Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-07-01 - Orange Coast Pilott I 4 i t 111111 £1111 Ylll 11111111 llllY NIU 111111, l•I\~ 1111 1 I '' I I , • ., J I 'I I I I" f J ' ' • :\ I II "I d 'J I(\ . .. . t I N I " El Toro 01an .. A man who authorities allflQ foraed more than $100,000 ln culllen' checka, entertained a frtend with a whlrlwµwi trip to Florida and pumped thousand& of dollars into ru. penonal bank acc;ount1 today ls In the le.- glaiborous confines of Orange County Jail. And Orange County Sherifrs ~rtment lnveaU,atora are ~ a teller at an El Toto branch of Southwett Banlt for preventing what they claim could have been a major caaH le.a to a Huntington Beach aavtnp and loan tnatftution. Cedric H. Wasano, 24, of El Toro, was arrested on au.1picion of f~ry Wedneeday after the • Cargo doors . c1osed tell~. Linda ttoy.-e, notttted •uperlors wh"en wa,ano at~pted to cash a $10,000 check drawti on the Edin1er Avenue branch of Coaat Federal Savlnp and Loan. Sherill's LL Wyatt Hart said Wa1ano, a Coaat Federal .employee, ls believed to have forged 35 "association ," or caahten' checka, with a total value of inore than $100,00Q. Thirty-three of the checb have been accounted tor while two remain under invest11atJon. Hart said. Hart aaid Wasano left Cout F~ral with the checks Monday eveninl. Later that nlaht. Hart said, Wuano and an unfdentified • companion flew to Miami. They returned Tuesday. _ Hart said Wasano showed up at Southwest Bank'• !l Toro branqh Wednesday and attempted to negotiate a $10,000 ~heck by placing part of the Amount in a savings account and caking the remainder In cash. It wu at that point that t.he ti!ller became suspicious and noUfled superiors, who ln tum called Coast Federal. Offldall at the aavinga and loan amfinned the check was .among ~· Subeequent Investigation, Hart said, showed "unexplained large Increases In several of Mr. Wasano's accounts." Wasano.currently is being held on $150,000 bail . .. Shuttle sliaf u solved ' • ID space FJSCAL HUMOR -Gov. F.dmund . Arown Jr. l8u Assembly Speaker Willie Brown (riaht) and other Jawmaken during a cetemony at the Capitol in Sacramento where the governor signed the new 1982-83 $25.2 billion state budget. 'Austerity' budget signed by governor SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state begins a new fiscal year today with a tightly balanced $2 5 .2 billion budget of "uaprecedented aus terity" finally approved after a five-day deadlock. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the budget and four related bills for the 1982-83 fiacaJ year Wednesday, wbile warning that it would not sf.ay balanced without a "strong economic recovery'' this fall. Brown held the signing ceremony/after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Senate recessed the day before, released the budget from the five-day hold impoeed because of a dispute over $2~ million for echools. The Democratic governor made no cuts in the budget, as approved by the Legislature, n oting its "unpN!cedented austerity." The budget contains no tax increases. He said the proposed spending is more than $200 million below the expected spend.bur for the fi.acal year closing Wedneeday, and $8 million ~low the actual spending in 1980-81. COUNTY "That (a two-year drop) has never happened any time in the history of Califorrua out.side of the Depression." he said. &t Bro'tljl_said the budget is so tightlj""TJlllanced, with a reserve of less than $500 million, that the Legislature will have to make further cuts in the next few months "if the national economy does not recover." The budget had been approved by both houses Friday. Both houses on Monday also approved a companion bill that changes laws n ecessary· to make the budget balance. But Assembly Speaker Willie Brown held up passage of both bills b ecause the Assembly wanted to give schools $235 million that may be left over in the cu.rren. t year'• budget. The. Senate adamantly insisted that any left-over money should go ihto the reserve in cue the economy worsens. and recessed Tuetday until Aug. 2. That left the ASlembly wtth the choice of either giE' in to the upper house and re the budget, or fighting an leavin1 the state without spending authorization. Coast gears for Fourtb Everything you want to know about the Fourth of July along the Orange COMt can be...f.ound on Page Bl. . TEL E VISION ... LandOJJ aims (or lamily Michael Landon hu become the new Walt Disney, apUm1na tali-ot. A.i:nerkana and ~ on wbo~;-~AI. · Closed hearing rejected By DAVll) KUTZMANN O(lfle o.-, Not •left An Orange County defense attorney's challenge of a new state law expanding on the public's right to atten d preliminary hearings in criminal cases has been rejected by a state appeals 09urt. 'Thereault~thataprellminary h earing in Central Orange County Municipal Court for two men charged with the slaying of a Mission Viejo woman will proceed Friday with both public and press allowed in as spectators. The 4th District Court of Appe~l upheld -without r rnw.,_ the OINltit'ldROly of the open hearing law which took effect in March. Previously, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab and C.entraJ Municipal Court Judge Samuel Taylor, who is presiding over the preliminary hearing! ruled in favor of open proceedmgs. Challenging the law, which took effect as an urgency measure on March 1, was defense attorney Ronald Brower, who represents murder defendant Thomas Thompson, 27, of Orange. Brower indicated Wednesday he planned no further appeals. Both Thompson and co- defendant David William Leitch, 22, of Laguna Beach, are charged with murder in the stabbing death of Ginger Flelachli. Miss Flelachli's body was found ln a shallow grave in east Irvine last September. Brower had argued that his client's right to a fair trial -if he was bound over on the charges -would be 11eriously jeopardized if press coverage of the preliminary hearing was aUowed. Leitch's attorney, Ronald kreber, did not challenge the new law. Brower asked Judge Taylor for (See PUBLIC, Page AZ) Firms destl"oyed BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) -A fire triggered a natural gas explosion and destroyed eight downtown businesses today as fire chiefs from around the state .ended their annual convention, authortties said. NATION " Outsid~ 'walk' -averJed CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Columbia's commander, "watching l ike a hawk," overcame a vexing problem wit.h the shuttle's balky cargo doors today, closing and latching them in a simulation of steps that must precede entry on the Fourth of . July. ''They closed normally," said Ken Mattingly. He sounded relieved and so did Mission Control. Flight dj,,rector Harold Draughon sMi that if Columbia tried to re-enter the atmosphere without the doors clO!led, the srup ''could shake like a wheel well coming off a hot performance aircraft. You get so much turbulence flow that it would tear things apart.'' However, bad the door _.p.1;g,g.wm perwied, Mattingly °""' .......... .,,.,, ...... NO PHONES -Pacific Teleyhone Co. repair crew members Betty. Doucet, left, and Dave Christin eye the severed cables that have to be spliced together before phone service to about. 2,500 customers in the Mission Viejo-El Toro area c.an be restored later today. The cable, which will require more than 3,000 individual splices to restore It to service, was severed by a construction crew near the intersection of Via Fabricante and Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo Wednesday afternoon. wOUld have taken a spaoe 'Milk to make repairs, Draughon said. The s hip was orbiting smoothly; Mattingly and pllot Henry Hartsfield did some 1 celestial sightseeing and crew calisthenics, test-fired jet thrusters, and televised an instructive "cook's tour" of the shuttle cockpit. Columbia's port door failed to shut Wednesday after flight in the cold shadows of space caUled warping, either in the door itaelf or in the frame. Overnight, ) NASA sent Columbia into a barbecue roll to expoee the doors Unwanted gu e St to the warmth of the sun. A similar fix sooceeded when the problem cropped up on flight Cl h. Jd . L b J three, and as the shuttle passed emente man ~ JD . aguna urg ary 186 miles overhead at Cape Harry Willits has bad a lot Of guests at his Riviera Laguna motel on South Coast Highway over the decades. But the 88 -year-old busineaaman had to call police to extract an unwanted "guest" who broke into his house Monday and ransacked the place. Luwla Beach police arrived at WWila' address near the motel Monday to find the owner engaged In a converratlon with the sus~ted burglar. Here • what happened: "I walked home from the motel for lunch and saw the rear gate and the front door unlocked," Willits recalled. When he entered the home he noted' wires to a burglar alarm had been tom out, his bed slept in, drawers and cloeets opened, and George Yves Audovi, 24, of San Clemente, lounging on a cou ch in the living room , attempting to get a tape cassette player to work. "I asked him what the hell he was doing In my house and he told me he coUldn't get any music out of the tape," Willits said The motel operator aaid he called polloe1 and told them there , WU a burglar in his houae. ''They asked me to describe the man and tell them how old he was. "I wasn't about to walk back in my living room and ask hirJl his age.'' Wili1ta said. "Just ~et down here and arrest this guy,' the angry businessman told the dispatcher. INDEX Can averal, just after dawn, (See SPACE, Page AZ) Cranston testing western waters WASHINGTON (AP) Senate Democratic Whip Alan Cra~on, claiming increased aupport among Democrata d.spite a disappointing speech at the party's mid-term conference, is carry l ng his pote n tlal presidential candidacy to the Far West. 'The California senator planned appearances at a National T..ducetion Association conve.ntion in Uis Angeles today and Friday, followed by a swing throu1h Oregon. Washington, Idaho, Utah and Montana. -=- Bravo I or Broaklynese • At Your Servi~ Erma Bambeck Buainel8 A4 B2 Bt-5 A6 B2 Ann Landers ~ B2 Movies 87-8 Lotsa people tlnk folka trom Brooklyn tawk funny, but It ain't funny, lt'1 wunnerful .. Page A6: .'fips to ousted employees After. advt.sing employers how to fire workers, an author '9 offertna tipe to fired employees: Page All. Fireworks seized in El Monte Callf omJa Cav~ Owtfled O>mk9 ere.word O.th Notice9 Editorial ~t Horoecope C6-10 ~ c& ~ A10 B7-8 • B2 Mutual Funds B4 National Newa A3 Public Notices B4.~.ce Spor11 Cl-3 Sr. Steincrohn B2 Stock Market1 85 Te1eYllion Be 'lbeatera B7-8 Weather A3 World NeWI ... . Al .. • • • ____ ,,__ ___ -= . .. • SPA~ SHUTTLE ... Mattln1ly tried the 1hut-and- open exerdle IO!n. Operatinf lrom a remote control pane in the cabin. he needed only three mlnut.es to do the Job. It wu bMmed live to Mllllon Control. Of.fidala learned a ie.on and capcom Brewster Shaw advbed tne a1tronauu that if an emerpncy forced them to make an early return to F.arth, they should immediately point the open doors at the aun to rninlm1ze warping. • "Go -top-to-aun and hold it there u long aa P<*f ble" before cloaing, said Shaw. Draughon said the r.roblem isn't fully understood', 'but we know we can't come right out of th•t attitude and re-enter. It doeG'l't mean you can't fly there. It just meam you have to get some equilibrium in the temperature.'' F.arlier, as the ship sped into the homeward half of its final practice run, Mattin~ly and Hartsfield delivered an entt}ualaaUc report on Earth'• "•~cloud fonnatlona." 'A polopt flyt.na over here col.lid have a ball for a Ufetlme," uid Mattingly aa he marveled at the va1t territory of western Australia. Later, they beamed down a TV ahow of life ln the cabin, with Mattingly pointing out the never-endlna array of oontrola. There were banner• hanging frdm the walls for Auburn UnlYeraity, from which both' araduated, and for the Navy' and Air Force. Mattingly la a Navy captain and Hartalleld a former Air Force oolont'l. ''That's a funny looking animal," Shaw remarked of the • Auburn "War Eagle" banner. "Aw, that's no way to talk," Mattlngly replied. Flight four was ent.erlne it.a fifth of aeven days today, looking toward Sunday's touchdown at Edwards Air Force Base in California. PUBLIC HEARINGS. • • ' " a c losed hearing when proceedings originally began in early March. Taylor agreed to exclude spectators, but a report.er for the Saddleback Valley News later asked the court to reopen the . hearing because no showing had been made that an open Car ring probed LOS ANGELE.5 (AP) -The ~t of a used car dealer and recovery of mor& than $1 million in lwcury car parts has touched off a police search for 200 to 300 purchasers of apparently stolen deluxe automobiles. Police said' Wednesday they recovered 27 stolen Mercedes-Benz autos. proceeding would jeopardiz.e the defendant.a' right to a fair trial. Under provisions of the new law, authored by Aaeemblyman Terry Goggin , D -San Bernardino, the defense must show tha\ an open preliminary hearing would be detrimental to i t.s client. Before the meaaure took effect, preliminary hearings would be cloeed automatically on the.-equest of defen.e attorneys. These proceedings are· held to determine if there ll sufficient evidence to bold a deftmdant for trial in superior court. "All we did is point out the exia'tence of the law," Saddleback Valley News reporter WUliam Boyer said. READY FOR SPACE -Rockwell International personnel tape a prot~tive covering to a portion of the space shuttle Challenger shortly before turnover ceremonies at Rockwell's final aaembly site inJ?.almdale. The orbiter will mA.ke ita maiden flight in early 1983. / • Slow journey for Challenger I New space shuttle towed to Edwards Air Base PALMDALE (AP) - America's second space shuttle, Challenger, began Its first journey today -a snail's-pace, 38-mile voyage through two towns to the desert apacestrip at Edwarda Air Force Base. During the 12 hours Challenger is on the road, being towed through Palmdale ana Lancaster and into the desert fiatlaQds, the veteran C.Olumbia will circle the F.arth~t times. Palmd~e residents got up early for a glimpee of the shiny shuttle. By the hundreda, they huddled on streetcom~rs as the ship inched by. Once at Edwards, Challenger will become part of a multi- shuttle extravaganza on the Fourth of July, when President Reagan will watch Columbia land. "This whole nation, and in fact .the whole world ... is going to see C.Olwnbia return from space and Challenger become airbom.e. (atop a jumbo jetliner for a .piggyback ride to Its Florida launch site)," said Joe Engle. commander of the second shuttle mission laat November. "That's eome kind of birthday present for America," he said Wednesday at Challenger's coming-out ceremonies ln front o f Rockwell International'a assembly hangar near here. The shuttle was towed slowly around the comer of the giant build.4tg aa some 1,200 wo.r1ters and dijnltariea applauded and craned their necka. Ita nose. appeared as a Marine Corpe band played the themes from "Star' Trek," "Star Wars" and. ''SuJ>ennaJ'\. •• Lebanese routed • Ill mock ·Israeli attack By Tbe Alaoclatecl Pres• Israeli jets roared low over Beirut today to drop smoke bombs and flares in a mock attack that sent thousands of panicky inhabitants rushing to basements and bomb shelters. The 20-rninut.e .foray, wbJch began at midnight, appeared designed to tell Yasaer Arafat'a P a. f e s .t i n e L i b e r a t i o n Organization guerrillas that lsr¥l'S patience was running out. No bombs were reported dropped during the raid. Israel is demanding that .the PLO's guerrilla forces surrender their heavy weapoM and leave Coastal Ught ~ winds becoming w.t to ~ 10 10 15 luiou afternoon and even i ng. SouthwHt •••II• 1 to 3 1~.1~ Mo.tty MM!nY afternoon. Hurrlsoue fulw* dolldl -·· reported l7iel ~ o.n- on tW~ • well • !7iet Callfornl.-T SISTTW"a. end •, tornado watc:)I wu luued for pert• of COiorado. ~ and Mebraaka •• ahowera and l~tormt dotted the nellon. A tornado waldl -IMlled for m«* of ~em Colorado, northwetlem end nontM>entral _ Ken aea. end aoma of toUttM•• n ,..,,....._ TM tunnet ebm f'llPOfted Ol'I Callfomle'. High Sierra ... ,. ecroae a. renga from .... • freak .aumft\er 1nowetorm1 etrMded ._.of hlk.-IM dey !*en. A IW9'9 ~Jorm watc:h W9a pOIMd fOr pwt8 Qf KMMI. Ntbrtelle, lowe, Mluourl, Alab&ll'ta. Tenn••••• end OeofVla. Sldile-..-t!y ~ --,,... ,. Of .. netlon. .Fot tOdjy. Jhunderehowera • .. .,. ~°'~" over the Lipper Mlu ourl Valley. Soauerad r~ were kncalt. from · wHtern Soutb Dakota eCf'oH Idaho, lrom Htlern Neveda terOM Colorado end nor1'1efn ..... MlldOO, and -"°"""' Florlda· end the Hltern Gutt eo.t. t :± -. ~lifornia Lebanon ot face a full-scale ... uit by the array of tanb. planel and naval vemela which have encircled the western Moelem half of the Lebaneae capital. l'lu. Wum.tnated bNchaide ,... .. man~~ ~~of the Ciiifil • nsw-.tlattertnc 80nic boaaJ9 a eat 'Beirut PLO hlcleaUt. where Arafat and h.ia 8,000 ~are bottled up. The U.S.-arranged ceue-fire in and around west Beirut went into it.a sixth day virtually intact aa Ame'rican and Lebanese mediators aou~ht to arranjte intricate medw\ics of the PLo evacuation operation. A ke Lebanese intermediary. aaid ;J'edneaday ni1ht that despite the PLO'a defiaht calla to fight to the death, the guerrillaa were ready to leave their lCMquare-mile enclaw bedu.e they did not want a showdown with bneli forces. But be mid · detalla of evacuating .lhem remained unclear. "It is not euy to aay how armed people will leave Lebanon," the intermediary, former Prime Minister Saeb Salam, told reporters. "This is an Wariner .. a3 91 74 IO 83 72 73 92 n 19 75 70 80 72 92 74 94 75 99 71 74 71 95 79 75 71 71 11 .. II 92 n 111 92 13 a3 .. 78 115 .. 70 71 11 80 11 80 .. .., .. 78 10t \ 74 .,., 73 11 .. 11 11 11 ea t2 77 ., • 7t 74 IM .. .. .. 12 77 • ~ ThurSday. Juty 1 49 • T alUres 55 70 .., eo eo 74 ee 7 ee 54 50 19 12 70 82 75 83 : ........... 5-*e 59 HOM. U.S D11PC ol C-C. 37 frGftts: Co6d.,.. wmrm.,. 75 5e 445 CAUFONU 54 Apple V/l/lwt ,54 ~ g: a.ntow 72 a..irTpOnl IO Big 8- 65 8ltflop 7 1 C.tallnli n Eureka 89 F~ . et ~·~ 74 ~ 71 long ._,., 71 ~"r 11 ~ 50 Mt. Wlaorl ~ NMcM 73 ~9-:tl ... Oelllencl 73 Ontario 72 PMn 8Pflnot eo PaMdlne 74 ,., Aootee .. =-= ~ laorllMnto .. =-lemlntno t 1 Sin Qelwtal .. Sen°"'° s 1 • len fffWldl9oo 72 ...... t1 Senta~ : lent•lerbW• n llnlaONI ......... .. ..,,....,.. :~-.. T~ 12 13 75~ : =::: ,.,.,,. .. 10 79 7t 74 IO 97 72 11 97 ee • 1A 73 79 12 52 111 II fl3 74 17 TS 71 74 7S 70 83 74 75 73 eo .. 72 71 .. 72 71 70 67 TA .. IO .. IM "-52 83 e2 51 37 .. 5e !SA 58 41 53 IO IO 511 57 38 71 eo 51 57· a3 57 53 se· IO 53 60 51 H 13 55 53 5t 60 58 A1 N 54 A6 51 Extended weather tit 80 M 111 111 " 72 117 00 711 18 18 53 75 n S1 711 1S 56 75 7t 75 75 75 Saturdey-Monday: Co111a1 .,....: Low cloudt In the night and morning houra otlllrwtM '*· Hlghe rtnglng from ,_ 70 at ltl8 beectlM to tow IOa lr1IMd ~ Lowa 53 to 13. Mol#ltaln .,._ Fllr with Wf1ll:lll fllGll _.... °'*Y weMerty .... 11 to 28 mph afternoon llour9. ....,,, ._, hlgl1t II lo 71. LOM Al lo 51. Smog The Air Quality Menaeement Olttf'ICt pr9Cllct1 good • QUallty today In II .,._ ol Ille 8oudl CoeatNI~ . Wll«a lo NII (loll rr .. ) IOI ·=.~=:4AWat' n1a1 .. ·c ounty: (100{ "-.2"2-A022 7t ...... end .... lemelc1t110' n .oountter. (IOO) M7-47tO 7t t~ a.-. ~ llOOt intricate procedure and cannot be done overniJlht." No of~ confinnation was.,, immediately available from PLO leaders on how the armed guerrillas would be evacuated or where they will go. Salam, Lebanon's 77-yeer-old Sunni Moslem elder statesman, haa been playing a key role in indirect mediation effOTts between Arafat's PLO and U.S. preaidential envoy Philip C. Habib to solve the criaia. Habib arranged the oeue-fire between the PLO and Israeli forces. Publicly, the PLO persiatB in roclaiming it will resist leaving ~banoo unlea the llraelia grant several conceaaiona, which include an Israeli pullback from around Beirut and allowing the guerrillas to maintain a token military and political preeence in the country. larael has rejected thoee demands. Madras BIRTHDAY GIRL - Princess Diana, who produced an heir to the British throne last week, celebrates her own birthday today -number 21. A we/I-known fabric made of hand-loomed cqtton. Storekeeper Todd Latham Is wearing our true Madras shorts In bright colors, with pleated front and belt loops. A store that offers fine fredltJona/ sportaWNI for 11HH1, women end boys. I ·Off ici&ls' 'sex acts' probed WASHINGTON (AP) -Charaa ot W.idt _.. becw .. : mem6en of C.onpell and theV. teen-age paaea are bftna: inveatl1ated by federal: authorlt.lea, ICCOC'd1nc to the FBt• and JuaUce Department. CBS Newa reported Wedne1day that "1everal" ~were aubjecta of the ln~tion. "lt'a at a very prellm!nary •taae.'' uid Justice Depu1ment apokeaman John Ruaaell. "A page came forward and had .me alleptJona. I can't d1acua9 them right now " The Arbnau Gazette, in a copyrighted article today, quoted an unidentified Juatice Department aource aa aaytna the .department was looking Into complaint.a that members ooeroed or bribed pages of both .exes to engage in homosexual or heteroae,ual a ctlvltie1 with them~ The Little Rock newapaper said nine or 10 memben of the House and one senator were Under investigation. Homosexuality reportedly waa not the issue ln the inveaUgation, but rather the promising of tavon by members of C.Ongreas and aex with minors. The network broadcast an interview with a fonner page auperviBor who said he engaged in aex with a member of the House on three occasions, including once in th~ representative's office and onoe at an apartment in the Watergate complex. • Aaked what compensation he received, the fonner page said he never saw money, but realiz.ed that on Capjtol Hill, "one favor deserves another." 'Annie' fan • gets souvenir at NB theater The movie critics may ha~ been lukewarm about the red- headed small fry but someone out there likes "Annie." Employee-s at the Edwards Cintma in Newport Center report a fan of the comic-strip character broke i nto a ticket booth -removing a door and a plywood divider in the process - to grab a post.er of "Annie." 'The culprit reportedly passed over more than 200,000 admission tickets, numerous movie passes and a stack of gift certificates on •fU.s way to the poster. The movie poster is worth $1.50 . Police speculated the crook must have been a big fan of the movie. . i DERAILMENT SPARKS FIRE -About 20 cars in a train carrying "hazardous materials" derailed between La~an~e and Hogansville in Georgia, resulting in a fire. Thousands of gal.!ons of toxic chemicals burned through the Al' Wlrepl\oto night in a nearby creek and officials shut down the water system of three tow n s on the Georgia-Al"abama borde r . Fumes from the chemicals kept firemen a quarter; of a mile from the burning wreckage. Anti-busihg decision cheered Bu.t NAACP vows to continue fight to integrate schools LOS ANGEL.Es (AP) -The Los Angeles school board majority cheered the U .S . Supreme Court ruling that upheld Proposition 1, California's anti-busing initiative, but the NAACP vowed to continue its 19-year battle to integrate city schools. "How _iood it is!'.' !iollicl. ~late Sen. A•l11 n Rob IHITrs", • ._,tl o authored the anti-busing initiative .that was approved in 1979. "We are delighted they have ruled the Robbins initiative constitutional, and by an almost u,nanimous 8-1 vote. I think I can now safely make the statement that mandatory busing in Los Angeles is over." '· The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People d isagreed llnd said mandatory busing, which ended in April 1981 after 2111 years, may yet succeed in Los Angeles. "The court has put form over substance and has failed to look behind the wording or the proposition, to look at the true racist intent of the framers and promoters of th~-proposition, 1 who sought to ·l'~segregate minority schoolcftildren, and they did it in the m06t plain and gross fonn of the political process -playing on the racial fears of white citizens," said Joseph Duff. member and counsel for the Los Angeles NAACP and its chief Siorix land claim -· v-- coming up short PIERRE, S.D. (AP) -The long-standing Sioux claim for federal government can'\~~ a ownership of all 7.3 million acres reqllt's\"frtnn Siol4X ln'dian!M~ -· of the Black Hills region. which leaders'' for 3.2 nilll:ron -acres· Qf includes areas near the Black land in the Black Hills beCause Hills, a mountainous area the there isn't that much federal land Sioux consider sacred. there, officials say. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled .The federal gove~e.nt owns in 1980 that Congress illegaUy ~lightly more than. l rm~.bon acres took the region from the Sioux in in the Black Hills in South 1877 without just compensation, Dakota and another 200,000 acres after gold was discovered there. in the Black Hills in neighboring The high court awarded the Wyoming. officials of several Sioux $105 million in exchange fedetiltagendes iafd.7 ~ • for the land, but tribes have not .. .~ere ~e an additional 2.~3 accepted the money, contending million ·.cres of federal land m instead that the Black H ills other pe.r18 of South ~ota west region should be returned to the of the Missouri River, the Sioux. officials said. U ·tec1 s· T ·bes Di to U .• _ .... s· T "bes Ch . m IOUX n rec r ru u:u ioux n alnll3Il s h · h Larry Cournoyer said that when Clarence yke. w .o ~ t e top h~ and leaders of eight other s~ffer of .the org~uon led by S . . tnbal chairmen. said Tuesday he 1oux tribes agreed to. a.sk still believes there are more than Con~ to turn over ~.2 million 3.2 million acres of federal land ~ m the Black Hills to the in the Black Hills, despite Sioux, they thought there was statements by federal officials. more than that much federal land in the hills. · "That was the assumption we were going on," Cournoyer said of the request for what amounts to 5,000 square miles of land. "We could be wrong, I suppose. The Sioux will research the question and draw up maps for use by a negotiating corrurutt.ee made up of tribal chairmen or their representatives, Syke said. After several months of work, the committee plans to visit Washingon to ask Congress for the land. he said. We'll check it out." : The 3.2 million-acre figure was an;ived at as a compromise in the ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ==-.!'~ OlllW ~~ lfldOW..el~ tom Murph!M .... Mike HeN9Y =:,~ ., Goddard • a.---~ 21,....,Mac&Mn dtwt. Looe ....... ClaHlfted advertising 7141142-5171 All ottMJ department• M2-t321 llAIN OFFICE mw ... 8lly SC •• C .... -·CA. ~II..,._: .. • IJIO, C•\9 Meu. CA.,... C...,..\ttM .. °" ..... C4e9t ............ ~. ,.. _.....,, llhntretklll1, eOlllWlel-w ... verti.e-'t Mreifl ,,...y lie ""'''~ wtttleut -i.• ""'*tleft Of copyrltM-· spokesman. "The majority opinion appears to s how a disinterest in looking at the true history of the proposition. "We have a case in the federal court. It becomes all the more important now, to write the true history of the Los Angeles school district," Duff said ma telephone interview from Boston, where the NAtACP is holding a converl\Ioa. "It. (the suit) as arguing traditfonaJ de jure segregation, that school officials intentionally caused the segregation in Los Angeles in violation of the 14th Amendment." Robbins, D-Van Nuys. said: "Those of us who opposed busing and those who favored it can. now work together. now that the~ battle is over." But ~IJos Angeles'l!d:tool boarid- member Rita Wa!te.rs, an ardent proponent of busing in .the massive Los Angeles Unified School District and the only black on the board. was bluntly unhappy about the 8-1 ruling. "I'm certainly surpnsed at the magnitude of the 8-1 vote. I am on the one hand very surprised a-nd on "the o ther not too surprised," Ms. Walters said. "1 look at the track record of this court regarding civil righ1S and civil liberties and am not surprised. "What it d oes i s just strenghten my resolve to struggle for civil rights and civil liberties in this country," s he said. '-'Certainly ·I will not cease to raise my voice in support of those goals. I will be working with the NAACP and the ACLU and their commUnity groups." ... _ ' School board President Tom Bartman and board member Roberta Weintraub. who was elected on a pledge to fight busing·, both called on the NAACP to drop its U.S . District C.ourt suit seeking reinstitution of busing. " Ms. Walters said the local NAACP representatives were all in Boston for a convention and not immediately reachable for comment. · "I am very very pleased, obviously," Bartman said. "It (the decision) is a real benefit to public education and Los Angeles. It's the final capstone in allowing thlS school district to return as its number one priority to education and educational issues designed to increase academic achievement. We don't have to spend large amounts of n!9()W'(.'leS and Ume on a progJ'am that is a proven failure." Bartman said the district spent between $20 mllllon and $30 millfon to bus etudenta across the 650..square-mile district between the fall of 1979 and last April. Mn. Weintraub placed the cost cloeer to ~o million. There ate currenUy 550,000 pupils in the district, the nation'• second largest behind New York's. of whom about 50 percent are Hispanic and 20 percent each black or white. Orang• Co11t OAIL't' Pll .. OT /Thureday, JUI)' 1, ~812 8 .. .. Shllttle • station versus U.S., Soviets take dill erent paths to space SPA.CE CENTER, HQuaton (J\.P) -The Soviets have a space station and want a space 1htlttlc America has a shuttle and wants a station. The Soviets probably won't set what they want soon Americ.-a hasn't decided yet. The two spacefaring nauons took different paths into outt.•r space. but both now are at a critical dec1S1on pmnt: What to do next? America's spat't.' agen<'y used its considerable talen\ to build the w()rld's most sophtstlcated and versatile spacecr•rt. The apace shuttle 1s a ~leek. roomy craft, capable of carrying a crew of seven and a 60,000-pound payload. It lands like an airphrn<· and can be reusod many tJmt.~ But it is a luxury spacecruiser In search o f a dl's tination Without a space• station. lhl.' shuttle has no port on the ocean of space. The Soviet space commuruty. never strong on techn1cul innovation, found a spa~e<:raft that worked almost 10 years ago and has usC'd the same basic design since The Soviet's \Op- of-thc-hne nafl 1s the Soyuz T, a cramped, thn•e-man can th;it lands by parac:hutc ;md 1s not reused. The Soyuz T. howPver, does have a d<'stinauon m spal'e The Soviets have.· orbited several Salyut space s tations Four Soviets and a French "'guc.•st" cosmonaut <Jrt' nuw aboard Salyut 7 Cosmonaut cr1·ws hav<' tw1et.• spent 185 day!. aboard S.tlyut stauon.c; M1ss1orn. of 75 davs have· become common The Sov1l'ls0 announced goal of ke<>pmg an astronaut in orbit 365 days a year may not be rar arr. Western experts havc received n·ports that the Soviets are moving toward development of a 1't>u11ab lc· spacecrah. James Oberg, an analyst of the Sovll't space prograJ1, reported In a inugazme artade ev1denc@ that the Soviets had tested a "hfting b~dy," a vehicle with an aorodynam1c shape that would be abll' to ghd<.> to Earth from space l\ccordmg to Oberg, the craft would be launched by an 1·xpendable boost.er, have a short fruc-thght and make a soft landing lt would not be reusable. h<.> !!aid. "Aviation Week and Space Tl•chnology", a weekly U.S . mugaz1nc, also reported a possible lt'St of a Soviet space shullle concept. ln public statements. however, Sovwt a;pace officials have stated :.trongly there 1s no Sovwt spa<..'l' :.huttll• in lhc near future V1tal1y Sevastyan ov, a l"O!>mol'ldut, was quoted by Tass as saying. "We are also thinking, on a long-range basis. of a rl'usable space shuttle. HowevC'r, -at present, detailed calculat1ons <:0nl1rm that ~ our existing system of transport of persons and cargo, as well as orbital stations of the new generation, will be much cheaper than with a space shuttle." Western experts believe the Soviets have created an economy of production scale with the Soyuz spacecraft. making it less ~ractical to invest heavily in a shuttle. The basic Soyuz hull and framt' are used in a number of <tpplacations, both manned and unm~nned. and the craft can be turnl'd oul al almost assembly- hne volum<' More than 40 have lx~n fl own with cosmonauts. In sharp contrast, each of the U S. shuttles in a planned fleet of AP Wlrephoto CHINESE "NO SHOW" -Lin Jianwei, left, a finalist in the International Ballet Competition under way in Jackson, Miss .. did not return Lo his room a(ter Monday night's performance. Lin is a representative of the People's Republic of China. Fede ral sources say Lin has sougRt political asylum. SPECIAL PURCHASE! ACE TRIM !J'ATTEAN-WHITE , .&Cl-VENICE • · four Is a custom job costing something more than • blllion dollars . Many parll are handcrafted and ,lnltalled. Soviet spac'P goall have centered on Jong-duration rught. Long-term tenants in the Salyut.a are ttSUpplied by a robot craft called Progress. It la la'unched anto orbit and guided by the ground to a remotely controlled • docking with Salyut. This is a s kill NASA has yet to dt1monstrate. The Soviets a r e also developing a larger robot supply ship, according to Western observers, and may be building a large and very powerf.ul bcxl&ter. The aim of thU. activity, it is believed. is to build a very large space s tatio n that would be manned continually with the dependable Soyut. as a ferry ship. NASA would like to do the same thing, but, excep\ for programs of study, there have been .no funds allocated for a U.S . space station. .. Several concepts have been developed. Some involve a large s tation assembled in orbit consisting of a number of modules strung together like pearls on a necklace. Each module would be hauled into orbit by the shuttle. But cost est1mates for a single space operations center have ranged as high as $8 billion in 1982 dollars and enthusiasm in Congres.5 and the administration has not been high. While 80 percent of the Soviet e ffort , by most Western estimates, has been toward the military application of space technology. military needs may also soon be the driver in the U.S . space program. Panel backs closing of head shops . $A<!RAME:Nfl'Q (AP) -The ,,,. As~embly Criminal Justice Committee has aeproved a bill : airfied ' at closih~ "head ' ~tf.oPe!, .. where drug eqwpment is sold. The corrurutt.ee voted 10-0 to send t!) Ways and Means a much-~ended SB341 by Sen. Newton Russell, R-Glendale, that would ban the sale of drug paraphernalia. State law already makes it a ~ crime to seJj dn.14J paraphernalia • to minors,•lnd requires stores to display such items m a .eparate room from which minors are excluded. Russell's ,bill, similar to some local ordinances. would make it a cpme to sell the items to anyone, or to manufacture them. Sponsored by parent groups and prosecutors, the bill cleared the Senate last August but stalled in the Assembly rorrurutt.ee, which is controlled by liberal and moderate Democrats. The bill had been threatened during the last few weeks by the definition of ''paraphernalia." But this appeared to have been settled late Tuesday by sponsors and two moderate Democrats. l I 1 • ' ' l : t • • • • i t I l I: r • l 1 " ~range Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, July 1, 1982 ly PAT HOROWITZ Of'ltleDller .......... D&Aa PAT: Some frlud1 ud I are ; ~' ',.f: ab .. t formlD1 1 co111mtr retail co.op · ''' aataoe. It ua oecarred to H tllat tllere 1 ·.. IQ t be aome le1alltJH lavolved la formlac n• a P"P· Wllere eu we ftad oat aboat . . ., .. , · P .R., Newpor~ Beacla The ftate Department of Con•umer 0 • • Afta1n hai 1 S08-page manual explaln1.ng, in ' eY;ryday t.erma, the leaal atepe that muat be ' 'taken wben forming a consumer cooperative ~ •' ~tion. The manual Includes seetlona on 1' ' bl1aw1, articles of Incorporation, taxes, · ·i.rtblts, health regulations and securities law. • l'or a copy of "Cooye~adve Law for California --Batail Consumer O>-Op9," aend a check made • out to the State of California for $7 to Cooperative Law, P .O. &x 310, Sacramento 95802. Showerhead cuts water use flllt .z i DEAll P ..\T: Can you tell me bow much water II saved by using a water-saving 1ll°'Hrllead? Also, wllat 9'0ald be tbe cllfference ID water lleati.111 cost If tbl1 type of alaowerlaead 11 aaed hl1tead of a regular one? E.R., Newport Beacll 1·:: The Plumbing-Heating-Cooling ...r Information Bureau says a water-saving , .. lhowerhead can cut the amount of waier by •1 about 50 percent without sacrificing •temperature, comfort or shower time. According to bureau studies, a standard ·• lhower head uses 25 1X> 30 gallons of water for !: • ~ a five.minute shower. Hot water accounts for ·: , · •.40 percent of this. Therefore, if two people use . ,..,,,.,.~owe!' once a day, the number of gallons > ,, "Ofi6ot water used annually can total 7,000 to r 18,500. That costs $75 to $100 each•year if the ''t water heater is electric; $30 to $40 if the ' ' heat.er is gas. By reducing the water flow to three gallons per minute, the amount and cost of the hot water can be cut in half -down to $40 or $15, depending Oft the heater. .. ;,'.Make unsalted butter , DEAR PAT: Aboat a year ago yoa C9blJ1•ed a recipe for •omemade, aualted Her. I didn't uve It at tbe time, bat would appreciate a repeat now 11Jlce my doctor bas told me I maat cat down my salt hltake to practJcally iero. 'H.E., Haotlllgtoo Beach You'll need a blender, 1 cup of heavy ' Cream and ice water. Pour cream into blender I I container. Cover and whip at lowest speed until yellow beads about the siz.e of com kernels form. P9ur off the buttermilk. Pour ice water into the blender container. Blend at low speed for a few seconds to wash the remaining buttermilk out of the butter. Pour . II I ~ \ ' • off the cloudy riNe water and repeet three Umee with more clean ice water or unUl the rime water poun off clear. Put the butter ln a shallow bowl and work out remain1na liquid by ~ the butter aaatnat the lldee of the bowl With a rubber 1patul.a or wooden paddle. Thls ~pe makes about one-half cup. lt can be stored ln the refrtaerator for two week.a or ln the freezer for aix month.I. For readers who prefer aalted butter, add a little aalt and fold the butter over with a wooden paddle. Repeat proceta until one-half to three-quaners teaspoon salt is worked ln and the butter is firm and waxy. Another variation, b<>ney butter, calla for 1 tabl.Mpoon of honey worked into unsalted butt.er with a wooden paddle. S&L restrictions reduced DEAR READERS: The, Federal Home Loan Bank &ard has expanded Its regulations to reduce current restrictions on savings accounts in federally chartered savinp and loans (S&Ls). The amendments include: -Allowing S&I.,., to charge fees for opening or maintaining accounts and to establish minimum balances for interest bearing accounts. . -Giving S&Ls reasonable authority to establish different requirements for different types of accounts. For example, a passbook account could earn a higher interest rate provided a minimum balance of $1 000 is maintained for at least 12 months. ' -Permitting S&I.,., to issue "loophole" certificate accounts without limitation on the loan amount. Loophole certificates are accounts for which the banking institution lends the depositor part of the funds necessary to meet minimum dep9sit requirements. Details on these changes are included on page 13776 of the April 1 "Federal Register." For more information, write to Peter Barnett Office of General Counsel, Federal Horp~ Loan Bank Board, 1700 G St. N. W ., Washington, D.C. 20552. • "Got a problem? Then write to P.at Horowitz. Pat will cut red tape, "1 getting the answers and action you need to solve inequltiea Jn n. governmeryt and businen. Mail your questions to Pat Horowitz. At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Olsta Mesa, CA 92626. At many letters a possible will be answered, but phone inqulrlm °" letters not including the reader'a full name, address and business hours' phone number cannot be donsidered. --.--.. •••C" .. /~ws eye aesceni change NEW YQRK (AP) -A major branch of Judalmp Ml dedded to wait a f.w more monthl befON deddlna whether to C!Mnae a law that hM been arouncf for 2,000 years. Followinl a aplrli.d 2a,t-hour debate, the c.entnl Cont~ of American Rabbi• asked a committee to 1tudy a proposal to chanae t he age-old rule of de9cent eo that a Jewiah father, u well u mother, could~ on the rellglout heritage to a cltlld. The conference repretenll 1,- 400 Reform oleri)' •rvine 1.2 mWioo ~ation fnelT\beft. The Reform-wing of Jud.a.ltm, one ot \hree main branches. allow• for flexibility in ancient Jewish law to adjust to modem conditiont. The Orthodox branch ln1l1ta on 1trict adherence to traditional law1, while Conservative Judal1m permit• 10me adaptation, but to a lesser degree than the Reform branch . .. ., ........ RARE BIRD HATCHED -This hours-old Lear•s macaw looks more like an insect than its large, blue-feathered "parents. Hatched at Busch Gardens in Tampa, Fla., officials there say it is probably the first chJck of this rare and endangered species to be hatched in capativity. For 2,000 yean, the rule h.aa been that a child is born a Jew only if lta mother is Jewish. If the father alone la Jewish, the child is regarded aa outside the K • • • • fo~~bbi Joseph Edelheit of " IW81)IS ag~1n nixes Michigan City, Ind., told the convention the change would b h · • ~~ ~=.;~tment f~r all W'Omen Inem ers ip But· after debating the issue, the delegates voted 179-168 to let MINNEAPOLIS (AP) _ a committee develop a position paper. Delegates t o the annual Recommended by a study convent lo n of Kiwanis committee headed by Rabbi International have voted to Herman E . Schaalman of continue to exclude women from Chicago, the proposal said, membership, the fifth such "Where only one of the parents is rejection in a decade. Jewish, the Jewishness of a child / The vote was 2,329,.1,083 i1 derivable from the Jewish again.st admitting women. The parent, and is expressed by rejection was by a slimmer participation in Jewiah life." margin than in y~ars past. By a The rabbis defeated a similar voice vote, the delegates also proposal from Canadian rejected a proposal to admit delegates that would' have women aa honorary members. declared the child Jewiah if the non-Jewiah ~ther agrees, or l! • Johrt Robert s , Kiwanis the Jewlshj1 father alone has president-elect, said he opposed custody. J women as members because Schaalman, who also is Kiwanis activities include heavy president f>f the Reform rabbis, labor. He cited a playground his said changing the rule would club in Baton Rouge, La., built compound the differences with for handicapped children. other Jewiah branches. Roberts. 59, a chemical I ol ,..... l I 1 TBEB . BRT. engineer, said some Kiwanis work involves "digging postholes and building buildings ... Tbete are the kinds of things men do that we'd have dif!iculty doing in a mixed group." The controversy over women as Kiwanis members aroee a.bout 10 years ago when the Great Neck, N.Y.: club admitted four women. Kiwanis International rejected the women members and was upheld by the New York Court of Appeals. 'The U.S. Supreme C®rt decliN:d to· hear the case. Kiwanis International has 300,- 000 members, mostly in tbe United States, and claims to be the world's third-largest service organization, behind the Lions and Rotary clubs . ... .. Extreme heat destroys beer taste. In fact, because of the way other beers are processed and shipped, they are exposed to 140 degrees of this taste-killing heat even before they reach your store. Not Coors. Only Coors is always packaged and shipped cold from the brewery to your store. In fact, Coors is kept cold longer than any other . beer-and that means fresher tasting beer for you. · Sure, it would be easier to allow Coors to be exposed to extreme heat. And maybe some beer drinkers wouldn't taste the differ- ence. But we think real beer drinkers would. Because keeping it cold is the only way to assure fresh beer taste. That's why your last Coors tast.es as fresh as your first. 'fast.es first-beer fresh, Coors aft- er Coors. Coors 1s the beer made for the way you really like t.o driI\k beer. · • 11192 MolPtl eoc.. Co.. Qoldlen. CdOfllOo ~ ! . , ' . .. --·1 ' Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, July 1, 1812 . - Dis Br.Ookl~n taWk ain't ... funny, it's wunnerfu1 ? ...... . NIW YORK (AP) -Ya ICK dell l\&)"I. !>ey Uve In Brooklfl'.\ wtt der'e mudduhl end t•uhl. .. , People Unk ~ tawk funhy, Mah, uy1 Mar,aret MUU\lx Flynn. It ain't unny. It'• wunnerful. Mn. Flynn ~ liltened to thouund1 of people ln Bnxmlyn, and u a lecturer at ihe De~nt of Speecrh of Brooklyn C.Ollele, lhe11' put topther a 1tucfy of dJalectl al'Mt aocentl of the borouah that c::alls ltwlt the nation'• fQW"th largest dty. . , "Moet people btllew that' That chan1ln1. llvtn1 1eneratfon Italian child. All and "IO" to "r.o": the Eutem comlna from Broo)dfn 11 dWec:t ll the culmlnation ol around him. he hear1 Europeana added a melody •ome kind of joke,' the wave upon wave of relative1who1pea.kanitallan that made dec-laratlve Brooklyn native Myt. tnunlaratlon, 1urttn1 with clialect. 1 en ten c e 1 1 o u n d Ilk e "It J.iwa.ya ptl a lau,h -the Dutch and contlnuinl "But then h•'• 3 yQl'I old, Quelt.101\I; the Ita.l.lana made you know, the ruy ~ th• rftht up to today'• lntlwc or and he ... out to play. He the word "lalt" IOund like World War ll movle who ll Ru11lan Jew1, Mra. J'lynn may meet an lriah-Amerlcan "le-ut." played by WUllam Bendlx uya. kld or a Jewl1h·Amerlcan The lriah changed "1olng" and M)'I he ii from Flatbuah "Very few flacee have the kld, and he adoptl IOl'ne of to "goln" and ''this" to "dla." . . . He a 1way1 1ay1 rlch cuhura dlvenlty of the way they 1peak. Before Mrs. Flynn says the Irish 'Toity·told Street and Told Brooklyn,'' and th u 1 you know It, h1I 1peech 1a a a poke an archaic form of Avenue,' and 'wolk' for Brooklyn'• dialect h . ~omerate." Enallah because of their 'work,' and 'earl' tor 'oll'." e1pecially rich, aay1 Mn. And 10 l t aoea . New llolatlon; the early part of thia/ First of all, ahe uya there Fl~. En1lander1 who ~ame to century marked the arrival of lJ no Brooklyne.e. There'• a 'We learn to 1peak from B r o o k 1 y n a f t e r t h e black 1 , who had been New York dialect that 11 the people around wt," Mn. Revolution chanaed "mother" alml.1a.rly itolated and made foµnd throu1hout the Flynn u!d ln an interview. to "mothah"; ihe Germana llmilar changes in Brooklyn rnetropoll1an area. "Say you have a 1econd.-chana•d "where" to "ver" 1peech. ~....,._. Ashbrook widow elected ·Flo ida islands to be 'dressed up' in tutus Republican Rep. Joba A1bbrook'1 widow, winning a "bitteuweet victory" ln a landslide over a Democratic challenger, promited to carry on her husband'• con1er\rative policies as she completes h11 unexpired term. Jean A1bbrook grabbed the victory in a special election over Democrat Jack Koelbl, sweeping all nine counties in Ohio's 17th Congressional District. Final unofficial resulll 1howed Mrs. Ashbrook with 74 percent of the vote. F1orida officials have given an avant-garde landscape artist permission to dress a group of Biscayne Bay islands in carnation-pink plastic tutus. The $1.5 million dlaplay by Bulgarian artist Cbri1to would be part of the New World Festival art celebration and be on display for about two weeks next March, according to his lawyer, Jay Lande re. 11111If11:18 A 16-year-old actress, left a paraplegic after a tree limb fell on her at the Lo~ Angeles Arboretum in 1977, was awarded a $1.6 million settlement by the county board of supervisors. The payment settled a suit brought by the family of Suanae Gllltrap, which sought $2 million in damages for her injuries. Since her injury, Miss Gilstrap hu begun an acting care~r. appearing in a starring role In "Skyward," a television movie made in 1980. An Antioch, Calif., man with just six houn to spend in Reno needed only a few minutes of it to rut a $171 ,740 jackpot on a "Pot-0-Gold" progressive slot machine at the Reno Hilton. Three dollars muat be dropped In the machine each time to wln the 1uper jackpot. Hennessy is a toll collect.or on the Benicia-Martinez bndge. A Honolulu woman vacationing in Las Vegas parlayed $25 worth of nickels into 11 tons of the coins. Mn. Margaret Amaao won a million nickels in a s lot promotion at the Landmark Hotel. Glven the Option of taking the 11 tons of coins or a $50,000 check, she opted for the check. An 81-year -old man who backed his wheelchair into a burning apartment to rescue an 8-month-old child received a letter from Pretident Reagan. Robert Fro1t of Eagleville, Tenn., is recovering from bums received when he rescued Ranny Ray Grimes from the burning duplex. "MINDY" JOINS CREW -Pam Dawber, best known as "Mindy" in the "Mork and Minay" series, has joined the cast of the Broadway play, "The Pirates of Penzance." With Miss Dawber at the Minskoff theater ln New York is Gary Sandy, who portrays a pirate king in the musical. Gov. Bob Grabam and his cabinet granted Christo permission to ring 10 Well in the bay in 6 million 1quare feet of p o I y p r o p y· l e n e . T h e 200-foot -wlde 1kirts - resembling ballerinu' tutus - would float on the turquoise water around the Weta, anchored to the shallow bottom to prevent them from drifting. Mlcbael BeDDetlY, 38, came to Reno with his wife Jessie on a six-hour turnaround trip. He bought $15 in silver dollars and had played only a few minutes before lining up five sevens on the bottom line of the machine. The president told Frost he was "deeply moved" by the June 14 rescue and said Frost would be reme mbered in his "daily thought and prayers." l!IY...iww, -·~ Broo~n'1 new are chanatna the of the ~. Puerto make "16ip" 1ound Uke "1heeP.'' and "very,"· ~und like 'berry." An~:: lndban. Oriental and Jewish newcomer1 are havii their effect, lhe uya. "Brooklyn la not a peculiar place where people ~k a peculiar lan1u•1•,' )t n . Flynn says. "Brookl)'J\ ~y represenll a muJtJ.,_i(onal heritage. I think we deMfve a little respect." Church .. approves • unity .I HARTFORD. C.Onn. (AP) The United Presbyterian Church has voted overwhelmin&ly to reunite the two major U .S . branches of the faith after 121 years of separation. The 571-18 vote came tw o weeks after the 122nd General AasemQly of the Pre1byterian Church in the United Scates. the southern braoch, approved a similar measure, 344-30. The proposal must still undergo the scr utin y of the two denominations' regional governing bodie1, called presbyteries. The two branches parted in 1861, at the onset of the Qvil War, over differences on theological iallues, 1ta!d' righta and slavery. A reunited church which would be called Presbyterian Church U.S.A., would have 3.4 million memben, with 2.4 million from the northern branch and l million from the southern. The delegates at the 194th General Aaaembly debated for 90 minutes before approving the plan. Marine Dis face probe into abuse Gov. Robert Ray of Iowa waa daz.ed when struck by a 10ftball in a Des Moines game, but waa uninjured and returned to his office to . fi.Jl.ilh 101ne work, a spokesman ~a. AS AMERICAN AS APPLE PIE! SAN DIEGO (AP.) -Two Marine Corps drill instructors accused of abusing recruits ln thelr traini1\g platoon face the military equivalent of a grand jury .inwstigation. accordina to a spo~ at the--Marine Corps Recruit Depot. S. Sgt. Steven Mendez and St. Anthony DiMaggio, both 25, allegedly kicked recruits, hit Ray'• preu 1ecretary, Jou them with fists and elbows and McCarroll, uid the governor was ordered them to keep quiet about pitching for hl1 office team the incident. the base spokesman against a teaio fielded by the said. Iowa Department of Revenue. None of t be 2 1 rec r u i t 1 Ray was struck on the left side involved was seriously injund. of his head by • Mil~ by fpt ~mah Layry ~b~ a Both instructors have been -statef..Uqoper assignee! H~ a suspended since the allegations bodyguard to the governor. surfaced June 15. They face an Noble was attempting to throw to "Article 92 Investigation." third base. {\·~~{fl(;?-$ Celebrates 1 -• -· -1 Year Anniversary 25% OFF. ALL DRY CLEANINI '1 .P~ok-Up Delirery • 1000 N. COAST HIGHWAY lllllll IYIO olltfl Pl' pu<tNM Coupo11 goo0 tllly tor COlllOonlllOll --'"" orclett C111wnet PIY' 1N ~ Mitt 11• °"9f ...... """1t, 1tU I. .. ~ : • _ _.. . - I I ' . ' ... . .1 I I ' I I OAILV .. ILOT!Thurtday, July 1, 1982 . . . High court· • re~1ew to foOd . shit. ' BAN l'RANCISCO (AP) -~ 1uit c:haratnl ~ Foodl with la.lie and deaeptive breaktut food ldv.rUalna will be reviewed by the Callfomla Supreme Court. A majority of the juatlca vote.ct to 1rant a review hNrina to the Commfttee on Chlldren.'a ClllllER • Televbdon Inc. and a c:oalltlon of minority and comumer groups, parenta and clUldren who sued General Foods. The aui&. which alao namea Safeway Stores and advertiaint firm Benton aftd Bowles, contains alle1atloos of fraud, deceptive advertising, =~ntation, unfalr bullnem practices and ol express warranties. 09\eral Foods, the suit charges, promoted the ~ as a "nutritious grain breakfast food for children by deceptive techn iques and false state*nenta about both the producta and viftat .the prodUcta ~do." ... It f\1l1hfr allea-the advertising is "specifically calcWated to capitall:ze on vulnerability of young children who compose the targeted television audience." General Foods has denied the allegations. 'rhe plaintiffs urg~ the high court to overturn a n4ina by Loe Ang~les Superior Court Judge David 'f'homaa whO'dismisaed their suit July 27, 1979 A state Court of Appeal later affirmed the ruling. ) In an appeal for reinstatement, the pwntifts told the Supreme Court that the lawsuit stems from allefled fabe claims made for five specific products, e8Ch containing 4~ percent to 6~ percent sugar. They are Honeycomb, Fruity Pebbles, Corn Pebbles, Alpha Bita and Sugar Crisp. The sUit alleged General Foods' advertising "conveys false product information a n d diaaemi~tes 1alse_arul rqisleading dietary and dental concepts to children who have sev«;rely llmlted abilltles to separate fact from fiction 'through television, a powerful medium to which children are especially vulnerable.'' The plaintifta seek damages and refund of purchaae prices paid over four years as restitution. New club forming on coast ~ Tiie Leads Cluij" *ill meet July 13 to organize. 'rte ~ting. at Tiny Nayiors, i100 Ortega High.way, San Juan Capistrano, .from. 7:15 to 8:30 a.m., LS designed for the woman i n business, according to Joan Fischer o f Capistrano Beach. Speakers will be Ms. Fischer, Judy Williams, and the founder of Leeda Clut), Ali L assen of Carlsbad. For informat!9DJ call 581-8504. . Business club pl~ retreat The Orange County chapter of Women in Business will hold its annual retreat Saturday at Ben Brown's ln South ~~pie of diacuaaion will be ·~How will this econ9Jnie crunch affect women ln their careers and t.wP ?'' BEWA TOO MUCH SUN Too ITUICh sun can tum an anf'l\:11.'~@lt' lJft'WuPib'1'i" vacation Into days of c ~~r, '""'u tP. ~b~ ~rt~ dmximror<. Wffh JUll a little caution and a fDOd amtan product, you can prevent both aaony and day1 ol un.lahtly peelina of your Min. Expme youneU to the IW\, with plenty of a good aunt.an preparation Uahtly petted on the Wn. few a lhMt dine to start. nien .. your II.Ult.an developl '8.ke more am each day. Wa1eh out for thoee fOfUtY d.a)"I with the IUD hidden. Ulu.vk>let rays can filter th.rou&h IO give you a bum. Protect YOW' eyes with a pair of aunglaases, created to filter out m ost of the harmful ultra-violet rays. S10p in and we Wlll be glad t o help you select depend1ble protection ..-i-. lhe IUD. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medkine. Pick up your prescription if shopping ~by, cw we will deliver promptly without extra. ~-A great many people e ntr ust us with their pre1c:riptlon1. May we compound and dltpenae youra! ~AltKlJOOl'RAIMIACY "-o.llNrJ •• ,...,...ltMI ,,,..,_,..., 16- BEAuTIFUL NEW MERCEDES BENZ TURBO SEDAN Clualc White with Palomino Leather. Electric Sun Roof, Alloys, Stereo-Cassette . 300Dt-T~RBO $30-1862,. Cati Virginia (714) 64MIQO or (714) ~5-1122. 7t MERCEDES WAGON MIQt. 24,000 ml., One owner. t14,000 less than a f18W wagon. Sun Roof, 91er4JP·Caasette, Allqya. White with Brown lnterlor.120.~95. Call V1r91n1a (714) 845-4800 or (714) 645-1122. l -t ftdelathetlnt u .. &at•• I'm ..ntlngUo<at CIDd l'mgla4. UtwlMn• Htro tat.tr lD yow hoaw. car. or boat botb of u wWlllelMqlpy, Rcde4 tortla11 A. ),C .. ..,.., gaa orelectrka.l INI. , ... 101••• llBIECUD 24" nLDllC Bl•ZD . 11 .. ... ,.,_....~ .......... . SlllCLE IUlllEI CIS an.1. 99'9! Large aooklDo cm.a. 11.000 ITU'a &cna rock and 20 lb. taalr lDduclecl. KDIGSFORD CHARCOAL BRIQOETS ·217 llU. Get enough durlng the aale. You're gonna bOYe Mor• than one barbecue. right? RUBIEBllllD n., cnbd .. If my al.ter wa •polled. I told them. nolt'• IMMW pelf .... llbe'• wecntDg. ... 110 Coast~rcl opproHd, no IJ4uld. no noxlcnaa gcnee. IO. 240 U you buy th• ..-Ung bracket at •xtlacoat It'• Coaat Guard apprond too. Entoy the holiday and ••eryday wttb o llttl• IDON MCUrity. Our deal la battery powered and Hen 1uchadH the batt.,, #' .. SUPU • GRO ·--2 88 ca And you thought t1'e darn th.Ing• would1u.at grow like 1lxty without any fertUl&er. You wouldn't llaten ... but theN' •a till time. \ Can you beU... tliclt? Rice cluomed lbllala. Ear lu~ ... , brothet-in-IGwCOGlddo It. U aomeoe. would NClllll tbem tohba. BRASS Pl,ATED FURIOTURE We don't have a ton. fuat enough. but d o come In early. Dam nice looking for thl• money or moN. No Rain Ch.ch CUSS TIP TUU CUT• UT UCI 1377 1777 197~ . . ,.., .......... ,_ ...... ,, . .., .... _ ......... . Dia,..,_, ., __ cmd ..... -.~ .... w. ...... . ' . -.C.· '/_, . • .'\ ,._y_ ,,, 11¥£ UIJ.n FERIS ,"5'~ ,.,.. I ' 77! Austra.Ucm r ... r.m. oc. ;/'- Mother rem. u NCM..i,.i ber •. Bl»wouJd 8af· "How about a dellctom cup of tree • Denni•?") R.g\&lm.wlauear'. hM .. what'a lheP~ wUho1.at colcl aoda, hot doge.and~ Berkey'• tentWe loMe lib. "•br .... Aw MolUe' •face look W. o mllUoo ... lt'a all IJNeD CJDd wnllalaCL (•rgg.) I'' COITlllEB nc•m --- -··· ~tlaeabade, keep nice . "\I adC011y.1'Qd«~.9Clf a.lee tbJnp to It cmd it will rewa:rd JOU wtth h\UMboeda of bloolu. McCULLOCI aa111uc ELECTRIC CUii saws Lighter to handle than ga• and a whQW lot quieter . Double ln1ulated wltb trigger lock. . I I. . .J I I I .-•• • 11 I I 1111w1 11 1 I 1i1 1 11111i1 11 1 ·'~ ~1'1'1!1,',. \ 6' X 15' BAMBOO FEM CE r · .75 IP_,.. tr· 1.5 IP _,.. lf'l.'7SIP.,. 1msuu .. I BIYOLllE ··MOT.OR OIL • •• FREERIDIO OFf'ER ··~· ir. • ~.:-•w.r. ~-........ -"'-~ 388 • Supple. 1hade. prl•acy. atmoapbe,.. Wrap an ox ln it and dffp fry It for the big c:blU cookotl. TDBTLE Wll POLY . SHELL SPRAY POLY SEILDT •88 . ... A ISalnu .. polf-NGldeal. lt's U..way to ... 8eguJar wa woo't get It lD amog • Aog. cmdlDltt. a .. bate from TU1'TLE -~ detalh la package • liGID LU'E FLIT-tlta WILL PlllT OI SUIDllCE Si iOll . ..... , , 37 . SPU LI Wlf GENIE 3 ST 1no11 SPRDIKLER TIMER 27 7~am Hook thl1 ln and nenr forget watering again. Llmlted quantltlH ao com• .arly (Don't alHp at the cfoor. th• cops will l'O\Ut you.) Umlted quantltl••· SPC.PlllT TUY SET 3•7 " It' a achlallf lplecea U JOI&--' tlilepdee tag. Cl bewagQJwbo~ F.nded up ta tb91RS.) YIUllCS 111· RECRARCE 22 #IC4 nm , ..... chcnp from'*> and up. (We paid toomucb. don't we .. ' 1.o .. towatehthOHSJUPMIY· "How dotb-rdolt?lt'anotlalt. n.,· ... bNaking tbe market. We gotta atlck toptber ... Wba1 nabblabl We .. u good and cUap too • • PIRnCLE BOARD 3/ r· 2 97 l/f' 4 7 ' SJ r· 5'' ' Did you h.ar about the auto mechanic who went to the paychlatriat and laid down under the couch? No 1 Okay here'• another a peel al. 3/ 4" 6'' Q +IN16 ZS Fr •. POWEILOCI D TIPE 7 44 I' ...... Fat, wlcle (pa laacl to ear "fat'1 blade. brtgbt pllow ...... wtJamaben, reBllable, l H wlcle lapr. BOMTEK nGR'f w1n 4 97 #Im You replace the lncandeaceot bulb with tbla thaoreacent deal and ten'• energy. more light for tbeblte. L.ammrr -=.J"' r· Clla.llE TVIE BID-I· .. n>:•s nus m.1.£1 CREDI 7~" EDUU SIW "Ill: ... 277 _Ul...7" ~Wyrlw"°'9W.aWf,~CK& ...,.t It W... theotMrwriter. I ...,., loet •r touch. ID lact. I am atlll looking lor It b theflnt u... ,, "2-#lm AJoutoodaCfllbWeeomMnaHoo,. <nat'•.,.... ti..,toack ... : JloMM. Ccm't JOU,_. ... thla ~. Fourt..th and OMllridge,) CALIFORllli CLIPPER GAS MOWERS Jr'JIP 99':i119 An cnriul (whai an cnriul word) lot of • mo1"9r for the money. Need a foot to tell you all the featw.1. AMultl~olor 799 web. 251,\" high. #II• DELUXE FOtDlllG Tcmgerin. polyHter duck M<l1 af\d back. 9 99 NS7JI DELUXE ID-BICK Fl Ye poaltlon adJmtment with towel rack. whoopee. 2 ·299 #5'734 .-:.... .. VlllYL COATED SDIKER NAILS 27t. Choice of 8 or 16 penny. (Why are theH nail• clUferent than othera? Aak our yardnwn. They11 tell you a atory you wouldn't b.llHe.) JiH@i@ & PC • BOUfEBBnSET 11·~. You pt If.''. I/•"· "".and W' nratgbtbtt1plua%" V-Groo.. and '1i'' ftlnlng. (Don't confuM me with thetacta. mrml.Ddlamodeup.) EVEREADY ENERGIZER BITl'ERIES UDIU TWiii Pll Ca DnrDI Pll a I ftLT SllCLE Pll nn 10• C...: Pll The "Leg~Da" ~ q wbOltt cNdenza lull ofi '"'G").J theae and more In th la coal bln at home. GlYe1 themtollnl91t1d•lb11~drt'andy. iT l IJ'Y.Jm BUBIEllJlllD 32 c•r.ra ROUClllECI· 1 .1 97 U.rou'ftbeen recelYing O\lfcataloga, NOdlrig o\lr ad.a. and watching ow TV commerdat. you'll need at i.a.t one of th ... to tile row DOt" ... KELLER GARDER WlllDOWS ,:::.s::.. 97•• msm.r 11 s•• 45 Y." I J4Vt'' nnsm.r 12588 J4 V1" I 4'V." nnsm.r 13588 • Y." 145~" -......... ------~--------..... ·-----Gotaa\lllac:neDaolcumeabtob1ockoat SUIC•BD llSULITllC #jjJllDWFllJI r.-yourplck from ........ or41'' wtdtha(or tab you .iao..i. or hoe. HQ, bo. Too cornr? OK.I MURRAY MEI'S 2&" MOllTEIEY CRUISER 677 7. ... ~ . . A flamboyant beauty (already I'm exclt-4 aDd ldoo't na bow what "flamboyant" m.ana.) 21.t.15 balloon wbhewalla. coaatet brob. aboat m ol the aun •• beat andglaN . G.E. son W1BITE LIGHT. wlt.Dat dlowtng off yow p&cmta. lroaae ~ tlnlah. BULBS 7 7 5crftonl0.15.orl00 watt.,..lpeakbag ol Ugh19. t DeHl malre ¥tota1 • 1• IP .. 4 aotber-LD-law. She . na • onlyYlaltetwlc:ea BILIS tecq;.,_.._ •terrs •lx ~ "'°"111weadl time. . .' .. ·1 ·. \ [ t 1 l ') t q '.) ') B & 1 l ") r 1 b 'b '.( ,, ') q .) n l:l a •• I& .J ,- ________ .._. ____ _.... ____ .._. ___________ -:-__ _.., __ ~--------:-~~~--~--~~-----~~---~--~~----~~~~--~--.---·--------? ---- f .. . "DISNEY" - Through o ut his career, actor Michael Landon has peen a at<p·yt e ll e r of Amer icaoa. By PftED ROTHENBERG ' A11111 .. 111r....~ NEW YORK. -In c:ornn1'fClala. he calla Kodak "Amerlc• '• Storyteller." Actually, the label fltl him . Michael Landon lt titre modem Walt Dianey, 1plnnlng talee of Americana for the entire family. Everything Landon touches, It seems, turns to apple pie. For nearly 25 years, Landon hu been starring In the kinda of showt they're not supposed to make ainy more. He was Little Joe Cartwrii:ht in 14ttonarua" aftd then Pa Inc•U. ln the continuing "Little Houae on the Pralrie," NBC's second-rat.ed show thla put season. I Lut week you uw that famoua both "Little HoUM" and U.1 1pln-oft Kodall am.Ue ln America'• J\U'\Jor MF'ather Miarph)'.:' 'nleee lho~.,.. Milli »aaeant on CBS. ~ .,..,.. ~to brl.l'C llmilJee topther. Landon waa hoat for the live 11Yarnlllea juat d()()'t talk to each competition. another ProtVam In other enouah any more," Landon k•plna "1th his outlook on life ..... , • and 'N. Landon, 44, who ta aeparated Landon 11 p ro1rarn1 ooze from hta wife, hu eeven children, wholHOmeneu. When NBC once and he'a viatJ.ant about their TV asked for heavier acUon In "Little view~. ~OUM," Landon didn't t'-U'ft U\e ··~~ ~re'• tpmethinf yery other cheek. worthwhtle, t 'won't let theM watch "It was obvious I wasn't aoina to durini the week. But they do have do that kind of ahow," he1says. to watch 'Little HoUM'." ''Our chancten are warm,.feelin« .tt. domal.c NCOn\lllend "Dallu." and non-violent toward each today's In show. . . other." "I don't watch tt enough to know Landon la executive producer of ,1 ~hy people watch it. All l know ta that they're makina a hero out of 91\ e\111 1\1)'. '. . Blat tbC cto.n't mean Landon hu jumped on the Coalition for Better 1'elevl1lon'1 bandwaaon, either. . "I don't think anything 1hould be .done by threatening people," Landon uya, Incidentally, the coalition has 1tnaled Q\ll NBO and ta boycotting the network'• ptogtarna. Thia fall, Landon won't be playtna Charles lnplla, although the actor will remain u "Little Hou1e'1" producer and frequent writer-director. "After to many years on one . . aertea and elaht on anot!Mr, I've had a Nee run. It'• ttaw to move on to other th.I.no. I like my work. But It'• when l don't f•l like dolna l1 100 percent that lt'a um. to pt out." How can "Little Houae" exiat without a father flaure? "I don't think I'm the only IUY they want to eee. Much of our audience ls children, anyway. So we'll let 1ome of the younaer characters take over." Six new charactera wlll be added, lncludina one played by Landon's 19-year-old daushter, Leslie. · SUMMER'S,. ·HOT ·FASHIONS ~ 25°/o'60o/o 10FFI ,. Wide selection ,. of quality brands: . • OCEAN PACIFIC • LEVI'S MOVllN ' ON • BRnTANIA •ZEPPELIN • P.C.H./RAGS \ • KENNINGTON •SALVATION --< OFF ~ORE ' /.~,.. t.'"' tJGHTNING BOLT I -. LEFT BANK • TOBIAS • 1=ocus • STREETCARS •CHEROKEE •BARE TRAPS •BATA • and many rr1orel . . EM1RE STOCK OF JUNl0R sWIMWEAR 25% offl Regularly S2J-~. n<YN SJ4,99-·S32.99. SeJe<;ted styles; regularly SJ4.SO-S22. MEN'S O.P. SHORTS \ Salel S 1.1,99 t . Selected styles. regularly SJ8-S19.SO . JRS' TERRY\ AC'rl\/EWEAR I ~ ' S~rt$1199-JS: s·1999 Save l/31Shoct,set regulartf ft8;jog BOYS' aP. BEACH PANTS · Sefe<Ud~ ~ $19--$22.50. BOYS' O.P. KNrT SHIRTS ~short sJeeve styles; regutarfy SUH21. I .. ~ . DID YOU Si!E CHANt4EL 2 ON SUNDAY, JONE 27~ 1•2 AT 8:00· P.M.? ' , • j lllXT·TV C-...1llll•llMIlle ..... II•1•111n _,., u lli'lll l)rtlll 11,....'a •1,11111 wM ._.." a.ra _, Zllp'. AMI 11111111atna.FMM'a,,,... ... 1tweya "91Mat wt111 ,_,,,_. te ....... 11 t111 ... . ...... hr u ...... ""' ...... '" .. "· 11 ......... ., •• 1 ..... a.u .. '-"· .. 11.11 .......... lUTI ...... , IAVI• II All AIOUTI . ' . I .- I • I I r WMO MAY "Olft ,.DeO? CHECK THIS LISTI A t I ' ALL PRICES •FFICTIVI -W:HRU SUNDAY, JULY ... 11th, 1982 A ...... DI ...... Five Pltcl Dlnlno Stt COMlttlflg of OYll table. • 1 tlllM lidt chi!" and OM ltm cNlf, , 9471.00 "" .... UllllM .... Miiii. 61111 front, ·-... .,.., 8384.00 " .... Wiii ............. It ..... TlllM OrlWlf 6'no1t 011111r. et ...... Comer Delk. ltll.IO .• TllM Draw lldll- IOr ca.t. eta.ee. 0pen HueC11t w. e111.11. 0pen Hutch .... • with 11gM1 If ..... Four Drlwlr Dnk. ttU.•. Four Dnw CM1t .. etat.ea..Oes1t Chait ........ C IPIUL MIMD IY "ml IOlL.•" .,..., ... c.nct ......... Dnlr:""' "' ........ ......... , caie,. .... ,. ~..... ..... Contlitlno Of mattf'IM and fol.ln*tlonl. l'Wlntlzt Sit, ........ f1111111t Set. aM.OI. Oueenllit Set, ....... Klnoslle s.t, talT.00. D lllCA'1 f.llllf *tt ...... ,....,, The VFTe50 hat lul·lunction Infrared l10'IOtt control. witti wlralnl hind unit. Soft·toudl function controls. tape countlf with memory switch Picture search and slow motion functions in-SP and SLP model only. cable·ready tuning CIPlllility. $ 7 49.8 7 . I l 1ta111a YIHt C • ftecol'ffr from lolly. The Sl·2000 has BetaScan hi speed picture search. Swing Search in normal and slow speeds, and a Linear TlmJ Tape Counter. The TunertTimer has 2·week. 4·evtnt unatttndtd prograpimlng, and a wireless Remote Commander. Tuner/Timer $&39 87 available at lddltlonal coat. • F ..., HYC·ntl Tr1-c..n with Trinlcon Plelup Tube for quality reproduction. in·camua ldlting caplbility, automltic expo- sure control, blrilt·ln microphone and the F1 .4 macro-focusing power zoom*". $819.87 Q • ............ °"' c.111• •••· lttl you -up to """" brewed cofllt. Autol'llaticllly l1lftl bftwtnO at the time you -.ct. 2·10cups.ModelDCM15. $33_48 H Celtt-.Clltllillt Tllll ....... T ..... 11-0.'" ........... Continuous cllanlno coating on im.ior Mn Wiiis ...,_ Incl partlally ab9oftls apatters. keeping the O'llll praei ltallly c:llml. Model TSO. I u c.,.it 1• 11• D'W" (PRQ, 11). 1200 w.n. ot go dfYlno powir. Two ......... IWltdlls foe htWlif flow~. Fo6d-t111 lllOdll~ • $14. J . .._.IM(' ... a.... a.Ill ...... LEO Clod! "'iiiiY, slldt rule dial, 3'I dynamic Sl)lltker, autofllllic: lftquency control (AFC), woodgrain finish. MqSel #7·462.5. $23.97 ,, K u .._. ·1 ..., ,_.... .,.. .,_, No 1nsta11111on -tust hang It up. Includes trMf pouch, hanging bracket, On/Olt ~Ind 9·volt battely. Model SMK2. $14.97 L 11c1,....t11 .. T••••.,.......... T ...... Mu1tnnlnd .. controls foe perfect toast; toast color control selector; hinged ~ tray lor easy deaning. Model 8701 . $11 • 94 M ftlYll I Qt. Creek ,.. ...................... ...i. ~all day While you're wway. low wilt "bi,nket ol heat" surrounds tht lldts for even cooking. No burning. Cook book Included. $19.88 N NO DllYlllG ALCDHOl ••. MO NITIACIAl. cot.oft. . A .................. llMI ........ MllltlHlr, Combo pad!, two 12 oz., 12-27, I ........................ ll .... ....... ..........,, Combo pact, two 16 oz., u.M. C. Alla Vll'l lcM, ... AIM Yan Ctltlt, Combo pact, two 4 oz .. U. 71. 8AU8Cll AllD LOM8 0 blStNFECTING SOLUTION $2 .43 12 fl. 0;(. P SALINE SOlUTION $2.16 12 fl. oz. Q DAILY CLEANER $1. 92 1.5 fl. oz. R ... , IUZD. Tailored In a solid colof ~pack ...,. oC 55tJ!. polytsttr. 45% worsted wool. Modeled In a 2 button, center vent coat. Popullr colors. -."'us A see.so S IOYa' .1'.MI. A sttection o1 polyeSter blend labncs In twills. brushed and CfOSS dyes. Regular and sllm aim available. (Not MfY fabric In MfY 11ze1 I SS.94 \ . • • • M FEOCO LA CIENEGA (21 3) 837-4481 3535 S. LA CIENEGA BLVO .. LOS ANGELES 90016 FEDCO VM NUYI (213) 786-6863 1"820 RAYMER STREET, VAN NUYS 91405 FEDCO PASADENA (213) 449-8620 3111 E. COLORADO BLVD., PASADENA 91107 FEOCO CERRITQI (213) 860-7711 11625 SOUTH STREET. CERRITOS 90701 otfet '°' Sony l ~ ........,. """ ,........,.~131.1961 ~~It! rlw Utilfd S....n Vood J.. ptOHbllfd li\llaw FEOCO COSTA MESA (714) 979-266o 3030 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA 92626 FEDCO SAN DIEGO (714) 262-241 1 ~TH & EUCLID, SAN DIEGO 92105 FEDCO SAN BERNARDINO (714) 888-418 1 570 S. MT. VERNON AVE., SAN BERNARDINO 92410 FEDCO ONTARIO (714) 947-8300 2534 S. ARCHIBALD AVE .. ONTARIO 91761 ENCLOSE CHECK OR-MONEY ORDER F~ U.00 • "'18A• DOltoT .. D CAIN ~-..ct only'° ....... ,....,. wll*'Cll9Dmll. STORE f10URS WEEK DAYS t't!UCOI& r.1.•m-.1.1u s •.-.. ... ..,.. .. ,. LR •nr-•• NMe...r 11 :00 AM to 1:00 PM • LA CIENEGA • SAN BERNMOtNO ANO SM DIEGO STORES 12:80 NOON to 1• PM • CEllUTOI • COITA MESA • MSADEIA • YAN tltJrS AND ONTARIO STORES SATURDAYS • AU. ITOREI 1a:aa AM to 1:00 P11 ll•Ull'GIB1 ... lll• .. \ \ . •) ' ,.. t GoUncil's B.olsa Chica I 111 • mo·ve-miss~d the point After bitter debate, the Huhijtlaton Beach City Council took ~ 'C»ntrove.ralal stand on the dev~pn\ent of Bolaa Chica. 'fiie action, on a motion by Joi)authomu. had two parts. It WM applOYed on a 4.3 vote. . f ·lret, Thomu asked for 1upport of 1tate Sen .. Paul \ CarpenwrJ1 bill that would ·take lhe ma~ out of the hands of the Coiiit:al COmmilalon. ',X'he 1secon4 part included endonement by th~ city of Orange County's plan to develop the manhlands that are aWTOunded by \be Pa~fic Coast Highway and \ ocean ·and on three sides by HuntingtOn Beach city limits. The 1,600 acres are located in unincorporated prange County territory. . ' The council action came after bitter excha~ges between city officiala. It al*> came the night before the matter waa to come before the Assembly. Energy and Natural Rnourcee Committee. The wlldom of the oouncll m .. jori ty -Thomae, Ron <J»ahiNOn, Jack Kelly and Don MacAlliater -ia questionable. With the Coastal C.ommilllon deciding things, the hearings are at least held in the Southern .c&llfomia area and local resident. have plenty of opportunity to view proceecUngs and to make their views known. We understand that there are basic differences between the council majoritY and minority on the extent of development. There are ways of resolving • those differences;-· The Coastal C.ommission isn't above criticism, but taking Bolsa Chica out of its hands and giving it to the state Legislature for final decision smacks of special-interest legislation. It is surprising that the Huntington Beach City Council would go along with that. • RV law reasoiiable In an attempt to curb owners vehicles leave trash ,behind when of recreationar vehicles from they hit the road again. taking free vacations on the streets While llOl'De doubt remains as of Newport Beach, City C.ouncil to whether 90 inches will really members have developed a new prohibit all models of recreational law. vehicles, it seems a good starting The law, which comes back ' point. for a final vote later this month, . And there is the question of bans recreational "{ehicles wider whether the council is asking too than 90 inches from parking on much of police officers to go out residential street.a for more than with measuring tape il;l hand and 12 hours. Wide vehicles used by determine if a recreation vehicle is handicapped per"80n8' are exempt. just a little bit this side or that side Angry residents from Balboa of the 90-inch mark. Island started calling for the-law However, the concept that nearly a year ago, clairping tourists ' residents, particularly in congested in massive vehicles were turning areas such as Balboa Island, narrow islana streets ·in to shouldn't have to put up with a campgrounda. summer-long procession of Residents said the vehicles recreational vehicles is sound. make it tough for regular-size'Cal'S If some wrinkles develop in to travel down the road and block the new ordinance, the oouncil can homeowners' views. Frequently, take a second look at it after a tr:ial they said, owners of recreat:lanal.. ¥riod. . A qui~t b~nef actor Most Orange Coast residents know the Fluor Corp. by its spacious and sparkling glass headquarters off the San Diego Freeway in Irvine. Many also are aware of the firm's worldwide reputation in the engineering field. Few, however, recognize it as one of the region's leading supporters of worthwhile community causes. · Corporate officials, for their part, haven't sought much public recognition for, thetr donations. of money and volunteer labor tD aid various local charitable and terYice 'organizatio ns . Unlike their striking headquarters, they have kept word of their philanthropic efforts subdued. It is not widely known, for example, that th e Fluor Foundation will dosiate ~$7-' _,million worldwide this year, with about $3.5 million going to causes in Southern California. In Orange . County, Fluor has given large sums to initiate the Immigrant & • Refugee Planning Center and to help build cultural facilities such as the proposed Orange C.ounty Performing Arts Center. The quiet approach fits the character of Chalrman of the Board J . Robert Fluor, who doesn't aeem to yearn for more head1ines than hjs extensive engirteering and natllral resources company already provides. Fluor seemed genuinely embarramed about the fuss made about bis corporation recently when the Rotarians honored him. Instead of basking in the limelight, he offered a challenge to other businesses to get more involved as "good corporate citizens." An international player in the hl1h-profile e nergy game, the F1uor Corp. will inevitably be the source of some controveny and many more· news stories in the future . But for now it i s appropriate to focus on the good deeds the corporation has done and to say, simply, th~ you. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on tnis page are tnose ot tl'leir autnors and artists. Reaoer comment is Invit- ed. Address "ftle Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa M~s.a. CA '92626. Pl'lone (714) 642-4321 . • L.M. Boyd/ Inflation note Inflation zoomed so swiftly in Germany during 1923 that diners in rstauranta there choee to pay their c}-*a al 100D aa the_l ordered rather thm after they ate. They couldn't be IUft the price wouldn't go up dwinl dinner. The autote1ten ny it'• a rare AIMrlcan-mllde oar that can ltand a f Ive-mile-an-hour Impact without comlderable dtnMp Q: Doesn't Franee have the molt aJaoholiml? A. Next to Qillet le.does. Per capita. .. wine pn>ducln. both. "What'• tbe •ou~t' deJ>u't- IMllt do In. biC oompeny?'' lnqufra. client. It Unch jot. .ellewhere for employees the company wants to fire. Lot of sizable firms have 11et ul:.!.'f' aervices. To cut down on the es caUMd by the ~untied who com- plain to urliona federal burea\&I. Q. What propor:tion of the 18,000 women In the U.S. Army in ~ are pregnant? A. About 10 peoc:ent. At any atven time. ~ i.fve, on1y 20 percent ot the newbam bliblel in thJa aountry lived to • 80. Now ~ 20 percent don't live tb.t &one. Q. What klnd of arrows do the ar- chen ahool ln 0.. 01,.... ....-1 A. ~.clnwn aluipb\'811 alloy tubee, metal potnta. plMUC v.... I' I ::J I I I \ . r1 I, ti I I " l .I p II ... ,, ,, I ~ I tt ·~ -.. ,, .. .... ,,, :iiiiiiiiill!lil~~~~~~ ~ :;~~~-~ ~· ,, ... 'TM~TfEWf-~ii; w~ 0r ~'P~~ !' " I. ~S~~ _ !~~~~f fm!e?el y.P~~~~?~.~~~Y of thel< -, fatcats are allowed to get away with cost pensioner a break if he can't pay the s trongarm me thods. My associat e ' overruns and tax write-offs, Pres'dent whole amount al once. Lucet.te Lagnado was told that the '_j Reagan's people have been going aft.er "For your convenien ce. w e can threatening letter now reads "may be ..... the widow's mite with all the ferocity of with ho 1 d the b a 1 a n c e of yo ur forced" inatead of. "will be forced." : J Dickensian debt collec tors. 1'he overpayment from your Social Security d · · · I 983 b d unfortunate old people are lucky that benefit," the Jett.er stat.es. A form is An in its origma 1 u get t request, 1he agency specifically asked for debtors' prisons have been abolished. included at U~e bottom of the page, a "proposed change" that would allow it ! Here's what'• happening: to "recover overpayments to individuals 1 THE SOCIAL SECURITY Admin-G. Crom available Social Security benefits." l Obviously, if it a lready has this istra ti on has been sending out authority, there would be no need to ask notices to pensioners threatening to cut , , Congress for it again. ~;h~~;o~~~f:1\~~~~ ~: ~.... FOOTNOTE·. An ag .. nrv spok--,..... I w ere overpaid in recent year s in JACI 11111111 ~~~ --J Hu .... Supplemental Security Income. · t.ri.ed to di.J11•1'ociate Wasbin~top I t I reported a few weeks ago that the staling: "For my convenience, pleue fieadquartera from the second letter\ • f Social Security Administration is trying withhold my full Social Security benefit · Insisting that such bullying ~tics were .. ,. l to coerce pensioners into letting the each month until my supplemental not administration policy but a n - agency snoop through their income-tax • security income overpayment of $-unauthorized bit of zealousness by a l records. Unless they sign a waiver of the is fully recovered." IC the pensioner regional office. He stuck by the first • privacy that every taxpayer ta entitled doesn't sign away the Social Security letter, however, and saw nothing wrong ~ t.o , the pensioners are told, their checks -oft.en the only income he has in trying to trick terrified pensioners into l supplemental l.noome checu will be cut -a follo~letter arrives. This one signing away what, in many cases. is i off. This ii a bluff, and a cruel one. 'The getl ....Uy • • • tpeil' _only so~. ?f ~e. ~ agency has no 1~ ri&ht t.g ~l)fw ~U we . from you (in 16 4 .j;qntr~s.t J.bi,_ with t.he ~e agan l through on lta Uu:eat. and it knows it. c:t.ya) we orced to suspend idTnMfstr4U°"'it-'CMnal attltude 'toward i Ihdee<I a federal judge ordered ~ payment of your Social Securit y defense contractol's, big oil companies ~ Security Administration officiala to ceaae Checks." and other business buccaneers. The l badgering beneficiaries until the legality This.threat is probably illegal. By law, Renegotiation Board, which used to ~ of their actions could be settled in fuurt. Social Security ~hecks are supposed to be collect overpayments from defe nse : · Now the Social SecUrity bureaucrats immun e from ·'attachment, o r contracts, has been allowed to die. The ' are using the aame tactics in their zeal to assignment." The National Senior Interior De partment trusts the oil !' squeeze every last penny out of the poor, Ci\i..zena Law Cent.er is planning to take companies to report how much oil they the sick and the elderly. , the agency~ over it this week. pump on federal wells, despite evidence , The first rw;l&ifict~~ ~ ..,.,! 1.' that the Social tt.at the qp.nen have been robbing Uncle ' Though it does' aa~~ secunfY-ouFei era themselves have Sam blind under the honor system. l --• .. • .. ..... -t --.,, .. _,,. c ~ - Volunteer program . sets To the F.ditor: 1 congratulate Jan D. Vandersloot, M.D., on the timely oonunentl regarding Medi~ cutt.cka, The Medi-Gal .Bill, AB 3480, which will elfminate emergency medical transportation certainly is of grave con sequence to many needy patients. I feel it is important however, to look at the alternatives which are available to Medi-Cal patients in Orange County. It has become a sign of the times that when individuals have difficulty with transportation and/or medic.al needs, the standard answer has become, "contact your caseworker" rather than contact our family, friends, neighbon or local voluntee't organization which could provide help. The Medi-Cal program has been burdened with accepting financial reaponslbili ties which could be eliminated through the use of available · servicel In the county area and through development of addittonal volunteer services. The spirit of volunteerisrtl which the curr ent administration augaesta the private sector embrace has been in e xistence in many facilities throughout Orange County for years. A UNIQVE PROGRAM exists at Western MedicaJ Cent.er. The Someone Cares program is made up of volunteers from the community. They transport patients to and from o utpatient appointments at the hospital. Someone Cares tr&n1porta 60 to 76 cues per week and hu been doing eo for the pest 12 years. There ia no charge for thil 1ervice and It ia ltaffedvtotally by volunteers. Thi• outstanding program never suffered even durfns the price increale9 in plOline. The VQlunteen are dedicated and catinl people -the eood ftellbbon we all need. . We have ln the county Dial-A-Ride, Dial-A-Uft, Magic Carpet and othen which are able to tramport handic8pped patientl -but there ll a fee lnvolVed. Tbe char&ee for Dlal-A-Rkle and Dial- A·Uft are minimal for lhort dlltancet and within the ....im of • tlxed income. It ii~ I tuM wheft we must be concerned about the cutbacks which our medically needy, disabled and elderly patients are experiencing. However, i-rbalJS 1t ii .alllG a.l.lme when we must r~ie thaf th~ -.late and fed e ral government can no longer assume the role of family. friend and employer for the citizens of the United Stat.es. Perhaps we need to encourage the philosophy that has prevailed in the Someone Cares service for the past 12 years and reach out to those in our community who need assistance. BETTY McMICKEN. M.A. CCC Speech/Language Pathologist Local n e ws To the E:ditor: Re: Local news scene. Daily Pilot, June 22: A brave young lady receives her degree after being buried in the snow, ~ blind woman becomes a masseuse and plans on running again at Edison High, and then we have George Van Dam and the Gallaghers who are so petty that they can't even live next door to each other in peace. What a waste of energy their story is . LIZ REINDERS TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Change the law To the F.ditor: What a shock to a lot of people who now know that Hinckley ii innocent becia~ hew• Inane at the time he ahot President Re.on and Mr. Brady, McC.arthy and Delahanty! Does that mean Rea.,gan will have to always wear a bullet proof vesc and be ln a bullet proof car whenever he loel anywhere? What about the rest of his body? And Nancy! Always in fear of the cru:l8 out then! who will pull out a gun and lhoot any offidal of lmportance. Does that mMn being rich the kWen can set away with crime and violence, or 18 it our system? It ii time we clvmae that law. What a terrible ~ of ~! EMMA E. RYM.Vi an example ., confidence in our motives and planning to approve a permit. We also appreciate \he t;ffoi;ta. of the Newport Beach Poli<.-e ~partment and we thank them for w~king with us and doing an exceUent jot>. And finally. we're grateful to the citizens of West Newport for their open attitude and their willingness to have this event in their neighborhood. VERONICA YOUNG DENISE A VILA GREG TAYLOR DENISE TAYLOR Tribute ea-d To the Editor: \ I strongly agree with your recent editorial stating the justification for r enam i ng the Orange County Performing Arts Center after the family that has contributed so much to its de~opinent. As you astutely point out, the''Segeratrorn family has not only~ a force for cultural development in our 'community but has also s purred • economic growth and development that will benefit Orange County for years to come. lt would certainly be a fitting tribute for a family that has dope so much. I laud your e dhoriaJ efforts in that direction. HARRI!!TI' M. WIEDER Supervtlor, Second District ·Picture the revel'Se . To the Edit.or: It is appropriate that in this time of Middle F.ast turmoil, a few sentences be recorded to i ncrease American undersiandin& of what is h•ppeninf. First: Suppoae the situation were reversed, with the PLO SWTOunding 'tel Aviv? What rberey would be uked, or expected? And beyond that, would it ~ based on our own American hilii6ry, be deemed better to 4Je tn battle, rather than iD a chamber filled with &Mf G!X>RGE LEWIS t l • t -l .. -4·---.. : Orange OOaft DAILY ,,,LOT/Tf'ul'9day, July ~. 1182 Looking ·for work should ·he·· a full-time j ob , . A t.Uow named Jun. I.• Cha1Jenaet' ltirNd up..,. oontrowny in thil 1p1a ...-ntly when he pw .-cuttwa Mlvk!I an )M>w btl\ to tlri the&r em~. · ~ II pretklent of Challenaer. Gray a& Cfu1atmU. an outplacement tirm -a company that la hired by other compan.iel1 to help find Jobi for people them companlee have llred. When I lnterviewecl him, be made the polnt that n:at exeeutives don't know how to fire people tl\ey don't want any lonpr, and they don't like dolnc It. In the column, he 1pokl! about the belt way to le{ people houn a day lnto loOkb\8 for work, & daye a Wffk. Don't let youneU wait for eomeone to call you wttb a job offer: If you do you may be wait.Lna from 11.x montha to a y.ar, or ev.n moN. You don't wait: you ao out and f~ht f« a job. You atw.ck the lnarketp19ce. ' 2. "See ai leut 10 potential employer1 a w!ek. Tht1 mean1 Int.er l•w, .,. ·th• atncle belt eource of new Jobe. 1ound1 1tmple, but It'• Important. hour to H)' you're wonderful. The See them In penon; on the phone they PhyUcally know where the lntervtew II. empl.oyer hu to differentiate betw9en can be pleuant and uy they'll try to lf you're late for your appotntment, eYes\ llx .,.ople who ate QUal.lfJed for the jcilb, help you, but It you're lfttinc there they for a aood 'reMOn, you probably can't and U JOU won't teU a.Jm how ~ JOU have to do 1omethln1. Some people recover. If you keep tne employer are, who will?" would •Y that thll ll cuhlna ln on waitil\I for 10 ~utee, forpt It, even If 9. "Don 't knock your former pereonal relatlonahlpa. Wall, lt i. ouhlnl you have the bett exeu1e fn the world. t:mployen, no matt.er what you thlnk of In, and Y9U have to ao It. Now II the time He domn't care if your bua wu J.ete: It them. Give ~ Im.,...,. that. to )bl. to call ln all the chlp1." reflectl on you. Since.he'11ot 11.x people eYeryone tn the world ii lovely. ~ • IO· 111111111 who can fW the job, you loee. LitUe penon you ever met wu nice. No one •· "PREPARE A H9Ul1le, but don't th1np differentiate one job candidate Ukea a complainer, ltnd if you l&art uae It. Reawnet loee more jobl than they from another, and lf you're late for the knocklna your old bo11e1, the n~w ~The reuon ii that lf the re1wne appointment: the ~ a. that you employer won't think ill of the old bo9 't aay precilely what the employer don't cant that much. Try to be 10 -he'll juat think you'"' a oomplai.net. wanta to aee, he ._.. you aren't the mlnutee early lnltead." Kee~~ nqaUve thqhta abOut 'your penon fOJ' the ~· lnlt.Md of handtna 7 . 11Dre11 up. Look good, but old 11e1 to Jourtelf." I REAC110N FROM around the lnterview, lnterview. See the pen0n you the potenUal employer a n.ume, talk to COMervative. Molt employen are older Challengef uid that the hardelt dt.1.nc c:ountry wu ma.tly aJ\ll'Y· Men and want to work foc -tf you are ln him. Tell h1m about YOU. and try to aenae people. and they don't respond well to for a penon who haa beftl fired to do ii l . women aald that, tn theae ruaaed manufactwtna, .e the manaaer of the what be wan ti to hear. Keep your y~ _ lhowlnc up foc a l_>b_ interview to keep h1I ~trill up. "Looklna foc a job economic t1mea. what ii needed ii not department. You lhould·aee penonne1 ~ ciily foc people who uk you If IOioklnC CMUal. Even If ltl not ~)' ta all bed. Its all rejection until the• advice to executives on how to fire people only if you at.olutely have to. they can aee lt." your 1tyle to ct.re. up, do lt for the job tbne. It'• touah not t9 pt doWJ) on people -but advice to thoee people who Getting a job ii a matw of numben. H 5. '"!be employel' II alway, rtaht. /U a lntervlew. It telll the employer that you younelf. have been fired on what to do now that you ao on SO lnterviewl. you have a much penon 1ooldnc for a job, you are a •ller think enouah of h1I company to try to "BUt just keep telling younelf:. 'I am ~y are out of work. < • better chance than If you only ao on two ln a buyer'• market. 1rhe employer feela look aood· You. can't go wrona by erring going to get a better job.' Becau.e i('a I told Challenger about ~e pome interviews. See people even If they tell he can find lix quallfled people for every ln drelllnc too well, but you c;an go true. It almost alwaya works out that from readera. He thoucht lt e aeNe. you ln advance that they don't have a job that ii open. 'nle employer ii Mldna wron,g by drelling too casually."· way. The job you end up with r. better And ao here ii a new list be come up , job available. Eighty percent of Jobe lor aomething he needl. So don't tell him than the one ;ou lost. In a way, beng with - a llat of pointera a t what to don't teally exist unUl aomeone ii hired that a certain thing he ii lookiilg for isn't I. "DON'T KNOClt younelf. You'd be fired ii one 0 the best thinga that can do if you are fired. for them; they are created becauae the Important, or that there's tomething aurprt.ed how manY' people do. Fabe happen to you. People should ~ 1. "Your only job is to find a new job. employer likes you." more Important. He's buying what he humility baa no place ln a job interview. jobs more often; being f1red can be a way Consider it u a lull-time Job. Get out of 3. "See your friendl and ask them to wantl for hi.a company.'"4a We•re taught to be humble all our lives, to ·end up in a better situation than you the hou.e. Make younelf put 8 to 10 hel . See eve one ou know. Friends 6. "Know where you're going. That but ln thil situation you have half=an-were in before." ;;;::.::;::;:;;::;::;:;;::;::;:;;::;::;:;;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::~~~~~~~---~-r~-"-~...&.--~~~--~~~~~~~ •. :--~-'-~~...;;;.__..;;...~~:--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...;.;.;;~~~~~~~~~~~~ ftUFFELL 1S Call 642-5171. UPHOLSTllY ......... ~.-.... ~ ttzJ HAalOI IUD. Put • l•JIW words to work for ou. COSTA MHA -14 .. 111.: ------------, MAKE MONEY i using your malling list * 804 saye $10.00 with this ad . · 0 label addrealing 0 list maJntmance 0 malling list brolcer •SOPe thi. od and ~ue $10 o6 VoC'' ftrst order. (min. $100 order) AAA to U2 · (714) 536-2104 lABEI:. & MAIUNG UST S ERVICE ~-~~.;:,,!!~"!!,~~~~~~.22~-J Something Special feminine fashions 250 E.. I 7tll St. Costa Mesa ---;; 645-571 l - JULY 2 .. 1 <•. '1") SALE DOl'T MISS IT SHOP EARL Y FOR BEST SELECTION (SELECTED MERCHANDISE) We Specialize in Fashion For The · M issy Figu~e (Size 4 t hru 18) •(SALE DOES NOT APPLY TO SPECIAL ORDERS) • I ~ w;q SHOES SHOE SALE FOR MEN JULY 18T THAU JULY 10 COLE-HAAN SHAWL TASSEL MOC reg. 109.96 Nows591s ALSO BAAGANO ROLL MOC SLIP-ONS IN BLACK OR BROWN CALF OR JOHNSTON & MURPHY BLACK BOX TOP SLIP.ONS ......... , ... • I llOW59•• .. 11•• Declare Your Financi al Independence • Horne Federal UM Ille money you'll pocket every moMll from"' new 111 cut to bulld a tu..,. retirement fund of your own. Now you have a star·spangled opportunicy to make regular deposits and earn high, tax4 ' deferred inte rest -for a welcome supplement to Socfal Securicy benefits when rou retire. · Slnce the we cut means "extra income;· Ir's c-.asy to budget for your lRA deposits. Here's another susgestlon loo: plan to use yo ur Income taX refund every \"ear m build m ur account even faster. · You'll i,e helping yourself -with a tax·defe rred investment In your o wn fu ture. And, In the spirit of independence, you'll be helpin8')'0Ur country as well. By purring investment capital back Into the economy when the nation can really use it. Ask for your free IRA Calculatorl It 'II show you the money you can have for your easy Living years. There's one for every family ·with no obli- gation through July 10 while supplies l!st. Make your IRA part of a Money MuterPlan•. ... An IRA can guarantee a more prosperous retirement. But you can combine your account with other imponant lnvestmenL' and services in a Money Ma'>terPlan -tu start every <lay a little richer. To open your lRA or hear more about the Money MasterPlan , talk to a Personal Financial RepresencitJve at Home Federal. ln person. Or, by phone any time, any day. In San Diego, a ll direct 2n-1m. ·From Suburban San Diego Counry, call toll· free 1·• Ml-1131. E ir .bLGZ !.• .. I ( ! , I' . ' Oranr OOllt DAILY PtLOT/ThUr9d1Y. Juty 1, 1Ha 'ti ) • • hr'rl>I " ' ,., ....!... - Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That C-tte Smoking Is 'Dangerous to Your Health. t , . . .. . •• . . 9 mg "tar;' 0. 7 mg n1cotin1 av. p1r cigar1tt1 by FTC method. • .. , -, \ .. . ,,.. ... · . . You've come a IOng way.~ VIRGNIA . .. .. \ .. THUAIDAV, JULY 1, 1982 CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION \ 82 85 86 - . Dropped lrom a Adam Arkin has TV role, witched to stage where h e' 'Rich and Famous.' B7. CoQnting doWn. to ~4th . • • ~ our . ON THE ROAD, DEPT. -Never forget that old saw that proclalms, "The only two things certain are death and taxes." Could be it's right again. At least the taxes part. It should be noted in the news that the Orange County Board of Supervisors, in its infinite wisdom, just did an El Splito vote but nevertheless caJl)e out in favor of going to the people to seek new taxes. · In this case, the county board voted 3 to 1 ill favor of state legislation that would allow the voters to decide on a new l percent sales surtax for the purpose of financing new transportation projects. While Supervisor Harriett Weider was absent, it is interesting to note that Supervisor Bruce Nestande was the lone lawmaker to ballot Nay on the proposition. . r-'\ AT FIRST BLUSH, T_D_M_M_U_R_PH_l_N_I ~~ this might leave you with ,~ the impression that Mr. --------~--.... ~~...-.... ............... Nestandeisopposedtonew taxes upon the already weighted-down populace, right? Wrong. What had Nestande up m the flying rings was the fact that this new levy, which would boost sales taxes in our region from 6 to 7 percent, would be earmarked for a specific purpose. That is, transportation. Alas, what he fears is that the county would then be tied down and unable to slap on some more sales taxes for Which end of this thing do you suppose they'll be &axing next?? a va riety of, purposes. ·1 mean, what he wants is a bigger bite out of th9' taxpayers' already frayed wallets. So for heaven's sake, don't slap Nestande with a label of being anti-more taxes. Just. the opposite seems to be the case. ALL OF THIS SUGGESTs that the county board might well be still living in the memories of he ydays in the 1970s, when everything continued to climb up, up, up. The board members may need some reality orientation here. Everybody out there in the real world is tightening belts these days. They are hardly throwing out loose cash that is cluttering up the house. AS FOR THE SURTAX for transportation projects s~ifically, it's possible that the harried motorists of our region might be just a bit skeptical about precisely how that money would be spent. . ln recent times, we've been visited by the spectacle of cash being allocated for "highways" and we find that it's some beautification project at an interchange. Meanwhile, the potholes, ruts and burnt-out lights on freeway directional signs remain with us. Most recently, state government has sent a signal that Caltrans might actually spend some money on fixing up certain long-standing and glaring deficiencies like the interchange terror at the Santa Ana and Newport freeways crossing. , Still, the long-suffering motorist might tend to look sideways at this apparent loosening of the construction pursestrings, figuring he might get duped again just to make it appear that the sales surtax proposition looks good. IF THE ST ATE Legislature does go ahead as the Orange County supervisorial majority suggests, and adopta tbe sales tax measure, there is one good thing about that. It then has to go to a vote of the people of Orange County. Unless the current economy suddenly does a takeoff like a Fourth of July skyrocket, that voting could tum out to be the laugher of the year. BLAZING BOOMERS -With fir~works banned or curtailed at most beaches, the best ~ O~J~~l~Hl'ttotM way to see them will be at civic displays such as this one at Newport Dunes. Beaehfronts brilfhter ' .... . Picnics, patriotic parades, pier pyrotechnics programmed By BARRY EBERLING Mttie Delly Hoc llaft Orange Coast residents will have no trouble finding ways to celebrate this Fourth of July weekend, even if the beaches are jampacked. SATURDAY Saloon NlsM llt 'tit&-.~ 0wnmunJty C.enter offers relideft• tne-cbMc-to ~8Clne Old West gambling, including blackjack and ro ulette from 7:30 to 11 :30 p.m . The $10 admission to the center at 21377 Magnolia St. is tax-deductible and benefits Huntington Beach's July 4th parade. SUNDAY Concert on tbe Green IV at Irvine's Heritage Park .football stadium features an evening of musk and firework.a. Stadium gates at Walnut and Yale avenues will open to picnickers at 6 p.m. A high school jazz band will play at 7 p.m. The Orange County Master Chorale and Orchestra will present a salute to Academy Award-winning songs from the last 50 years at 8 p.m. A pyrotechnic-musical entitled, "I Love America" will start at 9 p.m. Tickets are $4 each or two for $6 and tout for $12 at the Irvine City Hall Community Services Department through Friday. Tickets will be $6 each at the gate. Laguna Niguel'• Crown Community Park will be the site of a day-long celebration capped by a fireworks show. The festivities will include a pancake breakfast, a skydiving exhibition, food booths, magicians, games, children's rides and free balloons. Bluegrass, jazz and rock bands and a 30-piece-ensemble will provide-music from 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Fireworks begins at dusk. Baatington Beacb'1 tradJdonal parade led by Mayor Robert Mandie and the Aaembly chainna.n of Anjo, Japan, a Hu.nting1.on Beach sister city, will begin at 1 p.m. at Fifth Street and Yorktown Avenue. The procession of iloats, antique cars and ~~estrians will end at 2:30 p.m. at SeaCllH V~ where puppet shows, a parade awards ceremony and contests are scheduled. Fireworks and entertainment will follow at the Huntington Beach High School stadium, etartlng at 6:30 p.m. Food concesaiona will benefit the HllHS basketball boosters club. TicketB are S4 for adults and $2 for children throuah Friday at the Huntington Beach Public Inlonnation Offi~. 2000 Main St., and $5 for adults at the gate. Oraa1e Coast College•• Bonea West Trombone Choir wiJl perform at the Stan Kenton Gar.ebo at the Balboa Pier at 6 p.m. Admission is free. Veterans orguliations of Cost.a' Mesa will sponsor their ninth annual pancake breakfast from 7:30 a .m. until noon at the Ve te rans Memorial Hall, 565 W. 18th St. The meal will cost $2 for adultB and Sl.25 for children 12 and under. Dedication of a nag frcm the United States Capitol will be held at the main gate of Harbor Ridge in Newport Beac:ti by the Harbor Ridge Women's Club. The.Newport Dunes ... will touch off its aerial display at nightfall. Daytime admission is $2 for adults and $1 for children 12 and under. / A San Clemente Pier fireworks show will begin at nightfall. Beachgoers also can shoot off their own fireworks if they are at least 400 yards from the pier. Anaheim Stadium is offering a night of fireworks and entertainment. incl uding a celebrity softball game featuring the Jackson family and a Righteous Brothers mini-concert. Gates open at 5 p.m. ' Tickets at $8 and $6.50 reserved or $5 general are available at the stadium a nd Convention Ct?nter box offices. Disneyland will feature fireworks, the Main Street Elecc,rical Parade and plenty of rides. Cbriltopber Cross will perform at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater~ Tickets cost $16 for reserved and $12 general at the box office, 8800 Irvine C.enter Drive, Laguna Hills. The parking lot opens at 4 p.m. and gates at 6 p.m. for the 8 p.m. show to be followed by a fireworks extravaganza. MONDAY Bike Parade and Picnic will begin at 9:45 a.m. at Marirlen Park in Newport Beach. · The ninth annual parade will feature the El Toro Marine Corps Color Guard. grand marshal T. Duncan Stewart of Corona del Mar and neighborhood children on decorat~ bicycles. Entertainment featuring Stewart's Band, Barnaby the 0.own, booths and a raffle will foUow \he parade. Sbare Bealtla'1 five and 10-K runs at the Oranae County Fairgi-ounds in Cost.a Mesa will make sure that runners won't be neglected. The event starts at 8 a.m. Registration is S8 including T·lhlrt and fair ticket or $4 entry fee. Handle hot holiday tradition with care Although fireworks are a Fourth of July tradition, Orange County Fire Department Capt. Gary Stenber1 would pr4fer ta tee them limited to profe..lonal pyrotechnic show.. "llle1al firework• and the tm~ u.e of lepl ona cauae fires, • Stenbera aald. But he doHn't expect many Oran1e c:o..t oommunlU. to follow the leed of N.wport Beech, Luune end Swwl Belch, which MW benned both \ypll. • .. w. dUfJcuft -to "' ""' ldnd ot -. .. he llld. ••vw !llllecl ~ ..,.an, ....... of &he pubUo .... , _ __.ued. Wt hape _.._..._.,. 11111 ti• I W11 GM of ll'riftl apealcera at a fireworks safety conference Wednesday at the Ora.nae County Ft.re Station in lrvlne who warned people to stay away from ttreworka not marked aafe and sane. Stenberg went throu1h a bq of tllepl pyrotechnicw which ha(l belt\ confileated by lrvlne poliae a few weeb aao. smc:. the ownen were out of ..... and unaware of California firework• l a w•. th•y were Nll Med, he ._id. lf they Md bMn r••ct.tua, they would haw beli1 ..... wtth • Wally. ~the '-1'1 oantlntt WWI bcKU. l'OCUta ind lkyrocate, .,... ....... , ........ ...... --,,..., ftalh• ....... ... and they are often still hot when they land, according to Stenberg. Fire Protection Engineer Albert E. Hole said that auch rocketa are the 1Mdina .:>wee of aa:identa. He op~ banning all fireworks, tho~h. saylna that it would only create a black market. A1reeln1 was Lorrain e Lawrence, a U .S . Conaumer Product Safety Comml11lon community relat.lon1 dlreotor. She 1ald that 8 percent of firework injur&n-nationwide, lnoludinf mG9t majDr arm, .,. ...... t>yW.S~ IUll, 1h1 ur111 1xutrn• ·--~ Wllnl &he ... 11n1 ,,,._,~~out lhi& .-, . . ' • • • DlOSt cantp areas reserved -Would-be Fourth of July weekend campers will have to hustle for at.ate and county sites unless th*ey already have reservations. Remainlng areas are available on a first-come, firit-serve basis only. Caspers. Featherly and O'Neill parks are the only Orange County parks whic h allow overnight camping. Competition for sites ls expected to be tight, according to the County Environmental Management Agency. ·· There are eight s tate campgrounds in the Sout~ Coast and Southern inland area available on a first-come, first- serve basis. They are: Anza-Borrego Desert, Gaviota, Providence MC)untains, Red Rock Canyon, and Saddleback Butte st.ate parks; Picacho and Salton Sea st.ate recreation areas and Emma Woods St.ate Beach. San Ont>fre and Doheny state beach es are available by reservation only, and art? booked solid for the Fourth of July weekend. ... city halls, post off ices closed Mon.day Virtually all businesses except for some stor~ and shops will take holidays on Monday in observance of Independence Day. Federal, st.ate, city and county offices (excluding emergency services). and m08t banks and private firms will be closed. Many stores in Fashion Island and South Coast Plaza, as well as s u permarke t s and other consumer -orie nted businesses, will rerna.ip open Sunday and Monday, aepend\ng on their managers' decisions. Regular post.al senrice will be halted Monday, although federal and express deliveries will continue. Tras h collec tion will be· skipped on. Monday and will be one day late the remainder of the week in all Orange Coast cities except Costa Mesa, where it will proceed normally. Most recreation parks, including Disneyland lpld Lion Country Safari, will be open both days. ... police set to enforce fireworks ban Laguna and Newport Beach citizens Will have to attend shows if they want to see Fourth of July pyrotechnic demonstratiom. All fireworks, including safe and sane, are illegal in these cities. Fire works also are· banned fro m the unincorporated communit~ of Sunset Beach, all Orange County beaches and parks; and Huntington Beach city beaches. Yet, even where fireworks are legal, Orange County Fire Department Capt. Gary Stenberg rec ommends attendi ng a professional show. County Fire Chief Lary Holms said that firefighters will be patrolling the Orange Coast~ on Sunday to provide safet y jnformation to dtiz.ens as well as to enforce fire regulations. .. .. •• t I Orlnlt COllt DAILY flt~OT/JbUrldaY, July 1, 1111 f DEAR READERS: Color me red. Remember the leu~r from the woman who wanted to know what I thought about a couple going out to eat, ordering one dinner and splitting it? She said that in 101De restaurants they charge $1 for the extra plate, but it wu worth it. I told her it was tacky and added, "U you can't afford two dinners, stay home.'' Well -hundreds of irate readen have persuaded me that I was wrong. I herewith print samples of .their blasts and am ordering a double order of crow, which I am ea Una all by myself. FROM DF;NVER: Your stud apla1t spUUln1 a dlnner when dtnla& oat maiH '90 se111e. Oae-flftb of tbe world'• popalatlqn goes to bed haagry every aJ1lat. II la obscene to throw good food In tile 1arba1e cu. How could you? -:-SLIM BUT NOT BOORISH ·wE DO -Fif1een CQ\ll>les ~.1ed. thrir m~arr!age vows •at the 'satb~ 1c.!4!r~iti~A~'tm B~oo k side United Methodist Church, Indianapolis. As Thelma and Leroy R. Smith Heartbreak of psoriasis •' DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm 3% and single. Is It because I don't like &lie male sex? No. It's becaase men don't like me. And I don't blame tbem. Since I've beaa In my teens, my body II covered with p1orlan1. Meanwhile, I've taken all tile prescribed treatments. WUhoat sacce11. l'v,e given up oa doctors and they've given ;-up oa me. ,. So, it Isn't 11irprislng, is it, that I qalt medical treatment? I haven't been to a dennatologlat since 197%. My friends tell me to 1ee1' medical advice again. But, I tlaiak lt'• a waste. Nothing bat more dluppolntmeat and expense. Am I giving 9P roo aooa? -MISS G. . . DEAR MISS G .: Much too soon. Although 1 can understand why you have surrendered to this stubborn ailment, there. have been some advances in treatment during the past few years. Why not try again? Here's an example of a happier psoriasis patient: v .. • ,,. . •SAMA BQMB!OK ' •HOROSCOPE J'BOM BIRMINGHAM: Why don't you ltuad on any buay street comer and count the number of overweight people who pall• by? It will be approximately three out of five no matter which comer you pick. In view of 10 much Wlh•thy obealty, how can you talk aoinat 1p1Jtdna dtnnenf -ALSO FIGHTIRG THE BATTLE OF TH!! BULGZ FROM CHIPPEWA F AJ.1.8, WIS.: I wa1 amaa• wlaea J• abed ~o people 1p1Jttla1 a dbuaer. MJ 11-... ud I botla work ln tile ba1laea1 aM eat oat almost every mpt. Tiie l'fttaaruu we freqaeat aene larae ~ 0.. dlaDer ud two ·utad1 11 ........_ .. 1f. leave a Dice tip ud no one baa ever looked at u fmy. Y oa 1oofed oa this oae, Aan: -WASTE NOT WANT NOT . . .FRO¥ SOUTH BEND, IND.: My wife and I are vegetarians. Seafood is expensive .. where we live. One order of filh LI enough to aat.Llfy ua both .. Why order' more? -NO BICARB FOR US , ' I ~ FROM RHODE ISLAND: My co-worke" ud I apll& laclaea all die time. Id for &Qba1 leftoven llome ID a dogie Ml -ao way. My 1oldea retriever refaaea to eat tllem. -JOAN WITH THE UPPITY HOUND FROM TYLER, TEX.:· My husband and I are bQth on strict dieta. To order two dinners would be foolish' and wasteful. We always split and ha.ve n ever felt uncomfortable about it -un\il you sounded off. Sometimes you open your mouth and let it all tall out. -TACKY IN TEXAS FROM MACON, GA.: When was the last ttme\YOU paJd for a dlnner? For tbo1e of a1 wlr'o areQ't so fortunate a1 to be .. pealed" coatlalltly, I ca.a tell you the prices are marder. My husband enjoys a ~good steak. I don't care for beef. When we eat oat, wlllch 11 rare, we go to a flae steak llouae and order one dhmer. I never f eU ta. cky and stUI don't. JoiD the real world, Kiddo. -POOR BUT NO BOOR FROM OKLAHOMA CITY: We are a retired couple and have worked hard for 50 yean. We lived \hrougtl the Depreelim, raised our children and educated them. Our appetites are not as big as. they once were . The same can be Ni~ of our income. We don't eat out often but when we do. we split one appetizer, one dinner, one salad and one dessert. Who are you to call us tacky? I can't ~e your'insensitivity. -·INSULTED IN 0 . CITY' FROM DES MOINES, IOWA: My live-la and I are gaatroaomic adveataren. We love to try new dJahe1 10 we go to two restaurants a night and order one dhaaer at· botb places. We get a big hello wherever we go, so why don't YOU M.Y.0.8.? -IOWA READER What's prudish? What's OK? If you aren't sure, you need some help. It's. available in the booklet: "Necking and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Mail your request ta Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, DJ. 60611, enclosing 50 cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope. Patriotism diagnosed The American people do something better than anyone in the wbrld. They love their country. A walloping 80 percent admitted this in a recent Gallup poll. That's pretty amazing when you realiz.e that patriotism is a lot like sex to people. It's too personal to talk about in public or to flaunt on' a bumper sticker. Patriotism-is allO bard to diagnose. Most peop clDn't reali:m they'\te &Qt t. . SOME PEOPLE LOOK AT the Statue of Liberty and can,not $peak. Others look at the flag on the side of the Space Shuttle and tears begin to well in their eyes. Occasionally, people will find themselves sitting a little taller when an athlete bends u.., 1;t ••• down to receive an Olympics medal and the 0.ftl,. ~al .ib• a<J>~tn}ent so do ~\ilia il¥i 1 .. 1 ~v,e United States flag un!Ufb behind 1fow<ln! ~.'~ifuth1(fiht'relh~) before the ~: him: Or the throat may hurt when ctb?S~e . A. Glen O'Dell. t fl • •' 1 ~·ntTMJtb lraa puts his band over his heart and GOlfll ON lllDGf ~y CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF North-South vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • K982 <::? 874 0 1073 •A 65 WEST EAST •A76 •JSO <::? QJ1065 ~ 9 0 985 0 J6'2 ' +IOS •QJt7 SOUTH +QIO <::?Alt3Z O Al(Q +K8'2 The bidding: ·- 8"'-' Weat North East !NT Pua SNT Pua p ... p ... Opening lead: Queen or <;:>. U 7ou are a good guesser, JOU will always make three DO tnamp oa th.la hand after a heart 1-d. If you onlJ guess right half U. time, like most· of ua, 7ou wUJ have to rely on technique. • The aiaetion was straight- forward. Because he had no ruffing value. North chose not to search for a 4--4 spade fit. but simply made the value raise to three no trump. ~ West led the queen of hearts, and declarer could see only seven Cut tricks. An eighth could be established in spades. The possibility of a S-3 heart split could be dis- counted because of the open- ing lead, so the ninth trick would have to come Crom spades or a S-3 club break. Obviously establishing a second spade trick had the better chance. De~larer won the opening lead with the king and led the queen. Qf spades W eat fD!de a superb defensive play when he amoothly ducked the ace. Now a good guesser would conUnue with a apade to the king to land his contract. Our declarer. unfortuna~ly. did not divine the lie of the cards. He made the more normal play of running the ten. That lost to the jack and, with only .one entry in dummy, declarer could not both aet up another spade trick and cash it. Eight trick• were hls limit. A. spade flneue was in· deed needed \o make the con· trad. But declarer waited too long to take ill Examine what happens if, at trick two, declarer runs the t~n of spades instead of leading the queen. If West has the jack of spades, declarer can set up two spade tricks regardless of what the defe!lff does. If East has the jack. it does not help to hold up. so be may u well win and shift to a club. Otclarer wins in hand and can counter the possibility of a holdup in spades by leading the queen of spades and overtaking with dummy's king. By simp- ly continuing spades, declarer establishes a secend trick in the suit while t he ace of clubs is still on t~e table as an entry. Han '" bee• raalq la· to tlHltle trHble? Let Cllarlea Gere• llelp 7" Bad 1••••1~t ....... of DOUILES fer peultlea utl l•r takeeat. Fer a eop7 of tu. DOUILES Meldet, aead 11.85 to "G.,...·O..W.a," eare ef tMa ... .,.._, P.O. Bea !st+ 'Nww.... N.l. 076'8. Make clMclra ,.,.u.i. te New.,.,.rt..ou. flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S END salutes a flag he has not seen for 14 months. Theee may aeem like flu symptoms. It's ~tis So~a '°'1 1'.i'avel With patriotism and don't know it. Like the Russian who said to me, "I've never been to the United States. What are the borders like?" I told her there· were no border patrols or checkpoints or walls to go through between the states. All 50 were open and free with only an amused California trooper who watfhes you eat three oranges and four bananaf which you can't bring into California. Or the Australian woman who cornered me on a book tour and said, "Tell me how far the American women are now in their struggle for liberation so that we will know where we'll be 25 years from now." I thought the flush was. menopausal. It was patriotism. · WE TAKE FOR GRANTED that we elect peanut farmers to the presidency, have a Bill of Rights for children, give hurricanes human names, have a bell' that is a symbol ot . freedom with a crack in it, are a nation 'of immigrants from every pocket of the world, and have more people watch "Dallas" on television than voted in the last election. You have to love a nation that celebrates its independence every July 4, not with a parade of guns, tanks and soldJers · who file by the White House in a show of strength and muscle, but by family picnics where kids throw Frisbees, the potato salad gets iffy, and the flies dJe from happiness. You may think you've overeaten. but it's patriotism. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLl~NT I CAN ACCEPT THE INCONVENIENT ANI' THE UNJUST, BUT I REFUSE' TO ACCEPT THE INEVITABLE. HEALING HELMET -Harry Koppel of Harshaw Chemical 0>., of Solon, Ohio, checks the fit of a ateel-/acketed sodium iodine crysta probe in a ncm-surgical u Wlr•h•• diagnostic ayatem helmet. Placed over a patients head, the probes detect blood flow abnormalities in the brain, assisting in diagnosis of tumors or strokes. Wayne airport use up The number of persons arriving and departing from John Wayne Airport via commercial jets in May was 7 pereent higher than the same month one year ago. Figures released by the airport administration show that 213,021 persons passed through the airport terminal in May, compared to 197,666 during May 1981. This year, slightly more than one million commerdal passengers have either enplaned or deplaned at the airport, compared to 964,322 during the period in 1981. Conunensurat.e with the increase in passengers in May was an increase in the number of commercial jet operations. They increaaed 7 percent over May 1981 levels. Total air traffic control operations during May, however, remained well below year-ago levels due to reduced general aviation (private aii'craft) activity. · . ,. General aviation accounts for 89 percent of all tower operafiona. HEAT RESISTANT COFFEE GLASS AND NATURAL RATTAN HOLDER •rtu1~ Calt•HIH Alrwa~1 and Air Cal lll'9ed on a joint marketlna effort to promote t.be two aurien' oonnecUnc ltrvicel betw.-n London &ndU.,Wttt. The Newport Beach-bued carrier wlll •11 IJ*lt on Brtdlh eai.don.lan'1 new non-atop Loe AntelH·London Mrvke. For It• part, Brltllh CaJidon1an wtD lnclude Air C..1'1 route network ln lta tntem&Monal reeervatJona 1y,tem. 'nae acreement a1IO calls for a jolnt advertillni pncrun to ~ both pleuure and bualnetl traffic, and for Air Cal to produce a eerlet of tows for Britllh c.ledonlan Alrwaya to market ln the United KJ.nidom. The So1t~ena Callfonla C~evrolet Dealer AHoelatloa (LFD Chevrolet A11ociate1, Inc.) appointed C1aala1~am, Root Ii Cral1 of Loa Ansel• u advertll.ll1' agency. 1 ODUcal TecUlqees lac. of Santa Ana named Guy Wrea manager of operatione. He hu been wl\h Century Data Syat.ema. Soiree Teelmolopes Corp. will preview lte Voyaaer allde-llOW\d projector at an open houee for ill Loe Ansela-owned a&les and eerv1ce•ot&e at 163 W. Cerritos Ave., Anaheim, July 14 from 1 to 8 p.m. E .T.C. Carpet Milla, Ltd. of Santa Ana introduced "Cariyon Country'\ a multi-color cut and loop carpet made from Monunto nylon flben. Dynamic Concepll Inc. o( Tuatin unveiled a concept in database maNU[ement svstema -a package called CODE (TM) that includes .applications development tool• and automatic .documentation generation. The system was ~veloped by' Bualnem· Softwtte Products Inc. of Albuquerque. The board of directors of POINT 4 Data Corporation of Irvine approved executive appolntmenta. Paal Davies was elecled to chainnan of the board. Gua Gorsenyl, Executive vice president, continues as chief operating officer and is chainnan of the executive committee. David C. Coetiae was elected vice president, finance, treasurer and secretary of the corporation. Renay Bosell was elected vice president; Jou Matber, vice president; Robin Ollivier, vice president sales, Jerry Soma, vice president engineering and Daniel Cam"8ll, controller. GLORIOUS OLD GLORY PIN FOR MONDAY JULY 5TH HOLIDAY HOURS OPEN 11 A.M.-e P.M. SPARKLING CLEAR GLASS VASES From Turkey A wonderful aetectlon of heavy, clear vaae1 ''i•• A GLORIOUS \1 FOURTH "6 ... Glaaa and rattan get together' and add up to a nea.t and stylllh SOLID BRASS PORTHOLE WITH MIRROR From Taiwan To make a fine cabinet door or mirror on the wall. 11 • dla. 23.99· In crlap comtem· porary llne1. SOU ARE 2Va. sq. 9• tall .s.99 314• sq'. 11 • tall 7.99 • I CHOCOLATE BROWN RICE PAPER I ROLL UP BLINDS From Taiwan Bamboo ribbed lamlnated'rlce paper bllnd1 have 1talned wOOd hanging bar and brown locillng pulley•. cpffee "cup". 90Z. GLASS 3•.4" tall .89 HOLDER From China 3• dla. .99 MINIATURE Z1NC COATED TIN BUCKET l TUIS From Hong Kong Dell~htful u.tlllty comes down to hold breadatlcks, matches, paper· clips, soap, plants, penclls or whatever. ,59 each . Nicety crafted basketry to hold flowers, caatawaya or to accent a centerpiece. COCO MIDRIB & MITO 6" toe· dla. 12•t1ll 1.77 13Va" tall 2.86 15" tall 3.55 •NATURAL RATTAN, 9URI AND IAC IAC TMAIURE CHUTI From The Phlllpplnee · · Flat braided burl ~ncl bac bac bands ate Interlaced wtth 1turqy rattM framing to form handeome two-tont c:heltl. Glittering gold metal combined with apar· COOL COnON · kllng red, whit• and ~JUNTS FM* blue rhinestones. , OUR CLOTMINO -1Yr • long .96 IECTION 1--------------....fVOILE DRESS From Pakistan A claaslc print In assorted blossomy colors. S-M·l 10'.44 or grey plum designs on white. 1e• dla. 2.99 ea SHALLOW COCO MIDRIB TRAY NATURAL WOVEN PALM BABY ClltADLE BASKET From Mexico Snug tote to tine or be·rlbbon for the newest member ~-----of the f1mlly. Approx,. 36" long 18" dla .• 96 24" dla. ·1.43 SEAGRASS & SAC BAC I 5'ZES 5• aq. ic 6" deep to 10· sq. x 11 • deep 19• tall at hOOd 14• wld9 TUK OR WALNUT flNllH HARDWOOD TAIL Frodl Singapore Solidly conatructed table• hav. teak venMr topa with thlcl hardwOOd leg1 and framing with cwer .. 11 flnl•hn of either t .. k or w1lnut. • ' EXPANDING TO · I Corona del Mar Mondays & Thursdays Effective July 1st Exoellenl Laundry I 3 LoAos 1 12°0 Superior Dry Cleaning Hand Finish • One Day S~rvice Free Pick-up and Delivery So11th Of M•cArthur In Stoek • • • WALLPAPER 30o/o . Off All Other Walleote-rmgs 20-4M'o Off!J t•\ f 1 rt •) ';. '11 -'1 I ,l,, Fl\l:.l:l:\·Hl1~tEb11\tATI: l\:~f;\I I :\flt''\\ \II \l\l I \\'r111l'I\ l i11.1r.1n11·1· 1111 \t '" ,, ,f. •11 11 ·I~· On Sale Now! AR¥STRONG DESIGNER SOLARIAN(i) ' • 1 l • , I .... fl~~~~.:.·" NEW YORt -Tht Jlllcon ohlp fl an e>etnonUnarY thiM, Mid J._ Chrtltlan. A dlcMe ~~ nowf. t\oen l»fore, It couW man that home ~•rt m&aht \.lie•-of their pafCheck to flnance lhflr Such a development. •YI 1 report from the leq\leL_~~-MIQ\ben are heavtly lnvolv.d ln home lll1iMmlll• 0 could •.• reduce houlinc costs and lmprow the quality of life f« th«* farnw.t who now muat chome between career opportunidel and locational pn1e~." ChriaUan II an tcalriomilt, and bffau.. h• •• th• chief economiat of the U.S. IMcut of Savtn11 Auoc1atlon1, hl1 1pedalty ii houalnll, an area that hu produced ltl Mar. of d1ama1 newa. But th.Iii ii aood newa. .. Electronic technoloay (much of U ba1.ct on 1Ulcon d\lpa) may exi.nd the ran,. of , choice tor many tM\illee to anall dti~ and even rural areu,11 he Mid. "without the ucrlflce of emplo~t opportunity." · The opponw.Uty la likely to be Uiere, aays Chrilttan, becaUM of the evolution of lndUltry. The knowled1e, or information, lndu1try 11 now a ar<>wlnc force. Manufacturing might become a let1er one. Manufacturing, of coune, wu tied to metroPoUtan areu, and such areu generally were dependent upon tranaportation -riven and oceans at' tint, and railroads, superhlghwaya and airports more recently. r ·······tst:AY ........... i i 1IA1e111&· ! : : : THE MINI-QUIZ ; . . ! WHO ... WH'AT... ! Private San Clemente community with private beach and private swim and tennis club. • i ... WHEN ... WHERE i • A bit of • ! Contemporery Hletory ! 117/s% Financing Act now. (714) 498-2830 (213) 277-9470 i Oo•ty llCOOI '"d•• 2:30 p.m. J . . : ~vu., : i ~e ... 3 i • • • o. .... c-. ..... ._ .. "'--..._ • •........ ~-::~:::::;;;.~:-....... ! ttere•s a cuh management Kcount thet puta you In coinplet. control. Rudy cash when you need L (No need to "Lock younelf In .. for a long period.) -. With a deposit of as little as $5,000, you can eam the high interest rates of a 6-month $ J 0.000 or 91-day $7,500 Money MaJ1tet Certlftcate. ' Unlike ~Market Foods, whose interest rates may change daily. your etteblished Cash Control rate is guaranteed for the full term. - l -~ For ready access to your account, you simpty write c hecks (minimum $50() each) .J -a\lelilming the p{t\elav for·e~'Mll. And your funds 11° on earning et their establlhed ~ rate. ' · • , • MJn'"'um 1n~n't'•5.0oo:..: " e Rate~ for ful term. · • 6-month or 91 ~ lmutment period. e Free check.I. No trmMCtlon charges. 0 We edllence wry fundt needed IO qualJfy for~ high money mnet l'1ltlH. Checks wrlllen. or ecMnca k> meet the minimum, afe chlrged.,.. ~line o( ~which Is •t.000 leu ttWl your opening b.&lince. And you pey lntetttt •just I% more ttWl ~ c..ti Coraol Rllle. f eccount Is cloeed before maturty, ~ It e penelty. Your ..mp IMuNd to •• 00.000 REPUBLIC ~~P.~~-~L SAVINGSIFSflCI HMd Offk~ ALTADEM 2246 N. L..aM Aw. (21)) 791 ·12&1/6&1-6611 ALTADEIV1 • Al1AHE!lol , AllCADIA , llO!t8Al°'K , ~ , CU\RQIOM ~MTS • HACIEN>A t£IGKTS • U\OOl1A NOOE1. lOS A""£lES · Pl\L'4 ~ • MSAov.A • PICO lllV!RA • s.vn'A MA • TttOUSAM> 00.KS . WESTMINSTU . WOOOUVC> HILLS AcTITIOUI WSI l"ICTmOU8 .,.._.. ACTmOUe .,_.. MAim STATlmWT MAll(IS STAJ'lmNT MAim 8T AtamNT The following peraona 11re doing The 1o11owtnQ pe<IOtla are doing The lollowlng P«Ti>n• -doing bu9ineM M : buai,_ U : l>ual,_. N: MIS'SION VIEJO SWIM SUSAN M. COX and GERALD THE BEVEL CUT, 4N E. 17U1 rtennoul ...... N~ .•TATl•NT The followtng pe<l()nl are doing bull,,_U! , ...., __ f.~kt,# TREE. 444·B No. Newport ·.ao,.Jevard, 1RWJfO Beech. Celltomle 92880 RACQUET CLUB. 28221 Tierra LEE COX, doing buelneu ea Stre•t. Room 100. Coat• Meaa, Glrole. Ml..Wn VleJo, Celllornle RELIABLE PILOT CAR SERVICE, Callfomte 92827 WARREN DEVELOPMENT, a Calllornle corporation 444-B No. N.,.port Boulevard, Newport a.ctl, C8ltfOmle 92te0 Thie ~ la conducted by • generel pertnenhlp. • l<enMth o. wwr.,., ...,.,._ Thia .. ~ -ftled wttl'I the eountY-0.. of Ofenge County on June •• 1982. '--.,.... W'tllAM. llMITZU. ROT't9WI. KUCHIL ~-IUBT A Pa .............. e:...r=== ~z::,~-. .._,, Publl• ed Orenge CoMI Dally PloC, ~ M. 17, 24, Juty 1, 1982 25SM2 92t81 -asll2 DOIOtota, M1alon Vle!O;'C -Juel Lynn Afktnfflr.""1722 • SWIM & AACOUET CLUB. a 92991. . Weetclltt, No. 11, Newpoft a.ch. Cellfcwnle corpor•llon, 26221 Tierra S U SAN M . C 0 X . 2 6 5 9 2 C.llfomle 92eeG Circle, Ml .. ton VleJo, Calltornle Ooloroea, MINlon Viejo, CA 92891. ~ Clifford Dunmire, 1722 92991 GERALD LEE COX. 26592 WMlellft, No. 11, Newpoft hech, Thia~ la oonducled by a Oolofoea, MiMlolt Viejo, CA 92891. Cdfomte 92ee0 OOfl)(Wallon. Thte buelr-. la conducted by • Thia buu-.. oonducted by • ~ & ~ Club generel pertner&Np generel per!n«thlp. Tim Eaton. sw.i M. Cox end Jen Alklnton Maneger Olreld t. Col! Thte 8191-1 WM Ned wfttl the Thie etet-1 -flled wlttl ... TI* ICIU •••I wee llled with the County Ctetk of Ofenge County on County o.rti of Ofenoe County on CountY a.. ol ()'enge County on June 29, 1982. June 18. 1ee2. .M1e •. 1"2. ,,,... ,.,.. · f1m. Publlahed Orange CoHI Delly Publlahed Oranee Co .. t Dally ....._. hler,..... Piiot, July 1, 6, 15, 22, 1982 Piiot, June 24, Juto/ 1. •. 15. 1982 A ... fJ 111 IA I Cer9. 281442 271G-«1 --a, ........ ----------1 ....... CA-rta.JC NOTICE fUlJC NOTIC( ~ ":enoe coeet Dally Aennoue wu Plloe, .M:f 1, I, tll, 12, 1992 MAim 8TA1a.NT • 291342 The followtng ~ are doing Tiie lollowlng person I• doing _______ ....;.;....;..;.....;,;;;,. bl*'-ea: ~ ae: rtaJC NOTIC( RAH. 4230 Perk Newport, (e~ COLLINS ENTERPRISES #307, Newpor1 8-ch, OA l2980. dbe (b niE CAPSULE AEPORT (c) fliCUHOUI Wl8 RONALD A.11,4GE~. 4230 Pat11 THE APSULE f'l!PORT II, 0(d) T ..... f~ ITA,._., Newpor1, #307, ~ e.dl, CA CANIS.(ei FQLll, 1100 Le Mlmede, ,,. .,.........,ng person le doing neeo. :1~5, ountalrl v...,. Cellfornle ~:;:., MAINTENANCE, ANITA HAOlf'. 4230 Perk W1111em Lyte ~ "°° u 1m.,. Newpott 111\td., s1111e a21. :'1· .no7. Newpor1 ....._CA ~ No 25 Foun ... V'*"t C-. ...... C9lllomle 12829 Thia bUe1neM le oonduc1ed by e 1ng1neer °""9, HunUngton a.en. Cellfornle 127oe ' ' Betti I< Irby Thomu, 173 llmtted pen,,_., . CA Nt-4t. . Thie buelneM le COl\dUcted by f" Broectwey, Ho. A·2, Cotta MeN. Anita Htget OAVIQ.'"1· 8Mll'H90ft. 1MM lndMdUJI, CellfOfM t:z:t27 Thie tteMment wee flleCI wtt11 the Oo.M t+#y., 8unMt .. .aft. CA W. "-Colllne 11~ ~ .. oonduGted by en County Cter11 o4 Ofente OOunty on IOT,:.:-.;.. le OOl1•.oetd ~ ~ ::r=..flled~ ':: 8ectl R. TllOfW June 6, 1N2. ,_,.. ...... ... . JI.-it, 1•. Tiiie ........,., .. fled "'111 the Publltl'ltd Orene• COHI Delly o.M w . ......,_. , .. Counly a.rte of OfMge Coun1Y on '111ot. June 10, 17, JA, ,w,, 1, ttlf. Tiiie • .___,. ..... -""... r•1..._. 0renee eo..1 Detty Me1 •· 1tn. t111-a ~ Olflr o4 ~~ Ol'I Not • ..-f, •. 11, 12.*2 , .. ..._ .. '911. n 10sa2 PlfblleMd Orenoe cout Delly ....,, f"lot, Junt 14, J>Jtt '· a. 1a, 1992 "' .......... 0reftf9 0.-o.ity f9lS.. 175Ma ITAW OP wmmHWM. ,_ _. 10, 11. M. NI .. ~ PWUC ll)T1C( ~ ''!61':::: ONMftM MlihOUI M H•H "°""°"' lllllt•U ..... .c llR'ICI --ITAW Mnnoul ..,.... Tiie lollowlftl pettoll llH Tiie fiOloetrll ......... dcltnt . ..... STAW ..... ..., ...... ...,_._ N:MIDUI -• ....,_ -Tiie fellowtnt peflOfl II doi"9 fie,.. .......... uM1r .. " ..... STA,_ I WHTlf'N Oil. ''""'en . ....._ -floUuou, -llOIHH ....... or ™ .......,,. ,.,__ II delfW 1HH lroollll11t1\, lvlte 0.. AOMAM. 11741 o..i \llMa. CAL'' ORN I~ CL A 1 M • .....,.. .. ~ MI MOfUll. tu --=-.:::y·u ... '-'~ltd~::i~ .• ~110:1:-".:' ~ ..... ....,.. .... CA w.,.. ~. Yelle,, Cet~";er11otef.on, ltftl ~7.tfti.... ...,._ -w ~..,.. o .. .,. YW+ loutll Lo91111e, ~ tw lie.., ... -IUOt4A"D L. llf•O", Ill Joet111e WlllleM1, '111 ~ .. M1 .. lfl .. ~ .. • ~ ........... CA ... A=,,.....v.,, TNl~ll..,1t1...-11r1 ai~~;i.£U~~:.:~:gf£ r-=::.-JLo.~J;Di n,~ ~"lft~ ~~Me .. -. . ~nic t«hnolQo, bowwvw, trw,.... ot tt'°9I rtttraln.. The ptOd\d -~ Oft knowl_edae -can be ~ nUw man ....-. It enouch cltcuJta are available, people -.akt ewn work at home. It 11 h1ppenln1 already: The chan1• 11 ~-To Wuatrate, ChrlltlAn .......... a d'9Ck ot aome IUCX.'ellfu1 i.tten and~~• Yica A quick 1ury~~ waa made: Bala·Cynwyd, Pa .• HoWaton, Maia., Wic.kenbers. Aria., MeCila, Pa., Ftuwill.lam, N.H. The point WM mlde. Now add lhe economic lmpera'1ve to tbe opportunhlH made poHJbl• by elH&roatc oommunketiom, bt Mkl. • ''How much o( bullMli could be opsa NmOfelyf' I Th• ,enerauon now around 30 YMl'I of ace appredatee the opportunity to live where they want. II.Id Chrlltlan. A ~ bt -.wtred. "1 would Ntbw not II' on an tJ,rplaM and lole &wo da~ to So anewhin to: alve a 1peech," he ..ud. "I'd nther walk~ • to a teleconf--' .... center." : -~·--· . . Fluor deSigns plants Edison, SDG&E to use facilities A 10-meaawatt ae<>thermal power plant dealaned b y a Fluor Co. aubf.tdia.ry will begtn produd.na It.nm this aummer for Southel'!) Calltomia Edi.on Co. . Engt.neerfni is 44 percent complete on a tliml1ar plant for San Diego Gu & Electric Co. that wW be the world'• fargesl ~I.nary geothermal facWty. Fluor Power Servlcea Inc. la performing engineering and design for bolh projectl. In addition., Fluor will provide procurement aervioes for the blnary project. Theee plantl will tap superheated brine trapped beneath the Imperial Valley. 11WJth the exception of the pyaen m Northern California, there really ii no ot.her bl1 body of dry 1team available. You ha~ ... to make \.lie of what you have -hot water," uld Raaan Phllllp1, general manqer of Fluor Power Service•· Wea tern Divieion. The larger of the projects ia the 70-megawatt plant for San Diue> Gas & Electric, near Heber. Forty miles north of Heber, on the ahorea of the Salton Sea near Niland, the lO·mepWatt demonl'tratfon plant ia nearing completion. Avco unit reports loss Net e~ for Avco F1nandal Services, Inc. of Newport Beech for the six mont.ha ended May 31 were $35.8 million, off from the $36.8 million reported the like 1981 period. This decrease wu due to lower credit·related premium volume and h igher claims expenses in the insurance group1, partially oft.t by a decline ln interest rates, and reduced operating expenaes and credit lcmee in the financial services group. Net earnJnga for the second quarter totalled $18.8 million, compared to $20.3 million for the 1981 second quarter. The company's two insurance ll'CJUP' reported lower earnings. The Avco Financial Insurance G roup reported net eaminp of $14.2 million for the first two quartera, down from $18.9 million. Net eemings from the Paul Revere Life Insurance Group were $14.2 mlll1on, down from $16.3 mllllon a year earlier. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS Baja sets toll-free • services A A • • • • ,. • • SAN DUXX> (AP) -A ~ I tourl•t office for Baja . Callfor1\·1-hat aet up" toll·free telephone · I servicel from Callfo~. Arizona and Nevada. The OOltl wW be paid i by Mexico'• Baja 1i.te government and tourilt bureaus of Tijuana, Mexicali and F.nlmada. a pokeaw oma o Vi Murph y a aid Wednead.ay. A toll-free line from California i• 1-800-522· 1516. PacTel extend office hours Pacific Telephone Ja keeping its Orange 1 business service center 'I open 30 minutes longer. . The hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. J I I I ' I I I t t ' I . I 0'4I • Pd . • l + "° Uo J7.S f + ,.,., Up 21.1 • i-. Up u .o + 'Iii Up "·' • + '"' t:t: 1U ' + .... ~ H .t i : ~ :a I + ~ U.t . ~ 14' Up 12.S ; :t ~ lH + ,;:; Up 12.J • 1i-. Up 12.2 • 'Iii Up 12.0 : 1~ t: :u I + 1 Up 11.1 t + 14 Up 10.S t + w. Up 10.s • ' Up 10.J • .... Up tO.J +llo Uo10.0 + ... Up tl,0 • '"' Up • • I + I Uo t.J l ' r-• 1, 1H2 8 I May index up for 3rd month WASHIN01QN (AP) -A penunent Inda detigned to show future U.S. economk: trendli l'Ole ln May, the Commerce De partment repor ted . Jt wu the third 11.ralaht monthly g~in and another lip the r~ may 6o enclif11. The 0.3 percent l.ncreue ln the Index of teedin, lndlcaton followed the aharp 1.3 pel'()!llnt men-ln April. Today'• report t.lJo revlaed the fWw'e for M8fth 10 a 0.2 percent lncreue Instead of tLe 0.3 percent decline earlier reported. Cards pay for product~B ~ Southern Callfomia Gu Co. hu that ~tomera can wie MMtercard and VISA t carcU to pu.rch.ue energy comervatlon producu w the company sells. The utility stresaed that the ~t ca.rda will be accepted only for the purchaee of corwervation it.eml. not for payment of monthly gu bW.. The two bank cards can be uled to buy 8'acb products aa water heater insulation blankets, · IOlar swimming pool covers, flow-restrlctor ahowerheadl and sink aeralors and gaskets. Savings & loans to merg_e Seaside Savings and Loan Assn. of Milaion Viejo ana Escondido Savings and Loan have agreed to merge with Sun Savings, subject to approval by regulatory authorities and shareholders. :I'he new aasociation would be called Sun Savino & Loan and have asseta of $4~ million . Se811lde, formed less than two years ago, has a.11eta of $7.2 million. The stock of Sun Savings. baled in Univenlty City, has been trading in the $19-$20 range. Officials expect to have six offices in operation by December. NB firm develops shops Construction ia under way on 30,700 equare feet of convenience shops in El Monte planned and designed by Arehitectural Team Three of Santa Ana for Hopkins Development of Newport Beach. Dividend increased The board of directors of Morehouae lnduat:ries Inc. of Fullerton increased the annual cash dividend to 10 cents per share.,. ' The previous rate was 7 centa per share. The dJvidend is payable Aug. 20 to shareholders of record Aug. 2. Morehowe is a supplier of high-speed diapersion and particle reduction syatems for th e chemical .. processing industry. ~~v!~~!~ ~!~~ IGr -.. J "" JO. r ~ 0..• ... Lew c-oi. • 111111 eu.16 aua •1.M 111.n-o.• I> Tm JI• U J2412 JI 7.J1 JID.Jt+ LIZ 1S VU 1°'-•1 IOIO *11 l".70+ 0.7• '6 SI\ Jl6.10 JJCUll JIUJ 116.M. o.n Indus .. .. • .. .. ••. 7,Jtt,M Tr_, l,~111 UIH1 ,. ,., .... • ... . . l .tol;-66 Sn. 10,0ll,• WHAT STOCKS DID ,. H!W YORI( (API Jun. JO ........ -en<ed .,,; .... OKIW.0 a 1'f l.t>cNn91d 4IO ,::: T«UI l •..s , . ., Ntwhl~ 1' • Ntwl°"" 40 SS AMERICAN LE.ADERS WHI> I 4M( )\ CIO HEW YORK (AP) J11>. lO ........ -lnCed w~ ~Ti ·~ ZJO ., m ,,. Tul l-71' 11! Ntwhl~ 1 s Ntw l°"" ,. ,. ----- METALS • UPS AND DOWNS HEW YORI( (AP) -Spol nonleuove ..-..~w...._,. Pct. Uo IU Up It J Up .. Up •• Up u Up ••• Up 7.1 Up u uo 1,1 Up ,., Up , •• uo 1.i Up u uo u Up •. , Uo ... uo . •.1 uo •.7 Up '·' uo •.• Up ,,, "' 2·' t:: d UP ''° Up ... ~ E IS.I 10.1 10.A ··: t.!l J· • ,, .. ~ ·u C•PP•• ar.12 cen11 • pouno, u.s. oee!lneltonl. leM 2W7 -a poulld. ZIN 3~7 -a pound, 09llvWed. "" .. 1931 MM* w-. ~ .. ........,_ 1$-11 -a pciund, N.Y • ...,_, $370.00 per ..... """'-'2•t .00 tr0J oz.. H,Y. Sil VER ....,._, GOLD QUOTATIONS .,,,..· .......... ..... ..._,~told llftoet W• II U1. L.,....,,, morntnt ll~tng: U l4.00. lilP 11.00. Le--..i: ettatnoon ft~l119: Ul1.IO, 11t1 IUO hrte: ....,_ tlldllO: A 11.a . _.., 16. 1.4. ,~ 13H.OO. _.., 11.02. r.w.: iate lbdnO: IStl.26. up tuO • ate.n••· "-4r • Mw Metn (only oa11y Quet•) IS17.80, up N .IO. ........... '°""' *""' ..,.., 1111.a.. ... eo; ........ (~~..-. ........... ua:a.-.141 .... SYMBOLS -~­.. , •• HIWI WONDllll WOMAN WOftdlt W~ ttOQt Ille bledl-f!IMllel .... Of a .,.,., .. ,.. ml..... GU'- ~ •y1t.m 1C1ram1>11no ~ • THllAINT 811f1on r..wfl a girl from a hlOh·hHltcl nun's abduction attempt I a.WAT. HAWAII FIVl-4 A M1all QU«lllt force ' ..._~froman enncHY to IUpp«I a revo- IUtlon In thelt own country. ~fn'8 "Otet¥: MeenWto For E.,.. -.~ ..... MCNEWI NBCNEWS . 11'.ao HUMAHFACEOF Qw.A "SOn or Tile OCH/I" view.a et• taklH'I on a rlwrt>oat journey along one ot Ille grand .. t llnka In China's network ol waler· ways •• the Yangt1a River (R) -~ GOYlllNMl!HT "HO¥t Ftdet1llft!l Work1" (1)9NEW8 0 aAAHEY MILLEA A dHperate citizen thr•t-to blow himAff Ind Ille 11<ecinct eky high D MOVE • • "Homer" ( 1970) Don Sc¥dlno, Alex Nlcol. A tmell·town ltmlly experl etlC)99 Ille varlold llOcial problems ol 111•·'1101 Am«tc.n youth 1:00 I CM NEWS NBC NEWS KUNOFU Without rMOrtlng to YIO· ~. c.i,,. enda the t'I"· ll'lny ol a "Chi..-Malia" Ind liberates a boy Slave • A8CNEW8 0 Ko.w< Kolek, nnds aulcl<M an lml)<ob.tblt C8UM when -•' men, all attending the Hm• convention. •PPM' to tiave died by falling to their dtatha • M•A"S"H An emblUered prlvale refueM to heed Fllhe< Mulc;ahy's coun1el because the priest has -axpe<leneed front· line duty. • J()t(EA'S WILD • G'i) 8U8INU8 ~; (I) P .M. MAGAZIHE @ENTERTAINMENT TONIQHT An lnterv-with Ban.GU· VllL Qt THI Mtif PETS OUMt: Elton JOhn. (C)MOVIE * • * "The Rulel 01 The Game" ( 1939) Marcei Oello, Nora Gregor French locial Ind Mlluai mores Ml)a'll• arlatocrtta flld worklng-ctaa1 people bltfore WO<ld Witt (Q)MOVtE • * "t Hate Blondes" ( 19111) Jean Rochefort. Enrico Montesano The ghost wrUar lor a 1U<:cns- tu1 novelist Inspire• a palr of burglars to auempt to rob his mansion (%)MOVIE • • ·~ "The Immortal Bachelor" ( 1979) Monica Vitti, Giancarlo Giannini. On trlll 10< murdtflng her husband. a bMutllul Wld- ey., enthralla Iha lury with her remembfano.a 01 her oeulonate domest~ Ille. • • Orange Ooa1t DAILY ptCOT/'Thunday, Juty 1, \ REUNITED -A down-and~out horse trainer (Warren Oates) and his ·spunky daughter (Kristy McNichol) are reunited in "My Old Man" at 9 tonight on KNXT (2). f:IO 8 2 ON~ ToWN FMtured: a company that ~ anna<ed cera; follOw Stevie Wondet to a IOcal hlgll tctlOOI wtwe he talk• with atudtnll about Martin Luther King: vi.it a candy factory whaf• cus•-• make thelf own: a took at •om• or Loa Angel•• bfldp. I Qt FAMILY FEUD EY!ONLA.. Featufed' a -rch for the bMt roll« COMIW In Loa Angelte, a trip to Ille tnOl#lltllna f°' • -~ .... ., IUNon "'°"'· • M0A"l0H Hot Upe celebrat.. her Jull:i!•nled div0<ce • Cl) TIC TAC OOUOH • WlloCHEl I L.EHRE11 REPORT '9 FAWLTY TOWEAS Bull Fawlty, the moll lncompetlH'lt Innkeeper In Eng.land. Is aaved Iron\ fUln by hit efficient wll• !Part I ofll) 0 YOU A8KED FOR IT Filalured. "Man AldH OMdly Manta Ray" and "Engtand'• Space.Ag• Robot Ooo " CID TWO IN A eox The mime 1eem or Ro~ Shields and Lor-Yarnell ling, dance and per1orm mime In a -• of lk•tch· .. ~ AEAOelCl8E: llEGNmRTO INTEAMIDIATI Get In lhapa, 10ok gOOd, and Itel grMI with thl• phyalc.al flt,_. program 1:00 8 (I) MAGNUM, P.l M11gnum It hlfed by 1 com- putw magnate to recover valuable codee. (R) D QIFAMa As• dteme ClaM projkt, Oorll beifrienCle • prt1ty ru~ mnd ~her to ldlool. (R) &MOVll ty" (1912) Terenoe Hiii, 9ucl Spencet Two bfothen 1<>1n Monnona In their attempt to drive out a bind ol out· ··-· D (JJJ OAAKAOOM A biker V11111 a Stnatl-town lunhouat Ind • young hOodlum tanglM with a reputed witch (R) 0 MOVIE * e v, "Along Came A Spl· der" (1970) Suzanna Pteshatta. Ed Ne19on. A widow courta danger wlltn ahe lnvestlgataa lhe possi- bility of foul play In her husband'• death. GI P.M. MAGAZINE S1bf1na t..ai. ut Iha tine 111 ol Belly Oendng; • IOOk at aoma unuaual but valu· able co11ec11ons • MO\l1E • • •·~ "High Noon" (19S2) Gary Cooper, Gr- Kelly. A murdtfw and hi• brot11«1 attempt to ...., the IC«a wUh the lhtrlff wno eent him to prison • I.MT QHANCI GA1'AM • Blad 8Mra vtalte Ille lhop of an .,...,. rebulldtr -~~ Rogtf Eben Ind 6- Sltkel review "Megalorca" and "819de RI.Inn«." CID MCMI * •'h "F0< Yoor Eyea Only'' (1911) Rogw Moore, T opol. JetrlM Bond tracila a Ctlmlr)el wno purlolntd • top MCf9\ 8ri1Jah deftnM ~·PO' Cl} llll09'll .... "1111 God We Truet" ( t~ Meny Feldman, Arwt/ Kauhnan. A naive monk II eent out Into the world to rlltt mOM)I for hle~mon&lt· ··~ * • ·~ "GU/In" l 19117) CralQ Stevena, Edward Aener. Private aye Ptttr Gunn 11 Uked 10 lnveatlgll• a ~·and tnutder. ~ .. 000 COUPlE OKal It fired from h11 longtim. iob ... ll90<11- Wflter tdr tlllllng to cover • badminton mateh • INfAK PAEVIEW8 Roger Ebert Ind O- Sl1kel review "Megalorc:e" and "Bladt Runner." «9 LAST CHANCE ONWJ( 8'1d Searl Offen adVlce on buying Ind aoplytno car care Pfodue11 (Q)~ * * ·~ "Continent II Divide" ( 19111) John Belulhl, Blair Brown A Chlc 1go new1p1par C011Jtnnl1t trevel• to the Rocklta to escape aorne polltlul heat and lnttn1iew • reclullve nsturallat. 'PG' "6(%)MOVIE **'-' "Blow OUt" (19t1) .iohn Tra•olta, Nancy ~HenA~~. r:=·~9f-! mutdtf m'l't*Y when he wttnaaM 11'1 ......ina- llon 'R' t:OO B (J) MY OlD MAN A 1pirlled 1terl·IQ9r ind her down-and-out hO<M trainer lllher try to make a ,_ Ille together &fief a 14-yMr MPA<Sllon, Kr1aty McNlchol and Warran Oat" 11 ar. (F\). D Q! otFF'llBT STAOl<E8 Arnold goes on • hllngw atrlka to supPOn 1111 lndlatl dalm that e Ofummond constructl<>n Site 11 the location ol a sacred lnd!an burial ground. (RIO D ([I BAAHEY MILLEA Barney'• detectives learn that Rlkw' • ltland prt aon hi~ 11...-. -dlac:llerglng lnm ..... ., DecauM of overcrcwwded condition•. (RIO e MBWGIWAN au.ta: o.bblt Reynold•. Rip Tay!Of. The Barberi· ans. Paula Kelly. -------·-------------• NUloWAO UNO Atnwtcan dlacue thl'ower Al Oet1er. the only track Ind fleld lthlet• to win gold medala at lour auc- caaalve Otymplad1, la pro- n1ec1. .CHANNEL LISTINGS 8 KNXT <CBS) 0 D KNBC (NBCJ 1 e KTLA IJnd.l J; 8 KABC CAB() -c. D KFMB <CBsi fJ KHJ..TV (Ind.I ~ D KCST I ABCI l.. • KTTV (Ind.) :I, •• KCOP·TV (Ind ) • . e KCET (PBS) • • KC-:E (PBS> On·TV Z·TV HBO (C1nemaaJ CWORI N Y' • N Y'. IWTBSI IESf>N) <Showtlme) SPotllghl (Cable N~w' Network) • MAITEAPtECE ntEATM "Fllcltlft" It looka as 11\ough Atnle'a movie mty -be oom91t1ed -money runa out and ao dOea rte 1181. (Part II) 0 (C)MOYll ··~ "The Wandetw9" (lt79) Ken Wahl. Unda Men.a. The memberl of ~ tougll t IHSOI alrNt Q81'1Q IP tM Bron• dlec:ovet that the ,,_ of 110WIN I.IP tnO """ '" '°"' .,. ~"*-....,.. ....... ll'C*I INn MY of t~ nlMoo DM 0-V'WI talten pan In 'fll' Wl£:"'WT Wllllt It ltn\fi.d to "buy" 1118'\cl• wtlll l'lllltjvan•. (I'll i_Q~IOUAO ~ectlve 0.-t«lln PoMI u • ahopkMCllf to Ml a ~otectton radlet W U' AHO OOMtNO "A Uttle AomllOCll" ,rtn· Clnt IMM Iha moet dllfl· cult ~ of hat Nie wNtl 9'11 ftnclt out lht 11 ~Niii 1'1111)11')Q 10:00. Cll HIU. ITMIT IW8 A 150,000 reward te olftted fOf tnlormallon • leadlnO 10 Ille .,, .. , 01 • ,., publlo ~·· lnutdtf· w. Ind ~lie. IOllOwlno hi• latNI t>lnoe. la totcl to find a new lob. (Al 11-=~NIWI TOTHIMAHOA ~. Unawert ot Audrey'• new 1tatu• at the tMnor, an old friend ttope by '°' • Yltlt. IDTHILA.._.WJIM CorrHpondent1 Ltncl1 Warthelmtf and COiiie Roberta join Paul Dull• fof an up. to-tht-IY\lnUta Mlnl- mary Of ConorHtional actlvltlee. (l)U~ON ~ 1Per1 •I OM<>Yla ** *'-" "Wollan" (1981) Albert Fl(lney. Olene Vano- rL Pl:>floe .,. leoed with 1tn UnulUaJ ptObtefn M ~ York City II lnVeded by J pack of diapl~ WOii/ea, 'R' 10: 15 CHl MOY!& * * 'h "Hlatory Of The WQftd -Part I" ( 191 t I Mel Broolca, Madeline Kalln Man'• llluatrtoua tilltory •• lrom tMand«lhal cave· men to tlle Spanlth lnq\11· llll<>n -11 ellW!llned. 'R' '°'..,I HEW8 UP~ G MONEYMN<£A8 "Diagram 01 Flnanclal lndependenoa'' (Q)MOVIE • "The Children" (19801 Martin Shak11, Git Roger1 A atrange radloaoll¥e cloud turn• • group of tchooldllldren Into mur· dtfou• zomblM with black llngemalla 'R' (%)MOVIE **'A "Blow•UP" (19118) Oa'lld Hammlnoa. Vaneua Redgrava When a yoong London photog<a.pher hu -ol hi• plctur• blown up, he dlac<M!rl wtlll ~110 be a murder. 11:00 a U D Cl) 9 Q! NEWS • IATUADAY NIGHT Holl Shelley Duvall Gueat. Joa/I Armatradlng 0 YOU A8K£D FOR IT fMtured· "Catching An Elephant With fir•" and "Greece'• Death-Defying Sponge Olvera ... • M•A•t•H Hawk• pull die .077th on ~,M_ lheW~. I • .,..VHU ~ Btnny'• French leuon _,, to be lull of promlM lor the apoarant trMta Ir •tare • DICK CAVETT Guest: magician Tony Sly· dlnl.(R) '9 TONY llAOWN'8 JOOAHAL. ''The Other Battle" Tony Brown rwiewt black pet• tlclpatlon II\ th4i l'llMl&t)', -(RI (C)MOW * • "High Country" (19111 Timothy Bottom•. t1nda Purl An escaped convict and his handicapped girl· friend f1M to th• moun· talna 'PG' CJ) PAT COLUHS: THE .. HYPNOTIST VolunlNr• from the l\Kll· enoa r~ comloally 10 hypnoala 1uggHtlon1 made to them by thlt entertalntf 11:JO 8 Cl) OUINCV D 8WIM8l.EDON UftOA1' A report on develoi>menl• et the All·Engllnd Tennll Champlonlhlpa ii pr._,t. ed. •o A8CNEW8 NIGHTUHE 11J MOYIE • ~ "Blood On The Anow" ( 1984) Dale Robet1aon, Mllltha Hyer • THE JlffMIONS Lou!M's 'lllltlng uncle geta • COid recep11on from George II/Id Llontl. ·LOVI.~ ITYLE • HUMAN ,/l/Je ~ CH4HA "Son 01 Th• Ocean" TUBE ~UPPERS KOCE (~0) 7:30 -"Fawlty Tow rt." • Flrat of a 1t>c-part aerlea about an incompetent innkeeper in England and nla etflcient wife. • KCOP (13) 8:00 -"Hlgh Noon ." Academy Award-winning movie atara Gary Cooper u rt:tirins sherif t who ts challenged by .• aunfighter. KNXT (2) 9:00 -"My Old Man." A spirited teen-ager and her down-and-out horse trainer father try to make a life together. KNSC (4) 10:00 -"Hill Street Blues." A $50,000 reward ia olf ered for information leading to the arrest of a murderer. V'-• are tMtn on a rlwrboat IOUmeY •IOnO 009 of the Of andtll Mnll• In CHna't ,,.._. of water. Wayt •• the Yqtu Rl'ller. L c.vnoHIDMO ,,,.. D 8 THI MST~ CAMON Holt: Johnny Caraon. Oueat1: JAlnfl Garner, Joe Oaraglole. Larry Adler. (R) t1:N CID MOVME *** "S.0 .8."(IOllt)WH· llam Holden. Julle Andrew•. A movie dlrec1or wno ha.a Ju11 flnlllled a multj.,mlltlon dollar turkey goee from ettampted aul· dde to • blJMrely ln•plred r•llw>otlnt of hla '91C. 'R' 11:00. ENTPTAIN~ TONIGHT An lntatV~ with Ben OU· ura. e o VlGAI Dan eotnpet• w1111 a oor· o-lleuth to capture Iha klller of lhl'N private dttectlws. (RI • MOYll • • '* "Anna And The Kint Of 81atn" ( 19-411) lr- C>unn9, Rell H11r11on A widow accept• a po11 In Siatn u tutor for the king'• Children ti) LOVE. AMEAICAN STYLE '"love And The Heist" Four women try to prove that they 11e ea good a1 men by robbing • jewelry at ore fll UNOEMTAHOINO ftUMAH BEHAVIOR .. Altwed State• Of Con· ICioutneu" (Q)MOVIE * • '-' "Sperrey.," (1979) Randy Ht<man. Don~­ don An amateur prt'f9t• ot1ecuve Mt• out on a mlallon to find Ille roorder· er ot 1 popular aongwnter . Cl)MOVIE * *~ "La Sex ShOp" (t973) Julltl B«to. Qaude Berri A boo«stor• proprl· t10< finds lnatant auccea1 when ha •locikl hi• .. ,.b- Hlhment with ... rnanuall Ind matltal aldL 'A' .MOVIE t ••• "The Late ri 11\on1 Art Carney, .t'l'omlln. A Masoned v1te aye encountwa black· mall Ind roord« when lie comes out of retirement to IOcat• a cat bek>nglng to . an offl>Mt famai, client. 12:30. OOUPLE8 A mother flnda herMlf In bet-her boyfriend •nd heraon !.= * * "Husay" (1980) H ... ,, Mlrren. John Shea. A nightclub ho1ten beoOtnM Involved with a myater101.11 underworld uaoclll• wno 11 tnraat· ened by her murdtroua ••· lover 12:.0 8 (J) MCMILLAN & WIFE 12:"6 8 Q! WIMBU.DON TENNll Same-day coverage of the women'• aemlllnal match· ea (from Wimbledon. Eno· Ian<!). (C)MOVIE *** "A F-In The Crowd" ( 19S7) Andy Grit· fltll, Pl!Jricla Neal. A defal· let ~ trom • JAii oeH to nadonel recognition on Ille •lrength of hit humor and rnutlcltl latent. 1:00• MOYll * * "The 0e¥H To Pay" ( 1t30) Ronald Colman. LOtttta Young. A rllkllh )'Ol"'9 lllWtlne IMtee Ille IM1. tr .. Mf9 of a baCtM11or aa tong • he c.n before Mtllng down roota. · • MOYa ....... "Dear DMd Oelllan" (1972) Aor-MooreMed, Wiii Otet. When a woman aooept'I e '-iMltaeplng job ., 1111 Mtll•. she. dOHn't reaitn the twror that wilt follow, u lamlly member• -chino fO< a llldderi 1rtMUrt .,. aye. tematlcalfy murdered. 1: 10 8 lltOY MOVIE • ~ "Ao« Of The Crowd" ( t953) Howard Dull. H411ane Stanley. 1:aol =ACUt.AA ..,... .. CANADA POlitlcal hurnorlat Dave Broadfoot, Ille Company Roy11a Dane••• and lemala lmprMaionl1t Cfalg RUUall lit IMturad In a labulOu• -'ng ot IH'ller· talnment from Toronto. 2:00 CID GOTT A OAHCE. OOTTASINO Thia retroapectl\lt look II mO\lle l114JllCll• lncludel pwf<>m1~ by Allalra and Rooer1. Shirley Tam· pie, 0-Kelly, Metllyn Monroe Ind EMI PrMley and clips from "Carousel." "Tiie King And I." "West Sid• Story," "Cabaret" II/Id "The Rocky H0tror Picture Show." D JOANNVEN OOtiE1't HOUR Adult puppet-Betclay 8Mw afld the Troplcan1 Oenc:ers are IMhKed. 2:15 (%)MOYIE • ...... "Blow-Up" (191181 O.Yld Htmrnlngl, Vaneua Redor•.,,... When a young LOfldon photographer hu -of hll pictures blown up, he dlacovw1 What I:• to be 1 murder. 2:IO ..... MCMI *. )t ·-n.. Unholy Gar. <tfN• &~ Col- • MOYIE • "Philo Vance Returns" (1947) Wllllam Wright, i er· ry Auallri. • MOYtE • • "Dracula'• Cutle" ( 19119) John Carradine, -Otto Ktuger. A vamplra 0-elld hll wife -lc!Mp y_oung glr1a In 0<dtf to drink their blood. (l)MOllll ...... "In God We Trurt" ( 1980) Marty Feldman, Andy Kaufman A naiva monk 11 _,, out Into the world to '"" money f()( hi• lmpoverllhed monaat· !!}''PG' 2:..0. HEWS 2:.a I a HEWS a:OO MOVIE * * "I Sailed To Tahiti With An A"-Glrt Crew" ( 11184) GardMf McKay, Pat Buttr-/I young man trlH to prove hl1 -1'*-' by NHlng to Tlll'lltl wi1hOUI male help. JOHN DARLING CC>~ • * • ''l'ttwrn Ot A Mell 0-.d ...... ( tt111 l'llefl· ard Harrlt, 0... loftclef· ONfd., An ~ lord returna to Amei1Cll wtlM ht teenw thal the lncllent wllo lnltlti.d him inlO their OIDt lltYt toat tll•lr mode1t prt .. tvt to lt~a.'PQ'' ®MOYll • * • * .. ,., ''°"' The Mlddlng Crowd" (1M7J J.,... Chrt111e. T.,tne• ltll'llP A wlllful YOIHlQ ftrm Olrl btllafl hatMll, !wt dtttroya thr .. inen In lhtptOOtM .MCMI ••~ "'°' Y-E~ Only"' 11t111 Roget Moore. Topot. Jamee Bond track• I Otlrnlnal Who purloined a IQ9 MCltl Brllltlh deltnM de'lllOa ·~· 1:11e MOW • • "Pllllo Vance' a Garn· bit" (19471 Alan Curtis. Shell• Ryan. A keen .. )'td detectlw and hla glrllr1end NI out to tackle 1 baffllng myattty that ~ Cotta them their 11,.... 4:00 8 MT PAn.ol •:t5(%)MOW *y, "The Gong Show Movla" ( 1980) Chuck Barria, Robin Altman A TV llOlt muat contand with 1 variety of ob1tacla1, Including natWO<k c:enl0f1, to put together a collectton ol blzarra IC!• '°' hll lhow. 'R' 4:ac>e YOYAOETOTHE BOTTOM OF THE If.A "Leviathan" Cl) ,AT COUIN8: THE Htft HYPNOTIST Volunt-• trom tne •udl· enc. reapond comlcally 10 hypno111 1ugga1t1on1 ma4• to them by this entartllp a< f 'rida11•• D a11• inee Mo.,fe11 5:CMI a:) * * • "Tile Rule1 Of The Game" ( 1939) Mattel D1llo, Nora Gregor Franch social and M•ual mores ~·•• 11111ocrats and working-clan paople before World War I 11:30 0 *••'"'"Wollen" ( 1981) Albert Finney. Oiane Ven0<a Police 11a laced w•th an unutoal problem 81 N-YO<k City 11 lnYld· ed by a pack of dlaplaceo w0111as 'R' 8:00 (it}*• "Runaway 111and" M11M Buchanan. Simona Buchanan In 1113-0s Au•· tr•lla, two young11a11 nc.pe the clutch.. ol a corrupt govarn0< Cll • • "The Amazing Adventure• Of Joe 90" Antmaled The aon of an electronic a ••P••t ~. aciect.i •gent IOI the Wonct ln..ruganc.a Netwonl u a r-.11 of his fathat'a 1•1 .. t lnvenhon Cl) * * '"' "Hippy Birthday To Mt" (1980) Melissa Sue Ander"aon, Glenn FOid Al muroer begins chof>plng away at ha< c;lrcla ol ehtlat lr1tnd1. • prep 1cnoo1 Mn· l0t worriea that 5he may be Ille next \llCtlm -°' poHI· ~ the killtr !A' 7:00 '1:) * ... ~·a Tra· veil" ( 1977) Rlohard Harrll, Catherine Schell Bated ori the story by Jonathan Swolt An Englllh physlc11n becomes marooned on an 111and kingdom populllad by 1tny peopla 'G' 1:00 00 • * * • "Regong Bull" ( 1980) Robe<! 0. Niro Cathy Morlarty Boxing champion J1ke La Mo111 s apl)tude tor 11101anca bring• him success In Iha rong but disrupts his per. sonallll• 'R' f$J * * * · Ohvtr Twt1t' ( 1975) Anom•tac:L.8uad on Iha st0<y by Ctiarlet Dlc:k- ens. Ol•Ya< and hos crl<:ket friend Squeaker outrun Mr Bumble. Fagin, The Artful Oodger and M Bill st'<" U * * 'h "Chu Chu And Tiie Ptillly Flaah" 119111) Alan Atkin, Carol Bur,,.tt An alcohollc former 1>.ua- b1ll player •nd • k oolc y 11raa1 entWlalner become pannera In a tcheme to """ money 11'1 ~ • "* IUltOIM. 'll'O' 00 * • "fllrel lllto TllllO w-.•e Oo" (1tff) It....,, Olllfe lloonl Tiit ..,MM Of a ptCllNlwo ' Olla YOUllt -.. Mttttd t.llltMnot al a • mldGlt-eotcl .... 1:ao Cl:) ..... ,., ..... ~· 11111) lytwater ltll!Ont . AMl8nd AltllnW. Tlv• ~ brotMn fl'Of'I "" Htlf'• l<Jtollen Mellon or ,.._ YMI City COftlblN theft '""' of brlifnl and brtMt 1n lhe4r attort• to crffl• blltw llvt1 fOf thtmM!Yea 'PG' 9'.aG. •I•.; "Monat., llllllld" 11981) TertMe 819n1q, Pal., cu.Nne. A ....,tliy, bOted youth and )It• 9uardia" ert tnlpwracked on a rtf'llOM 1 •Ill/Id popl;iated by den. V!fOUI CfMllllM 9:._ {%) * * * "Tiie A~ 1:ia11on 0 1 Emily" I t*) JamH Garner. Julla Andrews Romanta gfOWI bet-• Brllllh ,,.,., w!O- ow and • non-hetOlc ofll· .. I' . , ..., usltlt*l to pr0¥ldt hie llJ~IOr· with the klllutltt. \ olhome ' IOlOG (H) **IA "Star Trek - The Motion Plclur•" ( 197t) w 1n1am Sha1net. Leonard Nlmoy The torrna< com- mand•• of the U.8.S. EnterprlM r-blN hie old crew end Mii off on • ml1alon 10 find Iha rnytl"'- oul .......i reaporlliblt lor the d"trU<:tion ot nurntr· I OUI Fedwatlon 1tarlhipa. 'G' CSJ * * 'h "Where The Spiel Ar•" (I 1>6a) David Niven. f rancotM Ootleac A doctor becomaa involved with roorOw and nplonJge Whll• conduct- ing bu1lnM1 10< 1 l0<elgn department t0:30 .CJ l 'h "Rock 'N' ROU High SchOol' ( 1979) P J. Solas. Vincent V1111 Patten. A budding eongwrll., at Vince LO<nbardl High Jrltl to g•t the Ramones to record her mullc Whtie hw aqyaUy ltnbilloul lnand pur..-tne IChOOI '-1· tnrob 'PG' 11:30 Q * .\-"Homer" ( 1970) Don Sc•rdlno. Ale• Nicol. A small-town lamtly ••pt- ,..,_. the VlllOIJS IOCl&I oroblam1 of l•tt·'801 Ameftean youlll. 12:00 0 * • "NurM On Wh .... " ( 1963) Juhet Mllll, Ronald L-11 A dedlcatad nuraa keeps II« appointed round1 Mnling the tide In a Stnall Engtish hamlet GI *I'-' "Pllont Clll From A S1t1nga<" (1952) G1ry Merrill, Shallay Wont.,• The lone tof'ollvot ot • plane cralh unOer· takes the taMI of no'11YW>Q the v1C11m1' tanwllea ti) •I'"' "The Bobo" I 19671 Pet., Sejlefa, Britt Elcl•nd A bumbling mata- dO• ·turned -alngar la promised the hmellght tf he can seduce th4t loYelteSI 1aoy In Barcelona within three days (Z, •*'"'"for Your Eyes Only 1101111 Rogw Moore. Topot James Bond track• I Crlmtnlll wflO purlotned a top NCfet BrlllSh delenM d8V1CI 'PG' 12:30 (t, * • * "+tome From Tne Hiii" (1960) Robert Mitchum. George Peo- pl/O A man·1 tllegit1mate son savea hts hie 1:00 0 **'A "Gunn" (1967) Craig Stevena. Edward Asnt< Private eye Peter Gunn '' med to ln..,..11- ~t• • gangland rnurdtf 2:10 tZJ * * 'h "Happy Birthday To Me" ( 1980) Metts .. Sue Anderaon. Glenn Ford A• murder t>agons Chopping away a I htr Ctrclt of elitl1t l•tend• .• prep school _,_ 1or w0<roes that She may be the next vlc;11m -or polSI· bly the killer 'A.' 2;30 (SJ **''>"Star Trek •• The Motion Picture ( 1979) W1ll11m ShllnM Leonard Ntmoy The IO<mar com- mander or the u.s.s. EnterprlM reasaamble1I hl8 old Cfew and a.11 off on a mlaston to llnd the myaterl-• out ......., rell)Onllble tor the destruction of nurntr· ou1 Federation atarlhlpa. .~, . ' -. • ' . • ' .. ··'· . ... ... • ~ t • ... by Armstrong & Batiuk 'Fame' polishes Big Apple scenes BY FRED ROTHENBERG J#T~Wrtter , NEW YORK -The honking cabs wouldn't cooperate. Nor would the ogling crowds, labeled "morons"' by one cop. Ana the nelghborhood ' entrepreneurs wtte kVetdrlna. ''They're blockins off m1 b~" laid one beely eouvenir aalealady, who waa weartna her wana, 1p11ee an~. •11'ame," NBC'• meriea about ~nercettc and t.alented New York bJgh tchool atudenta, had tinally come home. After a aeuon of 1hootbJa tn laid-ti.ck IM .u,ei.. \he cut wu ln tbe buatlina Bl1 Apple la•\ wHk, fllmln1 several acene1, tndbdfui one m\.alk:al number ln Times Sq'*" The ahoW ain at 8 Tbunday nJc.hta on channel 4. Tlmea Square'• air.ew doh't. really atop for anybod.y. The ~ t.Mt could be Mid wu that ll'llftio WU .u,htJy inWrupt.ed. Althou,h \hta Wll 11 far aa lt w.nt, Hew YQl'k did MW a fra.y«i al :Gali mat ~ •l'J'he people an mocw," uJd GM poJ._,,.,,, "TMJ don't 1191 attention to \II. .. ..,,. ta tW ~ p&,ice in the world co pt UU. klaid ol th.Ina.'' _,.1111 Ill.Inn. "hint'•" eacudve ,..,.,., ··r1·1 • :r. WOrktNI tn CXlinpldaft, 'I Mlly .... •fit. ~-.it If 1"" ..,., tM loc* ll'id.......,. .,,,.._ Yc:lrt&;,,_.'W1f0t to _ ....... ... , ~ Tan1 Anlls&&IO. orpnlr.el the dty cinematography, working with the mayor'• office to iet police officen uaiKJl.ed for crowd control. "People love to come up and touch the acto.n," says Amatulo, whose name was borrowed by "Fame'a" Danny Amatulo char11et.er. "lt'• a fine line to walk. Keeping ua ln bulUlell and keepmg all the ~trio N.W Yorken happy." Leroy Johnlon. the rubbery dlncet-pla)'td by Gene An~~. ere.wet the blaeet. .ur. "We want your body," abouted a lldeWaik daract crttlc. · 0.. lltl ran U.f and kS8ld him. ''Oh l Juat love hlm. ltt'1 ao cut.e,' eooed Sheron Le'"9, U, from Q~. "We watch the •bow every Thunday n1Cbi. then we party." 1he wriwra' 1trike and prod\.IC'don problema Umit-.i ''Fame''· to u81.na Loi A1""'9 to ~te Nnt York dW'!nl lta flnt ...:in. i..t week'• lhootlna ftom LincalD c.n .... Uw ~Ian MUIMn of Art. the~ Zoo, Battery Park and the s... ltd.Ind wUJ be lprink.W ~t the ahow*a 1881 .,_.., "It-I ..... '°-" .... -.......... -al :r~w~r::,:= ~.~ ......... ~ ........... JWiMe Allen. me..,, •a•a"•.,... ................. ~ ....... • Holdi.Qg balloons while waiting for the elgh~ ~ of a dance number on the islana between BrOadwaY, and Seventh Avenue, Mias Allen pointed upward: . ' "lt's ao alive be?'e. Look at all that apace, tNI.-• ~ the akyacrapen, the wackoa. Thia LI element." •• Or1n99 Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Juty 1, 1Na Adani Arkin: ·Ups and STARS -Chris- topher Cross will hea0 Sunday's Fourth of ~uly ·progra m at Irvine Meado ws amphitheater. Christopher Cross set in Irvine Pop singer Chri•· topher Cro11, the country-rock band Poco and a ~ fireworks show will highlight I Sunday'• July Fourth teativitiea at Irvi ne l Meadows amphitheater. Poco la acheduled to lead of! the e nte r.- tainment at 8 p .m . en.a will take the stage I next and the aerial fireworks ahow will be the finale. Ticket• are $16 for re.erved aeata and $12 fot laWn aeata. They are on sale at the amphi- theater box office or at' 1z Jfe.IB \V:AN A Ill ,.... LOI ANOILD -~ MrM day Adam Arkin ,..wd a rave review for hJa fint ttace appMnnCt ln 1eYen yean, he allo MW an arUci. MYina he'd been =d from the (Ut of tbe ABC y teri• ''TtlCMn Only.'' "l Juat hope that everyone at NBC plcled up a copy of the p.per.'' Ark.in, who had been fe.tured In the aeri• "Buatina Looee" and auch fllma as "Chu Chu and the PhWy Flaah" and "Under the Rainbow." Offk:iala of Canon Productiona, who eliminated all but Lynn Redgrave and Norman Fell from the AM , caat of "Teachers Only." aald they wanted a grittier, more realiatJc look to the ahow. Ht'• 1tarrtna throuah JulY 11' ln. t.M John Guan play, "Rlch ana l'amowl." Th• comedyt. whloh CO•ltart Charle• Levln and Jwie Payne and Wll dlrected b)' K1m J'rttdman, fHlUNI Arkin U a pllywricht whc:m drMml come true ln an unexpected way. O.ptte hi.a credeneiala. Ark.in had to audition eevera1 dmel for the role ln the Loe ~-Publlc Theeter production. ''There Went a lot of people with name1 more eet.ab~tha:n mine who were up for th art," aald the 26-yee.r-old actor. " I IOl It I wu \hrilled.'' lt'1 a demandlnc part, calllnc for him to be ONtaae for I20 mlnuta non.-top. 1'There'1 literally no time to aet your bearlnp," Arkin .aid. "You have to IWt out on the richt foot or you're tn trouble. lt'a auch a fllt..p.ced ahow that lt't like rurin1n& a marathon "I think the wrtttna II brilliant," be added. "That makH the actor'• job euler, but it allo makes it rgore of a Ace Hunter Is the Ultimate Super fferol wa_____..~ Ticketronoutle~. ~==========~::::::!~~~~~~±:::~=::==::=~~~~~~~~~--AlJo, amphitheater officlala have announced that the pop group He.art will perf o rm on Saturday, Jul y. 31. Tickets went on sale Tuesda y with $16 orchestra section seats, $14 • for loge aeata and $11.50 for the lawn. Christine- set for 'Dolly' ~YORK (AP)- Chri~tine Jorge nsen, whd made w o rld head11.nea 30 years ago by becoming a woman in a ae>t-<:.hange operation, ~......,..,.DON kUTH PtlOClOCTlON "' 'THE SECIET 01 ,...,..~ i, about to take on _,.,,,,,._., another Chang.. of roles ~ 8llOOE.l£Y JOHN~ DOM DcWIS£ EllZAl!E™ HMTMAN "' OOl(J( J...c:Olll ~ fMLEl Piii.A 5H&Wt l'('IEI ~ • .ll. -she's going on the ...,..,.,......., -•-NC>r~"""°'-..,_to...,. stage. ORY~~~ ,IQMNP()l·~·;n;:;··~ AICH...:.t~-r'STtWA.n Mias Jorgensen will "-'<«I .... DON~ ~~ JOHNl'ClM9CW a--o.DON!l.lmi cwww · play the lead in "Hello, rrr~.1111 _,....__" _ _. c_.,._.. 1=7.7 Dolly!" in San Diego and 1 ___ .:._• _ _:_~,:= ... :=:.=._.:::_0.:_""'_-_'_"'_' __ ,.._~.:_.,_"'_"" __ · ___ _:'=='•= .. ~~~~~r.Ml~=~-_J S an Franc isco this !- summer, the Daily News reported. "Everybody else has tried it, why not me,'' said Miss Jorgensen, 56, who lives in Laguna Beach. "I've aeen Carol Channing and P earl Bailey in '.Dolly'." COITA MHA Edwards Bristol 540·7444 COITA MESA Edwards Cinema Cenler 979·41 41 STARTS TOMORROW n lORO Edwards Saddleback 581 ·5880 IRWIMI ~dwards Woodbridge Cinema 551·0655 OAMQE AMC Oranoe Mall 637·0340 CMIH81 Stadium Or1ve·ln 639·8770 OUl8E WHTMIUTD UA City Cinema UA Mall 634-3911 893·0546 WHTMlllTtll Pacific's Hi·Way 39 Orive·ln 891·3693 I HO,~ ACCEl'TID '°" Tlfll IHGAGIMIMT I ROCKY ID NOW PLAYING downs NlllOl'WU~~Uty. You have to Uw up to the maierial. , Aric.1p becemt a movie aar of IClt1I at. the.,. of 1~1 when ht and hJI brother Matthew -tDel'\ 8 -played the leaclJM ro1et ln the Academy Award-nornJnat.a short fllm, "People Soup," made by their father, actor-dlrector Alan Arkin. Matthew, a recent coUese lfllduate about to enter law achoo!, waa \!Wtlna hl1 brother and came alon1 to the lntervlew. He aa1d he hun't ruled out an aoUnc career for hlmtelf. "I'm not mak1na any dectatON," he Mid. "I kept actlna while I waa ln colJete. I want to atudy entertainment Jaw 11 well at other thhlel· There'• nobody ln the family rtcht now who knowl anythinl about the lep1 end and that'• a nee zry part of the bullnea." Tbelr younaer brother, Tony, 14, Wanta to act and direc:t, he .ud. eomm, from an enta1alnment family ~·t h1Ddeted hll caner, Adam Arkin nae.ct. ~ 111;1au.e.a..••YS2Jlllltllllllrwile.W ~ S lld44•Iiell6l654mst~~) S ll '°"° Edwlrds~~ s11 seao ·--~T3~ Trl••P• 0 A mo•ie of toaring pleuuret that you ltope will ne•er eacL To be lffn ••in aad •i• • • · a-4 treaaared." * r FOi R#ll EICrmnEflll YllltOur... ) * re. Atndlm ~-l~'lfrl'.:.11 •• 11 .... fttl• m ""'1.•1J,,~• 1 ........ .s1H\ ..-WIUCIM TN:IU.•~ ... • ,,,n,~Jl-·~1e..··" •BARGAIN MATINEES* Mand1y tllru S1turd1y All Perform1ncH before 5:00 PM (~ .,..., ffttltllMMI IM Hllday1) 1,,. ,,.,-w•r ,. ~,. · M11odo 01 to .. ctona LA MIRADA WALK IN 99,·2400 "ANNI!"'"°' -. ... -..... "POL TEROEl8T0 <"°l -.-.-N9.- 0 0REAIE 2" lll'O) -.-.-.-1• LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi( IN "ROCKY 111;~> •~DOUY 0 ......... ,... .... , ... uaT All TMK It: THE WRATH OP KHAN" J.-DOUY l'RMO (ll'O) ,..., ...... -.- LAKEWOOD C ENTE~ SOUTH W AlM IN 1/tl.t,d'-4,\ "AUTHoRt AUTHOR" __ ..,,... ... ,_ (f'O) "8TAA TMK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN" n... DOUY ITIMO (f'O) ,.,... ___ _ "ROCKY Ill" (li'Ol ---,... --'"" foc1111y ot Condlewood 212/111·9110 "•GAFORCE" '"' ----- "GREASE 2" <"°> ----·· SO . COAST WALK-IN So11lh Coo11 lwoy ot lroodwoy 494-1514 ..THE-n.o"Clll ....... ,..._ Al';A>-•f "' ANAHEIM DlllVE·IH ft..-Y ti et LelftOft II 179-fflO ~ "8L.ADI ....... " ... -"llOOY HEAT" 1111> Clllt fl IOUllD "'\ ',.,. ... i A.'111 BUENA PARK DRIVE IN Wf'HI C.AMNOlmAU ...... , Cllll ·" IOlllD .... "ROCKY Ill'' <"°> __ " __ _ --··-- ••FIREFOX" ll'Ol -"OUTl.AND" 1111 ...GAFOIH:E" INl -. "V181T1NQ HOU9'S" 4111 Clllt "~ TrTAN8"1N1 "THE -n.o" 1111 -'CAT NOPLE" 1111 Cltllf fl IOUllD lloc~ llwO So Of GDreleflGt_k_ 19'·3693 . '"f'MFOX" !NI -"OUTLAND" 4'11 C1lll • " IOUllO ---"POL.,....r· " --...wou1e-'"' Ctllf " '°""° I .1 , .. •I>• ~ I LbN N (AP) -Thankl to Intervention of Prime ter Marg.,-.l Thatcher, the Anaele1 Philharmonic hu stven perml•lon to honor 1•ranrna In lta own way when It to London n >et y ar. After month• of 1quabbllna ver reuric\lon1 on vl11llQI r cheatrat, the Employmon' .i..na11'tnuont announe9d ~\ tNI ..... ~~ urltier ha conductor . Marla G1ullni cen perform cycle of the four 11rahma phonies and' four concertos ext May 31-June ~at the Royal estival Hall. 'l'he four ~oncerts, a major ent on London's mu1ical Orange 0011\IOAILY PILOT/ThUredly, July 1, 1882 cal~~:~~· the 160\h j~~·~ ttl• bltth of Tr ·Atlei\dct dllooi'd aroee when thl l1nplo,1~enl D partmtn•. In protection of Brl1111h mualdana, turned down a propoaed flvt-concert aerlet under a rule llmhlng foreign orc hutru to two London appeorancea. A 1mall oomprornille tu.a now been reached. The planned fifth Loi Angeles Ph1lharmonic concert, featuring the Brahms "G erman Requiem," will be given elsewhere in England, perhaps~ Cathedral. "It's extraordinary," aald a deUghted Jaaper P rroll, ttw orchtatra'a '401'\don agent, ttcltlns the usa o f fo 1Jr aovernment rejection• of t h tour. the m<»t r«ent Ju11t ltl d11y11 •80· Why the about-face'( "The deparlment seems to have been encouraged from above," Parrott to ld The Aasoclated Preas. "The prime minister was briefed on lhls issue and 1eem1 to have take n a ~nonal Interest ln It." The Times of London quoted government sources a1 aaylns Mre. Thatcher had a hand In th deCi.Jon. ,. I One of the ~igges~ Names in Barbecues~~~~~ .... ., "•••k•J jo•" Portable grHI, porcelain. re- movable legs, ash cat~her. For beach park, travel, home. car. motorb1'1e. # 10001. 2411 Reg 32 99 When le a door not a door? Answer below 16% OFF spred the 11Hn Famous late11 flat ' wall paint frorn Glldclen. Beautltul ftat flnlah acrubt clean. 1tay1 color fut. Euv water clean-up. Reg. Reg t~ 99 , Sturdy, convenient, clean snd • pqrtable. Self-cleaning. Choice of L.P. or natural gas. No. 7130., Kiiis reaches ants weter buQs crickets and over 200 other insects Wa1er based rP usable spray for easy app1tce11on Reg 4 69. 1t1pl1 1un-t1oker The arrow heavy duty stapler came do tacky things 15 •• T-50 Alig 21 95 'get that lawn Into sh8tfft j America's favorite fertlllzer for developing thick green lawns '12'' Helps grass multiply Itself. Covers 4.000 eQ.11. Reg 12.99. Add Security to your home Comes In two styles, Two colors #F51 PDV605-609, #B 160PV ·605-609. Reg. 17.95 21-ft. pdwer t1p1 Galaxy 9" oscillating fan keeps'oool c1rculat1ng in your home w1!tl heavy base and salty grill #2154A • RPg 19 99 to stay In hot water 30-gallon w ater heater with energy sevlnQ temoerature shut-off Best glass- ltned tank hner In the industry 11899 j •• THUMOAY, JULY 1, 1NI COMICS C5 CllSBllllD C7 { , Ki~g havirig a gOod time She'll Play Evert next ... : .· GRATIFYING WORK -Billie Jean King shows a combination of expressions during a recent Wimbledon match. " . AP Wlrephoto Next up is defending Wimbledon champion Chris Evert Lloyd in Friday's semifinals. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Billie Jean King, the oldest Wimbledon semifinalist in 62 years, is an optimistic reallst. "It's very gratifying," the 38-year-old tennis player said Wednesday after upsetting third-seeded Tracy Austin 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 and moving into the aemiflnab . "Anything now la a bonus." Even John McEnroe, at 23 the defending champion and seeded first in the men's singles at the All-England Tennis Club, was impressed. "I'D BE F A.R away from a tennis court if I were her age,·: he said. "But whr. shouldn't she still be playing il she's enjoyiniz it ao much." r ....-Prio r t o the victory over Aus tin, K ing advanced by upsetting sixth-seed'ed Wendy Turnbull of Aus tralia and e liminating 'Fanya Harford of So uth Africa and Claudia Pasquale of Switzerland. "I felt I could play three more sets," King said after her match with Austin. She's making a living out of this racket ¢osta Mesa's Lynn Adams ranks No. 1 In U.S. women's racquetball • Bv CURT SEEDEN if"' .. Delr ......... ·: You don't hear Lynn Adams qomplaining about staying at ):aoole, starina at the same four W10Ja every day. '. Actually, Adams, of Costa Mm. la usually cm.fined to an ~ with just three walla. And without it, she'd be out of work. Adams, at age 25, is the U.S. women's racquetball champion. L~ golf, tennis and bowling, ~uetball has a professional tot.ar and it is not uncommon to ~ Adams walking off with checks anywhere from $2,000 to $5·,ooo once the toumrunent is aver. Mesa, Adams usually doesn't s-ur the chance to compete in any o the aeveral tounwnents held at Orange Cout College eech year. So she'll be among the esdmated 500 competitors who will be battling at the ninth annual three-wall championlb!JJ'" which ..-begin Saturday and continue thr.ough Monday at acc. Adams, in fact, made racquetball her pemwnent racket while attending OCC five years ago. She originally went to the achool to run on the Pirates' track team. AT OCC, the track rurts "RACQUETBALL IS!'fT like parallel to the racquetball courts, tennis in that millio11$ of people and Adams couldn't help but know my name, but 'the people notice the action a s s h e that follow racquetball probably completed lap after lap. do," says the Estancia High "I loved it. I was immediately inctuate. "I ~eae rve had my hooked," she recalls of her first own small measure of success." racquetball ~xperience. "Then Facing Lynn Adams on a we went to a professJonal racquetball court is paramount to tournament and watched them meeting John McEnroe on the play. That got me started.!' tennis courts or Jack Nicklaus on The "we" Adams refers to is the Unk.s. You're up against the her coach, Jim Carson. the man best in the game. who used to run tournaments at Since she still lives in Calta Coast, the man who introduced San Diego rjstling aftet split LOS ANGELES (~) -The ri~ between the San Diego Pactres and Los Angeles Dodgers cofitinuea to get hotter. Perhaps it'• just u well they don't aee one another again until September. It waa after Wedneeday night's doubleheader at Dodger Stadium. in which the Dodgers won the opener S-1 behind "&b Welch's three-hit pitqling and Dwty Beker'• fifth career grand slam, and the Padres won the nilbtcap M despite two home runs by Loa Angeles' Rick MQDday, that the barbs were hutled. , her to racquetball and the man who will be her husband by the time August roUs around. "Jim used to work in the veter811$' trailer at OCC and he worked-the-teumaments," she says. " "We're getting married in my backyard." . It took five years of coaching for Canon and Adams to string up pennanently, a much longer time span than it took to riae to No. 1 in her sport. BESIDES PLAYING racquetball, Adams abo does a little promoting throu1h her aponlOl"S. She has done television and radio oommerciala to puah the •port and is always interested in find1ns a convert. "We keep telling people about !h~ ~ and lettinf them know . what they're missing. Right now, becau.e we. are a women's pro p>UP. (the Women's Profellk>nal Racquetball Aalodation), we're (See MDA'S, Pase Cl) WHAT A RACKET -c.osta Mesa's Lynn Adami, ranked No. 1 in women's racquetball in the United States, has a real love for the sport. She'll marry her coach, Jim Canon in Delr"91 ............ At.i~ Adams wlll compete in this wee 's three-wall tournament at Orange Coast Collep. . <)> • King, playing In her 103rd alngles match at the fabled grass court championships, dropped the first aet to the 19.year-old Austin, who had won thelr five previous meetings. l{injl won her first of a record 2·0 WTmbledon titles -the women's doubles with Karen Hant:.e in 1961 _:the year before Austin was born. Her first of six singles titles came when Austin was four years old. • Austin said King had been one of her childhood Idols. She recalled that when King visited her tenni!I club, she w rote a c omposition about the experience. "I was mad because I received only an A:JlUnus," Austin said. U Btn.ie Jean's victory was a surprise, McEnroe's fourth- round win over fellow American Hank Pfister was expected. AFTER HIS MOST serious blowup so far in this year's Wimbledon c hampions hips, McEnroe faced his toughest challenge today in a quarterfinal match against fifth-seeded Johan Kriek. The confrontation was a replay of last year's quarterfinal, won by McEnroe in straight sets en route to h_is singles crown. McEnroe has defeated the SouCh African in seven of their nine meetings, but he warned: ''Kriek is capable of playing some tough tennis." Other .quarte rfinal matches today pitted second -seeded Jimmy Connors against No. 6 Gene Mayer and third-seeded Vitas Gerulaitis against No. 12 Mark F.dmonson of Australia. On the women's sid e , 13th·seeded Anne Smith and U&h-_aeeded Bettina Bunge disputed the last semifinal berth. The winn e r f a ced the tournament's top-~ed woman, Martina Navratilova. King will take on defending champion Chris Evert Lloyd in the other semifinal. Both semis will be played on Friday with the finals scheduled for Saturday. McENROE , FACING a grueling schedule of singles and doubles match es through Sunday's singles final due to last week's rainouts, was given two misconduct warning s Wednesday, his second and third of the tournament. The first, which came during his victory over Pfister, earned him a penalty point for angrily slamming the ball across court after missing a volley. 'l'he second came in a doubles match in which he and Peter Fleming narrowly defended their men's doubles title in a second- round bout with Rod Frawley of Australia and Chris Lewis of N~wZetd. WORTHY HAPPY TOBE A LAKER LOS ANGELES (AP) - James Worthy, the No. 1 choice of the Los Angeles Lakers and of the entire National Basketball Aaociation in Tueeday's college dtaft, said Wednesday he "y.ras glad .to be with a winning organization." Worthy, a 6-9 junior forward from North Carolina's national collegiate champions, was taken by the NBA champion Lakers who had acquired the first pick via a previous trade with 1 Cleveland and by wlnn1na a coin Oip with the San Diel((> Clippers. J'or all the home runs, lt WU one \he Pad.n!s hit in the ninth inl1'nC that infuriated San Die9o M .. Dk:k WUliama.. . I:& home run. exactly, but •'J!.. tanowed it. Angels get a Sample of Rangers' hottest hitter ~ a.daft~k> WJ: ~v:;r. .. Odlrtdt Perldm, then hit the atilt t.tter, Joe Lefllbvre. on top °' .. helmet. WUllmm WM furtou., and he \ ......... out of the dulcKit. •'They've bit H borne nana ~" Will~ mapped ..... tM7 don't pt ~"C:',.-· W• hit GM 2. ~air1 ••41 Padre• fem« ....,.. ,.._ ........... .i. ........ if',~ ARLINGTON, TOM (AP) -It hu bwa a frwtntina ywt JWttnma year for 'TeDI out8elder llOly Simple. . Semple bt hla at.u1lnC Job in left field by delAult befon the ~ bepn. but now appears to have repined It with hill t.t. Sample ii rid1nC • 12-pme hltUnl *-". Ml pumped WI awr191 to .122 and WOI\ Wectn.day na,ht'I 1111De whh ......... by blMdQI hil llfth hcllDe nm 4116t ,.ar, a tine-run lbot on a 1-2 p&tdl wtth two out In .. ninth. ~ ~ ... IPGlt dnmadc l*IW ............ .,_,._. ... ·=.Mi' ... Allllll· .. It ..... ...... "~~-,..., • 1 ............ , .... ...................... •••' .............. . .. MM.di, "ia that now, every CUY out U.. who didn't kMck In a nm will IO home and wony about it. U we Md won, Chey wouldn't bave had any of thme bed feelin8I. 1 hope ~ll &et owr1 It by tano1row." Dave Schmidt, 2·1, fitched 2M lnnlnp of one-hlt relle for Texa1, ~outfour. ~ ldd Wll ........... ·Mauch llld ~ lebmkft. "lie Md IUpll' llUff." Aftllll' ........ Don ~. a.a .... )"' -out •!IV ,.. hll ....... l9W wt. ........ and up the ...... ~ ...................... htt . ................. .._. "'~tf:t:''··:r:ia. .. ...,., .... ?=• ... , .. ::.tt ' doeln't want to walk me with two 1Den on.." I . j I . ' ~ I I . . ~h blank• Royals on eeven hlta Matt & ...... ahut out Kaftlll Qty an POI mer c.onN del Mer Kiah ltar .. level\ hita and JM lledl drove in · Rte•ey Hea•enoa twice, leadm, Oak1'M to a f·O ~°"*'the Royala. ~ •t.ruck out one and walbd three In tmproytna lila martc to 7-10 thia ..... • . . Ellewhere bi tbe ~ Leilue, ~ doublel by Tim ....... , Md ,... CuttM hijdillahted a three- five-inning ...... wbkh will feature ~ . al ~'1 Uvtnc h11Dllll. '8 1J)Ol'WOl'ed by Cnallies' Jack and wW be played una.-the U,bta at Robert F. Kennedy Stadlur:.-. 1 Aaron, who la fil'll in career home rurw with 7$6, will be joined on She NatJonal Leiuue teem by Willie Map, . Stan MUlill, Rkhte Ashburn. Monte Irvin. Ralph Kiner, Andy Pafko. Hank s.._ and Bobby Thomlorl, The American Le.eaue conu.n,ent will be led by atngle-aealon home run champion Roger Maria, Al Kallne, Larry Doby, Bob Allilon, Jackie Jemen, Enos Slaughter, Charlie Keller and Roy Sievers. Maria hil 61homen.&min1961. >.. a group, the 17 aluged major-leaaue pit.cblng for over :S,000 home rum, 33,000 hits and composite batting average of .292. ~ Earlier, offidall announced that Hall of Fame pitchers Bob Feller, Whitey Ford, Warren Spahn and Robin Roberta would appear in the jarne. Quote of the day rub fifth ~that pow.net MiMeeota toe 4-3 win OWi' ~ the Twlnl' leCIOftd aaoce. in • ~Y.. n&ahta ... MIU Im, lcnocbd in f~ Nm Wfili a three.rub homer and a 1inaJe to lead a 17-hJt Detroit buTace u the 'l'tael'I exploded for a 12-3 trium.1>_h ovw front-runnini Boston . . . Gormu 'nomu hJt a two-run homer with none out in the, 12th lnnlna to help Milwaukee trip the New York Yankees, 9'-7 .. , IUeMe Zilk belted a pair ot two-run homen as Seet~ pounded Toronto; 10-4. . . IUell S.tellffe pitched a four-hitter for seven inn1n&I and Vo• Hayu knocked in three runs with two ainglet and a double to lead Cleveland to a 9-0 whkewaah of Baltimore. Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1920: Washington's Walter Johns9n pitched the year's only major league no-hitter, beating the Bo.ton Red Sox 1-0 at Fenway Park. On this date in 1919: BravM rally again to nJp Aatroe • llff holnM cl1maud a fout· 111 run ninth tnni~h a •two-run llna)e, which fo beck·t.o-blck eolO homen by OU. Mupla)' and Bob a.ner, vauht.na Atlanta to a &-4 victory over Howton. Ji Wll the llWfttb time th1a MUOn the BraWI have raWed to wtn after t.ra1lin8 in the ninth &nNnc or law . . . Pinch-hitter WWle = rippec! a thrM-nm homer and Doa •and ... ~ on a four. bitter • Ptttlbuqb QUcqo, 7-3 . . . 'nm Walladt mil Garr Can. lmMbed aolo homen and aw o ....... combined with Jeff RearMll on a tiv.hiU. to help Montteal top New York. 4-1 • • • Pitcher LaiTy ~ drove in ~.e:·• ao-ahMd runs with a double u the moved b.ck into tint place 1n the National Leque Eut ~y beating St. Lou1a.. 6-3 . . . CUl'Ue Lelbrudt wild-pitched home Joba.ale LeMuter with two outs in the 12th inning as San Franciaco edged Cincinnati, 7-6. The game lasted four hours, nine minutes and featured five wild pitches. Flori blasts crltlcal media Ed Flori, who is scheduled to • open play in the Western ()pen Golf Tournament in Oak Brook, 111. today, had 80me choice words for the media 1' Eddie Sann, basketball coach at Arkanaaa; "The biaest problem with out 1~ ia th.at the faculty repl"ftlelltatives are in con~l. We need to take the power away from them and give it to the coachee, athletic directors and school J>9!Sidents. I have nothin8 against the faculty reps. In fact, we haW! a; great one at Arkanaaa. But I know that lf we gave a buketball quiz to thc:!m. most of them would flunk it." Boston Braves shortstop Rabbit Maranville became the first major league player to hit two inside-the-park home runs bi one game. )Vho called the field for the tourney a poor one. "You guys hurt the tournament when rou say It's not 80 tough," the defending champion aaJd Wednesday. "llon't knock it because Nicklaus and Wal9on aren't here. We've got 150 guys who can play." . . . A federal judge agreed to postpone until Aug. 30 the trial of former New Orleans Saints running back Mike Stracbu, accused of peddling cocaine to his one-lime teammates . . . Contract negotiations between representatives of the National Football League club owners and the NFL Players Association have been pushed back to within two days of the contract expiration date, acx:ording to the chief negotiator •. . . Officials of the state's new National Hockey League team announced that the New Jersey team will be called the Devils. • Ralston named coach of USF team SAN FRANCISCO -Former Ell Denver Bronco coach John Ralston ••• waa named Wedneeday aa bead coach and general mahager of the San Frand8oo Bay Area franchi8e of the new United States Football Leegue. Ralston. who led Stanford University to two Roee Bowl victories while C98Ching there from 1963 to 1971, said he was pleased to go back on the sidelines ... "It's kind of fun to do it right here in the Bay Area, having spent 80 much time with Cal and Stanford and with the 49era in the wonderful organization that Bill Walsh hu built," said Ralston, \, On this date in 1910: Chicago's White Sox Park opened ita doors for the first time, but St. Louis Browns hurler Barney Petty spoiled the oocadon for the crowd of 28,000 by shutting out the White Sox on five hits 2-0. Seventy-two years later, the famed double·decked structure at 3:Sth and Shields -since renamed Comiskey Park - remains u the oldest major league stadium still in uae. · Committee to study Clipper situation NEW YORK -Commiasioner m Larry O'Brien Wednesday named six National Basketball Asaociation team owners to aerve on a special oommittee to study all ques1ions related to the application of the San Diego Clippers to move their franchi8e to Loe Angeles. · The ~ committee will be chaired by Wchard moch of the Phoenix Suns Televlslon, radio .. TV: Wimbledon Tennis -12:45 a.rn .. Channel 4. Women's semifinals (taped). RADIO: iaaeball -Angels at Texas, 5:35 p.m., KMPC (710). FRIDAY-S RADIO 8:15 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER - Brazil vs. Argentina. Noon (JU,-WORLD CUP SOCCER - Spain vs. WRi Germany . .Tgbiivg .t!!/~,w !!!-D.!!-,..~I!lf ~roup .can s1.1ve money ~ewport Bepcb Runners Association offers discounts, information on upcoming races For tbo8e wWiing to keep abttaat of local unning eventl, the Newport Beach Runners ~tion may be the answer. Members of the NBRA receive a patch, a lembenhip card and periodic information about pcomlng runs for a fee of $5. Not o'hly that, but )efllben a180 get a $1 ~too the 11 races it . ponlOl"I. "We feel that you can actually save money by ntering in five or more of the races," sa1d John llair, the founder of the Amoc:iation and abo track nd en. country coach at Corona del Mar High. • "We've also made aome money for necem•ry qulpnent.. such aa clocka and watches and 90IDe 'IOM)' goes to charity." . The Newport Beach Runners Auociation, WTefltly about 600 memben strong, waa started bout three yean ago, according to Blair. And it's een growing ever since. "Members receive a NBRA P.tch and a pin and . give. people a chance to belong to IOIDethina," ua Blair, iwhoee organization puts on the China up races. "And we Rnd out information to our -.emben to let them know what'• coming up." Blair isn't the only one involved In the .->Cia&ion. It haa become a family affair. "Ml,·wife and six children are all involved," be 1 laiml. ·wn-e in the prooe.a now of gettinf" ready I JI' 1983." ,For more intormation, write Newport Beach ~~ Aa>ciadon, 1162 Dorwt Lane, Newport ae.cb, 92626 or call (714) 966--0556. RUNNING DENNIS ,BRQSTE~HOUS • Manhall Medoff the exclusive agent to seek spomon for the race. BAA Vice President Tom Brown was named to succeed Clone aa president but no race director was chaeen. Brown aaid he ·hoped the presidency would be a "temporary thing" and indicated that a marathon committee, still to be named. would have a greater role than be in organizinC f\lture races. The BAA al80 voted to establish a finance committee and to expand its Board of Governors from lle'Ven to aa many aa 11 members to provide input from more diverse aouroes. Brown and Tyler said. MWeatmMU ......=i::. °"':'.!.-,._ County Fwgroun<N. Regiatr11tlon _ 9eg1ne •t 7 un. _. Uiguna 1M II $8. For 11'1()(• lnlonn•tlon, ~ ~ Plli'k. F• le $8 cont.a 731-5725. with T-1hlr1 end $3 wUhout. Aw.,d• tor men Md -In 11 different •g• gro11p1. Ho Ill• penelty '°' ~ the Cley of the rece. For more ltllorm•tlon, ooni.c:t 811Peecual .. 1137-3301. L• '•IM•I AD, R•lti.l•t C1t1• •es -5 Md 10tl '** begll'I •1 I a.m. In lA P*'9. r:.. $7 with T-ehlr1 wld S3 wlttloul; i.te l•e• ere $9 •nd $4. Flat. IH1 Hph11t couree. Cont•ct Kitty Rudometkln .. 622~40. ........... u..r .... -6 wld 10ll NN; 10k .,.. .. 7 a.m.. 51t •t 7:46 •·"'· At El OorMto Aaolonlll .... In Long 8-:11.. r:.. la le wlltl T .4fWI Mil 13. wllflollt wltt\. $1 ........ ConUct (213) ~. . ....,,.,,, 11 CllllC T•••·U• 8etlH .............. -Beglrlll ··'"· In Orlllltll Pull In LOI Angel••· Fee for run only, "*"'*" $2, non-member• $4. 8Nr1a 13. ~aguna team faces Germans Hoover honored tonight . the only g_ame of the night against the Long Beach 4~rs at 8. . The festivitid for Hoover and .. AnglerS gear for alhacote Southland salt water anaLen are ieartnc up f« the albacore aeuon and eatly lndlcationt are that we could be in for a better than averap catch U\11 awnmer. . The fl.rat longfin taken on a sport tio.t WM caught by Frank Calvery ~hile fiahina abOerd Spike Taft'• sportfiaher, the "Sea Ventdre," operating out of H & M Landing in San Dle8o. 1bil I first alble, a 16-pounder, waa caught tome l!O mi1ea due 80uth of Point Loma. • Anglers collecting ffrat flags In Newport Harbor for welahin$( in their longfinl are: Dick I Jordan of Balboa 1a1and who boated a 21 '4-pound l longfin, and Vickie Robinson, whb cau1ht a l 1 162-pound alble. Both of these albacore were taken below the I 195 spot, making it a pretty lo~ run for boats baled l in the harbor. Both of the flJ"St fish ~ were i presented on the same da):, June 12. t The albacore are still ln the area· some 60 miles j from San Diego and there is a wide area of flab, i BUT catches have been up and down. Aocordina to I sources at H & M and other landings in the San Diego area. there isn't a lot of early seaaon interest in the longf ins and there are not that many boats ln I the area to stay on top of the schools as they move around the ocean. · , Dally catches are ranging from just a few fl.ah per boat to some sportfishers which are getting into some pretty hw;igry schools and returning with respectable catches. It appears that thO&e who have booked multi- day mini-long range tri~ are getting into the better action as these anglers are able to stay in productive I : water longer, especially during the sun downer bite. ; Water conditions are good with some cool 1 water inside, which could make for a long and j cloee-in type fishing situation through the summer. ! Sport boats working up from Baja report that there are good conditions all the way up the : coastline and there are some large schools of bigeye and/or yellowfin tuna on their way up, too. • To date there have been a couple of big tuna l taken by the sport fleet in the 70-pound class. l '?Even though most of the local talk is about the 1 albacore season, there is some very good surface ! action taking place along our coe.stal shoreline for i thoee fishµ\g out of Davey's, Art's, Dana and t barges. ,II Mixed catches of bass, bonito, yellows and barracuda are common on a daily basis, with the all day boats returning'? Jhe. ~ocks with fuller sacks. , l l N ewcomhe sees 1 ~ big drug problem I LOS ANGELES (AP) -Don Newcombe, the i directbr o( C~mmunity Relations for the Loa I Angeles Dodgers, was quoted in a newspaper interview Wednesday as saying that between 70 and 80 percent of professional baaeball players are 1 preeently using a "mind-altering substance." · Newcombe also was quoted in the Santa I Monica Evening Outlook aa saying that there'• "a l very serious prpblem" on the Dodgers. ! However, at a hastily called news conference · i just before the Dodgers faced the San Diego Padres i in a twi-night doubleheader Wedneeday, the former i pitching star denied saying there was "a 8erious l problem on the Dodgen." ( He also tolq reporters: "When rm talking about mind-alt.erlhg substances, I'm talking about alcohol. Beer, champagne, wine; and when you get into the area of drugs, I'm talking about Valiwn, colul9 marijuana. I'm not talking about heroin. The biggest problem in this country is alcohol." Regarding his published comment about the Dodgers, Newoombe said: "If there is a problem, it needS to be dealt with and should not be swept under the rug. I nev~r said there was a serious problen on the Dodger ballclub or in the Dodger organization." _ . ·However, when asked if he was misquoted, he replied, "No." ' • i I ; i l 1 TBl!4.RECEN1' RETIREMENT of Will Cloney 1 1 director of the Boston Marathon ia "the I estnntnc of a Dl'W era" for the~ nice, 1 l)'I ~ Athletic A.ociation Coun.el William f 'ylel'. I ?,femben of the Laguna Beach High women's 800Cer team will meet a~ from Wett Germany in an exhibition ~ Thunday, .Jwy 8 at El M School in Golden West College bMeball coach Fred Hoover, who doubles u the manager of the Senik Rustlers during the summer Metropolitan Bueball League, will be 'honored by the league toniaht as its "wil'lningeat manager.,, the game will be held at Hart i-----------a Park in Orange. Friends and well-wishen are invited to honor him with humorous gjfts when ceremopies begin at 7. cioney, who under fire abo atepped down I rem the position di BAA presi~t, a pelt be had I .eld II.nee 1964, said pooc health waa the reMOO for I da 1oetbement. He haa had heart trouble. · But Tyler said it was pl'OtnpCed by oppo9fdcm I monc members of the JiAA. the ~offidal ~tor of I he mara~, to a contract Cloney aig:ned ma1cing Lacuna Be.ch. Maute M·aler, the Arti1ta' H1l1tant aoach during the ~ ~. said the pme ia 'part 'ot an annual exchange ~au betwem Lacuna Bellch and the ~lty of 01nabruck- Gelmokt. The pme la aet for 5 p.m. and la free of charge. f :oeKraii takes ·FV. reins· \ Jay ROOD CAIWM>N ,, ... ..., ....... , Call 642-5671. Pul a few JfOrda lo work tdt ou. Hoover, who baa~ the Sen1k Rustlers since 19111, has won five Metro Leegue titles and finished aecond aix timee. Among tboae expected to L--------~=======~ pvtidpete are Anaheim Stadium orpnllt Shay Torrent (with his portable organ), Cal State Fullerton bueball coech Augie Garrido, A.naels' assistant to the chairman l{ed Patterson and Chapman Colleie's Paul Deese. League offidall decided that since today mark's Hoover•a 52nd birthday, it would be an appropriate time to honor butt Hia team la abo scheduled to play Thia WMk.-d come Into Theodore Robina Ford end buy iJlf'I MW or UMd car or tructc Md Y°" wW NOelve • 117 p-. 49'r Red Oevtf llllOrtmenf PMWI We'll blM1 you wtth OUf' 4th of July .... prioM IO dOn't W9lt 'ti , tM fllwwortct .. over. (Offer good 7·1 thN • 7..&.) ll J. l!l 'Y' . . . " iS 30 .eoo 4\ :s2 .ee2 s 40 a3 .648 4 40 38 .62t 6141 33 45 .4:23 13\'o H 40 .412 13141 20 H 2e3 25141 .....,,, DM"9ft 44 2t 903 42 31 .576 a 38 3" .536 5 37 13 52t 6'111 38 '5 607 1 " 37 471 8141 " 40 452 11 ... ,. ........... .,.,... eo... T-5. ~ 3 Seenle 10, TorOlllO 4 ~ '· BeltlmCn 0 °""°" 1 ;. eo.tOll 3 ., ...._.. ,, N9w Yon: 7 (12 lfWnOll Oeki.nd 4, K-Clly 0 ~· 4, C'*-00 !I ,.., .• ca-- ..... (Wl114-1)81 T-(l1111M83-8).n Chlcego (Burnt &·3) 11 MlnnHOtl I fl'ledfem 3-t) r• 8Mttle (Pwry S.7) el TorOlltO (LMI 6-!i) C~ !Betit., 11·4) II 911itlmor. (D ! Martinel, &-<4 . n I Mllweuk• (H ... 4~) •I New York (M•y 1-2 or Mor9en 2-41. n 8otton (Tudor 6-5) •t ~rolt (WllcoM 6-3), " Only g-tclledutecl ~~ W L Pet. Ga Atlenla 45 29 .808 ~ Diego 42 32 .&ea 3 DM111er9 41 S7 .526 II • a., 1'rtincleoo 35 42 .455 11141 Clnc;lnnaU 3 I « .413 14'A .._.on 31 « .413 14141 . ........ONtlMR I ~ 42 33 IWIO ~ St. loul9 43 )4 .551 MontlMI 40 32 .556 Ptttlburgl'I 35 38 483 6 Hew YOftc 38 38 .480 6 • Qllceoo 29 411 .317 14 ....... ,... eo.-= ..... San Diego,~ 1, CNceo<> 3 4, New YOltt 1 ~l.Sl.L~3 AllWM 6, ~ton 4 San Frenc19co 1, ClnelMeU I, (12 inn!np) ,..,..ca- ~ (8-ngwlen 0.1) et CNceg0 (&ltd 44) New York (Scott 5-5) •I Montre•I • (Sendlrwan 1-5). n ! Onlyo-~ AMERtCAN LEAGUE ~5,Angfls3 CALWON&A TIXAI ... , .... .. , hbl Downing If 5 I 2 0 .$ample If 5 2 3 3 Benlo~ II 0 0 0 0 Muzllll cl 3 0 0 0 OeClnct 4 0 1 1 8.8fq.3b 4 0 I 1 Be~ dh 4 0 2 1 H09tlll• lb 4 0 0 0 ~.Jck1n rt 4 0 1 0 G•ubb rt 3 1 O 0 Clerll rt I 0 0 0 Sundbl(g c 3 O O 0 Grleh 2b 4 0 1 0 l.Jhn1n dh 4 O O o Lynn ci 4 I 1 I Rlcn<dt 2b 4 I 2 0 C.,_ lb 4 O 2 O Flynn ea 3 o 1 o FoN ta 2 I 2 0 Stein ph O I 0 0 ~Boonie 3000 ! Totals 35 3 12 3 Tote!$ 33 5 7 4 ._. .., .,.,.,.. Cellfornle 00 I 100 ICl0-3 lll<U 010 000 013-S Two ou11 .._ ~ run eoarld. • S-Olltltl, Aynn. ~-T1h1 1 LOB- C •lllornla 10, T1u1 6 28-Downlng, C1r1w. HR-Lrnn (51. Simple (5) $- Boone. DIClncea. FoN. ~ •HllOl•SO Forxll 7'1> S 2 2 2 2 A.-(L.3-3) 1141 2 3 3 1 3 ,_ Mltleek 61.'111 3 2 2 6 Sc:hrnldl (W.2· 1) ~ 1 0 0 0 4 HBP-'>y F'oflCh (Maulllll T-2·31 "-14,133. """"'t2,"911<9oJl3 lloM9ll 000 ~ 010-3 1 1 otitt611 J 432 ~ oo~-12 11 o HWtt. o,.O. 12~ "ponee 111 tnct Oedmen. laFrencol1 (7): Petr)', foblk (II). P. Underwood (9) 8llO Panlall, Faller (1), W- ~'Y. 7.s. L-Hura1, 2·3. HR-Bolton. Riet ( 11). Nlehols 12~ Detroit. IYle (81 "-24,691 ~I, OriolleO Cllyelend 013 000 401-g 12 O Baltimore 000 000 000-0 4 O Sutcllll•. Whitson (8) 1no eando. Flllnlgen, Slll\houM (3), T Mattlntt (7) end Nolen. W-SutcJlllt, ll-3. L-Flenagen. M "-14,259. Merlnen10.--•4 SMl1il 220 2()0 400-10 16 2 T°'°"10 000 , 010 300-4 9 0 Bltttll end SWMl; SlllC>. Seten.y (4). R L JteltlOrl (1). OatVtn (8) end Whlll w - BMttll. 1-4. L-Stll«>. 1-8. HRt-S..1111. ZWI 2 (7~ HtnOlraon (8) A-12,339 ,...... ........... ' Chk:ego 001 000 011-3 ' 0 ~· ooo 030 10._. 8 1 Hoyt ~ Rik, 8. c.tillo. R 09¥l9 ti) ~ . W-8. Ces1111o. 3-5 L-Hov'. 1o.4 S-R. ~· (6). HRt-QilcaoO. e.rnu.d (4). Alk (7). "-11,298. A .... ...,.o Olkllnd 100 000 210-10 1 K8r.-Cl11 000 000 000-4 7 I Keough 1nd M. Ht~th: Spllttorlt, Quleenlllrry (I) end W.....,. W--K._,..n, 1-10. l-11p11t1ort1. 7·5. "-24,ee}. .,_,,v....-1 Mlwlukll 105 000 010 002-8 17 O Hew Yori! 000 010 402 000-7 14 1 Lire:!\, 8tmetd (7), Angert (7). eat1erly t 1tl • Y091: John, LIAocill (31. Fruter (8), ~0M1941 (I). R1wtey 1121 eno W)'Nllat, &plnO (10). W-Flngert, 6-5. L-Rftll4r/, 4-<1. S-E•ltrly (2). HR-Mllwtukff, G. -Thofnll (18~ A-20.816. Top 10 (e.-1111 , ........ ) A.--.c:MI 'IT II H Pct. i~ 70 275 &9 97 353 T «onto 66 202 37 68 .337 Mllwlolkll 67 277 41 82 332 • ~ Clly 48 212 25 70 330 ~· 62 244 43 10 321 , Belllmort 10 116 32 64 ,323 ~City Tt 211 38 90 .323 -60 141 15 41 .311 °"'°" 11 211 46 16 .t 17 ~. ~ aty • 227 ,. 7t .117 ........ Tllornton, Cl1v•l111d, 11: Ogllvle, IMl'-Mt, 11: O.~ ........ It: •• 11; ~ MlnnllOea. .......... Mt"M· K1n1H Cit~, II: Tllfrnlon, l1Y1l1nd, ~: Lvnneltl, Chlc190, H : . ......,. rr~ Oglhlll. • • .... NATIONAL LUOUI 01-:.:~1 UM IMHO L08 AMeaLll ., ..... . , ..... Wloliftt Cl 3 0 0 0 81.1 2b 3 1 I 0 AkMrd•" 4 0 t 0 LAndr .. Cll 3 I I 0 11110itn .. 4 0 0 I lalltr " 4 I I 4 lMctllO rt 4 0 0 0 Gulrfltrf 4 ' 1 0 T.Kllll'ICIY 0 3 0 0 0 Cey n 4 0 t 1 ,_,lllnt ,b 3 0 t 0 ~ ID t 0 2 0 lllluat 3b I 0 0 0 M11111l lb I 0 0 0 ~llnnetv ab' o o o ec1oeo11 o :11 o ; o lolllbfO' p 2 0 0 0 All .... 1 .. • 0 0 0 l..tltbw. pM 1 I 0 WllOll p 3 t l 0 8HO'Ne0 0000 Tot.alt 30 1 3 1 lottlt H 0 t 0 lo«e 111 IM!fte• 811\ Diego 000 000 001-1 LOI AftQllll 000 ~ 1011-5 £-S"eleur. LOB-Sen DltO~ 3. l.o• AnQllM 7. 28-Sclolcll. a-,.,o HR-w., (16). SB-LlndrHUll, Ptrkln1. S- S&11, l.andrellux. SF-TemplttOllo hll o.._. IP H II Ill U IO ElchllblrQlr IL,6-11) I 8 II 4 2 I LMMtMM Wllcl\(W, .. 5) 8 S 1 1 I 6 S.HoWI 1 0 0 0 0 0 Wllcll pllc:Md to 2 blll.,. In the 8tll T-2'08 hdrMl,Dodael'94 NCONO GAill lAN DllQO LOI ANGal.11 ....... .., ..... WIQolnert g 0 0 0 Su2b l 0 0 0 AldWidt H 3 1 1 0 Lend11a ci 3 1 I 0 LUCNP 0 0 0 0 Belter If t 0 0 0 ~ p 2~ 0 0 Gutrtt• rt 4 0 0 0 Tmp41n " rb 0 0 Mor>dly If 4 2 2 3 RuJons el 4 1 I 0 Cty311 • O O O ~iM lb 4 t 2 2 Gerwy 111 2 O O O ~'°' !lb ~ 1 t 0 Mlf9hl 111 2 0 I 0 Flannery 2b4 1 2 t YllOI' c 2 1 1 0 Swt9Mr G I 0 0 0 SGloec:ie ph 1 0 0 0 T Kenndy c 2 1 I 3 Belenger M 2 0 1 0 ShOWp 2000 RuMlllM 0000 SllUll lb 2 0 1 0 Stewwt p 1 0 0 0 Ort• Ph 1 0 0 1 Fo,.ter p 0 0 0 0 Jo.Mila ph 1 0 0 0 Nlldnfur p 0 0 0 9 A.Pel\l p 0 0 0 0 Ra.nck ph I 0 0 0 Tot•'• 38 & 9 4 Totell 32 4 8 4 lcof• .., lnftlftel Sin Diego 000 0-41 001-6 L09 Mgtlll 200 I 10 000--4 E-S11w•r1 LOB-Sen Diego S, Lot "nglllt S. 28-Aennery. HR-Monday t21 (SI. l . Kennedy (8). Perkin• (2) S8-Lend•-.• S-YllOlf. Ian 0-.. • H R l'R M 10 S"-(W,7-3) '6'1> S 4 4 O 2 Lucu ,.... 1 0 0 2 0 DIL_, (S.S) 2V. O 0 O 1 3 Loi ........ Stewtrt S 3 3 O 3 Fortier (L,3-S) 2 4 1 O O Nlldlnfuer 1 2 1 0 I "p-I 0 0 0 1 t Nlldlnlutr l)ftdlld to 3 bllltr$ In Int Ith k8P-by Nildlnlul< (LtllC>vra). T-2 33 "-47.271. , '°'<-1, CYlll 3 POtaburgl'I 011 113 000-7 11 t ~ 002 001 OQP-3 4 2 D-Aoblnlon, Seu<ry (7) end T Pena, Le Smith. Proly (61. KraYIC (6), Tldrow (7) end J DaYll W-D Robinson, 11-3 L-LI. Smith, 1-4. S-SCuHy (4). HRs-Pllllburoh. Sterg•ll ( l l. Chlceoo. Sendberg 13) A-1 .osa. E1po14, Melt 1 New Yor-000 tOO 000-1 S 0 Montreal 1 tO 000 20•-4 15 t Falcone, Lynell (71 and St1a1n1, ·Gulllekeon. RellfOon 1111 ano Carter W-Guillckaon, 5·7. L-Falcone. 4-5. S - R41ardon ( 13). HIU.-Mont•NI. Wellteh ( 111. Certer (IS~ "-22,385 l'llllllMl,CerdlNllJ St. LOUii 010 001 001_...3 13 o ~ 130 200 OOll~ 13 0 F«edl. K-12), Kut (4). Slupet (7). Bllr (8) end Porte<, Ch<lltenson, Mc<lr-(9) end B. Dhu W-Ch1111eneon, -4-4 L- Forxtl. 11-4 S-MeGr-(2). A-31,IOS .,_ s. Aetroe 4 11oustoo 001 200 001-4 6 o "tllnll 000 100 004-5 1 1 0 Knepper. Molfill (9) and PulOll. P. Nieluo, C. Dll2 (9) and a.-1 W-C 0411. 1--0 L-Knewer. 2-8 HRl-H'!Uaton. Pu)OI$ ( 1 ). Allen1a, Ho•ne• 2 ( 13). Murphy 1221. A-10,308. a.ta 7, .... ' Cinclnnlll 000 001 131 000-6 15 1 San FrwlCilco 110 000 031 001-7 16 2 Btrtnyl, Price (Ill. Hume tTl, Kern 19). Ltltwendl (11) end Ven Qo.dlr, lMkey, L ....... (1). 8err (8), Holland (8). Minton (8) and Mey. W-Mlnlon. 4--4. L-Ltlbolftdt, S.3. "-358. Uttle Leegue TOUllNAMDIT OF C'H.UllPtONI (Dletrlcl U) (et OcMnYllw Amlt'lc:an U ) Friday'• 0-RoblnWOOd va. Oceenview Amer1uo. 5 30 Set\ffday'aO- Foun111n V1lley North VI Seavlew. 10 Lm W11tmlnster "m.,ieen vs. W•tmlnsler NetlOnal. 1 p.m Huntington Valley "'· Sol ... 4 p.m ~-o.n.. Stinton vs. Fountain Valley Nor lh· Sel"'9w winner. 1 p.m T'IMldall"• a-Oceanvlew Nallonel vs Weatmlnallr Net1ona1W11tmins1., """'lean wlnn9r, S 30 • .....,..o- Fountllin Vtf'-Y South vt. Huntington VlllNy·BolN winner. 5:30 NOTE: Semlfln8la w11 bl pltyed Thu<tday, July 8 a nd Frld•r. July II et 5:30, Olwnpiol~ pM It Saturday • .M'f 10 11 1 p.m. L...-. ..... °°" ANoqtet• CUllllllNT AWAllD9 A 'llliM: 61 -Clllrllt Of'ow, All1t Mldlll: 68 -F'1111k Rolli; 611 -Oii Clnfllld. I "lllM! N -Mel Ctrpenter; 68 -Bob Lolhr1~611 -Wiii Moore. C 66 -Allll IMng; 69 -Diet< • J-. Smith, 70 -JOhn Drury. D AIM: 70 -Ted ltMlr: 71 -George Mltterm1n; 73 -Jeck McDowell, Andy umlllld. Frank Dlemond. a '1lflll: • -Emll Allllandlr. 13 -Rich 1'91IBOll. Olrret1 FeQen. PQAetatletloe .~~ 1. TOfll Kita, 10. II: 2. TOii'\ ~ 10.21; 3. Scoct Hodl, 70.el; 4, Jeck NIClillul. CrliO s....,,10.11. AWIMM DRIWIG D18TM9CI 1. Tewa OUIU. 274.3; 2. o.n "°"'• 210.a, 3. Pllrfl9 a.-t, 2Q.1; 4. ""° ~ 2t8.1; s. ~·-.a . ..... AQI .. ,,.,.AY 1. ~ ,,_., .819:' 2. Milt Md, .770: t. --..., .1'5: 4. T«11 KIM. 0..-Ulftlr. , 14 f. -••ouu"'* t. '** ........ 71$, t ....... ~ .721;3 Clh!n ......... fl4;4.0W...,,.... AMI "-!. ·'°'· AWIUel NT'TS ,_ --1. Cflll ....... 21M: a. ~ ....,d, 21:11: a, ..., er.nae-...... ~ lufM, ..... :..~ =r.:2.-.. 1~ ~26; 2. TOii\ 1<119, ..ltl: 3. °"" .....,, .11•: 4. ~ ht• . .aot: •· w.-....... 204. , ..... ~ 1. Hlf't P•t•, Tom W•llllopl,~ ...... 11 ..... l'llllO, ·Din ,., :'t. ~ Cllampttt, Mlt; ~ _......_. t. T• IUle. IM: t, Cf9lt .....,, tf*; a . ......... ~ ... 0....111:1. cw. t . . ··~-·'·ii... ; •. .-----'". :.i .. .. i L LMIW • . . ... • '""'° RACI. 440 y8"11 aoott i..ew1e (lhrdl a.eo 3.oo uo Ctlr9IOI cO•rdO&I) tAO &.OQ Im Kelly Qr1111 (Hlll1> 3.20 "IM> r~· Ci.ty NllW., II• l'OI S\lft, My FtlQht Plan, Sciund 01 S~. HtmPIM Hope, 'f 111 Tlml!llllW Time' 21 .... POU«TM llACI. 440 yerdt ~ (Cwdo111 s 20 2 10 2 10 • Leiding Stir (lack9Yl 2.10 2 10 Doc: HNI (C•N9"1 2 20 Alto rlOICI M111er1 Clltl. Jlmltlta, Tiii ""'llnlen. [HY Ooubl• Three. Do YathlnltlmtuY. Ml• CNM Chicll Ttmt. a I 61. • UACT A ($.1) P9ld 14 80. P.-TH llACL 440 y11d1 LO... H Monty (Hcdml) 4 00 2,90 2.40 Oollyt H"'9 (CltrlNI) 3.80 4 00 Mr Dynamite o.cll (Paullnll "v.20 Aleo rlC»d Regal PIMlu••. Thi Plen. Bright Hour. Go Easy Ledy. Sol/1hlm Storm, Roctill Rib Timi. 21.82 llllTH llACI. -440 ya1d1 Klluunattlne (AllmUNlrl) S6 20 17 llO 1 I 40 0-rldl (MY*) 8 llO 7.80 Ml Secret Cesh !Hirt) 12 00 "I'° •9'td. Euy Doded, F11t Wheel. ~~~1~ -::~Swift Requnt, Johny Blm, Timi: 22.07. la IXACTA (3·2) plld S251 80. HVINTH llACI . 440 yardt. Mlaa C..,., Credit (Harl) t 1.40 2.60 2.20 Justanold Love (C1rOou) 2.20 2. to Gt~l'd Stephana (C•ff08<) 2.20 "'•o raced. P11ch Picker, Cuhn In, Flying• E1tpr1nlon, Suu Polley. Olatlnctlvely, Biulng JOI 811 Je1 Time: 2178 la IXACTA (7·21 p11d $27 llO llQHTM llACI. 350 yWdl 8unn1 Em (Hirt) 7 60 5 oo 3 20 Sy.1111 (P1ut1n1) 7 00 3 80 Relae "' ku11111 IC•uoerl a 60 Aleo rtcld "dloa s -1 Baby. Reven Stuy, Sul* Hemp, Mr Hoity B.,,., Trylog lo fSll&M, Bleck C.t FINll Time 1193 • la IXACTA (1·7) paid $33 00 la 'IC1C SIX (4·8--4-3-7·1) plld $13,569 00 with lhrM winning lk:llell (SIJI ~) $2 ~ Sh• cor\IOlatlon paid $16.llO With 1 S6 .... nlng 11c1t1111 (five hor-l ... TH RACE. 400 y11d1. MllQlllll M-(Aimuuen) 8 60 S.20 2.60 Coney llltnd Whlu (Tonks) 8 00 3.40 ~llorl Jet (C11tdoze) ~, ·.., 2 60 4lto •teed· 11 Pey, Neila Rocklll, M11d1 P .... Rutha C1rl 8a1, Umlta Jet. Ylbby Debby Otw . .lippy Time. 20 29. la I XA,QJ A,17 -3) paid '77 80 Allende~ll.708 Hoftvwood Petit wt:DNt:ID"Y'S llUUl.H tlOlll • ..... , llMlroutMlt'ed -11ftt) ~lfllT llACI. l'Ao miles Bold "ek (Vtlan~ll' 12 80 7.60 4.80 Triplane IMcCarron) 5.80 4.00 Preas Notlee' (Plncayl 3.20 "i.o reced. Donald, Regal Sporl. Lotty lov.,, Mec;don Time. 1.49 1 /5 NCONC> llACI. 1 1/16 milts Whittling Low (Slbllll) t9 40 11.00 8.40 Y~ 8elll (Vellnzutla) 7.80 S.80 Jvay a Alleorl (Pldfou) 25.20 Also ·~d Ktull Will Do, ludorvlla. lo•tls tCJtt!t~ldn1g111 .. ~. 1t1.-r1 , S9nl Mi. SIMy ~. Eattei llly,-liOble Cellbrlty. Rulla Knoll Tlmt t.441315 12 DAILY DOYM..I 1~1 paid S150 00. THIN> llACI. 6 luflonot. StrllOf Sena!« (Vlnzlll 7.40 3.20 3.00 PrlnQI Of Nott IPlnclly) 2.60 2.60 Rulla King (Dllahou&MYll 8 40 "'eo recld llobbll'a cw-. Iron "1fy. Olympic King, Dllby Let II Snow. Sir 41- Hlghllnd Hooter RISlng HoPI, UPI* Level Dlvll Timi 1:10 • DACTA (4-3) plAd $43 50 . fOUllTH llACI. Ont mite on turf s-1 Skell (Bliek) 20 00 8.20 3.80 W•ttrn Stlllel (GutHe) 5.80 3 20 One Up (UlllhOU ... YI) 4.llO Alto 1ac1d Ke1blc. Rlllu1n1, Winning Laughter Time. 1·35 215 t6 EXACT" (2·3) paid $190 SO fwnt llACI. 8 furlongs Sobrlhoml>fe (Sholmkf) 10 20 6.40 3.40 Dendy P-IMcCerronl 5.80 4,60 Holaty O'Tooll (Vllen.rue4el S 20 "l•o •teed: Colm1n. Cen't Be 8111. TtblolO, Walk Peal, Ololty. Happy Etcort Time 1:Cl9 4/S, M IXACTA 12~) paid $ Ulil .. 00. Sllmt llACI. S'A lunonga Eattlllt (Dllal\OUaee,el 5.80 3.40 2 80 Ledlrie Grand (Plncay) 3.60 3.00 Miu Olattnl Dly (i.tce.r•onl 3.40 Also •aced P1opert11. Gren•ll•. Cutltland, Prldornln1111. Gwen'• Penny. L..cky Llkllidl Time 104 31$ NYDfTH RAC&. 1 1116 mlMI Oii turf. $urpf"' Gl«.91 t"\MI) 17 20 1 .20 uo Dorce<o (CMltnldl) -4.40 3.20 Heart a..t (Pincly) 2.80 Alto !IC•Cl. Rtd0...0111>1•. "Y••n. duw111111. llnw ' 4'1 2/5. • UACTA (1-6) plid $170.00. u '9Clt ••• (l-4-2·2-7-1) plld 1 131,· 496..ao with one Winning tlcilll (tilt honM). 12 Pick SI• coneolatlon paid $935.20 With 48 wlnn4l\g tickets lllYI hor-~ 12 Pick SI• KfllGll oonao1111on paid 1791.80 "'411\..,,..., winning tk:kl41 (lour hcnll. one tetllCll~ UCIMTH llAC:.. 5 'Ao lurlonQI. e.m11 (OllY• .. l e 40 2.eo 2.-40 Prl,_ lunilllh (Vallnrull8) 2.20 2.20 Je Miil (ShOlmlktrl 3.00 "''° rlOld: lr1tll Love. BodY T Ilk, Wiik In Thi Snow. Time. I 04. MIN114 llACI. I 1116 mlltl.' SNyne McGuire (Mc:Crrn) 4,20 2.80 2.40 Ollll Qr-(CMlantdl ) 3.20 2.40 Ah Nth Hiid (Gutrre) 2.80 Alto rlOld· I'm Gullty. Gld't Gl<I • .-.• Klndy. Todo. Timi: 1°42-316. • DACTA 11-n ,..ci m .eo. A~1t.Mt. ....., A.._AM .....,aoc:CD LIA(Mll <• L11 e:.!i'r. ci.) 4 2 t 0 . ~ ..... 0 H 18 2 Ill " t 18 14 a 11 21 ....... DlwlMa I I ' ' 4 IO to 12 11 n ,. 2 2 t1 Q " ....... .M'f II -Senta Ana \'L IMfte (7 .30); J'1lti I -Founu11n Vllllly "" Hunt1119ton ....,, (7 30). AA'/ 10 -eo.i. ........... 0r.,,.. 111.- MINlon ""lo "'-NlwOOr1 8Mdl (8:30) .M'f 16 -FOUMein V""-t VL ...... Viejo (7 30). .My 16 -N9wpott 8Md'I ..... Huntington 8udl (7.30); July 17 -All .. t., gllml (l:30l LNlllRtl ._.,. 1 Cer1o1 Gerdlr\U (Colt• MeN). I: John Boyte (Cotti M111), 8; 3 Keith Wellt y ll•vlne), 7, P1t1r Trllunovlch (~wpofl Buell). 1 coamo. Toronto Monti.al Chk:ego NAa&. 1t.ftdlng1 ... ..,.,.~ WLCl"QAW .... 14 4 43 21 4' 123 118a72t21ff 11 7 33 28 21 88 5 12 27 31 28 66 Soulhem Dhtl6lll • For1 Ltudetdl t3 I 43 42 40 1 t6 Tempe Bey 9 12 32 44 28 12 Tulle I 10 S5 37 31 75 JICk_,v1111 • e 11 28 Je 21 76 W11tlrft OhWlll Sen JON vencouver 8'11111 ~~ 11 • 38 34 28 82 11 e 34 n 21 " 8 10" 28 28 78 8IO:I03225 • 7 11 22 " 18 58 Edmonton 6 12 21 37 11 80 Six pof<ltt .,.. _.,did for • ~ or 0Vlr11"" victory. Ont bonUI pof<lt for -v goel ll()Ofld with a muJmum of tn.. oer g1m1. No bonu1 point 11 1w1rd1d for OVlrliml J1f lhOolOUI goelt. ........ eo.- Jacll_,..... 4, Tempe Bey 0 Chicago 2. FOr1 Lauderdeil 0 Edmonton t. Portlend o Sen JoM 4, Cownoe t Montrlll 3. S.. Diego 2. (llO) SNttll 2, Toron10 1 ,......,.ca-- No ~ edlldul9d Deep ........ .... ., • ..,IPORT..,.rr (Alt'• ~) -115 engllre: 71 bonito, H b111, 1 b1rr1cud1, 307 mlCk.,el. 1 lllllbul, 1 yelowUll, 2t rod! IWt. ~· L..Mk•} -210 engltn: 377 ""° bua. 154 cellco b•n. t o bonito, 1 b1rr1cud•, 60 •ock lltll\, 4 hlllb111. 412 ............ DAMA WHAN' -276 anglart: 2'4 1119, 116 blrTICUde. 101 bonito, 1 ~. 83 madttrll, eo rode 11111. oc:s·--70. lfl9llrt: 31 c:lllOo b•H. 81 ""d b111, 13 rock flell, 64 mtekeral ~:'~=:-~'::l. "'"1'lkMl'll· -""'~ ... . 43 ~ LONG alACH ( .. l•lfll ~) -15 mnQllrc 4 llftd ~ 2 «*loo 1119.. IO rOdl ""'· 7 llllll>ut. 50 ,._..,.., 21 berT-.dl. *"'' -30 en9tere: 10 11nd ba ea, 1 llllbut. 200 ,....,.._ (ca....A ..,_., - 93 englln' 171 ~ 100 llOnllo, 294 callco -· 37 ""°' """ 12 l'llllllul, 24 roek ""'· MAL MACH -82 11191tn· 200 r«* flah, 102 und beu. 14 cellco lllU, I hlllbul, 50 mactter•. to blrT-.dl. .... -a2 eng11r1: 15 Nlnd a-.. 20 lllllbul, 400 mecl< .. et. MORllO eAY (Vlr•'• l.Mldl111) -S2 englert: 15 llnll cod. 117~~ cod, 185 rid roc:I< cod, II red ll\IC>Plf, ._ 1119 Thll •Mil'• trout pa.nt1 LOI AMOaLel -Clyttal l.llce, Pyt'tmld Lek•. lllVlllllDI -Derk Canyon C•Hk, Fulmore Lelli, Hemet Lake. SAN NMAllOtNO -Jenkt l.llct. Senti ""• Rivel. Sonte ""• AAler (South F or1l). SH-"'OOCI Lal<e. IAN 0.:00 -OOlnt Pond. Sen Lula Rey RI-. S-ater Rlwr KENf -"Ider Crtlk, Bone Crllll. Cedar Offlel(, Kern River (Otmocr11 Dim to KR1 Pow11hou11, Borell Powerhou11 to OemOC••I Dam, IMIHlll• D•m to 80<111 Pow.rhouae. KR3 PowerhouM to Llkl IMbllle), Nobe YOUflQ er.k T\IUM -Ory MMdow er.tk. Kern RIYer (FllMew Olm to KA3 P~. Jol\nsond86e 8'tdgl to FllrYllw Olm). Kern Ri¥W (Soulll Forll), Ptc>l*~•I Cl'llll, 8ouUI Cr..a, Tull Rlwr (North end South Forllt of Mein Forti) AL"9la -Kenny~ IMYO -Belt• er..ii. 8lg Pini er.tk. 8WIOP CrMlt (L-. Mlclclll, South end lntek4 llJ, Cottonwood C•Mk, O.orges Creek, Good1l1 Creek. lnd1pend1nc1 en.ii. ~ Pirll Creek. Hortn l.lke. °"' C111k (HOllh FO•k), Pl1111nt Velley Rlltrwlt, ~ CrMlt, Tebooee CrMlt. Tinernlha er-i.. luttll er.k. MONO -~ """"°"· 8uck• Creek. Convlcf Creek, Convict l 11t1. OMdmerl Cr-Nit. Ellery I.All•. Gl«ge I.All• Ollll CrMlt, °'.,' like. Or_, Creelt. ~ Liiie. Hiiton er..k, June LMI, LAI Vining Crlllt, LAI Vining Cr.-(Soutlt Forti). Lmll Welker I.Mt., um. Wiiker Rlwer. Lundy l.Mtt, Memll l.lkl, Mtmln04tl CrMlt, Mii') Leke, McGee CrMll. Miii CrMlt. Owlllt RIYer (llenton CrOlllng and Big 8ortftae). Pin• Crfflt, RIYtrM Crffk, Roblnion CrMll, Rock CrMll (PtrtdlM Cemp to l'om'1 Piece, Torn'• Pl-uptlrMm to Roell Crllll Like. Aodc CrMlt Uh to 1M end of ttle roed), Aodt CrMlt Lllkl, """' Crwk, S.OdllC>IQ Creell, 8eddlltllO l.11<1, Slllntltn Critic, 811Yw I.Ake. S-.... Cflllc, Tioge Lallt, """" Uillll llo~ J..U::: end Low9r), Twin Liii• ~). Cr..... Virginia Cr9lk (\Jpc)er and L-). Wlllttr Rlvw (Clwtl Ae1 c.-ound to town of W•lker, L••vl11 'lll11do w1 Cltnpgrownd to lonGn artdge). J ' ,..nn, • ._. '° womm"Cb..a nMn." ilhi • .,r, • ""-' IPDrt tar WG1D1n "Who ha._., competed befcn. • It'• DOD-.,_'-'1ne to aDICDI who ~'t competed ln lpOl'ta. 0 EVEN MOt\E lnvtt!nc 11 the limplidty o( the tport, Adami lnllata. I 6 ( ''BeclUM recqueib&u'la an fMY 1por\ to .learn for th' ~· lra •Y~t 1UCCe91 • ' t ,910 for tome<>ne h r:: ne i ayed It before," ...c:t.arot, 'I I I She; • )lf \he Or• Cout t.oumanienl, which ff t.hll July 4th weekend 1 populu. • enqugh to,~~ oompetiton from •• fatr away H Florid• and lfC'.anac&a. I I l « 1 ·:rve '°' tW9 k.ida hl9m 0m,C.· •nd one Jrom Seattle 1tayina witb ,me for,um ~fl ahe UYJI. "And one of ~' litla wlN playw on ~ ~ lO\U with me ,.)fa11ha· MacDonald, ,J}ways. come. out from J'lorid.a with bu hwbMd fO( thia C>Nt. It's a very popular ~nt." I Ra cq~~ball requirea a combi~tion of attributea for 1ucce1•, according to Adams . Strenltl\ .. 1.tamina and apeed a.re all etlellt.l.al ingredients. So are brains. '· ~ "YOU• JtA VE to survive the pre91ures of ~ing in a confined area kno~ your cornpeUtor is right next 'to you. It creates a different kind of pressure you don't see in ,too many other· l YJ~chting • • act1v1ty ve.ry light By ALMON LOCKABEY DIJIJ ................ Sailing oompetition in Orange County will be light this weekend with Dana Point Yacht Club's Dinghy Regatta being the only scheduled event. OOMPETES -Co.ta Naa•a Lynn Adami, rai\ked N'o. 1 in the ~nlted Stales~ W!ll com~te ln thl~ weekend's 'th ree,-wall racquetball to~t at ()range c.c-t Colle •. ·~·" she aaya. While racqueiball hasn't wandered too flU'. from the U.S. boW)daries, the sport is starting co become popular in Canada aha just recently Japan. "~e're going over ihere (Japan) to do some clinks and exhibition work," .she .._Y~·· "If you want to plaf racqueftiiill µi Europe, the only place to play is on -. mill t.ary base." Next s t op tot Ada m s ts Anchorage, Alaab, where she'll com pet e I n a n o n -tour' tournament. The regular women's tour concluded last week in Denver where Adams earned her U.S. champion title. Come September, the tour begins again and Adams will again start makinl a living. Tournament to feature rule changes But jhere-will be plenty of actlon»along the Southern When some of the nation's top California coast with major professional a nd amateur events being scheduled fl'Om San racquetball players converge at Die~o to Marina del Rey. Orange Coast College this Biggest event will be the 15th weekend for the 1982 three-wall renewal of the Marina del Rey to tournament, they'll find a few San Diego race, co-S'pOnaored by new rules ln effect. WindJammers . Yacht Club, The ninth annual tourney, Mar an a de 1 R e,,t , and wNch attracted more than 450 ~11. Yrht ~u\. ~~~o~d1~t· ol,tJt ~;-~port is that there will Mo!1<1t¥· · - be 400 or-trm1pts stadiAg the 1 rTOtfftlament d.flector Barty I popular race which has beoome Wall.ace says the key change in the largest sailboat race to start this year's tournament will be and finish within the borde.rs of the elimination of serving oorners the U.S. It rivals in numbers the to combat what usually turns out· N e w po r t -to -En s e n ad a to be a serving cont.est. With the international race which draws new court layout the server must more than 600 competitors. place the ball nearer the cent.er Y-,5ni.,ftom ever~ pl~asure of the court. It will make for ..Potl Jtl SQ\dhem Califonua are more returns and longer raWee. "enterea iir1he event which "It's.never been tried before. I includes lntemational Offshore think the fans will like it," Rule ratings, Pe rforman~e Wallace predicts. "Plus, ours ia Handica_p Racing Fleet, Midget the only tourney where the Ocean Racing Class and ocean server gets just one serve. You racing catamarans. have to be careful to get the ball The race starts at 11 a.m. in play.'' SAturday and the first yachts Divisions for this year's will be, arriving in San Diego tournament a re men's open S.ww:iay. singles and doubles, men's B c::::::" Clllllornil YIChflng Asloel•llon singles and .doubles, men's C · Onftllt c_., doub~es, men's senior singles and Oen• Point Y11Ct11 Club -Dinghy AtoeN. doubles, and a new category, s.iurctay.lAIAls••u '--1...... men's master doubles for Altrnltoe eay Y.c:M Club -Fourth o1 J1tty 45-year-olds and over. \... AtoMt• 111 *-> Saturdly, ~. Women's categories include A 0.::,°'~1Y~~~ ~~ and B tingles and doublee and ~ l'crililir-' another new dM1ion, tenior w ._.. _:--..,._, doublea. A mixed boys ~ girlB ,ID ~~i ~s.-;,,~1~:-r Cat4c.~y for 16~year-olds and sc:'1h"'Croe~f Corlnilllan Y1chl Club -under IS also planned. ~ r~ SC::·~. Ac1iorl ia acheduled to begin Soult'MeNm Yeatit Club -R'lllll Mwlne'' arownd 8 a.m. each day and c1e1 "-Y to a.. Diego r;f?• ~. continue until 7 p.m. Mltllon lllY Yecllt CM> -Fnctack4W • 8eflel , ........ ) $Murd8y. s b k -ks Oceeneldt Ytc111 Club -Club' CrulM. • I tar UC spea S.turdly. • ' • Corenedo vtcht CM> -Pop~ • Of • ,uFJawe skater JoJo Starbuck. Jib. hlMICeo ll:Wft.llOnll. Sund41Y. ~· 1,wi,ll bei the featured apeakel' at. SllvW o.te Y*ht Club -~ '°' the Irvine Snnrt. Club's monthly ow~,_, s.tuntey, Sunday. ,..... - Sentt 8#1>1r~I ~ _ s.man1oe .. m•elin~ July 8 ·at Victoria Ntutlcl ltHAf) a.lurd8y. ve11 T/opttt ,.. S~t.ion m Newport Beach. . llOf\,,..-, 9'.l\dllf.· , L.lc . , '.{he U:45 luncht;(>ll ls available o::'r= v~~~:!) S.~:'J~t~•bot: . to 1membe'--~ at t$~ foO eac!ih andF Sundty. I , 'I Jl9fl~U.:111 a •'4 eac • OC' A'*'Pt YllCllt Club -~·· CrulM ta.n ·~""Uons, call Ron Gromman '*VO to e.tlllt\e '*1d). July ""11· .at.~1~553. From Page C1 OODG€RS :S~ BEVERLY UDYOFF: DAVE GLEASON .,. Bue, ·Gaucho share award , B easley .. Scribner honored Orange Coast College basketball star-Q)rU Beasley and Saddlebac.k College tennia stai\d®t Mark Scribner have been na.med the top community college male athletes of the year in Orange County. In addition, Golden West College volleyball star Beverly Lldyoff has earned Orange County's female athlete of the year honors. The awards are sponsored by the Sports Information Directors of Orange County. · Roger See of Fullerton College and Dave Gleaaon of Orange Coast were named the county's top men's and women's coaches, reapecti:~· see coaches Fullerton's men's basketball sq and Gleason coaches OCC'a women's basketball ~. Beasley and Scribner became the third duo to share the men's honor since the awards were established in l 97e. Baskett>aµ standouts Ray Qrgill (Orange Coast) and Ron Davis (Cypress) shared the award" in 1979. Kevin Magee (Saddleback) and swimmer Bill Babashoff (Golden West) were co-winners in 1980 Water polo and swimming star, Kile Ha.niesty of Cypress, took the award last year. Beasley and Scribner were selected from a stro~ field of community, .coll~ athletes. Others nonunated included: Doug Rybieki. a •olfer from 1Cypress; Larry JacksC)pi a run~ ~ck on FUilerton 's 1981 footb"ll ~ · 1 ey, a wre.tler from Golden Wes\; ani:l G a water polo player from Santa Ana. ' Beasley, a 6-2, 185-pound guard/forward who pre~at Costa Mesa High, was the Jeeding ICOl'er tn e County in 1982, averaging 23.4 points per game. e was named the South Cout Conference'• "Player of the Yeaf," and was also named to the All-state basketball team, selected by the California Community College Coaches Aleodation. The OCC star 'became the South Coast Conference's all-time leading scorer in 1982 tallying 320 points. He surpassed the old cont~ mark of 284 points, set by Cerritoc College's Ron Kru..idhof in 1972. ~asley became the second highest sco~r in OCC h18tory, concluding his two-year career with a total of 1,002 points. He has received a full acholarship to play basketball and t>a,eball next year at Arizona State University. Scribne.r was the Miaaion Conference's moat valuable tennis player in 1982. The classy southpaw won the conference title Jn both singles and doubles. Scribner was the Southern California doubles c=~· and finished second in the state in PAC..C: YllW 11-.c>llAl.Pdl CemtlefY Mortu1rt Chepel·Orematory 3500 P.cillc View Drive Newpott Beech 644·2700 NcCoaMeal MOITUAl•S l 1Qun1 Beach •94·9415 l 1Qun1 Hills 768-0933 San Ju1111 C.p1strano '95-1776 H*llQI LAW..-MT. Of.IYI Mor1u.rv • Cen'9tery Crem1torv 1625 Gisler Ave • C:O.taMeu 540-5554 I . Ac:nnoue~ The ~:-~;:'1~ doing ~-: EANl!'S OOUAMIT ·MEATS 4e2 E. 17th Sttwt. Coeta ........... .' Calltomla • -· Denny Lee Boltelmen. 1808 w. P11111 "GM. Anaheim C1lllornle so. • • Ttlll ~' oonduded ~ 8i lndMdual. • OMny Lee 8oltelman Tl)lt ..-nan• -Ned with Coun1y Cr.ti of Orenge COunty on Jurie4. 1N2. ,,..,. Publlehed Or•no• Co••• Delly Piiot. Jun. 10, 17, 2'. """' 1, 1912 2616-ta '9C11T10U9 .,.. .. FOS::: 8 P~~V H.i/ 1 6 ~~:E:~d* ••POrl lvd •• ~Ml 1 c.ltomll t 7 ~ir . Terry C>awld Orent , 3117 Coun1ry Club, Co•U M••• Cllfomla tHH . Thll ._.,_ .. conducted by .,, tndMdllel. Teny Devld O<ant Thia atM-1( -Ned wlttl "" County Clll1I ot Or1lllQI County on June~. 1812. ,,.... Publletled Oran .. Cout Diiiy Piiot. -Mt 1, f , 16, 22, 1M2 2191~ -tf I),.' • ~ lf.,. 1 ·;, 'J .. ' , 0 • .. ~ I I' , I"'" ~: 4 • by Brad Anderson ' ' "It was a matter of who's in oharge around here." L~T'S W,ALK·· IT'S "Do you know many prof1ulon1I football pl1y1rt, Otorgt?" . SNIFF by Jim Davis TMEN ~PO I ~EEL LIKE l'V( JU51 L051' MV BEST FRIEND? by Ferd & Tom Johnson gy BUS IT'S />. GooD MAYBf.~ Bur BY fOOT IT1SA ~ SIXMl ~ES~ MIL.f:... ,, · / 7·1 ,, .. ,........_._ ,.., \ilt BOWn' '«JI> -PIE son, (I()! 11!s ~roof~! OH, MISTER--- PLEASE TI-4ROW UP THAT HAT 'I. by Ernie Bushm1ller by Tom Bat1uk eel I a.ouD tk.r:.·µEE. JOl<E.5 A~ HE.£ 1 HEE ! REAL CL.CUD Pl£A5E.R.5! "'-t:r'*..J:t.r ~., . e~~T~ ... ra ifilili----~· ..... ,... ~ ....... :~~!J~IMf4 •• "'-u':: :.m. . .............. ,~ ~!-__"11 .,... OMt.,............ ~'· . • ,.,. 1111 .... •al11te11111t1 I lllOel"T JAJlllU ...... -.&AMI .. llDRUM, ··••n•oa ... ,. ttl lllhUU 011 Wlll.!~_'!'"".1 001 I '"'out" DOI 0 11111.. llllUtll'IOa HOltll,11 II 1110 )00(, ~ on~i':t.~~~l~=--::~ ~~,ia;-.::r~:-:: ....... ='=···· 111•--JO A-1(1.11 .... ~1 OOft~lflff. Tllo .. IMfllltlOll OI 0... ........ • A_..,llor of lt\I lllMil 0t lttto. NOOl'dln8 of OOl'l~ll~ end MOnOll Yw i.e ...., ...._ Wit.I.JAM IC, N<>f'MAN. clooMlod, ~ tlle...,illM Pollo¥ INll bl It 1-_. Ei' ...... ,_ ........ ptMltt Nie IO .... ~ tM ......... of "" ~ llld .... .. llllN ...... Mt ..,_., tu~ IO oonllnniMlon ...., In IOOOfcMnoe wltll Niil ...... r:: ......., M ...... •Y "''Jbovt tlltltltd lu=r ~ ou11om1ry In •~tlltt11 .....,...,.. , Court, lhe rlQht, 11111, In , If Yoll -~..-Vie tdvlOt of Ind ...... of ttlt dtOec*lt 11 tM lidl "°""' Ill IMitd Md .ill Ill tn Ott°'~ lft tlllt lftMlor, y~ time of ,. dooUI tnCI .. rlallt. We. opened .. ""offlot Of Nlol6el end ..... do .. .......-.. tMI '/WI lllcl lnttrtat Ill• ...... 11 ... by ~. tOJO t.collct Aw, •lt1erl ,...._, 1' ·~. moy ... oporalltll ol law or otllttwl••· lllltit 17 tt, a..i Olfto1 CellforNe. M ... Ill time. ~ Othet """ or In ecklttlOn to .... llOuf of 11 A,tot. of ttll Move A v I • 0 I u a' • .. It. • 14 • "* of IN oeoodtnt •t Ille """ of ...... ••••a••· .. ,,..... ,.... MnliOUIE NA-.ft~ The .followlnt "" n It doln9 ~a.; OUTWAAO IOUHO. 38d I. 1tul ......... ~':I ...... ~ tH27 1»1111G JtMtty W"'-t•Une, 211 I . 11th ltrttt, ~ ...... c.llornlo t2t27 1111 ~.In end to tllot cwtlln Niii Tllo ptopeny ...,.... ~ II .... _.. U& • 1181,.,.. 1 pr~ toe.tee! In tM County of ooml'llonly rtlttrtt.I to ea 11?1 -• U& ....... ....,. Ora~t•~ lt1tt ot c 1111orn11, Tulare Of...,., #0411, Hunttnoton • ......... It W.-11: ... ~ .. tollowt; IMdl, Cllllomla. Tllo ~let.I ...... PAACE. 1: That P«tlon of Lot t rM«Vee ttw right to rtftCt ""Y tnCI ti U•t•d d•Ha 101101tar el of Ttect No. 86411, In the Clly Of alt b6da. COf\MIO do 1111 eboOldO If\ .... Thie bullr\tlt .. oondUCtlld ~ .,, hlCIMdua Huntlntton 811011, County ol . OAT£D:JuM2~1 11111 ' ••unto, dtt1err1 tra oe r lo OtlfVI, l tott bl Colltomll, 11 pet Jo AMI l\llWltn lnmtdlllllftllltl. Cll Illa fMMtl, Donald J. Wllttttlnt map reoordlO In Book 3a, Pagoe JO ANN! ICL!INHEN tu ~· ~ ,i 11air 11guna.. 30 10 ~. lncluelve of Mleoeleneoul II Adrnjnlatrator pue0o '* .........,. 1 tlornpo. Thie tt1--. ... lllecl wttll "" County o.ti of Oranot County on .. ..,., "' "" office o( Ille County ' ot "" ...... of 1. ~o THf" Dlf'IN)ANT: A mt Atcordtr of Mid County, lhowll WILl.IAM IC. NO~AN, comotlln= 111tn fllecl by the """'"· 1M2 ,111111 Ind ~ .. Unit No. 60 on tl!et O.Cu11d plllnlltt Yoll• If ~ .itl\ to Ctr1aln Condominium Plan and ~ .. "'~~ defilftd t ~.)'OU rnwt. wltllln PublltMO Oraneo Cout Dally ...... June 24, J4ltot 1, •• 15, 1N2 27()3..12 oertlllcate (Ille "Condo"'lnlum 9r .MM I II cSeyt ..,., "* eummont II Pten" herein) ttCOfded u Elthlbll A..._,. .., A9ftll:l1tt..., Mtwd on yo1;, lllt Witt\ tNt oourt • "B " to and lncorpor•t•d by 1010 ...... Awe.,...._ 11'1 written l"lllPOf\M to lftl eomplolnt, ti I tr t n c e In t II a t o er I 1 I n IM Delet. CA 11191 UnltU ycM; 00 10 'f0'.11 default will MUC NOTIC( 1uppl1ment1I dtcluallon of TA: (114) m.1n1 bl tntwoo on ~loll of !tie .... ment1, coven1nt1, condition• Publlalled Orange Co111 Dally plolntlft, MO 11119 OOtKt IM)' onttt 1 ACTmOUl&UIMll NAMI ITATamNT and rtatrlellon1 lor Huntington Piiot, July 1, 2, e. 1N2. Judgment ttlkl•t you for ll!e relltf lAndmertc Adult Community Ph-2788-&2 ~ In Ille oomplalnt, w111et1 Tiie followlng peraon 11 doing butl-u: Ill (• portion of Tt1ct 8541). ----.. -... -IC-Mft~..._.----could reault In g1rnl1llin1nt of -did on J1111,1ery 19, 1978 In "'11M. wee-. taklnlJ of ITIOntV or property Book 11823. Page 1298, et aeq. ol flCTinOUI llUllNlll or otller relltl raqu11ttd In tlle CLASSIC DETAILINO, 115 AocllYlew, IMnt, Callfofnle t2715 Mark Henry D1lbey, t 15 Rocitvlew, lrvlM, Collfornla 9~715 Tiiie bullntet II conducted by 111 lndlvldull. Ofl\cltl Aecords ol llld County, u • comotllnt. lrOnl time to tPt amended (Ille NAMI TAT'Dmlff DATED January 7, 1N2. "Supp.lementt l D1cl1rat1on" The lollow1no peraon 11 dOlng LC .. ,J.. 9nlnctl. llortln). bullneet II; lerti PARCEL 2: An undlllkMd 1198111 TWIN MAF\l<ET, 10338 8Mcll By SuMll L. CorCOfan, Marll H. Otlbty lnt••t In and to tlloM P«tlon• o1 111¥0., St11r1ton, CA. Dec>uty 1.ot 1 ol Trect No. 8549 8howTl and YACOUB N. OUSHAIR, 10457 UOMAllO D. 9.A .... 111 Tllla lllttmonl Wll !fled wttll Ille County Clerk ol °'f"O' Coun1y on June 29, 11182. deflnod 11 "Common ArM" (Ille Sitter Avenue, • 103, Fountain • w. 17'tl..,.... "Common Area" herein) on :lie Vtllty, CA t2708. lull• D , .... 1 Publlalled Orange Co11t Deity Pltot. Jul)' 1. a. 16, 22, 1ee2 2816-82 Condominium Plan. Thie bUllnotl II oonducted by an .... """ CA _,.. EXCEPT Ill oil, gu and olhlt lndMclual. Publl•ll•d Orange COH I Dally llydrocarbon IUblt•-and otller YIOOYO N. Oueflalt PMot. June 10, 17, 24, July 1. 1H2. mlnerlll tying ti.tow 600 tMt frOfll TNI ttlltment WU flied with Ille 2557-82 Ille IUrlac. ol the IMMcl ·prem1-. Coullty C1er11 ol Or1n91 County on ,...._with the riOflt to Ill~ tor June 6, 11182. e11d develop tncf drill Into and ,,_,. thtoutfl tllet P«llon of tlle IMMO Publl1hed Orange Cout Oally pr~ lying below 111d depth for Piiot, June 10, 17, 24, Jlltf 1, 1'82. 011, gu encl otller hydrocarbon 2504-82 IUbltancel and other mlnerala end to own, Pfocluce, uttlC1, r~ rtaJC NOTJC( Ind traneport same from anOtor ou .. -DI · through Ind store 11m1 In Mid Y ..... IN . 'AULT~lllA prem~ ti.tow Mid depth and to DUD Of' TMllT DATU) AUQUIT 1tore. treat and proceu the 14, 1N1. UNLRll YOU TAKI production from 11ld prem1111 ACTION TO PlllOTICT YOUlll WllllOUI, "-· the right to.,.,.; ~•n." MAY• IOLO AT A upon, OYtr, tctoa or othetwi11 UM ~-= :.0 Y~ ~,J: llle turf-of Ille IMMd pr.,.._, Of' THI NOCDDING AGAINIT 11 re•ervtd by Ille Si gnal YOU YOU IHCMJU> CONTACT A Complnloe, Inc ... eorporltlon, In LAwYIA. the Document rtcOfded Merell 23, NOTICI Of' TlllUIT'ln •Mi ~n~a. t0050, Page 237. T.I. No.,_ ALSO EXCEPT exdualw rights NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that 1ppurtarlan1 to eacll unit In the on WednetOay, July 21, 1982, at project (u ~ t...m• are Otflned 9':00 o'ctoc:k 1.m. of Mid day. In the In tlle eupp1emon111 ded1tatlon) tor room aet Hide for conducllno poM'98lon and oec:upancy of llle Trut11t'1 S9'M, wttllln Ille ome.. of ratios, balconl11, 1t1lrw1y1 end REAL ESTATE SECURITIES a n d I n g 1 1 11 o w n 0 n t 11 1 SERVICE. located II 2020 Nor111 CondomlnlUm Pl¥ end ~led Bfoactoy, Suite 20t, In llle City of ~ to be dellgnated u set forlh on Santt Ana. ~ty of Of'.,._ Stele Ille CondOnlit')lum Plllt or In the of Cellfornla, REAL ESTATE eupplemental declaretlon 11 being SECURITIES SERVICE, 1 Ctllfomla appurtenant t o such unit corporation, 11 duly appointed r~. • TtultM under and pu..uont to Ille PARCEL 3: An ea.nent tor the power of Hit conferred In that excluslw right 10 poueu1on and Cl<laln Dead of TN9t txeculed by oc:cupancy ot U1oM portlone of the PRAFUL BUMIA and URVASHI P. Common,.,, .. of Loe 1 of Trect No 8UMIA, HUSBAND AND WIFE. 8549 d11l gnlled on tll~ recordldAuQuet31,'1M1,ln8ook Condominium Pltn H patios 14201 of Ot!lcial R«lorda of Mid balconlel, 1tllrw1ye and landlnoS County, at pege 718, Recorder'• end 8howfl or dellgnated on the lnetrumont No. 31M173, by r--. ol Condominium PIM tnO/or In the • breacfl or default In peymont or euppl9menttl 4odll'wllon 11 being perlofmtnce of the obllg1t1on1 llOl>Urttrlant to Parc.i,,1,aboYe. ~red olbl•~y. J.'lE'~~!ng tllat 'ij)-'flC!llL 4: N&n•txclu1lv .br.Mch OI dobiutt. l'IVl~ bf which ••••m1nt1 for pedeatrlan and ...... ~ March 23. 1982, M Yelllculer 1oor-.... trlYOl Ind R1cor<1•r·1 lnlttument No. prtva1t llrMt pu;poan 0.,., tctOll 82·100338, WlLL SELL. AT PUBLIC and through Lota A throuQh F ol AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST Tract No. &549. Lot A of Trect No. BIDDER FOR CASH, i.wtuf ~ 81118, 11 per map recorded In 8ook of Ille United s....._ ~ • CllltNr I 334 , Ptge 35, et seq. o f cn.-or..ionaetateornatlonal Mlacellaneou• Map1, In the oltlQe of bank, 1 1t1te or ltderal credit the County Recorder of H id union. or• flat• or ledorll 11Ylngl County, and Lot A of Tract No. and loan aaaoclltlon domicllod In 734 1, 11 per map recorded 1n ~ tl'lll 1tat1. Ill peyable It the time of 301, P•g• 22. et seq. of Mll,lllrlgllt.tlUeandlnt-tlleld Mleoellanooul Mapa, In the olflce ol by It, 11 Trustee. In tlllt r11I Ill• C<>unty Ree order ol aald ~<>port~ In Mid County and County, which non·e•clu1lve taLllt, 3 of T 11 95followS:52 ~I• lfllll bl appur1enant to o r1C1 11 per map Pll'eei 1 above: LOI.I A through O of recordec;l1n Book 410 1>-a-9 to 12 Trtct No. 11549 to bl UMd lor the lnctullve of Ml9eellaneou• Map1 In parlllng or velllclu 11111 are the olflce of Ille County Recorder of permitted 10 par11 within the adult Orange County, Calllornlt. The commuotty under tilt ptovlsk>ns of street addr-or otllor common Section 8. 16 o f the Malter dHltnallon of the real property Doclaratlon recprdld Febtuary 28 llortinlboYI deacrlbed II P<KJ)Orted 1973 In Book 10575, Page 17 0j to be. 20 Cl'lolte Street, Irvine, CA. Olfld8I Aocol:ds ot llld County end T h • u n d • ra I g n • d II ar e by Lot• c Ind o or Tract No. as.49 10 dl1cl1lm1 111 ll1blllly for any be UMd tor t11t ... c1u11ve parking lnc<l'rectnell In 111<1 atreet adOr ... u.11 of owners ol Condominium or.<>.!~ .... ~~~· located In tlle Pll11e 111 ......, -bl .. ._ wtthout COndomlnlum ProJoo'. w1rr1nty, '11pre11 or lmplltd, PARCEL 5: A non-e .. clualve reg11dlng 1111•. pone11lon, or _,.,. apc>uf1anant to Parcet 1 encumbrancea, to 11t11ly the above (the Coral Spring• Cour1 Pf~ balance of Ille Note or non-exc:lullve toOtM -o 11 other obllQatlon MCUred by llld epoctllcall)' Oetlcribed and M l forth OMd of fruit. wltll lnter•t and in Soctlon 19.02 (A) of that oerteln other sums II provided therein; 1uppl1m1nt1I dec luetlon of plul ldvlnool, If any, under the ~•. covenante, c:ondltlon• tarma thereof and lntorllt on IUdl and ra1trlctlon1 for Huntington adv~ and plul ,., Ctllrgoe 1..M10me111 Adult Community f'twM I and tl\Pfll'I-of Ille Tl'UltM and of (Troct 7341). rtcOfOod on Ftbr\111')' Ille trustl crttted by MIO Dead of 21. 1978 In Book 10575, Page 112, Tru1t. The total amount of 11ld 91 eeq. ot 01flclll Recordl of Mid obllgatlon, lnefudlng r ... o~ably County, u from time to time Hllmllad Jee1. cllargea Ind •mended (Ille "Supplement•I •~of the TruatM, a1 ttle tlrna Oedar8tlon for '""-I" herein). ol lnlUll Pl~lon of 11111 Notlcll, 11 PARCEL 8: A non-uclu1lve 188,719.23. -t apc>uf1on11r1t to Pareei 1 OeteO; ~ 28, 1982. ebove (tll• velllcl• 11or1g1 area llllAl.Hc•~ft non-oxclualvt accou -ment) _... • •• llJIVICC, apecllcally Olecrlbtd and Mt tortll A C ... mta __.. .... ., In Soctlon 19.02 (A) of tl!e1 eertlln le T,......_ 1uppl1m1nt11 dtclu1t1on 01 D..l -C::.,":£~:1 co v enante, condition• and .. .. No.• re1trlctlon1 for -ti11ntlngton IMla AM. CA L.tndma111 Adult Community, PhlM (714) ....... II (Tract'8188~dtd on toeoruary Publlslled Orange CoHt Dally 21, 1974 In 11083, Page 414 Piiot, July I. a. 15, 1982 .. Mq. of Otftdll RocorOI of Mid 2112()..82 County, H from time to time amended l tlle "Supplemental rtaJC NOT1C( Oedar8tlon or PhlM II" herlln). ,AACEL 7: T'lloM non-exc1u91Ye ""9IJC NOTICR TO ""9IJC Of' MOUllT "°" ,... I .... 711 MU.All OP AINDI AND NOTICE OP' DEATH OF NOTICa M...,.. Of' KENNETH EUGENE ':,~-=•=-' ~~w~~~ i~· AiNJtNYl rr,'lJ} J:::or .. Road .My 1 • 1982 T ·E R EST AT E N 0 . lrvb':;t~: Ed Moore 7~7 A·llttll. TO ALL INTERESTEO AGENCIES. To all hei.n, benefid&ries, GROUPS ANO PERSONS: cre ditors and contingent Tllo pur1)0ll of 11111 notlce 11 to creditors of K ENNETH Identity two MPV•t• but related EUGENE WILBER, SR. and actlonl to be taken by t11e City of ll'Ylne. persona who may be 1. On~ about JVtot 11. 1t12. the otherwiae intereeted in the City of Irvine wlll reci-t tlle U.S. will and/or estate: Department oO Houelng end Urban A~·'Uoo haa been filed Development (HUD) to ral111e ,.. Fecltf al lunOa under Tl1le I of tllol by ITH K. FICKETI' in Houelng and Community the S,.upe r ior Court of Development Act of 1974 (Pl 2_r_ant ge CoITHunty .requeatl.ng 113--3831 tor VII f«*owlng P'ojact: .... JUD K F1CKET'f Parllland1 Ap1r1ment•. Hou1lng Coit Re duction -Land be appointed aa personal Acqul1lt1on, lrvln•. County ot l"f:preten1at1w to admin.la1er Orenge, Calltornla, SoutlleHt the estate of KENNETH eomor of ~Ind TrlbUco "4 .. EUGENE WILBER , SR., n°l't1~~~~~ "* COSTA MESA, CA. (under -=t1 (oqueet ~ ,..._. of tunoe t h e I n d e p e n d e n t wlll lfot con1t1tut1 an action Administration of Estates llgnlflcantly lftedlng Ille quality of Act). The petition la eet for Ille lluman envlronmenJ and h-rina in Dept. No. 3 at 700 tceordlnalY Ille ~ City --... of lrvtne fiU dedOld not to ~ Civic Center Drive West, an Envlronmental knpod Statlll'lent Santa Ana, CA 92702 on under tlle National &Mro11m11:cai Jul 28 1982 t 9 30 Polley Act of 11189 (Pl.111-190). JY • a : a.m. The rtMOM tor IUOh Oeclllof\ noc IF YOU OBJ!X:T to the to P''PW• aic:11 Statament Mi 11 granq of the petition, you lollow1: An envi ronmental aboWd f'f~d)l~; .. t ,.~ ~t dr::.:.~.mi heating ,an -i.ta'te your project w111 hev• 110 1IO'fttt1c1nt objection• or file written tff9cl on 1111 enYlronlnont bee.- objections with the court m1t1gatlon ._11 .. clolcribed In before th!" hearing. Your tlle ~ttl 111111mont llllYI ap~c n.ay be in penon .,_, tOded to the proflct. f An Emtronmental Review Aeeor1I or at..omey. r~lng the eubltc1 p<oJ.cl(•I I Y 0 U A R E A Illa bean meoe wNcti doeumont1 CREDITOR or a contingent tll• envlronmenttl rev .. w of the creditor of the deceued, you P'oJect and more fully Mt• fortll tlle fail claim •th the rlUOnl Wf'Y IUCto ltat-1 i. not ml.Ill e )'OW" wt require~. Tiii• En11lronm1nt1I court or pre11ent it to the ReYlew Aocotd 1s on 1111 11 the personal representative above add,.. Ind i. avllleble for appointed by the court publlc examination and copying within four month& from the upon requllt In the Department oe date of first issuance oC Community Dovelopmolit ~ the houri of a:oo Lm. Ind 6:00 p.m. letters as provided in Section No further anYlfonmontal review 700 of the Probate Code of of IUch projact la Pf'opoeed to bl CaHfomla. The time for conducted !>'lor to the roqueet for r ...... ot Federal lunOa. filing claims will not expire c 0 M M E N T s T 0 G R A N T prior to four months from RECIPIENT the date of t he hearing All lnttr111ed egonclol, groupe or noUoed above. lndMdulil dlMgfealng wlttl 111111r of Ille two propoeed llCtlonl .,. YOU MAY EXAMINE Invited to eubmlt written OOfl'W'*1tl the file kept by the court. If tor eonlldoretton. Sudl comment• you are lnt~rested in the wlll be r e c eived at 17200 estate, you may file a request J am boree~epart ment ot with the court to receive =:iuJ:::: ~v~=-m~t ~!:i s pecial notice o f the comm1nt1 recehocl wlll be inventory of eat.ate aaaeta conalOared and ttio City of lrMt w111 and of the petitiam, accounts not request Ille,....._ of Fodaral and reporta deecribed in ~.tall• _., tc:tJon on "'° Section 1200.5 of the w1111on ~:r:'u!:/::! California Probate Code. tunda. It .. ~ ltlet lt\OM L SCOTr L\RLJN, ,.,...,Olnt ~• IC)IClfy whldl Attenn Jt La• of Ille propoeod actlonl II bllflg UHZ N'ew,ert Ave., #IM ~lg~&.s TO HUD 'hlUa. CA Hiii Tiit City of hint wt11 unOenllke Tel.: (71') 7Sl~IHI Ille pr'OJtct(I) dtaa1boO abow with 8loC:* drant FUndl from HUO ~ .,_ ~ .. • y •y, Tiiie I Of Ille HCOA-1974. The City "a v --ol ltvlnl la oen~ to HUD that the A~ at Law ~ 1rv1ne arid DrM Siii, 1n 1111 IH,.... Cater Drive, capec:fty -Mayor, COfleMt # to ICOIPI the )ul1tdtctlon of the •-_ 11'& t•i•• Fet.lort l court• If an action 11 .. --",. • ,.. brought to onion:. r•poutlOlltltl Tel: (71') Ml·"'' 1n rtltltlon 10 enwonmen&1:1 ,..,.._, Publiahed Oranr Coast o.c.on miking MCI ldJon; Ind Dally Pilot, July 1, , 8, 1982 that '"'" reapon1lblllll11 !lave 291 .. "2 btlil 11t1111od. Thi llOal 8"tiot of ...... the otr1tftottlon .. ttlol upon Ill ---.---.,.-------1 llPSWOYel 8loC:* Orent ru.d m.:y bl ---"'11"4 UMd end tfUO wll haw Ntllllocl Ill rllPOflllbllltltl un4or ttie Natlonll _.._.. .. eppur1-t 10 P•eel 1 CfTY OP --lbOvt (tho ~~ Coun: non· IOlmARY OP "9CAL ftNI _... ADOP1'ID ..,_,. MID Envlronmenttl Poky Ac1 of 1Ht. HUD wl• aocapt 11r1 objection to lie ~oYtl of Ille ...... of lun09 _, acceptance of IN canlflc:don on1y If It It on one of Ille ~ ba911ii (•)Tho! the oat~ -not Ill fact HtcUttd :r.:,-r~ u c 1u1lv• puking euement) ~ Ulll Of' MYMll ....,.II ""909 ~ dltcrlbod end ... fonn On June 22. 11112. "" City CounGlf °' tM Cf'Y Of """" tOoptld 111e In S1etlon1 1902 (El and (C), ~ -of ,_,. lfllrtno fuftde tlw Fltoet Y• 1112.a: reepoctlwly, of the tupPtmtnlal ~ollct ()per...._ t 1IO,ODO docleratlon for"-II. rutlllo 8eNily Vthlele Oporlt!Ont ll0,000 (tAACEL I : A non-uc1u1lv1 YOUtll Sorw:. 130,000 -.nt ~ to Percel 1 8olllor 8orm.. 11.000 "°""" -epodltcely 4llalllod _, ltrMC S.....-0 17'.• NI fOfUI In Section 5.CM of tt1o • .,._ .......... 4'.000 Mitter Dodtretlon above ~ Not.for-Profit Ote-ntmllOnl 11.000 to . PAACIL t : A non•exclualve • eot.eoo 1111 •It~ IO Percel 1 .__. 43=1m: ....,.,. "*"'eelly detarlboO end : ... tofUI lrl a.c-. 1 '.01 of tM AV TO ~ Daalellllorl IOOll9 ,...,,.... : ..:..~~t,A~no: =:.~~- ISll A ) fl II._, ltld Ill tor1f\ 111 IOOV011 11.01 Of 1111 obove .....,.,.,,. ....._. DIOl•llo:i. MWAAY Qf ~ DCl'T tftY '°rtlon Included ~TIOHI ......,,~·· ..:...,:~:~.":'.;,'="~ ...... (tit• "PHAll Ill non- :. .. ·:·~ ao••H .... m•nt") fll .......... '°"" L" !•!::: :•..:._ 01 '"• ....... ,., ,.,, ........ . A Lt .. •1 .. MI :-:II 4 IWS,~., 11a11m • Ofleor or otMr of approved by HUD; or ~ tlltt 1Ppli0atlt'1 "'*°""*''• ,..,... r-cl for tllt protecn lllOloat .. orntlllon of 1 rOQutfod flolelon ~ « tllp ....... '° "" projOot In Ille .,,... ........... ,...... prcc111. <>1»iJ•6ttona muat II• prepared 11111 1u•in1tt1cl 11'1 aocordanct •1111 Ille r-~ulrtd ~urldlr ~Perl 51.71 °' "" lnttrtm ~ ~ Ill "",..,.., ~ .... APft 11, 1IH. TlleH ,. .. u1auon1 1ro ........... the 0111' °' lrvtft9, D•P9rtt11tftt of Co"uaunlty Oevelop"'ent. Tll•,. "'ay tit •fdrOtHd to lnvlr,onl'l'lt nlll Ollll•IOI OMlor, U.&. lhfie;llr••t Of HOU t 1 n f , a 111 U rben 1::~··J::. ::::~ •HUD111 .. ....._ ....................... ............... F-.. .. ...... , .. ,... ... == .......... .. Ill ,.,... .. ... .... , .... r::.. . ...... I • 5 6 7 · 8' D A I L y c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 z .. !, .. '!!'!!.'!!.~! ••••••• '.'.~!!!!.{'!.!!.~' ••••••• ~ •• !!!!.{'.'.le!. •••••• lla111l 1111 ,_.,,,, I HI ••n•I 1111 •··••····••·•····••··• ..•...................•••.••..•.....•••••••• lllal IWI 100! .... ·-1114 .... l!Qll 11114 ... .... .... ... ·~ . .., lll9 ION 1m ·-.... ... ·-IHlt ,(!) fOVAL MOullHO OPPOllT UNITY ••Ml•IMt'• ....... All rtal Mttte tdwrtlM<I In 1111• n1w1p1por 11 1ubJtct to lht Ftdtrtl Fair Hou11no Act ol IGea whlcll m1k11 It lllogtl to adver11H "any preftren· co. llmltatlon or dlecnml- natlon bHed on race. color, religion. au or natlonal origin, or any Intention to make any euch preference, llmll•· tlon or dlecrlmlnatlon~ Thill n-1papet wlll nol knowlngly 1cctpl tny advtrtlelng for real ••· tat• which 11 In vlolatlon ol the law. llAIT FIXER 4.111, 1104,100 Mu•t Mil Ihle weekend Grtal 1tarter llome or terrific lnY11tment. lnttr· eetlng-exlatlng financing. Cell for dttt.119. 546-2313 =tMM • •ut ---.. --• ... ---!.010 !Wiil ---- --• 10!) ,,. -11110 lllWNIT CREST "'* bring your clothea & mow In to this ln1t1nt home. Boautllully upgra· t.lod and decorated. IPtlCllOu• 2 Br & dtn, 3 Ba, walk to be ae11 & rocreetlon tacllllles Prlct tor Immediate nle & ••lier wlll help w/ financing. Full price S23t,OOO. 751.31g1 C::. '1l ' I < T -f"" Pf~( JP~ I~ 111 ', 3 Ill FllEll 111,100 Detlnltely JM beat buy In Co,11 MOM. 3 Bdrm 11- or. Big llvlng room. huge lot. Good area - wfUI a llttle work, COUid be rntdo Into a nlee ta- mlly hOme. Must aell by the 4th. 548-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS NEW VIEW TOWN · HOMES. 2 Master Sul· tea. View of ocean & night llgllta. Quiet Area. Perk•. open IPICH i t25,80Q dn. Xlnt Fin. Hal °''Pat Bauer. 873-7300 ... --------- PllllllU •••• Pr1te West Bay bayfront, SUpa for 2 bolV, rPmodelrd 3 bdnn. 3 bath Sl,200,ooo.. • Ocean & jetty vlewe. Marine room, 4 bdrm. 3 bath, 3700 eq.ft. Sl.385,000. Ooaenfront. ~ 1.111llU11111 Prime Ledo Nord bayfront. ,5 bdrm, 511\ bath. Lge LR , 2 boat slips Sl.~.000 . Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + larae r«. nn. beam ceilings, furnished, patJOI. $420,000. u111 tlll umMT ..a&oon view from 6 bdnn, 5 bath, playroom, dark rm, den, Boat alip. Now $1,000,000. BAYSIDE COVE Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up: 2 br, 2 ba dn. 2 boat &lips $1 ,000,000. COllOUDO CAYS Coronado Island cust. bayfronl lot 85' boat dock. Plans avail. :fled· $370,000 w/t.ermL ILIFfl OllM Smgle story end unit, expandrd 3 br. 3 ba on largest greenbelt. $250.000. PlllUll 3 bdnns, 2 ~ baths condo near pool. $145,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR )41 Buy\,d•· D•·•• •• B 'i '. ' '.>' 1st and OILY OPEi HOUSE , ....... 10 •• 2 IOI FtntlHf, C.rt11 ••I 111 Deluxe Three Year Old Duplex South of ~e liighway MUST SACRIFICE tT $411,HI $218,000 Assumable lat T .D. at 12.37% with GIBRALTAR $72,000 Assumable 2nd TD. at 12% with. Private Party OWNERS WILL CARRY BALANCE OF ~UITY WITH A STRAIGHT NOTE W~~~~!~L DOWN . THIS LARGE BUILDING W1Tii . FOUR CAR GARAGE PERnX:T FOR CONOO CONVERSION dartell 1>ash REl?dA)C 7~0-1221 55 ~::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::~ --------.is :S 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~I = fll lllffl ..., · Delult8 4 bdrm. C Plan : overlooklng tha pool. .., Can be purchased wl1h :: just 10% down to 1 30 -)"91r IOan Full prlee Is tlll HJI ti.JO ,.. ... ... tilt tllJD -t61t -----!OTO --rnu l'ltl6 t'IWl ,,. nu 91U fTlf rm ,,. -na fTtl na. -fTJll = ·"· lllG ...... "* fTfl ,,. na lml ., .. rm $279,500 L.H 171 4) 6 71-4400 UIJI Ul-2121 HARBOR .(\ l>l\'l~IOll of ll.1rbor Im,.,, m,·111 t • .. THE REAL ESTATERS lllT PllOE Gr.-atartlf t:omo, Ow- ner wll conalder ALL of- ,., •. 2 Bdrms, great Coate MtH neighbor- hood. low"t priced homo In tho tr•• 11 $107,000. 781-3191 c::. ·,1 ' . -t-' ,',/ ,. , .• J RfSIOCNTIAI AOL CS TATE S£AVICES 011111 YIEW .... ...... Somerset 5 BR only steps from pool & tennis courts in Seawind. City ligh ts & pastora l view, plank flooring, tile entry, 3 car garage. G reat family home. Owner will carry large AITD. Reduced to sell. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 wmFIL • WATEll •• ,. ...... ......, ... IM4 ....... .... ........... ....., .............. . Olauie Jlferler • 2 ......... ... aM ............... ,.... .... ... hntall 1114 fire rt.a. Yeer ....... .., .., 41' ............. ,.., ...... . l•1tr wUI ••I• flHHt fer 411afttte• hrer. 1111,110 11 fH , .... S.Mlt ten11t 111·1400. WATER! ROl"'T HOMES."< IU. \I l 1111' ..................... , ........ -,." " ................. ·~ .. .._.. ... . ~ .......... .... 831-1400 llS-4 .. ~-..,,.... :ll ------r "" For Qaulfled Ad '"'4111------~-------~ = ACTION ~ Cell •. o.11)' Piiot -AD-VISOR 842·597• Get GREEN CMh tor WHITE ..._,ti with a Cla11ltled Ad Cell Ml-817' Thinking of a MW hOfM for IPl'ing? ... -= ... "' ~· ftod cdurllM. ~ ':!:' SCi:t\cj}lA-&i..§ts· ------4~ CU.'f .. ------·=·:..J:r _:. ::: .... ,. ..... ._ ai...a. _. I r r I t I ~'!!..,,~II .. _ ................ ._-41 i tr--.... ............ ---4, j • .1 [ [ Or~ Oout DAILY ptLOTiThUrtday, JUiy 1, 1M2 , . lltffff.W./:*. ...... 1!11.'1.llt ....... lttllll~. lfttl.~I& ...... M'ii.IM'.!t'IJt ..... ~~ •• l!Wftf.0011ttA1f .. 19r.~.. f~ ~~ ..•...... !.ftl f'lilifil(ArJ1411 ffllf,fMt....... ~ .. JIM ffmtf.ftfutlr.IJl!ff "111.lfftf ...... IMf k9t ........... Mff l!!fffft.fm! .. Mff r,._ .,_,···· ;:.._ ~ • 0 •;; 1 .._.,...... •1111 mliili·::1· •v owtet, '•"'IY t1ome1 ma WAITll Oofl.-1 Mt 2t>a. ,.,.,, mtU H.,wvi..H01M11r,1 rr:r:Amn'l'.... • nr.r.;Jm ...... u;r. , ..... La Jolla Nee. I bf. din, ,..,. •. ...,.. .,, .... lot. MeM '11.oe v "*"' Lii. 1 bdflftj Tt•d• for N.I . oc••n· '••'o'P•, Wld, d''b'I' ... 2 3 and ...... ma trom ~~.~ 11000/me. v,., I .....,.., , ... Oeda, Hloe I It. atlCI! Gal aduha WI 1 .. 1 landtoaped by "o0•r• t ~ )'9tdl tot kldl. "'lly turn. ~ty an<r ttont llome. Ow11er. • •noe, 9•r, • M -· • 11. !dry. No l*L.... no t rri/ 1 • I Mii, HOnangt or Oe«Nn~ t1M ape, alo, pate I pool SI" I la, NONetlon flOIMt .... 1W• U00,000. 1111 SH• WI'../ Cl d n t I I I • 11 IO,tlOO 11~t pa 1' r"r1.ti~!·.ac ;:;:: C:.,';y~:,_ pro• alarm 1y111m & rot. ~'*'· no tramo atreet, Int. Owrier •"'"'2nd. lhMe. 87M67t 5*1~ s .,~ ":;:O, 'IP llAM 'It!!!: 1390• 142~"""· per. Call lt•ndon roi oacior. Xlnl ASSuMftLI OH. 14"'" '" to ,.. IH·1HI, IU·H:SO P. Cot••.; ... Trlpleic ..... i br, 1 ba, W/o tiOOlt-ut>. !'•d11 Int l •• prvt ,,_,,. .. i. eAA4J I HO/mo: 2 Ir. 2 la. TIO-t~ f\nanclno1 Wiii ooop wl1h Write exlttlno In. 1180, Wllllarnt licM OOOd inoom'.a and ,.,. No,.,,. U 1t. llOtlUb Nr8ClhOOll. J • ...::m, .,,.6 TOWftllouMa. oat Port• broker. Call ror appt, 000. Pll for •PPt . ltand New HomH & io.ni. 3 If OWMr't W\lt, 1110 laoantl a . •.142~5M. im1·~·;;;·,;:.;;: ~. 1111 blt·lne. ~?. i li1il•i2i41ili oriii1il0-4iiilili1.iil "41·10S3 Oondoe, no money down 7 ~old. 1231,000, agt IM5-7ta utM. pd, 2011. hlboa •· rm, tm&ll P*t olt. Wont *IA"""* " ~ 1••1 whllt ttl•Z;IHI. (1 t4) ua..neo. ..,~. Nice olMn a"· 1 ... fnocl 3 "' t Ba !eltbluft, •¥1 87s..612 7111..etal !Mii ..a• • • ..... -a• -. .,. -.. 6'ffl2 t d I July 15. 11200 mo. ' TIL·Mgmt 642·t803 -· _. -••w • '"•••••••••••••••• . llTAD ••• • ~•r , e no ad oat•f•· IMO·t01t &.... "fl""• ~• Alt. 5,'942 .. 221 tlll• •ldrm~lnprl· 11000 HWI ..,..,,........ .... Olllld ok, no P• •· mdl.J: .. rm .. r.r.-::i---------wowi Low .. I prlc•d VII• arH . Out11andlno ey owner a br a. be a.--.1.............. l!llldt O.M. Ptoe*tY, 3 IUO/rno, plua ~· • haWlnd 5 If.~/'::/ 3 bdrm 1ownllouH apl ~akHllore tenn11 Club beY1ront hOIM ON BAI.· a11umabl• financing. condo, e nd unli. fllgll --unite. l1H,000 (dlto. UU Oran9a "0 '. d<hl' ........ a,;,. ttnnlt. 11900 mo . 2,_,, ba llfePaoe tnoio: UP4* 1 Br, A/0, pool, 80A OOVl!S. Large 4 1•21.000 !MMhold. • .. um1blt, owe Sil, ULI. TUii 30K), Xlnt oppty. ""9ty, Ml-2111. ,.,,~.,......-iav. ......... 084 aft 5PM. Md ~110 1 blk. beaCh tao., uuna, ta11n11 Crl. bdrm, 3 bltb, doubl.8 141·1200 too. Ht-1213 or Iv• 3 IA, 2 IA. &pa, Alau· non·tltt, 1·'21·t001 ot W....ide 2 Ir. t la. fnOd Wa.tollff 3 lk Iba, new end atiopl, Appllcatlon• rec rm, nr So. Ooa1t , ~. 00~ patio mao. mablt loan. llH,800. (213) t.U.035t XUM. patio, .noltd t•r•t•. ~ ~·o. 1o11e1y yard. S9t5 aco•pted. 311·8 Mar• Plan. UllO lllCI. utll. ph11 muon morel Wiii •u•'-r-FH. Own•t wlll carry 2 Co¥lflaton .._Pleqa, top ne w carpet•. clrapH, LCMlfy a .bt. a be. ,.,., gdnt, 14.-e}et gu1<lta. Corona clll Mar. Me·1"9, AITO ot ltacll IOI' ~t· ,,. with~ dn. bl: owner. IOO. Ni So. Ctl Plua. ~No.,..._ 1411/mo. rm. orpta, drpa, bltlf\8, 173·71'3 1 ledroom l:M*.•· yard, blUlf • layth0f98 °' ?'?911 ,,,., IHI 97t-3t 3 • Ownr financing. Aftxlout pk:lt MOUt'lty. 1411442. IHO mo. 1 yr lu . M ... Ill. ...., Shotadlff 2 ar. latge 91t.age, "" .. P!' olCar ~ .., ,,.,, •••••••••••••••••••••• ONE OF A KIND a tMdy fof offwl Aft. ,..,~. 111-lllO...,.. a...... I 8R 2 Ba, ftrtlJ)I~. 2 .... dee*•. 2 car pon. "600 ~1- • ...,. o:.~.:.~o:t:!rrJo.'!t~ UNEQUALlO VALUE l4Mt00: 54-1Me 9PIC~t t11r "ll!XTM8" WOOOINIUOOl Z bf, 1 be car guage, JO't yard. ffplc, refrlg9, pool. 0c-N10a 2 br, ref9 r41q. No •lll-l•• ~;;;;;;~ kttehn, ·mo.,. In, ci.en. $49&,000. IM+.1725 •uMlll, ....,, LG oar. , llk11P, Yd .... .,. co ndo, oar.po rt , 1828 mo. cu P • n c Y Ju I Y 3rd· P41t1. 1355/mo. 352 VJc. ~~~~~===Ii or•t ttnM. &ibmlt a11 All IAILI ,_, 'lfll OC.MNTALI ,.80-S314 11111mo. ......,, 11u~:o. 915·2444, tone. 045-1191 ••-..... r8'1onabia otra. ••••••••••••••••-;,••••• A :r; '1NO N1-'14 Birdie ... .,._ 973.... 2. "-do, 2 Br. 2 e., SC -• "•s PROPERTIRS Tak• advent• now or • ... a•-a• ••• .. ~ ........... -... ...,., Tllll lllLDI llYlllMIT 4 Bdrm In TM Ranch. neet etrfft, well malnt Owtllf moving WMI, wlff llnanoe with ~ down. great tanne. 1 1ea,ooo. A ll1tlng of L.aralne Shaw. """1 ..,. ~ "rou1t Mii" 61tuallon • --·-w/ntoe Turtterodl. ltTWT\MIUlate " --Apt. t room wlm Plaza, 1535 mo. l/o, end Complete ocean view 89t·H2• or 827--4457• '#llc.rry2nd.3bf,tront Lek• front/Hanflltalr. 4 petlo,lnOry,klda~ bt2baw/flmldlnerm, •Br~condoowlpool, Vt kWaMctobeaeh.•11 unit. Non·1mokera fr It! 1 uk for Anita r~ view 81uffl condo. bdrm, 3 be. $575.000. OC-RENTAL8 780431• atnum. 1925. 515--9005, Ntlwfy redec. AvaM Aug 1, ulll9 paid, no kllohan, 642·2142 bd~. 31'ti.~t~ lmat IH4 Prof. <*orat.ct. BMutl· owe. 714·846-3279 o .c . 8EST 842-3153. l1100~mo. 813-2•22 or :::i~· Call Mon-Frli-,-lr-.-p-la-c-.-.-p-o_o_I_. -d-1.-h-· euper large t1<race for •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• lul oond. Will coop w/ ... ,.,, finu • bt wllfV ger, llll m itu... 213/5,_.578t ~ pvt patio. x LG ~~"11!alnll~;._.lou,S~1-~ T~l~~~9~A~~t=~.:.b~ r~-V~S:lo~~u:: ~ '#If ~:e=i:·~: .. Turtle Rock. 3 palloe, POOL HOME. 3 Br, lam 2u!tr~Apt: S1'00/mo Plu1 '! .. •7r2d!.~ 2 Bt. 1580 .,.... "'""• ·---ol Univ. $200,000. SSO, 97s..2418or1~-oe21. •••••••••••••••••••••• view, end uolt. 2<IOO eq rm. den, remodeled, · 120-tt49 ,_ .. _.,_._ .... __ ·---.---pool ~Ith lar~• d~~: 000 down, 1150,000 II, IAl.lflllll Brand new l>Mut. condo. ft, frpto, bar, bonue rm, beaut. patio. $1400. Agt. · 2 BR, ralrlg, •n.cl. gar. tJ~IOOf ti()~fS ~~I ~nn~~lng. A.l.T.O. 1~ Int only fl)( 5 IARIEW 01111 ttAUTY unsnu 2 mull< .,.. •• frplo, 2 comm. pool &.. llnnl1. 780-9333 . . C#I• ,,.., JIM $430. plu1 1250. sec. Aeattort, us.eooo saoo.ooo. yr•. Agent 541..ao32 Und9f Market. $24,000 Northern SM Diego Cty., car ~ .. 8!,'!-,.!l!!. days, S 1100/mo. 856-2882 Blulfa condo 4 bf, 2'~ be. *••c·~::•3::••••s•c••;::_•_• 148-0341 alt 1:30PM ;;;;:~~;~ 2BR/2BA WOOOBRIOOE down and o~ner wlll d11lrabl• area. •.6 ac. ~2" .... """ ........... 1995 • 3Br 2ba. $875 mo. ,_, ""· nr ........ .. .. e ,,.., kltch b --------.. I I "' oead "'-I SA Oat pool epa 1780 2 Bn' a. 'V"" ' Hns, Sgl tam. Sacrifice. 3 cerry · 21.,,000 •I 10Y.%. •prvod·-lolon"&''in'~ ""'t~I·. 4 BR, 2 be, rec. lac'a. 1 $1500 • •Bt 21>1. Agt. 8«-1133 Child 0·k. 752.siu 0; yard. 1550 mo. 631-3537 p y m t • I at. . H •I p I 1 Bdrm plu• d9n or. 2 "" ·-...... blk So. Cat. Plau. Sgl1. Woodbridge. 552·8'84 a-I 4 B 3 B eYI UNBELIEVABLE LIDO ISLE $257,500 BURR W HITE REAL TOR. INC. 67~'46 ]0 ... ..,.1a1 + ...u. 2500 aq ft. Exlallng anti· que buslneaa. Ea1ab. 10 yr•. Own« will finance Catay 831·22•2 usam1TUL1 Lovely 3 8r llOuM with dart, 199 & forever v141w. Only $351,900 Fee. Wiii 11.cle down. Call Oltec1 to Patrick or Fred Tenore 8"'7 2()d bdrm. Orov.·undlt' profaHIO· f 11 01 t .... au · apac. r. •· 841·1490. --·-------" • ,..., or am y. ICUH pe ' U I Pk 3 b 2'L b Condo Incl MP quartar1 l•"O 2 BR ~ I 11---------Ron Say Agt 549·1801 nal mgmt. 3,000 aq. ft. 1750 mo PurchaH opt n v. · r, ,. • · • 1 •• •II •II .... • • unsu · BY OWNER Turt .. Rock ' · home. elegantly decor•· posa 9eci..ee38 · twnh ... avall. 7/10, auto m • t I c O • r . -·a • • • tabla for cn ldren. 325J Lido Realty 673-7300 Olen. 3BR, 2BA, rttnl $1 , ted. 3 Bdrm, 2Y. Bath, · grMnbelt, pool. l•H•. 11300/mo. 780·9313. Newly decor. Ou pd. 17th. Pl. 846·5 t37 at1 000 monthly, purcllH• Tiii FllllT glorlou• up•tatr ... atudlo CONDO 3 br, 2Y. b1, 2 s 8 4 5 . 8 4 4 . 7 2 2 o. EAST BLUFFS 4Br, 2,~B•, encl gar, dwellr, pool, 11am. $250,000. e.45-9555 VllW w/390 deg. view. Scanio ety. Frpt, patio. pool, nr. 6•9-8755 tam rm r.ta req. 2,17 bbg. Adulla, no P•t•. -L--2-b--2-b----... -.. " .. m odd k C airport. $700 mo. B b · s 1300 942-5073. oe r, a, '""'ec. Brand New Homu a im wo ac • •P•· om-973 8270 da""' 2 Br den Turllerock am oo. mo. Pool. Refrlg. Nq pets. Condo•. no money down Thi belt world as your Pl•l•IY chain llnk•d. • ,.. condo, A/C, pool, gar. no Ord n r Inc 1. ( 2 1 3} I" 1 '5 . 8 4 6 • 7 3 1 9 , ~~~~~~~~~l.Jw~ll~ll~•~l~hG1~yl~a1~t~. ~(7~1~•1 feat (Ne W po RT 1200,00Q In uaumabla Npt Hghte twnhaa, 3 BR, 2 pete. il26. 065·1338 3"5·4"27 o r (714J ..._..,...... 8'13-0884 548-9522 Agt. HARBOR). Huge prime financing •l approx. ba. fpc, yd. Obie gar. No 9••·0807, op,•n Seti ~•uD,..u --------101 w/5·8 BR, 5 BA, 10,. •. Reduced from S"lt• $e95. 142·5122 3 Br. Woodbl1d99 Condo. Sun/ Mon 1·5. ..a-m NEW BREED APTS. c.n. ,,,,. 1114 ....................... 12.llf. IWU ,..... Juel In llm4 lor eummer, thl• lovaly pool home feature• larrlllc finan- cing. 4 large bdrms. new paint, n1er park1 and achoola. Ofl•red •I I 139,900. 5'0-1151 ~-HERITAGE . . HEALTORS 1---------1 PllOI •••1011 1•37,000 to $398.000. $726/mo. Avail. mid JjJty. .,.._,._ BACH W/LOFT. Frplc . .,.. cu• 1 0 m 11 0 m • w / Broclluta avllll. Contact: LHH or IHH option. Call Robin al •97·25"1. Hatbot View HOfM& •Br. BHullfully 11nd1caped r.c rc>om, pool, facuzzl, $11,000 HCluded pool. Senl8llC>-Sara Plotz or Al Og ... • Beau • bdrm, family •---t ••.6• 3\t Ba. aaparatt maid• garden apta. Pool &·Spa. gae & water p11ld. No on thl• Wiiiow wood n•111°:i"•r 0flnanclng 1 1 4 . 7 5 8. 3 o 5 4 0 r room, nr.piaoa. 2 be, 3 ~fllN -, .,.,.. quart•rt, beautllul oak Covered perking. No pet•. 393 Hamtnon, C.M. Modal In th• Oaana ave• •· na 01 the 714·758·3150. Agent. pa11a.. BMu yd. Nr 8. PR••e••0M£•••••·~ parquetftoor.L.R.&O.R. ~. 845-44t1 Homes. 4 bdrma, 3 be., belt lot• In lrvlna Tar· Prlnclplll Cat Pina. 1900 mo. IM H ""---~ 8 lrg Femlly Room, 11111 8ach91or l400 --------formal dining and IMng race. Oftar•d at 1975, 5 4 8 . 5 5 8 5 Ha Id • raid Bay.~·""· 3 R, pond with waterfall. 1 Br 181 E 181h $480 WHl•k:le. 1 bdrm, ltow, roomt. Excellent locatlon ~~;~~~ ~~).oe IHl llt11t 979-2390 ' ~~it~.~~!:'~ to 11800/mo. 557·7372 642.()858 · 84M811 relrlg. ~~;2';50· ,_ achbolt. pool and fx1u14•f lllf 3 BR 2'h Ba E/Slde, En· 1 blk to t>Mch, 4 Br 2 Ba. ~~~~~~~~1--------tennla. Call today for In. ••••••':':'&"''-••••••••••• gllah tudor ltyle w/ OCEAN VIEW fee .. yr1y rental $1100/pr .... ..,AI0'1 Large 1 Br. edult, near formation on flnlnClng. WAIT Tl Tl&ll vaulted ~· mu11< eul-Cluay 2 Br & ltudy, 2 mo No pet• Call 801: BIK lhops. pool, all utll pct. Lake ArrOWhead llOn'Mf, .,.5• ,._ .. I bath, 2 frplc1, eplra l 831-0"4 or'•~• soee 1426/mo. 2 Br, 1 Ba. t 9 8 4 Monro v I a . Hamlltalr loe .. '°' ..a.so• te. etc. -mo . ..._ °' •talrceM. I 1500/per mo. .,...,.. 1pt1. p11101. carporte. 548--0336 · ;port fllhlng boat. Call Biil, 83l·l 2&e Chart91' Reelty 496-8122 C...UI... Sm 1>91 ok. Won't laat 11 wkdya 752·1891. EASTSIOE4Br, 28a, Ilka °' •93-88&e 11..nnldM UIJ tllle prlctl Luer. l'hBa. no pa1.I. nr ,~~~~~~~~~~I new. beautiful yd. S900 •••••••••••••.,.••••••• TSL Mgmt 842-1603 mo c9;:_2~~~PluaS485 lerhr Y1 ...... IHI bl•,. mo. Incl grdn<. 87$-8706 P=~~~!.kHt~o~: Reaort~a adult tracf n< Spaciou• 2 Bt. 1 ea. '$425 --·------- By owner. 3 BR Monaco. JfutM lllO 2 Br, 1720 Orange Ave. SPECTACULAR ramo· SC Plz•. Pool, grdnr. 3 Br. 1 'n Ba. S 4 7 5. Eastslde 28r tb1, pool, '/!:Macnab · Irv one $19•.500 1111. Low•1t •••••••••••••••••••••• Prate< older couple. Call dlled horne:3 Br 2,~ ea, Olux 1Br. No peta. 1475 Laundry lee .. pool leun dry, $450, call I. 1911·1. price In bHI locatlcn. Prltltt p.-Price Alty 548-32()9 backyard fr~lc He & 135 utll. 776·2590. 548-9558 833-7890, 646-1947 3Br, 1Ba, & 1Br, lBa In· See anytime. Muat Mii. -·r ' ' · Hlghly upgraded & clean law suite, newly remod• •.E.'h ,. ......... t1...i..-. 844·4289 Wiii take 0\191' your pay· 2 br hou11, new crpte, alarm, loada ° Fr. doof9 t CIMn 2 Br. MllCArttwr E.~ cute IOI apt, vaul- i.d, r .. xlble terme. $129, .,..,_,;i~MICll\'ll~ .. BSOLUTELY ••usT menta on a 2 or 3 Bdrm ~nt & dr..,_. No pe11, & •kylll ... 11500/mo. Ar.J!!!nll t.nld" Vig., S.A. Tennie. pool, tad celllngs, pvt patio, 900. Or try IN option. By 1---------'" ,.. home, wlll lllao cone6dW no II .... 1 child OK. •114..e741 °' 4t 4-6577 • •••••••••••••••••••• ape. 1 600. Adults. 1425/mo. Joyce Weitze, ..... ML 111 own« 8'6-278e U.u• IH1A IHI SELLI Prime watSl<tronl a duplex or trtplex with R1f1~1480/mo. Call 3 BR, petlo w/epai lhon ~'!~!/!~ .. /!.¥. 752·5822 Of 84M•60 63t·1268, lllO'· l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:':''••••••••••••••••••• condo, ••au me 300K. nl Prl ,_,,, A Ad 6 5 o lk be h 2 000 llPt.D 1• OLDE LAGUNA CHARM c.11 Owner to 11PM for OWl'llfl u t. n. -"7 new•r # ' we 10 ac . '. Ocean view, bH utllully Weetalde L.g 1Br w/ B1•tbl.,,. R•c•ntly comple-lld II, llWllllT II Unlqua 2 bdrm floor d9talla. 873-0248 pleua. 542·3377 IM~-4300. 24 t1ra. mo. yr1y. 213-876-~55 furn. townhouse.-frplc, carport, O/W, lndry, avail ,..,} 3140 cuatom unit w~usecl brick Charming 4 Br. & large plan. 1 balh, llv rm w/ •Br twnhN/condo, dbl OCEAN VIEW pool & patio. '895/mo. 7-2. $400 mo. 645-6825 •••••••••••••••••••••• l\replaoe, Mexican ti .. •. f1mlly room. Brick fir• beam.cl celllng1, hard· f11ll• JOH I ,_,_ gar, $700 mo. Mufcttln-Exe 3 BR 2"' be dee*• 873-0896. Deluxe poolside. xtra tar· vaulted celling• MBR 1 wood 11oora. & IVWW~ •••••••••••••••••••••• nt.,. E t 1 l1<t00 4~20 1 br,stove,gar .. lndryfac. ge 2br 2ba bltns . p •c•. country kitchen, buml , ...... , 118-7', na. •lllllY ...................•.. • 0 n n • r pr • • • C..t• .... 31U .c•oee to occ. Avail. 7/1. d '•n II . beaeh. 1ulte w/cathedral win· quiet realdentlal area. Full Png '.''"" 1~_....1 .. ,_ "'--·ty on 2,, •, .... .__,_a.~ 7152-973t Nice 1BR 1 be. 1...,...x, •••••••••••••••••••••• $450 5'6-T214 · 1whr, 1 m es . dowe. Cozy, eecluded 2 Long l•rm Miier llnan· •rlca ·~-.,... ......, ,. a1 ...,.. ,....,.._ .......... OAIA IE Ill · ~~~~~~6~o pete. SSOOmo. ~~t~•7ltO~et.°~!>n~ cl~N 7i1ii· Ml~~~~LTY ::=1n:'.t~l=r~::. ~;~·.,;••••••;iu 2u:;.'ac~~ :tn~a=: r:,•:rg. g5a;:oSt. 8~~~:~ ALL UTILITIES PAID 1p:~t :~ta ~~:'cir::= ----,,-1-r99---- c l n g . 1358.000. A Iron l•nc•. gata• and •••••h ••••••••••••••• micro, prlv yard. Alt•· '550, l536-1453wtldyl. Carport. $375/mo. '"" ~'"'"" Colllne-Hlll ll1llng. 3 lk., 2 Ba, price l"tdu-OCEANFRONT Mobile uqul11t1 landecaplng. 1 Br. Traflar, prlV11tl, no c:h9d dbta gar $850 INCREDIBLE Old Madi· Compare before you 851·2175 1 & 2 Br. Discount on 7511·9100 oed $5000 to 111•,800. Hom.,-al. l80,000. 11,295,000 • eubm1t. P • t • • u t 11 1 Paid . 1..,.~ larranea n VIII• on r•nt. Cu1tom dHlgn --------eome models. Pool. Spa, Drive by 253 H-. Pvt. •""3818 Rick Alderelle Realtor/ 1450/mo. 111 l>lu• MQ,1-E.alde ~ 3 lk 1~ OCMl'lfront. leeded Win. fHture1: Pool. bbq, 2 Br. pool, garage. s.~2~ Gym , Sauna. etc . TMtl call LAo Hanna. ... 17,000 IN n--731-4-444 rlty. 842--0835, •99-1817. B dbl f 1 i *~ eoY'rd garage aurroun· mo. No pell. 1395 B 146-06111 144-4111 .,. ~ • .........,. •, ~•r•o•. rp c, . .,. !4ed ...... J-.-. w ~ e.-~783 -r..~-.....,....,...."""'.,.,...-ASSUMABlE LOANS La .... J..ci 1111 &.aif.p,e.U ... d rap a 1 1 ' MUI .,.vii\ ~'!'!""". '•••'• ... ._ . f~furn. ot ~Th. Speclaculu v1•w• of Oti« IHI ,.,,,. :':7 ...... , ........ 1~~· ,•MOO/mo.. 160-o2ta • .• pv . J \<e. "P'111> "0 pets. ~~ ,. • mfllt ill pOOI. epa. 189112 Florida. Emerald Bay and ltl• •••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR. ,_ dee. furn, Sec 2 950 per mo Yrly 1 Br. l\wn. """" $430mo 2 8t 1 Ba......_, &42 283-4 842-3172 cout from this private #Milt •• ,, gate, prlY Bch., t..W.. E/S:s27~·~~dart~ 114-e4G.5&29 . 365 w. Wiison 642-1971 laundry. rm.: a111rid.: • . GEORGE ELKINS C O 1 TAYl,OH <:o ...as&IUll" Elegant 4 bdrm & family rm. The perlec1 plan for large or 1m111 famlly. Lt ... /~ .,.... young or no1 ao young. ., llJ Lo• matter 1ulte on New 3 Br. 3 a.. Condoa. vn>und floor. Beaut. pool Newport School•. 80% lltld very private patios. financing at 12'n%. 210 a.t buy 1n BIO Canyon. 18111. Pt. Open 12·5 sav Vacent. 8•• anytlm•. &m, Dally 1-6. Jotin E.Uot ~•• _10 • Apent 831 ·4509 or ._.._ 6,73-3968 ev ... ------. ' 10 IOWIH community home with 2 ftt Wt Jiii Ownr. 49e-4038 ~ i 2 1. 9 o 0 a·. ~ .,,. l'••• l400 Attrac1tve rum. 1 Br. Call lot appt. e.ctlelor, stove a refrlg. 5 bedroom• en\I bathe. •••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ •-·-t 3111 21" ... ~ ""51 X .... .:.. auil _. dart Lg ...... tlo ,..,, Ma-T.C::L u..mt ••2-1""" blkl !O beac:h. ullls incl. ........ __ .......... , ........... Ml'--... .... •• -.,._...,.. ........ •• •••••••• ••••••••••• . ...... . -. T' ...._ • .,.. """ $350 960-9283 ......,. • .., ....., t .... --llRf, W14t •••• ••••••••••••••••• VACANT 2 br & dart 1g1 tur9,.qulet adult. No 1>9t. ---· ------financing. $850,000. 2 bdrm. 1~ be. adlta. Furn 2 BR, 1 ba, blk to 2 Br. cerpeta. $430/mo., etory condo In qulai 1·21~5'-5104 1 Br. garage, yard. No 2 Br. •Ba. No pets, qule1 644-7020 Large lot. Sml pet OK. bcti. yrty. Adlts, no peta fenced yard. wet« paid. adult ., ... Newty dec'd pell. S•26/mo. 397 B area Ready nowl $455 Lmel II.IL min Nr. Sho9Plng. L~ rant. '650. 673-6390 2 588 "C" Orange. 1v1 ba, air, bltns. trlga: Buti.ffM Hamilton, 64l-0783 plus deposit 425-A 12th. 125,000. 841-2954 .--.....ua 11• ---836-4120 Call 1·5PM. w/d, cpt1, drpe, 2 car ~ 3141 PINE BLUFF APTS. St. '--IU llJlh IHI n.-n ..,.""""' encl. gar. Cov'd. patio, •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 2 Ba. 1 child Ok, no --------:':71•••••••••••••••••• ~· Ills 5 Bdrm. Formal dining ~;L:OE/:~~ ~~~ ' no peta. M50 mo. Agl. ~-Patio, view. frptc, Near beach 2 Bt. l'A a.. lest ..... Ins 24'x8• GREENBRIER rm, t>onue dart. Pool i 1950/mo 3 br 2 be 586-8137 1.1,'I FllEIT Jacvul, gat., OU stove crptl. drpe, bit-Ins. lrplc, Co·ope from S39.ooo HOME. L.Q9 L.A.. Oln. Rm. lge ltlCll. latd. Summ« d"'9 ~.yard • blt·ln•' Spenlllh Eatate Living! $580. 831-6107. '"c clld51 garege2 . '595/mo . equity price. Condos kit open1 to Fam Rm or ...._ 2400 per mo. " · · 3 br, 2 be adult twnllM, 8Hu If k Ilk all 36-09 1 trom $75,000 full price welbar. 2 BR. 2 BA. Llghi Ag t . 9 3 3. 2 8 5 O or 548-4 view, nr pool, nr lhop-roun~l~10~81 ;.,~.~~~ UgM Brite. Airy & Brand LelMJra World Reeates int., 1115,000, bal. 11 ev.. 973·88•9 I Wra, lqe JI, ping a rwys. 1 ot hlhld pool Sunken gu bbq New. 2 Br. 2 Ba. lrplc, 2 Houae + 2 units. Prime 24221 Pueo d4I Valencl• $39,500. 540.5937 FENCED Near tranap over 35. $850. 497-3973 apa~kllng fountain•' car oar•ge· pool, spa. TAYLOH CO. l.. -----" : '·:. ADULT ~;::: .. ~~~~ 1:m:i Lag. Hiiia 7w 937•5500 OCEANFRONT Moblle Btua Dtl11nJdM and •hopping 1470: W•UI •l•HI Jiii Spacious roome. S.pa: ~~~1~~ ~. 557"2380· ~;;;;;;;;1 oppty or tall shelter. Iii 11 IMIA l•I Hornet, eeveraJ, $80,000. •••••••••••••••••••••• 964-1638 uk for Stuart ••'•••••••'••••••••••• rate dining area. ~elk-In ---------• $550/mo. neg. Wino •• '!!r.~••••••••••••••• Pvt. 499-3818 C.•11•1 3111 Putrl4ct '"' 4 br & d9n, 2 ba, din. rm, cloMta. home Ilk• kltch· $425·"35/mo. 2 Br. 1 B1. l .......... l;:;;;:::::-=i::=:.:-n::-;::;:-•••••••••••••••••••••• f I I t I b d Ill HWIOt down or break even 1• CdM/50S Narctaaua rp c. pr v. a rum, rec en & cabinet•. Walk to apt., eama ce ng, • ' .. · LIVING • Secu111yG1ta • P(IC)I & Rec Aoom 10l\% F H w/20'(.· down s 135 000 ..._., Newport BMdl De Anza 2 3B d & 2 Br. 2. B•. frptc, ~ ur ctr, te11n11. pool, pvl Huntington Center. laundry rm .. pool. Avail. 10% llWI Wiii ;rade ·for 1~10: 1400000 Total Pncel bayfr?nl Parl1. Mint 01:~~ryN•w r;. :~:arb. gwage w/openar, pool, beectl. $1500. 759·1•65 1 Bdrm-tum, $505 July. Call for appt. • t & 2 Bii Patio AplS Btand ,_end unll lea· Owner/agt, 548-4360 or Beat ~on oc:e.ntront cond. 78 ~bl wide, fir• 11500. epa. Chlld ok. $850. LAKEPARK·3Br, 2'hBa 2 ldrm·fum from $805 TSL Mgmt 842·1603 turlng 2 meat« suit ... 2 494-0395. II.Int toe. $325 000 cuh + ~'::,'· ~1f1 I p~tlo, 1~8· Npt Bd\I Summer/ Furn. 567•2390 or 545-3115· tam home. MlnUIH lo 2 Bdrm TownhouM furn. $500/mo. 2 Br. 1 BL up. • r.aroen t 1nc1sc1plng • 01srw.u1M?rs & 88Cl's car garage dlnd 3ume· JUST S 117 900 buy• 111umabla S75K, 10% 87M.181. run Y P&nofamlc ocean vlewl, ltulm ,,.,,_ ,U4 bell, Santa AllL Conim from $675 I* unit, encllCI garage. roua upgra 11· wnei 1 P• P • d d 1 TO OwTl9r 840-1990 SBr, fem rm. onve by •••••••••••rn"-•••••• pool, ape, lake boating, pello, an bit-Ina. laundry • JOQ to Buell & Shops I " I • " \ • '~ '.I .. ' wante lo NII TODAYll u r u gra :...._~oo . . J..ci ,,._,. Ufl 2331 Cliff Or, call for HOME FOR RENT fllhlng, t•nnl1. 24412 U1lllNt~~Ft~ee· I rm. Bring check book and home. No qual .. , .. 'V. low •••••••••~••'-'••••••• detllla. $2500/mo. 3 Bdrm. $750. Fenc•d C11wet1 Ct. $850 mo. ,_ • TSL Mgmt. 642·1803 -----.---- . .. make offer. Only $1411, lnl-t. Bkr 848-0709 lffmllLI Wetertront Homaa Inc. yard & garage. Kldl & 831-3128 Im.t "44 950. 2670 San Miguel Nlce2ity4Br.dblgatage, ADULT M08ILE HOME LlmY-831-1400 petewelcome.645--2000. LAOUINTAHERMOSA ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Or.' Newport Buch. I 110,000. OMC. Mur· PARK on I he Bay. 1 M IATIUll lltAll "'-~ .. .6~/ .,._ .... Agent, no '•· lfllll• n.M J#1 19211~rkalde Ln, 1 blk M25mo. 2 Br. 1Y. BL Woodbridge Condo 2 br, 759·1501 or 752·7373 chin son Enterprlsea bdrm, cs.n, 1 ba $80,000; Chooea OM of four on ---,.._ • = ••••••••:.-.·i:......... W. of • 3 blk• S. of Townllou11. yard, cu· 2 ba, 1 ye« .-·1.n Xlnt 752-8731 3 bf 2 ba SU 500 2 I I •••••••••••••••••••••• •U ... HOME FOR RENT Edlofar. port, Ill bit-Int, small 1>91 area. Desirable upper bdrm turn. $45.'ooo: 2 ::.:1,r:r~~y l~~d··~f~:: JASMl:~2!E~ ~· ,141 3 Bdrm. n 5o. Fenc.d Nl-1441 ok. Won1 latf end unit. All WoodClftdge ...... 12\,i% La. bdrm 12~.ooo. 300 E. kind. Priced from 1250. dart, ,,,_, ....................... = ~~ Quiet Junior & 1 era. TSL Mgmt 1-42-11103 amenities. N..r park, 3 Br. 2'nba, 1200 IC! ft, Cit Hwy Unit 1\3, New· 000. 552·171• ~~!i''t~.~~~ml~~·~~: 1..5~~~0~ Agent, no tea From 13715. Pool. rec. •MIN Verde 2 Bt. 1 Ba. r:4, ~ ;i::· :':: ;':; ~ Walker G Lee : ~-::~/==~al~: ~To~~eac II . Bk r ' Agt. 780-9333 Tp0-33.14 Ol*l 7-dayl #µ I..... '1lf rm., Huna,,•nclad O•· N•wly refurblehed 551--0324 9-6. :========i Wlw opt/ drps. $93,500 Comtortat>i. 4 8t -...., 3t12 .. _ W ..... to...--.... .• ~.'!I! ............... rage. 17301 Keaflon olf 1•96/mo. No pell . • llTlllS SALE '""'"'' -. -._..., a.. Slater 142 7848 833-9974 1 BR. 1 be badl. cewtdo. In. $1t10/mo pymta. Full home, pvt beach .. P•t r ............... & ---.... •• 8'uffl .,... oonOO. '4 -• • · · S Ow ... .....,....,. --2 -.... ---------1 Sharp. end unit. AIC, Pllll• Three bedroome, two and half bllh condo. Elac1rlc kitchen Including 411t1wHher. Overlook• pool and garden. 1146, 000. 111·lHO ,_.'"' ......... Beautiful home on 1 ~ Acr-9, 3 bdrm, 2 be. IMng room, formal dining. Oen, kttdl, lltld nloe .... try with 8olal' lttck at entry. Automatic epnnec. .., 1Y9111" fore and aft, auto ..,. do«. Beau- tiful land1cap1d and completely fenced and orou l•ncad. Small price t29.500. ner Take OWi' paymanta of welcome . I 1500. Chlldt9n & pet Ot<.. S86() 'Alba. .. ,_, gar w/etac .__, JNd ,111 Large3 Br. 2 Ba. Town· O/W Jae Avt ;1r1~ ~~r~~ ~n.d~ 1~~~ 11,556 per month. o-le!!: ~:~:3. 494·8013, =··· H4·9223 bet. =i.::.'.::.~r'n1. i;¥;);~;;4~·M;:;; ::;' ~:':~r:'':~: 115. S:S:.·9~1~ · ~3·2282 dy, 975.5497 : ~~~-v:-:d::~~ 11---~-· ,.~,,. M~-·-.6 .. __ on ........... 11L ... WHtcllff 3 IR 1'4 ba, 1*21 w. Balboe 8lvcl #2. ting. ••rs. 845-3381, '--u1 ...,. "'' •• b 111 t n Mk --... • -.... nvu-, .......... " 8 700/mo eummer, t76-5949. :':7 •• ~;.:;:.=••••• 1 own OUM. • • ,,_,,. 1111 •••••••••••••••••••••• garage fncd, yd lddt & MOO mo.""° Irv. TtrT., s•SO/mo wlnt•r. (213) ---------• _._, Wll/"'111 2 Bdrm hOUM, nr ~ port Hta. Vacant. clean, R2. St0,000 down · $1000 m o . Car•y 831·2242 ~~ 1~~;:-3~r; .. :.-.~;'#"............ R TIWllllU pata cit<. 115o mo. IMtr ~ ~ .... •::mo. 941~ 1•· pooc, gM1 wal« pd, Moat elagutntaklng 979-3378. IPPLI YIU.IY 2 lk, 2~ be. plut trptc, 2 ea1-4aa0 ....., i.;f' ~-,.,_ req. 147 Flower St. v1ew9. atl tM>ltt·ln•, nea- FHltllllll Tu......, ::,:n~~il1~.i!!~ iDiiTM-...-oc-=~AU THE :.U1~~·· uso mo. ~~:vfr::: r.~:*':,.~: NEWPORT HEIGHTS N9afnew4•plu,abdrm, beach . 1800/mo . South Hunt. BMch, 'At 1.ebr'tl200tol2000 M1M Vatc:t. 2 lk. 1 Ba. S880&up.330 CllttDr. flrtplace, ~patio, plul f9mlly PoOf & ..,._ , _________ , CONDO 2 bdrm, 2 be, 2 bath Heh unit with 875--2311 or 548-2239 mlle to IN Nf. • Br. 780-331' Ol*l 7..,_ ''1881 garage, 111. floor, no 49'44083. pool and laundry. 10% ....., 1 t p OC.RENTALS V ~ ...... ... ... pat1. $~75/mo. $475 -..... --.,-... --...... --- d No ............, L O•llQI • ..,,.-1 ' OI. • acant. ,.... ptllnt, _. -.Olttu 1100 -'·-nl Tll PllOI n. qu-''"'V· ono l:Hh flow. Now 1159, t·5br • $200 to $2000 mtt on c:Nlclr'tn & l*8. ......., .. ,. .,... ng. II ..... t•rm financing. Call 500. 8111 Grundy, Ritt, 750-331• .open 7-deye 8t'91QM .... or law (IS I) LIFE'' 7 59.4 2 2 9 , wk nd 1 E1410ant 2 BR, dart, 3 Ba, -• Brandon Agt. 720-1404 87s..8181. with tlon 19501 ey the monttl or1y BUT 54i-7329. woo<lbumlng fplc. pool, "your loot!~'°'• bet· --:::J;;;;;;;;;;;;;~L-1-=.:...:...:...:.:~;;;:;;;=----I .. TllWl•I Own•~~Agent. c a11 ":!; Otttf '800lmo kif 2 Br 2 spec1oua 2 er. 2 ea. de-11500 tee. 09•3529: re~:!. wll~N·lJ:~ llP8 3 8r, 2'hba, plu1 fire· appt. 780-ICM1. Ba, Mil 10 llMOh. AY911. ftnt~ PUMr luu. new c arp•h. 805-999-532.8 Ta• --place, 2 car o-. pool, frOf'll JuM 20 loclal Actlvltlaa dt•--ood 1 Id NICE 2 er 1b• ,........,w dining, R.V acceM. QOI'· --•-jec. all within biking dllt-3llr, 2la. rw Magnolla & . D l r e c t o r • F r e e .. --· goo ... 1 1 ' ".,.._., geoue famlly rm and In-Fii .... 111111 t • n c • to b ••c h . Qarfleld:......MW painted, 28f, bollC dCk llOO/Wlc 8 u n d • Y loc:atlon. Metu,. adulta patio, gar, ,.~, licM '-'dry.~ San a.m.m. pndl of HOO/mo. 175·2311 or dean. lrou mo. Gn1nr 1ru11d1•880'.. :t·~~~. ~~.. !:°~' Anna, 1"83 flnandn010 -.·~ ... la r~ ownertNp. Modem ~ ~2238 Ina. 994-6302, 111-5711 1ar, bolil de* '400lwlc '*1Ma•Ptua ............ _ ,_, ... _. n1111 11yla tour unit -...an mud\ moN $122,000. Cell t714370 ·-· -•m• •P•ttment hOUH With • -• Hr. Ha. •Int l• •tory ----0 It ll'AT . -OOMl'I. '* & golf COUIM Tll ~ ... lWMMi ., ............ ,,.. .... , I Iii It I c It. AT I 0 N : IMr 1.1 .... view, dote to ra· Rant In Coate Me .. • a bdl, ITH mo. -= '11-e1ll T • n n I 1 • F r • • Out of th• night only three yHrt 01 • NEWEST eat.ct 20 In'-._.. Leaaont <oro & Pl'O \t './/.ltlFtf pattern , tt)I • tftOWI lie• N!WI Townnome VILLAGE ............................. btM. daoof. lhOPl-2' 11••lth cust°"' hQl'ne oner. d help ftnanoe I MYe COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Ir. llAlllD ltt declll, fa~. w , ouar· Oii ......... m • 0 n I f I c • n t bllye r thouund1 of 2'At la. 180().1800 eq. ft. 3 8dml dl1•11Nd homea d • d 9 • t •' H . H . HydrM•llGI tractor and all attach--~-------ti manta. 17 Ir• orchard. Big 08fden .... Come ... and compare. For onf)' 1141,000. Cell 919/ 87f~2.208 opportunltl••· dolllnlll hlllno price of of pure IUxury. Oarao-, 1n uoalent w. A..._ UTOOfmo. """""~ Separate gueat ·=~~ ::P~•= 1pa1 In •v•ry home · b l e lmmedletely, 3 Ir Ma, w poot, ten-Ol1'l*'I . home •nd ptlv•t• o oatl PRINCIPALS mHt•r IUlt•, dining '919tmooa1,.., ..... ftll , IUafd•d o•t• •IAUTI UL pool end epa. ONLYI Call owner at toom1, l#OOd burnlnO ''"'other• lo ohOOM 11100frllo APAltTlllNTlt e>wr. wltt "'** 111•1 """'""'t'"•. ftrepteoea. lfttcfo-w8" ..,,.,., w.·,. v. .._to ••n1•••1... t a t ---Ollllfte. prw. ~ & ... ,_....... ....,ooma•~ =:I:::.~· Rn•.... =:,~'C':"M.;'~ 1~1·••..:.:.. ::,• ::.,~~ :.:!~:=."!"°...; ._ C-. .._ 12,000 IQ ft. Owner/ 15 ,,....... frOf'll '9'tl6onl .,,...,. bldg. ltlOOIMO. ... or ....., 1 toe. n·1-.... lnVMtOf' ""'' Xlftt Uft• ............ 1_._..._.toI0 ._...... Dovie KHf, .,,, "•' _, ",_. derlytng fin. Motlvalecl -.... ....._ · · ...... f!IU. ,.,,., IMWll • ....,, ftl•H or O.C.Alrpott. isa - 171 .. ~111.,,,. • .u,. J111t ettt of New111ort ,.· 1 ..... II' mt U ...... ...... -INd ••. of ..,,.:2': • .,. "-· RADII' --, .... --.--~~--c0i.'.'~i: 1~~~~:,:~:i ~~. 14,: WCMJGINDGI I bf OM-~·-'..".:~-=: .;~ ~!!!!!!!!!~!!!=~ = '::~*:. rww. Mat, on a.. ~· IP-Oran10 Ave ., Ooat• •· r' wia. 'i:· 1~ 11~ ff•na. nine ldr•., a lattl '" .. '"' + r.lUEST "'PT prH 1,000 141.ft. Xtnt .._.. C.O "'! ftlllll· "° ""!' ~ VllW .... (Ill ,_, . ..,. "'Ceota--. ~":IR. ~--'f:=; •flll ..-'·Woofter •. ~~ ~·~ :,\;.,:..~ ~= 1 .:.:;:.. ~.:..::.: .::• =• n•= .... ..... Lan#!•• ~·Kl,,. ...,.,_ *' •. ~.· -~7~ u.·--··---•i•:i!E' llii i" ................. i'F ......... i,i~"' .... l"" f11l!fl !!. .. • •m .,,. • "' 1····~'!~ -~ •t""... WrM •... ,. -. •· .... cr,Mt ..,., .. if..,._,. . ~ JMM,t/'· ~ .:;..1~4:.:,.,114 Oii 't' h ·UH. ' II I • • MMAfflfi •••• IMf c-.t"1A!fMJa uu Hl!.~.!.'.~t. .•..• IH.f ff!f!!l!!f!J •••••••••• !'11.."¥.'!l. •••• TJ.ft l!/l..,M'!!. •••• 1.1.!f •t11. !•IM 1J." a.1. lr•w -YJ• ml r... Found· Sldewelk '•ll'Ylew •-"~• I ••• •• ••••••••••• ••• ~ ••• mm • .,..1 •••• 1Pf --ma,. •• • • ....... .... Ad, cit.t. "' 01 lltV• Pick " • .,,., 1 BAR PIAIOM, tull or Mlltllll&. P.W .... 1100 or eoo"' .. -IHOP &pace. 1hH', UC> at CM ltOLICI OIPT. /affnfllM 11fl ~~· .. tl~~·.!'!O"c'· ... or Ofo. Cleenlftg, Npt. loll. ElllOY WOltclf\o wlltl kl<», --••••• ,., "'· Mo to mo. 'or ........ •too mo. Avt. now , •••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,,,.. __ .,...... • • F/tlme da a. P/tlma end wlM lnor-.ed W · ~· ~ --.. . .:o= 7 1 ... 4 t 1. i 8 T 2 0 r Men • Wllllt found on HIPm• m•• evee. U.8. ~ITIZENSHIP nlno•. utlllH your OVI • You GM WOltc *-to ._, 4t+OC>M ea1bo1 Blvd 0 111 to Apple u, Henoe on ter· IUm •'l!OUl~ID. Som• p / aoll'CI ~IY. i.arn home In our oom.llentty llAl'IW& IOentlPv '180·9178 mlnal, ..bu• 1ppllcet1on• ,,......._ ... , tlm• nit• weur oP•· J;ow lo becofl'le 1 trllned looll..S ClfwlMIOn 8a6le ., ... rill ,.,..._ .. ....,...... ••llT..,.. lf'l1'!1ff!."'Jfl1 .... Found: Sm111 Apricot ~nty. SJO 11'11· 846-5219 LoolclnO To-edd 10 our nlng•. Apply: 1h N. HIH counaelor. C111 ~~.,~~ •=-~'= s./" f.tli~ • .......... , ... ;mm With UM Of r~tlon, N.&. 3.16 llrcll. 6800 •Q. Poodle. l'em1I•. 17111 & ya, ff ·& 60 911"· etall • H Verel m1nlcu• Olive St.• Orenge. 2•SPM. 142"4321• Ext, or 4P,M·9PM D.ity, We ... SIUW .......... ()OIANl!..ONT t & 4 It. oonf. roqm, kltOll, ptlonf, ft. or 11 ... MIA i one. Ollve, Hunt 8uch J•i • WHtH 1018 rlata. Ollentele not ne-1·5PM, Mon·F-rl. • 3.u. EOE P•Y hourly w1gH plue .,llWf..... .. Avlll. now. w.-~ tllru MCl'etatlll a word pro-Agent &41·&032. 538·332t ............. ~......... CHHry. Rion Ouellette .IUITllW. RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST • oomrNM!on. ,..... °*'• •••-....u•~•uuouH• llUlnfMr, tfloft?), o.Mlng. Miii & l'llMM09 i?SO up. 21110 ft, lndu· Found: Beaut 1mokey gry e:~-Mi~prc;:i1~/5~:JI Salon. 200 Newport 8 day WHk required. P«m--p111·tlme fOf buey 840-0301 NO ~ -"'· & Condo l!lkllorn et t1,1n Velley. MrV. avell. MS*ateiy If atrial . Office. 1aoe1 ,..._ M. ell, nr ~rborlWllaon P &45~'a913 · · Centtr Or. Newport Re\lred couple Ideal. £Jc. Nwpt 1rH exec 1u1te, 1--UITY--/-ll.-L l_ 1--...1 __ _ ~ V-. "'9nta Idaho, beeutlh1lly fur• dHlred. Call: Judy, dondo Cln:tt II! Hunt· 545.4440 ext 307 tQgy BMct1 perlenoe reqvlred Muat ~l::onea. mutt type ----.- t'6-4tt2 ...... ~ :'.:. 714nec>-OlOO. lngton. BMch. 142-2834. FO'.ind: Sml Fem Poodle, hHllt lt '= BEST PART TIME JOB IN b• bond1ble. C1ll IOI nln Mr -:r.:=~ ":'~ ~."1~~~:.:::=: PAR ~ IHWPOf1T APAR TMEN TS s •. a loft, 2'.t k l)OOI, ~!'-• ... laf.b ... ,. f Eall C.M. rly~~ly groo· ~ r~ ~II p~~ lnp ~.?i,'f!',11 OtMt fOf moon-!PP'· 898·2"1. H.B. ev2. ~5.60 hr to teal1. Typing, $/H, .4.80 hr 19111\1 & tMOt1 prl\I ,._ EJc....,.,_ oftloe tn Cen-•••••••••••••••••••••• med. ldentl .,4v·1200 ,..., ..... ~. u • .. ~ 19\ltew In 30 dey9 Clll C1t1 M r . Yam1r1kl lhlnQ, hlklnCI, nor~ nery Vlll•O•. t480f,ino. Atllned Bu1lne11 L1dy Found: black F puppy, W:,W.~~a~.~~~anoe. N .. Work In our fun, cuual, 20 hrl/WMtl. Experience Cindy 833-9971 · 714/&42-<>411 coUlf.&~Ct.UB LIVING riding , Selmon FUver 8rolcet 975--4912 . n"d• unfurn. 1 bdrm White PIWI. Vic, Nwpt Bl. g CALL· 833 0423 prollt-maltlnn offlee u • ~elerr..S C111 '°' appt •-n••y ~~ bOtt ndee tennll 6.Qotf OE~IGNERS hit t glr1ge or coecll apart· & P • e Id Io C M . • • 898 2891• H B • Rntlurant ---.. 'Nt!fa.,I en~Tr:~~~t Celt 1·2i~i no..&Slf: • rlC)tlle lrt~t•~r~rnl~ ment, rear of private rH. g19.ort04 • . Med Sec .. P/T. EKp. telephone .. , .. promo-• . . . LUNCH SERVER. full Full/time polltlon to 1111 " .,. gft1c11 to Jh.art Incl EHttld• Cotti MeH. Trnecbr. 7owpm, Will do lion clerk IOf the 11e1'1 UllL llllOllY time. Apply In per1on. Immediate openlno. ry. =~ ... "11 If a.. ... fM warello Newpori Xtnt reterenc1t. After Found: cr11lrt & black F ln1 blH. 9e6-5053. ~~:~~re'::r~:9~J· ~~~ Experiene.d, f1mlly law, Bob Burn• Reat1ur1nt, plno. tight bookkeeping .. and .... 111 ... ·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.·r.:: •.•.•.• :. ..•.• ·.·.•• .. _ ........ ~•2 ~ .... 2 &pm~'"· 541-4070 Germen Shep • vie .........,..... _.__ Ille• chatge of one men 37 Fathlon lllend. N.B 6 ~ COmputar H · " n _,,, ,.. ........ Oree n brook . F . v. Teacher. now mother ol t 1.......,..,. .... v..,.... • en-A. perlence helpful. Cell IOf ape; I -"* court•. 7 IMlllft • tll Wl1'11 lulata/h ... t/ 9tl4-.eo&O :,.o~~:i:~• to babyall ~~:!'~7t'i!:.~oc11 Cotta ::':·5!;_.4~;-:ic C.Oter Reetaurent appt, 780-1041. =.~..:on~'. ' Dix. eJCec:. aulte, 2,012 aq fU...-Found: Small F Collie mix, Mon-Fri. &:30-9:30PM LI I Com Ion I el Captalna. Waltere, hifttlrJ Con.,.11lent 1hop1 on FlllEll 11. Newport Arc;llM Mt· •••••••••••••••••••••• vie. Vlctorl1 & Nwpt Blvd, B1/'I. WH IH 1llO Sat. 9:30-1:30' d"!t; lady ~"eat p°!,10: Waltr ...... Hoat..... '°'telephone ...... S4 hr atte. Unl\lmW!ed ~ rlna Bldg. &42-4&44 l11ln11 on Sunday. C1tl Van. ••• •••••••••••••••••• S84.00 for flrat W'eek ; 780·6030 OocktaWW11tre.... p1u1 bonua weekly. Need '°"914UeMtrl'lllP4•11'd ~:m~~.'-:r'~ti llWW•• y•u-0-lflal ,. SOOS S&S Aaphlll, 831-41119. *SEC'Y. then share In p1rt· Bu• & B1rtender1 own trenlP!>l'latlon. Call '~ .-~-__ , ••• -~r.;. •••• ;c........ OS I T Wtamlllnn phon• voice. n~·"'lp'1 prollta Call 111 IM .. llltt•IWlll · Ch1rlle 492·"""72 ._ SlOOO ptlotoe & referenc.e. Prime omc. tectltty loca· SWIMMING Pool Cheml· L.. T: Bu .. I 1" • wht. Anertlve. high energy. ....... · • are needed tor a new "" &...Mi end Crtdlta: Colmopofltan l..S dlrectly ICIOl4 from 011 Hrvlce lie. Colla Bridget · Vic; Santa OR recrullar w/"4 sllllla 8:oo:M 8 3 Top 197.out & Mtup ope. bletro restaurant. Apply: lllllln 01111111· BiJlio'/1# ·~!e ~ Good Morning Amertce. Civic .C.nter. edy 1c-Mesa area. No up nee. Ana Hg ta/ B•c:k Bay. tor Pr11. Nat Search 42"587 ellt t2 r1t0t Of Tomoa Swiu 9AM 11AM 333 ea~ Tll -~rnlture and The Tomonow Show. ceu to trwye, ltexlble Wiii tr1ln. J 60,000 lull 540-"728. 540· 1865 Firm Money open. BOOKKEEPER, wanted, autom1tlc1. Gd. lutura. Dr .. Npt. eCh. 0 C C c • m p u •' . .. ~.__,,"'"".,. Mowlnto-...,.,. 141"18" office 1ult11 from ln'IOUnl recfd. Wiii net Found: Sc;hnauier. Co· 7t4/833-t030 111eut5yr1txPtf.Keep ~.:;!.ngo::'°.f!/~::'. • d8Y Of' CMll'W tor .um-W•la1tr ... 1411 235-1430 aq. ft. For Id· $40.000 p!ua. C111 c;ol-rona de4 Mar area Plea-oen-ral ledger up to lrlll Mlc;ro Precl1lon Swlu, SALES =~h~ ~~ ·, ~~·;~ mer niol\1111. Smartly dlllonel Info Clll . lect, Mon-Fri . aak tor st Identify. 875-7428 aft Ad119'1ltlnQ bal 714·841·1&43 714-831·9331. Call Chrl1 It'"' lft Itta $15111 To apply oontllC1 turlilNlf.. .,nodel• oe>en 1111 A IDT Mn l.YM. llj. A u d I • 0 • 8 P M . 6 CQ QP OUPEITUI Dubreun Tired of making only 25% CoHI Community Col· dllilY;--141·11H 408•887--0 111 Found. SmJ ran rebblt, • I I 11 I I I 1-e. 1370 Ad1m1. CM. WOl'klflo lldlea 0¥9' 40 ---------i t to 3 yra. expr. Oemol~ •EOllllO g 11 ng nger e P HIUtt ... Q.\ ~ .. Ad. 11 d:~no.,,!,° J.:,::U~ ~'?m~'. 2 office aulte. o=~~~f~~ITY 6129 ' c:•:.~~~· ADVERTfSING ~~ ~~ :~~·r~~.'~u~1~ ~~:::!.:.P:;s.~~~ ~:.rt~~V:. s3"o'!!~~.~P8:1i ::,j:.9!~ :~iP~bJ'!:~ Sfll ~ Hiiia Ad. (Newport JIH ). Cell Mette 87~. ~ Found. Orange etrlped CQ.QRDINITQR thru 9th, 91m to 3pm. now i nd start earning 18. E.O.E./ M/F/H. '' 144-1111 "T.L.' 11 &42-7543 Sun-' CCl long hair cat. very rec-ft Santi Ana Country Club. ....... lael tfflte lant11tlc; money, right SERVICE Sta~on 11tend1 Ll~TIFUL 2 Br. dey tllru Thuradey lfter 8 •WPllT PIWILA •-ently spayed c M area. Explllenced newapepe< See Jim Wood. Pltlme, expf: IOf' G.P. call 1w1yl 875-4273 helper. Full 6 p/tlme, - fr , lo, ad'ulta. p.m. 940 IQ. ft. prime eQC. 557-7614. per10,. 10 handle k•Y lllllltf . Alie &4~ Salea Mr. Botti. 2490 Fllrvlew t 1050. ~o. Quiet M to lhr lrvlne 2 bf o ffice ap1c e. Mark MOBILE Founoi-White F Poodle, accounts In co-op cate-W ........ __ -y--.1.. •II" •-Atllflf BUILDING & _Ad_,_c_M _____ _ --,.---------1 ept w/aame, nonamkr, 973-eec>e. DOG GROOMING UNIT approx. 30 lb, vie Crown CJOl'f· Able to co-ordinate .,_ ... ww--··-M""~-SEWING MACHINE OPE· 1to;~."2 br, 1 ba, new ltralgl'tl, $285 + 'A UUll. NEWPORT BEACH Ut•lltl one-peraon co-op de· Mt LM rn medlc1I sklll1 & AATORS. Exper, quality CPW~P•· pelnt. No 857_.79e • "Turn Key" Offloe $390. Valley Pkwy, -499·2898 panmtl'll and work Over 25. e.t allted tot ..,,,. In the Army Re1-PLl•IDING DEPT. minded, piece ratea. s>Mi. ~. 176-0349 ---------"Branch" office $75. IE-••••-p••JIEI hand-In-hand with retail women. Mra. Camp, .,.... llM1 l\ome. Call to-UlftD C t M 842 9852 RMMTE Want..S to 1111. 3 ··--· -MOM'S MOVINGll I t If E II t dey· Ex p'd .. 40 hr. WHk, OS a ... • L= :!c.!.baM~ = br home In Univ. Parll =~~~ T=:~m~~~ Wanted. Siient or 1ctlve. Must find lovlng home ~~0'::1i,1 ~ppor~u°:111!~. 945-0032 eft. 12· C.M. . Tu1tln 731-0481 mutt be able to work SPARE TIME HELP NEE· w . s760 ~. 87s.7907 ""of lrvtne. Fem, non-pl'tonei. Cell tor Into BBQ rlba. Sl0.000. for "Zac;h", an adorable Call· 642-4321, Eltt 282 CASHIER & llouMWarM Santi Ana 5-42-4783 Sat. a Su11. Other hr1. lo OED. Your own tv1, 1tln1 3 BR 2 Ba. 1707 W. Bel- boa, newly decorated, bWlt. C411d. Ytty. llOO. 17~· lfN<r. Mull be neet a 752~a. 1·524-7908/1-776-1130 black & while M kitten, tor appointment and salel, F/tlme. Apply In USAA Ctr. 552-3173 be 1rranged. Apply In opportunlt111. Up ta ~ble. Pvt. pool & -l ii;iii9iiiiiii;intiil-Full 9trVlce gardening & approK. 9 wka old. lntervl-p111on: Crown Hard· llt4 tffle per1on: Kerm Rima $1000/mo. Appl. Dennla lac. Comm. teiwa & pool Wlll'mllRI 1and1eaplng. all equip.. 536-9832 aft. 6pm lr•i• Otatf ware. 3107 E. CoHt • t lier H.,dware, 2668 H11bor 84$-5-417 2 blka. ewey. S350 mo. 1200 °' 2400 aq. tt. o. route, etc. BHI otter. -Iii ptt·t Hwy, CdM Nwpt M.O. Mella young Bl., C. M. 1---------- Call: Rory, 840-3954 l uH office or •tor• 5-40-1174 ,,,, ••• 1. S350 -c I 41f*gellc Admlnl11r1t0f. nan SIPll·-...... only. 1---------••••••••••••',.••••••• 330 W Bay St. h Id cere needed for In-Mike appta, poallng, ••• •• •-•·-J ... ,. ep.c.. 14302 6 14804 lanf In our home Peraon Sales _. ....-. -~ ..A M/F to lhr N.E. Hunting-BHch Bivd. Btwn 2 U. 111111111 llltP Let Go Of Alcohollsml C0Es11 Mo"'· Ce•· ~26 with tuch up~r. c;alt ltlogh~~t·!_Aouu•tt bl •blel Leading temporery em· Q llila#W R71 C»< Fr-Wye. Olvtc Center VII· Ellabllehed. Term1 ne-Don't let 1lcoholl1m pull qual fPtr mg '· 551-3021 """" .., " IUPtfV. syment Mfvloe llMtllng ••••~•••••••••••••• ton. Bch ::t.sP/:e' . fitge Shopping Center. got11ble. Phil 845--5080 you lo sell-de1truc;t1on. alon. 848-3918 Cl•'tll.fil"" I-paced promotablt 3 bdrm1 2 ba condo, 1 Prime loelllon. t79-e880 AM Let go & llve • Ille of u1m111 OLEllOIL/PAJIT n•1 -• Mduals who ere •bit ··~pets. MOO. LIDO ISLE $376/mo. .... or 845-1280. llYUTHIT -f'~~::~gt!" ~~ ~~ Need money? Sur• thl"OI Looking for lnterMtlng 111111 Allll T • I • ' h 0 n • to Interface with exec;u. 721. 731-«MI urn, non--tmoltar. N-marketing program work? Typing, no shor-Conv • long term care ti-•t 1111 1e¥111. Tilt ......,, hnlbW . Cetol 875-9449 ~~r!,9;2~:Ciq~~ P~,.!!I!! ~~!~a~~~~t r~;eo:ii;,:~~~ oemonslralors needed. thand. 8-Noon Oto. on e>Cp. req'd. Excell. wor· Sllll Ideal candidate wtll ~ • 11_..__ F Rmmte wanted to afW s 1 per aq. ft. M-Ktfll. -"'" program. you never need No l n11u1men1. For P C.H 648-7431 king cond•-& beneftt1. Th Cluallled Advlk11 calflno on cltent• Ind/or .,.,.. ,.._..., "'-•-...._ -·i R t•'I 11 ·~• II-' lnterulew 2·30-5·.30P... F/tlme 1 3·30 3-1 1·30 • • bac:klng up lnalde s>er· •••••••••••••••••••••• ·-"·7 •n-a., • .....,._. c .. 557-7010 •.. 0t• _.1 &Ong to bl hotpltaliied, mlsa ,. • "" oetml IELP · · · · · · ting Department ot Ille ,.eonnel Temrwva... .._.., ..... E. C.M. hOme. &42·9835 Of 1 In the fin.I In 18th oen-time from work, or time Mon-Fri. See Mrs. Prld-714-M2·80"44 or apply In 0111y Piiot h11 an ope-"beckgr'ound 'i"Pki"a. 'bJ. 3 bd llM 1Nr9 /Mu-o Of' ""'' full or pwt, tury furniture Including lrom your lamlly. Mor-gen. 130 E 17th. St. Exper'd or wlll train. Dr) per1on: 488 Fl1g1hlp nlng fOf' 1 responalOle. not nee. 8aM ..,..,., plut YU.LAii rm saOO 19111 St .. C.M. Xlnt 1ront reproduction•. aollecfl·. nlng & .....rnno programs Suite F, Cotti Mesa. c;leanlng4f:~~86 Rd .• NB elltb.llJlaLUC Pll-'OJl. lncenllllel. 11 you iHI YO\l New 1&2 bdrm. luxury <*)ta. ~15 plua ~ loc. Avail lm~ed . blea. artlclea ol heritage .a11all1ble & lneurence llTO ll!OIUJHO Muit ll"a9'l>r'eylOIW1.,.· htllle tllti qu111t1r•1fon1 a apt• In 14 p1an1:1 Bdrm -1287 & Hqulslle handCf'afted approved IEITIL IEOPT Nursing phone saleS experience ....,. d I from $515, 2 bdrm from Reep fem. non-amkr pref. -... -plecee. COfona del Mar/ TIE 10-1-1 Wheel allgnment and • LYI,. Including typing approx would be lnterelte r ah 3 bdnn hM A It -·~• -Newport Beach. prime •" "• brake lie nee Own hand need1d tor pletHnt, • 5 BM S I joining our team, pleaaf !~700, TownllouM from1 1 ~ $230 831'.-01~~ lllll&L 11111 locallon. Write for m0te 1653 E. LlncOln, Orange toots Apply bu1y, 11t1b'd . group for 3-11 lhlft. Competl· 4 1 wpSml oh 1 1 e ec· call for en appt. Chertenf •v4 + poola, tenn '· m · · • Into: ABFR P 0 BoK 4647 Long e.ac:n Blvd . NEWPORT prectlc;e. EKper. nee ttve salary. Exc;ett. befWI. tr c. a ery Pua c;om-Ba,,,_ 714-851·9055 wat9'11ll1, pondtl 011 975-0700 LIA ........ ......... 1 335 S • C Long S.ac;h TIRE CENTER Npl Ctr 840-1t22 fltl. 642-80« or apply In mlsalon. 40 hr week with1----· ------ for cooking & hHtlng Pref. Prof~ 40, beau 2 ....... INr, ~J11 ( anti Ana, A Oall 1-100--422· llll 3000 E Co111 Hwy CdM person: Flagahlp Conv. en occasional Sat. mor· ltHI llMS P1ntt1 P•ld· From Sin Diego bdrm 2 bl. tum Ocean goo 111 • .m.nlii.. le.tel Olaalrli•• Int, Hoept .. 46& Flagship Rd., nlng. Excellent c;ompany Exper prel'1S. N-pon Frwy drive North on front 'condo. No Laguna. IH-!lll ·=J• n, fnrt AUTO MECHANIC, Alfa. need•~ tor gleaHnt. N.B. benefits Including medi· Beach, lull tim.. 8Mdl to McFldOen to 1425 mo.>6turon. l' da g V'ck''s BMW, Ferrari, Porsche. t1u1y, ut1b'd. group cal, dtlf:\lal, Ille lnMJren-957--0300 8 ••-~I nd V 11 I1 g • 497-4l59 2nd floor walk up offices I S035 IO I I qualllled only need ap-practice. EKper nee Nursing c;e, credit union, etc. (714)8Do5198. 1 ---------$125 & S16S monthly: •••••••••••••••••••••• PllTO lllELI ply. Relocation t-louaton. Npt. Ctr. 5-40-1122 II llPHYllll Oppty for advancement. ITIOI 1111 ..... [ ..:a.M Em 111 ,P<S. Orp.,l)dr~ .... IATTUR EIOllTl/l&IOHI Teit, evo fl~ Met•reon. DENT M-'f OrthQ Npl 3·11:30 lull/time. Aleo Call for 1ppoln1ment tor ,18 yrs Of older for amal •••••••••if••••·~·· gd en i 'l 11 n g . C (l'M': ltrt~',0,.JH, OUTCALl • , 24 HRS. 7 ·i ~2. 8A~h1P.-M . Bch ·4,tllly. M'ITI\ 'Ex~ JIN par&/llroe t 1-7 lnt~I-.· 642~1. ext. i.tall a~ In CdM, Gill Eutllde ~M. Fum.~ r7&2-1830 Special In 111 & 2nd lll•020l 77113_-65341_-01222567 7·2. call 6 RDA req. &42.2629 ~.u7 '!51115n g t on B ch 277 Ir Ot wrap, malnten1nce ol oom and beth LA"""'• .._ y a-.-.. TO'• nee 1949 ~ ~ =: Mt ltock appear1nce etc Oome1t1c Help. live-In r . • ...... ~ ~ • _....,. NAiii Robt. Sattler NH/CM l~~~~~~~~~!l ... IOU-a Call Jim at 714n60-&85C $288. ""73-7"-H Npt 8eactl prMM home. ""'" " ..-S325mo. 949 15355 1 otc .. ..aoo aq ft.. at 1250 R.E. BrOker Bd Realtors 330 w. Bay St Tues. thrv Fr1. BABYSITTERS · Mus'! be Organlrer. olflc:_e ~reon hMk~, chlldc:we, NB 20. Own trans State llc'd tor misc. dutea. EKP•· RM. tor rent. Aug.-,.,, 27+ nonlmkr to atw 3 br per mo. 1 ore .. 500 aq ft. 642-217t 545--0&tl • • • Costa Mesa. CA 92828 TOPLESS MODELS Pvt. ba. Kit. prtv. Mall or ~. $300 + 'A utMI. ;~..!::.:~mo. Call: WIDOW HAS SSS'°' TO's ltla1tls Parlor Equal Opp!y Emp•rr· 175 DAY . PAID OAIL'f lift SP • 5-48-3803 & bonded agency Char-· r l enc;e nece11ery lone 645-37<16 lnalHll PenH 83 HIOOO. fem. ~ 5-42-2880, 953-5435 RE Loan1. tOK Up No Open 24 hrt • day' • ' - ' -no exp • nee • 826-2~ Chrlltlen home, klt. prtv, $225/mo nHr OCC In Lt ... 1114 ... Credit Chec;k, No Pen-7 daya I week SALES TRAVEL Agent, exper'd Babysllter, Sunday after· Permanent part lime. PART TIME qu'9t atrelatrt male. Nr Cotti Meta. C1U any-Owner deslrea plrtner to alty. Oennlaon 4 Assoc: Jacuzzi, Sauna Locals Earn top pay by the Min. t yr. Sabre agency beeefl. $27& + utlll. Leg. ti-.. ..,....,1..,, le••• 7500 It of new _8_7_3_-7_3_1_1 _____ 8 1 well 8 9 tourists. beach. $300--$800 wkly. Executive Tr1vel Serv. noons, must furnish re-l 1·5 Mon-Fri tor New· Mature peraon tor dreaa lereo1141a 633-9799. port BHch Mortg1ge ahop. Co1ta Mesa. Firm Must bl depend•· 845-1665. Bch. 4M-2288 .. _ "~"" 1p1c;e In Huntington OESPERATEI Mull sell BsnkAmerlcard, Master Catt 538-7511. Aak IOI' lrvlne, 833-9408 ---------I Female 18·25 to llve BHch. LHH guer. • 3'd TO ol S12.500 12% Charge, American Ex-J«ry Lane. HCllW lfflCElll ble and heve 1 refle!>le PA~T TIME, general Ole. HOA•W CUllS Lux Mwpt Bell Apt, kit· aboard 57' Yacht In pwcant OWMrahlp In eo, straight 4 year note. 19. press. Oln111 All wel---""'-------re,,.,,. 11Ja chen, lrg bdrm I. bl. Newport Beach. Call 000 eq rt bldg cloee to 000 or belt ofter 1,_ come 71H845-3433. Slllea ••••'••••••••••••••••• car, Po1l1tol\s all'elTabla al 875-4918 25·30 hrs per wk. De· pendable person t8 °' Fum, pool, ape. gym, In-An. w. r Ad II 5 7 8 . bHeh. No dn paym't. after 6PM 556~211 2 I l2 Harb()( Bl CM FIU n•E "' C..11 .... ddi \a, 1325/mo. pNI u2 • ..,.,.. 24 .,_ C I I I M r . B r o o k 1 ---------Your Car Rell-1 You , • .., TI•E Wiil •••••••• •••••••••••••• Huntl"l,ton Beac:h ottloe. FASHION MODEL who older Mutt be avail. thru Bank Klf)W or SIY1flOS leeks to aupplement In· Ocl. 548-5574 from 1100 dap. Allt.7/1. Ally· '" .._,.,., '"•· ...... -• Gar1ge Sale • Lott ol time, S3l-3820 Roommate to lhr 28r llC>t. _2_1_4_15_96-__ 2_10_5 ____ b••••t,.fal•/ Custom wv. & Dellll Opportunities avall1ble Goodies! Sii/Sun 10•4. and loan .. per pret'd. come by working 11 1-4PM. EOE. Requires good typing Exec: hi& NB pvt quar· lemlle, $180 mo. + 'h o4 deluite offlcel. llrlttQlc 111ua1l1/ Reas • Tooy 547-8241 with the L.A. Times Cir· 879 Arbor St. (Nr 19th & lers! 1 8r ,·~prof M/F. uUI. 546-2902, 5-47-7818 location on Beech Blvd. Wll .t F•••' COEDS • Would love to culallon Dept. In our Monrovl1) C M owi 40. Ptl 844-1905 2Br apt to, lhr, M/F, $220 ~18g·/~":'etae,Xf05~',•q •. 'ft•. •••••••••••••••••••••• party wllh you. Cel1 1 Sue ~C:~ 1~r~:r:."'G'!~:~ ... ,H.~~.· UU rec.ptlonl1t In art gallery skills and fl~ure aptitude part/lime, can 844-45-45. PUT TIIE CONTACT ERSONNEL E'lff and/of weektnda. (213) 932-4359 HOUSEIEEPEll Reaponllble adults. over + ~ Ill I v.. A.aa1utt•••tr 5100 or Kathy 1 ny1 me I -......-B•oit 81~ N B Prlv rm. mo. 1 u • pre •r Ownr. 213-450-8555 •••••••••••••••••••••• 95:)!9353 teed hrly. wage P ui 10 yr eccumulatlon. Mull 5670 Wiishire Blvd. Morning• 8: 15-11:45 21. with outstandlno. at· Loi Angeles. CA 90036 Out l11 Incl. cleaning tractive peraonalltlea 10 SHS l'f'O Incl utll. Young :4~~~ gel :2~:0~: PRIME OFFICE SPACE (UUIT I IOOlllTI -f'.-tl-~-,-----5-4-r-111 comm!Mion. Hrs. 4PM to aell everything tr om W01nS11 Non-amkr CM CORou• .....,, M'"R ~ ~ llPM. Training 11 provl-antiques to miK. hshtd ...._5559 ,.""75-9~5 10 .., An1werlng 6 men ear-•••••••••••••••••••••• ded Potential to earn ltema. Thurt. & Prl 9-6. Oallfenla ,.,,,., hOUM & driving children work with youth (1g11 Sa•l•et I LN1 to/ trom school. Irvine . 10· 14). C1ll 2·5PM. Rmmat ted 1 ahr 4 " 11 I c •. S 2 0 per mo Empty trallef going to Ml· S300 plus per W.-. For 17-46 Anaheim St Nie• turnl.tohed room In •wan ° 714-633-o203 cnlgan, 5000 lb capacity an Interview , c;all· _ _;, ______ _ Equal Oppt'y Emptoyer Wooclllde erea. $90/wtl. 642-4321, Ext. 343. EOE Keren (2131 357 ·2009 PBX Ana. H rv. Exper. ~ MeaL" Cell after BRtwnhaelnNwpt.$250 1 .. RH S800. 498-5285 1·800·252·9141 , ut. MOVING OUT OF STATE ~ ~ .... mo · Po o I & I• c · ...,.... Ottter FITI 1204. Terllllc b1rgaln1I Sit. Banking Diana (213) 357-8878 pret'd. "' will trlln .• Fllh. Hou&ekeeper/Cook IOt 1 tal. 844·7050 . 833-et-48 dys, 844-5249 Flrat clau -full ~ Female Ascendancy thru (2)1at Clan round trip 11-5. 353 Br 1G-4. 15-48 A\11111 :=-t~ non·amk· 1111. EXEC. ottlcea, Includes Enllghlenmtnt " '"" tickets 6 (2)11t Clau SALES Elm •C. CM (In alley). TELLER peraon. Hve In. Engllan =la Lo-: ;:::, ~:'& Roommate wlnt..S: Quiel, all amenltl u . From on Eye on L.A. 11 now ~~·~~~In: ~~ht~: $SSS 110 to $25 hr. Un-Wtrbd, Gaal Df'yer. tlb- mo ...._.!'1.{1 • own beth, N.B. $185. $225/mo. 544-7180. acc;eptlng members. dercover Wear home la, steamer trunk• • Part time poalllon aval-speal(lng. 673-1879. PHTllUPIEI lable In our South Coast IMP/Exp. Co. nda. mgr, Earn top pay taking • ._...._ &42-1247 Call: 714-833-0200 July 15 & Dae. 15. $500. Plr11e.. 645-77« t>oo«a. jewelry, ciothel, w.:::,: fl H1rbor & Biker 240 aq. ft. --,-... -0-.,-,,-~11-1-1 _c_a_u_5_5_2-_0_408_. ___ 1 ~-6 more. Plaza office. Wiii work bl·llnguel. 2 yrs. up. anaplN>ta In your 1rM. Tu11day. Thursday & Mutt 1991k reed, write Amlleur ~hotographera IWISR Female roommate want· 111 floor, Pf~• entren-• J SALESPERSON foP c:hll· ·~··•• ed. non-amkr. 4 bdrm ce. $200/mo. 841-1324 • llttrM UI t.•l•nan l dren·1 shop. Elcp'd. In Olr11 Bfk•. Womena Bltle. Saturday EKperlence Chln11e & Eng. Sef. needed. 1rtllull lime _,.., hae. s..,. to Newport --::uiiriiiiiiMM;;;:;:-:---One dey MtVtOI •• ~ •• ~.-.............. retail only. Full/ P·tlme Gun Cabinet, Small Wld!!..nintall now .....U. Bw:tl $205 ptua utll ••WPllT* o.H IU-Mtl ldHll I Petite Marche. 642~714 Bookcase. 2 Otllc;e preferred Contact: $1.800/mo Send r-.ime No uperienoe Of Mlllno Kathy Am~;x:' to; KT A Co .. 7382 Boise required. Write to: Uni- 714-540-4 Ave., Watmlneter, C1. verul. P.O. Box 1223. t1il\& up. Color T\/. 714-131·35T4 Alfport Ar-. exec: aulte --------/a1t11tli•a 1005 SALES SECRETARY Chalra. t Oelll. etc. 1098 Pllf>tW1tl room. 2274 ---------•KP•nda, cllll)' eurroun-•••••••••••••••••••••• 30 8 ... ,, Tulare. C.M . M e11 OILIFIHll nlUAL 1>2833 Monleblllo, Ca. 908-40 Newport BIYd. CM. Prof lo lhr Condo, houaa. ding•. prof etmoaphera, SCRIM LETS hrt. per week, ...... to Wood•. 979-5749, 0·3 7445 111 1mentt1H 1285. nu t20 to 250 aq ft of· ·n • Prt·lltll ltrt-101 3. Follow leada. Mt ap-Fr1/Sit SAYl•llLHI Have aomethl~ you want PLASTERING. Flnleh 695 Town Center Or. to 19117 Cl1191 led ad1 do 1182-24411, *'-8479 flcel a dMk IPIOI from ANSWERS Taught by therapist. poln tmenta, h•111y ---·------ ARE I 285/ Ida..-I Classstart1 Jutyll.Call phone,llghttyplng.NeedGARAGESALE S at. n Prof. M .. non-4mkr. 28-35 mo. nclu .. .,, con Mary 873•1779 e'lff organlred & outgoing 11-4pm. TV .. table with Co1t1 Meta, Ca. g2826 I t well I Cell NOW , plaater.r • IWlm poota. Equal Oegty Employ: 642-5678. 497-3887 /wk to • h r N 8 h o m •. rm1, receptlonlat, •n•· Farina • Forty person. B1lbo1 Penln-Chalrt. llwn mowlf, Iota $375/nio. 631·t2te Ol9-.. ring Mnflc.. lot• ot 'OvlfY • Limb« 1t.1l1, 673--0780 of mile. 751-5-483 na. pat111ng. WP & T~ a¥elt FAVORITE 111~&~W~llaol.::~, 833-9078 tie had a tough Rfe. He -S~ at home. lt'a e11y ctullfted &42-6871 ~=~~~5~4t!47~6&~l luMM I# ... , 411' _'300_/_up_:_C_lfl*& __ .-d-,llCl-... -. wu 111 only chlld and Ile _ ••••Ae.•••••··~··•••• air. 17301 Baadl, H.B. lllM wun't hi• perenta' I.JI 6tlllll Single, nr Uiguna a Main 842•2834 FAVORITE. ::1•1W1c ••••• thl-ZV..: 8eec:tl. Centi1r ot town. ----·-----IMI I l•u' IJIO lllaitaaular U. 145 mo. 494-3044 •m lllT ..................... . Sum.rtlft rent1I. Splr1t Storage gerage IOf refit On~ 2 aul. tM left In prime · ~ *#!••'.">< on 8 1lbo1 Penlneu11 Huntfn9ton 8Mch com· ""'°-· ~ IPL 1~ l*I t'llllt to Fun Zone. 10'h ll m'I. bldg. Competitive ~.weekly. 856-1143 20W. &73-2t43. ratea. iwof, etm01911tre, •----------1 oell now tor det1111. 1•~· ll0-2471 4 ~. 4 Ntl\, Nlwtt 1111# ...,., ~!liiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~docik l8000 ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Ude 1111 a' t1c1m1. '*" 520 aq. ft. 11.00 per .,.. •SUITE DEALS* rm.f ·2 bil, S:uoo' .Mt. ~·:.~-="·· H.B. O.C. All'pOrt er-. Prof. '3800 AUQUM. • Gltln-i--=---------f environment, Mt aervlce, cty, Nlr, '75-4111. 1117 w.tdlff, N.B. Want or no fl'lllt. lndNklual of· , ...... 1 • ...._ •-flnancJ1t tnat. 70001.f. ftcea Of dMk IPIOI· 180 B~Yt *'"' to belch: 1 at. floor. AQ e n t tq ~-· a600 ~ft. 1 MO ........ Mr 19' '°'...... '41-6032 FREE. 751M871. , Ith •• , 000/111 0 -~-MM?* ......... .:a\11:=\ ,.... ........ 1,/, t • • ( L , r t·, l t )I •, .· . ' ~ ..... --~~ ./,/ ............ ,-- FOlJI> ADS ARE FREE Cal: 142·M11 <. '-__ ¢_:>=->_...;) ) ( ___ <05 ____ ) ) Newspaper Ca rr:iers tor routes in Huntington Beach, Fountain Vall'ey & Newpor.t Biach l'I 1. Pleo• your a d In th• Dally Piiot Cl...itled M011on (tt'a best to run 3 dayl tor maximum us><*A). H ~ pay for your ed In advence we'k run lt 3 deYt end only cherge you tot 21 2. Get ~ FAEE' ._.. Sele llgr'9 (II you haw to do II come i., to 1M Olllly Piiot & pey for Y'O"' .. "' ----..... afvre you two 11 x 1'1' .... - flREE of dWle~ s. ""°' ..... pea. of rnercMndtM. I " o o .. ............. . ..... , ..... ~Kw.............. ftltfttEellflf. ••••••••• MJlll ............. ••••v..••·· l)J!•i-••rn: U. 4111 HI.. ~ Aeetd. Otft-1.1p1, prden Htullnt .. euo.nt w1f1UClll; ~----lltl 1>Crwwo.. itAINTINO LOW TU.Tr .. trlM· Md'~---·-1 1"1' ..... .._ ,.,..Mt.t41·10MWllly Thenli you. lteve. Deve141-411S =~_..+~":... .. , .. ,..& ~· 1• , • .::.... .... -.., uo. -· ....._., ..f!W" '!"-1'· ~ "'v, "'aln11 trM trim. Low ratu. r•ll•ble. New up ""·---~ ., _. ~ re•owal, •II 141 lllllt41-4M• 71M111 M .... 12'6 ,_. .,.,. "' -,,_, ·-• ------...---i J:fllHI ..... ., nlng. ltew 141...,11 · et. M•rtlnea ~!~t::·.=:.~ •. T................. eet. KlhlS .. JOlll J~~~':to,DU~. !wfMf............ ~4·t~NT1NCI JAY Tw CAAi..!_. Quei, WOl'tl. Lio. M11•. .., ... LA~N MAINT. &41-1417 MAGICAL ILLUllONI IW. F:.· Mt. ~ ••llVAJMut•;;i;N•• ":· l MUmP ~ &..aM ....._ f''t..... ~ Ua.lm ~ .. & PtOC*'tY1· • ftft~ !JA ALlltOOOAl ... IONle•1• ••11.t ........ ,, I-.. !'fee ... C.il ~. LIO d, IM. MCJ.tlOI -. mr.;.m;m........ _.... ... _ ..... _ .. -........... ·-· -.D.1·i04t .... ........ 9W;.. ----·no ·-WALTl70-tnt ·---------No ltl9m/No lt\lfftpoO --· .....,.,._ --= G ... I I ••••• ••••••• •••••u• ~,.. •t. 1111/ut & .. .in.. , HINT.Mal TNI MIW • •• lpeol1Mlt. ,... ""'·· OOfM\11 ,... • -• Uc. ··-"on • er .. en "'' Ytl A091N'8 OllANINO ~ 10 Yf• In oc. Spec. ,... HIAler ~ typee. ~ v.. .... f7 DO IT HOWi dry.,,.. ....... ,... Lio. NSat7. M7·11M Hm• ., •• t . ou ... •llty .t,/ a.Moe •• t~ ,··A.,.·1<·w·o· .. ·t~·.·:.~~1·:::.: on ~··· Cell 24 hre, ..... ~.... yr9 .... Den 5N-A77 &a&. llt ._......_ • ...._ ........ , ,.__._ reae. re ••· eln ct.an .. _,_ 7 "" ,..; ,,_ ,.,.,.. 1 ""' ••t1 ........... -_. QtpU lnMllll....... ~ 1...r-.w.. -..-....,.,.._ landeo•pe. Nl/OdM. ·-· ~. Coeta Mela. • .,., -......,_,. UC. #411802. 6"-t1M •- VOA/It DellY Hoe AOod derllW....,,. ~·~·.:m~. ::h Comm, ..... uo t11-Nll. T.L:O. HOUMk~ IMM ....... 911-3176 oao Palnttno: ..... ,..... "'JOHN HENAY co .... 11.'l!IM ............ . lervtoe DINototy olng.114..aa1CJ, tn.llM • .._._,, _,.,.. -17. lilt\ AM711 ............ • -.. I s.Moer I.OW Rel•. Br'·" ... ,~.. ..... fr .. Mt. WOflt guer. Roof1118 fOt f1tne HomM Moat eub ........ K.M ~ tattw oMllnet•. Oe11 now · tree • ._-= , .. ~11 Toni U0.0208/'42"°'40S ""'' .....,_, OO!'Of .... , Den (71•) H1..cMt7 uo. 411232 54M2 3 _ .. .. • .. .:· m 'S:o:,~:.=.°':i ........... a-o111 WI& ...... Tree trim, gen. ~ !xpert'*'" ... ~ .............. ..,. ltUCCO, ~ rw. lie. 0.ve (714) "'4-$$78 . • 1 ~~~ - , .. at. 1 OfPll . 10 min.~. • WedOrl't tnlllt.•~ wen oement work. ,,... eet. We 1-...-...,,. • .., Bob &41-7NQ/6H-ttl0e __ __,..;_..._ ___ ,_.,.,IJM '!!!!~~~~~~~!! ..-. ""'dln, ""'9 •1•: avo ::!fl1!f! ......... 1.... Uo. arotet. waas oe1184-1ecM any11me. ~ f\ir~~,,, 1 &'~:iio':.~::., '•l!!hJ. .... .Woo& ;;.;0 .... "-'•• ,_. ~I rGOM e7.SO: couoh l1CJ; *KATAINA'I : ltv ·IN AUID/OOMM'l/INO, ·~-V•neeN 171-4831 Refl. Fr .... t. &48--04&4 •• •••• ••••••••••••• Lo mlrh Sml )ob10K. Uc. :'&ri11 ........... -•• • •••••••• •• Ohr 11, Guat. ellm. ,... hllcpre, daily maid 9'fV, 20 yre. Do my own work. ;"'l;T;fnlT'•••••••••••• Flt1tllnQ tntwtQ< DetlGn Fr .. •I, •·1 u1.7••1 Typing Word Proo. ~· ~ Park •tot. odor. Cf'Pt repair. 16 ';a offloe OIHnlno orpt lie. t7I041. /U 14W12t HOMl IMftAOV!M!NT ' HOUIECL.EANING Expert MHonry: Ou11tty HANGlNG/STAIPPINo '" V"O .... • ... r-..irnee, '-"' ,.. AepaQ. ·a::=CIJc np. Do work myHlf. Clllaanina· ass.a Ht ""mw AIPAIA-PLUMllNO IS OUR 8USIN!88t workmenehlp, rHlletlo VIN·~C Scott &45-H25 lnHal per•, MSS, et°" "'Mt ••1 "' ......... ••• ·"1 .W., ....,1-0101 Cwpenlry, eleO, tlle. Fr.. Jenlcl'I Aaogedy Ann pr ........ , Refl. 5"1 ~"55 '"SR P'"PERH'"unlun ••••••••• ..... -•••••••• 541-7135 -......, ... .., ,,.. -~ ...... •••••• •••••••••••••• No i..b 1111 Ell. 10 yr.. 875-251~ ,.... " ""'" " "' ""'"" moo M081LI SERVICE --------,,~ -Den--H-... -W9--Ql-1'9dN-~-19-c...11C...1t •::;~tr.:.......... ... Pa•I MtD.ii.r 64~;, · 1 ytt local exp. Ouar. 'Flelqreene/Nft ICIMnl ., • ._ 1!1 .... "'-, & Pavtno Co. Aaa/CoiN. •c;.;t'-••M•••••••.~• A~rlm;UllifDIW\ANOLPPl.ANSE-•IT Free .. tmae.e .. M2M Joar1'1 Cleaning S.Vtce ~~'••••••••••••••• work. Prlo .. 1tut •t NB/CM only. 642-9652 ~~"::71'~.~=r ..... lie. 391804 i.42-1120 w...cu~~ R;;dentlal addltlo'; I ...... ~ EX=PERT1~::ti: ~:.·APl .. -=~~:87 • A.BC MOVING . l&/roll. Alec 751·7027 l«d£H . "i..t tJle 8UMhlne In'' .. IMNll,. #U1061 Aob 647-2983 remodel. Den '47-MOI ::;r.o:.•PTr.:L;;.I~::..,~··• Plum • .. c. &42·8013 General Hou1eclHnlnn. Quick, Careful Service. Cu1tom w•llP•P•c,ng, ~!!!ff!........... Call 9Unltllnl~~S ··············••!f•••• " . nv"'ll'l;UUV .. Fr .. Mtlmat• 552..().410 • Mlllf"°'ICH) ouarenlMd, SECAETAAIES TO QO Cteenlila. I.Id. flNl SHINE AUTO Or!YM, patio.. well<•. Free ....... ,, INtllled/repaltld, G~ LOU'S HOME REPAIR . ~ll•bte. , .... 10 Y" exp. •&-1 ..,... For M t: Frank 175-0714 y.,.,, Offlct or ~ 20% M'onthly ' D£TA.tt.INO. Ouar. ..t. ~job too emaH. :"':/'.":~.............. Lio. 3411HeO 1·240-!<>!2 Elec-Carpentry·Plumb. 982.0510 aft. 4 Ertlclent/Aehble MR .. SPARKLE: .at wriefw9, . F,.. PU/del. &42-544t 538-2807 DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC ~ . Plaltar-Stucco-Palnt Quality H°"MCllanflVI T~ qud~lty. F!Speclal ~· 11.,,.,,,,,,..,, ln-tiou• Word Proo. both •ldH. IC'""' I ---------1---------1 Repeln, new & old, 11 Real._..._ 875-4558 ..• h p---·• T-'.~... 1" an ng. vr• exp. ••••••:!.~.-~........ No rtllnilmum &42"09e9 Prof .. 1lon•I Auto CIM· QlM Can 'yr1 op. Bud 552·tM2 ••••••• •••••••••••• ........ ..., e .. ...,, ... """'' Ccmpetlt ye R•lM ED'S PLASTERING trac;k1. Honeet, cMptn. nlng Waxing PolllNng ...................... Gardening Wanted •A•'u• Beth 558-0158 NO overtime. 730-1353 AJ.l TYPES INT/EXT CLERICAL SERVICES dable. Guar. = .. The 'oet ...... 'a..o-at".' LIC'O DAYCARE Wall tuturaa-Acouatlc Mowing, ~Ing, reklng, ttftt•""•••••••••••••• WAITll STARVING COLLEGE Textur11 Palchlna 8kkpg•lYol~*FllM f\Ma. pnc.e. Infante & older, 7:30-H9n0-T~l-ltud1 1w11plng. Fr.ee Htl· DUMP JOBS • STUDENTS MOVING·· FREE EST. 845-8254 PU/del. •vali. '42·86t8 '1--Automoblle NI Cond. 5:30~ N.8. 131-5335 Lie. 3"944 1·532-5549 m•••· 845-5737 & Sma.11 Moving Job• HNI to cle~ 134-«81 -.... 180 w• Place Call .. IKE •••1391 co. UC. T124-438. PLASTER PATCHING ~-'·"'•n CM.'e0ntekoe 14e-5208 C.llMltn 1Mt1'1 DRYWALL TAPING TIEii "' ,....,.. SCRUB·A·DUB tnturecUl41-t.427 ..Fllltuccoe. Int/ext. 30 :r::::!~.............. •••tMU ---------t •••••u••••'•••••••••• All Textur• I Acol.llUc HAULING-GRADING Fr" Wt. Vary relfabl1. WATCH US GROWi yrl. Neat. Paul 545-2917 SERVICE & REPAIR knockl oft.n wtterl'Y9.U . ........ ,.. REMODEL/ADD-OHS FrM Mt Kevin 175-9088 Topped/remc>Yld. CIMn demolltlon. c;l11n-up. 131-50Hl/M8-8<490 Van OP9«11 SeMcl Co. UM tM4llt-oetttno D•llY ....... ..-.::r.......... & Cwpentry. llc'd. 25 ll#lr#lll up, lewn renov. 751~78 Concrete & tr" rarnovll. HOUSECLEANING Id Ii IJ jg (714) 838-48841 Piiot Cl•111tl9d AClt to .... Twiet yr. exp. lrwln 548-2719 ...................... MOWING · CLEAN UPS Quldt llt'Y. 842-7838 By Sc;ancllnavt•n Lady ... ~ .. ~I. ............... ~f! ... 'I. ............ fl/t . ~-~Orange Coell Smoooothed --~-4479 Ane Flnllhed Carpwitry ELECTRICIAN-Priced Haullng • land1c;41plng HAULING a MOVING Exp'd. 548-2171 Piii f&HITNll p ........ Pf..WU • ,,_,..., 1m11tHn Rarnod. Sr· Randell right, frM :~~i::at• on Fr" •t• &42·9907 Loeal. Student w/truck. F/Student w/houHCllln b~herd Sinor. Lie. Y°"r full MrYlc9Pfumw ··~~t;.-c;.;:: n;u ~ &42·5e78 •••••••••••••••••••••• lie. 41958 720-1280 ucarge3:!.1m21 •7! "359 Mow, edge, rake, .-.p, lewla 875·8180 for l1dy In exc;hg• tor 12oeal cu.at1om3 >::!..of happy tll-NI0/141-1111 ~~2-•!~.C4all/.,..,•Cttudl.1•"8·~1~~~~~~~~!!! le•1•ll lftel1llt COMM' RESID. . ...., . v _, 1prlng c;lean·up, h•ul. t J 979 3979 -· -"""'" ""'"' ..., v7• I: U llll'f,.. Rarnod·Add'n .. ~ QullC'D ELECTRICIAN Chuck 842·2873 bef 9 H:~~'.r:a~:.~::r.~~ ran . enny • Thank you, e3t-44lO QIU Uf.1121 CERAMIC-LINGlEUM Cuatom carpentry, dectc• Vary ,.... UC. 390250 al. WOf'k·Reu. ,.... am. pr 0 p mg mt . RI c; k The IHIHI draw In th• PAINTER NEEDS 24 lar <v ........ ... Tiie. Fr .. 11tlmat11 & petlol. Quality WOf'k. Jaclt H. BenMtl, Jr. Fl'M Mt. 131·5072 Tom w•uT •c·TION? 831·0885, Krll 831-otg:, Weal. .. 1 Dally Piiot WORKI 30 yre exp, Int/ Real. Bob 876-5651 uc. #380801. Free Mtl-Gan, Contr. 552·9142 H•ve iOfiiithlno to Mii? ,., _ _::::... : ........... 71 CIUllfled Ad. Call Tod•Y Ex1-. Acouetlc Cllllngl. Find whet you went In matll. 559-5511 Bonded & lneured Cl...in.d fide do It Wll. ..,,._,_ ._. --Claulflld Ad• 642-5678 e.42·5678. Davta Painting 147·5188 Delly Plot_Clllulfleda. Sell ldt.Jtema 642-5678 CIHllfled Adi ere the •newer to a 1ucceMfut garaoe or yard ..., It'•• t>.tter w•y to tal '"91'• peoptel !!!!!¥.t!.f !P.« ...... !r. ............ ~f ~~ ........ l!.!f !'.~! ... !!! ~!..'!!rMl!.11.!f l!!.t!,.~ ....... ~! '!!~P.l!!m .......... = ,.,, !'!t ...•......•. !!~. ~.l!~.~.e~~.: ... . Gar•g• S•••: Furnllure, Pata .. ,. .. peopi.. Boar-MEDITERRANE.AN BED· -2:d --·RENTAL PIANOS· Ranger Bau boat com •• ,.,,. .... II "' ... Ptu .. Slit '"" n11 mlac. 10811 laRou. F.V. ding I Grooming. Poodle ROOM SET • KIO alze. 8 to 20' tong, 38C per fl. Open ~Ian, $15. mo. petition reedy .v9ry ex: •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••iiiii•:.i~:~u·•~ y •••••••••••••••••••••• Euclid/ Slater S•t pupe for lale. 9157-8589 Gd con d . $ 2 1 5 . 775-1491 anytime FI e Id a P I an o 1 . tra Call to aM $8 950 '79 MOT.OBECANE. 111nt. • ... ~ Reblt eng., ,_ tlr•. HD & • "" •---L AKC Re 'd pupplu 842-4541 · 714-838-2771 968-e238 · • · cond. Turn •lin•I• ... .., repllcM; pk:kupa & long body. 548-1274 , ~.'!! •• !f!!!.~.... SALE ~CED plua 15% Gor0eou• Ladle• Ouk. co~~EiL~~J~~N Wurlitzer spinet piano w/ m 8 l' · e 1 0 • 4 O 0 . f,°o'::1'io:8~~8~h(s°~• Two Family Oar11ge Sale off ell merc;han,dt .. w/ Mahoguy wood. BASEBALL CARDS bend!, xlnt cond. $800. 5'8" Montgomery Pram, 988 723 A3093). Prlcea ltartlng .i Wiii trade fine 32' .i.tfrlea y.,., name It . wa have Ill thl1 •d. P•rker a Pete, Sl25 &48-5355 STAMPS Todd 536-9832 548.-5313 • W/oer1, 1250. '79 PEUGEO"' -y St ffll power bo1t, good for fl. 19831 Maritime Lane NB 840-0090 , 873 1711 1 -• • 1hlng. diving, five·•· (Beectlwalk Condol). C1f1 • · Beaullfut Mahogany Compl. bau C B w / ,.,,,.. ••il•nllll · Good cond. Runt greet. board or tamlly tun for Goktenweet. S•t. M. O«m~ Shorttu1ir Point• Bookcaee. $150. antenn•, pu1h-up, all ..... ..,. ............... '73 32' Luhrt Sportftltlar, 1250. &42-333f late model Yin. (7 t4) c11mu , ---------1 '"· AKO. du•I champ M&-5355 exlrH, perfect, $100. Fr...,m. Coat $350. Ex. twn 225 Chrya. w/Npt 'll -· • I 494-2043. * '78 320! _.. ......_ bftat b c; kg rd. 8 wk 1 . 988-8110 c;ond., CH•, attach. Bch ellp 128,500. ,._.. 1---------1 ; -·0·· .,._ •••••••••••••••••••••• 7141871~3 Hammond OfVWI, couch, $150. 157-1503. 548-0361 aft 5 Lookl & run1 lllnt $350 1970 Ford Camper Van. (#438VCK) ,. MUltl Fwnlly Garage Sale. ,,,_ .,.._.._.,d anb 1dq. dining 181, trundle H IAL AflAI• ~-"'--....,.. __ . 540-3438 302, auto, lo ml, gr•t * ,_·1gc•51~~~~,. apcl) .. '°"!J Toya, blkea, clothea, ....,...,.,, ---puppy. • • dre11er1, frplc Compl $95 968-t110 •r.;;:-;r, ~ .-Wiii trade fine 32' Jeffries cond. $2000. 557-4585 m ••.. " .• ,,,,,.... --·. ~ b•by thliiga, furniture, AKC. Champion $200 IC:fMn & loal & mfflc. • · • ••••• ••• ••••••• s.cian Expreaa good for '79 COMMANDER * '79 5211: auto .. an/tf, lkle, golf balll. Fri/Sat 759..()265 548-2873, 1ets Pwt<glan Oii petnttng • 1lgned. G~~~b~c~·~ flalllng, diving, llva-a-Runs great. Orio. owner A•IN Wullfl llH (#53-428151 18125 LAethlrwood, Irv. Our Molly Medi 1 lovtng Cir, CM. SMacape, 32x42 w/gold concl $1'e0"e7w2·71 board Of famlty tun f« 1200. 84o-78CM '89 Cadlllec Coupe De •••••••••••••••••••••• * '79 l33cll; auto., low . . family. Ger. ~. AKC, Queen Slmmona hi*• & l>WOQU9 frMle. 1150. · · t1te model ven. (714) MUST SELL! BHutlfu VIiie Convertible, orig WE PIJ :1':ic\'=~51~ .. ..., ~ 1 yr, beaut. a W!fY gen.. bed, beige/ ruat/ green &45-1985. ..... ...... .... 494-2043 Sliver Pu ch moped owner. $2,000. "8-4851 TOP DIWll dedl (IBDV020). • ~·::.;;; .......... #ii tie. 494-8712 ftor•I. $200. 980-9096 LM IAlllla We b4.ly and Mii quality Cl•11lc 18' L1p1trak1 $250. · · '50 Plymouth, very nice * .82 320!; 5 9'>d .. io.-:n;;;!~ ........... ,.,., .. ,.. ,.,, Klng-u m1ttr•H a box Send eomeone you love uald 8')0ftl~ eqalp. on Century bay boat, 4 cyt. 830-9482 eY9I white velvet Int. body ,. n11 UIS dedl (#E80910) H~RBORAREA ¢••••••••••••••••••••. aprg,neveruald,qullted •bouqueeof30beautlful con1lgnm1nt Snow Grey.13500.875-e181 .. ,._1,,, ~~!:,.~tt~ .. ~,·~. ALMIHlll lll-l1T1 ,_ •-••-SERVICE flrl'll 124& Helium balloon. Lovely Skiing. ,Wlr\d aurflng. ... ... ;-::..?• 'I I ••"' "'" ~1 .,... ,_, 208 w 111 Senta NMI we .. ,..~ guar • "Okl". • • .. ., 1o~lng · · fOf brldea·a tun. for the water 11111ng, '*'"'-., turf ,., I ..,..,.,, "' work . A c I a a 11 c . "'11AI/-· · appllarieee 54t-30n H~/ Samoyed lldull F, 1·524-790811·77~1130 4th of Jul B• t th board, beck packing. C6Uttt Hll •••••••••••••••••••••• 11.000/bM1. 499-4e92 2480 Harbor Blvd. Cloeed Sundey · . Medi goOd home 2 CUSTOM Made GI... "h k'' Yi fa a e clothlng for all above •••••••••••••••••••••• 'll ....... 011 '12 -1_.....1 COSTA MESA CHOICE INVENTORY I llY......... 53&-9832 aft efm Door China Cabinet.. 67~19 ou 0 roae,. aport1. 845--4310. 11'1'9 "Sea Peace" Harbor SW StrOker lhodl1, al1 n--··t~t .• .. •~ ~-M·-MMHI VOLUME SALES Lee 957-8133 -78" high, 42" wide a 28" ' Newport Blvd CM. Crul111, c:outal aalllng, forlll, xlnt. S3ff. Mua1 ......, "" • ..,... ....--· & F tb good home wide '450 a $300. Anti-BVTCHER 811c. cutting tbl. or Cetallna Hcllday. By ..... &44·5410, &44·2338 H it. Prlc;1 18750 obo. 141-1411 ELEC. range, mlc:toweve,::, a...... ...... edkl:'1' que yarn winder $180. Rack,.1h11f, drawer .~ BBO with hood. hour,dayorweek.Mag-'lt-• l Call An1. Ad #681. WE llY Mlf·clean oven. Show 7 W:.. 54\.5392 an. 'Antlqu•Tnt top Tabla Show prize. $250. ortable. Never uald. In nlflcent luxurlou1 53' -1 Ill 842-4300, 24 hrs. Pf'ln. 1975. 847-5839 21" wide 1275. Walnut 147·5839 = $49, He-2084 atl. Ketofl. Booking now tor 1350. 875-1428 '58 T-Blrd . 3. epd w/ OWi CAii Freenr $200. WUher & scnn..a. to home with CoffM Table 31" tong POOL TABLE ,...,... c;on. · July 4th ·~•kind & 1910 Har11y'Davld1cn. overdrive. lmmac. Mual dryer 1125 aa. Olah· kldl. All lhota. &45-9044 1125. 10' padded cor-dltt '1~••00 fr. •-~'.. Summar of 82• Agent Golden Annlvar ... ,... LI· 1•"000 631 ....... 1 1 All TllOIS waah« 1100. 846-5841 alt 5. nice board $10. Round ~21iornp •••· -· "~' '73-2810 mlted Edition. f.~tory .... '"• · .._ .. '-u......... Need heme tot al Metal Folding Table $10. ..~t.!~ ... l/.!f 40• Viking,(/(_ Ctiartar eu1tom· *85Q peint I~ '13 M~C 2 DR CP~ Laro-Dl1play Fr .. zerr ~"" .. u....,. .. Lovable . Call 551 -1344 l'O 'SH~ INVAUD Walker, chrome, BEAlft1FUt %5" RCA Ftahlng, dlvfng & en-Many,•~ . ·~CO~. l15q), '• 150 or trade for any-2 --r; · 1 t Woodbridge. fllpaeet, whMll. ,1tlnt. Color TV Ille. 2 yr wrnty. 1•r 1a Inm•n1. c • 11 of chrome a aold plating. el2..:C810 thing I 541-8448 or 87~o ma • ca QUITTING ... _ ............ _ Sale S50. 845-3~ 1148. Fr" delivery. 812-2781. 17,000 or B.0 . &46-1854 • tll •---&42-1838. . ....__ 4 . TV J,...". ••• 17"" ·~··1-, COt-tt-Ull l.~t'I~' -~' f ,._,. ', . I r-i \4 I Yellow Lab mtl(. need9 rm now .'n Pl'OQI' ... at Bal· llAIT1fll ~"' 1 .....,. "" ... WJ "" KAWASAKI 400 12K ml ... , 1141 to run, love• kid a. ••m' Contemporary U.lllTD 17" RCA XL100 Color TV ••• .'!'•••••••••••••••• xlnt cond. 1750 080 •••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• or.-&4t4.n2 Furniture. 1931 Newport ..... w/1t1nd, xtnt cond. IMtau 121 MUST SELL. Sat & PMa GO CART, flbarglaa, Indy. .. llYQ su.1200 ... -_ Bl .• C.M. 548-55.ta I 1 5 O · LY n n work Beautiful Shape, 7·~ HP HB 536-n11 body, 3hp, ~ llX)W Top dollart for Sport• •-..,.., FREE KlTT£NS llnt laerfflee Very large horH 145, 558-~133, atl 8 & wknd• Honda. Extru, 113,500 1980 YZ125 t $875 prtu. 1690. 647-5839 Cara, Buga. Campera, '"LL NUEWQUl~PAPTLl~NCE8 '~~. •71~.... Cata 16. Alto made to' &45-2028. muat 1111. 536-1952.. . ex ru, • -&.... ,_, 1•~• 914'•· Audl'a ,.. " .,. _.,,._. v .,....,._. Brand new bedroom. order anlmal1, your · Finn 1nQr• .,.. AT COST Free 10 ...., ,....... ..___ t b 11 •. tamp•. • t c . choice of colore. Lulu Atari Video Compu191' 547-7823 6"2-2818 •••••••••••••••••••••• Aak for UIC MGR ·~1 vvvv ,...,,.., "'7• "•57 ••n •1"" _,...... S""'tlm CX2eOOA, $120. 1981 Toyota SR5 ahort -M••-(Maytag) adorable puppy approx 8 "' .... ,,.. .,._... .,.. ~ .... nda. ,. 497-3070 Rk:k •UM 14* '82 SUZUKI bed, new clutch, new ..,. - Wlllher Al10 $3119.95 wka. ~rlever mix will be Ma1tr111. Slmmona kg a Ladlll Bike, with foot 2 Mii of aallt, trlr, many GS 450L, 11moe. r41fl181-ttr11, new paint, xlnt YUIW .. Dryer 00110 1339.96.. excellan1 wtth chlldran or BMulyrelt, firm, 4 moa, brake $25. Twin Bou· apara part1. Xlnt cond. nlng on warr. 41900. Opn • cond. 15000. 840-8709 18711 Belch 81Vd. WUharLA310 $449.95 other dog xlnlcond.$290($500nu) prlng & Mattr ... 125. 12"11WIY121 Kept l neld1. $2000. tooffera.851-9158 aft8PM. HUNTINGTON BEACH Ill loLllE• llW Sal-.Sen/Q.l.Malng 850 N. 8eecl'I lhd. La Habra·--~2-IUf ... ~':'!':'.t Optn Sundaf 'lt 'k' (, IUlll lldif'I • AIDT ~eaalng R:Jt' CARVER ralS-IOrCE:lfv1W WUher LSA810 1519.95 846-4222 eYM ~117 Call 551-8344 to He. Zenith. 538-9832 •fl 8 549·2711 dyl. 850·9968 ---------• 142·MOI Dlhwahr WU7011519.~ · O·" .,...,.rm ..... 25 .. C....,.. Woodbridge. atl ePM. Yamah1 850 SPECIAL '75 FORD Courier. run1 ---------iC.-' lfJI Dlhwahr WU901 $5'*9.95 German Shep female, -,,_, -· """ ' 1978. 10,000 ml. 11100. great, gd. mileage. warn· D! •• r.: ••••••••••••••••• JAdmlral) AKC f'9G. 10 moe. Needa c;ontole TV $195. Con-DHka, furn., mt1c;. An· TEXAS IHSTRUMENJS SAILBOAT 25' Clatalc 675-8858 12,500/ 080. Mfl-1397 '80 CAPRI 23.5 cu. It. ref rig w/ good home 759-8944 temporary llOfall~t c;hor, fllhlng geer. Ev. HOME COMPUTER Ludera, w/allp In Npt .• 79 Honda CM 400 T. Like aft 5 Lite model Toyot,aa. * _, ll1J. * dlap1naer1 In door . .,__, •-• $450. Pecan w/glHi rythlng go.I 546-3&42 New, 1330. &44-n11 Bch. $30001080. See at ---------1 Volvoa, Pldtup1 & Vant. RS Pkg. Reel~ 11049.95. 11U1Ulut -~• coif" a end tbla. waJt M t Id T 28th St . Mar In a • ,_, Xlnt gu mlteage. 1972 Chevy Luv. W/ahelt, Call ua tod--' 1 Dlhwahr ou2488 ...................... unlta. Elegant eofa bid. Newport Beech Athletlc gu:,J :on~. 'a;:.n Ro~ 213-592.,.981 S 1000. 848-e 188 new paint. m-.ga, AM/FM •7• ~i::tr.: T = ~ 1309.95 ••-• -121 No Junkl 850-1880 Club Membarehlp In-848-5491 Of 538·9982 1980 Suzuki. 750 Cuatcm. atereo cuaette. c;uatom available. {782YOL) Juel Dlhwahr ou2488 -ctudH transfer leea. 'll T&llll TD 3500 mllea. Exctllent r11r bumper. Iota of 1 1 121995 Bl.ACK NAUOAtjYDE s.tlg Blulcouc:h, tlke.-. $135. 780•1181. l••H, •Ht ttll. cond. ll800. 831•8558 xtraa. must .... $2,800. ~·::er~1,::1~ ,::~ti~~ Whlr1pool aelf cieani~ 536-9132 an. !pm ~~5.. ~;~or• d . $ 2 O O . QUITTING Bullnell Sale ... ,, I llulat hft "'L.".'l• Pri• '75 Hond• 250 Elllnore Judy &42-0452 pmta. No old CCillttac:tl rtngea from 1499.95. now In Pf'OCJ,.... at Bel· w...1-1 tt4 fw sal Many exlru, 1350. Chevy Luv Pickup '78. to aaaume. No b"•ck Gafferl & Sattler ml«o/ KING INNERSPRING EX· tllll tz Wl'lllm aam'a Conlemporuy ••"'raett:•••••••••• •• 549"°9751873-1489 Joe Rune good. $2200 pmta. due. Alk fot .ROM elec bltn oven 1850. S. TAA ~RM mattr ... Mt, GOOD COND. SlOO. Furnltunt. 1931 Newport ... ,,, .... SH.-. 493-5019 842-4400, 551-1001 lectlon of COOk Iopa a neWlf uaed. ~h '530. &42"'211 81., C.M. 641-5515 ... , __ , ,.,, Ui-1114 .,,. ..... "11~ '78 Deteu ....... bed R al WI "' Proto LIM. hooc'-. 1ac. $241 del. Never ••• ~':"Au•••••••••••• •-i1••,_. " Ill n ~'V • oy --------BURKE'S APPLIANCES uHd qu .. n IZ, worth LIKE NEW Frenclacan Ivy P•ttern IGllll 1 IP Complete SABOT ready -,.•-!f1. blue w/cmpr · 1hell. USED CARS & TRUCKS c./1 1111 546-1873 1399 CHh only 1211 SOFT DelE BED $75 Stoneware. MMce f()( 8. to Mii $150 c·:.~.-•••••• ••••••••• Spoke rime. 12750/080. COME IN OR CALL FOR •••••••••••••••••••••• del 'Uaually home &45-5210 78 pee. $300. e76-24t7 Long •h•ll. like new 640 7878 0, 873 5794 "'" Motor Home. 20 "· 497·5813 wtldyl 8-5 --•-• .. •• ~~~~~~~~~!.~~-~c=~ .. =:J· .,. 8PM $500. 548-9089 • • good cond. 111 11800 ,._., ,..,._ ;; 754-7350 HIDE·A·BEO S50 . 17' Ffberglaaa Sloop tak• 842·1353 1978 J~ DJ5 1~ ml. Oorm-..·O.llllo O.E. Refrigerator. tro.t **' BUY** Double etze. 549•34.21 Twin Bed $45. 1 euatom f!!.'1,.~••u~ w/tralllr. xlnl cond. 28• Ex9C Motor Home dlrorae IPOk ... roll bar, ....n '74 COLT, 2 dr., Mo, xlnt running condition, oood.tlf91, 12.000 ~il>ol 11.895 157·2419 • fr ... very c;te•n. 1225. -. dy. a; 549.4927 eve Table Model Stereo PlllO •••II! I 11500. 137-1338 $300 wtc Ordal~ ental 8 cyt, auto. Aral $2.400 18211 JEAC~ BLVD. 547·2918 Good uald Fuml1ur'I & (LOtene) SfOO. Fem Stancle 115. .....s · · r · 957-1177 HUNTINGTO • .,, .. Appllanc:.-OR I wlll Mil Magazine Rack $15, , LOST MY SLIP 18' Hobie Cat, )'9lloW w/ 831·1715, 831·7 22 -. --------. . .....-CH %::: Rf:!r.';:~~t "t:. $,el Of SEU tor You Otd-fuhtoned wicker muc h mo r • m 11 c . 24• Drek• Cabin Crullll' teq. eunrlte Mils. Llk• Pr.Um ft1NI ll11 8i,5 ~ "8• :~~~:~ 141=!811, Ml-Nt1 ~'!!! .......... !.'.'!! 19G·90IO llll1DI lllTm 1ofa, 1150. 549.3421 548-6448, 493-0803 t2m PIP new. $2500. 87M181. •••••••~•••••••••••••• ~ S..~sfo3 •t .... -• -n (d~48 -4t27 •wa For Mle antique qullta. 1tO•Wood·Chry1ler .J.24 Fully equipped tor Smt traller, ftxer-upper. _o_r_. ______ _ 14 cu ft WIWlpoof refrig ---> 185 & u' 130 cruia.J race. h Cond 1100. You take awey. '71 Aird F100, 400cc eno. 1300. Shallf Carousel I llf....,. MUST SELL·Kltchen Mt ~75 Value $6000 (f14) 493-40 18. . 131·2250. tleeper box, 11850. tn- Top Dolar Paid ~q-wave w/1tand lee • 957-1133 w/3 di .... $30. 549-1149. Ed~ Ill. Tant Tralllr with atladied quire 546-59" . Aft• 2 831 • 5038 897•7943 ~~ ~h, r'an11' 'ffc~ •von Inflatable lifeboat ... ,,, ~ ·2 cir tent. (Bear'•). MOO. 'U ""''LI••• ·F«··-vour,Cart " - -··-' New~ mattJ ... Mt, .... _. -•• A.a. . -· ..... U p ... " ..a -· Cupboatclt 110¥9 llQht• J -Sis-...-~ $85. New quffn 1lze, ~ -& lollWt, co.t $220, Mii for 100. w/2 hp enilne, mint ...................... Sipe 8 ffe.2014 aft.; 5 tpd, bed llnar. etereo, LlllHll ..,_, ... _·K- 0 _..,... 1100.750-5832 a 15 o~°T:·,~;,'T;'; 552-0798. concs.s1es. 75-5428 -~d..... epm. · Fors1500P ·~~~E ,.~1no 2ea6Harbor81Yd, ,..... ..... m " r •• r,....a--897-7943 '17 MAKO 23' Inboard. ....,.. .,,_ ay, Wk or mo. -..~•Alu 1-• arta: ,.,. I .,.,.. Coate MMe 540:5930 •ll!~~!Ml&ijlill ·tor. at80. #uluJ Feat • fllhlng l nwbor t4e-0551 •11 .,,.,.,. ti 213 auto tow I/Way $100. ~ • -.. -MUST SELL 72" Sofa •----_, I I " S 9 O O O ~ ·••-•• •••••Y•••;r••• Or .._... ....__ ••"' ..,1" Pf'emklm ...._ __, , _,._,, -cru 1 n,,. • Wl'NTED: 85' 1llp or .,...,.,. ..... -wo ,.. ....... ..... ' .. •-.... -... ,.,.. t':o J>''T4 9~~ 1""::· si1~;;A~t:•::i;h·~;~~· 548-2580 mooring for HllbO•t, mTll Tai .. '17 Ford FIOO 2"A ton s;:'..: =~c:i -· WAT£RBED Super """" 197.7f43 • I 130. Clll NI· 7018. 25' Sklpjaek cabtncrulMr. Npt. Bch. Joe, &44-0602 Made "°"' Fotd Court. Bobtail, 390 CID engine In good oondltton. '81 0.1.,..n 510 w"". -...0 ~!!!~~!!!N3~~2~alt~. lpm~~!!! w/2 Mii of--.. mett. ~30 &4MtlT • fully equtp'd. 119,500. NEWPORT u-1.-ad box with topper, needl encl. van plu1 llflgata s.. ue Flrltl trw, llr, dllt wood 9t#ft :; ~5 11e-1253 Sofa bed. Queen 11111. Ex • 2 1 3 . 4 3 3 . 8 1 1 4 · ~""'' 23: 11Qh11 l ~. S4to0/ offer. 979-2000 pac;kege, eaoo ml. A•· Mull ... OE ...,_ & • • cond. 1200. •97-2933 8 PC DRUM SET 714-848-0021 • ='°".,,C:, ~· f Ni-9832 ut 132 or 551-3880 •I• ktni 87300 ofrer. dryer, ,;hlte. 1100 for ~~or~.Oleu ~ after 4pm. ::!. =•~~m-14' Gregor. hvy duty llehtng, m•ny extra':. ter 4 pm &46-tea , Mt. Xlnt cond. tet-9753 831-3218 _, 11200, .,.2.et78 mod••• 25 hp Suzuki S1t.500. 536-8674 jalf ,.,., ,_,, '718210. ExcetCdllCi. 49'< 1tl0 WHIRLPOOL a "' I f b d I ~................ eng .. rune Qt'Ml. Ind. 3 SLIP AVAILABlE. up to , ........ "" ,.., :.t.!!.-~·~ 14 CU FT AEFAIG. ••u u eo • e w BOAADINO IUIO per mo. ctialtl, rod holderl, oar1, 35' CdM .,. It/ft 30' •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ...... _. ' MOO. 831·5038 lift. 2 ll"l•tchlno chr · Coit Why pay more' l•ck OllJ# hnltuw I a hvy dUty ,,._..., w. 2 mi.; cflaroe C.. ~ LITE BODY WOAK l '79 chevy Ven Nomad, •77 2IOZ. Good~. 14,. .,._ ..... r,:r: """' --!1.5001 .. • lactltic. "'°· Bay area. Lo. llght•d ...,_, ... 1..,.,..1""" ~.7 .. tor, .... '?-.. , Of Cante i 14/ffl.241' pelnt/:: ~t -~ ~2 ... w/blUe Int. lo ""· 000 After 2 PM ..._ .. ,.. • ..... .....,...... _.. . .,..,., 641-16M ••"'~••••••• .. • .,.,., '""'' ~ ...... wtldyt 1-6 body • .......... ta2 Window• & removable ' 831-eosl', =· tlO.:a.."':-.aUke ~o.:::~ M5 . 4,, •• ,. ....... ~ctt-:::. =~ry',::: 23' IMP. xlnt. weekender WANTet>: -.... for AM Chevy tNdl JNlfUl ~ ~~~·ut . IUOO. ~~"~1~·~"~ .'11 821~1 •Int QG!f'd, 4 .. """°20. 9llill 4 \lltllii tole blUe ~ new coet 11100· l loaded for fletllng too. Cal 2S Sallboat 0...,. ton tO dleaal. Ablt. , I II t~a _,O: . epd, A,a/F,M qa .. "'., !aP/ff.............. --9Ytl. ,_. ~·rtdw. 8•crtft~e et 1500. c.H ~ny1:~••i.!~'!•7!m raMt Need ...e by Jul) :~~..:om 11M ~180qt~ '!.,~ ~°"a· ....,_. 0111f1 lnvnadlaWf equ ... 12700/bat otr, o..i ~ mr rad!. 110. 20 ElceGuttwe Oall °'*" Good men'• '*--,.._ 133-llOO, Mk tor a.n. · 1 •· · ......,....., " 21. 1'WI 494.rft17 ..,.. " ,..,.,... ,_ -tor r:our vetllcla. Do· 7-..0St • JClflt •ldlllol1 (tOOd for ltotH u .. ), -:.~ ~· New I ft oak Hemllton 30' C•bln Crut..,, twin IOAT IUPe CftlDar Maaa. IOOd OOl'ld. :::.: ~ 11IOO. Of m .. 00 o, tor•f1n. '11 llOZX OL iii 'Ill~ 731-2133 :=".:!i ::1r...::-; • &40-1802 Or•ftlno table end en1tne with 1Hp. Mu1t AVAllAILI MO pr. C4li 1or ~ Snvl "'llOI • sa1...-, 1 ~ w/lo rnl ~\II CMN..8' eTINORAV ._, tie W. .... ..._ ..... ,,, ...._... e q u I p m • t . 17 o O. .... '2MGS1, 127-0014. ~ 9eect121' .o· I 14CM10t aft PM. ,.. ........,. ,. ~...: . .._ I ~ • pl1 .. 1~11~ • : >ant oonct.tao.. oor .... • 9"'IP .,, 1n-...... -... 11l'r.':...... 55t 1116 1s·.ooe1. ttw ower woocs, aa·. '41~. NP,M ·~ .,., _..... & ,... · • • .--.. rn-::i qr & ·n ICIQ.tuM 142 ... 11 dM • ..,. 8'e ..,,_ Deak ntno OebtMCe. etc r.tltt Mr. taao Of ~ HAVE OAIHIY clfill ..... M . Van, 8U llloetlent COftd. SHOO. W ... .. ...... ~-.::::. I.I.JP-... at TM RMI letat•e( 11111 - -Liie. MW ·..-.... NO °"· IMl-U11 Need H•H' pwr boat AlpMll. la1-411t =-71,·HOO, IVH .................. ........ ii\ _ ........ , ~I. Coelt HWv. CdM ~ ....,, 940. rH•. offer refuHd, •a• Mattflewl. tWft oet • l r' or "'o or 1 n g . 11 ' '11 AUDI 80008 .. 1 L ............ u -__ .,_ ,~-.11&2JIU).0r.Clllll lll-tlNtlft.D. wtc~111-4111·.,_& Brteeol 181800 itvtpty 111·1111 '•fON>VANI~ TIO bank lea.~•!• ' °"9,,,,_ "'' ~ COMTM _. ... _.. 111~111 .eind •N-H17 • i1allil.tie1 WMI ... -. .. a on ~ Gd OOlld~ 1 ...... _. ...... • •hie, aunroo•1-~ •. ..... XLNT COM> · 1 r-MN ... l11IO OIO. -.em lfl.MIY' • .,..,.. • •· • ·--y · &42-21i1 1..;:""'..ec:' .:-lof':": ~i. ......... U.~f llM "C".......,,. 11 ft..... .,. .... I .... , ..... /fr.ffl!•••••••• ~I; . 1o....-t, .. rthtona•.· HT~TI: 1• Clem ~•b T~. lpottl ... '10 •.....,, llttrttte• ~···· IM!tOMANT NOT10I -• • -~ ltOO Nit NA ldnf oonct c.r1 d dlamlnd HlllM. engln ... loadM. tH. • ... ..... .__ TO MAOIM ANO -Jmll!j•b! MM .... ,. iitt 1, ' ...,... .. llU 'U T· OOPIM CMep to °"' llOO, '4• Ila -MMIMW ~ • •:"-r.:.-r. ltrd. 11 Oii ~. ,.... Undor We(ranty •• r • • ;; 11 • Tiie Pttot Of ..... •· -•tn. Id ....,ry Mnn eat. It" Ch11n I nutt••· Muet u11. uoo '. II' .... llb 1111 •• •• M ~ ' _..... -...... .... ..... lld-W....... = T!:: ....., ... •1...tl7I ... • •• ... rwn dll, ·-.., ,..... I .... ~ ....... ..... !!t..,. ....... ..:: .. •~•=d1a:.: .,....,.,_,. ... ..._~..ATOR~_. ~~V-=. ~-=-u::: ---==.::: ___ .... ._ ..,.-d19'1 .... jf ....... ·~·· ~A ... ~ ...... 0;11n11-.-!RIM c··-Ml1. a•r~ --::''! :,cz-:=~ !Lt .,...., .... fi ii.;;:I ·&..,.. ... -••·-..:--~ ~aw.rai ~ .. er.a: ... .. ii• .. 11i•·HM11 • e: .... ,__~ ..... t .. D'l.:.75 •·• •·• -.~ • ~,~=:i~;..=. ,..m=t~Jl!~~=a--1-c:~l~ --- IMl~IMMll.vaa ·=LWC ...... 11rr:P1M ..... ;:... l.ll'M.,!ft ......... .. ,,... .......... 11.ft ...... II.ff lltil ........... 11.lf M!ltt.i ........ 11.11 -~-':.,~ft. I! .,. ......... ._..,; • • Otte· ':::.1~=.n on '71 ....,,_ '*'° ---· U.!f..\ffl•· HtOO. ::f,.~.m't. ::1.~l~n':'! = 1trow~tan, 1001< id or '7 1HO I.· ll •MNa u.d 8ulete1 In °'""' lftlll, "'*· ....,i ... r,-·· ...... . .. iiiilii ... "' .• ,,.... ·-·-, .. ,,.. ....,. , Int. UMa Al.I. -f'ed with b11ok~ .--2!!. Ml.-Mii '1t lllOMtl. .,... , ... 17 0.., • MOM..,.,*'·' :E o101t1 1ntM1w 4 W.£14M11•· ~ ver trlro 00 OOftlSIUt• ioe. I oy!_, 4 "'· alr1 llfftt, nt "'llHI•· .• ,1.100/ AM"M OllMttt. i , ' ' dad, uan, xlnt cond. t ttvO. Ut• .. lt: 090.1?~ 11• ••a oonct. u ,ooo or •tot· n vw.411..1.c•-~_oor, 4 • ,,100 171•3859 •nY·•-•1_1-_1_u_1 _____ 1 IH UI ,. Mera11t• ::-, 4 -fat. 711-4111 fNM I'° I ...... ~ ""'9· Good 1trN !!fr ........... "-! 'O• YOU• di, urf, iclnt OOl'illl. -· '71 Tl#tlt,.........,.., l'td PM '~. talOO. 4N-0041. • n.... HIJ P.!r.l!f ......... 11.ff -.,.., MllTMAIM. 11uoo. 111-111. dye, Tltta. '°""· low ml· '71 Toyota CO«Olla, AMI 11 ~bit ••• '"· A/Ci •I ... 0...,.Clllllfy rmnr •••••••••• rr ... '74 IMPl~I., Lll#on w. GM l'lllpl ...._you __ & 111...,.20 ..,_/ Vltlncll IN_tt._ .. Tom:, t4a··1tol, l'M oa11. eooel oond1 lnrt, amlfm 0111. • 21211 H1rw eM. ·ee Camero. n•• e1et1ll llZK or1a. ml, '40 ou. 1n'. ,_,'T __ t_CutlMI __ .,,. __ ~.,.....,.,,-,-~. ohaolt our u11bMt•· ··-,.. '7t HOO: Mint oond. LOW .. ,....7 ' 12100 OIO ... , ...... , oond. Ooet NIOO. w OOITA Ml!IA =· am/fm • trlt. VI, .... ro. lullY IQulo1cl. ml 18.L bla 111.ouon, 11vlno1 ~ ... -mllea, MIOQ. •1a 1.1 t \4, new trene, ,. .... Mllll t171f !10 • .1141·4001 171•2111 . Hf.0741 aft. e Luthor lnL 0 '00. s :ocltl• tor lllo~A and IOMoll •,~"I 117·5071 CIUtotl, tlNI I T:r toP. CINn runt t AiplM IYel ncle. '72 CAMARO tel-99011 I d I h I " ., 111¥111m . !tit• tt. cttll lllU MU»t 'IO 3000 20 200 ml fU11y ~Al OMt. • In a amt.m radlOor:. ~10 II.JO ltt, red 'WlrtU 6'.tlln.. II.I Auto. NN OtMI l!.adaMl.al NM =::..: ~ ~ ~ 111.U 1 --\ ltedtd '•\;;; .. i.-. _.. IN'lll. oer cw •. a eac1 .....,,. • ..-..AMll'Mow, 1eoo nnnn......... .. t1tto. ee2-2111 r.;; ..... w ...... rnrr won 1 wtth """°°'-1 Otc t1s-21;.-.. (Aoy o; uolt. IHOO. Dave. r6Dtt eno. •aLsoo. OIO. • •• u,.. -·75 MAAK IV wM•. ~ with T-top. (701UOfl1 215Q Hlfbof BIYd. ·eo M91d1121Ofl'I,6 IPd, Lloyci): •v•• l w1tnct1, 4t7·M13 wtcd~. '7t Cellca oPI. blaok, •Int Mika, -~t7-6v1' wkdy1 1111.IAlt 9'!!!!11! ........ !I.~ tlok Edition, oabrlolat (132WfTI (NOXKWl Ju9i COSTA M.l!SA air. ltll'IO, 32M, beige, 1·t1W2tl. 1171 ...... 1111 =:o ~., ...,. 1-5 Wt epeolallla In ...... Ill .. PIDTI landau, faot. mega. nHd reil•~-=rty t• 14.•I .. , se250. 11&-2112 ,71 2..,,. 0 .., ... r-1 ...._.. .... ... , · 191, vw v..,agon 1. AC. tor 1ri ... ........_ --·-b • •i,i t If u 1. S3 9 5 o. tua llMll pntte. • ""' .. IQlld, llfl/nn -~· ......... .....,, .,,.,~' ffW aut• AM/FM 'Id t ,,__ ..,._. We have I good Mleo-875-217a No Old oontrllCltl to.., •77 HONDA CIVIC #f,,.,., ... nfl CHHtte, •leotrlo IUn· Int• l,S, 5. OIO :,,,,,....,._ f.~f -·01 cut, n ttvo protwloMI. tlon of Nl!W l USl!D , N b . k p ta •••••••••••••••••••••• roof, whit• wlblut Int. • 10ll ••••··~~···....... cona. t10.eoo. 6""4142 &..le 1•11• Chtvroi.t.11 c.n.tft llJI eume. o ic Am , sp~y~ ~e~loy :!:' = 1uoo1 oeo. nw2n 't1..,.. ,... c1?!~ ~~.,IM , lllT IAll.,.. ...-... 1m ;-;·r:;c);,7·;·:;.~·1121 :~::4:::, f&o; •• 1~;; ~11 mllHg•. m-_. tff4 l\lblt engine. L.w t'-1 rtfurbllhadttl New 17,. 70 Super Bootle, fun· 11•1• Fullorton Ave., Ooft• Pfoto L./M. • lnllde l out. •I... ~ ............ ,.,.._ 6M ml. New battety/ motore complet•ly roet, Mllfm, IPOft wNa, .. II llHll ~ 8·5 WMkdaye • -1-o""'Oldl ........ ..,.H~.-OrtglNll~-:--"."'"aw.:~' (1BCBOIO) Juat nMC1 r• ........ t111! 7l11r,~•a=:i::r~.~: clutch, no ru1t .• White. ohromad.' with 40 IDA :::,•.,::·~ ~ ..,_ 1111 nar. ""' motor-1 oooct ll1bl• party to "It• Compere HOUM 'Of Im· 800 080. 857·1719 15,900 OBO. 494 N76 W.W catbu1'9t0tl. Po-SHH 7QO..OMI Ollff· ...-A•••n•••••••••••• lh"'9. MH. 131-2"108, amall monthly pmta. No por11 Olraot !MIO~ to . , llahecf oenterllno rl~ _.1...iol weeltcliap ' N~· . ~ '72 DART SWINGER 2dr Noon to 3 or 6tt IPM. ~ ~tract1 tod~ mo1. Hntlble pyrnta. 13 MOB totally r11tor~. ,,..11, nfl Cuatom Interior, now .·• • . 8cyl AT. AIH, radlala, 'oqr. R~ pm8tta.;2 ~:.00 Dial 213 or 1141 MER· ,,_paint, Int, r9blt ang, •••••••••••--••••••••• paint. 240 louvere. M'* 'ti VW lklg. "9oond. eng, C L 75 Vega H9Wlback, a/o, orig ownr 11400 010 .,_ . lfff o•• ... ... ... · c EDE 8 11 2 1 3 or $1800. 176-9741 llW '" to 'appraclatel s.. claan, lharp. MUil 1111 35,000 mllea, now tlr•, 536-n81 r,.lt 55&-1008 Proto LIM. 714/837-2333 rtoua ll\QUll'Orl only pt-. 81376. 131-6912 tll/99. mint cond. 11760 or belt • •••••••••••••••••••••• --------IMlttl 1141 ..,. a-• ..-Lt•·-.. Call f()( l'flOI' I Jo · lt-OOH.11li.1181v1t ' offer 846-8153 1114 ,,,, '72 Pl11to, run1 good. 1978 Honda CMc. Good H1v.1'1't you wllte6 long ••••••••••••u•••••••• -_. -p~ t ..-... ....:.. ~ '71 VW bull. rt>lt ent1 171< (<'!>I.I Y..._1 540 0100 . . ••••••••••••••••••H•• good tlr•a $750. CIH c~ndltlon. 57,000 ml. •l'lougl'I to own 1 Mer-'74 Pantera CITI, alfNetl 30 to C1Moee from va • _.,... ml, AMIAA cue. 11860 •75 El Camino, pl 1, lie. '78 Aeet1, gd. cond. Fao-840-75412. · BHt oiler. Call (71 4) eedll B•nz? Don't let blk, 24,000 ml, cuetom Immediate DallWfY (714) 711·0211 Firm. 556-2018 12200 or make oiler: tory 1unrf, 1 ownr. . llff 998-7oe& this QOP0!1un1 lty p111 you xtru. Andrft 818.2MO. (8~~ •.• 00931 41) •90 BUO xlnt. 1,.,..iPO(; MllT llLLll •79 EL~ 1c111~4r5~~· 979-4027 $2,8001080. H0-9114 ~I/If•••••••••••••• ·eo 4 door Accord. auto, by ... ICt now We hive a 1t..M1 1141 .. tlon 11 2oo Of belt olfor mpg. • c · 0 · •74 M1v.nctc 13K ml on ·ao Flrebifd Elptlt ~.Xlntoond.$8500 fantutfc HlectJon ol •••A••••••••••••••••• .... llllT 141.2093 • '79 Rabbit dll, 5 IC)d, 8 Irk & c111. ater. '9!1f>RVAIR rb l t eng'. lnqulr• *ml SIU.* Firm. 49M321. ;:sell & coior. 1Valta-LUil l 1112 M /-flll&ILT '72 BUS, XLNT COND. h~f~ =: rrn,:1~ &f&-7253 ' Nm~9438 ~: 54&-6999. l850. ClaDy yet llMl'f. Brown Hol4ti1: Toyota. D1t1un, , .. IU.S PEllEIT 101 ·I ·.2524 Hllbor Blvd .. C.M. New paint. 1unroof, lhocka, 50 mpg. $3700. TllE WIEST '83 FALCON Wagon 4 dr whh OOld ve4our buc*lt Ill m1k11. $199 doea It. llPllTI Tlllll llEIEL 549-9023 145-7770 cuatom ,hi•, etereo ·etHMS/549-7748 Jim • llUOTIH .72 MALIBU LAGUNA a cyl. 2nd owne<, ~ti. 11.1~0. wltti l"9Y No·11t orlHt,nodepo-1301Qual1Street $ S9 . t"'9,nowl'9dlell,tao00. '71 VW FHtb1ck, xlnt oll•t•model,IOWmllM· Excell•nt cond. 111t. I 1595 '45-7579 p~!!':'r •~v•r:cg;ana~ :Y ':!'.· ~:S :Yiv: NEWPORT BEACH 2 7'4 Renault A-12. 4 apd, J.J. 9'6-8470l754-a870 cond, new paint, sunroof, ge Cldlllace In Southern Int .• engine not running. U•Nla IHI (1AEK018). Ju1t nMd over ou~ coat. All severs fr lll·llOO 4 dr, AC, aterao. 11650· 1974' WESTPHALIA c-.n-1m/lm ClllOtt• 11ereo. Callfornl1l S.. ua tod1yl seoo. 842j853 ................... rellabl• party to mike LeUl.no 634-0189 Per month pl\la tax 54&-8739 P•r. lo ml, n•w llr••· new tlre1. xlnt •ngln•. UIEll 327 Chevy V8327 engine 1177 Y smell monthly 'Pf'llta. No '12 ·-· .. ti 1110 ao IL 48 month cloHd •nd AM/FM ca11. se.ooo. $2200. Call 144-7117. 0••1LUO with 350 tr1n1. shift kit. '4995. a2.oop ml. 1 OW• old contract• to ueume. -• • Xlnt cond. 2 tops. Black lllM on approved er• lflll l..m Inf 857-2524 ..., HI performance. MUST net. All \lltllte 8404902 No back pmt4. due. Alie 0nly5000ml.S38001ncl. with bamboo Interior. dlt.Comelnand.-IOI' ••••••••'·-·-••••••••••• .79 CONVT. WhtlWht. Vtht 1111 2toOHarborBlvd. SEE.$1,0000BO. If, HH for Ron 842·4400, t111. Auto, 1/e. erulee. Poll1hed rims. Firm at Qetall•I •1 DE. AlERlN u s··A Stored 2 'fl'I. Only 1400 •••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA 842-4853 •• !~~~.............. 55&-1008 Proto LIM. fmmei:. cond. 731-8630 $32,500. 831-8325 IUOI 1 .. 11 · · · ml. lmm•o· ••.HO. #1 Y..,...., 141-1110 •14 CORVAIR 4dr Monza ,11 _ l'AAA '78 GRANO PRIX. nle• J...-11JI MBZ 280 S.E. 1969. 4 dr 848 Dove Street m~ 6-46-0247 11 lrllCt IHltrt A/T xlnt 11,../Mech seoo __ , 1.1•-cond. $3200 080 . •• ,....._••••••••••••••• Hdln. White w/green NEWPORT BEACH 'l4 ~ 11• OB O S•1 t & PM ' 1 2 dr, 8 cyl. auto. pa. lie. &45-92"8., "8 'l2 DI lntr All<lng '4500. ~I -ULD,...,. 1111 llealltt 538-7781 rMr d«oO. new radllll .. 78 T Arn llYr /bit( V12, orig. 38K ml. 'i plue 493-7402 • • ·.;.112-1111 6cJ.;•1 .. eciquotf'#IOlllQH1t• ' 545-0732/640~14 lit Wl•I SEVILLE, low mllHg•, '77 CAPRICE ~~I~ ~!,~~r•o. new v..:.~t., 43K ml,wAIC, 2• lu10, wire wtlls, air. •79 3000 4 dr Hdln '74 io4 4 d t . ""'"°"'ll)Ol'lw,&oll6"oW 17 vw. new reblt '"" OVERSEAS OEl.IVERV ~=1·~ c~~· i!!:0~ CIMn. loaded. $3000. Sie-9832 PIS, P/B, AM·FM CUI., :1~!J:ti. :;~~l9~ond . perfeci cOnd lo ml mu11 lmllm ·bkJe~n::d, '" .tlOSfOWNOAYS . • under wm~ 2 now, r• EXPERTS ownet. 97~7200, alt 8 • 838-4579 loaded. xlnt cond. Muat ... , Flnancl~ 1val..,...... $21""' • 951.'2 ..... _: f'-L•-f•f• dlllt, AM/ tape decll, 875 n5&• --Mil. $4300. 7eo.tt53 aft 548-8355 ... 673 s.97.• ••· .... v,., -• . 11 • 44.000 ml wrnty, 11.1nrf, UIU IU PM -v "" • ·74 M1llbU Laguna, lo ml. 1972 Dalt• ae aPM More temlllel ere. getting the cempfng "bug" this 'year. If you have •cam- per that'• not o•ttlng uMd, Mii It now with 1 Clullfled Ad. • IVI • 552-9355 evs/wtlndl ··~.:;z~·· !2k~~·c5k5'1 "~~7d cond. • .. -Cl111lflad Adi.,. th• llrl P{S. P/B s 1150. Runs good. ., . -~ 3001 • 1171 78 91 f SC Taro•. blk. UNIBm • """'· -3vv 1Ht H.,;; ,81vd. anawer to a 1ucco11lul 831"2991 s7oo. &e0-t43I. !!I. .............. !~!.? Ellceptlon1lly cl11n. cork leath, Goltl whta, lllAll '7J. BUS. Xtnt. eng. Fold COSTA MESA garage or yard lllol lt'u 1'75 Monza Town Coupe, 196& Old1 conv. A/C, ,_ 75 Veg1 Wagon. rune fllr. $9500/ofr. New tires. P7'a. JCJnt oonct .• .,, lltrU. ••1___ -..... eway bed, muat NII, belt •--•-• 18 .. 7 batt• way to tell more •c lean, 4 cyl. 4 apd, Mich. Hvy duty trall•r noed• IOfN W<lf1<, $500 IMS-9849 $21,950. 87M203 -•-• _. _. peoplal $1000. 964-3419 ptcge. S.1500. 131-8658 080. 545-0982. \ ATLAS CHIYSUR.ft. YMOUTH -~ l'i•rbor Blvd,, Co1ta Maaa. Tel. 548-1934. 3 blockal aOuth of Sen Diego Freeway oft 1-Wbor Blvd. Complote. ,body anop. SalH . Strvlc.. Parta. Service Ooot. ope" Mondlly thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and & A.M. to 5 P.M. on Saturday. llACH IWOITS ~ Ml Dow StrMt. Newport S..Ch. "Toi. 752-0900. Call ua, w.·,. the 1pociali,t1 for Alla Romeo. Peugeot, Saab I . .... .,,.~ .. THIODORllOllMSPOIO ·Moc*n .. '"· Nrvlce, perta. body. pPrt I ti,. O".pt1. Competttlw rat" on , .... & deity renta11. 2090 Hert>M llYd., Coeta M .... 842-0010 or 540C11. . I JOHMIOM I ION UMCOLM MmellaY , . ""'*°°' 8 1vd .. Coeta Miii. Tel. 540-ll30. f7 y..,.. of ftlendly famlly wvlce -er.,. CoYnty'• oldeat Lin· coin Mercury deelerahlp. • . MATCH THE NUMIERS OM THE MAP· WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NIW,oaT DATSUN • 881 .Dov. Strfft, Nowport Bueti. Toi. 833.1300. At tha trlanglo of Jam~. Mec:Arttlur l Brl9tol behind Vletorta ~ Saloa. Sorvlce, L .... no l Peru. Wo "'*• .... dtelal , · • MAIHS CADILLAC . 2900 Harbor Blvd., Co1ta Meu. Tel. 540-9100. Or~ga· County'• Largfft Cadillac ~. Salee. Sotvlce. L .... Ing. 'LAQuna Hiii• 837~2400 • . CHICIC IVBSOM .POUCHa-AUDl-VW 415 E. Coaat Hwy .. Newport a.ch. 873-0800. Th• only dNletshlp In Orange County with tNN thrtt OtNt INMI .und•r one roof! · • • IOI LOM•PllPOMTIAC. 13800 Beach Blvd .• W"tminallaf. Tel. 892-6651. Orengo County'• otdelt and lergo1t Pontiac do1lar1hlp. Salta. Servi~. Patts. DICK MILUI PIAT/LANCIA "Probably tho iow.at priced Fleta fn Southafn C.lltornla" (Loceted 1 mile north of Bouth Coat Plaza near Main St. and Warner Ava. In Senta Ana.) 120 W. Warner, Santa Ana 557-2132 • SANT A AMA DATSUN 2001 e. 171h Street, San-. Ana. Tei'. 558-7811. Your• Orlglnal Dedicated Dat1un Oeeltr. COSTA·MISA'DATSUM 2845 Harbor~ .• to.ta Mesa. Tel. 540-6410. S..Vlng Orange County fOf 18 yeera. 1 Miio So. 405. ._ . SUMSl1' flOltD. IMC. (Home of Wittie the Whllle). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd., w.tmlnster. Tel. &:ll-4010. r I llUlll',f)J\'f 1111 'y I 1·11\.' =NB hit-r1J.n J:ea _th · goes·.IJack to· CoUrt By STEVE MARBLE or-. Deltr ,... ..,... h was 10 months ago that Newport Beach resident Donald · B. Warner was kllled by a hit and run driver. Warner wu 26,· a Callfarnia neweomet. He WU ~ a 1treet less than two block.a from flia apartment when 1\e was hit and left face down in the l'OMI. With assistance from witnelaes, police tracked down the death car in lesa than 48 hours. They found It abandoned in a WhlttJer shopDtng center, ltl wlndahlfld unaahed and blood 1plattered on the hood. Arresting the driver proved to be harder even tho1.11h police said the1 knew who It was. Otfkera spent week.a t~lking with the suspected driver'• frie1*, parenta and attorney. A 21-year -old man named James S . Gibbs. a resident of Orange, eventually was arrested. Following '-week.a of courtroom activisY. Gibbs pleaded guilty to Cargo doors closed felony manslaughter and hit and headed back "°-Court. ~ run charget. Gibbs, armed with a new Glbbe was sentenced to 210 attorney, i. alated to 10 to oourt days· in county Jail, a sentence Friday and ar,ue that h1a IUilty Deputy District Attorl)ey plea aa well aa the 2Hf-day Michael Dow considered Ugnt sentence be tolled out. compared to the 1tate priaon term According to court docwnent1. he had aought. Gibb1' attorney -James Dow thought that wu the end Merwin ~ aaid hit client'• flnt of it. Warner's parents thought J attorney failed to give him that was the end of it. That proper legal advice and that wun't the end of It. Gibbs pleaded guilty to thl.np he More than six weeks after shouldn't have. Gibbs was scheduled to begin DisUict Attorney Dow said if serving his time, the case is the plea is accepted, the caae goes # S·hu1·11e . snafu solved ~ ldentlly ear 2 heachgoers J i l help 0£ ficerS I I '1 I, I ~ I I Police credited two young beachgoers and a patrol officer in the arrest Wednesday of two men suspected of robbing a Huntington Beach liquor store at riflepoint. Huntington Beach police Sgt. Ed McErlain sait man carrying Judge hit ., by suit o_n ·residence Sa nta Ana attorney Dan Charles Dutcher, who placed a distant second in his June 8 race against incumbent West Orange County Municipal Court Judge Joanne Harrold, is seeking to have h is opponent's victory invalidated. . Dutcher hae filed a post · election lawsuit in Orange County Superior Court against Harrold alleging -as he did ' during his bitter oampalgn against her -that she is not a legal resident of Orange County. The re-elected judge, who beat Dutcher by a 3-1 margin, h.u maintained that ahe keeps dual 1 residences in Rivenide County and Newport Beach but reprds Orange County as her home. She 1 1 I has frequently denied Dutcher's allegations. Dutcher has alleged that she was not a legal resident of Orange County now or when abe was a~inted to the bench by Gov. und G. Brown Jr. in 1980. Dutcher also filed a JaWIUit before the election .eekine to have Registrar of Voters Al Obion remove.. Judge Harrokl'• name from the June 8 , ballot becauae of the residency dispute. An Orange County Superior Court judge ·turned down that request. In a previous interview , the judge said she never· claimed to live exclusively in Orange County, but conaiden the county he_! primary place of residence. C OUNTY a .22-<:aliber rifle wrapped 1n a raincoat entered Pasha Liquor, 706 Pacific Coast Highway, at noon Wednesday and demanded money. After he fled with about $600, •a st.ore clerk ran ou tside and asked bystanders if they had seen where the bandit had run... McErlain said two young men visiting the beach told the clerk that tne bandit had joined a ECOnd man in a brown l.Jncoln Continental. • After hearing this delcription on hia radio, Officer Frank Morrelli spotted the alle1ed getaway car and follow ed it downtown past the police station, McErlain said. Al1isted by other officers, Morrelli stopped the car near 17th and Pine street&. McErlain said police seized a rifle M d recovered the money allege8'.ly taken from the liquor store. Jailed on suspicion of anned robbery were Yurow A . Coleman. 21, of' Marina del Rey, and Martin Richard Bawnan, 43, of Los Angeles. · McErlain said p olice a re attempti ng to find the unidentified youths who first described the alleged getaway car. They are asked to contact the Huntington Beach pol ice detective bureau, 536-5951. Teen critical after plunge A 19-year-old Huntington Beach man was liated in critical condition today in a Flagstaff, Ariz., hospital after a 50-foot fall at the Grand Canyon. David Witherby, 21302 Sand Dollar Lane, fell into a hole behind a waterfall near Supai Vlllage, Coconino County Sheriff's deputies aid. Members of W ltberby'1 campina il'O"P lifted him from the holie about 3 a.m. Tueeday. He IUffered heed lnjuria and i. in the hospital'• intensive care unit followin& · 1ur1ery, a spokeswoman said. l:Oa•t gears /or Fourtli Everythinc you WIDl to know about the Fourth of. July Mona the ar..,,. CaMt am be found on Page Bl. TE LE VISION ( ·-32111 FISCAL HUMOR -Gov. F.chnund G. Brown Jr. lau,N with Auembly Speaker Willie Brown (right) and other laWmabn during a ceremony at the Capitol in Sacramento where the governor signed the new 1982-83 $25.2 billion state budget. 'Austerity' budget signed by governor SACRAMENTO (AP) -The · state begins a new fiscal year today with a tightly balanced $25 .2 billion budget of "unprecedented a u ster it y" finally approved after a five-day deadlock. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the budget and four related bills for the 1982-83 fiscal year Wednesday, while warning that it would not stay balanced without a "strong economic recovery" this fall. Brown held the signing ceremony after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Senate reces.9ed the day before. released the budget from the five-day hold imposed beca~ of a dispute over $235 million for achools. The Democratic governor made no cuts in the budget, as approved by the Legislature, noting its "unprecedented austerity." The budget contains no tax increases. He said the proposed spending NATION is more than $200 mllli~below the expected spending or the fiacal year cloaina Wf y, and $8 million befow the actual spending in 1980-81. "That (a two-year drop) ha.I never hap~ned any time in the history of California outside of the Depression," be said. But Brown said the budget is so tigh tly balanced, with a reserve of less than $~ million, that the Legislature will have to make further cuts in tfle next few months "if the ~atlonal economy does not recover." The budget had been ~proved b~th houses Frida . Both h on Monday al8o a ~ a companion bill that laws necessary to make t e budget balance. But A.embly Speaker Willie Brown held up peaage of both bills because the Assembly · wanted to give school• $235 million that may be left over in the cunent year'• budget. Bravo for Broolclynese Lotaa people tink folks from Brooklyn tawk funny, but 1t ain't funny, lt'• wunnerful. Pace M . rI'ips to ousted employees After ad~ employers how to fi1'! worken_ an author II offering tipe to fired ~: Pap A~l. · Fireworks seized in El Monte . . EL MONTE (AP) -One hundred~ of 1lllpl fireworkl wel1hina a ton and valued at •126,dOo wwe teu.I here today and a 41-yw-old catertnc W'Ykle .mployee WU arretted, police laid. back to square one with a jury Gibbs. "I think this was a state trial likely. prison case all the way." Attorney Merwin could not be Warner's father, a relident of reached for comment. Maryland who haa ~old his •The turn of eventa has left automobile dealership to puraue the caae and reforma he believes Dow. Warner's parents and are needed in hit~and-run laws, friends angry. Dow said it took is more surprised than angry. week.a to build the ca.ae and that some witnesees have moved trom • He sald he is a family and a the a rea. He said il may be church man and would have impoaible to track some of them little difficulty forgiving the ' down. driver of the car that killed his "He should have been grateful son. He said all the driver has to for his sentence," Dow said of do is ask. • • l ·Il space Outside 'walk' averted CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Columbia's commander, "watching like a hawk," overcame a vexing problem with the shuttle's balky cargo doon today, closing and latching them in a simulation of steps that must precede entry on the Fourth of cargo door problems: -July. A> '•'They closed normally," said -----------~ Ken Mattingly. He 90Wlded relieved and so did MilSion Control. FJiJhl d irector Harold Draughon said that if Columbia tried to re-enter the atmosphere without the doors cloeed, the ship "could shake like a wheel well PROBLEM -A balky door latch of the Colwnbia space shuttle marred the shuttle's near-flawless performance Wednesday. coming off a hot performance M • } aircraft. You get ·~ much aJOr OSS turbulence flow that 1t wouJd ..,... dµnp apart." L/-" \at HB hank However, had the door problem persisted, Mattingly would have taken a apace walk to prevented make repairs, Draughon said- T h e ship was orbiting smoothly; Mattingly and pilot Henry Hartsfield d id some celeatia.l sightseeing and crew calisthenics, test-fir ed jet thrusters, and televised an instructive "cook's tour" of the shuttle cockpit. Co.lumbia's port door failed to shut Wednetday after flight in the cold shadows of space caused warping, either in the door itself or in the frame. Overnight, NASA sent Columbia into a barbecue roll to expoee the doors to the warmth of the sun. A 1'irnilar fix succeeded when the problem cropped up on flight three, and as the shuttle passed 186 milea overhead at Cape Canaveral, just after dawn. Mattingly tried the shut-and- open exerciae again. Operatinf from a remote control pane in the cabin, he needed only three minutes to do the Job· It was beamed live to Million Control. Officiala learned a lesson and capcom Brewster Shaw advised the astronauts that if an emeraency forced them to make an early return to Earth, they should immediately point the open doon at the sun to minimize w~iop-to-sun and hold it there as long as poeaible" before closing, said Shaw. I NDEX At Your Service Erma Bomb«k A4 B2 M -6 .u B2 C6-10 a a C4 ' A10 81-8 B2 SPORTS A man who authorities allege forged more than $100,000 in cashiers' checks, entertained a friend with p whirlwind trip to Florida and Jtumped thousands of dollars into his personal bank accounts today is in the less glamorous confines of Orange County Jail. And Orange County Sheriff's · Department investigators are crediting a teller at an El Toro branch of Southwest Bank for preventing wtiat they claim could have been a major cash loss to a Huntington Beach savings and loan institution. c.edric H. Wasano, 24, of El Toro, was arrested on suspicion of forgery Wednesday after the teller, Linda Howe, notified superiors when Wasan o attempted to cash a $10,000 check drawn on the Edinger Avenue branch of Coast Federal Savings and Loan. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Wasano, a •Coast Federal employee, is believed to have forged 35 "8"'Jociation," or cash iers' che<:ks, with a tot.al value of more than $100,000. Thirty-three of the checlc:a have been accounted for while two remain under investigation, Hart said. Ann Landen B2 Movies 87-8 Mutual Funds JM Naticmal News A3 Pu~ Notices IM,C4,C6 Spo111 Cl-3 Sr. Stltncrohn B2 Stock Marketl BS TeleYilion B8 TbeaWI 87-8 Wtiatblr . Al Warld Nevil Al I ' I I . I .I 1 I I : I ' t I , I he Bring r.ejected BY DAVID l.VTZMANN or .. ..,........ I An Orans• .~ounty deftnH attorney'• chaJlenle of a new state law expandln1 on the ·public'• r l1ht to attend prellminary heartnga ln crlmlnal. cuea hu been rejected by a •tate appea.la court. 'The result la that a prellmlnary hearlna ln Central Oranse County M~clpal Court for two men cbaz'8ed with the Ila~ of a Mlaalon Viej(> woman will proceed Friday with both public and pre11 allowed in as spectators. The 4th District Court of Appeal upheld -wi thout comment -the constitutionality of the open heartna law which took effect in March. Previously, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab and Central Municipal Court Judge Samuel Taylor, who is presiding over the preliminary hearing! ruled in .favor of open p~gs. Challenging the law, which took effect as an urgency measure on March l, was defense attorney Ronald Brower, who represents murder defendant Thomas Th omp son , 27. of• Orange. Brower indicated Wednesday he ~lanned no f~er appeals. Both Thompson and co- defendant David William Leitch, 22, of Laguna Beach, are charged with murder in the stabbing death of Ginger FT~iachli. Mias Fleiachli'a body was found in a shallow grave in east Irvine last September. Dog flush es out s usp ect · A police dog with a keen nose led officers to a man suspected of robbing a Westminster gas station early today. Westminster officer Earle Graham said the dog followed a trail from a Texaco self-service gas statiop a~ 14902 Beach Blvd .. to some's~bery several blocks away in Midway City, where officers arreated Rqnald. Hiawatha Barnes, 28, of Garden Gro~e. ~ Barnes ia suspected of robbing • the station at knifepoint of about $30 at 2:30 a.m. today. Gr~ said the money allegedly taken m the robbery was re.covered. Light vaneble wind• beCOming weec 10 IOUthwMt 10 lo 15 knot9 afternoon and evening . South-at 1wall1 t 10 3 IHt. Moltly MRlY afternoon. ' BIRTHDA Y GI R L - Princess Diana , who produced an heir to the British throne laat week, celebrates her own birthday today -number 21. Gloomy sk ies p redicted for holiday Th.at sunahine and blue aides aren't a myth, folks, but cloee to it. ~ If you are expecting the same for the three-day Fourth of July holiday, don't hold your ~reath. f th "gl .. It appears more o e oom Orange Coast residents have experienced for nearly three montlis is headed our way again. Wednesday a high-pressure system chaaed clouds that grayed Orange County most of Ju!1e, May and April eastward, but another marine layer is hanging j ust off the Oregon an.a Washington coasts and ts expected to reach het1? Sat';lrdaY· according to ~he National Weather Service. That means a drop of 1,000 feet in' the w eather front producing low cloud.a. late night and early mornings Saturday, Sunday and Monday , high cloudiness most of the daylight hours with a chance of some s~ by late aftemoON. Today dawned clear as did Wednesday with mountains visible inland and no smog forecast by the South Coast Air Quality Management Di.strict. The sudden weather contra.It may have caught many by surprise but still aent thousands · to the beaches where reported the largest ee y crowds this year. \ ....... -..... wl w..a -baW ... Hp=#I f« ..-.J W• 0-. c.ou.nty a.. th1I ......... ,.,. ....... .., - are b-"QI '°" 1beer lltand·b1 crewl wl ~"°" teum I.cw the Fourth ot July weekend. A Mfe and MM-type tpU'kWr tGmld into the air by ~ WM tbe ~UM ot a ~f an4 attk ft re early-.. WednHda'y In 'Fountain Valley, J'lre Chief Richard Jorprwen Mid. Wht blue, at a home at 17710 Santa Elena St., W¥ qul~kly exUnpilhtd by firefiahten but not ~fore lt eautd p,ooo d&=ap, J°'lT:"' .... TM ftn f taid ~ lfttinl ott an Wlpl bot'19 rOdwl cauaeCI a 1lmtlar roof f Ire ~\ another huntaln Val»y home two w•kl aao. cal.lll.nl tl.GOO damap. Jor1•nHn aald addlttonal flref~t\t.en wW ~ on duty on the J'OUrth of July, and aome wW fonn a rovtnc petrol with poUce officen to watch for llleaal fire ... ork1 or Improper UH of le1al firework• In Fo\lntai.n • .. .. I • ValltY: Mtlhbetlloodt. (St• ~h. P4card Nld, altho'Wh : ,....,. --. .... Bl.) ' mlnbna1 duntet WM rwpor111d. : In HunUqton Beach, Fire 8UU.~ ldvtled OW1*1 o1 ~ OIW Ra1 ftlird ""9 he a11o wU1 bOllMe wllh fla•me\tle wood ,.. Mve I MdldaMJ fiNIP*' Oii ahirO roofa to 11.-p 1addlr'I and : duty ~ the ho~.i plua 10 prd'en hOMI handy o~~r the : mxDloref Scouta to • holiday to help~ my : ft:ard laid HunUnaton Beech fir• prevention oUTclalt wut petrol that d ty, illu1na dtationl and confhcatlng llle1al ttr,workl. Firework• thl1 week have ..ir-dy auJMd two roof f1rea and three 8fUI ftre. ln Huntlnpm • a,.'\JtlonA. : ~ fire chief prectic1..t that : Urefilhten ln the four Net 8'x : clUet (Huntlnaton Beach, ~ Fountain Valley, Wettmlnater .. and s.al Beach) will .,. ... i buly with about 140 flreworU.. .. related lnddenta on the J'ourth ~ of July. :. • .. .. Collnty starts year on tentative budget ' ' • : . ~ . BJ P'R&DERl<S SCBOBMBRL O(' ... ...., ........ Oranae County govemment'• new fl9cal year belan today and, techn1cally, there la a budget to fund operations for the next 12 tn0ntha. · But the shape of the $812 million 1pending program will be· subject to many changes later this month when the county Boa.rd of Superviaon conducta annual budget hearings. To comply with state law, supervisors were forced to approve the proposed budget Wedneaday. The law requires counties to approve their budgeta by June 30, the last day of the fbcal year. While ln technical COfr!pl.i.ance with the law, no one la hidlni the fact the final budaet fisure will be modified wfi'en updated financial fi1ure1 are rei:elved from the 1tate and federal governments, budget analyata uy. . For example. It was only yesterday that Gov. Edmund G. Browtt fr. aig:ned the $25 million state budget Into law. Local officlala say It will be several days before the actual impact.a of the state spending plan on the county budget c an be determined. The county's $812 budge~ la balant?ed -but precariously, Seal Beach sh if ts fii-e protection The Seal Buch City Council has· :c~ved a 1982-83 budget that fot the transfer of the city's fire department to Orange County to save costs. Aatant City Manager Dan Joaeph aa1d today the dty hopes to save about $288,000 by having the county provide fire protectf:>n and paramedic aervice. Joaepb said the county would abeorb 29 people in the local fire department, however. the tranafer has not been officially approv~ becauae of a~ in the pay. negotiations. He.Uld city penonnel would tatte a alight pay cut under pn!9eflt guide~ • Joaeph aaid cfty officials \ Cocaine found MIAMI (AP) -A eearch of an abandoned suitcase at Miami International Airport tumed up 70 pounds of "high-grade" cocaine valued at $3.5 million. officlala said. believe the city force should get at least equal pay at the time of transfer .. The city alao cut. 13 employee poaiti.ons from the new budget that WU puled Tuesday and took effect today. Joaeph said that property tax revenuea have fall'en from $4.3 million ln 1978 when Proposition 13 wu palled to $1.4 million for the 1981-82 fiacal year. . Reagan hints of 1984 run WASHINGTON (AP) •Preaident Rea1an, hintln1 broedly at a 1984 ~ bid, he doesn't "walk away from :a:Sunfinbhed job" and aide• don't need to look for new oN!s. according to budget analysta. A $40 million revenue deficit wu erued, on paper, at leut, by deletfn~ $3 miWon In car::! projects; taking i 10 mlllJon reeerve acx:ounta; removing $12.5 million for salary ~. and adding bac~ 05 million in federal revenue sharing funds that otherwise would go for other than day -to -day govenunent operationa. Analyata said those revenue shifts are not prudent .and were done 1trictly to bring the budget into balance. on "Making E~citing Home Movies ," a four -week workshop desi8JM!d to teach amateur Super-8 crsmera owners how to c reate professional-looking filma of family activities, will be offered Wednesday1, beginnini July 7, at Golden West &liege in Huntington Beach. •Round-table dl.tcuaions for parents of CUbSCi>Uta ana Boy Scouts in the Padfica District are acheduled July 8 and Aug. 12. The meetings will be held at a new location, the Huntington Beach Chapel, 19191 17th St., Hunti.ngtoo Until the final 1pendin1 . packqe ia approved, the county Admlnlatntlve Office )laa impoaed a freeze on hiring of ~ new employees, except for a few · posit.Iona ln the probation and • 1heriff'1 department.a, according to Ken Hall, an aide who i1 coordinating budget matt.en for Supervi9or "'nlomU Riley. And , Hall said, county department h eada have been asked by the adminlatrative office to submit ways of red~ ~ their propoeed budgeta by "10 to ~ 15 percent." ~ .. • inov1es Clueea will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Fine Arts ROOIJ) 106. Topics will include re-editing home movies, , adding tit.lea, recording IOUDd trades and executing special effect.a. Enrollment is. limited. Advance ~tion may be made by calling 891.-3991. Registration fee is $15. .Beach (behind the 'Ralphs· Sav-On ahopping center at the corner of Beach Bouley ard and Garfield • Avenue). Formation this fall of the new Tiger Cub Scout program for 7-year-olda will be one of the topics to be di9cualled. • . .. • ~ c " • • ( ' ' ' Warmer Friday Although "it is far too early" to decide whether he will run again for the presidency. Reagan said Wednesday, "I have not been tell1ni anyone around me that I won't rUI\ again." Reagan'• comment during a nationally televt.ed White Houae- newa conference wu the firat time the 71-year-old president publicly addressed ·re-election other than to say he has not made up his mind. •Jo le e • M lc,.e ll e Grualq, 17, of Hun~ Beach, has won the top pn.re of $-1,000 in the Sout~ern California Junior Achiev~nt Program. her junior year at Ediaon Hiah School. Junior Achievement ii a nationwide, non-profit educational organization that acquaints high school aged people with the private enterpriae 1ystem. • tt 59 91 • 83 55 12 • n 51 ., 61 .. 71 et 37 71 83 74 51 ... 70 .. 66 1M 15 15 62 12 71 .09 .37 .01 .31 Catlllna 72 se l.ak•Arr~ ee 41 .07 Long 8eech 74 eo 7t 59 ~ Mt. WllOn 52 3t I .. ,80 N9WPCJr18Mctl ()ntarlo 74 Pllm~ S7 PlillldaM 73 Sen BemardlnO 74 :Extended weather 57 es 57 68 80UTHEfU~ CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN, AREAi -COaatal lfffl: Low doudl In the nlaM end momlnl llcMn ~ filr ....... rwWna "°"' naet 70 ... .._ .. --... eo. Inland~ LAim ... .. MounUlln -,.., .. ...... llWl ....... ~-­tfto 21._ ....,,_ ..._ Allott ............. to 71. LOMo ... ,0 ... She has recently completed Madras A well-known fabric made of hand-loomed cotton. Storekeeper Todd Latham Is wearing our true Madras shorts.Jn bright colors, with pleated front and belt loops. A store that olfert fine • traditional aportlWHI for men, women llK1 bay•. ' . . I l ' • • ' ; F.tr.st aralt resl1ster Indicted ... Dl •• rpak1nc him tM flnt penon ltlCCUlld ot not complyinc with the 1tand-by military dntt. Suwa,y • political ldence and phlloeophy ttudent at Humboldt State Univenlty, al.to becoa• the tint penon ~with such an otfenae ance the Vietnam War. He WM to be arraJaned today. Hltaebl Ltd. 1ndleted In seam SAN FRANCISCb -Hitachi Ltd. of Japan and 14 people have~ lnd.lcted f« conaptrtna to 81!1'Mi eecret computer df!li&N 1tolen troni IBM to rivals in Japan. . The lndlc:tmen111·'-led Wect.n.day marUd the tint time charaee in the indUlll'lal ~ cue were leveled" against the hute Ja~ electronk:a company. The federal &rand Jury, in a separate indictment, alao charae three otben with tl'8{llporting and receiving 1tolen QIOj>erty. One of thoee wu a Californian not previoualy linked with the cue, brinClna to 22 the number ot ' people believed Involved in a aeven-month acheme to obtain confidential tape1, dmilN and docwnenta on ~ computers. Californians rally for new ERA LOS 4NGELFS -Undaunted supporten of the defeated Equal Right• Amendment aire.dy a.re rallying for a new version expected next month and effona to ouat politicianl who blocked the initial ratification drive. "Phyllis Schlafly and the Moral Majority have won this round, but the struggle begins in Congress again on July 14," actreSll Jane l'onda told cheerlna memben of the National Education Allodation'a Joint Conference on Minority and Women's Concerna. "I have no doubt that the ERA will be in the Constitution, right there alongaide of the Bill of Rights and the 14th Amendment," Ma. Fonda said, urging educatori to help. remove ERA opponents from office. Thal hijacker ~lven demands . BANGKO~ Thailand -A hijacker, hia Mt:ranced Italian wife and their IOI\ departed for Sri Lanka today after the sk)' ~irate freed about 100 hostages when he got a '3()(),000 ranaom and a suarantee of safe conduct to his homeland. He presumably •till had the money, but it waa pomible police might arrest him when he Janda 1n the Sri Lankan capital of C.Olombo. The family and about 250 pueenaen left aboard an A ir Lanka Jet at Don Muang International Airport where the hijacker, 33-year-old Sepala Ekanayaka, had for 32 hours held an Alitalla jumbo jet and its pueengen and crew and threatened to blow them up unleea he waa reunited with hia family. Spain to ink U~S. military paet? MADRID, Spain -The United States and Spain announced today they have reached a new five-year agreement to continue the U.S. military pl'etence in Spain. · Spantah diplomatic 1ource1 said .the aireement prohibita stationing nuclear weapons in Spain. 11\at ~ a key point in Spain's nej(Otiatlona before entering the N«tb A~ \ Treaty Organizaeion in May. -' The agreement. to be signed aooa. ~ to a joint announcement, givea Spain million in military aid next year in return for me of three Spanish air~ and~ Spanilh navy base, U.S. officlala aaid. Cosmonauts prepare lor return MOSCOW -French coanonaut Jean-Loup Chretien and bis four Soviet crewmates are comp)eting joint work aboard the orbiting Salyut-7 apace station. Ta. reported today. The official Soviet news agency said ''pre~tiona have started for the deecent of the So)'U%-T 6 spaceship°' that will carry Chretien! mlaion commander Vlad!mi.r~-bekov and engineer Alexander Ivanch back to Earth Friday. Two other Soviet smonauts, Anatoly Berezovoi and Valenti Lebedev, aboard Salyut-7 since mid-May, will stay in the 1pace station. Tax .eQt due in today's payeheeks WASHINGTON -Paychecka are a little fatter today as workers start collecting the aecond installment of the largest .tax cut in history. Uthe Reagan administration's forecasts are on target, the extra money will spark a recovery from the worst receeaion since World Warn. The reduction in the tax withheld from individual paychecks will range from 40 centa for the $100-a-week ea.mer to '13.40 at the $700 level and, higber. The Treuury Department figures a typical married worker with two childreh and the median family income of about $24,000 a year will take home an extra $6 a week. Beagan say~ he calls shots WASHING TON -President Reagan says he cal.11 the shots on foreign policy and "there is going to be no change" despite outgoing Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig's charge that it la off-ooune. "I think we are progressing very well with what it is we are trying to accomplish," Reagan said Wednesday night during his first televiaed news conference in seven weeks. But the president again declined to di.-:u8s the reuons lor H.aig's resignation last Friday, saying the American people had been told everything about it that they needed to know. House adjourns until July 12 < WASHINGTON -The House today adjourned until July 12 after memben from both partlea urged President Reagan and federal agencies "to do whatever la pomible" to keep cash-short federal agenciea operating thia awnmer. The action ended apeculation that the Howie might return from its J"uly 4 recess or take aome other poaible action to keep about a dor.en agencies 90lvent. Adjournment came u no au.rpNe. HOUie leaden had atgna1ed late Wedneeday that they might take that course rather than call vacatioolnC conare-nen back to Wuhlnp>n for a lpecial ..-I.on. Cla•ltned edweftt .. 71~ All otMr .....,_.,. 142-4111 Panel would double tax on cigarettes WASHINGTON (AP) -The Republican maJ)!!,~~ of the Senate J'lnance ttee hM acreed to a peck ... of two doaen tax tncr.•11 that would double the tax CJI\ daaretta to 18 centa a pack and, lor the firat tlme1 Withhold. taxee an lnw.t ana dividend income. . The full\ 20-member committee plenned to be1ln votlq ~Y on the =•· tmtatlftlY ~ to Wedn y by the ...... 11 RepublicanL o.lr .......... ,.... GOING UP -That drop of water will become more expensive in several Orange Coast cities, starting today. Lawmen gird for action over Fourth Law enforcement authorities in Orange County are increasing patrols as precaution for the July Fourth crowds and commotion. Authorities say incidents of drunken driving and disorderly conduct inc rease during Independence Day festivities, especially along the beaches where thousands of people flock to party and aet off fireworks. Police officials in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach recall near riots in past years when the beaches have become packed an~~a) fire cracken have ~n into crowds and at police officen. • Although Independence Day crowds in both th06'e cities have been orderly in more recent times, authorities say extra officen will be working overtime on patrol. In Laguna Beach. reserves and officers working overtime will be trying to enforce the city's new ban on fireworks. "We have very large beach crowds during the holidays and we'll be out in force to cut down petty crimes like car break-ins and purse s natches and to enforce the fireworks ban," says po.Ike Sgt. Greg Bartz. "Last year, they damned near burned the place down," Bartz said. "l spent most of the day following up reports of fires." Alcohol-related behavior accounts for most of the disorderly conduct, authorities say, and traffic police in local cities and the Highway Patrol will have extra units on the alert. "We try to get them before they crash," says Ken Daily of the Highway Patrol. • Hlf' ~· CoSt of waler turned up along Coast • By JEFF ADLER or ... ..., ,... , .... What always haa been the cheapest drink around will cott a few pennies more in several Orange Coast citlea beainning today. Water rates are going up in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Irvine, reflecting the lncreued rates being charged by the Metropolitan Water Di.atrlct of Southern California, which 1upplle1 the bulk of water distributed by these local water agencies. Similarly. Fountain Valley has ra.laed Its water rates effective Sept. l , while C.O.ta Mesa haa · acheduled what amounts to a rate \ncrease in January. Area.a served by the South Coast County Water District also will see water bills go up in 1983. • The rate hikes, which vary in amount from city to city, also are tied to the increased energy costs local water agencies now fa~. The coat of electricity used to pump water has increased dramat~!r. in recent years, water o · have said. Newport Beach residents will be paying 16 percent more for water dlatributed by that city's water division as a "direct result of the MWD increase," according to Joe Devlin, the city's utilities director. Devlin said the city is raising its water rates 9 cents, from 54 cents per 100 cubic feet to 63 cents. The city's basic service charge, however, will remain the same, he said. 1 The increase will mean that the average water bill of a family who lives in a residence with a lawn will go up an additional $3.06 each bimonthly billing period, Devlin said. Jus t down the coast, the Laguna Beach County Water Dis trict is raiosing rates 19 percent. The increase is the first levied by the district since 1978, said Joseph Sweany, general manager. • Sweany said the 10 cent increase per 100 cubic feet of water will represent 'l.50 on the average family's monthly water bill: Instead of 52 cents per 100 cubic feet, water ·will now cost 62 cents, he said. Also serving portions of Laguna Beach as well aa other aouth county location• is t he South Coast County Water District, which probably will raiae water rates in January, said diatrict general manager Ray Miller. "Our budget takes it (a rate hike) into account," Miller said. He added he expected the rate increAse to be between 7 and 9 percent. Beginning today, the Irvine Ranch Water Distric t is increasing its rates 4.8 percent, explained Arthur Bruington, the district's general manager. Bruington aaid the basic 41 cents per 100 cubic feet of water charge is being raised to 44 cents. The average bill in the Irvine area will climb from $9.35 a month to $9.80 a month, he said. The water official added that becauae the Irvine water district pumps about 3 percent of its water from underground wells, a cheaper wate.r 90urce, it is able to abaorb some of the coat of MWD'a rate hike. In action Tuelday night, the Fountain VaJley City Council approved a 5 percent lncreue in the eo1t of that city'• water. The rate hlke becomel effective Sept. 1, said Don Hein~b. of the city's public woru depertment. 1 The rate hike meana a 3--0enl lncreue in all five of the city'a water bill categoriea, each baaed on the amo unt qf water oonsWned. Heinbuch aaid the average bill in Fountain Valley will climb from $10.25 a month to $10.76. The water dh&aion uked for the increaae to off.et the cost of several water-related projec\a. including a capital improYements program. he said. AOO, increaaed energy 008'8 and the MWD rate increase necessitated the change. · Heinbuch pointed out that 90 percent of Fountain Valley's water s upply comes from underground wella, while only 10 percent is purchased from MWD. . Water rates in C.O.ta Mesa will increase when the Mesa Consolidated Wate r District a djusts its rate structure in January, e xplained district general manager Karl Kemp. Kemp said the district plans to eliminate the minimum water allotment now provided as a component of the district 's monthly ·service fee. Presently, Mesa Consolidated customers receive 300 cubic feet of water at no charge. · After Jan. l, there will be no minimum allotment and the basic service fee will remain the same, Kemp said. He esti_mated the change will add another $1 onto residents' monthly water bills. Kemp said the district is able to offset much of the MWD rate hike with water pumped from underground. About half of the district's water is purchased fn>m MWD, he said. For the tim e b e ing , Huntington Beach residents are getting a reprieve from the round of water rate hikes elsewhere, __., said E.A. Elevatorski, chief of that city's ~ater division. He said that while water rates will not be goinf. up in the "immediate future, ' the dty is considering stud ying its water rate strlJcture. . Huntington Beach currently buys about 30 percent of its water from MWD and pW.l.s the remaining 70 percent from groundwater. Elevatonki said Citing rising energy costs. the MWD moved to raiae its wholesale water prices March 9. The increase raised the price of water, used for residential purposes, from $121 an acre-foot to ~140. An acre-foot of water, roughly 326,000 gallons, is about the ap'lount needed to sustain an average family in Southern • California for one year. MWD, which gets much of its water from the Colorado River or from Northern California, provides water to 27 member agencie• serving 12 million people from Ventura to San Diego County. In turn, these member agencies sell water wholesale to local water districts across Southern California." ' ortnge Collt DAILY PILOT/Thurtdey, JufY 1, 1111 Council's Bolsa Chica move missed the point After bitter debate, the 11 1 Hunt.inaton Beach City Council I took a controveralal atand on the development of Bolla Chica. The action, on a motion b_y John Thomas, had two part.a. It wu approved on a 4-3 vote. F l rat, Thomae asked for · aupport of state Set\. Paul Carpenter'• bill that would take the matter out of the handl of the CoMta1 c.omm.taalon. The second part included endonement by the city ol Orange County's plan to develop the manhlanda that are surrounded by the ·Pacific Coast Highway and ocean and on three sides by Hunti,ngton Beach city limits. The 1,600 acres are located in unincorporate d Orange County territory. I The council action came after bitter exchanges between city officials. It al9o came the night before the matter was to come before the Assembly Energy and Natural Resource. Committee. The wildom of the council majority _: Thomas, Ron Pattinlon, Jack Kelly and Don MacAlliater -is questionable. With the Coastal Commission deciding things, the hearinp are at least held in tho Southern California area and local residents have plenty of opportunity to view proceedings and to make their views known. We understand that there are basic diffe rences between the council majority and minority on the extent of development. There are ways of re80lving those differences. The Coastal Commission isn't above criticism, but taking Bolsa Chica out of its hands and giving it to the state Legislature for final decision smacks of special-interest legislation. It is s urprising that the Huntington Beach City Council would go along with that. )Recall inapprop1:"iate A dispute over middle schools continues to flare ln the Fountain Valley School Di.strict. Earli~r this year, district trustees approved plans to convert three kindergarten through eightli grade schools to middle schools (grades six through eight) over' the next three years. The first of the middle schools, Talbert, will begin classes in September. Some parents have asked that a districtwide survey on middle schools be conducted before a aecond . one (Masuda) is opened ln 1983. Last week, in a 3-2 vote, trustees decided against the survey. They questioned the cost and value of such a document. It wam't surprising~i the three trustees who voted against the survey, Cheryl Norton, Roger Belgen and Suz.anoe Moore, are the staunchest supporters of middle schools. They believe the program will be a great success if it is given a chance. · It is also no surpriae that the survey was requested by parents who oppose the ~lddle school prosram and believe the survey would show that most parents feel as they do. 'J'he middle achool opponents alao are the people who have targeted Belgen, Mrs. Norton and Mrs. Moore for recall. The recall effort may indicate how strongly some parents feel about middle schools, but the campaign is an inappropriate response in this instance. Recall was designed to remove from office officials who are guilty of gross misconduct, not e lected officials with whom somebody disagrees. Besides middle schools aren't some sort of revolutionary educational program. For example, four school districts that .bor-der -\.h.e. . .F.ountain Valley district -Huntington Beach City, Newport-Mesa Unified, Garden Grove Unified and Santa Ana Unified -all have middle schools or junior highs (grades seven and eight). It's time to put animosity aside, adhere to the decision of the school board majority and let Fountain Valley's middle school program proceed.. Face economic real~ty The Huntington Beach City Council has raiaed the salaries of City. Attorney Gail Hutton and City Clerk Alicia Wentworth. Mrs. Hutton's pay goes from' $52,104 to $58,447 a year while Mn. Wentworth's salary will rile from $33,923 to $36,594. Mayor Bob Mandie said the raise was given to Mrs. Hutton to ensure better cooperation and communication. City Administrator Charles Thompec)n said a factor was that the pay of one of her subordinates soon would have exceeded Mrs. Hutton's if she didn't get the raise. Other city department heads • who are covered by contracts will get automatic pay raises in July and again in J anuary. At the same session in which the railes were granted for the two women, the City Council members lamented the lack of state funds and criticized the state for many of their financial problems. But in a ti.me of layoffs and tough economic times. they turned around, almost automatically, and awarded the pay increases. It seems that the majority of the council has yet to come to terms with today's economic realities. OplnlOfts e'lCpressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on tnis page are those ot tneir autnors and artists. Reader comment 1s mvtt· ed. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1S60, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . .t ·L.M. Boyd/ Inflation note. Inflation zoomed so swiftly in Germany durlng 1923 that diners in restauran" there clJiOle to pay their checka • 1000 u they ordered rat.her than after they ate. 'nley couldn't be 1UN the (llice wouldn't 10 up durlng dinner. Q.' What propocUon of the 18,000 women in t1'e U.S. Anny in F.urope areA. ~tlo percent. At any pven time. Oil pumped out of Ai.ka in one 4-J DOW ti va1u.t at .,ym Umel II lllMacb 11 tam aoumry paid for AlllU. -what'• the ·~t· ~ ....-do ln • tq compmy'?" ~· eUent. It flndt Jobi elHwhere for ....,,_ the ciom,.ny wantl to fin. Lo( ol ...... finllll haw 11t 1.:.e w wllm. To out down an the ' caused by the disgruntled who com- plain to unions and federal bureaus. Q . Doesn't France have the moet alcoholism? A. Next to Chile, it does. Per capita. Big wtne producen, both. 'lbat falcon known u a pen!8ri.ne hill apeedl of 'Up to 200 mph ln anack dives. Why doesn't the wind velodty hurt ita lunp? Another trick of nature. lta nostrila have baffles ln them to llow down the rulh of air. A pri9oner under tentenoe of death lo1t 1,100 1ealp haira a da)I. He OOW'lted them. 'lben he WM pardaned. And he promptly arew back. full l.-d of halt. Thfl w i...rchen to beUeYe that au-m$1ht oontribuw to baJdnem, But lt happened IDON than a doMa ~ .. o, and dftpite much IWdy; IUll hawn't pr'OY9d lL ? N ~w threat to pensioners · WASHINGTON -While corporate fat.cats are allowed to get away with ooet overruns and tax write-offs, President Reagan's people have been going after the widow's mite with all the· ferocity of Dickensian debt collectors. The unfortunate old people are lucky that debtors' priaona have been abolished. Here's what'• qappening: THE SOCIAL SECURITY Admin- 1 st r a tl on haa been sending out notices to pensioners threatening to cut off their monthly benefit checks unless they repay immediately the sums they were overpaid in recent years in Supplemental Security Income. I reported a few weeks ago that the Social Security Adminiat.ration is tryj.ng to coerce pensioners Into letting the llgency snoop "through their income-tax recorda. Unleea thet sign a waiver of the privacy "that every taxpayer is entitled to, the p ensioners are told, their surplemental income checks will be cul of . Thia ls a bluff, and a cruel one. The agency has no legal right to follow "\hrough on its threat, and it knows lt. Indee<i a federal judge ordered Social Security Administration officials to cease badgering benefidaties until the legality of their actions could be settled in court. Now the. Social ~ty bureaucrats are using the same tactia in their zeal to squeeze every last periny out of the poor, the sick and the elderly. The first notification is relatively mild. Though it does say, "Please refund the $--· immediately," it gives the pensioner a break if he can't pay the whole amount at once. "For your convenle,nce, we can wi~hhold the balance of your overpayment from your Social Security benefit," the letter states. A form is, included at the bottom of the page, Q doubts about the ·1egality of their strongarm methods. My •sociate Lucette Lagnado was told that the threatening letter now reada "may be forced" instead of "will be forced." And in its or iginal 1983 budget request, the agency specifically aaked for a "proposed change" that would allow it lo "recover overpaymenta to lndividuala from available Social Security benefits.'' Obviously, if it already has this authority. there would be no need to ask Congress for it again. FOOTNOTE! An agency spokesman -JIC_l_Al-111-11-1-~. tried to disassociate Washington stating: "For my convenience, please headquarters from the second lettet', ~ wiU\hold my full Social Security benefit insisting that such bullying tactics were 1 $ each month until my supplemental not ad~inist~atlon policy bu't an : security income overpayment of $--~utho~ bit of r.ealousnes b>: a : is fully recovered." u the pensioner regional offaoe. He stuck by. the .first : doesn't sign away the Social Security . !etter'. howev~r. and ~w noth~g ~ng ! checks -often the only income he has ~ trying to tnck terrif!ed pensioners mt;o : -a followup letter arrives. This one Sl~ away what, m many cases, IS gets really ugly. their only source of income. "If we do not hear from you (in 16 Contrast this with the Reagan days) we will be foreed to suspend administration's caaua1 attiwde toward payment of your Social Security defense contractors, big oil companies Checks." and other business buccaneers. The This threat is probably illegal. By law, Renegotiation Soard, which used to Social Security ch~ks are supposed to be collect overpayments from defense immune from "at tachm ent or contracts. baa been allowed to die. The aHlgnment.." The National Senior Interior Department trusts the oil Citizens Law Center is planning lo take companies to report how mucl\,oil they the agency to court over it this week. pump on federal wells, despite evidence In fact, lt appears that the Social that the oilmen have been robbing Uncle Security bureaucrats themselves have Sam blind under the honor system. .. • • . • • • . . • • • : I • . . • • . . Volunteer program sC.ts an example • . . • . To the Editor: . I congratulate Jan D. Vandersloot, M.D., on the timely commenta regarding Medi-Cal cutbacks. The Medi-Cal Bill, AB 3480, which will eliminate emergency ...,-edical transportation certainly is of grave consequence to many needy patients. I feel it is important however, lo iook at the alternatives which are available lo M~-Cal patients ln Orange County. It has become a sign of the times that when -·~--------------------------MAILBOX individuals have difficulty with transportation and/or medical needs. the standard answer hu beCIOlate, ''contact your casework.er" rather than contact our family, friends, neighbors or local volunteer organization which could provide help. The Medi-Cal program has been burdened with accepting financial reaponsibilitiea which could be eliminated through the use of available services in the county area and through development of additional volunteer services. The spirit of volunteeriam which the current administration auggesta the private sector embrace has been in existence in many facilities throughout Orange County for years. A UNIQUE PROGRAM exists at West.em Medical Center. The Someone Cares program i.a made up of volunteers from the community. They transport patients to and from out.patient lppoiptrnenta at the hoepital Someone Cares l.ramporta 60 to 75 cues per week and haa been do=· 10 for the put 12 years. There is no c for this 1ervibe and lt II a1affed to y by volunteen. Thia outstanding program never a&ffered even durt.ng the price increMeS in ...,une. The volunt.een are dedicated ana cartnc people -the aood neiihbon we all need. We have in the county Dial-A-Ride, Dial-A-t.itt, Macie CarPet and others whJch are able to tranaport handQpped i-tientl -but the.-. ii a fee involved. The charpl far Dial-A-Ride and Dlal- A-Uft we minimal for abort distencel and wt\hin the realm of a flud lnc:ome. It ii ~Y • time when we must be concenwd about the cutbeokl which our medically needy, disabled and elderly patients are experiencing. However, perhaps it is also a time when we must recognize that the state and federal government can no longer assume the role of famill, friend and employer for the citizens o the United States. Perhaps we need to encourage the philosophy that has prevailed in the Someone Cares aervk:e for the past 12 years and reach out to thoee in our community who need assistance. BETTY McMICKEN, M.A. CCC Speech/Language Pathologjst Local news To the Edftor: Re: Local news scene, Daily Pilot, June 22: A brave young lady receives her degree after being buried in the snow, a blind woman becomes a masseuse and plans on running again at Edison High, and then we have George Van Darn and the Gan.ghen w~ are so petty that they can't even live next door to each other ln peace. What a waste of ~rgy • housing, while providing an improved environment for the blrds, as welt Bolaa Chica in the main is not a "wetlands" (a funny l egal term for an lndian- envirorunentaliat to use) and has not been so since before the. tum of the cent'V}'. It is largely a vacant lot with less environmental quality than, say the Cleveland National Forest, 'or many other vacant lots in Huntington Beach. It is a degraded oil field, drained of its coastal salt.marsh environment nearly 80 years ago by duck hunters and bean farmers neither of whom drove Mercedes. Persons now concerned with the environment of humans would like to plan an improved environment for the Bolaa Chica to make it a place where one can aapi.re by hard work to live, by good fortune to sail or by grace of God to sit ~ watch the birds and boatl. I'm afraid that people like Helen Craig, having arrived late on the acene, woufd prevent others of ua to live and enjoy our own versions of the good life in aouthern California -whether or not we drive ~rcedes. WAYNE CLARK their story is. LIZ REINDERS I. Change the law Tribute earned To the &iitor: I strongly agree with your recent editorial atatlng the justification for renaming the Orange County Performing Arts Center alter the family that has contributed so much to its development. AB you astutely point oui. the Segent.rom faniily has not only been a force for cultural development ln our community but has also s putred economic JP'OWth and development that will benefit Orange County for years to come. It would certainly be a fitting tribute for a family that ha ~ to much. I laud your editorial efforts in that direction. , HARRIE'IT M. W!EPER Supervisor, Second Dlltr1ct .. '.l'o the F.d.ttor: What a ahock to a lo\ of people who now know that Hinckley ia innocent because he wu lnMne at the time be lhot Prelident Reqan and Mr. Bndy, McCarthy and Delahanty! Does that mean ~ will have to al~ wear a bullet proof Wet and be in a et proof car whenever be IC* anywhere? What about the rs of bis body? And Nancy! Always ln fear of the crazies out there who wW pull out a l\.lft and shoot any offidal of importance. Does that. mmn ~ rich the killen can aet away with crime and vlo&ence, or ia it. our IYltem? It la time W. ~ that lew. What a terrible~ of jualice! EMMA E. HYMAN .... . • • . t , . . . • . • I . • ' ,i ennecott dropping 91 SALT LAKE CIT~-~~!~.._. -Kennea>tt Mlnera1a Co. announceQ lt la laying off 910 employee. at lta Vt.ah C.opPet' 'l:>lvilion here. Kennecott'• Utah operaUona normally employ about 7.000. A tiatement said the layoU. ~ the reault of "contJnulna dtpreued ~conomlc and copper market condftbw.'. Corn crop cut baclc 2nd oil strike off sh Ore noted LOS ANG~ (AP) -The At.I.antic IUchlWd Co. hu announced lhe IJICOnd ~ c(J IUike tn the Sant.a &rb&ra Channel within a week. uUI the ant float.lna 4t'Xplotation v-1 che state hu allowed ldnoe the ma.-lve 19e9 oil blowout. The well two rnUe9 offahore trom Coal 00 Point waa produclns 4, 138 barrels of oil daily, Arco spokesman Al Greenstein aaid Wectne.day. - Texaco Inc. aa1d earlier lta e>eploratory well ln federal waten off Polnt Conception wu produdnl 4,200 barrela • day. MCI moves to Irvine complex MCI Teleoommun.icationa, Inc. signed a 1.-e and options that will total nearly 20,000 .. uare feet durina the lease term ln the Irvine Company's Executive Pari office complex at Main Street and MacArthur Boulevlll"d ln Irvine. MCI recently moved into ha lnltial 10,000 1quare feet ln the low-riae office development from the compan1'• former facility in Santa Ana. Approximately 60 persona will be employed ln the offit"eS. • The broker repreeenting MCI wu ·Howard Wella of Coldwell Banker Commerdal Real Eatate, Newport Beach. The lease is valued in eXcetS of $850,000. Deadline set for stock buys Enterpriae National Bank (in organization) hu .et Aufl. 6 aa a deadline for purchaae of common stock in its initial public offering. The shares sell for $10 and a minimum purchue ii 200 sh.area, aa:ording to an offering circular. The bank, to be 1ocated at 200 "l'.ut Sandpointe. in the Warmington Plaza, Santa Ana, ii offering 500,000 shares or 575,000 if ovenubecribed. The organizational office is i.n Newport Beach. Timothy Peralta is president and chief executive officer. Fed panel meeting WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Relerve Board's policy-making arm, the Federal Open Market Committee meets here today to map poplicy for the rest of 1982 and to make tentative plans for it. 1983 monetary stance. Its decisions will be discloeed later lhil month when Federal Reterve Board Ch.airman Paul Volcket appears before Congress. Brown signs housing measure SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has signed legislation which would RUt a $200 million bond Issue to subsidize low-interest mortgages on the November ballot, the governor's office reported. The measure would finance an estimated ll,000 home mortgages annually. The measure, AB3507 by Assemblyman .Bruce Young 0-CerrilOIJ, would authorize the Califomla Houaln°g Finance Agency. contracting with private lenders, to set up a fund to reduce mortgage rates for young families buying their fl.rst home. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HF# YOlll(<API f<l,..I Oool>-Joflft wn far ~ .. JUI\ JD STOOCI 11 NI law C... Clll9 UPS AND DOWNS Pct. Up IU Up IU Up u Up ••• Up u Up 1.0 Up 7.1 Up 7.7 Up 7.7 Up 7.S Up 7.• Up 7.2 Up ••• I.IP "' Up "' Up u Up 6.1 Up .., Up 4.S Up .... t: u ~ tj Up i:o JO 1n11 °l:'s." at"., 1111.11 111.•>-o.a ID Tm Jlt.t.2 31412 ll 1.>7 DI.St+ 2.n IS VII 10..'1 10U 3 IOUI IClll.70+ 0.7' '5 SCk 116.70 HAOI Jl UJ J1'.M + 0.ft ·-.................... 1 ..... . ~ ::·:::.:·::.:::::::::· l:== '5 Siii • • • • • • . ... . . • . . • • 10,ou.• WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YOlll( 141"1 Jll\. JD Pre¥ ,,.,.,_..., , ~.J. DKllNd -,. u.~ .., .. TCUll-1IU .... ... ,,,.,. lt M -·-~ s.s -· ...... ,.CC> HEW VOltl( l4Pl Jll\. JD ,.,..,, ,,.,.,enc.., ~ ~T1 Dtcllned 2311 "7 U.cMft99d m Jlf T«al .. "" ,,, 111 ... ,,,.,. 1 s ... ._ " ,. METALS NEW YORK (AP) -SPol nonl•HOlll met• pricee today. c.,,.., tl-72 cent• a pound, u.a. deallnellona. L.eM 26-27 OWll.a • pound. Ziiia 35-37 OWll.a • pound, ........,__ .,,.. M.1931 ....... Weelt ~ lb. ~ 1&-n OW11a a pound, H V ...._, a7o.oo per.._ ,....... $2M.OO ~ OL, N.Y. SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS ~: m0<nlno llxlnt: '311.7', Giff 16.76. ~' a1temoot1 n.ine: ss10.21. °" 17.21. • ,...*"-' ~ .-.n. o1111.e1. ,,......., Nn.ra, °"SUI. .._\.ate "*'f: *310.00. -M.M l*I. N10.IO lllltecl. tteM1 a "-: (Ol'lly dally ...-.1 Pdji" M10.H, oft 17A 1" ...... *<01"1-..,.-..ta10A• t A SUI, i·1 ............ , •• '°"" ._ ..., ....... . ... 71.Clfflf.•. ti SYMBOLS • ti 11• .... ~lllw.~~== .1 "'*" ............. ,... .. . _____ , ___ .... •11•1lerl• ., .... , • ....., ....,.. ... ...... ""'" .......... .. .... ,__. .................. .. ................ ...,.. ......... w...t ..... ..... ....., ... "'•'•a•...,.. ~ ........... ...... ~ ........... ,i.i3 ..... ..,.... ........ ..... ................ -.. fl!lllllll: ""°"'"'·-·--·· ----------~-....... ----~-..... GOLD COINS . ~ ''°':4''r.'f9.!N -.... Ill ..:=..-......... .... , t8\'0llC!alf-,....•'---• .................... n • _ ....................... ,... -- ••-.; ................ ~..,:· 1 • ,.., ..... ,V>~ff -:.::~~ ,.. , ........ 'lAJi'49 ....... -=----== _:.-r...-::·· ... -· !it~~ THUMOAV, JULY 1, 1tU H1' COMICS C5 .. •' - C7 ·c11111110 .. ·' .,...,..... I King havillg1 a g~od_ tiriie 1 She'll play Evert next WlMBLEOON, En.gland (AP) -Billie Jean King, the oldest Wimbledon aemifin•llat in 62 ' years, la an optimistic reallat. "It's very gratifying," the 38-year-old tennis player aaid Wednesday after upsetting third-aeeded Tracy Austin 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 and movina into the aenl.ilinala. "Anything now la a bonus." Even John McEnroe, at 23 the defending champion and seeded tint in the men's singles at the All-England Tennis Club, was impressed. "I'D BE FAR away from a tennis court if I were her age," he said. "But why shouldn't ahe still be playing if she's enjoying it so much." Prior to the victory over Austin, King advanced by upsetting sixth-seeded Wendy Turnbull of Australia and eliminating Tanya Harford of South Africa and Claudia Pasquale of Switzerland. K ing, playing in her 103rd alngl.es mat.ch at the fabled grass court cham'pionahipa, dropped the firlt 1et to the l~-year-old Austin, who had won their five previous meetings. Kina won her first of a record 20 .WTmbledon ti ties -the women 'a doubles with Karen Hantze in 1961 -the year befol'e Austin was born. Her firlt of six singles titles came when Auatin was four years o!d. . Austin said King had been one of her childhood idols. She recalled that when King visited her tennis club, she wrote a compoaition about the experience. "I was mad because I ~ved.. only an A-minus," Austin said. If Billie Jean's victorY .was a sucpr ise, McEnroe's ffourth - round win over fellow AnMrican Hank Pfister was expected. GRATIFYING WORK -Billie Jean King shows a Next up is defending Wimbledon champion Chris Evert Lloyd in Friday's semifinals. "f felt l could· play three more sets," King said after her match with Austin. AFTER HIS MOST serious blowup so far in this year's Wimbledon championships, McEnroe faced his toughest challenge today in a quarterfinal match against fifth-seeded Johan Kriek. combination of expres&ons during a recent Wimbledon match. ·~She's making a living out of this ·racket The confrontation was a replay of last year's quartetfinal, won by McEnroe in straight sets en route to his singles crown. McEnroe has defeated the South African in seven of their nine meetings, but he warned: "Kriek is capable of playing some tough tennis." 1"Costa Mesa's Lynn Adams ~anks No. 1 in V.S. women's racquetball lllr CURT SEEDEN or .... Deir "'°' • ..,,, You don't hear Lynn Adams complaining about staying at home, staring at the same four ~everyday. Actually, Adams, of Costa . Neu. is ·usually confined to an a(ea• with just three walls. And wllhout it, she'd be out of work. Adams, at age 25, ls ttie U.S. wometl'a racquetball champion. Like golf, tennis and bowling, racquetball has a professional toiur and it is not uncommon to aee Adams walking off with cKecks anywhere from $2,000 to ».OOO once the tournament is over. "RACQUETBALL ISN'T like telUlia in that millions of people know my name, but the people that follow racquetball probably do," says the Estancia High · graduate. "I guess I've had my own small measure of success." ;Facing Lynn Adams on a racquetball court is paramount to meeting John McEnroe on the tennis courts or Jack Nicklaus on the links. You're up against the 1s8st in the game. Since she still lives in Costa $.an Diego bristling ~fter split ·I 'LOS ANGELES (AP) -The rtyalry between the San Diego PidreS and !As Angeles Dodgers calltinues to get hotter. Perhaps it"• just as well they don't see one another again until September. · It WM after Wedneeday night's -doubleheader at Dodger Stadium, in which the Dodgers won the opener 5-1 behind Bob Welch's three-hit pitching and Dusty Baker's fifth career grand slam, and the Padres won the nlg:ht.cap 6-4 despite two home runs by Loa Angeles' Rick Monday, that the barbs were hurled .. Mesa, Adams usually doesn't pass ur the chance to compete in any o the several tournaments held at Orange Coast College each year. So she'll be among the estimated 500 competitors who will be battling at the ninth annual three-wall championships which begin Saturday and continue through Monday at occ. Adams , in fact, made racquetball her penTlKllent racket while attending OCC five years ago. She originally went to the school to run on the Pirates' track team. AT OCC, the track runs parallel to the racquetball courts, and Adams couldn't help but notice the action as she completed lap after lap. "I loved it. I was immediately hooked," she recalls of her first racquetball experience. "Then we went to a professional tournament and watched them play. That got me started." The "we" Adams refers to is her coach, Jim Carson, the man who used to run tournaments at Coast, the man who introduced her to racquetball and the man who will be her husbjmd by the time August rolls around. ''Jim used to work in the veterans' trailer at OCC anll he worked the tournaments," she aaya. " "We're g~ married in my backyatd." • It took five yea.rs of coaching for Canon and Adams to string up permanently, a much longer time span than it took to rise to No. 1 in hef sport. BESIDES PLAYING racquetball. Adams al9o does a 11 ttle promoting through her aponeon. She ha.a done television and radio commen:ia1s to puah the sport and is always interested in fl.nding a convert. · "We keep tel.ling people about the sport and lettJ.ni them know what they're miaing. Right now, ' becau.e we are a women's pro group (the Women's Profe91ional Racquetball Aaeociation). we're (See MESA'S, Pa1e Cl) WHAT A RACKET -Costa Mesa's Lynn Adams, ranked No. 1 in women's racquetball in the United States, h.u a real love tor the sport. She'll marry her coach, Jim Canbrl in I o.tr,.. ......... August. Adams will compete in this weelwnd's three-wall tournament at Orange Coast College. Other quarterfinal matches today pitted second -seeded Jimmy Connors against No. 6 Gene Mayer and third-seeded Vitas Gerulaitis against No. 12 Mark Edmonson of Australia . On the women's side , ' llth-aeeded Bettina Bunge won the last aemifinal berth and now will face the tournament's toP' seeded woman, Martina Navratilova. King will take on defending champion Chris..Evert Lloyd in the other semifinal. Both semis will be played on Friday with the finals scheduled for Saturday. McENROE , FACING a grueling achedule of singles and, doubl es matches through Sunday's singles final due to last ~week's rainouts, was given two mis co ndu ct warning s Wednesday, his second and third of the tournament. The first, which came during bis victory over Pfister, earned him a penalty point for angrily slamming the ball ~ court after missing a volley. The second came in a doubles match in which he and Peter Fleming narrowly defended their men's doubles title in a second- round bout with Rod Frawley of Australia and Chris Lewis of New Zealand. BUNGE, MAYOTTE WIN MATCHES WIMBLEOON, England (AP) -Bettina Bunae of Coral Gables, Fla., gained the women's alncles eemifinals today in the All -England Tennis Championships with a 6-3, 2-6, 6-0 victory over Anne Smith. Bunge will face Martina Navratilova Friday. Meanwhile, American Tim Mayotte aained the me~'• quarterfinals with a 6-2, 7-5, win over Britain'• Bust ltfottrarn. • For all the home runs, it was one the Padrel hit in the ninth inning that infuriated San Diego Manacet' :o.cJt Will.Wnl. Not the ~ run, exactly, but w)Jat followed it. .Angels get a Sample of Rangers' hottest hitter .. cim Niedenfuer, who gave u/?. •. i-toff bcmel' to San Diego 8 llllc'leridt ~ then hit the .-tiAt batter, Joe Wfebvre, on top • atJbe helmet . \VlWan.w WM furioua, and he .earmed out of the dUF'Jt. MTbey'w hit 14 home runs =us," WUliama mapped • ard, "and they don't pt dil6r ha .. '&Km.once. We hit one ...... lUt." 4' :H~ Dod1er1 and PadrH .... =~~l=.:a:n . . = In ..... ~, C-...s , ...... --QDd9ln by ~ .... ~~Cl} \ ARLINGroN, Texaa (Al') -It hM been a fnmratina nt ~dttllq yw for Tex.as outfielder .Mly ~ele. Semple loll hit ltal'UnC Job in left tieJd by default before the ....n bepn. but now appean to have repined it with hJa bat. Sample is ridinl • 12-pme hittina m.1t. hat pumped hit avenae to .:m and won Wecme.lay nleht'1 pme with the An8ell by b1M*'I hit fifth bome run oi er. y.ar, a tm.-nan tbot on a 8·2 p&tda with two out in the nlntH. • .,,. .. Dl'Obably the mqrt dnmadc hit rw hid." S-• •Ni• •""" Tnat' M ¥tctDl"y owr "tbe Aaeill-"It ... nice. I a.In-& -thnUib • ama1 *-•lwauldMwllbdliDdlwun11 ... _upwtthtbe .......... " ., ....,., ..all rNiiw a m?l&lftl .. of bitterne11 over the way be waa shuffled oft to the bench after Texat traded fOI' Lee Muzilll and dedand him the ltU1er' Without watchinl blm .... · He thinb the .,...._ he is aettinl nOw la no more than bia due. . '"I'm not aom.& to be bumble lbout It. T he lakt. ''Afw lour yean I mou.Jd have inherited lt <ltartlnl. Job). I ~ r= ''Now, rm Just playtna lib I'm to be then tomoliVW, 9Y9I\ If ~ O·fOl'-4. I'm not .,...,, to WfJC!'1 about lt ... lf thev're ~to._.. a move tMyil•'w ti~ ........... .. Sample ______ •• blow ...... the ~ hal..a thler mrw-..-wbffnl ~ ~a vwy aabdl-9 .,.._,.... ..,,. ......... abaut ...... -... war.'' .. id An1ela Maupr Oeae .. , . Mauch, "la that · now, evecy guy out thaoe who didn't knock in a run will IO =and worry about lt. If we had won, wouldn't haw-had any of ~ hlld . I hope ~y'll pt '1'M it by tmnonvw." Dave Schmidt, 2-1, fltched 2~ lnnintl of one-hlt relle for Te.xu, ~outfour. ~t kid WM aw ... •," Mauch aAd ol. Scbmldt. ''He bed a&pll' stuff." Anllla' Nli9wr' nu.. Iva, 3.3, Wiii ~ ane out away fram hll ninth ave wtiln lhe .......,. find up the wMnl ~ RichMdt beat out en lnaeld hit and BID 8tlllD wa1W • a W ooun&. ~-.. ....... .. Ahi' tbe ooun& wnttD 1-1." ..... 11i4,••1.r1Q_. ............... doesn't want to walk me with two men on." I I l f ! I , From AP dlapatclllet , WASHJNOTON -Hank Aaron, II bueball'a all-time home run kln1. be9dl • Utt of 17 outflelden IChedWed ~=hen 1n the Jwy, 19.0ld Tlmen Th9 flve·fnnlng aame, which will feature ~ of buetiall'I living lepnda, La 1pol\IOnld by Crecker Jack and will be played under the Uahta at ~rt F. Kennedy Stld.l\&11'.l. Aaron. who la, flnt 1n career home NN with 755, will be joined m the NltiOMl Lequele.m ~ Wlllle Maya. . Stan MUlial, Riehle Aahbum, onte Irvin, Ralph Kiner, Andy Pafko, Hank uer and Bobby Thamlon. The American Leque conti.nftnt will be led by single-season home run champlon Roger Maril, Al Kallne, Larry Doby, Bob Alli8on, Jackie Jensen, En<» Slauahter, Charlie Keller and Roy Sievers. Maril hit 61homenmain 1961. As a group, the 17 sl~ major-lffl[Ue pitching for over 5,000 home NN, 33,000 hits and composite batting average of .292. F.arlier, officials announced that Hall of F~ pitchers Bob Feller, Whitey Ford, Warren sp.nn and Robin Roberta would appear in the game. Q ~---------------------------------. Quote of the day E~dle Sutton, basketball coach at Arkansas: "The biggest problem with out league is that the faculty repreeentatives are in control. We need to take the pewer away from them and give i' to the coaches, athletic directors and 1ehool preaidenta. I have nothing against the faculty reps. In fact, we have a great one at Arkansas. But 1 know that if we gave a basketball quiz to them, most of them would Ounk it.'' Ralston named coach of USFL team SAN FRANCISCO -Former Ell Denver Bronco coach John Ralston •II• was named Wednesday as head coach and general manager of the San Francisco Bay Area franch.iae of the new United States Football League. Ralston, who led Stanford University to two Rose Bowl victories while coaching there from 1963 to 1971, said he was pleaaed to go back on the sidelines." "It's kind of fun to do It right here ln the Bay Area, having ·spent so much time with Cal and Stanford and with the 49ers in the. wonderful organization that Bill Walsh has built," said Ralston. ..... . Keough blank• Royals on •ven hit• Former Corona d•l Mar Kiah aw II M•H ""•P lhut out KanlM Ctty on .ewn hita and JM RM! drOve ln Rickey Beadenoa twice, Jeadlna Oakland tb • 4.0. victory fYVfW the Ro)i&la. K.tou.ch 1truck out one and walked thne in tmprovtnc fi.11 mark tO 7-10 th1I aeuon .. ~where ln the American Le.Que; nm..ecor'lna ublea by Tim Lalldaer and J"on C.ldM hted a three·• nan fifth lnn1na that powerid lnne.ota toa f-8 win over Ch.lc:eao. tM Twinl' acond aucceee ln u many ntahta. . .Mike Ivie knocked ln tour runi with a three·run homer and a alngle to lead • 17-hit Detroit barrap u the Ttgera exploded for a 12·3 trlum_p.h over front-runninc Boston . . . Gonna 'l'li.Om•• hit a two-run homer with none out ln the 12th inning to help Milwaukee trip the New York Yank.eet, 9-7 . . . Ric~ Zilk belted a pair of two-run homen u Seattle pounded Toronto, 10·4. . . Rlcll s.1ellffe pitched • four.hltter for aeven inningl and Voa Hayff knocked ln three NnB with two aingles and a double to lead Cleveland to a 9..() whltewaah of Baltimore. ' Baseball today On thla date ln bueball in 1920: Wuhingt.on'a Walter Johnson pitched the year's only major league no-hitter, beating the Boeton Red Sox 1-0 at Fenway Park. On thta date ln 1919: Bo1ton Braves ahortatop Rabbit MaranvUle became the fint rna.ior league player to hit two lnside·the·park home runs in one game. On th1I date ln 1910: Chicago's White Sox Park opened its doors for the fint time, but St. Louis Browns hurler Barney Petty ipolled the occasion for the crowd of 28,0$0 by abutting out the White Sox on five hits 2-0. Seventy-two years later, the famed double-decked structure at 35th and Shielda -since re}'\8J'ned Comiskey Park - rernainl as the oldest major league stadium still in use. Committee to study Clipper situation -NEW YORK -Commisaioner m Larry O'Brien Wednesday named six National Basketball Asaoci.ation team owners to serve on a special committee to study all questions related to the application of the San Diego Clippers to move their tranch.lse to Los Angeles. The NBA committee will be chaired by Richard Bloch of the Phoenix Suns Braves rally again to nip Astros 8Uf POH,.. climaxed a four· Ii run nlnth lnntn1 wlth • two.run atnale, whlch follow4Kl bllck-to-back I01o homera by Dale M...,..y and Bob Boraer, vauJUng Atlanta to a ~-4 victory over Houaton. It wu the •venth time thll aeuon the Brave. Mve rallled to win after traUtng in the ninth 1.nning or later . • . Plncl't·hltter Willie Star1ell rip~ • three-run homer and Qoa Robtiaaoa and Rod Searry combined on a four- hitter u Pittabu.r&h downed Chicago, 7-3 . ". . Ttm Wallacll and G•ry C..rter ama.shed aolo homen and BW Oalllcboa combined with Jeff Reardoa on a flv&-hitter to help Montreal top New York, 4-1 ... Pitcher Larry CtuiJtealOD drove ln Philadelphia's go-ahead runa with a do<:able as the Phillies moved back lnto flnt place ln the National League Eut by beating St. Louis, 6-3 . . . Cbrlle Lelbrudt wild-pitched home Jobllale LeMa1ter with two outs in the 12th inning aa San Franclaco edged Cincinnati, 7-6. The game lasted four hours, nine minutes and featured five wild pitches. Flori blasts crltlcal media Ed Flori, who is acheduJed to • open play in the Western Open Golf · Tournament in Oak Brook, 111. today,"' had some cholce words for the media who called the field for the tourney a poor one. "You guys hurt the tournament when you say it's not so tough," the defending champion said Wednesday. "Don't knock it becauae Nicklaus and Watson aren't here. We've got 150 guys who can play." . . . A federal judge agreed to postpone until Aug. 30 the trial of fonner New Orleans Saints running back Mike ~traclla.a, accused of peddling cocaine to hia one-time teammates . ·. . Contract negotiationa between representatives of the National Football League club owners and the NFL Players Association have been pushed back to within two days of the• ·· contract expiration date, acoording to the chief negott;ltor . . . Officials of the state's new National Hockey League team announced that the New Jereey team will be called the Devils. Television, radio TV: Wimbledon Tennis -12:45 a.m., Channel 4. Women's semifinals (taped). RADIO: Baseball -Angels at Texas, 5:35 p.m., KM.PC (710). FRIDA Y'S RADIO 8:15 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER - Brazil vs. Argentina. • Noon (34} -WORLD CUP SOCCER - Spain va. West Germany . 'oining this running ·group can save money ~ewport Beach Runners Association offers discounts, information on upcoming races For thoee wishing to keep abreast of local unning event.a, the Newport Beach l\unners ~tion may be the answer. MWKMIDlU RUNNING ._., .Mr • County Fw~01>nda. ReglslretJon ....... ..,. I Md 1Clll lllwl ... i. S8 For mote information Members o( the NBRA receive a patch, a iembenhip card and periodic information about pooming runs for a fee of $5. Not only that, but lelllbers also get a $1 discount on the 11 races it DENNIS BROSTERHOUS -8eglrlll et 7 e.m. •I lAgune contec:1 731-5725 ' Hlgull Aeglonel Pertc. Fee .. 18 ponaors. I "We feel that you can actually save money by ntering in five or more of the races." sa.id John Uair, the f(>Wlder of the Asaociation and alllo track nd era. country coach at Corona del Mar High. "We've also made some money for nee c nary quipment, such as clocka and watches and IOllle noney goes to charity." · . The Newport Beach Runners Association, urrenUy about 600 members strong, wu started bout three years ago, according to Blair. And it'• een growing ever since. "Members receive a NBRA patch and a pin and t gives people a chance to belong to IOl'Detb.ing," ai<l Blair, whoae organization puta on the China :Up races. "And we aend out infonnation to our oombers to let them know what'• coming up." Marshall Medoff the-exclusive agent to seek spon90rs for the race. BAA Vice President Tom Brown was named to succeed Clone aa presfdent but no race direct.or was choeen. Brown laid he hoped the presidency would be a "temporary thing" and indicated that a marathon committee, still to be~. would have a greater role than he ln organizing future races. The BAA allo voted to establish a finance committee and to expand lta Board of Governors from aeven to u many as 11 members' to provide input from more divene 90UJ'CeS, Brown and Tyler said. wllh T -•hlrt end $3 without. A-ds tor men end women In 11 dllf•r•nf •g• gro.,p•. No let• penelty tor ~ 1M dey of tM rece. For more lnlormetlon. contec:1 8111 PMCUlll et 83 7 -330 1. La PelMe/ ADP "1111111111 Calais llllell -5 end 10. r-beglrl et a e.m. 1n 1.a Pllme. F• Is $7 with T ·lhln end S3 without; lete •••• .,. ,, •nd $4. Flet, IHI Hpllalt cOurae. Contee! Kiiiy Ruclometkln •t 522-87t0. L-a ...., UIMf1y """ -5 and 1<* rum; 10tt beglna at 7 a.m., 5k 11 7:45 a.m. At El Dorado Aeolof\al Parti In Long Beac:h. F .. I• II with T ·lhlr1 and $3 wl1hovt with • $1 la1• .... Contect (2131 430-0989. .....,,,,.,..,, ............. Md_"_ -&.glria 8 .a.m. at the Orange T.-d8r, Nfr/t NeutlhH Pfu• AnnlHrHrJ ...,... -5 end 10k runs begin 6:30 e.m. In IN!n9. F• .... wl1h T-ehlrt Md $4 wtthouL Contect 966-055e. ...... ,. My 10 0.-., 511 Md 10k "UM -e.gln9 end enda at WlldetMSS Perk. 1099 lllll• Lake Roed, Downey. F• Is $8 with T·Shlrt and $4 without. Add $ 1 day ol race. Conteot Downey Track Club at (213) 923-41711. eirt. 232. hnde,, .My,., C"lllC Tune·Op lerlea ~ _. .... -Begins 8 a.m. In Grllllth Park In Los Angeles. Fee tor run only, membert S2, non-mem~a St . Shina S3 Blair ian't the only one involved in the ~tion. It has become a family affair. ''My wife and six children are all involved,'' he laimll. "We're in the process now of getting ready or 1983." Laguna team faces Germans Hoover honored tonight For more infonnation, write Newport Be.ch \unnen A9odatlon. 1162 Denet Lane, Newport ~b, 92626 or call (714) 966--0556. THE RECENT RETIREMENT of Will Cloney 11 di'rector of the Boston Marathon ia "the leginn1ng of a new era" for the pre9tigious nee, aya Boston Athletic Amociation Coumel William l'yler. Cloney. who under fire allo atepped down rom the position of BAA president, a poet he had aeld ainoe 1964, said poor health was the reeaoo for tis retirement. He baa had heart trouble. But Tyler aaid lt was prompted by oppolliUon unong members of the BAA. the official operator of .he marathon, to a contract Cloney aigned making Memben of the lAguna Beach High women'• llOCCer team will meet a team from West Germany in an exhibition match Thunday, July 8 at PJ Morro School in Laguna Beech. M•ggie Maier, the Artlata' Htiatant coacM during the repJar ae.on, said the game ·ia part of an annual exchange prosrmn between Laguna Beach ·and the city of Oanabruck- Gesmold. The game ia .et for ~ p.m. and is free of charge. -OeKraii takes FV the year in footbell and a tint team All-CD' star ln bMebaJ1 for Willon. HJa ~ brother. Bnd, ~ ml.nor leacue ball ln the Milwaukee Brewers orpnbaUon. In addition to the new ~post. DeKraii will a1ao aaal1t with the BASEBALL IOOhomoft football teem. -111 eet eome ~ • lor\C time •i'' ~ DeKnl;l. but l w..a't ..,.. U it w. aanc t.o come (heed ooedUn.I Job) In football or baaebell. I've De.n lnvolwd ln both .,.... for the Ian Din• yeart 8nd l'm really exdwcl about thll." Deltralt'• playln1 ex.,erl•nv• lncludee Lona Be.eta W&19on ..ct ~ but ..... IDP1 CIUt ilst ........................ ,,, ............. • ,I Golden West College baseball coach Fred Hoover. who doubles as the manager of the Senik Ruatlers during the summer Metropolitan Baaeball League, will be 1honored by the league tonight as its "winningest manager.'' Hoover, who bas managed the Senik RuaUers since 1971, has won five Metro League tiUee and finiahed aecond six times. League officials decided that aince t.Oday mark'• Hoover'• ~2nd b irthday. l t would be an appropriate time to honor him . His team is alao llCheduled to play Thi• week-end come Into TheOdore Robina Ford end buy any new or uMd cw or truck and you wtll reoelw a 117 piece 49'r Red . Devit ueonment PM•• We'H blut you with our 4th of July Nie prtcee eo don't wait •tn , the1'reworkl are over. (Offer good 7-2 thru • 7-1.) . l\nglers gear for ·albacore Southland aalt water anaJen are Pa.rtna up for the albacore 1eNOn and early lndJcaUona are that we oowd be In for a better than average catch this summer. ·The flrat longfin takeJl on a sport boat WM caught by Frank Calvery while fith1na abou'd Spike Taft'• 1portfi1her, the "Sea Venture," operating out of H & M Landing ln San Dleao. Thia first albie, a 15-pounder, waa caught aome 130 mllel due south of Polnt Loma. Angle..a collectins firat flaga ln Newport Harbor for we"'bi~ in their longflnl are: Dkk Jordan of Balboa Ialand who boated a 21 M -pound longfln, and Vickie Robin•on, who caught a 162-pound albie. Both of these albacore were taken below the 195 spot, making it a pretty Jona run for boata baaed in the harbor. Both of the first fish flap were I presented on the same day, June 12. The albacore are still in the area some 60 miles t from San Diego and there is a wide area of fiah, l BUT catches have been up and d~wn. Areording to sources at H & M and other landings in the San Diego area, there isn't a 1ot of early season interest in the longfins and there are not that many boata in : the area to stay on top of the schools as they move ~ around the ocean. I Daily catches are ranging from just a few fish i per boat t.o some sportfishers which are getting into { some pretty hungry schools and returning .with c respectable catches. ~ It appears that those who have booked multi- day mini-long range trips are getting into the better action as these anglers are able to stay in productive water longer, especially during the sun downer bite. Water conditions are good with some cool water inside. which could make for a long and close-in type fishing situation through the summer. Sport boats working up from Baja report that •·there ar~ good conditions all the way up the coastline and there are some large schools of bigeye and/or yellowfin tuna on their way up. too. To date there have been a couple of big tuna taken by the sport fleet in the 70-pound class. , Even though most of the local talk is about the { albacore sea.sot\, there is some very good surface l action taking place along our coastal shoreline for ! those fishing out of Davey's, Art's, Dana and l barges. Mixed catches of bass, bonito, yellows and barracuda are common on a daily basis, with the all day boats returning to the docks with fuller sacks. Drug problem in baseball? LOS ANGELES (AP) -Don Newcombe, Ute director of Community Relations for the Los Angeles Dodgers, was quoted in a newspaper interview Wednesday as saying th.at between 70 and 80 percent of professional baseball players are presently using a "mind-altering substance." Newcombe also was quoted in the Santa Monica Evening Outlook as saying that there's "a very serious problem" on the Dodgers. t ' I I ! I i I I However, at a hastily called news conference just before the Dodgers faced the San Diegt> Padres I l!l a twi,night doubleheader Wednesday, the former i pitching star denied saying there was "a aerious I problem on the Dodgers." · t He also told reporters: "When I'm talking about mind-altering substances, I'm talking about alcohol. Beer. champagne, wine: and when you get into the area of drugs, I'm talking about Valium, coke, marijuana. rm not talking about heroin. The biggest problem in this country is alcohol.". Regarding his published comment about the Dodgers, Newcombe sajd: "If there is a problem, it needs to be dealt with and should not be swept under the rug. I never said there was a serious problem on the Dodger ballclub or in the Dodger org.,iiz.ation." However, when asked if he was misquoted, he replied, "No." Call 642-5678. Put • few words to work for ou. !¥.!:! •CDtDllG•• -......... ,.. UTMIOCIM ---S. he. 111U1 ..,_Time·-.. y-00. fc.li llOf9 ._... y-~ COITAMISA 641-12" ISff.....,_. ...... MUON VII» 495..o4Q1 ttntC.....C ;' a "-.... llPwy ... ...., ~ . i l i I I i i I , BEVERLY UDYOFF. DAVE GLEASON Bue, (;aUcho . share award Beasley., Scribn.er honored I ~ ..... MUCDICI A 1TA:r1r::.1 f ..:i:.':f!ll~ .. -r:~ ......... ...... ... ""' - ---~ .. uei of 1119 lloUtlOUI "*'*' •. . Q u NA L u Q 0 A 0 I ~ MIM; "°""°"' ..... ADOIO CLAH 1117 II h OM,ANY, tlOt N. llOMl••r.· t'f'M MOfON 1MI ...,,_ Th e tollowl I 11111011 t111 ..,_, .,... ltt, ~ -VII• A, la1111 A"" 0111 .. rft ao..1 ....... ~ tatn • Wlllldrwn • • ....,., '*""' "°"' OA llttO JOI. Tiie l'lttltl~t lutlfllH Ha"'• ~ °"' ... """' .. AlllNOLO LU JACl<IOH. ~· .. :t~J·~i::n ltl•rr•CI IO Ibo~• Wll tll•d In OONIUL~~: !~r.\ N, ~ "'°· """"*"' 1IOI N M e A I • o1 r11111 County 011 l'ebruery H, Town Cini• DrM, No. IOO Coeea HI01. lA na ~ 11 • ' Na. W... Oalltotnll Htd ' MONICA f?: "°9A. 1 LOS ANOD..18 (AP) -Thia VAAP of luuL-11 TN. .... II DOf'dllOled ~ ,...!."~ :c:. Hertmen. 1100 Tiie llotlllout bllt ffttH ntme 'i:c'~ :.--,. CA ' F9l1\ando .,_. ~umu ~ Oallf9f~• H~I • e-.il. 'llltrton, etaternenc IOt ""J:'::."&,,,..., llllWled PW'"•• ... ...., by • ,;., ......& ... ~~~~la ~. ~ot~-~Lubtou'f .t l lellllilbaat VfJ/Mr; Land Oo. Thia blltlneet WM oonduoted by ~on Acw11 7. ' 2 In flle CV ~ L ~'°" -r-.... • -..,.. •u :::=•· an IMIYldutl. "'"~ ...0 Acktrw Of IN Thia at...,,,.,, WM fllld Wiit! Ille mu_,.._ that mar hJa --UOnU rookie Thia ac...,_,. .,.. 111tc1 wttt1 . CAA1le 0uy HwVMn ~ Wlttldrwlnai =1 = ., o...,. C-.iy °" yw in 1981 -but ~ 21-~ &c.n Mexico County Olttti of OtMOt County 0:: ~-"':r~ ~"the IDMONT T, IAA .. ITT, ... Jucie • 1 2· , .....ma UDOl\I buebail'• ~ winDlre. ...., 1t, IN2. Jurle ~2. IH2. tnOt ty on Town o.nw DrMI. No. IOO, c::.. 11'110llthed °'""' COHI 0 y Valensuela hla 10ili • ot •l..-' '111111 ~. c.ifomle •HH Noc """"10, "· u . .>vty 1 1 a M-..i~~ .. 1...._t •-~~ •L-VT . C'!'-~~th ll'ublltlltd Or1n11 00111 Del Publltlltd Orenge CON I Dtll" It/ ldmont T. llrrett ' ' ' a•1 ea W-...... 1U ....... VJV l'UJ UI ""'----WI ll'tlo(, J\11\1 10, 11, '• Ji/tt t, 1 ll'llol, June 2• '"'" 1 I 1• 1N2' ,~ --~~~~~--+-Steve lton of PL"-""-'"'-•·. ~·· ., -2 • v_, . . v. Publlth•d Orange CoHt Delly "9lJC --·~...... \.09 11-~ 1---~ ...... -------1 ----:-....----..:2:.:.1::°':: .. ::!'2~1 Piiot. June 2• . .My 1, •• 16, 1N2 ---::::==-=..,~·~~~ ..... -= triumph over San D&eao1 V la wu "8JC NOflC( flWlJC M>TICE 21~ MOT1C8 °' uu hi eerly. recover9d in the mJddle lnnJnp and ITAW °' wmeu;M. •itiliiMi NI.IC M)JIC( ':,~:;r.:r netded relief help from Stew How. to .,i the ,.... PAlrnllMHlt ~T9'0 NOnc1 °' Ne. ••-victoc'y. -TIW9T91'8 1AU NC>TICI IMTtNO M>8 In the 8upertor Court of S "'°""°"' ..,_ .. llMm NO. ltmr NOt1o1 It lllr9by alW9 thet IN or Calllorn11. ror 1111 Cou t 0 Tiie fOllO•lno peraon lltt On Jvty n , 1N2, ~ tt:OO em Board of TruatM1 -or ft.a CoHt Otwioe In Ula MltW of IN N w H.. wttb an earned run aver:. of 2.92, wllhdrewn •. Oll*ll l*tner from •••t•wlde li:Oft CIOtllrl Sarv1ci1i: Community 0011•11• Oletrlct ol 0' JI! R 0 M I! c 0 .. NE I Valenzuela ldm.ltt he ii tar from the form which the per1Ml'lhfp CJPW•llng under 1he lno ... duly tppolnl•d Tr111••• Orange County, Calllornla, wlll AOllNSON. : ve La-an a " 1 ..... in 1001, wL~ ..._ ...i • ....i.........i flotlllou1 b11alfleaa neme of 11ndar and p11r111ent to Offd of r.oelve aNled bldt up to 11:00 Notloe It hereby ~ ''-t 'he '111'1 V"'Y , ... • .v ._. """" .-.v.:...u IMll'LOYH ll!Nl,.T llftVICI! Truet ~ded Mey 11, 1Ht, booi1 Lm., Wed11Nd91, Jliy 21, 1912 It ~will ... 11 '11vate , Utou1a in five Of hJa ffnt aeY.n pmel. CONIUl.TANTI. 'to I. CNof'Mlt 1'080. pege SH, o l Olflclel Illa PurcNtlna Depertment of Mid to the h!OMat tnd !Nat Old 1r, Valenzuela said hil off.,.._.. "'t.chet, L•-curve Avenu.. 202. Or1n11. Clllfornl• "-oordt. •xecuted by; Donlld L college dlllrTct looetad 11 1310 auOJaot to conllrm1t1CN1 01 d L-" __ ..,1 L•-fl ..,.._ t'" uw tffet. Cunn1ngh1m end Beverly A. Adame Avenue, Colla MHa, 8uf)erior ~.on or""" the d U1W •JU u111 uttery ecrew ball were oot effective The flotltloue bu11neaa n•m• W11therb)', .. tN1IOr1, 1n the offlU Ca1ttorn1a. at wl'llch ume Mid bid• dl'f of July. 1ff2 ti ~ or I Monday nJCbt. A dosen of hla pitches were in the ttat-t for th11 Pl'1'*9hlp -ot the County Aeoorder of 0r111ge wttt 1>1 .:b11o1y openecs tnc1 reec1 ,.,~ Rodi. Pollooll, '9t1Mr. o.lbr & dirt bef~ they got to catcher Steve v--. flllct on 34-82 In Ille ~ of County. 8111a of Ca1J1orn1a. Wl(L PRINT NG & BINOINO FALL 1N2 Phlllpa, A 1.9w Corpoia11o.i, 11 j "But I k I --·· Ot~ IELl AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO COMMUNITY SERVICEICOLLEOE JOlln D. PettkerL~!!__W. I th t. 1 now can pitch, .. he Hld after Full Name end AddnM of Iha HIOHEST BIDDER FOfll C~8H ACTIVITIES BROCHURE. Sult• 1IOO, Loe.....,._ Callf . Mondav'1 oame "I've juat. t t.Q ·-tl.t .. 1..1 .. ,.. Per90l'I WlthclrlWlng: (peylbfe at time of .... lfl lawful AM bid• .,. to be In llCCOtdance County of Loe .............. Stat -•tive'Jv.'~ • IO &eep -......u.. 81m1 M. Odeh, ~01 E. Tait money ol the U"'*I Stat") at: with the 8ld Form ln11ruotlone and Callfomle. .. -~ 1t11e ,.._. " AYenUe, Otange, Callfornle t2ee& 8outtl lront entrenee lo the Otenge Condltlonl end 6"cllleatlont which lntar"1 pl Mid decUHcf at Valenzuela wu clouted by NL Weat Dtvtaion Ill Sarni M. Odeh County Old Courlhouae, City 01 tr• now on Ille end may be Meured time of de.th end .. IN right, leeder Atlanta in hla= ,.,... ,.,, .. Ane. Stat• ot ca111om1L 1111 1n the otftot of 111e P"'c11u1no Aoent and en..,. ,.,. ,,,. ...,. ot · OUI start, lfvlni up al.x P11bll1h1cl Otenge CoHt Dally right. Utle and lntwlfl con'feYed to of~ COiiege diatrlct daoeued ll u toqulrad l'UN in five innings. onday night he awTendeJ'ed Piiot, July 1, 8, 15, ~2. 1982 end now held by It Undw Mid OMd Eactl bidder mutt IUbl'l'lll With hit oper.iion Of law or CllMnw!M. three dou. blet and a triple to the Padres in the •1-t ________ __;2:.;8..;;13"-:..:;:82:1 of Tru11 In tile property lltuated In bid • cH,.l•r'1 ohack, oerllfl•d thin °' In lddltlon to ltlat or f 1 .... 1 .. -I.Ult .. _"' 111\Tll'r Mid County and Sttle cleecri~ aa: check. or bidder'• bond made decNMd et the time of dMt our ........ ._.. "_,.. ""'""' Lot 10 or TrKt 9374 u per /!\Ip payable to the ordet of the Ooeet end to Ill the.cerllln ,.., pr "He wun't u sharp u he hu been," said ---:,,=te:::TITl=IOW:-:::~-=.,.....~=~--rac<l'ded In look '°9, PIQM 15 to Cornmuntty College Diltrlct Soard alluettd In Ille City or New Ye~"H t lt t""' •L--in h ddl ....... 17 lnclullve or M~ MllP9 ol Tru11 ... In an amount not .... a.a.. County of Ofange, Stai · • ego -aeuaa-t e mi e inntnp." Tiie ~:.,"!!:".!, d.....,. II) the olllc:• o r u ld county thin '~ percent (5%) of the eum c.Ntomta, ptrtlcultrl)' dMc:rt The ge., a1JO seem to have lt together winning bu"'-... -'V Recorder. bid ... guartnlM that Iha bidder lollow•. to-wit: TJI• l•H Id 11 of their Jut 14 games to move within 4\1~ a.-CARLINI ORIOINALS l tett The ttr•ll addreaa and other wlll enter Into the propoud ~, ... , ~-~~'!' ~•--To· of l-.~i ..... Atlanta at the time. --Perla)' Clrc:le Huntington' BN<:h common !lealgnatlon, If any, or the Conlmtrac:t II Iha aame 11 _.,did to ... .,...., ..._ ... .,, .....,.,,,., --.uo._ CelHotnle 82647 , • 1'111 Pfe>c>ertY deec:<lbed •bow It h In Iha event of fa/lure to.,,,., ~dated Jenuaty 1. 1811 by Emmy L911 Plrzlnl 16ee1 p::a purported lo be: 9 w .. lpot1, lnllne, Into l4ICh onlrKt. Iha Pfoceeda of • n d b •I w •• n THE IR v I E IT MIGHT HELP Vale .. •uela to ~~n •L-Qr..._ Huntl t ~.... CA. tllecheckwlnbe1orfelttd or In the COMPANY,• Wut Vlrgl la ·-·~ UJMl '2W' ng on -·· ... a1Hornl The undartlgnad Truetae caM or t bond. the full eum thereof e«poratlon, u ~and wu this year'1 overall record COlnpAn!S favorably to C"1a .._..._..., 1aee1 P..,._ dl1clalm1 any tlablllty for any wlll ·be lorl11tad to Hid college O. Stagge, 111-"' PIQQ'I L St aeuon-ending statistics in 1981 -a 13-7 record Clrcle .._;-;;t----, lnc:«rect,_. of Iha 1treet addt-diatrlct. '-bend end wife .. joint l with a 2.48 Eh.A. tae.i 1 on lelc:n, Cllffomla and other common dtelgnatlon, H No bkldllt may withdr-hie bid aa ~. recorded on Augllll 4, In the Thie bu"'-If any, lhOwn herein. for a period lot forty-five (•5} dl'ft 1t71 In Book t773, Pege 57 of tint half of the 1981 le880n there waa general Pl'1nentilp conduettd by a Said u la w111 be mede, but alt" the da1a Mt 1or the open1ng Offtol., Aec:ordt of °"..,... ty, Orange Coast College basketball star Cbria Femandomania, as he befuddled National LeegUe Et'llf'lly Lou'Plulnl without covenant or warranty, the r •of . Calllornle further daacrlbtd .. Beasley and Saddleback College tennis standout batters on hla way to the NL Cy y~ Award' as Thll •,.t-1 ... llled wtlh the Ppr ... or Implied, r1g11d1ng tftle. Botrd of Truat ... ,....,.. the lotlowa: A LEASEHOLO EITAT IN M. ks ib best. pitcher. This se·-. he L.--~tch more llLe CountyClancofOftngeCowltypn ~~ ....... ~~~ ~o~~'t~~: ANDTO;PAACEL1:lot62ofT ar e r n er have bee n name d the· top __... ,._ WI. June 11. 1N2. • Iha notl(•)..Q;:,t;;;Oeed 01 1nrorma11t1et In "'Y blcf °' In the ~~~ty ~ ;:::,:. ltat community college male athletes of the year in his gutty struggles in the Dodger Champion.ship '191111 Truat, wllh lntere11 thereon .. bidding. ca11om;e. u per mep reoor Orange County. ' t and World ~eries victor ies last O c tober -Publl•h•d Orenge Coaat Delly provio.ct In Mid notl(•). IKlvanC.. N0Rt,4AN.E. WATSON book 211. pegH 5 through ln addition, Golden West College volleyL~-" aometimes unhitt.able, but ,often in trouble. Piiot, June 2'· July 1• 1• 15• 1"2 Ir eny, under the term• of Mid o..d ~•tary, lndualYe of MlacelllnlOUI "" tar Be l L d U1U1 1---------__;--r~~.:..::.:.....:::..:..==-.---...J 27'3-82 ol Trull. lea1. chargu end Boerd ofTrult-the office of the oouncy recot 5 ver Y i yoff has earned Orang• County'• _.,. __.t-•xi>en-of the T~t" Ind of the Cout Community Collage atld county. PARCEL 2: female athlete of the year honors. ir99Ulf ••w 1ru111 created b~ald DHd or Olttrlct 1ppur ten1nt~11-exclua The a w d d b h ~ ~ .. _"' ..,,._ Trull, '°' the amount reuonebly Publlahad Orenga CoHI Delly MMment ror and a r s are s ponsore Y t e Sports ,._ ""'~ '1CTTnOUa .,..... Ntlmated 10 be: $55,315.33. Piiot. July 1. 8. 1982. throuonout Lot 6 of Mid Info rmation Directors of Orange County. f'ICTmOUa .,_.. l'ICTmOUe IU..... ..... ITATlm#T The benefletary Undllt Mid Deed 2917.52 71'4. TOOETH"ER WITH Roger See of Fullerton =ll and Dave ..,._ ITA~ NAm ITA~ Tile tollowlng P«90nl .,, doing of Trutt heretofore axecuttd tnd t----------butldlnge Md other ~ov.....,u &,.;;; WW.& ~ •: ... bualneel 11: KIMBERLEY FINANCIAL written OeciaraUon or Default tndl-----------known ••: 312 Vlall Suer •• Gleaaon of Orange C.OUt w e-the ""''~2:!' The fotlowlng J'lfl4fl •• dol,,,, TM lollow11111 pereon I• doing bu.W-... dallverad to Iha undarelgned • f'UllUC M)J1C[ on ••Id land. More oommo ly top men's '61ld women's coaches, respectively. ERNIE'S OOURMET MEATS CAR RAY l .. VEITMENTS. SERVICES. 1581 Tah iti Avenue Oerntnd '°' Sale, and a written auNNOfl COURT Newport 8-ctl, Celilomla 82 coaches Fullerton's. men's baaketball squad. and '92 E. 17th Street, Cotta .._; 2'82t Del Predo, Dana Point, ~ DMoti. Celtfomll 92e5t ' Notice or Default end Electlon to °" CAUl'ORNIA Any brokerage commlHlo GI ---L • Cellfornla Cll90mll ftl2I ~ lllmlrd KOIMCk 1581 Sell. The undllt'llgned c.uMd Mid COUNTY Of OflANOI tubject to ~ovll of cne eason '-~nes OCC's woinen's basketball t.eam. Denny Lee BOlltllm.n. 1808 w. ~ a. &pnora, 21311 Tahiti Avenue. Laguna Beech, Notice 01 Oeftult and Ellctlon to 700 CMo C..... Drtwe Wiit Alto. the underligned ,__ Beasley and Scribner became the third duo to Pllela Roed, Anlhllm, Calllornla Av1nld1 Alllblenre. El Toro, Callfornla t2e6t Sell to be recotded In the county ... • right to retKt ""Y and a11Md1 share the m • h . th t2eo. Clllfomla ll2e30 8'lan ScotfWOOd 1581 Tahiti wllate the,.., proP;llt'f'l It locattd ..,, .. AM. CA 97'1 to entry of en order conllmllng en s onor SlnCe e awards were "* ~ .. eanducted by .,.. AY9nUe, llgllnll e..ch. Cellfomlll DATED Juna 23, 'tN2. . MARRIAGE OF PETITIONER: DUC ..... establiahed in 1976. Ind~~ It OOnducted by 111 lndMdulll, '2e51 1 !~~~~· F0teclotu,. Ml~EHSTPROUNODNGENT NGUYET T Tarme OI uli CHh In la 0 __ ... tball Denny lee llolfelmen ~ G. &phora Thll ~la conducted by a .....,. • .,...,Inc. " : HI money of the United Stet .. ~e s tandouts Ray Orgill (Ora.nae Coast) Thia •t-t -fllld with 1he Thlt .....,,_,. ... fllld ..-the generar ~. u llld TrvttM, TRAN confirmation of ..... or Ptr1 and ~n Dayis (Cypress) shared the award in 1979. Cow!ty C1anc of 01'111ge County°" County Cl9rtl Of <>r.,.. County on a.IOe 8. KOMaCk By Subatltuflon SUMMONS (FAMILV LAWI and Ollanca evldenoed by n ta K e vin Magee (fS addleba ck) and swi·mmer Bill June e. 1N2. June"· 1912 ~265-7810 By A.A . .M7/. NOTICc.. No. o..20210 MCIKed by Mortgage or Trwt P1tt111 Thlt ~ -filed with the P1Mldent •1 Yeu heft ............. on the Pf°'*1Y IO IOld. Ten Babasho.ff (Golden West) were co-winnen in 1980. Pubt19hed Orange c o.:.'= P11bll1hed Orange ea.at D.,ty County Clel1I Of Orenge County on 5925 Cerrltoe AYI. Tiie-' _, dedde ....,_.,.., C«it or emount bid 10 be depotl W ater polo and swimming star, Kile "·~· of PMot. June 10. 11. 2•. Jliy 1. 1912 Plot, June 17, 24, J1Ay 1, a. 1MI June 22. 111t2. Cypr-. c1111om1a wt1t1ou1 ,_ _.. '-d .._ wtth bid. ~ k th • ._.._.3 25 2tl8-a2 ' Tai.: (7 t•) 528-3280 ,.. ~ ...,.. ._.,._ "9ed 8ldt or ott.r.. to be 1n wntlng -n.,~ too e award lasf year. 1~ -----------Publlalled Orenge Cout Delly Pubflthad Orange Cout Dally U.. llltof ,,... .. , ....... ... be ~ at IN Beasley and Scribner were selected fnlm a . rt*JC llOTICE ...aJC NOl1C( Piiot, Jutte 24, Jvty t, a. 15, 1N2 Pilot. Jul'f '·I, 15, 1882. an"ayoutto wllfln• tlo Meltthl '"-,act, Ylc:e of oMoe at any time llft• ltle strong f' Id ( • ll 2730-42 2t00-82 r Y n • ma er. you publication hereol and ~ d ta • ie o commwuty co ege athleta. Otben P'M:TmOUa .,_.. NCTlflOUa •11•11 -----------I lhould do eo promptly '° that your of Ille. t norrunated lncluded: Doug Rybicki. a golfer from ..,... ITA~ = ITA~ "8.JC M)TIC( Ml.JC M)TIC[ '9IP<>llM or p!MdjnQ. II any, may be Dated thla 22nd dey of ~ , Cypress; Larry Jackson, a running back o n ~°':WCno Pl'l4fl 11 do11111 ~ ~ peraon 11 dolnG MOnCa °' uu NOTIC• cw TRUeTH't uu ~:; .~· u at• d 11 e , 1 ct o ::;,._elf.._.. 1' I Fullerton's 1981 footbalJ team; Tim Riley, a FOSTERS PHARMACY. tN5 DOCTOR DETAI\., tu Notice la hllfe«>y ~ 11UrWt LwNe.Wttt/l'TRDT demendedo. II trllt1111al pue4e tf..W0..~1d1 t. ~ wrestler from Golden West; and G,.... Terry, a Newport llvd., Cotta Meaa Cheyenne, Coat. .._, c-..i.. lo Metlont 3071 and 3072 of the SP ESCT;!--0 No. Tl'l94 lllaldlr centre Ud. aln •ll1note • '°"" 0 . "9ttller, • ._. )o la ·-• c.Mfornle 92127 ' t2t2t --·-~-CMI Code of the State ol Clllfomla n W SERVICE. INC. u --.,_ Ud. ,....... deltlro Rodi, ...... ~ water po P yer from Santa Ana. T'erry O.vld Orant. 3177 Palrlcla Shennon. tu the undartlgoed, G & w TOWIHO duly liPPOlnted TrvstM Under the delO .... Lee-te~hn... / ~, ,.._.' • Beasley, a 6-2, 185~ guard/forward who Country Club, Co et• Mau Cheyenne, eo... .._, c.lfomll ..,. ... at llUOIC IUCtlon. et 132 '~ deec:rtbed deed of trust...._ A a.-c:.rp. n P. res:at Costa Mesa h, was the }--""'ng --r c.llk:nie 92e28 ' t2t2t l"duttrlal Wey, Coa t a Mau Will S ll AT PUBLIC AUCTION SI Ueted dHaa 1ollcltar al 111w .... It.1- CGU.l ......,. "' ~.~. 11 oonclucttd by en Tilll bu11r1e1t la coilCAc:ted by tn Clllfomla, at I a.m. on Moodey, tllf TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR oonwjo de un abogado en eate Loe ,.,,.._ CA .... 7 m County in 1982, averaging 23.4 points per ..... y..._, lndlvldull. 1ttt1 cSey of Jufy. 1ee2. the following CASH lPl'f8ble at time of .... 1n ••un t o . d • b • r 1 a ha c, r 1 o Publl•hed o,.09• Coeet game. e was named the South Coast Conference's Terry o.Ad orent Patrtcll Stlenlle>n ci-:nbed property, t~t: llwNl money ot the United s1a1 .. ) lmrntdt.1Mnen1a. de .. ,. m.,_., P116t. dune 2•. 25, .1u1y 1. 1 "Player f the y .. d Thia ~ -fled with the Thlt tCltement -llltd with the 7 I D . t. "n c 0 II p.. v I N "' right, lltle end ln*-1 ~ IU raepue Ila 0 ~. al hay 27 0 ear, an w as abo named to the County a...i Of °'tnOt County on County atr11 of Orange County on H~n&e. LlcenM No. 3tOV~ to and now held by It under Mid a1gun1, pu•d• ••r ragl1lred1 a All-state baske tball team, &elected by the California ~ n, 1912. "'-22, 1112. CellfomlL DMd or Tru1t 1'1 the property ~-rta.fC M)l1C( Community College Coaches Aaaoclation. ,..... ~ Seid .... la for the purpoee of hllfelrMlft• ~: 1-. TO THE RtfSPONOENT; The The occ star b ecam e the South Coast Publl•h•d Or•no• COH I .Delly Publlthed Oreno• Cout Delly Mllefylng llen of theundertlgned for TRUSOTOR; CHARLES R. STREET P•llllQl'ler hH lll•d • petition YOU AM .. OID'AU.T Piiot, July 1, s. ts. 22. 1982 "-Piiot, ~ 2•. ~ 1. 8. 15, 1N2 Towing and Slor1!QI loOllMr with and AU REY B. STREET. huabend conoemlng your mwr1191. II )'OU ouo Of TNlaT DATID A Conference's all-time~eadin scorer in 1982 2191-12 2707-aa coeta of adYlrtlling and •llPlltl-and w111 u Joint tenant• end Feil to Ille a ~ within • 21. 1111. UNL••• YOU tall · 320 · H • of NII. SUSAN D STREET, a llngle woman Cll'f'I of the dlte that thla tummon1 ACTION TO PROTICT y )'1ng points. e the old conference ~ -----:,.~18.J~-IC-M>na_____ Oiled thla tit day of Jufy. 1882. BEHEFICIARY : SECURITY II~ on you, your default ml')' ~rT.rTMAY• IOl.D mark of 284 points, set by Cerritos College's Ron ~ -HK G. w. Miiier PACIFIC FINANCE CORP. be antated Ind the court may .,,., "*.M: •AU. • YOU ... ~~IN Kruidhof in 1972. Publl1hed Orange Coaal Dally Rec:orded Mey 12, 1981 11 lnltr. • judgment containing ln)uncttY1 or •JCPl.ANAT'ION CW THm NA Beam became h ~-.. NOTICE OF DEATH Piiot, Jufy 1, 1N2. No. 1•272 In book 1"°6-4 pege '4e othllt ord«• concerning dlvltlon of Of THIE P9'0CUOINQ T . ey t e second ~ghest acorer in ~ OF 278 t-82 or Offic:ial Reco<d1 In the office of proper1y. 1pou1al aupport, chlld YOU, YOU IHOULO CONTACT A OCC history, concluding his two-year career with a ... ~ per-.n 11 doing ANNE C. BURGESS AND the Reoordtr or Oranu-County. cuetody, chlld auppon, attorney LAWYEA. to•al of 1 002 · t H h ...._._ 0 F P E T I T I O N T o .,_ ... MnJlC[ Mid deed to truat deacrlbee the f-. costa. 111<1 tue11 othllt retlef u NOTICE Of TRUSTEE·• a • • poin s. e as receive d a full c PR1ses. 1oos2 ,.~"" ,.............._ T• No h la.rshi la E ADMINISTER EnATE NO ~~·"'property: ma,. be orentao by the court. Tile -· • M17t 9C O ~ to P Y basketball and baseball ne xt dye Drive. Huntington BHch A 1119 .. 1 • EX"'*T wA" garnlahment of wegea, taking of NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN. t year at Ariz.ona State University. Callf«nla 92&48 ' • • · •KROW NO . .....,.. PAftCal t: Loi 8 of TrKt 'No. money °' pr0per1y, °' othllt c:our1 on W~netday, Juty 21. 19! . "Scribner was the Mission , '-niere~·s ~t OrtYe~~l;._~ !~005. --~ To all heirs, beneficiaries, NOTICI TO CMOfT°"8 Of 859t, In the County or Orenge. authorized proplldlnga mey a180 9:00 o Clock Lm ot Mid day, 1 al '-"' ·-"' ........ ~.., ._... .......,..,.. c reditors and contingent MIL«~" AHO Of State or Calllornla, 11 per map ,_,,,,, room set u lda for condu 1 g v uable tennis player in 1982. The .. 1 .. -... aouthpaw t28'e credi f INT'INT10N TO~..... recorded In book 2'8, Pee-•2 to DATED February 28. 1982. TruttM'I Saa... within the I won th f . I b ----~ Thllbullneealeconducteclbyan tono Anne.C.Burgeaa ALCOHOLIC llYlllAQI '4 lnclullYe,Ml-'l.r-M.,,.,ln LMA.Brtneh. REAL ESTATE 8ECURIT doubles.e con e r e n ce tit e in oth singles and 1~c.,.. L p-..., and persona who may ·be uea.tl(I) the offloe 01 the county recorder or Clerk SERVICE, located at 2020 Tiile · v .. , r. otherwiae interested in the (9-. ,_.,., u.c .c. Mid c:ounty. By Helen M. Otten, B<Oldwey, Suite 206. In the C &:zibner was. the Southern California doubles llatement -flled with the will and/or eatate. .-,., Man MP) '""cu 2: A non-111c1u11ve Deputy Santa Ana. County ot Oreng., cham. pion, and finished ......,,,nd ;ft the sta•~ m' ~. cin1., .. 2 of Oranoe Courtly on A ti•I-.__ .....___ Notice la heNby g1wr1 !hit a •p1>11rlanan1 •aaement over and • VAN DAO a LIN'T'NmA. INC. ~Ca111ornl1. REAL EST -._.,, ,., """ "'-8. .., pe .... , .._ ~ filed Ill* ~ of pereon11 pr09et1'f tcro.t the Southllfty 3.00 feel of Loi 1* W. 1m. a""4 ~COAITIES SERVICE. a Clllf a ling.)~. ,.._ by Marjorie ~land in the end t tren• of 11quor lloanee(a) la 7 In Mid Trect for ~ of ..... 2n c:orpor1t1on, H duly appo1 I d iiii~iliim:::--::=:==::::=~-----------1 Publlthed Orenj• Coeat Dally Superior Court of Orange lboUt to be made. dralrnlge and for mllntalnlng the leftla AN. CA ll70t Trull" under end PU<*l•nt t t 11111 m Piiot, "'-10, 17, '· .Jvt)' 1, tNa County requeatl n& that ....,.TheZJp~'l~lng add,.., ularlor or the atructur11 well Pubflahad Orange Co111 Deny power or aala conferred In 1 253M2 • .., ....,... ._..._ Md Soc:ill located llPOl1 lot 5 of Mid Trect Piiot. June 10, 17, 2•. Juty ). 1982. certain OMd of Trull allecut --""'"".=~--------·M a rjorie R o wland b e Seci.wit'((«)ir.dtrllTuNumber ldjlcenttolhll..-nent. ~8~ CHARLES E. PREEDY, a •I rtaJC M)TIC( appointed aa pereonal of the ~•>trr. · YtN -1n def9Ull Under 1 OMd men. ,_dad Sec>lell'lber 8 • . l'IC-.... I repl'eBentadve to adminJst.er OEOAOE E. YEAROUT, 1931 of Trutt dated May 8, 1881. UnleQ "8JC M)TIC[ in Book 1'210 of Otr1cie1 Aeoor MARSH Matheny and father-in-law .... nA=:r.. the estate o f Anne C . = i~~::~::A°""' ~~~lt·;~n~°.c::~~·= -~~-~~~~~~tr'u~f~ .• 55'sa. FLOYD MARSH, beloved o f Kenneth Matheny. He ... ~Oflowlng ""°" 11 doing Burge 8 1 ( under the The namece>. m1111ng ~ ..... If you need...,, explenation of .. _ -r111on of a br..c:tl °' d«llUll f •the r of Lo I a Mar I h WM preceded in death by hJa --II: Independent Adminilltratlon end ZJP Code Number Ind soa.i the neture of the pn>eeedlng ....,_ On~ 8, 1982 at 9:00 Lm .. It ltle paymenl or performance 0 1 • -;;;;:;;;:::;::;:::;:::;;::;::::;;:-,loving wife Clara. a pioneer OTI MOTOR8PORT, 1511 of Estates Act) ~ 8ecurtty (or) Fedenil Tu Number rou. you ahoutd l:Ofltlc:t •.llwYw. "9nlal otlce. 3883 PnYlew l...llne, Obllgat1on1 ucurad thar ~ of Coata Mesa. Servk9 will Monrovle , Newport Beach • petidob of the,,.,..._ "9: C}9001 Antlodi Or., S.W. ln!lne, Irv~, Ctllfornla, the followlng lnducllng that ~ or be held Sa Celffotnla t2983 ' ii aet foe hearinc in Dept. RUDOLF J SEEMANN 1ot2t " ~ petlOnlll property w4ll be Notice or which WH recor on turday, July 3, l ryce Oaborne, 2 1 182 No. 3 at 700 Clvic Center Flitong om.. Santi Ana.~-"(ff a 1traa. llC!clr-or oanwnon =: publlc 1uct1on, without March 29, tt82. u Recor PAc:.ec YllW MIMOliAlPM• Cenwtery Mortuary ~hapel-Crematory !5oo Pacific View Drive NewPOr1 Beach 644·2700 MICOlb4Q( MOITUAlllS Laciuna Beach 49'·9'15 Laquna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cap111rano 495-1776 H•MC>m LAWM-MT. Ol.IYI Mortuary• Cemetery Crenwtory 1625 Gisler Ave .. Costa Mesa ~555-4 1982 at 1:30 PM at Pierce =~untlngton Beec:ll, Drive, West, in the Qty of nla 92105. 8. $.No. IMt-62~5 dMlgnatlon 11 ehown aoove no lnetrument No. 82-107853 Br~en Bell Broadway .. ..._ S A Cal Tllomee o. Divin. q c:.nw wurenty It g iven u to' 111 1 ,.!!.> ~ lndudlng 1 oouc:n. SE\.L AT PU8LIC AUCTION TO Cha I. Intennent pn'vate at ~~II oonducted by an ,.~.~"21 Ina, lfornJa on lr¥1n•. C1lllornl1. s . 8. No: ~ « oorrec:me.1." • ""'°' .......... eMctr1c t'fP9Wl1tlit HIOHEST BIDDER FOR CA "~ YLY 982 at 9·30 a.m 189-2~ The beneficiary under Mid OMd with Cata. 2 nHtad t1bl11, 1 lawflA money of ltle Uftled s I Me rose Abbey. Pierce 8r)'OI Otbome IF YOU OBJEcr · llllt 1111 penona1 i;Woperty to be of Truet, by reeaon of 1 ~ or dretalng t1bl1, 1. wing otlalr, t or a Cllhler't cnectt dnlwn Brothen Bell Broadway ~"*~'!'..It._ fled wftti tlll -.n•i .. -of•'---~ the tr.........,...11 delcwlbed In1111*'• cMlllUlt In the obilgtllon MCUrld dlnlf!O> dlelr, 1 octeoon11 dlnlno lttte or net1on11 °"*· 1 atet , j Mortuary dlrecton. ..._..,."" OrMee County on .---• w., _ .. _you 11 INderielt, IUCIPllet· lll«Clflen. ~. hlrltofotl ._,.., Md lllllll, 2 mtrble Chella. 2 OOCktlll federll c:r9dll unlOlt or a June • 11&2. ehouJd either appear at the dlH . 9qUIPment !::Jor 'buelftea clefl¥tred to the Undet"9fted I ::0: ~1 1 floor ..,.., 2 ,._.., MYlrlgl end t0an --~bet\ ,._heari ng and 1••t• your -. lbrt-· •-= wnaen Dedetdon Of~....,,. --.. 19dwoodcN6te, domldledlnthitatate ... P110flalled 0 · C • '"' ~On-elle 8-IWIM ~ °""8nd for 5a11, end wrtt11n no:; 1 dr"""'9 .... I HOOlfW uprtgtl1 the time of Ille, .. rigftt. PERRY Piiot, June 2• • .M.,"9;'. I, ~"1~1y object.Iona or file written No. •2·118515 end It loclted .,. of l>feedl end Of -.ctlon to-.. WQAm, 1 Sony cotor TV, 1 lltlOle lntereat held by It, aa T SU~ANNE El. PERRY, i105-e2 object,oM with the court GYPSY'S, HSI BolH Avenue 1111 underelgned to aall H id ~ht= ~a !remit. 1 that ,..., prOC>1f1Y attuet• 1n paned away on June 30, before the hearing. )'our Wl9tmlnater. Ce11fom1a. 1~ pr09et1'f to Mtleif)t Mid oOlglt19, ,.:?.. ~ '""ra, ' t101e County and Stell, deec:rl 1982 S'--__..._ of q)C -a,_,...,._ rnav be in wfttl the followtng detcr10ed aAco-•nd therurter tlle undaregnicl _,,.., 1 ........ aiornr.-. lollowl: · •..: waa a ._.._..t ""'~ ....--~----., penon hollc ba ¥a r1ge ll oenea(t)· CIUlld Mid notice Of br9lld\ Md of •• (a) WT 1 clD4Nncl lndudlng Lot 3' of Trec:t No. 7083. Laguna Beach. CA. Survived ...cnnoue.,.... or. you.ry o•ttomeyu .RE A •2·J11515 now laau•d for Mid ellctlon to be AlcorOld Mtrch 2, 1o ~~ '1' pmM, S4 ....... County ol Oran ge, St•• by her huabe.nd 'lbomu A. NAm ITA1-Nf ~ U .( ,,,......_ ' 1te2 11 lnttr. No. 82-07283e In Mid Jae*-. 1 ooet, t Clllfomie u pet "llP Perry, I IOI\= Michael J:. ~~~•no pereon 11 dolnt CREl>ll'Oll or a oonUncent Thet the IOlll contldwetlon for Offlolel Aecorda. =., °:1'*'11 tulla. 1 IWMW, 2 Book 273. P•gH 27 to ' o-.... 1 .... •-1>..-• -credJtot of •'--.... .a fN '""""" Of Mid ~ Ind ~--. 1 ftlMt l*l1a. 1 tlQhta, 1 M~ MIP9 In die oflol • -·~· ... ~ •...,.. &... OE. "fY PAOPEATllit 11121 ~ oecreaHu, you of Mid liotftea(I) II ttie ..,. OI wltllout c:o¥ant nt or werrenty ~ ""lftllft. the county recorder Of .id andPury~~!..a.~~~-.,u.1hter ~"1· W~on.8treet, "°""111n must file yourdaim with the "40.ooo.oo wNctl GOnlletl OI tM .._.or lmplltd, regarding....: ,_}. .. ~Pfll•l\cea 1nc111dlng 1 Tiie 1trae1 edd'"' or 0 1 "'"'"""' """ul T P'..nllt. i.. CA tt10I court with.la fOW' month• followlno: • poun•0t1, or encumlwMOie, 10 '.:.t. doall, • "--1 ""* C0111mon dellgn111on Of tlle , GraWl6de aervlcea wUI be .. NOLD L. SILVl"MAN. 3 from Ure dale of first DMlftjltl111 ...... ,.., ltle l'llMlnlnt ptlnolptl.,,.."' bO•, t uopeoa OOttMmtklt, 1 property hereineov. ~ I held on Friday, July 2, 1982 ~~ IMnt. CA 1171•· luuance o~I u•u •• c..ti 11.000.00 IMnotlftl._,,. byllild Deed of =:,er1b:;.:'· 1 '°"' t•pe Pf°'*'Y ,,.,..._. ....._ t 11:00 ......... th • ....._ D--.. oonduOlld by.. r,.....,.. wllfl.. Trwt .... llllerwt .. "'................ • .... ""*· 1 Clrde. IMne. ~ ~ a • ~ .... .._ acv. ~. provided in 700 of ~ ....,_ ~ ......,.. 1 -·-poolltt oelovtator, 1 ttler11111 Tiie und•r•IQntd tier Robert L . Cornell1on NnddL.._._. the probate cod ~ of t.100.00 .. ,..... °' ..... b9.d"':I e fUtt•ter. , lunbHlft rood d ltol1lm1 11t ll1blllty for offlcMUne. In lieu of Oowww "* ......,""' .,.. tied Wfth the C Uf ra1 ~ bllelno tlCONll nol9""" ..... c11erf111 enct .,..., Pl a c 111 •· lneol1<1C1tnwt In eeld IC1'911t s..be family requ,ati~cin1_.°'0ttn0t0ountyon ,1: ... 0 •· lime for :s..,es:••,.. ,.,.._n01t11e=":'..:..'t! ('41 Ml1oe111111ou1 u-.." Olottier~~.~, be llMde tD Jutte t. .... --• daima no\ Qptn Of 1.000.GO ..,.. Deed Of Tna .,,., lnolvellnt 6 bOlC" of ~""'· t .., .... ..,. .,. llllldt -COD~trtbul°"' 8l . • l'W• prior to lour -thl b'CllD Oernend llOle IS,I00.00 ..., .... _. lie ,.... °" ...._.._, ~ 10 .,... """• ~ 1 w1rr•11tr. lltP'"' or IMpt d •ipa1 Qun:h for Pu~ °'11191 c..., Oaity the dat.e of the hearlnt P'l'Mltloct,.. woo • "· 1tea • 1:00..,.., -..-., --.~Md'.!.,, 3 ·It. a reotrdlnt t1t1•. po, ... .-,, the t. Perry Manorial """".,.,_ '°· 11, i.. Jvty t, 1eu. nodtwJd abow niet It Mii "-'..,.... ......_. ~ ,.__,. ........... 1 '° etlt .,....=-;u= of .,..., t lft4VMM1nc". t• ""•fr • J'und . Pactltc Vtaw 1•1..aa ' Mtd tr,....•ll(tl ht........,. Cl* Cent•......_. IOO .... ........ I~....,_ elf -"°" M-··-. New-Be.ch • YOUllAYUA.lilDIBthe ..._._ .. l""'111rOfllN...., ~ A--.·1n i.e Olly°'~ 1~--. oai. oti,1t111r1 ...... lliJ, ~,,. ..-. f9l& mf fUt UP' bJ lb9 C11Ut. lrlO'I ,_ "'"' ... '-"'1(•"9 to lie ~CA "'I • ..,_ .... 0..-Of Nil, _.. ........ ----...;...;....-~---... ma Miid in Iha eatate, ==~•==A":= ... :~I 1,,:, ~'".:. ~ J.:1:C::: Owelr.-Jr:i,:;:::r '.!:11!~ ~ =:.::.: r~=-- DtlNLAP PCllti-=~=· ,.. : a: ~ .= :to.-=r .. c::--.......... :r-::.r.::=---:-:: ...... ,., -., , ... :·.·~, ·~·· ~ --=·~:;. "":: .. ___ ., dlAaUii 0 -r.n .. .... .J..~=14• ""'°" .. ~ :!:.: o1 die ...,......,, ol Tllat Ille 11oreln •••ori.ect e1e::.=e1 , ... :T '""' an4I "':4."'" _: --. .. ~1"l°°"' ~. _, ........ • ... Tw . ..,..,"~; • ..... _.. ~ • .....: " .,....,. .. to lie°" 1u111•u• "' ...... ,..., flftf .. I I ·•DJ •.,.. ~..,..., ~et.d:~~ftt o 11.:~=.,•=::= HUU~I ":ad r':::":': =-~~=r:o~ ~:.,=4:•t: ... =. c;-.:-8-o !:"-.": ==--ef •••y ta Bawq. ~ --&::U:.:''' 111 ._. 1n .._ 1•.1 !~c .. ,.,,, ~·a• ..... ~-.-(1~., • •:=:iE "=: .. '"9.i.n .-., 1-. Ila fir---...::,:\~,\':of lllo C.Ut-. ........., 3 ...... -., -~J:l.ow "" =· ~ ==-.:::.1:",':l.."!9..,..U ~_, h i• •••••r Mary r . ~--= ..... ...._.,. --ma_ •,,.. ".. u.. c• _..., ...... Ca. lad I .,,. .......... I t '.,.. I*-... I.. ~ WW~ • .. . -.... ,... .. .... .... •• ,.._ ... a!::k.:n• t Mc:•••·........ J.~ J::lt&ltCW.Dr.#Mi1 oo;. ~--·-!r!.!.!! ltfAH He•tT rrl4•y,f.ttan~'!':..: .,.::.,,,::"" "•~i-~ .... ~-· ·• l ·--PM ·~•.•:!View ._.. ~~'Ii ti. v..... ON -.. ~~ .... ~--..,. .11m1 .. •n· ~pao~ ~-=f..o:nt=-;;R f.'11 .,.... ,.... . "DC: .. ~ ,N.•l~llltl.;. ... ;\:'1111. ' : I . . 0r""9 eou. DAILY PILOT/Thut1Uy1 July 1, 1811 ::g~·:x-:: .. if"~.:::e -.. "~·--· ~ ,........ I · ff M•la I• ....... ~ ......... """'5 ...... "'9 '*'°* . ' •. . ITA'9 If •Ill "'""_. & .. I\..... ..... • ... lllf tfle °"'"' T-. IWlte. ~"'l '· Hutff e9at1llfll Uf MlllUlflH.. Ol'INOANT1 lfllT JAMii ellJlfllH, •fl• fflllllUlftl 011 WU.L~~I I tl1t0110h 001 ........ lf1111r11•t1 ... ., .... 1. 10 .. ,. xxx. NOTICI II HIMIY OIVIN tNt MdlMlr lflll '8 ....... • of tcPm!*I on or ah or Jul~ 11, 1.•!1Llha Iha ilt• of raoordlfll of ,.,..A11111••••C....._. "'....._,= JO ANNI 1<.....,1~1 0011....,9'tQe. Tiie .. llftl11111on of o... ..., -..ii a MIM-·lilW et tfle ...... °' -., ~ of~--IM N01'Clat ., ...... .._ ..-.. WIWAM I(. NOfWAN, clooeMed, MY tltta ...,,._ ~ Miii be al TM .... Mlf ......... ,.. wll 11!11 al pt!Yete Mia lo tllehlll*t the Ul*!M o4 ttla ~ wld .-... ,.., a.iae .....i _.... • ~. IUllfaOt to GOflllftMtloll ...., In eooordenoa wtth,... •t•to ,_ ,....... """"' • .._ -.,., by tha allove antlliad tupetlor ptaolloe OYltomary In touthar11 tM ..._ 1r1 n ~ OOl#1, .. the rteM. title, "'*8el. Cellfomle. 11 ~ Wlell 10 .... ttla ecMoa of wld ...... of the --.n1 et lht Ilda lnl.i Ila IMled and wlll lie 1n euornoy In tflll matter, you llma of 1'111 deeltl and .. flaht, Ihle, opened el IN 0"'°9 of NIClldee and lflOUld Clo IO SWQmPtty IO ttlal )'O\lt and l11tere1t lfl• "'at• 11 ... llY Holl)'wOOd, 1010 ~ Awnua, Mitten ~. 'II eny, may be operation 01 law or otharwlH, llllte t7ta, Ian DlaQo, Callfomla, at Ned on time. llOQuhcl ottw thin Of In lddllloft to Iha hour of 11 A.~. M the lbo'll A Y I I 0 I U I I a 41 " e I 14' • tMt of tlla daaedant at tile lllM Of dale. .......... " UIMllll ,... l'ICTmOUe ...... NAMI ITAT'llmln · Th• followln9_ pareon 11 dolnQ ~ •: OUTWAAO IOUND. Mal!. ~· ..... c-..--. Callf0tnta 92J27 DoN1c1 Jaffefy .. dMttl. In end to that oertaln ,... The l)l'oparty herein <Mtoflbed la ......... Ult. "" IUlll Hie • P'ot>«'Y ~ In tM OOunty of commonly Nl•rr•d to at H77 ..... .,_ Ud. = ....,_ Oran~ 91111 of Oalllornla, 1'\llMo °'""-· #~H. Huntlneton ••...._Laa i. -·-"" ... deaol161d 11 folloift: -..ch, ~. TM ~ ._ What1t1ne, 2H I . 1'tfl llreat Coate MeM. cellfomla Utaf PAfllCl!L 1: That pottloll Of Lot I ,...,..... Iha right to r .. all)' and .. r Utl•d d•H• 101101111 al of Tr*lt Ho. llo4t, In ttla City of Ill bldt. COMalO de un lboOldO tn •i. Tlllt ~ II oonductact by an lnctMclull. Hunt111 9ton l•~~lltY ol . OATED:Juna24, 1"2. uunto . dabarra ha~arlo Onnte, ...._ of .. par Jo AnM Klalnhan '""'8ctl .. 1111tnte. oa .... "**9: ,nap ~ In 1oo11 3413 Pao-JO ~N4 KlEINHEN eu ,...._II -11a. el hay ...-, DonelclJ.~ TtWI 1ta~ WM Ned with the County Cllrtc of Orante COUnty on June 22, 1M2 ao .. 13. lllclMlw of ~ .. Mn\lnlatrltOf Pl.teda .., raglltrada • tlempO. .... In tM oflloa of tM County of Ina btll• ol 1. TO THI! oen~NT: A cMI ...,_., of Mid County. ltlO'fWn Wlt.LJAM K. NORMAN, ~t hal 11Mt1 flled by tt1a and ...._. M Unit No. SO Oii tMI DaoallMd 111*\tNf 9Qalfttl )'OU. H you wittl to P1t1111 Publltlled Oranoe COalt Dally Piiot, J\IM 24, Jul>{ 1, •• 1&, 1982 270W2 oertal!\ Condominium Plan and MtGA.091 • HOUYWOOO ~ 11111 ......,.,, rou rnvat. within o.nlllcata (the "Condominium ., .,..,. f.. ....... • de)'I lf'8r t,. ~ II Plan" ._..,,, rocordad aa &rilblt ~ tit ........... .,..., MfWd on ygu, Illa wttfl thll ~ a "I " 10 and lnoorporated by 1t1t 1-.M A..._._... 1112 written raacior-lo tfle OQl'nCllalnt. ratarenca In I hll cart a ln a.~ CA 9t10t UnlaM you do to, )'Ollt daflklft wit 1uppfamant11 decl1ratlon ol T&: ~) m.f711 be entarld on llPC)llo9don of ttla '1CTmOUl .... U NAMI ITA.,._NT MMtnanll. coYanenlt, c:ondltk>M Publiahad Orange Coae1 Dally plllntlfl, and W. oou11 may enttt 1 and rHtrlcllont tor Huntington Pilot. July 1, 2, I , 1912. Judoment 8Qllntt you '°' Iha rllttf The following person 11 doing bullneaa u: L.andllWtt Adult Corntnunlty Pf\aN 2718-82 darnan6aCI in Iha complalnt, which Ill (a portion of Tract 1548), -----------.i:ould rHult In garnlehment ol CLASSIC DETAILING, 115 Rocklllaw, IMna, cellfornla 927 t5 Mlrk Hanry D1lb1y, 116 Aockvi.w. lr'llna. Calffomla t2715 Thia butt,_ It conduc:tad by 11'1 lndlvldual. NCOrdad on J-*Y 19, 1971 In PWlJC NOTIC(. llf90N, taklna ol money Of Pl'oo«t)' looa 11823, Page 12ee. et 1aq, of ~ ._.. or other raflet requHtad In th• Offldal Aaoordt of Mid County, u • .. --.-complaint. from ~ 10 time amandad (ttla .. ,__.., DATEP J-*Y 7. 1982. "Supplemental Oecl1titlon" The lollowlno peraon I• doing L .. A. Brancti. hataln). buW-at: Olartl PARCEL 2: An undMded 11111h TWIN MARKET. 1033e Bald'I By Sutan L. Corcoren, ..,...t In and to thoea pof11ont of Blvd .. Stanlor\, CA. Deputy Marti H. DalbeV Thi• ttat-1 -fllld with th41 County Clltk of Drlfl98 County on June 29. 1982. Lot 1 ol Tract No. 8~9 tllOwn and YACOUB N. QUSHAIR. 104$1 LIONNm D .......... daftt'8d u "Common ArM" (the 81111r Avenue, # 103, Fountain • W. 11ttl atraa4 ' ,1111411 "Common Area" har1lnl on the Vlllay, CA 92708. Mt. o CondomlnlumJl:lan. Thia II""'-le condUc:ted by an a.iu Ana, CA 111G1 Publlthed Orange CoHt Dally PllOt. Jul)' 1. e. 15. 22, 1e12 2815-32 EXCEPT all oll, gu Ind other lndMdual. Publl•h•d Orange Co111 Dally hydrocatbon aubetancaa and othaf YICCNb N. ~' Piiot. June 10, 17, 24, July 1, 1982. rnlnatlla IYlna belollt 600 leet lrom Thia 1t1tament wu ftlad with the 2557·82 the -1aoit of !tie IMled Ptamlaal COonty Cleft! of Orange County on Ml.IC NOTICE together with the rlaht to explore'°' June 8. 1982. 1nd develop ~ncf drlll Into u1d '~ ~ that pottlon of the IMaad Publlthad Orange CoHt (lally pramiNI IYtrlG below tlld depth'°' Pllo4. June 10. 17, 24, Jul>{ 1, 1982. Oii, DH ana other hydrocarbon 2504-82 llUt>atancal and other mlnarall IQd lo own, Pfoduca, •lllract, remove "8.IC NOTICE and trantpOtt time from and/or YOU AM .. OIJIAUU UNDU' A ttwough and 1t0te aama In Mid MIO 0# ""'8T OATED .. ,....,._ pramlaaa below Mid depth 9C!d to -' atora. treat and procau the 14, 1H1. UNLlll YOU TAKI production from ul~:M• ACTION TO ftfll OTICT VOU" without, ~. the t to ent.; f'WtllllTV," MAY .. aoL.D AT A upon, owr ec:Toal or ot i.a PUeL.9C aALI. • YOU l9ID M the--* of the IMMd Pfen\IMI, ~=~Air= at raurvad by the Slgnel YOU. YOU~ CONTACT A Compeniaa, Inc., e corporation. In LAWYIR. tna Oocurnent recorded Mate11 23. 1972 In Boo11 10050 Peg1 237 NOTICa M TMlaTU'a aALt Ofllclel Aecordt . ' . T.I . No. ,_ ALSO EXCEPT exdullva rlghtt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. ~ appu11en1nt to 11ch unit In the on W~natdey, .Juty 21, 1912, It Pfotacf (U wc;h letrnt are defined 9:00 0 cie>c* Lm. of Mid day, tn Iha In the ~tel cjacgfatlon) lor room Ht H ide lor conducting poa...ion end occupancy of the Truttea'• Salaa. within the olfloal of r1t101, btlconla1. etalrwiya ind REAL ESTATE SECURITIES 1 n d I n g 1 1 h o w n 0 n t h a SERVICE, localed at 2020 No1'1h Condominium Plan and daalgnatld Broadway, Suite 20e, In the City of "' to be dellgnated .. tat forth on Santi Ma. Coun1Y of Orange, State '\ha Condominium Plan or In the of Calllornl1, REAL ESTATE aupplarnentll dacler1tlon u being SECURITIES SERVICE. a Celllomle appurtan1nt 10 auch unit corporation, H duly appointed r~ · TNltea under and ~ to the PARCEL 3: An ~I lor the power ot Ille conferred In that ••~ right to l>Ol"'9lon and oattaln Daad of Trull eucuted by occupancy of thoea pof11ont of the PRAFUL BUMIA and URVASHI P. Common Arw of Lot t of Tract No. BUMIA, HUSBAND AND WIFE. 8 5 4 9 d •• I II n II• d 0 n th. recorded Auguat 31, 1M1, In Bodi Condominium Pl1n .. p1t101 14201 of Ofllolll Aaoordl of Mid t>elconM, ttlllnnys and 1andln0i ~. at Pll8I 711, "'°°'*'' and ahown or daalgnalld on the lnatr'linent No. •n. 11¥ t9MOn of COndominlum Plan andlOt In the • bf..:11 Of ...... In ..,.,.. Of a.ipplamentll dadaratlon u being peffor111ance of the o~attone appunanant to Pare.I 1 aboW. MCured thereby, lnc:IUdl119 that PARCEL 4: Non·•J1clu11ve bf..:11 Of dalwAI. Nc*ol °' wHctl a1Hmant1 for padHtrlan and -...oordld Mardi D. 1N2. • wNaMr lr)gfMI, agr-. ,,...... and Racordar't lnetruma nt No. prtvate llraet purpoea1 ._ ec:Tc.t 82· t00334, WILL SEU AT PU8UC and through Lott A ttirou0ti F of AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST Tract Ho. &549. Loi A of Trle1 Ho. 8100£R FOR CASH. i..f\A moMy 1188, 11 par map recorded In 9oo11 of ttla Unllld Statea, °' • C811Har't 334 Paga 35 at eaq. ol cnaai OteM1 on• lt8te Of natlonel ~ MapS. In the offtC:. of b1n11. a ltlta or federal credit th1 County Recorder of 11ld union.°"• •tit• Of l9der9I MvtflQI County, and Lot A of Trle1 No. and lo8ll MIOdetlon domlclliad 1n 7341, 11 par map recorded In Book tlllt 1t1ta, II payeb6a at the time of 30 1. P • ga 2 2 . at u q . of Mia. 111 rtght, tltla and lniw.t held M....,_ MllC>a. In tt1a o1ftca of by It, at Truataa, In that rHI the County Recorder ol tald r~uete In Mid County and County, whloh non-a11cluelva Lot•. 3 of Tl~ ~515ollow9:2 --It thlll be appurtenant to · r-· • 11 par map Parcel 1 abcw9; Lott A through o ot recorded In Boo11 410 pagae 9 to 12 Trle1 No. 8~9 10 be uMd l0t Iha 1nc1us1va of Mltcellaneous Maps In periling ol vahlclu that are the olllea of the County RacOtdet of permitted to part1 within the adult Or1ng1 County, Calllornla. The community under the Pl'OYllAon• ol ttr .. t addr-or other common Section 8.18 of thl Matier d11lgn1tlon of the real property Dadarltlon recorded February 28 haralnab<>Ya delcrlbed la purported 1973 In Book 10575. Page 17 0j to be: 20 Choate Str .. 1, Irvine. CA. Olftclel Aecofd1 of said County, and Thi u n deralg ned hereby Lot• c and D of Trec1 No. as.4e 10 dl•cl1lm1 •II lltblllty tor any be uted lor the 111ctutlve Plfklng lnco<r1C1MM In said ttreet llddr- UH ol ownar1 ol Condominium °' other common daslgnetlon. locltad In the Ph••• 111 Seid sale wm be made without Condominium Pro)act. wuranty, uprau or Implied. PARCEL 5: A non-aaclutlva regarding tltla. poueulon, or ~ IPC)W'1enant to Puca! 1 encumbrances. to utlaly th• abov• (the Cor1I Sprln91 Court Pflncipll balMC9 of the Note or non-axc:lutlva accaa1 ~I) at other obligation MCUfad by Mid IP8Qlflc:ely deaerlbed and ... lorth Dead of frutt, with lntaraat Ind In Section 19.02 IAI of thet cartlln other 1um1 at provided, !herein; 1up1>lemantal d1cl1r1tlon ot '*-ldv'ancae, H any, under the _,tt, COYenent., condltlone terme thereof Ind lnt•aat on IUCh ind rntrlctlon1 tor Huntington lldvancaa, and '*-'-· dlargaa Landrnal1t Adult Communi~I and 8JlPlfWM of Iha Trustea and of (Tract 7341) ,_dad on the tNlta cra9t9d by Mid Daad of 21. 1978 In 8ooic 10575. p t 12, Trull. The total emounl of u ld .. aaq. of Of11c1a1 Racordt of Mid obllgttlon, Including raaaonabl)' County, aa from time to lime aatlmatad I•••. ch1rga1 a nd amended (the "Supplemental •~of the Truat ... at Illa time Dadaretlon I« Phaea I" herein) of lnlti.t publlcatlon of INs Hot1c1. It PARCEL I : A non-axcluelve SU.719.23. -*"' appurtenant to Paroal 1 Dated: "'-21. 1982. above (the vahlcta 1torllg1 •raa ~~~-non·Hclull'la acceu auamant> .::_ IP8Qlflc:ely deacrlbad and tat lorth A C•1m11t oorpaf..._ In Section 19.02 (A) of tNt cartlln • Trwtae, 11upplamental daolaratlon 01 D..I. -:::.:;:, covananu, condltlon1 and -N. .... • ra1trlctlon1 for Huntington lenta AM. CA lAndmark Mutt Community, f'hlM {114) ...... "(Tract 11181 recorded on '-bruary Publlthed Or1n11• Coett Delly n. 1e14 1n 1oot1 1 tot3. Page 414 Piiot. Ju'Y 1. 8, "· 1982 .. aaq. of Olftcllll Raoorde of Mid 2920-12 County, 11 lrom time to time amended (the "Supplamen111 rtll.IC NOTICE Oadar•lton lor PflaM "' herein). PAACE1. 7: Thoaa non-aJ1Clu9lw ....,,.,, .. appurtenant to Parcel 1 abov9 (the Bltceyna Court: non- axclu elva parking aHamenl) ~ deaerlbad end eel lorth In Baotfont 1902 (E) Ind (C). ,...,.c:tlwly, Of Iha IUppMmentll dedalaliol1 tot ~ II. PARCEL I : A non•HCIU1hre ...,_,. appunanant to Paroal 1 --.. ..,..:Melly dMortbad and -'°"" In a.otton 5,04 of ... ....... DadW9tton --~ '°' PAACEL t : A llOll•HClu1fva ' ...,.,. ~ 10 Pwoal 1 ~alrllna allOW9 • IP lfwlr .... ltlllCI end a · aat fof1tl In ~ t1.01 •of the V, It.a TO ...._ O..llllOll 1bo¥8 rMirract RAMS: to.P~L 10: A~rlgtlt =:. r:un.j .... ..... '° ,..,_ , --.. . thlttng ~ a ,_, ..,.'INd end • '°"" lfl e..110fl 11.01 of tlle allova ,...,.,., to .._.., O.C. .... 1. 8UMMAfn' Of' APPAOVED IXOIPT MY portlOfl lf\CtuctM ~TIOHI ............... PA9'Ca t 1: A non·••CltUllV• I &1"91Ct-IO~1 1 •0•• Ct.e ''PHAel Ill llOfl· ::·;:; HO ... H Hmant") f l .......... b1tl I n •• Ion 11.0 1 of Illa ........ 1 ......... 1'••1!!1 IOI Htfeftt tHH, •I .. F-3, ....... .. ,. 5 ...... .. IV&h _.,, .... -,, ~ ............ .., .. ... _. .... ~ .. t eU•-.:~ It I e ==-···-"' NOTIC9' TO PU9IJC 0# MQUllT pa. TMe Jt.ff711 M IAll 0# PUNH MID NOTICE OP' DEATH OP' NOTICS 0# ,_ 0# KEN N ETH EUGENE NO ltQMSllCANT mracT WI LBE R SR. AND OP OM n9 INVMMlt .. NT PETITION TO ADMINIS-?~ J~ .. Road July 1 · 1982 T E R E S T A T E N 0 . lrvtc':;,~: Ed Moore 754-3&47 A-lUlll. To all '-•'-...... --f''"'--'-. TO ALL INTERESTED AGENCIES, •~-. ..... .., 1U&11..... GROUPS AND PERSONS: creditora and. contingent The purpoM of thlt notice It to c reditors of KENNETH Identify two 1898'111 bu1 related EUGENE WILBER, SR. and 1e11ona to be teicen by ttM1 City 01 h -Irvine. pers<1n1 w o may be 1.0norat>outJul>/17,1912,the otherwile intttesteci in the City of lrvlna will ~t the U.S. will and/or estate: Da9ar1ment of Houtlng Ind Urban A~tiUon has been filed Development (HUD) to rateua Federal lun4• under Tiiie I of the by ITH K. FICKE'IT in Houtlng end Community the Superior Court of Davalopma111 Act ol 1974 (PL Orthaant ge CoITHunty .requestl.ng 113--383) tor the tollowtng pto)act: JUD K F(CKET'I' Parlellnd1 Apar1m1ntt, Houelng Coat Radvcllon -L i nd be appointed aa personal Acqulelllon. lrvlna, County ol repreeentative to administer Orange, Calllornla, Southeut the estate of KENNETH comer of Culver and Trat>uco Rd .. EUGENE WILBER, SR., north of Santa An1 Frwway. OOSTA ~A. CA. (under ~ 1~aq":.~ ,:";'tu~~ th e I n d e p e n d e n t wlll not conetltull an action Administration of Estates tlgnlflcll'ltly affecting tM qwellty ot Art). 11\e petition la 1et for the human 1nvlronmant and ~ln Dept. No. 3 at 700 accordingly Iha above-named City of lrvlna flu dacldad not to~ C enter Drive Weal, an Enwonmantll lrnc>aet Statar'Nllt Sani. Ana, CA 92702 on under tt1a Natlonaf EnWonmantal Jul; 28, 1982 at 9:30 a.m. Polley Act of 1"9 (Pl 91-190). The ,_. ror llUCh decll6orl not YOU OBJECT to the to prapera IUCh Statement .,. 11 cranti.nc'of the petition. you tollowe: An-an11lronmantal should either appear et the 111 mment hM bean made and 11 hearln1 and state your hH bHn determined that the objections or file written ~ac~ ~~ =~g~ objections with the court mitigation mauura1 .. deacrtbad 1n before ti.• hearing. Your Iha enwonmental 1 1111 111nt 111"9 appearance n.ey be in penon bean adOad to 1t1a project. An En-M~tll Aalllaw Aacofd or by your •t.omey. reapectlng the eubJect project(•) I ~ Y 0 U A R E A NI bea11 macta wnic:t1 doeumanu CREDrl'OR or a contingent the environmental review ol th• creditor of the deceued, you =•~":ti~=.':':!'= must file your claim with the required. Thie Environmental court or present It to the AeYlaw Aacord It on Illa at the peuonal representative •bow addrMt and II a'tllillble tor appointed by the court public a111mlnetlon 1nd"copylng within four montha from the upon raQUMt In the Daparunant of date of first laauance of Community O.-.eloe>4'nent ~ the hour't 01 8:00 a.m. end 5:00 p.m. letters aa provided in Section No lut1har anYlronmantal review 700 of the Probate Code of ot tuch projlC1 I• Pfopoeed to be California. The time for conducted Pflor to the request lor relMle of Fadet1l lunda. filing claimll will not expire c 0 M M E N T s T 0 G R A N T prior to four months from RECIPIENT the date of the h earing All lntereeted egenclet, groupa or noticed above. lndlvldual• dlaagraetng with ellhaf of Iha two pr09Qted action, ll'e YOU MAY EXAMINE 1nv11ac1 to submit wnttan comrnentt the file kept by the court. U for cor\llderlllc1:f\. Such commantt you are Interested in the wlll b• received It 11200 eslate, you may file a request J • m borea/ Oap art ment ol with the court to r.....,lv• Community Development on or ""~" .,. befor. July 17. 1912. All written spec ial n o tice of the comment• received wlll b• inventory of estate asseta conlidar'ed and 1t1a City of ltWl8 wli and of the petitions, acoounta not requa1t the ,..,._of Federal l\ll'dt or Ilka any action on the and reports deacrlbed In deacrlbed projact(a) priOf to HUO'• Sec t i on 1 2 0 0. ~ o f t be written llUttlor1Utlon to i.a thcea California Probate Code. lundt. n II r~ tNt tholl L. e~ KARLIN lcwwardlng commantl IC)aClty whlc::tl "'-'V & & ' of tt\a propoaad IC1JoM It being Attor.ey at Law addm11C1 . U5!! N~rt A•e., #!H 09J£CTIONS TO HUD Tutia, CA HIM The etty of 1rv1ne ..., un0etta1 Tel: ('114) 711-UH tna PfOJac1(1) daac:r1bad above wttn ... Blodt Grant Fund9 lrom HUD under NI,..., 0,.. .... •EV, Tltla I of the HCDA·1974. The City ""' m.JUA. of Irvine It oattlfytng to HUD that Iha Attor.ey at Law City o1 Irvine arid 0.vld Sllle, II)"" lt5 To .. Cater Drtn, oflicl.i C8il>llCl'Y • Meyor, conaant #Ml to accept Illa Jutltdlctlon of the ,,,__.._ M~CA t•i•t Federal courtt If an action 11 ....,._ • • broual\t to enl0toa ralPOflllbllnlat Tel.: (7U) 1 .... , In '*Ion to anlllronmanlal review, Published Oran.1e Coast daCltllon makk1il and action; and Dally Pilot, July 1, 2. 8, 1982 that thaH rHponelbllltla1 have ~ .. tltftld. The legal .n.ct of 2914-82 the cartltloatlon It that upon 111 ------------1 approval Blodl Grant f}.lndS m.y be "8.IC NOTICE uMd and HUD wltl haye .. tlsllad It• reaponalbltltlaa under the Naltonal En'llronmantal Polley Act of 1919. HUD wlll accapl an objection to It• approval of the ,.._ of fundt and IQCaPlll'ICa of Iha C*11flclltlon only II 11 It on one of the fOllowlng baelt; ,., llMlt the oanmcauon _. not 1n tact H1c11tad ~· CTC~~ Officer Of ot1* of approved by HUD; or I ) tt11t applleant'I anllffonmantal ravtaw record for the projeC't lndlcl1M ornlMloft of a required dactilOl'I ~ Of ~ .pie ... 10 ""' PIOfect In ttla 81wt!01w1•1Wll t9'Mw I toe.600 prooau. 0111.ct10111 111u1t Ila prepared and eubmtttad In accordance with Iha raqYlraO prooadlna...,., 240FR Part 58.11 °' ... lmar1m .......... bnl In ... Federal ......... dallld Apf1112, •11·1iJt tll2. ThaH """'•Ilona are avallM .. in t._. City ot Jrvtne. •tt.IM.4a4 Oo pertment of Community D•vatop111ant. Thay may Ila addrHaad 10 Envlron111an111 • e.-noa °"'°"· u ... O.•l1mellt o f Ho1utn1 and Ur be n Oevetopment, UOO Wll1h1ra ...... •d. I.Ga ~ Caliomla IOOl7. . ~.,.,':..,."':,:~': net ....::::.: ~= ,.......,, ... of H.IU.. ;;a@= .. .. ~ .. ~Y& .... __ 'lift.i • ~ -...Lr'"T.,, - I ... • 5. 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D. 6 4 2 • r CLASSIFIED INDEX .1:=1 ,,,...,.u.ea• 642-5678 .USfHSAU ... :1 = I ·-..... ... .... ... ·-ltu '"' ·-..,. -·-,. ·-... , .. lQU~ HOUs.o O,,OllTUNITY .... ..., ......... All ,... Mtate ad~IMd In tl\11 newtJ\_apar 11 IUbJ~t to th• '•d•r•I fall HOU81ng Act of 1"8 whldl makM It 1119alll lo adwr11N "any prtleran· ca, llmltatlon or dltctlfm. nallon baMd on race. color. rallgton. Hx or national origin. or any Intention to make any auch prafertnc., llmlta• tlon or dtecrlmlnatlon." :: Thia ~ wlll not l: knowingly accept any •• adV9ttltlng for real H · J• tat• wNc:tl la In vtolatlon 1* of tna law. :: ----------,.. :tlOI lat ----,,.. -- llllT Flllll 4 ••• 1104,100 Muat Mii thle weekend. Great •tarter home or terrific: lnveatment. lnler- Mtlng axlatlng financing. c.11 for detella. 540-2313 ··tJ¥B4 UIO .. .. ... -·-&loll --IGIO IOI) ---- - IEWPllT OllllT Juet bflng your c:lotnaa a mow In to Ihle Instant h~. S..utlfully upgra- ded and decorated. IPedous 2 Br & den, 3 Ba. walk to baacfl & recreation facllltlet. Price for Immediate Ula & taller wlll help w/ financing. Full price $239,000. 751-3191 I Ill FIUll 111,100 Definitely the beat buy In Costa Meta. 3 Bdrm rt- xar. Big ll'llng room. huge lot. Good .,.. - with a little work. could be made Into a nice le· mlly home. Must 1811 by the 4th. 540-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS NEW VIEW TOWN - Prize Weet Bay bayfront. SUpe for 2 boei., remodeled 3 bdnn, 3 beth •i.200.000. , Ocean & jetty views. Marine roocn. 4 bdrm. 3 beth, 3700 aq.fL $1.880,000. ac....ntl'Ol\L Ull ISU lllU !->rime Lido Nord bayftont. ~ bdrm, 6 ~ beth . Lee L.R., 2 boat allpa $1.~.000 . ~modeled 3 bdnn, 2 bath + l.arp rec. rm. beam celUnp. fwnf~. patJoe. '420,000. UIU llLI llYn"' ...agoon view from 6 bdrm. 6 bath. playroom. dark rm, ~en, Boat allp. Now $1,000,000. IAYSllE ll¥E Spectacular bayfront view 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br, 2 be dn. 2 bollt .Upa .1.000.000. COllOUll OAYI Coronado Laland CUit. bayfront lot. a~· boat dock. Plana avall. ~· '870,000 w /t.etm1. ILIFFI ... Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 be on largest greenbelt, $2~.000. Piii L8I 3 bdnns. 2 Yi bathJa condo. near pool •1•~.000. BILL GRUNDY. REALT OR )-1' ~Oy'. rJ• lJ1 .-• •-. ~ ~ 'J -~ 1st 1111 OILY DPEI IDUSE ~llW11te2 IOIFtr1INf,Oer ... 4ellar Deluxe Three Yeer Old Duplex South of the Highway IUST SICllFIOE IT MJl,NI $218,000 Assumable lst T .D. at 12.37% with GIBRALTAR $72,000 Assumable 2nd T .D. at 12% with Private Party OWNERS WILL CARRY BALANCE OF EX;}UITY WITH A STRAIGHT NOTE WITH SMALL DOW N PAYMENT!!!!!! THIS LARGE BUILDING WITH FOUR CAR GARAGE P~ FOR CONDO OONVERSION HOMES. 2 Muter Sul· lat. View of ocean & night lights. Quiet Area. P1tk1, open epacae. S 125.100 dn. Xlnt Fin. Hal or Pat a-. Agtl. _~_1_3-_7_300 ______ 1 daneU path RE/MAX 759--1221 tllt tlJI tlJI ... II.II •1• tilt ... -... -----.,. --.,.., ,,. .W!Vl ,,.. fll.J rm "II 11111 flJl '131 n:a 1m fill tn~ .,. ,,,. .na ,,. lfJQ in .. .,. .,., Tll ILWFI OafUJta 4 bdrm. C Plan ovarlooklng the pool. Can be purchued with Just 10% down to a 30 yeer loan. Full prloa 11 S279,500 L.H. -l7 I 4J 673·4400. 12IJI U l-JUI HARBOR I\ 1'11v1~1on or ll.1rbor lnH-:.lm1,11l l'u THE REAL ESTATERS IEIT PJl9'1 Greet ltart« llorne. Ow- ner wtl conalder ALL of• fart. 2 Bdrm1. great Co1ta Mau neighbor- hood. LowHt priced home In the ara1 at •101.000. 7514191 C:.',t I r ACSIOfNflAI AOL £SfAfE sEAVICES .... YllW.... ..... Somerset 5 BR only steps from pool & tennis courts in Seawind. City lights & pastoral view, plank flooring, tile entry. 3 car garage. Great family home. Owner will carry large AITD. Reduced to sell. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 wmn&. • w11D1 .......... ....., ... pe4 ....... .. ........ .,..,...., ............ . .............. , .. *·····-............. ., .. ,.... .... .... .......... fire ,..., , ......... ... .., ........ ,... ... ,.. ...... . .... , •Ill .... , tl11111 ,., , .. 11t114I ••rtr. 1111,IH t1 ftt 111411. la••t ttfllll 111-1411. WAl ER .. RONl HOMES."t llt. \I 'tHll"' ~'···'•. .,. flfl "" u.'lf>• 1_.11 .. , Jl~-A ... flJf ..... ,.. ...... ,.._ - :: 131-1400 l7S..-o ~---------------1 ~ ................................. ~ ::: fOf Cl ... lflod Ad • '* , ACTION '"' Cell. rm Delly Piiot -AO.VISOA 842-M78 .. • ' l I ~ I· I By STEVE MITCHELL or-.....,,... .... A San Juan Capiltrano couple, who1e adopted 'ton faced deportation to hla naU.ve Llberia next week, hu won •an extension ' of the dHdline that will allow him, to remain with his family eight more mon&ha. . The Immigration and Jf aturalization Service this· week exte~ the Jul~ ~ deadline for Sam Willet to Feb. l, 1983, after the 26-year-old man and hls father, Dave WWet, drove to Los Angeles to pre1ent a letter from Co~ Robert Badham. "It meana Sam can stay In the United Sta tee at least until next yeer, unleia there la any lldvene action on Badham's private bill," Dave WWet aald in a telephone Interview. "We were really getting cloee to U.. line, and •. the family 11 ,.Uy relieved," he aid. Samuel, who WH born ln Liberia, wat adopte.d by the Wille" more than a ~ aao when the couple were workifta fo'r th~ Peace Corps ln that COWlfl'Y. The "edopted IOI\ •pent teven' years ln Uberia and Kenya with the Willet fJUnily, then a two- year 1eparaUon forced by ~ :Balan'c.ed budget OK'd Brown cites nee d for economic r ecover y SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state begins a new fiscal year today with ll tightly balanced $ 2 5 . 2 billion bud.set of "1,1nprecedented austerity" firtally approved after a five-day deadlock. ' Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed the budget and four related bills for the 1982-83 fiscal Year Wednesday, while warning that it would not stay balanced without a "strong economic recovery" this fall. Brown held the signing ceremony after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Senate recessed the day before, released the budget f~om the five-day hold irnpoeed because of a dispute over $235 million for schools. The Democratic governor made no cuts in the budget, as approved by the Legislature, noting· its "unprecedented austerity." The budget contains no tax 1.ncreases. He said the propoeed spending ii more than $200 million below the, expected apendina for the fiscal year cloeina ~y. and $8 million befow the actual spending in 1980-81. , "That (a two-year drop) has never hap~ned any time in the history of California outalde of the Depreaaion." be aai4. But Brown said the budget is so tightly balanced, with a reserve of less than $500 million, that the Legislature will have to f!l&ke further cuts In the 'Wl;(J . few months "if the national economy doe. not recover."· The budget had been approved by both houses Friday. Both hou ses alao . a p proved a com~ 'bW Monday. But Aalembly Speaker Wlllie lkoown held up pa11age·of bot,h bills because the Assembly wanted to give schools $235 million that may be left over in the current year's budget. The Senate adamantly insisted that any left-over money should go into the reserve in case the economy worwns, and recessed Tuesday until Aug. 2. That left the Assembly with the choice ,of ~ither giving in to the upper house and releasing the budget. or fighting and l eavi ng the state without spending authorization *** lJnwanted guest Laguna hit Clem ente man h eld in L agun a burg)ary b y further Harry Willits has had a lot of guests at his Riviera Laguna motel on South Coast Highway over the decades. ·But the 88 -year-old b~ had to Can ~potice td extract an unwanted "guest" who broke into his house Monday and ranlacked the plaee. Laguna Beach police arrived at Willits' addrea near the motel Monday to find the owner engaged· in a conversation with the suspected burglar. Here's what happened: "l walked home from the motel for lunch and saw the rear gate and the front door unlocked," Willits recalled. When he entered the home he noted wires to a burglar alarm had been tom out. his bed slept in, drawers and closets opened, and George Yves Audovi, 24, of San Clemente, lounging on a state cuts couch in the Uving room, attempting ~ pt a ~pe camett.e pla.f"..tr'°ect ~ what ~heft~ w• doina in my hou8e and he told me he couldn't get any music out of the tape," Willits said The motel operator said he called po~. and told them there was a bUrglar in his houae. "They asked me to deecribe the man and tell them how old he was. "I wun't about to walk back in my living room and ask him his age," Willits said. ' "Just ~et down here and arrest this guy, ' the angry buainessman • told the dispatcher. 1-Nna Beach fic\1119 ,fit .. an0~ $100,000 on t.Qp of an anticipated $254,000 Ima in state bailout funds following Wednesday's approval of the state legislature's budget. Richard Reese, Laguna's finance director, said the city had expected a decline of $254,000 wh~lt prepared Laguna's spe pack.age for 1982-83. But overnor Brown'• signat\ltf' on a $25.2 billion spending program Wednesday means Laguna Beach stands to loee as much as $100,000 more than expected. Outlook 'gloomy' And while the news certainly isn't good. Reese said that. as recently as last month, the city feared i! might lose as much as $606,000 from the state bailout source. q\Mltion of Sem'• lmmilratlon when the Willetl retumecf to the Unh.ci State. The far6Uy wH re.united nearly two years a10 when Samuel obtained a one.ye~r ltudmt via. , But the U .S . 1overnment neYel' offtdally recCJlnlJed the adoption, uytng Samuel wu toe old to be considered adopted nearly 11 years .,a. on Attempts by Badham lo Introduce private bills to keep Samuel In Arner1ca Called. and the House Subcommittee qr1 Immigration said it would not re-hear a specral bill authored by Badham. The extension will give the subcommittee more time to reconsider Badham's la test private bill on behalf or the Willets. Delly Not PIMltoe b1 Qefy A,,.,_ COOLING IT IN LAGUNA -New York visit.or Shannon Ellithorpe samples a quarter-pounder ice cream cooe at Swenson's in Laguna Beach on the first sunny day of the summer. The 3-year-old, who, with her mother . Therese. is visiting friends in Orange County, appears to have left about an eighth of a pound of th~ cold stuff on her face and hands. coast • . MeanwhilP, Judi ciar y Committee C h airman Peter Rodino has sent a lette r to Badham indicating th e immigration 1ubcommlttee ls extremely busy with other immigration leglslatlon, forcing Rodino to postpone consideration of the private bill. That s hould eliminate the poaibility of adverse action on (See SAM'S STAY, Pase At) Shuttle· orbiting sinoothly CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) -Columbia's conunander, "w a t c hing li~e a hawk," overcame a vexing problem with the ihuttle's balky cargo doors today, closi.r\e and latching them m a simulation of steps that must precede e ntry on the Fourth of July. "They closed normally." said Ken Mattingly. He sounded relieved and so did Mission Control. Flight d i r ect o r Harold Draughon said that if ColuPJbia tried to re-enter the at:mosp~ without the doors closed, the ship "could shake like a wheel well coming off a hot perlonnance aircra f t. You get so much turbulence flow that it would tear things apart." H owever , had the door problem persisted, Mattingly would have laken a space walk to make repairs, Draughon said. Th e s hip w as orbiting smoothly; Mattingly and pilot Henry Hartsfield did some celestial sightseeing and crew calis the nics. test-fired jet thrus t e r s. and televised an instructlve "cook's tour" of the shuttle cockpit. Columbia's port door failed to shut Wednesday after flight m the cold shadows of space caused warping, either in the door itself or in the frame . Overnight, NAS A sent Columbia into a barbe<:ue roll to expose the doors to the warmth of the sun. A ..similar fix succeeded when the problem cropped up on flight three. and as the shuttle paswd 186 miles overhe ad at Cape Canaveral. just after dawn. Maltingly tried the shut-and· Qpen exercise again. I .. l for 3-day holiday "So I guess you could say it's good news compared to what we feared would happen," Reese said. Murder hearing to he open "Courf rej ects challenge in Coast slaying case· 'I t J That sunahi.ne and blue aides aren't a myth, folka, but clo.e to it. U you are expecting the same tor the three-day Fourth of July holiday, don't hold your. breath. It appears more of the "gloom" Orange Coast residents have experienced for nearly three months ia headed our way again. Wednesday a high-pressure •ystem chased clouds that grayed Orange County most of June, May and April eastward, but another marine layer is hanging just off the Oregon and Washington coasts al)d is expected to reach here Saturday, ac.~o-rding to the National C OUNTY Weather Service. That means a drop of 1,000 fee t in the weather front producing low clouds, late night and early mornings Saturday, Sunday and Monday, high cloudiness most of the daylight hours with a chance of 90l'1le sunshine by lat.e aftemoona. Today dawned clear aa did Wednesday with mountains visible inland and no smog forecaat by the South C.oast Air Quality Management District. The sudden weather contrast may have caught many by surpme but still sent th~ ~ to ij)e beaches where lifeguards' reported &he argest weekday crowds thia year. <:oa.t g ears for Fourdi l>wrything you want kt know about the Fourth of July along the Or.nae OoMt mn be found on Paae Bl. TEL E VISION '. But. he said, before the city uses the new fig ures and compiles a final budget for City Council adoption la ter this . month, there's sti ll one ingredient missing. "We'll have to wait until the county releases proper\y tax aael8ed valuations next week," Reete said. That figure is expected to increase for Laguna Beach,( despite the slow r eal elltate market. He said city finance officials will sit down sometime in the near future to make a final estimate of all revenues. The prellminar·y budget, adopted last month by the City Council, calls for a spending package amounting to $7. 79 million. NATION \ By DAVID ltUTZMANN or-.....,,......, An Orange County defense attorney'' challenge of a new •late law expanding on the public's right t o attend preliminary hearings In criminal cases has been rejected by a stale appeals oou.rt. The result is that a preliminary hearing In Central Orange County Munkipal Court for two men charged with the slaying of a Mission Viejo woman will proceed Friday with both public and press allowed in as spectators. The 4th \)lstrict Court of Appeal upheld -without cqmment -the constitutionality of the open hearing law which took effect In March. Bravo for Broolclynese Lotaa people tink folka from Brooklyn tawk funny, but it ain't funny, it'• wunnerful. Page A6. TiiPB to ousted emploxees After ldvtllDj employers how to tire work.en, an author ta oflertnc tipe to fired empk>yeea. Pap All. • Flreworb seued 1n El Moate ) Previously, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab and Central Municipal Court Judge Samuel Taylor, who is presiding over the preliminary hearing, ruled in favor of open proceedings. Challenging the law, which took e ffec t as a n u r gency measure on March 1, was defense a\torney Ronald Brower , who represents murder defendant Thomas Thompson , 27.., o{ Orange. Brower indicated Wednesday he planned no (urther appeals. Both Thompso n a nd co- defendant David William Leitch, 22, of Laguna Beach. are charged with murder in the stabbing death of Ginger Fleischli. Miss INDEX A4 B2 83-5 A5 B2 C6-10 c~ C5 C4 AlO 87-8 82 :;PORTS Fleischli's body was found in a shallow grave in east Irvine last September. J:Srower had argued that his client's right to a fair trial -if he w as bound over on the charges -would be seriously jeopardized if p~ coverage of t he preliminary hearing was allowed. Leitch 's attorney, Ronald Kreber, did not challenge the new law. ' Brower asked Judge Taylor for a closed h e aring when proceedings originally began in early March. Taylor agreed to exclude spectators. Ann Landers 82 Movies 87-8 Mutual Funds B4 National News AS Public Notices B4,C4,C8 Sporta Cl-3 Sr.Steincrohn B2 Stock Matkeu 85 Televil&on 86 Theatera 87-8 W•dili' Al Wcwld Newa AS TAY E*TENDEIJ. Bedham'a blU before the new Ftlvuary deadline, Willet Mid. ~ augeated the fl.mlly •eels adminlatra\lve relief by aeeldna refupe atatua toe Sam. Bu(beve Wtllet Mid he wlll have to conau~t Santa Ana attorney Jim Cannon before pumatna that courae. Cannon aareed to help the WWet family at no coat when he heard of Sam's plight. Meanwhile, Sam has given notice to hia employers at a San Juan Capistrano fut food restaurant becauae he feared he would be deported neXl Tuetday. "1 don't-know lf they'll aivt h1m hll jQb beck or not,'' Oiavt. Willet aid. He Mid the new extenalon wlD. enable Sam to t.ake more bualne11 and accoun.una claaee ln the tau at Saddleback College in Mlaalon Viejo. ( "The problem is, S.am no longer has a student visa, IO we'll have to pay the $3,000 or ao foreisn student fff,'' Willet said. But the eight month extension is welcome, he said. County getS budget 'subject to change' By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL ()f~o-r......... I Orange County governqlent's new fiacal year began today and, technically, there is a budget to fund operations for the next 12 .monthS. But the shape of the $812 million spending program will be· subject to many changes laier this month when the county Board of Supervisors conducts New annual parking f ee for Laguna Lagunans who used to line up at. City Hall every six months to purchase semi-annual parking permits may now\ buy annual stickers for their car bumpers. The City Counc;il approved an 8¢\ual parking permit program after a number of citizen requests for a once-a-year stop at the cashier's window at City Hall. The parking pef11lit program, initiated in 1978, calls for patµcipants to purchase stickers each February and August. The council agreed an annual sticker would reduce costs to the city slightly due to the saving in staff time and the reduced number of permits required. Residential usera currently pay $15 per half year and thoee who use the stickers for business and employee parking in \Own pay $30. From now on, participants can d ecide whether they want to invest in a half-year's parking, or pay the tab for an entire year. annual budget hearings. . To comply with atate law, supervisors were forced to approve the proposed bud.get Wednesday. The law requires counties to approve their budgets by June 30, the last ~y of the fiscal year. While in tec:hnical ~pliance with the law, no one is hiding the fact the final budget figure will be mo<Sified when upftated financial figures are received from the state and federal governments, budget analysts say. For example, it was only yesterday that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. signed the $2S million state budget into law. Local officials say it will be several days before.the actual impacts of the state spending plan on the co unty budg e t c an be determined. The county's $812 budget is balanced -but precariously, according to budget analysts. A $40 million revenue deficit was erased, on paper, at least, by deleting $3 million in capital projects· taking $10 million from reserve 'accounts; removing $12.5 million for sa1afy increases, and adding back $15 million in federal revenue sharing funds that otherwise would go for other than day -to -day government operations. Analysts said thQSe revenue. shifts are not prudent and were done strictly to bring the budget into balance. Until the final spending / pack&Re is approved, ~ county Adililnistrative Office has impoeed a freeze on hiring of new employees, except for a few positions in the probation and sheriff's departments, WASHINGTON (AP)· T Chari" ot lWdt aex between memben of c-,r.. and their teen·•I• paae• are bein, inveatlaated by federa authoritlet, eccord1ng to the FBI and Juatioe Department. CBS Newa reported Wedneaday tt\at "several" con1re•nen were 1Ubject.a of the inveltlptlon. · "lt'a at a very prellminary •taae.'' Mid J~ Department apolleaman John Ruaaell. "A pap came forward and had aorne alleptiona. I can't dilcus them right now." The Arkanaaa Gazette, in a copyrighted article today, quoted an unidentified Justice Department IOW'Ce aa saying the . department w~ looking intO' .complairtta that members coerced or bribed pages of both eexes to engage in homoaexual or beteroaexuaJ activities with them. ·,i The Little Rock newspaper said nine o~ 10 memben of the Deir ................ G~ THE MESSAGE? -New signs at .both ends of Laguna Beach warn residents apd visitors that the only pyrotechnics they should see on the Fourth are the ones ~~eel by th~ ~ity at Main Beach Park. A new o~ prohibi~ ~~ f~ of , even "safe and sane" fireworks within the city limits wll! be stricUy enfo~ by police· and firemen. Bank clerk helps forgery arrest • 1n A workshop exploring the psychology and proceaa of humor writing will be conducted July 10 from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 22191 Paso del 8ur, South Laguna. The workshop is intended for any profesaion~l, technical, business or creative writer as well as students or teachers "who want or need to improve his ,or her relationship with humor writing.'' •The Ami.stance League of Laguna Beach has received a letter from President Reagan congratulating the' league 9n its 20th anniversary· More than 370,000 volunteer hours have been c6ntributed by the local league, for which the . Warmer Friday Coa stal Uglll variable wlndt becoming _. 10 ~t 10 to 15 knob afternoon and evening. Southwest swell• 1 to 3 fHt. Mostly ~ afternoon. • • ' .- HoUN and one Mnator we.r '8Dder tnvetUpdon. I Hornmexuality y w• t not the ilaue in th~don, 1 but rather the proml1fn1 of favors by mem~rs ot c.onar- and 1ex with mtnon. The network bJ"oadC'8l an interview wtUa a former P9ce aupervilor who Mid he erurMed in aex with a member ol \he Houae on thre• occaaiona, , lncludJn1 once in the ~ ~preeentatlve'• off.ice and once i at an aputme'\t ln the Watersate ; complex. l Asked what '10mpenaatJon he 1 received, the fonnet pace said he ; never -.w ~}'. __ but realized. • that on fCapltol Hill. "one favor : th .. ' dHerves ano er. : "Say, fOC' inatance, 1 WM a : junior while 1 wu a .pege. ~.I :· wanted to stay for my aetuor , year, I could have gotten a : rponsor•h_ip by another :· congremnan.~e added. ~ The former page wa• not :: identified and hi.a face waa kept : in darkness during the interVlew. : - Besides helping participants recognize what is f u nny and why, the workshop. will introduce strategies for injecting humor into prose and poetry. Author and Saddleback Community College instructor Lola D. Glllebaard will conduct the session. The $100 enrollment fee includes a gounnet luncheon by the sea. For further information, cohtact Ms. Gillebaard at 49Q-J968 or 494-6922.· president said, "Your involvement exemplifies the highest tradition of aervioe to others and enhances the lives of all our dtlz.ens." The Assistance League, which is affiliated with the National Assistance League, is located at 547 Ca~ "St. .. ,, .. .. I I I I : I t • I I ' , . t .. • • I .. . ' .. .. • .. • , ~ • ,. ' . l . .. . I . ,. (. L I• .. ~: I\ ,,. .. .. ' . .. i' .. .• . •' .. . .. . . .. .. .. ....: I: I: •• •• '~ •• 1. f: •• .. Federal· health oare reductions hit honie The nation'• ailing economy has spread the unemployment epidemic to the South Coast l Medical Center ln South. Laguna. Admlnhtratora at the 1 24-year-old medical center recently announced the elimlnation of 40 jobs, including 25 nursing positions. The reductions, I mottly achieved by attrition, are to ' balance the eenter•s $23.~ million . 'budget by cutting,$1 .4 mllllon in salaiies. ' I The cuts are needed rDalnly · because of state and federal . reductions in health care programs for low-income and senior citizen patients, sa-y nospital administrators. • Based on a formul a of estimated costs, federal Medicare and state Medi -Cal programs reimburse hospi~ for treating patients in those programs. j Hospital administrators have ' long complained that the government formulas don't fully . reimburse the hospital's costs for patient care, although that's the intention. Now, legialatort are reducing medical programs to balance government budgets. It's cauaed a rippling effect. Added to the problem of government reductions has been the development of several newer general hospitals In Orange County in the past decade, drawing patients away from the South Laguna facility . This has increased overhead costs at th.e 260-bed center, which of ten is filled to lesa than 50 percent patient capacity. However, hospital admlpistrators say the currently \4nused beds will be needed ln tuture years as the county population increases. Although most of the job reductions were handled by not filling posts vacated by resignations and retirements, six unskilled workers were laid off. Unfortunately, the overall reduction in job6 at the center alao m eans fewer employment opportunities locally. Budget balancing act Laguna Beach employees are getting pay raises next year and some ar·e getting increased retirement benefits, but they're all giving up some benefits, too. City hall employees are getting a 5.5 percent pay increase. in January and employees of the fire and police departmellts are getting 4 percent pay increases, as well as improved ret irement benefits. The one-year contracts were negotiated by city administrators and representatives of ibree employee associations. The inCI,'eased salaries will cost the city about $475,000. Cily administrators also negotiated concessions from city . employees that will reduce some overhead costs. For instance, paid sick leave for city employees is b e ing reduced from 12 days a year to 8 days a year. · And police department employees are getting a change in compensation for working a holiday. Cu rre ntly, department employ~ get time-and-a-half pay plus an extra day off wit.Q pay. Next year, the holiday compe n sation policy is to give time-and-a-half pay1 but no additional paid day'off. The extra day off is eliminated so the city·doesn't have to pay a day's worth of overtime to another employee to fill the vacated slot. · The-new holiday pay scheme and the sick leave reductions will save the city in excess of $40,000, say city officials. Thus, the contracts give city employees slightly higher salaries than last year. And the contracts also give the city more for its dollar in the areas of sick leave and holiday pay. A good friend lost Laguna Beach lost a good cop and a good friend last week with the passing of veteran police sergeant Vic Sagan. A 35-year member of the Laguna Beach Police Department, Sagan was a familiar figure in town. Be died June 25 at the age of 56 after suffering complications from stomach surgery at Tustin C.Ommunity Hospital. 'More than 300 cititens and city employees turned out to honor Sagan at a memorial service earlier th.is week. The best way to describe Sagan -and he was so described by many who knew him -was as a rather grumpy man with a heart of gold. In other words, :his bark was far wo~ than his bite. His reputation for chewing out rookie police officers was legend, but each verbal lambasting • was followed b~'words of encouragement. Vic Sagan joined the local police force in 1946 after a stint in the Marine Corps at nearby El Toro. He served in more capacities during his 3? years than any other police officer. He was with the detective bureau, was training officer, range master and even a ber of the police scuba divihg the 1950$. was fondly known as "Poppa Bear" in the police department, and many, many kids who grew up in Laguna Beach remember his counseling and advice when they committed some infraction of the law. Tough, but fair. That was Vic Sagan. He leaves a void in the police force that will long be felt by the 35 sworn officers and everyone who knew him. He will be missed. Oplnie>f\s expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on tnis page are tnose ot their authors ano artists. Reaoer tomment Is inv•1· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 641-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Inflation note Inflation zoomed 10 awiftly in G«many dUJ'ina 1923 that dinera in. ...warants there (lhaee td pay their checb aa aoon u ~}'_ ordered rather than aft.er they ate. 'Ibey couldn't be sure the price wouldn't ao up during cllMer. Q . Doetn't J'rance have the moet alcoholllm? A. Nm to Oille, it does. Per eaplta. .. wlfte prodWen, both. I ( .. What'• the 'outpl.lcemem' ~ IDlnt do In a b6a eompeny?" inqu&e. a client. It flncfa jobt elMwbere for employees the company wanta to fire. Lot of alz.able firma have aet uC.:.ih aervkee. To cut down on ~ es cauted by the diterunded who com- plain to unions and federal tiureaua. I• Q. What prop0rU.on of the 18,000 women In the U.S. Army in Europe &re presnant? A: About 10 peroent. ·At any liven dme . In 1776, only 20 penll!Dt of the newborn babiee in th1a country lived to• 80. Now only 20 percent don't Uw that lane. '· ,, -' New threat to pensioners l doubts!'about the legality of their : stronga Hn methods. M)' associate ...J Lucette Lagnado was told that the ;-1 thf'eatening letter now reads "may be ; J WASHINGTON -While corporate fat.cats are allowed to get away with cost overruns and tax write-offs, President Reagan's people have ~n going after the widow's mite with all the ferocity of Dickensian d e bt collectors. The unfortunate old people are lucky that debtors' pri8ona have been abolished. Here's what's happening: THE SOCIAL SECURITY Admin~ istration has b een sending out notices to pensioners threatening to cut off their monthly benefit cheeks unless they repay immediately the sums they were overpaid in recent year s in Supplemental Security Income. I reported a few weeks ago that the Social Security Administration is trying to coerce pensioners into letting the agency snoop through their income-tax records. Unless they sign a waiver of the privacy that every taxpayer is entitled to, the pensioners are told, their supplemental income checks will be cut off. This is a bluff, and a cruel one. The agency 'has no legal right to follow through on its threat, and it knows it. Indeed a federal judge ordered Social· Security Administration officials to cease badgering beneficiaries until the legality of t6dr actions could be settled in court. Now the &cial··Seewri•y bureaucrats are LUiing the same tactics in their zeal to squeeu e\tery last penny out of the poor. the sick •and the elderly. The first notification is relatively mild. Though It does say, "Please refund the $--· Immediately," it gives the pensioner a break if he can't pay the whole amount at once. "For your convenience, we can withhold the ~alance 'of your overpayment fro.m your Social Security benefit," the letter states. A form is included at the bottom of the page. Q -J.-1:.-.-.,-1.-•• -. -~. stating: "For my convenience, please withhold my full Social Security benefit each month until m y supplemental security lncome overpayment of $-· is fully recovered." If the pensioner doesn't sign away the Social Security checks -often the only income he has -a followup letter arrives. This one gets really ugly. "If we do not hear from you (in 16 days) we will be forced to suspend payment of your Social Secur ity Ch ecks.'' This threat is probably illegal. By law, Social Security checks are supposed to be i mmu-.fle fr;om "atta c hm~nt -or assignment." The National Senior Citizens Law Center is planning to take the agency to court over it this week. In fact, it appears that the Social Security bureaucrats themselves have Volunteer program sets To the F.ditor: I congratulate Jan D. Vandersloot, M.D., on the timely comments regarding Medi-Cal cutbacks. The Medi-Cal Bill, AB 3480, which will eliminate emergency medical transportation certainly is of grave consequence to many needy patients. I feel it is important however, to look at the alternatives which are available to Medi-Cal patienls in Orange County. It has become a sign of the times that when MAILBOX . individuals have difficulty with transporta'tion and/or medical needs, the standard answer has become, "contact your caseworker" rather than contact our family. friends., neighbors or local volunteer organization which could provi~ help. The Medi-Cal program has been burdened with. accepting financial responsibilities which could be eliminated through the use of available services in the county area and through development of additional volunteer services. ~he spirit of volunteerism which the current administration suggests the private sector embrace has been in existence in many facilities throughout Orange County for years. concerned about the cutbacks which our medically needy, di.sabled and elderly patients are experiencing. However , perhaps it is also a time when we must recognize that the state and federal government can no longer assume the role of family, friend and employer for the citizens of the United States. P erhaps we need to encourage the philosophy that has prevailed in the Someone Cares service for the past 12 years and reach out to those in our community who need assistance. BETTY McMICKEN. M.A. CCC Speech/Language Pathologist Local news To the F.ditor: Re: Local news scene, Daily Pilot, June 22: A brave young lady receives her degree after being buried in the srfow, a blind woman becomes a masseuse and plans on running again at F.dison High, and then we ha\>e ~rge Van Dam and the Gallaghers who are so peny that they can't even live next door to each. other in peace. What a waste of energy their story is. LIZ REINDERS TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below ¥useum history To the F.ditor: As ! 10-year Art Museum board memt>er (1970-1980) and SO-y ear ~civic volunteer, I was dismayed at your front ~ "Laguna Beech M Museum looking up" article for its lnaccuracy. Bill Ott.on ii a new director. The ' forced" instead oi "will be forced." • i And in its original 1983 budget ·i request, the agency specifically asked for 1 a "proposed change" that would allow it \ to "recover overpayments to individu;Us ( from available Social Security benefits." Obviously, if it already has this ~ aCouthority, there would be no need to ask !; I ngress for it again. \ ~ I FOOTNOTE: Ari agency spokesman l ~; t ried to disassociate Washington } :; headquarters from the second letter, ~.;. I insisting that sueh bullying tactics were ~· not administration policy but an~ unauthorized bit of zealousness by a ! regional office. He stuck by the first !I ' letter. however. and saw nothing wrong •I in trying to trick terrified pensioners into :1 signing away what, in many cases. is :I their only source of income. : Contrast this with the Re agan !: administration's casual attitude toward :; defense contractors. big oil companies ·:'l and' other business buccaneers. The 4 Renegotia tion Board, which used to :i collect overpayments from defense :: contracts, has been allowed to die. The ,. Interior Department trusts the oil :: •• companies to report how much oil they " pump on federal wells, despi~ evidence !,l that the oilmen have been robbing Uncle ; Sam blind under the honor system. an example We congratulate the new director with his ambitious program and the support of the present board of directors and hope that with the expansion program it will be within their means? HARRY J. LAWRENCE Tribute earned .. :I •• .. .. .. .. •• ,, •• •• •• •• •• .. .. .. .. .. •• •• •• .. .. .. .. • •• .. ., .. ·• .. To the Editor: ;t I strongly agree with your recent :: editorial stat ing the justification for ;; re n am i n g t he 0 ran g e Co u n t y :1 1 Performing Arts Center after the family : that has contributed. so much to its J• development. As you astutely point out, ; the Segerstrom family has not only been • a force for cultural development in our ... community but ,h as also s purred economic growth and development that - will benefit Orange County for years to come. Ii would certainly be a fitting tribute for a family that has dope ao much. I laud your editorial efforts in that direction. · HARRIEIT M. WIEDial Supervisor, Second District Change the law To the Editor: What a shock to a lot of people who now know that Hinckley ia innocent because he was insane at the tlme he shot President Reagan and Mr. Brady, McCarthy and Delahanty! , Does that mean Reagan Wlu ha'(e to always wear a bullet proof vest and be in a bullet proof car whenever he gic>es anywhere? What about the rest of his body? And Nancy! Always in fear of the crazies out there who will pull out a gun and shoot any official ot lrnportance. Does that mean being rich the ~n can get away with crime and violence, or la it OW' l}'lt.em! It ia time we d\me! that law. Wha\ a terrible milcarria&e of justice! . , EMMA E. HYMAN THUMDAY, JULY 1. 19H CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION L 82 85 ee Dropped f rolfJ • TV r0le, Adam Arkin ba• switched to stage where he's • 111mn111111 c11m our . \r ON THE ROAD, DEPT. -Never forget that old saw that proclaims, 11The only two things certain are death and taxes." Could be lt's ri1ht again. At least the taxes part. It should be noted in the news that the Orange County Board of Supervisors, in its infinite wisdom, just did an El Splito vote but nevertheless came out in favor of going to the people to seek new ta>ces. In this case, the county board voted 3 to 1 in favor of at.ate legislation that would allow the voters to decide on a new l percent sales surtax for the purpose of financing new trans~rtation projects. While Supervisor Harriett Weider was absent, it is interesting to note that Supervisor Bruce Nestande was the ,.. lone lawmaker to ballot Nay on the proposition. b \ AT FIRST BLUSH, ,-11--M-U-R-PH_l_N_f ~/;. this might leave you with 10 -~ tl'\e impr!-?ssion that Mr. Nestande is opposed to new t.-s upon the already weighted-down populace, right? Wrong. What had Nestande up in the flying rings was the fact that this new levy. which would boost sales taxes in our region from 6 to 7 percent, would be earmarked for a specific purpose. That is, transportation. Alas, what he fears is that the county would then be tied down and unable to slap on some more sal~ ta>ces for , Which end of tJUs thing do you suppose they'll be taxing nexrr? a variety of purposes. I mean, what he wants is a bigger bite out of the taxpayers' already frayed wallets. ' So for heaven's sake, don't slap Nestande with a label of being anti-more taxes. Just the opposite seems to be the case~ ALL . OF THIS SUGGESTS that the county board might w ell be still living in the memories of heydays in the 1970s, when everything continued to climb up, up, up. The board members may need some reality orientation here. Everybody out there in the real world is tightening belts these days. They are hardly throwing out loose cash that is cluttering up the house. AS FOR THE SURTAX for transportation projects specifically, it's possible that the harried motorists of our region might be just a bit skeptical ~bout precisely how that money would be spent. In recent times, we've been visited by the spectacle of cash being allocated for "highways" and we find that it's some beautification project at an interchange. Meanwhile, the potholes, ruts and burnt-out lights on freeway directional signs remain with us. Most recently, state government has sent a signal that Caltrans might actually spend some money on fixing up certain long-standing and glaring deficiencies like the i~terchange terror at the Santa Ana and Newport freeways crossing. Still, the long-suffering motorist might tend to look sideways at this apparent loosening of the construction pursestrings, figuring he might get duped again just to make it appear that the sales surtax proposition looks good. IF THE STATE Legislature does go ahead as the Orange County supervisorial majority suggests, and adopt.a the sales tax measure, there is one good thing about that. It then has to go to a vote of the people of Orange County. Unless the current economy suddenly does a takeoff like .a Fourth of July skyrocket, that voting could turn out to be the laugher of the year.· 'Rich and Famous.' 87. ' - Counting· d~wn to 4th. '\ • • BLAZING BOOMERS -With f.ireworks banned or curtailed at mosi beaches, the best • Deity Not ltllff "'"'4oe way to .see them will be at civic displays such as this one at Newport Dunes. Beachfronts brighter Picnlcs, patriotic parades, pier p yrotech nics programmed By BARRY EBERLING OftMDellyHotltllff Orange Coast residents will have no trouble finding ways to celebrate th.is Fourth of July weekend, even if the beaches are jampackeci SATURDAY Saloon Nl&ltt at the Ediaon Community Center offers residents the chance to try IOfne Old West gambling. including blackjack . and roulette from 7:30 to 11 :30 p.m. The $10 admission to the center at 21377 Magnolia St. is tax-deductible and benefits Huntington Beach's July 4th parade. SUNDAY Concert on tbe Green IV at Irvine's Heritage Park football stadium features an evening of music and fi~eworks. Stadium gates at Walnut and Yale avenues will open to picnickers at 6 p.m. A high school jazz band will play at 7 p.m. The Orange County Master Chorale and Orchestra will present a salute to Academy Award-winning songs from the last 50 years at 8 p.m. A pyrotechnic-musical entitled, "I Love America" will start at 9 p.m. Tickets are $4 each or two for $6 and four for $12 at the Irvine City Hall Community Services Department through Friday. Tickets will be $6 each at the gate. Laguna Nlpel's Crown Community Park will be the site of a day-long celebration capped by a fireworks show. The festivities will include a pancake breakfast, a skydiving exhibition. food booths, magicians, games. children's rides and free balloons. , Bluegrass, jazz and rock bands and a ' 30-piece ensemble will provide music from 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Fireworks begins a\ dusk. Hwatin1ton Beacb'• traditional parade led by Mayor Robert Mandie and the Assembly chairman of Anjo, Japan, a Huntington Beach sister city, will begin at 1 p.m. at Fifth Street and Yorktown Avenue. The procession of floats., antique cars and ~uestrians will end at 2:30 p.m. at SeaCllff Village where puppet ahows, a parade awarda ceremony and contests are echeduled. Fireworks and entertainment will follow at the Huntington Beach High School stadium, starting at 6:30 p.m. Food concessions will benefit the HBHS basketball boosters club. Ticketa are $4 for adults and $2 for children through Friday at the Huntington Beach Public lnfonnatlon Office, 2000 Main St., and $5 for adult.a at the gate. Oraage Coast Colle1e'1 Bones West Trombone Choir will perform at the Stan ' Kenton Gazebo at the Balboa Pier at 6 p.m. Ad.milaion is free. Ve&erua oraubatlons of Costa Mesa will spoNOr their ninth annual pancake breakfast freJO 7:30 a.m. until noon at the Veterans Memorial Hall, 565 W. 18th St. The meal will cmt $2 for adults and $1.25 for children 12 and under. Decllcatlon of a flag from the United States Capitol will be held at the main gate of Harbor Ridge in Newport Beach by the Harbor Ridge Women's Club. Tbe Newport Dunes will touch off its aerial display at nightfall. Daytime admission is $2 for adults and $1 fo r children 12 and under. A San Clemente Pier fireworks show will begin at nightfall. Beachgoers also can shoot off their own fireworks if they are at least 400 yards from the pier. Anabelm Stadium is offering a night of fireworks and entertainment, including a celebrity softball game featuring the Jackson family and a Righteous Brothers mini-concert. Gates open at 5 p.m. Tickets at $8 and $6.50 reserved or $5 .general are available at the stadium and Convention Center box ~ices. Disneyland will feature fireworks, the Main Street Electrical Parade and plenty of rides. • " Cbristopber Cross will perfonn at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater. Tickets cost $16 for reserved and $12 general at the box office, 8800 Irvine Center Drive. Laguna Hills. The parking lot opens at 4 p.m. and gates at 6 p.m. for the 8 p.m. show to be followed by a fireworks extravaganza. MONDAY Blke Parade ud Picnic will begin at 9:45 a.m. at Mariners Park in Newport Beach. The ninth annual parade will feature the El Toro Marine Corpe C.olor Guard, grand marshal T. Duncan Stewart of Corona del Mar and neighborhood children on decorated bicycles. Entertainment featuring Stewart's Band, Barnaby the Clown. booths and a rafCle will follow the parade. Slaare Healtll's five and 10-K runs at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Cost.a Mesa will make sure that runners won't be negl_ected. The event starts at 8 a.m. Recittration la $8 including T-shirt and fair ticket or $4 entry fee. • • • most ca m p are a s r eserved W,puld-be Fourth of July weekend campera will have to hustle for st.ate and county lita unless they already have reservations. Remaining areas are available on. a flrst...c;ome, first-serve basiS only. Caspers, Featherly and O'Neill parks a r e the only Orange County parks which allow overnight camping .. Competition for sites la expected to be U,ht, according to t~ County Environmental Management Agency. There are elg ht state campgrouhds in the South o.t and ·southern inland area available on a first-<:0me, flnt.. serve basis. They, are: Azua-Borrego Desert, Cjaviota, Providence Mountains, Red Rock Canyon, and Saddleback Butte st.ate parks; Picacho and Salton Sea state recreation areas and F.rnma Woods State Beach. San Onofre and Doheny st.a~ beache s are avai lable b)' reservation only, and are boo~ solid for the Fourth of July weekend. .. ~ city halls.~ pos t off i ces · closed Monday Virtually all businesses except for some stores and shops will take holidays on Monday in observance of Independence Day. Federal. state, city and county offices (excluding emergency services), and most banks and private {inns will be closed. Many stores in Fashion Island and South Coast Plaza, as well as s upermarkets and other consumer-oriented businesses, will remain open Sunday and Monday. depending on their managers' decisions. Regular postal service will be halted Monday, although federal and express d eliveries will continue. Tras h collection will be skipped on Monday and will be one day late the remainder of the week in all Orange Coast cities except Costa Mesa. where it will proceed normally. Most recreation parks, including Disneyland and Lion Country Safari, will be open both days. ... police set to enforce fire works ban Laguna and Newport Beach citizens will have to attend shows if they want to see-Fourth of July pyrotechnic demonstrations. All fireworks, including safe and sane, are illegal in these cities. Fireworks also are banned from the unincor~;hted community of Sunset , all Orange ' County beaches and parks; and Huntington Beach d ty beaches. Yet. even where fireworks are legal. Orange County Fire Department Capt. Gary Stenberg recommends attendin& a professional show. County Fire Chief Lary Holma said that firefighters will be patrolllna the Orange Cou~ area on Sunday to provide safety information to d~ as well as to enforce fire Tegul.ations. ~ Handle hot holiday tradition with car.e apeek.en at a fireworks safety conlerence Wednesday at the Ora.nae County Fire Station in Irvine who warned people to rtay away from fireworkl not marked aateneane. 8tenberl went t.hrouah a blQ of Dlep1 p)TOt.eehnial wlUch h.a been ~t.td by Irvtne police afeww .. kaa,o. , Si.nee the ownen were out of tta• and u.nawaN of Calllomia firework• law1, they weu ,.rnnd, he llJd. u they hid bell\ rwldenta. the)' would hive '*" ...... wtth • f•bly. ~ tM .... ICCIDlmll wtn ......... ind .,,..... ......... 111111~ IDld In Mhll' ...... ,,..... fttlh• ... .,..., and they are otten •till hot when they land, aocordl.ng to Stenberg. Fire Protection Enalneer Albert E. Hole MJd that auch rocket. are the letldln& IOU1'Cfl of acddenta, He oppoled bt.nn1na all fireworka, thou,h, l&)'ina that It would only create a black market. A1reeln1 wu Lorraine Lawrence, a U .8. Conaumer Product Safety Comml11lon community relatlona director. Sht Hid that e percent of firework lnjurte1 nationwide, lnduchni moll majar ... .... cawed "1 w.A ,,,o......_ l&Ul, ah• ur1H extreme lllu1lon wa.u. illlal IM.,. Ind ..... ,,,.., ....,.....,, ..... ...., are cla11Uled as haurdoua products by the aafety comtn1-lon. "Even a aparkler bums at 800 to 2,000 deal'eea." Ma. Lawrence MJd. ''U one 1ancll on a ahake root '' coWcl 1tart a huce ft.re ." She recommended the foll~ pnceudona: -Uae •fe and aane flreworkl only.' -Do not"" cblklrm hMdlt art)f fin~ lndudfnl aparkMn and----Kaw • bucUt of .... neubl 111111 .. .u \met and ..... ftnw•la -Diani ftNwcu Wit fad I0 .1D :eff, .............. .................. ' . I • I 111 J ti ~. I> A ~ I l I ' y 1 I '-' NB hi(-rlJ.n de~ilJ g<;1es iaCk tµ court - . BY STEVE MARBLE O(tMDeltr ..... llaft I It was 10 rtK>ntha ago that Newport Beach reeid~nt Donald B. Warner wu killed by a hit and run driver. Warner was 26, a Callfornia nev.lcomer. He was crossing a street less than two blocks from his apartmept when he was hit 'and left face down In the road. W i th assista n ce fr om witnesses, police tracked down the death car in less than 48 hours. They found il abandoned in a Whittler shoppln& center, lta windshield smashed and blood splattered on the hood. Arresting the driver proved to ~ harder even thou1h police said they knew who h was. Officers spen~ week• talking w ith the suspected d river 's friends, .parents and attorney. A 21-year-old man n amed James S. Gibbs, a resident of Orange, eventually was arrested. Following weeks of courtroom activity, Gibbs pleaded.guilty to felony manslaughter and hit and run chargea. Gibbe was sentenced to 210 days in county jail, a sentence Deputy Dlatrfct Attorn 41y Micha~l Dow considered light compared to the Slate prison tenn he had sought. Dow thought that was the end of it. Warner's parenta thought that was the end of it. That wasn't the end of it. More than six weeks after Gibbs was scheduled to begin serving his time. the case is headed back to court. Gibbs, armed with a new attorney, la slated to 10 to court Friday and argue that hll guilty plea as well as the 210-day sentence be toaed out. According to court documenta, Gibbs' Attorney -James Merwin -said hil client'• fint attorney faile d to give him proper lebl advice and that Gibbs pleaded guiltt' to thJngs he shouldn't have. District Attorney Dow said if the plea is accepted, the case goes back to square one with a jury trial likely. . Attorney Merwin could not be Teached for <.'Omment. The tum of events hu left Dow, Warner's parents ana friends angry. Dow said it took week. to bull~ the case and that some witnesses have moved from the area. He said it may be impoesible to track some of them down. "He should nave been grateful for his sentence," Dow said of Gibbs. "I think this was a state prison case all the way." Warner's lather, a resident of Maryland who has sold his automobile dealt?rshlp to pursue the case and refonna he believes are needed in hit-and-run laws, is more surprised than angry. He said he is a family and a church man and would have little difficulty forgiving the driver of the car that killed his son. He said all the driver has to do is ask. Liberian adoptee extended Balanced ·budget QK' d . Brown cites nee d for economic rec.o ver y By STEVE MITCHELL or-.o..,,...,..,. I\ San Juan Capistrano couple, whose a d opt ed son faced deportation to his native Liberia n ext week, have won an extension of the deadline that will allow him to remain with hit family eight more months. The Immigration and Naturalization Service this week exlended the July 5 deadline for Sam Willet to Feb. 1, 1983, after the 26-year-old man and His father, Dave Willet, drove to Los Angeles to present a letter from Congressman Robert Badham. "It means Sam can stay in the United States at least until next year, unless there is any adverse action on Badham's private bill," Dave Willet said in a telephone interview. l · "We were really getting close to the line, and the family i.s really relieved." he said. Samuel, who was born in Liberia, was adopted by the Willets more than a decade ago when the couple were wotkiJl& for the Peace Corps i n that country. The adopted son spent seven years in Liberia and Kenya with the Willet family, then a two- year separation forced by the question of Sam's immigration when the Willets returned to the United States. The family was reunited nearly two years.,ago when Samuel obtained a one-year $ludent visa. But the U.S . government never officially recognized the adoption, saying Samuel was too old to be considered adopted nearly 11 years ago. Attempts by Badham to introduce private bills to keep Samuel in America failed, and the> House Subcommittee on lmtnigration said it would not re-bear a special bill authored by Bad ham. The extension will give the subcommittee more time to reconsider Badham's Jaiest private bill on behalf of the WiJJets. M ea nwhil e, Judiciary Committee Chairman Peter Rodino has sent a lette r to Badham i nd icating the immigration subcommittee is extremely busy with other immigration legislation, forcing Rodino to postpone consideration of the private bill. That should eliminate the po91ibility of adverse action on Badham's bill before the new Februaty deadline, Willet said. ~ Rodino suggested the family seek administrative relief by 1eeking refugee status for Sam. But Dave Willet said he will (~SAM'S STAY, Page AZ) COUNTY ~-......... FISC~ HUMOR -Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. laughs with Assembly Speak~r Willie Brown (right) and other lawmakers during a ceremony at the Capitol in Sacramento where the governor signed the new 1982-83 $25.2 billion state b udget. i,ank clerk '1 ~lps . in forgery arrest A man who authorities allege forged more thaii $100,000 in cashiers' checks, entertained a friend with a whirlwind trip to Florida and pumped thouaands of dollars into his personal bank accounts today is in t he less glamorous confines of Orange County Jail. And Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators are crediting a teller at an El Toro branch of Southwest Bank for preventing wha t they claim could have been a major cash loss to a Huntington Beach savings and loan institution. · Cedric H. Wasano, 24. of El Toro, was arrested on suspicion or forgery Wednesday after the telJer. Linda Howe, notified superiors when Wa sano attempted to cash a $10,000 check drawn on the Edinger Avenue (See CHECK, Page AZ). Outlook 'gloomy' for 3-day holiday That sunshine and blue skies aren't a myth, folks, but cloee to it. If you are expecting the same for the three-day Fourth of July holiday, don't hold your breath. It appears more of the "gloom" Orange Coast residents have experienced for nearly three months is headed oµr way again. Wednesday a high-pressure system chased clouds that grayed Orange County most of June, May and April eastward, but another marine layer is hangjng just off the Oregon and Washi ngton coasts and Is expected to reach here Saturday. according to the National Weather Service. That means a drop of 1,000 feet in the weather front producing low clouds, late night and early mornings Saturday. Sunday a nd Mo nday, high cloudiness most of the daylight hours with a chance of some sunshine by late afternoons. Today dawned ·clear as did Wednesday with mountains visible Inland and no smog forecast by the South Coast Air Quality Management District. The sudden weather ~ntrast may have caught many ~Y surprise but still sent thousands scurrytng to the beaches where lifeguards reported the largest weekday crowds this year. t NATION • SACRAMENTO '(AP) -The state begins a new fl8cal year today with a tightly balanced $25 .2 billion budget of "unprecedented auste rity " finally approved after a five-day deadlock. Gov . Edmund Brown JrJ signed the budget and four related bllls for the 1982-83 fiacal year Wednesday, while warning that it would not stay baiancea without a "strong economic recovery" this fall. Brown held the signing ceremony after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Astronauts fix door on shuttle CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)' -Columbla's commander, "watching like a hawk," mlen:ame a vexing problem wUh the shuttle's balky cargo doors today. cl~ and latching them in a simulation of ates-that must precede entry on the Fourth of July. "They cloeed nonnally," said Ken Mattingly. He 90Unded relieved and so did Mission Control. Flight direc tor Harol d Dra~on said that if Columbia tried.1o re-enter the atmosphere without the doors cloeed, the ship "oould shake like a wheel well coming off a hot performance aircraft. You ge t so muc h turbulence flow that It would tear thlnp apart." However, had the d oo r problem persisted, Mattingly would have taken a space walk to make repairs', Draughon said. The s hip was orbiting smoothly: Mattingly and pilot · Henr)' Hartsfield did some ceJ,.eat1aJ sight.seeing and crew calisthenics, teat -fired jet thrusters, and televised an instructive "cook's tour" of the shuttle cockpit. Columbia's port door failed to shut Wedneeday after flight in the oold shadows of apace cauaed warping, either in the door it8elf or in the frame. Overnight, NASA sent Columbia into a barbec:ue roll to el<poee the doors to the warmth of the sun. A similar fix aucceeded when the problem cropped up on flight three, and u the shuttle pasaed 186 miles overh ead at' Cape Canaveral, just after dawn , Mattingly tried the shut-and- open exerciM? again. Operatinf from a remote control pane ln the cabi'n, he needed only three minutes to do the job. Coast gears for Founb Lotu people tink folks from Brooklyn tawk funny, but it ain't funny, it's wunnerful. Page A.5. INerything you wmt to know about the Fourth of July along the Oranae c.o.t can be tOJnd on Page Bl. TEL E VISION • Challenger heads to Edwards LANCASTER (AP) -Cballenaer paraded throuah dty streeta and de9ert flatlands today, an encine• ~p inc~ away from lta ...embly hupr to Edwaro. Air Foree Bue. . Su•pecled banlc robber killed LONG BEACH (AP) -An off -duty police lel'puat ltandlna in • ~ line lhot and km.d a 1u1peeted bank r obbe r &ocl•Y. and wa1 blmMlf woundMI In the~i. om.• llAd.ll I Senate recessed the day before, released the budget from the five-day hold imposed because of a dispute over $235 million for schools. The Democratic governor made no cuts in the budget, as approved by the Legislature. noting its ''unprecedented austerity." The budget contains no tax Increases. He said the proposed spending is more than $200 million below the expected spending for the fiscal year closing Wednesday, and $8 million below the actual spending in 1980-8 l. County ease ~"That (a two-year drop) has never hap~ned any time m the history of California oullide of the Depression," he said. But Brown said the budget is so tightly balan ced . with a reserve of less than $500 million, that the Legislature will have to make further cuts in the next few month·s "if the national economy does not re.cover." The budget had been approved by both houses Friday. Both h ouses alto appri>ved a companion bill Mondav. But Assembly Speaker Willie (See BUDGET, Page AZ) Challenge to open hearings rejected By DAVID KUTZMANN or-.Dellr ..... ...,. An Oran1e County defense attorney's ~nge of a new slale law expanding on the public 's right to attend preliminary hearings in criminal cases hu been rejected by a state appeals court. Theresult~thata preliminary hearing in Central Orange County Municipal Court for two men charged with the slaying.of a Mission Viejo woman will proceed Friday with both pubHc a nd p ress allowed in as spectators. The 4th District Court of Appeal upheld -without comment -the oor\stitutionality of the open hearing law which took effect in Mareh. Previously, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab and Central Municipal Court Judge Samuel Taylor, who ~ presiding over the preliminary ·hearing, ruled in favor of ope.n proceedings. Challenging the law, which took effect as an urgency measure on Mareh l, was defense attorney Rona ld Brower, who represen ts murder defendant Thomas Thompson, 27, o f Orange. Brower indicated Wednesday he planned no further appeals. B ot h Thompson and co- (See PUBLIC, Page AZ) Paralyzed Irvine girl wins million Sixteen-year-old Suzy Gilstrap of Irvine has won a $1.6 million settlement from Los Angeles County in connection with a 1977 accident that left h er wheelchair-bound. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors agreed to the settlement Tuesday, ending a four-year legal process for the recovery of damages. The Irvine H igh S ch ool student. meanwhile, has become an occasional actress o n telev~ion ... She was injured on a !1Chool field trip to the Los Angeles County Arboretum in Arcadia when a section of a eucalyptWJ tree fell on her. It damaged her spine and caused her to remain in INDEX A4 82 83-5 A5 B2 C&-10 ~ C6 C4 AlO 87-8 82 ~;PORTS the hospital more than three monthJJ. Undaunted by a life in a wheelchair. she began l~aming how to play tennis and, through a contact with teacher Brad Parks, was recruited for a role in the TV movie "Skyward." She said in an interview with the Daily Pilot in December that adapting to her injury wasn't as bad as it might have been. thanks to her family. • "It took a lot of strength on my part and my family's p,a:.t to gel back into the routine. ' she said. "But I don't think I went through any depression or denial period because of all the swpport my family gave to me." B2 B7-8 84 i ·I t I .. \ BUDGET APPROVED. • • . I Brown held up puu,ae of both bllla becauae the A11embly wantea to 1tve achoola $23& mlWon that may be left over ln the l:urrent Yffl'a budaet. The ~nate adamantly inaiated that any lelt-over money should 10 Into the reserve ln cue the economy wprsena, and recessed Tue9day until Aug. 2 .. That left the Allen\bly with the choice of either giving in to the upper house and releaai.NJ the budget, or fighting and leaving the state without spending authorization when the tltc&l year began today. "I wiah to recommend to t.hla houae that W9 avoid the 'c:haol that would be generated by virtue ol any COW'le of action other than tiendina the billl to the governor," Speaker Brown, D-San Franciaco, told the Auembly. The speaker aald the $235 million would be a continued subject of ne&<>tJallons when both houaes return Aug. 2 from their normal summer receas. The Aaaembly also left for the month after &ending the budget to the governor. SAM'S ST A Y EXTENDED. • • B I R T HDA Y GI R L Princess Diana, who produced an heir to the British throne last week, celebrates her own birthday today -number 21. have to con sult Santa Ana attorney Jim Cannon be fore pursuing that course. Cannon agreed to help the Willet family at no cost when he heard of Sam's plight. M~anwhile, Sam has given notice to his employers at a San ·• Juan CapJs trano fa-,t food restaurant because he feared he would be deported next Tuesday. "I don't know if they'll give him his job back or noi," Dave Willet said. He said the oew extension will enable Sam to take more business and accounting classes in the fall at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo:' "The problem is, Sam no longer has a student visa, so·we'll have to pay the $3,000 or so foreign student fee," Willet said. But the eight month extension is welcome, he said. · Irvine duo carried all ' • precincts CHECK FORGERIES .•. Larry Agran and Barbara Wiener won in all 73 precincts in the recent Irvine City Councjl e lectio n that i n v.atved six ·candidates-; _ branctlof Coast Federal Savings- and Loan. SheHff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Was·ano, a Coast Federal employee, is believed to have forged 35 "association ," or cashiers' checks, with a total value of more than $100,000. Thirty-three of the checks have been accounted for while two remain under investigation, Hart said. Hart said Wasano, left Coast Federal with the checks Monday eveAing. Later that night. Hart said, Wasano and an unidentified companion flew to Miami. They returned Tuesday. Hart said Wasano showed up- at Southwest Bank's El T oro bran c h Wednesd ay and attempted to negotiate a $10,000 check by placing part of the amount in a savings account and taking the remainder in cash. It was at that point that the teller became sus picious and notified superiors, who in turn callesf Coast Federal. Officials at the savings and loan confirmed the check was amo~ 35 missing. Subsequent invesugatlon, Hart said , showed "unexplained large increases in several of Mr. Wasano's accounts." Wasano currently is being held on $150,000 bail. A breakdown of the votes by polling place shows that Agran, the top vote getter with 8,510 votes, won 39 precincts while Mrs. Wiener (8,157) won 37. The pair tied in three cases. Agran finished second 31 times. Mrs. Wiener was second at 23 precincts. Third-place finisher John Nakaoka (5,778) was second in six precincts and fourth-plaL'e &iward Doman (5,470) placed second 14 times. There was one tie. . Of all candidates, Dornan's performance was the most hot., and·cold depending on voters' neighborhoods. Dornan was particularly strong at UC Irvine precinct&, in his own University Park neiBhborhoods PUBLIC HEARIN GS.. • • and, somewhat surprisingly. the large precinct at the Irvine defendan~ David William' Leitch. Kreber, did not challenge the Meadows mobile home park. 22, of Laguna Beach, are c~ed new law. Doman. like Agran, called for. with· murder in the stabbing strong environmental positions Brower asked Judge Taylor for •--d d I t H · death Of Gina. er Fleiachli. Mias on new ••. m eve opmen . e lS ~"& a c 1 o a e d h ear I ng when En lish · tru to at O nge Flei.&chli's. body was found in a an gu ins c r ra shallow grave in east lrvin.e last· proceedings originally began in Coast College. September. early Mareh . Agrarl also was strong in the h same areas -especially Irvine tsrower had argued that is Taylor agreed to exclude Meadow•. where he gained a client'• right to a fair trial -if apectaton. but a reporter for the 132·vote margin over Mrs . he was b o und over on the Saddleback Valley News later -Wiener. Agran al.so polled well in charges -would be seriously asked the court to reo~n the Deerfield, CulverdaJe and The jeopardized if press coverage of hearing because no showmg had Colony. the prelimina ry hearing was bee n made th~t an o pe n Mrs. Wiener's strong a reas allowed. • proceeding would JeOpardize the were Northwood and Turtle Leitch's a ttorn'ey, Ronald defendants' right to a fair trial. Rock. whecP shP '1iv<><: Warmer Friday Coastal Light variable winds b«;omlng _, to aoulhwMt to 10 15 11no11 all•rnoon end etenlng S9u1h•Ht 1w•llt t lo 3 IHI. Moetly eunny al1emoon AsMYille Allanta Allantc Cly AusUn Balllmof• Billings Blnningtlm 91-c:I< 9oiM Boeton Btownsvlle Buftalo Buf'Nngton U S Summary =" sc • • Cflarlatn WV Thund«etorma. fliOh wln<le and Cflatl1t• NC hHYy rein• 1prHd acron th• ~ eouthem and centre! plalnl today, Clnclnnatl "rllllng part4 ol NebrHlla, ~ Wyoming, K1nH1, T•nn•n••· Clmbl8 SC T-. Ind • centrll Gull Coeel Columbul 1181•. Del-Fl Wth TM "'-9 and tllundef9torm1 ,._.00 gradually w•r• ebbing. They ~~ perli1ted mainly ov•r northern 0.. MOlnes Ml11l111ppl and north•rn o.trOll Artlen .... with thun<lerltormt 0.... Duluth the «*ltrll hlgll plelnf. Et Peeo High w1ter from hHvy rein• Fwgo ,.,, ..... _, to flood -ww ol FllQlt•n Conoord!--Ken., wlw• WOtlllWI Gr•! Fellt piled ~ to Otoe.ct • mobie Herttord llOlfta _, 8l1d IOlne ~. Helena . C>fllclm lf90 wwMCf of pOlllb6I Honolulu lloodlllQ In 0-Cf.-c.nyon Houston ,_ lcWlo 8Ptinaa. Colo.. about lndnlj)lll 45 ...._ ... of o.i-.. Some Jac:luln MS hOIMa -• evecuated OY9Rlight. Jeclu11w11e Wldlly lelttwed "'°'"" end Kent City thunderehow•re 1•11 ov•r th• Lat Vega NOl'Uwlell, lllflh • lew ltlowwt and Uttle Rodl lh\lnderaflowWa fingering along C.oulllrile the _,.,.,.,, Atlentlc CoMt. • l .ubl>odl Sid• ... a--mud! o4 Metnptlll I h • r •• t 0 ' I II • II 11 I 0 n . Mlllmi , T empereturw t1round Ille nation .,.,.... II befor9 dewl'I ranged from ~ . '" ,_..., .. ~ and 8eult .......... ~ Mlc:fl., to 8' In Ptloenlx. Artz. New Ol1-nl . .'Naw YM California , ::.'::... Tiie ~ w.... a.vtoe <>Illa Ctty prldllei ......,. round of nlgfll On111M 1ltd "'or11lft9 otolldlll•H •'!.d Ot1endo aft•r110011 11111•11111• ,.,lday. =:-,..., ............ ..::::::: to PtltlOwaft JO -"'~ lfld PU.nd. Me . 6::. :::...-:·,... "°"' PU.nd: ar. me mid 10a In LAii Nlllllle to • PnMdela MH IMUM Of II at 1fi .. OllH , :::~ ........... 71 1n ......... M 8S 88 68 78 60 94 73 83 66 77 82 90 68 .01 74 St 90 58 83 59 93 82 18 72 SI 73 ... M 82 92 78 77 51 .14 89 ·68 7S 58 70 46 90 ~ 72 49 92 72 74 49 94 72 7S 53 89 81 .28 71 83 .91 74 49 It 41 95 65 15 52 7t 35 78 59 8t 55 ee eo .15 " 7t .04 92 eo 77 53 91 71 ,27 92 75 . t6 83 85 .78 83 84 93 70 79 S7 90 ee 95 75 t.00 17 80 10 St 71 65 91 85 .05 90 87 .31 11 92 90 10 1.12 71 • .. 81 87 IO .to M 75 71 IO 102 74 79 ... n st n • 11 ... • 17 ... .. 61 .10 11 .... 11 Sall l ake Sen Anlonlo S..ttle Shr-.port Sioux F ... SI LOiiie St p. T llTIPe St Ste Mlrie Spoil-. SyrKUM Topelie TUCIOO Tutu Wllhlngtn Wlehlle 9t 59 91 59 83 55 92 89 77 59 81 51 " 79 et 31 79 83 74 51 ... 70 98 85 1M 75 85 82 92 71 CAUfONtlA 09 .37 . 01 .39 Wlt'tftlld 79 88 .22 Blythe 92 E~a 81 54 fr-87 57 12 Yncal1., 89 57 Loe Anoelel 73 Mety9ville 78 Monllfay 82 NMdlla 91 Ollklend 83 68 Peeo Aoblea n so Aid 911111 78 82 .0 t Aedwood City ee sa Sacnmanto 70 57 8lllllm 81 53 sen Dleoo n 83 11.n~ IO 5-4 Senti---• 71 53 Senti...,.. 7t 8toc«ton 70 TiienMI 90 lerltOW 79 82 llglear 10 37 llillOP 81 ... In lie llWI IOI J11 1M 11W1 __, AIAlclll.,._.t11.,.IOlftdld ::--'"-........ ...-~--~~-~-~~~~~'!-~~-All'lllll.,......,, .. ....... IWJlllllll ,,. .. ,_. ... ~ .............. c. ...... .. .......... llllfld. Nclftllweet ... _._ ........ ..... ---~ ......... --..._.._ ce.sr ............. _ -·-!itil .......... ---~ lltlf 5. " :=· . , . • Catalina 72 Uk• Arrowheld 88 long Beech 74 Monrovia 79 Ml. Wiison 52 Hewpoft 6eecll 88 Ontar1o 74 Palm $9flnOS 17 Paa6ene 7G San BemwdlnO 14 Ex tended wea the r se 4 1 .01 80 59 38 80 57 83 57 58 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AHO M OUNTAIN °'REAS -Co11t1I 1tH1: low cloudt In the nlgtlt end morning hou<1 ot,,.,..._ lllr. Hlglla rengtng from ,_ 70 at Ille beed191 IO low llOl lnlend valley9. Lowe 53 10 83. Mountain ......: Fllr .,it1I ,....._.. hleltl Clouda. ~ w.lefty .... 16 to 25 MPll ""8mooft lloura. Reloft level lllgll8 81 to 7t . l.OM ... to58. Smog Th• Air Ouallty M•~ Diii predlctl good lllf Qll8llty '" ........ of the loulti Mr .... . Wll•r• to cell (tefl frM ) for ~~=I!~ LOI Antet•• Count~: (IOO) 242-4022 ,....,.,.. lfld 11.n "'-•;o ~ (IOO) M7-4710 AQMO --Center. <Ml 242-4tee Bf. RSDl:IUCK ICHOEMERL °' ... ..., ......... Oran,e County aovernment'• new fltcal year beaan today and. technically. there la a budget to fund operaUon.t for the next 12 monlhl. But the ahape of the $812 million a.,.ndina.proeram will be subject to many cha~ee later thla month when th'e county Board of Supervilora conducts annual budget hearinp. To comply with atate law, aupervlaora were forced to approve the proposed budJet Wedneaday. The law requirea counUet to approve their budgeta by Junl-30. the lut day of the fltcal year. Whlle in technical compliance with the law, no one ia hidlna the fact the flnal budget figure will be modified wfien up~a ted financial figures are received from t he state and fe de ral I '1Vew council member set I to take oath Barbara Wiener will be sworn in as an Irvine City Co"ndl member at 9 a.m. Friday at City Hall. She will be the first ne~ member to take the oath of office since ItarrY Agran in July 1978. Normally, council ~mbera are sworn ln during the regularly scheduled first meeting in July, but the special ceremony is intended to make Mrs. Wiener a full-fleidged council member during her attendance at a League of California Cities conference July 7 in Monterey. Her first council meeting will be July 13. ~ Mn. Wiener and Agran were the two top vote-gett.era in the June 8 election ln a field of six candidates 11eeking two openings on the council. 'Annie' fan • g e ts souvenir at NB theater The movie critics may have been lukewarm about the red- headed small fry but someone out there likes "Annie." Employees al the Edwards Cin e ma in Newport Center report a fan of the comic-strip character broke into a ticket booth -removing a d.oor and a plywood divider in the process - to grab a poster of "Annie." The culprit reportedly passed o v e r m o re than 200,000 admission tickets, numerous movie passes and a stack of gift certificates on ti'lS way to the poster. The movie poster is worth $1.50. Police speculated the crook must have been a big fan of the movie. Madras I 1ov1rnment1, budaet analyatl ..~. J'or example, lt WH onl_y yeeterday that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. aJIJ\ed the $2~ million atate bud1e t Into law. Local offlclala .._y it wW ~ teveral . daya before the actual lmpactl of the ata\e •oendlnl plan on the c ounty "'bud1et can be determined. The rounty'a $812 bud&et is balanced but precarloualy, Grand JUry exits with parti~g shot On the lat day of ill term. the Orange County G rand Jury lashed out at the' County Board of Sup~rvlsors, claiming the board broke a promise to reply to jury reporta within 60 days of their iauance. The jury, ln a letter released Wednesday by foreman Keith ' Boillot, accused supervisors of not responding within the agreed-to time frame to a report on operation o( private aircraft tJedown spaces at county-owned John Wa~ Airport. The jury indicated it was miffed because it didn't have ita • own opportunity to respond to the board's resporise to the report. That jury report -which generated a scathing replay by Airport Manager Murry Cabl~ .- was critical of county policies governing tiedown spaces. T he report was releaaed March :30. The jury, expected a re- sponse by June 1, learned June The Irvin e Community Theater is looking for actors -and n o exp e r ience is / responae by Junel, learned June 7 that the board's reaponse would be two weeks late, according to the letter. The rounty response, however, did not come before the county Airport Commission until a meeting Tuesday night and has yet to be formally acted on 'by supervisors .• Seid the jury in its letter: "Thia melancholy situation raises many doubts and the jw')' wonders if the clanging chains of this bureaucracy are joyous in having this jury fade away without having been able to be the first sitting jury to respond 10 the board of sypervjsors response to the first report of the 1981-82 grand jury." County staff members blamed major airport-related litigation and airport com m 1s s1on deliberatJon of revised tiedown policies as factors contributing to the delay in preparing a response to the jury repo_n,__ would be included in most of the scenes. required. Those wishing to volunteer More men are needed to their time to appear in the complete the cast of ICT's show, which runs weekends August production , "Inherit from Aug. 6-28, should report , the Wind." Two of the roJes to Room 2 of Turtle Rock are featured parts. but there • Community Park Saturday at are four or five others which 1 p.m. Further information c all f or only minimal may be obtai ned b y dialogue. though the actors contacting ICT at 55:7·7297. ------- •Three get-acquainted coffees are scheduled during July for women interested in joining the llvine branch of the American Association of University Women. The two-hour meetings wiU be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. July 8 at the home of Randa Money of The Ranch; 10 a.m. Saturday. July 17 at Barbara Wiene r 's ho.me in Turtle R ock , a nd at 7 :30 p.m . Wednesday. July 21 at Jalla Bynon'a Nort:1wood home. Any woman graduate of an accredited four-year college or university can join the organization . M o r e information is available from Membe rship C hairman Pat Marcelli at 551-0626. A we/I-known fabric made of hand-loomed cotton. Storekeeper Todd Latham Is wearing our true Madras shorts In bright colors, with pleated front and be~ loop:s . A srore that offers fine traditional sportswear for men, women and boys . • • • . ' Orang• Coul DAILY PILOT/Thurad1y, July h 1882 Private pay talks .. !gn·ore· public riiht ( 1 l i e • Once again, trustees of the Irvine Unified School District have chosen the softer, easier w ay ··for them, meeting privately out of public earshot to grant pay raises. The latest episode involved Superintendent A . Stanley Corey's recommendation ·to raise pay and grant two-year (!9ntracts tq two (iepu ty superintendents and two assistant s uper · intenden ts. -The trustees met June 23 in "executive session" -in other word s, privatel y -to rubber·stamp the superintendent's proposal. . Trustees are hiding behind the Ralph A. Brown Act when they m eet pri vately. The act perJllit s schoo l boards to mee t behind closed d oor s when discussing pending litigation and sensitive personnel issu es. Pay raises for administrators don't qualify as litigation a nd ques tionably meet criteria for sensitive personnel issues. They're "sensitive" because it's easier for board members to discuss raises privately -so long as they think they can· get away . with it. This is the second time in recent weeks that trust~ have m e-t priva te ly to give pay raises _to administrative types. A month ago they met behind closed doors to approve a new salary schedule for principals, psych ologists and similar ~itions. • T he board is aoing the public a great disservice. Pay raises for administrators aren't bargaining issues. Any time money is dis- cussed, the public has a clear right to know what is going on a nd w h y b ecause it affects residents right where it hurts most -in the pocketbook. The board should end these private sessions to talk about raises and come out in the open with action invol ving the public's money. CJear choice for mayor The time has come for m e mbe r s i of the Irvine C ity Council to select Larry Agra n as mayor. Agran wUl start his second four-year term on the council on July 13. He has never been mayor before, although he has both the talent and time to perform the task well. While the mayor's role offers n e ithe r more money nor r eal powe r , it does designate its holder as the ceremonial head of the city. The mayor ~lso runs the City Council meetings and Qften chairs other ad hoc committees. Agran 's "sl ow g r owth ... post ure d id not ingratiate him w ith the council's "pro growth" majority in past years, but the growth issue is all but moot these days. Furthermore, this will not be an election year, so there is little reason why others shouldn't allow Agran t he chance to serve as mayor. Since Agran joined th e council, BiJl Vardoulis has been mayor one year . retiri~g Art Anthony has served another year and David Sills has twice handled the gavel. Sills says 1ne is not a candidate to be mayor next year . Agran, who like Sills is a lawyer, is one of the most articulate council members and also one of the most talkative. As mayor, he probably would find it m ore necessar y to super vise a lively discussion than to jump into every dialogue himself. This, too, woul d undou btedly be good training for Agran. Finally, Agran has shown by twice becoming the top vote-getter in local elections that h e represents a sizable constituency in Irvine. It seems only ri.ght that he gets the opportunity to se"ive a term as the community's leading spokesman. In som~ ways, he already is. A quiet beD:ef actor Most Orange Coast r esidents k no w the Fluor Corp. b y it s , s pacious and sparkling glass h eadquarters off the San Diego Freeway in Irvine. Many also are aware of the firm's worldwide reputatio n in the engineering field. few, however, recognire it as one of the region's leading s upporters of worthwhil e community causes. Corporate officials, for their part, haven't sought much public recognition for their d onations oft money and volunteer labor to aid various local charitable and sel'Vice organizat ions. Unlike th e ir striking headquarters, they have kept word of their philanthropic efforts subdued. · It is not widely known, for exampl e, that the Fluor Foundation will donate about $7 .5 million worldwide this year, with about $3.5 million going to causes in Southern California. In Orange Cou nty, Fluor has given large sums to initiate the Immigrant & ' Re fugee Planning Center and to help build cultural facilities such as the proposed Orange County Perfonning Arts Center. The quiet approach fits the ch aracter of C h a irman of the B oard J . Robert Fluor, who doesn't seem to yearn for more h eadlines than his ex t e nsive engineering and natural resources company already provides. Fluo r seemed genu inel y embarra~ed about the fuss made about his corporatio n recently when the Rotarians honored him. Instead of basking in the limelight, he offe red a challenge to other businesses to get more involved as "good corporate citizens." · An international player in the high-profile e nergy gam e, the Fluor Corp. will inevitably be the source of some controversy and many more news stories in th e future . But for now i t is appropriate to focus on the good -deeds the eorporiitiOA has done and to say, simply. thank you . • OplniC>t\s expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on ln1s page are those ot their authors ano art •Sts. Read£-r tomment •S 1n111t ed. A.ddress The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Me'id, CA 92621> Phone l l14l 642·4321 . L.M. Boyd/ Inflation note ....... Inflat ion zoomed so swiftly in · Germany during 1923 t hat diners in restaurant.a there cbqse to pay their checks as aoon u they ordered rather than after tbey ate. They couldn't be sure the ~ce wouldn't go up during dinner. Q. Doesn't France have the most alcoholiml? A.. Next to Chile, tt doet. Per capita. . Bl• wine prodwiers. both. 1•WMt'1 the 'outplacement' d~ ment do ln a blJJ company?" inqUlree a client . It find• jobt elsewhere for employees the company wants to fire. Lot of sizable firms have set up such services. To cut down on the hassles caused by the dl,sgruntled who com- plain to unions and federal bureaus. . I. Q. What proportion of the 18,000. women in the U.S. Army in Europe are pfe8J'Wlt? A. About 10 perwnt. At any given time. In 1776, ·only 20 percent of the newbOrn babies in thia country ·uved to age 60. Now only 20 percent don't live that Iona. Thomas P. Hatley Publl$t\tf' • T"°"'" A. Mu,,..,,., Editor l1r Nr1 Kretbld• l dUorl1I P•o• &!dltor ' I ·11 11 I I l~ ~ ·1' 11111 I ' jl I. ~. :· ~~. -f.3 ' ~ .: -:_ ..a._ ---= -~eq 9 . - ·- ., ,, I .. .. 1' '• I .... . . ,. r . • , $ I . Ne~ threat to pensioners W ASHlNGTON -While corporate fatcats are aUowed to get away with cost overruns and tax write-offs, President Reagan's people have been going after the widow's mite with all the ferocity of Dickensian debt collectors . The unfortunate old people arc lucky that debtors' prisons have been abolished. · Here's what's happening: THE SOCIAL SECURITY Admin- istration has been sending out notices to pensioners threatening lo cut off their monthly benefit checks unless they repay immediately the sums they were overpaid in recent years in Supplemental Security Income. I reported a few we<.•ks ago that the Social Se<.-urity Administration is trying to coerce pensioners in to letting the agency snoop th rough their income-ta.x records. Unless they sign a waiver of the privacy that every taxpayer is entitled to, the pens ion ers are told, their supplemental income checks will be cut off. This is a bluff, and a cruel one. The agency has no legal right to follow through on its threat. and it knows it. Indeed a federa.} judge ordered Soc:iaJ Security Ad~inist.ration officials to cease badgering beneficiaries until the legality of their actions could be settled in court. Now the Social Security bureaucrats are using the same tactics in their zeal to squeeze every last penny out of the poor, the sick and the elderly. • The first notification is relatively mild. Though it does say, ''Please refund the $---1mmed1ate ly," 1t gives the pension er a break 1f he nm't pay thl' whole amount at on<.'C'. "Fo r your conveniC'nce. Wf' l'an withhold the balant•c of your overpayment !rqm your Social Security benefit," the letter states. A form is included a t tht· bottom of the page. G -Jl-Cl-1-ND-IR-SO-N -d stating: "For my convenience. please withhold my full Social Security benefit each month until my supple mental security income overpayment of $--- is fully recovered." If th(• pcnsmner doesn't sign away the Social Security checks ---often the only income he has -a foUowup letter arrives. This one gets really ugly. "If we do not hear from you (in 16 days) we will be forced to suspend payment o f your Social Securit y Checks." • This threat is probably illegal By law. Social Security checks are supposed to be im mune from "att ac hme nt or assignment." The National Senior Citizens Law Center is planning to take the agency to court over it this wc.-ek. In fact, it appears that the Social Security bureaucrats theffiS('lves have . doubts about the legaljty of their i strongarm m e thods. My associate ' - LuC'Nte Lagnado was told that the · !\ threatening letter now reads "may be ;- f om:x:i~ instead o{ "will be forced." And in its original 1983 budget r-equest, the agency specifically asked for a "pra posed change" that would allow it to "recover overpayments to individuals from available Social Security benefits." Obviously, i f it a lready hat. this aut}\ority, there would be no need to ask Congress !or it again. FOOTNOTE: An agency spokesman tried to disassociat e Washi ngton l headquarters from the second letter , • insisting that such bullying tactics were n ot administrasion policy but a n unauthorized bit of zealousness by a regional office He stuck by the Cirst letter, however, and saw nothing wrong in trying lo trick terrified pensioners into signing away what, in many cases. is their onJy source of income. Contrast this,with the Reagan administration's casual attitude toward defense contractors, big oil companies and other business buccaneers. The l Renegotiation Board. which used to· collect overpayments from defense contracts, has been allowed to die. The Interior Departmen t trusts the oil <.'Ompanies to report how much oil they pump on federal wells, despite evidence that the oilmen have been robbing Uncle Sam blind under the honor system. Volunteer program sets an example To the F.ditor: I congratulate Jan D. Vandersloot, M.D., on the timely comments regarding Medi-Cal cutbacks. The Medi-Cal Bill. AB 3 480. which will eli minate emergency medical transportation certainly is of grave consequence to many needy patients. I feel it is important however. to look at the alternatives which are available to Medi-Cal patients in Orange County. It has become a sign of the times that when MAILBO~ individual s have difficulty with transportation and/or medical needs, the standard answer has bec.'Ome, "<.'Ontact your caseworker" rather than contact our family, friends, n~ighbors or local volunteer organization w hich could provide help .• The M edi-Cal program has been burdened with accepting financial respo n si bilities w h ic h could be eliminated through the use of available services in the county area and through development of additional volunteer services. The spirit of volunteerism which the current adminislr a tion suggests the private sector embrace has been in existence in many facilities throughout Orange County for years. A UNIQUE PROGRAM e xists at Western Medical Center. The Someone Cares program is made up of volunteers from t he community. They transport patie nts t o and from outpatie nt appointments at the hospital. Someone Cares transports 60 to 75 cases per week and has been doing so' for t.he past 12 years. There is· no chargC' for this service and it is staffed totally by volunteers. This outstandi ng program never suffered even during the pri~oe increases in gasoline. The volunteers are dedicated and, cati~ple -the good neighbors we all n . ...,..... We have in the coun\y Dial·A-Rlde, Oial-A·Lift, Magic Carpet and pthers whi<'!l are able to transport handicapped patients·-but there is a fee involved . The charges for Oial-A..Ride and Dial· A·Lift are minimal for. •hott distances and within the realm of a fixed income. lt Ls c.rtainl)' a time when we must be con<.'4?rntd about the cutboolu wtyc.h our • Lrtlt!r~ Jrom rtot:J(lr1 arc IL't'lcome. TIMI r1oh1 10 N>tttknBr 1 .. 11,.,. 10 IU JplllCt or t'IUninOlf llhtl •~ rl•rri•td t.1trer1 pf 300 u•nrd1 or leu wtll ~ fllln ptl f,,fft(I . Alf trtlrrlf miul •nch.t• ltQMfllrt cmd moiling oddrr., bt.r "°'""' mow IH u,.tltMld °" rt • (llJfl•I I/ •ulftt·11"I '"'"'" II opporriu /)p•tr11 u•ll '1111 lw (1Mhlt11t1d 1~111r1 m•JI ~ t1t1p~11'Wd 111 tHJ alHh1 .vomt 1tnd pltOflf! 1111mhi!r fl/ Ill"" ,.,, .. ,,..,,._,.., "'lillf t,, gtm /or ...,,., ---~~~;~..,; .......... medically needy. disabled and tlderly patients are experiern:ing However, perhaps it 1s also a time when we must recognize that the state and feder a l government can no longer assume the role oC family, friend and employer for the citizens of the United States. Perhaps we need to enco uragl• the philosophy that has prevailed in the SomronC' Caros service for the past 12 years and reach out to those in our community who nC'<'<l assistance. BETTY Mc:MICKEN. M.A. CCC SpeeC'h/Language Pathologist Local n ews To the Editor: Re: Lo<.'al news scene. Daily Pilot, June 22: A brave young lad y receives her· degree after being buried in the snow, a blind woman bel'Omes a masseuse and plans on running again al Edison High, and then we have George Van Dam and the GaJlaghers who arc so p<>tty that they can't even Hve next door to each other in peace. What a waste of <'nergy their story is. LIZ REINDERS Tribute earned To the Editon I strongly agree with your recent editorial stating the justification fo r r e naming th e Orange County P~rforming Arts Center after the family that h as· contribut.ed so mul·h· to its development. As you ao;tutely point out, the Segerstrom family has not only been a force for cultural development in our community but has also s pur re d economic growth and development that will benefit Orange C-0unty for years to come. • It would certAinly be a {itting tribute for a family that has dope so muoh. 1 laud your editorial eflor ts in that direction. HARRIETT M. WIEDER Supervisor, Second Oistr\ct Deserve cen sure action in the recem city-coune1!~ampa-ign in which Mr. Nakaoka and Mrs. SicoH inappropriately invoJved th~ [rvine School District. Mr. Nakaoka violated his position of trust when he fraudulently deceived the public by disguising a typical piece of campaign rhetoric as an official school district communication. Mrs. Sic:oli violated her position of trust by presumably writing and certainly signing this rhetoric which falsely pictured the role of city council members in school district affairs. Although a recall campaign would be the most appropriate form of censure available to the community. we former representatives of that community make this expression of censure on their behalf. We hope that this statement will serve as a message from the community that all future campaigns by elected trustees must be carried out ethically so as to preserve the integrity of our school district and its leaders. JUNE FOLEY FRED GAHM FRANK HURD SHARON SlRCELLO-TOJI Change the law To the Editor: ·~ What a shoc.k to a lot of people who now know that Hinckley is innocent because he. was insane at the time he shot President Reagan and Mr. Brady, McCarthy and Delahanty! , Does that mean Reagan will have to always wear a bullet proof vest and be in a bullet proof car whenever he goes anywhere? Whal about the rest of his body? And Nancy! Always i~ fear of the crazies out there wM will pull out a gun and shoot any official of importance. Does tha1 mean beingl rich the killers can get away with crime and violence, or is it our a~atem? It ia time we change that law. Wh.at a terrible miscarriage of jus(jcc! EMMA E. HYMAN I ------"'"""-.:;.... ___ _..-!......_....-...__... _ __,.._ __ _.. ___ .._ _____ .... ___ ...,__. ..... _ ..... .__---" ...... • . .. ( •1• 11111 I t t I I ti .. 1 I., I .I l i l ' t 1 Ii•. l l I 11\ N l 'I I I , , It J I y ,\ ' i I l It. N t I\ .'.' l t N I '. . NIJ hit-r.un aeath gQe~ Baclt to· court By STEVE MARBLE Of" .... Delly Not ..... lt was 10 mont~ ago that Newport Beach resident Donald · B. Warner was killed by a hit and run driver. Warner was 26, a California newromer. He was cross ng a street less than two blocks from his apartment when he was hit and left face down in the road. With assistance Crom witnesses, police tracked down the death car in less than 48 hours. They found it abandoned In a Whittier lhopplng cente , 1tlt windshield smashed and blood splattered on the h'bod. Arresung the driver proved to be harder even though police said {hey knew who lt was. Officers spent wee ks talking with the suspected driver's friends, parents and attorney. A 21-year-old man named James S. Gibbs, a resident of Orange, eventually was arrested. Following weeks of courtroom activity, Gillbs pleaded guilty to f•lony manslaughter and hlt and run charges. • Gibbs was sentenced to 210 daya •In county .iall, a sentence Dep u ty Oistrfct Attorney Michael Pow con~dered li1ht compared to the atate prilon tenn he had iiought. Dow thought that was the end of It. Warner's parents thought that was the end of it. That wasn't the end of it. More than six weeks after Gibbs was scheduled to begin serving his ,time, the case is headed blick to court. Olbbs, armed with a new an.omey, i. slated to go to court Friday and argue that hla guilty plea aa well aa the 210-day sentence be toeaed out. Aocordinl to court docwnenta. Gibbs' attorney -J a mes Merwin -aaid his client's fint attorney· failed to give him proper le1al· advice a nd that Gibbs pleaded guilty to thinp he shouldn't have. . Oi5trict Attorney Dow said if the plea is accepted. the case goes back to aquare one with a jury trial likely. Attomey Merwin could not be reached for comment. The turn of events has left Dow. Warner's pare nts and friends angry. Dow said It took weeks to build the case and that llOme witnesses have moved from the area . He said it may be lmpoaible to track some of them down. "He should have been grateful for his sentence," Dow said of Gibbs. "I think this was a state prison case all the way." Warner's father, a resu!ent of Maryland who haa sold his automobile dealership to pursue the case and reforms he believes are needed in hit-and-run laws, is more surprised than angry. He said he is a family and a church man and would have lmle difficulty forgiving the driver of the car that killed his son. He said all the driver h~ '\o do is ask. Liberian idoptee extended Balanced budget OK' d Brown cites need for economic recovery By STEVE MITCHELL Of the Deity Not at•" A San Juan Capistrano couple, whose adopted son faced deportation to his native Liberia next week, have won an e)Ctension of the deadline that will allow him to remain with his family eight more months. The Immigration and Naturalization Service this week extended the July 5 deadJine for Sam Willet to Feb. 1, 1983, after the 26-year-old man and h is father, Dave Willet, drove to Los Angeles to present a letter from Congressman Robert Badham. "It means Sam can stay i'n the United States at least until next year, unless there is any adverse action on Bad ham'!\ private bill," Dave Willet said in a telephone interview. ''We were really getting close to the line, and the family is really relieved," he said. Samuel, who was born in Llperia, was adopted by the Witlet.s more than a decade ago when the couple were working for the Peace Corps in that country. The adopted son spent seven years in Liberia and Kenya with the Willet family, then a two- year separation forced by the question of Sam's immigration when the Willets returned to the United States. -Th-e family was reunited nearly two years ago when Samuel obtained a one-year student visa. But the• U.S . government never officially recognized the adoption, saying Samuel was too old to be considered adopted nearly 11 years ago. Attempts by Badham t o introduce private bills '° keep Samuel in America failed, and the House Subcommittee on lmtnigration said it wpuld not re-hear a special bill authored by Bad ham. The extension will give the subcommittee more tim~ to r econsider Badham's lates t private bill on behalf of the Willets. Meanwhile, Judiciary · Committee C hairman Peter Rodino has sent a letter to Badham i ndi c ating the immigration subcommittee is . extremely busy with other immigration legislation, forcing Rodino to postpone consideration of the private bill. That should eliminate the po1aibility of adverse action on Badham's bill before the new February deadline, Willet said. Rodino suggested the family seek administrative relief by seeking refugee status for Sam. But Dave Willet said he will (See SAM'S STAY, Page AZ) COUNTY o.-, ..... "'9tll ~ LM P8'M SINKING FEELING -If you can't win the tug-of-war, you might as well enjoy the mud puddle, figured Vicki Hirota and Cliff McKinnon after the annual employee event Wednesday at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. • Outlook 'gloomy' for 3-day holiday That sunshine and blue skies aren't a myth, folks, but close to it. If you are expecting the same for the three-day Fourth of July holiday, don't hold your breath. lt appears more of the "gloom" Orange Coast residents have experienced for nearly three months is headed our way again. Wednesday a high-pressure system chased clouds that grayed Orange County most of June. May and April eastward, but another marine layer is hangirig just off the Orego n -and Was hington coasts and is expected 10 reach here Saturday, according to the Natio nal Weather Service. That means a drop of 1.000 f eet in the weather front producing low cloudsl late night and early mornings Saturday. Sunday and Monday, high cloudiness most of the daylight hours with a chance of some sunshine by late afternoons. Today da·wned clear as did Wednesday with mountains visible inland and no s mog forecast by the South Coast Air Quality Management Di.strict. The sudden weather contrast may have caught many by surprise but still sent thousands scurrying to the beaches where lifeguards reported the largest weekday crowds this year. NATION SACRAMENTO (AP) L The s~te begins a new fiscal year today with a tightly balanced $25.2 billion budge t of "u nprece dented austerity" finally approved after a five-day deadlock : Gov~Edmund Brown Jr. signed the budget and four related biUs for the 1982-83 fiscal year Wednesday. while warning that it would not stay balanced without a "strong economic recovery" this fall. . Brown held the signing ceremony after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Astronauts fix door on shuttle CAPE C ANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) -Columbia's commander, "watch i ng like a h awk," ~ a vexing problem with the shuttle's balky cargo doors today. cloaing and latching them ln a simulation of stei-that must precede entry on the Fourth of July. "They closed normally," said Ken Mattingly. He sounded relieved and so did Miasion Control. Flight direc t or Harold Draughon said that if Columbia tried to re-enter the atmosphere without the doors closed, the ship "could shake like a wheel well comjng off a hot performance airc raft. You g e t so much turbulence now that i~ would tear things apart." However , had the door problem persis ted, Mattingly would have taken a space walk to make repairs, Draughon said. The ship was orbiting smoothly; Mattingly and pilot Henry Har tstield did some -celestial sightseeing and c~ew calisthenics, test-fired jet thrusters, and televised an instructive "cook's tour" of the sh uttle cockpit. Columbia's port door failed to shut Wednesday after flight in the cold shadows of' space caused warping, either in the door itself or in the frame. Overnight, NASA sent Columbia into a barbecue roll to expoee the doors to the warmth of the sun. A similar fix succeeded when the problem cropped up on flight three, and as the shuttle paseed 186 mlles ·overhead at Cape Canaveral, ju st after dawn, Mattingly tried the shut-and- o~n exercise again. Operating from a remote control panel in the cabin, he needed only three minutes to do the job. ' Coast geari tor Fourth Lotsa people tink folks from Brook)yn tawk funny, bu t it ain't funny, it's wunnerful. Page A5. ,...1 Everything you want to know about the Fourth of July along the Orange CoMt can be found on Page BL TEL.EVISION ( • .. Challenger heads to-Edwards LANCASTER (AP) -Challenaer paraded 7 and ........ llatJ.nda today, ... enatne ip lnchinc away from ita Mllembly banpr ards Air Fon:e a... Su• ted banlc robber lillled LONO BEACH (AP) -An off·duty police 1erpmt ltandinl ln a· bmlk UM lhot and kilJed a 1u1p.c\ecl bank robber k>day and wa1 hlmlelf woUnd9d In the lhootaut, olflaln IUd. Probe OI 'N.r .,,,.~ ordeHa ,. Se~\e recessed the day before, released the \budget from the five-day hold imposed because of a dispute over $235 million for schools. The Democratic governor made no cuts in the budget, as approved by the Legislature, noting its "unprecedented austerity." The budget contains no ta.>< increases. He said the propooed spending is more than $200 million below the ex~ted spending for the fiscal year closing Wednesday, and $8 mHlion below the actual spending in 1980-8 l. "That (a two-year drop) has never happened any time in the history of Califorrua outside of the Depression," he said. But Brown said the budget is so tightly balanced, with a reserve of less than $500 million, that the Legislature will have to make further cuts in the next few months "if the national ec.'Onomy does not recover." The budget had been approved by both houses Friday. Both hous es also approved a companion bill Mondav. But Assembly Speaker WiUie- (See BUDGET, P age At) Newport OKs curbs on parking of RVs A law designed to curb owners of· recreational vehicles from taking free vacations on the streets of Newport Beach has been approved by City Council Jnemben, - Angry residents of Balboa Island started pushing for the ban nearly a year ago, cJaimlng 'owners of massive vehicles were turning narrow island streets into campgrounds. Several homeowners said they were frustrated because tourists in recreational vehicles spent their summer vacation parked in front of houses, leaving trash behind when they hit the road. City officials said research indicated there appears to be an influx of vacation goers who, because of hard economic times, prefe r staying on the beach streets to staying in motels . The law. which comes back next month for a final vote, bans any vehicle more than 90 inches wide from parking o n all residential streets in the city for more than 12 hours at a time. Large vans or other vehicleS used by handicapped pel'sons would be exempt from the law, which likely won't take effect until late summer. ;, S e v e r a 1 h o m e'o w n e r s complained that the 90 inch rule isn't tough enough.-· · "Ninety inches is a giant loophole -big enough 'or most campers to drive .th'l"ough," sugges ted homeowoer Stuart Williams. Council members reje<:ted a sugg estio n thQ.l fhe:wid th restriction be trimmed to 84 inches. The council also passed over a no tio n that the law contain restrictions on how taJI and how long the vehicles could be. Bank clerk helps in forgery arrest A man who authorities allege forged more than $100,000 in cashiers' checks. entertained a friend with a whirlwind trip to F1orida and pumped thousands of dollars into his personal bank accounts today is in the less glamorous confines of Orange County Jail. And Orange County Sheriff's ~partment investigators are crediting a teller at an El Toro branch of Southwest Bank for preventing what they claim could have been a major cash 1~ to a Huotington Beach savings and loan institution. Cedric H. Wasano. 24, of El INDEX A4 B2 83-~ A5 B2 a.10 ~ ~ C4 · AlO 87~ B2 SPORTS Toro. was arrested on suspicion of forgery Wednesday after the teller. Linda Howe. notiried s upe ri o r s when Wasano attempted to cash a $10,000 check drawn on t he &:ling_er Avenue branch of Coast Feder.ti Savings and Loan. ' Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Wasano, a Coast Federal employee. is believed to have forged 35 "association," or ctishiers' checks. with .t total value of more than $100,000. Thirty-three of the checks have heen accounted for while two <See CHECK, Page A%) Ann Landers B2 M ovies 8 7-8 Mu\ual Funds B4 National New. A3 Public Noticee B4,C4,C6 · SporU Cl-3 Sr.Steinc:rohn B2 Stock Markets m Televilion 86 'lbeeten B7-8 W•tmr M W«lllNewa A3 •w\••·•'"' I· I OIN ( Oranee Clout OAlLV ftlLOTITtwrlday, July 1. ... ._ .............. ""!'l!"'!~~----~lmll!"'------------------- SAM'S STAV EXT.ENDED~ • • so Ions have to con1ult Santa An• attorney Jim l:';annon before purswnc that c:oune. Cannon a1reed to hel~ the Willet family at no cmt when he heard of Sam's pllght. ; Meanwhile, Sam has given notice to his employent at a San Juan Capistrano fast food restaurant becauae he feared he would be deported next Tuesday. "I. don't know If thev'll give hlm his job back or noi," Dave WUlet ..Id. He aaid the new ext.enalon will enable Sam to take more bulin- and acoountJng cluaes In the fall at Saddleback College In M!Jsion Viejo. 11~he problem i1, sl!Jl! no longw..has a student visa, _,...,11 have to pay the $3,000 or ao foreign student fee," Willet said. But the eight month extension is welcome, he said. Superintendent John Nicoll accUlld the Letillatwe today of "a btgh de1ree of lrreaponalbillty" followlna. .,......., Wedneeday of a $25.2 billion atate budget that caU. for no new money for 1Chool8. The Newport:Meaa Unlfied School Dlatrk t leader aald it appears the achoo! d l1trlct'1 tentative $48.5 million budget approved by trust.eel lut week will stdd. CHECK FORGERIES ... The state budiet had been approved by both houaea laat Friday, but was held up ln the Aasembly where lawmakers were fighting to give schooll $235 million that may be left over in the current year's budget. remain under investigation, ttah said. · Hart said· Wasano left Coast Federal with the checks Monday evening. Later that night._ Hart said, Wasano and an unidentified companion flew to Miami. They returned Tuesday. Hart said Wasano showed up at Southwest Bank's El Toro bran c h W e dn esd ay and attempted to negotiate a $10,000 check bf' placing pa rt of the amou~t in a savin~ account and taklng the remainder in cash. It was at that point that the telle r became suspicious and notified superiors, who in tum called Coast Federal. Officials at the savings and loan confirmed the check was among 3~ missing. Subsequent investigation, Hart said, showed "unexplained large increas~es in several o f Mr. Waaano's accounts." Wasano currently is being held on $150,000 bail. The issue die d after the Asse mbly agreed to seftd the budget to the governor without mention of the surplus school fu nds. The matter will be discuased again Aug. 2 when both houses return from 1ummer recess. Paralyzed Irvine girl wins $1.6 million "I'll believe that when I see it.'' said Nicoll, regarding the likelikhood of any additional funding. ''I don't believe they'll face up to anything mearilngful until after November." Nicoll said it appears the district will receive the same funding Crom the state as last year, which is what the tentative local school budget was based on. In past years a two percent increase was customary. Sixteen-year-old Suzy Gilstrap of Irvine has won a $1.6 million settlement from L os Angeles County in connection with a 1977 acc id e nt that l eft h e r wheelchair-bound. The Los Ange les County Board of Supervisors agreed to Huge cocaine ring cracked LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two banks cooperating with rules for reporting huge cash deposits helped federal authorities crack a massive cocaine smuggling ring that did. business on both roasts worth more than $1 million a week, Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Perry said. Authorities seized 87 pound.a of Colombian cocaine with a street value of at least $10 million, plus nearly $1 million in cash and Miami bank accounts. Perry said a t leas t $25 milli o n was laundered through the Los Angeles banks. Coastal Light variable wind& beComing .-t to IOU1tiw.t 10 10 15 k/'lota eflernoon and eve ning SouthwHt 1wall1 1 to 3 ffft. Mottly tunny allernoon. Aahevt!M Allen le A11an1C Cly Austin s.ltimor• 8lllings Binnlnghm Blsmerdt 8olM Botton Brownsvtle 8uffalo Burtlng1on the settlement Tuesday, ending a four-year legal process Lor the recovery of damages. The Irvine High School student. meanwhil~. has become a n occasio nal actr ess o n television. • She was injured on a school field trip to the Los Angeles County Arboretum in Arcadia when a section of a eucalyptus tree fell on her. It damaged her spine and caused her to remain ir the h ospital more than three months. , Undaunted by a life in a wheelchair, she began learning how to play tennis and, through a contact with teache r Brad ?arks, was recruited for a role in the TV movie "Skyward." She said in an interview with the Daily Pilot in December that adapting to her injury wasn't as bad u it might have been, thanks to her family. ''It took a lot of strength on my part and my family's part to get back into the routine," she said. "But I don't think I went through any depress1on or denial period because of all the support my family gave to me." 86 65 66 66 .29 78 60 10 94 73 04 63 66 n 62 90 66 01 74 51 eo 58 83 59 93 112 .18 72 51 73 46 1 The district's budget is about five percent lower than last year's and, with no new money from the state. Nicoll said the "likelihood of any meaningful pay raises is extremely slight." The d istrict's 850 teachers have requested that the district deliver a sign e d contract by the beginning of the school year. * * * From page A 1 BUDGET. • • Brown· held up passage of both bills b ecause the Assembly w a nted to give schools $235 million that may be left over in the current year's budget. The Senate a~tly in.si.sted that any left-over money should go into the reserve in case the economy worsens. and recessed Tuesday until Aug. 2 .• That left the ASRmbly with the choice of either giving in to the upper house and releasing the budget, or fighting and leaving the s tate without spending authori.z.ation when the fiscal year began today. U.S. Summary =~~ 86 62 92 76 n 61 .14 89 611 ThuMerltonn1, high wind• and Chetttta NC heavy rain• apread acro11 the ~ .authem and centtal plelr'9 today, ~.,_,,... 1trlklng part• of Nebruka. = Wyoming, KanlH. Tenn•-· ClmtJ6a SC T-. and tha Q9nlT9I CMt Coett Columbus ''-ri:' ~ and lhunderatom11 Oal·Ft Wth gradually were ebbing. They g:',:; P••llled mainly over northern Dea Molnel Ml11l11l ppl and northern Oetrolt ~.with thunderatonne over Duluth the otntrel high p6tlna. High w•IWf from he•YJ' reln1 ~:;o tiv.tened to ftood -.,.. of Flagltan Concordia. Kan .. "'*• _..,..<Meat Fiiia P11ec! ~ to protect • motllla H8'1fo<d ,_court and~~. Helena °""*"' elao warned of PC)llllbla HonolulU lloodlng In a-Cr• Cenyon Houlton -lcfllho SpringS, Colo., about lndNPfl• 45 m11ea -' of Denvtr. Some hcl<ln MS ,_,.. ... tMICUe'9d 0¥Wnlght. J.otanvlle WlcNlly tcattered .._.. and City thunder1howar1 fall ovar 1h• ~Vegee Not1h .... """ .... .,_..and Uttle Rodi :::="U.:1c~. eloftg Loulavtlla Ski.a -· deW -much of ~ the r eat 01 111 • nation ~ Tamperetlna atound the netlon .,.,_ ~ t.,,ged ll'om 44 In Mllwlluk .. Metquette and a.ult Ste. Matle, ~ Mlcfl .. to a.t In Ptloenlx. ML ..._, Orteena ·I • ..._,Yortl Caliiorn1a ~ The · Ne11o1W1 W.... 1eMce Olda City Pf9dlcta _,.,_ rouncl Of lllgM OINN end n1ornlng cloudln•t• end Ortando afternoon 1un1flln• fl'rlday. ~ Notlt HlafW ..... ~ ... to ::::- 30 """" In not1llem ~Md Ptland. lli1e ~:;. 9=tr.:r""' Ptland: er. IN r'llld 701 In LOI to e Prcwldanoa maximum of II at HGfl... =gh '*-' .. and fl '"Ee In ... flllll '°' ... ... ~ RjNCllld~ .... -.... ...tld .,,. 1191.-1 t1 .... 109 ....... 75 58 70 46 eo 54 72 49 92 72 74 49 94 72 75 53 89 61 .28 71 63 91 74 49 81 41 95 65 85 52 71 35 78 59 8 1 55 M 60 .15 89 76 .04 92 eo 77 53 91 71 .27 92 75 .15 83 86 .78 83 64 93 70 79 51 90 ee 95 75 1.00 87 eo 10 51 78 55 91 t5 .06 to 67 .31 II 12 tO 10 f.'2 , .. t4 .. 87 eo .90 .. 75 78 10 102 74. 15 " n 11 ~" " 51 "t7 ... .. 152 .10 ft ... 11 '4111ot'al w ...... , s.r..c. \OA.& l. S Oepl ol C~,,..,ce Front1: Coo .,. Warm w.. Sall I.eke S11t1 Antonio S..1111 Shreveport Sloua Falll SI LOUla SIP-Tampa SI Ste M.arla Spok-s~ Topeke Tuct0n TulN Wuhlngtn Wlehlla 9t 59 09 91 69 37 63 55 92 89 77 !19 .01 81 61 " 79 61 37 79 63 74 51 IA 70 39 ff 65 94 76 85 62 92 71 CAUFOIMA 8akertflald 79 86 . 22 Blythe 92 Eur•• 81 54 Fr~ 67 57 .12 t.ancaater 89 67 Loe AngNa 73 Maryavllle 78 Monterey et ........ 91 ()aklaftd 63 51 Paeo AOb1ae 78 50 ... """ 71 82 .01 Aadwood City .. N ....,_to 70 57 .a..... 13 53 San DllgO 73 83 8#1 Ft..-00 80 54 ..,,...... 11 63 ..,,. • ....,.. 71 Stodtton 10 Thet!MI 90 == : =~ llltlOO 17 44 ..... ....~ .... ~~------------~~~~~~~ ..:::-~~=: ,,.._ °"' fNlft ,_.. c. ..... n to Ian N ...... lllaftd. Noffflwelt ....................... ........ '° ..... ... a.. ........... ....... :.:-::..:1 .. ,..,..... .......... ................ .,._ II """e , .• ......... Tempenilg;.. · ·an· • ca1anna 72 Leite Arrowt!Ud ee Long 8MCt\ 74 Monrovia 79 Mt. Wilton 52 !MwpOrt 8aectl 68 On1erlo 7• Palm Springe 17 Peeadene 73 San Bernatdlno 74 Extended weather 56 41 . 07 60 59 38 60 57 63 57 51 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -Coutal ., ... ; Low clouds In the night and morning hour• otflerwlaa fltlf. Hlgha rlflglng rrom ,_ 70 al the beactl8I to IOw eoa Inland v--. Lowe ea to ea. Mountain .,_.. '"" wtltl ....... high clouda. Ol*Y .....,,, ...... ,, to 15 mpfl lll*ftooft llOtn. Aeaort .......... to 71. lowt 48 to N. SERVICE CITED -Robert Mccurdy is the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce's Commodore of the Year. McCurdy honored in Newport Newport Beach reaadent Robert McCurdy, known widely in buaine11 and comQ1unity aervice circles, h.u been given the Commodore of the Year Award by the Ne~ Harbor Area Chamber o( Commerce. A fonner chamber president himself, McCurdy was honored at ceremonies last Friday at the Marriott Hotel. The ~ward is annually given by the Commodore's Club, an a rm of the chamber• to an individual who best exemplifies fellowship, hard work, good ,humor and dedication to the club. McCurdy, a native of Pasadena and a gi-aduate of Pacific Coast College and the University of Washington, fit the bill. During his 25 years in Newport, McCurdy haa served as president of the local chamber, the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, the Orange County Boy Scout.a Council, the 552 Club of Hoag Hosp~tal, the Orange Cout Aaociatlon, the National Safety Council and Sales and Mark.eUng Executives of Orange County. And that's just a PArtiaJ list. He'• currently president of Padrlnoa, the men's support group of Children's Hoepital of Oranse County. • McCurdy, who received Hoag Hospital's Siracus Award t~is year. a a member of the Irvine Coast CoU,ntry Club and the Balboa Bay Club. On the business side of things. he is a business development o ff icer with the Bank of Newport, a post he took after serving as president of Newport Marine Supply Co. Madras i at. Mesa libra'ry The Coeta Mesa Library la ho1tlng a number of free fllm1, storytlmea and J>ro1rams for school age children this aummer. Children between 3 and ~ years old are invited to the aummer 1torytimes every • Tue.day at 10 a.m. at the.- library, 1855 Park Ave., Costa •A three· week film teries· ahowing a Christian view of dating, loving and marriage will be screened beginning Friday at the Harbor Christian Fellowship In Costa Mesa. The three movies by lecturer Josb McDowell will I County ease ... Mesa. FUma will be ahown every Wednesday at l p.m. for children of all .,es and · special 1ummer programa will be offered each Wednetday at 10 a .m. for all 1chool •ie children. · For more Information about any o f the ac t ivit ies call 646-8845. be shown Friday nights at 'I p.m. al the church at 740 W. Wilaon Street. "Givers. Takers and Other Kinda of Lover.-· will be shown July 2..,!tl'he Secret of Loving" will be aired July 9 and "Maximum Dating" will be screened July 16. Challenge to open ·bearings rejected By DAVID ltUTZMANN Of ltM Deltr ,... ...... An Orange Co.unty defense attorney's challenge of a new state law expanding on the public's r i ght to attend preliminary hearings in criminal Fifth of July the big day in Newport In Newport Beach, the Fourth of July has been transformed into the Fifth of Julv. City leaders have agreed to rewrite history slightly by celebrating Independence Day on July 5, abandoning the day the njatlon has been doing its celebrating on for the last 206 yean. The reaaon for the change is becauae the Fourth of July falla on Sunday. Organizen of the annual festivities in Newport's Marinen Park feel people should be in church 'that day. ,. . So, July 5 at 9:45 a.m. the festivities begin with a bike parade through · Mariners Park. The celebration runs until l p.m. with games, a magic show and a barbecue lunch. The Mariner a Park celebration, which started years ago as little more than an overgrown block party, now is recognized as the city's official Independence Day salute. The park is located at the comer of Dover Drive and Irvine Avenue. cases has been rejected by a ~late appeals court. The resull is that a preliminary hearing in Central Orange County Municipal Court for two men charged with the slaying of a Mission Viejo woman will proceed Friday with both public a nd press allowed in as spectators. The 4th District Court of Appeal upheld -witho ut comment -the constitutionality of the open hearing law which took effec.:t in March. Previou sly, Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab and Central Murucipal Court Judge Samuel Taylor, who is presiding over the preliminary hearing, ruled in favor of open proceedings. Challenging the law, which took e ffect as an urge n cy measure on March 1, was defense attorney Ronald Brower , who re presents murde r defendant -Thomas Thompson. 27, o f Orange. Brower indicated Wednesday he planned no further appeals. . Both Thompson and co- defendant David William Leitch, 22, of 4guna Beach, are charged with murder ip the stabbing • death of Ginger Fleischli. Miss Fleischli's body was found in a shallow grave in east Irvine last September.· •· 1$rower had argued that his client's right to a fair trial -if • he was bound over o n the charges -would be seriously jeopardized if press coverage of the preliminary hearing was allowed. Leitch 's a ttorney, Ro n a ld Kreber. did not ohallenge the new law. . . . . A well-known fabric made of hand-loomed cotton. Storekeeper Todd Latham . ~ • • • • • I Is wearing our true Madras shorts In bright colors, with pleated front and belt loops. A store fhst offers fine traditional sportswear for men, women and boys. • • . • I • • • I· -- Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, July 1. 1aea Revised pltin raises question of city need Li.ut week of flciala for Amel Development Co. walked into Coeta Mesa City Hall with a plan to build condominiums and off ices o'n 50 acres neat' South Coast Plaza. The plan calls for a good d~ more commercial development than anyone had expected. In fact, 43 of the ~ rezoned by a voter initiative that wu later declared invalid are proposed to be filled wlt}l low-and. mid-rise offices. This is quite a change from the original Amel plan that called for construction of 537 apartments and 127 homes on the property. Neighboring homeowne rs, objecting to this density, promulgated a successful initiative to rezone the property for single- family dwellings only. The initiative later was declared invalid by the 4th District Court of Appeals, clearing the way for the original plan. Now Amel wants to use 43 of t h e 50 acres for commercial development, leaving only seven acres for residential use. In view of the need for housing in the city and the .number of commercial offices awaiting tenants, the new plan raises some questions. Under current zoning laws, the seven acres left after ' commercial developm~nt could 'Co nta in as.many as 2 1 0 condominiums. In the past, city omcials have frown e .d o r\ comm er ci a 1 development on the w st slde of Bear Street. But that alone should nQt be a guideline 'for planning commiS$10ners who will took at the plans in October, especially considering the proximity of South Coast Plaza. But does the city really need another 43 acres of commercial ·development when it can't meet the existing housing needs of those working in the area? This must be among the considerations when the plan is examined . An envir onmen tal report will be done in August. Also of concern will be the reaction of nearby homeowners w!lose opposition to the earlier pla n to build 537 apartments r esulted in the initiative to rezone the property. Given cu rrent financial constraints, it is understandable that the developer may want to lean away from residential development, but the proposed heavy tilt toward commercial u~ might not be in the best interest o( the city. It Mesa • lS a concern The l o ng -de lay ed amphitheater at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa is on again. Backe rs of the 15,000-seat theater signed a construction contrac.t last week. The Orange County fair board has waited all year for construction to begin on the Nederlander Organization's $10 million facility. Originally, it was to open in May, in plenty of time for this year's Orange County Fair. It probably would be nice to have a theater in the city that will bring recognition and more sal~ tax , but there are ot h er considerations -like new traffic and noise problems for some Costa Mesa residents. 'l;'he Irvine Meadows amphitheater in Irvine is located near a major freeway and its closest neighbors are some giraffes and rhinos at the nearby Lion Country Safari. They probably don't growl too much about noise and don't have to bother fighting heavy traffic since they generally stay home. ' But Costa Mesa residents will have to battle local traffic at least as heavy as that generated by the weekend swap meet at the fair grounds and any noise Crom the theater won't have to travel far to reach nearby homes. Irvine M eadows has even been hit by noise complaints from people living several miles away. And just last week a concert at that amphitheat.er ended in the stabbing of two people. along with drug arrests. A lawsuit between the city of Costa Mesa and the fair board regarding plans for the project was settfed ou t of court, the board contending it is not answerable to the city because the fairgrounds are state property. That is all very weU. But the fact is the facihty will be located right in the middle of a heavily populated area and there is little doubt that at least part of the burden of traffic a'nd c r owd control will fall on the city police department just across the street. Th e city fathers and especially the fair board will be well advised to keep all this in mind as plans proceed. And to decide in advance who will be responsible for coping with any problems that do arise. '.l'he fair board especially.must rea.li7.e it is n ot operating in a vacuum and must take th e neighbors into consideration. Boosters to the rescue High school football players and fans in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District have had to get along for years with dim lights at Davidson Field, the district stadium at Harbor High. The district hasn't been able to justify spending money o n lights while it was being forced to lay off teachers and trim academic programs. But the boosters clubs at the district's four high schools came up with a better idea. • They decided to raise most of the money themselves and ask the district to chip in only one-fiflh of the cost of new lights. In July there will be tests of the proposed n ew lighting system. If the lights work well, everyone has agreed to split the purchase price of $20,736 n ext year. The boosters clubs' efforts to take the initiative in this project arc to be applauded. Opini~s e')(pressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex pressed on tnis page are those ot their autnors and artist!>. Reaoer c.omm ent is 1nv11 ed. Address The Dally Pilot. PO Box IS60, Costa M esa. C.A 9262b Phone (114) 642·4321 . L.M. Boyd/ Inflation note Inflation zoomed ao awlftly in Germany during 1923 that dlnen in re.tauranta there choee to pay their checks aa 9000 aa they ordered rather than after they ate. 'they couldn't be sure the price wou.Jdn't 80 up during dinner. Q. Doesn't France have th; most ala>boUsm? A. Next to Chile, It does. Per captta. BiC wine prod.ucen. both, . cUent. It flnds~·o s elsewhere for employees the com y wants to fire. Lot of sizable f have set up such lef"Vi<:es. To cut down on the hassles 98Ute<i by the disgruntled who com- plain to unions and federal bureaus. Do you h4M!d such notices as "Keeo Off the Gr .. " and ''No Smoking?i' Not all do. In UNI ladie1 loo of 1 pub ln London la a amaahed mirror. Next to It la an lnvltatlonel algn: "The ~t thanks you ln eclvance tot not bc-eak1na thit m1m>r .'' • • .. l . \ 1 1 \ 11'11\ ~ I ·~ ,, \ .'. ' ii •I J .. ,, I II 11 '• .. ·: I •• . . .. New threat to pensionei-s l WASHINGTON -While corporate fat.cats are allowed to get away with cost overruns and tax write·offs, President Reagan's people have been going after the widow's mite with all the ferocity of Dickensian d<'bt collectors. The unfortunate old people are lucky that debtors' prisons have been abolished. Here's what's happening: THE SOCIAL SECURITY Admin- istration bas been sending out nol1ces to pensioners threaterung to cut off their monthly benefit checks unJess they repay immediately the sums they were overpaid in recent years in Supplement.al Security Income. I reported a few weeks ago that thC' Social &-curity Admmistration is trying to coerce pensioners into letting the agency snoop through their income-tax records. Unless they s1gn a waiver of the privacy that every taxpayer l5 entitled to, the pensioner s are told, their supplemental income checks will be cut off. This is a bluff. and a cruel one. The agency has no legal right to follow through on its threat. and it knows it. Indeed a federal juage ordered Social Security Administration officials to cease badgering beneficiaries until the legality of their actions could be settled in court. Now the Social Security bureaucrats are using the same tactics in their zeal to squeeze every last penny out of th.e poor, the sick and the elderly. . The first notification is relatively mild . Though it does say, "Please refund the $---immed1audy." st gives the pens1oner u brt·ak 1f hl· can't pay the whole amount ut once. "for you·r <:onvenicnc1'. we can w i t h h o I d t h e b a I a n ct• cH yo u r overpayment from your Social Security benefit," the letter st.ates. A form ts mcludc.'<i at the bottom of the pa~e. Q -Jl-CK-AN-0-fR-SO-N -~ stating: "For my convenience, please withhold my full Social Security benefit each month uniil my supplemental security income overpayment of is fully recovered." If the pensioner doesn't sign away the Social Security checks -often the onJy inc.'Ome he has ....:.. a foUowup letter arrives. This one gets really ugly. "If we do not hear from you (m 16 days) we will be forc.-ed to suspend payment of your Social Security Checks." . This threat is probably illegal. By law. Social Security checks arc• supposed to be immune from "attachment or assignrpent." The National Senior Citizens L,aw Center is planning to take the agency to court over 1t this week. In fact, it appears that the Social Security bureaucrats themselves have doubts about the legality o f their strongarm methods. My associate Lucette Lagnado was told that the • threatening letter now reads ''may be ~ ... fort'ed'' instead of "will be forced." And in its original 1983 budget l request, the agency specifically asked for a ''proposed change" that would allow it to "recover overpayments to individuals Crom available Social Security benefits." Obviously, if it already has this authority, there would be no need to ask Congress for it again. FOOTNOTE: An agency spokesman lried to disassociate W ashington headquarters from the second Jetter, • insisting that such bullying tactics were • no t administration policy but an unauthorized bat of zealousness by a regional offic.-e. He stuck by the first letter, however. and saw nothing wrong m trying to trick terrified pensioners into signing away what. an many cases, is thetr only source of income. Contrast this with the Reagan adm111istration's casual attitude toward defense contractors, big oil companies and other business buccaneers. The Renegotiation Board, which used to collect overpayments from defense contracts, has been allowed to die. The Inte rior Department trusts the oil companies to report how much oil they pump on federal wells, despite evidence that the oilmen have been robbing Uncle Sam blind under the honor system. V oluhteer program sets an example To the &iit.or: 1 congratulate Jan O. Vandersloot. M.O .. on the timely comments regarding Medi-Cal cutbacks. The Medi-Cal Bill. AB 3480. which will eliminate emergency medical transportation certainly 1s of grave consequence to many needy patients. I feel 1t is important however. to look' at the alternatives which are available to Medi-Cal patients in Orange County. It has l:>«:ome a sign of the times that when MAILBOX individuals have difficulty with transportation and/or medical needs, the standard answer has become, "contact your caseworker" rather than contact our family. friends. neighbors or local volunteer organization which could provide help. The Medi-Cal program has been burdened with an·epting financial r esp on s i b ti it i c.s w h ich co u Id b e eliminated through the use of available services in the county area and through development of additional volunteer services. The spirit of volunteerism which the current administration suggest.$ the private sector embrace has been in existence in many facilities throughout Orange County for years. A UNIQUE PROGRAM exists at Western Medical Center. The Someone Car~ program is made up of volunteers from the community. They transport patients to a nd from outpatie nt appointments at the hospital. Someone Cares Lransport.i 60 to 75 cases per week and has been doing so for the past 12 years. There is no charge for this service and it ls staffed totally by volunteers. This o uts tanding program n ever suffered even during the price increases in gaaollne. The volunteers are dedicated and caring people -the goOd neighbors we all need. We have in the county Dial-A-J\\de, Dial-A-Lift, Magic Carpet and others which are able to lranaport handicapped ~tients -but there ill a fee lnvolved. The charges for Dial-A·Rlde and OiAl- A-Llft are mln!mal for ahort dittarlCC!S and within the realm of • taxed lncom . h la certainly a tiJM wh n .we must be • L.etltr& lrom rrothr1 ort wrltom1 Tilt' right to rondt•ni,. lttttra to flt tpMe or f'/1mlMlt titwt+11 rt'lt'rtlf'd lAtftr• of 100 ll'Mdl ,,, "" IL'IU ,,, ~"' ,,,,~, Ah lt111r1 """'' *'""' ""'°'.,,.. Md mollmt n.tfdr1111 but MmH m411 bf 11.tUMnl Oft " qti,.t 1/ 1111J1tl,ftl ''°'°" Ir 11ppor'1ll T'i>f!I r11 u•ll IMll ~ l*blllllld IAfltrl "'41f llt • htlrpltcW'i/ fll ..,..., 1Ytlffl• Giid ,,., '""",,..;Pl l#w c·oltl1'tltlfor "'"ff hi ftWll /tr ,,,.,..,,,. lllf!Jtl• concerned about the cutbacks which our medically needy, di.sabled and dderly patients .are experiencing However. perhaps 1t is also a time whl•n we must recognize that the state and fc·dcral government can no longer assume the role of family. fri~nd and employer for the citizens of the Unitt'<i States Perhaps we need to encourage thl' philosophy that has prevailed in the Someom• Cares service for the past I 2 years and reach out to those in our community who need assistanre. B£TTY McMICKEN. 1\1,.A . CCC Speech/Language Pathologtst Local new To the Editor: Re: Local news scene, Daily Pilot., June 22: A brave young lady receives her degree after being buril'd in the snow, a blind woman becomes a masseuse and plans on running again al F,dison High, and then we have Grorge Van Dam and the Gallaghers who are so petty that they can't even live next door to each other in peace. What a wast.e of energy their story is. LIZ REINDERS TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Change the law To the Editor: What a shock to a lot of people who now know tha\ Hinckley is lnnocent because he was insane at the time he shot President Reagan and Mr. Brady. McCarthy and Delahanty! Does that mean Reagan will have to always wear a bullet proof vest and be in a bullet ~roof car whenever he goes anywhere. What about the rest of his body! And Nancy! Always in fear of the crazies out there who will pull out a gun and shoot any official of imponance. Does that mean being rich the killers can get away with crime and violence, or la It our ayl14ml? It ii time we change that law. What a terriblo miacarriacti of jus~! EMMA E. HYMAN t'Onfidence m our motives and planning to approve a permit. We also appreciate the ~fforts of the Newport Beach Police Department and we thank them for working with us and doing an excellent JOb. And finally. we're grateful to the citizens of West Newport for their open attitude and their willingness to have this event in their neighborhood. VERONICA YOUNG DENISE A VILA GREG TAYLOR DENISE TAYLOR Tribute earned To the Editor: 1 strongly agree with your recent editorial stating the justification for renaming the Orange Cou nt y Performing Arts Center aft.er the family that has contributed so much to its development. As you astutely point out, the Segerstrom family has not only been a force for cultural development in our commun ity but has also spurr ed economic growth and development that will benefit Orange County for years to come. It would certainly be a fitting tribute for a family that has dope so much. I laud your editorial efforts in that direction. HARRIETT M. WIEDER Supervisor, Second District , ' Picture the reverse To the F.ciitor: It is appropriate that in thls time of Middle East turmoil, a few sentences be recorded to inc r ease American understanding o{ what Is happening. First: Suppose the situation we-e reversed, with the PLO surrounding Te) A vlv? What mercy would be asked, or• expected? And beyond that, would it not. based on our own American hialory, be deemed better to die in battle, rather than in a chamber filled with gu? ' GIX>RGE LEWIS J t I • : • • • • • • • : l J. 0 Electronic technology relea~es location reStraints Pl~~~~~ NEW YORlt -Tht 11Ucon chip It an ntraotdlnary &h&q. taMI Jam11 Chnauan. A dec6de from now, even bifon, it roulcl mean that horM buyen m&aht UM t .. of lhelr paycheck to finance thelr houlll. IEBlllYll Ouittl.an la an economilt, and becauH ht la the chief economlat of the U.S. IAaaue of Savln11 A.11oclatlon1 , hla apedalty la houa1"41, an.,... \hat haa producied lt.1 aha.re ot dllmal newa. But th1I II 1ood news. Such a development. Mya • ,..port from the leque, whole memben are heavily involved ln home flnanctna. "could ... re<IUiee ~ C01t1 and lrnprove the quallty of Ufe tor thoee famUtee who now muat choc:.e between career opportunJUee and locational preferencet.'' "Electronic technoloay (much ot ll bated on 1lllcon chipa) may extend the r~ of cholce for many famillet to amall cities and even rural *1'eU," he aaid, "without the aacrifice of The opportunit~1 likely to be there. aaY• Chriatian, because o e volullon of Industry. The knowledge, or Inf tlon, industry 11 now o growlng force. Manufacturing might become a lesser one. · employment opportunity." Manufacturing, of courae, wu tied t o metropolitan areas, and such areas generally were dependent upon transportation -rivers and oc.-eona at fi rst, and railroads. superhighways and airport& more recently. . Final Oceanfront Lots f'rivclle San Clemente community with private beach and pnv<1te swim <1nd tennis club. ll7/s% Financing Act now. (714) 498-2830 (213) 277-9470 1·········p[A.y···········1 ~ 111te11,,· i . . ~ THE MINI-QUIZ ! . . i WHO ... WHAT... : : ... WHEN ..• WHERE : ! A bll of ! : Contempor•ry Hl1tory : ! o,,,~ ,.,.,,, ,,,d~, 2.-30 p.m : ~ ~--~ . . • C>-C-hl"'°""•--•Jll_IW_ a . . ......... -.... '-'" . ................................. : Ill ~lic's Cash Control Account High Market Rates ~000 ~ lnsuran<E Here's • cuh mmwgement account thllt puts you In completa cormoL Ready cash when you need l. (No need to .. Lock yourwetf In" for • long period.) With a deposit of as little as $5,000. you can eam ttie high interest rates of a 6-month $10.000 or 91-day $7,500 Money Market Certificate. Unlike Money Marl(et Funds, whose interest rates may change daily. your Htablished Cash Control rate is guaranteed for the full term. For ready-access to your account. you simpfy write checks (minimum $5()() each) -avoiding the penalty for earty withdrawal. And your funds go on earning at their established rate. • Minimum Investment S5.000. • "'6 -month or 91 -day Investment period. • Rate gull'Mteed tor ful term. • Free checks. No tnnuction charges. 'We tldvance 8f'Y fundl nttded to quellfy for the high money nw1cet '*'-Che<:kt Wltkn, Of ~ to mttt I.he minimum. 1re clwged egeW\tt )IOI# line cl credit. which Is $1,000 !eta thin )'IX'~ belen«. Md )'OU pey inter~ at just 1 "-more thin )IOI# (:uh Control Rae. II ICCount Is closed befott !Ntuftly. thefe II • penlllty. Your MVlnfS ln.nd to • t00.000 REPUBLiC ~~!?.~~}.'L SAVIN~S j l'§fl(;j I MrnA MA 17th St. West cl Newpo11 Freewey (714) 541·5286 ~ 202 Anaheim ~z.a. 500 N. Euclid St. (714) 956-8290 LAO<lrtA POGal!L 30212 Crown Valley P8r1twly (714) 4~ WOTN'Sla 134 Watmlnster Mel/Bdte £, s.n Oie90 Fwy. (714) 994-5347 H.,.SOIF!c~ Al.TADUIA 2246N LAUA~ (21)) 791·1281/681·6611 llLIAOCNA . ANAll(ll'I . AllCAOIA. SUR8AN ... • CLAllE~1 . CLA~T HloGH'TS ·HACIENDA HEIGHTS· lAOOl'IA NICUEl LOS ANGELES . ""'VI SPlllMGS. ""'SA0£1t.11 . PICO 111\IEIA • SAl'(TA ANA· THOUSl\t'IO OAKS · lllESTl'UNSTER. WOOOlAl'IO HIU.S PICTmOUa..-.. NAME ITAnMENT The tollOwlng penona -Oolng ooslneas at: PEACH TREE. 444·8 No Newport BJ;,levard, Newport Beach. Calltomla 928e0 WARREN DEVELOPMENT. a Calllornle corporation 444·8 No. Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach, Calllornla 92eeo Tiiis t>Y!llnen la cOnducted by a g«Wal pat1nertllip. Kenneth D. Watff". Partner This statement wu flied with IM County Clertl of Orange County on June 8. 1~2. a.-C>Mcea WYlllNf, IAUT'Dft. ROTHMAN. KUCHti. & aLNRT .,.,.._....,...,.... ......... .,..c ........... I ::.~~om.. ~9-tl,C.....--1'190977 Publlahed Orange Co11t Dally I Pilot. June 10, 17, 24. July 1, 1982 255~82 Nlt.IC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTICE F1CTTT10UI .,._.. F'ICTTTIOUI 9UllMEll NAm STAft•NT NAtK STA"MENT The lollow\no per.ans ate doing ,,.. lollowlng '*''°"' ••e doing ~ .. : buslMNH. M ISSION VIEJO S W IM SUSAN M. COX and GERALD RACQUET CLUB. 28221 Tierra LEE COX. doing t>ualneu u Clrcle, Minion Viejo. Calllornla RELIABLE PILOT CAR SERI/ICE, 92891 26592 OolorON. MIUlon Vieto. CA SWIM & RACQUET CLUB. a 92691. Celif0<nle COfl)Ofatlon, 28221 Tierra S US A N M C 0 X , 2 6 5 9 2 Circle. Mlstlon \/lejo, Calllornla OolofON. Mialon Viejo, CA 92691 92891 GERALD LEE COX. 28692 ThiS ~ 19 conduc:ted by a OolofON. Ml9alon \/lejo, CA 92691 corporation. Thia ~la conducted by• Swim & AKQuet Club genei-al pertnerlhip Tlm Eaton, SuSM M Cox and Manager O«afd LN Cox Thia atat-l w .. llled with the Thia 11~ WU flied w;th the County Clet1l ol Orange COUnty on County Clefk of Orange County on June 18, 1982. June 28, 1982. ,1t11M F1'2Jal Put>llahed Orange CoH t Dally ~ ,uler, a--. Pilot. June 24. July 1. I . 15, 1982 A ... shnlsMI Cerp. 27~ ,.,. .. ,_ ... ..,,. -----------• WNHlet, CA-(211> ..._ Publl1had Orange CoHt Dally '1CTITIOUI 8U .... I PUO., .My I. 8, 15, 22, 1M2 NAmSTAftlm#T 2913·82 The lollowlng parson 11 doing --------.....;;~~ 1>usi""' u · P'lBJC NOTICE P'lBJC NOTICE (al COLLINS ENTERPRISES ----------- dba (b) THE CAPSULE REPORT, (C) ~=ITue .. ~ THE CAPSULE REPORT II. (di .. ,_.., '9C'TTTIOUI 9Ul*IU CANIS (e) FOt.IS """"""" La Alameda The followlng pereon la doing . • -• buelneel aa: NAMIE ITAnmNT ~-90925, Fountain v-.y. Clllf0<ni. KIRBY'S MAINTE""ANCE, Tile followlng peraon 11 doing u •· ~ ~ u : Wlllienl Lyle ColliM. t900 La 182JJ' Newpof1 Blvd .. Sulla 321. ,"4AONUM MARKETING, 5e0t "'8meda. No. 25, F_,teln Vflwr/ Coeta MeM. c.lllOl'nlt 92929 Enoii-Ot!Ye. Huntington 8-h, Cellfomla 92708 ' Betll Kirby Thomu. 113 CA 92849. Tlllt bu11MM 11 conducted by an ~ay. No. A·2. Coate MtlM, DAVID W. SMITHSOH, 1Me6 lfldMdull c.lltot'nll t2e27 Cont Hwy .. SunNt 8each, CA w. '-Collnl ~ 19 conducted by an to742. T'1le ~ wee Mid with the 8.th R Thol!\M ~~la conducted 11¥ an ~ ~ ol °!*IOI Councy on nw t11t-t Wla flied with the ~ w. l"""'90n • · ,~ Col.ny C*ertl ol Or1nt1 COunty on Thie ltlMmlnt ... tlled wlltl me Publlalltd Or~ COHI Dally Mey 21, 1N2, County Clerk o1 °'.,. councr Clll "°'· -M1 '· 1. "· u , .. 2 ,,.... .NM I . tM2. 281o.t2 Publl•lled Or1ng• Coa1t Dally P\B.lC NOTICE ---FtcmlOUt llU .... 11 N.u.ITATEmNT TM lollowtng '*'°"' -doing buslneaa 11: THE BEVEL CUT • .U e. 17th Street, Room 100. Coat• ..,aa, Callfornt. 92827 Janet Lynn Alkln1on. 1722 Weatcutt. No. 11. N-l>Of'1 Beech. Celllorni. 92860 l~ Clltt0<d Dunmire, 1122 WeatcMtt. No. 11. ~ BNch. C.lltorlll• 928e0 This t>Yllnett 11 conduc1ed by e geMl'al partnerlhlp Jen AtklnlOO Thia s1atemenr was filed with Ille County Clerll of Or911V9 County on Juoe 29, 1982. F11MA Put>llahed Orange Co111 Dally Piiot. July 1, 8. 15, 22. 1982 2814-82 __ Nl.IC NPTICE FICTIT'IOUIM.1 ... 11 MAmSTAft•NT T~ lollowlng l*IOfll are doing buain.t u : RAH. 4230 Park Newport, •307. Newport 8"ch, CA 92860. RONALD A. HAGER. 4230 Plfll Newport. •307. Newport 8ucll, CA 92860 ANITA HAOER. 4230 Parlt Newport •307, ~ BeaQtl, CA 92~ •. Thia bU"-II COOOucted by e limited p«1nerthic>. ,.. Heger Tllll tle~I WM ltled With tM COunty Cletll of OrMga COUnty on June 8, 1H2. ,..n Publlalled Orange co .. 1 Delly Ptlol, June 10, 17, 24, Juty 1, 1N2. 2556-12 NlJC M)TIC( ---' ,,_,, ~ PllcM, June 24, Jut./ t, I , 15, IN2 PublitMd Or•noe C-1 Diiiy w.. 2758-a ITA~:r--••AL ...... .NM 10, 17, 24, Nit~ --' "8.JC NOTIC( "'°"', QNRATINQ MflllOUI • I I M PICTmOUl':..t MAim .._ ITAW PICTmOUI WM Tilt fot1ow l11t ••reo11 llH T1le ................... dolfW MAim ITAW .......... •• ...... l*"*ll'om PICrmDUI ai1111• ........ , TIM fotloWlng !*SOil 11 dolno IM peill•llllp operMfnf "'"* .. MAim ITAW WllTl"N 01&. 11,.VICll, ........ •· ffctlllOlll 11111111111 u"'e of T1'e fOllGWlftt P«"fOll II dOlftt 1HH aroelill11rtt, 8ulle 0 , ADMA-. 2174( ~ \11141. ~11' O IUlf A 0 LA I M I ..-..-. W•1AMa,~--lellll~~t2t71 TANT1•1000....,_ YIDIO MIMO•Ull. UI ~ ............. 11* htterluncl Corporation, a..... -AM.~"104 • .,_.... ,.,.., ~ lleedl. CA ....., ......,., ,...... v...,, Calltorn•• oorpor•lion. 21741 Tiie fletltltv• 111u11neN ".,,.. -· Clltelftl MJOI . 011111 Viet•, loutll L19un1, ••' ,. .. .., .. w••• .. .. IOHA"D L. llNO,., Ill .IHltlll WllllH•t . 1 tatt ~ •n ... lft W1 .. lit tM County of ....,.,. ..... CA rce· l'Oulttlill\ v.-,. TlllJ ..._ It ~ 11y t OrtNe. 1~..,...1. ~M ..... Ml ~ of h •na-.u,. ••~1¥• ~~·t ,.,.... • .;;...,.., ...... &...... ......=:....... I• :.;;m t.i U1M , ..... -~c..."'I.:: -~:::-a.::1"TNt'l:':.":::i.=;: ~=-...... =t-. =:\Tel~· ='I..... '" Ir "' ~o;ntQ.~··,,~. ,::.-=·~~~trJ!1~l'ft~~ ~ t.chnolocy, howft9r. frw s-ople of thOM iwtraint.1. The product -tnlorma\IOn or knowledp -can be moved ratMr than people. If enouah cl~ult.1 ar. available, people cOu1d ewn work at home. Now add the economic lmp•ratlve to the opportunities made poulbl~ by •lectronlc I ec:fh1munJcatJona, he aald. ll la happentna already: The chanae ii oa:urrtna. To llluatrate, Chriatian auaeeted a check of aome 1Uccet1ful let\el'I and conaulunc aervk.w. A quick 1urvey waa made: Bala-Cynwyd, Pa., HoUJ1ton, Maa.. Wlckenber1. ArlJ,. MedJa, Pa.. FtuwlUlam, N.H. The point w .. made. • "How much of bualneta could be 0per~.1 r•motely?" . A lot, he anawered. "I would ra~htor not g.t n an airplane and loee two daya to 80 .amew to ( The aeneratlon now around 30 years of aae apprc.-datet the opportunity to live where they want, a.Id Chrtatlan. give a 1peech," he saJd. "I'd rather walk dow to a t.eleconferendng center." ~ Fluor de~igns ·plants Baja set ·: toll-free ~ Edison, SDG&E to use facilities . :I A 10-megawatt geothennal power plant designed by a Fluor Co. aubeJdlary will begin producina 1team this summer for Southern California "With the exception of the geyserl In Northern California, there really ii no Other big body of dry steam available. You have to make use of what you have -hot water," said &gan Phillips. general manager of FluoD Power Services-Western Division. services ·1 ' I SAN DIEGO (AP) ...JA tourist office for ~aja California has 11e t wp toll -free telepho•e servk'CS Jrom Callfornla, Ariwna and Nevada. ! Ediaon Co. . Engineering is 44 percent complete on. a similar plant for San Diego Gas & Electric Co. that will be the world's largest binary geothermal facility. Fluor Power Servkes Inc. is performing engineering and design for both projects. In addition. Fluor will provide procurement services for the binary project. These planta wiU tap superheated brine trapped beneath the Imperial Valley. The larger of the projects is the 70-megawatt plant for San Diego Gas & Electric, near Heber. • The costs wiJJ be J>ltid Avco Forty miles north of Heber. on the shores of the Salton Sea near Niland, the IO-megawatt demonstration plant is nearint' completion. unit earnings off by Mexico's Baja :si~te government and to~rist bureaus o f Tijuan'a. Mexicali and Ensenado. spokeswoman V1 Murph y sa~d Wednesday. A toll-free line California l ·800-522-1516. Net earnings for Avco Financial Services, Inc. of Newport Beach for the six months ended May 31 were $35.8 million, off from the $36.8 million reported the like 1981 period. totalled $18.8 million. compared to $20.3 million for the 1981 second quarter. , The company's two insurance groups reported lower earnings. The Avco Financial Insurance Group reported net earnings of $14.2 million for the first two quarters. down from $18.9 million. . PacTe l exten~ office hours This decrease was due to lower credit-related premium volume and higher claims expenses in the insurance groups, partially offset by a decline in interest rat.es. and reduced operating expenses and credit losses in the financial services group. Net earnings for the seeond quarter Net earnings from the Paul Revere Life Insurance Group were $14.2 million, down from $16.3 n11llion a year earlier. Pacific Telephone <is. keeping its Oran1.'e business service cent r open 30 minutes longe . The hours are 9 a.m. Jo 5 p.m. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS ... ... + ... •• • 14 .... .... .. I t I ! I ! 7 • • IO 1t 11 tJ " tS It 17 " " lO ... _ Emht1 WI """~· ""'.:! Al r.ulody 8 Owlko O.tc "" Em..-, u" V•l""'t' Ac ... Gtl ~Pwpf Am!il..tl AlrRe ~~(IQ AdllMSy ~&"':.. ''°-' OlntcSc• Lal , ... I l"'1 1 t' l "' ..., ... "'· • It 1 • '. •• , • :t.. ..... ) 41, • • 1 '''• I. ~ ... 17.. 7'. 1J~. 1 l J• 1 • ... " • 11 l ,., liw II) t ,.. '• ,,.. '• -.. .... '• 1a.. • 1. 1~ '• M • I • "... . ' DOWNS Lal "W. .... • '" )''1 '> 7 ·~ • ., 2 .. 2 .,. , .. ... \, ·~ .. ··~ t 1• .. ~ ,., '• Jll) '4 1'1 .. ,,, ... ,.,. '• J '• • " l'J• .. P(I Up » ! Uo 1' J Uo ,, 0 Up 16 I UD tS 7 Up II ' Uo tf J Uo t O Up t t Up • tt S Up •11 S VO If S Uo 'I l uo t 2 Uo t 0 Uo '10 Up t I Up I 1 Uo I ~ Up tO S Uo 111 1 Uo 10 J Uo ,00 Uo 100 Up (I VO \I Pel ()ff tOI Off '1 s Off ~ii~ Off ()II n!t Oft tt,1 Ofl 11,t Off It.I ()If 10.0 OH .. s 0 11 •.s Off •t• 0 11 •;t g::. ::: 011 ••• Off 1.1 011 1,1 Off 111 Off ltt Acllt1n<ICI SI' 7t DtcllMd 117 ?2 Thdl'it(p , .. ,. ,., ()ft i~ Mdr'ln ~ ., Off l.llC...,,gtd . 2. Ol ~ T"•' '""" . ... . . l.n• 2S Lo9e1rn 17''• p.i. Off Condtlm 7 , Off •!? Ntw 111~ • • J7 » ..... '°'"' . .. . . .. . . . . . ~ I 11 ~ellMA9 I .. Off ~·· I~ "' 0 11 . ., Tot•l Miff ..... , . , • , . 27. S..• 700 Vi> gl\I Jiil " 011 ·r LI M4n 7. IS NI. Inv Vw , •• tl Pllrl"' US NI. I"" Ile_, l • J 11 Tllrlft .... NI. lstel II 92 NI. ~:::. l::~ NI. ~1 ~II 1: !l 11 ... \ Q'tft• 1.dl N JP •nco 1 m 1.•J Fncl'fll 12.... NL Jenut I. 14 NI. l~I Ut NI. .-HlnCOCI<. ""Dm •· ,. H I. lloftll 12. 2' IJ. U Al In-ors: Gr.Cll I 7t t.'7 8lld ,. 11.tl IU5 VS G"' I.IS 1.9' OIKO I.SI t.3J TH Ea I.a t.00 04' .. h .. 2' UI ~ '3 NI. •ncom s ... • ... ,.,.., Flftta: _,_ft U I s 26 lncom I°' 7 •• ~"Ea J:t; u; ~o;... t~ ': r. .. WIE4 .. ,. 7.3 lntfl"d t0.:11 II 27 tl!Wllll 11 ... NI. M.., 11 •.O •.IS f'cllttr 4.11 Ut Oo4n 11,J7 12 0 Ftld 0411 4.• S.01 Su"'"' IS .. 17 IS '=r Gr:_:: N.. i:f"11t ,rn iv.~~ lncom IUt NI. us G"' , •• I,, = 1~~ 1i.1~ ~«;: ~; IJ.11 "'+'f*ll" °'r;f UI g:: : 't: 1~ !1 ~C 12 ... IJ,14 CV\ Kl •II 7 •• ~II 7.'fl 7.14 On IQ S.37 • 02 IClft Ult S.At Cid li 14 .. 16 OS .... S.ot Cid •· 7t t· 1' I-1.11 1.14 Clit •.II IS us Giii .... •.•• I....... J" • ,. ml US '·°' TeaFr •• Sl •.1t It tOD Ut ~t •·• IO.IO ,,, ..... , Lnlllllltft Grp: ~Ilic: ~~ US IO.ll • ,. ' ... lllcl I IS I It Mec!T t).. NI. Slnh • 20 'ti;! """''* o1 ci.-n.11e F-'·" NI. SlrMlnv 'J) f~.'t~ arn:.·,, :·: .~ ..:.."'si~ Ni 10l'4 ~~:' 1;: , lncom I 11 I 0 Pl.fnem Fund\ Tax Mad 14.0t 'It T• Fre t,'2 •>I CM!v tt.7• 11.n T....otb 11,, .-~ 111110..•I II !5 NI. · fl'll EG tl.<I ll st TITVI GI S 7' "I' MA Slw Jt 15 NI. Geor~ ti '1 12.IS T"'Olll W IS S4 ~. :='l! .. '~·~ =t ~~.. ,N~ ~:;: ~~~ ~~ ' =~ ~.:1~~ NL ~ 'U~ i:·mt~~ ~: ,~.~ •,. ... .,, •.5' lCl.29 In-I 7... I 40 TWr\C GI • 10 ,ff lotld 1 ., J 14 OPln 11 .o 11 4• 1""" s. 11 " Hu Gr..Cll 6.11 l ,J4 Tu E• 1' S7 17.J.4 T-C U1 4, 1! 4 ~ l'f.id S.11 •·1· Vl•• ll.~ 14 2' USAA Qr-: 1 ncom s " '· s vo.,.v 10 " 11 1• Gr.ell •. n H.J Sloe• I If • 1 ~ Jl.06 NL lnco •.M H Tu Ea •• n 7 .36 Alltlnt>w 111 NI. 51>11 t SS H TotR• • U •ti "9wre '-'I NL U'lf AcO.I S 46 lo( Feir11d S'S 6 SO Siloco Secvr U'ltf MIA I '1 MIEUle Fl.Wld E~lt I.II NI. U'llt.O. Alftds· •1 E~ll 11 n :ID JS Gr.Cit U Cit NI. A<cm 7 IS J. Gr.ell 14 l5 ISM> lnco '· S7 NI. 9ofWI 4.51 A. lncom • 41 IOU SC,..ul lnv•il lnlGtll 12.D Rel Eq 11 65 "·" Celllt ..... IO,. '°" Inc U ll " Tea Ea S Sl S II Gr..Cll 10 U It." FldUc 21 ... at. '-'*''"' Berm SpKI 16.0I NI. HI Inc 11.4' It; Enr~., IS.07 NI. Scudder l'unch· lllCMI U :S ... G<Mrd 1' II NI. C.Om SI 10 12 NL Mufti S.4' 5. Ulltv J 1' HI. 0.v•I ., n NI. SctE,.. Ult •• "'-'ht -l.7S NI. C.oGtl VMQ ll.r4 ~ IJ.Cll NI. 10 » HI. US a.Id l,JI """" ti.» NI. lfltom ·' • NI. v11 ... u,.. I'd : •wt GI 11.o!I NI. lflll Fd IS. 12 NL 8oftd 10 61 , tie9' Inc 6.tl NI. MMe 6.CI NI. FUNI 11.• a,_.. tU2 NI. SaK1 40.S7 NL lncom $.t' l"fr •• 1'1 NI. =ty ,..,,..., IAY OI IS.It ~ lflOI I.It NI. 7.11 7.JI Spl $ll 11.• ~ NI. ell't S.• S ... VMc9 ~: • .. , lllwtl "" t .$1 ··ri .. . .. , ~ I \' BY STEVE MARBLE OrtlMD .......... lt•tt ll "'as 10 months ago ihat Newport Beach resident Donald B. Warner was killed by a hit and run driver. Warner was 26. a California newromer. He was Cf'C>Ming a r street less than two blocks from his apartment when he was hit llhd left face down in the road. With assistance from "tnesses, police tracked down die death car in less than 48 hours. They found it abandoned In a Whittier shopping center, its windshield smashed and blood splnttcrt.>d on the hood. Arresting the driver proved to be harder even though police said they knew who ll was. Officers spent w eeks talking with the s uspected driver's f~lends, parents and attorney. A 21-year-old man named James S . Gibbs. a resident· of Orange, eventually was arrested. Following w~ks of <.'OUrtroOm activity. Gibbs pleaded guilty to felony manalaughtel' and l\it and run charges. · Glbbti was sentenced to 210 days In county jail, a sen~nce Deputy Oitlrfct Attorney Michael Dow Considered light compared to the state prilon term he had sought. Dow thought th(lt was the end of It. Warner's parents thought that was the end of it. Th.at wasn't the end of it. More than six weeks after Gibbs was scheduled to begin serving his time. the case is headed back to court. Glbba, armed with a new attorney. i. slated to go to court Friday and argue that hla guilty plea as well aa the 210-day sentence be tossed out. According to court d<>C\.l.menta, Gibbs' attorney -James Merwin -said his client'• first attorney fail ed to give him ,proper lesal· advice a nd that Oibb. pleaded guJlty to things he shouldn't have. District Attorney Dow said If \he plea ls accepted, the case goes " back to aquare one with a jury trllll likely. • Attorney Merwin could not be \ reached for comment. The tum of ev~ts has left Dow, Warner's parents and friends angry . Dow said It took weeks to build the case and that some witnesses have moved from the area. He said it may be impossible to track some of them down. ''He shQUld have been grateful for hls sentence.'' Dow said of Gibbs. "1 think this waa a at.ate prison case all the way." Warner's Cather. a resident of Maryland who has sold his automobile dealership to pursue the case and reforms he believes are needed in hit-and-run laws. is more surprlled than angry. He said he is a family and a c hurch man and would have little diCficulty forgiving the driver o( the car that killed his son. He saJd all the driver has to do i.s ask. ~ Liberian adoptee Balan~ed ·budget 0 K' d Brown cites need for economic recovery ' extended. By STEVE MITCHELL Of"IMDllllyNotlt.tt A. San Juan Capistrano couple, whose adopted son faced deportation to his native Liberia next week , have won an extension of the deadline that will allow him to remain with his family eight more months. ·The Imm igration and Natural1tauon Service this week extended the July 5 deadline for Sam Willet to Feb. l , 1983, after the 26-year-old man and his Cather. Dave Willet, drove to Los Angeles to present a letter from Congressman Robert Badham. "It means Sam can stay in the Uniled" States at least unul next year. unless there is any adverse • action on Badham's private bill," Dave Willet said in a telephone \ interview. "We were really getting close to the line, and the-family is really relieved." he said. Samuel, who was born in Liberia, was adopted by the Willets more than a decade ago when the couple were working for the Peace Corps in that country. The adopted son spent seven years in Liberia and Kenya with the Willet family. then a two- year separation forced by the question of Sam's 1mm1gration when the Willets returned to the Uni t.ed Stat.es. . .... .. DeUJ Pitot Photo bf L ..... ,M SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state begins a new fiscal year today with a tight!)' balanced $25 .2 billion budget of "1.11\precedented auste rity" finally approved alter a five-day deadlock. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. signed' the budget and four related bills for the 1982-83 Ci.seal year Wednesday. while ~aming that it wQUld not stay bJla.nced without a "strong economic recovery" this fall. Brown held the s igning' ceremony after the Assembly, left with little choice because the Astronauts fix door on shuttle CAPE .CANAVERAL. Fla. ' (AP) -Columbia's commander, "watching like a hawk ," overcame a vexing problem with the shuttle'• balky cargo doors .today, closing and la~ lhem in a simulation of steps that must precede entry on the Fourth of July. "They closed normally.'' said Ken Mattingly. He aounded relieved find so did Mission Control. The family was re united nearly two years ago when Samuel obtained a one-year student visa. But the U .S . government never officially recognized the adoption, saying Samuel was too old to be considered adopted nearly 11 years ago. SINKING FEELING -If you can't win the tug-ot-war. you might as well enjoy the mud pudd\e, figured Vicki Hirota and Cliff McKinnon after the annual ~ployee event Wednesday at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Flight director Harold Draughon said that if Columbia tried to re-enter the atmosphere without the doors closed, the ship "could shake like a wheel well coming off a hot perfonnance aircraft. You get so much turbulence flow that it would 1.ear things apart." Attempts by Badham to introduce private bifls to keep Samuel in America failed. and the House Subcommittee on lni.tnigratlon said 1t would not re-hear a special bill authored by Bad ham. The extension will give the subcommittee more lime to reconsider Badham's latest private bill on behalf of the Outlook 'gloomy' for 3-day holiday However, had the door problem persisted, Mattingly would have taken a space walk to make repairs. Draughon said. The s hip was o rbit ing smoothly: Mattingly and pilot Henry Hartsfield did some -celestial sightseeing 1&nd crew calisthenics, test-fired jet t hruster s, a nd televised an instruct~ve "cook's tour" of the shuttle cockpiL Willets. 1 M eanwhile. Jud ic iar y Committee Chairman Peter Rodino has sent a letter 'to Badham indi c ating the immigration subcommittee is extremely busy with other immigration legislation. forcing Rodino to postpone consideration of the private biU. That should eliminate the possibility of adverse action on Badham's biU before the new February deadline. Willet said. Rodino suggested . the family seek administrative relief by teeking refugee status for Sam. But Dave Willet said he will (Sff SAM'S STAY, Page At) • COUNTY That sunshine and blue skies aren't a myth, folks. but close to it. If you are expecting the same for the three-day Fourth of July holiday. don't hold your breath. It appears more· of the "gloom" Orange ~oast residents have experie nced for nearly three months lS headed our way again. Wednesday a high-pressure system chased clouds that grayed Orange County most of June, May and April eastward, but another marine layer is hanging just off the Oregon .and Was hington coasts and is expected to reach here Saturday. according to the Natio nal Coast gears for Fourth Everything you want to know about the Fourth of July'afong the Qrange Cout can be found on Page Bl. TEL £-VISION I I ~ Landon aim• for family Mtch .. l Landon W'H become th• new Wah Deiney, ......_ .... ot Aniwlcam and 1Nild"I on wholnanilft•.~ Al. • ' Weather Service. That means a drop of l,000 feet 1n the w eath er front producing low clouds, late night and early mornings Saturday. Sunday and Monday. high cloudiness most of the daylight hours with a chance of some sunshine by late afternoons. Today dawned clear as did Wednesday with mountains visible inland and n o s mog forecast by the South Coast Air Quality Management District. The sudden weather contrast may have caught many by surprise but still sent thousands scurrying to the beaches where lifeguards reported the largest weekday crowds this year NATION Columbia's. port door failed to shut Wednesday after flight. in the cold shadows o( space caused warping. either in the door itself or in the frame. Overnight, NASA sent Columbia into a bar~ue roll to expose the doors to the warmth of the sun. A similar Hx succeeded when the problem cropped up on flight three. and as the shuttle passed 186 miles overhead at Cape Canaveral. just after dawn, Ma ttingly tried the shut-and- open exercise again. Operating from a remote control panel in the cabin. he ,,needed only three minutes to do the job . Lotsa people tink folki from Brooklyn tawk funny, but it ain't funn]. it'•wunnerful Page A6. <Jhallenger heads lo Edwards I LANCASTER (AP) -Challenger paraded through city street.a and delen flatlariCU today, an encmelea spaceship lnchinc away from lta UleJnbly ha"lar t.o Edwards Air Forw Bue. . Suapected bank r0bber l:Uled LONG BEACH (AP) -An off-dut)'_ pollce . .er1eant ltandtna. ln a bulk line lhot and kWed • auapeeted bank robb•r today and WH hlm1elf wounded In the thootout, afflmn llld. Probe of 'Hx •er.• orileretl ' Senate recessed the day before, released the budget from the five-day hold imposed because of a dispute over $235 million for schQOls. The DeJnocratic gover)lor made no cuts in the buaget, as approved by the Legislature, noting it!\ ''unprecedented austerity." The budget contains no tax increases. He said the proposed spending is more than $200 million below the expected spending for the fiscaJ year closing Wednesday. and $8 million below the actual spending in 1980-81. • "That (a two-year drop) has never happened any time in the history of Callforrua outside of th~ Depression," he said. But Brown said the budget is so t1ghtly balanced. with a reserve of less \han $500 million, tpat the Legislature will ha~ t.o make further cuts in the next r'few months "'if the naqonal economy does not re<.'9Ver." The budget had been approved by both houses Friday. Both houses also approved a companion bill Mondav. But Assembly Speaker Willie (See BUDGET, Page At) Newport OKs curbs on parking of RVs A law designed to curb owners of recreational vehicles from taking free vacations on the streets of Newpon Beach has been approved by City Council members. Angry residents of Balboa Island started pushing for the ban nearly a year ago, claiming owners of massive vehicles were turning narrow island streets into campgrounds. Several homeowners said they were frustrated because tourists in recreational vehicles spent their summer vacation parked in front of houses, leaving trash behind when they hit the road . City officials said research indicated there appears to be an influx of vacation goers who. because of hard economic times. prefer ~aying on the beach streets to staying in motels. The 1 w. which comes back next month for a final vote, bans any vehicle more than 90 inches wide from parking on all residential streets. in the city for more than 12 hours at a time. Large vans or other vehicles used by handicapped persons would be exempt from the law, which likely won't ~ke effect until late summer. Sev e r a l hom eow ners complained that the 90 inch rule isn't tough enough. "Ninety inches is a giant loophole -big enough for most campers to drive through ," suggested homeowner Stuart Williams Council members rejected a s uggestion that the width restr1ct1on be trimmed to 84 inches. The council also passed over a n o tio n that the law contain restrictions on how tall and how long the vehicles could be. • Bank clerk helps in f<;>rgery arrest A ~an who authorities allege forge<! more than $100.000. in cashiers' checks. entertained a friend with a whirlwind trip to Florida and pumped thousands of dollars into his personal bank accounts today is in the less glamorous confines of Orange County Jail. And Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators are crediting a teller at an El Toro branch of Southwest Bank for preventing wh~t they claim could have been a major cash loss to a Huntington Beach savings and loan institution. Cedric H. Wasano. 2+. of El INDEX A4 B2 83-5 A5 82 C6-10 ... C.6 ~ C4 AlO ' B7-8 82 Sl'()ll 1 S Toro. was arrested on suspicion of forgery Wednesday after the teller. Linda Howe, no ti fled superiors when Wasa no attempted to cash a $10,000 check drawn on the Edinger Avenue branch of Coast Federal Savings and Loan. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart ~d Wasano. a Coast Federal employee, is believed to have forged 35 "association," or cc.shiers' checks, with a to"\al value of more than $100,000. Thirty-three of the checks have heen accounted for while two (See CHECK, Page A!) Ann Landers 82 Movies B7-8 Mutual Funds B4 National News A3 Public Notices B4,C4,C6 Sports Cl·3 Sr. Stetncrohn B2 Stock Marketa 86 TelevUdon B6 ThMtera 8'1-8 w..... A3 WGrJd NeWa A3 I t .. a mid(!le 'ground dispute on church The battle continues between members of a Newport Beach chtlrch and neighbortna residents over how ·hi1h a ~ew church sanctuary ahould be. Residents ln the Cliff ~ven community •ay St. Andtew•a Presbyterian Ch~ la a gueet in the neighborhood and is pushing lta luck with planl for an 85-foot sanctuary. They say the <:.tty's standard 35-foot limit would be more Ukejt. Church members, pointing out their congregation has swelled, s.ay lhey need to expand and with a shortage of land, have only one way to go -up. City planning commlssioners on a split vote recently sided with the ch4rch on the 85-foot request. The ntatter, though, has been appealed to the City Coun~il and a renewed fight is looming. Church members and residents have met several times to try to work ou\ a compromise. Although the church h~ ~ow agreed to seek an 85-{oot ~ght llmlt instead of 10& feet a1 originally requested, the diapute 11 still just that -a dispute. , We beJieve there are several points that should be kept in mind. Although this ia a ~hlll'Ch, lta ' request for a height variance should be treated the same Bl all other req•ues ts from 1oca1 'businesses or homeowners. Everyone should follo"' the same rules. ' On tbe other hand, it is important for residents to understand that the church, just like a business, has reason to expand when business is going good. By all accounts. business at St. Andrew's is very good. Perhaps the best bet would be for the council to toss the ball back in the neighborhood court and let the two sides make anothe.r pass at finding some acceptable middle ground. After all, the church and its neighbors are the ones who will have to live with the final decision. RV law reasonable In an attempt to curb owners of recreational vehicles from taking free vacations on the streets of Newport Beach, City Council members have developed a new law. · The law, which comes back for a final vote lat.er this month, bans recreational vehicles wider than 90 inches from parking on residehtial streets for mo.re than 12 hours. Wide vehicles used by handicapped persons are exempt. Angry residents from Balboa Island started calling for the law nearly a year ago, claiming tourists in massive vehicles were turning narrow island streets into campgrounds. Residen ts said the vehicles make it tough for regular-size cars to travel down the road and block homeowners' views. Frequently, they said, owners of recreational vehicles leave trash behind when they hit the road again. \Vhile some doubt remains as to whether 90 inches will really prohibit all models of recreational vehicles, it seems a g~ starting point. And there is the question of whether the council is asking too much of police officers to go oul with measuring ~pe in hand and determine if a recreation vehicle is just a little bit this side or that side of the 90-inch mark. However, the concept that residents, particularly in congested areas s uch as Balboa Island, 1 shouldn't have to put up with a < s ummer-lo ng procession of recreational vehicles is sound. If some wrinkles develop in the new ordinance, the council can take a second look at it aft.er a trial period. Boosters to ~ the rescue High school football players and fans in ~ Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict have had to g~t along for 1ears with dim lights at Davidson Field, the district stadium at Harbor High. The district hasn't been able to justify spending money on lights while it was being forced to lay off teachers and trim academic programs. But the lx>osters clubs at the dis1rict's four high schools came up with. a better idea. • • They decided to raise most of the money themselves and ask the district to chip in only one-fifth of the cost of new lights. In July there will be tests of the proposed new lighting system. If the lights work well, everyone has agreed to split the purchase price of $20, 736 next year. The boosters clubs' efforts to take the initiative in this project are to be applauded. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- presseq on tn1s page are those ot tne1r authors an<J artists Rea<Jer comment is invit- ed . Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone (7141 1>4,2·4321. L.M .. Boyd/ Inflation note Inflation zoomed so swiftly in Germany during 1923 that diners in restaurants there chose to pay their checks as aoon as they ordered rather than after they ate. They couldn't be sure the price wouldn't go up during dinner. Q . Doesn't France have the most alcoholism? A. Next to Chile, it does. Per capita. Big wine produce~th. ''What's the 'outplacement' depart- ment d~ in a big company?" inquires a client. It finds jobs elsewhere for employees the company wanta to fire. Lot of siz.able firms have set u~h 1ervi~. To cut down on the es r•used by the disgruntled who com- plain to unions and ~ederal bureaus. That faJcon known ... perepine hits speeda of up to 200 . mph in attack~ Why doem't the wtnd velodty hwt '111 lunp? Another~ of natw'e. lta DOltrill haw bafflea"'in them to Uaw down the Nib of air. A pl'i8oaer Cmdel' _,_.. of death lost 1,100 scalp hairs a d ay. H~ counted tbml. 1ben be •• pel'dc>Md. And be promptly 1t•w back • full head of hair. This led reaea.rchera to believe that stress might contribute to baldness. But It happened more than a dozen years ago, and despite much study, they still haven't proved it. Q. Didn't you once quote experts aa claiming Abraham Lincoln suffered from such a severe case of Marian's Syndrome that he probably wouldn't have lived out his term even if he hadn't been aaassinated? A. Yes, but to that, other experts said nonsense, or words to that effect. There's not enough evidence to con- jecture, they say. Do yen he«t. auch nodces as .. Keep, OU the Grus" and "No Smokir"1 ' Not all do. In the ladles loo of a pub In London is a lmMhed ml..rror. Next to it la an invitational sign: "The roanaaement tNnb 'J<N. in advance for not breU1nc t.hil mirror." Opined Nikita KW'lhche'V: "U you can't cetcb a bird of J)U'adJle. better take a wet h•n." Tbe late Mr. Kl\llbcheY W• a bit ll w'miltic. True, our Low and War man•• ft1a are cr1 mm •d with da ta on bUd-of·oandi8e bun._. wbo bea wet hem. BUt a Jot at we\.ohen bun..,. bit WntHf.pir .... tao. \ ,J I\ \ 11;1\ I r ~ : I 1\ I I I I . ,\ )'. l .\ I' .il11 11 -1 • (J .) .. 5~-~~~-~ I '1\t~i i£Wf-tiw-.s 1"E wR or~ 'PA~! / > : New threat to pe~sioners WASHING TON -While corporate fatcats are allowed to get away with cost overruns and '8x write-offs, President Reagan's people have been going after the -¥fidow's mJte with all the ferocity of Dickensian debt collectors. The unfortunate old people are lucky that debtors' prilo~n abolished. Here's what's happening: THE SOCIAL SECURITY Acynin- 1 st ration has been sending out notices to pensioners threatening to cut off their monthly benefit checks unl~ they repay immediately the sums they were overpaid in r ecent years in Supplement.al Security Income. · I reported a few weeks ago that the Social Security Administration is trying to coerce pensioners into letting the agency snoop through their income-tax records. Unless they sign a waiver of the privacy that every taxpayer is entitled to, t he pensioners are told , their supplement.al income c;hecks will be cut off. This is a bluff, and a cruel one. The agency has no legal right to follow through on its threat. and it knows it. lndeed a federal judge ordered Social Security Administration officials to cease badgering beneficiaries until the legality of their actions could be settled in court. Now the Social Security bureaucrats are using the same tactics in their real to squeeze every last penny out of the poor, the sick and the elderly. The first notification is relatively mild. Though it does say, "Please refund the $--_immecilately," it gives the pensioner a break if he can 't pay the whole amount at once. "For your convenience, we can withhold the balance o f your overpayment from your Social Security benefit," the letter states. A form is included at the bottom of the page, G -J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -~ stating: "For my convenience, please withhold my full Social Security benefit each month until my supplemental security income overpayment of $--- is fully recovered." If the pensioner doesn't sign away the Social Security checks -often the only Income he has -a followup letter arrives. This one gets really ugly. "If we do not hear from you (in 16 days) we will be forced to suspend payment of your Social Security Checks." This threat is probably illegal. By law, Social Security checks are suppo6ed to be immune from "attachment or ass1gnmerft." The National Senior Citiums Law Center is planning to take the agency to court over it this week. In fact, It appears that the Social Security bureaucrats themselves have doubts about the legality of their strongarm methods. My associate Lucette Lagnado was told that the threatening letter now reads .. may be forced" instead of "will be forced." And in its original 1983 budget request, the agency specifically askecflor a "propOsed change" that would allow it to "recover overpayments to individuals from available Social Security benefits." Obviously, if it already has this authority, there would be no need to ask Congress for it again. FOOTNOTE: An agency spokesman tried to disassociate Washington headquarters from the second Jetter., -: insisting that such bullying tactil.'s were not administ.ution policy but an unauthorized bit of zealousness by a regional office. He stuck by the first letter, however, and saw nothing wrong in trying to track terri~ pensioners into signing away what, an many cases. is their only source qt income . Contrast this with the Reagan administration's casual attitude toward defense contractors, big oil companies and other business buccaneers. The Re negotiation Board, which used to collect overpayments from defense contracts, has been allowed~Qrdic,...The Interior Department trusts the oil companies to report how much oil they pump on federal wells, despite evidence that the oiJmen have been robbing Uncle Sam blind under the honor system. Volunteer program sets an example To the Editor: 1 congratulate Jan D. Vandersloot, M.D .. on the timely comments regf.J'ding Medi-Cal cutbacks. The Medi-Cal Bill, A.S 3480, which w i ll eliminate emergency medical transportation certainly is of grave consequence to maify needy pa ti en ts. I feel it is important however, to look at the alternatives which are available to Medi-Cal patients in Orange County. It has become a sign of the times that when MAILBOX - individuals have difficulty with tnnsportation and/or medical needs1 the standard answer has become, "contact your caseworker" rather than contact our f.amiJy, friends, neighbors or local volunteer organization which could provide help. The Medi-Cal program has been burdened with accepting financial responsibllitie..s which could be eliminated through the use of available services ~ the county area and through development of additional volunteer services. The spirit of volunteerism which the current administration sugests the private sector embrace has been in existence In many facilities throughout Orange County for years. A UNIQUE PROGRAM exists at Western Medical Cent.er. The Someone Cares program is made up of volunteers from the community. They transport paHents to and from outpatient appointments at the hospital. Someone ·Ca.res tranaporta .,&o to 75 cues pel' week and has been doing ao for the put 12 years. There la DO charge for tht. tervice and it ls staffed totally by volunteers. This outstanding program never tuffen!d even durlnc the prit.'e l.ncreaaes ln a-:>llne. The volunteen are dedJcated ancl cartna people -~e aood netchbors we all need. · We hive in the cou.ncy Dlal-A-RJde, Dial-A-Ufi, Mqic Carpet and <>then which are •ble to tnrwport handicapped paUentl -but theft la • fee lnvolVed. The charpl for D1al·A-Ride Ind Dtal- A-Uft are rn1n1ma1 for abort diltanra and within the rta1m o( a fixed l.nciome. It ii otrtainly 1 tinw when we ma.t be concemed about the cutbacks which our medically needy, disabled and elderly patients are experiencing. However , perhaps it Is also a time when we must recognize that the sta~e and federal government can no longer assume the role of family. friend and employer for the citizens o{ the Un1ted States. Perhaps we need to encourage the philosophy \hat has prevailed in the Someone Cares service for the past 12 years and reach out to those in our community who need ~istance. BETTY McMICKEN, M.A. CCC Speech/Language Pathologist Local news To the F.ditor: ~: Local news scene, Daily Pilot, .rune 22: . A brave young lady receives her degree after being buried in the snow, a blind woman becomes a masseuse and plans on running again at F.dison High. and then we have George Van Dam and the Gallaghers who are so petty that they can't even live next door to each other In peace. What a waste of energy their story is. LIZ REINDERS TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Street . closure To the Editor: With recatd to ~ recent c1cmng of a public st.reoet -namely Hazel Avenue in Corona del Mar, l am Interested in the criteria used to make this determ- lna tion: I live on Poppy Avenue and the traffic year round ii likened sometimes to any freeway in Southern CaUfornla, (take your choice) not to mention the added traffic generated by the Five Crowns reataurant on comer of Poppy and PllCific CoMt Hiahw•y. f feel the cloGna O( !fuel to the one-way t raffic wu done very aurrepthlou11y •nd would be very 5t.ef\.al for 91\ antWet' IO that we on y mlaht punue the IMM avenue ln the cto.Uw of Hpelt VIROINIA L. J'OUTS confidence in our motives and planning to approve a permit. We also appreciate the efforts of the Newport Beach Police Department and we thank them for working with us and doing an excellent job. And finally, we're grateful to the citizens of West Newport for their open attitude and their willingness to have this event m their neighborhO<XI . VERONICA YOUNG DENISE A VILA GREG TAYLOR DENISE TAYLOR ·' Tribute earned To the Editor: I strongly agree with your recent ·- editorial stating the justification for renaming the Orange County Performing Arts Center after the family that has contributed so much to its development. As you astutely point out., the Segerstrom family has not only been a force for cultural development in our community but has also spurred economic growth and development that will benefit Orangt' County for years to come. It would certainly be a fitting tribute for a family that baa d~ so much. I laud your editorial !!fforts in that direction. HARRIETT M. WIEDER Supervisor, Second . District Picture the reverse To the F.ditor: It is appropriate that tn this time of Middle F.ast turmoil,.• few 9ellt.ences be recorded to increase American understanding of what is happening. First: Suppose the situation were reversed. with the PLO au.rroun<!ini Tel Aviv? What rMtty would be asked, or expected? And lieyood that, would it not. bMed on our owp American history, be deemed better to die in b9ttle, rather than ln a chamber filled with pa? GIX>RGELEWIS • Or~ a.. DAILY PILOT/ThUr •• ~ ~. 1112 DoW~nesFi OFF 8.66 CLOSING 803.27 2nd oil filrike. . ...... off shore. noted LOS ANOELEs (AP) -The Atlantic Richfield Co. has announced the second major oil strike ln the' Santa Barbara Channel within a week. using the flm floating exploration veseel the state has allowed since the massive 1969 oil blowo"Ut. ~ The well two miles offshore from Coal Oil n>lnt was producing 4,138 barrels of oil dally, Arco spokesman Al Greenstein said Wednesday. Texaco Inc. said earlier it.a exploratory well ln federal waters off Point Conception was prod~ 4,200 barrels a day. MCI m oves to Irvine complex ) MCI Telecommunications, Inc. signed a lease and options that will total nearly 20,000' square feet durina the lease term in the Irvine Company's Executive Pari~ office complex at Main Street and MacArthu~ Boulevarg. in Irvine. -· MCI recently moved i1;1to its initial 10,000 square feet in the low-rise office development froJD the compan·y·s former· facility in Santa Ana. Approximately 60 persons will be employed in the ·offices. The broker representing MCI was Howard Wells of Coldwell Banker 'Col'J'lmercial Real &tate, Newport Beach. The lease is valued in ex~ of $850,000. Deadline set for stock buys Enterprise National Bank (in organization} has '!!t Au~. 6 as a deadline for purchase of common stock m its initial public offering. , 'Ihe shares sell for $10 and a minimum purchase i.t 200 shares, according to an offering circular. The bank, to be located at 200 East Sandpointe in the Warmington Plaza, Santa (Via. is offering. 500,.000 shares or 575,000 if oversubscribed. The orgamz.attonal office is in Newport Beach. ·· . Timothy Peralta is president and chief execuuve, officer. Fed panel m eeting WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Reserve Board's policy-making arm, the Federal Open Markel Committee. meets here today to map poplicy for the rest of 1982 and to make tentative plans for Its 1983 mQnetary stance. / _ . Its decisions will be disclosed lat.er this month •· when Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volek«! appears before Congress. Brown sign s ho using m easure SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has signed legislation whic,ti would put a $200 millioft bond issue to subsidize low-interest mortgages on the November ballot, the governor's office reported. The measure would finance an estimated 11,000 home mortgages annually. The measure, AB3507 by Assemblyman Bruce Young, D-Cerritos, would authorize the California Housing Finance Agency. contracting with private lenders, to set up a fund to reduce mortgage rates for young families buying their first home. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT NEW YORK .. CAPI· S.lu, l p.m. prke ena net <~ of t,.,. lllteen most ecun New YOl'k Stotk E•tlWlnc)e i•~. ~:l'~~~tlONlly ·~.2~~tnen :~ "' GolclWSIFn .. 2.100 S -..... NL.T CMp '60,100 3'\I> ~ BNL. lndull 6.19,300 If.loo ... MAPCO n•,700 H AmEXPAU Sll,700 'Cl '" Mobil •17,'IOO ,,.,. '. CltlflSvce "4,100 SS"' • ~, Euon • •12,IOO 21"--~ Amer T& T l'l,100 SC>... -.,. PrlmeCm J77~ 11 -n• SchlllfT'lbr'Q Uc.600 37~, -.... L.IL. Co 3'2,600 IS.\li AllRlchflO 337,600 37 • "' WasteMof 32•.900 11"> • "1 AMERICAN LEADERS. NEW YORK IAPI· S.tn, l p,m. rw ano ,.., ,,._,. ot ttw ,.., ..,..., ec Amertun Stotk E•c!wlnt,1e ~ ~~~tiONllY •·,~..:, U.:1~!· GrtLkOwn -. 109,600 2Do Sovml'll wtC 111',IOO 21/o PlcoPrOd n 70,'IOO 7'°11 gr~~~ ri:: .!-Alba W•ldn U,100 • KlrbvExp l'l,600 t v, weno e •·'°° 21"-erownFor e ' 37 ·* ,,.,. METALS NEW YORK (API -Spot nonteff metal ll'iees Coday; ,l Coppor 69· 72 con ta a pound, U .. Pct, Up IU Up 11A Up 11.• VP tO• Up I.~ Up l.J VJ> l.O IJp 1.1 up .., UP H Up U Up U Up U Up 5.S VP U Up 4.t Up •.I UP U Up 4.S Vo U uo u Up U Ve •.2 Vo U uo .. , dest•nationt LNd 2s-21 cents a pound Zinc 35-37 c:enll a pound, CletlYOtod. • Tift $6. 1936 t.4eta!s WMk ~ tl>. Alum"'41m 7S-71 cents. pound, N.Y. Mon:"'Y $370.00 I* ftask ~ '286.00 troy OL. M.Y. SILVER Hlllldy & Harman. $5,800 per troy GOLD QUOTATIONS ., Tiie Ante•...,. ,_ s.i.cted WOfld QOld ,,..._ lodey· Lo11do11: mom1no ll•lng: $3t 1.75, $$,75. L~ •ll••noon llxtno. S310.21. '7.25. ....... ".,._ ft•lftg: S)()t.75, °" ., ,........., ~It 15. ort SUS. ~ Lale llx"'f: t.310.00. Oft M.n SS 10,50 •.a. ....._, a ... n•t41fll fOl"IY dally 1310.u . °" •us. 1........i 1on1y 111111y CIUOM} as10.n. t7.2~ ...... leftly dallr ~ wa:1s. °" st ..a. SJMIOLS