollll>CN lD D I'> 9\<lt ~ Amer•• •1<1t ~ Ooculel 2Al'J 14'-KulklJ.e ,,,,., 11'¥t A Furn ,,,. • OollrGn I) 1711. LMI« s -20\ll AGrwt 22"-2211o ~7~ 16 141'> l.6ndRes ~ • !::'!:f,,, Ml Ml\tt """ , ..... uneeo »I'> J114 " 14111 0..MIO s IR.U\'t Llln~ 1M 241'> A~" •111 ..... r.•lron '°"'" ,, Lln8rd s 21v. 2111J A·~ '" •'Ill tnvnc 12t.lo IJ ~tm ,. ,~ AW.to l IS 11 Ee Ol'ILIO .. :IO\'t 20V. c ~ "'!\ 40 AMCl!te • ..... EiPMEI !Oh,, MGF Oil sv. ~ AngSA El-ee Sl'J '"' MMlGE 141'9 1~ 11·16 1 .. 14 EieNUCI ~ ~ =•Pt •ICo ... AngAGcl -Sl\to e•-321'9 ~ Rt JV. ,.,., = '"' ,,.,,, Enr09¥ " 19'11 Me,lon 4\'o ~ 1Jl'J I~ Enr-"" , .... Me<llLP 21 JO Ar-.Gc! >Yo ~ EnRl¥ 4 .. s Mey Pt 12 1211. AlldCBt s is-.~ Entwlttl 11"" UV. ~~ ~ ~ AllGsLI ,~, .... Ectilt$L ~JI'> ,.._ID AttenR s 21 21\.lo ~,.~, -1~ 71'> M<Ferl "" 1~ A•nt ... • IJ~ IJ .... W2 742 == •v. 10 Belr~ ~ s-. •rrnG9 :rtV. 2'Vt IJ ll"-BellyP 1~ 1\lt Fldl(or == MldtxW 11'4 ,~ BellQHE ,~ 11 1'181<5'1" -·clCep ""' ~ 8eskR 9 I 1~1•2 FIBostll »V. ..... MldlRtt Beul Fr 2Allt 14¥1 FIE~ IM" .. 16 11·1' BeylllW! 9" .... Ft-In ,.,., ~ Mldlllll l tw. n Bffflnt ' ,_ ~:~llb 21 21"-Miii~ 21114 20'l"I a.nt~" ?VI 2 '"" FleHru. ,,... 17111 MIU iG 11\lol~ 8.UL s ,.\lo i.111 ~Ullo Moln ~""' a ... Mat 16\lt , • ..., Flurocb 7 7V. Mon1Col •llt "' BlbbCo " 14¥1 ForeltO 21~ 21:\tt ~ ,.,.. 171'l BJrdSon .... 7 Form!~ 21'> 2'¥> 2711) 211'> 81rtchr ·~ .... "'•'* '°"" " Moro Res M ""' a1.,.._. l \'tlJ.1• FreMIE u n .... Morsnln ·~"* lloMnl 1'¥t 141> FrftSG '"'" 11 MotCIUb "" ."' BrwTom -10'¥t F..-10lWio 11 Mwller ,,.... " a~-.-IO'¥t 11 FullrHB ·~" Her~ 21'1tt 221'> Bllffell D U \ft GnAutm ,.., ~ HO. 11 1711o ~~ 11'4 ""' Gnl>e¥U , .... 2'-He"""-5 " •m , 2"" GflRIEsl 12•11 1~ HJ RHC ,,.,.. I,.. CPT s ...... ""' Go•EAI 91'> 10 HYAlrt 2\lo J CelwtS.. )4 JS GreptiSc IJl'J I~ Hl<kOG 7•• 7¥1 CenredH 21'> 21'11 Grey Adv ., ., Nicolet "" "" Cec>En ,.,, ... Glllntst ..... '' .. te1111 A ~41"- CepSw s 12 13 Gyroctyn th 7h Hlel111 8 -41"-CepAlr Jiit "" H-' '"" HlkeB 2'!'11 JO Cer.CO llV. It\'> H.,..1 Pt 141'7 IS HoCer'G6 l:J'h ,,.... C.-Ul t '"' Her-1!'11 2Yt NwtHGl -1~ C ..... RI• ~ M HrpAow I ~ HwllPS ISh 16 Cl\rmS ICl'lo ~ He= • 21'11. 221'> Ho .. 11 Jll'J Jl\lt CIWtHou l I~ 20 HI 11M -Hucorp IV. '"' Cllml..H 13 14 ~~ IM'll ""° HutrSy I .,.... )I CMIUll II lt"'1 enrd 2~ 1S\to Oc•-l;M\ ,. Cllllbb mi. J71'J HolotM'n 2"-21'> ~l!.'2: l21'J 33 Clrfko .... '" HMwr tvt ~ I ~» ... CllrSoGe 7V. 1'-Horlrlb JI'> JV. OllFemi ' .... CIUUtA JloV. J7 IMS tnt 15" ,,,_ OtterTP I"' 17l't Clt1Ut8 Jll.lo tllWio ISC 111'> 11-. PCA 1111 ~ s-. t1er&JL •v. ~ ln1re1no IYJ ' ::C~: 1""1 ,._ 1• 1•1'> MUTUAL FUND NEW YORK (AP) -TlllfDI ....... ~ let~~ ~ fllf sewrmes 0.e~ Inc., er• Ille prfcft et wlll<h 1""9 securities COllld heW bMfl IOld (..... _,_. ¥elUH or ......... • ... 1111 pft.s *" cller .. I ~ TxFtt 1.21 1.tl Httnco 7.ot Able ii'iA NL Acorn F 21M .. L AOV 11'3 NL AM.,... 11.92 Ht. AIM F""""' GapTHT W\e\lell HI Ykl UI Ceftl-1 G9: LI -7.D Gr91 7.2A 7,tJ Pvrlln t.'9 EQvlt 5.6S •.17 Tllrln '·°' Chencellor ~: Tr-K•2 HIYkl l-71 •.M Fl-'l:lel Proo: HIMun 11.7• 12.11 o.,ne •.'7 F'wot>EllP 1:1'14t IJ'll Y es '4V1 14-\lo Pet rite ~2' n ME DC .,, ~ HEW. YORK (AP) -The loll-lft9 It\% hill-,. 14Vt T•:• eno l1,,.. PN~ JIV. JIY, T• m l 7•'. ,.~, 5"°-S IN Over • Ille C-er PhnaR s iOYJ I~ Te<umP Sol .... H .... 1100 •• -•• ,, ... " U..1 ...... 90N .... Pier~ lllo'o ""-TeicmA 17~ " ... ,,_, _ -3. ~· ... ..., .... Pl'*r1n ~S1 Te1141nl t• ,..,, i:rcenl of c-. r ro1eu ol •OI..,_ or T....S.., 1 PlonHI l 22 .... TexAB 1 ~ lO\. ..!:. ~'I"!!:~~~"!'-=~~:'!;~ Plesllne .~ ~ i~1c% 11, • Pos•>• 1'1o 3 :::::=-en':'r.:::·. 1::, ru·~~ c-no PresGM 21 21'1• Toyote l . ,,,,, Pr~i.,n llh 1.V. TWstEx •• ,.. 7 Pf'09"P J\lt 2'¥> TrlcoPd ,..,, 23.,, UPS PbS•HC 11'-II~ TysonFd 17V. ""' Purtllen 11\lt llYt UnMcGll u·~ """ -LUI C"O ~· ~~ 11 11'11. US Enr ~ ~ I BlrdSon .... 0 ... Up Ifs 17 17\'t US SUr 10I-> ~ , K-I WI 1'· . .. Up ns R~ 7\l'J 7iw. US Trek 10'11 I~ l W:Jf?,IE 1'. '• Up 11.S Reymncl ;iot,o, Jiii. UV•Blll ~JS • A Ile s . " Up 11 I R-s :nv. lO Un•e:;i """ ,.,, s Ovntch' "'. . ·~· Up 10.t Ro..:!Ex M M\tt UpPen 12•1. """ • A"9(yE 13 I l: uur :g:~ RollOMy 12'11 tl'h VHIR ~., .. 7 Vlretek • ROCIM 17'-17.., VelHll • ISl'J IS .. • Ar(hleEn sv. Y1 UP 10,0 Seclller ~ 4 VenOus Mei fOI/• ' Fr-SBI< ••• . ~ Up 100 Sefeco XI Dito Velcro 11i. ""' 10 GtOulor , .. . '" Up >O,O StHelGcl 22.,, 21.., Vlctresr 1 ... H o 11 FU.Fin 11•. . I Up ·-· StP .... ~ 17._ vi=:: 1'-141> 12 AmSoler ~,~ l'J UP t.3 ScripH ' l7Vt II VeH 141'> ,...,, ,, ASlr -l . ... Up t I ~ .. Ill'> 11~ wernEI ,,,,. ., ... •• F.istefl J .. UP t .I s.n-411'> 41-Wll\EIV I~ IJO. IS EICMh ··~ . ,, UP l-7 Svc Mer 1~ ISllJ Weldtrn s ..... ,. Bkcom h 3'-'o . ... Up l.l Svcmst m. 2>1'> =~ llh •• 17 UTLCP 10 . ... Up 1.t ShMcld :rt :rtV. 0 2~1~ 18 HICAI O , .. It • 3 ,. Uo 79 Shwmut ~2A~ WmorC 1111> •n. .. Comelr ,, , '• Up 11 SlerelU 12 12'¥t Wettrau 10'11 .. .,.. 20 Polyet! ,., . . Up 11 Slllconit '""°' I 7 Wiser() ' ,...,. 1P<t JI R-,~ • >-•• Up 7) SCelwtr Ill'> 12 WolvAlu ~ • ..., " ~s 1"1 . " Up 7 I SwEIS.. I~ IS\l'J Wornet 100,> ICR. n I s S'o . .. Up •• Stend'l'n ,.__. 221'> W-LOI JO ~ 2• c.erclln o • . .. UP • 1 SldMkro e-. 1\ft Wrla'.JIW 12'/I 12\o> u ~In • .. Up • 1 ~:::..., Jl'IJ Jt\lo Zion t s 711'> 21 ,. lsleRi.c , . ·~ Up • 1 D a. IU..· HOt ~~-21 LloflCSI I\ 2 ... \o Up .. , DOWNS Heme Usl ''it. Pel I Monclllk SOio Of! 20.7 2 Elkonx l -... Oii 20.0 l Cye"""' 3 "' gn UJ NASDAQ SUMMARY • ln~un l , •• J s r..-. l ''> '• Oii ,,_. • BofVey ·~· ... Of! 136 HEW YORK (API -Moll ec:tlw -· 7 ChffjCO , .. .. Oii IJ. 1~ ~~ "tfcllecl A'~ N~ • Hlthlnl .... I Oii 129 ' CPSCI\ '°" '"" Oii ". BrwTom . 1,:n1,400 1~ I~· t 10 Emhr1 WI , .. , 1 ~. 011 II 6 MCIC .... 1,M ,IOO 391'11 "° . "' 11 C~r , '• 011 11 1 PelmB .. uuoo ""' "'-"' 12 El<IMIS 10 '" Oii 11 I EnR1v •.. ,..,JOO . ... s ll Mlkro. 2 '"' Oii 11.1 Intel .•• 2'1,400 JOit. JOI'> • \lo .. Petrich 2 .. Oii 11 I AlrFle _,. U2.GI 2 ... , ... -.... IS c...,,.,' , 1·16 '· Oii 10.t Re9(,J.,E .... ooo 13 U\4 •IV. " D•lto 11 , .. ... Oii 10 s Mic _ ·~ ' ..... _, 17 Helion un •.. " Oii 10 s Olyn198 ····-nYt ,,.,,, . '-II Vt<lorG '"' ... Oii 10.S Aj)pleC .. 157,200 ·~ 11\1> -\oo " B..co .. ., ,, Of! 10.0 20 C~eR ~ ... Oii 10_0 Ad.,,_ ............... ,. 21 Mk rely ' I Off 10.0 Oe<lllZll '" n Mlkroo un 1~. .,. 10.0 Uncl\enold ... : : ·• '.: ·:.'.".' . .'.' • .'.:. U1t 23 HlckOG , ... ... '·' 2• ·~ _, ~f Tote! 1•.-s .................. ,. ... Stdl..oQ un u Hew~ .............. -•• 12 1S B•l<o ,,,, -''• Oii '-' .... -. . .. .. .. . . Totel Se1es ··············· 1'3 ,. CenreoH 1•,t16,IOO 27 lmeQ un l.ll H Horir II IO HL T• Fre 1 4t HL c-hit Eq ~ HHllh MIYkl lncom 1n .. a1 11 n 12 t1 IUO IJ..641 11.n 12.11 UI 10.19 IJ.12 JS.10 IUI 14.•7 s .. •07 7 tl l .M 1\1 ~ . Oii t I l l·1 '· Off 9 I Fluer Corp.'• bo quartel'l7 cuh dividend corrlpH,.a common a share of record a t Builder gets Divenified Projecta eelected Seffell & M construct a $4 million , Lake FOl"tSt Office Hills. • The ltrUctW'e will foot development, looa . Center Drive. Planned use for commercfal office space. August. Holding El Camino Bank shareholders voted propoeal to establlah El holding company for tlie The proposal is sub regulatory agencies. ' AMERICAN LEADERS • f dlrecton declared a oenta per share on Ult , payable July 19 .. oee of business June llr. International -Inc. If e:xlended the expirad.- from June 30 to Aug. n. tions ·of the warr ... nsion is subject to • nt to the company'• lopment of J,..agwia ma Inc., an Jrvine builder, to office building ln * nt Project in Lagua of the 58,752-~•= Interstate 5 and three-story building • ject.ed completion date~ of Birmingham, Ala., -story Daniel Buildina'tt of Daniel Intemationil of Fluor 1Corp. ce Co. in Birmingb- real estate t:ra.nsacdim eim said the bank'• lmingly in favor of • Bancorp as a ba.S HEW VOAIC (APJ Jun. U T.- S17 'IOS ~ '"' • ,,. NEW VOAIC IAP) Jun. U METALS T.- 202 l:J1 205 141 • S7 NEW YORK (AP) -Spot ~ -~T..-.Y c..,._ 7~75 cent• • pcMa u.s lnatlon•. LHd 26.27 cent• • pound. Zk'lo 35--37 cent• • pound, ~ Tiit '5.8725 Metal9 w.--..it• 0AlllfllllrMft 78-17 ~a poi.WI. •.Y. ~ $370.00 I* 118111. . .......... $297.00 t~ oz., N;. SILVER ~ 11•ndy & Harmen, 15.400 troy ounce. I ! ' I l'llUNDUllil\r IWTAIU A•IFM STlllO IAllO CASSml llCOllll 6 PlAYll 26 llCi MEI'S • w112.1w.....,ww.-.1nr.. .... • °"_ .............. _,,. -'~Ori,. • c:-..... • .....,.,. ...... & ...--..sw.. ..... lAo ..J, • .. ,. Stereo Cassette Adaptor ~for I-Track Stereo Tape PlayerJ llOIQ Enoblet 'fO'J to ploy ICA ·I 'oltette topes In 'fOl/t 8 · !rock ·~ ployer wit+. ~ ln~lty LOWEST PRICES EVER! c=rm ix'W:C:. !~§!.! Top-of-the line -- Cornell "m'' 2+ 2 · TUBELESS WHITEWALLS , Steel iBelted · no.-.-n::;.. RADIALS s42~~:·· ··----··,-- SIU ... Cf lfD U C -IUUNlfU LU $2.0. I $2.16 $2:30 $2 ... 7 $2 . .57 $2.73 P23.517.5R 1.5 ,___-~llLIPHOlll TELEPHONE ~ mm °"1• ..._ • '° 3 MEMORY .. ~=~"=. DIALER .............. ,..,... 10911 KATILLA Ml. • l<ATlLLA 6 IUCLID ,HONl1 611·0NI ~ . INDUCTIV6 l'ICK -UI' ENGINE AllALYZIR • mn l&l <mw•twt aa,ll.lalW -• Ml •• llT¥JIAIU UAl'S .. , ... • l&llEAl~ ·~ e 1111r .. UICI ·--..-_ ..... _ ---·· ---......... _.,..,, 29'! I • . I I i I llllJPllat YffdMlday, June,,, 1111 SLIM GOURMET • 04 OUT OP Tt'.41 KITCHIN ·De 8UPERMAfl<ET SHOPPER 010 PUT 'EM UP -Pickling and home canning is an American tradition with modem uses. I • I . ,A f ot:mer gooseberry I ' makes good ... ()6 sav e the fruits and , -~e getahles of • summeF . In the iood old ~rtlme we find a . tremerwb.-vuiety ot freah fruits and vegetables to pi.. OW' pal.Itel. But the twnll*" ..uon la a abort one. So it'• not llW'p'iatnt that alone with pellChel, cucumben and \fine.ripened tomatoes, come thouih11 ot home cann1nC and pAckllnc. Plclslina and c:annlnl 1lve1 you a Mf\le of ~ aatlafaction and accompllahment. And you'll' find It uvee you money, too. How much depends on whether you grow your own fruits and vegetables or purchase them from the supermarket. In any c.ue, you'll find that foods you've put up t0Ul'9elf are especially delJcioua. Because unlike store-bought loods procmed for the mass market, home canning allows you the freedom to prepare foods accordins to your own individual taste. · When pickling and canning, It is Important that you uae g1ua jars specially tempered to withstand high temperaturel. Theae jars ~ easily recognized by the fancy patterns o·r manufacturers' names that are blown into them. Generally, such jars are available in half pint, ' pint and quart sizea. After you've prooewd the jars with the delicious foods you've prepared, It ls always best to test them for pcmible leaks that' can bring on unwanted bacteria. After cooling, one method is to tap the metal lid lightly with a spoon. The tapping should produce a clear, ringing note. U you've over-packed the jar slightly, and the food toUches the inner seal, it is still safe to store if i.pplna produc.!)S a sound that's dull, but not hollow. A hollow or dull-hollow sound indicat.ee that the jar la not &ealed properly. The food should be reprocused using a new Ud, or refrigerated and consumed at once. The time you spend on home canning is well worth It. Opening a jar of fruita or vegetables you've put up ii like unlocking a taste of summer 09 a cold winter's night. And, aa a holiday gift, obthing la more appreciated than a basket or preeervea you've prepared yoonelt. DILL PICK.LES 4 pouncb 4-inch Jlickllna cunumhen ~ cup pick.Una Ult 2 ~ cupe di.atilied white vtneaar 3 cupe water 14 heads fresh dill 28 peppercorns Wash cucumbers; cut in half lengthwise. C.ombine salt, vinegar and w19ter; heat to bol.Una. Pack cucumbers into clean jars. Add 2 heads dill and four peppercorns to each jar. Pour vinegar solution over cucumbers to within ~-Inch of top making sure vinegar covers cucumbers. Cap each jar at once. Process 10 minutes in boiling water bath. Makes 6-7 pints. STRAWBERRY-PEACH JAM 4 IA cups prepared fruit (about 1 qt. fuUy ripe strawberries and l 1h lb. fully ripe peaches) 2 tablespoons lemon juice 6 cups (2 pounds, 10 ounces) sugar 1 box fruit pectin First prepare the fralj. Stem and thoroughly crush, one layer at a time, about 1 quart strawberries. Measure 2 IA cups into 6-or 8-quart saucepot. Peel and pit about 1 ~ pounds peaches; finely chop or grind. M~ 2 cupe; add to strawberries. Add lemon juice. Theo make the jam. Measure sugar and &et aside. Mix fruit pectin into fruit ln saucepot. Place over high heat and stir until mixture comes to a full boil. Immediately add sugar and stir. Bring to a full rolling boll and boU bard 1 mina&e, stirring constantly. Remove from heat and skim off foam with· metal spoon. Ladle quickly into hot jars, filling to within IA inch of top. C.over and process in boiling water bath for 5 minutes. Makes about 6 ~ cups or 7 (8 fluid ounce) jars. ... They · deliver _TLC where it's needed By MARY JANE SCARCEu.o meals are 'l"er 60, disabled or .,.., ,.. ~...., • temporarily ill and unable to The old people are t4Cked · cook a main meal of the day. away in tiny apartment• or Jl\x' c.orienne McNish of Costa converted garages with television Meea, who suffered a stroke in sets, old photographs and January, havµig meals delivered memories. They can't drive, can to her tiny apartment has walk only u far as the mailbox enabled her to remain at hom~1 'and have no money for taxis. .during convalescence. ~ -Who feeds them!__L__ "She was still in bed when we In Costa Mesa, F o untain began delivering m~als to her," Valley Tustin and Santa -AD• • • according to Donna Anderson, a it's ot'ten Project TLC, which TLC volunteer. "Mrs. McNish is atandl fer transportation, lunch doing well now. rve seen a real and CJOUn8el.lng. Improvement in her over the The program delivers about months." 200 meals each day from 16 The 83-year-old wdman walks centera w ith in t hose cities, slowly with a cane now and looks according to Roberta Button, forward to the midmorning visit homebound d irector for TLC, from Mrs. Anderson and the and another 1,600 meals ace other volunteers who bring her served to seniors able to travel to meals each day. the centers. F o r Mrs. Anderson, who . Sponsored by the Feedback moved to the area two years ago Foundation, TLC also offers trom Colorado, •it was an a nutritional 'education, friendly opportunity to help people viaitQrS. lhopptng aasistance and without being tied down every help with apecia1 needs. day. (Volunteers drive a route Partidpentl in home-delivered once a week , and the R e, ' Col:nmunity -Center, where she picks up the meals, has about 15 volunteers w ith three driving each day) .. Assisting her recently was Art Fong, who will take over her route for a few weeks this summer while she ls on vacation. A graduate student at UC Irvine in eqvironmental toxicology, he jokes that the TLC wath-''ls my chance to get out amona nonnal people." Most volunteers spend about two hours and make from nine to 14 stops on. a morning route. Meals -are refrigerated in zippered, insulated bags and stored with Blue Ice to prevent spoil.age in transit. Special meals are available for people on resUicted diets such as low salt, low salt and low sugar, blan·d or .low fat. A central kitchen in Santa Ana prepares the meals ~der the direction of a dietician, and van6 deliver them to the various centers. The main: dlah and vegetables arrive in a disposable aluminum tray with a cover whk:h removes for heating. whenever the recipient wants the main meal. Another ''cold box" accompanies it with ~ items .. salad, juice, a sandwlch and deeeert. Senion Med1ng more food or a second meal each day can receive an additional bag with aoup or sandwich tlxlnp, and meals are available BeVen days a week for thoee with special needs. Ms. Button estimates tqe meals cost about $4 eachf although recipienta are aaked only for donations at a suggested rate of $1 per meal. A preaddressed envelope for donations is delive red once a w eek to homebound seniors, but no one is refused a meal because of inability to pay, and no benefit program or Social Security is. affected by participation. A current worcy at the TLC beedquarten in Santa ~ la a possible 5 percent cutback in federal money, eome of which comes from Title III funds, beginning July 1. Restrictions prevent the foundation from taking donations of food, 80 la. of funds could mean cuts ill either staffing or meals .• "There's a small posaibillty we would have to stop taking new clients," ML Button said, "which would be a ~. Many need help with home meals right away f>ecawie they're just out of the hos ital" ~nlora who recover and b ecome mobile agai n are encouraged to attend group lunches at the centers. Peg Schmitz. volunteer coordinator at the Rea cent.er, estimates about 80 to 100 lunchei are aerved there each day. For Sylvia Teal, livinC in a anall but Ulbnaculate Colla Mesa a~t, the meals probably will COlltinue. "I u.ed to live upstalra, but now I have a pecemaker, ID lt'a hard fer me to aet around." abe aay1. A cheerful woman who joa. about almoR ~. abe hal little moblllty now. ''Sorry to walk ID t..t,." the aaya with a laUlh while meld~ her way carefully acrom the driveway. Friend•· wh& IOIDeitm. talce her Oil .,..... • haw ~ out ol town. -"' electric cut the owm bM tlDl*l OWi' with hlr wbm lhe trticJ to ao out on her own. .. It'• called an Ami10. but lt'a not my frMDd." lhe •Y.· "I doft't trult my ei.ctrlc bane." But tht people • 'ft.£ ld11 brln1 her meal• each day. un.rw been IO .... fUI to .. '' lh9 •Y8· "I try to emd tblm a daMdan wbln l hl\49 a er.; ...,. dallan. ""1 9Wll whe I _ ... -brinl ... ,.._,. An1on1 lntere1ttd ln volun~ or a.nwil ..... ... :TLC_ .... ._ . .._. llMOU. • I I HELPING RANDS -Art Fong explains a note about a free medical check-up to Sylvia Teal as she receives her meal (above). He aPd Donna Anderson (below) unload meals from the insulated container ln her car trunk. I ~1 J l ·1 . j PEPSI Bll>WEISER MARTINI R.J. COOK'S COLA BEER & ROSSI CA8£RMET. 12 Oz. 12 Oz. ASTI SAUVIGNON '8 Pak 12 Pak SPUMANTI (760 mll) SUMMER TREAT -Fruit from all over the world 1oe1 tosether in a liqueur marinade 1•1 ... 311,.. (750 mll) 411 T11 T11 1'.'' Fruit salad has exotic taste -~ Strawberries, cantaloupes, melons, apples and bananas are 1 exotic fruits from all over the World. It'• that little extra that m eans a truly refreshing and delectable treat. So are Australia's MARINATED kiwi and papaya from -F RUIT BOWL the islands. l pint strawberries, sliced. Now add your own special touch - Amaretto or Amaretto and cognac. 1 'h cups seedless green grapes 1 cup honeydew balls w ~ II) SAVE1~ ON ANY VARIETY ~8oy.aFdee 8 15 OZ. RAVIOLI 1.-iett GoodOn: BEEF RAVIOLI CHEESE RAVlOl.1 CHEESE RAVIOl.J IN BEEF SAUCE SAUSAGE RAVIOl.1 MINI RAVIOl.J~ •s•orr HEINZ PICKi.BS any size any variety Enjoy the great, cr1spy, crunchy taa1e of Heinz pickles. • • W.'w got your f'tcltle. 2 kiwis, peeled and sliced 2 oranges, peeled and allced . 1 apple, cored and sliced 2 bananas, peeled and sliced IA cup amaretto or amaretto and cognac· 2 tablespoons honey 1 tablespoon lime juice 60eon Mint leaves Mix all fruits, except bananas. in large bowl. Blend amaretto or amaretto and cognac, honey and lime juice; pour over fruit and toss. Refrigerate about 2 hours. Just before serving, add bananas . Mix well. Garnish with mint leaves. Makes 8 to 10 servings. ' .. . E1c1ll1nt Fresh l11t I Pnduc• D1p1rhn11ts ' FEAtURING: * U.S.D.A. Prime afft . * tl.S.D.A. Lamb a Pork * Zacky Callfornla Grown Fryera/Part1 * Full DellcataHn Section ' ' Get a coupon gaotj for one FREE CAN of any 15 oz. CHEF BO'(•AR~DEE RAVIOLI • I I I I (see details below) ~Bog-aFdee· GOOD FOOD FOR ACTIVE PEOPLE - - -MAlL·IN OFFER - - - -Chef Boy"8rdee~ FREE CAN OFFER Buy tow cans of 15 oz. Chel Boy-erdee Aevloli. SEND us lhe louf ~ end receive 1 aiupo11 good tor one FREE can. Mail IO: Chef Boyardee Free Can Ol1er, P.O. Box 991, Greens Farms, CT. 06438. Ofl9r_exiJiret October 31. 100, Addr---------------- ----------The E1rst Mlnlmn Porcillaln Plate Authorized by the Hummel Family ~"A Clwub.1Glft" ~ •• ~·· Gl'r "lht lht 1111 CXillcllall ol rNnllNt ~ ol flmaus Cllllk1lw c.. ~ bJ lilt~ irt "8lltl Th9ftrstllltlllllt..,l:IJllll .... [ng- llllll CGIKIDr's ~ ..... .cllllM ..,.... the 111111 HllMlll '*-" rel " ailllclrllld llJ lilt "!Ill hllrs fll Blltl ~ Tiie ~ Hummll irt ..... ...., In Ml Clllar Cll fine ..... Plllallil llll lwlllodlcalllid "41111 bMd ti prdu 2'2111.giill. Eldl pllla .. bf lllllrNl1lld. 'tllu .. ..., .,..,. • c.... f/llllglllr'lllCll llWli'lg llllhl~rttlllll'ntd!On. __ .,.,.... ... I --"' .... ...................... ==-"I.-===---, __ ,,. __ _ _ ....... t:UO-..___ .................. t,, ~MICllMIJICUm» ____ ,,..,.,_.,... __ r,,...,..~,..... 0 ..... Clf'll O •~--- I I I I I I I I I I I I I One Roll of New Improved ~towels ~~enyqµb~y uuee rolls. Now KLEENEX' Brand Towels have been improvect. Our new, uniQue embossing improves the texture and adds softness to ea~h sheet. And KLEENEX Towels are strong and absorbent for all your tough jobs. One rpll FREE when you buy ttiree makes New KLEENEX Towels even better yet. Take the FREE AOU coupe>n to your favorite S1ore. HURRY :ofter~ Julv 12, 1982 I • l \ • \ • \ ,,_ '111111 . II . ~redeem these "'llll r a:::::~:re., , selling these ' , products ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, June 18, 1912 .. WEIGHT WATCHERS INTRODUCES 5 DELICIOUS BOIL IN BAG ENTREES. NOW lTONLYTAKES 15 MINUT.ES TO FORGET YOU'RE ON A DIET. -------------- l5¢ SAVE 15¢ ON WEIGHT WATCHERS t5¢ BOIL IN BAG ENTREES. I·--------------- lf 1 I I I I ·~---=-......... _____ .,.,.._ .. ., _ _. c-.,__w_•-••••USJ.. I _.., ... u..,._ ....... --••11111r--..,..._ . .._-~ ....... .--.,..... .... ................ _ i-........ ._ ___ _ ·SAVE on~ . HONEY &NUT CORN FLAKES"' '*981. 01'll o-11 '-Ill¥*' - COUPON AT RIGHT The only · : nutty cornflake i! anyone m~kes. ~~ Crunchy com, with a ~ J . touch of QOldel1 honey fi~ I and Iota of real nuta. . -._/ z.,, ~1.., ..... ~ ANTIBl!PTIC Kills the geu ••• that can cause bad breath! Save 50¢ when. Vo'& buv •?Y me can ol MaXwell Howe' Ground c.of'fee. ' . NCOl.312300 50 .................... tta. ¢ ~COllNIPO,_... GENEAAI. FOODS CORPORATION --------------·- • STOA£ COUl'ON Save 3~ ON ANYSIZ£ USTERINE ANTIUPl1C 3!000 ll.0593 1'0 THE OUUJI: You •• M hOflltO 10 Id • our lgllll lo< •llllmlllion 01 11111 couoon Wt .. ~ ,_. but)t you IQt Ille llct Yalut OI 1,,,1 COUllOll OI ~ -ulil lot 11ee -cl\lllOtst .... n itim· butst '°" lot IOCll ... OOodl plus 7< lllnOl<nQ prcrncled I'* YoU llld lllt -""' teftlllllld ..ih lllt l•ITll OI our -tllel Vood ..... P'Clfl•04e0 11"4 111t111Clt!ll 11y Ii. Cooo onlr ., US A 11\d US MJ•Y OHH O .. IMll c;,,,, Yllltt 1/20 OI 1 Ille -""'11 P1Y "'Y Mies 111 l'MUD WUif: ""1 °'"" JOPllal•Oft cons!A.-n -.... ~ 111°""0 purellllt -lflt ... 90 flars OI s..«te..,.. Sloel 10 ~ tou110t1S pr,..,.. '°' ·~'°" -Cle -r4111Dlf -If QWll Olllt -IO one c-'* soec•• P<odu<I .,., illt MJ•I C0'410lli 10 WAllll!A· lAM8CllT COM"""Y PO IOX 1n7 CUlllOll IA S2 7J.4 COUPON !XPIA(S JllNf :lO 1983 ~~H i3!00 105,27 ---------------. STORE COUPON . 250 We wlM ....,. legll ..... e._1et11 Ille i.c>e -. pk19 1' -rrnv to< Mdl eoupon '-'* In connedJon..,, lh• --ol 111• ~l)fflWl(lj -eel eou. Pon ....., -lotielteel w ltwolcee allOWlnQ llU<Ch-ol IWfllcl9nl elOCk 10 -..... ol -PtlPn• ... nol oroducect on ~. 0t * oouoon llNlgned, nn. ...,eel 0t ~ 0y one not•••-__ .,, -ll'<)dl;ct. Ot w eoupon •• -· -· -hlC!Mdorreq.-.. ~1'9 ..,.._lonlOt~ lion....,_,~ -tllul .. -c..-, -eriy~ ... Cea/\ .-,,ption-1f20fh '11 e CMI AeoroduCllon l)tOlllblleel S-IO Joll"'°" & Joh,._,, P o Bo• u ... c.onton, -u1 ~ Lilnll --,,.. OUtCheM _,., -a 01043 503075 Umll One Coupon ~r Piie~. Oood Only On KO'l'EJ(• MufOr Mini !'Ida. /\JTi Otbtt Uw a. Fraudulenl. 3b000 l.l76bS 3l.000 ll76l.S 1 I .................... 11911 ... 11911 ....................................................... --............. ---------~~--.-~-~---- I ~ l i ' 1 J . ' . ' • I .. . I ,. I. 81 I AllBAIU. OIBIONI 8--are 20 Wayt to exlt 1ummer 1llmmer than you 1tart.d: 1. Dedde now to make the freah fruit of the ~ your only aweet. l'rom now throuah fall, Mother Nature wtll provlde ofOU wl\h a 1teady aupply of new attractlona that chan1e evt!N'y few weeka, atal11na with 1trawbe1T)' and rhubarb, leading Into cherrlea, peachea, pluma and aprlcota, winding up with blackberries, apples and peen, with lota more in between. 2. Become an avid prdener. Forget tlowen and try growing thoee inten!9ting oddities that you rarely find in your aupermarket: Oriental exotica like peapods and celery cabbage, for example. Or spaghetti aquaah. Or a rainbow of spicy red and yellow peppers, as pretty as any roeebuah. Gardening is good exercise, too. r~ Even if you have no time or space for gardening, discover fresh llerbs. Available now in nurseries, most herbs w ill flourish in flowerpots in any sunny w indow. Try Italian parsley, oregano, thyme, sage, savory, c hives, rosemary. Indoor h erb gardens are prettier than ivy and mQje low-calorie foods delilious. Some people even keep herb plants in their office window to spice up brown bag lunches. 4. Now that the nice weather's here, take a hike. Every day, or every other day, plan to walk an hour, at your own pace. When you've run out of interesting nearby neighborhoods, to explore, drive to another town and take a look at other people's streets. 5. Make this your summer to t4ke up a new sport or outdoor activity. What will it be? Golf or· gardening? Tennis or trout fishing? Anything that ~ts you off your du ff helps bu calories and makes life more interesting. Meet new friends, too. 6. Fix up the place. Why pay a painter to get the exercise you need. U Market soul CHICAGO (AP) - Kenneth Hennings doesn't wan~ 1o plump a chicken in every pot. But .he's itching to put a bit of aoul on every stove. If Hennings has his way, the American public soon will be hankering for hog maws, craving for chitterlings, and pining for peas. ~d all they'll have to do is stroll to the supermarket for a quick fix of soul. Hennings is the fresident of Soul Chef nc., a frozen food company that may be the first in ttie na lion to cater to the black market. "There's never been any attempt to reach the taste palate of the black community," Henni~ said. ''Most frozen f, are too bland for blacks." A n d so H e nnings decided to beat up the thermometer on those ice:uned frozen food counten with some spicy -and h.igh-<:alorie - 80Ul culai.ne. Soul Chef's • that Job'• too overwhelmtn1. look around for a more man a1eabl• 9roject t hat'• bHt done In 1ummer: 1talnln1 th e picnic bench, for example, or reaeedln1 the lawn. Or maybe c1ean1na out the aar..-. 7 . Make a Hat of lmpedlmenta that kept you hlah and dry Q1 pllt aummera. and aet rid of them. Dld a troubleecme halntyle keep you out of the pool? Get a haircut. Buy a awbmult. Take lwimmina 1-ca. Jotn the Y or lhe IWtm club. 8. Dr.a for NClClm u a al1m. acdw penon. U *kot~keep you from JoCNnl ln the fUn. IO~ now for the rl1ht wearable•. Don't put It off until you're allm enou1h. beau.uie you'll never pt allm 1lttln1 on t h e aldellnes .• Check tbe apec:lalty ahop few atyla 1n your me. 1111111110 ...tood aummr. plan to eat flab 1Nt.eed of meat every other dinner. Explore you r Mafood marketa for .ch week'• f re ab c a tc h a n d experimen t w ith the apedea you never tried before. Or, catch your own. •U.JDm•r to ltreak the Joln a club, take c},.. IOda pop habit: lndulp or reaearch book• and y o u r 1 e 1 f w l t h become an expert in wild . extrava1ant bottled flowen or wild tooda. ~every other day. water, or become a Flnd out where th• 12 . ...., .. a put-ttm. ~of exotic Iced h\.IGkl.eberriel grow. ~ -••rN!W' Ja tw. 17. Plan your vacation the b,st time to try It. 1&. Go on the WllOf'l. with )'_our figure In How about maldn8 .v.ry Make tt a po"1t to lCIM mind. Don't lit on the other dinner mMti..1 boele at leut until fall. aam• porch or beach office dwinl your lunch hour; ao lhoppln• or wa.lk.lna in the park. l'.At lunch at your delk to make time for a ~delay actMty break. 19. Start now to peel away that heav y overcoat ot exce. w"-ht that ma.kea awnmertfine heat an exva burden and keepe you trapped lnlide by the air conditioner. ' 9 . M~ke thla your 10. Have a aalad foe lunch flYery day. 11. Have a aalad .tor u . Bu y or lltu lld a Keep In mlnd that chair thls year; go ~ Jlra'led foodl akioho1 la fuel and that backpacking or white arei...wtt•Cooldna over thme tall, aldnny, Unkly water canoeing. Go •coUJ-a ~t another~ &NI~ ~..,._,he aeUOA 11 1 form of brOlliq, only oooUna are rnlly heat· in1tead of whe re the t.tt.. maken. 1ood reatauranta are. 14. Make thia your 18. Take to the wooda. 18. Get out of the ae. Unplwc~._...'ti.v.J-.. - From now witil autwnn it'• nothing but reruns, anyway. Rosa Porras Piera Casella Laura & Ed Jones Saved S26.25 Saved s16.95 Saved s14.19 Mr. & Mrs. Se.ease Saved s10.21 Lucky's total: $116.98. The total at the other market on the same or comparable items: $143.23. Rosa saved $26.25 at Lucky. THI liken Mey 24, 1992. Lucky's total: $139.96. The total at the other market on the same or comparable Items: $156.91 . Piera saved ~ $16.95 at Lucky. Te11 11k1n M•v 23, 1882. Lucky's total: $87.88. The total at the other market on the same or comparable items: $102.07. Laura and Ed saved $14.19 at LUC'r!ltllkenJune 1. 1882 Lucky's total: $87.53. The total at the other market on the same or comparable Items: $97.74. The Spease's saved $10.21 at Lucky. Tell taken June1', 11182 l.Ower prices storewlde. Instead of limiting your savings by offeri ng limited "Father's Day" specials, Lttcky offers you lower pric.es on thousands of food items for a lower food total. Recently we asked shqppers to compare Lucky's total with another supermarket of their choice. First they purchased their items at Lucky. Then, they compared the same or comparable items at the other market. Consistently, shoppers proved greater savi ngs with Lucky's low discount prices. Take your own shopper's test. Start saving at Lucky. (Oocument1tlon on Ille.) FRESH M EAT BONELESS 179 ~~~S.!!=AK IA BLAOECUT 89 CHUCK ROAST llOnOIO IMf lb • FRESH OROUND BEEF S UIS °' MOrt, Does NOt Exc8CI '°" Fat FRYINO CHICKEN wtlOle IOCIV. SoutNm Gnd!JA ~.58 FRESH FISH ITEMS ~E~~.~.~~.~.~~~ .. 11 1.79 ~E~~.~~.~~~1~.~.?~ ..... 112.19 ~E~~.~.~~.~~~·~········ 1a4.68 MONTEREY SQUID 79 ...... .......................... "• r!~,;!!f.1.~~ .......... La 1.99 CANNED & PACKAGED HARVESTDAY 57 !-..~Top 2• Oz lOaf e Top or SMdWICfl. WNtt OI W9ltlt CANNED & PACKAGED pa RICE·A·RONI 59 6 ~Ml~!eox • r LIBBY'S • 39 ~RE~NB~~. . PIUSIURY 89 R.OUR 5 U>. lage l SALAD ~SSING ~CA=~~ •IOlm 1.19 l~~ ~'!.,or eo .. 86 r~~ ....... NClld•86 r~.~~~ .. nor-1.47 l~~~~······ 1101-2.07 ~~!~~ ~~~~~.~ ..... HT -.0 .48 r~~~;~~.~. 101o.c .89 l~~~:-:'~~.~.1~~S oow~.89 l~~~~~~:~e.~101CM•43 I DAIRY ITEMS HOMOGENIZED 191 "11LK lady Lee Gallon Btl ~~ ~~'.. ~1.~~ ..... ~oun 1.86 !'~ F~T ~l~K ... '""°''" 1.61 r~~~.~.~.~~~~. IOIW'o33 ~~~.~.~~.~.~.'..'.~~.•IOI CfN 1.81 FROZEN ITEMS HARVE~T DAY 129 ICE CREAM Squw.. Hllf Gal~Ctn SRawn l~~n ......... t10lCM•79 l~!!~'.. ~~5.01 ., .. 29. r =~~~-····· .. 10011~.79 l~~~:~. !-.~:.~.l~~"E! '°'. 75 l~!~v~~ .. : .... ooi eor 1.99 l!!?l~!~.~.?~~~.~. 1•oi-.99 I~~~.~~ .... 1001-.69 l!!~~~~ ..... tor IO• 2.49 ~~~~~~.!~~I~~ ... 1101 TIAh 79 DELICATESSEN ITEMS - CIGARETTES KfNC SIZE . 5ss . Cl<~ARETTES ~anon CIGARETTES CIGARETTES ~ta.5.95 WCU•ACl •68 Wltnt•9 !ht Sv19t011 Gtnt•al Hu 011t1•11t1ed rha! Coptllt Srnolt19 II 0111gt11111s 10 YOU< Httllll LIQUOR & WINE I~!~!!!..~~!~!'!un 12.99 l~V_!'~~··"° ... " 13.99 l~P~~~~·~ ... 110 -.nS.29 f GAllO WINES =~om"::.~~~'slrt 1n 2.89 HOUSEHOLD & PET rKLEENEX 75 SOFTIOUE · Fadll T!Swe 100 Ct IOI e !~T~~IO ... »orCM 1.41 l ~E,..~~~!~.~ ~~!!!S ~ .37 J con coctions include mnothered chicken, hog mawa (pork stomach). c h itterlings (pork lnteatinea), and ham hocks (a part of the h am). Some fourmet d inner• are rom 1 a. OW"9 to 20 Olmeea and ranfe from $1.99 to $2.4 . ~!!!~~~~ ....... 111.97 ~~ ~~~ .~.~~~ •••• 111 -0 1.69 ~~02~~~.E~~.11 2.29 ~?~~~~~~ ..... 11 2.29 ~N!l~!~.~~~~!1 .79 CROUNO BEEF PATTIES ~--,~· ......... 111111C4.38 ~2,~,~R~~.~~!. 11 1.49 ~!.~~~.~?~~! ...... 111.77 ~~;,o~'!,~~~~~.~!~~. II 1. 77 WEBER'S 103 BREAD 2• OI. LA>lf • l~.!1',.~~ ...... ·~or eoi.89 r~~~.~~ ........ ar-1.30 l~~~-Ol-....... UOICM•69' DAIRY ITEMS r~~ ..... IGll1U 1.16 l~.~ .. ~~01CM.95 l~.~~~~10tt m .79 l~.~ ....... arm 1.75 I .JACK CHEESE l*-to-1.M Monterey I~~PE!J~~~ ....... nvgi. 71 l~~.~~s~~IDllUWC 1.12 I22~E~~~.~~·~·•"Ol IM•57 rs~~~~~'~' ~ ... or II\ 2.58 PfH)()LJCE ITEMS '-rbeee are foods that have been pnflli:red in t h e S ou t h ain ce the alawry dql," be u.id. ~~.~~~.~~ ...... 112.27 BONELESS WHOlE HAM :.:i,-.-:::..~ ................ II 1.89 FRESH TURKEY BRE~ST :.,~TQ,-: ....... /. .... 111.69 ' TURKEY BREAST '*------~-.-3 29 --~"'-' ...... ·····" . RUDY FARMS SAUSAOE =:...~.~ .......... , ... 2.28 ~~-............ 2.19 ~~~.~~~~ ...... 2.67 r~~.~~!!.1.29 o.. ____ _,..,._ __ '°.~ ....... -,. "'"',_,, -n. , .. _,,_-~ ............ Mllllll•-~ FRESH 29 CANTAlOUPE ...... ~ Lii . \ I · " Otange CoMt DAIL y PILOT /Wedneeday, JuM le, 1982 ••• Write . it out, make your p ~int an~ f ile· .i t . ' ,.,~~ ICAACBW> • · Fortill.ci Mr ""9hener for~·" By ~ Ill If 111 llRIEI time ~ou actually pt \He 1tulf. on the market The law Harry· S Truman, never a thy Ooww, la tUl1 mak1nS newt~ atw hM deedl. A book NCM\\ly maldnl the rou.ndl lhowl not only did HST ffy off the handi. ln public, but he wa• even more explo1lvt than tbe world 9U1pected, Hit unmaDed lettera, dlc1ated in a white heet of ~and filed away, have come to lilht tq print. Once aaain, "Give 'em Hell" Harry la leUSna them have it. 'The J)llll1na yean have removed aome of the ' letters' .un,, and they're more for am~ than tlncler "°V.:t but letU.nlr off 11.elm ln not. la IOmtth1na we au can enjoy, even if not.hlna ever ll malled. Sometimet we juat mumble u we So about the day'• choret and put them in a mental file. Dear Mi8I Jones: Yea, we know Johnny'• math papen are a mem. You ahould aee bia room at hame. Better yet, you ahou1d eee the tax .reoorda bia father took to the accountant thla yeer. It'• probably congenital defect" but not from my aide of the family, believe me. Dear Dr. Brown: After 1pendlng two bOW'I waitlnR in your out.er office and another 45 rnlnutet in the little ex.arnlnation room wearing nothing but a cocktall-alze paper napkin. 1 can honestly say I've oven!~ on bOth your Muaak = and the a1r conditlonlnl. I cmne in for a p and left with a lllnm candldcn. which the II*"*'"' •YI will dw' up if I ttay out of dnttl. Tbank aoodnm t only came ln cnce a ,_.. for I ebeeiup. .. =.,<!? Wcirial Dept.: It WAI deliChtful to be a II by the llnab\ll of btrda and the tbudd1Nr of~ -ooiidde m~ .window at 6:80 \hii mOrnlril· We knew you little devUJ were up to eometh1na lMt month when you put up the Temponry No Parkin& 1i8Jw that a1mmt became permanent. It wu a thrill when you finally resurfaced our street lut week, but why are you now lnltalllna a new eewer system? The beaS!I of dirt and 1renchel throuah the f.reah blaCktop lead UI to believe the inmates a.re run.nln8 the aylum apln. Dear Major Ccmpany: It'• not that we don't appreciate the wandertu1 rooney~ft coupona for new prod\.lda in thil month'• maau:inee, but where are the productt? The manqer of ;ny local grocery atore th1nb rm printing theee th.lnga in my buement, atnce no one, lncludl.ng the grocery president, even haa teen an order fonn for "New, Improved, 100 Percent Natural, 1Mlvt1, th• dol will have eaten my coupon. Pleue try to hOld beck the enthWlialm of your advertlalnl aaency until the product h.u aotten into a bottle or can. DMt' Market M.anaaer: Once aaaln. I've al.molt died from frostbite and e~ to the elements in your al.l1ee while tho for frozen tooda. By the t.1me rd decided w ether 1 wanted the regular ~ peaa, tiny peu, extra tiny sweet peu or Ch1nete pea pod.t, 1 wu 1ufferlng from hypot.heunia AWL.my ba_od1 w re ti)Q_ frof.en to write a check at the Cull re ter. That'• why the bank returned my check and said lt wu the wont attempt at forgery lt had ever teen. For cooka who want to avold the dangers of the frozen food alales in stores, here'• a recipe to cook and ltbre in your freezer at home. It makes a big batch. IO cook lt up and freeq IOIDe or freeze the whole thlna. becau. lt'1 sood enoush for a company ~r and doesn't taate reheated after a trip t.h.rOUCh the glacier. CHICKEN IN WINE SAUCE 8 whole chJcken breasts, 1pllt 'A poUlld butter or rQargarlne 2 cups finely chopped onion 'A pound small mushrooms In the warm weather months Amerlcans have a puaion for picnics that doe1n't seem to wane until lt'• 111.mply too cold to enjoy leisurely outdoor meals. generally wind up with, with fresh fruit and slicel) it'• time to broaden your vegetables and Jlerhaps a 6 eggs, beaten Picnic in the park wiih z esty quiche, What may w-ane, though, la the taste for hot dogs and potato chips, the standard picnic fare for many people. U that'• what you HAVE A JUN-E AFFAIR WITH HONEY BAKED HAM. (WE'LL CATER YOUR AFFAIR) . ~{J)e~Q. Ao<Mtd ~·· ~fu. ~~~ ~T!~~. For graduation, Father's Day, weddings, or any special occasion, delicious Honey Baked Ham is fully-cooked and ready to ~rve. Call your Honey Baked Ham store. GIFT CERTIFICATES REDEEMABLE ANYTM . .,,,,, IUll •IM -.---J700E Coost Hlghwov•(7W)67J.~00 ,.,.,. -The VllOge c.tltet e 1:122 So 8t00111V1I (!-t lol Aood) •"7 W) 635· 7~1 • ,. _ ... T-Plozo No11'1• 2A001 lloyMond WoY (Al Et Toro llood). (7W) 137 .3122 'MIMlll""'-IQOcWleoclltltva (AtGo1lelctnett10~·1)•(7W)M&·W6 ~ -Wll>N Tuatln(Acio111rom Tovo1001 Orange)• (714) 907 .90()() ,,_, mAlf -71·634 Hwy • (llonct>o Mir~ Plozo) • ( 7 W) 346-339• ..... _6276AllingtonA~• (lnHorclman~Cen••)•(7W)618·Q631 AllOINLA-A.LMlWOOO W(SICOWIA IOINN0UVW000 WUILMtllUAWl PAMD(HA.SAHTAMONCA WOOOl»CMUS IOIHllC>Gt S.UOJOS( -v..U PolllO AllO ~~,r.~lllMUI C:_...,, .. _..,,..., ........ .., culinary horlzon1 and little wine, and tou're all 1 can (10~ ounces) look toward eomething a set to go. i .condensed cream of bit more elegant and COLD PICNIC QUICHE mushroom soup. c e r t a i n lj' m o r e 4 to I serving• undiluted interesting. Try a cold Pastry for single 'h cup milk quiche. crust pie 1 tablespoon instant Prepare the quiche far 'h cup (2 ounces) minced onion enough in advance so it shredded Cheddar or 1h t e a s p o o n chllla completely in the • Swiss cheese prepared mustard refrigerator. Then wrap 'A cu p chopped ~ teaspoon pepper it and pack it in a basket luncheon meat (2 to 3 Roll out putry to flt a .. 2 cloves of prlic, cnathod ~cup t1oui' ~ t.eupoon ult ~ teupoon pepper 'A teu~h dried thyme leavea 2 cant (18~ ou.noell) chicken broth f chicken bouillon cubet 2 cupe white wine Remove skin from cbiclten breutl. Heat some of the butter in a 5..qua.rt Dutch oven with a tight-fitting lid. Gently brown chicken breuts, a few at a dine. adding more butter u needed. Remove chicken aa J>leces...brawn and .continue un are"'browiied. , Add onion, mushrooms and earl.¥:. Saute, stirring, about 5 minutet. Remove from heat. Combine flour with spices and stir into onion mixture .. Gradually stir in chick~n broth and crumble in bouillon cubes. Bring to a boll. stirrlng, reduce heat and add wine. Heat oven to 400 degrees. Add chicken breaats to wine mixture and bake, coveN¥f, for 30 ' mlnutet. To freeze: Divide chicken mixture in half (for 4 portions each). Place in foll-lined casserole and fold foll over chicken. To serve: Place frozen chicken ln casserole dish and bake at 400 degrees for 40 minutes, or until completely thawed. Stir and bake another 15 minutes or until bubbly. 9-inch pie pan or an 11 x 7-inch baking pan, OR divide pastry in half and roll out each half to fit two 8'A by 5 'h-inc h (about) disposabl e aluminum baking pans. Ease pastry ln to pan(s). Trim and flut.e edges. Sprinkle cheese apd meat over pastry (if using 2 pans, place half in each). Beat together eggs and remaining ingredients. Pour over cheese-meat mixture. Bake in preheated 375 degrees oven until knife inserted oear center comes out clean, 30 to 35 minutes for 9-inch or 11 by 7-inch pans OR 15 to 20 minutes for two 8 'A by 5 'h-inch pans. Cool on wire rack. Cover and chill. ' t Treat /.OUffflf to a ••lach. Tuat .your IUIU' 8llid wa•. Brina juiOI oool, ,. rHhh•I and flWMil to the un\.WUally to boll~ 1lmmer I 2 ta~ ""Pl' eleaant frult Hlad, ele1ant and venatlle m&nu• Sdr In 1-non ~ cup flaked or I d r •no h • d w l th N.w 7Mland ktwterutt. -2"1• JWce and Nin; cool. U\Ndd.s coconut. touWd iun-ID1alhed eye appeal. K 11' 1 P R U IT AN tr!:~ lemon-rum iyrup 4 kiwifruit, peeled Lllhlly aatl1fyJn, and MELON SALAD ::kl~t! =i:. and tUcec1 fl bur1Un1 wtth ulcy \i cup~ To --·. sr;: .,._.1.,. l quart aHorted aooctn-. frult M1adl .... U. -"'"' lrw• Jon llou..11a , a perfect accompt.nimlnt n C!U~ water and eame o the IYNP me ..,,...... to patio luncheon• or 1 tab ..,oon lemon Into indlvldual Mrvin1 (watermelon, , IWlllMrtlme d1nMn. peel dJahel. cantaloupe, honeydew) · When your 11 l ad1 W C\IP lemon Juke Makel 8 IWYlnp. In snail bowl c:cimb(ne . include the bounty of W cup rum ma:n:r, lemon Ju.ioe, exotic and unuaually 4 klwtfrult, peeled KIWIFRUIT MELON IUPI' ai coconut; mix and aUced SALAD WITB to blend well. Serve u a • deHdow fnai11 available, 1 q_uart melon balll CREAMY COCONUT ~over mlXture of you've created a real (honeydew, cantaloupe, DRE88JNG ldwltrult and melon • REFRESBJNQ - Melona are joined by New Zealand kiwi· fruit tor a chanp of pace salad. ~:mn1 from a land watermelon) ~ cup mayonnalle belll. where aucculent fruits ~~In~~IJ~U~ce~pa~n~co~m~6~ln~e:..__~~3~ta~blea~~~~~GW~~lemon~~_...:.M~1.11=~=ea::..::6~.rvm,.:::.:~!::..·~~-~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lfOW in abundance, the New Zealand kiwifruit la a natural ln ulada beca'--it'1 both exotic ln appearance and delectable ln tute. Formerly called the Cb1neee Gooeeberry. the kiwifruit WM introduced to New Zealand from China back in 1906. AlthouP it didn't make it to die United States until the 1950s, the New Zealand kiwifruit has quickly gained popularity nationwide. The simple elegance of the kiwifruit makes it ~ to enhance any from break.fut to dellen. Wrapped in a U1ht brown furry akin, the New Ze,aland kiwifruit cuta open to reveal a SPUkUna emerald areen &.h, dOued with tiny black eeeda and a pale 1reen center. With a refreebiq, sweet taste, the kiwiliuit'• flavor is incomparable. Enjoy the ta1te of kiwilruit aa a great mack. Serve it in i11 own natural cup by llicing it in half and 11COOpin8 out the delicate f1eah wtth a lpOOD. Or simply peel and alice the kiwifruit to U8e in a variety of ways from a fruit and cbee9e board appetizer to kiwifruit ice cream for deslert. Like pears and avocados, the New Zealand kiwifruit is picked while still hard to protect it during transit. Ripen the fruit easily at home by placing the kiwifruit in a plutic bu · _ with an apple or banaha; then close the top. Within 24 hours the fruit will be beautifully ripe with a delightful flaVOI" and aroma. It simply takes a trip to your local market and you, too, can romance your summertime guest.a with tasty kiwifruit. For an elegant Kiwi Melon Salad, serve a mouthwatering melan&e of New Zealand kiwifruit slices and assorted melon balls. Tempting salad drelMinp , are the crowning touch to any salad and the creamy dreBSing, with a bue of mayonnahle and coconut, is no exception. For a refres hing change, marinate the kiwifruit and melon balls in a tasty blend of lemon, sugar water and a hint of r u m to create the Marinated Kiwi Salad. So ease into enter1aining this summer with cool and refreshing Ad~ice for b irds LANGHORNE, Pa. (AP) -Whe n it '1 refre1hment time at Sesame Place, ·the educational ~Je play perk near lphia now in its third 9eUOn, youngsters can get not only IUCh snacks .. pizza and hot clop, but ai.o food for thought. Thia come• from no le11 a nutritional authority than their l·foot feathered televtlion hero, Bla Blrd. Blc Bird'• bealthfW tipe for the kids, dllpla~ on 1i1n• in the .. l'ood l'ICtory," include: -Wlllh your wlnp before you •t. (lt'a nk1e to,... your ~ too.) -... pd food bu&ldl ...... 1llMb Ind ..... (If you happen to be a b6rd. It ..., mu. ,our ,........ ..... ) -You lbould alwa,a i.te ~ food before rou add Ha1ontn1. Per1oaal11, J pref •r bWl11£•~ -Peo~ are ju1t lliindrW fruit .... ---·;::~ =r-1 ... -~ PRIC!S EFRCTM 7 DAYS 8 A.M. THURS., JUNE 17 TliRU WED., JUNE 23, 1982 U.S.0.A. Cholc9 .... I •9 CENTER CUT CHUCK ~TEAK ..... la. •• U.S.D.A. Choke ... f I 3 s.. CENTER CUT Ct;IUCK ROAST .. LI. • , U.S.D.A. Ololce.... I " BONELESS CHUCK STEAK ........ LI. • . . U.S.O.A. Chokw 8"f, loneleu ~ 1:1..Q CHUCK CLOD ROAST ............... LI. l _.ff .._, ._...,_.,..._.. NlWl ~::u .... ,..6.99 n...~iw-. .19 NEWPORT COOLER GL-ASS ''-· AMhot Hodtif'9 •• .39 NEWPORT ICE TEA GLASS 7-. Met... Hodtlt-e NEWPORT PITCHER 1.99 ... ,_ GOUal1IT ......... tA .89 , . We accept Coupons from ALL other super.markets! 1. faplred covpo111 not occepted. 2. Co11tl1111ity promotoo111 & gr0<ery purcho.e <oupo111 no1 0<ceplfll 3 Only mo1111foctvrer't covpont of S 1.00 or leu con IM doubled 4 Subthlut1011 of •l•mt 011 mo.,ufocturer't coupon• prohlbl,.d by low. S. Vol11e of oil i1em1 011 retailer coupon1 determined by our 1helf pro<• 6 II we do "GI 1toclt the item 1pecifltd on other food morltet'1 coupon, we wilt 1ub111tute 011 ,,.,., of equ••olent •olue 7 l•quor, tobo«o & dairy productt tuludtd. a S11bject lo llmil1 imprinled Oii eoch COllPO" 9 Appl·•• only to 111permorltet coupon1 from lo1 A"9tle1, Vent11ro & Orange Counl•"· 10. Offer good June 17·23, 1982. · , ... u cou•o• .,,. •••• , ACCl ltTID STEAK & SHRIMP! FILET COLOSSAL · MIGNON SHRIMP .. ISH WATll..fllll.ID la OIVllNID COOK SCAMPI STYLE Oii 8AR8EOUE ') Wihoft 93~ rot "" BONELESS HAM ..................... la 2 .19 Fo.-'orm1 Gtodt A I 1· 9 STUFFED GAME HENS .... : .......... LI. • TtdUlios'~isAUCE .. tA. I .•9 um. Juon ... 12-oz. 99 TAMA LES .......... , .......................... EA. • Voe l'odi ... l-lb. I 69 HUGHES SLICED BACON ..... l•. • Loul1 ltich Holl t HEN TURKEY BREAST ta 1 .19 U.S.D.A. Choke loneleta STfW BEEF .............................. l l 2. I 9 lolllt ltich TURKEY DRUMS ll .59 loui1 Ri<t. TURKEY WINGS OKor Moyef 12-oz. LEAN & TASTY PORK OKor Moyer 12·01. LEAN & TASTY BEEF Foster Forms Grode A FRE~ GAME. HENS .. 11 •• 69 fA 1.19. "' 1.69 l l 1.39 ffflh FHl.t of Fro1tn/o.fro1ted, New Zeolond, Filleh 9UT'llllfllH ...................... ll . 1.69 O•AllGl•OUGHY ....... LB. 2 .S9 Ff911t5'1inlled Froatn Pon Ready UllmA BX ........... Le. 2 .89 I AITllHI WHRlllG ... l8 .79 IRENCH BREAD . 24-0Z. SLICED DICARLO 89 SOURDOUGH. 16-oi. l'int CClf1o11 .19 I O·or ln1I011I 4 .19 IMO DRESSING FOLGERS COFFEE 16-oi. S& W .19 13.75°01. Bo•. Betty Crocker 1.09 ITALIAN STEWED TOMATOES .. POTATO BUDS 9.25-01. Ovkh Critp VAN DE KAMP COOKIES . ... .91 24·0l CLOROX PRE-WASH PUMP 1.99 8-01 111110111, Reg., Decaf • . .5-7 01. A.st. VMietiet 5 .19 NABISCO FLEX SNACKS . .91 TASTERS CHOICE COFFEE 2·1b. Butt.rmilli C-plete 14().C1 .83 AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE MIX I. IS GALA FAMILY NAPKINS 2'-oz. 12·oz. P1on1er'1 I .IS 1.79 AUNT JEMIMA LITE S'YRUP ... COCKTAIL PEANUTS 2·Uter, 7·UU A & W, wnltlst, "?" & S.f. SEVEN-P BEVERAGE ........ l.•9 7.25-or. Boa, Nature Vol!Ei GRANOLA CLUST R ... ······ ...... I •• , H PEACHES JUICY YELLOW MEAT .3Z. Sh'io\Hriw. t t~ot Con .9 1 MANOARI"'.' ORANGE 51.tolo•• Ohbo Slol1toloe, I -01 "'o DRIED MUSHROOMS . FRESH '-"""' ~."' ......... 2 6$ "' "'• 1.6 1 llAltPA SUSHI SEASONING si.~o1o• .. r.,.,..,..,....,. ,..,, SEASONED SEAWEED .29 LB Sh•t°'A¥ Arore 6·01 k• 1.19 RICE CRACKER ...... __ ''°""" loltlo SOY SAUCE r:d>i!H!Si!tf#; 16-oa. linlwy• Aall. Voriet!M FA .. llllH .. 19 VIGllUID ... ~1. 4-l'odl, All Vort.ties ·--· . ..................... . ' 10.01. l.orroiM, Spln.fMuthroom MICHELS FAMOUS QUICHE ..... 2.M 12 .. 1. ~ OoYl4 Kothtt FRANKS OR KNOCKWURST , . .19 .79 .89 10.1.s .. 1. ~ldte '°"" POuNo cAKE . ~ ••• .• 1 .as 9-01. loh To Loli• MONTEREY JACK CHEESE ... I .39 12 .... r,......., ~Aft!FRUIT JUICE . .. .. .... d, • .19 1 .. 1.leef,Ctlldl-.., Tlffti.y · BANQUET MEAT PIES ................... 3 tl 1 ·lb. Meet er .... ARMOUR HOT DOGS 1.69 ~ 4-oa. SMl•s.ft, • Voriofiot ALOUETTE CHEESE .. • .... .... 1.19 LARGIMIATY IPUT BROIURS • FRESH FRYING CHICKENS WITHGlllOS L• .• 79 .. TREETOP APPLE JUICE 6·l-OZ HOTTLE s1s9 r1"i'!ii!.'.t~; 799 7 lO "'' 9'.).P1ool, St•OtQht Who.lo tty JACK DANllLI ~od 12-01.NR.lottle 2 29 .... Ywa•IAW 7»..,I., 86-Proof, Whhlctty, Imported CANADIAN CLUB 8 .19 WI HA VI A NICI 51UCTION Of OGARS ~ OAOf BULK BAllAllA Clllltl u 1.78 : ' I ',, I / . Learn to fix Persian meal '1 tSe - OFF THIS COUPON GOOD POR 15~ OPP Oft REGCILAR CHEw-EEZ OR CllBW·EEZ POR IARGEDOGS, nm NATOR..u mP L IDDI! TREAT. ---- , COAIT llARDWAU In Lapna Beach will otter Katt• Lani Slattery teachln1 pnpuaaan of a P......n blnquet at l L 1.m. on June 17. Menu wW be cold yo1urt and ~her eoup, tQPlant and lamb ca11erole, • Penta.n rice and f re1h frult ~ he la t18. She will retun\ at 8:30 p.m. an June .24 wtth authentic Cb1n.e diahe9 tn Wtl\em ltyle. Clllll wtll Include aa1orted appetiser 1alad, roaat lemon chicken, et1ht· . Save2Seoil jewel rlce CHHrole1 1tncer Ice cream ana WCID•tcln coalliel. he ii Ill, Jou C\llberWoQ will teach an advanced mk.Towa\'9 c1lll at e:ao p.m. on JWttt 29. Menu will lnclud6 arttchoke quiche, Cornl1h 1ame hen1 with wUd rice 1tuttJ.ns, broccoli-<.'elel')' almondlne and a p&neapple ~ J'ee la t15. Bet1y Moulton wtll ahow how to prepue a quick, euy and elepnt dtnner party at 6:30 p.m. ~ 100% Nat11ral Cereal. Savinp Deftrtasted so .,00! \ ..., Orange CoMt OAILV PILOT IWedneed.y, Jun. 18, 1982 on July 16. TM l'MllU, SherJl1an Library whlcb 1bould 10 from and GardeN ln c.c.-ona lhopplnc baa to table lo del Mar wtl1 hoat Kay an hour, will otter hot Putorlu1 teachlna brie with nuta, cold beet preparation of do.ahead and cucumber 1oup, hol'I d'oeuVNI at 11 Lm. acampl with pernod, on June 22. Menu will paata prlmavera and lnclude muab.room btta, 1trawberrtee Romanoff. Mexican flelta appetiJler, Fee ta $20. French peppery cream Call the 1tore at cheeae paatrlea and 4 9 7 -4 4 0 3 fo f' c 1a11 aherry ahrlmp rolla. Fee l n f o r m a t l o n a n d la •20, with prere&*atra- enrollment. tlon required. Call 25 -= • • • Atari 400 Personal Computer Systems IVt lldvanc*'...., lo oo ~from~ n.ng 'fOO" ~noinoes to en1~ng 'f'M family! «'78·2281 tor lnformatJon. IROEK·MOORE In I.Acuna N&aueJ will otfec a Lunch and Learn elm .at 12:05 p.m. on June 21. Student• can watch 1 demonatradon, obtain a recipe and enjoy the food P~· Wulater wlll teach cool cookiJl8 with a .microwave at 7 p.m. on June 24 . She will eroph.ulle the buk:s of microwave cooklna. Ann Dreyer will teach a clall tn preparing an Italiah ptcnfc at 7 p.m. on' Entry Blanks Available at Participating Stores. Hefw'• how to enter 1. On .i Ollical El!Cry Form or ptaon poece of 3 • S Piii'' hlndl>ml Yoll' compllle name llld lddrus and complm ttif fOlowwlQ lhret SIJlements A H¥ne AIMrad formula Crist s c:My fiqnlllO system --- 8 Crest !las beln accePllCI by Ille------ C Now Ctnl comes on three n~vo1s '--------.anG --------- when you buy... JU 1 FAMrLY SIZE (10 Iba. 11 oz.) 'Ii• 1 KING SIZE (5 lbs. 4 ~.) 1 GIANT Silt 49 oz. (3 lbs. 1 oz.) 3 REGULAR SIZE 20 oz. {1 lb. 4 oz.) \ BT . Jun• 80. The menu will offer kiwi with pl'Olduotto, rolled breast of Yell, tonoWno Ill.lad and oranae thel.LI filled wlth oran,re crMm. Patty GWflllan will inltruct tn ma.k.lna fl'elh fruit de91erta at 7 p.m. on July 8. De11er\I will ranp from It.a.Uan and French tar t1 to an elegant but almple double-cruat cherry pie. Fee la $18.50. Call the at ore at 496 -0446 for phone reserva lions and class loformatlon. nmm PP+4H OneFrf!!e6.4 Oz. Advanced Formula Crest! Choose your flavor Regular M1n1 or GPI ~ . , ' I ) 4 QL&¥2 4 ••••• .. .. .. .. Or..-.ge OOMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, June 11. 11U a d!!f wh:ite • wine now · verYone wants to huf: 1"N•w1 lel"llee another flva acrea to th4. fact lt, too, 11 uaually .. ltkowlae haa a clean, Don Harrllon. eetate ln ~ e'v. all heard abour Sauvtanon BlMc. made a touch on tho 11111 Wiii crl1p llnlah. Sugeated WUllama, an erratic H a r°r•l•17'n a n d white wtne boom ln Richter expWnod why l)Wet aide. I retail 011 the 198ll out but briWant wtne maker, con1ultln1 enolo1l1t United Stew.. Whlto 'RlMllna, ln Oerticular, II (WMn lt'1 made dry, It 100n. will be about f3.60. wae responalble for Andre Tchell1tcheff outaellredlfourto an aw"watd variety to can develop an both RIHlln1 and by Buena Vl1ta. The pattern Ml been J)uena Vlata'• highly oontin.uethelepcywltb o and many former handle ln the field. unaitncUve bltterne11.) Oewuntramlner ln the Preaident Hubertut von iet: premium Rleallng t m pre 11 t v e 1 9 7 7 a ranse ot fine wtnee c ktall·bofore-dlhnar '1P'lrat of all, every The varlet(• main blend and are calltna Woltfen, evokln1 hl1 and Gewurztramlner Cabernet Sauvlgnon lncludlna a fJnt-qual.lty f•era are 1wltchlna to year w'e have the debate problem la: lta hard to them by proprietary German herlta1e. Thl1 trom Napa and Sonoma "Caak 34" u well 81 a 1980 Oewurztramlner wt.Ate wlne . of: do We leave lt on the pronounce. One winery namee. 60 pettent Oewurz, 40 la on the wane. number of other wines ($6.80), an elegant 1980 Why, then would vine and go for a aales director said he la Buena Vllta l\H a percent Rlealing ha1 a including late .harvest Chardonnay (a good • t..ndmark Vineyards In late-harvest 1tyle of aaked for 0 that wine that wine 'it calla Carnero• 1Ught reaidual augar and Speaking of Buena Rleallngs that challenae value at $9), and a fine Scmoma aell lta 1980 wln,?Andlt'ahardert.o aurts with a G?'' Spicellng: Balverne goOdacldlty.Price})aan't Vhlta, this old Sonoma the best ever made Tn 1978 Pinot Nolr ($6.~) Rlealln1 and Oew · pick. The cluslet1 are CPronoL.lnce H makea He.ald1burger. 'yet been set. County operation haa._Cali..fom.la, thathu.elementaot-tba uutramlner at $24 a lighter• and the pickers guh-vunz-tra-mee-ner.) Both are light, aUghtly HeaTclaburger la 70 had a r-esmgenoe un er ~ Carnero• Dl1trlct from cqe wholesale? At that want more money." Becau1e ot t h at aplcy, cnlllab le, percent Gewurz, 22 former wine maker Rick After a dispute with wtuch It came -earth prk.'e, a retail shop oould Oewurztramlner has problem, some wl.nerfea quaffable apertlf wines. percent Riesling, 8 Wllllama and recently management, WUliams and tarry tones and a tqe a full markup and another-problem, besides have made winea ual.na Splcellng wu named percent Scheurebe and under the new enologiat, left and now sells real velvety finiah. atip tell the wlnes for $3 ---------------------....__----~------------------------------------- a ~ttle. \fl:le reuon these two well -made winea ~ntly Wf!tt closed Out nts in the kind of pr~mium white winea th~ American public w4rtta. In a word: dry. Most white wine sold in the United States t o day is jug w i n e, generics that are a bit sweet and offer little if any varietal character. lfhese are everyday wines, beverage wines, and most of it sells for about $4 for 1.5 liters, which makes e a ch four-ounFe glass cost . ~ about 32 crents. Landmark 's 1980 Gewurztraminer first tut the shelves about a year a~, priced at $6 a fifth -three times the oost of jug wine. Unquestionably it's better wine than almost anything found in a jug. It is spicy and matches well with highly spiced foods such as curry and all forms of Ch inese cooking. But recently, in the R i e s ling and G e wurztraminer v ineyard Bill and Michele Mabry planted while they were students at UC Davis a decade a~o, workers were cutting vine trunks off halfway up the stalk and were placing small chips of other vine stock in a T cut into the bark. This T-budding, after about a yea r , will convert these Riesling -and G e wurztramine r vi nes t o pro duc ing Chardonnay. Landmark is switching to classical varieties, ana they're not alone. Many are dropping Riesling because, "Ri esling is a hard ~ll. no matter how good it is." 'Mi.at was the comment of Peter Richter, w ine maker at Ma rk West Vi n eyar d s in Forrestville. Mark West T-budded five acres of Gewurztramine r last summer to Chadonnay, and next year owner Joan Ellis may bud over Quench a thirs t -I RollsOnl First Of The season Juicy, sweet Nectarines Tropical 49 ~Mangos ... ea.. ao Proof Smirnoff 4 97 · ~vodka .. r: • 11nc1uoes N Off uoen "(V7 Liquid ~•vor.v 22-0~ ~~ .. Dtl~·-~~ ~cheer 4t-oz.2 15 •• Do• • ~ llmwtttflltd 18 ~ KOOi Aid .. : .... ~~ ... \'¥7 M¥1tft ~~ti .. Q..SOlt ~Wheat Bread ... 1~~ ••• 39 ~ OI CMIO i lOllO ~Sliced sourdough 1 :: ••• 99 l1 Pabst seer .... ,.erit-1. 79 lX jii scotch , .... ''Ir 9. 99 ~..,<....,.a..••• ~ EIJ Gallo. Wines ,,.., 3. 29 ' SAVE .50 Ta b. Sprite, sugar Fr~e Sprite or Coke COit cutter cuannteecs1 Prtc9 cost cuttef 4 09 Mayonnaise 11:'·•·• . ....... !~0 ••• 99 U.S.O.A. Choice Beef Boneless Chuck steak 78 Famuv Pack Frvino Chicken :1 29 ll Breast . ·~ . . lb. • us o A cno1ce Laroe Meatv eno USDA Beef 1 98 cM01ct Rib steak ... • J:rolffl ~ ~Of (ntfW ll rottno·s Pizza .. ,,~.°' 1.2~ ""' Froltn "*!_'•• 9 ~ Frencn Fries .... ~, ... 5 •• .. ·Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wldneed•y, June 10, 1882 1$7.*; AftMIPI .. ; I e.7Mm' I:· I Recseem 1111s coupon tor a Carry Pack I : I l~Cled wltfl lttleen p1tct$ ot tuKy. l • 001C1en 1>row~ Ken1uekr Fr1e<1 Cn1ck~ • • ---r-inMft twb IJ!ffrs Def ourcfiiit (oupo" 0000 I L•lllll lwo otters Pt• ourtllH• Couoon OOoO only 1or eom0tn.iion .. 11111101rk 01dt1s ' only IOI tOlllOtNl•on wn.teioarli orders c Cu$1omtl DIVS alt IPOllCIOlt U IU th u\IOll'ltl oays 111 IO~ICIO . U 1U , .. Otter explrta June 27, 1912 I Oller expirH June 27, 1912 I . ' I • may vary II l)lfllC•PlflllO IOUhOllS Pfl(U m1, •••Y al oarloC•Pll••Q IOUllOllS COuoo• 0000 Ql\ly •n Sou111trn P11cu may vary 11 011toc1~11ng 1oc11.ons I Coupon gooo oniy '" Soul11trn C11iroir11a w11t1t I ..... .-.. C111foinr1 wntrt you '" the intm Coupon OOoO only'" Sou1nt111 C111r01n11 ""''' 1 btrsn•o HM of 1111 Kantuc-y you '" Int memoe1s1110 sol ot tnt l(enlucky you Ht ine "ltmbersnoo sul o Int l(entucky fltt<I Cntckan Assoc111t0n 9 Frito Cn1ck1n Auoc11tt0n 9 Frito Cnickan Auoci.iion • ------·--COUPON --·------- EASY MEAL -Plain or puffy omeleta are simple to prepare and can be varied with many fillings. ~ntucky fried Chick~:· Beating up on· an omelet For an impressive, yet fast and easy meal, you Nat can't beat an omelet. Whether you chooee the plain or puffy variety, you'll be pleaaed to know that either ia sim,1e to prepare. No hidden technique ia required. The recipe tells you everything you need to know. A plain omelet "IB an effortless mixture of eggs, water and seasonings beaten together with a fork, poured into a bot, buttered ome let pan, cook'ed and US\lally filled. It can be folded or rolled, flipped grandly or slid gently out of the pan onto a aerving plate. A puffy omelet contains the same basic ingredients, but the egg yolks and whites are beaten separately to provide puff. Cooking is done partially on top of the r a.n g e , then completed inside the oven. Fillings for an omelet are unfimited: cheese, vegetables, fruits, meats, poultry, leftovers -the choice la yours. The following recipe features a filling of slightly seasoned fresh vegetables (the ones in bountiful supply in many home gardens), combined with a sprinkling of cheese. It also gives complete directions for making either a plain or puffy omelet. FRESH VEG ET ABLE OMELET Z serviags 1 small onion, sliced 1A c up c hopped green pepper 2 tablespoons butter, divided 1 small zucchini, sliced 1 mediWll tomato, chopped ~ teaspoon salt, divided W teaspoon oregano ~ teaspoon pepper 4 eggs, separated 1A cup water ~ teaspoon cream of tartar ~ cup shredded Cheddar or Swiss cheete In medium fry pan over medium heat, cook onion and gr:een pepper in 1 tablespoon of · the butter until slightly aoft, about 3 minutes. Add zucchini, tomato, 'A teaspoon of the salt, oregano and pepper. Cook. stirring fr eq uently , unt11 vegetables are "done and liquid is nearly evaporated, 8 to 10 minutes. Keep mixture warm. For a Puffy Omelet: Beat egg whites with water, "°' teaspoon salt and cream of tartar at high speed until stiff but not dry, or just until whites no longer slip when bowl is tilted. Beat egg yolks at h.l,gh speed until thick and lemon- colored. Fold yolks into whites. Heat remaining butter in 10-inch omelet pan or fry pan with ovenproof handle over medium- high heat until just hot enough to sizzle a drop of water. Pour in egg mixture and gently smooth surface. Reduce heai to medium. Cook slowly until puffy and lightly browned on bottom, about 5 minutes. Lift omelet at edge to judge color. Bake in preheated 350 degr~e oven 10 to 12 minutes, or until knife inserted halfway between center and outside edge comes out clean. To serve, loosen omelet edaes with spatula. With a sharp knife, cut upper ~ down center of Omelet but do not cut through to bottom of omelet . Arrange vegetable mixture over half of omelet. Tip pan. With a pancake turner, fold omelet in half and turn out onto plate with a quick Oip of the wrist. Serve immediately. For a Plain or French Omelet: Do not separate eggs. Mix eggs, water, 1A teaspoon salt with fork. Omit cream of tartar. Heat butter in 10-inch omelet pan or fry pan over medium-high heat until just bot enough to sizzle a drop of water. Pour in egg mixture. Mixture should set at edges at once. With pancake turner turned over, carefully push cooked portions at edges toward center so uncooked portions flow to bottom. Tilt pan as necessary so uncooked eggs can flow. Slide pan l'Wlpidly back and forth over heat to keep mixturie .in motion and sliding freely. While top is still moist and creamy looking , fill w ith vegetable mixture. Use pancake turner to fold in half or roll, tuining out· onto ru.te with a quick Oip o the wrist. Enjoy the juicy and exciting flavor of mangos. They're ready to eat when they yield slightly under gentle pressure. The pit can be easily removed when you s lice the fruit horizontally with a knife. 111:•111 l:lllllli l{ecipe PEPPER RELISH 6 sweet~ peppers 6 sweet red peppers 6 mecllum onions 3 cupa water 1-P'P .upr JI cup viDepr' ~cup water 1 ~ teMpoonl alt 1 ~ teMpoonl dill Med J\nely ll1nd peppen and onlolw. Drain well. T\&m Into ~ ~: Mt lltd4t. In f.cup 911111 ..-.., hMt S cupa wat.tr at hilt\ for 7 m&nutM or till M4""C· Pour avw ~ m&xtuN la o r 1 rcM. Let Nnd 6 m&nutle. Dnln. Add ~~r, K ... , -· Ill~ ond dill lllllt .-v•tel. It ~ b te mlnutee. till .......... OllOI, llU In hot clotM Jan: l'lfrter *• . . wdl ._,·up to I IMftChl In tlal rilfr1d I I If, ............. SAFEWAY LOW PRICES · & '. CSJ DOUBLE COUPONS Sofeway Quality kef, ..., ...... ,.,.. c:-1 .. C..t Boneless Beef Roast .... Beef Cube Steak ~......, Boneless Tip Roast ~ Premium Ground Beeh.!:'~ flt 111. It. '241 '1" Large 'AA' Eggs Lucerne 5 1 c ~M =M Corton Sliced Bologna ..._ ..... Chicken Franks .~"::. Fresh Pork Steak ~ GROCERY ~nfamil ~ ~ '131 •Green Chi I~ .W::..":"lllced 3 ~ '100 C-[>t>og Food "::' 25:. '511 ~Lucerne 3 ~ '1 c.oe-• e~ I 9c 1~z. Con1 • ~' DOUBLE COUPON ~' I I _ .... _...., _____ ,_ ... __ , -' ........................ ,.. ........... _ ........... , I .:=-.. :.: :-::L:: :.:......-~ ---:=::.::::,: I .............. ,. ........... J ....... ,., ................ ,.1 ,~ '"' .... .........,..._ .............. ~ I '(\) ··---& ........ '-, (\)1 . C~---------------J ~DOUBLE COUPON '' ~ 1' DOUBLE COUPON .,, . Safeway' s 'No ·Name Has A Name ••• ScOtchBuy Since Sofewoy flnl introduced Scetch Ivy ltoftcl ........... upon~ el canny •het>pen hove reduced their ..ec.ry blllt wbttontlolly. br buyinv Safeway'• Scolth l<#yt You'I tov• -' .J many 9re<etlfl ... hom moyonnolM le • paper prod11ch. Conned good• lo deonlnv ltom1. They'to all Sofe..,ay guara nteed ... Sofe..,ay'1 Good Quality vo1u ... Cream Corn .. -it. .... Tomatoes 0.-•"-• .. llqulcl Bleach ,...,..,.i......., Tomato J.,ice °'-'"--Catsup 0.-T_ .... ., lath Soap 5'MlUplvy •. ,~45c .. l~:.75< o.n... 79c ·~ 79c ~.i: 89< 1;:: 15< Fo1h Cllltornt1 GtOWll Lamb Chops ~a,_ Pink Salmon-Roast ::= Breaded Fishstlcks ~~ lb '1" lb '181 'it:-1131 Raw Shrimp Rudy's Sausage Patties Eckrich Smoked Sausage •. '7" 12~ '1" l'llg .C-[>Lucerne Ice Cream ~ersey's Syrup ~" t?-t>crearil Pies =: i:-:,, s119 C-£' Multimeal Bread ~ '155 tr-£> Breakfast Rolls Mrs Wugllls A~ CmnMllOll MrJ Wroglles ~\ 99' :\ 69c Sweete"4 Juicy. sac. anti Tep With C...m -....... --. lb. ,. .... 'E •. ate Fresh Crisp Carrots t=' White Rose Potatoes ~ .. , Granny Smith Apples ~ Fresh Bell Peppers 2.:. 4gc lb. 29t Ill. (,UA~ANTHO LOW PRICf PROTHTIO~ WIT~ 1111111111 t:/\Slt HI tl/\11 • lllNI ·~ . ...., It '251 HoneydeW Melon ,~39c Libby's Croutons '1:'~ 3,.•100 large Mixed .Floral Bouquets llltdl '2M Indoor House Plants ..,., 41: 99c Fresh Rose Bouquets ':.! 59c '·' ,. . ' .. HEAL TH & BEAUTY ··"• ~Smirnoff Vodka 80 Proo! 1.7& '9" LI• Alm Toothpaste '4-<0L 110 • '"°' ~Seagram's ~ai :112" Safeway Plastic.Strips :,o •145 ~ & B Scotch ,.'! ~ '8" Chapstick Sun Screen _,. 57c ~urvoisier V.S. ~oot ~ '12'7 Nail Polish Remover i~ t:. 79c CGgRK l:WScoresby Scotch IWrool 176 '9" lllll Regular Emery Boards T11111 ~o 55c C1nadlan Club ::. ·a•• c.w...1 I • -._ • ... .. Ortnge OoUt DAILY PILOT/W~, June 111 1111 ac-Man gobbling .up coiJ!S in sUperniar~ets r MARTIN 11.A>ANS a.a..A~ _. ~ ~ for • 10 ,.._., i I • refund form and th• U Rasor pack•t•· PZPsoDJ:NT Refund 11 the Pac-Man the Inn. lencl tbe arrow aMocNnt-' r-.n rMtial 1•1111111 lllmRI bottom flap with t he l:xD&nl Sept. 30, 198 • Offer. Receive • •1 t oun1 fellow at th• ,.._. th9 hnt _.of charl9I for a ~um rl _ _ rrl Un1\Wtll Product Code LJSTZRMINT World refund . Send the eclaout oounter who Arrid Roll--On, h .-ta ol .rx n!ibta per 1tay. : l}'lnbol from one box of Map 9Uer. Receive a required refund form .._ ~ ~ foe'_.,. and hand1lnl 1be d.lloount cetU&aWI 1882. 10-count 1lae and th• Dry Idea Rott-On, 21-lnch·by·32~ Rand and two Unlverul ~· ~o. he-Man II one o1 andy;ur name ana will be honored untll Th ... offert require re1l1ter tape wlth thf ecented or un1eented. McNally wall map wonh Product Code 1ymboll ~ moat poeular of tN adduu .. The of hr Dec . l, 198 2, at refund forma: ~'lee circled, l:xplrH J:xPirel Sept, ao, 1982. $1.N. Send the requlred and net. w • t 1 ht • .. w ,......aan of coin· lnolud11 three Herta partlolp•tln1 Hert• CURAD $1 Refund t. 80, 1882. OILLHTE Trac II refund form and the atatemenu from the ~t.ed vMleo pmea. Oll1AfbWI, each aood for outleta ln the continental Offer. Send the required RY IDM $2 Coupon Ruor Refund. Reeetve a Unlverul Product Code carton• of lara•·•lle More than halt a UO off the "~Hidy Unhed Stat11 and at refund form, two Otter. Receive 0 tn.u refund. Send the 'lmbol from one (4.7-ounce), famlly-alsa '1baWcift of U-.. armde-economy fare" or $10 off partlclpatln1 Quality wrappera from any GWette couporw for Dry required refund form 1 -wnce or laraer bottle (6.~~) or tuper-llze ·~i. pin. have been the weekend economy Inna ln the United container of Curad Idea, SllldencejTony, and the proof-of· of Lhtermibt or (8.3-ounce) PeJ>todent lftttalled in candy •tor.. fare," and three Quality Stat11, Canada and "Ouchle11" Adhealve Adorn. Atra ana l'z.-r purchale IM1 from the Ll1term1nt Cinnamon. 't'ootbpute. Exptre. Aug . . pl11a J>arlora and the Inn cerUflcate1, each Mexico. lCxpUee Sept. l, Banda1e1 except the Mate. Send the requlred beck of one Gilletw Trac Exptree July 31, 1982. 31. 1982. ~Ske. The old pinball macbl nee h1v,e been tepl1ced by Pac-Man, Dorf, The Wizard of 1Rar, A1teroid1 and Centipede -all (fObbll.ng up quarters to the tune pr 8eVel'll bWion dollan annually, and growing. Wltb revenuea like · thia, could anyone expect · that aupennarkebl would · not be enticed Into the · video Jame? Why ahouldn't they aet in on the action? Aft.er all. the games are .-n almoat p erfect fnoneymaker. They don't reqUire any Investment e'.tnce ea ger game Qperatora will indall them without charge ln exchange for a 50-50 •~lit of the revenues. How much can a aupennarket make from theee video games? I am told that each machine can produce a weekly income of $100 for the ltol'e owner. That's not bed for a dollar's worth of electricity, a few feet of space and no investment. Chains like Safeway, Kroger and A&P seem to agree. Safeway has lnatall'td e lectl'"O"nie games in more than half o£ ita stores, and Kroger aod A&P aren't far behind. But other chains - including the New J ersey-based Grand Union, Tom Thumb in Dallas , Ralphs in California and Wegman's in Rochester, N. Y. -are not jumping on the video-bandwagon. Some s upermarket Ol)erators are concerned that the coin-operated games would <tetract lrom their family image or their image as· a food store. --A long w i th t h i a consideration comes a moral question: Should the supermarket take money from youngsters, "{ho are the most ardent tans of video games? But the list of holdouts is abrinking. The supermarkets that have experimented with the games have found that potential problems ce'n be minimized if they itutall only a limited nwnber of the machines, keep them out of high- t ta ff i c areas and ~efully supervile the pbly~. :Some stores do not tUtn the games on until afler 9 a .m . so that yolmgSters won't be late fe>f echool. Others forbid ~ under 18 to play t1' games until a certain , bfur in the afternoon. llow should smart 1K0ppers react when t!(iee games are installed 11$ t ·heir favorite alllermarkett? !tlemember that they .i;, pt another impulae it$· ready to take your nipney and buet your ~et. P888 them by. · ¥ you have bad an e•_J>erience with these g,_mes in the "'1>erznarket or want to v9tce your opinion, pleue write to me in ~ of this newspaper. I :. CLIP 'N FILE ~: REFUNDS P,noaal Prod1cta (File :. ll·B) :clip out this file and keep it with aimilar cub-cSff coupons - biyenp refund offers • beYeraae CXNpona, ftr example. Start ct)lecting the needed pfOofa of purchMe while lqikinC for the required rietund form• at the aiapermarket , in n:. w • p a p e r • a n d •1a1tnee1 and when tfadlna ..,.1th f rlenda. 0.jfera may not be ~in all U"eMof tlllal country. Allow 10 =· to receive each : 1be faUowinl retund ..... worth $109.74. '_ill~ •••k'• refund iff•n Wve a total of f"-lM. Till• offer doua't _., •. Nfund ... ~:.\DID. PD ... •· nrtR. •Iii. HOH. •••••• dllto••• i .............. 1a tlOO oa Berta . ' • , Qt·~ ©u1t v«eat ffiat uUade CUs tlamous! ,. __ 9t_._s _©_ull_vU_ea_t_ffi_· _a_t vU_a_d_e _CUs_~_a_m_ou_s_! -~ !000'$ Of Low.. LOW Prieal to help you save on your Father's Day Feast! .. :.:::..~,,.,. ' • • • • -• • I 17 .. •• -u u u •\ --I BEBF LOIN T·Bone Steaks .......... ........ § BEEF RIB BOHELESS UTIU! JUAN >O()l.3 YA.lllmES nc mlTIS . .. .. IA _"'1_..&_1-0Z 1111 SAISll( l.11$ .. . IA • STATDI .,._ IZ,OZ •1 21 Slal l.1111 llAJS ..... u • llAU.,_lfOZMf.ATOll •111 IUf llBS . . .. ..... fA • ..... la 11.11 IAllMIUUt SllOUCll LIMIT 4 STEAKS PER FAMILY Ciia-srul... .la 11.39 amm cm SltAI la 11.19 iiliiiSF .. YSltAl .lal2.19 r.iESiUi. . . . ..la 12.19 la 12.89 tPUVOM ROYAL GELATll FRESH ~-N..,...I D,,. •A .... C.-1il8h Game Rem WESSOI OIL .oz HllTS . KETCHUP .., LIMIT 8 LBS PER FAMILY WHILE SUPPLY LASTS '\, LIMIT 3 LOAVES-PER FAMILY WHILE SUPPLY LASTS IEEr: BLAt>E..cuT .. _ ,.llOZfl< Sil fllflS 24-0Z LOAF la 11.49 la 11.81 la 12.08 geJu/lce COeQl gpecla~sf _.__., l'Ma'fllZI CllER llETEICEllT ":-... ---Doll°"" .. la 12.18 .. ~•2.11 ILICID TO OAO£A lWIEYmAST ---==-=~' ~· INIO~w~~ IKf LUYS DIAPERS .. uu c ,.u 11.18 .. u 11.88 I j ' 1'011 1.AUNDllY OIA#T Rm FAB DETERGENT -- FrUit • IS u '°"'" la a hUft'1 about .atnaer. n.othl~ 1urp1ne1 frfah, f Ht•fr\< d .. 1trt1 In ta1te, 1pted of preparation or oonwftAlnDI. Andathaofa b.Otlo day\ a aoothlnc reward CIR De nutrttloUI. rHdlly available and econonUoa1 fruit. One deUert that'• rHdy In le11 than 20 mtnutea !1 Pineapple Caramel, with luatrout wed1e1 of fruit ln • aoJdeft canme1 uuce. Another popt out of the oven ln 30 minutes: Banana Rhubarb Crllp, a 1plcy and fraarant compo1lte that wlll remind you of IJ'W'dmothe.r'• kitchen. Pineapple la available all yar Iona and la a fair aource of vitamin C. It la alao Jow ln 80dium and caliories. Pineapples are picked at the pMk of rlpenma and flaVol', and do not ripen after harveat. Select one that is plump, fresh-looking and aa large as possible; the larger the fruit, the more fle8h that la edible. Remember the lovely, rosy rhubarb of your &randparenta' garden? BrinC it back. Although botanically clauifled a vegetable, rhubarb la considered a fru l t beialU8e of ita flavor and acidity. Fine-quality fruit la fresh, firm, crisp ahd tender, either cherry-red or pink in color. Stalb should be fairly thick with fresh-looking leaves. Keep ln mind that only the stalk is edible and not the leaves. One of the moat popular flavon of all is banana. Thia year-round fruit haa supplies of vitamins B6 and c. and a1ao potassium, iron and other minerala. Select plump, flrm, unblemished and brightly colored bunches. Green or semi-green bananas will ripen three to five days at room temperature. But you. can use green-tipped bananas -they're great foe auteeing, broWni or baking. PINEAPPLE CARAMEL 1 large, fresh pineapple ~ c up firmly packed brown sugar ~ cup butter or margarine ~cup heavy cream ~ cup brok e n walnuts Cut off crown and stem end of pineapple. Stand pineapple upright and cut. off rind in lengthwise strips . Remove eyes with pointed knife. C ut Contest ' at Fair A lemon pie and oranae cake contest will be held on July 13 at the Oranae ~ty Fair in Corta~esa. Contestants should bring the ple or cake to· the Gourmet Gallery in the Home Arts department between noon and 1 p.m. The entry will aerve as admission to the fairgrounds. Judging will begin at 1 :30 p .m ., and partidpanta are lnvlted to ot.erve. Baked goods will be evaluated on appearance, texture, conalltency and flavor. Reciees need not be origlnal. but they muat be oven-baked and not made from a mix. Lemon piea abould have a meringue topll'ina. and oran1e cakei ahoud have an $flavored <II' white A ndpe 8boWd be au.ebed to wh item. A lllwr lll'VIQa .-. will be awarded far bmt .. md bl9t calm, with ribbon• awarded tbrou1h thlrd place. ~ tntrW will be on dtaplay for the dUl'ldan ol tM fair, July t to 11. rot additional Information, call 101-rAlll . Keep 'em cold To auuri lo,·trllf .... ~ .. m,c.~r.· .1?.: ... -- Ea~ey for dessert .. DtDHpDle Into K-lach ihlok illete .. Cut MCh ........... a.mow con. ~ ..a •UCIP9 eombtu 1u~u. buuer and cream. Stir OWi loW heat until •car la dl110lved and stun OOIDll to a boll. t minutee. Add walauu. Arru\19 plnMppa. .... on ltfYint platwr. Spoon hot •uce owr pineapple. MAkm: • to e Mtvtnp. BANANA RH BAR CRISP 1 W pound• f reab z.dly, __ ,....,,_ lntefFryer Zedlyl'_.,,....,,_ Fryer lnat ~ CNt mto 1.anab • .,..tun ~(-.Ut4~ Iii~~ I ripe banana•. oa11erole combine ..,_.. 1..aricti thick rhubarb, banana and '4 •• eup_ freahly on-a. juice. In ama.11 1qu..d C1ftD11 )doe bowr combln• brown K oup f{rmly ..,, Dour, oe.._ llnl9r' ~ '""8 ~ aact cinnamon. Wfth M eup all·purpoee r••trY blender or ..,.. knlve1 cut In butter M euf:i. quick oeta until mixture ~ 1 tab9*"' fnlbly ooene cnunbl; lprinkle patld _... ftmt QI' 1 K over fruit: Bake ln a tr, 9 a !IN pmd ....... 310 ca.er-oven 2& to 30 \it twp>on _jroUnd mlnute1. Serve with dnnNftOll vanllfa ce cream or I tablelpcaw butter heavy c:reun, lf de.tred. or mar1artM. at room MU.: 4 eervtnea. • per lb. .22 ':,.. .• ": 1.• Frozen-Defrosted Armour-Butterbasted Boneless Turkeys per lb. J49 Assorted V artttes Western Hearth Bread lYl lb.loaf _________.. 75 Dalry/0.11 ValuH POi8iaiii11d • 88 -140L . C1llll ....... ,...... -l1~•lt•'1 Y01m1 IOL .38 cup z..dly ,.,.. ., ~--~--llCU., ': 1.• iGrp C111dd1r Cll1111 ":: 2.99 Frpr Tllllhs 'f-",~tlt • --e11l1 ": 2.89 ..~ ... Juice 1.79 Fisherman's Cove , ..... ':. 2.98 .. 49 Dower Sole l*o. oU ,,_.o.troe!M ':. 1.41 1.79 R1lllllow Trout ~ .. Appetite Shoppe Yalu•• ~.2.39 O.o-1' ... ..... , ....... ..": .41 1.19 ___.., ...... C.•••ierr ,,., 1.11 ,. .. .21 • Sea. ... ~ .41 ..... ... ..... ti ... .11 . - ot tbe .,.,. Double Coupon Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturer's "cents off'' coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the Item. Not to Include "retailer", "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed Jhe value of the Item. Exclu~es liquor, tobacco and dairy products. Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon and Limit 3 Double Coupons Per Cu1tomer Coupon Effective June 17 thru June 23, 1982 cw+a- Double Coupon Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturer's "cents off" coupon and get double the savings when you purchase the Item. Not to rnclude "retaller", "free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value of the Item. Excludes liquor, tobacco and dairy products. Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon Ind Umlt 3 Double Coupons Per Cuatomer Coupon Effective June 17 thru June 23, 1982 Personal Care Yalu•• o-91 .... 1.49 iiUdrr .. 11111naa11 Cheerios Cereal 1'oa. boa Mdl ""'°' Crwt •• G*lte App18• WIV PIZZI t1a 1.55 Atn C.rtrllll• "' pq. ......... .99 ,.,......,,..., Hiiiin Dressing llOL l11Rtree latlen 10oa • ..... lltl. Wasson OH 1.95 Wllll~Trtel ... 41oa. btl. Alm THtllp11.--1.4oa. ii1i.&n11 ,. ~ 2.29 Produce • Floral Value o-...... Kraft~ .33_ Fresta Celery •1ean11I a CM-1'4 OL •ildl ..... , ............... loMl'eoll .49 Hu•t'a To•1toa1 ,."' ... ........... .... can lb. 0.-• ........... Y..., u.a. .... t 1.45 111111• .... Petit•• ': ,,. .... Clusters ri. oa.-... e-.II ,....,, ..... 111ct. ... Hell All T••••.._. pet a.er 0.181'1•111 lb. - .95 " 1.49 1.57 .29 . ' I ll I t - .. -Orange OoMt DAit PILOTJWedneeday, June 11, 1813 FRESBIFRESBIFRESBI . ~ FRESH STRAWBERRIES ARE HAND-PICKED AND DELIVERED FRESH DAILY TO ALL 1HREE IRVINE RANCH FARMERS MARKETS STORES! .. - .---... ~1-E* ?£1' •a ;(•1··1•1111-----...... Large Sweet YELLOW· MEAT PEACHES 69~ lb LONG GREEN CUCUMBERS WINTER CRISP RED DELICIOUS APPLES 59~ .lb WRITE BUTTON MUSHROOMS $1.19 lb Rich Nutty-Flavo~ HAAS AVOCADOS · 59~ each New Season COACHELLA GRAPEFRUIT 5/$1.00 29 ,~ ·each -----------------------------------1\~l!tli~t---------------------------------------FbR FA 1HER'S DAY BAR-8-QUEt FARMER STYLE TRI TIP ROAST TURKEY BREAST BAR-M BACON PORK RIBS Reg $3.98 lb 4 to 6 pounds $2.29 lb fteg $2.49 lb Reg Sl.98 lb $3.29 lb $1.69 lb $1.98 lb $1.98 tb Available at the Tu.tin and Newport lte>re9 only! ------...... f .. ~1 ?f;J j(IJI] I]•------NATURAL FOODS WE HAVE ONE OF 1llE LARGF.ST SELECTIONS OF FRESH AND FROZEN SEAFOODS ANYWHERE. IF WE DON'T HAVE WHAT YOU WANf, WE'LL GET m Near East Pure & Simple RICE PILAF PUFFED CEREALS 9 oz. Reg $1.19'· 6 oz. Reg 65¢ 9!~ Ric•·49~Co~ PEANUT OIL Health Valley 32 oz. Reg s3.09 DIP POTATO CHIPS $2 •49 5oz.Reg$1.09 Available at the Tuatln and Newport stores only! --------1 •1 ?1111 . COME TRY OUR FRESH MADE PIZZA! FREE SAMPLES TRIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ATTBE TUSTIN AND NEWPORT STORES! Domestic Mild Marie Callendar SWISS CHEESE BACON DRESSING Reg $3.98 lb Serve Wclrml $3 49 12oz.RegS2.25 Extra~and~eor1u1 $1.98 TAVERN HAM FONTINA B~erHillorEIMoUno 89~ NO OIL SALAD DRESSINGS 12 oz. $1.09 Reg $4.49 lb Reg $4.291b $3.49 lb $3. 79 lb TBEIRREG JOHNSON'• KETCHUP, 14crz. .. Sl.73 Sl.39 $1.09 AvaJlable at the Tustin Knud8en SMALL CURD COTTAGE CREESE 32 02. Reg S2.09 and Newport store• only! Pepperklce Fann SANDWICH BREAD White or Wheat 16oz. Reg Sl.10 $1.69 ,., j t1\~ • ·~'1 69~ ~ Irvine ~ch Farmers Markets ALOE :~A JUICE VITAMIN E, 200 l.U. 'Fruit Aloe Cranberry and Orange ·~capsules. Reg Sl0.69 32 oz. Reg S7.50 $9.69 . $5.95 .:_ ____________ ..... ,~an1~11•~:1rta~.xr..~1.~x~~,--------------- . THOMPSON . SEEDLESS RAISINS RA'::,~,,.~NDS Bulk or Packaged $1.29 lb $1.59 lb I: t! :t I 1Xf(1X11 •t-i~--__., ___ _ Homemade Irvine Ranch Farmers Marketa . 100% Natural SPROIJTED WHEAT BREAD " or ED'S &RE.AD WITH SESAME No OU, No Pretervatlves 24 oz. loll $1.38 • •, ' Homemade Irvine Ranch Farmen Markets COtJN1'RY STYLE RAISIN BREAD 16oz. loaf· $1.39 \ " ..... FROM PURE AND SIMPLE: WHOLE WHEAT ELBOW "MACARONI, 16 oz. SESAME TAHINI, 16 oz. RED WINE VINEGAR, 17 oz. CIDER VINEGAR, 16 oz. SESAME DRESSING, IZ oz. ROMANO DRESSING, IZ oz. MAYONNAISE, Z4 oz. FROM ARROWHEAD MlllS: . 99~ $3.87 $1.35 $1.35 $1 .99 $1.99 82.39 79~ $2.99 $1.09 81.09 SI.SS $1.55. Sl.85 WHEAT FLAKES, II oz. 60~ 43~ · B~OWN RICE FLOIJR, IZ oz. 82.IZ 81. 79 PIN~O BEANS, 16 oa. 81.0S 95~ BISQUIT MIX, IZ oa. 81.93 8 J..49 •sugeated Retail Price at Health Food Stores. Ll•lt ats•t• ••••r•••, NeDealeraalee. Prices good through Tuesday. June 22. • &Be $2.39 sse sse $1.25 $1.25 $1.49 33e $1.39 · 11e 81.IS Salad • • var1at1on Among the man y J>leMw'el of summer are the oountleel variations of cool end• satisfying main diah ulads. Eaay to mak e, refreahing to eat, aalad~tered meals fit neatly into summer's eMY-Pnl lifestyle. Sure t.o be appreciated la Marinated "'Seel and Muahroom Salad , featurint appetizing 1llce1 of roaat beef, mu.brooms and green pepper rtnp. Thia salad entree can also be a budget- str etcher when made with leftovers from a beef rcmt llUCh .. rib, rib eye, rw:np, tip, top round or crom db •. tfARINATED BEEF AND MUSllROOM SALAD 1 pound cooked beef rout . 1 can (4 ounces) sftced mushrooms, drained 1 medi um green pepper, aUced into thin rings 'A cup red wine vinepr w ~ oil 1 salt ~ teaspoon onion salt ~ teasp oo n WOl'Ce8tershire sauce ~ t.eaapoon pepper ~ t.eaapoon tarragon leaves 2 cloves g a rlic, cruahed 4 lettuce cups Olerry tomatoes Cut roast beef into thin alices; arrange slices in lhal1ow 11-baking diah . Top wi th mu.hrooma and green pepper rlftls. Mix the vtnepr, ot1, salt, onion salt, Worcesters hire •uoe, pepper, tarragon leaves and garlic; pour mixture over beef and ve,etablea. Cover and refri,erate at least 3 hours , spooning marlmde OW!' the beef and -~eaetabl es ~·With alotted spoon, fill lettuce cype wlth waetablee. Arrange beef a1iCee be9ide lettuce cµps; garnish with cherry tomatoes. 4 eervm,.. • Quantity purchasing One way to aave f?OD· ey It the lfOCel )' store la buylna larp quantities when r-. are on ale. l'or meat purchases, freezlne ll a necealty. l'or laformation on the tubjaet, aaD Teledp, the home aad 1arden tele- phone iDformation eer- W. ol the UDIYSl&ty of Calltonaia Coooeratlve ........ Dial "774-7080 add atk for me11a1e ............... ,l'nie-... ,,,.. ............... .... , 2 ... w ... I••••••• for .......... ,, , .. ,,,, ...... E~tlal.'flM .~ I PRODUCE TtlOflCM. T!!£AT Large Mangoes ~~~otatoes -ZfAiAIC> ~-<JllU1' C'nnny Smlh Apples ~n Red Onions LA .15 u..69 LA .25 LA .69 LA .29 HEAL TH f, BEAUTY Hour<tt-ASSTU ~ Impulse Body spray , ~~Baby Fresh Wlpea ]98 225 129 FROZEN FOODS ~e Onnge.Julce ·"'=~~ t I lOl SW!rT r; IOIJI O«)l CN0C0t -OllU:N'5o. oom ~ .... Wt. Wlkher's BoMn..a.g ~.~~ .75 133 199 159 VONS BAKERY ~~Olke ~ FMher's Olly F.mty <Ake mG ....... ""' 325 345 .79 MEAlS L&278 I.a 259 L&2'' L& 179 i:=~ L&249 ~~---WC:t L& 2" ~-;.~are.ta ... 199 ~~mttkks L& .&9 OOUllTAll-~llUTTVllltlTm t., Annour eon.as Turhc,y L& a~:f..m ia 119 SI H VI< · 1 SI J\ I t 1 < l ' ' r>AIHY PfH>f)(f< · , ~-s:::-,,_ rt=.~~ ~=~ (iH: )('f l~lt S ~~lttllll .59 ~'"&1C:"C.c. .79 ~~a..~ .69 ~~s:. .99 =-~ .79 ~ornllOMdlup_ 149 ~'lil:l Olhea 299 ~ .43 ~""* 239 ~a •• .:. • 1~ z==""" ...... .84 ~ ... .99 ~~ .79 rc..c; ·== ~59 ~ ]39 mu. ..... .59 e;....~ ..... .49 .49 r.~•••wrm,••••~;m;r.•••••1• •131 11 ."' . Iii . •114 • 1, DOUBLE I DOUBLE 11~DOOBLE~1 1 ooPONsl1lcooPONS ' OOPON I If---:!:'\:···---~ I• ---~ I II ~=--==--... 1•1 ~=--=::"'"_ ... ,.,, ~=-~-... •• =---·-I ....., __ ,..__ ....., __ ,.. __ I _.:=.::~~ l'I ====·"= 11•1 =·=====I' .. _., .. _ I ... -.., ... -... -.., ... -I ~-.:r-.:..-=-:i:. I ~.:-.... -r--.::..-:-=c:.. I ~-:.-~-r-..::....-::--.:::i=.. I ..................... . .. ..... -...... -.....-..:. ..................... _...,,. 17= ... _ .. __ ..,,_ Iii .._.__ .. __ D ... Iii,. ._ ... _ .. __ ,,,..; 1; ............................................ ¥!111 ...... _______________________ ._.. __________ _ BEEf T·BONE 2 68 STEAK TABLE l<l'iO BEEF-LOIN CUT CUIB LS. J..MT 4. ~ OWi' lrnloteg. pike lb. 2.88) DfLICATFSSEN ~-...... 69 ~~~::"' t 69 ~~Olltw.>U t 09 ~-lllO ~LA 1'6.'-.VP>IOI 229 l9'0nterey JM:k 0Me:M LA .69 .89 ~'ii:~-.63 .. o..,,.c.-..-.--··--,. o..r,,. ..... a.._ ........ ,, °"*,,................ -~ , • .....,.._,...._,...._ __ I It LmMC..,........_llGI,.,.. 1• REVLON FLEX SHAMPOO 16-0UN<:f-OR CG'10. ASSr0 VARIETIES lHT 2 EA C"-'--~ price I 94) J39 LIQUOR ~Ile Champegne 197 l~~=t<~~~bL 299 ~~odka 839 ~:CeL~~~~. Of Dertc 3 75 . ~~ 1199 ~.v.o. ~ 799 939 : I 'I ,: ' i i ~I I': PS WCI SJ 4 PUC ZQOU&IP I 0 jUf4¥VPU 04 ¥ 3f4Y•• ifG & 4 I • • 4 t MUC NOTICE MO'nOI TO c;;;;M0TW • ...., MOT10e OI IUNW OOUltT Oft OM.&..M 11011.. MO'n01 YO ~OM ftUt'TU .. IALI CWl'OfMA IO•fOOL Dlll"IOT : O#M«~ ,........... OOWTYOftlMOCOO HVNTINQTON HACH UNION ..=t ,,.,_.,., U.C.O.) NOTICI II HIMIY OlvtH, tnat ~lH COUMn' ~ '°"°°" OttTll'IOT waby Qlwn \0 Vie ct on Wadnmd11Y, Juty 14, 1"2, 111 IUCHCIAl. CMeTNCl llO ~ .., NO .... ., • etedltOtt Of OIOAOl A. IAY!N t:OO o'OIOoll U'I. of Mid <MIY.111 IM lllLAUnl,,11 DWIGHT D. •;OO ft.M" ~. -1. 1112. end ILM.A D. '"YIN, TrlMMron. room ••I H id• for conduo11110 WAHLIUQ al'Uf ••"TMA •• 110 NO. 4M • 1:00, M , ~. ~ ~ llddtMI II 7l4 W. TNltea'I ...... ~IM omo.t ot W~"° ,., JW 1 IMI llttl ftreat City of co.ti ....... "IAL teTAT& ld'O"l"llll O.,f .. OANTl1 OOAITLllH PLACI 0, 110 "IOlllllT: \JelltOfnll. OMIY Of Ot'wiot. •• llllMCI. IOOllllCI .. 2020 Nonh INVHTMINT &NC., OUlltlMCI HUNTINGTON HACH UNION Of Celltorni.. that."""' Vtinfflr .... oedway. &ult• tot, In 1111 City°' AUUT niu•O!l..t llTTI •• HI 0 H I 0 H 0 0 L. 011TAI0 T about to be mecta to HYIH' CtlOO hnta AN. County CK Otenga, 8111\e HAMllOM llM Du.I I "'"""" IOUCAtlOH OINTIA, IOHI Chin and Kyunt loon Ohln, of Callfornla, IAN r.fA~INO IUC, IMIMMH. Yorktown AY9tlua, lo.,d '!_!!'!'J Tt1nlflfHI whon butlnau 8 AV I N 0 9 AN 0 I. 0 A l'I C-Na. N•lln1 ~ttllaton laedl, ~ ._ a6df.at 111017 9. Wayalda 8trMI, AllOOIATION. a C11tlor1111 Alllt'UCATION '°" 'AOJIOT IOINTll'IOATION CltY Of Anatlelm. County of °'11119'-co1po11t1on, .. duly •PPOll'll•d OAOH DIMCTIHO N.AMI: llD NO. 417 • A1ph1lt l tate of C~. Trl»tle \Ind« Iha P\ltllUll\I to lha lllAY•NT OUT ~ ""tofltlOn • W"tmln11., High Tiii P'oeenY lo bl ,,.,.,.,rad " PoWef of Hl• conferred In 11111 RIAL lllATI •UNO ld!OOl llld HuntlnQtOn 9eaoll ~ deacflbed In glfl«al M: AJ4 ''*In certain DMcl ol Tru•I and a.JlaGUled (lllllC '"'~ IOl71) lol\ool, 110 NO. 4H • lulldlng ltlde, lllltur•, aqulpmtnl end QOOd by J 0 9 IP H M. AVILA 1 n d Plllntlll •ll4'0M· Pain~· ldlaon ~lohOol. llld wtll Of thll Liquor llorl bu.in.at VIAOINIA AVILA, hll•band Ind wife, I On Ootob.r 12. 1979. 1)191nllfl Win HIQtl ' known H 8un•hlna Liquor and raoordad Seplamb« 19, 1979, In lllad 1 oomp111n1 1n th• above PL.MlL ~He ARI ~ FILI: IQcaled 11 724 W. 19th 8tt ... , City 8ook t3315 of Offlcllll Racotdt OI antlllad matter tot d1m1gH fot Mflntan1no•. Opar11lon1 and ofCott1MaN,Callfomla,Countyc:if Uld Courity, at 011g1 111 32. 1r 1 ud 111 d oa c111, b1uc:11 of .eonatructlon, "°°"' 321 Huntington Otlll09, 8111• of California. ~dar't lnttrum.nl NO 21664. con111c1, and con1pt11cy •G•lntl .. f+.,~-.1-..otl UNoo Hlet' lclhooi DilUtot The.-b~1n1u1 wJLLJla a.l944an~~AEHCe...:.t..LaaA+ ldl.IOetlon Center 10211 Yortttown coneummatad on or 1fl., the 2nd payment or p11lo1menca or th• VERNON end otne•• Avenue. Hun1lng1on 8aaoh1 day ot JulY1.. 11182 •I 10.00 a.m. II Obllg1llon1 u o ur1d lhar1by, ;i Th• cnuMI of action lli.vad In Oallfornla ta84. Phone: (7 H1 0 A 0 V £" E 8 CR 0 W lncludlng that l>reaah or datoult, 1rw. complt lnl llON on or aboUt "4-33Sll, bt. 320 CORPORATION, wf'loM add,_ '-Notice of which w11 racotdad May 10, 1978 1nd It b1Md on tlll NOTICE 18 HEReBV OIVe.N lhet U002 lrvln• 81vd .. Tu111n. March II, 11182. u R1co1dar'1 1reud, mlttaprtMntatlon and claOel1 the ~lle!Md 9oflool Dlltrict of C.Utomll. lnllrumanl NO. 82·0711802. Wil l o1 Int daland1nt VERNON Orange County, Calttorni.. ICllng Liii data IOI unng ol1lm1 •• SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE 3 VERNON w•• • real '81111 PY ano lhrough Ill Oovarnlng '1·1·'2. HIOHEST BIDDER FOR CAS H. llCentee II 1r.e 11me 1ha tr1nuctlon• loanl. hereinafter ~ to M 80 far at II known to th• lawful monty,or 111e United Sllt.M, 1nv01vld 1n 11141 complaint oocurrad. "Ol8TRIC1 ', wlll t~ up lo, bul Tran1farH1, Ill butlna" n1mH or • cuNaf"• chick dr-n on 1 11\d w11 parrormlng ac11 1or Wlllch a not later than Iha abOY9-llatld and 1ddra11a• u••d by Iha 11•1• or netlonll bank, • 1111• or raa1 11111a ucenN I• iaqulred 1n lh4I dml. t..iacl bldt fOf ~ awwd of II T111111faror1 for Iha put lhtM ~ fld«al etadtt union, °' • 1111• or s111a ol Cllllfornla wnan the l:IMlll oontfeCt lot U1e ~Ojael era. Sama. fed9ral aavtngt ano io.r. aeeocietl0'1 or ecuon ag11oa1 him oceut'ted. Ilda ltllll bl In the~ 0.tad: June 1, 1N2 domic:llad In this 11•1•. Ill payable 11 • On Junt 30, 11181, plllnlifl wu Identified above , and •hall b• Hyun Choo Chin the llma of ..... all right, title and grentld 1 dafeull judgment by 11119 opanad and put»>cty r9ld aloud 111 Kyung Soon Chin lntarMI hlld by It, u TruatM, In Courl ordartng thal tn1 plllntltf .c...:a_...._ ______ __,llM ~!ltd time and place. Trlnlfar-lhal real prQParty 111u11a In Mid shoukl recover ltom dtlandanl 11141 ..,._.. Each bid mutt confOJm and be ON>VllR llCAOW County ind Siiia, detcrlbad H sums ol $25.000 00 cbmpen1110ry I# ... .,..... ra1pon1lva to Iha c ontract teom.,,,.,.,........, IQllowa: A l.MMtlold lnfar•l 111 and dama911 11.000oo1ttornev"•f-. DEEP DEPRE~ION -Bruno Trevino, head 38 percent. During the Great .De.preesithanon, the25 ~...'t _ ........ ~ ...... !~~ !!~ ~23aofmapTract,-~ .. }~1!;_~ s 12,011 r.s m1area1. $661 oo c:o111. ached l.inh ,._.., ""' .,_ .,. -,...._._. .--.,.......,, -· ~.,... "' """" IOl81hng S38 872 58 Slid )udgmtnt of the Starr County Industrial Foundation, Is national jobless rate re no 'A.66 er by =ll'lly ,...,.,ad to In Iha Publlahad Or•n1• COHI Dally 12S, pages 1S, 19, 20 and 21, ol Ill> now r1oa1 .,.u;na to }~ b• ·-t-essmen to the area in percent. Behind Trevino ate empty buildings ~~I ~~If~!! the "9t Piiot, June 18, 1N 2'u1 a2 ~·~~~~·nn!.O.UI Map1, IKOtdt ol 5 The amount OI 1ne actulll an<I ... J ~~ ~1 "' --· -·--"" .., ...., """' ., crnect 1011 eulfa1ed by plalntllf1 extreme s u th Tex 8 s. w here the downtown. .... DISTRICT ,....,.. Ille rlohl Th• atrHI •ddrau 01 Olhar I hr 0 u g,, I h . Ir I u d . has hed ,a;.,.... lo fljact any« all bide or 10 walYa PUBUC NOTIC£ common detignetlon of the •HI mosrepresen1111on, ahd decen or the unemplo yment rate re&C an astoun ....... '6 any lnegularlllM or lnfonnallt ... In ITA"RMINT Of' MANOONMENT r.operty as hertllnabOv. daecrlbed defendant 11 $38,872.58 ---..:--"--------------------r-------------.--------------1 ltlt'/ blCll or In Iha bidding. • purpofted to be: 4714 Cortland 6 Ne11ne1 ,1111n1111 11 the spouM ol Tiie DISTRICT hH dal4Wmlnad Of' ~~1:C,."'JJ:t'• Drive, Coton• del Mar, C1tllorn1a. detendant·llcenste not ine P¥tonat Executive sentenced ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -A savings- and-loan executive convicted of maiming a dog with · his lawnmower has to spend five days in jail and 100 hours "relearning" how to deal with animals. a judge has ordered. M . John Roess. a vice president at Guaranty savings & Loan Association, also was sentenoed to a ·year's protiation: He was conVlC\ed of one count of animal cruelty last month in the maiming of the dog, which died. Roess' attorney said his clie nt would appeal both the conviction and the sentence. Roess was allowed to remain free on appeal bond. Farmers defeat plan NOTV'r 11111-IC NOTICE Iha gentral PNYlillng tale of par The undarelgnad he 1eby •pre••n1a11veotsucntpou11 PlB.IC 11\4 l"\IUL diam WIQM In lhl locallty In wtllc:h Th• tollowlng par1on• heve dl1clalm1 •II llablllty tor 1ny ru, As o r t ne dat e Of '"" l'tCTTnOUS .,...,. I(.-ltl .. WOtil It lo be performed for abandoned Iha UM 01 Iha Flctlllou• lncortactnMI In utd 11r .. 1 addreu appt1«11on pla1n111ts nave tecelved MOTICI CW aALI ~ ••th cr,11 or type of workman Bullneaa Name: or other common dealgn11Uon h 1 1 t 1 r Th• :=1::~~=~ doing MAL"'°"""' AT netdad to ·~ecul• Iha conlre,ct. CLASSIC PRODUCTIONS, Said tale will be m•de Without ~ho~lf 1~ugdg~::.~,~~~ln~~·~E~~8~ 0 bUtlnMt u : lllNVATI SALE Th•te rlla• 111• on fll• 11 the ~5 Placentia. Co.ta Meta, CA warranty. upreu or Implie d, 8 Ple1n1ilfa have med• the NEWPORT HARBOR COIN, No. A·110Ga DISTRICT office located •I 10251 112927· regatdlng lllle, posuulon, 01 ro11ow1ng searcnes and 1nqulrl11S to 808 Blvd Coat MMe. In tM aupencw c.-. of the Votktown Avenue, Hunllnglon Oaty Alltn Lynch, ·1t538 ltvlne ancumbr1ncea, to 11ll1ly tlte ascet1e1" whether the defendant is 6a11tom~27. ·• a ateea of c•11• for Iha Bwh, CA 92849. Copiaa mey be Ava.N~ ~~ 112~9f""-'-principal balence of the Noll or poueued 01 reel 01 pe11onnl Keith o. Wllllamion, 1801 C-IJ ot 0r.._. oblllned on taq\1111. A copy of orm · • --v-other obligation eecured by Mid propeny or othe< aaaeta liable to be Nawporl Blvd., Coil a MIH, In lhl Mal* of thl E1t11a of 1'-rllM lhaM be potted at tlll Apt. 8• Coata M .... CA 112827· OMd of frutt, with lntar"t end &Old 01 applied In sa1111ac11on ol the Callfomle 92827 JOHNNIE LEE RODGERS WAU<ER fob Illa. The foraooino ldladula f:A Wllllam H. Hair, 11931 San other 1um1 H provided therein, judgment This~ It conducted by 111 aka JOHNNIE LEE WALKER, par diam wagea la bUad upon a Roque. Huntington BHch, CA plua adYlllCel, If any. under Iha 11 An AbllrllCt ol Judgroent hu o-.ed. WOl'klng dtlY of light (S) houfa. The 12t4f. terms lh«.of Ind lnlarMt on such been reco<ded 1n 1ne othce of 11141 lndMdualKalth o. WlfllamlOn Notloa la hereby given that the rate fOf hOilday end OWttlma WOl'k Oa~ C. Yadarllnlc, 471 5 advanca. and plus '-· charges County Recorder ot Orange County Tlll• atalamant wu flled wtth the undartloned wtN Mii at Private tale. lh•fl bl II leul Uma and on.half .• WatHnaa:y ~· CA 12503· and eapen-or the TruSIM and ol end 1110 ol San 01990 County r ..... ..,ty C.-of Otanga County on to Iha nlghHI and bffl bidder, No bidder ,,..y withdrew his btcf Thi lhe trusll eteated by &aid Oeed OI Coples of said abstracts are M.Y"28 11182 aub)acl 10 confirmation of H id for.a parlOd 01 lorty-llva (45) daye Coun~ ':=':' ~ ftlad ~~Iha Trust. The total •mount ol nld attached os ExhtbH 3 • 1'1 ... Superior COUl't, on or aflar Illa 251h attar Iha d1te Mt lor Iha opening of J Y4 lll82 atiga on obllgatlon. Including re11on•bly b) In January, 1982 pl11n111t, Publl•h•d Or1nge CoHI Dally dey of ~. 111S2. at lhe ofb of btd•. une · · Ft15QI eellm•t•d lees. charges and counsel engage<> 1he llrm of Ouest Piiot June 2 9 19 23 11182 WALTER BYRON TAPPEN. 2301 W. A P • Y m • n t bond • n d • p bll had Or C D lty •~ o1 lhl Truat ... 11 tna llme Attorney 1nvHtog111ons number • • ' · ' 23~ Llncoln Avenue, Sulla 130. parfonNnOa bond wHI be ,.quired P~ ~ 19 23111~ .,::;~' 19~2 of lhltlll publlcetlon ol this Notice It AA008736 10 conduc1 an n set Ml.IC NOTICE NOTICE OIF 9UlK T5'AN9RA (t-. 1101-4101 u.c.c.) Anaheim. County Of Ofanga. State prior to Hacutlotl of lhe contract. • • • • • $9,054.83. search A copy 01 1ne11 •IP0'1 1s of Cellfoinla 92801, al Iha rlgN, \Ille The peymtnl bond lhatl be In Iha 21143-82 DATED June 11. 11182 attached es Exhibit • and tntarMI of Mid~ at lhe fo1m HI forlh In Iha cont tact 11111-IC NOTICE SAN MARINO SAVINGS 9 BY THESE SEARCHES ANO llml of dMlh and al \tie rigtll, t1t1e documanlt. ... _ & LOA.N ASSOCIATION. INOUIRIES PLAINTIFFS HA.VE and lnlaraat-tntt lhl Mlate of aeld By. Robar1 C. Bell9y, ITA~ OF AllANDONllENT I Callfornla oorporall0'1 0 IS C 0 VE Fl E 0 N 0 RE AL 0 R I SANTA BARBA.RA (AP) -A group o f San 1 Luis Obispo County farmen defeated a proposal I that they aay would have resulted in state conservancy funds being used to develop, rather than preierve, farmland. Notice I• haroby given 10 Iha Creditor• ol TONY HORVAT, Trantfaror. WllOM ~ llddrMI le 509 3111 Street, N9wpor1 Beeoh. County of Orang•. Slate of Celffornla. that • bulk 11-tar It about 10 ba mad• lo JEFF OOONEWARDENA, Tran•lar .. , WllOM t>u.w-addr ... II 11811. Opal, Balboa l1land, County ol Orange, Siiia of Callfomla. daceaud hll 1cqult•d by Oltactor MUN Of' l'K:TYTIOUI .. TrustM, PERSONAL PROPERTY NOR 1>P9'lllon of law or otharwlae other Mllntananoa, Operation• IU ...... NAME By REAL ESTATE OTHER ASSETS WHICH HAVE 1t1an cw In eddltlon to thet f:A Mid . and Conltrvc:11on The followlng parson ha• SECURITIES SERVICE, NOT ALREADY BEEN SOLO OR ~. II Illa tlml of daalh, In Publlthad 011ng• CoHI Dally abandoned the UM ot lhe Flctlt~• • CaJllO<nle corporlll0'1 0 T H ER w' s E A p p l I E 0 I N and lo all Iha oert.in Aetll Pl'GP«1Y Plk>I, June 1S, 23, 1G82 ~ Name· Ila Agent s A T I s F A c TI 0 N 0 F TH I s 11tu1tad In Iha Hid County of 290&-82 IRON SPUR, 110S9 G1tden By 0 J. Morger. JUDGMENT • Orange, Stal• ol Calllornla. 11111_"' NOT1C£ Orova Boulevard. G1tdan Grove. Ila Preeldent 10 P1a1nt1 lfs have dllrg11n11y parllcularty deacrlbed u follow•. l"UUU\I Clllfornla 112840. 2020 North Broadway. P<Jtaued me reme<11es age1n11 all ~ ''It would have established a precedent that would have resulted in state funds being used to develop 100 acres of farm land for every 20 acres preserved," said Ella Honeycutt of the Coastal San Luis Resource Conservation District. The property lo be tranatarrad II IOcaled a1 509 3111 Streat, N9wpof1 Beech, County of Orenga. Stat• of California. 10-wll: The Flctltloua Bu1lna11 Name Suite 206. othe< persons liable 10 him in the Loi 13, Tract 3307, Book IOt , l'tClYTIOUI IMllMla referred to above wu flied In Santi An1. CA 92706 11ansac:t1on 101 wnlch he seeks PllQM 8 a II, Mlle. Map1 Orangt ..._ aTATEMl.NT Oranoa County on Mey 12 111s2. Tai (714) 1153-6810 recovery by this cl elm (See County M k v o 47g 1 M Publlshed Orange Cout Dally a11ache<I Exh1b11 S Oeciarauon of N • ~a A_____,., known ... 320 E. The followlng par1on la doing 81 •n rnum, yra Piiot June 16 23 30 M·•n•o Merr'ck ) "~ -···~·1 • bull..-u: Avenue. c w-. Catllomla 90630 • · · · • • RoM StrMt, La Habra, Celltornla l) BRIAN MIZUNO ANO Thia bualnMI wll conducted by 196 WHEREFORE. pla1nt1f1s prey thll 90831 ASSOCIATES· 21 COMPUTER en lndtvldull. 262•-62 11111 Court make il8 Order directing She waa referring to a proposal of Morro Bay Mayor Warren Dom that was brought before the state Coastal Commission. Said property 11 dHcrlbad In general aa: All 1tock In trade, fhtturM. tqulpmatll and good wlll of thal oertaln Travel Aoency bu.U- Term• of HI• cuh In lewful VENTURES 10201 Pua Drive Mark I/in Ornum 1nn1 th" Real Estate Commissioner money ol Iha Unlltd Stalea on H llnQto ~h CA 1121149 · Thi• a11temen1 wa• filed wllh the Pl6l.IC NOTICE p,.y 10 the p1a1n11tta. DWIGHT D confirmation of tale, or pll'I cuh un ~Muanobu Mtnino · 10201 County Clerk ol Orange County on w AH l BERG and MA Fl TH A E 1nd balance 1vldenced by note Pu .._..._ H 1.....,1on BMi:h CA June 14• 11132 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS WAHLBERG from the rnl estate MCUred by Mortgagt Of Tru11 Deed 1 ..,..,.... un ""' • F1113$4 NAME STATEMENT rur1d 1ne sum ol S 10 000 00 ror DEATH NOTICES known u WEST COAST TRAVEL CENTRE ltld IOcaled 11 509 3111 Strael, Newpor1 Beech, COunty of Ofangt. Siila of Celltornl&. on lha-.proparty IO IOld. Ttn per 1121148. Publlahed orang• Coast Dally The IOllowlng per1100I ate do•ng domages sutlerad by the plaonlllls ln oant of llmOUnl bid to be depolltad ThMdl• l>UaltlMM ii conducted by Ill Piiot, Junt 111, 23, 30, July 7, 1982 bull,_ u · connect•on with the seles·lease with bid. Ind u · B. Mizuno 264.._82 SMITH & SONS PROPERTIES, beck·loen 1ransec1ron on their 8lda or offer1I to be In Mttlng and ........... t___. -flled wltfl the 15•2 Monrovt• Avanu1. Newport r a,, den c: e and ·1 he 'v m o I w411 be ~ at the aloraNld • ·--• .,,_,, P'tB.IC NOTICE Beech, CA 926f3 s 10 000 00 as compensa1ton ror the Th• bulk tr1n1far wlll ba conaimmatad on or after lhe 8lh day of July, 11182, at RESIDENTIAL MULVEY his retirement in 1960. Mr. ESCROW CORPORATION. 1470 PEGGY E . M ULVEY. Kof.Cord is survived by his ~':.~c~'r~Jo~ passed away o n June 14, 90n M.E. Rink Kofford, Jr. 0rwiga: Stat• 01 Calliom1a. pubflcetlon her.of and bet~ dli. MllY 24, 11182. RaCIM>W NO. Ma...M Monrovia Ave • Newport 8Mcn. CA c o n n e c t 1 o n w l t n I h e office 11 1t1ty time aft• the flrlt County (;Wk ol ::s:on WALKER SMITH, ,IR· t542 damages &ullereo Dy pla1nllltt rn of.... NOTICE TO CMDITOtll 112663. rraudulenlly·•nduced rnveslm«il Dy Dated Ihle 14\h dey ol June. 1982 Publlehed Orange Co Y Of' 9UlJ( ""-'NalUI CLARKE A S M ITH. 1542 plaonhll& W1ln oetenoant VERNON 1982 at Mission Communjty and f amily of. New.port So far u ltnown 10 th• H~spital. A l ong tame Beech lhd, ~· Se0~1 C~ be !:;'1.::·!.ci~.,=~ resident of Laguna Beach. e I n I . I t y • lhl thfM )f'Ntl lalt pall!, It dlffwtnt Ca. Mn. Mulvey is survived Pennsylvania Friday. June from lhl above. are: Sundlnoe, 304 ACllNnletrltor of the Piiot, Mey 28, June 2• II, l8~~ (a-. '101-4107 U.C.C.) Monrovia Ave · Newport Belch. CA Daleo Ma•ch ?• t98:i' Eltat• of uld Daoadenl TMI eeorow la autJtaet to the 92663. N. Munro M1rrlek. WALTO IYAON T .... N ~ Ce-clel Coda KIM S TH 1542 Monrovia Attomer lot Plell'llltt• nt1 W. UMoM A..... P\111.IC NOTIC( a.cttoft No. 11• Ave .. Newport Beach CA 112693 FAILUllE TO RESPOND MAY ..... UO l'lCT1TIOUI__.. Not ice 11 hereby given to MOLLY M S MITH, IS4 2 llEIULT IN SUSPENSION OF ~. ~ l!80'I MAim ITAnfllEIT cradltor1 of th• wllhln named Monrovle Avenue. Ave Newpotl YOUR LICENSE. by her son Tim Mulvey of 18, 1982. Matin• Avenue. Balboa laland, Anaheim , Ca. M emorial BAXTER °'~.C.,:.~1182 ~~IMO The followlng pareon 11 doing parllH that a bulk lranafar I• Beach. CA 92663 N. Munro Marrlcll tw ~ •: Intended to be made on personal WALKER S MITH 11 1 1S42 S2'7 81-nt Ava. ~-,.., A-DEPENDABLE CLEA.NINO property harelnattar dacrlbed MonrOYla Ave • Newpot1 Beaeh. CA Solan• llffcft, CA 92075 1119Uriei-COMPANY, 278 Avocado •B104. Thi nerna and bu91nat addreas 92663. (714) 75$-4445 Publl1had Orang• CoHI Dally CO.ta M .... CA 92927. of Iha lnlandac:l lfansleror ate: This bu&inell tS conducted by 1 Pubhshed Or ange Coast Dally services will b e held pn JODI ANNE BAXTER. .Jett Go0r-wdana Thunday, June 17. 1982 at age 22. a resident of Corona TranafarM 2:00PM in the chap el at del MM, Ca. Passed away on Publl•hed Orang• CoHt Dally McCormick Mortuary, 1795 June 14, 1982. Survived by Piiot. June 18. lll82 2&50-82 Pllol, June 19, 17, 23, 11182 ThomH At thur BHlla, 278 ARGAil ENTERPRISES, INC .• a general patln«Shlp P1101 June 2 9 t6 <13 1982 """'"-"? Avoc:edo •B104, ,Costa Meta. CA C1lllornl1 corporation, By: ART Walke< Smith. Jr 2•14-82 Laguna Canyon R oad , loving parents Leonard and Laguna Beach, Ca. with Dr. Nancy Baxter of Corona del Andrew Straley officiating. M a r , Ca . • ma t e r n a I lnurnment will be private. grandpare nts Charles and M cCormick Mortuary . Margaret Small of P asadena, Laguna Beach direc tors. C a ., paternal grandmother 494-9415. Celeste Hood of Huntington fltB..IC NOTICE l'1CT1TtOU9 .,...... NAmaTAT'ElmNT The rollowlng paraon la doing butlneN u : MISSION ENTERPRISES, 1822'1\ Newport Blvd. # 138, COllll ~.CA92927. --------------112627. BARRENA, PrHlde nt. 9374 La Thi& S11tamanl WU llled Wtlh the rtaJC NOTICE Thia bu.in.a ta conducted by Ill Collnl1 A111nua, Founl•ln Valley. Coun1Y Clerk of Orenge County on 1'1CTITIOUa .,..... lndlvlduel. • Callfornle 92708 Mey 21. 1982 HAm aTA~ ThornlS A. 8a111 The natnM and botlii-a address F1'"33 The fotlowlng perlOnl ate doing Thi• •t•lernent WU ftled with Iha ol lhl Intended tranafer-are: RICHARD •. L VNN butlnMt u : County Clar1l of Or•ngt County on KEITH BORTLE, 12852 West Att-r el uw MAIN STREET ARCADE ANO June 14, 11182. Street. Oarden Grove. Calllornla 12 Cof'por111 Ptau ICE CREAM PARLOR. 118 Mein F1114SS 112840 Sult• 202 Slreal, Huntington Beach, CA Publlthed Orange Coast Dally JOAN BtNOER, 111802 Bonalre Nawpor1 Beac:h. CA 92MO P\ELIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT fhe lollowing persons ere domg ouslness as Dill Y'S. 16561 Boise Chica Street. Suite tO 1. Huntingto n Beach. California 926•9 KOFFORD Beach, Ca. and also survtved 1121148. PllOt, June 18. 23, 30. Ju!y T. 111s2 Circle, Huntington Beach, Calllornl1 Published Orange Coast Dally Robert Pomerantz, 18920 2610-82 9211411 Plfot, June 2. 11, 16, 23. t982 M. E. RINK K OFFORD, by several uncles, aunts and SR .• resid ent of Oil City, cousins. Memorial services • P ennsylvania. Passed away will be held on Thursday, on June 15, 1982. lie was 1 June 17, 1982 at ll:OOAM at fonner resident of tdM, Ca. the Pac ific View Chapel Mr. K offord was a 1922 with Dr. Gilbert P . Prince graduate of Alleghany o ffic iating. Inurnme nt at College I n Meadville, Pacific View Memorial Par:k. Pennsylvania. he worked for ln l.teu of flowers memorial the Penz.oil Company until contributions may be made ~-----------~to the Cancer Society or BETTY BOMBOV, !)8g Flalcam Pl .• Coate Meaa. CA 92827. Pasad«O. Tanana, CA ll135e. Ttt. propeny l)lrtlntnt .....-e10 la 2403-82 Mark Flahar. 10377 SunHI Ml.IC NOTICE dMCtlbed In general•: MallN"lala. POOUC NOTICE Olll V'S RESTAURANTS, INC., a CelH01n1a corporation. 16561 Bolu Chica Stree t, Suite 101. Hunllngton Beach, CeJllornla 92649 iety ~TION &UAIAL AT SEA 646-7431 Our llteralure tell• the complete 1t o1y of our aoclety. Cell--~ ,._ IAlTZlill•aoH SMITH & TUTHILL WHTCUH CHAPll 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-937 1 f'IUCI lllOTHHS SMITMS' MOITUAI Y 627 Main S t HuntinQton &ach 536-6539 r. PAC9'M: VllW MIMOalAl PAI• Cen'etef'Y Mo1tuary Chapel-crematory 3500 P.c1l1c V~ Onve Ne\¥00'1 Ba.ch '844-2700 ~MOft'UA .. I laQUM8e.Ch *"4M16 LeaunaHm1 7l9-0t33 San JUWI C:.p11trano ~177& N'PMLA~.OUVI MortvatV • C.nwt•tV Cfe,,.torv ' .. 1125 GI• Ave .. Cotta Meta M0-6&54 I Hoag Memonal Hospital 8th Floor Cancer Ward. Pacific View Mortuary directors.. ·DEATHS ELSEWHERE KULA, Hawaii (AP) Karl C. Leebrick, 96, p n!Sldent emeritus of K ent State University, d ied Sunday. He was president of Kent State from 1939 to 1943. C ORON A DO (AP) - Retired Navy Capt. George L . Heap, '75, a highly decorated pUot in World War II. died Friday. Typists meet ™' butlnMI ii conducted by .,, lnCllYldual. Belly Bomboy Thll ltatement -flled with Iha County Cler1c of Oratlgl COunty on June t4. 1982. '1fl411 Publlahad Orange Co111 Dally PilQI, June 18, 23, 30. Juty 1, 1982 2t1)..82 ,._ ........ .,d L-A............,. CA. aupplles, mercnandlte, equlpmanl, "'Thi'."~ i.~uct«I by a l'ICTITIOUI uuatNEn fticturea. furnllur .. 00ASSETS ONLY"' .--al ~ ... ..........,, ...,.._ aTATEWNT of AROAIL ENTERPRISES. INC., 11 K-oo300 ..-·-o;:-...=-p'"'....;.__tz The followtng pereon1 we doing ellfornla corporation, doing FICTITIOUS IUSINHI .....,.,.., -·--· ~ NAME STATEMENT Thia lllalemen1 w• flled wlltl lhl as: alnMI M: OCEAN SPORTS L TO . The IOltOwing persons are bomg County Clerk of Orange COunty on A l A S K A M A N ' S and 11 localed at: 5048 Edinger business as Junl 14, l9&2. ENTERPRISES. 8 Solan1. Irvine. Avenue. Huntington Beach. ELITE PATROL ANO GUARD 1'111414 Celifomla112718 Cllffomla 112849 SERVIC E. INCORPORATED .• Publl1had Otange CoHI Dally Z. Clar1I 8r1neon. 335 S El Thll th• herein daacrlb•d C1llforn1a corporatoon 1570 E Piiot June 18 23 30 July 1 1N2 MOllno Avenue, No. 5• Puadlnl, trlnlfars .,. to be coneummaled, Edinger Ave nue Sante Ana ------------1 ' ' ' ' 2~ Calltornla 111101 aubjaet to the above provitlona, at P'tBJC NOTICE Wendy Sue Wylla, 8102 W. YOUR ESCROW SERVICE CO .• Calllorme •-.,. MnTICE OcHn Front. Newport Beach, INC .. l&5l7 MAGNOLIA AT HEJL Eugene Kem1nsk1 3 t MOnc. M ........ aA&i ..._ "" California 92e83 . WESTMINSTER. CALIFORNIA Diamante, lrvtne. Caltlornt1 PLAINTIFF: MOUNTAIN AVENlJE flCTTnOUI .,.._.. Hanry E. Ruliaback. 10538 112683, on or aflar July 2, 11182. 92714 BUS INESS PARK, ETC. YI. NAm aTA~ M Strael. Sunland, Calllornt1 Tharalftel be noc:lalms ec:capled Be t I Y Kamin s k 1 3 I DEFENDANT: JOHN O. AOOEFFER. The followlng l*90l'll .,. doing This boW-ii conducted by a Into eacrow 11111 5 pm., J\lly 1, ();am•nle lrvrne C1t1lorn11 ETC. NO. 36-2&49 ~ ... general~· 11182 92714 By vtrtue of an aMCUtlon ..._ J ANO A CLEANING SEf'VICE. z. Clar1I Branton Dated June 3. 11182 Tn1s blJStness is conducted by • on .April 28, 1912 by Iha 8upar1or 23711 Cella Hoger, Minion Viejo, . Thia 1t1ternent w•'llled with 11141 Ktlllh Bortle corpor•t:ie Patrol end Court. County of Orange, Stat• of Calllornla 92691 County Clerk of Orange County on Joan Binder Callfomla. "90" •Judgment antaract Anthony John Shoaf. 14591 June ·14, 1N2. lnttndld Transter-Guard Service, Inc In favor of MOllNr"AIN AVENUE Sweeten Avenue llYlna Calffomla ,~... Publlehed Orang• Cou t Delly Eugene Kominski BUSINESS PARK, a Llmllad 82714 ' • Publl1had 01anft Co11t ally Piiot, June 16, 11182 This 51~~=~~1was tiled wun the P111111ar1hlp. •)lldg!Mntoredlt~) Roll Olil. 23711 catle Hogar. Pilot. Junt 18, 23. . July 7, 1N2 2653-82 ounty Clerk or Orange County on and 8glln8I JOHN O, AOOEFfE • Mlaalon Viejo, Calltornla 92891 2~2 May 20. 1982. lnCIMdually and dba Ooaen Floor'I Tilll ~la oonduct.o t>y. Ml.IC NOTICE VINCENT o. JANTZ, JACK B R O BERG ASSOCIATES. INC , a C1lllornle corpo,.t lon. 16721 Carousel, Huntington Beech. Cahl0<nla 92649 Thrs bullnes.s Is conOucled by • gen«al pannarSh1p INC OILLV"S FIESTAUFIANTS. Frank WOOlwy. Prealdenl Tnls s1a1emant was llled wtth the County Cltril of Orange County on June 14. 1982 RHODES , KENDALL a HAfllUHCTON A Profaeelonel Law C..Jt«ltioft 4211 MecArttlw 8oui.Ywd, autte 108 N1wporl •••ch, Callfornl• '211C>-20t1 F111 ... Publlthed Or11nge Coast Delly P1101. Ju~ 1e. 23. 30. July 7, 11182 2647-82 POOLIC NOTICE u Judgment debtor(•). etlOWlng • llmltad·pwtMfSlllp. "8.IC NOTICE ttoma'f, el LA• net bafanoa of 1178,000.00 ectually Andy J . Shoal f:ICTITIOUI ., ...... due on Mid Judgment on Iha data of Thll •t•l-t wu flied with the flt.._ 1'1Cl1TIOUI .,..... N. ualln Avenue, NA.Mil ITATE•NT tlll taeuance of Mid execution. I County Clarie ot Orenga County on RCnnoua .,...,. ...._ aura..wr l ult• 202 The following peraon• ,,. doing heve leYled upon ell the fight, title June 14 11182. MAim tTATDmNT The lollowlng peraooa ere doing Sant• An1. C•lllornl• 92705 business u : end lntarHt of Hid judgment • F111447 The followtng partON we doing buelnM• ... F-1atua BEAG-STRASSE TUNING. debtor(•) In the p1opa1ty ln Iha Publlthed Orange CoHt Dilly bll.W-aa: H 0 TEL I M 0 TE L FUR -Published Orange Coast Delly 1581 Mon1ovl1. Newporl Beach, County of Orange, Ste ta of Piiot Junt IS, 23. 30. July 7, 11182 G ANO 0 UNION 78, 10175 NISHINGS, 501 3111 S treet, ,Pilot, June 2, 9, 16, 23, 1982 C•llfornle 92863 Cellfomla, dMcJlbed M lolowl: · 2595-82 Euolld SlrHt, Fountain Valley, Newport Beeotl, California 112893. 2404-82 Bryce Darrell Otl>Oma, 21142 Lot 111, In Ttllci 9350, In Iha Callfornla 112708 Hanry Hau, 180 I Sunaet Whlrehorsa, Hunllng1on Beach, County of Orange, State of rtB.IC NOTICE GlltY Aobar1 Reeh, 3790 Aepan Rlor,, Laguna Beacn. Callrornle Ml.IC NOTICE Callfornl• 92648 Cellfomla. 11 per m111 NOOfdad In ~Chino, Cellfomle 91710 928 1 ------------• Joaaph Edward Rou . 1508 Book 3111. PagH 30 lo 37 of l'lCTmOUa llU-.. OlltY ~ ~. 17 .. 1 E. G_, H-(wife). 1801 Sunae1 l'ICTITIOUa IUl*«ll B1lbo1 Avenue, Balboa laland, ~Mapa. In \tie Offtoaof NAm ITAT'llmNT S afford SttHI, Oardan Orova, Ridge, Laguna BHc:h, California NAm ITAT11111NT Clllfornl• 92M2 Iha County Recorder of Mid ooun . The lollowlng paraon I• doing Celtomla 12704 112851 Th• lollow1no per1on I• doing Thia bualnlaa II OOflducted by • Property 11 more common bu9tneal as: Thll ~la oonduclt9d by. Thia bull-.. conduot«l by ~LEW~S: CAOILL'"C MOBILE ~-~o known M 3 A1nvoc11 Lana, !Mne, BEACH ELECTRONICS, 19042 general pert"""'IRt hllabend end w!M. ,... .. ...-Oebor'na CalltomlL a.di 8tvd .• Unit •'A", Huntlngton OlltY R. Alltl Hanry H... MECHANIX. 245 Flecher Streat, Thll lt;;;;.,,t -lllad with tM TGg9thar Witt\ II the Beech. CA 826'1. 'nlll ttlllemam,... fllad with the Thlt at•l-1wu111ac1 with thl e.-1. Coate M-. CaUfornll 92829 Claf1I 01 Coun tM tenements, rw.cttt.manta Mark Alan Rodgtrl, 20111 eoumy Cleft! of Orange County on County Clar1t of Otangt County on Hairy Arthur L-1•. 2 13 N ~~. 11182 of M09 ty on The Ind e pendent ~ tt1araunto Moontldl Cir .• Huntington llectl • .uy 10, 11112.. June 1. 1982. ~=· Leka Elatnora. Calllornta ,...... P f · 1 T · «In~~. CA 92649. l'WMI ,.,.,_ ... _ ............ ..., Pubtt-•ad Orange Co111 Dal"-ro east on a yp1ata NOTICE 18 HEMllY CllVfH Thia~ 11 oonduelad by an Publtlhad 011noe cout Deity Publlahad Orange CoHt 0111y Thll ~ .. ....,....,......, v1 • ... ., Network w J 11 meet on Thundey, Juky 10. 1te2 11 1 lndMdual. Piiot. Jun. 11. 18. 23, 30. tM2 Pllol. June 2. 11. 18. 23. 11112 llmltad l*tMf'lhle> P11ol. Mey 28• JuM 2· 1· 1522~~ Saturdav at 1 p..m At O'Clock 1.rn. •I Main Lobby Mll1I .... Rodgaf"I .Jo• ~ 23112-92 Thie It~~ llltd with Iha 11 • ~ Courttiowe. 100 aWi o.nw Thll ata1-1 -fllad ...... the 1lC( P'tB.IC NOTICE Merit Savi.op and Loan, w.t.. Cltv °' .._ AM. CCM'lty Counf'I' oan of Ofanga 0oun1y on PWUC M)llC( PWUC NO Co4Ml7 C!artl ot Ofanga eoun1y on ~392 Walnut Ave., ~...._...:.,~•=-June 14• IN2. 1'19Mal PM!5JllOUIM •••• .11.-• IM2. ,.1.., l"ICJ::.~.~ .. Irvine. For information, ~ o.111 In ~ °' Publlth«I Oran~ coaet o.ny · Mm ITATW ':.~==r' Pub"1hld Or1110• Co1tt Ditty The IOllO'w'lnO C*aont .,. dOlt'O ca 11 Jo an Tucker at .. Unit.t ..._, 11 ._ rtaM. Not. .111n1 1e. 23. ~. >.it 1 d!'.!. The IOllOWfnO ~ .,. doing PllO\. Junt '· 1s. n . 30, 11182 bllelnaaa • 61H·1610 Pd lnterHI of Hid juclemant 2-~ • ~IO per90nl .,.. doing 24M42 DIAMOND AIOGE VENTUAE. ' '*'°'(t) In .. .._. deee 1bad 8UA.FER PU8U8HfNO OAOUP, M f Q A F 1 N A N O I A L PlllJC N011C( 202t Quall Straa(, N9wpof1 Bw:I\, •-• tGllC( ~.or•mudt'*'aofl ,•NY / f'WUC M)llC( H040 C•l'!.~!~1•1" Jual\ ~TK>N. 1920.,... Q.ny Qallf80fTnflaAl,?NMOa OEVELOPM""NT ..._ b•. n•O•HlrY to ••t • y H id Cllpltllr'Mo • ..,.....,,_ .... A1191We. 8Ul'9 I01 Senta Ana. CA ,.,.. ... MTmOUelUll•M ..-,tlon,wWl-.uaclln••tand fllCT1TtOUI........ SURFER PUILIOATIONI, • 11706. ' NtmOUI.,.._.. COMPANY , INC .. I C1tlfornl1 MAlll ITA~ OOeCIL ~ ITA~ Ollltotl\le ooii>Oftllon. U04f Cell Meal f!lnanclel Oofporetlon, a Mm ITA~NT oorpor1tlon, 202' Oulll Street. Thi followlng paraon 11 dolno Otltacl 8' 8lnta AM. ~ Thf followlng pa11on le doing Avledor, Ian JUll\. Capl•treno, OelfomJa ~ 112.0 r..t ftla fqllowlflQ 1>1r1on 11 doing NewpottF 98ellCl'l0 .; V~LomlaO p ~H T bu9lneal Ill June 10, 1111 bullf-. •: ~tltll Garry ~"'!flue, lull• 201, S•n'' ~ u : RF "' " -"' Pl!A80NAL. PAINTING ANO ="""~ CA~lfORN IA COTTAGE Tillt ~ta oonducted by a Me, CA 12706. IO"TH COAST l"L.AZA. OORPORATIOt<I. • Calltou\11 DECORATING. 1'682 ()o!Oalwt r.-.-. "';f=-... CA OOMfllUTINl'J, 11110 Vtrbane. I~ fllll*lttona Tflll bu11nMa II oondUCIN. by a ,l.OMT, ~South 8t111P4, Ooeta corpo~11lo11, 1UI Otanc;:rs I"-'. HuntlnQton IMdl "'41 --·v ....,__ Founl8111 Vl/J/t#t, ~ tl70t 0011*1111ou. ...... OA tltlt. AwnvaT'"'-, Ot111gt, ~--.. Robert ... 0 .. 1 •• IHI Ir: I(. INwft, Nd.d l'dwerd o.w. ,,.,. ,.,... Olot!I, ..... Anltncllll Corp. ~ ~ v..-111 Udo .... bllllneaa la,.......,_ ........ :"~~7Huntlngt ... ~ llNCm ~l'OU!MlnV'!""'·~ Thla.=;:v......... =Ji.~ :r...°'lv•. ~· 1 .. c11. CA ~-~Dlv.L.· Tillt ~II 1Qf1dl.-.ct by ::r-'9::::..... T1lil ..... II OOIPllUOlld by., = Of OrlfWi ~ Ofl T'flll ttMI '-"' ... fllld .... .. Tllll bu11nMa la ~eel by M ~...J:. .,. .... ,__,.OM ..,.-;:r-o. . ........,.,LO.. • • ,_.,. ~C:,llfOnrflfa~Oft...,..... 'Mof'"'-YIOk _....~:e ,,. .. =............ ...... ....... 01&1•-,,... ..... l.,, ... fllldwtlfttM "'~ o, .. ~D91ty ...... Tllla .......... ftlldwtlt\"'8 I,......... .. Oeu111r I of °""'8 0..,., ·.',...... Or..-~ ~ 0-... OIWI! of °"'* ~.,, .11#11 I. 11. a,~ ....... NlllshM Or...-CMlt a... ti °"""'9 ~en i::l oeu. °' Or-.. • """9.~ .... .... ..... 11. D , I01 ... _, .. -'1, ... ,_ ..... ~ .... .-.-., t, .... M, ,_ ,,_. 4. I ' =ii "'*"""'" "'tt-.. or~ a.... ~ • "'~ 0r.,... a ... , ~ l'ul>tl"'" or....-,._ .-. t. t , 1 n. ,... ,.._. Wl\11 c'f•W !IRI Ill ............ ,u. 'f 11 ,. , .. 1 · HM, Mii tt.. ft, to. •• ,Ml ~ .... Old..... • 1MI I SEIVICES ~'" 0.rtrtory EMPLOYMENT & mtAIATION Sc-. IMtni<llOft JoOWaaud• ~--·· .. MEICHANllSE - -•IO •ll -----------W7) --... ... -al -... l!Ot4 --- WIO -!iCllO ------t lll tlX tut ... tllC ... tilt flt[ - --· --llU .. , --mi -= =· ::: .., Bi = = Te,,,,_.;::=--...... ,..., Cl1An cars* bikes• *skateboards• trucks* baby carriages•tea carts•trikes rol lerskates • walker~ ~oys •wagons•••• scooters• hot rods*coupes• trailers*hard tops*convert- ibles•motor homes* lawn mowers* Ii mos *corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typingtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles*golf carts*model trains*bikes *pianos* cars refrigerators *skates•••··• If it's got wheels, you'll move OCEANFRONT LAGOON 150' OF BEACH 7000 1C1 ft building pad. .85 Ac l.aCosta, Cart•- bed $275K. 581-9695 Plll&TE SAU s.gant colonlal ratldenee Sl ,295,000 Open Sunct.yt 1-5 824 N. Sierra ~ Bev9'1y Hiiia. Call COUf'1 appointed exciutMt ,Agent• Rlcherd H. huen Co • INVESTMENT RE.AlfOflS ---,m·t~ ......... -~ ,,,., 1'11-1111 TAX llELm ..... 2 br, 2 ba, In Placentia. many lacilltles, nr. 57 & 91 Frwyt. Hu gd. te- nant. 111,IOI" 11" .... 12~4', II Yr. Le11 851-033 1 Of' 97!>-0836 "~•m DECORATOR'S OE- LJGHTI Extremely popu- lar 3 br plan feetunng magnlllcent decorating, lrple. gourmet llland kit- chen, fnnl din, frnly rm & ln-houM laundty. All ttllt & more for only $389,000 FE~. 2870 San Mlguel Or. Newport &each. 759-1501 Of 752-7313 ~ Walker B Lee .. urrm Duplex, Balboa Penln- aula. Two 3-Br units. 1 blk from beach. Summer/winter rentala. Min. vacancy I actor. 1389,000. A Dion-Marla Uttlng. 759-9100 Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Jn 1e, 1882 Ill ~he marlretpldCe on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 RrSIOf NllAI Rf At FSIAI[ SERVICES UM 1411,111 Elegant country setting. 3 BR & large re modeled kitchen. Beam ceilings, wood floors & lots of c harm. 2 fireplaces. ~arge assumable Joan & owner carry 2nd. A good house with great financing. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 . \ f >I l I tl I :' II •.• . .. • •.• ••1 •.· llllDllED SUSHED $30,100! 1 ...... ,... Meea Verde mention, OY8t 2400 1C1. ft. I lllew of Cat allna, aunaet• and eJty llghtal 4 king bdrmt, 3 ~ht, mualw lamlly room, new everything! $38,000 mOYel you lnl NO QUALIFYINOI Call 18'1. can't last at low, low prleef 898-2536 . Orangt Coa1t r1ndent1 boug,ht 4~ of all ntw cart told in tM count~ lalt ~ear evm through t~ compriM onl~ 30o/c of the count1,. • population. · ...... hlllld'4 •••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.,., 1144 ...•...•..••.......... Fum 28f In Orange Tr ... AC, SHARP M50 mo. GOLDEN PROP£RTIES 752 .. 1589 it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you GEORGE ELKINS CO turn your wheels into cash. ~ .......... , ...... , .. , ..... ....... •••••h Ill -A1 we, ......................... ......................... ,., ............. ,., .... . ......... " ,,. ..... _., .. " lltJIWlllnlp ....... 11--.. . WATt:Rf'RONT HOM "J~I hTAll ..... .,,., ... ~ "''"'" M..\.llt"Wttf l ..-.. 1 • I I a s 2222 ass a 2 a SS 0 5 $ 5 0 0 I ~ 5 5 au 0 • Father's Day " Wish Dad a Happy Father 's Day for ~the world to see and WIN 4 FREE .JilCKETS · • 1 ....._ l\a • •• •u• •••u • IJrf'J:tft ........... fi. ~ .. ••••••• ...... II 1!!11 ••••••••••..•• flf!!fw••••••••••n ••• J,J.fflJ.'trr/Jfrl!! ••• •... i:-_.••.1-~~~w~~ ~---.:.:.,..~'::.:!~"~ ~=~~= ToCllVn~ ~~wov,c. ... ,... NT~TUOCO. -.,_,.. t$Wt0) 4'tfloe OIH"l"l .1. orpt ,,.. .. ,, 142·1H7 ~ lMtet?M~IO • ~e::r:11: ~W.il. ......... • ... •.. """"fl!_J/I.___,,_ ...... ---oiMnlnO• IU•t\'• ~ Mt-4811 Heullnt I .. ~1 h!Ye ,.._ 1,1.-t.1-"' ................. """"* lf!1lm '"''"' ........ ~ ....... Job-tH•,. No 0*1lme. 1'0-11N .;r:r.;;r ••••••••••••• !!'!! My ~~ ~ A"°HiiiOTi.i.W p~·Ni ,r... Ken .... IOS& ~ 0 p '"I'"'. "101e •TA•MNO COlllOI • ILL .... ,. ~· Xll'll -...c.M. ........... '0" IMJllDING ""MIT LA~,. MAINT. 1~~ "' 111 "°"3 ·~~,1~~0VING *mn. "'* I=! I=' Ct\lld ,.~., llo'd MIM!On "9~entlel eddltlon• I 1 _____ ,_.. __ 1 Oommerloal 6 Pf= ...,.__,,M ,_.:......; ... 1 .... · ~f~ --v1e10""':'01ne Allola a ~.Don a.r.eeoe .,~-fmml, ...... , ~ •••••• rer........ "--· -. ..,. n • ,,_ ~. .., .., AOelN'I CL.lANIHO WATo.4 U8 OlllOWI ""!:....Trw":.: .::•,::.:.•.•• DO IT NOWt Jerol\ffno, tuillpl time, ._,, ••••••••••h• ••• ••••• t ler'floe ~~ ...,.. ~..,., "'"' nna M :t()ptn ..... 25'1 ::'lo'im•············· CRl'T·UNO.WOOO ROl\.t Gardertolno: I Yfl olMtl ~ ' 1 ,... & AIR COND, M~l-~ tlr a-....... . O..YWALLIACOUITIC INtllled/repelf"ed. Clr90 .. me ere•. lltl IY al •••••••'•••••••••••••• auto, comm'I. 64MIVCJ --• I Yft I~. eduoetlonal Aepelre, new I. Old. 11 Uo. -~ 1·240-30t2 reu. r•I••· Malntl Quellty HoueeolMnlng ,. ,.,.. :::,_ ~ f'llot proor1rn Incl. "••ding yr• ••P• lud Ha-t512 l•ndeoape. N9/0dM. w/a peraonel 1ouot1. CM. by Alchtrd Sinor. Lio. ,._.,,u-1•-1• -!-~ 1---------llrelled. 7~1181 ~ W•" t-t·~ ... ·~--io .., ... ,.,, ... 171-9*. IN HI -..ti l5CM>e33 2tol44 13 •••• rTr. • .r1.wrm ••• ....,....-•-••• ~· Contf~Of ... -"' ............ • •• ~ •••••••••••••••• ---------1 I I 0 yt"t Of Mppy ... ~ .......... .. .. •t, IU Ind., oonwn'I, ree. CHILD CAM. H~T .. ......__ .. , ... 1tude AlflAIA & INSTALL. .,,.~, Peoltlo HoutedMnlng ~ Cuelk ~ O ,,_ •t .. -"'·-= 141 , .... u.. l!Onle 00.tl ~ ..-_...... Qarana drt. HardWare. :;;::'l::e;"•••••••••••• 8 )( ...... rnen you, ,,..1-«t · ,_, Ll9. 3m17. 517-17N ~, • Lie ... ~ 1·~2-45'1 -....... HOMl IMPAOYEMENT Yft ell(>. lnl ..... Qual, work. UC. 11111. "!!!!~!!!'!!!!!~~~ 91/r.!~ t 7tJ'ael DRYWALL TAPING DMIOn/Plllnt teo-t1N Rl!!PAIR·f>t.UMllNO ,,.. ett. Lort e?iJ.9353 PArNTE~ ~EDS 13f·234! -~ti·~ •----~ a ·•-11.J~ r..-1 _._ Ole p,_ T 'C .......,._..--'-WORKI 30 )11'1 9JCP, Intl ... ......,,, •••• ••••••••••••• _._., -All Tutur. • Acouauu ..,.., ..,.._. ry, -' .~.~.=;".:"1_ Exter. AcouetlO ~-........ llit11trtM o;;mn ••• l'!NOU I DICKS •• ••••••••••••••• •• Fr• •t K9\lln 1175-toee •••••••• •••~•••••••• et\. No Job too llmlllt. -~ ...,... ""' -·~:.:s·lot Mll1it ftoblneon Conti. "!MOOlUADO-ONS Gardening Wented DellM 145-1811 Toni UO..Otoa/&42.o405 o.vi. Pelnttng &47-111 WUf ..... "" ..,..,., ~ SlnOe tt71. 754-0tSt I Cerpentry. Llc'd. 26 ft..fnfl/ Mowing, edging, rak!NI. c••,_.,.., • M•"""""' ~·-Hou~--i.u. EXTERIOR PAINTING ............... ••1 .. 1...... yrl llJ(p. lrwln 5'8-27111 ;;:1.................. •weeping. ,, ..... 1. -...-·-· ~-. --....... "' c rk r ·--........... . -._ ....... -... 0A81NET8-AEMOD£L. ----------11!Ll!OTAICIAN-Prlc•d met ... 545.5737 Rooflno. Plumblng furnlen VllQWm. uttom WO • ~,.. .... -- AL.&.ITATI PAVING SkylltH • Qr .. nh·.. Fine Flnlliled ~ tight, frM Htlmate on Orywell ·Stucco· Tiie ~. Khty 5'1~1170 ~ +fine Int. l Ital· M4I 11•1•111 ~ WlndOWe Remod. Spec. lwge or ernett jObe. LAWN CARI! Remodel. J.8. ~ttto HOUSECLEANING nlng. Steve 547 ... 281 ~~olel Aepllt9 comm./"-fct. 6'4&--4909 Lia. 4111587 120-1 Lie. 3oe82t. 873-03511 ~=ble~~M EXPERT HANDYMAN 18 OUR IU81NE881 11r.JhJ. Tenant ·~~II • ••••••••••• •loMk* ....,..,. Aee./OOIM\, OomnwGlll ~=-- f!rftf •• , ••••••••••••• L..a.tfl,..fl!Mt • .atuooo Teict~ Thin Well ltuooo "1olt. UC'cS. 011')' 157..0715 ~ ••................ ~om C.emlo n. Prompt. Cflll Cftuc*, ew 142.e514/87&-140I d)ll CERAMIC-LINOLEUM Tiie. ,,.. ettlmetee Rell. Bob 876-5151 '!!1!.ll!r!!1 •••••••••• LOW RATES·TrM trim· ming I. removal, all ~ & trMtl heullng. ,,.. ••t. Mert lnea 554-7017 Lia #~7M2 &4M181 6-.i l#Tln OOMM'URESID. LIC'O !LECTRICIAN Onrlopr, Betry 845.7412 C11pentf)I. Roofing Jenice'• R~ Mn •• •••• ••••••••••••• QUALl~EE ~~~IMATES OM He!IWQ Oredlng mr.••••••••••••••u • Aef'nOCl·Add'n•~ra Qual. work-A .... r•t.. Pluml:>lng, eto. 942-eC>tS Elt. 10 yr1. 815-2514 F~~~~·=I= 'fl'!!JN. I ~Co. Ree/Coml No StNm/No Shenlpoo Vwy r.... Uc. 3 260 FrM •t. 131·5072 Tom TIEii JACK OF ALL TRADES PROF. HSECLEANINO vi ... Mc Scott 145-11325 714/te&-9050 n-..1me ••••••• ••••••••••••• I ..... •a7 ... 2 17"" Stein Speclellet. Fut Jedi H. Bennett, Jr. T ......... / ~---ct.....--vw7• Moet tub)ectl. K-14 .._ --• .., ....., F _. ast-1582 Gen. Contr. 562·9142 TOP QUALITY -..-r .. ,~. -· Cell Jedt dey or mght Reae. •Aelleblee,._,. 71415484454 Evenlngl ..._._IUfTVMI' l10wtt· _,, r• -·· .. _...__. • 1~·r_.. ELEC~ICAL WORK up, lewn renoY. 751-34711 •875-3014* WlndOWI. "·-561-8137 ASR PAPEAHANOINO UC. 3438113 ... 7 .. ,., .._,.,,..,./ Ctpt. I tall/~ ed ..... ..,... • ..... ..., ~ 53 ,,_7 7 yre locel exp. Guw. ,________ Mr. Morgen, 845-1178 ..,,,., Flood d!m.c,.. St~ l • .I. llffllH a ltl ·rat•. 1•5056 ,MOWING • OL~N UPS WUHI-'-work. PrlcH et•rt 11 IH/S.• WW /!I.,,.,,_ •••••••••••••••••••••• cl"" 55'·51t0. 173 8&ee ,.,..., ELECTRICIAN Hauling· ~~Ing COMPL. HOME MAINT. •••••••;c::'f•••••••••• 18/roll. Alec 751-7027 ••••••'••••••••••••••• •••••~·--~·•••• . ... .... . ... • • • Lie . ...,_88, Rarnodel. Sml job9/Aepelre. Lio. Fr .. Mt. 842-tt07 Cetp. plumb. pelnt, heul, RenoY•Ung-sc>Mklerl --------1 REPAIRS 1215 to I t51 "l...et the Sun9hlne In"" 8~ dew\ :;T' hi&.... Stwnpoo a tlMm clMn. add'ne, cablneu. 2331oa.c-1o. 648-6203 yd clnup. Fr .. Ht. i...w 1~ up Cuetom wallpeperlng. free Mt. Call anytime, 0111 SIJnehlne ~ ...._ Color brightener•. wht 94e-ute/&45-4&44 Mow. edge, rek•. IWM9. 49e-32111 D•ve l4?...S53 Mlltftctlon gu*anteed. WALT 770-27215 "''---Ing, 1 td ........ .. & dedta. Medi Mctn-crpta • 10 min. bleach. ~ M.flK eprlng clHn·up, haul. Bud e4~l2eS For Mt: Frenk 775-0714 ..,_, MOnL · .,......._ oel handyman work. Hall, Uv/dlft. rm• 115 .• 1..., M4'•h•a.....aHlt4. . 'I Irle Chuck 842-28"'73 bel II ••Ill•• ... 1 Hu .. -· Roott~-••l t.,,,_ 20% thly OllCOUnt 875-7151 " .,. Fiee •t. ~ •. f;lcee. 131.7zu am. ••••••"'•••••••••••••• • By the roll, from -to tO. ..,.. ·...--•r~· Or Coat Wind room 17.llO; couch 110; Oull work Lie 371..., . au -..2 ---------' DUMP JOBS UM!f. C1ll Macy, 1551-4tll5 New-recoYef-decttt ange OWi CHAR'S CUSTOM TEAK chr 115. Guat. ellm. pet · · · ""'· "l -~-AHldentlal. Clean-upa, & 8 111 Mewl Jobe ••••••• •••••••••••••• (5-.._) lr"Ylne. UC. #411802. 648-11734 "We IMw you with a ~ ,._ 15 831-23415 ,J~ Lit. 4lotOI I ,..,'('MIKE •• '!P 1.,.,1 B~RK: Smlll Jobi. ~...... bflghter outlook!'" · Odor ..... .,t ~-yre ---------i , ~ garden, n rvlc:e, manl., ..,.. -... , Colt• • I ,.1 ,...JOHN HENRY CO..... Fr• Mtltnlt• 830--&111 recite exp. Do work myHll. Cal,.. W.Mflfl"*-. tree trim. Fr .. HI. HAULING-1tudent hH lr"Ylne. ,._,._ 875-317 !!m. •• ~~~••••••• Roofing lor Ane Homee etc. 21yrs.145-3749 Rela. 531-0101 •••••••••••••••••':";"d. Eleotl(cll Contractor 941-109e(Cell Wiiiy) 1ge lNCk. Lowell rete. Br'·" **BRYANT'S** Lie. 415232. 54M2t3 •RESIDENTIAL* EXCEL CARPET CARE Cdrooow:,,mmo•u!dtlleneg •• beonotrk~ ~'J.~·2-."C t7om. Pmh • .. ~7ee_1·7~ SHIYO'S OAROENINO Prompt. Cell 1511-11178. _.'::Co~ concr .... retllce, Wallcol/9f'lng RemOYal MonthlyOtrly Olecount F« CtMl lfled A4 Jack Buffington C&HI, ced~ llned clo-_.. ,,., ..... ""Totll Verd Cat•"" Think you. John. ~i7i&01536-"°8 A.11 typM. 142-1343 J..Ah Ila Ctlrle 1157-8388 ACTION Own«/~IOI' Mia. Wood ....... lone 10 11.,_. ILIOTllO Mo/wtlly. 551-8232 eve ••••••••~ •• I ........ . Cell . Cerpet uptlol ., .. rug ......... IWWl!l;ll PROF. SERVICE Flreplacee-Plent.,. 11,,,.,m ... 1, BUDGET RATES Whel. Wonderlul World o.11y Hot cleaning. w~ QUtr. wood P<Oblerntt We don't m•k• you wait Landectplng-Yd Clnupe Haullng -.,yerd cleanup 880'•P•ttoe--V.-••••••-'-:":'r.;';0 ••••••• Lo min. Smljobe OK. Uc. of Shopping right •I AD-\llSOA Free Elt. 845-1'771 831·t528 LIC. 37oe89. 831-71123 Tr• trlm-Expen mtlnt. Qulek & olMn. Fr• eet. Refl. FrM .. t. ~14 0'1 PUITllllt Free •t. In• 941-7581 YfNI 11ngen1pe' r.<erydayl 142-M78 Claulfled Ad1 are the You don't need• Q4.f' to lrrlgetJon. Jim Ht-0129 ____ 87_3-0_548 ____ 1 ___ AU TYPES INT/EXT k1 .. a1 Dilly Piiot C1aullled ~=======~I ~!L~!?..... 1n1wer to a 1uccenlul '"drew feet" when you The telleet draw In the HAUUNG-ORADINO •• -;;;;'···~··••••••••• FREE EST. 845-8268 •••••••••••••••••••••• Ade. To pl•c• your •d, -Cement-MMOnry-81ock gwege"' yerd Mlel It'•. piece en Id In the Delly WHt .••• Dally Piiot demolltlon. CIHn-up. -ABC MOVING-PLASTER PATCHING MOBILE SERVICE call e42-5878 andiet. Hew eomethlng to..,,., w......Cuet. work. Lie. better -Y to tell more !>Not Want Mtl Call now CtMalflec:I Ad. Celt TOdey Concrete & tree r~. Qulc:il, Cerelul Service. Reetuccoe. Int/ext. 30 Reecteene/New ecr11n1 Clualtted AcS·Vleor '*P CIM1Mled 9de do It wel. #381057 Rob 547-2883 peoplel / 942-5678. 142-6878. Quiet! Mnl. &42-7838 Fr• MtlmatM.552-0410 yr1. Nett. Paul 645-21177 NB/CM only. 142·111552 ..;you:..__·------- ~.H!. •.•••• !t. !!m~.IJ . .' .••••••• !.~ff !'!.'I..'!.~~ .•.. !.{! !•.'1..'!.~~t!. ..•• !.{!f !1.11..'!!!'!!. .... !.1.~ !•!1..'!M~ •... 1.1.'!f !•!1..'!M~ •••. !.~'!f ~!I..'!!!~'!. ...• !.~~ !'!.'l..'!!!~'!. .•.. !L. ¥!!~.~~ .....••.. H•ppy Blrthdey JODY hJtlllt l1Mf1p Banking .,. h1tll f1H. lft, llLU 0UU Sec C..11 #HI LYNN. W• love you ho-$t5. 873-9388 OP. P/T TIWI I E.nlhullutlc, efficient & •m PllT·11MI -II TIWI! mreteryo. 11oan11Y Secretatlal •••••••••••••••••••••• ney F 20 hral'#k. Apply: Hunt-organized w/bkpg. exp. Mature woman liref'd. h...tftl lttntln G~• Sala • Lott ol Mom, Rick, Annette ~:-i.=.. ~~=-~~ lnglon S&L, llM7 War· 4 d•y wk. c . Meu. lrNf fir •HI llPlwl Apply. t08 22nd t, NB 10< Regent1 Point. New 1 ofc. of the lea! SaUSun t0-4. • __.., ~~-.6 • ._ room..-..... ~.·-d .......... .., ner. H.B. 842-8800. 648-3000 SALES CLERK needed fOf retirement faelllty In Ir· Headqulrt.,. ofc. of I 879 Arbor St. (Nr 19th & -• •--~ .,.,.. '"'"' ..,_, W k · f ual fi -.. t.i~.. ...__._ vine. Req·1. ablll1y to Jolly RoO•r Raetaurant Monrovia) C.M. •••••••••••••••••••••• In exehange for oompa-.-aEIPll lllTll llllSTllT or m our un, cas • pro t-• .-......"6 II,.__ boutique, exper org1nlze. communicate chain hu an opening for ___ .....;._' ----- nlon1hlp tnd llaht hou-P•rt time. r•l•ll etore. Dynamic. pat141nt Oflenl· office as a telephone sales promotion preferred. 648•8444 & type. Excell. working •n •xf*"d. Exec. Seer• #i AWIH f Olll> ADS ARE FREE Cal: 141-llll Mkeeptng. ldeaflor ~ e/p , a i r , peyroll . ad N.B. precilce need• clerk for the area's finest newspaper. C.M. conda. & banaflte . terytotheVlcePreeldent •• !'!••••••••••••••••• l•g• or Hit-employed 845--0792. brlght,mottvated,enthu-Only r~uirement is a good telephone IALIS Phone: 851-1555 , of Operation•. Poe. r• l1•1•ar caraar wom•n. Phone el11tlc team member. 1$11110 to 125 hr. Un-llAM-4PM. Mon-Fri. ~uplrng••!~ll• ~~ltlder• ! flml'l IAY Edmund In L•gun• ••-•••at ADA or comparable ex-voice an enthusiasm! Local Costa Mesa dercovar WHr home SECRET•RY. PIT " -Beach 11 494-04211 -·-1 Off" " variety ol reeponelblll· with • epec:lal meeMQe In --------· __ P • r . • • Ir Y. o P • n · tee. partlea. 145-7744 Accurate typing 50 wpm llM. Prior r•t-·raftt ex-the "-"" Pilot. Let Did Yoor Cv Reflect• Yoo Colleg1 etudente. Full 848-248t. ..._._ ...__.. ,...,._ + blll --· .,_, Cuetom Wax & O.tell time pot. tor the aum----1 ·-~ ,...,. s.... • ty to lrtnacrlbe. P«· would be a definite -hie name In ptlnt on mer. Naed eggrenlve DOG Groomer. exper. l :M , ..... laal ,.a. Ungerie Home Pwty Good w/people, to Nn plue. Lovely ~. ex-June 20th. If you piece• Re&a. •Tony 547-1241 pereon to gather lnlor· Corona del Mtr. •~-IM 1&-hJI ._.. coneultenta. Xlnt SSS. No one P•rton church 01-1 cell. benefit pack1ge. greeting for Dad you wlH ..._.1 ma 11 on 1 n orange 644-4000 -·--1• r-kit cherge. 13~273 floe. C.M. 548-2237 Apply In pereon from be ellglble for the di'•· ~~~~~~~~~I ::ir.c:!P.!!~!.......... County. Bu.ina.e 11ure& •IT..., $84.00 for first week; then share in ll•nUY/TYPllT 8:00AM 10 4:00PM 11: wtng of UWlll Jdf .... ,. 111S car. mutt. COnleci'. Lole ., ..... AM thl1t No a wn partnership's profits. SalealUIE I llCll With pleaaant pereonallty THE JOLINCL v_ ROGER. • na.o ~ L •••••••••••••••••••••• GRUBB & ELLIS -·1 • ......,. W lfllr ... tu I plu•.. If ....... I N -· oe1 8PYQlaiu Hiiia ., .. Young mwrted men WOUid IGS-29<>0 nae. Pl/time. Apply In • Of ... o ..,. n --17042 Giiiette Ave., •-m • 8-10. 8 ~mo. otd tern• Ilk• odd Job• av•• & · · per-eon: Dlpplty Donut•. Nl-Hll alt. 11 ITllT IEIE port Center. Accurate lrvlne 714-Me-0331 - golden color Cocker wtienda. Can do• v.nety 1854 Newport BIVd, C.M. The Lo. AngelM Timee typing at 85-70 wpm, · 1111111 l 11111 Sp1nlal, anewere to of h•ndym•n Jobe. CHEF ASSISTANT Clrcul•tlon Dept. cur-word proceeelng ••i>e· Call &42-5878 and piece c • n d 1. c •II Lucy 1172•11525 evee. all! for MUST BE EXPEAIEN-nllTllLMlm rently hat poelllona open rlence helpful, but nol your m~•"G• now for 840-4433. Biii. CED Wented: UC'd. Electrolo-In ...... At a Fi.Id ,._ necauery. No ah or· ....... .,, 111-only 15.00 LOST: Mtne cu.tom..._ f>Mna. 493-4805 i"'· '"A Piece of Health ••SU 11111 UAL man IALIS preeentatlw, you'M ..,,, thand. Evalle, 1144-2507. To Pr•. fl 10,.8190.· _...;;._,__ ____ _ ID brecll9t, June 11, Ir· llllEllmll -...."l&IE e-.ity'". 94&-71142 eonv • long term .car• W• 11ew 1111 opening for hourly nee & eeneroue llOlnUY Heavy Numt>era. ~l!f!~ ........ l!!f vine Me•dowe Rock Prof womtn MA exc ,...._......._ Te--"'--••• ITI..._ ..,,_., 'd Ex ..... 1 two well-dreMed, lnteftl. commlulone. Houre lttflbfy 111-• --Tiii ••• • · · ..._._ -• -,,_ ..,..._ exp. req · ..., · WO<· gent ••l••P•rton• to 4-llPM. For lnformaUon PART TIME. 20 houre Tl 85 no lhrthd .....--Concert. OrHt Hnll· '9f. C.M., N.B .• leg.,.._ ....__ ..._ ....... _._ Elm l10-S12 P« hr. pl Iring conda. & benefttl. ftexlble. Smell MD firm ' . 15 llAM 50% m1ntal value. Steven Sunny 831.e3n ....._ •• ._.. lime. 645-5781 Wiiiie Flllma, 7-3:30, ~11:30. worbork In thelnNewport calt: 714-1167-2381, Ext. needs general Secretery. 8 moe. Mk1g. eocper. Juneon all tiiv.ntory' ~ :;.,,... Dreyer, 114-840-7824; u.~·, ........ wlll A-1_ Would you Ilk• to IC*ld 714-642-8044 or apply In H1•1 ,...... doommar/ • 1204 Accur•t• typing, light Appointment Onty ,,.. NOl'd Allllq~ (B:c; 875-7002 .........,_ ....,.. ....... "' 3 ..eke •t the beech. llSPITIL pereon: 488 Fl•g•hlp c • H H •n or r••· Salee p t Pl __.... LIZ Relnderl Arri .. Inc. '"' · elder'ty Of Ill; al90 oheuf-eod get paid for It? Do ldentlll Mlea In the more enon, ml ure, l>oolck....,.ng •l(f*" deel· 4020 Birch, e.t'&4 EOE Door) 111116 Harbor, CM. LOST: L•dlH diamond feur. 549-0373 you Ilk• young ctl11Clren7 lee111ta l...n.W. Rd., NB affluent arw. time, H~, red. Send r-.ime Ind Newport/133-3190/FrM Magnlflclent 7' Square engagement ring, femlly LIVE I h k I Loving peraon needed to General ottlce poeltlon LEO HANNA Mlaly requlf9mentl to G -Grand Plano • H•n•• .... q, REW• .. o ~ ,...... • n ouee eeper avallable In corporete NURSES A,..._ Full time SR VICE PRESl....,t. B lab, Inc 20t W. ~ _., · "'" ·-,,. compenlon. M9M perr-0 1 r • 10 r m Y 2 • n d account• recel'vlbi. 01• 7 10 3 & ;'i';" 11. Ai>l>IY. · "" SALES Rd. Unh B, Sent• A; SEWING MACHINE OPE· 1850. Roa-ood cue, v.iue ~ ~· Turtterock manent poe. Aet' a. 4-yr-old deuoflten In my no.. fll:"i. good math• H 8ctl Con Hoep W""1 I. T.,e.r PT/FT. Own hre. Trlln 92707 RATORS. Expef. quality carved leg•. S1crlflc·• ~~·· 8lg Boy on 83&-1113 Laguna Beach home .. matlcal commu~lc•· 8':;~3"15 .. P~e· ·C•r~·.· Aeeltore &44-41110 uou to bulld own bu•I· minded. piece ratH. S5000. 720-12t1 . ...... .,,..... 833-89111 live In Mon. thru Fri. ca11 " u • IElllTllY ;mo. Cott M 942 11652 • •ti• rtutM 1111 Jan at~ tlon eklll• & llght typing cluaa are offwred. Tnllt/l111 ... 1lllt ~.· Cell &45-9210 '"' • eea • Antq. lovaH•t. clrc• Lott: On the Penlneula, •••"••••••••••;;...... required. Mu•I be d•· 1fs'O per month 10 etart. ..... .. · Anendal lnY9StlTlent firm IEWm 1850. fl1wleu cond. black cat. White wtile-Salee llDI pendable. reepontlble &-OPPORTUNITY Accur•te Md-feet typing SALfS ~AIL, ~~c!i':n~~-t ~.: fXWd Ol*•tOf. 2300 $9tt. ~17 ~,,.:.=·~~ Fr•1lllM lallt For rntaurant. 10 lley Nlt·monvttecf. ~ • mull. Start lmmedl•· General partlclp1t1on, tary. Excel typing ind Harbor Blvd. Coete OAK Dining tbl w/4 oak · · 1100,000 per yeer cal· eicperlenoe. Oana Point. B••ch. Irene Ruiz, Do you w•nt flexlbl tety. Exper pref'd. wicker rattan furniture, S/H required. Ellecullve Meae. ee&-3337 chre., 1 le captain"•. lber oomm. · 493-t548 for eppt. 640-8950. ~:;·,~:1 • C::.~1~~":. ~; 714-720-094 t non•amkr. over 30, de-MCretllrlal expr. a muat. 11.,,.. Ol.DI $ 2 1 5 . 8 4 2 . 9 o 2 1 / COMPANION AID: Oo you HOUSECLEANERS-Halp hHlth & Hit develop-U-llf coratlng lnctlNitlon help-Non-amokar pref. Cell 842-7208 To ••II manuUicturlng need 10 au1)91ement your wanted, mull h•ve own ment? Frei training, """,,... lul. -'200/wt! & c:omrni. 840-0l23 For active eport1we1r ---------package In your Area. SOC. Sec? 1 need llve In tranap, top dollar pd. Succeutul yec:ht co. In 1 Ion . Hr a to. 8 . company. Must be bon-OAK DrMHf w/t>eveled ~m. 12500 perp 0 ..... help. Mala or femele Call Marta &46-5355 fringe beneflta. Npl. 8ctl. requlr" pro-839-7183. C•ll bet. SECRETARY • Hvy. 1y-dable. N-port Be1ch. 1 mirror, 8 drltWtrl. 1200 . ...,..,d reeume to Box • **842-5270'** fHslonal Recept1onl1t1 t0-12. ping. Excell. llllllt plus 8'4&-6888 . 642·90211542-7208 Found: Olr1s' ,_, purN, ~2221'1· L.agun• Nlguel, Ce. ~~~7~o~ ~o~'.·:~: IEYPllOI IPD. PUT T*E Parton Frld•y. Mu at vOl'ac:loua reeder r9<1"d. OAK Commode. 3 dre-left et garege..,. • v •-Data enl"' pereon nee-E I h•ve gd. telephone per-IEClnllY No ahorth,nd. non-emkr. t .....,.. T--' 656-2174 ......... ., vea and or weekend•. eonallty & gen. ofc. llkllls Reply In collfldenoe; TAN WHILE ---· ca.,...... .,_ &HIBJllT ~~~h~nd M~~~· ~';'.~~ Aesponllble edultt. over Inc I u d Ing I y p Ing & lrW o...r41utw COLLINS ASSOCIATES reek. s 175. 842•90211 F= 11~':..t~ Succe11ful yacht com· COMPUTER firm ope-ponalble. Pd co. benefit•. 21• with outatandlng. et-10-key. Excell. working Potter & Brumfleld Div. 567 San Nlcolu Or.. _8"..._2_·7_208 _____ _ pany In Newport requires nlng new branch olflcee. Salary commensurate tractive 1 ~rsona~ll•( 10 environment on the 1.11.f., IH. Npt. Bch. CA. 92660 YOU EARN J-llattt 1111 Newport/Mein. Tuatln. full charge flnanclal & Menagera needed. No wt e•per. Cell Paulln• work w I yout agH wa1er, pteeaan1 ueoc1.. hu en opening In oor -.,-,r.;-.•••••••••••••••• 155t-1425 accounting pereon •xi>«. required. We wlll 54g..8909 10·141. Call 2·5PM, '"·competitive ulery. WHt Co••• reglonel llOlnllY •11 HARBOR AREA Found blond male dog with bleck lace, med. tlz• Gefmen Shee>herd mix. $40-1883 Beeutlful wonting oondl-train 1mbltloo1 people. 8"2-4321. Ext. 343. EOE Contact: Mra. Brown. ealea office for a Hlghly quallfled , Hll· Reeort lntarvala It now APPLIANCE SERVICE tlone, on water. con~ ReeumM required. Call: UllllY PEllll Peraon to work oy1ter &45-135t btwn. 9AM & ucratary/ order co-motivated lndlv. with••· hiring lor publlo rel•· We Mii recond., gu.,. nlel 111oc1a1 ... Dre•m 714-772-0147 Expr'd pref. June t 4 thru bar, 5 dy wti, b•yfront Noon ordln•tor\ Mutt hive ceptlonel typing ekllla '"' tlone. Call: tppMllllCCll. , •549-3017 Job for right person. July 11, Apply In pereon. restaurant. xlnt compeny u-,--proven •blllty to deel profeulon•I HrvlcH / Mark 531-2401 I llY IPft.....a FOUHO: Short hllf blk & bm mell dog. Poea. Lab Ge t m an Shep mix. llee-4464 Mutt be meture, with AAAI Huntington e.ach Con· benefit•. Wiii train. .u-_, with outeld• contact• training dept. Knowledge Impeccable reflfencet. ..,. UIHcent Hoepltal. 873-7228. 9-4. 50wpm. ••c•ll phone and type !50 plue wpm. d MIQ Cetd II. Newport lftw 2Pll L• 951-8133 Call Mre. Lul!a. 845--8351 Needed lmmedlataly '°' tNtl Aortd• St, HB. 1111111, Ille bkpg. Mutt be Prev. exper. pref'd., but Beectl lfM. 840-8950 WUher/Oryer 1125 eec:h. bet. 10 & 12 noon. tut food Cf~ & omelet Pfl• f'lllAJ well organtied. GrMI co. not nee. FOf tppt. call RefrtgeretOf 1225 Dllh- r•teurant. Min. 2 ~· l I S Energetic reeponalbl• ban1flte. Salary com-C•rol at 7i4-493-4503 Tele......._ ltlltlhn wuh« ltOO ~ ANSWERING Serv. F/ experience. Fulltlma e•a ecv person to Wfll• ordert & meneural• w/uper. 2e131-0 F Ad A tion ......-. . F~r~~~~~·N':ia~~: time, P/tlme ahlfte av~I. deya. 752-58711 N.B. PART i'fME 2 to~ ~ anawer phonH. Full 7118-4751 Peggy . ...,, Ave. A.uropuerto or C :: =· t'citn ~~~ Kenmore Wuher & Dryer. Ha. M2-8350 ~ n-:""r ::·. ~T. i"f: COSMETICIAN LIC'd. for nlnga per~ '"' ovw-time. Permanent. '4.25 ll-TlllllT Sen Juan Cepletrano I Bch ofc '°' holldey & Exc1llent condition. 780-7000 EOE f/tlm1 makeup pot. In flow. 5 PM to 7 Litigation pr hr. Apply In peraon. For plu~omoe In New-E.O.E. Ca a ,_· tr1Yet club. Salery ~'1:1 ':!~ately. Found mlle lr1eh Setter, top Npt. be•uty aalon. experlenQe. Non-smoker lrvlne Photo-Graphic• C A 11 t ptue comm. ptu1 bonu1. ___ ... .._ __ ,_ __ ch•lr coll•r, •pprox. 3 l /P llJr ·~ C • 11 : L • u r • • only. Newport Center 17851 Bi.vi>art<. Ste G. port enter. PP cen FOf Cluelfled Ad Daly Plot Cell: 833-3740 aft tPM Kenmore port le elec. yre. Old. 545-7091. ..... ..... ~ 21~274-8575 54&-3733 Irv. ~ ~~ A8~°.N TOPLESS MODELS _.,,... & • Apt tlza. F:,t ~A~ on ...... II 11 ~,!TE°'R wtHEnLPt-~Oryted. Lepl ... ,...,., ~"!1,!"-•1=PP••r.•1nc .. •5. ~r•Nt•0 Dally Piiot AD·VISOR ln7059~~v. :_P.A81D2.D2A!~~ :5~~t~"eal 4 o OB O • 548-7882 T/ ed', tneurenoe co. .......-·-·· • Newport Center Real ~·-.,,... " -r···· AO.VISOR .... '""' ""'.,.... ____ ..,_ ___ _ Accornpllthecl Peraonnel clHnare. 30848 Coaet Eetate Litigation Firm Omemental ptent exper. • and. Call Evalle at 642·5878 642-5678 REFRIGERATOR 81k '""1oundlend neut. Servk:ee. Inc. Hwy, So. Llgunt. need• uperlenced required. Wlll tr1ln for 1144-2507. SELL Idle Item• with • N.w, lroet..fr•, 2 dr. mate. 5 )'ti, IOYM chll-3300 lrvlne 1101 NB Len11/Exec Secy. Xlnt r .. ldantlall lnduetrlal. REMEMBER DADI Delly Piiot CtMllfled NJ. 1185. 893-9080 dren. To good home. 545-"71 -'1~ ;:,... ...,... m llP. typ.lng dlct•phon• & "Irle. ~··· control. wt· ... 7~ A challenglng QPportu-' "' ____ ., _____ ASSEMBLERS. We Wiii nlty I• open •• Schweber thorthand I mutt. S ... ry I 5 0. t • 2 5 0 m 0 . F•ttler'• Dey rneeeage. Found: YO OerlMll Shof· tr.11n. Apply 7AM. MIC· Electronlc• •• IHdlng open:840-8980 94e-744 t 942-5878 tllllr Pointer. F, vie. T• Gregor Y.9chte, 1831 electronic dlllrlbutOI', for M•rtne anglne ptrte..... Win 4 FAEE TICKETS! ....... Schoot. $40-11155 Plec.n11e. Colt& Meaa. an lndlv. who le ••If· pereon. s.tld ~ 10: PllTmlPlll to en Angell Gtme Found:vwytgeMOerlMll 8ABYSfTTER-mtture per-mollv1ted, hu good Mr. Anderlon, 171F RI-EU/I top P•Y liking c~.!n --a.. blk~ 1--a .. .._ d ... communlCltlw ekltlll eod verelde Or., Newport ltla,........te In """" .,. ... ..,,.... ,...... ' "' • IOrl, ., on• per ey, .., C 921Je3 __ ,.. ,~ in., CdM. 87 7 d•y TuH .. no wknde. one Who pey9 attention Beech. L · Am•teur ~hotographer• I E IEOIOAIY F~·nd· turquolM Pera ,._,. ,..q. 87~75114. ~.~'.!!.'· ~ College Marine .....,,lne & Of Marine needed. artlfull time. ......!., "__.•t• ..__ __...., ..,.. • • _,,.........,, ,... ..... but not hatdww ltore ......... ex-No experience"' Mlllng .._ -· '""' ,_, lc•I (CAL-All2·2·0t4), required. PteeN contact per. Send RH~;;·. to: required. Write to: Uni-•,°'•Plt•,rl_!~ed• .. !..~r~. vie. F•lrvlew, S . .A . Hewl0m9ttllngyouwent Bert>ereat 558-3880 ~• PO Box t223 .,.,., ..,_.,.,...,. 554-12114 to Ml?~ acSI do · Mr. Allderlon. 177F RI-,,__, · · • Muet heve .excellent ty· 11 11 I C II H OW F var aide Dr .• Newport Montebello, CL 90840 pl"" •"Nie, ........... _ ... -t Found: -, & whit• M w e • • Ind what&:u went In ... -.............. ·-.. 942..tle71 ........ Piiot -lfl'.A. Beactl. Ce. 112883. .._. ....... but .._._... .. , wtll cit, vie. rookhurat I. • -7 --. ....,.,...., ,_..., Yor1doWn, H.B. Me 34e5 MEDICAL. Fltlme. front PllFUllllALI !!!!~:,"~ ~ l'l!! ••• ~ •••••••• Y.ff BANIONG COMMERCIAL LOU OFFICER • ~ years heavy commercial loan experience. • Banking~ required • Located in elegant Newport finandal center. • Excellent talary. outatandlnl benefit. & prof.it lharing, MAIL RESUM.E TO: Jldde Ek. v .P. American Siate &nk P.O. Box l~. Newport Be.ch. CA 92663 IU>.S.. M/J' otc. poeltlon. Ml11lon We.,. eeelclng I people ;;ta .. ltcenee clellreble. Vlelo. Req01, medlcal .. with eemlng pot«!tlel d ,. ... G1'9tohen. '31-1"8 «•terlel exper. Including Ill .... 1 ,.., ...._ lneur•nce bllllng. Salll 411&-1ot0 People who have r••· 11\urD~ --. ~-died • lone In I.he roed NIUI\ lhllmJ ....... 8ch. Some _ and would Ilk• to be ,._ Her•'• • llnlQUe oppor-• ..,.. -...... proor•m•d for • new tunlty for one wtio tr1JOY9 ~u~~p~'':~:;:': cer .. r. for pereonel wortclng wftt1 tM put141e 759-1133 ll'lteMew cell IAM to 12 on the telephone end ---------1 'noon only. 714-830-41111 Hrnlng ll'IOney •t th• 11111. ........... Mr. 8untrne NIM time. W• ere turning 1way P.Tm llLll Your 1ucc .. tful H iii ~ n Med 1 .a. EniOY wortc-""" klCfie.. ••perlenoe .in en1bte pr'd prof. nell ~ ~.. you to beClofne •~pert wlttl I lltUI ~ Top tltld ~ 1001'1 M I it W • of o.Jt CtM ..... ""'*'" oomm. or ouar Hl•ry nlnge, ut!MN Yo"' out· tl=ln D•P•ttme1H . pl\'9 lddlt. ~ ptog-QOll'CI pellOlieMy, leem I OOMl'l'l'U 'OI\ CM\ ram. l!duoatlOf\ avell1· liow lo beoolne • trelned .. bte. HI•• couneelor. Call " you ,.,_. ..._ ._, ~ 1 w a-5PM. e..2..a21. ext. .. ••• .., • ... 8out1I Ooeet ,_. MS. IOI ~ ........ you N/11. tor Cllorte f46-71M 1U1. -·-H• -In 0 • Ted ......... Need t-.;,;;.• =:: tfl Fot tfl llltl I ..... ..., ••• •; OOfNMrCllll & ....,.. ............... fNI •-t ,...,_......,,.1111 1'A flenon nal Dept. at ~ Gftelt ..._. J'OU l t rowlftf fltt11 .... , ~1, M m . = ~~ wor111,.. oondl11oftl tn Tt ~!!'• .. ar...,. COMt N • w' o rt It a o" , ~• ..... 71......_IOl1 -W. !!!.!'-. ........... ·~r:J.,wff~ "" ~ l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I :t:z=-... • "&: ;c::11, =' ) ) NTBD ... Newspaper Carriers tor routes in Huntin~ Biach, . Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • • • KENMORE 15 cu. ft. ,._ frlgerator. 2 yn. Old. 1200. 4118-6187 0-E wlolher I. Mc:. Oryw, m.totllng. ooed. Ilk• new. 1250/JW. 1155-1134 STOVE, QM w~5115. LIQll>A T10N SALE s..ano ....... It ooet. WuMra. di'rerl. refrlgeratora, d'llh· w1tllere, r1nge1, bltn oven• I cook t opa I. tlOOClll. .....,. .. , .... ''~:'ei'n .... AU,.IGIAATO".L-!r.tl ttae.Worb ... ..-. 144-?W .,.,. __ .... 'L. ____ ,. ]JllRtfl ...... M" ~,.. ....... . •f'-1 ' ,, II I · JI '• I ,. I -.. AU. Wood dllum beby cr1b ...... coet 8300. w 1150/080. en-eeoe Contemporary Sofa & 1.0.,. a .. t. 11tnt cond. Ortglnelty S 1300. ucrt- Aoe ~-ll0-1MO. , For .... 50•· MOORING, ...... lrM~ "" Balboa Pen. Nr Art'• •••••••••••••••••••••• Landing. M&-0741 WE PIY WAHTlD: H ' allp or TIP 11'1 II moorlno for Hllboet, 1 • -- •· 9dl. Joe, IU OIOI .. -Ila ~ ~~ 11:·1'.r. •• ewill. NOW. ln.et04 .. j • 1i.r.lr· Al .. • ... ·········••4•••······· ... ,., ~ .. .. 14' lkl •oat w/78H' i--------htftr~. encl trall•. WI llf •~......, ..... ....,.....:;.;=.=...:...1 •1100. 141 ll04 . . COMMHl CHEVRO LET ·~.... ' ' . ,... ,. ~ S41>-I 200 ' . ; FOR THE MAN IN YOUR LIFE June 16, 1982 ~AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT - . - - -1 .. 2-Man In Your Life -A ~t to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 TBER 'S DAY ORIGINATOR -One of rica's best loved holidays was -originated Mrs. Dodd in honor of her own beloved dad, . ·am Smart. hecklist h.elps • 1n une 20 brings to mind carefully before buying," of great lift ideas says Dianne Keogh, dad on hU once-a-national fashion director ~day. And a bit of of a leading retail chain. qwck preparation helps "An early once-over look !:i~e the moat of the in. his closet may prevent on. time-consuming gift .1'Family and friends exchanRes later." Mould examine dad -· Checklist conside~ aed dad 's wardrobe ationa, according to In 1910, the role of father as }\ead of the family wu a,uociated wiih dj~~e,, ori4er -beha ptt.enw that mandated Cfilldren be "aeen and not heard." Yet William Smart, father of six (one daughter and five aona). Civil War veteran and pioneer of t.he West, was such a benign father that he inapired"l'ather's Day. His only daughter, born and reared in the West at the tum of the cenn.ary, had an almost devout appreciation of his love and devotion. Hia was a dedication to hi.a motherless children that was not lost on his daughter. . So, after she became a wife and mother heraelf, ahe conceived of an idea to honor her beloved father, and ell Amefican fathers, whh a day. devote<t-to special attention for"them. Her notion grew on her, like a grain of sand grows into a pearl. And with the help of friends, the YMCA and the Ministerial Aseociation of Spokane, the first Father's Day was observed in 1910 in Spokane, Washington. The idea ,was to obeerve Father's Day on W i l l-i a m S m a r t ' f birthday, which in 19t0 fell on the first Sunday ln June. But the fates and time were against the .:heme. The ministers, who agreed to preach Father's Day sermons, just couldn't get their special messages together on time, so th e)' advanced· tH time IChedulle by twG weeks -to the third Sunday in June. The Father's Day idea began to gather support from the very beginning -from William Jennings Bryan, to President Woodrow Wilson, to President Calvin C.OOlidge, later on. By tbe time William Smart passed away in 1919, Father's Day was an llCID!lpliabed. tf not aenerally celebrated holiday. In 1931, ,che National Father's Day Committee waa established to increase public ' awareness of Father's Day, and te extend its meanina as a celebration on a national .ca.le. Throu1h the committee's etto!'ta, thia waa achleved in a few short years. In faet, nearly three decade• before Congress got around to establishin8 Father',s Day as • national holiday in 19tl. the day was alrea4;y widely accepted. t. Today, Father's Day~ obeerved by 95 perdnt of all Americans -*-il it ia a beloved family M community celebrati ) •. Father's Day is~ obeerved in other nati~ around the world -\'.9 Europe, in Asia, '111 Africa, and in t~ Australlan continent. ~~ .... , gift. decision Ma. Keogh , include determining what he has in abwldance now, such as handkerchief.a, aocks and jewelry. Next, analyze what needs replacement or updating, such as dress ahirta, ties and belts. "Much of the current excitement in men'• weer is suited to dads of all ages," Ms. Keogh observes. "However, certain 'fabrics and styles look best on men of different shapee. calling for a closer look at father's physique." A few points to remember before buying: -If be'a beeo sbowtna up more around the waia~ avoid. cl~ fitting apparel 9UCh a1 tig}lt sweaters or tapered dte8I abirta -CODlider a cardigan style if a sweater's on your Uit. -A void turtleneck . . swe..ten if hia neck ia short or wide. -Socks make great ldfts for the kidrtb give ilad. For bwlinem wear, give him lightweight, one-air.e hoee. Key the colors to hia busineu suits. For casual weer, give him hoee and crew IOCb ln lively colon and interesting patterns. Never buy abort 80Cb for his suits -M 900I! • he alts, tbere'a an unbecoming show of leg between t~e pants bottom and the aock top. -Belts styled for either buaine98 wear or sportswear are always popular gifts. Dada can always uae extra belts. For dress -up &Ive calfskins, fine grains, and the like. -C.001 shorty pajlmM with half sleeves and short.length bottoms are slated to live dads add grads cool. ~ bights. INTRICATE STaIPES ENLIVEN THIS DESIGN -Thia cott.on and polyester oxford ah.lrt combi.nel 9tripee tr_, white, gray and blue oo a pale pink bacqround. It features a 3-incb bUtton-down collar md fully cut short sleeves with a singJe cbe9t pocket. Americans cboOSe practlca_I gifts dad might need -or just clothes to make warm brand and varietal f~. days more comfortable. =erence. Not a bad Mo 1 t gifts are (Strong accent on either, if you've put practical, which la why, comfort meena a 11fc .-, off ahoppln& until the aocording to the Faths'1 on CM\W weer.) IMt minute. ~ bottle Day Couacil'• l•S•$ lua up-and-ozcr ltol'e on the comer cm retearch, nearl1 ...._.. eltolee la tQU ~ •ve dad'• day. quarters of all the peejll eolo1ne, aft• b9" 'lbla ii a ~JMCI ~ti0!1ed replied .. , 1 o ti on•, a k la· cue world and we1re a nation u., live dlid 1011dl 1 ~ Tbe ii ol lpOl't buff:a. SO, if your to-...r. ....,_ '1~l/ ~• cllld .,.. in for acUve Aad tiace FatlMi'I -.. me. ...-. tbAa la the tbne'"11D 0., -al the ct-. a. luxwY md .-bim a mw putts, of ---. when dlid II •• D. a ti 0 n. t b.e I. --OI' tenDla baDI. 1hlfU:~ara to a "ll)Odies" provide. No flihl~ar, bo.,,trac warm~ lifeltyle, djd.,,.. Ml enouch. c · 1fln1 l\llt or be aeecla juat about You've 1ueaHd it. . U. .-• ~ Wlwend ~are bic and on. Sporte thlrta, drett favorite., t.oo. And ao Another Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 -3 l • • Outdoor· ··.Living Specials-for Dad Extra Low Prlce1lll Th••• prices wlll not b• repeated after. the 1rand openln1 In Anaheim 'Hiiis. Look for the G,anit:OpellJlltt . ad Thurs., 6-17-12 In the Dally Piiot. r (All models are priced with cart and Including either hatural· gas with 12-quick connect hose or LP Including .tank.) This model features an e~tra large grlll, double burner, porcelain grids. Automatic Ignition and more. '299" WESTClfF PLAZA 1024 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach (17th It IMM) '42·1133 r I I . - 4-Man In Your Ufe -A Supplement to the DAIL y PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 - Popular windsurfing -ltiexpensl,,e, Safe · By JANINE FIDDELU: -........ 9ectklM lclltot' Summer Ume means beach time along the Orange Coast. Put the shoreline glistening with well-oiled bodiee ts the sight of sail boards bobbing up and down in the IU.rf -windsurfini has hit the coaatline. Whether the tport i• actually cl.aasified as flying, sailing or surfing isn't known. the movements however seem effortless and the sport quite popular. According to Reed Lockheart of Matlack Windsurfing, the reuon for Vlindsurfing's popularity lies in four · advantages: it is inexpensive, convenient, and safe and it appeals to all ages and kinda of people. "A couple looking to purchase windsurfing equipment will f1nd that lt is relatively inexpensive," said Lockheart, "ln fact most of tliie expense lncu.rred is in the initial purchase.'' According to Lockheart, there are few follow-up costs. The boards are relatively maintenance free and the tail need onlt-Pe replaced every two or three )'ears during heavy uae .. Slip or storage fees are USUally unnecessary, becaUle the boards and tails are light and oompact and can be stored at home. Because windsurfing equipment can be secured to the top of· a car, there is no need for a trailer. The windsurfing equipment can also ·be launched single handedly . In terms of safety, windsurfing 90 far has an excellont record. Many of its parttci pants claim that it ii one of the safesi, water sports around. "Because most people surf in sheltered water ways, there are very ·few injuries," said Lockheart. "The only times there have been real problems are when surfers uae poor judgment and go out ln unfavorable weather. But this happona in other water sports as well.'' However, Sargeant Russell Bradley of the Orange County Harbor Patrol said windsurfing does pose one safety problem. BecaJJSe the surfer at times has limited control over his board. he can fall unexpectedly and become a hazard to hi.m8elf and other vemela. to operate in the Main Federal Channel -running from the harbor entranc& to the turning ~ -thus e!lmlnatipg the hazard to them1elves and other veetela. "This ruling has been in effect for several years," said Bradley, "but it has been only recently with the upsurge of participants that it has been strictly enforced. However, there have been no tickets given - only verbal warnings." Windsurfing is a great way to meet people, Lockheart said. Unlike other sports that limit participation to a specific age or aex, windsurfing eeems to appeal to all ages and types. Lockheart has seen windsurfers u ~ounc as seven or eight and as old aa70. · · And, it-la a nuaconception that strength ia necessary. Statistics show (See WINDSURFING, Pa1e 14) EVERYONE'S DOING n -Windsurfing is a great way to meet people because it aeems to appeal to all ages and types. Technique seems to be the key to mastering the sport, not brute strength. Becau.e of a recent court dedsion, the board is not considered a veaee1, . but an aid to swimming. With this rullnl{, wlndsurfen are not allowed PEACEFUL·EFFORTLa8~ -Whether it is flying, sailing or surfing no one is quite sure. ............... is lure i9 that the sport seems almost effortlessri - and getting more and more popular e_very day. W"11 a FREE~ for two to TAllTII By Enjoying the Luxury Services of ~dl~~~NSi; .... I ..... u I...... .... 1 ... .. . • ...... ,. 1 ..... . ...... ----...-~· . .. -.. __,_ ___ ........ ·-. -·--·--....... _._.. __ .. _ . " ...... • ... --··-,._ ....... _ .. _ -· -·· • -l Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 -5 G.etaway vacations Affordable answerS 10-vacation questions . . By JANINE FIDDELKE .................. It's summer and a man'• fancy turns to far away places. He aeeks affordable answers to vacation queltiona. Where do I go to be pampered and aet away? How can· I give my wife nne attention and escape the office calll? How can I ,et away with the family and sUll feel at home? Elcaping alarm.clocks, traffic jams and other Dooby prizes of civilization is not alwaYB easy. For the~ man, who is anxfom to be pampered and does not want to waste time plannmc itineraries or caJculaUng expenw, a Club Med vacation in Mexico might be the answer. For about $900 a man can spend a week in the relaxing atmosphere of Pla}'a Blanca> Mexico. ., "A Club Med vacation is an all- incluaive package," said Jeanne Porro, a travel C for Travel Network in Costa "The entire- vacation is paid for u=~ are DO hidden COits. - meals, rocmw and Bctivities -is taken care Of." · Amid the red. yellow and purple 00.1pinvilleaa that tumble down the hillsides, the vac~tioner can go horseback rid:(i picnicking. There is aJao in the h:L~ waten -Of Chamela y and . on the palm..studded cove beaches. Club 'Med vacations always have a good mix of people and entertainment, said Porro. A perfect Plp"for the sincle man to get a'!Kay. i:MJIDetimes even the beat-~ vacatiom caqnot eteape the naaina phone calla fJ'QIJ) the office.-llut perhaps a cruise on the serene, untroubled wa-. .IP Alaska mJcbt give the vacatiming couple a bit of privacy. • For about $2,400 a couple can a week taking in the fine8t y of nature imagi™"hle. ain, a cruille is an all-inclusive vacation where everytb1ng but tips are paid for up-front. The blolation of the cruise ships from shore can Practical gifts (C011till1ed from Page Z) -anything from an instant camere to film for tlie pamera be already owns. Give. something to make the home computer a game center, model-making kits, tools for the do- it-youraelf dad, an album for his coin or stamp collection. Let your knowledge of your qad ~_your guide. U be fancies hi.mlelf a terrific chef, he might go for eome new cookint gilllnlick. And lf he's a horticu4ure hobbyist, a prden guide and 80IDe fools could be just the thine. r ,~& ~~; ::'t.!: IUDClell. w a areiiUnl c:an1. (More tmn 100,000.000 di tie .m out tlUI year, IO be Mll'e JOU'N CDUJlted ...... lbe mid 1111). And if ,.,.. put ~.~'°°on~t:k.~t!.*"au: ~-----,.....,.bid. .......... t .... al aD Tai ... your JIM. • provide a couple with privacy and cut the busineaaman off from virtually all intemlptiona. ~agnilicent glaciers, sheltered waterwaYB and hemlock forests are just a few of the sights the · vacationers Will view. But the activity aboard the ahiP' 18 as vatjed as the BCenery, said Porro. In f.act, ""there is more than enough to keep the buliDNllJ'Wn busy, so he won't in1aa work too much. Finding a place to vacation with the family can be difficult. A condominium on the beautiful Hawaiian island of Maui could be the right home away fnlm home. For about $2,800 a family of four can spend a week on the island amid its vivid colors and beautiful acenery. "One of the drawbacks of vacationing with ~n is having to run out to the coffee shop few even a glass of juice," .said Pono. ''With a condominium, many of the meals can be prepared the.re, saving money and restaurant fuss." • A condominium gives the family a chance to hike on the beach, swim and go snorkeling. The nightlife of the ci~y is also nearby for the parents. Regardless of a man's family situation, a travel ageqcy can provide him with a world of places to explore. It also makes a great casual pant, because It is dura· ble, Ughf;welgkt, and comfortable. Perfect for / · ~e active maft, or as Storekeeper Michael Bueche suggests, for the man whojust wants to relax. Ayallable In 10 colors. father's Day ..• Sunday, June 20th. A store that offers f1ne ~rasf IUonal sportswear for men. women and boys • BankAmericardlM.ter Charge . W11t Mff Plau f -· - • - I 4 ~ -...:<::" ·,~ ~r -7 ;.--::-;.-~/ / .. ,, 6--' Man In Your Life -A SUPJ?lement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 . NautiGal· look mea'.ns handsome decorating ,,. Aa long 'u the nautical look in f.ashions is in. why not extend that handsome style to interior fixtures and decor in the form of a gift for a dad or a grad? The nautical theme isn't confined to the many veaaela along the Orange Coast. It is~ into many· offices and homea hy interior ..decorators, aome of whom specialize in the nautql theme. , Brass fa popular, and bluee, dark greens, beiges, and tam are often used in decorating with a salty theme. The nautical theme is being carried into offices and homes by decorators. Old lanterns, cJoclCs. and charts ~ u.ed, as are parts of old boats, chart \ tables, and al-Jp's hatches. Teak and mahogany are popular and deck chain and old desks are often choeen for furnishinp. Among types of wallpal!tt U8ed .are OIM with rope on the paw and a new vinyl wall covering with a suede effect. Boaters, meanwhile, aren't blterested in becoming "slaves" to the upkeep of the appolntmenta on Uleir pleasure Ve98eJs. (See NAUTICAL, Page 8) mi:r:::::~T.7:~:::::;!~~~~~~~~~ NAU'nCALLY HANDSOME -The decor of La Fitte Yachts, Inc., designed by decorator Nelly , .... The Dally Piiot cefebratn the wrtval of.the Pageant of Masten with a sped•I tablofd, full color supplement publlshlng Wednelday, July 7. The section wHI be a guide for 86,000 affluent readers on entertHvnent and spec.Jal ewnts as the an colony of Laguna comes alive durtng tfte -..nmer motldd. In llddtdori. •xtr• copies wHt be distributed at businesses and shuttle stops throughout ~ leKh, .. well at at the P9.nt ttsetf. .,.., .............. ·Kelly, shows tasteful use of fixtures and furnishings for a total. ef feet of nauti~ luxury. MR .. ,. _ .. _,._....,....__ ... ----------..... ---. ---~--· Man In Your life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 18, 1982 -7 HARBOR 0 CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. (AT WILSON). COSTA MESA OVER 40 STORES TO SERVE YOU HARBOR CENTER MERCHANTS DINltG .. ,. ENTERlAllECT Chuck E. Chaaw Pizza Time Theater "1tte Jofly Roger Phoenix Chinese Restaurant Nick's Italian Pizza and Restaurant E'dwards Twin Cinemas <Flipper Fantasy ,.., Game Arcade The Hot Dog Plaze APPAIEL J.C. PwiMY Olmenslons In Fashions Kida Mart Mon Amie Brldala and Formals The Male Man For Y9U Windsor Sport Shops The Shle Hut It's A Diiiy K&B Sportswe~ Kirk Jeweler Harbor at Wilson Costa Mesa ~46-5021 t.ISCELLANEOUS Thrifty • Crown Books Wallpapers To Go Olympic Sales Company K.C. 's Hallmark Shop Singer Costa Mesa &Ming Center Richards Beauty qonege Vito & Marla's Custom Alterations Winter Beauty Supply Harbor Center Cleaners The Cobblers Bench Harbor Center Stylist Harbor Center Lock & Key Shop Vicki's Sunshine Factory Enterprise Rent-A-Car Executive World Travel Dr. Kleine-Optometrist Holiday Health Spa Register · BAKER ST. FINANCIAL INS111UT10NS ~AD~A~M~s~:Av~e-.~fM!~C::::::::=w Crocker National Bank Security Pacific WILSON ST National Bank a-;;~-.-..-11--~--~--. Columbia Savings Glendale Federal Savtnos..,.. ..... ...._. ......... ---~ ... FOR DADS and GRADS. Exotic WOOds Ezperienc. the acntementl 1 or your writin9 inltruments, chOOM one of m beautiful Jiardwooda . •lected &om around the world for · •· workability, ltrength, appearance. ffaUmar)t Wood W ritin9 lmtrumenta feature walnut, cordia, .wenoe, roeewood, tuJi~ood and teak. MS.• aet. SU.SO pen or pencil. u• 1uM1 aw. •· larMI C..ttr K.C."/ ~-Jr.. /HOP. Inc . • c.ta ... nq: •••.w MAN, me~ an unu.ual men'• dUcount store GIFTS FOR GRADS & DADS . SAVE 20~· -40% Jordache Robert Bruce Haqqar ,..... Anqela Flight Le Tigre Arnold Palmer Jockey Royal Copenhagen Givenchy Jimmy Connori Joshua " ,. . I I I I · j I l J f l 1 ~ I I I I i ' . 8-Man In Your Ufe -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 • Nautilus Equipment • Olympic Weights • life Cycles & Monarch Bikes • Luxury Locker Facilities ' • Co-Ed Sauna, Steam & Jacuzzi • 7 Aerobic .Passes Daily Coupon Expires 6/20/82 ~!),s99 Full Price v-• 1 YEAR "8&RSJW> ~ Coupon Expires 6120/82 ~ .. '45 Full Price • 1 MONTH TRIAL fBIOS. CALL 675-.1:171 Nautical look provides sharp decor (Continued from Page 6) So they go for sturdy, serviceable items. But that doesn't mean nautical fixtures aren't attractive. On the contrary, the lamps, tables, clocks, barometers, wind instruments, and carpeting are handsome additions. Nautical fixtures are stury, serviceable items but still attractive. Mirrors are often used to expand .. and brigh.n the dark, close quarters. Also popular are holders, hooks, and items that can stay flattened against bulkheads. Many boaters are interested in nooks for books and bookends to help secure them. There is also often room for a small painting in some vessels. Oil on glass is popular. All are good gift ideas for those who love the water. SEEING THE LIGHT -Classy lanterns, old and new, are popular Hems in nautical decoration schemes. Tltey can be used for lighting or as conversat1on pieces. - ------,_ ____ •. -·-·-_._...... -----... -.. -Dad, mom team in household effort Family life has gone through a trauma during the past couple of decades, jolted by 50Cial upheavals that most of us can recall. Father, who at the turn of the century was an unchallenged dictator of family discipline, is now an equal partner in the management of the family and its affairs. So how come be lost his authoritarian posture? He didn't 80 much lose it as he gracefully sought help -in bringing home the bread and in making the weighty decisions that m odern parents have to mafc:e nearly every day . ~ And there was mom -able, confident, aroused by the challenges of greater -Opportunities for self- fulf illmen t , new educational opportunities, and expectations for henelf and the family that only two incomes could make oome true. Naturally, when mother helped support the family, she got an equal vote in dec:i.ding the ~ of the family fortunes. She came on as an equal for the first time, taking on the burden of a job outside the home, while still managing the affairs of the household. Well, managed them with the help of dad. Todiy, that wonderful gruff old grouch is beginning to show his ~ and appreciation. He does the laundry, vacuums the floor, broils the chops, even whips up a mean salad. So~ of today's dads are asking , for, and getting paternity leaves: time off alter the baby comes, to learn about the newborn and do some of the diapering and feeding - maybe while mother is out on the job market. And it's about time. Why should mom have all the fun? And why shouldn't dad pull his oar with equal strength, helping to steer the family to a better life thf'ough greater participation? Today's families are be tte r unified, have more interests, and likely as not, do more things together t.lian ever before. And dad, as a functioning member of the family, is adding his strength, . knowledge and experience to the job of living in the most Complex 80Cial order the world has ever .een. Long live the dads of this country who are now doing their thing, and doing it well when it comes to full. ti.me ''family-ing." ._ H·ob5y CC!n be .. boost ror father's health Want to do something really significant for dad on "his" day? Start him on a hobby. Doctors for decades have extolled the therapeutic value of a driving interest to compensate for dimini.abing work. aa an aid to good health. nie necie.ity for individuals to have a hobb~ as a safety measure-la becoming more and more emential aa everyday life becomes more complex and more demanding emotiqnally. A bobby, to be benetidal, doesn't have to be complicated. It can be 90mething as simple aa reeding a book or listening to records. In choosing a book for dad, try to select one on a subject you know he will be interested in. If yd\.l decide on a record album, you will find there are many types available.· There are recordings from the sound tracks of movies, albums of every type of music from clenical to avant garde, how-to albumt on a myriad of subjecta and hilarious comedy records. If you are thinking of a more elaborate lift, you can include a recarcl .,.. with the albums. N~ paintine ia a very popular -p ti . lt is an wy way a dall new lll'tillt to develop b1a lldlll. Once he bi. ''wet bJa feet,'' he cu bnach out Imo man a.tive llWlbodl.. Miiiie ldtl are another way to introduce the novice to creative endewon. The--of echlewmmt II qu&a. •tldJlnc. to la)' noddnc al the llll!D1 ........... lhlnp tMt C8D ....... a ... , --coin collecttna an pnp4er ....... that _. to • e' ~!"J men, and"they .... llllllllllMlll'Z• MYS 'end -tar DO coll~on is ever complete. If your pop likes to putter, there are many tools on the market for the home craftsman. No matter how many toola dad baa, he can always I.lie more. Another idea is a por-trai t photograph of dad's BOn or da\.&8hter that he can keep throughout the year. This gift will give him aa much pleasure a year from now aa it did the day he recelv~ it. Ball game big activity on · Father's Day -Just about any place you Uve, there's a ,.atber's Day baseball game. In big cities and small U1'tms, on sand lots and in backyards, bueball is as American aa Old Glory -and just about as revered an institution. But takina a dad out to the ball jlU'k Ill jL9t one oJ the thlnea that we do Oil htber'• Day, according to rneereb juet completed by the Father's Day Coouncil. The next blgeat activity la a family IK-'°led* most oftetl • b(g dinner at home. (&:;;;; 80IDethinj Wre 78 millian poui!dl of beef are IOld far the J'ather'a Day~ a pd auw •that tbe bsbeque .,oil wm tile wwldal &W•dma ..,..lbm .....-,.) ~-~~~....,,. 11r111atflltlll91 •-~•••..._ ... cllld -the phaM .., wtlb lllm ,....._ .... \ Each year, over one mWJon 1bc National Committee for Amctican c:N.ldtcn sul'cr &om Prevention ol Qilld Abuse ls a child lbusc. Over 2,000 c:hUdttn private, charitable orpnization dAc from IL that knows bow to pttYent child But what about those who lbuse. survive? But WC need your hdp to do iL Stadsdcs show that an abused We need money. We need dilldhood pn ~a person's volunteers. entire life. Send us your cbcdt today, or Many tCCNF drug addicts and write for our booklet. tecnaac prosttn.iu;s report~ Because ifwc don't all start abused children. "'lomewbctt, WC WOO 't get So do Juvenile ~ucnts and anywbctc. aduJt criminals. ft Yet we now know that child llllh 11 I Cl ••lttM fw . abuse am be prevented. Prlflllill If l*IN Mlle • . ·' 10-Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 Program p:rovl~e~ presci'lpllOri fOr fitness The problem fac:iol mmt .or.nae Cout men conoemed about their fitne. ii not eo mudl a weight problem u a fat problem. , And, while most -Coast men may be more fit than their counterparts in other parts of the country, they still ha~ a way to. flO to achJeye an excellent or even 1ood condition level, aid Jbn Mcllwain. direct.or of Oranae Coast College's exercise science Laboratoey. "Sometimes scales are m.Uileedtng,''. aaid McDwain,, noting that a man who weighed 150 poundi in colle1e may atlll weigh 150 pounds at age 45, but h._ve 10 " pen-ent more body fat. "You lo8e mUllCie tillue And gain fat tissue as your body is changing," • · he· said. But a program of aensible eattna and regular exerciae can revene that trend. "We do have oqr share of · aedentary people -. with~ too much body fat. Weicht is not the problem, olt'1 body composition," aaid MdlWllin. ~ with too much fat otten find it up front and the ' poor abdomlna.l tone is genera·ny accompanied by poor flexibility in . the back, leading to a lower back ~ . . "Many men have weak abdominal If you stretch to improve flexibility, you feel more relaxed and you are ·-likely to be injured. ''Thia-ls eep,edally important if you, are on a 12gging program," said McDwain. 'Only in the last couple of years have people put out good lnfon:nation on this." In fact, there are four important factors to be conside1'!d by thole planning a program of endurance training, lie said. -The frequency of training - recommended to be three to five days a week. -The buensity of-~ -60 to 90 percent of maximum heart rate reserve or 50 to 85 percent of maximum oxygen uptake. -The duration of training -15 to 60 minutes of continuous aerobic activity. -The mode of activity -any (See FITNESS, Pqe 11) muacles and tight back mueclea, ao they have to work on tightening their stomach muscles and stretchbfg the back muscles to increase flexibility,',. McDwain said. "Flexibility isn't stressed enough. FIT~ ANALYSIS ~ Athlete Mark Gritton is given a graded exercise test during which oxygen consU1')1ption is calculated and blood pressure is monitored. lnstructQr Charlie Appell con~cts the test at Orange Coast College. . dad'.5 day,jum 20th from our kse ~ lab:z.l. col lciction, ultra J~t pincon:i 8.lit ... . . \ . ;·POOL SRA DECK S12 #400 COIPLETE 'ANY SHIPE YOU WANT UP TO 90 FT. PERIMETER -420 SQ. FT. L l~"l'll .... 421.._ll.W,....._,,,,, .... ' -IS.11t1t'ft'•111._ .................. . 2. lllel It ..... -• tt "' ................ It,... ..... l.M---~-tllltla. ~ 17.Allla..•111rt~......_ ._,.,,....,...,rr_, ... ~.,. ... ..,. "'~ ........ ....-..... ~ .. it-.a_. .... ,S:;,_.._ ..... ._ .. .. ................. ir........... ... ....... , ... ,,._............................ .... ....... ,.. .......... 2 .... .... 1 ........................ _..,. ....... . &111..,,..,....., .. ..,,......._ 20.,...........,.~ , ....... _ ...... .__........ ~-•uaic...a-c-.. 10.• ... 11.0.t ............ 2......... .... ....... -• ft=:-.==.-::.. ..... .-. IL c 'T:"..=f.=~p=-~ =:;t:r ... •,-;...,..r=r.; .,_.,....., Olllll ~ WE SPICIAIZI ·IN THI FOLLOWING: * f~EE CUSTOM DESIGNS * ROCKSCAPE POOLS * SOLAR tDTIC & INSTALLATION *FENCING & PATIO COVERS * TtDAPEUTIC SPAS *WRITTEN C<lft.ETION DATES .. F:itness ~.analyzed -• in college program (Cootlnaed from Page 10) • activity that uses large muscle When you build muscle, you begin groups, that can be maintained losing inches instead of pounds, continuously, and is rhythmic and ·because muscle is heavier than fat. aerobic in nature. . · • · A pound of muacle occupies le. Examples of this type of exerciae •. space in your body than a pound of include running, jogging, walking;, ·fa\. You wear smaller siz.e clothes hiking, swimming, skating ,. ~en though the acales indicate your bicycling, rowing, cross-country weight is the same. skiing, rope skipping, and various· Exerciae ICience labs like the one endurance game activities. at Orange Coast College provide U consideration iln't given t.o the9e fitness analysis for students factors, then the incidence of injury · enrolllng in personal fltneu goes up, said Mcllwain. programs. . · . For instance, he said, a rule of The evaluation prosram at OCC thumb for non-alhletea is the includes a graded exercise test "conversation test." . during which oxygen consumpt:Min ia If you can't talk continuoualy calculated and an electrocardiolr while jogging, you're pushing it too and bloOd pn!8IW'e' are monitored; much. pulmonary tetta; neuromU.1Cular Exerche helpe shed weight by tests of strength and flexibility; and · burning calories, increaain~ ailCUlaUon of body fat and mu8cle metabolism, building muacle, an ~i u d e n t s a r e g i v e n a n controlling appetite. individualized exercise program For aeveral hours after YQU ~P · which they carry out using physical exercising, your body's metaboliiri> ~tion facilities on campui. is increued. which means you are ~ 35 years old and older and burning calories at a faster rate. all thoae who have questions about Alao, muacle is very active ~ their health or w:ho are heavy and bums more calories than iner\ smokers, Mave b.lgb blood prellUl'e, tat. heart d.iaeue, elev•ted blood Upim In their haste t.o loee weight, amne or obesity must receive approval alao Joee-muacle tmue by following a from their physician before diet too low in calories. Thia foroe9 participating in th~ graded exerciae the body to bum both fat and muacle· test. . · for -energy. Die ticiana and. All participants are encouraged to nutritionima recommend one to two obtain their physician's approval pounds each week< u 11 safe weight before 'beginning their exercise loes. ~ program. VIDEO, IOVIES SPOIEI HERE • No C .. t0 loln1 -.... IS tip .... • 1000•1 et ...... ., ••h. • r ..... . EVALUATION -An electrocardiogram f.s part of the evalwation program at the exercise science laboratpry' at Orange Coast College. Physical education instructor Darryl Cox checks participant before test begins. \ ' For Father's Day Choose a gift from our excellent collection of silk neckwear from 'Robert Talbott and other fine makers. Offered in stripes, foulards and clubs in all of Dad's Favorite colors. ) ' .. - - I I I I I ! t I l ~ ' I ... r --..... -~--------.._. ___ .,.-.,.....,., ..... , ~.~ ...... -=-_...~=, ~ 12-Men In Your LH• -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wedneeday, June 18, 1982 I I I I I I I . I • I ••• F~ther's day dilemma ' ' .GREAT NEW WAY TO CATCH -SUMMER FUii! 'l!a0KODAK ulSC . 4000Camera Capture the lun and wn shou you may have been missing. Technology so advanced, you press one button, the camera does the rest. Automatic fllm advance. plus automatic flash wnenever you need more light. Full Five-Year Warranty on camera and Ultralite energy source.• OUTFIT s49•s ONLY /ttelUdn 2 dllCI Of KODACOl.Oll HR OISc Flint ,. I K--;.a L j 'Ml w fOr detlMI on ....-. FM-YQr WllrrlfttY. """"° '*""" doeln't -·· w1l wtCtl nonMI ur9. rltum It to UI, lllCI ~ -......... It~ cNrOI. VIA ~ LIE>O D R UGS M4S via. Udo• new"°"' IMMlch •phone 67M1SO More gift ideas to choose from Pipe Gifts 1bere are hundreds of good gift acceMOries you can cbooee for the pipe smoker on your list. These include racks, humidors, special pipe ash trays, pouches, pipe tools, pipe lighters and amoct.ed other items .. which your pipe smoker will , enjoy receiving. Give Dim a Gilt Certificate! ------------ I , I l Country Traditionals ~fi.//JJ)/ -~:71'/1 7 ( p,)/ FatMr'1 Day Stoeklag He enjoys the outdoor fiahinf· and-camping life, but you d on t know what he needs in the way of gear? You can make a fun family project out of filling a Father's Day atocldng. Take the children to your local camping equipment store. You'll be amazed at the wealth of aoce.tries in the mall, inexpensive category. Pllote Portrait How time seems to fly. First Christmas, then Valentine's Day and Easter. By the time June and Father's Day oomes, your ideas for gifts are usually just about exhausted .. This year, think about giving the father in your house a portrait photograph of his 110D or daughter that he can keep throughout the year. This gift will give him as much pleasure a year from now as it did the day be received it. Gift Dad wlda 8lt BlrdaltHe A very special and personal gift is that of birthstone jewelry -not only does the gem sianify the month of the wearer's birth, it al80 bas a special meanJng all ita. own. A ring mt>unted with dad'a own birthstone is a very special way of saying, "Happy Father's Day." These are the appropriate stones for (See MORE IDEAS, Page 13) The classic V-neck pullover nts \ ~ into every man·s wardrobe. , ".t .., especially in the beautiful array · f. -~ ~) of colors offered by Country ~ ' ~ Traditlonals for Spriog/Summer -• •• ~ '82 Full-fashioned. 100% ...... ·: .-;;;_.- Orlon Is easy care and easy wear Sizes Med .. LQe. XL EIQht Lovely Colors, $32.00 ' .. , I -Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 -13 . More gift ~deas for dad • • • (Continued from Page U) each month of the year, and their significance: January is the month of the garnet, which symbolizes constancy. February's stone, the amethyst, stands for sincerity. March birthday people can be gifted with either aquamarine, signifying courage, or bloodstone. April is the month of diamonds, for innocence. May has the emerald for its stone, and it spells love and 8UCCefla. June has three birthstones: Pearl, alex.andrite, and moonstone for health and longevity. July, the month of the ruby, calls for contentment. · • August has the peridot as its atone\ Signifying married bappinelia. September people should wear sapphire; it stands, for clear thinking. . October has two birthstones, the opal and tourmaline, for hope. November is the month of the topaz, the gem of fidelity. December bouts two gems, the turquoise an~ the zircon, for prosperity. . Tell dad the meaning of his birthstone as you ·gift him. for a bonus good wish thia Father's Day. 11 Fatller Scats-Ible? Dad's special day is a 20th Century deve!f>pment, but fathers have • gratefiilly accepted gifts of fragrance all.. through history. In fac:t, the only time that Western man didn't fragrance his skin, his clothes or the air he breathed was d\¢ng the Dark Ages. Then c.ame the Renaissance ana men saw the light. Today's dad _is eV"en more enlightened, of eourse, because be wears fragrance in several fonns. So, gift him wi~ his favorite acents. For Handy Dads Maybe once 1n lifetime, dad will get a gi.f t from mom and the kids that really rings the bell If this is the year of the great gift for dad, serious consideration might be given to a complete portable power tool ~kit. Groomlag Kit Gift This Father's Day, give 80IDething dad can appreciate,.. whether he's a fisherman, a ~p oollector or a birdwatcher -a grooming kit to keep in his desk or locker at work. Attractively decorated, stocked with useful items, the kit can be assembled with lnaximum pride of creation by your yOUDgJJtera. All your child needs 'ill a sturdy container such as a cigar or shoe box, paste, sciHora and imaginative materials to trim the kit. Into the kit can go many helpful ootlnexpensi~i~msdadwould like for freshening up at work. For hand care, there could be curved nail acis8Qn; an emery board and a nail brush. Tissues, deodorant and a razor are other items dad might like to ~v.e on the job. HOBIE CATS · ARE HERE! HOBIE 18 From ·s3995 OBIE'i& from $1800 Use yoar 1ma,mat10D! Father's Day gifts with little chance of going back to the store are a cartridge siphon-bottle for the bar so that he'll never run out of fizz water. A battery operated tide timer for the sailor or a little world alarm clock that gives the hour in cities around the world for the traveler. How about a vacuum carafe so that he can keep coffee, tea or soup hot on his desk (and still the dieter's hunger pangs). A set of hunter-style steak knivet to fit a big-handed grip like dad's. Maybe a electric hand steamer for dewrinkling a suit before· the big meetings would be a great idea for the business man. Regardless of wbat yo. get dad be tare to remember him OD ill special day. THE M~T ~ALU ABLE GIFI' you can give Dad -and the least expensive -is your affecdon. Show him how much you love him on his -<lay oLdayst_ _ -1 Denim '\den:em\n t A "'81 ~ ballc OOllOn Of blencl9d lctlric. The fatlr1c • Is _., alOtlle Cll'd ls pcpJar for al types" gormenlll lion\ ~ c:lolle$ IQ ~(Wld ~..,._. . 2 Aooatet*M~used :.cs~=~ ·Ats Garage; 'lbur Denim Stofe for Dads Doy ... A Le-A ~50r Slvtnk·to-111 t:)Qsjc denim. 8. Let Rider, Slrolghl leg dlrin. C. Leo.4-tor-Men. ""8ICtl der«n. D. a:iMn IC1ein. i4 oz. denim. -c .. , I f I I I I I l I l I J ·1 _, .. c: 14-Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the OAtLY PILOT, Wednesday, June 16, 1982 'Hea·d hunters' compete tor 'plums' In an economy where gloomy talk often pnvaUa, there are bright apota -including Jobe for en,ineera and data prooe-'ng ~- Defenae contrat:ta are cauaing employment in California'• bil ~ industry to grow -and "bunten". (recruiten) aee1c1.,. quaHn,ct ellip)oyeee for their cl.lent companies are c..o~peUng enerptically. . A hiCblY ngarded encineerinl "plum" ta.a a top notch aaidemlc back~nd, five to 10 yean of experice in the field. and irobebly enjoys 18CWity clearance for Werk on cenatn defeme related projllda. He or she is an intelligent, mature, confident individual who knows the job scene in h1a or her field but may not be actively looking for a new situation. In fact, be OI" ahe " likely to be very involved in a project and difficult for the head h\lnter to reach. For the head hunten, getting there (to the en1lneer or data proceulng pro1rammer) fint ia important, • la rapport and the heed hunter's relatiamblp with h1a client ~.f:;~t. (or protpeetll) .rwt iO ............... TAKING A DIVE -Sometimes the windlurfer hM limited control over IHI board and can fall unexpectedly, but practice makes perfect for the beginner. · -. Windsurfing appeals to all' kinds and ages of people the head hunter," said Ch\tek Borunda, pn!Sident of Professional Recruiting Conaultanta of Co~na del Mar. "They're aenaitlve to whether you're tight with the client company. ~Y want to be sure they have a Je8itimate entree, not just a oourtmy interview with the wrong' people at the wronc time." he said. In the cue of the dlUicult-to- reach p"roapect with a aecurity deu'ance, u. interview .ometlmea l"ftle!Dble1 a me.a match. '"We can't talk as much, but there la certain ~ that does not compromise the security nature of the work," said Borunda. Growth and participation 1n the client fiJ:m'a program project:a are key points of interest to many applicanta. Alao bnportant are the technolasy, stability, and philosophy of • management (la it "forward thlnldn4J?''), said Borunda. Meanwhile, the pay range for experienced englneen ~ from $30,000 per year to tl0,000 for the IDOlt IOUCht after appUcanta. It's a buyer'i market for eJl8lneen. • .... a.one -IET1ll'fS PRICES FROM ~L~~!~e with Purc:hMe of bcMlrd) 2aO W. COAST HWY. NIWPC?IT llACH, CA 631-7574 . We are now the EXclusive retailer of Hickey Fr.eemane Clothing on the Newport Peninsula z -VIA CJPOl!TO. IMWPOllT -I j:;I ONll DM. y ~ (714) 675-1 71 7 -=---~ 1M i j ~~ ~ OIYINCMV tJmljlfj• 0..-........ ~ Cl.ra.tiaa Diot • LANVIN ' Man In Your Life -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, W4tdneed8)', J~ 18, 1982 -15 BUSINESS HOURS DUR-NG SALEI WEEKDAYS -10-7:30 SAT. & SUN. -10-6:30 • • \ ,. ,. 18-Man In Your Ufe -A Supplement to the DAILY PILOT, Wedneeday, June 18, 1982 - You'll appreciate the quality -the claulc loob -the brancla J'OU , know to tnuL Come .... ~ • while ou're.ahopplns lot the MAN IN YOURUFE. .. WI l ll~I .11 f\ I llJ NI 11. 1 '•11.' DlllJ ll'llot ,..... .,, u. ...,,.. MOD~L MONUMENT -Fountain Valley sculptor-designe~ Jim Ruhl displays the model for the walled city fountain that community leaders ho~ to build in front of City Hall. City quenched? Valley may get its fountain By PHD. SNEIDERMAN OftM DelJNet•Wt Jim Ruhl, a designer-sculptor who moved to Fountain Valley just 10 months ago, wanted to do IOmething special for bis new bOme town. :SO Ruhl agreed to design the ol)e civic ornament Fountain Valley sorely lacks: a ci ty fountain. .Ruhl's model was unveiled to f&Vorable reviews last weekend during the city's 25th birthday ceiebration. Now, ,say ·local boosters, the ctiallenge is to get Fountain V~lley's fountain built and pumping with no help from the city treasµry. Past attempts to build such a m o n u m e n t h a v e b e e r. unsuccessful, but community leaders are hoping the civic spirit roused during the recent bii'thday celebration will help see ~ ~aternity leave nix ed S ACRAMENTO (AP) -The at6te Asaembly has defeated a ~ to allow fathers up to u weeks off work -without J>9 -to be with their babies. :Aslemblyman Art Agnos, D- Sln Franciaco, said Tuesday his AB3370 would give fathers a " JMlt,emity leave without the risk of;lolln8 their jobs, similar to the m~ternity leave guaranteed under state law to mothers. · !!'he bill failed oh'·a 32-36 vote, n£ne abort of the re.quired 41-vote majority.' But Asolos eaid he would ask for another vote later. COUNTY the ject to fruition this time. .. r,o the funds come iq accordingly, we estimate we could have the fountain built by Christm.M," said Woody Young, chairman of the committee coordinating this project. Se~eral hur~les remain, however. First, the fountain committee must obtain approval of the project's design and engineering specifications from the City Council. The council has given preliminary approval to the concept, stipulating that no city funds must be involved. Final consideration is expected later this month. Then the corrunittee must raise about $15,000 in prl~ate donations to build the fountain. Young said the committee wants to have more than half of this sum in hand before construction begins. About $3,000 is already in a special account opened during earlier fountain campaigns'. The tentative location for the fountain is a lawn area near the flagpole ln front of City Hall. Artist Ruhl said he designed the fountain with three things ln mind: "Simplicity, dignity and function." Ruhl said he faced several challenges. One was a wind problem ln front of City Hall. Another was finding a design that would complement the stark, linear design of the exi5ting civic cenler buildings. The artist said he sketched about 600 fountains before settling on a curved stucco wall design that includes an archway. The curved wall shields a simple (See VALLEY, Page A%) Huntinston votes for November H untington Beach casts its vote for city elections in November. Page Bl . TELE VISION ABC's 'Hart' leads way "-ABC'a "Hart to Hart'' was the top-ranked ahow lut week. while CBS won the ratings war. Page A6. I 'Elephants' for family Toallht'1 •-nw x...t Roundup of the Elephantm" featurt • 1pectacular fOOj.el• of elephant hunt• and eY9b • .-.... md .. dllcrlbed .. aood family ~Plll,B7. I I I ¥ ., .. • WWW ts lllTillTll llKl/flllllll llWY UflJ\N(.~ < t>llN I~ < f\l 11-0HNIA 25 CENTS . HB asks cable TV audit Contradictory reports of revenues due city stir action By ROBERT BAR&ER or .. .,... ......... Hunt.tnatOn Beach dty offldala have 'ordered an audit of expenaes and aareementa of the Public Cable Televhlon Authority ln the wake of contradictory reports about revenues due the city. The PCI' A la compri*t of four d.l.recton -dty counc1l members from Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Westmlnater and Stanton. The PCTA oversees construction and operation.a of Dickinson Pacific Cablesystem. Councilwoman Ruth Bailey British warn of tragedy By The Aasoclated Pre11 Britain put pressure today on, Argentina t o dec lare a permanent peace in the South Atlantic, saying hundreds of captured Argentine troops on the Falkland Islands could die of exposure and illness if there is more delay. The warning came from the commander of the British task force after Argentine President Gen. Leopoldo F. Galtieri and his two junta partners were the targets of violent demonstrations Tuesday night by thousands of Argentines angered at the defeat in the Falklands. ~ted en audit to find how ~ tf• spent "in the early yean • of the PCTA. lhe Mid. "I want to find ~t if the• expenaea were leaHlmate and have to be mmbUned by the city," she Mid. Two weeks aao former . Hun tln gton Beach City Councilman Clancy Yoder allo called few an audit after PCTA off.idala announced that the four cities would start gettµlg a total of about $190,000 ln television revenue next January. They are entitled to 3 percent of the company's groee revenues. ,. But that announcement was later retelnded because PCT A staff members apparently made a book.kee.plng error and the cl ties reportedly still owed more than $360,000 to the cable TV •Y•tem to pay back advance paymeltts from 1974-79. Yoder aa.ld he wd' concerned that cities have been paying out money for the start-up of a cable television system since 1974 bu\ still haven't received any revenues from earnings by the oompany. The company advanced the money to the cities to pay costs incurred in slarting up the system. Cities don't receive any revenues until all the advance debts are paid, offlcials said. Yoder aald today he la concerned that the PCTA made agreements to increue advance payments from the television company without the knowledge or consent of the city council. "It seems they have an open hand and can do anything they please," be said. Mrs. Bailey said she wants to find out what agreements have been signed between PCr A and the cable television companr, and wliat tbe city's responSibtllties are. The junta bas said that if Britain reinstates British rule over the iaJands there wUl not be peace in the South Atlantic. In a statement released by the British govenunent in London, Rear Adm. John Woodward said the care of 15,000 Argentine POWs on the Falklanda paeed "a major disaster relief problem." DlllJ ............ .., ..... ,.,_ PEDALERS PROTECTED -Widening of Coast Highway Bridge over the Santa Ana the bike trail-sidewalk on the· ocean side of River has blocked a traffic lane for a month. "The Argentine• must appreciate that I cannot keep their troops dry and warm and fed while we are still subject to attack. They must face the facts and call a halt to all, repeat all, hostilities," Woodward said. Israelis capture PLO· base LebaneS'e Christians lend help to invaders He said the prisoners, BOme of whom have been on the Falklands in wintry conditions since the Argentine invasion April 2, were "already suffering from malnutrition, exposure - in som e cases hypothermia (subnormal body temperature) - trench foo t , scabies a11d diarrhea." Galtieri, forced to cancel a public appearance because of the demonstrations, went on national television to vow Argentina will never accept London's plana to reinstate British rule in the Falklands. He said Britain must not "proceed to establish a colonial regime, with which there will be (See FALKLAND, Page A%) Spotlight on Da d in special section With Father's Day coming up, there's plenty of attention being focused on Orange Coast dads. For information that can help make hi8 day a· special one, tum to today's Daily l>ilot section on The Man ln Your Life. STATE . By Tbe A11ociated· Presa Israeli commandos, ad~ und~r covering shellfire' from Lebanese Christian allies, stormed and cgptu red a Palestinian guerrilla stronghold near the paralyzed Beirut airport today, the state-run Lebanese radio reported. The report said the Israelis took the science faculty campus of the Lebanese University, along the main runway of Beirut lntemational Airport. According to the reports, the action wa1 aimed at eliminating a mapr Palestinian stronghold controlling aooesa to the airport and some of the Pa 1 eat i n e L i be r a t Lon Organization's enclaves in Moslem west Beirut. There were conllicting reports on which forces were \nvolved in the outbreak of shelling and fighting today, which shattered a few hours of relative calm in war-devastated Beirut. , On Tueeday, Israeli and Syrian ~ battled near the airport for four li&lra, breaking a four-day ceaae-fire between Israeli foroea and their Syrian foes .• The Syrian regular army, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area, was not obeerved Voters make the rules Voters ·are oVerruling lawmakers left and dpt I throuBh the referendum procea, aaya columDlat Richard Reeves. Page AS. ' Concert just a 'Dream' A San Diego radio station'• broMtcast of a "Or.m Valley concert of the mind" started many rock tam on a futile aearch for the "concert" and Ql8l"9d law. enforcement au thorities. P-ae &1. BUSINESS intervening in the battle for tl)e science faculty. Private Lebanese radio stations reported that Israeli and Syrian forces were invo v~ in artillery battles elsewhe re in Beirut's mountainous outskirts. But thoae reports were not verified. Israeli commanders said their gunners did not take part School bars two in student prank Two Ocean View High School students will not join their se.nior classmates in graduation ceremonies today because they violated a warning against senior pranks, according to officlals of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. District spokeswoman Lyn Hendenon said the district has not rescinded Ocean View principal George Bloch's decision that students F.ric Reinholtz and Brian Crawford ~annot participate in commencement ceremonies becauae they let the air out of the tires on a achool van. The two ltill will receive their diplomas, ~ officials said. I INDEX Bloch reportedly had warned students that anyone caught taking part in a senior prank would be barred from· th e ceremonies. District officials said such warnings are issued becauae the district has been plagued by destructive senior pranks in past years. The youths were unsucce*ful last week in their bid to convince a Superior Cour t j udge to overturn the school's decision. Mrs. Henderson said she knew of no other pranks at other clistrjct high schools this year thai have resulted ln students being barred from graduation ceremonies. At Your Service A4 Hocoecope B2 B2 ~ a-1 AnnLanden B2 Movim Ca1ifornia A6 Mutual Funda Cavalcade B2 Natiooal Newa O W fled E4-8 Public No"'8 Ccmlcl 86 ~=:Marketa Cl<Mword 86 Death Noticel E4 Televtllon Editorial A8 Thea ten llntertalnlnent _ B5 W-.ther' I Food Dl-10,lll-3 . ,:. \ SPORTS . ~ 1Jod6en wm; AnseJ.. I01e · B5 a ..A3 C4.,C8,E4 Cl--3 CJ B7 B5 A2 .. ' , • The Dod1e ~1 1ot another 1ood pitchin1 .perfanDAnoe ·out of Jerry. aw.-tn downlna a.ft' a... ~i ~"tat Uw Ana-II fell to the Blue .r• at bame, 2-0. P1i1t Cl. . . ,. .. I ' I ~ --------.-_ ...... ---~ __.._...,.. .. _~·-...... ,..._......,........ .. . . ,, .. VALLEY FOUNTAIN . . .. central tountaln bowl from lht wlnd. "The ldta wa1 to croate a f eeUna of warmth and welcome." Ruhl iald. The propoeed fountain would reat on an oval platform of coloi'ed ceramic tUet featurhur a ata.rburtt design. Backen of the project are hoping to attract donon by prornlai1\8 to inscribe their names on the tllea. Fountain boosters claim the monument would coat no more to operate and maintain than the current lawn area on which it would "'9t. Artiat Ruhl said he comes from Pennaylvania, where relidtmta traditionally rally behind projec\I 1uch aa the Fountain Valley fountain. "We're real banM"a18en back there." he said. "My hope la that 1 the citir.ena of thil community can 1et into the 1plrlt of th1a project by volunteering materiall and labor." City firefighters ~ watch eatery burn CLEBURNE, Texas (AP) - Firefighters from this North Texas community watched from their truck parked at the city limita J)B a restaurant about 100 feet away burned to the ground. the road at the city line, too," Perkins said. "U a man fell ln there drowning on the wrong aide of the creek, I guess they'd let. him drown.'' The restaurant is about three blocks from the cent.er of town, Lut Perkins' ~king lot extends to the city limits. Johnson County is divided into rural fire districts. .. • .. Dae I• eu•tody Opium seized by GG poli~ ': .. Ji .. i'tlCkapl of raw opium u woll u 1,200 opium plantt were seized by police ln Garden Grovo and Weetrninater Tueeday and two people were taken into custody Hit movie OK for children DALLAS (AP) -Stephen S p l e 1 b e r g.' a h 1 t m o v i e "Polterg_.e e1i11tt"· · may. contain "blatant, flagrant violence," but a jury says Dallas children should be allowed to see lt without their parents. The jury deliberated for more than an hour Tuesday before declining a request by the Dallas Motion Picture Classification Board to prohibit children under 16 from seeing the movie without parental guidance. followtn1 a thro•-montb lnveattaauon of a Thailand-to· .~ Orana• County 1mu11t"1a operation . .• The two suspect.a, a Laotian · father and eon, were UTett.ed by Gardon Oro.J1,.e police but , We1tmln1ter officen failed to make anticipated arnwta ln their ·· juri1dlctlon. They dld setie packagea from Thatland containing raw opium. . Garden Grove police Sgt.-- Bruce Beauchamp said Chu Ma'-: Moua, 69, and hi.I 80n. Lr Moua, 43, were taken lhto custody after they received a pack.age at their home lat.er found to contain four ounces of raw opium valued at about $5,000. Drug Investigators obtained a search warrant and entered the Moua home after federal drug officials, customs agents and postal inapect.Ors reported that they sus~ drug deliv.eries were taking place there. . • The restaurant's owner said he is furious that the firefighters did nothing to help as he tried to extinguis h the flames with a garden hose Tuesday. · Tommy Wallace, an assistant ch~ef of the Godley Volunteer Fire Department and a paid lieutenant in the Cleburne department, said city firefighters were prohibited by law from fighting fires beyond the city limits. "We called the Cleburne Fire Department~and they just laughed," said Bob Burks, an Arlington resident who recently leased the restaurant from Perk.ins. . Al'~O HUG FOR A HERO -President Regan embraces M/Sgt. Roy Benavidez, a Medal of Honor winner from El Campo, Texas, aft.er he led the pledge to the flag at a $1,000-a-plate fund-raising dinner in Houston to aid the re-election caJJ\paign of Qov-Bill Clements. The 2I-member board sued Metro-Goldwyn Mayer-United Artists Entertainment Co., the film's Hollywood distributor, to c hange the movie's PG classification. Beauchamp said a search of the • house turned up more raw opium. However, officers who went into the backyard made the biggest discovery -1,200 opi\.&m plan ta, some as tall as three feet, Burks was sleeping ln a nearby mobile home when the fire began at 3:30 a .m. "Poltergeist," produced by growing l.n the yard. Officers booked the Mouas into Orange County Jail on charges of possessing opiates for sale. Westminster officers, acting on The restaurant, Charlie Perkins' Barbecue, burned before volunteer firemen could arrive, wit1\esses said. Perkins said in the 30 minutes it took for volunteers to arrive from Godley, 10 miles away, the flames had consumed his restaurant. Cleburne Fire Chief Lloyd McVicar said the city sent a fire truck to the !ICelle becaU9e the wind was blowing sparks from the blaze toward a house in the city. "U a fire originates inside the city and goes outside the city lines, the fire department will fight it," he said. "But i1 it starts-' s>utside, as long as it's not endangering the city limits, the fire department won't fight it." Huntington parents seek school change ..__Spielberg, maker of "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "Raiders of the Lost Ark," is about a suburban Califor_nj..a. family terroril:ed by ghosts. "I think our final reasoning was that parents spould have their own opportunity to make a determination (about the film)," jury foreman Ernie Stover said aft.er the trial. the same information from federal Investigators, awaited the delivery of packages from Thailand at several addresses l.n their city. At one apartment, however, no one was home and at another, the occupants declined to accept the package. Police said the packages were apparently sent from a refugee camp in Thailand. Perkins estimated damage at $200,000. ''There's a creek that crosses FALKLAND ISLANDS .... neither definitive peace nor security. It will be Great Britain's responsibility. for deepening the conflict." British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ruled out any future Argentine say in the running of the islands, rejected a call from the Labor opposition for a United Nations trusteeship and vowed she would "n ot negotiate on the sovereignty of the islands in any way except. with the people who live there." : "I hope we have restored once again the dominance of Britain and let every nation know that where there Is British sovereign territory it will be well and truly defended," she told the Houae of Common.a Tuetday. Briti1h Defense Secretary John Nott said Tueeday night he believed the fiahting wu over but railed tfie po11ibillty ~ntina could continue to at British forces from l ta bW9 en the mainland. Maj. Gen. Jeremy Moore, commander of the land forces on the Falklands, said Tuesday night that the commander of the Argentine garrison at Stanley, Brig. Gen. ~brio Benjamin Menend.e~ •. -1>rpmlsed that Argentine forces from the mainland would not attack British forces. It's nothing personal, but some Huntington &ach residents want to move their children from the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District to the Ocean View School District. Representatives say ~:_t have no quarrel with the q ·ty of education. They want to make the boundary change for convenience sake. They say their B o·ls a Landmark homes near Talbert Avenue and Edwards Street are near Ocean View's Hope View School, 17622 Flintatone Lane. But they say because they live in the Huntington Beach City echool di.strict they have to send their children to Smith School. 770 17th St., three miles and 15 minutes away by bus. About 92 children are Involved in the proposed t witch. The Huntington City district presently receives about $170,000 in state aid for the children. Partly cloudy f Coastal ,. Low ctouda end drizzle to l!'Vf way to hazy 1un1hlne thla afternoon. Hlght,renotno lfom low 60s at the be8dlel lo upper 70. 111 Inland areu Low doudl encl fog to retwn tonight, becoming p11tl)' cloudy Thurldey afternoon. Overnight lowl 54 to 82. Hlg.ha Thurlday 85 to 75 Elaewhere, lrom Point Conception to the Mealcan 1>«0. en0 out eo mllM: UgM varleble wlnd9 becoming WWI to eouttlwM1 12 to 111 knot• thla evening. SoulllwMt ,_.. ol 2 to 3 feet. Low cloudl-becoming pertly tunny thla •11.,noon. U.S. Summary Thunderetorma, flood1, tornadoe• and hurrlca~foroe wind• rampaging 1crou the oent• of the nation kllled 1t1111ut MY911, WUlled out the bual,_ dletrlel of an low• town, d9fllled 1 paaMllg9( trlln and topp19<1 70 utltlty polea In K-. TtlrM people-· atHI mining today In norlhem Ohio aft• their b<>atl ~ In howling wlnda that pied up to 111 mph. Thlrty- thrM other• -• reecued from b<>all on Lake Erle. Hundred• ev1cuated their homH becauH ol lloodlng In Iowa, Nebraaka and Arkan1u, and thOuNnd• -• left without power TuHday In the Grut. "'81rta. Mayor BIM Pevtlov of Haetlnga, Iowa, Mid he WU OUt c:fledlfng the te...i of lndlM Cr• -.i he hMrd en eerie nolM "like • real h~ wind." 'Til9re -• wall of .... ~right acroee that ftlld," he Mid. ' I had lo bllCll rff'f tNClt up to QM out of Iha WJY wtllle I ._. t8'klng on the C8 tllllf'9 my w4fe wno to e#I to Ml ._,, to gee out of their l1ouMI." About n.... .,,... ....,....,, ltla Sen FrlfldlCO ~ rounded • bend 11 71 mpti T~ and lleftMMCI IMO I .. to 4-fool ... ~ on tl'lt ~·· ki.tg a· 19-year-old women and~ 18 othen to ~-. authcWltlM Mid. llqht. vartabte winds tonight and Nt1y Thurlday, becoming -t- aouth-' al 12 to 18 knot• by afternoon with • 2-to 3-loot aoulhWMte<ty 1'#911. Sees thould be higher......, the point. Temperatures NATION .. Lo Pql 80 88 88 60 78 63 83 83 89 70 78 &4 92 87 .88 a4 71 78 55 .19 90 74 n 49 .01 a4 58 Fronts: COid .-. Wttm .,. OcclUded w.' Stationarv •• 73 &4 . 94 78 78 80 .12 75 59 .08 69 48 . 19 82 79 85 85 82 70 82 '3 .28 77 48 .04 84> 68 .88 88 80 .70 88 71 .01 83 80 .77 91 88 .02 83 &4 .81 81 45 .01 71 63 .01 88 81 .73 &4 35 9A 84 71 52 75 38 80 56 12 84 82 6o4 90 76 90 79 .. at ,88 1M 87 .65 94 70 T7 58 .31 " 71 19 84 1.86 87 85 1.48 78 57 93 118 .22 ee 11 .02 ea •7 .47 Mpls-St.P •74 NuhV\lle 90 NewC>rlMM 92 NewYOf11 83 Norfolk 84 No. Plett• 119 Oki• City 80 Omah• 71 Ottlfl<lo .. =r.I• 83 101 p~ 80 Pti.nd, ae Ptland, Ore 82 Provldenee 80 ~ 88 Aeno 88 Sall I.Me 80 Sen Antonio 93 Seettle 76 ~~ 92 70 81 ate Mat1e 5e ~ 87 a~ 78 T~ n TUCIOl'I ... T\llM .. c~ Bek...n.td 103J B¥M 102 Ewekl 81 Freano .. ~ 98 Loe Mg9lea 72 M~ 91 Mont.-., .. 49 87 78 71 70 43 81 60 75 70 17 85 65 58 82 70 52 57 72 60 88 47 40 eo 86 57 .. .. 71 49 IS9 71 eo .47 .48 .48 .12 .03 .Oii .34 01 .17 .18 • 32 .32 Need ... 104 Oakland 70 Puo ~blea 98 54 Red 81Uft 101 70 Re<lwoOd City 72 5e S.erllMl\tO 98 60 Salin at ea 51 SM OlegO 71 85 Sen FrencleOO 59 50 Senta 8arbwl 64 54 Senta Merla 68. Stoekton 100 87 Therm .. 101 8arltbw 98 88 81g &Mr 78 39 BllhoP 91 52 Cataline 89 s. Long BM<:h 73 81 MonrOlll• a4 54 80 81 Mt. Wllaon N~8eKtl 87 ' 81 Ontario 81 Palm S9flnga 101 PeMdena 78 Sen BemaroOl'IO 83 S1t1 JON 81 s.n11 Ana 72 Santa Cna 811 TahOeVllWr n Extended Forecast 67 ee 84 58 51 69 58 41 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -~ nlClht and """ -ll'll"!!I' __________________ morning low clouo• ••one '" coul. Otllerwlu lalr. ,,., 11t•rnooon oloudt ove r mountl!IN. HIGN at beadlel 10 · 10 '74 and lnlMd Vtl9yl M to M. L-&4 to 12. Mollnteln ta.on lllOhl 72 to 90. l.4'WI 41 to M. lllf RIPIRT • l If they are moved to Ocean View, it would result in a loss of three teachers, school officials say. Officials of the t.wo school districts are preparing a legal petition and survey to go before their school boards this summer. If both boards of trustees approve the boundary change, the Orange County committee on ~chool District Organization could give final approval after hearings in both districts. U either denies the petition: it would eventually go to the affected residents for vote. Sale of state mansion OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) - California's new governor's mansion, in which Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. declines to live. could be sold under a bill approved by the Assembly. The bill , AB2373 by Assimblyman Elihu Harris, D- Berkeley. went to the Senate on a 45-11 vote Tuesday. _It would order the Department of General 15ervices to sell the mansion and put the money aside for a new mansion closer to the Capitol -if the governor to be elected this November decides not to live in it. Blast kills 3 PISGAH, Ala. (AP) -A student, a SJChool principal and a custodian w ere killed after gasoline they were using to clean carpet glue exploded and turned a classroom Into an inferno, authorities said. • winners Winners of Ocean View School District's first annual creative writing contest have been announced. First place winners include Eric Stopher, Vista View; Sharon McCaffery, Meadow View; lan"e Kabakov, Hope View ; lticbard Doyle , Westmont, and Klm Vu, Westmont. Second place winners: Stacy KoJaka, Meadow View; Shelly Barman, Meadow View; Clarls Olson, Meadow View; Bryan Hinkle, Spri.flR •Coastline Collegf will offer two classes for students interested in learning how to sail a dinghy. Mark Howe will teach sailing techniques, water safety and aerodynamics and will oversee on-the-water practice in the beginning class, Sailing I. Sailing 11 covers racing skills and additional prac1ice. The classes will be held at view , and Denise Mullens~ Mesa View. Third place winners: Nicole Pille, Sun View; Rebecca Clifner, Marine View ; Daphne Chau, Spring View; Edna Foronda, Westmont, and Richard Nikas, Mesa View. Fourth place winners: Tracie Nemeth, Vista View; Jeff Melo, Glen View ; Michelle Boal, Lake View; John E hret, Mesa View. and Sari Malmquist, Mesa View. P e ters Landing in Huntington Beach. Sailing I will be offered at 1 p .m . Tuesdays. beginning June 22. Salling II is scheduled for 1 p.m . Wednesdays, beginning June 23. There is no tuition charge. but s tudents must pay a materials fee of $10 per ~. More information is avail.able by calling Coastline at 963-0824. Delig)lt Dad with a gift from Hickoey Farms~ We've got over 100 delicious gifts to choose from, in almost every price range. And we'll gladly handle all the details sending your gift. FA~HION ISLAND Ne"port Beaob ........ ' OPEN DAILY ' WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th and Irvine, Newport Beach ... •••• 71 ' ' ~ffiU~OO[(] Churches to reunite? Southern Presbyterians vote north merger By n. Auoclated Pre11 COLUMBUS, O•. -A lop1lded vote by IOUthem Pt-eebytertana ln favor of reunltlnl with a l'\Ot'thern branch of their denomination 1tunned oppcnentl and even 1urpriled backen ot' the plan, , chord\ leaden Mid. The l22nd General Auembly of the 840,000-member Pre.byterian Church ln the United Staie. voted 344-30 on Tueeday to approve a plan reuniUng lt with the 2.4 million-member United Pre1byterlan Churc~~ln the United Si.tea of America. c The two poupe 1eparated over the llavery ilM.ie in 1881 and laraeJy maintained their northern and IOUthem alignment. Before the two boc:tle. merp, however, three- quarten of the 10Uthem church'• 61 preebyt.eries must approve ~union, and church lNden ·~ that will be a 1truule becau.e of opposition ln South Carolina, M.l-1Mippi and Alabama. Republicans to cancel TV ad HOUSTON -The House Republican Campaign Committee has abandoned the television commercial that blamed the nation's economic problems on Democrats and used look-alikes for former President Carter and House Speaker Thomas P . O'Nelll Jr., White House political director F.d Rollins says. Rollins, who spoke with reporters Tueeday on board Air Force One u It wu carrying President Reagan here for a speech, said the oomm1ttee had alao fired the New York ad agency that ~ate.d the commerdaL He said the ad was difficult to undersland, ineffective and costly. Conservatives keep ~hurch control NEW ORLEANS -Con servatives have retained the reins of Southern Baptist leadership, electing their standard-bearer, the Rev. James T. Draper Jr. of Texas. to head the. nation's largest Protestant body. His victory marked the fourth oonaecutive year in which the conservative-fundamentalist wing of the 13.8 million-member denomination has won its presidency ln contest with moderates. Or~ Cout OAILY'PILOTIWedneedey, June 18, 1982 IMl1,.. .... ,.._.. 'r Lee ...... B4 '\'E GUITAR, WILL TRAVEL -show off his new machine before embarking · Country-Western' singer, Ray Nelson, if. you on a cross-country tour. The only trouble With couldn't guess, likes motorcycles and guitars. his guitar bike, he says, is keeping it tuned up. He stopped off in Newport Beach this w~k to Air'pori slaying investigated Victim was due in court on drug charges Murde r victim Barkley F. Hodges, shot once in the head last week in a John Wayne Airport r estaurant , was acheduled to go to court later this month on cocaine-selling charges. authort.ties revealed today. · The dead man, a brother of Westminster Councilman Gil Hodges, was arrested last March in Huntington Beach on the drug charges, police said. Troubled Poland worries pope Earthquake felt But Orange County Sheriff's deputies, who are investigating the June 8 murder at Delaney's Restaurant, said they don't believe $lrugs played a role in the shooting. They-have not detailed a motive in the episode. GENEVA, Switzerland -Troubled Poland was seldom far from the thoughts of Pope John Paul II as he hurried through a day-long visit to this tranquil city. The pope -whose next trip is likely to be to P oland in August -referred subtly but often Tuesday to events in his native, martial law- adminlstered country, where an open challenge to Communist rule was crushed last December in a sweeping military crackdown. J ohn Paul returned to the Vatican Tuesday night. Seiko to produce TV wristwatch TOKYO -Seiko, Japan's largest watch and clock maker, today announed production of the world's first wristwatch with a built-in black-and- white TV !ICJ"een. Seiko officials said their new watch-TV features a 1.2-inch liquid crystal display instead of a conventional cathode-ray tube and is also fitted ~umua with a digital time display. The set, capable of rliceiving regular VHF, UHF and FM broadcasts, comes with a battery-pow~ wallet-size receiver and a headphone. Seiko i! planning to Introduce the TV wristwatch into the market early next year at a price of about S400. , Diver dies · off Clemente Isle LOS ANGELES -A 37-year-old commercial diver was pronounced dead Tuesday afternoon after an apparent diving accident off San Clemente Isl.and, authorities said. The Pasadena man, whose identity was withheld pending notification of next of kin, had been diving with the wudentified owner of a boat at about 2:30 p.m. when the owner noticed a leak in his own diving air hose, said Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Mason Kinny. The victim later was found in about 10 feet of wate.r with his breathing apparatus wrapped around his neck, the deputy said. California's import ban violated SAN FRANCISCO -Despite a statewide ban on Mexican fruit, more than 150 tons of Mexican oranges have been unloaded in San Frahcisco wholesale markets in recent days. following the discovery of maggots in part of a shipment of 1,000 orange crates to San Mateo and Santa Clara counties 80uth of San Francisco. At the 88.8'\e time Tuesday. Arizona announced an embargo on citrus fruits from Mexico. The report Tuesday came four days after California officials halted Mexican fruit imports Bill would give teachers priority .. SACRAMENTO -The state Assembly baa voted tb require that only teaching experience, not administrative time, be counted in calculating. seniority in case of layoffs at community oolleges. Assemblyman DI.ck Floyd, D-Lawndale, 18id Tueaday his AB3364 is intended to prevent administrators with little or no teaching experience from "bumping;' qualifie4 teachers from their jobs where ther e are cutbacks due to declining enrollment. " ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Thomee P. Haltw ~ lftd Chlllf 6-AM Ofllow ~~ wOll.-of~ Tom MUfl)hlne ,...... =.:..~ ~ KenGodderd OINalWf/f~ ~ a.tea Looe ........ Ylor ., .., ........ .,., .......... I ··~- CIHaffted •dverttalng 7141&4~5171 All otlMr departments 142-4321 llllAIN OFFICE DO Wet1 a.y St., C-NWM, CA. M<lll .-,,., lloa U.0, Cata Mete, CA. ..a c.vrlollt NI~ ... C.tt Pllllltllllftt ~. He rMWt '*°"". lllutllntloM, .-..n.1...--w • YertlM"*"t ........ Mr( lie ,---.. w4tMllf ..-<lel """'"*'°' CAllPYrltM-. VOL 71, N0.117 Student acquitted of assault charges SAN FRANCISCO -A graciuate student accused of knifing a woman in an elevator when she refused to put out her cig~tte has been acquitted of urault chulres. Richard ?dam, 38, a psyc.bology student at San Francilco State University, wu found innocent Tuesday by a Superior Court jury after two hours of deliberation. He bad testified be 1tabbed 26-yur-old 1tudent Dorla Collum Feb. 26 ln aelf • defenae. We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What 'don't you llkt7 Call the number below and your mt1Htt wm be recorded, tran1cribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. Tht same M·hour an1wenn1 Hrvlce m1y be UHd to record let· t•r• to UM editor on any Lopfc. Mailbox contributor• muat lMlude their nanw and telephont number ror vtrtrleatlon, No clrculaUon ull1,pleue. Tell ua wh1t'1 on your mind. in five counties Hodges allegedly was shot once in the he.ad while at the restaurant with his 32-year-0ld cousin and '1l unidentified third man. ANZA (AP) -A moderate earthquake felt across five counties tossed items from shelves, caused chandeliers to sway and knocked pictures from walls but caused no reported injuries or serious damage, officials said. Tuesday's temblor measured 4.8 on the Richter scale and was centered beneath this small Riverside County community 90 miles southwest of Los Angeles, according t o officials at the aeismology lab of the California Institu'e of Technology in Pasadena. The quake struck a t 4:49 p.m. in an area along the end of the San Andl"f>A)I; FA11lt "It was pretty scary," said Linda Ellington, owner o ( Ellington's Anza Food Center, where jars of jam and boxes fell from shelves. S he said damage was not major, however. "We felt it real good but we haven't had any reports of any structural damage, just the normal dishes breaking and things like that," said Cindy Weirbach, a dispatcher for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department in Anz.a. "It was pretty jolting. It shook. It didn't sway. it shook. It lasted about 30 seconds." The tremor aJao was felt in Orange and San Diego counties and as far north as Granada Hills 20 miles northwest of Los Angeles. The Richter scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on ·Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gemologist. AOS THE LARGEST DIAMOND isn't for Nle The world'• largest cut diamond will never be bouaht for Elizabeth Taylor. Nor will a tq New York jeweler buy lt and put lt on display in hia ~.Even an~ lheikh will find thl1 1tone beyond hla reach. The Iar1eat diamond, weighing ~30 can.., ia mounted Ob the royal 11eeptre of the BrlU.h Emph. It ii pert ot Britain'• Crown Jewels. 1be --... '11l from the Cullinan cHemcmd wblcb. at 3,108 can..,,.,.. the .... diamond eYm' mlnad. J' W9 foUnd in l~ tn South Africa'• Pt..-C Mine and wu alv•n by the Transvaal 1overnment to J:n&land'• Kint mdwud vu •• birthdey ~t. lt ~ la• cu' up Into n1oe larwe ... and 98 ....u.r-Oftla ••• Tlie llrplt. c:u& w• named the Star ot Abtm. '!be I other' major cu• ww. ftlllMd 1Amtr Scan ol Africa. The 'M 1~cu11totaledi.thenl ..... ~ ...... °'Africa .. .-..... ·-~valw .. Clft1y be a mitt#°'~ 1M 19 .,,...,.., mmy mol6am clollan. a seismograph. Every increase of one number reflects a tenfold increase in magnitude, so that a reading of 7 .5 s h ow.s an earthquake 10 times stronge r than one of 6.5. An earthquake of 6 can cause severe damage, while one regjstering 7 is a "major'' quake that can cuase widespread heavy damage. The cousin, Laguna ·aeach resident Kelly Russell Daniels, was arrested In connection with the murd e r . H e faces a preliminary h earing on the murder charge June 25. Daniels, a sallmaker haa pleaded innocent to the charges. • Miller due hearing on assault charge Former Orange Cou nty Supervisor Edison Miller awaited a decision by the county district attorney's office today whether he will be charged with alleged misdemeanor assault and battery on his wife, Carol. Miller was freed from Orange County Jail on $ l ,500 bail Tuesday morning following his a rrest Monday night at his Orange residence. Orange Police Capt. J erry Graves said officers took Miller into custody after Mrs. Miller made a citizen's arrest alleging assauJt and battery. Captain G raves declined to provide details about the alleged incident. "Misdemeanor assault and battery pretty much tells the story," he said. Mrs . Miller, the forme r supervisor's second wife, was not seriously injured in the alleged altercation, Graves said. Miller was appointed to the county Board of Supervisors by Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr. in July, 1979, to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of former Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. . The appointment immediately drew fire from veterans' groups who charged that Miller, a former Marine oolonel. had made anti-U.S . statements while a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Miller was defeated in 1980 for a full four-year term on the board by Bruce Nestande. Since leaving the board, Miller, an attorney, hu been practicing law in Santa Ana and has not been visible in political circles. l ' .... " • r ... ~ . ar.noe Coat DAILY PILOTIWedneedey, June 1f. CT Gene I Tel gets rate hike SAN J'RANClSOO (AP) The state Pubilc UU.UU., Qicrun1llion hM ..-nted o.nentl Telephone a tee.2 iD1Won '1U\ual rue 1nctea1e that wUl m111n hlaher blu. for C'UltOmel'I. • The rullna carne TuHday on an applh:atfon Oenttal filed in March 1981 .eeking a $296 miWon lncreMe. Of the total, $19U million }l.u been if*Dted. r.tvlnl the f1rm a chance to 11.m a 1!78 percent retum on lnve11ment, up from tbt 12.71 pe~t. The latett lncreue wOl result ln residential flat rai. terYice on rotary dJal phoneti golnf from $6.26 to $7.75 a month and touchtdfte rates trom $7 \0 $8.40. The bua!ne11 rate in ttae Loe AngeliM and Ora.nae Counties metropolitan arell will go from $6.50 to $7 .20 a month with the per•outgolng-call unit rate lncreulng from four to u cents. Office comples started Groundbreaking wu· held for Cypress Pointe Bualne&a Centre, a multl-fhue development by John D. Lusk & Son, Irvine. The project'8ite ia at Katella Avenue and Holder Street in Cyprem. The first phase is slated for completion in February, 1983, and conaists of twin two-story buildinga of 36,000 square feet each. One building will h old Marmac System• Engineering, located in Leas Beach. Fluor denies layoffs Reports that Fluor CAl!'P· in Irvine, which employs 6,000, is considering rnasa layoffs are "without basis.'' Bean Allen. vice president and general manager of the company's Southern Calit.irnla division, said. "Management has a Mr'ong commitment to our people and some of F1uon projects a.re pending for weeks or even month• -longer than was anticipated," Allen said in * prepared statement. Allen said that there bave been a (ew layoffs In recent weeks due to cancellation of the Northwest Pipeline Project In Al.ask.a ln March. Most of thoee employees have been ree"'8r>ed to other divisions. S tock sale postponed Prlntronix Inc. of Irvine announced today it decided to postpone indeftnitely a proposed sale of conunon stock due \0 unl.norable market conditions. A registration statemlftt, covering 380,000 shares to be offered by the coms-ny and 125,000 shares by certain selling shareholden through an underwriting group managed by Ro~. Cohnan, Stephens & Woodman, was filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission on May 24. Printronix designs, manufactures and marketa medium aild low speed lDldrix impact line 12rinters. Bank capitali•tion anal yzed It costs more to capttallze a bank in California thelle days. Data compiled by Echtard Carpenter-& Associates Inc., Lot Anaeles-bated financial institutions consulttng firm with oftlces in San Francisco and Newport Beach, 1how the average beginning capltallr.ation of new mtiona1 banks rose to $4.8 rnilllon in 1981, up from tl.3 million a year earlier and $1.3 millfon in 1975. 11w average startup outlay of new state banka adva.ncect to $3.4 million in 1981, up from $2.8 million a year pior and $1 .4 million in 19.75. Hiabest capitalhatic:a-arnong the 15 new national banks fast year was $15 tnillion and the lowest $2.5 million, noted Carpenter. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORK (AP1;;8•le1. Tue1. prl~ ::!. "1'Y~S:C. ~'!~' •= trlldlno NtloNllly _. n-e INln 11. --US Steel 1,516,IOO I~ ~n MOICll'i 511,600 <tS -14 E .. on 1 5".100 2711> -\lo leM 531,IOO 591111 . "' Kin.rt :is'.: 11\tt • \It i lU..Svc. ""' • E merT&T 01,SOO "'--~ Softy "°'11 442,tOO ""' -~ WerlW"COm 431,GI ... Rel$1nPur C27,500 ""' ~·~ Tlllld)' •1'.JCO 17 .... I::.1:1111 «M,GI n"° --rOll 37',IOO ,._ --DciwCllem 351,300 2111. Gvtt Oii W,IOO UV. AMERICAN LEADERS HEW YORI( fAPl-Selu, Tun . prlff -..... ~ tN .... most ecthlt Amefk-'1 Exc"-9e ,_ trHl~~-ly -:,:,-00-::. --~,.,..,.,,. ' 1'2,100 "" -1i. EU LAYUO 132,600 Wlo . ~ War;p_! 111,IOO H" . ~ ~f i 113,600 '~ Hlrl I 102,500 12~ -\lo Teel! sr, 91,700 '" . " =II r 66,IOO Ullo + " Pe Cof 64.400 Uh ... '"'' ....... 60,200 ~ -~ NIW YO"~ (A,) -lltlHI II ~~ .......... .. 1 &1 ...... --•• .. .,.., ........ ,, ....... Wtir ....... ....... r--- NEW YORICCAPI FIM I Oow.J_, -rt; n.toay. J111 IS OCKS 9CI Ind • Trn o;r "Ir. ~ c-~ • ll IO . II 79J.31 IOl.27-0. 313.15 llS . .S JOl.91 JU.II>-1.42 15 Ull 1a. ll ta..41 IOl.22 10l,17-0.):5 '5 SIM JIJ " l" 6S l09 ~ 312.1)-O.tl Indus S.m..JDO Tran 1.m.ao """ 7Jl.JllD '5 Slk 1.a..- WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK CAPI Jun. 1' Prev. l.-. ":J. Advanced S27 0.Cllned 90S IOU Un<~ 42' -Total I-"" IJIO .... "iGM I • Newlowl 114 6S ........... c.oo HEW YORK IAPI JUtl u ,..,..., n-. ~ Advarocecl 302 0.Cllned l17 l5I Uncl\ellQllCI 205 tu Total IUUft 14' 7Jt .... hlGM • 1 --,, ZS METALS NEW YORK (t'P) -Spot nonNr'rout prlOM tod9y. c.,..., 79"-75 cents • PoWIO. u.s f-t.,!:~7 cefl ... pound. ZllllO 35-37 cent• a pound, dell¥W9cl. 1111 '5.N 15 Metail W.. OOf\'1PCl9H• lb . .....,.,._ 7&-77 oanta a pound, N. Y ..._, $370.00 I* llMil. ,..,.._ 1297 .00 tray oz.. N. Y ,...;..;;;.;.;.....;;.;.__; _____________ ~~ •SILVER H1ndy a H1rm1n, 15.400 par troy ouno.. ·GOLD QUOTATIONS L.-.... lllOf'*'O llklno: 131t.eo. Iii> •u•. &....-.. ~ fbdnQ: 130'.00, up auo . ..... .,..,_ lllClnO! '31t.15, up ••• ""'*911111 "11.ol, \IP ,, .oo. ......,. i..-t1111no; 131i.oo. "" a .oo llld~l.00 ••• a ...._ oniv dmlly cauote ltiT.OO, up 11.00. ta•"-* ~ dellY quolil U t7.00, " .oo. _, WlllNl '.(lf\) lllNI I 1 1.' Deir,... ........... SAWDUST CITY -Artists at the Sawdust Festival grounds in Laguna Beach lift facade into place atop makeshift booth that will house works of art for the Sawdust's 16th season ..... Festival exhibitors are constructing their booths from scratch for the event which runs from July 10 to Aug. 29. Lagu11:a appoints two new planners Laguna Beach City Council members appointed two new planning commissioners to four- year terms Tuesday following failure of an urg~ncy ordinance that would have reduced commission terms to just two years. The co uncil appointed Elisabeth Brown, a 13-year . Laguna resident, and Mary Fegraus, a nine-year resident, to replace two commissioners whose terms expired. Prior to making the appointments, the City Council attempted to reduce the number of years served by com.mi8sioners. Several council members said they believe a three-year terin would be adequate, while others argued two years would put the entire commission "more in sync with the current City Council." Since the council was split on the length o( office to be served by commissioners, the motion - which required at least four affirmative votes -failed. COUNTY That means the two new commissioners will serve four- year tenTlS. Subsequent council action -on which a simple majority was necessary - limited the terms of future planning commissioners to two years. Bobbie M"mkin argued that ~ two-year term would "better represent t h e feelings of the citiums at the ballot box," saying holdover commissioners from a previous council majority would not necessarily reflect the view of Laguna voters. She was supported by Mayor Sally Bellerue and Councilman Robert Gentry. "If you have a commission that is not in sync with the council, then it makes.a big difference in what gets done," the mayor said. "Besides," she said, ''it's more fun if you have a planning commission in sync with you." But council members Neil. Fitzpatrick and Dan Kenney said (See PLANNERS, Page AZ) Huntington votes for November Huni:m,ton Beech casts its vote for city elections in November. Page Bl . , TEL EVISION A BC's 'Hart' leads way ABC's "Hart to Hart" waa the top-ranked show last week, while CBS won the ratings war. Page A6. ''Elephanta' for family Tonl&ht'• '"nM I.All\ Roundup of the ELephantl'' f•atu.r .. 1pectacular foot•J• of elephant hunt• and eY9I\ • ,.,.., and ii dilcrlbed • lood famlly vtewlnl· P ... 87. . • .. ' • I ~ . UllU IUCll /mll Cllll Oil ANGE COUNTY C ALIFOHN IA 25 CEN TS Size of annex • Ill liIDbO Laguna considering boundaries south of A liso Cr eek By STEVE MITCHELL O( ... Delfr .... ...., Lquna Beach la keeplna the door open to annexation 1n South Laguna, but questions remain aa to juat how muc h of the community the city mt1ht be willlnJl to take into the fold. The· City Council adopted an ordl.nance Tueeday •that would prerone about half of South Laguna -from the cl ty's aouthem limits to A..Uso Creek - brlngil)g Laguna's 7.0ning codes into-d)nformity with county r.ones. And the council directed its planning staff to meet with county officials about possible boundaries aouth of A..Uso Creek British warn ·of tragedy By The Asaoclated Presa Britain ~ut pressure today on Argentina to declare a pennanent peace in the South Atlantic, saying hundreds of c~tured Aigentine troops on the Falkland Islands could die of exposure and illness if there is more delay. that QU8ht be Included in an annexation. City offlclala abo will ask the county to review ft1ure. that show the economic impact of incorporating all 4Df South Laguna would be a "wash." Laguna ftguree property tal(ea, aa1ee and other revenues derived from South -La1una -about $930,000 -would about equal what the city would have to spend on polke, fire and other dty personnel. The council will return July 20 to diacuas setting boundaries for a potential incorporation try in Sot.tth Laguna. ., Hugh Wilkins, chairman of the South Laguna Civic A.89ociation, preaented the council with signatures he aaid represent 35 percent of the voters in South Laguna, excluding the Three Areh Bay community. He aaid officers in that gated community association are conducting their own survey of residents' views t QWard annexation. Several council members expresaed doubts about including Three Areh Bay in an annexation try, and Councilman Dan Kenney questioned whether Lagunans themselves support annexation in South Laguna. "We owe it to the citizens (of Laguna Beach) to ask them what Tight squeeze Youth trappe d in chimney _ A 17-year-old Anaheim youth got caught in a tight fix Tuesday when he decided to enter his grandparents' locked home in Laguna Niguel by climbing down the chimney. . About half way down, Steve Cubbison got stuck. Orange County Fire Department rescue units from Laguna Niguel, Mission Viejo and South Laguna rushed to 29751 Preston Drive at 5:30 p.m. after neighbors reported yells for help coming out the chimney stack of the single-story home. Cubbison, described by fire officials as weighing less than 100 pounds, was dropped a life line and pulled free about 20 minutes after rescue units arrived. He was uninjured, but a bit dusty, fire officials said. "He popped out pretty easy once we got him free of the wedged s pot ," sa id fire department spokesman J e ff Taylor. "He was stuck wilh one arm above his head and the other down by his side but he was able to grab the loop in the life line and we pulled him free." Fire officials say Cubbison 's grandparents were n 't home when he attempted his entry. they thlnk," Kenney aald. He was joined by Councilman Nell Fitzpatrick who aald he moved to Laguna because "l alwavs wanted to live in a small city.'r But Councilman Robert Gentry said annexation in South Laguna would do more to maintain the village atmosphere of Laguna by protecting Its neighbor Crom uncontrolled growth . "The lime for South Laguna annexation is now," he said. "Because we can control the development along Coast H1gl)way. We identify more (See SOUTH, Page AZ) I sraelis • continue ·advance By The Associated Preas Israeli commandos, advancing under covering shellfire from L e banese Christian allies, storme d and captured a Palestinian guerrilla stronghold near the paralyzed Beirut airport today, the state-run Lebanese radio reported. The report said the Israelis took the science faculty campus o f the L e banese University, along the main runway of Beirut International Airport. The warning came from the corrunander of the British task force after Argentine President Gen. Leopoldo F. Galtieri and his two junta partners were the targets of violent demonstrations TuescJay night by thousands of Argentines angered at the defeat in the Falklands. The junta has said ·that if Britain reinstates British rule over the islands there will not be peace in the South Atlantic. Packard announces According to the reports, the action was aimed at eliminating a major Palestinian stronghold controlling access to the airport and some of the Pale s tine Liberation Organization's enclaves in Moslem wesr Beirut. . In a statement released by the British government In London, Rear Adm. John Woodward Said the care of 15,000 Argentine POWs on the Falklands posed "a major disaster relief problem." "The Argentines must appreciate that I cannot keep their troops dry and warm and fed while we are still subject to attack. They must face the facts and call a halt to all, repeat all, hostilities," Woodward said. He said the prisoners, some of whom have been on the Falklands in wintry conditions since the Argentine invasion April 2, were "alread y suffering from malnutrition, exposure - in some cases h y pothermia (subnormal body temperature) - trench foot , scabies a nd diarrhea." Galtieri, forced to cancel a public appearance because of the demonstrations, went on national television to vow Argentina will never areept London's plans to reinstate British rule in the Falklands. He said Britain must not "proceed to establish a colonial regime.•• Spotlight on Dad in special sectio n With Father's Day coming up, there's plenty of auemion being focused on Orange Coast dads. For information that can help make hi$"<iay a special one, turn to today's Daily Pilot section on The Man in Your Life. STATE I • • • wr1te-1n call1pa1gn "'I By JEFF ADLER has received "hundreds of calls OflMDllJ,......,. and letters of whic h the Carlsbad Mayor Ron Pac.kard overriding theme is that these -as expected -announced citizens want a c h o ice in today he will wage a November November." write-in campaign in an effort to defeat Republican nbminee Packard alsif'told reporters Johnnie Crean for the 43rd attending the morning news District Congressional seal. conference that he is being Pac k a rd j o i n s f e 11 o w supported in his bid by all 16 R bl· B 'll M c 11 · other candidates who sought the "Sfu~ c~~~ ~~ .. otha~~ nomination in the district. which developed in the days following includes portions of both Orange Crean's 100-vote victory in the and San Diego counties. district's Republican primary. Packard. the 50-year-old In announcing his candidacy, second-place finisher in the close Packard acknowledged that it primary, joins McColl, who will take a "monumental effort" announced his own write-in bid to win a write-in bid, but said he (See WRITE-IN, Page AZ) * * * * *· * Archer ffTelcoHJes four-way contest Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a c andidate in the 43rd Congresalonal District race, believes his political fortunes are looking up these days. A few ahort days ago, he was the candidate who couldn't get any respect, a facelem Democrat in a solidly conservative Republican district. Even his wife referred to him as the "ignored candidate." · But all that has changed In recent days. Archer believes his election prospects have undergone a complete about-face -courtesy of the Republicans. Ever since two Republican candJdates, Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard and former pro football player Bill McColl, announced they would nm In the general election as write-in candidates In a "stop Johnni e Crean campaign." Areher believes his chance for election has improved considerably. "U it comes down to a four- (See ARCHER, Page At) INDEX There were conflicting reports on which forees were involved in ~the outbreak of shelling and fighting today. which shattered a few hours of re.lative calm in war-devastated Beirut. On Tuesday, Israeli and Syrian tanks battled near the airport for four hours, breaking a four-day cease-fire between Israeli forces and their Syrian 'foes. The Syrian regular army, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area, was not observed intervening in the battle for the ~science faculty. Private Lebanese radio stations reported that Israeli and Syrian forces were involved in artillery battles e lsewhere in Beirut's mountainous outskirts. But those reports were. not verified. Israeli commanders said their gunners did not take part in the two hours of heavy shelling that preceded the reported assault on the PLO •camp on the science campus. Associated Press correspondents said most of the fire seemed to come from Christian artillery entrenched in the hills above the airport. Members of the Christian Phalangist militia Kataeb were fighting openly with the Israelis against their common Palestinian enemies for the first ti.me since Israel's army reached the Beirut area in a 11 -day thrust northward to wipe out Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon. Correspondents reported seeing Phalangist liaison offieens in ollve-drab uniforms with Israeli units positioned all over Beirut's mountainous hinterland. Voters malce the rules A4 C5-7 B2 A5 82 Horoecope Ann Landen Movies Mutual Funda National Newa Public Notic9 B2 B2 85 C6 A3 Voters are overruling lawmakers left and right through the referendum process, says column11t Richard Reeves. Page AS. Concert just a 'Dream' A San Diego radio station'• brmdcaat of a "Dream Valley concert of the mind" started many rock f.anl on a futile aearch for the .. concert" and anaered law enforcement authorities. Pace BS. BUSINES S Fin1mcm6 too .orallYe • • ~ c1etaw• .. ~ and a use ttudy blamiil-.-1Wilt1W ~ Ilia ta.. W.u_.nlwnp decWan oudawlnl due-an..-qlli•1111 • ..._. Cl. • •• FA-8 B6 B6 E4 A8 85 Dl-10,El-3 SPORTS Spc>11a • Stock Marketa Televillon 'lbeatere Weether • . -. . ~en wm1 A,nsela. JOH . C4,C6,FA Cl-3 Cl B7 B6 A2 \ ' .- =The D~daeu aot another 1ood pl\Cbln a onnance. out bf . lfl!r.Y a.. In ~ a.n· J-0, but the AniU' tell to the mue • 1t hanle, M . P• Cl. i I . . ' M ' / I ' I' I I ll II I I ,,, to Al L Orange Oout .DAILY PILOT/W~, """'-:::-1•_._1 ...... :---------~~-....-;.;...--~-:--~-....:.------------ 0pium • WRITE-IN PLANNED. • • Monday. McColl flnllhed third ln lut week'• primary ra.ce. All t hroe Republican c:andldatea quar• off aaaln1t Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a Palomar Community Colleae political ectence profeaor, In the Noyembet' election. ' Crean, a 33-yeflr-old travel· trailer manufacturer, earned the enmity of GOP primary opponent& by •pending $760,000 ln hia election bid and employing campaign tactic• that were roundly criticized by tht 17 other Republicans seeking the nomination. He was accused of buying the ca mpaign and of using questionable and often dirty dl1cuu their reapectlve aam.,....,.. Durlna the newa conterenoe, Packara Indicated he expteta many public offldall ln \he San Dteao C.ounty area to try and talk McColl out of hla write-In bid and lnto 1upporuna Packard'•· McColl bu aald, however, he lntenda to 1tay ln the race. Meanwhile, the Oranae County Republican Party t..ued a news release urging coun ty Republicans to close rank• behind the party's nominee, Crean. Acting GOP party chairman Tom Fuentes called Crean a "d ynamic new face on the Republican horizon." campaign tactics. Nonetheless, when the votes "I call upon all of the other 17 finally were tallied, Crean Republican candidates in the race emerged the winner by a slim to pledge their endoniement and 100-vote margin over Packard, support to Johnnie Crean llO we his nearest rival. can guarantee a Republican victory in November in the 43rd Packard and McColl were Congressional District," F\.tentes scheduled to meet later today to said. * * * * * * AR CH ER CONFIDENT ... way race between Archer, Crean and two write-ins, I believe I will take the election. Archer, I think, will be your next congressman," the 48-r.ear -old Palomar Community College political science professor explained. He said that his chances of winning the general election are much better if two write-in Republicans enter the race rather than one because it will divide the GOP vote even further. But Archer feels he can win the congressional seat even if only one write-In candidate challenges both him and Crean. "I'm confident I can take Crean because so many Republicans are disenchanted with him,'' he said. He explained that he will pick up many anti-Crean votes rather than the write-In Republican candidates because the write-in prOcedures are so complicated. "There are some Republicans around who think it's better to elect Archer this year and come back at him in two years," the Democrat added. Archer said Crean'a primary campaign, with its "hit letters" and name-calling was a "disgrace to the Republican party." Crean won the nomination by a .100-vote margin. He c hara c terized the 33-year -old Crean as an inunature candidate, accustomed to too much money and not qualified for the job. The Democrat said he hopes to raise about $30,000 for his campaign and expects to attract some Republican money for the race. Having run unsuccessfully for the state Assembly in 1966 and 1968, Archer said he considers himself a middle-of-the-road Democrat. Assessing his chances, Archer conceded that nortll4lly the 43rd district "is a rough race for a Democrat, but this year I have a very good chance." PLANNERS NAMED. • • a three-year term would be more realistic. "It takes time. for a new ~'Ommissioner to get his 'sea legs' and be effective," Kenney said. Fitzpatrick said a three-year term might mean the commiasion and council do not see eye to eye· on every issue, "but I'm not aure I want to look at the commission and see my reflection coming 'back at me all the time." Cons for hig hway maintena nce OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assembly. California prisoners could be Tuesday's 53-4 vote sent used for highway maintenance. AB.2956 by Assemblyman Terry improvement and cleanup under Goggin, D-San Bernardino, to a bill approved by the state the Senate. plan•s seized Packaiee of raw oplwn u well u 1,200 opium planta were 1elzed by police ln Oarct.n Grove and Weetmlnater Tueeday and two people Wefe taken lnto custody followlna a three-month lnvettiaatton of a Thailand-to· Oranae County 1mug11lng operation. The two auapecta. a Laotian father and eon, were arrested by Garden Grove police but We1tmlnater officer• failed to make anticipated arrestll ln their' jurisdiction. They did sel%e pac kages from Thailand containing raw opiwn. Garden Grove police Sgt. Bruce Beauchamp 18id Chu Ma Moua, 69, and his aon, L~ Moua, 43, were taken into custody after they received a package at their home later found to contain four ounces of raw opium valued at about $~.ooo. Drug investigators obtained a search warrant and entered the Moua home after federal drug officials, customs agents and postal inspectors reported that they suspected drug deliveries were taking place there. .Beauchamp said a search of the house turned u p more raw opium. However, officers who went into the backyard made the biggest discovery -1,200 opium plants, some as tall as three feet, growing in the yard. Officers booked the Mouas into Orange County Jail on charges of possessing opiates for sale. Westminster officers, acting on the same information from federal lnvestigators, awaited the delivery of packages from Thailand at several addr~ in their city. At one apartment, however, no one was home and at another, the occupants declined to accept the package. Police said the pack.ages were apparently sent from a refugee camp in Thailand. From Page A1 SOUTH • • • closely with the (South Laguna) community than the county Board of Supervisors," he said. "It's a way of protecting ourselves." Spokesmen for two large developers in South Laguna opposed the annexation move, saying that, under Laguna's current zoning structure, their projects "would go back to square one" If a nnexation were approved. Those developments include a condominium time-share complex at Treasure Island Mobile Home Park with three structures as high as 113 feet. Partly cloudy Coastal L.ow cloud• and drbZle 10 ~ve way lo ha~ aunahln• t le T emperatures afternoon. H a ranging lrom low 60t II the bNChM to upper 70t In Inland ar.... Low oloude and NATION log to retUl'n tonight, becoming HI lo Pee> partly Cloudy Thurldey eftemoon Albany 80 68 Overnight lowl 54 to 82. Hlgha AlbuQue 88 60 Thundl)' 85 10 75. Amatlllo 78 53 Eltewhere, lrom Polnl Atl\e'f\1141 83 63 Concepllon to the Mexican border end out 80 mll ... Light Al lent a 89 70 Atlante Cty 78 84 variable wtnde becoming ..i to Auetln 92 87 .68 90Ut'-1 12 to 18 knota thll e.hlmor• 84 71 everll~. ~t ...rta of 2 to Biiiings 78 55 .19 3 I Low cloudlnMa becoming Blrmlngtvn 90 74 HUG ~OR A HE RO -President Regan embraces Mis~; Benavidez, a Medal of Honor winner from El QullPQ. Texas after he. ~ed t~e pledge to the flag at a $,1,000-a-pla~ fund-raising dinner in Houston to aid the re-election campaign of Gov. Bill Clements. F une ral h e ld for form e r Laguna man Two shot in base 'holdup Two Camp Pendlaton Mart.n. were ah6t and wounded Tueeday nt1ht when they re1i1ted an attempted robbery on the Jprawllna bl.le. The two, whoee namee were bein1 wUhbeld pendln1 notlflcatlon of relativea, were repo~ ln atAble condition th1a mornlnC ln area hoepltala. One wu shot ln the 11.0rNCh while the other man wu 1hot in h1a right arm, according to Sgt . Laura Somerville, a Marine Corpe 1pomwoman. The pair were aa:mted about 10 p.m. In the Camp San Mateo area of the base by a man who demanded money. The robber waa armed with a .38-caliber- handgun. according to Sergeant Somerville. ~ When the two marines resisted, they were ahot and the suspect fled, she a.aid. An Investigation by the Naval Investigative Service Into the ettempted robbery and shooting is continuing, ahe said. Burns kill teen O ~KLA~ (AP) -A 16-yEar-old yo th has died from burns he suff when he waa engulfed in a grease fire as he was cooking French fries. Toro Hurtubise of Oakland died Monday in the burn ward at Brookside Hospital in San Pablo . -----.. · Funeral services have been held in Arizona for Roger Gaylord Belnap, a long-time Laguna Beach resident and former high school football star. Mr. Belnap and daughter Leslie, 6, and son Jedd, 4, died June 3 in a light plane crash near Flagstaff Arizona. Mr. Belnap was 46. He lived in Phoenix for the past 16 years. LB art auction aids Boys Club A football lineman at Laguna Beach High School in.. the 1950s, Mr. Belnap was awarded an athletic scholarship to use, where he earned a degree in real estate and business. He joined the Navy Air Corps after graduation from USC and was a pilot stationed in Rhode Island and Florida. Most recently, Mr. Belnap was vice president of the real estate firm of Scottsdale International Corporation and Northwest Ranches. He is survived by his wife Karin; his sons Mark, 25, Kenny, 15, John, 12, and his daug~r Stacy, 23; his mother Lola Belnap, of Laguna Beach: h is sister Glenny Christensen, of Laguna: and brothers J . Grant Belnap Jr., of Dublan, Mexico; and Davie Belnap, of La Habra. Sale of s tate mansion OK'd SACRAMENTO (AP) - California's new governor's mansion, in which Gov. F.dmund Brown Jr. declines to live, could be sold under a bill approved by the Assembly. A c harity art auction sponsored by the Laguna Beach Exchange Club will be held Saturday at the Boys Club, with proceeds going to several local groups. An art preview will take place at 7 p .m . with the auction beginning at 8 p.m. A no-host wine bar will be included and complimentary hors d'oeuvres will be served. Artworks will include •Host Laguna Beach families are being sought for about 30 Japanese students who will study English and learn about the United States for three weeks this summer. The students, through the International Study Tours organization, will arrive in Laguna Beach July 28 and stay through Aug. 18. •The Laguna Beac h Chamber of Commerce annual dinner and preview of the 1982 Pageant of the Masters, will be held July 7, with tickets selling at $30 per person. The annual membership dinner begins at 5:45 p.m . with n o-host coc ktails, paintings. watercolors , graphics and oils by local and international artists such as Connie K ing, R ockwell . Chagall, Dali, LeRoy Neiman, John Kelly and more. The $2 admission can be paid at the door and proceeds go to the Child Abuse Prevention program and other local youth progTams. For more information. call Bill Hoff at 497-1944. they will attend morning English classes at Laguna Beach High School, and participate in other activities in the afternoons. Host families are invited to participate in excursions. picnics, pot-luck dinners and other events during the three-week stay. For information, call Gloria Roth at 497-6796. . Jllowed by dinner at Tivoli Terrace on the festival trounds, and viewing of the pageant. Tickets are limited to chamber members only, and may be ·obtained by sending checks to the chamber, P.O. Box 396. Laguna Beach. For more information. call the chamber at 494-1018. pertly eunny Ihle •fternoon Blanwcl< 77 49 BolM 84 58 so.ton 73 84 .01 The bill, AB2373 by . Assemblyman Elihu Harris. D- Berkeley. went to the Senate on ____________ ..;_;_.:..:... __ .:.S..::ta:.:..ttonarv= •• a 45-11 vote Tuesday. U.S. S ummary 8'ownl'llle M 78 Mp4eo-Sl.P 74 49 Buffalo 7& 80 .12 ~ 90 87 .47 lhunderatorme. llooaa. Burlington 75 59 .oe New°'*"' 92 78 tornadoea 1nd hurricane-force c.,. 89 43 .19 New York 83 71 wlnd1 rempaglng •o~u the Charlatn SC 82 TII Norfolk 84 70 otnter of the nation klhd et leut cnan.tn WV as as No. Platt• 80 43 _,, wuhed out ttie buelntee Ctlarlttl NC a:z 70 Olde City 80 81 .44 dlatrlct of an lowe town. detailed • Clleyef!M 82 43 .28 Omella 71 50 .48 P~ train and toppled 70 Chicago n 48 .04 Oflando 94 75 .12 utlllty po4M In '8"au. Clnclnn.11 84 ee ,ee ~~· 83 70 ThrM people ...,. atlH mlNlng CleYelend 88' 80 .70 101 77 lodey In norti-n Ohio an. their Clble IC 88 71 ,01 Plttabu'f!:. 80 85 boetl capetzed In howling wlnda Columbul 83 80 .n Piiand, ee 66 .03 that gulled up 10 81 mph, Thirty-Oal·FI Wlh 91 88 .02 Pllend. Or• 82 88 thr .. otnen -• moued from Oeyton 83 84 .81 Providence 80 82 boat• on Lake Etle. Denver 81 46 .01 Relelgh 88 70 .08 Hundred• e11acue1ed their OM MolMI 71 53 01 Reno 88 52 homea becauH 01 lloodlng In Detroit 88 81 .73 Salt Lake 80 67 low•. NebrHI!• en~ Arl!tlneea. Duluth 84 35 San Antonio 93 72 and thOuaanda -• left wtttlout El Puo 94 84 S..ttle 75 68 ~ower TUHdey In the Grell Fargo 71 52 ~ 92 88 .34 alna. l'Wigataft 75 39 SlouxF• 70 47 Ml)'or 8111 Pelll!OY of HM!lnge. =::--80 55 St s .. Mette 68 40 .01 12 M !Owe. eald he WM out chedClng S2 54 8poll-87 80 111e i.Ye1 o1 1nct1an er.-wt1ar1 111 8yr9CUM 79 85 • 17 '-d an eerie nolM "Ilk• • ,... HonolulU 90 75 Toptlka n 67 • 18 ~wind " Houlton 90, 79 Tuceon 84 84 .32 ~-•wallofwet9f lndntll)llt 88 82 ... TulM 84 84 .s2 ~ right ecrOM ttlet lleld," .... Jedlen MS M 87 .55 Mid. ' I heel lo bedl my INdl up Jeokl!Wle 94 70 c~ to ~out of the '¥:, whlle I W¥ ~City n sa .31 8Mar1lftlld 103 TII talk onlheC8t mywlfe LaaVegee " 7t Blythe 102 wtlO to cell to tall t'-1 o ~ out Uttte Aoclt .. 84 1.35 &nk• 8t 49 of their~·· ~ 87 86 1.44 Freeno N 80 About ftye ,,,.... up91'9M\, tM Lubbodl 71 57 IAnelitter 116 71 8en Franc:leco ~ounded e ~ t3 .. .22 Loe~ 72 80 band et 78 "1llf1 rt and Mleml .. 7t .02 M~ N tWnmect Into a a-to .._.foot wa1 ....... .. 47 .47 ~ .. o1 weter on the treolle. ~ te-,._-61d WOMlll and 18 other• to ~-. au1hontlae SURF RIPIRT Mid. California TIM NMIOMI WNUW 8ervtoa •· ,,,.... lr10tNt round :i= z-= .... A ..... nloht end mornlny cloud '---l lOftf Illa OOH I nd 11111 -=-, ... 1flernoon tunlflln• ThlH'ld.r, =:=' flllr .. .,. " With wetltft/ IW._.. ""*"nt 40tfl I t. ~Jetty 1·2" "°' 17 ....... 1 ...... 14" poor 87 ..... ~ "'°'*' ,.,.. ltftdlt......, 14" = 17 ....... __. "' ......... • ,., " ., ~'Pill.ft.A ::z" ;: IO . ... : ! Tt7,"ciif!:. r" ,.., ..... -~I ..... "'" ~It '"' ..... ..... ... ....... TOMCM¥IOW'I TIOll.I ..... t:M P"' . ... - • • ' • Needlee 0 1kland PMO Roblee Red Bluft Redwood City Sactemento Sellnu Sen Diego Sen Frenctec;o Santa Berb111a s.nte Mana StoclCton Thermal Barttow Big S..r , 81eh0p Catalina Long 8Nch MonroYI• Mt. W~ton Newport 8each Ontario Palm Springe Puedene Sen 8amllrOIOO Sen JOM Sant• Ana 8wll• Cruz TahoeV~ 1()4 70 98 54 101 70 72 68 98 80 88 51 71 65 59 50 84 54 68 too e1 101 - 98 88 78 39 91 52 69 54 73 81 84 54 80 81 87 81 81 57 tot 88 78 84 83 se 8t 61 72 59 88 5e n 41 Extended Forecast SOUTHERN CA LIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN ' AAEM -UM nldlt encl Mlfy mMnlno low olCM1d• alone the oo .. t . Otherw lH fair. Few afternooon oloud• over' mountelnl. ..... It bMCfl9I 70' to 74 and lnllnd vallerf M to M. L.owl 64 to ea. Mountlln ralOfl • fllol'9 7a to eo. I.OWi 4f to If. Tides ""'~!11.JmDllHlf~ mm uH 1m1nm · Say "Happy Father's ~!" with a gift from fffctco11 farm1 Delight Dad with a gift from Hickory Farms~ We've got over 100 delicious gifts to choose from, in almost every price range. And we'll gladly handle all the details sending your gift. FASHION ISLAND WESTCLIFF PLAZA - Newport Be ach OPEN DAJLY 1 '7th 4'Dd lrVlne, Newport Beach 84•····· ...... ,. • ,__., • . I - .. 1m1111m11 ·.\I I !NI '.(IA 1 111 ~4( 11 l 1:1: OH ANGE-COUNTY C AL H OflNIA 25 CENT S .One Irvine. hospital builder drops out 11 ,. -~ ~JOEL C. DO~ lnteretted ln buildJ.ni a hmpltal adminlatrator Mike Servali said support the estimated demand by \ and Western Medical Center, run state, would recommend againat W ... Dllf ""M~--' ,..._ .. __ in lrvlne. They are Irvine he no longer see1 the lrvlne 1990. by Untted Weste rn Med ical two clinics, she added. •tern ~ -ntef ,_ MedJ.cal Center, backed by the . hospital as a "viable project." He Centers, must be . granted UCI College of Medicine dean dn>pped ltl =to buUd • ma.jbr non· profit People ror an ltvtne aid TuaUn hospital officials now We• tern Me d I ca 1' 1 n e w approval for their projects from Stanley van den Noort. a major hoepltal in · San Cornrnunlty Ho1pltal and the are le.aning toward an outpatient outpatient clinic pl.ana are likely the Office of Statewide Health backer of the campus cllnic, aald IN1eAd. oltldall of the ta Chataworth·baaed HeaJthWe1t cllnlc propoeal. to cauae a stir at UC Irvine, Planning and Developm.ent. That the university remains In a Ana·bued medJcal center hope Foundatlon. which alao wanta to build its own application procedure is similar "strong position" in the wake of to build a $10 milllon outpatient Tuatln CommunJt~ Hoeplt.al "There jwlt doesn't seem to be $10 mllllon outpatient medical to the Certificate· of Need (OON) Western Medlcal's proposal. clinic in the city. The cllnlc would and the Nuhville-bued Hoepltal a real need for a major hospital in clinic on the campus,9aaid health review for building a hospital. "We wW continue to pursue - offer aeneral medical and Corp. of America alao have Irvine bued on population and plannfn1 council apokeswoman our goal and hope that the apecialty care •• well 81 expreaed .lnt.ereet in a hospital hospital utflizatlon-vre nds," Jean Emond. Though highly unlikely, the authorities in health planning emer1ency room, outpatient for Irvine, But the Naahville Servaia aaid. He cited ah Orange The UC Board of Regents s tate cou ld approve two wiU realize the virtue of what sur1ery, alcohollam treatment group haa aet other projects County Health Planning Council already has approved UCI's outpatient clinics for Irvine, Ms. the university is proposing,'' Dr. and many other aervioell. ahMd ot Its Irvine plana. re port and other studies that outpatient clinic plans. Emond said. The health planning van den Noort said. WestemMedlcal'apulloutnow lnatelephonelnterviewtoday, show areas around Irvine will council, which serves as an Though a battle over the leaves two major group• atUJ Tuatin Community Hoapital have too many hospital beds to Ms. Emond noted both UCI advisory review board to the (See MEDICAL, Page A%) WATCHING -An inauspicious TV camera hangs from the ceiling of the Irvine City Council chambers. Beginning this fall, the council sessions will be beamed in color. Color 'em dull? Irvine council tints meet~ Irvine's City Council meetings broadcast over local cabfe television no longer will be dull and·drab beginning this tall. The council authorized the city Tuesday to pay $8,382 to modify its chambers ·so Community Cablevision can install $35,000 in better equipment to broadcast the meetings in color. Then the meetings will be dull and colorful. I City officials asked Cablevision to make the change becauae of concerns about poor transmission. They also noted that other agencies, including the local school board and the Newport Beach City Council, are broadcast in color. Russel Rei.nsel sat in a small room !)ear the council chambers Tuesday -as he always does - to direct transmission of the meeting from four automated cameras poking through the walls and ceiling. He said' Cablevision, his company. is acquiring new studio equipment and plans to move some of its existing gear into the oouncil chambers. At the same time, the city will add better lighting, enlarge his "studio" and even add a window so he can omerve .ctivitiee in. the meeting room. Reimel never peeps from hla cloeet-like room during meet.:ingB. even when council sessions last four to five hours. "You get kind of used to being in rooms like th.is." he said. "But th\!:se things do tend to drag on.'' The youthful director found it interesting that council members who occasionally speak at length about minor issues managed to breeze through the TV discussion with almost no comment. Few If any observers watch the council in action more than him. He suggested members didn't want to fuss over this issue. . "You notice how qui<;)c that went through? Bang, bang, bang," he joked. "I loved it." -GLENN SCCYI'T D.., Plot "*-bf 0., AMtwOM DIRECTING -Russell Reinsel of Community Cablevision sits in windowless room watchin~ Irvine City Council meeting on TV monitors. He switches the cameras and zooms in on the "action ." COUNTY Huntington votes for November Hunttnaton Beech casta ~for city elections in November. Page Bl. .. TELEVISION ABC's 'Harl' leads war.· ABC's "Hart to Haft" was the top-ranked lhow last week, while CBS won the ratings war. Page A8. 'Elepbant1' for family • Tonilht'• 1"nle I.Mi Roundup of the Depbantm" feature• 1peciacular foo~• of elephant hunt• and eYlll I ,....., lftd la dllcrO*I II aood family ~wtn1. i-.,.,87. I Animal shelter gets OK -...,; Irvine agrees to build facility for $2.3 millini. By GLENN SCOTT Oftti. Detty Not etalf Irvine's new animal shelter will be built for $2.3 million, the City Council agreed Tuesday night. The price was set after lengthy di8cussions on the scope of the proposed shelter, which , for some, became a "pet project" in more than name only. "I'd estimate I've spent 80 percent of my time on this issue during the past three weeks," said Paul Brady Jr., assistant city manager, during a break after the vote. The shelter will be built on' Sand Canyon Road near the Sant.a Fe Railway tracks. Animal Well-be ing) and the city's animal car e advisory committee on cuts. The project was reduced by 25 percent, o r $76 2,000 . Representatives for low bidder Hamilton -Tarnutzer Construction Co. of Cost.a Mesa agreed to the reduced project costs. They said construction could begin in two to three weeks so most of the outdoor· work could be completed before the rainy season. The shelter is to be built in conjunction with construction of a new city corporation yard on five acres adjacent to it. Hamilton-Tamutzer will build the yard f-Or $2.6 million. Its costs were reduced Tuesd ay by 11 percent. Among changes to the shelter, the council decided to replace air conditioning for the kennels with a less expensive air cooling system. Members also deleted a third kennel building which would have given the shelter 150 instead of 100 "runs," or cages. Although he reluctantly voted to approve the cuts, Councilman Larry Agran warned that the shelter still will overtax the city's operating budget in future years. Mayor David Sills said he too was worried about operating costs, but said he was convinced that little more would have been saved by delaying the project by throwing out bids and seeking new designs. Sills warned, t.pough, that the c:ity probably will need to change its policies allowing pets to be kept indefinitely once the kennels get crowded. "I think we are building a facility now that wiU take care of our needs for the next 20 years," he said. Seeing the shelter approved also was a victory for retiring Councilman Art Anthony, who leaves his post next month. Anthony had campai~ against delays. His wire, Elaine, had been a chief spokeswoman for PAWs. A l ow bid for the sh elter received in March and approved by the collncil last week was for $3 million in construction costs. However, the council agreed at the urging of city administrators to cut out "frills." Tight squeeze Falklands • prisoners City officials drafted joint recommendations Monday with members of PA Ws (Promotion of Youth trapped in chimney endangered .. Restaurant bandit one of gang.r Police in Costa Mes a now believe that the man who held up a restaurant Monday may be the same bandit who has held up 11 other restaurants, three in Newport Beach. A 17-year-old Anaheim youth got caught in a Ught fix Tuesday when he decided to enter his grandparents' locked home in Laguna Niguel by climbing down the chimney. _ About half way down, Steve Cubbison got stuck. Orange County Fir e Department rescue units from Laguna Nigue l, Mission Viejo and South Laguna rushed to 29751 Preston Drive at 5:30 p.rn. after neighbors reported yells for help coming out the ch imney stack of the single-story home. Cubbison, described by fire officials as weighing less than 100 pounds, was. droppe_d a life line and pulled free about 20 minutes after rescue units arrived. He was uninjured, but a bit dusty, fire officials said. "He popped out pretty easy once we got him free of the wedged spot," said fire department spokesman Jeff Taylor. "He was stuck with one arm above his head and the other down by his side but he was able to grab the loop in the life line and we pulled him free." Fire officials say Cubbison 's grandparents w e ren't home when he attempted his entry. By The Auoclated Pres.a The commander of Britain's task force in the Falk.land Islands said today hundreds of the 15,000 Argentine POWs held there are in poor health and in danger of dying unJ~ Argentina declares a permanent end to hostilities in the South Atlantic. But the land forces commander on the islands, Maj. Gen. J eremy Moore, was quoted by British correspondents as saying there were only 9 ,000 Argentine p risoners. Britis h Defense M inistr y sources said the discrepancy in figures may be due to conflicting troop counts given by Argentine ,.<2fficers. At first police thought there was no connection between the $1.100 robbtary at The Big Yellow House, 3010 Harbor Blvd. and others in Orange and Los Angeles counties during the past year. Israelis· seize PLO ln Buenos Aires, meanwhile, Forei~n Ministry sources said Foreign Minister Nicanor Cost.a Mendez and ·~gentina's interior minis ter s ubmitted the ir resignations, but President Gen. Leopoldo F'. Galtieri refused them. The' sources said the offers to resign were intended to help speed domestic reforms Galtieri promised Tuesday night in a nationwide TV address. Lt. Jack Calnon said that all the other robberies were committed Monday momlng;s by two bandits. one in a stocking mask. base • 1n Lebanon A lone unshaven man, described as in his mid 30s, about 6 feet and 170 pounds and wearing sunglasses gained entrance to the restaurant Monday by po6ing as a delivery man. Spotlight on Dad in special ~ection With Father's Day corning up, there's plenty of attention being focused on Orange Coast dads. For information that can help make his day a special one, turn to today's Daily Pilot section on The Man in Your Life. STATE By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 Israeli commandos, advancing under covering shellfire from Lebanese Christian allies, stormed and ca ptured a Palestinian guerrilla stronghold near the paralyud Beirut airport today. the st.ate-run Lebanese radio reported. The report said the Israelis took the science faculty campus of the Lebanese University, along the main runway of Beirut International Airport. ., According to the repo.rts, the action was aimed at eliminating a major Palestinian stronghold controlling access to the airport and some of the Voters make the rules Voten are overrulinl-laynnaken left and right through the referendum f'rocess, says columnist Richard Reeves. Page AS. Concert just a 'Dream' A San Diego radio station's~ of a "Dream Valley concert of the mind" started many rock fans on a\ tuUle search for the "concert'' and ~ law enforcement authorities. Pap B3. BUSINESS Fbiaacins too creative I ~ defaulll.,. rilinc\ and. USC 1tudy bJ.anill -~tlCriattve f~' ana the W.u.nkamp ~ outlawtnc du.cm.-. m.w. ~co. . . ' Palestine Liberati o n Organization's enclaves in Moslem west Beirut. There were conflicting reports on which forces were involved m the outbreak of shelling and fighting today, which shattered a few hours of relative calm in war-devastated Beirut. On Tuesday, Israeli and Syrian tanks battled near the airport for four hours, breaking a four-day cease-fire between Israeli forces and their Syrian foes. The Syrian regular army, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area. was not observed 41tervening in the battle for the 9Cience faculty. INDEX About 5,000 Argentines angered at their defeat in the Falklands chanted obscenities and called for the military junta's resignation before police used tear gas to drive them £rom the presidential palace Tuesday night. The warning about possible Argentine prisoner deaths came in a statement by Rear Adm. John Woodward, received by the British De fense Minhttry in London and released by the government. today. (See FALKLAND, Page A!) At Your Service Business A4 Horoecope 82 B2 B5 C6 A3 Herb Caen Callfomla Cavalcade Cua1fied <Jom1a era.word Death Notices Editorial Entenalnment Food C5-7 82 A5 B2 E4·8 B6 B6 E4 A8 & Dl-10,El-~ SPORTS -41m Landers Movt. Mutual Funda National Newa Public Noticea Sports Stock M..-keta Television Theetera, Weather DOdgen win; Ansel• .Joee · C4,C6,E4 Cl-3 C7 87 86 Al \ • ,, The Dod1er1 aot anottf er 1ood pltchln1 performance· out of Jerey. RM.-1n downlna Su\' IJMF. 8-0, a.,a_t the Anpla fell '° the_Blue _;J'"an at hcne, 2-0. hie Cl. MEDICAU CENTER .. • ouipauent clink ~ may be loomJn1 betwMn UCl and W•tem M""~ o.ntitr, Oranae County healttl P1ann1na oftld&ll embr&Ced the 1hift away from • h01pltal for Irvin . "The future of lrvtne'• healtn care sy&tem baa ju1t taken a tnuch more constructive turn,'' aatd health plannlna council executive director ltan Matek. "Instead of concentnUng limply on the ilaue of a bolpltal and who will get to build one the Jlaue finally has -.ne what kind ol health care l)'ltem ls be.1 and moat appropi:ia"!·" Wayne Schroeder, executive director of WHtern Medical Center, waa unavailable tor comment after repeated telephone calla to hit olfJce thJa week. M1. Emond aald the health planning council I.I 1till awaltlJ1i certificate of need appllcatlona from Irvine MedJcal Center and the HealthWeat Foundation. She said once the •ppllcatlona have been N!Ceived, the local and state review process will take a minimum of 90 days. FALKLAND ISLANDS ... Defense Minist~ spokesman Ian McDonald, asked about the conflicting number in the military -c enso r ed co r - re s pond ents' reports on M oor e's statements, said Argentina 's Falkland s commander told the Briti.lh he had 14,800 troops, while another officer reportedly put the figure at 8,100. McDonald said the "picture painted" in official reports he got was that many POWs were suffering from "emaciation, malnutrition, trench foot, lack of sheller and wet clothing." Task for ce commander Woodward's statement said in part: "The Argentines must appreciate that I cannot keep their troops dry and warm and fed while we are still subject to attack. They must face the facts and call a halt to all, repeat all, hostilities." He said "hundreds" o~ the prisoners could die. Galtieri, forced to cancel a public appearance because of the demonstrations, went on national television to vow Arpntina will never accept London's plans to reinstate British rule in the Falklands. He said Britain must not "proceed to establish a colonial regime. with which there will be neither definitive peace nor security. It will be Great Britain's responsibility for deepening the conflict." Britilb Prime Minis ter Margaret Thatcher ruled out any future Argentine say in the running of the islands, rejected a call from the Labor opposition. for a United Nations trusteeship and vowed she would "n ot negotiate on the sovereignty of the islands in any way except with the people who live there." "I hope we have restored once again the dominance of Britain and let every nation know that where th~ is British sove~ign territory it will be well and truly defended," she told the Howie of C.Ommons Tuesday. British Defense Secretary John Nott said Tuesday night he believed the fighting was over but raised the possibility Argentina could continue to strike at British forces from its bases on the mainland. Two Marines shot averting robbery Two Camp Pendleton Marines were shot and wounded Tuesday night -,;hen they resisted an attempted r obbfty on the sprawling base. The two, wh<>R MneS were being withheld )>ending notification of rei.tt\res, were reported in stable CIOhd.ltion this morning in area bcllpttals. One was shot in the '**h while the other man waa ahot in his r ight arm, according to Sgt. Laura Somerville, a Marine C.Orps spokeswoman. The pair were 8CCCl8ted about 10 p.m. in the Camp San Mateo area of the base by a man who demanded money. The robber was armed with a .38-callber· handgun, according to Sergeant Somerville. When the two marines resisted, they were shot and the suspect fled. she said. An investigation by the Naval Investigative Service into the attempted robbery and shooting is continuing, she said. Irvine layoffs . . t9 ·be spared? lrvtne City Council members aald Tuead•y durina budget Cllltualona that they'd like to avoid laylna oft four clty ~era. City Manaser WllHam Woollett Jr. 1UJ1e1ted the layoff• ,.. part of h1I prol)Oled $19.6 milllon spending budget for the 1982-83 fllcal year. The council besan review of the budget ~~tt Mid he propoeed the layoffs because the city's Community Deve lopment Department no longer hu work for them becauae of alowdowna in comtructJon. But moraJe-coruicioua council memben, including Larry Agran and Mayor David Silla, said attrition might aoco~t for the needed cuts and the workers could be placed in other jobs. However, no action was taken. The council decided to meet again at 7:30 p.m. tonight to resume its budget review. Council me mbers heard reporta Tueeday that aeveral city prosrama will be ellml.nated or redUced becauee of J,he need to cut the dty budaet th1a year by an ntlmated 3 percent. Woo1lett aaid cuta in development fen and state tax relmbunementa are responaible. Among propoeed cuta a.re the city's haunted house, vacation ho uae checks by police and preventive maintenance 1uch as aaphalt patching and window trimming. The city recently cut out free coffee for employees. That will aave an ntlmated $18,000 next year, aocollting to the budget. < Parks add related city facilities are propoeed to be cloeed at 9 p.m . weekday• and 5 p .m. Saturdays. They currently cloee at 10 p.m. Council members also expressed concern about fees for use of the Heritage Park Aquatics C.Omplex. Fees for lap swimme.rs are proposed for $1 each while those for swim team members would be $5 per month. Packard .announces • • • • write-Jn campaign By JEFF ADLER Of IM 0.-, "°' ..... Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard -as expec ted -announced today he will wage a November write-in campaign in an effort to defeat Republican nominee Johnnie Crean for the 43rd District C.Ongressional seat. Packard j o ins fellow Republican Bill McColl in a "Stop Crean Campaign" that has developed in the days following Crean's 100-vote victory in the district's Republican primary. In announcing his candidacy, All three K epublican candidates square ofC against .Dai:pocrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a Palomar Community College political science professor, in the November election. Crean, a 33-year-old travel- trailer manufacturer, earned the enmi t y o f GOP primary opponents by spending $750,000 in hia elect.ion bid and employing campaign tactics that were roundly criticized by the 17 other Republicaps seeking the nomination. Packard acknowledged that it He was accused of buying the will .take a "mon~tal effort" r c a m p a i g n a n d o f u s i n g to wm a .wrlte,:in bid, but said he question able and often dirty has received hundreds of calls campaign tactics. and letters of which t h e overriding theme is that these cl tliens want a c h oice in November." Packard also told reporters attending the morning news conference that h e is being supported in his bid by all 16 other candidates who sought the nomination in the district, which includes portions of both Orange and San Diego C01:1.Qties. Packard, the 50~year-old !leCOnd-place finisher in the close primary, joins McColl, who announced his own write-in bid Monday. McColl finished third in last week's pri.mary race. Partly cloudy The Fluor Foundation has given a $250,000 grant to the non-profit Explorato r y J.,.eamJng Center, a Santa Ana facility intended to combine hist('rical preservation with lessons ·in sci e nc e a nd technology. Coastal LOW clouds and drizzle to give way lo hazy aunehln• thla eftamoon. High• r91lglnQ....,., low 60s at the bMcnea to upfer 70. In Inland v .. a. Low ~ and tog to retUtn t0t1lghl. blaofnlng pvtly cloudy Thunlday lfMmooti Ovwnlg/11 tows 5" to 12. Highs Thuraday 65 to 75. Temperatures NATION HI Lo Pct' 80 68 88 60 78 53 83 63 89 70 The Fluor grant will serve as a cornerstone in efforts to raise $1.6 million for the center, said Michael McClean, vice preside nt of McClean Cadillac in Santa Ana and vice chairman of the center's Board of Directors. u~o HUG FOR A HEl\O -President Regan embraces M/Sgi. Roy Benavidez, a Medal of Honor winner from El Campo, Texas, after he led the pledge to the flag at a $1,000-a-plate f und-raising dinner in Houston to aid the re-election cauipaign of Qov. Bill Clements. Archer welconJes four-way contest Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a c andidate in the 43rd Congressional District race, believes his political fortunes are looking up these days. A few short days ago, he was the candidate who couldn't get any respect, a faceless Democrat in a solidl y conservative The center is to be located o n 10 a cres at 3101 W . Harvard Ave. in Santa Ana. near t he intersection of Fairv i e w and Warn er avenues. Already at the site is the so-calJed Heritage House, an early Orange County house built by Clay Kellogg, o n e o f the area's first surveyors and engineers. \ Republican distr ict. Even his wife r efe rred to him as the "ignored candidate." But all that has changed in recent days. Archer believes his e l ec tion prospects have undergone a complete about-face -courtesy of the Republicans. Ever since two Republican candidates, Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard and former pro football player Bill McColl, announced they wo,µld run in the general election as write-in candidates in a "s top Johnni e Crean campaign," Archer believes his chance for election has improved considerably. "If it comes down to a four- way race between Archer, Crean and two write-ins, I believe I will take the election. Archer. I think, will be your next congressman." t h e 48 -year-o ld Palo m a r Community College polt-?ical science professor explained. He said that his chances of winning the general election are much better if two write-in Republicans enter the race rather than one because it will divide the GOP vote even further. But ArCher feels he can win the congressional seat even if only one w rite-in candidate challenges both him and Crean . "I'm confident I can take C r ea n because so many Re publicans are disenchanted with him," he said. He explatned that he will pick up many anti-Crean votes rather than the write-in Republican candidates because the write-in procedures are so complicated. Ela•where, fro m Point Conc•pllon 10 Iha M•11lcan bofder •nd out llO mtW. UgM varleble winds becoming ... t to 900\hwwt 12 to 111 kl'IO\t this 9VWllllQ. SoutllwMt llwele of 2 to 3 Net. Low Cloudlnea becoming pvtty .unny thla att•noon. Albany Albuque AtNtlllo Alhevllle Allal'lta Atlante Cty AUl1ln Balllmora 81Hlngl BlrmlnQhm 81111'\81CI< 8olM BoetOI' BtownaVlle Buffalo ButflnglOtl Caper Chartttn SC Of\er1aln WV Ch8'1tt• NC 78 ... 92 87 .68 &4 7t 711 55 .19 90 74 77 49 .01 a. 58 Fronts: Cold.. Wwm WW 73 64 ........._ - Occluded ...,. Stat100ary • • J . Robert Fluor, chairman of the board of the Fluor Corp., and south county rancher Rlcahrd O'NeUl are honorary co-<:hairmen of the fund-raising drive. Another historic home, the Maag H o use, will be renovated at the site, and a barn and agriculture center will be added to preserve historic farm equipment. Along with a nature center. the facility also is planned to include an unde rground classroom and a 2 lst century greenhouse. "There are some Republicans around who think it's better to • elect Arcner thia year and come back at him in two years," the Democrat added. U.S. Summary Thund•r1torm1, flOOdl. tornadou and hurr~forc. winds r ampaging acroH th• cant• of the nation kltlecf 9t leut ~. wuhed out the blMIMaa dlatrtct ol an low• town. dlr1lrad • p111anger train and tO..-70 utlllty polM In Kanau. Thr• people -... ~ today In nort"-t'n Ohio .-Mr boetl capsized In ~ wtnd• lllet gutted up to e 1 m.,;i. Thirty- threa ot"-t'a -• r'*"*' ltom boeta on Lall• Erle·. Hundred• evacuated th•lr homH becauH ol lloodlng In Iowa. N•bruke and Ar'k1n1H. and thouland1 -· left .itlloul pow•r Tuesday In th• Qr••I Plalna. Meyor Bill Pavkov of ~ IOwa. Mid ,.,. ... out --*lno 1M 1eY91 of Indian Cr.-""*-ti. heard an ..ta nolM ''*• a ,... ~wind " Ther9 -• W1lll Of --~right KJOM that ........ he Mid. ' I Md lo back ""I .,_ up to 09! out of the~ wMa I ~ Qltlng on the CB telllng "fl wtte MIO to call to tell them 10 991 out ofth*~.·· AbOut llw ,,,. ... ~. the 8-1 Frendaco Zellhw rounded a .i 78 """' f ueadey _, Into • 3-to ...._ Wiii of wet9r on the tradle, ~ a 1.._r-woman encl ~ 18 otlW1I t • ~ Mid. g=:- Clnclnnatl ciev.land Clbla SC Columbua o.1-Ft Wth O•Y1on Oenver Del MOlnH o.trOlt Oulu1h El Paao Fvgo R.gstatt Of•IFalla HMtford ......... Honolulli Houl1on lndnllplla Jadlen MS JadcanYlle KMI City LMVegea UtUa Aoek LoulrAlla Lubbodl Memphla Mllml Mlho•JMe 94 78 ' Mpla-St.P 7 8 llO . 12 Nahvllle 75 59 .o9 N9w Orlean9 89 48 • 19 N9w Y0111 112 79 Nortollt 115 65 No. fltatt• 112 70 ()Illa City 82 43 .211 Om8he 77 ... .04 Orlando 84 68 .$11 PhlllldPhla ee eo . to P1io.ril11 88 71 .01 Pittaburgh 83 eo .n Ptland. Me 91 68 .02 Ptlend. Ore 83 &4 .61 Provldenee 81 45 .01 Raleigh 71 53 .01 Reno ae 91 13 Salt Lek• &4 35 San AntOtllo 94 &4 $Miiie 7 1 52 Sllrewport 75 39 Sioux Falte 80 55 82 &4 St Ste M.,.,. 82 54 Spoil-- 80 75 ~ 90 79 TUC80n M 62 .ff TlllN 1M 87 .55 74 49 Need ... 90 57 .47 Oals.land 92 78 Puo Roble9 113 7 t Red Bluff ... 70 Redwood City 89 43 s.or-10 eo et .48 Salin• 71 60 .411 San Olego 94 75 .12 Sen Francl90o 113 70 Santa Barbar• 101 77 Santa Man• 80 85 Stockl0t1 lie 55 .03 TMnnal 82 51 BaralOW llO 82 Big 8Mt ee 10 .oa Bllhop 88 52 Catallna 80 57 Long e..ctt 93 72 Monrovia 75 58 Mt. Wiison 92 ea 34 N.wport Beach 70 47 Ontario 511 40 .Ot Pelm Sprln;a 87 eo PaMdena 78 85 . 17 San IMmltCHllO 77 •7 11 Sen JoM u ::~ · Santa Ana :: :: ·32 Santa Cna ,_ ..., .32 T~ V"""1 1M 70 <1 CAl'OMaA t04 70 96 54 101 70 72 58 " 60 611 51 71 65 59 50 84 54 88 tOO 87 101 91 61 76 39 91 52 89 54 73 61 84 54 80 61 87 81 11 57 101 ea 711 ... 113 58 81 51 72 511 811 5e n •1 77 51 .31 Bek«afleld 103 79 " 71 &¥he 102 • &4 ta5 EvAk• e 1 49 17 15 1.41 ~ ff " 78 57 ~ tl5 71 93 et .22 Loe~ 12 eo Extended Forecast M n .~ M~ ~ ee •1 .47 ~ ee SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -l.M nfah( and .-ty '!' • ..,. .. ------------------mornint low cloud• •tono t~ • --COHI. OtllerilrlH ,.,,. F•fr Sulf llPIR' aft e rnooon ctouda over .'.··, 't._ .. _ = -~~:;r=-~ --; ;;;;;; ~ high• 72 to IO. LOWI ... to ... ~HlmtllRllll 11J1•1mu1nuum \_ " ·Say "ffiq>py Pdther's D~!" with a gift from ff ictco17 rarmi -.• .. V\' .,.): .:·::::.fl··.·~\ --. .... ... .· .. ,-it. . " .. -. . -·~. .. . ·~ . . . ... .__,_ .. -.. -' e sa9 .. ~·I . . --~ . . .. , --_ . .~ Delight Dad with a gift from Hickog Farms'!" We,ve got over 100 delicious gifts to choose from, in almost every price range. And we,11 gladly handle all the details sending your gift. , FASHION ts LAND OPEN DAILY WESTCLIFF PLAZA .. N ••Port B••:.fb ......... 17th and lrvh:ie, Newport Beach 841·•1Trl I / • • • •a 11u 111111 O J~AN GE COUNT Y. C A LIFO J~NIA 25 CEN TS British: POWs periled By The Asaoclated P ress • The commander of Britain's task force in the Falkland Islands said today hundreds of the 15,000 Argentine POWs held there are in poor health and in danger of d ying unless Argentina declares a permanent end to hostiliues in the South Atlantic. TURNING OUT FOR FUN -The fo~h season of wood boat races on T uesday n1ght8 in Newport Beach is under way. Here ilte fleet heads down Lido Channel Dally Pflot l'tlolo by GMy AmbfMe from Balboa Island. Competition among the 40-to 65-footers is in formal 90 the two windsurfers weren't too daring. But the land forces commander on the islands, MaJ. Gen. Jeremy Moore. was quoted by British correspondents as saymg there were onl y 9,000 Argentine prisoners British Def e n'se M1n1s try sources said the discrepancy m figures may be due to conf11cung troop counts given by Argentine officers. One hospital group quit.~ • ID Irvine ln Buenos Aires, meanwhile, Fore1J(n Ministry sources said Foreign Minister Nicanor Costa Mendez 'and Argentina's interior min ister s ubmitted their resignations, but President Gen. Leopoldo F Galtieri re fused thern. The sources said the offers to resign were intended to help speed domestic refonns Galtieri promised Tuesday night in a nationwide TV address. By JOEL C. DON Of'lhe.,.., .... ...., Need for major facility questioned in decision Western Medical Center has dropped its plans to build a major hospital in Irvine. Instead , officials of the Santa Ana-based medical center hope to build a $10 million outpatient clinic in the.city. The clinic would o ffer general med ical a n d s p eci alty care as wel l as emetg ency room, o utpatien t surgery, alcoholism treatment and many other services. Western Medical's pullout now leaves two ma jor ~roups still interested in building a hospital in Irvine. T hey are Irvine Medical Center, backed by the non-profit People for an Irvine Community Hospital and the Chatsworth-based Health West Foundation. Tustin Community Hospital and the Nashville-based Hospital Corp. of America a lso h ave expressed interest in a hospital for Irvine. But the Nash ville group has set other projects ahead of its Irvine plans. In a telephone interview today. Tustin Community Hospital administrator Mike Servais said he no longer sees the Irvine hospital as a "viable project." He said Tustin hospital officials now are leaning toward an outpatient clinic proposal. "There just doesn't seem to be a real need for a major hospital in Irvine based on population and hospital utilization trends." Servais said. He cited an Orange County Health Planning Council report and other st udies that show areas around lrvlne wiU have too many hospital beds to support the estimated demand by 1990. Western Medical's new outpatient clinic plans are likely to cause a stir at UC Irvine, which also wants to build its own $10 million outpatient medical clinlc on the campus, said health planning council spokeswoman Jean Emond. The UC Board of Rege nts already has appr oved UCI's outpatient clinic plans. Two defeated candidates Planners OK M~sa skyscrapers . Six-building project goes to council in July • • re101n race By JEFF ADLER Of'IMO.-,Noealllff Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard -as expected -a nnounced today he will wage a November write-in campaign in an effort to d e feat R e publican nomi nee J ohnnie C rean for the 43rd Di.strict Congx-essional seat. P ac k a r d joins fel l ow Re publican Bill McColl in a "Stop Crean Campaign" that has developed in the daya following Crean's 100-vote victory in the district's Republican primary. In announcing his candidacy. Packard acknowledged tha t it will take a "monumental effort" to win a write-in bid, but saiQ he has received "hundreds of ciills a nd l ett e r s of w h ich t h e overriding theme i.s that these citi zen s w a nt a c h oice in November." Packard also told re porte rs atte nding the m orni n g news confe ren ce tha t he is being supported in his bid by all 16 other candidates who 90ught the nomination in the district, which includes portions of both Orange and San Diego counties. . Packard , the 50-year-old ~nd-place finisher in the close prim a ry, joins McColl, who announced his own write-in bid Monday. McColl finished third in last week's primary race. All thr ee R epublica n candida tes square off against Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a Palomar Community College political science profeasor, in the November election. Crean, a 33-year -old travel- trailer manufacturer, earned the (See WRITE-IN, Pa1e A%) COUNTY A project that will add . six high -rise buildingB between 10 a nd 14 stories on the largest chunk of undeveloped land in Costa Mesa will go before the City Council July 19. The Costa Mesa plan ning commission has approved the proposal by Curci-England Co. to build 1.3 million square feet of commercial office space on 46 acres of Sakioka-owned land near South Coast Plaza Town Center. The developers said they plan to beg in constr uction of the South Coast Metro Center March, 1983. "Given what's in the area we don't see a problem," said Mike Bank robbed .in Newpo(~ $541 lost A lone bandit claiming to have a gun held up a Newport Beach bank T uesd ay afternoon and escaped with $541 in cash. Tellers at Heritage Bank, 1501 Superior Ave., said the <!rook scrawled out his robbery message on a deposit slip and became angry when a teller asked hin\ if he r;a"Y had a gun. "J ust give m e the d amn money," he reportedly shouted. Police said t h e r obber , described as being in his 20s and having wavy collar-length hair, left the area on foot. No car was seen. Huntington votes for November Huntington Beach c.asta its vote for d ty elections in November. Page Bl. TELEVISION ABC's 'Hart' leads way ABC's "Hart to Hart" was the top-ranked show tut week, while CBS won the ratinp war. Page A6. 'Eleph.anll' for family TCJn1*ht'1 ''TM Liit Roundup of the lllephan11" fe1turt1 1peot.ecul1r foota11 of 1l1ph1M hunu and even a ..,.., and II dilClliq.d 11 FOd family WrWlni· ""'~· "' Oberst, project manager for the com pany in regard to the council's consideration of high rise. "It's compatible with what's m the area." The proposed project is east of the Segerstrom-owned Town Center that includes 1.7 million square f eet of office developme nt, including the 17 -story South Coast Plaza Hotel. About three million square feet are planned. The first phase of the Curci- England development calls for two 11 -story buildings, one 14-story building and parking for 2,252 cares. The second phase includes two 10-story buildings apd one 15-story building with parking structures for 1,868 cars. Plans for the entire 16~-acre Sakioka parcel bounded by the San Diego·Freeway, MaJn Street and Sunflower originally called for only three and six-story commercial buildings and 1,500 condominiums. Oberst said that the company's decision to build high rise was influenced by the nearby Town Center complex. H e said that the company pla.R£..to submit proposals for a condom!nium development on 35 acres soon. Tight squeeze Youth trapped in chimney A 17-year-old Anaheim youth got caught in a tight fix Tuesday when he decided to enter his g ran d paren ts' locked home in Laguna Niguel by climbing down the chimney. About half way down, Steve Cubbison got stuck. Orange County Fire Depa rtment rescue units from Laguna Niguel, Mission Viejo and Sou th Laguna rushed to 29751 Preston Drive at 5:30 p.m. after neighbors reported yells for help coming out the chimney stack of the single-story home. Cubbison, described by f_fre officials as weighing less than STATE l 00 pounds, was dropped a life line and pulled free about 20 minutes after rescu e units arrived. He was uninjured, but a bit dusty, fire officials said. "He popped out pretty easy once we got him free of the wed~ed s pot,." said fi r e depar tment spokesman J e ff Taylor. "He was stuck with one arm above his head and the other down by his side but he was able to grab t he loop in the life line and we pulled him free." Fire officials say Cubblson's gr a ndpar ents weren't home when a e attempted his entry. Voters make the rules Voten are overruling lawmakers left and right th.rough the referendum process, says columnist Richard Reever. P age A8. Concert just a 'Dream' A San Diego radio station's broadca9t of • •'Dream Valley concert of the mind" started many rock f.ans on • a futile eearch for the 0 poncert" and angel"!d law • enforcement authorities. Page 83. BUSINESS • Ms. Emond notAfd both UCI and Western Medical Center, run by United Western Medical Cente rs, must be granted approval for their projects from the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. T hal application procedure is similar to the Certificate of Need (OON) review for building a hospital. Though highly unlikely, the s tate could approve two outpatient clinics for Irvine, Ms. F.mond said. The health planning council. which serves as a n advisory review board to the (See ME DICAL, Page At) Report says Arafat seeks role by U.S. - BULLETIN BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Yasser Arafat's Palestin e Liberation Organization 11 wlJUng to discuss laying down arms lo direct negotiations with tbe United States, Arafat's polJttcaJ adviser was ,uoted as saying on Le bao!>o s s ta t e television today. Israeli commandos, advancing under covering shellfire from Lebanese Christian allies. s tormed and c apture d a Palestinian guerrilla stronghold near th~ pal"alyzed Beirut airport today, the state-run Lebanese radio reported. The report said the Israelis took the science faculty campus of the Lebanese Univers ity, along the main runway of Beirut International Airpor t. Accordi n g to the reports, the a c tion was aimed at eliminating a major Palestinian stronghold controlling ac"CeSS to the airport and some o f the Palestin e Liberat io n O r ganization's enclaves in Moslem west Beirut. There were conflicting reports on which forces were involved in the outbreak of s helling and fighting today. which shattered a few hours of relative calm in war-devastated Beirut. On Tuesday, Israeli and Syrian tanks battled near the airport for four hours, breaking a four-day cease-fire between Israeli forces and their Syrian foes. The Syrian regular army, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area. was not observed intervening in the battle. INDEX About 5 ,000 Argentines angered at their defeat in the Fa lklands chanted obscenities and called for the military junta's res1gnat1on before police used tear gas to drive them from the pres1den tia I pa lace Tuesday night. The warning about possible Argenune prisoner deaths came m a statement by Rear A<iJTw. John Woodward, received by the Braush Defense Ministry in London and re lease<;I by the government today. · Defe nse Ministry spokesman Ian McDonald, asked about the conflicting number in t'be m i litar y-c en sored cor - r esp o nd e nts ' reports on Moo r e's s tate ments, said Argentina 's Falkland~. rommander told the British he had 14,800 troops, while another officer reportedly put the figure a t 8,100. McDonald said the "picture p&anted" in official reports he got was that many POWs were suffering from "emaciation. malnutrition, trench foot, lack of shelter and we t clothing." T ask f orce commander Woodward's statement said in part: "The Argentines must appreciate that I cannot keep their troops dry and warm and fed whale we are still subject to attack. They must face the facts and call a halt to all. repeal all, host1hties." He said "hundreds" of the prisoners rould d ie. Galtaeri. forced to cancel a public appearance because of the demonstra tions, went on national television tQ vow Argentina will never accept London's plans to reinstate British rule in the Falklands., He said Britain must no t "proceed to establish a colonial regime, with which there will be n eithe r definitive peace nor security. It will be Great Britain's responsibility for deepening the conflict." British Prim e Minis ter Margare t TRatch~r ruled out any future Argentine say in the running of the islands, rejected a call from the Labor opp05ition for a United Nations trusteeship and vowe d she wou ld "not negotiate on the sovereignty of the islands in any way except with tt\e peop~e who live t~ere." "I hope we have restored once again the dominance of Britain." At Your Service A4 Horoecope B2 B2 Business C5-7 Ann Landen Herb Caen B2 Movies B5 California A5 Mutual Funds C6 Cavalcade B2 National News A3 Clusified E4-8 Public Notices C4,C6,E4 Coollct B6 Sports Cl -3 ere.word B6 Stock Marketa C7 Death Notkm E4 Televiaion B7 Editorial A8 Theatert 85 lnt.ertainment & Weather • A2 rood Dl·lO,El-3 r • ' SPORTS ~en win; AJ16el1. lote · The Dodaere aot anothe r 1ood pllchln1 perlGrmanoa • out of Jerry a.um ln daw"1na San' DleF, 3..0, but the Anpli fell to tJw Bh.1e-Ji11 1\ homil, 2-0. P.-,. Cl. • I ' U O/N ~\ \\t Continued 8forle8 . MEDICAL c·ENTER. • • aiate, would ~nd aaa1nat two cllntct, aho added. tJCl Colle& of Mec:tlcine dean Stanley van dc;n Noort. a major backer ot the campua clJnlc, aatd the unlverel\~ remain• In a ·•atrona poaltion · ln the wake of We.tern Medlcal't proposal. "We will continue to puniue our goal and hope that the authorities in health planning will realize the virtue of what the university ia proposing," Dr. van den Noort said. Though a battle over the outpatient clinic proposals may be looming between UCI and Western Medical Center, Orange County health planning officials embraced the• shift away from a hospital for Irvine. "The future of Irvine's health care system has just taken a much moC'9 c:onatn.cUve twn," aald health pla.nntna counctl executive cllrec10I' Stan Matek. "Inatffd of concentr•tinl limply on the llaue of • hoepltal and who wt~t t.o build one the ilaue ti tw ~ what kind of h th cue •)'Item ii btit and mott appropriate.'' Wayne Schroeder, executive director of Weatern Medical Center, was unavailable for comment after repeated telephone calla to his office this week. Ms. Emond said the heal th planning council is still awaiting certificate of need applications from Irvine Medkal Center and the Health West Foundation. She said once the applicatione have been received, the 1ocaJ and state review proceaa will take a minimum of 90 days. WRITE-IN PLANNED. • • enmit y of GOP primary Republicans to clpse ranks opponents by spending $750,000 behind thef party's nominee, in his election bid and employing Crean. campaig n tactics that were Acting GOP party chairman roundly criticized by the 17 other Tom Fuentes called Crean a Repu blican s seeking the "dynamic new face on the nomination. • Republican horizon." He was ac:cused of buying th~ "I call upon all of the other 17 c a m p a i g n a n d o ( u s i n g Republican candidates in the race questionable and often dirty to pledge their endorsement and campaign tactics. support to Johnnie Crean so we can guarantee· a Republican Meanwhile, the Orange victory in November in the 43rd County Republican Party issued Congr~ional District," F\.ientes a news release urging county said. * * * * * * Archer welcomes four-way ~on test Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, a candidate in the 43rd Congressional District race, believes his political fortunes are looking up t.hese days. A few short days ago, he was the candidate who couldn't get any respect, a faceless Democrat in a solidly conservative Republican district. Even his wife referred to him as the 1'ignored candidate." But all that has changed in recent days. Archt?r beli~ves his election prospect-t-have undergone a complete about-face -courtesy of the Republicans. Ever since two Republican candidates, Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard and former pro footbe.11 player Bill McColl. announced they would run in the general election as write-in candidates in a "stop Johnnie Crean campaign," Archer believes his chance for election has improved considerably. "If it comes down to a four- way race between Archer, Crean and two write-ins, I believe I will take the election. Archer, I think, wUl be your next congressman," the 48 -year-old Palomar Community College political science professor explained. He said that his cha.nce9 of winning the general election are much better if two write-in Republicans enter the race rather than one because it will divide the GOP vote even further. But Archer feela he can win the congresional seat eve.n lf only one write-in candidate challenges both him and Crean. Planner ~ denied 2nd Newport Beach City Pl.anni.na Comml11loner Allan Beek, a aomet.lmee controv~nial political fillll'• In the city, hu been denled a aecond term on the pl.annlna unit. Beek, the Qity Council voted thla week, will be replaced by David Goff, a former leader of the West Newport Legislative Alliance. Goff, a mechanical ·engineer, qwt the alliaooe the same day the grou(> announced it would seek a .-referendum on the Banning Ranch development. He aaid he could not support a referendum. Curre:ntly aerving on a city environmen tal quality convruttee. Goff said he comes to the comrniuion with an open mind on development. ~ a member ot the alliance, he had been critical of the Banning development and later supported the project whe~ the council made modifications in the plan. Beek, whose family owns the Balboa Island Ferry and has interest in Beacon Bay, has been mentioned as a potential council candidate ln November. He said h1' ha(! not decided Whether to seek political office. Two Mari.nes wounded by armed robber Two Camp Pendleton Marines were shot and wounded Tuesday night when they resisted an attempted robbery on the sprawling bue. The two, whO&e names were being withheld pending notification of relatives, were reported in stable condition this morning in area hospitals. One was shot in the stomach while the other man was shot in his r ight arm, according to Sgt. Laura Somerville, a Marine Corpe spokeswoman. The pair were accoeted about 10 p.m. in the Camp San Mateo area of the base by a man who demanded mone)'.. The ro~ber was armed with a .38-eahber· handgun, according to Sergeant Somerville. When the two marines resisted. they were shot and the suspect fled. she said. An invesagation by the Naval Inve1tlgative Service into the llttempted robbery and shooting is continuing, she said. Partly cloudy Coastal ,. .. . 0.., ..... """'° lty IAe .. .,... PEDALERS PROTECTED -Widening.. of Coast Highway Bridge over the Santa Ana the bike trail-sidewalk on the ocean side of River has blocked a traffic lane for a month. Restaurant bandit one of gang? Police in Costa Mesa now believe that the man who held up a restaurant Monday may be the same bandit who has held up 11 other restaurants, three in Newport Beach. At first police thought there was no connection between the $1 ,100 robbery at The Big Yellow House, 3010 Harbor Blvd. and o thers in Orange and Los Angeles counties during the past year. Lt. Jack Calnon said that all the other robberies were committed Monday mornings by two bandits, one in a stocking mask. A lone unshaven man, described as in his mid 30s, about 6 feet and 170 pounds and wearing sunglasses gained entrance to the restaurant Monday by posing as a delivery man. • Calnon said that the pose and the gunman's order not to look at his face matched holdups that have occurred at the Quiet Woman, Le Biarrit.z and Five CroWn.s restaurants in Newport Beach. Calnon declined to speculate on what the split-up of the robbery team could mean, adding that the other man could have been ill or waiting in a car. No getaway car was seen Monday. Police are warning restaurant owners to be especially cautious on Monday mornings and not to open their doors to any stran~ers. District offers extra classes Youngsters and adults interested in everything from pre-kindergarten to calligraphy, cooking and drama are invited to register fr the Extra Time Classes June 28 to July 30. The summer classes range from $22 to $82 and are spon- •In honor of their 26th year in Costa Mesa. the Goodwill Store at 620 W. 19th Street will offer popula.r jeans and new clothes thlS weekend. sored by the Parent Faculty Organ1zat1on of Mariners Element.ar)t School. Classes are held at various schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. For more information call 645-5558. GbOdwill Industries offers training and employment oppor tunities (or 450 handicapped men and women in Orange County. Ne-wport backs $40 million budget The Newport Beach City Council has tentatively approved a $40.8 million 1982-83 budget, dumping requests for additional police officers in the process. :!'he budget, which will be considered for final approval * * * June 28, would add no new employees to the city payroll and calls for a 5 percent reduction in spending. Council action The council signaled its desire to keep the budget tight by slashtng requests for three new police officers, a code e nf o r cemen t officer , an additional engineer and a new recreation supervisor. Employee salaries make up 54 percent of the ,budget. That figure does not include The N ewport Beach City Red Onion Restaurant at 2406 anticipated wage hikes. Council voted this week to: Newport Blvd. because of traffic Employee associations currently concerns. are bargaining with the city. Low clouds and drlzzlfl 10 give way 10 hazy sunshine lhla allemoon. High• r•nglng from low 60a at the beactte1 10 UPP« 70• In lnlwid areu Low ci0ud1 and log to re1urn tonight, becoming par11y cloudy Thuredey allemoon Overnight laws 54 10 62 High• Thursday 65 to 75 -APPROVE the first reading Council members did agree to rTt tures of a law banning electronjc video increase the budget slightly by i empera games Crom being closer than 300 APP 0 INT Kent allocating $42,000 for a new El1•wher•. from Point Conc•pllon 10 the Me•lc•n t>o<der wid out eo m11e1· Ugllt variable wtnoa becoming ..i to IOU1hWWI 12 to 18 knots thl1 evening. Sout~I 9Wella of 2 to 3 feet low cloudlneu t>ecomlng par11y sunny Ihle allernoon U.S. Summary Thunderatorma. llooda, tornadoes and hurrlcene-force wind• rampaging ecrou ttle center of 1he n•tlon kitted II leal ..-..n. walhed OUI Ille bu8lneM dlllrlel of 1t1 Iowa town, detailed a p~er 1ra1n and toppled 70 u1111ty pofat In Kanna. Three people -• 1t1n mlltlng today In noflhern Ohio alter their boats cap~zed In howling wtnde that guSled up to 81 mph. Thlr1)'· three oth•rt were rffCUed from boats on lake Erie. Hundred• evacu•ted 1helr homes b•c•uae of flooding In Iowa. Nebraake and-Ark1n111. end lhOunn<la were left wlth0u1 power TueaCl•y In th• GrHt Pt•lna. Mayor Bill Pevttov of He.tinge, Iowa. aald he .... °'-11 c:lledllng Ille lellel of Indian Crelll wMt! he '-rd .,, Mrle nolM "Ilk• ...... high wind.'' "There -• wall of wet• ~ right e«OM lhet fleld," he Mid. ' I hed to bec:ti my tl\ldl up IO gel OU1 of the way wtllle I ._. tailing on Ille 08 ttlllng my wtle who to caN to t .. them lo 1191 OU1 of tllelf 11ou-. .. About 11119 mllee uptlrMm, the Sen Franc:ieco ZeohYf rounded I bend •I 78 mpti tueeo.y Ind Mmmecl Into 1 3-to +fool W9I of water on Ille tfllCb, kJmng I 19-)"Nf .()Id -end Mndlng UI others to hoepltlle, ~Mid. California Tiit National WMther l«'Me • pt«Slct• lf'IOther round ot .... night 1no mornln9 cloud"'"9 1long th• co11t ind ""Y alt•rnoon 1un1hln• Tl'lurtctay, with wttttfly l>r-. .. brwfllnt ...,,. ac 1f to ff fl'IPfl, Hip 1lutdly IMuld ,.,. hM "" ""'* 10. In '°""'°"" m,t'.:~'n ::a.c .......... lrOM N to 10I Ir! Wit 111111 ~ -...... tOI .. 1flllllOW~ .... ..... ...,,. ,.... Ce!"""' .... ......, ..... """ Alb•ny Albuque AmerHlo ~ Atlanta Atlante Cty Austin 881tlmo<• BllUngt Blrmll>ghm Blamer cit BolM Bot1on B<ownlYfle Buffalo Bur11ngton Caeper Charlatn SC Char1etn WV Chertlte NC Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati CleYeland Clbla SC Columbus Dll·Ft Wth Dayton Denver NATION feet to schools and 100 feet to ·Steckmesser to the Board of county home for children. HI lo Pct> homes. Library Trustees; Patric ia A request for $20,000 from the : : Kendrick and Molly Lynch to Fair Housing Council of Orange Dea Moines Delrolt Duluth El Puo Fargo Rega ta ff GtMt Fllll Harttord Htlenl Honolulu Houlton lndnaplla JtlCkan MS JtlCkwwl'I K9na City lM VegM Uttle Rock LoulMle Lubbodl ~ MIMI! M....._ 78 53 -POSTPONE acting on an the City Arts Commissi?~; County was turned down. 83 83 ordinance that would restrict Michael Mitchell to the C1v1l Several council members noted ~ ~ how long recreational vehicles Service Board; Robert Hopkins that the housing coW'lcil is suing 92 67 .88 can be parked in residential and James Capreu to the Parks, the city over housing practices. 7848 !51 1" areas. Be aches and Re cdr eGoa tfi(o n The city bu~et, by st.ate law, 90 "1· · .. 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Wiiton Newporl BMtCh Onterlo Palm Sprlnga PINderla S111Bemlr0lr10 S...JOM Senta Ana Senta Cruz TaholV~ . 104 10 98 54 101 70 72 S6 ee 60 es s1 71 66 59 50 84 64 es 100 87 101 98 68 78 39 91 52 89 54 73 81 84 S4 80 81 87 81 81 57 101 es 78 84 83 se 81 51 72 SQ ea 58 11 41 Extended Forecast (._~~1~~m 11111111__,m •mun 11 m1 · :-· Say "Happy Pdther's ~!" with a gift from ff ictcor1 farm' d SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AMAS -Lat9 n4Qtl1 Ind Mrty •'W!'I!!!""-----------~~~----morning low cloud• along th• •·: ·.. IUlf 1iP111 ~~~~ . Delight Dad with a gift from Hickory Farms~ We've got over 100 delicious gifts to choose from , in almost every price range. ' ) lllghll 72 to to. Lowe 41 to st. 111 '7 ·- :~ft w ... A ...... ?i"ft' -=-'=' 1 ·I ft poor a7 1.Z It poor 11' 1-1 ft poor 17 1-1 ft poor 17 :~= :::: : Tides TOOAY e.oorict... 11:11 ··"'· e.oorict ·~t"'· ,.,_ IOW 1:07 un. ' ,..,.. ...... .. ... Lift, ... And we'll gladly handle all the details sending your gift. FASHION ISLAND New~rt Beach OPEN DAILY ~STCLIFF PLAZA 17th and Irvine, Newport Beaob Hft ,_, to ... °""** ...., , .. ft .. • Tr=.., Wfl '* • ......... 11:11 ....... u ........ .. .... -'II ... . "'" ......... 9Mft., ......... 842·0172 TOMOMOW'I TIOll! HW1 t:• '""' 1.1iW 11:11 11""· lwll ~ ......... ,_,........._.M!UI. ..... ""' ..., .. 1;'1 ....... -•:.,.M. . \ . . TURNING OUT FOR FUN -The fourth season of wood boa( races on Tuesday nights in Newport Beach is under way. Here the fleet heads down Lido Channel . .,.., ..... "'*..,,Gery ....,_ from Balboa Islahd. Competition among the 40-to 65-footers is infonnal sh the two windsurfers weren't too daring. One hospital .gro-up quits -in Irvine By JOEL C. DON or ... .,.., .... ,..,. Need for major I acility questioned -in decision Western Medical Center has dropped its plans to build a major hospital in Irvine. Instead, officials of the Santa Ana-based medical center hope to build a $10 million outpatient clinic in the city. The clinic would offer general medical and specialty care as well as e m ergency room, outpatient s urger y , alcoholism treatment and many other services. WeStem Medical's pullout now leaves two major groups still interested in building a hospital in Irvine. They are Irvine Medical Center, backed by. the non-profit People for an Irvine Community Hospital and the Chatsworth-based Health West Foundation. Tustin Community Hospital and the Nashville-based Hospital Co'k'p. of Ame rica also have expressed interest in a hospital for Irvine. But the Nashville group has set other projects ahead of its Irvine plans. In a telephone interview today, -· ' Tustin Community Hospital . administrator Mike Servais said h e no longer sees the Irvine hospital as a "viable project." He said TuSfin hospital officials now are leaning toward an outpatient clinic proposal. "There just doesn't seem to be a real need for a major hospital in Irvine based on population and hospital utilization trends,'' Servais said. He cited an Orange County Health Planning Council report and other studies that show areas around Irvine will have too many hoapital beds to support the estimated demand by 1990. Western M e dical's new outpatient clinic plans are likely to cause a stir at UC Irvine, which also wants to build its own $10 million outpatient medical clinic on the campus, said health planning council spokeswoman Jean Emond. The UC Board of Regents already has approved UCl's outpatient clinic plans. Two defeated candidates Planners OK Mesa skyscrapers Six-building project goes to council in July • • re101n race By JEFF ADLER or-. Deir ,.. '"'" · Carlsbad Mayor Ron Packard -as expected -announced today he will wage a November write-in campaign in an ef(prt to defeat Republican nominee Johnnie Crean for the 43rd District Congresmonal seat. Packard joins fellow Republican Bill McColl · in a "Stop Crean Campaign" that has developed in the days following Crean's 100-vote victory in the district's Republican primary. In announcing his candidacy, Packard acknowledged that it will take a ''monumental effort" to win a write-in bid, but said he has· received "hundreds of calls and lette r s of which the overriding theme is that these citizens want a choice in November." Packard also told reporters attending the morning news conference that he is being supported in his bid by all 16 -other candidates who sought the nomination in the district, which inc:ludes portions of both Orange and San l>iego counties. Packard, the 50-year-old · ~d-place finisher in the close primary, joins McColl, who announced his own write-in bid Monday. McColl finished third in last week's primary race. All thr ee Republican candidates square off against Democrat Roy "Pat'' Archer, a Palomar Community College political science professor, in the November election. Ctean, a 33-year-old travel- trailer manufacturer, earned the (See WRITE-IN, Page A%) COUNTY A project that will add si)c high-riae buildings between 10 and 14 stories on the largest chunk of undeveloped land in Costa Mesa will go before the City Council July 19. • The Costa Mesa planning commission has ~p!'oved the proposal by Curci-England Co. to build 1.3 million square feet of commercial office space on 46 acres of Sakioka-owned land near South Coast Plaza Town Center. The developers said they plan to begin construction of the South Coast Metro Center March, 1983. "Given what's in the area we don't see a problem," said Mike Bank robbed in Newport $541 lost A lone bandit claiming to have a gun held up a Newport Beach bank Tuesday afternoon and escaped with $541 in cash. Tellers at Heritage Bank, 1501 Superior Ave., said the crook scrawled out his robbery message on a deposit slip and became angry whe.n a teller asked him if he really had a gun. "Ju st' giv'e me t h e damn money," he reportedly shouted. Police said the robber, described as being in his 20s and having wavy collar-length hair, left the area on foot. No car was seen. .. Huntington -voles I or November HunUngtQn Beach casts its vote for dty elections in November. Page Bl. .. TELE VISION ABC's 'Hart' leads way ABC's "Hart to Hart". wu the top-ranked show lut week, while CBS won the ratings war. Page A6. . 'Eleplaantll' for family TCJniCht'a "The I.Mt Roundup of the ~ta0 ---f•aturtt IPKtacular footqe of' elephant bunt.a and ewsa a ,_. and 11 m.crtbed • FOCI 1am11y vtnnDc· ...... /J'I · • Oberst, prqject manager for the company in r1!gard to the council's consideration of high rise ... It's eompatible with what's in the area." The propoeed project is east of the Segerstrom-owned Town Center that includes 1.7 million s quar e feet of office development, including the 17-story South Coast PJ.aza Hotel About three million. square feet are planned. The first phase of the Curci- .England development calla for two 11-story buildinss. one 14-story building and parking for 2,252 cares. The second phase includes two 10-story buildings and one 15-story building with parking structures for . .f,868 cars. Plana for the entire 165-acre Sakioka parcel bounded by the San Diego Freeway, Main Street and Sunflower originally called for only three and six-story commercial buildings and 1,500 condomlnlums. Oberst said that the company's decision to build high riae was influenced by the nearby Town Center complex . He said that the company plans to submit proposals. for a condominium development on 35 acres soon. Tight squeeze Youth trapped in chimney A 17-year-old Anaheim youth got caught in a tight fix Tuesday when he decided to enter his grandparents' locked home in Laguna Niguel by climbing down the chimney. About half way down, Steve Cubbison got stuck. Orange County Fire Department rescue units from Laguna Niguel, Mission Viejo and South Laguna rushed to 29751 Preston Drive ·at 5:30' p .m. after neighbors reported yells for help coming out the chimney stack of the single-story home. Cubbison, described by fire ofticlala u wefi)ling lea than • I STATE 100 pounds, was dropped a life line and pulled free about 20 minutes after rescue units arrived. He wanintnju:n!d, but a bit dusty, fire officials said. "He popped out pretty easy once we got hiJ'!l free of the wedged s_pot," said fire department spokesman Jeff Taylor. .. He was stuck with one arm above bis head and the other down .by bis side but he was able to grab the loop in the life line and we pulled him free." Fire officials aay Cubbison's grandparents weren't home when he attempted his entry. Voters make the rules VoterJ are overruJin& ~wmakei;t left and right through the referendum process, NY• columnist Richard 1'eeves. Page AB. Co~eftr.t just a 'Dream'. A Sen Dieao radio stati0n'1 bro9doMt of a "Dream Valley ciontiert of the mind" started mmiy rock f.ana on a futUe 8Nl'Ch f<Jt the '4conuert" and anpred law enforcement authorities. Pace 83 .. BUSINESS Ms. Emond noted both UCI and Western.Medical Center, run by United Western Medical Centers, must be granted approval for their projects from the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. That application procedure is similar to the Certificate of Need (CON) review for building a hospital. Though highly unlikely, the state coul3 approve two outpatient clinics for Irvine, Ms. Emond said. The health planning council, which serves as an advi&Or y review board to the (See MEDICAL, Page Att Report says Arafat seeks role by U.S. BULLETIN BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Yauer Arafat'• Palestine LlberaUoo Or1aafaaUoo II wlllJ.91 to cllaca11 laybag down arm1 In dtreet aegodatloa1 wldl tlae Ualted State1, Arafat'• political advller was ,aoted u uylag on Lebanon 1 state televtaloa today. Israeli commandos, advancing under covering shellfire from Lebanese Christian allies, stormed and captured a Palestinian guerrilla strongltold near the paralyzed Beirut airport today, the state-run Lebanese radio reported. The report said µte Israelis took the science faculty campus of the Lebanese University, along the main runway of Beirut International Airport. • According to the reports, the action was aimed at eliminating a ma· r Palestinian stronghnld contro~g access to the airport a nd some of the Palestine Liberation Organization's e nclaves in MoSlem west Beirut. There were conflicting reports on which forces were involved in the outbreak' of shelling and fighting today, which shattered a few hours of relative calm in war-devastated Beirut. On Tueeday, Israeli and Syrian tanks battled near the airport for four houn; breaking a four-day cease-fire between lal:aell forces and their Syrian foes. The Syrian regular a.rmy, which has 1,000 men stationed in the Beirut area, was not obeerved intervening ln the battle. INDEX A4 a-1 B2 A6 B2 1:4.a Be Be l'A A8 85 Dl·lO,Bl-3 ).' SPORTS -· . ' • f1¥ •• Britisli: I POWs . periled By Tile Auoclated Pre11 .. The commander of Britain'• task force ln the Falkland Ialanda said today hundred.8 of the 16,000 Argentine POWa held there are ln poor health and in danger of dying unless Argentina declares a pennanent end to hostilities ln. the South Atlantic. But the land forces oornnww;ter on the islands, Maj. Gen. Jerem. ny M\JOre, was quoted by British correspondents as saying there were only, 9,000 Argentine prisoners. British Defense Ministry source"s said the discrepancy in figures may be due to conflicting troop counts given by Argentine officers. In Buenos Aires, meanwhile, Foreign Ministry sources said Foreign Mlntster Nicanor c.o.ta Mendez and Argentina's interior minister submitted their resignations, ·but President Gen. Leopoldo F . Galtieri refused them. The sources said the offers to resign were intended to help speed domestic refonns Galtieri promised Tuesday night in a nationwide TV address. About 5,000 Argentines angered at their def•t in the Falklands chanted obscenities and called for the military junta's resignation before police used tear gas to drive them from the presidential palace Tuesday night. The warning about possible Argentine prisoner deaths came in q statement by Rear Adm. John Woodward, received by the British· Defense Ministry in London and released by the government today. Defense Ministry spok~ Ian McDonald, asked about the conflicting number ~n the military-censored cor- respondents' reports on Moore's statements, said Argentina's F a'l k la nd a commander told the British be had 14,800 troops. while another officer reportedly put _the figure at 8,100. McDonald said the "picture painted" in official reports he got was that many POWs were sufferirig from "emaciation, melnutrition, trench foot, lack of shelter and wet clothing." Task force comma nder Woodward's statement said in part: "The Argentines must appreciate that I cannot keep their troop; dry and warm and fed while we are still subject to attack. They m1.&5t face the facts and call a halt to all, repeat all, hostilities." He said "hundreds" of the prisoners could die. Galtier i, forced to cancel a pubQc appearance because of the demonstrations, went on national television to vow Argentina will never accept London's plans to reinstate British rule in the Falklands., He said Britain must not "proceed to establish a colonial regime. with which there will be neither definitive peace~r security. It wiJll)e 0-reat Brf 's responsibility for deepening e conflict." British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ruled out any future Argentine say in the running of the Islands, rejected a call from the Labor opposition for a United Nations trusteeship and vowed she would "not negotiate on the eovereignty of the islands in 1q1,y way except with the peop~e who µve tl)ere ... '1 hope we have restored once again the dominance of Britain." i ; ~ I l l I l I I I I I I r I I , I ' J t ~--~--- ~illTI~UJ[~l ~--...-..~'- Churches to reunite? Southern Presbyterians vote north merger By ftt AneeJated PNll COLUMBUS, Ga. -A lopsided vote by eouthem Presbytertana ln faVOI' of "'u.nitinl with • northem branch of their denomination atunned opponents and even 1urpriled backen of the tan, church leadera aaid. · The 122nd General Auembly of the 840,000-rncmber Presbyterian Cburch In the United Stat.ea voted 344-30 on Tueeday.to approve a plan reuniting it w ith the 2.4 million-member United Prtabyterian Church In the Unlted State• ot Amerb. 1l\e two groupe 1eparated over the slavery llNe ln 1861 ~d largely maintained their northern a.nd eouthern alignment. Befote the two bodles merge, however, three- quarten of 'the aouthem church's 61 presbyteries must approve reunion, and church leadera aay that will be a ·~f':!:e becauae of opposition In South Carolina, M ppi and Alabama. Nevada conducts nuclear test LAS VWAS, Nev. -The Departr8ent of Energy conducted an underground nuclear weapons test Wedneeday at the Nevada Test Site, the eighth announced test at the site this year. DOE spokesman Jack Campbell said the test wu conducted at a depth of 948 feet below Yucca Flat, 75 miles northwest ot Las Vegas, and had a yield of leas than 20 kilotons of TNT. Code-named Kestl, t!\e •test waa the 590th announced shot at the site. The blast was conducted without incident. Campbell said. John Hinckley ref J.ses to testif 1 WASHINGTON (AP) -John W. Hinckley Jr. told the judge in his trial today that he will not testify in his own defense. "It's totally my decision," the presidential assailant said. · Hinckley, accused of. shooting President Reagan and three other men, was called to the bench by U.S. _Dis!Jict Judge Barrington D. Parker after Hinckley's chief attorney, Vincent J. Fuller, told the court, "We will not put him (Hinckley) on the stand, your honor." Parker asked Hinckley: "Mr. Fuller repr.esents that you do not intend to take the stand. Is that correct?" Hinckley answered quietly: "Yes, sir." House approves $3 billion plan WASHINGTON -Ignoring a veto threat, the House of Representatives today shouted its approval of a compromise $3 billion housing- stimulus plan designed to make it easier for low- and moderate-income Americans to buy new homes. The \lction in the Democratic-controlled chamber set up a near~rtain veto confrontation between Congress and President Reagan, who opposes the housing program as a costly bail-out of one segment of the economy. Trou~led Poland worries pope GENEVA, Switterland -~bled Poland was seldom far from the thoughts of Pope John Paul II. as he liurried through a day-long visit to this tranquil city. The pope -whose next trip is likely to be to Poland in August -referred subtly but often . Tuesday to events in his native, martial law- administered country, where an open challenge to Communist rule was crushed last December in a sweeping military crackdown. John Paul returned to the Vatican Tuesday nij(ht. Diver dies off Cleniente Isle LOS ANGELES -A 37-year-old commercial diver was pronounced dead Tuesday afternoon after an apparent diving accident off San Clemente Island, authorities said. The Pasadena man, whose identity was withheld pending notification of next of kin, had been diving with the unidentified owner of a boat at about 2:30 p.m. when the owner noticed a leak in his own diving rur hose, said Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Mason Kinny. The victim later was found in about 10 feet of wateJ' with his breathing apparatus wrapped around his neck, the deputy said. California's import ban violated SAN FRANCISCO -Despite a statewide ban on Mexican fruit, more than 150 tons of Mexican oranges have been unloaded in San Francisco wholesale markets in recent days. following the discovery of maggots in part of a shipment of 1,000 orange crates to San Mateo and Santa Clara counties south of San Francisco, At the same time Tuesday, Ariz.ona announced an embargo on citrus fruits from Mexico. The report Tuesday came four days after California officials halted Mexican fruit imports ,Bill would give teachers priority \. SACRAMENTO -The state Assembly has voted to require that only teaching experience, not administrative time, be counted in calculating seniority in case of layoffs at community colleges. Assemblyman Dick Floyd, D-Lawndale. ~d Tuesday his AB3364 is intended to prevent administrators with little or no teaching experience from "bumping'' qualified teachers from their jobs where there are cu tbacks due to declining enrollment. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Thom .. P. Hllev l'lilllll* _, a.. 6-O"'- ~~ MdOIF.wol~ Tom Murphlne Edllor =:o,H:;:L.,. ~ Ken Goddard DlreolOr al~ ~'--' a.tee Looe ......... Edllor ~,.. .... ...., ........... , • Claum.d adveftlalng 7141142·5'11 All otMr departments 14~321 flllAIN OFFICE UO Wttt ~St., COit• Maw, CA. M•llti.ddfftl: llOll ts.cl, ColY -·CA. '2626 C01tYr'9M ttll 0r-. C-Pullll.,.."t ~. NO MWS _... lttwretl.,.s. edlttnel ...-weo. .,.,ti,....,... llef'elft • ....., M ~ W'ltllDwt _ .. , ~ .. ,...,,""'-· VOL 11, NO. 117 Studen·t acquitted of assault charges SAN FRANCISCO -A graduate student accused of knifing a woman in an elevator when.,£le refuaed to put out her cigarette haa been acquitted of assault charges. Richard Ma., 38, a psychology student at San Francilco State University, was found innocent Tuesday by a Superior Court j ury after two hours of deliberation. He had testified he stabbed 26-year-old student Dorla Collum Feb. 26 ·ln Rli- defeme. We1re Listening ••• -Whal 40 you llke about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't you llkt? Call the 11umber below and your meaaa1e will be recorded. tran1cribed and dellvertd to the appf9priale editor. • The 11me 24·hour anawmns n r vlce may bt UHd to rffOrd l•t· ten to the editor on any loptt. Mailbox contrtbutora mual Include lhelr name and telephone number ror vertflcallon. No ctreulaUon calla. plH&e. Tell u1 what'• on your mind. .. __.... --r'•• Orqt ec\ut DAILY ~ILOT /Wedneed•~. June 18, 1882 " Dellr Not • ..,, "'°'° "' "" ,.,,.. ' H AV E GU IT AR, WILL TRAVEL -show off his new machine before embarking · Country-Western singer Ray fjelson, if you on a cross-country tour. The only trouble with couldn't guess, likes motorcycles and guitars. hiS guitar bike, he says. is keeping it tuned up. He stopped off in Newport Beach this week to Airport slaying investigated Victim was due in court on drug charges Murder victim Barkley F . Hodges, shot once in the head last week in a John Wayne Airport restaurant, wa~ scheduled to go to court later this month on ine-selling charges, authori · ealed today. The ead , a brother of Earthquake felt • 1n five counties ANZA (AP) -A moderate earthquake felt across five counties tossed items from shelves, caused chandeliers to sway and knocked pictures from walls but caused no reported injuries or serious damag~. official.a said. a seismograph. Every increase of one number reflects a tenfold increase in magnitude, so that a reading of 7 .5 shows an earthquake 10 times stroJlger than one of 6.5. An earthquake of 6 can c.auae aevere damage, while one registering 7 ii a ''rnajor'l. quake that can cuase wi.d~pread · heavy' damage. Westminster Councilman Gil Hodges, was arrested last March in Huntington Beach on the drug charges, police said. But Orange County Sheriff's deputies, who are investigating the June 8 murder at Delaney's Restaurant, said they don't believe drugs played a role in the shooting. They have not detailed a motive in the episode. Hodges allegedly was shot once in the head while at the restaurant with his 32-year-old cousin and an unidentified third man. The cousin , Laguna Beach resident Kelly Russell Daniels, was arrested in connection with t h e murder. H e faces a preliminary hearing on the murder charge June 2!. Daniels, a sailmaker has pleaded inqocent to th«; charges . _., - •' Tuesday's temblor measured 4.8 on the Richter scale and was centered beneath this small Riverside County community 90 miles southwest of Los Angeles, according to officials at the seismology lab of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Miller due hearing The quake struck at 4:49 p.ro. in an area along the end of the San AndrPAR F11ult "It was pretty scary," said Linda Ellington, owner of Ellington's Anza Food Center, where jars of jam and boxes fell from shelves. She said damage was not major, however. ''We felt it real good but we haven't had any reports of any structural damage, just the normal dishes breaking and things like that," said Cindy Weirbach, a dispatcher for the Riverside Count y Sheriff's Department in Am.a. "It was pretty jolting. It shook. It didn't sway, it shook. It lasted about 30 seconds." The tremor also wa.s felt in Orange and San Diego counties and as far north as Granada Hills 20 miles no rthwest of Los Angeles. The Richter scale is a measure of ground motion as recorded on . . on assault cha¥ge Former Orange County Supervisor Edoon Miller awaited a decision by the county district attorney's office today whether he will be charged with alleged misdemeanor assault and battery on his wife, Carol. Miller was freed from ~e County Jail on $1,5110 oail Tuesday morning following his arrest Monday n igh t at his Orange residence. Orange Police Capt. Jerry Graves said officers took Miller into custody after Mrs. Miller made a citizen's arrest alleging assauJt and battery. Captain Graves declined to provide details about the alleged incident. "Misdemeanor assault and battery pretty much tells the story," he said. Mrs. Mill er, the former supervisor's second wife, was not seriously in~ in the alleged altercation, Graves said. Miller was appointed to the county Board of Supervisors by 1 Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. in July, 1979, to fill a vacancy ' created by the resignation of ' fo rmer Supervisor Ralph Diedrl~h. - The appointment immediately - drew fire from veterans' groups • who charged that Miller, a • former Marine colonel. had made · anti·U.S . state ments while a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Mill.er was defeated in 1980 for a Cull four-year term on the board by Bruce Nestande. Since leaving th e board, J'v1iller, an attorney, has been practicing law in Santa Ana and has not been visible in political circles. . Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certifi~ Gemologi•t. AOS THE LARGEST DIAMOND Wi't for sak The workl'• largest cut diamond will never be bou&ht for EU:zabeth Taylor. Nor will a big New York jeweler buy it and put It on dlfplay ln hla Window. Even an Arab IMllth wlll find thJ1 1tone beyond ht• reach. The lar1eat diamond, weiCh1nl 530 carats, II moun\ed on the royal tceptre of the Brlt11h Empire. It ii pert of'Britain'• Crown Jewels. The atone ..... C\lt fnlm the Cullinan diamond which, at a,toe canta. was Uw Lara-t d1amood eYel' mlnld. It was found in 1905 in Souih Abb'1 PNrnier Mlnt and waa 1lven by the Transvaal 1overnment to Enaland'1 Kfn1 Edward w .. a bU1hday ...-.l It w11 la• cut up into nine 11irJe "°'* and 98 llnAller on. ... The Jart.n aut w• named dw Star of Afib. n. 8 oUMr mQil' CU1ll W9l'e __. 1..-. Stan ol MricL Tbe .... ~-IOelW-thanl ..... ~ ......... of Afrlal II not ,... ... lo 1111 ....,._ Yllue -ani, ....... ,,, .... . ~........, mlD1 ...... ,,, I :i I I ' General Tel gets rate hike· SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The state Public Uttijdes QJrnmimlon has lfaJlted General Telephone a $85.2 million. annual rate lncreaee that will mean higher bill.t for customers. The ruling came Tuesday on an application General filed ln March 1981 1eeklng a $296 million lncreaae. Of the total, $192.6 million has been granted, giving the firm a chance to earn a 12.78 perwnt retum •on investment, up from the 12.71 percent. The latest increue will result ln residential fiat rate aervioe on rotary dial phones golng from $6.25 to $7.75 a month and touchtone rates from $7.to $8.40. The buainesa rate in the Los Angele11 and Orange Counties metropolitan areaa will go from $6.50 to $7.20 a month with the per-outgoing-call unit rate tncrea.stng from four to aix cents. Office complex s tarted Groundbreaking was held for Cypress Pointe Business Centre, a multl-phue development by John O. Lusk & Son, Irvine. The project site is at Katella Avenue and Holder Street in Cypress. The firat phase is slated for completion in February, 1983, and consists of twin two-story buildings of 36,000 square feet each. One building will hold Marmac Systems Engineering, located tn Long Beach. S tock sale postpon ed Printronix lnc. of Irvine announced today it decided to postpone indefinitely a proposed sale of common stock due to unfavorable market conditions. A registration statement, covering 380,000 shares to be offered by the company and l 25,000 shares by certain selling shareholders through an underwriting group managed by Robertson, Colman, Stephens & Woodman, wu filed with the Securities & Exchange Comrnis3ion on May 24. Printronix designs, manulactures and markets medium and low speed matrix impact line printers. Bank· capitalization analyzed It costs more to capita.llz.e a bank in California these days. • Data compiled by Edward Carpenter & Associates Inc., Los Angeles-baaed financial institutions consulting firm with offices in San Franciaco and Newport Beach, show the average beginning :&ttalization of new national banJu rose to $4.8 on in 1981, up from $3.3 million a year earlier and $1.3 million in 1975. The average startup outlay of new atate banks advanoed to $3.4 million in 1981 , up from $2.8 million a year prior and $1.4 million in 1975. Highest capitalization among the 15 ne'!" national banka last year waa $15 million and the Jowest $2.5 milllOn. noted Carpenter. STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS • MOALS HEW YORK (AP) -Spot nof'ferrou1 metll prioM today: c:...., ~75 oenta a pound. U.S. deetlnellona. LNd 25-27 '*'" • ~· Z1M 35-37 oenta a """'"'' ~. Tin IS.Mt& ~11 Week compoelte lb. Allllllll•-1&.n cent•• pound, N.Y . ...,...,, 1310 oo '* nu« . ........... $297.00 troy OL. N.Y. '