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1982-07-15 - Orange Coast Pilot
Ylll lllD• llllY IUll (I I~,.. N ' , , I 'I u N I '( ' I\ I 11 I t I (NI A •' '1 c I NI•, I MoDI freed, dad convicted in tot dea ~~ i. A Hunttncton Be.ch woman who wa1 charged with murderinc her 10..week-old 10n wa1 acquitted b y an Orange County Superior Court Jury Wedn.day, but the father of the Infant wa1 convicted of involuntary manalauchter. Both defendants -Sidney Green, 24, and Cynthia Evana, 20 -were found guilty of child endanaerin.K and child beating in the death of young Joey Green in June, 1981. The nine-woman, three-man jury'• dedaion late Wedneeday came after nearly two daya of dellberatlona that began Tuetday. • Several jurora wept aa the verdicts were read, as did both Green and Evans and their famillea, who were present in the courtroom. Proeecutor Bryan Brown had argued that the defendant.a were guilty of murdering the child - Oreen because he violently shook the baby the day he died and Ma. Evans because she had custody and allegedly knew 1he waa exposlna him to danpr. Oranie <:.ou.nty Superior Court Judge Kenneth E . Lee, who presided over the trial. inltructed the jury Tue.day that It could find Ma. !!vana guilty of eecond de,ree murder or acquit her. Judge Lae had said that Green ~d be found guilty of eecond- degree murder, Involuntary manalaughter or acquitted. ''The jury did the right thJ.ni," deferuie attorney Larry Bruce, who represented Green. aald after the verdicts were read Wednelday. Bruce laid he never denied hil cllent WU rouah with the baby, but ht. 9CUonl were not meant to kill the child. "The jury determined that it waa not reuonably apparent the ch ild would dJ.e from the trMbnent." he said. T he 10-week-old youngster died June 1, 1981, in the mnall Huntlnaton Beach ~partment where hi• unmarried parents were living. 11\e prmecution had argued that Joey wu beaten and ahaken because he cried too much, enraging hie pa.rents. Alter the infant died, doctora diacovered Joey had 12 broken bonH throughout hla body, including a broken collar bone. According to medi cal t.-tlmony, the child died after being violently shaken, cauaing injuries to the brain. "The jury didn't let emotionalism decide the cue," Bruce said. Attorney Donald Rubright, Colorado town deluged as dam breaks ESTES PARK. C.olo. (AP) - A 24-foot earthen dam on the Fall River gave way today, aending a wall of water up to 7 feet deep through the scenic main street of th.is reeort town juat eaat of Rocky Mountain National Park. There were no immediate reports of injuries. The boilin g b r own water churned debris from along its path, tncluding a mnall car. failure of the Lawn Lake Dam, owned and operated by Farmers Ditch Co. of Loveland, an irrigation company, apparently occurred in the early morning hours. The re are about 6,000 pennanent residents in the Estes Park area and now is the height of the summer season, which means another 30,000 to 40,000 tou rists and vacation-home owners were in the area when the flood hit. who defended Ma. Evan1, admitted hie client had rtruck the 'child once, but that ahe waa unaware that Joey wu badly hurt from treatment by hla father. Going ln her favor, Rubrtaht said, was testimony by the famlly1 pediatrician that he did no diagnose any broken bones in the child eeveral days before he died. Both Green and Evans could be sentenced to up to 4 years in state prison. GE'M'ING HIS GOAT(S) -John Matar of present from Matar's brother Sam, a car dealer Chicago stands in his front yard after taking in California. F.ach year the brothers try to delivery of a herd of 50 goats -a birthday outdo each other with outlandish gifts. Mayor Harry Tregent, surveying the damage a half- block from Elkhorn Avenue, the main street, shook hie head and appeared near tears. At .least 3 feet of water waa reforted standtnc in all of the 150 to 200 bu1ine11ea along El1thorn Avenue. Jim Crowe, a county employee answering the sheriffs phone a"t the county offices, said town streets were dry when he arrived at work at 8 a.m. Iraq claims Iranian troops driven back By ne Aueclated Presa Iraq claimed today that iu forces drove Invading Iranian troops back across the border after a counterattack that halted an Iranian offensive apparently aimed at the major Iraqi oil port of Dura. . But Iran, which invaded Iraq on Tuesday night, said Iraq's "feeble counteroffensive" failed and the Iraqis retreated. . "The agsressors' perfidy boomeranged oo them,·· an lraqi communique said . "Th ey retreated in failure across the *** border, pushed by blows and curaes.'' Tehran radio, quoting an Iranian military communique, said : "A feeble enemy counteroffensive was defeated this morning" and that the Iraqis lost at least 10 tanks. It said Iranian jets were bombing Iraqi positions. F.arlier, Iranian broadcasts said today Iran's "Operation Ramadan" invasion forces completed a 12-mile thrust into Iraq -Iraq admitted a six-mile (See IRAQ, Page A%) *** Arab oil nations 1;1ff ected by battle \ WASHINGTON (AP) -11• AIA[Rll About 200,000 Iranian and Iraqi troops are locked in a bloody battle that could have long-range conaequences for U.S .-backed Arab countries in the oil producing Persian Gulf, U.S. in~ analysts aay. An estimated 100,000 troops on each side are concentrated on the Baara area of southern Iraq, which the lraniana have invaded with the apparent aim of overrunning that key oil industry center, according to these analysts. "It looks like this may be a bloodbath," said one speciallat who compared the scale of fighting to World War II combat. At the White House on Wednesday . deputy press aecretary Larry Speakes said the United States is urging "an (Sff WAR'S, P a1e A%) TELEVISION Another l(ar documentary "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why IOITle Vietnam veterans turned to crime after returnin g. but instead is just anoth er war documentary. Page B6. BUSINESS Morl6a6e plan detailed O~t W11tem S.vtnp annowKW lta p1ana to deal with due-on...i. ~and edde lt will "°' in..,_. wi&h pllt .... P ... A12. Fl,.,,,. •ddl1J6 d•y care .... and ._.. oompana. IN ~ an ... t. •r -,_ the ...,.. numben of ""*" who .... .., worldftl .,.., .. Wtl blnh. ,... •• ,, I l~ I Patrons sought in Clemente disease scare Fearful that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis might occur, Orange County health officials are attempting to locate any people who ate at a salad bar at a San Clemente Carl's Jr. restaurant July 2. '"nlia ia the flnt rve ever aeen in this town." the mayor aald "I suppoee it can be cleaned up, but th e damate i1 done. I'm juat sick.'' T h e flood cloud U .S . H l1 bwaya 36 and 34 and ColCncb 7, CUUing off Fates Park in all directiona. Authorities began warning motel sue-ta and resident.a at the weat end of Estea Park, to evacuate just before 7:30 a.m .. a resident said. Jim Harpst.er, spokesman for the U.S. Park Service, said the By 9 a.rn., power was out in the north and west ends of town and there was a heavy smell of propane gas. People were warned to move away. from propane tan.ks that were 11e.en rolling through the muddy, brown waters. Fall River, generally a clear, meandering trout 1tream, wu totally out of it.a banka as it made its way to Eetes Lake at the eaatem edge of town. A dam on Eetes Lake empties into the Big Thompeon River. A flood along the Big Thompeon in July 1976 killed 139 people. In Denver, John Bryne, director of the Division of WELCO M E, S O N - Argentine Navy commander in chief Adm. Isaac Anaya welcomes his son, Lt. Guillermo Anaya after the latter arrived with 592 other POWs released by the British. Disaster Emergencies, said his office was sending a helicopter to Estes Park to help local authorities d etermine the damage Crom today's flood. Dr. Thomas Prendergast, count y epidemiology director, said a male employee who helped prepare the salad bar that day has become infected with hepatitis A. Santiago airport site backed :~ The junior college track team member a pparently contracted the disease at a central California restaurant while away for a track meet, Prendergast said. Between 18 and 20 other persons in the state have contracted the d.isea9e after eating at the restaurant. he said. County 'blue ribbon' panel n early unanim o us in selection .. Pre ndergast said health officials are seeking any people who ate at the Carl Jr. salad bar after 3 p.m. July 2. By F REDERIC& SCHOEMEHL «-.o.1r ........ A "blue rib bon" panel of Orange County business and industry leader• has recommended Santiaac> Canyon east of Oranae as a location for a new Souther n C'alifornia regional airport. 1t'he panel, in a unanimous action Wednesday with one member Jtbstaining, said the Oran ge County Board of Supervi8on should immediately enter negotiations to purchase or reaerve Santiago Canyon for the international-type air Cac$ty. The site under study is owned by the Irvine C.ompany. In its list of recommendations, the committee appointed by' supervisors in early 1981 said' John Wayne Airport should not be expanded to handle more than the two million travelers per year it currently serves. The committee said that future . work at John ·Wayne Airport. should be done strictly for safety, convenience or efficiency. Any affected person should either contact the h ealth department at 834-2683 or a physi cia n , Prendergast recommended. Thoee people should receive an injection to prevent beciomina ill with the viral infection. Crean foe bolts GOP panel -. :: :: Hepatitis is a liver dlaeaae that requires oonsiderabie bed rest. "Nobody dies of Hepatitis A f« pract1cal purpoees," Prenderpst said at a Wednesday news conference. (:andidate vacations while controversy continues .· He aaid any penon should try to receive the gamme globuli.Ji. injection on or before Friday. SPORTS By JEFF ADLER °' .. ..., ........ Republican con1reasional candidate J oh nn ie Crean may have departed for a Europe.ft vacation, but the political con troveray aurrou ndina his candldlicy contlnuea to almmer. Hanging. tough in Shrine ~ F4ilon Hlgh product Rick DlBemardo -played it tough for two years, and will do the mne Saturday night in the Shrine All-star fooiblall proe at the Rme Bowl. Page Ct. . Good racket tor McNamara Fonner UC lrvtne tennll COICh Myron McN...,.. hM returned to the p>d life and 19 U. hMd ..... pro at John Wayne T.W. Club. The Duka would haw wan&ed ~t that way. p._ Cl. COUNTY Lo,..,, •• ,,,.. ,,.,. •••• A member of the San Diego Cou nty Republican Central Committee for the paat eight years has resigned rather than endorae Crean. withdraw its e ndorsement of'. Crean, who is seeking elec:tion to.· the 43rd C.ongreaional District: seat. :: San Diego County Republican Central Comm ittee membef': And a handful of Orange C.ounty Republicans a.re asking their GOP central committee to Roeemary Barrett-Smith said sh& .. (Sff CREAN, Page Al) INDEX At Your Service A4 Ann Landen B2 Erma Bambeck 82 Movies 87-8 Bullnem C4-5 Mut ual F\lnda C4 California A5 National Newa AS C..vabde 82 Public Notkes B4;C4,6,8 a-ltied C8-12 Sparta Cl-3 c.orNct B3 • Dr.Steincrohn 82 Cr a.word B3 Stock Marketa a Dlaih NC>tk.9 C8 TelevWon B6 Sditiolial Al0..11 Tb.at.en 87-8 &nterWnanlnt 87-8 W•ther A2 Hof~ 82 World Newt A3 NA -:-JOtJ I Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Th"red'Y. July 18l 1981 =~~=m~P:!Q!:::-:.A~1~~~~~-...;.~~.....-~--------~--------------------------- stories .~it~·!?~!~N~.ba~.'wednelday m tbe n1olldat,ln1 po1IUon1 m t'r 10Utheut comer of Iraq, Iran lhlq'1 eecond ...._, dty eent jet.a to at~k Dura croaa tfle Shau-al-Arab ltaq Mid ha air force retaliated ,_f;:J· The communlque1, by bom~ Kharf Ial&nd, Iran'• in London, aa!d the vital Pentan Oul oil po~ and lnlh.bma were preparing to drlve three we.tern. Iranian ~ltie1 ward the Iraqi clty <>f where hundreds of ca1ualt1es umah, on the eut bank of w e r e r e p o r t e (I . I r a q I W~terway oppoe.lte Basra. communiques ackdowledaed 1ran 1 lnt.erlor minitt.er, Nategh losing four planes in the attack , Mid ln an interview with on Kharg l&land ~uri ll1aml newa(Maper ' Inn would flaht Iraq unUl Both aides claimed to have Ian clt1H were safe from lnflicted heavy enemy loaeta and am and .... long .. our righta taken hundred.a of prilonera in not met completely." the clash on a narrow strif. of Interview, .een in Nicosia, lfand between the lraq-ran , apparently contradicted rontier and the east bank of the tar prom.iJes to fight until Shatt-al-Arab opposite Basra, 75 'kan'1 fundamentaliat Moslem miles north of the Persian Gulf. 4im1es toppled Iraq's regime and The conflicting claims could ~ to Is r a e f i -held not be independently verified becauae foreign report.era are not j ~ n _ru1e an estimated 200,000 allowed into the war rone. but ~ and lraqi troops fought the combat clearly was large- wbat Wl'll Mid to be a bloody scale . . *** . *** WAR'S CON SEQUENCES ... i.mmediate end to hostilities and a who hurled themselves at the negotiated settlement." Senate Iraqis in human-wave attacks. ~jorlty Leeder Howard Baker Despite political divisions of 'l'e~ attended a briefing within Iran, the analysts said, the by a na~o'?;81.aecurlty official and Iraqi invasion had a "rallying then S81d, Its a very real danger effect'' which enabled the the war will spread." Iranians to turn the balance Acco rd l n g to t he U . S . against the Iraqis. ·I, intelligence specialists. the Both Iraq and Iran are hostile I irptnediate Iranian objective to the United States. 'I a~ to be to cripple .Iraq's But U.S . analysts said the oH-baaed economy, with a American stake in the war lies in pqillible drive to rut a critical the impact its outcome will have m;Jitary supply route into Iraq on the security of U.S.-supported from Kuwait. Arab regimes in the area Inn's basic goala. the sources including Kuwait and Saudi 14td, probably are to shatter Arabia. Iraq's fighting power, badly U.S . officials worry that a shaken _by pre~ous defeata, to victorious lran might turn on uoderm&ne public support for the Persian Gulf nations which have Baghdad gov~rnment an.d to supported Iraq. Even if Iraq ~ the retpme of President withheld any overt military seddam Huaem. . action against Kuwait or Saudi ,~ Iranians not only want Arabia, it is feared that their thc!G' ~ of ~ in revenge victory could be followed by for-Iraq 1 invasion of Iran 22 I r a n i a n s u p p o r t o f monthl -SO· ~u,t they obviously fundamentalist Moslem groups in want to humiliate Husaein and pro-U.S. Arab countries. perhaps aee him replaced by a A f t e r t h e s h a h w a s f~talist regime," said an overthrown by fundamentalists intelligence &.na.1:Y1t. and other opponents in Iran, U.S. After some initial 1etbacks, the military officials believed that Ir~ army rallied to push the the resultant cutoff of U.S. anna. lr1!q15 back and the momentum is spare eart8 and training wouldl with Iran, the analysts said. reduce Iran's armed forces t-0 They predicted the outcome vtrtual impotence. will turn on whether the Iraqi However, the Iranian.a have t roops, whose weakness in 1urpri1ed American analysts le.aderahip and fighting qualities ~since the beginning of the Iran- ~ere expaeed in previous battles Iraq war with their ability tO' m Iran. will now "pull up their austam heavy ngntmg. socks" and fight effectively on One explanation advanced by their home ground. intelligence officials is that the Up to now , they said, the Iranians have had a clear edge in motivation, including what ·Was described as the "fanatical -fervor" of revolutionary guards Iranians still are drawing on what are described as "a hiKi1 amount of military hardware and ammunition" bought by the shah during the era of clos ~ U.S.-Iranian relations. Cft EAN • • • rHttned becaute 1he dld not approve of Crean'• primary campa!Jln tactics. Mr1.~Barrett-Smith llald 1ho quit after he&rtnc Cr-ri defend tiil prinwy Clell'palp dwina • contul committee moetfn1 Monday nlaht. Followtn1 the meeting, Crean left for a month- lor\I ICutopHn WMiaUon. "I felt hi• ar1umtnta were ~clout," Hid Mra. Barrett· t)mlth, who also (1 a vice preaidont of the California Federation of Republican Women. touthem dlvtaion. "I felt. I couldn't support him and tht more honett thing io do wu real .. sf~ added that. she will probably work for former Carllbad Mayor Ron ,Packard. the second-place finisher in the OOP primary who has announced his w rite-In ' candidacy. "Mr. Pac kard gives the1e people an alternative to Crean without voting for a Democrat," Mn. Barrett-Smith said. Meanwhile Beverly and Doris Roose of Capistrano Beach and Wllliam and Jen Rogers of Mission Viejo have asked the Orange C'ounty central committee to withdraw 'its endorsement of Crean because of his primary campaign excesaes. lt was a formal complaint by these same two couples that led to last Saturday's finding by the party ethics committee that Crean had violated the party's code for a second time during the primary campaign. In a letter \o county GOP Chairwoman Lois Lundber~. the couples ask that the party's backing of Crean be dropped because of "the serious nature of the violations and the fact that they. in all probability, were a deciding factor in the election." Mrs. Roose said she and her husband wrote the letter because the e thics committee action stopped short of recommending the party withdraw its end orsement. "W e were n't aati.Bfled." she said. "We thought they should have gone further ." Mrs . Lundberg said th-e question of Crean 's party endorsement would not be raiaed at next week's central committee meeting unless it is broached by committee members. "lt has been thoroughly through the ethics committee," Mrs. Lundberg said . "It has already been tried and deliberated and it is a completed matter." She added that she would be reluctant to have the central committee overrid e ethics committee r ecommendations because "we would be clouding their effectiveness." Mrs. Lundberg said she would be "highly surprised" if any central committee members agree to bring up the question of the Crean endorsement at the mt?eling. Slightly cooler Albuque 100 86 Rain I.ml Snow ;.;. Coastal SnWI corwfl ecMloty O'<l9' outer .....,. tn:wn Po6nt Corloapllon to Sant• Ro11 leland. Soulh of Santi RoM llllllncl, ~ -1 ..,_ 10 to II knotl with 3 to 5 toot -•· Inner wllafl, llght .....,. ...,. 9llCIPt ~ to to ,, 11note dur1nQ aftamoon and -*'II hOufa. Conlldlt9ble low ~ and IOC.i tog with pertW ~ di.mg .,._ llOl.n. tl.S. Suwm~·;y The Gulf and eouthlrn A tlantlc coa1t1 had thundentorm1 Wednaedl)' and 1ho-r1 and tllunder11onn1 alao continued -"" IOwet Mi.curt v,,,,,, end ""° MlcHgan. Heavr 11orm1 over lh• 1011tlle11t corner of T11111 produced 1 tornado which touched down aboul 25 mll•• ... of Port Arthur. A I•• 1hower1 Oempenad nor tll•••t Monlana and lh• Wllllllngton COie\. 8111" were 1unnr over lh• So.rtllwMt. the Nonh.,..t had partlr cloudy all.I•• and tha nor1tlsn P1lllll had dtov6y ..... FOf tod9y, IClttered ~ end~ .... forec:eet from Ill• Gulf Co11t 10 Iha c..alMI end ICrOll thl upper MIMI= Velley and upper Gr.-A ~ of wldlly eoe tt•r•d 111ower1 end ..... "°""" -fofWC8IC """' .. ,... °' thl nlllkln'• EMt. end IAto tM n0f111ern and centre! ....... California AndlofllQe 81 45 Thursday July t 5 • i:;-:i AOanta 87 70 • Temperatures Showef1 Rurrielc Atlante Cty 79 73 ~ Auatln SHI 74 ~ Baltlmor• 1M 70 91nn1ng1vn as 69 ~ca 83 58 BotM ao 55 Boston 78 &a 8uftlllo 87 ~ 8ut1lngton &4 81 aian.tn SC 85 75 ChartSln WV 87 87 Chatttt• NC &4 71 Cheyenne 85 !o3 CHcago 99 66 Clnc::lnn911 88 &4 Clewlland 66 81 Clmbla SC 89 70 "'•~ Wntt>e< ~e Columbue 86 86 NOAA U S Oeol QI COf""'P'-" g:,"c!, Wttl :: f: ~ronts: Cold...-Warm W9 Occh.lded 99" Statl()Oafy •• g:~ : ~Sbni F• 86 66 Senta Batbera TO 57 Detroit a5 62 St Loull 85 71 Senti Cruz 87 59 Duluth 87 59 St P· Tampe · 92 78 Santi Marti 68 ~ El Puo 101 69 St><*-68 58 Senta Monica 68 54 FWbanka 78 !o3 SyrecuM 81 50 Stodlton 911 82 Fargo 84 68 Topella M 72 TlhOI VeAW( 84 42 Flagslalf 87 49 TUQ900 106 n Thel'INI 109 74 Or .. t Flltl 76 59 Tolll 93 87 Torrance 78 90 Hartford 85 60' WUhlngtn 85 77 Yuma 113 95 H*\I 78 5ll Wichita 93 72 Honolulu 87 7 4 Houlton 90 70 CA16~A lndu.,ila 85 86 .. Lo A~leo Jldl111 88 72 ~= 95 59 Bermuda JldllfMle 92 75 Bek• 105 79 Bogota ~City ee 11 Barltow 10s 78 ~ Kno~ 86 85 8-imonl 101 55 Freapon Lal Veg.111 107 75 Big S-83 43 Guecs.141jera Uttle A«* 91 87 Blythe 114 80 Ouedlloupe Loullvtlle 87 85 C.tlllnl 70 57 HIVMa Lubbodt 91 68 Eurak• 87 51 MempNI 113 72 Ff'llllO 100 70 MWnl 17 81 ..... Anowt-.d 82 53 Smog .. 95 ee &4 to 91 82 68 "" Lo 79 79 51 79 73 55 12 75 .. .... 17 14 ~ le 74 ...... p 91 17 l.OftQ 8-::tl la t3 .......,.. to 13 Loe.,_... 13 t3 New on.na • TO Mo!vowll 17 51 .... Yorti 14 72 Mont-..o II 82 Noftoll S5 73 Mom«wy .. 55 No. PlllttAt 99 M Mt. Wlllon 11 16 The Air Ouellty M~ Olstrlet Pf'9llcta ~ • QUiity ·~ In ,.,... ,...... of tt. South Co.t Nt 8eiir\, """ good • qUellY ~ Ofl)y for tlle co.t.li ..... Okla City 88 70 Newport 8eldl TO t3 OwNN ee 66 e>nterto -. 51 Or1endo 92 74 Patm IPftngl 112 72 C..... IOw _. and toe In ~ 17 70 P8Mdlne ti IO ....,,.Celbftla .... -. ~ 113 16 PMO Aot>ll8 17 57 Unh11lllltul air qualltr tor everyone end 1 Pollutant S~ Inda of 235 II~ tor IN 8"' Gebflll end POftlOM ~endtlle~S... a.rn.clllO ... wllfl ...... °' 220 predicted tor tll• I an Fernando and Santa Cl1tlt1 14'\oe,,.... ,.., Wouotl Frid•>"· Plnlburafl as 82 ~ 1e st --OOOllr ""-· ~. "' 71 51 9'ld IMt .. 72 OrMf9 ~ty cen Hs>eCI Plllnd Ore 93 M AedWood City 11 10 ............. to 74 tod9y. Pr~ 82 .. Reno .. 54 •ton Fftdl¥.1111Md llllN 71 to ~ ee 10 Secnnwtto le eo ...... 11 to. "'-· Lowa In ~ Qty 13 t 1 SlllNI 11 51 ... lilerlo ff 54 811'1 ... llllldlllO tOO et ~.....,_OM llll*t llWll · Nut.mood 16 72 811'1 ~ tO IO In tol .... ._., Illa ~. Seit 1Ake t1 .. 811'1 Diego n M ~ -In ... ic.e In len AMonlo ti 72 811'1 Frlf!ClleoO 71 U ..... • ..... -...... 11 60 lenJoee t1 12 .=i ::-...=m-= ~·;"~M;•~o:.tt:...._....,~":....!7!1 ...!lenta=::!AM:._...,__,~M=-~l~i 'tt-T =-=~,::: ,~:: ......... .. -:::;: .... =-:.= l!!r. ~ -=-=-~ ..-.......... lllf llPllT ~ . Wiier• 10 cell (toll trM) tOt ...... ""°' lnfonMClon: Orange eounty: (IOO) ~ Lot 'AngelH Oountr: (8001 2A2..0U ........ end ........... dlllO ~: (IOOt al7-4110 M*O r.,..... 0..: CIOOI ~ Tide. . • ' FOUND AT LAST -Tucson police detective • h . .,. ~ Tony Bulver look s over the Lincoln cars istory, he found the car w as sold t6 Co . ta1 h people in Indiana. Kentucky and lllinois before - ntmen e diacov.e red was stolen nearly 12 d Ar years ago from a Chicago man. In tracm· g the en mg up an izona. Now pohce are seeking the original owner. ~~~--=-~~~~~~~~~- Trash strike ends Banning j ob f ac!n g f inan cial wo e / in Huntington, FV A strike by West Orange County trash truck drivers and loaders was dec lared over Wednesday by an official for Rainbow Dispoeal Inc. Stan Tkaczyk, vice president of the Huntington Beach firm said all the company's 45 to sO trucks were out in the field in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley picking up garbage. He advises residents to put out trash on regular coUect.ion days He said delays in some cases are running up to a day but that the collection should be back on schedule by the end of the week. Tkaczyk said nearly 100 workers walked off their jobs Monday morning in a dispute over holiday pay. He said the company was foUowing contract provisions. A representative of Teamsters Local 396 in Los An~eles. the Homes 'lean'; families fl ee C HICAGO (AP) Two Northwest Side families were relocated with relatives temporarily after their house ')ust got tired" and began to tilt like the Leaning Tower of Ptsa The two-story frame structure started to creak Tuesday night and tilted off-<enter 18 mches. narrowing the gap between 1t and a neighboring house from two feet to six inches. Fire Department officials sa id Wednesday. "Sure. it scared the families inside," said Robert Montgomery. fire battalion ch1ef. "H jarred them, but they were unharmed." t un ion thut represents the workers, confirmed that the w~lkout waS' an unsanctioned wtldcat strike. Tkaczyk said about 75 of the reg.ular workers had been rehired anp the othe rs were replaced. T.he c.ompany provides resid ential trash service in Fountain Valley. Huntington Beach and Sunset Beach. Irvine blaze causes loss, con fusion A fire caused $19.000 damage Wednesday to a new two-story house in Irvine where several Korean families were staying. The blaze of unknown origin broke out at 2:45 p.m. in an upstairs bedroom at James Yoon Lee's home al 3 Christamon in Northwood. said Chuck Murphy. spokesman for the Orange County Fire Department Three families from Korea were visiting Lee's fanuly. They had arrived just four days earlier and 14 peop1e were staying at the house. Murphy said. OnJy Lee 1.'0uld speak English: none of the firefighters rould s peak Korean And Lee was al work when the ftre began. Despite communi cation problems, the fire was controlled m 20 minutes. Fire damage was confined to the one bedroom. he said. One of the occupants. Mi Fa Jang, 40, of Korea suffered a seizure aft.er she had evacuated the house. Murphy Said. She was treated at Western Medical Center in Santa An.a. Ueve loper Hancock "Bill" Banning says that he is unsure about the financial feasibility of building the $124 million project that wiU now go ID a citywide vote. Faced with a referendum, the Newport Beach City Council decided Monday to put the embattled Banning project on the November ballot. They could have voted to kill it. Banning. president of Beeco Ltd., said he views the council's decision as an "emphatic reaffirmation of their plan." ln March the council approved a compromise plan to build 379 homes and as much as 400,000 square f eet of o ffice and industrial development on 75 acres in west Newport Beach near Pacific Coast Highway and Superior Avenue . The council's d ecision last March disappointed Banning who had wanted ID build 750,000 s quare f eet of o ffice and industrial development and 239 homes on 75 of the 500 acres owned by Beeco. He said that the $12 million in road improvements and park improvements he 1s being asked to pay. along with the reduction m the commercial area. could force him to scrap the plan. "Ir we can we'd hke to be able to do 1t because we think it would be good for the community," said Banning. Baruung said he hopes to reach a decision within the next few weeks regarding the economic feas1b1hty of the plan. He will then meet with homeowners. Angered by the council 's approval of the project in March, homeowners formed a group known as the West Ne wport Legislative Alliance which led the successful referendum drive. belle £ranee Dressesfrom Beile France. You'llfind them in our ladies department. A stort thut offers fine tradinonol sp<>rtsKWJr for mtn wonwn. and 1>'11"> • 1028 lrvlM, Newport Be•ch. C.thfom 1. Phont 042 -7001 I l l , I Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurtdey. Juty 15, 1912 • Chaos reigns at Beirui hospital • BJ:l.RUT, Lebanon (AP) -A She pointed to the trail of before the ltu1 of the 197&-76 her 1peclalty -wa1 covered two-toot wide path of blood blood. Letaan.. dvil war. S1nct then. with aharda. Four beda nMl'elt trailed throuch the broken glul "That wu a vtator. He will the holpltal hu been dunuld the wtndow were Uttered with l.n the hoepital wardl, down the probably loae hi• le1," Dr. by ahrajinel many t1mel and Ml glua. • hall to the 1tairl. Bed CW1a1na Shamma said. been hit ~y at leut twice. "lt'a a miracle. None of the and a topeled aide table were Later in the day the man'a lea "I'm all rlaht. rm fine. At Jeut children were b.urt, Juat a couple splashed with red. wu removed at the hip. I'm 1till alive -l don't know of viaitorl," ahe said. Since June 4, when laraell how," llhe Mid, half u U to About 20 or 2~ people &rblr Hospital la just 400 yards from the "Green Line" separating bealeeed PLO- dorninated west Be1.rut from the hraeli-occupled Chrlatlan- dominated eaat side. It has been shelled ~y times l.n the last eight years of clvll strife in Lebanon. Dr . Amal Shamma, a 38 -year -old naturalized American with a home in Durham, N.C .. has been here through it all, including last week's bombardment by Israeli artillery. planes and boa ta be1an convince heneU. wounded In the attack were bombarding we1t Belrut to force The laraell artillery ahella brouiht to the h01pital while the the Pale 1 t In e Liberation landed juat outside the hoeptal shelling wu atill 10J.na on. Three Or1an11.atlon guerrillaa to leave, last Sunday, blowing In the or four were already deed, llhe Barblr Hoeptal haa treated about windowa on the east aide. "Moet said. 1,000 people. of the Injuries were from glaal," "We piled them up on the floor "That does not include the Dr. Shamma said. like animal.a. We were nearly OOAll (people dead on arrival). It The 90-bed hoepltal had about paralyzed. We were not able to does not include thoee who died 80 patients in it when the use the operating room. The in the emeraency room," Dr. 1he111 n a at art ed. " It w aa wont part waa that the shelling Shamma said. milerable. It was a catastrophe," continued for several hours after The small, intense woman aho aald. "The panic wu crazy. the hospital waa damaged. came here in 1974, after her We had to work on them on the "Thia area has not had much training at J ohna Hopkins floor." rest," she added, referring to the Hospital in Baltimore, Md., and The pediatrics ward -where last eight years of violence in the Duke University in Durham, just Dr. Shamma nonnally practices f r o n t 1 i n e h o 11 p l t a 1 ' 1 neighborhood. ''This (the Israeli siege) ii the worst, not for the numbers but for the type of wounds. In last year's mini-war (between Israel and the PLO which lasted 15 days), for instance, we had a lot of sniper victims. All we get now are shrapnel, bums, 1hocklng wounds . I 've seen auto-amputations." Dr. Shamma said she had treated a number of people for phosphorus bums, and one man died of them last week. Israel says it does not use such shells. ''The number of OOAs is much higher than before. The percentage of people who have major handicapping injuries (like amputations) is much higher. It is a totally different scale of destructive weapons." She estimated about 200 dead had been brought to the hospital since the fighting began in early June. . ''The main thing i.a not m.iaaing patients who are going to die if you don't treat them i.mmediately, among the pile of bodies on the floor," she said. The patients are usually about 30 percent PLO and Syrian soldiers and 70 percent civilians, Dr. Shamma said. "It's surprising because you would think the 90ldiers would be about the only ones on the streets during the shelling." . UWll 1t111 ":· PRDSURE COOKER -Dr. Amal Shamma, right, treats child at Barbir hospital in Beirut. The hospital was hit on July 1. 11 by Israeli shells that landed just outside the building. • • •• .. . ·~;, i.4J . •\I• Child support pay increases sought I l I• child support is owed, fullr•: payments are made every mon1h"i·: ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) - Backers of a bill to raile child support payments say such payments are now too small and too seldom received in California. The bill , AB3693 by Asaemblyman Art AgJloe. D-San Franciaco, was diacuBaed Tuelday before the Assembly Judiciary Committee during a general hearing on the ~ue. The bill, which had already been shelved for the rest of the year, would create statewide· guidelines, and require an annual 7 percent cost-of-living increase unless the paying parent could show it was unjust. Robert Barton of the state Social Services Department said, "We have yet to scratch the surface in the State of California in creating an ethic" to pay court-ordered child support. Barton said that out of 562,000 welfare cases statewide in which in only 16 percent. Jq, Law Profemor Carol Bruch of'•! UC Davia said judges donl['_1• realize how much it COits to~·· a child, and tend to sake ~ needs of a divorced paren.t .. · without child cu s tody ~1; generally the father -molll!•• seriously than those of the parelif!~. with custody. .~:.~ Agnoe aald he wanted to~•: aome modest changes this ye.ab~~ including telling judges to consider inflation when the)A'f• modify support orders. But the•t• com mittee ch air ma n ·,--11· Asaemblyman Elihu Harria, ~#·, Berkeley, said he doubted anyA>· changes would paas this year. ., .. , A survey in which just over·· half the state's counties took par.;t indicated that child support •1 payments average $118 a month · statewide. 1"" ,.,1, PARTING SHOT -Walter F . Mondale, former vice president with President Jimmy Carter, shows T-shirt at convention of the Communications Workers of America at Cobo Hall in Detroit. Mondale blasted the Reagan ., ........... aclminiatration and said he may be back in 1984 ''to talk about aomethin& else" but stopped short of declaring presidential candidacy for the Democratic party. The phrase RIF is a euphemism for layoUs of federal workers. Chemical weapons boost urged· WASHING TON (AP) -The United States should star t rebuilding its chemical weapons stockpile because prospects are slim that the Soviet t!nion will agree to any new treaty banning their production and use, a Reagan administration official says. subcommittee Tuesday. The main stumbling block to any new treaty is Soviet refusal to permit verification that a ban ia being adhered to, Howe and other officials told the panel. and the use of toxins, or naturally occurring poisons, is barred by a 1972 agreement. The administration has charged the Soviets with using chemical and toxin weapons in Afghanistan and Southeast Asia. SFA S Firial Clearance Begins Today. .. "'4r. .. " .. • "We can no longer forgo modernization of our chemical warfare," J onathan T. Howe, director of the State Department Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs , told a House PROBER -Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, chairman of the House Ethics Committee, will investigate charges that members of Congress have engaged in illicit sex with teen-age congressional pages. Chemic.al warfare ia banned under the 1925 Geneva protocol ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Cleaalfted edYeftt9"" T14t4142-M71 All otftef departments MJ-4321 Thoma1·P.Hele\I ~ end a. 6-.1"'9 OMow Key Schultz VIiie~ -~·~ Tom Murphlne NW MtkeHerwy ~-.......... ~I Ken Godderd °""*' ol OperllloN ~LMn ' a--looe ........-.,.. MAIN OfflCE DO WffC ar, 5'., C ..... *'-•CA. ¥all"*-: ... ,,.., C.U -·CA. .... Copyr'-"'2 ~ .... C.... ~wlllllfllfte ~. No-norw.. , ..... , ....... .-..n.•-· ... ffl'tl .. _11 IWf'elft _,, lie r--..C .. wllMut "'9Clel ll'ff"l!Mleft .. <'-''""'-· U.S.-Soviet talks aimed at a new treaty broke off in 1980 and aren't likely to be resumed because "there ia little prospect for productive negotiations under existing circumstances," Howe said. No U.S. chemical weapons have been produced ainoe former President Nixon banned them in 1969 , but the Reagan administration haa asked Con~ for money to resume production. The new weapons would be binary shells, which combine two separate, non-lethal chemicah into a potent weapon after the shell ia fired. The Senate hat approved $56 million to produce binary shells at a Pine Bluff, Ark .. arsenal. 1be measure is still pending in the Houae. Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa, told a Foretan Affairs subcommittee, "the Jong-term cost of destroying our existing stock of nerve gasses and replacing them with the new binary weapons will be in the billions. "A more coat-effective approach would be to devote greater resources to defensive preparaUooa such aa pa tnMka and pnnent u~ coupled with • real effort -at arms control," Le.c;b laid. Pent.aeon and admlnlavatlon offlcial1 aay the current U.S. atocka are det,rlor= and outdated, but Le.ch that the U.S. aneoal la 0 11Uffident to kill every human betne on earth.'' ~ ........ ...., .......... We're Listening ••• ........,,...., II l'O\I 00 "Gt ..... • )1911'-lll'•aoom ott....,,., , ....... ,.... C09¥ .. " --· -----~ti __ _ _....,...,"' , .... -..... 10 .... .,.,,, "°"' ecte¥ .. .. --- Whit do you like 1bout the Dally Pilot? Whit don't you like~ C1ll the number below and your mn11•• will be retarded. tr1n1cribtd and delivered to the approprtatt tdttor. The 11me 24·hour anawertnt aervlce may bt uNd to ,.tard ltt· lera to the editor on any toptc. Mailbox t0ntrtbuton muet tnel\Kte their name and telephone numbtr for vtriOcaUon. No tlreulaUon t1ll1, plea1e. Ttll u1 wh1t'1 on your mind. ' . 50% to 67% Off Original Prices* On Special Selections From • Better and Designer Dresses • Contemporary and Updated Dresses • Better and Designer Suits • Contemporary and Updated Suits • Designer Collections and Better Ready-TC>-Wear • Swimwear and Beachwear I • Contemporary Sportswear : • Designer Sportswear ~ •Better and Updated Sportswear • Right On! for Juniors- coordinates, separates, skirts, blouses, sweaters • Intimate Apparel- S leepwear, Robes, Loungewear • Fashion Jewelry Collections • Blouse Collections • Fashion Accessory Collections • Handbag Collections • Small Leather Goods • Womens Shoe Salon, Designer Salon, 'SFAntastic Shoe Collections • 1~ ""'~ ,.,.Vf' ~ 1nt~1~1· "'~ ~IJCllOtU ()(I sonw .'ff'tTU ptlOl 10 1h1s wi. Not ~v stvt. rn ~ colot •rtd sin .. .. ~ . •' ., ··~~~ .... ~, I'~~ ...... ........ . ·.t: I', • ,.ff ... , ... t; •''1' .. ,: ........ ,. .. . :;.i: . .... , .. J. : ,, . . . ... ::~1· , ~ ... .. .. ~ .. , ... .. • t~ :: ·(.): i l. "••· -~·. .. :! • ,r ~·· •• :.1 . ~;. -~~;!I \ ~ I .. 1, I ·Fluorescent bulb hazard ., PAT lloaownl .............. , DSAa RIADS&8: Underwrlten I•' r.lllixtm Jnc. (UL)~ a fluar--.t .. _.,, ftxture. Model 1010. b1arin1 the UL UilaM IDU'll and manuflldund by Lilh'-of Anmlca may ...-.t a rtlll ol ei.ctrio thoc::k ~ lnlWlatioll or removal of • noure..nt tube. · 'ftM UL apoUmnan ..ad the Jilk may .... -1y tf the fixtun la pNaed lA. the plnl • -. end of dw tube are IMerted Into the • Md a penon cantl!Cta a pm on the of tbe tube while that penon a11o la ~with lfOUDded metal. The ODnlWIW' II mutlooed to unplu1 the fixture when ..,_n,.,, or~ lampa. . The ~ added that the fixture eta. DOC oomply with 10m1 UL requirements. The ~ and authorir.atSon to UR the UL l11tln1 mark on the fixtu re haa b~n withdrawn by UL. and Lich'-of America hM .Svt.ed UL that the manufacture of the 'Model 8020 bu been cil8contlnued. Llah'-of America al.lo bu advt.eel UL that it bu offered to exchange any Model 8020 with ita new ahop liaht Uxture which has 1 received UL u.tt.na and la etlgible to bear the , .., .. UL u.tina mark. I tf i Child-care credit data DEAR PAT: Cu yoa tell me wkat tile aew tu replattou for ltl! are reaard.lag ~d-eare c"'1t? l'\'e tried to read aboat tills myeeU, Mt filld tile tax laformattoa I've aeu to be q.tte ceefa1lD1. J.M,. Foanta.lll Valley ~ U you make $10,000 or le98 per year, you ,. can claim a credit of 30 percent for eligible I) child-care expenses on your 1982 federal ~ income tax return. Thia la $720 maximum for one child; $1 ,440 for two or more children. $: U your l.noome ia more than $10,000, your : credit la reduced by a percentage point for : every $2,000 i.ncome over the $10,000 figure. I{ The maximum for one child ii $600; the : maximum for two or more children is $1,200. t U you make more than $28,000 annually, fJ you aet 20 percent of child-care expenses .. This ' ~~ ia $480 for one child; $960 for two or more t:. children. f; Thia tax credit may be claimed if you and i your 1pou1e both work outside the home on a J t full. or part-time buia, or one parent works ,, and the other goes to achool or ia disabled; or f1) you are a single working parent; or you have a home for a child and take the child as a ~ ! dependent on your tax return. •• :! Tax credit running out l ~ DEAR READERS: Thia ta the lut year to j [ claim a tax credit of up to $3,000 foe lmta1llng • approved water uvtnp system in the home. , The pr'OIJ'8ID was authorized in 1981 by a • law which established tax credits to cover part f of the cost of installing rain water and gray ! water systems, flow reclucen foe showers and faucets and low-fluah tot1eta. Gray water ayat.ema reclaim water from batha. ahowera and alnka for land1cape lrription. Both rain water and any water 1y1tem1 muat be used only to lrrl1ate landlcaDU\a. Landlcape lniladon accou.nta for about hall the water uted for California ~ The tax credit for one-family relidencee la 00 percent ol coeta, to a maximum pt $3,000. For multiple reeidel'M.9, an o'¥Jltr lrlatalllnl a ~ COltlnf at leut $6,000 can take $3,0bO .or 26 permnt of the cmt. whichever" creater. To be elJclble, all clatem landlcape u.. m1.11t be approved by the local health department. . A brochure de9Cribin& the ~ hu been written by the Department of Water s.oun-. Fr'ee coplee are available from Alan Inaham, Department of Water Reaourcea, Divi1ion of Plannina. P .0 . Box 388, Sacramento ~02, or can be obtained by caWna a toll-free number: (800) 952-5530. Benefits may increase DEAR PAT: My most.er recelvea VA Deoe•demcr ud hademalty Compe•aatloa (DIC) on die baala of my brotlter'a aervtce- couected deatll. U we place ber lD a D1nlD1 bome, will abe forfeit Iler DIC? W.R .• Hudaston Beacb No, in fact the Veterans Adminiatration reporta that your mother may be entitled to an additional monthly payment if ahe becomes a patient in a nursing home, ls helplesa or blind, or requires the regular aid and attendance of another penon. 'Lemon 'bill' detailed DEAR PAT: I read tllat tbe "Lemon BUI,. to protect new car parckaaen from bel.Dg atllck wl_. defective new can wu alped by tile govenor. Can yoe tell me wkat protecdoa tills new law offera! L.W., Corona del Mar As signed. AB 1787 provides that as of Jan. 1, 1983, if a car is subjected to four attempts to repair the same defect, or if it ii out of service for more than 30 days, the purchaser-will be entitled to receive from the manufacturer a new car or a refund, less an amount attributable to use. providing the consumer first uses the informal dispute r esolutio n p rogram set up by the manufacturer, if one is available and meeta specified criteria, before using the new righta under the bill in court. · .-"Got a problem ? Then wrl~ to Pat' Horowitz. P•t will cut red fllpe, • l getting the answers and action you • need to aolve in equ ities In n 1overnment •nd bu•ineu. Mail your quetJtlons to Pat Horowitz, At ·Your Service, Orange Ccoast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Carta Mesa, CA 92626. Aa many letters aa possible will be answered, but phone inquiries or letters not including the reader's full .rwne, address and business hours' phone number cannot be considered. Crack inco a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. Try a generous ser:ving of our new spiced cold boiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcorn® shnmp. And then do it again! It's all you can eat. Every day of the week. Each special is served with your choice of a crisp rosscd salad or coleslaw. baked potato or rice pilaf. and another favorite, sourdough bread . All }IOU can eat. All week long. Ala.Bo Snow Crab Legs All you can eat ............... ~15.45 ~Shrim An you can eat .. -~-.......... 17.75 New Spiced Cold Boiled Shrim All you can eat ............. '9.45p ledfobster· JU the seafood kwer in )QI: 7801 Bciach Blvd .. Buena PArk. 99+12_.I 16811 Beach Blvd .. Hundnaton Beach. 848·19S6 I !:JO a.m -10:00 pm Sun.·Thurt. II JO a.m.-11:00 pm. Fri &. 11 J ADMIRED -The readers of Young M118 magazine admire Brooke Shields more than any other female. A cto r J ohn Schnelder rates highest for males. one aslted Br.ooke to prom •NEW YORK (AP -ll wu a movie "Jtnc.U.. Love, .. WM the wHk before he/Li;h achool female moat admired by the prom. and Brooke Sh:tdt didn't maautne'• &'Mden. have a clato. So the 17-year-old 'nte mapzine said ita reeden, act.tell and model called up a boy primarily at the 111fJ1 of 10 and and uked him out. 18, put the Princell of Wal.II In "A friend and I called up two the No. 2 apot on the iof n:at guya who are frtenc:fs of oun and admired female., an author uked them to &Q w ith ua," Miu Judy Blume in the N 3 apot. Shielda la quoted as saying in the Mi. PiUY wu in flf plloe. Auauat Issue o f Young Mias Actor John Schnelder wu molt magazine. "As It tu rned out. admired male. they'd wanted to aak ua all the .----------- Uine." She attended a private achoo! in Englewood, N .J . Young Mist alao reported that Mils Shield.a, who starred in the INTRODUCING A NEW Cell e42-5171. Put • few word• to work for ou. SUPER CHECKING ACCOUNT Don't Settle For An Old-Fashioned Bank Checking Account. UNDER $2000 ... it looks and acts like the state-of-the-art free cMcking account you should have! OVER $2000 ..• stand backl we "sweep" it all into a high-rate money- market investment dailyl Real chedtng account convenience and doily access to your money. Write os many checks os you wont, whenever you wont, in any amount .•. we outomoticolly "sweep" any balance above $2.000 doily and outomoticolly into o high rote money market im1estment account Your surplus funds ou1omo11colly eorn money morket rotes w11hou1 monogement lees/without "in ond oul" paper work. To 1nves1, simply open o "super checking occou11t" 01 ony ol the convenient Equitable offices. Equitable Savings & Loan (Formerly Bellflower Savings a Loan) 16 108 Bellflower Boolevord Bellflower 213) 867-724 1 2 1552 Brookhurst Street 12775 Beach Boolevord Stanton (71 4) 895-1181 ALL ENTERTAlfleENT FREE WITH $4 Aot.ISSION •RJlllGI COUNTY ALL AMIRICAN FAIR LNDTOCIC AUCTIOfl .:& 17, ... , • 11 -1:00 , ... •n-•1 .. ,. a.,11-.. 11•,... • Oranoe Oout DAILY PILOT/Thurtd1Y, July 11, 1112 ]ones i ndicted on coc8ine charge Country singer charge d with cocaine possesion 8ln1er Oeor11 J'a11, th• Cou.ntry M\.ll&c Mloclatlon'1 malt vocelllt of the )'Ml' ln 1981, haa bHn Indicted on a cocaine =~11lon char1e In Jackaon, TM Hindi C-cM.lnty IJ'and jury action ti.nw from a March 2~ UTe1\ tn which the M*'-tppj Hlahway Patrol atopped the linler'• 1982 Lincoln Continental for apeedtnc. ~ driver, N-:f. Sepulvado, SS, of MUICle Sh , Ala., wu charpd with apeec:linc. Jonea, 60, wu arreated the next day near Aberdeen, Miu., after' a one-car ecctdent. In that caae, Jonea pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated, reckleu driving, poneaslon of alcohol ln a dry county and reckleea driving. He was fined $737.~. Folk singer Ario Gatbrle has becoQ)e a talent ICOUt, program producer and director of a fled gling company hoping to operate a commercial televiaion atation in Pittatleld, ftiass. 11111 /FICEI Houutonlc, Berkahtre Televhlon and Plttlfleld Community Televialon are competin& for pennialion from the Federal Communlcatlon1 Commlulon to operate on Channel 51. Actor Robin WlWam1 llld he II "cooperating" with the Loe Anaelea Police Department ln the inve1tlga\lon of the drua death of actor John Beluahi, but Wllliam1 declined to provide detail.I. In a statement 1-ued through his lawyer, Williama u.id he was "cooperating with the duly constituted authorities" in the Belushi inquiry. doth from a dn.&8 overdoee lut Maroh. Almott 100 hoboa from aa far away a1 Al11ka and Penn1ylvanl1 aathertd ln atrmJ.naham, Ala. for the 74\h Annual Hobo Convention -and not one hopped • tretpt train to aet there. "Hobel ride the cuah1ona now, m.tead of a llde-door pullman (box car)," llld Boraee lfa mptoll, a 67-year-old hobo from Attalla, Ala. The hobo9, who arriv~ Jet and by car, aathered to the time when an "1Jm,atecl 800,000 "Kn.lahta of the Ro.ct" rode the rails dur i ng the Great Depretaion. . Fair weather, good fllhlnc and fellowahip prevailed for the 15th annual Jimmy Doolittle FiahJ.J1' Party. althoueh actor Bert Reynold• declined to attend. R etired Gen. Jame• H . cauaht thtlt Umlt of two ulmon. "We had a fine day of ftlhina," th• 8&-yeu-old ,....i Mid. -Actor and atncer Bea Vt ..... ii =• down new root• In Jllver, N.J. becalm, he joked, the resident.I "uked me to move out there to improve the nelahborhood." I 1'1 don't know too much about Saddle River,'' uJd Vereen, 84, known for hll ro1-ln ''Ptactn" on Brordway and 11Root.1"fr on t.elevWon. "All I know ii that the ~pie I've met ln Saddle River' are wonderful. And the area la J<>rpoua and I look tcrward to becominC a member, a part of that community.'' Saddle River, a wealthy Beraen C.OWty community, ll the home of former Presldeat Nb•. Writer Alvia Tomer will meet with Pre.iden t Lal• Herrera Camplu and 1tudy the economic lltuat.ion in Venezuela during a vl1it thl1 month, the official Venpres newa agency reporta. , Gary Kaye, president of Houaatonic Broadcasting Co. and a producer at NBC Radio, said Guthrie also invested "some money" in Houaatonic. Guthrie lives in nearby Washington, Ma.. Along with actor Robert DeNl r o, WUllams was identified in a Doolittle, an ~viation pioneer who won fame aa the "First Man over Tokyo" in World War II, wu exuberant at a dinner at Sourdough Lil's ln We1tport, Wash., later all 30 members of the party, Including nine other Congressional Medal of Honor winners, spouses and friend•, Toffler, author of ''Future Shock" and ''The Third Wave," wW make hi.a flrst viai t to the South American nation to attend the Venezuelan Financial Congress in Maracaibo on July 22-23. ., ........... N a t i o n a l WILLIAMS Enquirer article as having been present in Belushi's bungalow at a fashionable Hollywood hotel hours before the burly actor's • A Robinsons Sale 55°/o OFF COAST T O COAST -Susan Not orangelo broke a transcontinental women's. biking record, cycling from Santa Monica's city hall to New York's in 11 days, 16 hours and 20 minutes. Her trip, completed Monday took her through 14 states. DRESS YOUR TABLE FOR A TOP NOTCH PARTY. WITH OUR ELEGANT MIKASA CRYSTAL BARWARE Rog. $17 .95. Sale $7.99 each. Encourage your guests to bring their drinks to dinner Our hand cul full lead crystal barware carries the elegance on into the meal Clear. shining and gleaming. It belongs wrth your fine china and silver. Here. our 1mpress1ve Park Avenue, Ambassador and Embassy patterns in highball and old fashioned sizes At this price. you'll be able to collect enough (or you . and !or this summer's wedding gills Robinson's Glassware. 86 To order. call toll-free 1-800·345·8501 ) ' ' I , t I ~ : t I ' i ! t I i I I 1 I I : • I I ~ • RED HOT· ·suMMER S~LE . . ·All Wallpaper JO% Offl· ••cl~ Kinney ar-. Over 100.000 P•tt•rn1 To Choo••· From In Stock P•p•r• from 10·40% Offl Mini Bllnd1 50'6 Offl M&B Wood Bllnif1 40% Offl SUNMASTBR VERTICAL BLINDS. 60% OPFI ~ .... ,ll On Sale Now! 913 on OU1C aean's list 1 A total of 918 ltUdentl at Oranp C4Mt ~lle! in Colt.a M .. rude the deul'1 lilt for -.ICadmrilc.--~ excel.Lenee durtn, the tprlne ..,...... 'A brMkdown by dty of the ttrailhl A (•.O) t~r ttudenta: -A -Donlld J. Coe*, lulll't 1. De¥1dNft, 11111'9 A. ~. c.e..11. . = ~~ .. !t:.ti."=-...... o. DouGlef. C.ol A. ou.wi. DoM6d T. Dunning, ferri A. Qemmll, ,_. M. Lalor, fttoll Uellllna, Tim It V1111 Der BeM, lw¥t VM lte¥em. -C09TA MUA -M#ll M. Mftlon, ~ I. ledl!'1 !-1 L lllllrd, .__ D • ..,.,, P .... J. ltooQ, ~ 0.0, Mii T. H. Chi, Xuln Kh 1'h CNem, Kerwl A. a.toll, ..... w. ecimr.. AM-090 T. Ding, Jule A. Dlnllolr, MlcNill Q, De V0te, Qloflll H. ~. Andrtill '· ~ Tlaolr r. ~ .. o. "°'91,...,..,..... .,.,.. !. --.-MlchMI 0. Debele •. Goettmdt ...... A. Hlddald, Mett1 F • ....._ Jon W. Hall, M1111 I . Hlilldwt ..... °"'II T. Holng, Jin HooMt, Robert J, Hudldc, Ven T. 8. ~. ~ H. ~ Mindy L Jeootll, NdWd I.~.~ J. ~ 1<1i11N E. Kt.lbo4&. TMnfl lam llo °'*'I Lo, Q'°"8 Mlllh I.I. Mel HOMO Thi Le. Robert L ~. LM M. ~Jule A. ...... = M.flitolllr.~L~.~A. ledlHwTN , Duno ~. Duno Ven ~ • .._._.,. ~. HI.lie ~. 11t1M I . Nowtn, Tri )(. Nawln, Tm The ~. TUln Nth M«w fJ. ..._, Olgf C. Nordqulll, ~ M. ~ L ~..i.,~ T. '-ltrow, lldl X. Ptllm, AldMle E. , IC.wt Ill mew, ~ I . '"-"· MlchMI P90mM. Dorl L AltKtlkl, 1k.un L "°°9IM, ........ J., llndlr-. LOf1 D. Selfl, Mlrdl L Sc:nott, Donni L lkotldl, JennlNt H. Slnllh. Sten T. Stwdlr. C.ol E. Spna. Doua E. .... Dlt)orltl A. ~.Timothy,, 'Temc>ie, Qr9g C. T...-, 'i111 TN KM! Tren, Cllido VenM11'11. Mal T. T. Vu. -l'OUNTAIN VAUEI -loot1 I . Boni, Mk:hael J. Oe\4dlon, J W111m D. Duffy, Or90 M. OoodridOI, Allen 8. Holtz. Ctwwtee Jenlel, Now you can take to the lake and seashore the ba1 seen on the sands at· Rio. Pier l 's new straw beach baa Is handwoven In northeastern Brazil's Amazon re1ion. It's a bl& 18''x18H pouch for sandals, suntan lotion, dark glasses, bikini and towels, with room left over perhaps for ftns, mask and snorkel. When you're not soakln& up sun, take It to the mall; It's a fashlonable shopping bag too. Get yours today -at our price they'll all soon be on the beach. Brazilian beach & shopping bag ......... 4 99 ,.,.., IUIEll -509 Katela Ave., 772-2472 CllTI IESI -2110 ttnor Blvd., 540.7337 AS I.OW AS $12~~ SAVE '4.00 SQ. YD. ARMSTRONG DESIGNER SOLAR IAN® FLOORiNG Written Guar•ntee on Labor •nd M•terl•I• C•ll For Free In Home Estlm•te PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS . 8820 Telbert Ave. Pounteln Vly., CA 92708 (71~)883·0881 . 63 .... , .. Mon·Fri 10-e: Thin 10.9 I~ Sat 9·6 Ctosed Sunday ,, ----------------~ A Robnsms Sale YOU'LL SAVE 50%. Aober1 F. Kuclw9kl, Nine M. MacUod, Alllln R. Mllhleu, Plltldl A. Moetwty, Atlcwtda K. Moeoll#ll, ~ C. Mlllinger, Yvonne M ....... PWloll L Moof9, Mll'lhl L .._.., I.Ori A. Pner, Mldllll T. P8Qmll. D1nMi1 8. ,...,.. Frta J. lt .... 1, CMttlna N. Taylor, Aotlby Wld ..... -HUHTINOTOH BEACH -NafMIY P. Balllle, Julie M. letMr. CynW1111 M. lrown, Ht1ounO Thi lul, CtllQe 0 . Camc>t*I. Tina T. Chena. Ke~ A. Cox, Robl J . Ct8ft, F~ C. C<oob, Ruel J. Czech. M1c:Ne1 W. Dey, Hoe Thi Doung, Jemee C. Eddy, .,_., G. Fuhlng, Kerw1 D. FNndl, IAllll A. Geol'geeon, Dorothy Q. Hefner, Keltt! M. Hughie, LM#tl L. Hull, "-K. J<llflr, MldlMI ~. \/MM J. KrwnQ, Jv6y J. Mallard, lret A. Mathfl#t, COlln J. Mct<lbbln, °'** 8. McSween. lea Mldllln, Dellld K. ~. CNn V. Nguyen, Ann Margr9' PMCUDO, KMI J. ~-off. Rlct\ard G. Rodaerw, Daydre T. Roew, Victoria J. AoM. Ronald J. Rubino. eor-w. 8dlar't>erg, M.-n1t1U Segl, Ellen G. ~. JoMpll G. Sire, Robert F. Slmgo, Uurle L Sloc*I, IMctl Thuy TonnutN. Allyn I. Wawman, ~ R. Wlchner. lr9nda 8. Yunek, JoMnle Q, Zurelc. -IRVINE -M _ _, E. 8-d, Janee M. eu.dl, Mldlelle J. ~ u P. Fono. Men:le C. Hechtt. Gerllkl Klrctig ... oer, Yong J. Lee, Olene l Undwell, Herwy A. Otlolky, Trung T. Phan, 8arbtlnl A. Strono. Curt M. Zimmer. -LAGUNA BEACH -Jwl Piette A. Gereu, Ew M. Hendel-•. Mllf'lha L 81¥errMn. Sc.ot1 A. 8Nnn, Wlllam A. Whon. -NEWPORT BEACH -o.rwt T. Allen, Lanoe A. 8-Kegerd, LIM S. Btownell. Wma L Chemer9, Marti S Dwyer, Elub9'll Edtternacti. DM1e1 C. F,.,.,..ger, Ger'9 P. Gmlperd, Annette F. Hurwttz. Peul D. Jacoot, Robet1 T. Jonel, .,_., K.unzlte, 0rego L Lem, Kathy S. Luc:Qy, Albert R. Morgen Jr .. CMt1el R . ...,,,., Lynn D. Nolen, Dellld R. Penderar-ft, ~ 0 . ~. Jofln 8. Pyle, <:M9\opher R. Roll. ~ L Rome, J4/ldy A. Ryan. Tlmolhy R. Ryan, Dolot9I P. Stelnbsg, Wllllam L. Tllomauen. Hiiary J. Tllompton. Michele A. Vencllk, Klmberty A. Wt#th. Route bid denied NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -American Airlines has been denied the right to fly non-stop from Texas to busy National Airport on grounds that Dulles Airport, which also serves Washington. "pines away, unwanted." The 5th U.S. C.ourt of Appeals upheld a Department of Transportation rule that forbids airlines to operate non-stop service between National and any airport more than 1,000 miles away. LIGHTWEIGHT WGGAGE FOR EVERY PURPOSE. You'll find a tremendous collection (every one from a famous maker) In all sizes, shapes and colors-all at 50% savings! For four days only, we're reducing several groups from our regular stock. Or you c an choose from a vast selection of manufacturer-discontinued styles and shades. (Sizes and colors may vary store to store.) Our sale of regular merchandise ends July 18, and clearance items are limited and subject to prior sale, so hurry in to Robinson's Luggage, 19, Newport. To order, call toll·free 1·IOO·Ml·l501. DIANE VON FURSTENBERG UTE 'N LNELV:-FORM a M VERDI. Slate, moss. claret, purple or lilac rubberized vinyl with contrast trim. Orig. Sale Accessory tote ....... $37.50 S17M 17• roll bag .......... $37.50 S17M 20· roll bag..... . . . . . $42.50 ma 26'rollbag .......... $60 taM 19'boardlngbag ..... $53 l2IM Multi-pocket tote ..... $57.50 121M Garment bag . . . . . . . . S7 4 .... 25' pullman . . . . . . . . . S63 .._. VINTUM• ROIMN IAOWN. Nylon In t>town tweed wtth belting leather trim. Sale ends July 18. Shoulder tote . . . . .... Tralncate ...... · · · . Club tot• ....... ···· Carry-on tot• ... · · · · 2•. putlmln ........ . 21· ...,..,,.,, ........ . ., ............. . Reg . $105 S147.50 $117.50 s1eo 1195 12"l5 1255 1180 ....-MK CLOTH. Ten or navy nylon wtth broWn vinyl trim. Sale endS July 18. Reg. Sale Garmentb9g ........ $235 111UI Medium pek . . . . .. .. . S120 lllM Largepek .......... . Medium tight pak .... . Long tight pak ...•.... EJcecutlYe pak ..•...• 21 • puttman ........ . 2•• pullman ........ . 28 • pullman ........ . 29" pullman ........ . Ajr tot• • I o '\' • • I • ' ' ' ' •2 • garment beO ... · . Paid roll toll . . . . , . t •• ..., •........ S135 ..... $105 111M $120 ... 1192.50 ..... 1105 111M 11 .. 0 ...... $185 111• $198.50 ..... 1115 ...... 122() 11 ... •. IO ..... 111.IO .... Duflll .............. 1102.IO .... .O•rflllo ......• 111..IO .. W*QS• GREEN CANVAS. Sturdy canvas with tan vjnyl trim. Sale ends July 18. Reg. Sale 24"pullman ......... $1"0 ..... 26"put1m1n ...... : .. $175 ..... 29" putlman .......•. $210 110UI Alrtot' ............. $135 ..... Rqlltote ............. $67.50 Ill.II ~rment big . "· . . . . . S 150 '7~ ATHALON• INTIMATIONALS •LYB. CordUre • nylon In allver cotor with matching leather trim. Sate end9 July 18, Small duffel ........ . Square top big ..... . OverNld carry«i .. . Olrment big ....... . Reg. 125 115 1110 l200 ,11,ht -. .. .. .. .. .. 115 M1dll,,uluffll .. . .. .. MO Sale 111M M1M ...... .... .. ... M a M VERDI VIBRANCY. Navy or tan vinyl with ta{l vinyl trim. Sale ends July 18. ' Reg. Sale Shoulder tote . . . . . . . . S35 $18.91 Imperial roll tote ..... $45 $21.91 Car,.Y-0n bag . . . . . . . . $50 $24.11 Junios pull man . . . . . . . $70 $34.11 Garment bag . . . . . . . . S70 $34.91 MAY MCLAREN SUEDESKtNS. Tan sueded leather with brown vinyl trim. Orig. Sale 24 • pullman ......... $85 $41 .11 11 •tote .. . . . . . . . . . . . $35 $18.11 ie· tote............. $45 121.11 12 • tote . . . . . . . . . . . . . $50 $24.11 15· tote............. $40 $11.11 16 • tote . . . . . . . . . . . . . $55 $21.11 11· hand tote ........ $45 $21.91 17 • briefcase . . . . . . . . $50 $24.11 22 • carry-on . . . . . . . . . $75 $38.81 MAY MCLAREN OXFORDS. Nylon oxford cloth with polyurethane trim: black with burgundy, toast/brown. Orig. 41 • garment bag . . . . . $75 24 • pullman . . . . . . .. . $70 15" tote ............. s..o 17" tote ............. $30 28 • pullman . • . . . .. . . S80 28 • pullman . .. .. .. . . $90 Sale ..... SM.II l11M 11UI ...... ........ MAY MCLARIN TOIKIN& Taupe·strlped brown rubberized vinyl with p0tyurtthane trim. ' "7' cMrmenl bag .... , 20· °'rry-on ........ . 11·~········ 11 • .,.,,., big ... " .. 12 • a,rry4ft .•••.•••• 11• GtrfY4" •••• ' .• '. Orig. seo MO llO -.... ..,, Sele •• .... .. .... ... • • f I I i 1 I l I I I site p.ses advance APPOINTED -Roy NaraeJ hu been named director of the Jewtah Nattonal Fund's Oranae County chapter. The fund finances development and reclamation in Iarael. Local Jewish fund head ' appointed. IJ STEVE TRIPOLI ............... Plana tor the tuwr. tm of two achoola and other property owned by the Newport-Meaa Ullifled School Di•trict have naowcl toward IWOluUon.. Diltrlct trulteel pve tentative approval to plan• tor multl- purpoae uae of the former Woodland Elementary School and decided to aeek a leHe a1reement for the former Llndberlh Elementary School. Diltrlct Superintendent John Nicoll said Tu.day there have been "expremlons of lntereet" in rentfnl pAr1I ot the Woodland llfe ,..,tly. He propoeed. plan under which the d.latr1ct would u. five dwtooa• for lts own adult education proaram and. 1eek to i... the rett tor a pre- ICbool Jll'Oll"Ull, a pr'08l'am for children with WOl'king parent.I and other mes. Nicoll told the board that the • Roy 'Marpl, a Ne~ Yorker Orange Cout YMCA might be who hu lived in Iarael, has been interested in moving i~&~e named director of the recently achool J>roeram t(> the W d eatabliahed Orange County site . Coat a Mes a Ci t y ""'°'1 of the Jewish National Councilwoman Nonna Hertzog Fund. and YMCA o,fficlal Dave Margel, of Costa Mesa, Harding appeared at the meeting fonnerly aerved aa Israel bonds to confirm that interest. director for the state of NicollabosaidtheCityofCoeta Louisiana. He ia a member of the Mesa and the county might rent Oran1e County Community some space at the former school. Relations Committee, the B'nai The board instructed Nicoll to B ' r it h and the Zion i at look into the possibilities and Oronization of America. return with details of the The JNF, which is financed by financial aspects of the plan. contributions from supporters in Nicoll also received board 46 nations, is the agency approval to try to lease the entire responsible for land reclamation, Undbergh building after telling development and afforestation in board members that it would be Israel. nearly lmpoesible to sell it in the Margel ia meeting w ith current economy. The board repre9e11tativea of each of the 16 voted to seek a minimum five- l)'nlMUes in Orange County to year lease on the site at a oraanh:e special events to minimum of $55,000 per year. introduce the facilities and staff Officials have stated that they of the regional office in Garden . are not yet ready to discuss plans Grove at 12181 Buaro St., Suite 1 for the future uae of the Corona F. del Mar Elementary School. and For infonnation, call 638-4433. Nicoll said there currently are no new developmenw in the attempt to •ll the dJatrict'a Wakahain lite, which lalt week attracted no bidden t« tw t3 million Mldnc price. OC treasury • earning big interest The nation's economic climate may be touch but in Santa Ana the Oranae County treuury ta dolnl just fine, thank you. In the just-«Jncluded lNl-82 fi1cal year, the county'• investment pordoUo ,earned nearly •1'70 mlllJon, a h..ltbY return of 16.9 percent in intenet. Tax Collectot-Treuurer Robert Citron, in hl• annual report to the 8oarcl of Superviaora, aatd earnln11 throu&b inv•ttnenta -mmtly government 1ecurltie1, - represented a 27 .8 pe.r.cent increase over the ~ fiacal year. Citron said that throuch an '• aggreaai ve lnve1tmen t prqp-am.'' he hu manaaed to earn county government more than $600 mlllion in nine yean. For the fiacal year ending June 30, the county treuury earned $169.9 million. The money available for Cftron'a investment program amounta to about $1.l billion a month. It coml!s from caah the treasurer manages from more than 150 separate taxing entities in the county. More than half the fund.a come from school d.latr1cta. The county's share of the overall earningJ amounta to $22.7 mlllion, Citron said. The 16.9 percent yield on investments WH above what many other local governments earned, Citron said. Davis~ Brown •APPLIANCE• rELEv1s10N • v•••o SPACE SAVINO 13.1 CU. FT. AEFAIGEAATOA • S.O.·h•nged ''"ze' <Soot • • 3 lutl-•o<llh lllet"ft chllte< trey • 2 tee ·N Easy trey• •ow s379s s O•LY HUYYDUTY COMMERCIAL CIMDRYIR •............ ,,..."'° tifNd .....,.. C,Clet • a ..... °"'°"' lndudlnt ....... fluff • ~•in enemet Cltum •ow .$29915 O•LY I I Model OSD1200S • Durable PermaTute Interior. • 10-YNt full warrwtty on PermaTuf9 tub and dOOt' llner. e 12-cycie WUh Mlecilon Including Pot1COJbbet9 cycle. SAYE $40 • 23 s cu " .,,,. e s1 ell " ''""' • Mo111 n ''"".,,.,Cool n Fresn &10•19e '°"'"f'lf!Wnlt con•e•l•I> .. mH I pen 1n<1 H aled Ml~& pack • 011penMf N it•••• cruaneo oc:e cuo.1 •M<:~·~,·10.- I I .. I • Drastic Reductions On Regular Merchandise 11\JMPTY DUMPrY - D D CHl&..Dl8n WIAI 1051 l"'-9, Westclff ,._. ... ..,.... ..... c • PARKING LOT SALE SALE ON ALL TV's • SALE SALE RADIOS & STEREO'S AT LQW1 . LOW PRICES SALE s p E c ALL DEMOllSTRATORS 103 I A L OVER COST GUSDORF ALL TV ST ANDS MICROWAVE CARTS 10% OFF In Stock or Ordered .. s p E c c I A L · .. SALE Thursday,. FrldaY,, Sa,urclay and SunClay Only , July 15, J16, 17, -18 f Subject To Stock on Hand ' Delen.e 1u1Mld1 /or Japaa b.11 t J 4 .&·mtlllon park1 Coppertre• A.modatel of &.nta Aaa and BMMn We lna&rance Co. o1 N ........ ComplNd in law 1881, the bullnem park wu orl1lnally offered u condomlnlum1 for ule. The owner• boucht the project with the intent to conwrt lt exclwilvely to i... 1pece. MONTEREY (AP) -The Unii.d Statee 11 unlnt.entionally hel~ compew wlth Yl&al U.S. tuch· compantea by aub16c11Jint that nadon 1 defenM, Hewl•tt·Paekard chalrman O.vid Peckard MYt· Coldwell ~nker Commercial Real !'.It.aw 8erv1cee, Newport S..Ch office, it the Mlln8 .,.nt for the park. Peckard Mid the United Stai. lhould force Japan to pay a ~ portion of lta defen.e COltl 10 that It Will no Jontes' be able to put ao much of lta l"Oll nadonal product into non-military htih· technolop ~arch and cWvelopnent. ~ AP Wlrephotoe REAGANOMICS DOLL Humorous, two-sided doll with caricature of President Reagan on "Supply Side" and destitute man "Demand Side" throw some sharp but funny jabs at politicians on each side of the fence. Nude bathers tend to be leftists COPENHAGEN. Denmark (AP) -The farther to the left a person is politically. the more likely he or she is to sunbathe nude on a public beach, according to a Gallup poll published in the Berlingske Tidende newspaper. The pollsters concluded after interviewing 1,- 000 Danes that only 10-15 percent bathe nude or topless on Danish beaches, where the practice is banned but oft.en overlooked. The poll found that more women than men sunbathe nude, but more men approve of the idea. There are other factors . but "political affiliation" is the best determinant of how likely a person is to strip on the beach, the pollsters said. Almost two-thirds of all women who profess to extreme leftist views also bathe in the nude, they said. RO LEX IF YOU VALUE YOUR TIME ... YOU DO NOT WANT TO MISS SLAVICK'S EXCLUSIVE ROLEX EXHIBITION Cremlon. Rolex {)y$tet$ are displayed in consecutive stages of manufacture, from solid block of metal to finished watch. Expert AcMoe. Review with Aolex experts the elements of watchmaking technology that symbolize for yoo the validity of Rolex value. Add complementary Rolex literature to YOUf llbrllfY. Time u Hlatory. Setected originals, and exact replicas of famed Rolex time- pieces dating beck to 1904 and marking feats of science and exploration are displayed. Rotex Owner's Courtesy As a "member of the club." feet free to discuss yoor Rolex and Its performance with our experts. Deepen your k~ of Rolex history, and Rolex Innovations. THIS SPECIAL SHOWING AFFORDS YOU THE PERFECT OPPORTUNITY TO CHOOSE THAT SPECIAL ROI.EX WATCH FROM SLAVICK'S EXTENSIYE COLLECTION ......... Sine-. 1117 WJwrc clw best SWfJ>'r'UCS bqin. JULY 16, t7, 1912 \ Shelter • se1n1nar offered A..nlnar~io inform b•1tnntn1 lnweton of the rilka and rewarde of tax-eheltered lnvHtment1 will be offwed at Orena9 Cout CoU... ln Cotta "M .. on July 29. Tltled "Tax-Sheltered Inveetment1 -Let Uncle Sam Make You Rich," the ~ will meet from 7:80 io 9:30 p.m. In room 207 of OCC '1 Ohemhtry BuUdtn1. Adrntulon la ... SAVE UP TO 50~/o OR MORE NAME BRAND SPORTSWEAR FOR WOMEN AND MEN BATH TOWELS, SHEETS, AND CASUAL SHOES FOR LADIES: LOTS OF BLOUSES, SKIRTS, PANTS, JACKETS, SWEA TEAS AND DRESSES. Pr•-re1J1tratlon la betnr. conducted in OCC• C.ocnmunlty Ser- vice Offlce, located ln the coll•¥_•':: Adminiatration Build.Ing. FOR MEN: SPORTSHIRTS, DRESS SHIRTS, PANTS BLAZER JACKETS REDUCED 25% to 50% Seminar lecturer la Frank Ci Gllliland, vice prealdent of adminlatratlon for Am cor d, Inc .• a diversified international corporation ln Newport Beach. Gllllland ii alao a vice preaident and partner of Jenks, Kennifer, Richa.n:ilon & Co., a Newport Beach investment counaelor and broker. PENDLETON SPORTSWEAR SALE ·LADIES' FINE WOOL JACKETS, SKIRTS, PANTS. and SWEATERS -REDUCED 30% to 50% BUY EARLY FOR FALL AT GOOD PRICES! 'RINY ANTIQUE -Orange County aviation Aviation's John Wayne Airport facility pioneer Eddie Martin explains what it was like Saturday for a show. Proceeds from the event to fly ln a rare 1930 Steannan Cloud Boy. one will benefit Orangewood, a new shelter for of more than 35 antique aircraft due at Martin neglected and abused children. Free prenatal checks offered income families up to one year' following birth. For information, phone 556-5880. ;BUY NOW AND IAYEJ DEPARTMENT STORE Houn Deity l :I0-1:00 Ctoeed lunder• The Laguna Beach Free Clinic ii olfertna free prenatal care for low-Income mothers-to-be who live in Orange County. The .ervioe. jointly sponsored by the clinic and UC Irvine . Medical Center, also provides free lnunu.nlzations and medical checkups for babies from low- Third-year students of UC Irvine Medical Center conduct the prenatal and well-baby checkups, supervised by a licensed physician, who also ls provided by the medical center. said a clinic spokeswoman. The prenatal clinic, 460 Ocean Ave., is open Mondays from 2 to 5 p.m. and also offers group counseling sessions on nutrition and parenting, said a clinic spokeswom&J'.l. 1118 NEWPORT BOULEVARD • COSTA MESA For information, call 494-0761 or 546-3715. Call 142-5171 . Put a few word• to work for ou. FEDCO • NOT JUST A NAME BUT A COMMITMENT ro LOW MEMBERSHIP PRICES ~ ~~~ lfll 1N·Al X-10· Ufl l·tl .,....... 1'111 CMlr* controls lights and household appliances with linger·tiP conYenience. You can dim ~ghts or turn appliancies and lights on and oft with the comm.ind control. Controls up 10 16 llghts and appliance modules Set lndude1 one command control. two lamp modules and one appliance module. No speaaJ .inng Meded $52. 60 llfl l -10.1'111 Tlm11 automatically controls the lights. telev1s1on sets and appliances in your house. 24 hours a day. scares burglars any Timer and modules plug into regular $49 96 outlets -no costly tnstallallOn • HhterPili t NN lt\\A"' fJ,•tA"<T UM .. ,..,, of I Compfete Ontl Hyf!IM Protr1m. Convenient to Use, Attractive Design. Calibrated Pressure Control. Large Reservoir, Four Jet Tips. . Standard Model 71 $24.33 hsq;ue walerflter • "II!••, .... ctelMf, ...., Tnt1111 Wltlr. ktler Tlltllll helll 11M1 Dr1M. Attractive, Easy to Install. Choose flltered or Unfiltered Weter. Convenient Replacement Filler. Modet f·IC. $18.8& FEDCO MEMBERS AGREE WITH CHANNEL 2 KNXT-TV Channel 2, Sunday June 27, 1~82, televised the results of their consumer survey comparing prices of Fedco's merchandise with Gemco's, Kmart's and Zodys'. The KNXT consumer editor selected national name brand merchandise sold at Fedco, Gemco, Kmart, and Zodys. In every instance, Fedco was the lowest on all Items when compared to the prices at Gemco, Kmart and Zodys. NOW THAT'S WHAT MEMBERSHIP SAVINGS IS ALL ABOUTI CMtllll llMI Easy. Convenient colOr·coded pysh·bvttons control this T oastJNster oven·bro11tr Wi1h the push ol a button. bike rout or broil. Nothing could be easier Even Im sett-cleaning oven 1n1enor to eliminate messy Clan-ups. Handy slgnal light tndk:ates when oven Is 1n use Model 5242. $48.76 ._... ..... .._.....,.,....Hit. 500watts f01warm· Ing. 1000 Wlltl for COoldnO. ContempQflfy styling. Portable and llOMWllgtlt. dalOf*I lor table or counter top UM. Euy to dean buff colorld finllh. Elements tilt up for •sy deaning. Unique, low siltloulttl design. Model &407. $28.97 ALL PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 20, 1982 htNlll VNte c-ttl ,......, frM Siiiy. The SL-2000 has BetaScan .. hlgh·apeed picture search; Swing Search In normal and · slaw speeds, and 1 Linear Time Tape Counter. The Tuner/Timer has 2-weelt. 4-.wnt unattended programming, and a w1re1eSs Remote Commander. TurnerfTlmer available at add11Jonal cost SONY. $839.87 TI-E CX'E AfD O\lY ...., tfVC..2211 T11111C811 C.IMfl with Tnmcon Pickup Tube for quality reproduc:tlon. In-camera editing capabilrty. automatic exPO· sure control, built-in microphone and the Ft 4 macro-focusing power zoom lens. $819.87 Dn Fl& TAPE OFFER! When you buy the Sony SL·2000 Video Rec:onier. Sony wiH _.,. you 8 free Sony Videotapes and a guide to por1able video recordil lg. Add IN HVC-2200 Trlnk:on Color camera and get 6 more free tapes. Jtllt mall the Owner Regi11ratlon cards. thl1 coupon and • copy of your receipt to Sony FrH Tapes, CN 0o4050, Trenton, N.J. OMSO. Off9r fOf Sony L-500 videotapes runs lhru August 31 , 1982. Valid only In the United Stat". Vold where prohibited by l1w. --..---~-.. ....,c:oo.- I APPLICATION FOR LIFE MEMBERSHIP I Me11ie."""9 '-*f Only IO Cllilofnoa RetoOtlU ---------. n:DCOllNC I P.O. lo• 221M. Loe Angetee, CA 90022 I AR• YOU IUGl•LI TO .10111? APPROY•D CR•DIT UNION M•M••RS NOW QUALIFY. I ~ """"'EA04 LETTER IN toll 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I "IMTHllMS MIOOUilNITIAl LAIT#WolE 11 I I I I I I I I I I I r I I I I I I I I I NO 1r11£n • llESUNCE "'· NO. •1 1 LI I I I I I I I I ~ Isl I I I I aTY zPCOOE •1 I I I I I I ·1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~COOi HOME~ AIWACOOI IWlOVMENT!tfl •1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I a.\.OVWNT I0400l..AOOMll· • ~ 1 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I @0 lei I I I I on ,.COOi I -.111r----•·••••••nnrn .... • • i &II-...................... _,. ................................. I CHECK'ntlS LISTI I ,~~--I 11 ~=:~::::.:= ..... "'-· --------· ...................... .. I • ,..... ••• , .................. ......, ...... ........................ _,. ............... . ........................... ............................ ....., ............... ,.. ........... ,. ....... ., .. ............. a ... .... .. llllllP). .....,.., ...... • ............ 0.ps*AC...... ......... .. I .,... ..,,....., .. """' ... a. ....... .. I .......... ~ .... ,..... .. ,.ea: ... .......... ........., ..... ......., I ......... ,,.....,.....,.....,,..,.. • .,..., .. I ....... ,.. ·----~ ......... , ... I • --.c...,.car.•.._ .. ,.1,.1.,.,1 ,.., .............. I • • .,., • .,....,....,.. ..... ,. I .... ,,,, .. I .,._ .......................... . .... I • I ,,., ... , .... a11, .......... .._., I . ~· ~-=-=.:.-iiiiiii'i1~·aiiii9't.'; b 1w,...=ic~.r=.!•~·:!"'~"""~=============~·==""="!!===:.J • -.._. .. ---. . ==·.:.-:•1:=-BC OllCHI0$0.. MOHIYON>I" '°" ----,, •• _,_._.. FED CO MEMBERSHIP DEPARTMENT STORES 8TOA• HdUA8 WIBDAYI: 11•M1'1l:tlP'll •LA~·Mll• .... -Ull ... ITOIU ,,. ..... t: ... • C8UllTll • ..,. .... ,..... .. Ml -o.TMIO ITOMI IA1UMAYI: AU"""' , .... II 1• ,. .... : M.L~, ......... ' . I ' .. . • • l : 4 ' l I ' • I o t • .. . . .. • • \ . •• 4 • .. ' . 4 • l : ' . . . ., I ~·· • Referendum approach not without pitfalls Referendum ta a method whereby a 1peolflc ~nment MM.IW'e or 1tatute la before the people for a popular vote. It h•• taken on increasing importance in Newport Beach in recent times. Le88 than one year ago, ci'tizena upset with project proposals by the Irvine Company at Newport Center passed petitions and qualified the isaue for a ballot referendum. The vote failed to materialize when company officials withdrew the City Council-approved plan. Now a second referendum has been qualified in Newport. This involves the Banning Ranch properties above the bluffs of West Newport. In March, the City Council had approved development of 379 homes and 300,000 square feet of office and industrial space on the undeveloped land adjacent to the Costa Mesa boundary. This was actually a comprwnise that diluted what developer Hancock "Bill" Banning m had sought. He wanted 239 homes and 750,000 square feet of office and industrial space. It is not even clear to date if Banning agrees with the City Council compromise and would go ahead with the project as approved. Yet, despite that rather hazy status, a group calling itself the West Newport Legislative Alliance gathered 6,300 petition signatures, far more than the 4,300 required, to force the question to a referendum vote of the people. As is their option, City Council members Monday voted to place the referendum on the November ballot. It will go to a vote of the people, regard.I~ of Banning's eventual position on the project. What appears to be happening is perhaps not so much a vote of no-confidence in the decisions of the Newport Beach City Council as it is a vote, or petition, by the people against any kind of new development propoul on a arand ecale. Thu1 if lt appears to the people that a project means large, new development, there 11 an lrnmedtate reaction against tt. If the trend here continues, what this may mean 11 that developers will recognize It ia futile to make any grand ecale proposals in Newport Beach. Perhaps, they will reason. the only way to push through development will be in an unobtrusive fashion; by brinRt.nJl projects before city governrilen1 bit-by-bit; one small piece at a time. This might entail large landowners selling off to smaller developers who would then propose modest projects on individual basis. There could be some perils to this approach which might create just the opposite effect that la sought by no-growth or limited growth advocates. Bit-by-bit development might achieve a final result that is far less desirable than could be controlled with larger scale master planning. Then too , there is the question of provision for public utilities, s t reet and road improvements, parkways, landscaping and many other public amenities. In a practical sense, city government can demand-and often get-much more from a single large developer than can be demanded· from each individual small developer as he brings projects in to city hall piecemeal. Referendum action la a part of our law and certainly fonns a safeguard against extreme misjudgments by our elected officials. Its use, however, in the application to broad and extensive land use planning, does have its perils. The Newport Beach electorate should be aware and sensitive to those pitfalls. Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is this problem more serious than at institutions such as UC Irvine. The cost of living in Orange County, especially near lryine, already is high, and university officials have been decrying for some time their problems in recruiting top-flight professors. Despite the economics, though, they have managed to assemble a noteworthy faculty . Many professors evidently are interested in more than their savings accounts when they accept a position. UC professors were granted a 6 percent pay raise in last year's state budget, but the new $1.185 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials ~h as Dr. Joeeph McGuire, chairman of UCl's Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary lree7.e may •pur some of the top academicians to accept more competitive offers at other institutions. But Dr. McGuire says he doesn't expect a ~ exodus of the 600 faculty members. For one thing, most faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other universities similarly beset by economic restrictions. Instructors at UCI earn from $19,700 as starting assistant professors to $43,600 as full professors on nine-month contracts. A few may earn as much as $51,500. It also isn't uncommon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as royal ties for t exts they authored, fees for consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesses. The best people in any field, of course, are entitled to market themselves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer some loaes if its best people departed for higher salaries. • University professors, however, and the institutions themselves. are not immune to the economic temper of the times. Everybody bas felt the crimp of the current economy. Atademia just isn't immune t.o th09e forces at work. Opinions expressed in the spa'e above are those oftthe Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit- ed. Addre!>S The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71·0 , 6'2~321 . . L.M . Boyd I Restaurant rescue Eugene O'Neill'• "Strange l.ntet'lude'' opened in Quincy, Mall, in 1932. The theater WU right aero. the atreet lrom a near-bankrupt resta\11'8nt. Intenniliaion crowds aaved that eatery. Thua d1d Mr. O'Neill do his part in the f oundml ot one of th1a country'• b&Gfelt holte1ry chaina. The r ettaurant owner's name: Howard .Johmon. DUlcover'y of the x.ray cau.ed a certain anxiety. amon1 tlmtd folk. They fared plctwea \ale.en of them ORANGE COAST llllJPllat unaware. might ahow them stark naked. Clothina maken Immediately came out with lines of "X-ray proof' underwear. Q. What wu 8C'tOr Peter Falk'• job when he waa in the Merchant Marine? A. Fry cook. There are UM.e, too, who kilep the bathroom bowl apotlal by droppna a denture cleaninC tablet tato lt wvery day. Thomas P. H1tey PublllMr T...,._ A. ,.,,,9'1111 l dllor .. ,..,.",..." l dft0t1111t ... •dttor \ SEC~D 111£ MOTION! I . ' Saudis hold economic cards WASHINGTON -The United States today is more vulnerable to foreign RJ'HSUl'e than It has been since the early days of the republic. This pres.1ure is wielded by the remote desert kingdom of Saudi Arabia, whoee vast oil wealth is mismatched to a small, backward population. The cauuous Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They are inclined, therefore, to deliver their threats delic ately, lamenting that it must be done and acolding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli throat into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil ahipments to the United States and w ithdraw their billions from U.S. repositories. But the intemal dynamics of the Arab world • may compel them, however reluctantly, to uae their economic weapons against the United States unle99 the Reapn adminiatratic?n can re9traln larael Thia strange tyranny of the weak over the strong may be succeeding. For President Reagan appears t o be acquiescing to the Saudi demands. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, who wants to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Secretary of State Alexander Haig. Su~porting Weinberger is the president 1 national security adviser, William Clark. who has fired 90me pro- Iarael atrategiata from the National Se<:urlty Council Then add George ShulU, who h.aa been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shultz and Weinberger were brought into the Reagan adminiatration from Bechtel, which did a minimum of $666 million worth of business in the Arab world last year. By far their biggest single customer was Saudi Arabia. The Saudis can surely be forgiven if they g e t th e ide a that their behind-the-scenes threats had something G. -J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -d to do with Reapn's realignment of his policymaken. Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who appear so quaint and picture9que in their flowing robes, sit on one-quarter of the world's known oil reserves. And the mighty United States has foolishly allowed itself to CJ'06S the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a reliance on Arab oil. It's easy enough for Americans to understand the consequences of a Saudi oil embargo: gas lines and huge increases In fuel prices. But the threat of withdrawing Saudi investments from the United States is not so easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S. banks, businesses and land holdings. Their investments have given them a silent partnership in ever-widening circles of our business community. But their biggest partner is the U.S. government itself. Of the estimated $50 billion worth of known Saudi investments in this country, the bulk is in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the beckrooms of the state, defense, treasury and energy departments. The reason is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S. economy. If the Saudis cashed in their Treasury chips and transferred their billions to banks abroad, the federal government could stiU borrow the money back from overseas. But the move would drive up interest rates, undercut business re<.'Overy and prolong the recession and high unemployment. As far back aa 19?_8, a CIA report warned that "temporary dislocation of international financial markets would ensue if the Saudi Arabian government ever chose to use its accumulated wealth as a political weapon." This is now precisely what the Saudis are threatening to do. WHAT CAN THE U.S. government do to counter such a Saudi move? The answer is: Freeze their assets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian government of Ayatollah Khomeini wou.ld have disastrous political effects, of course, but it would be effective. Except for one thing: The Treasury might not know the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. For information on Saudi investments is scarce and has gotten even harder to find since the Iranian freeze. As one Middle East expert noted: "Since monopolies are corrupt, It is hardly to be wondered that the disposition of OPEC wealth is no open book." The Saudis have shrewdly been c hanne ling billions of the ir U .S. investments through the Bahamas to disgwse the true origin of the funds, a source told my associate Vicki Warren. The Saudi government's secret holdlnp. plus thoee of private Saudi investon who might cooperate in a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens or billions. But even the CIA doesn't know for sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now considered potentially as the most powerful influen~ on U.S. foreign policy. Anxiety symptoms yield to treatment To the Editor: The July 11 Daily Pilot Sunday Special featured two articles on one of the oldest of known medical condi tlons, anxiety disorders, popularized in recent yean by much publicity in the media, aome informative. and useful, others less well informed ind misleading, if well lntentioned. The phobic type of anxiety symptoms, clusified as 8ROf8phobi.a. will be familiar to many people when described in MAILBOX tenns of feeling a marked fear of being' alone, oc being in public places from which it wou.kl be difficult to either eet::ape or receive aid in case of sudden incapacitating pel"llOll8.l ~ter. THIS CONDITION has been well known for hundreds of years. It has been lneffectively treated for over 80 years from the emergence of paycboanalyals to the present-day divene treatments described in Sunday's articles. Effective treatment has been available and in u.e by psychiatri.rts for the past ~iecade. The accepted standard and specific treatment for prevention of the acute penic epi.IOdes and the reatlting anticipatory anxiet}' (e.1. ti.ge fright) util.lml the preecribing of a recently developed clall of medications known as beta-blockers, which are for thls condition, one of the most apecific medication• available in the entire tpeetrum of medJcally treated conditions. RABOLD H. KATES, M.D. Deposit law n eeded To the Ed.ltor: I would object 1trenuou1ly to the txU'etnely preJucliced article on the front .-.. of your llaue of July 8 were l noi en titled to a rebuttal. F r ederick 8choemeh 1•1 arilcle headlined tic.anWnitt Dtpotill ico.uy• .... bul tha ftnl of mM'f M:h ............. lMl WI mu1l endure between now and ~2. WMhou\ the.,..,.... of 1 mukJ-mllUan tr ... ?iC'"t.:i.rJ::~ .., I .. In (Mw" the proposed container deposit law'? Any law which acts as a deterrent to the blatantly inconsiderate disposal of beer bottles by breaking them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be all bad. Three times have I personally pushed my bike home because of cut tires, and once I took a slashed bare foot to an emergency room for treatment thanks to some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of the lobbyists if the cost of medical treatment or or new tires and tubes is inc lu ded i n the ir previous "microeconom1c analysis." GERALD CORLEY TEL E P HONE YOU R LETT ER TO THE E DITOR See instr uctions below Protests sen tences To the Editor: I wish to publicly protest the recent sentences handed down by Judge Mark Soden in Orange County Superior Court to two men, age 25 and 21, who abducted and raped a 14-year-old deaf mute. The girl was driven to the beach where she was raped and sodomized by both men, then driven around Santa Ana and offered to strangers. She was raped by a total of seven men in alleys, cars and ,trailers. THE JUDGE decided that because these were so close in time and place, they constituted "A single occasion of aberrant behavior.'' The men were sentenced to 12 years each, which according to Judge Soden, would give them a chance to rebuild their lives. Another man involved ln the case was aentenced to « yean by another judge. How la that child ever goina to forget that nlght of terror and start her fife anew? Wh e n are w e going to s t o p mollycoddling these vicious criminals who kidnap, rape and torture o ur children? Because these animals could be on the streets again in 8 years, to pro~t my own daughter who will then ~ 14. I wish to remain anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Oust incumbents To the Editor: Because of the complacency and indifference of the American voters by continuously returning the incumbents to Wa s hingto n . o ur esteemed representatives finally have succeeded into turrung our national capital into another Sodom and Gomorrah. Not unlike the doctors and lawyers who protect their incompetents, the investigative committee will never divulge the names of those who were caught. It takes months and sometimes. years for any bill to get out of the maze of committees because halt of Capitol Hill is too busy calculating ways to fill their own pockets while the other half is prostituting themselves by any vile means to satisfy their sexual desires. The time has come for the voters to take a serious look at the foul smell emanating from Washington and make a d ean sweep. If we have to throw out the baby with the bath water ao be iL The innocent (If there are any left) may suffer in the process but at least all bases will be touched and the taxpayer will have the satisfaction of giving thelr favorite repreeentatives the heaw ho they so richly deeerve. G. KOVACTC 111111• l } Orange Ooa1t DAILY PILOT/Thur1day, July 15, 1982 ·-~ · · . Letters from 'normal' p'erson habit-forming Thil Al rMlly •'\inf porverted. When the letwn ~an to urive, I tsnored them. That wun't hard to do. A lot of mall coa. lnto th1I offlce, much ot it nuta. If you want to read about detJl'ldation, evil. depneracy, larceny and m.ctne.. it'• all there. For 10me reuon a uo. eection of the wont upecta of humanity ahowa up ln eech of my mail deliveries. So I wu a little IW'l>riled to read the me.aae contained 1n the flnt letter: "Hif I'm writing to you neither to complain nor to be very lntereatlng or important, but beaau.e you ouaht to get IOl'ne mail from eome normal people. I 8*rt that I am normal." THE WRITER wu a woman from the auburbs. She wrote: .. Before backing my claim to nonnalcy, please let me state that today is every blt aa sunny and lovely u yesterday! I am nonnal becaUle I like America, good steaka, eoda pop, my nice husband, our little rented house, multivariate calculus and 'TuC90n,' a fur-bearing dog." I had to admit, the letter was different from what I am Wied to. The woman wasn't asking me to intercede in a child-<:uatody caae; she wasn't telling me how her husband was beating her or ,how she had been abused as a child; she Art Show Huntington Center doily tlyu Sun. SATISFIED WITH YOUR IRA/KEOGH YIELD? SELF-DIRECTE TRUST MAY BE YOUR ANSWER Don't wall another day. Call now lor profes5lonal Information & details. Ian Rednall I (714)955-1191 I ~~~ RAW SURFACE WATER II NOT 8Al'E TO DRINK ~: R.'Ph. It Is no J.onaer oondden!d eafe to drink raw lurface water from either lakes or atrnma. Ovilhatlon. with 1111 pocential contamination. hu Invaded even the wilde~ area. When traveling dlNncls from approved public water auppl.ia, It la wiar to have a I filled 'nlermoe or canteen. I Foe an ftMr~ncy I.lie, two d.ropa of Tincture of Iodine In a pint of water. left to stand for a hall hour bef<>tt drinJd.ni la uf e. F.uler to I.lie la a product we carry called Haluone. One tablet purifies a pint of water. Explo~n u. them. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medlclne. Pick up your prHcription if shopping MU'by. or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people, entrust ua with their prescription•. May we compound and dispenn yours? '1AM UDO l'HA/fllACY ,,_,,....,, ., ,...,,,.,, ,...,, . *":'~ . convert- ibles•motor homes*lawn mowers* limos •corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's**** •typingtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles*golf carts•mode1 trains*bikes •pianos*cars refrigerators *skates•••••• If It's got Wheels, you'll move It fester In a Dally Piiot claulfild act. cau 642·5'71 •nd. frlendfy •cf. VIMf"wtll hetpyou turn your ...,,,mo ~ wun't compWnl.na ~ta lawyw or• doctor WU ct.tra.nn, her; IM wun't, ln Iha.rt. wa.Wnc about any ot the thlnp that the J*>Ple who write me Ul'.IA1l)' concentrate on. 11.Aa a normal penon I feel that I have a certain obllaatlon to corrwpond with 111111111 you,'' ahe wrote ... So this la my f1rlt 1n a aerlea of letter1." Uke I say, I ignored it. But aoon there WU anothe,r mem.p from her: "Di.d you watch the Indy 500 race on the TV? What a greet race! The can were lncredible and the drivel'I superb! I am hlppy that Goroon Johncock won the race beca1.a1e be la an Indy veteran. he had won an unhappy vtctory ln 1973 and becaute he WU Mario Andrettl's team partner. My huabAnd and I drove to Indianapolis to 1ee the final day of time trials and ao had the opportunity to watch Andretti practice. Hi.a car waa excellent; he suffered a great 1oa when hla car was ruined before the race ever began." I wmt about my bul&Mm. 'n'9 newt ot the world wu the uaual: mwden, wa11, l'DtelJ\M9, And there WM a 19\ter from the woman: .. WE ENJOYED a pltt"nt Memorial Dey holiday. We bepn the mom1na by drivlna OW' bkyclea down to Crown Polnt !or the annual DwW9 Century bllce ride. We follow9d the arrowa that are painted OD the ltNet to the •y ' and tolly, I~ the ride W• on Sw;d.v7 IO we drove the bOr.tl blclt h'Cml~y. thme billl outaide of IQowntown' went amooth that mominll" After work I hlt the place. I UIUllly hit. l heard the u1ual r.atloA of complalnta and ~. When I Ft to work the next day, I reeu.d that I WM aubcon1cioualy antlcipatin1 the mornlna'• fl.rat mail delivery. When lt arrived! quickly flipped throuab all the envelope•. I fl1ured out that I waa huntlnir for 1omethln1 from my "normal'T wrr~t She didn't di9appob\t me: "My dad came over wtth hi.I electric lawn mower. Remember how it rained last week! Thll la the time of year that 1fUS tends up its ltalka of aeed. My huabahd acythed down the lawn with the ol' puah-mower. I got to mow most of the lawn, instead of my dad doing it, How does Now stack up? becaUM he would have, but he did do the dos yard and he followed me, ho1d1nl \&e cord and polntlna to apota." A man called up yellinM about aome dl1pute he waa havfng wllh o pemment qency: a woman told me that ha had hired a private eye to follow her cheat1n1 bu.band around. and would l expoee the husband in print? I wa11.<.>d for my ne:ict letter. HERE JIS what the "normal" wonwn uJd: I "My mom had a barbecue with sal ds (ireen, Jell-0 and potato) steaks charred on the gaa grlll, baked beans, the cho100 of two homemade salad dressings, garlic bread, hot dogs and hamburgers, colt.age cheese and tomato slices and then watermelc•n and chocolate cake . My aiater and her new husband brought the center lrilcll from their lovely garden. and h1a 8rand~nts brought two of the uladl. Afterward we went home. My husband ·drank some beer and w e watched televiaion." I went out to do an interview .that night; aome public relations people from califomia were trying to sell me on thC'1r cllent. They were quite persuasive, but I found myself wondering if I would hl'ar from the "normal'' woman again. The next day, I did: 4mg 4mg 4mg "My mother and I went to my liner'• new hu1band'1 grandparents' hotm ~ pick poonJes. My mother 1ovee peon&elf Alter we had lunch, we took a walk." AS I MENTIONED, th1I ll ptttn, perverted. But 1 can't help it. with all the terrlbJe newa th• world nu to offer, I find myself lookln1 forward to heuina the details of this "normal" woman'• life. For example -you might not know lt, but ahe and her huaband are thinkfna about renting another bowie: "Jt'• an old~faahioned houae. It'a a block away from the commuter bull atop. It has a washe r and dryer in the basement, a large kitchen, ·porchet, an attic, a Jard for Tuaon the fur-bearing dog. an a garden. And what a orden it. is! The owner keeps the garden u a relaxing hobby. He'a a barber. He's al8o quite friendly, a silver-haired man. He doesn't sell the vegetables, ao we can eat all \o\'.e want." 1 don't know where this i.a leading. All I know is that when I arrive at work each day, l have my choice of the two Chicago newspapers. the New York Times. the Wall Street Journal, and a stack of maH I can read any of it. But thesf• days. alJ I want to do is read about the "normal" woman and what she's up to. Pervt'rted But nice. ~ro~~ IOO's 3mg -- W1,ni1g1 The Surgeon Gtner1t H11 D111rmintd Thie Cignttt S,,.. Ito.,... co Yow Htallh. ~ lnnd tll ._ llflect 1t11 ._of llChli nc method Of Die 81 flC Aepc)tt IOfT MCI Ml'• fl.Ta MaTI& 2 ""'"W', 0 2 ... nico11111 "''I*. cig111111 by flC m11hod ·~ . t . .• .• l \ J It FAMILIAR? -Actually, these cans th labelB resembling thoee for a favored rage are filled with candy and sold in tores all over the country. But the American utomobile Association wants the chug-a-cars ut of the hands of children , saying they foster ealthy attitudes toward beer-drinking. AA frowns candy can NEW YORK (AP) -Papa has his Michelob. ow junior baa "Pickelob." Papa's Qot Miller High e; junior has "Milder Low Life.',.. But that's too much gusto for the American utomobile A.saociation. It wants Pickelob and · r -as well as Fallstiff, Heinekant, Lowbrow 'The One For Bums") and Von Schultz -out of e hands and mouths of children. The"Chug-a-Can" candy, sold in 2-inch ture beer cans made of plastic, are filled with tly colored candy, not the frothy golden brew. -~ The AAA has launched a campaign against the r lookalikes in editori.ala sent recently to its 176 be for distribution through club new!letters patlonwide. AAA says Chug-a-Can fosters unhealthy attitudes toward beer-drinking among yoUJlgllten, and wants stores to remove the candy. "Making alcohol consumption a glamorous activity is aomething that shouldn't be done," says Allan Wilbur, national director of public relations for AAA, which has 22.5 million members. "We've been Involved In alcohol education J>l"Oll"AIDI for ao long, we just felt we had to say aomething." Fleen.'Orp, the Philadelphia firm that makes Chug-a-Can, hasn't answered the club's letters. A secretary to Donald Peck, Flee rcorp ..,-esfdent, told The Aseociated Press: "We have no comment on this subject.'' Peck, she said, was out of town and she refused to bring any other company -officers to the phone. ')I n Chug-a-Can, which costs 30 cents to 60 cents ~r can , contains tiny, sweet ball.a similar to jawbreakers. It comes in 20 ditterent "brands," looking like the real thing with their fliptop opening and "Don't Litter" imprint on top. Piclcelob .Carries a drawing of a pidde and a re9el1lb1ance of 'the real brew's d~tinctive can deman. but adds on 'the side: "Just a Joke ... Pu.re Fun." <. ,,. AAA's battle began a few mootha ago in Maine 1'nd New Hampshire. It persuaded the merchandising manager for 7-Elewn stores In the ieutem division to atop offering the product from its Cliatrlbution center, which 9el"W9 8eVerl states and :Jhe Di.ltrict of Columbia. But 7-Eleven stores may ,tell the product if they buy it el8ewhere. Other stores haven't come along ao quickly. ,· Harold Frank, president o f Bradlees department stores, just doesn't agree with AAA: ~·we concluded that these tiny cans of candy ra-esented no threat to any future drinking habits of the children who consume it.'' ) I } 0 fl l NEED YOUR ~ JEWELRY REPAIRED? z I We do It on the premises at our Newport Beach store. Also, we do appraising, watch and clock repairing, engraving, pearl and bead stringing, jewelry designing and manufacturing. I ., 8.U HOWFS and SON FINE JE"ElERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS fEllOIT BEACH 3412 VIA lJ)()/675-2731 PASADENA/SANTA BARBARA/PALM SPRINGS HAWAII/PEBBLE BEACH/SAN FRANCISCO a very special boutique for children at ~a Westport ~i· .-P Square Mi~· ,su L~ · ·S~-Thurs .,july Uth P.S. We now carry ai•ea 7·14 alonA with our infanta and toaal•r• ,,,,, anti 1tyl•• •... ,. ................ ". I S&I... issues due-on-sale guidelines Oreat W•tern Savina hel announced a pro1ram dt1t1neCI to eliminate confuaion amona borrowera and the l'Hl estate communlty concemJn1 due-on- aale claUM In mort.aaae oontracta. "The recent U-.S. Supreme Court dedalon upho.ldlna the effectivene. of the due-on-aale provtalon of. monaaae contracts tor federal UIOClationa hu railed many queaUona amona homeownert, buyen and othen." Jame1 F. Montaomery, chalnnan and praident, Mid Wedne.cs.y. "People who have 10ld their homee in the paat, have aalea tranaacllom in prooea1, or thoee who might wish t.o 1ell homes In the future need to know how Ducantl! aoo or ~~~7130 Barbe!cues ""· m. • Y our Choice Our lowest Price of th1'1 Summer! RllHI~ 8-irllklen Reg 8 99 to 25.99 they are affected," Mantaomery 1ald. To reaolve theae queetlon1, Great Weetem adopted the following policy: -Greet Weetern will not Interfere with put aalee, lncludinJr uaumpUON made without not.lfytn1 the lender, or refinance tranaact.lona Involving Great We1tem loana. However, for Interested Orea t Wea tern b orro wers , th e · aaaoctatton ta offer in1 a r efinance pJ'OIX'am at below-market rates for terms up to 40 years to replace short-term aeoond trust deeds coming due. -Great Western will not attempt.to cha.nae the tenna of any etierow open by July 15 and will aUow to Aug. 16 for that MCroW t.o cloee. -Great We.tem lntenda to continue It. policy of not enfordna du.on...ie provlalona in ha variable rate and adjustable rate ~· -For future property tnnlf•, Greet Western will exerdae the due-on-tale provtalon on fixed-rate bana. To uaiat homeownen and bu~ with new trantactlona, however, Great Western destined a variety of loan programa. Features include loant up to 40 years, Joana with lower payments in the early years compared with convent.tonal 1oe.rw and interest rates that vary with the COit of funds for the duration of the loan. Diet or Regular 7-UP A & W Root Beer Sunkist Orange 12 Pack • Your Choice FHI Direct1n Qlin ...... , ...... ~" Pltlo ""· "" n;ul1 I 221/1" WIMr Klltil lar-1~ #71005 black only Reg 69 95 Clo11 0.1 alltclM 1rt n,,un Grau SMlri Reg 7 99 Costa Mesa. CA -Kermit Rima (left ) with brother Keith. shown at a recent meeting discussi ng the rami fications of a parking lot sa le ... Ther e was some discord. but in the final analysis th ere will be "one heck of a Parking Lot Sale". Hui ltllt I 501-L Reg 1.49 gq1' ------- Trll T-.• ..... IHll ~JO. .1ff ..... , l11n a,rtllkllr 11.11 c off . Vllll '*•Miila 10· x e· Reg. 1U'9 '1 \.I L ,,... Cllll 30 pl. Reg. 1U?9 ....... ,., ''*" Reg. 11.·88 1 ag I" kltdlUI lllCll W35-254 Reg 29 95 -1 t .. lalty Silk #1414 Reg. 39.09 Dectrlttv• HtM ,. .... 4· )I 2' l l I olt v .. .,..._ 4' 40W ... , .. ...._ .... E40·CW Reg 2.•7 (limit 241 Reg. 33911 Wall & Cellng Paint Glldden·s Latex wall & celling paint. White only. SAT. ONLY ••• FREE MAGNETIC KEY ... CASE WITH PURCHASE OF 3 KEYS! BAR-8-QUE FACTORY REP DEMO FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 11 to 4 GLIDDEN REPSJO ANSWER ALL YOUR QUESTIONS MIDAY & SATURDAY, 10-2 · VISIT OUR '1 and '2 TABLES •• Reg 109 00 Mquvox 9" AC/DC B&W T.V. #4010 Reg. 109 r.o MlfllYH 19" Clltr T.V. #4166 Reg 399 00 .J I IJ MllllYH 25" Clltr ....... T.V. t5~o Reg 939.95 v Ju S1llcltd T. V. SIHd 1• 11 Aasl'd. R••W..ld il•s I.', --------Gil1tt11 u lr dry1r1 IN Clrllll lrHI u0''o Cff Easy drf var SI( ·I Resi 9 99 j 9' AK -8 Reg. 14.99 I.• Mlac. lllM 1M1a ......... GINI• Ca1tf: ........ Reg. 18.911 g11 9.99 , . I II ~ ~ t I llllJ Pilat . D THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1982 Issuins orders by mail ~ CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82 83 86 is one way Erma Bombeck would prevent war. B2. 0 • raises stink town • 1n PURE RUBBISH DEPT. -You can think of nothing more rotten happening around your place than having the trashman go on strike. You got that rotten part didn't you? That's a pun, son. It has happened to the good residents of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Sunset Beach. The trashrnen went out on Monday in a dispute over holiday pay. They went out, but the trash didn't. More than 100 trash collectors working for Rainbow Disposal. Inc., walked off the job in what has been characte~ by the Teamsters Uruon as "an unsanctioned ··strike." Most homeowners in the aforementioned communities could care less whether the strike was sanctioned or totally unblessed. The main thing . was the trash remained. I"-\ THERE WERE NO ,-0-1-1-0-1-,-8-11-1-~-r. rainbows .around th<:>se l ~ ~' " trash heaps. Maybe flies, ________ _,. ~ .... ....._ or the neighborhood dog. But they weren't there to collect. They just came around to rummage. One of the vice presidents of Rainbow has now informed reside nts to heap out that trash now on regular collection days because the strike, authorized or otherwise, is now over. But, he cautioned, the trash collection may run about one day late. Just let the stuff sit out there and ferment for a day, folks. You have to have a certain sympathy for Huntington and Fountain Valley residents who stuck their h eaps of stuff out on the street at the end of the weekend. Then they got to look at it for at least a day. '!'My never came around until we miaed the garbage conector .. ~ Look at it this way: It gave the neighborhood kids something to keep occupied with for a day. MAYBE IT WOULD HELP on the trash front if somebody told the Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach homeowners that the trash strike could have been worse. They could have been , for example, living in my n eighborhood when the re fuse engineers took an abrupt holiday. Around our neighborhood, we have an ample supply of trash-rummaging canines, cats and kids. But we also have an added attraction: rummaging skunks. Skunks, when they go after the garbage and trash, do not simply rummage. They also strew it all out and then get very picky and choosy with the offerings. NOT TOO MANY nights back, one resident of our abode didn't take the rubbish on down to the trash cans but just dropped it off out on the front porch. Some hours later, my wife awakened me to announce, "There's a prowler 'out on the front porch. I can hear him ' 'rummaging around." Dutifully, I got out the big flashlight and poked it out the window. "He's after the trash," I announced. "Chase him away," sh e instructed. "You go chase him away," I said. "He's about a foot and a half long, with a big fluffy tail and a white stripe all the way down his back." "HE CAN HAVE whatever he wants," she said. Thus you can see while Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley folks suffered some vexations with Rainbow Disposal, around our place, you look out for striped trash parties that can shoot rainbows. Don't get hit by one. 'COllege for Kids' workshops at GWC Children'• clauea in aoft ICUlpture, pottery and ceram.ica are planned at Golden West C.oUep in Huntington Beach aa part of the "Collep for Kids" propm. ID the IOft 8C\&lptw'e workshop, fer ..-8 ~ 10, children wm w.m to Cl"Mte obJecta wtth Ion and thrMd. Th.ii procram ••t Monday and y, July 18 and 21, from 1 ... a:ao p.m. "' Adm&NltraUon aa.110 ....... don I• II '9. rw ~ 1r '° 11, • eepuate • sun PfGll'lm wW be cm at.I .... cla11t from 8 J·"'. • o noon, a I 1 o t n *7'nte1rl*" 1oom 110, '"" .. ..... . i'l•l•P.'""'"• Po"1r'1 .............. , •. ~·"· is a 12-M!Slion progam running Monday \hroUgh Thunday from 1 to 4 p.m. in Fine Art. Room 129. In the clua, which bej1N Monday, July 19, studenta will learn to make cylinden, mup and bowla.. "Ceramic Hand-Bulldtn1 Worklhop for Betfinnen." al.lo aimed It 13 '° 17-year-oldl, wtll cover pinch, 1lab and coll technlq1.&e1. Thi• &hrH•WHk ptOll'8m. al.lo ""11n1 Mandat; =l:t;l~~~y ln nne Atta Room . The rtCilWUon , .. lot ... of the ~*'>' and OlrllNc ca-.. to: Mort Inf or1D1llon at.oul Ooldln Wei&....._,,.._ oan t»t obteln•d tti oalll•I . , ...... I BEST OF FRIENDS -Karen Stone and her brother Chris discuss soccer games, lawn bowling and other generational Delly Not "'"° bf o.ry ....,_ topics on their second outing with their ·'adopted grand.father" Nick Alles at his mobile home park in lrvine. Small, wrinkled hands paired· 'Adopt-a-Grandparent' plan, ice cream parlors soften Irvine's isolation "The best thing I Wee abour grandparents is you have someone to calk to when no one else understands.'' From a scrapbook at the Irvine Senior Center By GLENN SCOTT o< .. 09tr ..... ...,. Nick Alles slta In an upholstered chair In the immaculate living room of hia doublewide mobile home at The Meadows in Irvine. He directs his 72-year-old smile across a coffee table at two children sitting politely still. their arms folded. on his large sofa. They smile back. Karen and Chris Stone are his grandchildren, but they aren't ready to confide in him just yet. Karen, 11 , and Chris. 7, live with their parents, Bob and Joyce Stone, in Woodbridge, which like this mobile home park is one of the new and affluent storybook neighborhood~ th~t make up the newest city 1n ()range <:ounty. NiCk Alles is not related to the Stones, and he is not actually the grandfather of the two children neatly dre98ed in warm weather clothes. A retired electrical engineer born and 'educated in Holland Alles has been a widower for more than four years. He has no children, thus no grandchildren. Karen and Chris do have ~dparents, but far away in Maryland and Florida. They are well-remembered yet too far away to be tha;e who understand when no one else does. Fate and mig;ation have brought together Gus trio. They have adopted each other. Now they are sitting in Nick's big and lonely mobile home to forge what does not come easily in Irvine -a comfo rtabl e connection between small hands and wrinkled ones. . Theirs is one o f 10 s uch relationships started this summer through the ci ty 's Senior Outreac h Services, sa id coordin a t o r B eth Re nz . Already plans are under way to create more. Th e idea for the "Ad opt-a-Grandparent '' program came from severa l young girls who called the city's Community Services Department Friendship's letter-perfect LB, Australian women bound by 48 years of overseas mail By STEVE MITCHELL o<tM Delly ........... They live 7 ,500 miles apart and, until three weeks ago. they had never met. But to listen to them chat about their families. old friends and jobs, you'd think Eleanor Widol! and Pat 'J'hompeon were next door neighbors. The two women have been pen pals for nearly five decades and they figure they've exchanged more than 400 letters across the Pacific Ocean since 1934. Pat's from Bexley, Au.stralla, just 10uth of Sydney. and she's in Laguna Beach visiting her life- long correspondent for the first time since the pair took part in a letter exchange program 48 yean ago: Eleanor was an 11 -year-old student at San Juan Capistrano Elementary School, home with tonsilitis when she heard a radio announcement inviting children to e xchange letters with Australian younga1era. She aent in a letter to the radio 1tation and, six weekl later ahe received a aea mail re1pon1e from a 10-year-old St. Patrick's School atudent in K.oiarah, Auatralia. 1be mall never ttopped. They wrote about their parents, their school chum•, favorite clulel, romance. and heartache9. "Not too many heartaches," aaid Eleanor. "Pat's pretty cheery.'' "'lbat'• me," the brilht..eyed Au.tnllan Mid, prunpdnc the two pen frt.endl to bnt.k out in lauahter. Their leUera durln1 World . War ll contained 1tampt that .-14()ptned by c..r.·· and IOIDltilw ll took a mGftth fw I lett« to c:ro. I.be oc.n. Pat worked ,,. the Women'• AUIVaban Air hrot duMI the war. lleenor ...... Wll wortdnc fot \he WW llfott liOo, • .. , ......... u.. a In oolltp," lhe Mid, 1par lftl ~0U1tr rowad of l1u1 ,., ...... the two • .... r 09tr ................ FOREIGN 'CORRESPONDENTS' -Eleanor. Widolil of Laguna Beach and Pat Thompson of Australia have n exchanging letters for nearly 50 years. They met for the f t time last month. Eleanor hu saved many of the month, It was Uke old hte Jett.en from her friend, includlnc week. one dated Septembef', 1~1 that "We had a fair lcl'ea about each re.di: other before we met," Eleanor "The song 'When the said . Swallow• Come·Back to "We're 90 ln tune With each Caplatrano' came to Auttralla other," Pat acreed· "We're IOUl .,.,,. time b9ck. z.cb week we matea •• lilten IO I --6or\ Ol'I the wil'eJell . called 'Hit Pvllde •" Pat retuma to her New South ' Walt!I home in two week11 and They fell in love with the Mme the c:ouple intend to keep up film ...,, end Cl'OOMn durinC lhetr ~ . thMr' ~~wt~ favort• .... -..rt_ Ta1IOr Nellon °"1y .,.. Ume, they to :a~'I P-* ;;d Ronald . =:,.."-touch more ol:: by And &hey exohan11d .. A...,_..., mnll tollftd ............ f/¥91 1he durdw, now.'' l&Hnor Nld, •dd&na a _... ~lram llihaal lind la•, ._ caU 11 S.. than ta lor photH of •h•lr hw1ban~1, Unt ndaUlll. ilhllfr••.-.lf'll•tit"tw. i!iJ'!rw .... how U.. IMil , .,....., .... a..119 L , ...... ......_ .. ............. ~.......... ' • seeking ways to meet older people. she said. Many of the callers shared a similar situation with the Stone c hildr e n -their own grandparents were simply too far away to e njoy much contact. They wanted more. Irvine is not short of old fol.kl. As many as 8,000 of the 69,000 residents are senior citizens, she said. Yet the 10-year-old city hasn't had time for generations to grow and resettle. The roots aren't there. "You have to understand Irvine. People are isolated here," said Ms. Renz. "They don't have grandparents in the vicinity, in California even." A training session was held in April to familiarize volunteer childre n for the ir ne w roles. Then an "appreciation breakfast" was offered in May for interested seniors, with the kids doing the serving and entertaining. Finally, matches were made. . City officials say they know of no othe r communities with similar programs. Most others, of course, wouldn't need one. Organizers are anxious to involve more young and old in the adoption program. Interested persons can caJl Ms. Renz at 754-3869. She said expectations are kept simple. "It's not that the grandparents have to do anything. They. don't have to buy the child anything or take them to Disneyland," she said., "They just have to be there." Alles has roused the children from the sofa and walked them to the lawn bowling green at the mobile home park. U ever there was a symbol.of the senior citizen subculture, this is it. No one on the green moves fast. Even the weighted balls curve slowly on their cros&.ng course. Alles is active in hia park, active in the community. He ia chairman of the Senior Qtizien Center. Everyone on the green seems to know him1 .~ut they don't know the two kiCll bemde him. l "Whoee are the chilctrenr · Mka an approaching bowler. I ''They are my grandchildren," beams Alles. "Are they from A.rmt.el'damr' the friend Mks. "No. 'nlel' have adopted me," uya Nick. lie UcbUy t.oucbea the toJ)I of their ~ with hla :J: ~=c-z:r. in the middle, and .. , ~::=r~~~f th1a II I pine bt'a 1WYW ._. before, 1 l& " cmly the ....... ~ bet.,Mn Karea and her new, g::tt•\h•r and tM ""' for .. on • ._ ......... I ---·~a.. ... . ""°'~"-It. •h•J •• ,.;:, ...... . ~·----· ... -------· ... lllJ!W I •r 11 U.1 ,.,, •• ................. "_ ' J I •' Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT /Thureday, July 1&, 1$82 •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE woman's close shave a secret worry DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've had th1a for a long time and can't brina to talk about lt. I won't have peace ol until I get lt aolved. rm • rather pretty girl ln my mid-20.. Sbeolutely nobody knows thil, but I have to ve my chin every momin&. I then use a vy makeup that coven the problem very ttell. So, what am I worried about? Well, I have th1I recurring nightmare that one day I .nay have to bf: ln a hospital where I won't 6e able to ahave. In nine hours I would look lb aome kind of beast. I feel like a walking time bomb. This t worry plagues me constantly. I am esperate for help and don't know where to . Can you advise me? -FEELING A FREAK IN DALLAS DEAR DALLAS: Have you considered lectroly1l1? Tld1 l1 a permanent hair- . emoval procedure done by beaa.ty T rou1 HEALTH OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN Doctor visit ~rescrihed DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Wby are doctors against the use of non-prescription drugs? Whenever I go to a drugstore and 'sk for an over-the-counter (even ordinary aspirin) medicine, I feel sneaky and guilt- )Jlden. Isn't it possible that taking such medicine may bring relief and often save a needless and expensive trip to the doctor's qfflce? -MRS. K. I DEAR MRS. K: I'm in favor of a natient buying aspirin for occasional headaches or arthritic pains; or an antacid for occasional stomach upsets; of moderate ~of vitamins to supplement a poor diet. 1 Self-treatment is usually harmless if it is limited. But it can become dangerous if prolonged. I recall several allergic patients who cpf_l~Ued to take aspirin even though they sµttered asthmatic attacks. They did not realize that "harmless" aspirin provokes such attacks in susceptible patients. A well-known judge made a habit of visiting a neighboring drug store for his daily dose o f bicarbonate of soda to 1'CUtralire the indigestion and gas under his chest. Not until months later did he realize his symptoms had been due to coronary artery cijsease. Fortunately he survived his heart attack. Even self -treatment with extra-large doses of vitamins, taken over a long period, may produce serious symptoms. What I've been saying, Mrs. K., is that how long you treat yourself measures the incipient dangers of taking non-prescription drugs. For a short while, perhaps okay. But the longer you treat yourself, the longer you postpone your visit to your doctor. The longer you a re u nawa r/' o f the real diagnosis, it's evident that treatment is a hit-or-miss affair. I don't suggest that people go running to their doctor for every little ache and pain. But any discomfort that persists deserves early medical evaluation. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I am pregnant for the first time. I have i 'ldence in my obstetrician because of personal reaction to him and the nice g1 I've beard about him. But I wonder If be isn't too strict about ~e need for checkups. Is It necessary to see m at least once a month during the first x or seven months? -MRS. Q. 1 DEAR MRS. Q .: If he has suggested the following schedule of visits we wouldn't say ~e was too strict. The healthy woman requires a checkup eve~L month during the flrSt 28 weeks of pregrumcy. Then, every fy.ro weeks up to 36 weeks of pregnancy. 1 And weekly until the baby is delivered. In ~ instance. be thankful your doctor is sirict. t Dr. Steincrohn welcomes questions 1.,-om readers. H e cannot answer all i d/vidually but will include those of ral interest in ms rolwm1. Send your tions to him in care of the Daily Pilot, .0 . Box 1580, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. slOn Y ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT ~· · ..... 1peclall1t1 ud some derma&ololl1t1. Not all electroly1t1 11 1ucce11fal. A ~ ... desree of 1klll 11 reqaJred In order to clfftroy tlae roots so tile llaln wlll aot 1row baclk. U yom wut to lavfftlpte tills wltla a dermatoto1t1t, call tlle coaaty medical society. U you prefer a beaaty 1peclaU1t, watd tlae aew1paper ads, Ulu 10 la ud ask to be p•t la toacll wlill a clleat wllo us ud auccet1 wlUI die proce4are. U well doae, It coald pat u eD4I to yoar 1bavla1 ud your rec11rrta1 al1lltmaret. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thought you might like to know that ''chutzpah" is in the of fidal Scrabble dictionary -both with and without the "h." It is defined as "supreme confidence." "Oy" is in there, too, but no "vey.'' The definition of "oy" is "to express dismay or pain." I am not Jewish but I love Yiddish expressions, especially when used by those wonderful people in the Bronx. No language is nearly so descriptive. How I wish I could speak it! -SHALOM (also in the Scrabble dictionary) SPORT POPULARITY SOARS -Whitewater rafting, a sport that has soared sinre 1977, has now caught on in Maine, and the state's riven -once jammed with logs -are quickly becoming clogged with rafts. A group of DEAR SHALOM: Sorry to pick a bone wit~ tbe Scrabble dictionary, but "Oy" does not mean pain. It mean• simply "ob." 11Vey" means "woe." The complete e1pre11lon, ''Oy vey 11 mlr," means "Ob, woe 11 me." I alao cllallea1e Scrabble'• deflnlllon of "chut1pala." It doe1 not means 0 1upreme confidence," bat pare 1all. (Five will get yoa 10 tut &Jae tran1latloa was made by a tblrd-&eDeratlon American Jew who is under 35. What do tltey bow?) DEAR ANN LANDERS: I simply must respond t.o the woman who is mad at her husband (and the druggist) because she is ~regnant at age 41. She signed her letter, 'Twenty Years in the Production Line." I had a baby when I was 44. I couldn't believe I was pregnant. My husband was stunned. We had four rhanied children and five grandchildren. Our late dividend, now 8, is the joy of our lives. He keeps us young and turned on to life. We play soccer and baseball with him and go roller-skating. The other parents on the block probably think A~ Wlf'ephoto enthusiasts rides down the rapids of the Penobscot River. About 22,000 people are expected to raft down this river and the Kennebec this swruner. n ANN LANDERS .;>~ we an· nuts L\u l 'l1e • l'•lf 1•s" \VP h<•Vl' never hud so mw h I lll 1 1 w1 ... 1i I • 111dd Ii 1\.• l\\•1 ''' th11•( more, Ann Th1•11 1s n11 l;w ll•·r \\,1\ 10 ... u1 y young and vital Sr ~.,, 11s 'I HI-OLDEST MEMBERS< W I 11 ~ I <JN <. ISLAND PTA DEAR ~H \I Ul'lh· Folk-. like you should adopt or 1.1k1 10,11·1 t·hlldrcn Into your bomt' l lo\f' vuur 1•111h11,ia">m! ERMA BOMBECK .A 1 \IVl1Sl:.ND Rule.· \\1 rth fighti11 for .\:-..1 \\•11111 I• t il tl.1nk1ng about war, .illd ho\.\ t 11 It ... ,.t•n1-. 1 11 ' • !111 IJC•111t tll imagine that nall•m ... ,,,1111 •I ·.ti! gl'l along with one anoth• 1 Tr' • 11 ll• · 11.il l\ < 1s <1 set of ruk'l> th.it 11111-.1 I. , 11 • • I " ~ci. h<1w are theM! for 1 1111<1IT1 '" Nu uHJllll I pay for 11 111 t.1sla p.1yrol) HI \l/f lf.11 i' ,,,1 111dl·~1tcan 11 , I • ll• No p<'rsonal. i It .. l NOTIFIC:i\ l IC>'\ nF \ '\ .itt.wk on a fore>1gn c·11u11trv \\ill,,., 1 111 \l<.J l1.S. mails by thl· all;1do•1 11. th• .itrt<kVt· The> war mav not 1·11111111• 11• • 111 ttl tlll' 1 •·spon S<: is returnl'd 1l11 11u~'l1 11 t s 111.111 .. WJrs \\ill lit Ii ·Id 111 do\\ 11111w n public govc•rnnH·n t li1.ild111 • . rHI Ill> un t• may engagl' 111 th1 , 1til 1 li1•11 '1 li1c1L-s are parkt'<l ll'galh 11 1111 l\\11 11.11·1-. provided markC'<l "VISI'l l ){ 'I ~11, ,., l•1t ,, two-hour pencxJ A ll 111!. 1 ·.1 111. It ...... ·111 i>E> towed away. C1t\ 11a11 .• 11 l11 d ii<' will h( provided all Other:. ('ngaJ,.'mg II IMt l )I but Will not run aftc·r h l "> 111 ti, 1't11111~s. "1th IHnited hours un S.1tunJ.1\ .111..i no :-\umlay i.;erv1ce. 1 Aries: Study facts Befon 10JU1 11•.., ,111 1nll111t-d insurance forms and dpp1 111• 1,11• l.11 lh ·mmbers ~U hav« bc.•<·n 11111 t l'l I• 1 "11• 11 fh1s means your clnd n1 , ... di ''" • • • n• • "P'. two will haVl' to I ~ -..1·r1l t• ·ti 11• llri•lll:• 1·ompany, and vou 11 •1.1111 111 • 1111 "' ir nwn rf'<'ord . If not filkcl 1n 1 r,111111 .. 1. • • i..:r 1" ""di not be cons1dt·n·d All W ('.l f k ••• 'loi '1 h11 i1·s will be> in kits Friday, July 16 ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Some factual material requires more study, consideration. Focus on messages, trips, calls from relatives. Capricorn, Cancer persons figure promin.~ntly. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Sales ability multiplies. Accent on increased income, getting rid of losing proposition. You gain inside infonnation -you'll deal from position of strength. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Ties are cut with situations, penons representing delay, reaction, suppre11ion and defeatism. Breakthrough is now. Lunar and numerical cycles point to independence, originality, innovation and the pioneering of a project. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You regain sense of direction. Confidential data is made available. Property eettlement would be in your favor. Hannony is restored on domestic front, including peace with parent or authority figure. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Social activity accelerates, you make valuable, new contacts and cycle also points to creatlvity and romance. Focus on friends, aspiratlons, fulfillment of desires. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Definite steps can now be taken to advance career, improve business prospects. Be positive of source material. Check facts, get an accounting and perceive meaninp between lines. I UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22); Accent on conununic.ation, t.ravel plans, abWty to break through to new market•. Emphaaiie correspondence, calll, meuaaes. goodwill trips. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Dlfferencee with family member will be •«led. Focus remainl on finandnl, lendtnc, bonowina and reellJlna f inandAl ~ of one who made srandlme daiml. IAGmAJUUI (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): IWw to Judtpnlnt of GM cic.. to you, lnclaedl"I pu1MI' « ma'1t. Play w9'Uftl pme -be • "-'· lhrewd, qu.IM ....... .,... Dlt.y warka In your favor . ClAPllCOaN (DID, IWan. 11); ..... ~--.._....,......, .... Yeu'D~ .• .,_., .. _.. • ._= ... '°do It ........... -.. IBlft, d,.,... - and mu..;1 lir· , · 1111.1. d 1 ... 111rr using.- • HOROSCOPE Instrw·t11111" "ill I·• 111 .. I .r1g 11.ig1• foreigt'"! to the· counlr\ ·''"' 11111111; :I. 11 1 .1r1d f1vC' wing nuts will tr .. 1111 "' Ir•"'' • .1d1 "t l BY SIDNEY OMARA AOlLTS ("\'\ O\L'\ .tltl'nd a war when at'compa1111 d ''' h 1ld1 ··n This means childrC'n f1ghl1m, 1111 • w 111dow m a tank. need to be detennined and realization that you could strike pay dirt. standing ••I d.1dd\ ·., • 11i.,,\ "'"ry minute asking wh.11 hi '" dn1:11' ;11h l \>.ill he carry h1mwhrn 111· '" :11 1•.I ind• 1.1•nningon maps in the tJt 111.,., '' 1•111 \\li111111111• 111 1s board. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What seemed out of reach now becomes available. Emphasis also on creativity, romance and a fulfilling relatjpnship. Speculative venture can prove stimulating, profitable. &uh p< 1-...1111 , 11tc-r11w ,, war will be respons1blt· l1J1 1 • rs1111 . .J d ;1111 t1.!1•s to hfe and propert\ ind m11.,• 1,.,1' .1 <111 deductible insurann· ll4 •f111 • 1 '• Ii'"'• '" 111 he issued. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): New approach brings desired results. Study Gemini message for valid hint. What seemed a setback will boomerang in your favor. AftN l\\<1 1·!:11111 Ill'• f" II• ,, 11 1 bt• dropped and hi won't 11< 11 lo I• l11•h1 It all sound. liur•·.11w r.1t11 Rut when you thank ot at .11 .1" hun .1ul racy done for ynu h Kl,I\ ' GOREN ON BlllDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SH~I I Neither vulnerable. North deals. NORTH +KJ42 <:?AQ108S O AQS •s WEST EAST +1081 +AQU <:?ti <::1 4 O JT4 O ltlOU •&JU! • Ql0t4 80\JTH +u <:? )(J'7t5 OtU +AU The blddlnr: Nwtk Eaet s..di W e1t I o P .. a <:::> Pue 4 <:>Puer ... r ... Openlnr lead: rlvt or •. The bidding nef'd" a "11rit or explanation. North"~ r1111•11 ing bid or two diamnnd • ..... ,, the Flannery Convl'nt1ori It showed a limited open1nl( lt11t with precisely ,lour p:ido•, and five hearts. South'<. JUlllJ• t.o three hearts wa<; '"' ll .1 tional and Norlh. who hl'ld 1 ·maximum opening bid for tlw convention, raised to g11mr West led a club. Tlw neophyte would have little or no problem with the hand He would take two i1pad1• (1n eue1 and a diamond finnsr. and probably f'nd up lo111ng two 1pade trickl and two diamond• for down one. tit' would count hlmaelf most unluck7. and lndted he woultl be. But t.ht up.rt would "'-ke hla C!Ontrad, and tbPNI la ..othlar t.he dertnd•r• tOUkt do lo et.op hlml ftlt wl1nll'll lfthn1t1utt I• .. Nff I tlult ll ti' rk t11r11 a..m N\uru to t-nt1 wt'• 1 '"'"'' tntl ruf11 AMIMr flMlt '-101 I h • 111 J· '· '" l•r 1 1 h hark lo 1 if •I 11 "'ht r I rump. tn " "" , ... tr•'<\ 1111 the• last .1 •I,. •I• I•• •lo,, 1r11mJI'· Jnd • ,11h I ,ft I 1111111 Ill ll ~pa.Ar-~ 111• ir11pl\ 1 •1Vl'r' ·'"> r rd \\•·~t J o\ ~:i.,t 1,1n Wtn the 1rll'l.th1,1ph ltu• h+ '''nan 11111n\1.1hl1 rit"1111111 tr he 11111~" .1nnltwr flub. h<• yields ~ ru(f .ind ''"" lo dC't'larer. .1r1•I 1 h, '""'' '11 ,,tJe can gel '' t tin·•· tr" k' Ill lht• po1nle<l '"'l• t~p.i<lt • 11111! d1amondsl. llut 1r 111 rf'I ur n' l!llher of t 111"1 "''''·hr i-i•l'I up a tri.ck In f 1h•dbn•r 111 \\ h1rh1•vcr suit tw rl'l11rn' hlhN 11.ay. de dun will m11 kr ht~ rontract. ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, July 15, 1082 THE FJ\MILl' CIRCt8 BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) PEAN 'T LET 1IM MIT IT ! r t .. j I ' 0 by 811 Keane .------- "I'll show you how to breathe. First you inhale, then you outhale." by Brad Anderson 0 0 0 0 0 u "Using my bubble bath doesn't do much for your macho image!" - VOO t>ON"I ~AVE TO flGHi WITH OOG5. Hank Ketchum 0 YOl.J DON .. T ~AVE TO 5L££P. YOU t'ON'T HAVf. 10 EAT MOON Mt.;LLINS ACROSS 50 Implants 1 Oec:lotht 52 Voic.nlc f Serpen1 11 FoodfWI , .. ~ 15n.t• tt Negrtto 17 MelM!fwey ti Wtmhlr - ""'" 20 ElL'* 21 Opening 22 Celle "'*" crllll' 5t Foot.baiter 57 OcMfnlble 80 AuthOf George -e1 Mounted •2 Oettllt t3&c.,.i t4Poet 15~ 24 OICMll DOWN -Hollllt• 21 ~ I Pouohel 30 1outt1... 2 Giit ptb 3 Nero'• ctty Sf ,lfldld 4 Midi beet« 7-15 WEDNllDAY'I PUZZLE IOI. YID -~ 5 -MM\ 211edpett 44Vltefl M..... t Meteor ff VeotbOnd 45 .... If...... 1 Norte god It Ladt too .. ......., _..... • Ctlolot ~ .. , .... .... a• tDllr *IOM-: 4tM9111M01 •OM·lllr ,.,_..._ ._. .. .,._ ... ....... ,,..... .~ .... -~ I_,. •u..tr ... II--In by Ferd & Tom Johnson <JffZ·· ~ DIPN1T I STUDY H,ARD IN SCHOOL AND BECOME PRESIDENT p....:;:::::;:m• OF A 8,ANk,o~ 50MST~1N<Q ... .............. ·= _ .. ...... ... ........ . .. ........ ~-...... -...-•a .... i Ju_, ........ . ....... ~~= 1rs 80RIN6 OUT ~EltE ! .i SHOE :\.\:\{'l ' SLUG GO.WHY ARE YOU OUT HERE? YJ <.()LYRE (;()IN(, 1D HAVE A DEFEND~ GHAlkENGE MATCH wm~ iHE 'ELIMINATOR ', HUH~ ORA BB LE OAO, OOE.'S tf E.>JE.R be. f 6ofl1Hb &ttNE:i StcURrf~ GiUAAD ~T 1'~(. R£T1RtME.Ni ~1,.1,.Ac,£, 1 .---.. THEY DIDN'T LIKE MY TABLE MANNERS·-- c.>EAH I I KN EW fHA'T 1Hf~ WOULD HAPPE~ troNER OR LAiE.R ! E.VE.~IUALJ..l,.l WME KID WHO ™INKb HE'S FA!:>TER i\ND BEifER. WOULD (.()IVIE AFTER MEI "'r ~INC:t 7 ARE. 'b) l<1DD1~&? I rAcE. OANC,t.R E.'JER.i O~'f ~ 1""£ WlE.I< \ 1/1 D YOU KNOW t"Hese DIAPSRS we'Re: w eARING ARE:: ONL-Y MADS OF PAPeR ?.' i ' I 5 0 THEY WOULDN'T FAMILY LET ME EAT INSIDE RESTAURANT FACE rr , FArttER TiM£ CJrrOIES UP m All OF US! 'loo NE.llE.R KNOW \i)\.IO '4()1.)'LL E.HcOUNTE.R AT 114£. MAIN c.A'fE \ I~ l'M NOT (Off~A~tL-1 ALE.Rf AMO ON M-4 1ot~. I CoVLO SE IN llEAl JE..Of>AROi '· ~ WE TREAT YOU JUST LIKE HOME by Tom Bat1uk I HAD m 1URN SIXTEEN flY'l\EDN-i ! by Kevin Fagan "ERE, QAD 'fOtl ~T f~<>oi '40llR ~TASU. 1'1J! by George Lemont ;!. SUDDf!Ni,..Y' FSE::L-L-lKE: AN ORDE:R OF F ISH AND CHIPS ! ~·R1= ~AU.Y oor HERE. 0015'0£:.. IN it-\e.. MlOOU: OF ~EH\6Kr \~1HE.OA~. Pt\..L Pi.OH~. l , l J I ' t Tiie llltln . af 1111 . lnlt ......... !JIB OODDY Sii.ASH Ol!HIDAll! "OH"1U ••• of tit• t.aaiat Mt•HC• '° N fou d la UJ firsi-ru a ori• •.• -Ytan at O.••J, ••• •r• fl•• "A llVft roa •om rn•o• r.&n1" _ .... , . ..., ... ---:;;i'\4rt 1BE SECRET POUCF.llAN'S~ ..,,.. .all aaB • PITD CXQl • ta:llAll. PAUii •GRAHAM alANAll ,_.,.-.~am ••CllllJ•Plrl~ Pm.Ul.l.m • ., .. •8'.E C1APlm ==:.1...-:.::.:::..~,:~ ·---fft'[""W~l;:w,...., ---STARTS TOMORROW --- COSTA MllA Edwards UllDUI UIOYE South Coast Plaza 546 2711 Edwards Westbrooll 530 4401 ACTITIOUe W U ACm lOU8 W U .... ITAT'llmlfT NAm ITAT'lmNT The foltowl119 pereon 11 doing The tollowlng peraon I• doing ~ • ~ • OVTWARO BOUND, EUCUO CAA WASH, 1135 N. 356 E. 19th 8tr9el, Coeta .._, &did, AnlMlm, Cellfomt. 92801 Cellfomle t2t27 OoNld Jeft9ry Plltllp Anthony PHtl, 143 Whetetlne, 255 E. 19th StrHt, Cypr•H Drive, Laguna Beach, Coeta Mela, Celfomle 92e27 CellbNI t2t52 Thie ~ .. conduc1ed by ., Thll ~ .. COflduc19d by .,, lndMdulll. lndMdllll. Donald J. Whetltlne P.A. P-1 Thie 1181-t -ftlect with the Thll ......,.,t -Ned with the County Clettt of Oriinge County on County Cieri! of Orenge County on June 22. 11182 ~11, 11182. ,..., P'1"• Pubtlehed Orange eo .. t Deity PubMlflecl Orange CoHt Dally Piiot, June 2A • ./Ally 1, e. 15, 1912 Plot, Ju/ly 1, •• 15, 22. 1982 2703-82 ~~~~----~a~12_·~-i ---------------~ MUC MmCE ACilliOUe WU l"ICTiTIOUI W U .... 8TAtamMT llMm ITA~ TM ,..._.119 pet~ la doing The tollowtno pet.on le doing ~-~-D .. AFTINO 80AAD, 2180 CLASSIC DETAILING, 115 Eld9" Awenue. No. 101 . Co•t• Aodl.....,, lntne, c.111om1e 82715 ._.,QA n127 Merk Henry De Ibey, 115 FLAVIO BATISTA MOURA, Aodl'ltew, IMne. Celllomle 112715 2ft0..., ~No. 101, CoeU Thie bullMM .. ~by., ._., CA tlt27. indMduel. Tlllt ........ II OOlid ICNd by an Maf'll H. OelbeY •dutltl• Thll lt.Mement -111ec1 with fie I .. A1Mo ...... Mour9 CounlY aertt of <>r.,... Co&#lty on TNI 1111 ,_,. -.... wlltl ... Jul'9 tt, 1M2. ~ =:-of er.,. Co&#lty °" Pvbtlened Otenee eo.:.~~ ,.,. Piiot. ./Ally '· •• t5, 22, 1182 ~ 0renee eo.et Delly 211542 ,.. -•• 15, 22. 29, 1M2 2llM2 PmUC MmCE AD STARTS THURSDAY NO DEALER SALES SUNBEAM GAS GRILLS INDEPENDENTLY CONTROLLED DUAL BURNER Got the Lite A Motic. fuel Sentry. lilt out troy. 40.000 BTU's. Approx. 562 sq. inch cooking area. DELUXE INDEPENDENTLY CONTROLLED DUAL BURNER Everything the other one hos and a cooking 2 997 temperature Indicator. 4 flare guard cooking #9492 gride. big redwood eide table. . ' . DURALITE .. FOLDING SAND CHAIR ': ~ ~1 · ~"' "-: .._ ' J ·:~~t· .... While this stufl 101111 You know we hove what we advertise but the etuff i• limited. okay. Muhi·color web . ';I'#'~: .. : .... ~ t''. ,, • t. DURALITE STACKING STRAP CHAIR fade resistant PVC strap•. yellow with white accente. 2499 #7531 DURALITE 7 99 #5120 ~I ~LIMITED QUANTITIES . "=:-, 5 POSmON CHAISE . 3999 #7541 --\) ,,,, ~?'· LJMJTED QUANTITIES 6 PC. CUE PITTERI SET You.g•t lour arlyn cane chain, umbrella table. and a 7 foot umbrella. That'• the good new1. Nowforthe bad. The baH leextra, MINI MUTINY -Matthew Blllingl, 10, wu havtna a aood time rowtna when Stephen Carle, 4, of Bakertfjeld let lt be known f\e didn't want to be a few feet offahon from Balboa laland. A.. eoon u Tracee Carie, 8, pulled Lauren BW1np lnto the plutic boat, the founome piddl9d ubore w hen Stephen exerciled a 4-year-old'a preropt1ve and c:rted that he wanted to be taken back out. BUDDY L HOODED WAGOM Who wont• a wagon with a hood on It? In my n•lghborhood we tought the hood•. f ive poeltlon llrepon. two vent cont role. BUDDY L PATIO MASTER SQUARE SMOKER Big 369 (okay approx. 368) eq. inch cooking area. two wood aide ta bl••· #44351 97 KINGSFORD CHARCOAL BRIQUETS Don't run out In the middle ot the burger baeh. (I got1a writ• eomething to fill thl1 1pac•.) KDIGSFORD MITCH LIGHT BRIQUETS 2~o! All you n-d ls a match. no lighter fluid. no mHI. Pretty easy U you don't mind paying tor the convenl•nce. 2 88 8 LB. COLORITE Vi" x so n . VINYL ROSE 2 33 #500 The old one I• ehot or doHn't reach. So dig in th• pocket !or two buck• and change and eolve the problem. EMERSON ELECTRONIC 15 WATr BUG KILLER Protect• agaln1t bug• to a third of an acre (Did you know my uncle Huby 1~qk1 Scotch with a eoda accent?) 49aa 10. Ell-15 CIBDlllL CO I ill GLOYES 49tPR. #11 OR l lC Lo" th• name. °"9 lt"'"" It'• for the blrda. or doee ll IMClft lt hcu a w .. 11119? (Or doee lt ...... r •• -.~..-.,, SUNBEAM 18" DELUXE TWIN BLADE ELECTRIC MOWER M. V. NURSERY 4-PAK OR 5Yt" CONTlllER FLOWERS Marlgold1. lmpatlen1. Be9onla1. and Vlncae. ••• EA. FUCllSll I 3 9 c AL. Kffp them ln the ehade. k .. p them pinched back. pinch their no•••· and you'll get 1u~r color. (Mot at Cathedral City •• too hot?) JOBE'S TOMATO SPllES ,1 'l ! J , 1' . ,. "' '· 'f 'I ., ....... : ... AT WORK -Debbie K owalcyzk, an investment director at Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. in Bloomfield, Conn .. takes .15-month-old daughter Lynn to work with her \Wery day, where she iB cared for by the corporation's on-site day-a.re center. Moms bring tots to w ork BLOOMFIELD, Conn. (AP) -Every rqht Debbie Kowalcyzk packs two bags so she'll be ready for work the next morning. One is filled with her rue. and work papers. The other is packed with diapers and baby food. ' "I put them together at night ao I won't forget anything," said Mrs. Kowalcyzk, who t.a.kea her 15~montb-old daughter Lynn with her to work at Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. every morning. Husband Wayne gets breakfast while Mrs. Kowalczyk gets the baby ready for work.. When Lynn is sick, the couple decide whose meetingll are more important that day. "U they're equal," she said, "it's a coin toss." Lynn doesn't actually go to the office with mother, an assistant director of investment systems. She spends the day amid cribs, rag dolls and brightly colored mobiles in a day care center Connecticut General set up for employees and local residents. Just as Debbie and Wayne Kowalcyzk are adapting their lives to be parents as well as corporate executives, corp·orations like Connecticut General are adapting their style to help women be executives -and mothers. More and mo r e women are deciding that being a mother doesn't mean you can't be a manager. A National Center for Health Statistics study showed an increasing number of women are waiting until their 30s before having children. An important factor in that delay, it said, was a desire to establish a career. "It Wied to be you worked a while, then got married and had ·a baby," said Wendy Reid Crisp, editor of Savvy magazine, who didn't stop working while raising five children. "Women going to work all their lives creates a new set of demands." Today 1,500 companies, including 250 hospitals, are actively involved in child-care assistance. Of the 250 corporations, a fifth are like Connecticut General with day care centers on the corporate campus. The rest help parents find day care for their children, either through information and referrals. subsidies or other arrangements. The federal government has given impetus to providing child care by offering tax benefits to employees and employers for that care. Ellewhere, "fieX1ime" born out of the energy crunch and an effort to eaae commuter cruah, haa proven a aolution to child care for 90me women and men who can adjust their work schedules to meet the needs of their children. A week after giving birth, Suaan Fisher, 35, wu beck oo the job as a vice pn!Bident and director of marketing for Chemical Bank in New York. "I was very lucky.'' said the mother of two. "Both my babies slept for long stretches and weren't any problem." But the majority of working mothers do 80 as much out of economic need as for career fulfillment. Particularly thoee who live outside major urt.n areas have to find other solutions to the child-care question. "Management at CG realized in the 1970. that the work force of the future would depend more and more on women and there would be more and m«e workina families,•• uid Ali80n Kenworthy, ..a.tant d1rec:tor of c.c.mectk.vt General em..,,_ fadlltiee and employee let'Ykles. In 1975, an Old dairy barn wu convened into the day care cen~ for 55 children. It ii ND by Kinder-Care, a day~ chain that runs 700 oentert nationwide. The rei::e to the Living and Leern1na Center bM 80 positive that a new, w.ir center ii belnc built. IncreaHd worker loyalty ia one of tbe benetidal ap&uoffa campu\ies are dJalowrtnc tn thmr ettorta to aw to the new family W01Wa. Intelmed'rw. a Freeport, ~111d ....... , proclucta compan7, wu havtn1 • bard time IDA~ IUarW of the~ ODI pondorw. IUdl M Dow o..mc.1a and Amoco; in the Tew OuJl ....... le w• Uio bavfnl • problem with ab911lteetmm, much ol lt .-Jatad to W01mD who had to my home wttb dM6r cbddnn. TM ~ opeMCI lta on-lie. day-an _.., ID nm thll ..._. Mlh __.ID ..... .,wtta. ................ ~hll.Or11z••~tlntbea.. ... ,.. GI 1,n1U ... " iMd _.. dlfaM Alie D F ...................... hOW ....... ..... .... ... rEi! .......... "' a. .... ·-rt FR11 k .E .. 111 ... ...... •111tr1M,... . NO DEALER p t.a AD STARTS 'ftiUR8. LIBUIY Uliil 2777 EA . #1024 My little brother one:• fell ln a manhole 10 I ruahed right over to the llb«1ry and got a book on how to rala• a ch lid. Oak flnlah. L0lmltedquantltle1. #1014 and #2984. TALKABOUT CORDLESS PBOIE •••• You talk about It. I don't feel like 11. Tq_ke th• phone out In the gcnage. the yard. over at Harry'• hou1e next d oor. Range 11100 feet. Catc:hea all your ' c:all1 lor you whether you·,. not at home or even If you luat wanna nap. Plc:k1 up on the flret ring. 4777 77'' 97'" CIU J0TTD I CIU llTTD 2111 IUIL WSETTE CIU Jm'D llll DOIL CllSllTI Wl1'I IEJ9TE MOllBCB MllEB A two c:ublc foot mixer. tuat right for driveway and 1idewalk lobe. Unit lnchade1 the foldaway hcmdle9. motor mounting brac:ket. pulley. and wheel a. I 69~r.xw G.E. Vi HP MOTOR 4497 RED DEVIL BUTYL CAULK 77~10Z. #0696 Stay• where It' 11uppo1ed to and won't 1hrtnk. (Sounda llk• a wart I u1ed to h~ve on my thumb.) 158:s14 You gotta 1eethl1 onetobelleve lt. K.epsyour tool a neat and orderly. lnterlocka hold everything In plac:e ao you can roll It up. Orange Oout DAIL y PILOT IThureday, July 15, 1111 TOO MUCH DYERTISllGI GET I TUCKER 30 GAL. TRASH CAR 30 Gallon a? Let' 1 '" that 1hould be big enouyh to hold about one day'• worth of work for me. (Oh. pardon me. I wa1 ju1t thlnklng out loud. What rubbl1hl) ARKllSAS KANGAROO FOLDDIG WOOD TABLE/ BENCH SET 4997 Sine:• when did kangaroo• come from Arkan1a1? Anyway. you get a table and two benc:hH. In charcoal stained o&ark pirw. Limited quantitlH. QUAKER STATE 30 WT. MOTOR OIL 79t QT. Can you imagine how many people a,. now c:hanglng their own oil and saving a lot of real folding money doing It? (Thirteen? More?) #332 WD-40 Stop• the 1queak1 and 1queal1and1001en1 up ru1ted port1. And It a110 1ay1 it prevent• c:orro1ion and lubrlc:atH. 1 24 90Z. G.E. CLEAR OUTDOOR nooDLIGBf BULBS 333 EA. TBEBMEX WllDSBIELD WASHER FLUID II It ever rain• 40 day• and 40 nights. you'll be all HI for the big one. Choo1e from 7S or 100 watt. 67t GAL. No dilution. UH ii 1tralght. Bug1 and grease ju1t bubble away. (Can you imagine •Hing a bubbly bug on the wlnd1hleld?) ' ' ALLISON AIR COOL CUSHION 1 88 #41-1102 Keeps the nether region• cool. What good 11 air c:onditlonlng II you're 1tuc:k to the 1eat? BUDGE TEXAS TWEED SEAT COVERS lrown or blue. 2 Door Spilt lack or 4 Door Solid Back. (Who aald my wife ha1 a m.emory like an elephant and shape to match?) 7 77 EA. MURRAY BICYCLES @~ ~·M 'GJ .. .. f.J • lilllLI* 24,, CllllEI lplff Upt 19llow flnlah. hall foam handlebar. eooa .. r lmdln . #1·1&17 ·-··· naa CIDICE •••• EA. EVEREADY EIERGIZEB BATTERIES CUD """PAI 81 9 YOLT SIJW PU La1t lot1 longer than their c:arbon battery brother•. That' 1 the whole truth and nothing but the truth. YOUR CIOICE 1 09 PAK • DI.ILL FLOOR SAFE ln1lde dlmen1lon. ... ll 9'1.'' • 13'1.'' LARGE FLOOR SAFE ln1lde dimen1lon 121/t" ll 13¥." ll 13¥." MESA SAFES Got v," thlc:lc 1t"l body. c:omblnatlon ~ lock you c:an Ht to whate•er. full hardplate coYerlng the locking mechani1m. (Facte. tact1. you're c:onfu1lng me.) 9997 13497 IESt YET lln &LUtm IS lHD "LE CGllllllTl81 BUI UICI/ DOLLY II'' t:J I .. t j lllJ<I I IOu3 ..., ....... WO l••tWOMAN Wondlf WOIMn Mutt ute ... her ..,.,..,,.. Ind PO'#et to tllCIP e Mm>ri1t group "°"' k~ 81-.nd other~""'*"' ottk!llll&_ • 1l411AJNT A poltol> 08f1 lnt9<TV91t Simon'• vteit with •n ~ fl'lend In tl'le W•t lndlee I I.WAT. HAWAIRW-o McOerreu m••ta wllll reeletence when he tri.t 10 bring • ~ In for P<O- tectlon pu<potM • OVEAl!ASY GIM9t: Ktor Hal Linden (R)Q aD HUMANmE8 TH~H THE ARTS "lller•ture: The Story ~,. 'ICMNlWI NliC NEWS N9CNEW8 I ~ 1 * * * 'ITN GrHI Muppet I C•per" ( 1981) Ollarl•• Grodin, Olene Rigg. I Aeporttre t<ermlt, Fam. I and Gonzo tr•ce • l•bu· lout atolen jewel to Lon- doo. 'G' 1 (I) THE PEKIHO OPEAA ' Jotlnne Woodwatd tio.11 a l ClllneH extr•va g1nu 1 IMturlng llnglng. denclng. ICIONtk:s. mime md mar- : 1111 an. O MOVIE ~ * * "The Apple Dumpling Gang" ( 1975) Biii Bixby. SUMI\ Cleric A c:erdatwp IQ•-to t1lcl ~ j of -11elu•ble j)<openy lot • lriend. and I• r1tt1er ~to learn lhll lhrM Ofl)fl-ate lnduded 1n '"-dMI. ·G' 1:10 (%) PARTING IHOT t:at. DtCK CAVETT l G AMERICAN I QOVEAHMENT "TheCongreu" '(1)8HEW8 I G) 8AAHEY MILLER A llt>rarlan 11 err•ted for threatening to allence nolay patron• ptl(manenlly with e gun. 1~. C8SHEW8 • N8CHEW8 8 KUNOFU C&lne la I~ to repay • famlty debt by tMCtllng a ~ful man how to kill 8 A8CHEWS G KOJAK Ceptaln McNell'I wife i. kidnapped by • majof drug rnetchent lecing PfOMCU· tlon. • M•A•s•H Maj. Hou41hen'• flanc:e atfflel at the •OT7th end ellodct FrMk by ulclng him to be hie beet men • JOICEA"8 WILD • '111 8U8MS8 REPOM Cl) P.M. MAOAZN A behlnd·t,..__,.. IOott •t P<ofeM!onal wr•lllng. • young mother wtW> la • Chernplon temele body· bullder. aJ EHTERTAIHMEHT TONIGHT An Int'""""°' with R1Ch11d Herrle. Q)THEMU~S (C)MOVIE * * 'h "Blow-Up" (196e) Oevld Hemmlnga. vennu Redgr•ve. When • young London photographe( hH tome of 1118 plc:tur• blown up, lie dlecovere wll•I ~beamurder * * * "Sliver StrHk' (1978) Gene Wil<Mf, JIM Cl•yburgh A mlld· mannered book editor eccldenl•lly become• Ofl.l'Q4t Oout DAU. y PILOT,,.~~. July 1e. 1812 NARRATOR -Historian Robert Kee tells the story of Ireland in a 13-part documentary, entitled "Ireland: A Television History," that premieres tonight at 9 on KCET (28). lnv<>llled Jn • llnlller ert lhlel'a blzerre plol during • croea-coun1ry train ride 'PG' 7:30 8 a OH THE TOWN f'Mt"'9d: 1 tour or l10ma llWll ere u lamoua aa lhe etert thll occupy them; • gottlla wtlo llvea In a trailer In Woodlend Hiiia; e IOOk et 1"41 otf!Qlal pelm Ir-of LOIA~. I 8 FM!fll.Y lllUD IYfON L.A. Featured: 1 profile of Shield• end Y tr nell: • repor1 on menatrvel pain, the ltl•I In metellk: heir· al)'lee; e klc* II lowrlders ID w •A•s•H When • general dies at th41 .077th. hi9 alcM struggles to make ii -lie dilld hwolcelty In ballle I CJ) T1C TAC DOUGH MACHlll / lEHAEA RUORT 6!i) FAWl TY TOWEM BHH crutes Cheoe by trying to lmc>OM his .,....... on Mxuel promt1cu1ty on hll ciler>I• end •••tt (Pan 3 of II) !ti YOU A8Km "°" rr FM lured· "How To T~ To Anlmels" end ".Wooten. World'• Strongeet Man." (I) AfROelCllE: ~TeTO Al)VAl#/CU) Get In ehape, klc* good, end feel grMI with lhll j>hyllcal fllnesa 1><ogr•m 8:00 8 Cl) MAGNUM, P.I. Magnum is hired to protect 1 women who Is ghostwrit· Ing IN mernolra of an eccentric and reclusive Inventor. (R) O Q!FAME ~ cu1a force IN dls- mlaut of one or the 1eecn- .,.., end one of Bruno's eonge .. llolen by • t-rodt compoeer. (RI • MOYIE **'A "Culler'• Trill" (19M) John Gavin, Menaa P-. Art entire town lnttmidated by • bend of out-.. la reec:ued by • lone""'"*' e a DAMAD<>M A F'9tldl con llrttll _... lenced lo death de'ri-an lnoenk>UI ptot to ncape 1118 I•••. end en .,.~ gist ~ en ancient CUAe (R) CJ KAAATE "Woffd ChetftplonaNp" • P.M. MAGAZJME A WOtld·lamoua tum of Clydeadele horaaa: a young moti-wllo I• 1 ct11mplon lemele body· builder g) MOVIE * * * "Murder Al The Merdl GrQ " ( 1978) Oavkl GrOh, Didi Conn. Two tour. lat• •II••• an unlikely rom•nce emldal the H elt-I and Intrigue of New Orleena during Merdl Gru. • U.S. QW)HCU "Pofllic», ~ And Tl\9 Ballot Bolt" The oontrOYer· ay aurroundlng redlatrlel· Ing end II• effect on minor· lly voling power II Uplored. CD SHfAK PMVIEW8 Roget Eben end Gene Sl•kel hoat en tnlormlllYe look II whlll'e new et lhl mo'llea. CID ... ~., FOLLIE.e Pllytlle Ollie<. Rip T l}llOr end Stubby K•Y• join the Mln91!y Burlesque Troupe for • revue fHlurlng bag· gy-pente comedy, atrtp- IMM and production num· bell. (aJOffVIEW (l)MOVlf * * * • "Kremer Vs Kramer" j 1979) Duatln Hottmen. Meryl St...-p A mtll baltl .. with hll ••· wile lot cualocly ot th.,, young aon el1er ahe welk• out on them 'PG' O MOVIE * • '" "The North Av«we trregulen" (1979) Edwerd HerrmMn, Berber• Herrla The -mlnlater tn 1 em•H town otger>las • group ol dolly_, In Na congre- gallOn to atop the now ot church funds to criminal• 'G' 1:30. 000 COUPLE When oec., ct.ime the •pertment for an al1ernoon poker game. Felt• la forced to l•k• 1111 d•ughler'a l>tr111d•y perty elMwNr•. fD SNEAK PMVllWS Roger Et>e<• end G- SISl<e• host an lnlormellve IOOk at wllel'a new II Ille movlee. 6!i) LAST CHANCE GARAGE Bred SHra pull aome 1982 cer modela IO the lest and e111luat• the ,_,, .. ©)MOVIE * * 'King Of The MOUi>· taon" (19111) Herry Hemltn. JoMph Bolloma ThlM young l A bachelor• deYot• fhtir energies to lN IPC)r1 of dreg recang 'PO' 9:00 8 Cl) SMOH & SIMON A leller from a dead man Pfompta A J end Riek IO inveatlgal• • m<Hdef Whleh oc:c:urred 22 )'Mfl Mrflet (A) D 9DlfTMHT 8TA()t(£8 Arn04d'I dl .. bled friend Kelhy helps him overcome hla 1tage fright. (Rl 0 8 9 BAMAAA WALTEAS 8P£CIAL Barbare Weltera Inter,,,_. SytllHI., Stellone. Tom Selleck. Kenny Roger• and SllMe Wonder. (R) GI MERV GfUfflH 0.-ta. Oenly TerrlO, Eve Gabor, Bobby C.id._..I, C.role Methewa. Stephen Blrm<ngllern SI IRELANO: A TEUV1SIOH HISTORY "A Nellon Once Again' lrlat\ hll1ory la lrac.d up to 1807. ••• '''°"' ...... 111111 Qehlle Hew"· Otie yy CM.. A •llritft .,.., IM eld DI en ..._. pOlloe dtltOllVt efltr 1 t1e MOOIMI ~ lf'I e ...,, ..... of mvteltA 81141 kldnf!Hlnt attemc>t• t:IO. 8 GIMMi" A llMAK Hell 111'\d Ille Chief rMllff tlley tlevt wtigllt ptobleM• tMt MclOt 10 oo on • dltt (fill) IAULHOGAN ~ KHOTI LAHOWCI Abby oel• 114f clllldf9" l>tcll ftOM hat .. -l'lut beMI .i.tt Mid l)IOll ~. Ind Keren tell• on enotller ~.(A,) D. HtLL ITI8T l&.UQ A nercotiOt offlcet 11 In,,.._ Ogeted tor • evtl)lcloue llhoollng, end Hiii end Ren· ko Ilk• 1111 lnltrMI In IWO neotected clllldren. (R) I B-Ao•..:• OLOMU!t .. ~~ .. • TO THI MAHOfl llOM A rere lt'OC)lcal bird ne.llng on the eettte glvM Audrey • --c:. Ol inco.ne • oovUEV ~seeking The F1re1 Amtrt- c:ana·· Arclleeologl•I• from Texu to Alaake Matcfl for cfUM 10 the Identity of lhe ftrll people 10 treed the American continent (A)Q (Q)MOV!f **~ "Hlatory Of TM World -Pen t" (19111) Mel 9r00ka. Medellne Kahn M1n'1 111ua1rlou1 hlatory •• from NMnderthal cave- men to Ille Spanish tnqul· llllon -la examined. 'R' (S)eaAARE "Big Foot" G MOVIE *•"Blood 9Hch" (1981) John Saxon. Burt Young. A pair of pollc• ottlcera have their henda lull when they lnvNtlg••• Ille C8UM ot beechgoet• being aucked into the .. nd. never lo be -egeln 'R' tO!aOI HEWS UPPOMPBI JOAHRIVEAS COMEDY HOUft Adult puppet-9ercley Sh•w Ind the Troplcena Oancera are IMIUled 11:00 1JDG(J)OQ! HEWS 8 SATURDAY NtGHT Hoat ~ Henry Guesta: Franken Md Oa11ta. Sun R1. CJ YOU ASl<ED FOR rT FM tured "Can1da'1 TrM Supermen" a nd "The Fut•I Heel In TM Weat." GI M•A•&•H When H•nry Bleke la tr•naferred 10 Tokyo. H1wkeye leonc:'-a wild c1mp1lgn to get him blelc. • lllfHNY Hill Aa reporter Henry McGee. Benny rvne Into trouble w•lh two lrtlll guests. ID IU8IHU8 REPORT G DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE MICllael la coetced into lnvmng P•t Mottleltem. better known .. Rigor Motlla. to • moYle (C)MOVte * "The CMdren" (1N0) Mertln 51\-. GM Rooer•- A llrange redloecllve doud lutna e G'GUP of ac:hoolchlklren Into mur· deroua ~ombiea With DI.ck flngernelle 'R' {%)MOVIE *' * • '* "Reg1ng Bull" ( 1980) Rot>en De Niro, C•tlly Motterty Bo•IOQ champion J1ke La Mott1'1 eplltude for vlol1 nce brlng9 him auccesa In the ring but dlarupta h11 P8'· aonal Iii• 'A ' 11:JO 8 Cl) QUINCY Oulnoy GOH on a despef· 111 Mitch lo dlac:ov•r wllat c•uMd IN death ot a young girt wllOM body dtgenerlled to that ol • 70-year·Old within thr" deya, O QJTOHIGHT GUM! hOlt: De\lld Stein· betg. Gueeta: Belly Thom- "· "-t• Berbuttl, Mertln Mull 8 9 A8CHEW8 HeGHTUHE G MOYIE CHANNEL LISTINGS • MA8TERPtECf THEA TM ·Pride And Prejudlee · Mr Colllna llMlca • reconclll•- llon with the Bennet femlty end Intend• to chooee one ol the girll for a wile (Pllf1 2)(A)O • • • '«)eugtlter Of The Mind" (1989) Ray Mlllattd, Gene Tierney. F c>11oWtftg lhe death of hi• young deughler. I lop govern- ment eclentlal ~ ~ wMrl ,..., llC)kil begin. ~ befot• him. fJ KNXT (CBS) 9 KNBC CNBC) • KTLA (Ind.) .KABCIABCI e KFMB CCBSI D KHJ·TV !Ind.I e KCST lABCI e KTTV !Ind.I 'e KCOP· TV (Ind.) .• KCET CPBSt e Kc-;e \PBS> ~ On-TV z Z·TV 11 HBO _t' (Clnemul IWORI NY., N.Y im CWT BS I 'IJ CESPNI 00 ( Sllowtlme I • Spotlight • (Cable News Network I (C)MOVIE * * '" "Echoel Of A Sum· mer" ( 1976) Rlcherd Herrla, Jodie Foeter A ter· mlnalty IH 12-)'Mf-olCI girt glvea her lllualon-lllled f1tller end Mr bllndly determined mother tlle courege to eccept her late 'PG' CID TOH AHHOUNCED (%)MOVIE • THI .liff'& •OHi Bentley trlle to •vOld Wfl•I lookl like • caneill INlf· rlage propoeel from Illa irffrlend. aAHf'ON> AHO IOH UNDIMTAHDIHQ HUMAN llEHAVIOfll "Str-" ID CAP'TIONE.D A8C HSWI TUBE TOPPERS KABC (7) 8:00 -11Dukroom.'1 A French .• con anllt lentenced to dMth p1ana an ncape. KCET (28) 9:00 -"INiand: A Telev111on Hlltory.11 P'lnt of a 13-part documentary that trlCle the 1utf•rinl and violence that ta Ireland. See photo, left. KNBC (4) 10:00 -"Hill Street Blues." Part one of a two-part eplJlode about two neglected children. KABC (7) 10:00 -"Vietnam Requiem." A portrait of Vietnam War veterans who have been imprl1oned for committing violent crimes. Review below. (8)MOV11 * * *'"' "WolltH\" ( 1911) Alben Finney, Diane v- ,. f'olic. ere llOed with an unvMial PfOblem • New York City la ln...oed by • pectl ol dlepl~ wot.... 'R' alaAOMPTOH PUC. (Pert •I O MOVI! • • '" "Galu y Of Terror" (19111) Edwerd Alben, Erin Moren. A epeceehlp cr- encounl.,. • coterie of frightening •lien crNlur• wlllle looking for another ,. ..... atranded on a for. bidding plenet. 'R' 11:•8 ©J MOVIE * * * "High Riek" p9111) James 8rolln. Cleavon Lil· tie. A trlO ol greedy friend• plot the robbery of e mll· hon dOllera lrom • Soulh Ametlc:en drug de•let. 'fl' 12:00 8 fNTE"1AIHMIHT TONIGHT An Interview with Rlcherd Harrie e o VEG.Al Oen ... ,cl'IN for the per- son who frerned L1 Nelaon tor the brutal mufder ot • well•-(R) GI MOVIE * • ~ "Diary 01 A Mid Hou-•I•" ( 1970) Cerrle Snodgr-. Aleherd Benje· min A New York houM- wlle ~· OYer the .,pertlciallty of her I •m•ty and everyday Hie finally )'leld• to h1\llng en 1ttelr wllfl • writer wtW> tutn• out to be• bore ., LOVE. AMEM:AH STYLE "love And TM Good Deal" Paul end Corle need • cuatom-m•d• bed 1HO D QJ LATE HIGHT WITH DAVID l.£TTEAMAH Guest: Cllrll Wallaoe 8 OOUPLU G) HEWS (,Q)MOVll * • "They Ceme From Within" rn MO\llE * 'n "The Gong Sl\OW Movie" ( 1910) Chucll Berri.. Robin Altmen A TV hoel mual contend with • variety of obatect11. Including network --. 10 put togelhet • coMec'tloft of bin«• ecu kw NI alK1W 'R' 1~40 8 Cl) MCMIUAH & WIFE Art et1emp1 on Mac'• Ill• r..uita In the accJdental death of • Frencti Polic. intpector's ,_bride (R) (~MOYIE • * * "Foti Apeche. The Broox" (19111) Peul New· man, Ed ASnet. A tough cop b•lllel crime end cor· ruptton In New Yor~ City'• South Bronx nelgllbo•· hood 'A' 1;009 MOVIE * * "Gunfight Al Com•n· Che Cr .... " (1983) Audie Murphy. COllMn Millet A c1e1ec1tw tnn11r11 .. • geng of outlewa for Ille purpoee of upoelng their notorloua leeder. ., MOW • • '" "Footatepe On The Moon" (1987) Ooc:umen1•· ry Nerr•led by Or Werner von Btaun Met1'• ltnl lunar edll ... em.1111 e.re ·~ -~ • * 14 "The Kid• Are ) AltiOtll" ( 1979) Tiie Who • Footeoe of eome or the rocti bend'• pertor- ere lntereiperttd wttn Inter· vltwa of the group mern· bera. 'PG' t:10• MOVtl * *'A "Pretty Polton' ( 1MI) Artthorly Perkin•. TVMCSey Weld An ex-«>n· vtct retume to pt1aon alter a brteil jevnt .. 1111 lmegi- nwy CIA 1g1nt. != **'A"~" ( 1N7) Craig Stawne, Edward Aener. Prkl•le eye Peter Gunn 11 ulced to lnveellgal• • ~end murder. 1:ao D QI MIC HCWI ()VMHIQHT (B)MOVlf * • * "The Siient Perl· ner" ( 1979) Emott Gould. Clltlttopher Plummet A b•'* tellet'• lmPfomptu allempl to c..n In on • robbery lellda 10 lier• ... ment and lerrot when IN reel thief ch-htm to receplute Ille loot. 'R' 2.'00 • lil()Y9 • • .... "°'8mond HMd" I 1983) CNttton H•ton. Yvette Mlml«lx A WMlthy H-allan prllCtleea e dOU· ble etand•rd when he oppoeea NI lilaler'e pten1 to marry a half-breed Hewallet1 while he hlmMll II•• a pregnant mlatr .... ())MOVIE • * "F•lty Talea" ( 1978) Don Sp1t1ca. Sy Richard- son A handeotne prince e xparlencea m1ny encounter• u lie journey• through l•lry l•nd In ... rch of the womM Who will beat hla heir 'R' 2~tl) MOVIE * * "Curle 0 1 TM Vim· plrH " ( 1970) Amalia Fuenlls, Eddie Garcia. A brother end elater learn 11\el their vempjrlam WM ac q uired from their mother. 8HEWS 2:4018 NEWS 2:"6 MOYll • * "Flw Summet S1~ nee" ( 1975) Documentary Slow-motion eequenc;• highlight I hie exernlnetlon of Ille aurflng lifestyle filmed In Southern Calllor· nle end H•wail (%)MOYIE * * "Deughtwa Of Derk· ,_. .. (1971) Delphine Sey- •lg. John K~. A couple on ''*r tloneymoon errlve tn 1 fright~ town wMle meny young women hive r-.11y .,_, mysterloully murdered 'R' 2:llO MOVIE * * * '.<\ "TN High And The Mighty" (195") JOhn W•yne. Clair• TrellOI' An airplane with 22 paaaen. gera l bo•rd rune Into dan- ger en route to San Fran- cleco. 3:00. AAT PATAOl Moftill and Pelllgr-allow them..,_ to be ceptured In order lo get lnlorm111on lrom en~ POW •bout Rommel'• ,_ bal- tle plen 3:109 MOYIE * * .... "The New ~ .. ( 1972) Leff Erlckaon. Rob- ert FoJ<Wotth Rural 1own1- JOHN DARLING L IS1'EN, .JAN, 'TH1i::nv 1SN•T "{HAT OLO! YOU'~E IN 'THE. -pj::f1ME ~ "i'OUR 1-IFE ! 'Requiem' only a partia1··story BJ FRED ROTHENBE RG ,.,, .......... ..,..., psychological or IOciological experts, nor does it provide any feel for the kinda of people these priaonera were. There it a worthwhile atory in how America tomed aside the welaJme mat for ita emotionally burdened Vietnam veta, making their adjuatment that much harder. But we only ,et blta and pieces of that story here. lnat.Hd of an aftermath piece, "Vietnam Requiem" it juat another doc:wnentary about war. In that veln, tonlsh\'a pro1ra"1 hH lta momenta, pu1.icularly whenever Peewee Dobbs 1.t on the IC'l'eel\. Dobbs, •rvlnc a Ht-year aen\entle for armed robbvy, apeaka deliberately and dramatically abou• h1a war experlenc.w. Dobbs wa1 17 w hen he volunteered for V.ietnam, two ye9rt YCJ\m181' than the ·~ Vietnam 10ldier and nine years younger than the typical Wodd War ll fiahttna man. Short in stature, OObbt la)'t be "wantecf to do .amethinc macho and I eaw betnC a peratrooper u the manifestation of macho.'' With that peychok>cical need u a tiny gllmpee into the Dobbm e:harecter, mtaht there be other reuom -belidm Vietnam -why Dobbe took up urned robbel )'T la It fair to pre1Um8 the link between Vliltnam and hia conviction? ABC ta. hem the moat darinc network news orpnlratlon In takinl the documentary work of • outlide producen and brin8lna lt to national TV. "The 8avln1 of lhi l'"nalden t" worked wonderfully . But "Vlelnam Requlem," by • produam BUl Couta.arie and Jon111 McC.crd, faill becau. lt c.ella only • partial st«y. '"'"11,'' r~I'''' l:.' ' ' l ,_,.. Ill*• IN ..,.--. of • -,.,.,,..... Wiit "'*' • .,. .., ... t:IO(Jl)MCMI •1t "In ~ Wt TNll" ( 1NO) Meny ,.ldmen, ANty ~ A NM '"°'* II Mnl CM Into IN _.., to ,.... """"" '°' llla~lllOl\111• ;·=.. • • •14 "Doctor ~ .. (1Mt) Omit lhlrlf, Get• Clllle Ct\ac>lln r..o io-. 1IN091e emld•I the tpl(lt 111'\d pellillOnt ol IN "u• tlM ...-.0111110n. l:IO. V<ltAOITOTHI IOTTOM OI THI~ "The LMI tomb" •:10• MOWl * * "Tiie Oulck Oun" ( 1ff") Audie Murphy, Mer• ry Andera. A oowpotie le forgiver\ by the 1ownaoeo- p1e for hit peel mltdted• when he belllle e geno Of notorlou• ou111w• wllo ll•ve been tormenting the town .-:11 e ..ave • • "Thi Hollywood Knlghla" C 1180) Robert Wulll, Tony 0enia On Hal- '-...,.In 1985. • rOWdy high IChOOI geng wteekl hlllOC In Beverly Hiii• to •ver>ge the cloalng of their hangout by the IOCal home ownetS QIOCI· Ilion 'R' •:20 (%)MOVIE •• "FunllouM' (1981) Elizebeth Berridge. Sylvll Mll.. Four IMn-•g•r• apend 1 frlghlful night In 1 carnival lunhOuM lnhlbll· ed by • demented barker and 1111 monatrou• aon 'R' •:30 8 VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA "TN Slledowoman" f 'rida1f• Dayfl•e .ffov 1 ... 8:20 (C) * * "The Huallet Of Muacla BHch" ( 1980) RlCllerd Hlleh. Key Lenz 8:"6. * * "Blood Beech" (1981) JOhn Suon. Burl Young 8:00 (%) * • '"' "Seema like Old TlmH " ( 1980) Goldle Hawn. Chevy ChaM 8: 10 * • "Crossb1r JOhn Ireland, Brent Car..er 1:00 (I}* • * "The HICIM· ways" I 1973) lngrld Berg- man. JOhooy Dorin Two cntldren run •w•y from home and hide In New York City'• Metropolllen Muaeum of Art. whete they are belrtended by • splrll- ed recluM. 'G 7:30 CID .*. SST 0t .. 11 .. In The Sky (1977) Lorne Gr""•· 8urQeU Metedllh 9 * * 'n "Chu Chu And The Philly FINh" (1981) Alan Arkin. Catol Burnell An llcollollc former b&M- bell pleyer end 1 kooky atr"I 111tertelner become partners In 1 ICheme to meke money by returning a lost aultc:ue. 'PG' 7:"6 C2.J * • "Dirty Trlcil1" (1981) ElllOll Gould, K•le Jacltaon. A H.,,.etd P<O- leaaor beconi. Ille quarry of peraon1 en111oua 10 get l'*r handa on • racentty ~ed lttltr written by George WUhlng1on 'PG' t:OO (C) * * "Oh He•venly Dog" 119901 Chevy Chue. Benji_ Whtie '"-ligating • P<>l•tJcel ... ecendll In Lot>don. e pr111a11 delec· ltve la murdered ind rein· carnlled u 1 ecrulfy dog 'PG' t:00 U * * "The Ullle Dr•· goos" (1981) Salty Boyden, Chris Peter.on A gang of kids trelned In kar•I• rn · cue one of their friends when she Is kidnapped 'PG' t : 18 (%) * * * The Siient Partn•r" ( 19791 Ellioll Gould, Chrlatophe r Plummer A bank teller'• impromptu lllempl lo caSh •n on a robbery leed1 lo heruement and terror when the real thief ch ... • him lo rec9')ture 1111 loot 'R' 10:00 (C) * • "Leave YNlerd•Y Behind" ( 1978) John Amer. C•m• Fi9her FOi· lowing • Ir aglc IQC!dent. • COl!eqe athlete leama 10 ~.n.iow..-. .... '*"°'lft~ ;;:~., ..... ,,..,., N.....-~ ..... PW!.,... ........ Of . poor lntllefl ter111tt ~ ....... .. ..,.. ........... Md ,_ °"" MIUf1 •llQ' Cl> ••••• ..._Ol.Wf'. (!NI) Van JollMOll, Jefwl ~. AmettaM ..... Of ""9 10111 Alfboml DM-elon MOeOt In ,,,. ,.,tnClll ~ tnd mo..-of tn.lkllgt. ltL'OO (Z) ** "My~V· tntlnt" (1tl11 Peuf K• nltll, LOl'I ......,_, A Ml8ll town ~ • ectt1t Of t•nor dur"'9 their ~ Vlllent.lne'I Dey denco. 'fill' 1 l :IO. '**'A "Tiie "-1111 A- nu• lrtt011lttt" ( 1t79) ldwerd HtrNNM. let~ r1 H.,rlt file MW mlnllltt In e em.Ill town orp.lllllMa • group of dotty -In Na c:onoreo•t1on 10 11op the flow of ChutCfl fundt to Clflmlnele ·G· 1t:OO G * • 'h "Conciu-1 OI Sp•c•" C 1958) Weller 8 roo11e. Eric Flemlng. Army votvnt-. tmbertt on • tpeetacuief journey eround e.n11 u, 1 men- rnade ...... . e * * * 'The Men From Cotor•do' ( 111-48) Glenn Ford. W1Hlam Holden A newly appointed 1.0..11 fudge of Ille Colorldo Ter· rltory le .. diatlc to th<>M whO oppoae hi• hlrahneae • * •· .. "Cuanov1'a Big Night" (111~4) Bob Hope, Joan Fon11lne A tallor'a apprenllee gell Into trou· t>le Whiln he muquerldes H the great lo11er CHano- va. (Cl "Don't Change My World" Cll * • "Tiie Apple Dump- llng Geng Rides Again" ( 1979) Tim Conway, Don Knoll• 12:30 (%) * *' 1 Hlalory Of The World ·· Part I" (1981) Mel Broou, Madeline Kelln Man'• 111u11rtoua h1Story •• from Neander1hal ca11e- men to the Spantlh lnqu•· llllOll •• 11 exam<ned 'R' 1:00 Chi * * * * Kr-VI Kr•m•r ( 1979) Dustin Hollman, Meryl Streep 1:30 (.C) • * '> Mad WedMs- dey'' t 19471 HerOld Lloyd, Francea Remaden An aml>nious Mii-aierter of the 1920s learn• that au<:· ce11 h1a 111 price 0 • • '> For Your Eyea Only' (1981) Roger M0ote. Topot 2:06(l.) * *'• ·s-maUkeOld T1mu · (1980) Gold•• Hawn, Chevy Ch8M. 3:00 CID * * * "SST· Dlsutet In The Sky" ( 1977) Lorne GrMne, Burgeas Meredith, The maiden lltghl of a auper sonic tt1n'90" turns lnlo • neglllm•ra wflen .. bolll\lrt relHM I dNdly \llrua. 3:80 CZ) * • "My Bloody Vel· enhne ( 19111) Peul ~el men. Lort Hetlet +.oC> 0 * * ·~ The St. Valen- t 1ne'1 Day Masa•cre" (19671 Jason Roberda, G~rge S1gal In the 1920s, underworlCI kingpin Al CaPOOe atagee the bloody werehoule aleugh- "" Of _, rivel geng membeta (C) * *'> 'Toby And Tiie Koala Bear" 119811 Rolf Herrea CO) • • ~ The Tender Wert.or' (1971) Cherlel l... Dan Heogerty. A young boy sets !rapped an1maJ1 tree a.nd leads them against tM hunters G' ***"The Hide&· s' ( 11173) Ingrid Berg- n, JOhnny Doten 5 * * ·~ "The Vagabond Lover'' ( 1929) Rudy Vallee. Silly Bl•ne A .. lloe>hootst hnd1 rem• md romance when he II mlll•ken for 1 celebrated iuz tn\1$1cl•n 8:25 (%) * *' "Dirty Trlcfla" I 1118 t) ElllOll Gould. Ket• Jeckaon. A Hllflllfd P<O· ,_ beoomn the quarry of persons anxloul to get ll'wl4r hands on • r_,tty discovered letter wrtllen by George Wlllhlnglon 'PG' J OR TALENT -Top student actors from ~eral high schools perform in Moliere's "A Doi::tor in Spite of Himself," winding up this weekend at the Forum theater on Saddleback College's Irvine campus. JI-star students • 1n GLENN SCOTI' *o.lf""41talf Four more performances of the oUere comedy, "A Doctor In pl\e of Himaelf," will be staged ugh Sunday in Irvine by the wtior Wing of the Saddleback rppany Theater. The performances, which pn last Thursday, are being nted at the Forum theater t • he Saddle back Nor th pus. It is the first year such 've presentations from the group f area high school thespians Ye been staged in Irvine. 16 fact, the idea of collecting of the best student actors various schools is a fairly ncommon one, according to Jene Gould, set designer and ublkist. "Usually there's s u c h mpetition among high school ama departments that they're , football teams -they don't school lines," she said. Thl.s year, however, they have assembled to act out the raucous, freewheeling story replete with sound effects, an Italian slapstick style and a ~y ending. The presentation includes one other aspect: During key acenes, actors will uae sign language for deaf spectators. The production is one of three plays to be staaed this summer by the Saddleback Company. The others, presented at the main campus in Mission Viejo, are "The Music Man" and "Death of a Salesman." Mrs. Gould, whoee husband Blake. is director of the Moliere story. said hvine was choeen for the junior wing production because no other plays had been produced before at the Irvine campus . Gould is drama instructor at Irvine High School. Among the student actors in the play are aeveral from Irvine: Lynn Campbell, Glenn Cote, 'Doctor' John Isbister, David Prlcz, Robert Robinson, Holly St. Pierre, June Sison and Beth and Daron Song. Remaining evening performances are at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. Matinees at 2:30 p.m. will be staged Saturday and Snunday. Tickets ate $3 for students and S4 for adults . They can be purchased at the door. Every Sunday "A Mo¥le l'ou'"e Just 6ot " 'Firefox' has suspense. intricate plouins and To See!" 1 -JOEL SIEGEL Good Morning Amf'rica ABC-TV c~•.._. .... ,,., Ot-·U4-2H) ............. '----·,_ \N(XXJ( AllEN MIA FMl:fCNY .osE F£RRER 1JUE H.OGERTY lQ\ff i:ceaus ~ STCEN3lJSGEN a climax crowded with action." -GENE SHALIT ~-· l'0-·---1 ....... _._ ...... _...,_ ..... ..._ ~ .......... .., .... -...-.... -----··--·· .... ITA8TI FalDA'Y I ' '·' ~ ~ -. t : I 1111~ : 'Ill Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, July 15, 1N2 'TRON' alters ad campaign HOLL YWOOP (AP) -Walt Dlm:i:oftidala plan new adl attemnc the Delney of the actence-fictton thriller ''TRON" after dill box· office 1'9tuma lndbt.ed \he movte'a debut 1putt.eted in the amal1 townl that uaually 1Uppor1 Dllney fllml. "We did very well ln lar• dU. like New ;::::============:::::;::;;:;=;::::::::=-. York, La. Arlaelea, San Frand8co and auc...>t but we're welk ln the medlwn-to«nall dU.. wnere Disney II uaually IV'Onl." Mike 8unall. 1enlor f.lnandal officer at Walt Disney Proc:fuc:Uona, l&ld Monday. "We'll chanae the ad campalan there foe more of a 'Walt DWney pneenta' appc"OeCh." '11M!re'1 been no .uch la& fOC' "E.T." Steven Sptelbera'a fant.y about a lovable extra-terrestrial vflltcr. t1nlvenal Plcturea reported tta 31-clay srcm 1--------~--------==~ :.,!108.7 mlllkln. The tilm la paaytnc ln 1,374 G o ........ "" ••"'"ow PIAYlrtO .....-11111i "Porky'•" hM allo topped the tlOO million ~'..,. a.,.. --__ _.. ....-....1u ~ ~--'--·-...I M-..1-Edwns CiMlftl C-Eiw"' 5.-... NIC Or-. 1111 Ill\ Clly 0-.. 1u.aa, 8 -~ uw. ~ IUrYe)' mnuw.u uuuay, t tt4141 HI~ tJHll40 "4'911 but 20th Century Fox't hiah-tchool comedy took 17 CllTA.... ... Wi11WIM weeks to tally '100.68 mlllion. It'• playtna l'1 696 =:-c.... rf:'4~~=-011eM1 ~~. movie houlm. I =======~~~~~~~~========-1 "TRON'' had an "encouraglna" openlnc lut ~ Friday ln 1,091 thaten, amumlng a three-day total of ... , mtll!on ,,..__ .... ,......,. _ _._,, ... .._,.. ____ ......,,,, __ riil AU AGH .\OlollTTED l!:::!] o.ne.at l\l.ld- ·"AUTHOR, AUTHOR" "DIV A" (fl) "SWORD AND THE IR> AU a m ""° tlJ FILws AECllV( ™E SEAL Cl' THE MOTION PICTURE CODE Cl' Kl.I MGUlATION SOCERER" LUXURY THEATRES ITAITI PllDAY ~ ·I 111111r1 l-..i-~.J'-.LU *BARGAIN MATINa•s • Monday tllru Saturday All PerjormMtCH before 5:00 PM Ill• ...... 1111....-. tM 1tt1ay11 "ANNIE" lPOI ---··· ,.THIE NCMT Of NMf" ------t•I "POL TEROEIST" CPO> ___ ,...._ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< IN 14AUTHORI AUTHOR" ___ ,__"9 (N) ,.ITMTMX It THI! WllATM Of KHAW' 1111111 DOl.9Y eTIMO (N ----- "ROCKY IU" {POI ---,_ ... ,ri •oc1111y ot Conoiewood 21S/IJ1·fll0 "ITM TMK It ••c ..... Of THI! WRATH OF KHAN" "THE.:.5-':..°--~ "ROCKY Ill" (POI 911 1111111 DOLaY ITtMO -.--.,,..-.- LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAI• IN ~IWCMID ANDTM~Oll ------I ,., -14ROCKY ll"<Nl --·-------- .. ~ ....... ._. ANAHEIM DRIVE IN ''•••O'Y •• OI \ .• MOft St 179·9110 C1ll( flSOUllC --------~--· --------- ~X"tNI --.cau<>l'Cr .,., c.,.,._ ~ ' ~.A ' A Ii. l BUENA PARK 01m1 IN "AMMr°INI -'~S"tNI ClMf 11 IOUllO '1'0l. T1lltOSl8T" tNI -"MA WOl.VWr tNI CM II SOUllO ,. ..... ~ .... LA HABRA c1111v1 '" ---·-.............. 171-1862 ----..... OR ANGE ci11 .1 '"" --I Alm "9 -:a-·"' "WMW.11•1 OP A'1.Mnl" ... Ml'.>~t~>N ,., • • -. . ..r-• ~ TPUllT" tN1 -"NA WOLVll".., Cllltfl- -"f'9IAL. ....... llNr'"' "TMln.e-.., --CAT~Oll Cllll • " IOUlllO --- --·-• .... c ..... 111·7022 vr I l 1 I i I Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Thurtd1v. July 15. 1882 . lton's less1 popular, but having fun BNAAAAJl .... LOa ANGJ:LIS -J:lton John of .. ~·~and july et1 hH found at a1• 36 that 11 more to life than the No. l •1;><>t the record charta. "The record aalea have aone down, t I'm happy. Try to work that one tl" John uya. H•'• about to launch a two-month ln the United States, the wt lea a worldwide apln that bepn ln uatralia early thia year. The tour. Urned wlth the releue of hn'a latest and 23rd album, "Jump p," ia dealened to do aomethlnl t the record sales. John'• pNYkNI album, ''The Fax," took an unpnaidoenwei full year to., aold. ''Jwnp Up" haa been well recelvtd by revlew•ra and, more~ta:ntly. radJo teema kindly dll towards 1uch cute u "Ball and hain," which teaturea 1ueat 1u1tarl1t Peter Townaend of The Who1 and "Empty Garden," a movtna tribute to the U.te John Lennon. 'fhe 1on1 wH co- written by John and Bemle Taupln, the lyridat-aldekJck ot John'• 1lory days. John, once known tor his flamboyant outflta and ru.zle-daule 1pectacle1, looks le• like CaptJln Fantastic and more like a 1arden- variety HoU~ood penonallty ln a white at.riped aporte co.at and plaln preacrlp\lon 1hadea •• he 1lve1 a rapid-fl.re rundown of hla actlvttJee In recent yean. 111 haven't really promoted an album on the road al~ 1976, which wu the 'Rock of the We1tiet' album, ao that'• a lon1 time ago," he aaid. "It helpa to tour wlth the record. It really dOell." But while the albuma continued to roll out, John admits he wu burnt out. At one polnt he annoUJ'la!d that he would never aaaln tour, and for a few years there were almoat no performances. 'nut aporadJc t.oun that followed, while IUCClllfuJ, had uni.'° do w1th album Nleue datM. "You can't force yoW"Mlf," he 11ya. ••u I forwd my.elf to ao on the road when an album came out beforehand, I wouldn't have been perdcularly very happy, becau. that'• why I 1topped ln 1976 -to 1et my prioritiet rtlht. I like my albums to aell. But I've 1ot other thlnf! to do with my life apan from that. Thia time around, John says. he lntended only to play a few dates ln · Australia that had been canceled at the lut minute by Rod Stewart, who ahares the aame promoter u John. Ace Hunter I• the Ultimate Super Herol ::arw. :!.'.:es-. ::.-TUI -=- ""WRT' tllUM"~ ~ .. MA'<l'<-..1 llA.'il-ntt ''MlRLl -.Nit flCl ,.u lRlR .,. • l.EF ~'ll\'4_lY KATHlflN llfl.UR SIMl'IN M .. < <lflKINl\l\U l•hll\<•I M'llAf\f'., ~ ..... ,,.J Rk llARIHYNUi .. - , ..... _. ~··" l\'•M ~ARN<'lll.-...1 l'~IN 'll 0,0.0lYO\ lo ALNAT P\'\'N ''"'""""'"'' ... M ANl\..,.,.. t HA~ ea \4~RIA'Nl \ HA'\l _..,."'Al N.aT f"YL"N ~. •' o o ~I 001 OCU\' S"l'BWD f SH un s11 *' nus.. -CllTA-.U -U. ... lot ltl /10 lllw--C-.IW• SU l/11 Now it is free to become one of us . 11i1a · IRU FOUNTAllll VALLEY OllANGl UA Mov1u 990 4027 Edw11ds foun111n V1llry S1td1um 0 I 639 8 7 70 COSTA MUA 839 1500 WUTMlllSTEll H11bo1 Twin 631 3SOI •OllAlllG( C.ntdomt 634 2553 t.n1m1 W111 891 3935 lllVINE Edwt•d1 Woot11Ht41t1 S!ll 0655 ·~70MM £!?·W--J 111SS1011 WlJO MAU m 6110 Art Show Huntington Center doily thru Sun. No matter how many good movies you see this summer, you must see "An Officer and a Gentleman!' Because we feel that this one will stand out and we want you to know about it. WE'RE HAVING A SNEAK PREVIEW TOMORROW ~ <if.OIG£ ltOV HILL r11111 ROBIN WlLUAMS •THE WORLD ACCORDING TO <iARP" MARY BETH HURT · GLENN Cl.OSI! • JOHN UTttGO'W __,,.,..... PATRICI l£UZV ~ 111 STEVI TESIOf ...,..,. ., -e .. JOHN lln1N<i ,.,.... .. GIOltGE llOY lllU ...i ROIPT L CUl'fOlO DIH<•lll Gf.OIG! IOV HIU. TOMOllROW NIGHT AT 810011.M. COITA MIU Edward1 8oUth COllt P1ii1 1•1·2711 1111111 Qnldoml 11•·1153 .,~ ..... RELAXING -Pop alnger Elton John, now· , aaya there's more to life than having a num one record on the charts. llllJPlat THUAIDAY, JULY 15, 1982 ClASSlf 110 C7 BUSINESS C4 McNainara returns to the good life It's what John Wayne would By BOWARD L HANDY or .. Dllr,......,. When Myron McNamara talks, othen lilt.en. . Thai includes youngsters. oldaters and all atudenta of tennis who 1eek out the veteran mentor to help them improve their game. McNamara, aometimes known as the Phantan to cloee friends like Jack Kramer, hu taken over as head pro and director of tennis at the John Wayne Tennis Club in Newport Beach. It is a homecoming of aorta for McNamara who helped star t the Irvine Coast Racquet Club (now Balboa Bay Club) and served as tennis coach at UC Irvine for 14 years. He left the area three years ago to COICh at Arizona State and in between WM ' consultant at Induatry Hil.la . But he retained his home in Corona del Mar and is back in the area he loves doing the thing he enjoys most in life-teaching and promoting tennis. "John Wayne wanted me to take th1a job when he built this facility," McNamara says in retrospect. "But I didn't want to leave UCI at that time and I didn't feel I was ready for this , either. "But now it's a different situation for me and I've got a chance to do what I want to do. I'm working with tennis players of all ages and they are treating me wonderfully. "I think I've got a chance to do a lot of things with a lot of people and th1a is a good cross section to work with. Here I'm able to work both sides of the street, teaching kids and older people aa well and at the same time have a chance to make th1a one of the be9t clubs in the country." McNamara left UCI to take over at Arizona State when Dr. Fred Miller was athletic director for the Sun • Devtla. .,. "I went over there because of i; Miller," McNamara aaya. "He made a lot of promiaes to me -nine thinea to be exact -but he WU fired before they were committed to me. He could aell Willie Shoemaker a dead hone. "Joe Kearney took over and we got along well but then he left and the present fellow ls, by neceaaity, football-oriented. I have to like a person I work for or I'm not worth a dam. He's a good guy but I really never got to know him. "I can't say I won't miss roaching because I will miss the ~iation with the young fellows. The money isn't that good in coaching but there 'We 'r e all in th e business of trying to make oth e r people happy, aren't we?' are a lot of other things you can't put your finger on that really make it worthwhile . ''Tennis has been a wonderful life for me. How many people do you know who can do what they like to do for a living? "I've been here fi ve weeks and there are 700 members. an all-time high. Last night some of the kids gave me this t>Mket of goodies (candy and other items). Do you ever get tired of little things like that? "Every dog likes to get his fleas scratched once in awhile. "I'm doing what I like to do and l like to help people. What's wrong with that? This morrung I had a women's clinic and I don't think I've ever done anything more enjoyable. "This is a wonderful environme nt here and these a.re super people I'm working with. I feel comfortable and I like the club and its people. As long as I'm happy and feel well or until I lose my enthusiasm. I'll keep on teaching and working with people. We're all in the businem of trying to make other people happy, aren't we?" At A rizona State M cNamara thought he had an outatanding team lhia put spring until things started to CONCENTRATION -My ron McNamara has returned to the Orange Coast area to serve as head pro and director at the John Wayne Tennis Club in Delly l"lloC ""°'° br Gary AINwOM Newport Beach. A former UC Irvine coach, he has coached the last three years at Arizona State University in the Pac·-10. happen and he lost his No. l player, then No. 2. "We beat Stanford at home but w e also lost nine matches by 5-4 scores including one at Berkeley (California) and another at Stanford. I couldn't s lee p for two nights afte r the S tanford loss. "You have to have players who will give you their best shake and don't want to compromise. At UCI, we had a bunch of kids who were clean cut and when we showed up, our opponents knew we came to play. That's the way it should be. "Once an Anteater , always an Anteater and as things turned out, I probably never sh ou ld have left Irvine. I had tenure, classes and was coaching and teach ing. And the people treated me great. We were competitive. At Ariz.ona St.ate, I saw myaelf four times as competitive as some of the kids on the team." McNamara is n't condemning the Ariz.ona St.ate program and says, "I'm going to miss some of the kids on the team a great deal. You meet some wonderful people in this sport." His prowess as an instructor has carried d own through sever a l generations. One 35-year-old was in for a lesson this week. She started as a nine-year-old with McNamara as her instructor and still has the utmost confidence in his teaching ability. ''One family has its fifth and last child taking lessons from me now," he (Sff MYRON, Page Ct) DiBernardo's style: It's called overkill Malavasi says Jones No. I QB I;Jon 't be surprised if Edison product is in 011 every play of All-star game 9v ROGER CARLSON ti(IMDllJll'letSUlll At 6-3, 217 pounds, s.tationed as a middle linebacker. F.d.i.eon High product ~ DiBernardo virtually loomed above .. eryone the past two seasons, hia ~ve style notwithstanding. And while the two-time All-CIF Division I star surely has nothing to prove ln Saturday's 3 lst annual Shrine All-star football game at the Rase Bowl, t&"J a good bet he'll once again be the ~ting force of the defense. "It'• not a matter of showcasing myaelf," says DiBernardo. "fll still be going out there to play my best, no matter what." That's been the general attitude of this two-year F.diaon standout since his first start for the Chargers, a span in which l!;dison compiled ;a 24-1 record and ~ its winning streak to 32 before ~ to Servite in the CIF Big Five ~erence opener . "A lot of people thought we w ere cocky going into that game, .. says DiBemardo. "But that wasn't really the point. "We had won ao much, we felt like we'd win · . hTbey <f:~te)_ played a helluva ~ and .:ored oo a ldckoft return and • •big pea Thoee thinp happen. Our defeme played well, but our offente just couldn't put it t.osether." DiBemardo ii a player who baa been ~ln1 things apart for two years, {l(lpllnattng with bis aggre.ive style, ~ in overkill fashion. • .. I 1et a little excited ," admit• Di.Bemardo. "But you have to dominate, to play 100 percent. .. ft'• the 100 percent effort that typifies ._. oui.t.andlna ~ and it't the )lflet ....... rci1e that baa DiBemardo in ~ with .. pa.ltioo. I 'A 1lnebeckel' it in on 7tJ.lay, he hM to be able to hit, to be to eel beck far the s:-..'' .,. Dmemudo. "lt't atill four years away until Di.Bernardo wUl be looldnl funber down .. rmd. but the alp6raticd of a career haw been with him dim. . ' apec.i '°be pla~ ·~ 227 ... ...,..., .. be aya. ''Rilbt now rm ltl11 lldsmf. 8dUally.'' Pro dreamt are one thln1 - fanteef"DI at a f~ e1a.rter at Mouw Dame .. another. DtBmwdo'• ... at ..... Dime in ... fall II to 91t ln ,..,.... ...... with .. IPliMl'Y 'ft• want •• io play mtddl• Jla••tr, '"'' dale ,.., will be a ....... •••r1rn o," llil..,.. .... Dlioll ... ~--... .... =.., tr• ' .. .... -... • fif ,:,_ ............ ..... ... Jatbh .... Neverthel~. when USC lured &iison assistant coach Russ Purnell to its ranks, DiBernardo admits he began to waver "I almost said yes to USC," he says. Rumors of impending crackdowns by the NCAk for ticket scalping charges. however. helped Notre Dame. "Yes, my dad and I had a feeling they (USC) would be on probation. It was something we considered.'' But, Notre Dame was something I always wanted ... the pride, tradition." DiBemardo was a two-sport star at F.dison, starting for three years on the varsity basketball team and gathering All-CIF honors as a senfor. But he'll not play basketball at Notre Dame. DiBernardo's JUnao r season in basketball found the Chargers going to the quarterfinals w ith an all-junior lineup, nearly upsetting No. 1 seeded and Ci.nalist San Marcos. &iison's CIF championship victory over Fountain Valley at Anaheim Stadium during his junior season was a.lao a big moment -including two interceptions. Those endeavors as a junior. however, really put the focus on him as a senior and he admits he felt the pressure, from within and from others. "It was like playing in a fish bowl," he says. "l felt like everyone we.s watching me, all of the time." The pressure is off, now, and it's a welcome thing for him. And while he admits his ambition is to play in the pr06, his education is now in the forefront. "That's the biggest thing," he says. "The education . There a r en 't any football players at Notre Dame, just students.'' DiBemardo, a 3.0 student, will be majoring in business. This won't be DiBemardo's farewell to Southern California. On Nov. 27 the Irish invade the Coliseum to duel USC and chances are this is one Notre Dame freshman who'll have his nose in things. Edwards leads TROON, Sc6tland (AP) -Danny F.dwards, a two-time winner on PGA Tour, conquered the rain. wind and cold to wrest a hard-earned 1-under par 71 away from Royal Troon Golf Club today to take the early first-round lead in the l llth British Open. In the third group off the tee, the former Oklahoma State All-American ·who dabbles ln sports car racing, turned the front nine in 2-under par 34. F.dwards ahot 1-over par 37 coming home dead into winds gusting to 20 miles an hour off the Firth of Clyde. F.arly morning rains raked the 7,067 . yard links and coupled with the wind and temperatures in the mid-40. playing conditions were uncomfortable. Jack Nicklaus, three-time Britiah Open champion, started w ith five ltiaicht para. Jensen dead . SCO'M'SVILLE. Va. (AP) -Fonner outfielder Jackie J..-n. • member of w-American LMcue All-Ital' ~ and the lelfue't Moat Valuable Plllyw ln 19&8, lldeed ot • beM'taaacka& the• of &6. J-'• wU• X.&Mitne, M1d Mr h\&lbend =om ialned of fMlinl m 1Wllday • \9:: ... "'"""" tram &he NIDIMr ball tlMl....f he ap1nm ., ......, r.t& u.-..._, A1111JT11. !'&Yi ......... hit ............ ..... ..... . rou .. &o &he Of Vlflla&a ..... .... awta .... From AP dlspatcbes Coach Ray Malavasi o f the Rams ponders a problem that would make his compatriots in the National Footba~ League happy. He has two top quarterbacks vying for the starting job -Bert Jones and Vince Ferragamo, both proven successes. "J o n es is d e finitely the leader," Malavasi said Wednesday. ''Ferragamo will have to battle for his spot.'' MALA VASI ISN'T worried about another quarterback controversy, something the Rams have specialized in recently. He admits, however. that had the Ra m s known earlie r that Ferragamo would be available, they probably wouldn't have traded for Jones. who starred for Baltimore. Ferragamo, who turned down a Rama contract, w e nt t o Montreal last year for a try at Canadian football and was a failure . Yet the former Nebraska star had put the Rama into the 1980 S uper Bowl and led them the following fall aft.er taking over from Pat Haden, who this summe r announ ce d hi s retirement. The Rama traded their first round selection in the draft and their first selection in the aecond round for Jones . At the time the club, which held NFL rtghta to FetTagamo, didn't know he waa coming back from Canada free of oootnctual commitments. Yet a week aco. the club slcned their former quart.erbldt. So the Rama have Jonea, l'erra1amo and Jeff Rutledee aa quarterbecka. "Ill' ONB can't set the Job done, -.'ll 10 wtth another," Malav.t llkl. "I don'& foreeee any problem In that ..... Tbty appear friendly and wh 1wpeet11 tht olhw'• abWty. ~ "lf we 1\1.y healthy, l pnim11e ,ou we'll be In the p&a10ftia. U we -., 100 ""*'' DbJl6mlb, .. -~ h9w • -.... iD Nida.~~-· .... · Mt _ ·-rllid -.... . ......... .,.. a old9e -.& .. _IQ, •A --al ................. 1 ... .......... ,_ .. _.._,." ......... --=----=----=---- - ----...... _ .. Or.,,oe Oout OAIL y PILOT lfhurtday, July 15, 1082 .----------------------wi cott falls short of breaking record From AP dl1patcbe1 l.AUSANNE, Switzerland -m Former UC Irvine standout Steve Scott rJn the faateet 1,500 met.en th1a : leUOll Wednelday night but mlaaed : by almost a full second hls announced goal of shattering Steve Ovett's two-year-old world ~ The powerful American was clocked in 3:32.34 •t an international track meet, improving ICOTT Sebaatian Coe. hl.s own best mark by .26 ~nds. He wu cheered on by a crowd of 7,000 In Lausanne's Pierre-de-Coubertin stadium but his 800-meter split time of 1:53.93 made it clear that he was likely to fail in hia bid to better the Briton's 3:31 .36. At an Oslo meei a week ago, Scott had clocked 3:47.69 over the mile, only .36 off the world record held by Britain's After that race, he announced he was ·"morally and physically ready" to better Ovett's 1.500-meter mark. Rams to come to terms with Redden The Rams h ave reached m· agreement with their top draft choice, c. • running back Barry Redden of the University o f Richmond, it was reported Wednesday. Jack Faulkner, the Rams' director o f football operations, said, "We're kind of in agreement and should have everything finalized by Thursday." Redden's three-year contract with the National Football League team reportedly will be for $620,000, including a signing bonus of $250,000, $90,000 in his rookie season, $130,000 the second year and $1 50,000 the third. However, only the signing bonus is guaranteed, and he has to make the~· 45-man roster to earn his 1982 salary of $90,000. · Quote of the day Jake LaMotta, former world middle- weight boxing champion who had, six bouts with Sugar Ray Robinson durln~ his career: "I fought Sugar Ray so many times it's a wonder I didn't get diabetes." Lakers to open with Golden State NEW YORK -The world m champion Los Angeles Lakers will host the Golden State Warriors Oct. 29 as the National Basketball · Association opens its 1982-83 seuon with a full slate of 11 games . the league a nnounced Saturday. The Lakers also will host the 33rd NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 13. and will play the New Jersey Nets in the annual Hall of Fame exhibit.10n game Oct. 26 in Springfield, Mass. The season will be the league's 37th, and will l!.nd April 17. BaM ball today . On thJe dat.t ln bueball ln 1873: Ana-11 flreballer Nolan Ryan bW'*i hla · aecond career no·hltter, blanktna the Detroit Tletn S·O and atrlklna out 17. It wu l\yan1111COnd no-hitt.tt of the teaal. He pol1*l one on May 18 tpinllt KaOIU City. On th1a date ln 1089: Mlnneeota Twlnl l&'Ond bueman Rod c..tew 1tole home tor the 1eVenth \1me of the 1euon, tyina Pete Rebltt'a 1946 major league mark. Carew'• 1wlpe of home, agaln1t Chicago pitcher Gerry Nyman, highlighted a 6-2 Mlnnetota vlciory aaaimt the White Sox. · New Orleans to host '87 finals N¥W ORLEAfiS -The 1987 m NCAA Dlvlllon 1 baaketball cM!nr>Jonahlpe will be played In the "°'ii.Jana Superdome where a record attendance wu aet when they were played there last aprina. 'fifhe-record attendance figurel and receipt.· were evidence of \he' committee'• belief that the · 1982 championahlp wu tjle beat in NCAA history," aaid Dave Gavitt, chairman of the basketball committee, wh.lch ai.o picked Kanau City for the 1988 finala. The announcements were made from NCAA headquarters ln MJ.aaion, Kan., following the committee'• meetlnp In Sun Valley, Idaho. Cliff Wallace, general manager of the Superdome, said the aelectJon should answer any linge~~ questions about how well college baske goes over when played in a big stadium. More than 61 ,000 watched last spring's Final Four at the Superdome, in which North Carolina edged Georgetown for the college basketba11 crown. The previous record for a college basketball game was 52,693, set at the Astrodome in 1968. Pavln leads tourney qualifiers United States Walker Cufper Corey Pavla, 22, cut a stroke of par Wednesday over the Pebble Beach Golf Links for a 215 total after 54 n holes to lead a group of 32 players into match play today in the 7lst California Golf Asaociation Amateur Championship. Meanwhile, Newport Beach's Lee Davl1, 37, was grouped at 221 with two other golfers and will meet llichard Meyers of Pleasant Hill in his match today. Also qualifying with a 228 was Jolla Ba rckle of Costa Mesa. Burckle will play against Fresno's Dan Hornig in his match. Craig pleads Innocent to charges Olympic hero and former Boston • Bruins goalie Jim Cr a ig faces a maximum sentence of 2 'h years in jail and a $3,000 fine lf convicted on a charge of vehicular homicide. Craig pleaded innocent to the charge at his arraignment before Di.strict Court Judge Robert L. Anderson and waived a jury trial and will appear before a single judge . . . The fonner man.ager and trainer of World Boxing Council heavyweight champion Larry Holmes has filed a $20 million lawsuit against the boxer and prom6ter Don h1. The suit by Rlcbrd C. Glacbetti alleges that Holmes has failed to honor a contract that give. GiAchetti 20 percent of all Holmes' filidlt pu.nes. Television, rad io TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -Angels at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m ., KMPC (710); New York Mets at Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KABC (790). Contract to expir~ L . NEW YORK (AP)-Heisman Trophy winner 1979 BMW 320• Marcus Allen, quarterback Jim McMahon and I se_ve~a1 othe~ top rookie prospec~s have until &l ODO m·i SI 100 nudnight to stgn contracts or face being locked out ' ' of National Football League training camps. Bronze with black Interior, The NFL players union, meeting with team excellent condition owners' representatives Wednesday to ~ a new contract, refused to ext.end a waiver to their current agreement that expires at midnight. That waiver would have allowed all unsigned players to continue individual negotiating with teams past the July 15 expiration date. 1917 VOLVO 244DL ll,008 mi $3,100 Union representatives also officially rejected the NFL Management Council's contract package presented Tuesday, and assailed a letter sent to teams telling them they could conduct spot checks of players -including urinalysis -to indicate drug uae. The contract included raising minimum salaries by as much as 56 peroent, i.ncreaaed playoff and injury pay and reduced compensation for free- agenta. Corduroy Walkshort Two front pockets and a rear pocket; velcro closure: in ~--r----:-71 assorted colors. $24.00 MIWNITWCll ,......111and .................... ...,. .. Mena Swimwear Velcro ofosure: sizes lo IAOrted OOlors. $23.00 to $32.00 Maroon, new tires, excellent condition (714) 760-1393 (i.ove m•st09•) Petersen approaching goal Laguna runner finishe1 tilth in San Ennelseo MantliOD Ju.t put the mtdwa)' polnt of laat 8undat• San Francl1eo Marathon, Lasuna Beach'• Sue Petenen wu ~ the women runnen and '"w• feellna IUper ltrona. ' "f wu dotna 8-flat.1 to the 14-mile mark and really feeµn, comfortable," Mid Petenen. "h waa •tronaer than I've ever felt." At about th1a point, eventual w~n·1 winner AUNNINQ DENNIS BROSTERHOUS Nancy Oltz of Menlo Park puaed Petenen, who resiltered runnen on the cool but IUft-dttnched fl.nlahed fifth. momJnc. ••1 wu leCOnd until the 20-mlle mark," ahe said. The youngest fln.laher wu Chip Walker, 8 IA, 1 'llfhen I f:t loat tt. I wu worried at one point whole time wu not available. Ivor Welch, 87, waa whe~[ ah':°'!:. ~~1t, to~~ the coune In ~~~~th~ia1~t. ooming ln at 4:48:43, plua a 2:50:88, and t.houah Petenen 't win the race, Brad van Houaen, 35, waa the last of the 6,834 lhe Sa a~ her eventual aoal. flnlahers In the race, but he waa perhape the most "I have vi"°"8 of break1ni 2:40 and I feel I'm impreaslve. Van Houaen, who haa a wooden klg, aettinc clomer," abe Mid. "rve never felt that strong, was time In 6:23:46 after getting a two-hour heed that powerful. Utually, right away, I'm feeling start" crummy. "8-k'el, I never WMfY about where everyone ORGANIZERS WE RE HOPING this yeat'a e1ae la, I nan how I feel. I waa a little excited to be event would help San Franciaoo joln with Boston In front. thouch-" and New York in a "triple crown" of marathons. Sue always runa with her huaband Pete and ·However. moat of the top names in the San ~ marked the 70th marathon they've marathon, including Alberto Salazar, choee not to competed In. participate Sunday. "We always run together and th1a la the first This year's course was Oatter, more downhill time he wu actually going after me.'' ahe said. and looped through San Franciaco's mo.t aoenk Peterwn had nothing but kind things to say points: Golden Gate Park, Chinatown, the about the San Franciaco Marathon. "It was very Embarcadero and the Marina near the !IOUth foot of well-done," lhe laid. . the Golden Gate Bridge. "It did get a little warm at aome spots, but generally It was a nice race. San Ftanci8co is an ideal spot for a marathon and it draws quite a few first-timers." • • • • • • R~tcHeDUU ... ..,.,.Mr ,. c,.,_ ~ '"" 9'Ull 10. -Beglne a a,m. at eyp,.. CMc Cent«. 5275 °'ange Ave . Cypr-. F• It 18 wttll T-tnltt and 13 wllhovt. Fof more lnformellon, contect Sl\9ryl Puryeer, &700 On1n99 Ave .. CYP< .... Ca. 90630 °' 821•9600. When the race was over, Petersen indulged in one of her paaaions -a milk shake. "At the end of a race ia the only time I can have one. They're too many calories," she said .. "-""Mr• Sackttebllcil College II hoellng a i«1-of 811-eom«I lllMCI at the main c.mpu. ot tlM lldlOol. Tiie meet1 era being held on eu c Cl 111 ... WedMedeyt. •1111\lng et 11:•5 p.m. IOt tleld-. e.nd 1:15 tor n.wininO. AMONG THE FINISHE RS Sunday was Cheryl Page, an 11-year-old girl who came from Birmingham, England, to San Francisco because she's seven y~ younger than the eligible age to run a marathon Ill England. Cott 11 $1 tor unllmlted entry. F°' mot• Information, contact Tom White , •t 831-4545 .• ....,,Mr • Olly ef HewtbelM ..... AIM •WJ 1a DlmMM IMt -... 7:30 Lin ... HawthOtne Plaza M.. F• le 15 with T-ehllt """ 13 without. L.Me regi.tretlOn, fldd 12. Aet. tut courM wl1ll ewwda to top llw• """'*9 In MCtl dMalon. F« mo<• information. contact (2131170-7907 And she turned in an impressive time of 4 hours, 10 minutes to finish 800th among the 7 ,800 ....... --BegH>I a • m •• GrWllU. PIR In Loe Angelea. FM .. 17 with T .-., lll>d 13 without. late I•. eOd 11 Conucl Celloml9 Aoed Aunnet. Club, PO 8oa 19 t, T..-uN. CA 11S5e «cal (21:l) IU-6529. Angels begin second half CLEVELAND -His beleaguered infield ls well-rested and his surprising pitchers are hoping to maintain their American League-leading earned run average. With thoee thoughts in mind, Manager Gene Mauch and his Angels embark on the second half of the aeaaon tonight (4:35 PST) beginning with a 10-game road trip. The Cleveland Indians provide the opposition in the first four games, with Rick Waita (1-6) aet to oppoee lanky Angel right-hander Mike Witt (4-3) in tonight's opener. Waits' lone victory came last week at Anaheim Stadium when he beat the Angela, 8-5. That pa.rticuL1r 1098 was the eighth straight for the Angels. Since t h e n , however, the Angels have reeled off four straight wiN. From Page C1 MYRON McNAMARA. • • says. "They told me they didn't know if their dog used his right or left paw but that he would be next if I wanted to take him as a student. "Don't you think I've been pretty lucky?" McNamara conducts five two- week camps for youngsters during the summer months and is in the middle of the second session now. "l have this hangup on over- achievers of all ages and I love to work with them," he savs. The youngsters flock around him during breaks to get a bit of extra attention. Mc Namara once served aa public relations man for Jack Kramer and later was manager of his company. "I left th"tte because the travel was getting to me," he says. "I was on the way to Australia one day and suddenly I was asking myself, 'what am I doing this for'? "When I got back home, Frank Hathaway of the Los Angeles Athletic Club called me and we got together to build the Riviera Tennis Club. After that I came to Orange County and have been here ever since with exeption of the interlude in Arizona. "No, I won't miss the travelling. I've travelled all my life and I think I've had enough for now." Kramer may call him th e Phantom for whatever reason be had for not having McNamara under foot all the time. But members of the J ohn Wayne Tennis Club in Newport Beach will have no such monicker to place on McNamara. His day begins at 7:30 in the morning and many ti.mes doesn't end at the club until 10:30 that night. But like he says: "It doesn't matter until I lose my enthusiasm." That day may never come. Stop by at our demonstration and learn about ... One Tool Does It All! 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II Clewiend, n T uu 11 T Of'Otllo, n S..ttll 11 Beltlm«I. n Keneu City II 8oe1'>n. n Olk!Md 11 New Y«k, n Chic8oo 11 MllWllJI(•. n Oltroll 11 M'"'-OIL II Netlonel Leegue ftSTPN OIVltk>te • l 51 53 50 36 40 42 42 48 37 48 33 53 UITIM OMMOH ~ 47 3ll 81 LOUii 40 39 Ptttst>ur911 44 40 MonltMI 43 42 New Yor11 40 47 CNclQo 36 53 • ....., •• ketee No 0-tchld"'4ld f'et. Ga 807 5111 2 523 7 471 11 435 14'"' 3&4 111 553 ~ 524 2'" soe .. 480 e 404 13 Todef'I 0.-Nlw York (Putlo 11-8) 11 Dodgen (R4Juaa Ml.n A1lln1• (Nleliro 0-3) •I Cllic.tQO (Jenlllna 6-111 Mon11e11 (Le• 0·5) 11 S art Olego (MonlllulCO 1_..) Clnclnn111 (lelb11nd1 3·4) II SI.LOUii (Slupet 4-1). n Ptttlburgh (Ceno.lllfll -I 11 HOUllO'l (Sutton M). n Phll1d1lphl1 (Byllrom 2·2) 11 S e n FrwtelacO (Giii 3-1). n 'rtdlf'• ca-. New Yor11 11~n A111nll 11 Chlcego Clnclnnltl 11 SI. LOIM. n Ptttaburgh II Houlton, n Mont,..J II San Ollao. n PNlldelpllil et San ,rllt>daco. n Ange4 nef .... 8ATTING .. II H "" .. ,,__ Cit-Lynn Downing Foti Clark Boone 8eytor o.c--. Re.J~ Beniquez RoJ-aon Ferguton W111ong Burllaon K~ To111a Mehle< H ....... A-Renko Zltln Fcncll Wilt Senclllz Klson Golt1 ~1 MOf-TOllll' 21fl 43 112 t 21 2t7 277 49 79 II )1 211 330 SS ~ 13 33 218 270 33 11 2 35 215 S3 1 IS 2 5 283 241 15 6e , 2t 274 339 38 92 13 53 211 310 43 83 10 47 2$8 2fl9 35 7S e 36 2ll1 as 11 21 1 I 247 40 3 10 1 0 2'7 50 3 10 0 2 200 118 10 ,, 0 5 111 45 4 7 0 2 1!>11 18 2 0 0 0 000 291' 387 7115 111 3511 269 PITCHING "' H H 10 W·l EAA .,. 7 0 0 o.o 000 44 29 22 22 2-0 I 84 51'~ 42 22 40 3.3 2 98 102 99 27 50 7·2 3 09 127 Ill 31 41 10-4 3 12 IJSYt 125 30 44 .. , 3 59 8S1"i .. 31 44 4..J 3 59 41 47 22 28 3-0 3 64 71 71 30 42 &-3 314 211Yt 29 t4 18 2·2 3 81 51 5-4 21 23 1.1 4 64 ...... 55 23 22 3.7 4 14 781\o\ 144 271 372 49-31 3 44 ~J: .... A9 II H HRMI 35 7 12 3 5 237 42 ,.. 2 29 m 32 ee 1e s2 301 43 87 18 53 359 4!1 100 0 28 119 22 33 1 211 109 • 30 2 13 1t 0 3 0 2 312 31 81 tO 34 325 35 112 10 35 28 3 1 0 2 2« 34 61 2 22 46 4 11 0 2 13 11 It 2 9 196 :zo 40 2 111 " e 12 1 e 2702 350 73' 73 339 ll'ct.. 343 312 294 2811 .270 277 275 272 280 252 250 250 244 229 204 .116 227 W WNtoll, K.(ltly Hrl>eh, MlntlffOI• Harrah, Clevet100 vounl. Mrlweuk .. llOntllfl, f O<onlO P11trl4lll, OllfOU Coover. MllWIUkll McA ... K1t11 .. City "TCHINO (11 DeCISIONa) Vukovicll MtlW-ee, 1°"4, Zlftfl, ,..,..... 10·4; Burn•. Ch1c1go, 9-4 , 81r1l,, Cle.......O. 10-5. 0...ra. Kanu.1 Clly t0-5 Guidry. New York, 8·4, CIUCllH, S..111e, 8-4. Su1cJIH1, CleVl4a.nd. 7-4 NATIONAL LIAOUI 0 A8 II "l'cl. Ot1-, Montreal 84 315 41 101 321 r Pene. P111st1u•oh 12 275 30 ee 3111 Knight, HQutllon 14 375 41 103 317 C1t1e;, MOt!HMI 19 2114 !>3 Ill 313 ~ .. Oocttet• 10 m a 74 .312 Ru JO'lls. San O;ego 711 2as 55 89 312 Medloci<, Pt11sburgll 81 299 49 93 .3 ti Rtcl\ards, San Diego 59 24S 33 78 310 LO Smllll. SI Louis 85 324 10 99 304! Dawson. ~Ot1tre1I 75 311 60 115 305 HOM£ AUNI Mu1phy, AU1nt1. 23. Klnoman New Vork, 21. Car1er. Montreel. 19. Homo•. Atlan11. 18. J Thompson. Plnsburgh 1 11, Clark, S11n Francl$CO, 17 MINI 8ATTEO IN Murphy. All1n1a, 62. OliWf, Mon1re11, 60, T Kennedy. San Diego, 57. Clttk. San F11nc11co. 57, Caner. Mon1re11. 55, Kingman. New York, SS. 8 0112 PM-1pl>I•. 55 J Thompson P111st>u•gh. S5 PITC,_O (11 Dt:ClllOHI) Loller San 01eoo 10-2 O Rob•naon. P111st1vrgll. j()-3, Rogers Mon111aJ, 10-4 Sutton. Houston. 9-4. Mon1erusco Sin 019110 1-4 Valenauala, Ood9at1, 12·7; ForSCll SI LOUIS. 8-5 Soto Ctoonnau. 1-S LITTLE LE.AGUE AU.·ST A"S ~(11-1~~, Ottnuct a T WNT Alea 1 (11 l .... IOfl U.) W-...drr•1 acot. Stanton 4, Ocunview Amlrlean o Tonlgtlr 1 Genii Founllln Valley North V$ W .. 1mlnller A.m41<'1C1n, 1 30 p,m Fridef'• 0-Fountlln Vlllly NOrth-W .. 1m1ns1., to.« VI, OoMnview Am«ICen. 7:'30 pm a.turdlf'•.- S..•lew vs. Stanton, s o.m ..... , ......... ood U.) ......... , .• acor. 80lu 4. Founllln Vllley Soulh 3 T ....... 1'1a.... W•lmlnsler Ne11onaJ va. Foun111n Valley Soulh, 5:30 p.m. Frtdlf's a.... Aoblnwood vs. Huntington Valley. S.30 pm ......,..o- ~ NltlOnll VI. BolM. I 0 m IMSTNCT 9S TOUNIAmMT ..... <• ....._ V1lto LAU) •.. .., .. ._. M1M1or1 Nort11 e. -... Hc1r111 4 T........-eo- ~._vs. S-. 5:15 o.m Frtclef'90- EI Toro VI. Minion HIU .. S 1ddl1becll lollr, 5:15 o.m ....... a- Llill• For-1 vs lnltne No<tll, 10 e.m ,.,.. . (eta.a..-teLLt ....... r'ita-. M~ South 6, laguna Nig\'91 0 ToN!IM'•O.... Sin Juan va. INlne South. S 15 p.m Frtder'• a... VlelO lfl Mlsalon South. 5:15 Om. a.turdef'•GMMI Laguna Blach VI. l.agutll Niguel, 10 I m Sen Cllmlnte .,. Friday·• io-, t o m 8enlore ( 1 ... 15-Y..,-otde) OllTlllC1 a TCM.MNA•NT AINI (al ~ Junior 141gh) . ...._., ...... W11lrnlnsler Nallonel 8, S1e.lew 2 I Seevtew ellmlnated) ToNgltt'1Q.- Foun11in Valley South on. Ro!Mnwooo. !> pm lclwdlr'•O-w .. tm1n11er Nallonll vs Fountain Vllley Soulh·RobinwOC>CI loMr, 9 a.m. ..... (14Ut0..C. ..... ) T ......... sO- Botsl vs Fountaln Vlltlly Horth, 5 p.111. ........,..a- Hunllnglon V1llly va. Fountain V1ll•'f Nor111-8o1M '-· 9 a.m. Paramount Sporfj _ _, ITA~"" M...,c11 •r"" U. ~ Mnnout ......... ''Everything in Tennis'' Tiie ro11ow1no per1on• h•v• ...... -Ultt of -lk:1Hioul bu•lnHt n•ITI• THI AUNHIHO RACQUET, S0100 Town c.ntet DrM. L..-...,.., CA '2t77, Tll• flGUllou1 bueln•H neme r•r•"" to et>ove wH filed on °'*Iller to, 1t7t "' the COunty of °'TilLIAM HIOHOLAI ,AICUAL, U372 LM Herenjoe, L...-....... CA 1117'7. CHAALll W ILl,IA WlTTIHGIL, 1'HI hnt LeureU•. ,ounteln V1lle1. O ft10I. 1'1111 -----.ited ~ oen.tt,... .... =~:-::~ ....... ,,. ............ wtlll o...er ........ ~ .. Mt ,., ,... ~~·~· STiii .. llllllL-ll•lllD at. llllll 111.1 ~~. ...... ....,1 ... 1111 ALL MIRCHANDlll llDUCID 10" TO IO" rl .. Orange CoHt DAILV PIL.OT/Thuraday, July 15, 1982 ca Loe Alelftltoe wt'*llO.AY'I MIU&. Tl (UNl4•-MfM~"'"'lfttl PlllT llACL 400 y11rd1. LOYW\O Alillr (H.,1) 1~ 40 0 20 3 40 Sir l'lltnblln MM (&Md) 6.80 4.00 AllOdl bo (lKk&yl 3 40 AllO t1Ce d. l1b11 Merllnl, Ernplr• Elq>IMe. In O.VOV1 Limit. Junole BlrMkef, lobe er-a.,, llfoc-111 Oort® TIMI. 20.14 a DACTA (3•21 oald 144 IO .. COMO flACI. 560 y.,01 AocUbo (C11doal 4 20 J 40 2.80 Cinder Clle (Mt1Chllll 1 20 3.80 8wi An Ao. (Biid) 3 20 Aleo tlOld J11on J-..ic;e. Oo1 The CHh, f>«peluetor Time 27 41 T.-> flACI. 400 y1101 Too Hee> (CltdoL•l 33 eo 16 80 1 eo Tidy Pull>IO (8'ooU) 10 20 8.80 Kwock (Mylle) 4 IO Alto rlOld. o-1 L.,.O. The Cr1WOlld KIO, Oeldty Walell, Ju91 Pllln Bruol, W11cil Tiii M . Tin~ Good Kid. Fancy Leg«IO. Tln>e· 20 80 POUftTH flACI . 400 y11d1 HIO(>lly (My!MI 11 eo 5 00 3 eo AdvlllOMn (Cardo.ti) 3 60 2 60 Arnie 81by (Tonk1I 5.80 AllO rlCl<I Tln .. Reb. Ctn1y Venaqua, Plloebll P1undlt. Scrambllno Joe, P•ll-Go Go. Tole• l ime. Marlin Bov Time. 20.48. 13 IXACTA (2· 1' palO 528.00. 'IPTit llACI. 400 ya1d1 Ml Judy (Myteel 16.80 1 40 4.80 Mark or Money (CatdOll) 5.40 3.60 Mulied Ecilo (Cre&g.,) 5 40 AllO tllCld Wind And Fite, Liiiie Tiny Gltl, O.._,le Rocket, Kida Cr.Oii. S.-Finl Rlbll. S1•enneh1 Ta, Oeck.,1 BIKll Ledy Time 20 52 tlXTH llACI. 400 yard1 M• Tiny on (LICkeyJ 24 oo 1 eo s.oo 8111 Bondatnen (PIUlinl) 5 00 3 20 F11tn1no Count (Btoolc•I 3 00 Aleo rlCl<I Coor-Poo. Mov•no ven K~ Ar1s Jlwe4, Mt Comk. T,,.,.. No Ooubl. Euy Roclcl1 Stx. Ole S0t111•• Tl-2055 a IXACTA (4-1) paid UC> eo UVl!NTH llACE. 350 y1tds M110 Known (Hero 11 80 3 20 3 eo Rocle SollO (leclley) 3 00 3 00 Rocket Song (Pjlken1on1 3 80 Aleo rle:IO Smooth Chlmo. OH-F\Mhy lhemloa. OH-Trvly Siiia. Cllecll My Time, A4lll E.uy 8111, MeQ Lautel, Ouoes M19tc Ptldl Time 1e 32 la llliC TA (6-8) 011<1 S 11 80 llOHTH flACIL 350 yard1 Gr-8Muty (AOll<I 8 llO 3 20 2 llO MllQ9lfl Men (A.,.,.UIMl<ll 5.80 3 eo Nedt Rock11I (Knight) 6.20 AllO reced J1PPY, Coney lalancl Wiila. Flamino Gwen, lrltll Pr1terenc1, M11<11 PUI, Oo11'-Ye. F"unny Feather Timi t7 ~ 13 IJIACTA (2~1 peld $21.00 a ~I( llX (1·2·1·4-6-2) paid $7.S18 20 ..nth lour wlnntng 11Cto:111 (llYI llorMS) $7 Pleil Sil! con1011110n pelO '77 80 ..n111 1311 Winning 1lcket1 (tour llor-1 .-.nt flACI. 400 yard1. l 00 Me Nol (Mlldllll) 0 llO 4 00 2-«l 8'1d In Tiie Puroll IFl)'(lly) 8 80 5 40 W eylon Awey (lAdcey) 3. 80 Al9o racld Ontlm P....,, Cotgorale Jet, Fr-. Oii Ftcl<le Fren. BulHon Boy Time 20 36 tz IXACTA (8·61 011C1 SM 80 Allencllll>CI 6.426 Holtvwood Patti WE.t>Mit>AY'I llllUUI 111at"....., .............. -1ne1 AMT llACL OM mlll eoto n-(Men•I a oo 4 eo 3 20 Aldi c.r-(McClf•Otll e eo 4 40 Semlnote KIO (H.,nandll) S 20 Al.o racld 8Hu John, Ooclglng AA>nQ. a.lglum SIMI, Credit SQuMre Exclusive Choice, JMl\'1 ICy BIHi. Funnlly T-137 215 UCOMO llACI. 6 furlong• Kryalll Snow (llpl\am) IS 60 • 40 3 60 W11h "--"•llOn (McCauOtl) 2 eo 2.40 lnllde Movea (Oi11J S 20 Aleo •acid· Red Vokleno. 11 I Thi Betr{•. M1rk'1 Polley. Johnny's Oel1gh1. Blecl( Marqui11, Liiiie Deduction, 01klee Promise, F ootltll Otory Time. 1 10 2/S 13 DAll.Y OOUtllE ( 1-61 paid $114 40 13 COtctOUTION DAILY l>OOllLE (1·51 plld $10 40 THIRD llACIL 6 lurlongs lr!Sll Chl11er (SlbllleJ 12 80 4 eo 3 20 Fan BMuty 10t121 2 eo 2.60 Sindt• z (Mlz•I s 40 AllO racld Wlf Of S... Moor Envloua, lovely Bronze, 0.rby 01y LaOy Sllvet ~.1·m SmoocNn. Benson11urs1 Timi 1 09 315 II IXACTA (2·5) oald '82 00 ~ M CI. One mile 280 .. 40 3 40 Rotllng O<ey S.-. (HllWlly) 13 00 0 80 4 20 .......,, ~ (Sibffll) 25.40 12 00 Roya C<itil (Of1IOI) 5.60 Aleo rlCld: Vlcloril PIWI, Lord'• ...._, Cotton Cindy, Foicy Toy. 8rllk Oul Thi Wini, Oenlle Handt Timi: 1:37 1/li. • llXACTA (S.9) oald '488 00 ....,.. ... '111• m-.. O!l IWI ~~~ (MoCW~l uo • to 'to ~·~,.....,. l911Wr•I 10 tO I to T14' I T.....,. j~) I <tO AllO l &ffi Otfl=~al&•le 1111, er.:. L~t•,,.,_ , MN ~bv "flfMI I ~ .J(I ~ IACI. t'~ lllriona.a. C.1*1• ~-1 •Ill 4 00 3 ~ ll°'9y ( IOl'll t IO I 70 DtlllCllllQ l'llt>ot (ellc*) 0 40 Alto rKld Mr AmbHHdor. llllllHlu, l>tayt»y JubllM l'lml t 14 416 .. UACTA CS•Ol l:leld I04 00 •MIC tlJI (l·t l·O .. 3) D•ld 135,411 80 wtlh lour wlflnlng llcl<111 (eja h<><-1 12 lllc:k Slit oon101111on 111ld 1328.20 wllh t46 l1Mn1t19 tick.ti (n.,. llOt ... ) U Pklk 81M w11cn cooeo11100n pato s1u eo ,..,,, 11e WlnnlftO llOlcet1 (lour hof111. one tc1111.n1 llOHTH llACL 8 turtoog1 M•tchtng (Pl~•YI 0 40 3 80 OUI Roi H. (ltman(;I) 0 40 OUI Blllllltul 01 ... (McCaitOll) OUI (No allow wegetlf'IO) Alto raced Jon• tln>1 Mac;hl11• Tln\e t:ot 210 • IUCTA (t·3) p11ld 51(14 00 ~ llACI. I 1/10 mt ... Oil lull MecllmOI..,_ 1v0t CPneyl 4 40 2 80 2 20 F1t>ul0ue 81111 (01Mrrt) 2 eo 2 40 MMM<ounO (Toro) 2 eo Aleo 1 •C•d Opat11c1nc 1 He ll To BolclMN. Mlllml!IOn. My Slit., SatlCh .. Time 14) 2/8 U lliCTA tll-1) p.io $29 00 A11en0at>Ce 21.729 Loe Alemltoe etendlng1 (Tllt..,.hlliloftdlrt JOCKIYa ....... 11t 2nd Jrd 423 78 63 M 453 ea 119 11 402 63 81 62 138 411 27 23 281 32 27 21 230 29"' 27 28 2!>3 27 211 30 255 27 29 11 246 27 21 40 1118 25 25 111 U.8. Pro Cl\-.n~lpa I•• 8roollllM, W-.) ~ ll4MHMI tlMIM Gutlletmo ll1IU !Ml Cr1tg Wlt111S, ~-II. &-1. 8-2. Eliot Tel19Chef def Zin au.try, 8-4 6-2, l•1n Landi Oii. JI.Ill! Agullltl. 6·3. 6-4. Jot>n -under Oii Mlctl• Leecn 11-3 5 1 S-5 fleach ••1irld bec1uae ol cramp11 Mel PurQlll Oii Oerlk 1 err &-t .M>. tl-J Jim o.teney def Eoo .. Otbbs 1 s 6 2 Y anniCk Noa/I <Ill Jon Cenl., 6 1 6-4 Httoto Solomon 0.1 Jimmy Brown 6·3 6 0 8wedl1h Open (at ... ...s, Sweden) Finl llound llnelM Mata WdlllOe< <111 Jiii Gunn11NOn 2·6 6-2. 6-3 C•••·A•t>I Hagea~09 d•I John Fnzger~ 7-5 6-3 WCT tounuunent (11 Zell Am Z.., Auetrla) Finl llCMHWI llftalM JOH! lu•s t..te<c Oii Joao Soere1 6 1 1 6 Tony Glllfn,..elva oet Corraoo 8arauu111 0 6 6 4 6·3 heond llOUftd Sing ... P1ve1 Sloill det Cllrl11oon1 Roge1 Vauettn, 7-8. 6-1, Heuu Ouen1haro1 del Belau Taroczy, 8-2. µ_JON Htgueru oef Vlc1or Peoc1. 8-2. 6-1 f'lret "-nd OoublM Peler F1igl·Robe11 Reininger def Ocieppc>-Roger vasaelln 6· 1. 6 • THm Tennie WEONllOAY'I ICOfll& Loe Angelel 25. HoualO'l 17 01111111\d 21. ClllC<tQO 22 Thfl ..... trout plente LOI ANOEL.18 -Cullie LIU CUiiie Lagoon. Crystll a..lce. Pyflrn40 I.Ake Sen Get>rlel Ai-ce..1 encl w .. 1 Fork•I lllVEllllO! -Dark Cenyon Ct .. k. FulMot lAltl ..._ Liiie I AN KllMAllotNO -J-• Lake, Senta ""• Rtv. s,.,,11 Ana Ro-fSOUlll FOO.) LUI OCOO -Oolne Pond. Sen Lu11 R4I)' Rt-, Sen11 Margar111 Rtvtw MADVlA -Sen J~u1n Atv., (Middle forkJ, Sl1tkW1a1,.,., like ALJ'1Nj[ -Blue Like (Upper) KERN -Bon• Creek Ke•n Ai.er (Olmocr•I Dam 10 KR 1 PowotrtlOUM, Borell PowerhovM 10 e>emocr11 Dam. IHbtlla Dam 10 Bore ll Powerhouse KR3 Powernoute to Lek& 1.a1>e11a1. No be Young Creel( TULARE Ory Meadow Creek. Kern Rtver jFetrvlew Dam 10 KR3 PowerhouH Joh11aondate B•ldge 10 rR•rv-Dem). Kern River (South Fork). P90119rm1n1 Creel< South Ct-. lute Al-(Nor111and South Forks or Miiin F or11 I INYO Saker Cr-. Big Ptne Creel< . S.shOP Cr..._ (LOWlr, MtOdle. South 11\d 1n11ke II) Co11onwood C•eek. Oeoro•• Creek, Goodale Creek Independence C11111<, t..ke Sabrlne Lone Pine Cr-Nol'111 Lake. Olk Cree« (NOr1h ForkJ. Sheph«dl CrHk, Symmes Creel! labooH Creek Ttnemaha Cree«. Tuoie Cr- lllONO -8rldQeOor1 "-"oi1 Suet.eye Cr11k Convict Creek Convict l ike Oeldmen C•-. Ellery lakl GIOl'Qe LIU, Gllsa C.1111< Giant like G•..,, Creel;. Gun Lalil. HlllO'l Crllk, June l..1k1, l.M Vlntng Cr ...... Lee Vining Cr-(Soulh Fe>0-1 lt111e Wd<er R1-. l;;nOy Like. Mamll I.Ike Mammoth C.aek Mery LP•. McGM c ..... M•ll Creek. 0-0. RI-(Benion Croaslng encl 819 Springs) R1¥erM Cf-. Rot>onaon C111k Rock C11111 (P1r1dlH C1mp 10 Tom's Piece. TorT.-1 P1ac41 ups11111m 10 Rock Creelt Ulk1). Rock Cr-Lllte. Rut/I Cr...._ S.Odlet>eg C.-. Slddleb19 Laite, Shefwln Cr-. Sit-lake. Swlullfl' Creel., Tioga Liiie. lrvmbull l.llr,e. Twin lilt .. Bridgeport (Upperlllld LowerJ. lwtr't Lek .. (Memmolh), Vlfglnll C<Mlc. Vttg.tnll I.Alce (UPI* lltld Lower). W1lk11 River (Chrl1 Fl11 C11T11>9'0Uncl 10 I own ot Walker, l llvll1 Mlldows Campground 10 SOt!Ot• BrldQll IN CALIFORNIA'S PALM SPRINGS AREA! Own A Resort Lot $250PerMo. A Great New Golf Course Community Invite• You Just 10 percent down .. $250 per month! Beat resort area prices at the Jack Ivey Ranch. just minutes from PaJm Springs. Some choice on-the-golf-course and eMl~ view locations still ~. available. ~~ ~~ Off lntef'I ~ 1!,.JJJ~l£!~d-___ _ wn. I .iam 1.., T odly Jeck t111v Rench Counttv Club Send I P.O. lolc IM2. P1lm Sp1ngs. c. 92263 coupon I "'-"""•"""i-t._lf'<I_~, tor I complete I dtta1'1. ·~·I ;:1:{~1 Name ~ O.V------~--""'~----Zlp ......... __ "*" Ccwnot roron10 MOrl11ei11 Cl\ICllQO NAIL IAaTINI OIVlllON W L OF OA W '11 10 a 4t '4 ., 14 t ,, 11 42 31 S4 108 12 9 31 ) t )0 08 a 13 36 44 33 1t tOUTHIAN OIVlllON Fort LIU°"rd... 15 10 ~2 52 41 1~5 Tula• 10 II 44 41 l9 95 Tempe 81y 10 14 36 48 32 92 JICklOnVille 9 1~ 30 44 211 112 WlaTEllN Df\1111<* v~ouv., 13 e 311 34 31 10s Sen JoM t2 11 42 44 33 103 S..Ule 1 1 1 t 46 34 37 101 8111 Oleo<> 10 11 35 37 30 80 Ponllnd 10 12 30 24 26 82 EdmonlOtl 7 15 25 45 22 60 SI• potnll era awarOed tot 8 199u1111on or OVlrllme lttctory Four j)Olnll for 1 \hOOloul vlOlory One bonus po•nl for ev•ry goal ICO<e<I wlln 8 tnQtmum ul 111'!MI pet g- NO bonut pojnt It eweraeo for overtlm<t or lhOolOUI goala W.clt>ledef a kotH Coamos 3, Montreal 2 Vancouver 3. Fort Leud.,d11~ 2 1011 Ponland 3, Eomon1on O S..tlle 8. Jacllsonvttle 0 ChlCego 3, San JOIHI I Tonlglll'e Gan.. hmpa Bey 11 Tulse C •l"Ofnl• Ameteur Chemplonehlp (11 Pebble BNcll} Maleh Play Ou•llfll<1 Corey Pavtn 70.14 n 21S G••r v1n"" 7>73·70-218 Joe Ternt>urtno 70-1!>·73-218 1(11511n Moe 17 73 70 220 Don DuBois 73-74-73 220 L .. DIVIS 16· 1•· 7 I -271 tracy Nakuakt 12·11-78 -221 'ileve Bogan 72-71.18 -221 Jert Hen 72.77.73 -222 Oen HornlQ 74-16-73 -223 Sam RanOOlph 72-74-77-223 Craig S1e<nl>t!1g 11-74·78 -223 C1119 OeY11 67·78-78-223 Mike Mtl~ 14·75-7S-224 JQtln Flannery 69· 75-80-224 Sle•e Pate 63·74·82-224 Mtke Allen 74-17·H -22S St""e Schroede< 78-72-75 225 Ooo Stie•orskl 73-7S-71 22S Man., JoMaon 16-76·74 226 Bob Blomberg 72-7S-79 -226 Rick Meyers BJ· 73· 72 721 Rey Pet~11n1 73-711-76-227 Clem Rteha10son Jr 77.73.11-221 OIYIO HObOy 77-7t-79 -221 Jot>n 8'Jrckt1 80-74.74-228 Bob Surnm .. n 79-74-75-228 Jell WtlM>n 75-75·18-228 Matk 81911 .. y 74·76-78-2211 0199 fwiog1 17-71-60-2211 M11co Ouc1 72-82-74-228 OIYIO G.,.... 18-74·76 2211 Wednetd•Y'• trenuc:tlon• IA8E8AU Amencan LMQW NEW YORK YANKEES Recatteo Bu1cll Hobson 1n.ro basemen ftom COiumbus 01 lt"MI ln16fne11on11 Leeg"" 01>tlON>d S11ve Balbont. l1t1t baseman. 10 Golumbvs Ne11on.t l9'19u• CINCINNA Tt REOS -AsStOne<I German Barran!;#. 1ntteld., 10 lndtenapohs ol Ille Amettean A$$0CI011on MONTRl Al [J(POS -Pu•Ch8Sod 1t>e con11ac1 ol Chrts Smith H11tll baseman oulHelder lrnm Wteh•I• BA8KET8AU. N111onel 8 H kelball Auoct•llon DENVER NUGGETS S•yneo K1•1 Vandeweglle to rw<110 10 ~ multt·YM' contract FOOTBALL He11onet FootbeH Leeou. Cf!ICAGO BEARS Signed Jerry Muckensturm. Mnebec".. and Joe Turnt!t oetentl•• bacl> DENVER BRONCOS Stgne<t GtwalO Wlllt111e running b9'" Otlonoo p,tc01.n..i end Dan Pielt!f ,_.11.,s. 10 • -ies or one-year contrllC1s Stoned W1ll11 Beebe end Jon Hoo11. rvnning oack• HOUSTON OILERS -S tgn&d Mike Re1nleld1 salely anO Te o Tnompaon HneblCkM 10. Hr!M ot one-yeat ConlflCIS NEW ENGL.ANO PATRl()lS Signed Clay1on w .. 1111u11n ltnebect<t!< and K...,.n Muno Punllt ST LOUIS CARDINALS SIQneO lutl Sl1111>11 ot1en9've tackle and Benny P.,un oerenllv• blC:". ,10 • series ol one·yH r con11ac1a SOCCER North Am«tc.n loccef LHQW SAN DIEGO SOCKEAS -Signed Jul<8 v-'°"""" 10 1 lour-yeer contracl COi.LE OE CHADRON STATE -Named G••y Rk:h1tdson lllaO lootl>lll CO&Ch MICHIGAN -Nam e d Ale• Ague ..... 11n1 tootball ooecll Conditions - sloWing yachters A vut high pnmunt a.rcu that hu hovereCJ ov r tlw J\Orthem California Coatt for •everal weeka has made &low solng for two San Franclaco to Hawaii vacht raceii. · Thtt tint wsa the single· hunded ra1.-e Crom San FranciJlco , tO Hanalei Bay on the island of Kauai which started June 19 Jt'irst yacht tO finlah was Mike Kane 's 53-foot trimaran Crusader from Newport Beach which l'Ompleted the cow-se m 13 days, about three days short of his own record two years ago. Kane s.rud he had five days of slow ~oing before breaking free BOATING of the "high". after which he had as much wind as he could handle. For au Intents and purpoees. tht' race was over by today, eXCl•pt that a few boats were still tryLng to make port. One boat had ml.SSE'd the island and was trying to heat its way back to the finish, and another was sitting on the wrong side of the island waiting for the heavy rain to stop before proc:eeding to the finish. Overall handicap winner in the single-handed race was Don Newland of Alamed a in his Wylie-34 Pegasus. He finished the course in I 61h days. Newland also won D1v1s1on IL D1v1s1on 1 winner, finishing about 5 hours behind Newland, was Chul·k Hawley from the Bay Area in the yacht Collage. He was se<.'Ond overall Busy racing · weekend set Seven teen match-racing skippers and crews from throughout the West began fighting ll out m two-boat races today for the coveted Governor's Cup for 1unior saJlors 15 to 18 years of age. The event is being sailed in the ocean off Balboa Yacht Club and wiU cont.mue through Sunday. The Governor's Cup match racing was patterned after Long Beach Yacht Club's famed Congressional Cup, except that the BYC event 1s for junior sailors The races are being sailed in Santana-20 sloop&. In other local yach ting compet1tron, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club 1s conducting the fourth race of its Angelman St.>nes for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yach ts Sunday; Lido Isle Yacht Club h05ts an All Girls Regatta Sunday; Voyagers Yacht Club 1s st.aging the fifth race o f its BoRart Series for PHR.I'~. l°' A11911ff·L°"lj lleecll Long Beoch Yecnl Club -15'•nd Se<les S & 6 Salurdoy. Sunday Senl1 Mona S.1 King Herbo• Yacht Club -His ·n He< race (keel bouts) Saturday S11nta Monica Vichi Club -Racey Lldles Re19e11a (PHRF") Saturday, Sundey Sen Diego Coronado V1c111 Club Plclclord Serles csouno ) Saturday. Sundey. t.Al1c11e11 Seri.a (T ·Bltd ) S81urday. Sund1y S1tver G11e Yech1 Club -Cit~ Series. St1urd1y Coronado C1ys Ve ch1 Club -George Ltsko S1><1no Se<tes. Sa1urd1y, Sund~ Sen Ot1QO Yiacttl Club -AyMa Trophy rice (IOR. PHRF") Saturdey. Sund1y; One Design r1g1111 (Siu. Elch1ll1·22, PC, Olson·30, K-38). Saturdey Sun<11y MIUton Bay Yect\1 Club Summer Series 1111 c•-1 Sunday OceenSlde Yect11 Club Coutal Serles (PHRI') $und1y Soulh-le<n Y11c:ht Club -VIiie Slries tHendtcap) Sundey Morth and lftlld Ventura Yect\I Club -Blue Weter Serles (PHRF) S11u1d1y AflllCI~ Yeehl Club -All llwta Orr;. S1turd1y, Youth Fund1y Sund1y (S1bo1, l.Allt) Sund1y P11fpoln1 Bay YllChl Club -l'ry'a Herbof CrulM. S11urd1y. Sunday Sant• Barbera Y1Cl'll Club -WUaon Serles (PHRF). Salurdey. South Huntington Beach Jr. All American Football LAST SIGNUPS July 17 10 a.m. -2 p.m. Edison High School Cafeteria All Boye Agee 7-14 BIRTH CERTIFICATES REQUIRED • FOR MORI INFO CALL HOWILL 113-1314 ' OrlnOe Oou1 DAILY fttLOT/Thuraday, J~ 11, 1111 / 90• LO#dPll• ,.Alllltl 7 12 I: Ol GMAC •ii 70 A.P.R. LOii RA1W '82 •21711 'IZ CAD. 131a 11 TRANS AM "'1 ELDORADO ""1 E~MPLE EXAMPLE Offer explru July 31, 1982 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY •.l#fl"' 11'1111 WE LEASE Atl IAKEI AID IODELI. CALL •E mEllOI. / 808 LO#Gl'R• L•A•lllG 7 13800 Beach Blvd., WHtmlnater, Calff. 714/112-1151 714/111-2800 Final Oceanfront Lots Pnv.:tle 5dn Clemente community with private beach and private s wim and tennis club 117/s% Financing Act now. (714) 498-2830 (213) 277-9470 Gl~~ lllVlllOlll WAllTIDI CASH FLOW ,-., TAX SHELTER s10,ooo ..... CALL JIM (114) 141-0211 JULY ONLY no-ic NOTICE ~i\Bl~RS l"UUL Ml.IC NOTICE NlllC NOTlCE Fl<:TITIOU8 BUIMH K..ocJm IPMICM2 ( :ADILL1\(~ NAME ITATUIENT ITATEMENT Of' NOTICI Of' C f M The following person II doing ABANOONMENT Of' TRUlnra I~ OS 0 050 buJlnets es· UH OF 'ICTTTIOUI NO. 111.W7 (714) 540-9100 I A , N A I L . I BI NA I l •u•••• NAME On July 23, 11182, ., 11:00 1.m . • -~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ DESIGNERS ANO I NDUSTRY The lollowlng persona heve Stelewlde For1Clo1ur• Servlc11, to LEA GUE. 21125 Coll1ge. Coat• eben<loned the uM of 1he llciltlou• Inc. H duly eppolnted Truatee MeN, C A 92626. business name: under end pur1uent to OHO of TOM GAERTNER, 231l Tulane, UNIQUE PROMOTIONS. 22952 Tndl recorded Mey 15, 1911, book Colla Mesa. CA 92626 Lovtos Street, Mlaslon VleJo, CA 14060, pege 5115 , of Olflclel This buslneu la conduc16d by an 1126111. A.cord•. 1xeeu14ld by: Donald L. lnOMdual, The Aclltloua Bu~ Neme Cunnlnghem and Beverly A Tom Gaer1ntl(f referr ed to above w11 filed In WMlhetby, u truetora. In the office This s11tement wea lied with the Orange county on ll/20f79 of the County A«:ordlt of Oranoe CoYnty Clerk of Orange County on CH AR LI: S 0 RUM M 0 N 0 Coun!y, Stete of Callfomle, WILL July 6, 1982. _ FRANKHOUSE, 221152 Lovloe SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO '1•-1" Streel. MINion VleJo, CA 92891. HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH Publl&l'led Orange Coasl Diiiy DONNA ANN FRANK.HOUSE. (PllYable el time of .... In lewtvl Pilot, July 8. 15. 22. 29. 1982 22952 LOV!o& Street. Miiiion Viejo, mon.y of 1hl Unlt41d StltM) et: 2811·82 CA 112691. South front .mnince to tM Orenge ----no-.,,-1-C-NO-T-IC_[_ Thie bu*--conduc:tlO by• County Old CO\.lr1houH, City of r "°' ;en«el pertnlrlhlp. Sent• ""'-. Stai. of Cllllfomle, Ill ....,.TTTIOUI _, ... ,, CherlH Drummond r1ght, title and lntereet convey9d to '""' Fr111khouM and now held by 11 1#\d« Mid Deed NAME BTATEMENT Thie st•l-t -!!led with the o1 TN91 In the Pf'°'*1Y 11tv1t4ld In The tollowlng peraon 11 doing Coun!y Clerti of Orange Col.wily on Mid County and St.et• o.cnbed M : botl'!"'TA ~rr....css CENTER. 2251 .k.lly t, 1882· Loi to of Trect 937" .. per m-c> "' "' "" F111m ,_ded In Bodi "°9, PllQll 15 10 Herbor Blvd • Coat• Mell, CA Published Or1ng1 Coeat Delly 11 lnc:lull¥I of Ml9clllaneoul Mepe 9262:ENTON O'DELL CUSHING. Pllol. July 8. 15, 22. 211, 1~2101-82 ~:..~ffle1 of H i d Coun1y 3050 South B<lston, Apt 11·0, Senti The ltrfft eddreH 1nd ot1·11r AM. CA 92704 ------------loommon deelgnltlon, 11 llrf, of !hi f!Q business Is conducted by en "8.IC NOTICE rNI P'°'*1Y dlec(lbld •bow le tndMduel. purported to bl: II w .. tport. ~. Benton 0 Cuahlng YOU AM IN DIFAUl T UND«fl A CA. Trita stetement was filed with the DI.ID Of' TMllT DATED AUGUST The underalgned Truat•• PtllJC NOTICE IT tft...,,. CW Wl'THD9'AWAl ,... 'Almtlfll ... ONAATINQ UNDO ACTITIOUI .,_ .. NAlm The following p.,1on h11 wtthdrewn .. • Qllllfel pertner from thl plrtnenhlp c>per•llng under the lle11tloul ~ neme of LEGAL CONSUL TING CENTER et 895 Town Center °"""9, No. 900, Coe11 Mw. Clllfomlll t2e29. The flctltlou1 bu1tn111 n•m• lltetement for the Pllftnerehip -Ned on Apt1I 1, 1882 In ttte County of Orlnge. Ful ~ and ~ of IN Peraon Wlthdrewltlg: EOMONT T. f)ARRETT. 895 Town cert1er Ortve, No. 900. Coete ......, Ce111orn1e m:ze la! Edmon! T. BerTett ,~ Published Oreng1 Cont Delly Piiot. June 24. J4Jty 1, •• 15, 11182 2729-32 Ml.JC NOTICE Coun~ Cle<1< of Orange Coun1Y on 21, 1111. UNLESS YOU TAKI dl1elelm1 eny ll1blllty for eny Juoe 3. 1982 ,1'2032 ACTION TO "llOTICT YOUR tncorTec:t,_. of the ttrll1 lddr-YOU AM IN DIJ'AUlT UNDaR A "'°"""· rT MAY M IOU> AT A and ottw common d1119Ntlon, If DlaD Of' TfllUIT DATED AUGUeT Publlahed Or•no• Coast Dally PU9l.IC IALL • YOU •m AN .,,.,, 11\0wn hetlln 1".! 1H1. UNLIEIB YOU TAKI Piiot, July 8. 15. 22. 211. 1982 E~TtOM Of' THI NATURE s'eld 1111 will be meo1. but ACTION TO 'fllOTECT YOUllll 2985-82 Of' THI '9t<>CEE>INO AGAINST without covenant or werrenty, ~n. rT MAY• aou> AT A -----------YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A expr ... or Implied, reg11dlng tttll, "'9LJC SAL.I. • YOU ..aD AN POOUC NOTICE LAWYUll. ~. or encumb<eneee, to l~TtOM Of' THI NATUM K-G0751 FICTmoua BUllNHS NAME IT A TU.tENT The following pe<aont ar• 001ng )UBlnestU: BEVERl Y Hill$ REAL TY CORP .. 27271 L .. RamblllS, Mission Viejo, CA 92692. BHS Reelty Corpor111on, 1 Calllornle corporellon 27271 L11 Ramblll. Miiiion Viejo. CA 1121192 This bualnl$a Is eondueled by • eo<PO<etlon BHS Afflty Corp Roben E Newb«ry. v Pr• This Slllemlnl WU hied Wi1h Ille Coun!y Cllrit ol Orange Counly on June 30. 1982 '1t:Mll Mete..-. c-' c-111 Amon llt<rd. ttll Fl. Coei. ...... CAaae Publlahed Orenge Co111 Delly Piiot. July 8, 15, 22, 29, 1982 2998-82 NI.IC NOTICE pey the remelnlng prtnelpel eum of Of' THI '9tOCUDeNQ AGAIN8T NOTICE Of' TRUITEIE'S SAL.IE ,,,. note(l) MCUred by Mid Died of YOU, YOU IHOUlD CONT ACT A T.S. No. ""11 Trull. wllll lntereat thereon, H LAWV.fll. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. thet prOYIOICI In Mid not9(1), ldveneee. NOTICE Of' tlllUITIEIE'I SALE on Wednesd1y, July 21, 11182, et It Illy, under the term• of Mid Olld T.&. No.,_ 11:00 o'clock e.m of said dey, In the of Trust, f111, chergH end NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. thet room aet H ide for conducting •kPl"M9 of the Tniat .. and of the on Wedneedey. July 21. 1982. et Trutt .. ·a Selet. within the olftc:ee of tru111 crHted by H id DHd of 9:00 o'dock e.m. of Mid dey, In 1111 REAL ESTATE SECURITIES TMJI, for lhl •mount reuonebly room HI H ide for conducting SERVICE. loel1ed et 2020 North .. 1lmet41d lo bl: $55,385.33. Tndl .. 'I Salee, within 1he officl9 of 8'oedwey. Sulle 206, In the Cl!y of The bln9fleiwY Undlt Mid Deed REAL ESTATE SECURITIES S1111te Ane, Coun!y of Orenge, Stete of Truet lllrltofore lltlCU!ed end SERVICE. toeet41d 11 2020 Nor1t1 of Celllornle , REAL ESTATE dellvered to the under1lgn1d • 8'oec1Way, Suite 208, In the <:tty of SECURITIES SERVICE. 1 Callfomle wrttten Oec:iaretlon of Dlfeult end Santi An1, Coun!y of ~enge. Stei. corporellon, H duly eppolnted o.tnend tor Sele, and • ..,,,..ltten of Celll ornle. REAL ESTATE Truat .. under end pu...uant to the Notice of Dlfeult Ind Elletlon to SECURITIES SERVICE. e Callfomle power of Hie confer• tld In thet Sell. Thi u~ eeuMd Mid corporellon, H duly eppolnted certlln Died of Trvst IXICU141d by Notlol of Dlfeull Ind Election to Truet .. under and punuan1 to the CHARLES E. PREEOY, e 1lngf1 S... to bl rec:ordld In lhl coun!y po-r ol 1111 conferred In thet men, recorded S.Otember 8, 1981, where thl reel P'°'*1Y 11 loeet41d. certein Deed of Truet 1ocuted by In Book 14210 of Offlclel Ale«dl of DATED N1I 23, 1982. PRAFUL BUMIA llld URVASHI P. u l d Counly, el pege Hl25, Ste1ewldl Foredollu<e BUMIA, HUSBAND ANO WIFE. Aecofdlt'a lnalniment No. ll558, by ~T Inc. recorded Auguet 31, 11181, In Bodi reuon of 1 l>feec'1 or defllUft In • _, l'Ull•. 14201 of Of9ldel Ale«d• of l8ld p1yment or performence of the 9y Subltl1utlon Coun!y, et pege 718, Alcorder'I obllgetlona aecured thereby, 8y RA Joy, lnltrument No. 39873, by r-of lneludlng 11111 b<eech or «Mleutt. Pr"Mident • breec:h or dlflUlt In peyment or Notice of which wH recorded 51125 Cemtoa A.,.. performenee of the obll91t1on1 Much 211. 11182. H R1c:order·1 Cypr-. Cllltornle H cured thereby, lncludlng thet lnatrument No. 82· 107953, WILL Tel.: (7 14) 828-3280 breech or defw.111, Notlol of wNcll •111n SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE Publllhed Oreng• COlll Delly -recorded Miich 23, 11182, .. MOTIC9 TO CMOt'TOflll HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, Pltot, July 1. 8, 15. 1882 Recorder'• lnltrument No. Of IUUC TRANll'Ut lewful money of the Unl141d Stet... 2900-82 82-10033e, WILL SELL AT PU8UC (e... t101'4107 U.C,C.) or e euhllr'a et1ec:1c drewn °" e AUCTIO N TO THE HIGHEST Notice I s hereby given to 1t1te or ne1k>nll bllnk, e atete or __ .,.'""TICE BIDDER FOR CASH, lewlul money creditor• of the within n1m1d flderel credit union, or • lltlt• or r~ "" of the United Stll• or • c:dlllr'• ,,.,,...or(•) thet • l>Ylk tr111efer II lldlr&I Nv\ngl end IOln INOCl•tlon NOTICI INVIT1NQ ..,. ChlCIC orewn °" ...... Of netlonel 11>out to be med• on peraonel domletled In 11111 etete, en peyebll 11 Notice 11 hereby glYln lhlt the benk, 1 1t111 or f1der1t cr•dlt Pf'OS*1Y het .. n•flll' deec1tbed. the time of NII. ell rlgh1. 11111 end Boerd of TrualH• ot th• co111 union. or • etete or t.derll Mv1nae Th• n1me(1) end buatneu Int-I held by It. H Truet ... In Community College Otatrlct ot Ind loin lllllOClltlon CIOmlclted ln 1 d d r • • • c I 1 h • Int• n d • d th1t rMf P'091rtY 111u1te In Mid Orenge County, Ci lllornli, wlll Ihle 11111, 1N PIYlble et thl time of lt9Mllror(1) In: County end Stet•. d11crlb1d 11 recelw ...i.c:t bid• up to 11:00 NII, Ill right, 11111 end lnt-1 held BALBOA DRUG. I N C . • follows· Frid J•"" .. 3 1.,.,. I 1.._ by II. u Tru1111, In 1htt reel C Ill I 11 doing . of T -~ In ..,_ e.m.. ey, ~, ' ' ...,, 1 ,,. I In __ ... ,._..-..,__. • om • corpor1 on, S Lot 34 r1et No. 1.,..,., ,,,. PurchHlng Oepertment of u ld r.::r:r.:,ue I -""""" • .., ~A•RIMnA•c'y,'51•.,•w .. F o, 11!,ThEStRr;_, County o f O renge. Sllte of college dlatrlct toceted et 1370 •II. Ibid~~; "'"" ,.. • •• ... Callfoml1 u per m1P recorded In Adema Avenue, Coate M•••· Lot 3 of Trect .,55, .. per ITl8') eo.i. Mw. Cllllornl1 92827 Book 273. P1gH 27 to 30 of Cellfomll 11 which tlnw Mid bid• -d«t In 9ook •10pegee1110 12 Th• n•m•(•) end bualneu MteolllelleCUI M• In the omc. of wlll bl pubttcl.,, °'**'and reed for: ~of M~~ In 1 d d ' • • • o I t h • I n I • n d • d thl county reoorder of Mid Counly. ....,. 6 lllNIMNO OOLDl'N W'llT the ofllce of the County of tr11 .... 91(1) 11'1: The etr••t eddrut or other C0LLaGS Or1ng1 County. cerllornte. lie TERAYOAVIOGRANTandJOAN common d .. tonetlon of the r11t fALl 1111 CALINDAllll Of Rrwl ~or other common MARIE GRANT. 1835 Newport property hlrllneove dleeflbld 11 IV8fT8 = of the r .. I property tou19Ywd, Coeta Mw. Cellfofnle property ~ deecttl>ed .. Al blOI •• to be In ICCOl'dlnce detcWlbed II pul1)CW1ed 12ta7 Clrde, lrMI, Cellfomla. with tM Bid FOfl'l'I tnetruc1lon& end to bl: 20 CflO&M It,_, llvlne, CA. That tll• property pertinent The und1r1lgn1d h1r1by Condltlonlend~llCtllwNclfl Thi und•r•l oned hereby IWeto le dlecltbed In Olf*ll • · dlaelelm. 1 ell lleblllty tor eny .,. now In fie llld_ mlrf bl .:wed dltoletma 111 lllblllty for eny "-'lOfY, .. ore fU9PllM. tlx1Urea, 1neorr.e1neee 1n Mid ..,.... lddr-. In IN olb Of the Pllnlllellng Aeiln1 ~ 1n Mild lltrMl eoor- 11t offfoe l>OltH , IHHllOld "'other common cN&lgnMlon. of Mid 00-. dltltlet "' --COflWnOfl dellglwUon. OV9"11fltl, ltMe llgne, llld 8e1c1 .... w11 be INde .ttt1out llClfl lltddlt muet ~ wftt1 hie l4lld .... .. be IMdl wlthOut er Item• of tlngll>I• ind w1rr1nty, expreu or lmpll•d. bid 1 oeehlef''• cheek. wtlli.d wlrtlnty, upr•H or Implied, ..... ._.. pnonll property,9enc:1 le rtgerdlng tltl•. POtMHlon, or clleclt or bidder'• l>ond mtde r-a•rdlno Utle, pot .. Hlon, or lomlld et 11' W.-1ttfl tNet, enc11m1>r1ncu . to utlefy 1111 ~ to the ~ of tM o-e 1ncumbranc••. to Htlefy Ute c-. ~ Olllfotnle taar pr1no1pe1 .'*-or ttte Note or ~ C-.. ~ 9-c1 pftndpel .,.._ of IN Note or The .,_.... '*"" ueed l>y IN ofll&' obllOltlon _., by ...., of TNMI& In en llftOUllt not .... _., ~ ....... by Mid Mid ~ M Mid looMlon le: Dltd of 1'tuet, wtttt lntW9ll n ~ IM ,.,__ C~I of 11& Ml'I Dted Of TMt, _..,. .,_,... Ind FOeTIR'I flHAlllMACY otll« ~mt H prOllided tlllt&tft: blct • e ......... f* V. Wder other '4nl'lt .. prlWIO&d tlleteift; Tltal .. Id l>Uflt tr•n•l•r Ii l*lt ~. " tl'ft, .,... the "'" enter t"to tit• prop01ed p1u9 ~. " ""· .,... !tie ....,.,.., to be~ M V. """' ,,_.,, Md ..,.._ on Miii Contr.at " IN ....,,. 19 _..... to """8 thereof llld ..,... on Miii omoe of: OAfn•"· MONKMAN, ~. llld Jiu& ..... CIW9e& '*" In .. ..,. of '°"'" IO '"* ....... llld ~ .... otwoll OOOftlll', IANIO,_N a Mii.Li. llld ....,.,.. of IN Truolee lflCf ol tnto' _,,. comrect 11te llfoooNt of ltld .,.,... °' fl& Ttuteet lflCf of ..,._ ~ ~ t2101 on or t1tt tMte er..-. by M6d Dted of ttlt °'** _. be fortllMd or ti\ die .,. ~ ftM&d by M6d Dted of lftlr.,.. I. ,..,_ Tri.et. Tiie total amount or N ld oeM of 1 IMWMI IN JUI ~ ,,_.,, Tru1t. T• totet M1ount of Mid n. ,.... w ...,_ oc IN obllt•Uon, tncludlnt r .. 1on11>ty "'" I>• f0trott9d to •••d cOll... ollf .. •tlon, 1110tUC11no rH10N1111Y ..,_, """ ~ -;.,';at be ottmated , .... cllargo an dlltttot tllrlftattd l&H, olllfto• •"' ... II NM ,...-111111111, • "° ..,... of ... T"*-. Ill lflt ltme No t:itdder wlttldf• ,. bid ...... Of ... Tf'Ylllll. at IN*"" ...,.,. AM IN -~-..... :i:,, tf-M'""""""-• "'' ..... I:', -"',.,,.. iiiifi'° ,.,..,_. :;:.:r.,,,,.,..., ..--114.ttt.14. tl\lle (4> _..""' 111o ...... .., .1tt.n . • ,., •• ,, ." .. " ., .... o..lt ~r. ':'ou '""'• "\:*-=:Wn.... ~ : r· , .... lt1to11dod Tt1111fofH~Hld ,..,,.._. ~..i _.., .:~=-=..: e .......... ••!!. _., • ~ ., I ~ "'"' " '2 I -, .... 'It • lfl .. .. J'&~- I Jtaamart1 Tteklr Slier••••· a native of Newport Beacb, hu been promoted to public rtladGnl IOC.'IOW\t eacutlvw at the Loe ~ offtct ol DanmuelW-. wh.k!b tpecdall-ln public raladom CIOWWel and f1nandal noUm advertUilR&. ICOCOM IClecUoalc IJtttau of Tu1U11 promoted Cltarltt C. BtHIDI to director of marketinC. / Prffldtnt DHal• A.. MJ11t!1 the board of dir9cton. offiom and ataff of Martae Nadoal BHk, Sant.a Au, ll'ffttd ~uetu auendlnc • ~ to ctW.-,te the ban& I flnt annlvenary. Miller announCed p1ana for a new bMdquarten location and • eroP*d branch atte in the Irvtne IndUltrial Canpiex .,.., Tht bank'• Une of eervScea will ai.o upand. Pint Lot Aqtlff Boll announced that Peter Ktuy jo6ned the 0nmet County relional office aa bullneea development cOordinator. The board of dlrecton of Pacific Suf luua.ac. S.nlcea, be., Newport Beach, promoted Ric C. a.Mer to executive vice president. Marlaen Baacer~a newly announced Newport Beach-bued ho company with plans to launch five finanda1 IU diaries. retained Clay PabUcom, lac,. Irvtne marketing oommunk:ationa company, for a marketing communicationa program. To111Jba Wormatioa System• will hold an open hou.e July 29 to preeent lta word proceaaing/ legal bllllng 1ystem. The aeeeions, to be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p .m. and 4 to 7 p.m., will be at the firm's office at Suite l, 3033 Bristol St., Colt.a Me98. For information, call 641-9611. Blue Cron of Soatlaern California has promoted Jim Killian to regional manager, for Orange County, Long Beach and the South Bay. He bad been district manager, Orange County regional oUice. State indicators up SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Department of Finance said Wednesday ita Revised Index of Leading F.conomic lndlcators rose in May for the 8eCOnd consecutive month. Department Director Mary Ann Graves said the upward movement of the series might indicate the beginning· of recovery from the current receaion. OYER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW YORK IAPJ g~ 1S u~ Horii Rt JV. l'lto Oii Ferro NASDAQ QUOtellot)t •n ' IMS Int 1'\0 IS OtterTP '11oWl"I N.,_I bldt Colr'Tle t•Yt i.v. ISC ll IJl<o PCA Int MO 1-1 offer• by CotoG<K J.I• ..,, 11\frelnd • . .,, PebSIB w:ri:t=.9d:~ ComCIH H'h S6 Intel )IV. ll'I> C<G•R Cm I Slit 11 IJ 11\lr<Ellr • •Yt eut•J,t ""Jude r.tAll marlluP CmwTel I) 14 l!\l9rpll 14"'-Ul'i p .. , mark-or com"" ~Pac> U"'-2•V. lnlmed ~-,Pefl.llEnt lulon lof' -.. cllt UV. 2J.\lo 1n1mtG1 ~ IOYt p.,,,.,' Stock Bid Atk CrolTro IS UY. In Bk Wiii ~ ·~ P-Ex;p AEl Ind 1111.o l:M> utlrFd t "' I lw•SoVI 14\to " Pet rite :'~~ ~ !' ~~"". ~ , .... Jemlb\I 11~ 11 PeltlbOn IJ'I> 1~ JerlGo ~20"1 Pllll•-Acecllns 17h 11'4 0.'(IM , 1J IJ'4 vlJllly ,.,. \It PlerceSS :~r::~ :"" =~ 0 ..... , ,,_,, l 11-16 Joslyn • J2 Jl'IJ Plnllrtl'I K•l.SC pl u " PlonHI I Ac:lvRou ~ l~ Dekl~ t•'h 1411io K•h,•r Pl .. 11,.. AllBll\ t 14\1') IS DelC... II 11 11·161 >-1• Poub Allcolnc ~ » DeweyEI l J"' lt•man 1711. 11"' P,..IGM Amaru • ..., •~ 01.Cm 22 u KelySv 1 211'. ,. PrtSteyn AFurn SYt Sl<o DlanCn.o JO ll'h Klmti.11 1~" Progrp AGr"' tsv. u-. 0ocu1.. n~ u Klftlllnt IYt I~ PbSvNC Aln~ s~ '6V. DoflrGn 11Yt 1111. l(loofG 10'lto 21 Pvrt&en .... M U --~ • ., .. ~=v 1~ U'h a AQuMr -.... 1114 1.-. W1 "" ARHMe .... ._ I I~ ,..., Kvt1<11e • »\lo R= AW.Id t U t• rl""' 11 11 ... Un« I n D l'I AMCllle .... 61'1 E•tnVnc 12 121'1 unc11t .. ~ •Yt --AngSA Econi.a '""' lt'h LeMCo 11 ""' ltoectEa f 1·16 I .... IPetEl II II ... \.llnn :IA ... 21"-Rol*My A"9AGO '°""> ~ .... ... s '~ l lnlrd 1 20\/o ~ R-= 11'h 11"" EleNucl 10 I°"" ~"' ~" Sedlief' IS ISl<o El-!t'I>-........ Set.co ArdenGt> l\lo ,._ El-w1 t•Y> IS"1 MGF Oii ,.. l l'I Sll4e1Gd AidClt t JS-. »Yt EnrOn 111 Jiiii. ~E ISYt 1""° StPeul AllGsU I~ 14 ... EMMelPlll I"' '"' ="' ,,. •Yo ScrlllH ' All..,R t 23\li U... Enlhv J"1 J"' .... ..... 5e--Av1tt.., ' 1>'11 ,,.._ Enlwlal ll IP<. Merion •v. ~*-Belr~ •1i. .... EqllCSL >"'-' J'lt. MevlLP ... JO SwcMtr B•llyP Tllo 11'> E~lOll ~ 9111 MeyPI ""' ~ Svcmst B2HE 1~ I~ ~ SC .,. J.I• ::i~ 411. 41'1 ~ Bes R 9 ermGp :I0'9 JI .... -20"' ;t,w""" I 1~1• 1 1 ... Fkllcor 11h 11\o\ MCF.,I 61t. •"'•~r•Rs B•JJIFr ,. , . ..,, ~::::c ~1' ~=> nv. 1211> ;111c°"" BeylsMll .... "" 1111> •11o u .... '""' SCMMr B .. 11,. s '"' FIE~ lfV• lfYI Mld\JIW ""' ""' SwEISv lleftlPl ll 2 .. ,. 2 ... FtWn In ,.. ,.,., Mdl~ ,,.. .... ,,_.,n kills 27 f1\<o ~:rct .. ' n~n"' Midi Rn \'I ... SICIMkro Bev"'91 ,. .. ... ""' ,,,.. Mldlllt t _,, SWR-BlllOCo Ullo t• FleNr.• ,~ 1'11. :i~~~G 20',. -BlrdSoll Siio SV> 1uroco 6 61'1 " 11111 Blrtcllr +\;, .... ForfllO I~""' Molea 6414 .. ,.. Jim Grace, prealdent of BtlH Grace CHcolatet, hu been ei.:ted pnetdet of Re\111 Confec1ionen lnt.emational at It.a annual convention in Toronto. Grece hu been Jml'lldent of Lynwood-hued , Helen Grace Chocolata llnoe l.978. He IUIDCNCMd hi.a father, W.T. Graee1 who beian !he bull.- with his wife Helen witn one ttore In Sin Pedro ln 1944. Both Grace tamlliee tellide ln Hunun,ton Beech. W.T. Grace ttmaiN active ln the bua1notm, which haa grown to 15 stores in Southern California. L H Reaearcla of Tuatln appolntlld Job T. "Teel" Matter director of national aalea. He wu Western sales manager for ACDC Electronics, Ooeanaide. Geor1e B. Hase hu been promotlld to vice presldent-operation1 for Nortlarop Corporatloa'1 electronic 1ystem1 group. Succeeding Hage u vice president and general manager for Northrop'• electro-mechanical division, Anaheim, I.a Dr. Jolua F. Mce.n.y Jr. McCarthy waa with the National Aeronautica and Space Adminiatration u director of ,the Lewia Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio. Auto sales drop f rorn year ago DETROIT (AP) -The Big Three automakers have reported that new car sales in the first 10 days of July fell 14.8 percent Crom the corresponding period a year ago. The automakers said Wednesday they aold 104,732 cars in the July 1-10 period, down from 122,913 in the period in 1981. General Motors Corp. led the decline, down 18.9 percent in the eight selling days this year • compared with the corresponding period last year. Ford Motor Co. was off 3. 7 percent, while Chrysler Corp. sales were down 15.9 percent. µ.-. • ~· ... -XI )4 UPS AND DOWNS 17\1' .. U tn SlerlSt 2\'. ,,_,_ ~ s Slr•wCI 14'h JS ~~ Suberu ..... ~ I~ 11'h rr~EI 1'4 . .,, ""' 1 ll ""' • 10 rfME oc M• ~ NEW YORK IAPI -The lel-1"1 1111 12,.. ll'4 ~:::'/:, JS'l'I »'4 "'°"' ,,,. Over -~ U"1 IS%. , • .,, 11\lo "och -w•rr..,tt tl\al ,...... ..,.. "" ll'h 12~ TecumP s.. SS the ..-1 -dOwn the mott -on -27 felcmA uv. !Ho 1:".nt of C'*'lle r-rcll .. t of -, . .,. ,.~ Tenenl IJ\t, 14V. r Wied.. ~ .... ,..,, ~:::.1011 '"" H• ..::. ~:= .:;,~-=~~ ~~ 1n.11to lh l S3 SS Toyol• ' 6'11. 6 tj,.I• dlflerence 11e1-the Dr•vtous <totlnG " ""' TW,IE• Sit. S"1 bid~ and Wed.'1 IMI bid pnce, .,., 111. rlcoPd 10'.'> 21"1 10\t, 11'1> Ty,....Fd 11'1. 11\0 ~" VnMCG11 ...... ""' ~10'lto VS El'W' '~ ,,. 1\lo 2Y> vs 5"' """ ,. u" 11"1 II"' US Trek -'°"" ..__ Ult • c';t.. Pct • 1IV> " UV•Blll ~XI,_ I JeylH 2"' Up .. .l llh 12Y. ~;~"a l" J 1 GeBCIF t µ. . ... VP 2U " I ..... uv. 11"1 > V-£11 .-.. . ~ Up zu .......... YMIR 4S'h ., ... • ~ S'I\ .. ... Up t7.J 17\o\ ""' VelNell '~I) ... ' • . ... Up 11 I " 1'\lo v ... Dvt ' '"' 6 Flngrm WI 1 ... . ... Up 16.1 41 0 14 Vtl<ro ,,_.. ,. 1 ~~· ' . I ... Up IU 12"1 l:W. VktreSI , ... 1\o. I , . .... Up ,..., ""' ., .. Vldeoep 1\. , .. t Re.,co • . \'I UP U.l ,.. . V•NBth I~ 17 ... 10 MMlon ..... . "' Up ~ """ J2 Wern El """ nv. II Sylles IJ . I .... Up 11.0 11 .... 11\IJ Wt/IEl'W' 12 .... ""' 11 Beys.Rt Ill(, . l\lo Up 11.S ~-Weldlrn ~ .... ll o.-1 ... 11.. . .... Vp 12-S 17111 ,. WC>eep n.... 21'-u Cymet 1 . "" Up ILO ""' II~ u ~In 1 .... . "' Up "·, 11 , ..... WHolO U' .. ,,.. " " ........ " . '"' Up 11.1 1~ ""' Wmor<: " 171/. " Mee.or<> .... . ... Up IO.J we11r ... ""' 11\'o v~a Wlt.erQ I ""' ,, .... II Fl.aAuto 1lo.o . •• Up '°"o JO'olo-WOIVAIU • ..... " =~"n 11\IJ • I Up u m-. UV. Womet 11 11\rl 111 , ... . II. Up .., 15141~ W-l..OI ,..,. JO 21 US M Otny l • "" Up t .1 " 11V. u OfCC "" 10 .. . ... Vp u 1111> 111\ Wrl:c':W 10"9 IYt JJ CP Rt> wt •"-. "" Vp .., I~ IS'h Zion ts n 21"" 14 lntnwcl ,. ... • 1V. Up .., t1'h 1l'h n.e.. Nol ..,.,i 1uo1e JS MlclPecAlr , ... . "' Up .., ' tYt ~~ DOWNS -LASI Pict. _c';'(. Blyv-, .. " '"' Form~ 2'h lh MonfCOI 1 , ... NASDAQ SUMMARY I ~~ ..... Oii 11.• Bonen1 '"'"I ... ,., ..... 1~11"· ::or~ 11\!o 111'1 2 ..... -I Off 11.1 8rwTom ~ ·~ l'renll I 13 IJ\I) 27 27"" l NordR., • -1'> Off t•.7 Buck-IO'h ·~ Fr .. so ...... Ith Mor9R .. • 114 • Bufl .. 1 tt"' 231;, l'rtmnl ~ th Morsnln 1211. I~ NEW YORK (API -MHI ec:tl .... -· s Bur~ 11'1'1 11\lo FullrHB 1111. ""' MolClw "" 7 ... -<-.. SlOCU "1l::lecl by NAM>. 6 CNL In 2Y. 2-GnAull'll ,.... 3 ... Mueller " 20\lo ' CPT a I~ UV> GnO.wcs ,.,.. 2~ NerrgC 22'h UV. N-Vol-d ASked ~· • .C:.IWIS.. u ,. GnRIEsl U I;. ISlt. ND•~ IS...1W. MCIC ... tOf,100 .. VJ .. "' -' <:.nrdl ,,.. , ... GevEl'n IO II NflWllS , ... ltYt T...omi. C.-0 .. .... ''"' _, E11lttv .. JIU.JOO 3VI ,., -.... 10 C:.,,En .. ,. 11·1' Gr ... Sc ,,.. 11'0 NJR-l:W. 1Jll't lrwTom . ~:= .-. "' -14 Cac>S.' llV> Ill'> Grey-tO M NYAlrl 21'> '"' Apple<: • 12\1') ,,_,, • Yt 11 <:.i>Alr J'9 ,,.. GlflntJI • 10 Nl<llOG 6 6Y. lnt....o .. 205,200 2"11 -• 1"' u C•ree;,, INI~ Gyr.,.,,, ' "' Nlelsn A ...... _ Acedlns . 204000 ,, ... 11\<o • "' u <:eius .... 10 H"'°" 1 7\1') Nlelsn B ....... 08-.. '':i-, 21..J2 J 11·1• -•·» " Q\erRlv J2 n v. HemlPI lfl;. 12 .... Nike B JJ'4 )4 s, ........ I .JOO 1J IJ\4 t l'h " CllrmS 11\0 "" Herctwu , ... 1-. NoC«O. 13'4 ,,.. 11 Cl>rt-' '"" I"" Hr pit-..... '"' NwtNGI 11 11Yo VllNetl .. 132,100 UYt Ullo -'-II Chrnl.H IO II He~ 2.S\lo U'h NwstPS IS..'"'°' AdVenc;ecl 01 It OIHUll 16 11..., He I 20 ,..... NO•ll » Milo Dec lined m 111 c--l1 H e c 11 n 0 NUCClrJ> 14: ,.!: unc......., . . .. . . . . ... . . 2.42• 21 Clrfk.o •Y> .... "" 20 Heftrdl' NuttSy a l.M n Cit~ "' ,.... , . "' 2 ' au-..... 12 .... T.C.I ,_ .............. ,, 1J ClllUIA _,, ... ,Ho_ 21.11 , ... ~= J2 :a .... 1 -~················ .. 2• CltJUIB JI 31'1> .__ IO 111111' ~ --····-············· 21.-,400 u » Tot.I Mies ••.••••••• MUTUAL FUND NL ~~;« ~~ 'H~ !r..~.:1 ~ HI lcm IO.• I0.79 HvttGlll 10.20 PC111TF unevell ISi ~: h l're I.XI NL Grwltl S.7' 6.N us G¥I 6.9'1 NL lncom :uo :UI ldellty ~: TrFd ""UNvell Auet IUS NL TM Sii 9M 10.SI 80fld 6.IS Nl IMll*'t U7 HL Conon Jl,11 Nl Inter< ..... : GOl'lffd .. ., NL 1..c.p 1.71 U2 01lny LIS..... HIYld tt.n 12AI Eq Inc II." NL 111ve1 ..,. •.71 h ell 19.IS NL NtRet S.,. S.'2 ~ lt.of2 lt.82 TeJ<Ea 1.1' t .M Mun Bel s.a NL hrt lnvst 1.is I .fl l'hlll 1'.M NL 111v llldic 1.17 Nl Gvt 59< 1.93 NL t11v llOl ._., 9.>J Hllnco 7.ot NL '"WAin 0-: HI Ykl 9.10 NL IDS 1k1 US 4.09 LI ,_.,,, 7.2' NL IDS 011 S.2.S S.71 Purlln t . .S Nl IDS~ 11.01 11.97 9.ot IR I OS HIY J.M 1.40 HI. NL NL NL 10$ NO l.51 7.U I OS ""9 '-" .42 11111 Mil .... t.o IOSTll 2.M U6 ""' $Ill 11 •• It.IS I ft¥ 914 6..A1 l. ts 111, Ver 7.• 1.11 lllV """ Sumllo 10 -'" Oii t•.O "°'"' Sl'I -... Ott 11.1 R .. on '"" -~ Oii 117 AGS av. -1\lo Off IU SHtteTr .. -1'1> Ott 12.l G!Swtln >"' Yt Off 1U Emllrt WI ~ -"' Off 11.S ...... '"' -"' Off 11.S ~~ ..... .. .... Off IO.S >'!>--... Off 10.0 Glblon I • I Off , ... SlltrpfGt •lo> -.... Off 11.0 o--. 1-.. \lo Off t.s H-...0 , ... .... OH ,,, Ml.-"" ..... ~ Off t.I CeM\lrl 2 ... .... Off .., C:-ln9 .... -"' Off u lnlllo ' 211io .... Off u s-• Sl'I .... Off u T_,. Sl'I Ill Off u H-1 "' Ott u DltlPnl ..... "' Off a.1 II NY E COMPO ITE TRAN A€11IONS 1110tanCW.. lllC\WH ......... , ........ , • ._ •• MIOllWIU. "''"''· , ... '°''°"· ..... ,, .... c••C••••ff nou Ile .................... '", ........ ••o llftTIHIT I t Housing prices to fall 15%? SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A bank eoonomlat predicta that interetst ratee coupled with • court rultn, on ta1umable 10tna could whJtUe 16 percent oU the price of houttna in California, the molt expenalve state in the nation to buy a home. Ted Oibeon, Crocker Bank v1ce p~t and eenior economllt, eetimat.ed that h~na prices will drop at leaat 6 percent. ln 1982 tnd another 2 percent or mo.re in 1983. Morioge interest rtte9. now about 16.5 percent, could falJ-to 14.6 or 15 percent by mid-1983 and to 12 or 13 percent by 198&, he said. However, If interest rates remain at the 16 percent level, home prices could drop by u much u 15 percent by 1983, Gibeon aaid. I Irvine firm's earnings off 1 Alpha Microsystems of Irvine reports lower earn.inp with net Income of $24,601, or 1 cent per share, for the quarter ended May 31. Income ln the corretponding 1981 period was $289,817, or 16 cents, prior to the cumulative effect of an accounting change, which brought net income to $379,817, or 21 oenta. Sales fell to $5,363,251 from $6.207,487. Alpha Micro designs, manufactures and market& microcomputers. June retail sales drop By Tile A11oclated Pre11 F.conomists counting on consumers to pull the economy out of recession were dismayed by ~e government's latest report on retail sales, which showed many shoppers stayed home in June. The Commerce Department said Tuesday that retail sales, including those of cars, plunged 1.5 percent in June from the month before. It ~as the sharpest drop since October and followed a re~ 2. 7 percent sales gain in May. Auto sales declined 6.9 percent. "It's not an encouraging sign," said Robert Gough, vice president of Data Resources Inc .. a Lexingto~. Mass., consulting firm. "If, July and ,Au~t folio"':'. swt with new declines, then Id say we re 111 trouble. Realty meeting planned Jim Wood, president of Unique Homes. Inc., Corona del Mar, will discuss the real estate market at a meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Irvine Coast Country Club. For information. call 675-6000. Valley chamber plans Expo The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce will present its third annual "Business Expo" July 27 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Holiday Inn, C.OSta M.esa. Chamber members will display products and sel"Vlces. For information call 962-4441. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AYERAGlS NEW YORI< (AP~Selee. Wed. ptlce ~ net c~ of ttw llltMn moll actl.,. H•w York Sto<k E•c""noe 11-•. tradlllCI Ntion.lly al mo<• l,..n $I HEW YORKIAPI F l,,.1 Oow·J-•"9' IO< Wed • Jul. 14 STOCKS ~ " .... .._ c .... a.. JO Ind tl•.4' IJf.•2 llS.76 111 ,. • •·" .1~ 20 Tm m 11ll•19 Jll It m .s.+ o., t8M 1, .. ,..., .... Euon • •. t'7,IOO 7tYI Anwr T&T 1,006,700 S7V, VI SIOOllc.I tSJ,IOO 11'-• ''°' CIGNA(p n -,AGO 31'" • \I, AlldSlr\ S'4, 100 11"1 • ..... ~z:r.:. m:: ,~:: : ~ Ne1Senv Ul,'00 1''•• Ill S.•l1t" S17,100 14 -'• WarrvCam JOS.tclO -•I t~~~y..., :.::~ ~~ . \, Int Horth '71,000 1t ~ AllRk hOd .... toO ll... • 1•-. ~· Up IS 7 Up U • Up IJJ UP 17 t Up 11 > Up 11 t VP 11 .J Up ,_. Up It UP '1 Up I t U p 1.0 UP 7,t Up 1.• Up 7.7 Up 7,t Up 7,• V• 1.2 Up 7,2 up 7 I Up 1 I Up t 1 Up ti up 6S UP 6.S P\:I Of! IU Off 12 0 Off .... Off ICU °" t.1 Off , .. Off 1.A OH 1.A OH '-' ()ft ••• i()ff ~! ••• u ~i °" .. E t: g:: u E , .. ,. ,,. GOLD COINS HIW vo•uc (AP> itrloee tet ~-....... -.......... ~· ..... ::t"' .... ' tf'Or OL, 1374.lf, up " ·=-..... , lf'O¥ ...... .,, ... 1111 ............... .,... .......... n. ........ ..=-: =.r .... "' .... ..... i::,. •• ' 1S Ull 106 n 101 S6 10S as 107 OS o ... U Slk 1" <10 J170S )1'01 llO ... 0 .. ""''" 7,1«2,00C Tran 1,u7,D: VIII• •.70C , U Sill '·'"·· WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VORec; IAPI Jul 1• Adv~.., Oe<ll-UncMncled Total •l_.. N•• n•Of"'\ New IOWS Toon •n ,,, .. , llU 1' ~ HEW YORK tAPI Jul •• AClvenceo O.cll""" Uncl\e"9t<I Total il-. New MQl>s Htw low. METALS roes., ... ,.. m 11$ s Joi Prev .,., , . 110 n1 ,.,. 1 n NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrout metal pt!QeS Wednesday Copp9f 68~·71 oenla a pound. U.S. delUnatlons. LMd 28-28 oenla a pound. Zinc 37_.0 cent• a pound, deti--.:1 Tin $6. 1896 M«al1 Wee« composite lb.Alulft'"-7fr 77 c»nta a POUncl. N Y fllwcwy $370.00 per ..... ~ $25400 troy oz , N.Y. SILVER Handy & Harm1n, Sll.•70 Par troy ounce. GOLD QUOTATIONS ly The AH I c'-'M ,,._ Selected world gold pricea Wed~•y Lendon: mo<nlng ft•l11g: '353.75, up $1.25. LAlfMloA: allemoon fixing: $352.75. up S0.25. l'wte: allemoon llldng· Holklay-matM! doaed. fr8Mtwt: $354.00, up $15.2•. ZWtcft: Leta fixing· 1354.00, up M.50 blet; '354.75 Mked. ...... • ...,_ only deity quote 1362.76. up S0.25. lnllh:nt only deity quot. $352..76, ut> I0.25 . .......... onjy dllly QUOtt ~., S310~. up so.~. SYMBOLS ... , I I· -~ .. .--.. ----- GET ALONG, BIG DOGGIE -Whether Sally, a German shorthair, knows it or not, she has been turned into a horse by 22-month-old Audrey Johnson, dressed up for the California ,.,~ Rodeo in Salinas. The city is filled with horses and cowboys, who will compete for $250,000 in rodeo prize money. M Wfbjelin•w TM i. :,,.,. .,. ... "°'''JI .... W. ~It! ...... ....,. T"~folltwl'lt PtrlOll 1111 ACTION WON> ""°°-...WO.ltd 1'11 u. Of IN ~ OINT~ Ho, • AOM1e Tr• LMw. ..__ ""'* I ~ ~ lt111 If A~~=-, ... Hftclt. ~Terril, Ho. 4 M1111 Tret eo.ce...... **1 LMI. ~ Ctlltomlia tl111 Tiie '1Cllllou1 lu1l~M NtlM MeM L. 'Intl. Ho. 4 MMll rtlt rr•d 10 tltowo ~II lllt d In T,.. LaN. lrWW1 ~ H711 Ot1ntt County on flwuary U , TJlll ~ .. _......-l9r M 100I, llldlWNll. Curll! Guy Hert11,.11, 1700 MIN I.. TWYtl &uutatad "-'· c..ct, "'*"°"· ,,. .................... tN c.llfo; OollftlY OWk of Or...-County °" Tll9 ... OOllCNoled by J4/!t 11, ttu. M P1'1W Ourtifl ~ Hlrlmlrl PublllMcll OtMte Coa.tl O~ Thia -.1111T1e11I Ml llled wttfl IN ...... """' ,., tt, •. -•. 11U ~ CWtl of °""" County ~ 11....a .11#11 ti. INI. ----::~~~~----,...,. , l'ubllltlff Or1n90 CoHI Di iiy ~ WJ NcM, JllM 24, J41!t 1, I, 18. 1N2 ..... ITAT_,.. 2104-12 =naull.A OUPVO I .A.: Ill 0UMY0 I.A.; (0) 010 ~o I .A. Koll Oonter, lulte Hoo, •ooo MtoAtlllur l twd ........... OAtlttO. .. IUU.,1,0 CUl'IVO I .A., ==: ~ Co .. ,. ....... In -•ow.,.. .. :::· ~ ..... 10 DI': .,,. bullnlll le OOftductod by I oorporllllon, Gt\IPO Cwnoo I.A. n-wc.1ne1 TNt ltl .. ~ t° w11ti Ille County c.ti of Ortnoa County on Juf'/ 14, 1M2. ,_ Publlltled Orange 00111 Dt ll) Piiot, JIJlo/ 15, 22. 29, Aug. 8, 1N2 ,_. M)ncl ,_IC Mna ;m.'M.lfl&"tl. ..... ""**' N mMIW IUH•H um .Jr..~ .......... Tiit loll••lnt ,.,.... .... LYN':1 Vlil.INTINI =*~=~"= '"0'1~TIH, I Clwlt_,J,u, floll1tou1 1t111l11111 n11111 of ~ ..:::..~:.. 0 A I." 0 II !ii I A 0 LA I M t OOtPOrllloft. ·=· ._ COHf4A,T~TI 8' 1000 MeoAt111ur ~ ._.. ~ "• IMt., llnl• An9. Otlllorni. t27CM, Tl"8 111'811.i °"' d • If Tiit flot1Uou1 buelnt .. ntme ~ ' • ........... .., h l)el1Mr'ltllp -Jeoo4le ~ fllld Ofl f.l1-tl In "" CcM!ty of JoM w. ~.,,. °'9no1, ,,.....,,, M Heme Ind Acktr .. of the Thie ....._,. -~lllt ,.,._, WltMrewlng. c.ti luen w. ~Jc:!. N. 8hen.r 1 • 1M2. of ~ on ..,..., Of*'91, c. ..... ,.,.,, e.,,v Ocfttl, I01 I . Tan A--. Publlelled Ottnte CoMI Otff) OtlflOA, ~=.:= Piiot July 15, U, 2f. 414 t, tNI ,~ 118242 Pubtlell•d Orange COHI Delly .,._,.,,. -- Piiot, July I, t , II, 12, 1112 --;;tN;M;,._nftjj:;;"";;;"i'--i&:r- Hl2·H IMTano. TO .U AT Ml.IC N011C( PUllLICI~ HoClce II llet.tiy Q1wn tN11 on NIWPOM.-.a fuwN!y, IN 27111 cley of .My, tNa, '*"'ID SC~ IMIT'Net et tO:OO a.m. et: L.ICIAL NOTIQI Ofl"OA County 8hertff.Ccwontr, Notlol, le her.i,y ~ dl.i IN HtnlOf '"'°'au;_,, ttot ._.,,.. loard of Eduo1llon of the Df!W, Coron. del Mw, CA pWrtUll'lt Newport•MI H Ul\lfltcl lcllool 10 Hetbor end Nav'91tlon Oocr. OletriGt et lie ,.., metelng of .My ~804. the &hef'lff-CorONr of the 13, 1N2. dtolettd lie lntentloft 10 ~ of Ofenqa w4ll ... at pubic leaM Ille L.lndbtrgti ld!ool, located _...,., lo the ~ bidder, tot et 220 liHI Urd 81rMt, Co••• Qlllh, In IMlfl;I mon.y of Ola 1-"'"«1 Mell, Clllfornle. The Notice to ltat ... die fOllow4ng ......i: Blddere end Leeu Form• ere ~~.:....Homtmede lt'llilal>le for tnepectlon M IN offl09 ,..,_ ......,.bet: CFZ 1211A006otV of the luelneu Men1ger. 1157 Aegielretton No.: CF 1288 AV Plecentlt Awenuo, Coeta Mete, lo9t Type: Ca.bin Cru1eer ~ the llour9 of 7:30 AM to L.enotll. 22'8" 4:80 PM, Monday through Friday. Av1lt1ble for lnepectlon. 1.00 s1se-e.2 SHl•d Bide 10 LHll muet l>t a.m .. dell of Nie ,,.,.. reoeived on or before 2:00 PM. BRAD GATES, ... _""' 11111\TV'r Publl•hed Orange Coett Dally Auguel 4, 1N2, et the offloe of llM SHERIFF-CORONER "_,,, ""'._ PM. June 24, July 1. I. 15, 1912 ~ Manee«. et ...,, time County of Orange, ---::==~~--....;.;;...._--l 27~ oral bide,.. lleo be recel'4cl. Tht Calttornle f'ICTTnOW .._.. -----------1 Boord of Educolton ... tMa nno By: K. Btown, SeriteM• NAm ITAT'119NT fltltt.IC NOTIC( M:tlon to -d the l.aMo It ltl Publlehed Oreng1 CoHt Diiiy ~~ig pet90f'9 -doing ---::::===~~=-~---! '::r.'fu moetlna beQ1nn1na et 7:3C Pllol. July 16, 1982 A·AUTO ACCIDENT, 4400 '::~~~~=· P • Tueldey, .(uguit 10, l982. 31""'2 MacArthur Boulevard, Suite 370, Tti. following '*'°"' are dolno Raymond R. 8cMlerer NlllC NOTICE l\ltwpol'I BeecllF Collfornia 92MO t>ul4neee H : Bull.-Manag« ALLEN & LATI, AllC>moy9 •• ewe LEASING 17220 :1~0letrlct Lew, 4400 Mac.Arthur l outevatd, N1whope Street S0u1te t03 Publlahed Ora~e CoH I Diii) Suite 370, New port Beech, Fountain v111ey, CA t2708. · Cellfomle 928e0 J AMES L. CLAYTON, 64 Piiot. July 16. 22, • t912. Thi. buel,_ 11 conducted by en Ctoarw11er, Irvine, CA 92714. 3199•4~ lndMduel. BYRON l WILLIAMS. t8272 Robert F. Allefl Jr. Tiibury Circle, Huntington Beech Thia llelemant wu fifed with the CA 92849. ' IN'ftlfTIOM TO NU. AT County Clerk of Orange County on STEVEN J. SHERWOOD 15 flUltJC AUCTIOM Ftennous 11Us•as NA• ITATl •NT Tiie following peraona are doing bualneu 11. SUSAN M COX and GERALD LEE COX. doing bualneu u RELIABLE PILOT CAR SERVICE, 28592 OOlorot1, Mlulon Viejo, CA 921191. July 2. 1982. Sunrlae, Irvine, CA 92716. . Notloa IS 11ef«Jy glV'ln Ille! on ------------i:===========r============ir===========J P'91271J Thlt bulln-II conducted by 1 Tu.day the 27th Clay Of Juty 1N2 Publl1h1d Orange Coeat Dell) gener11 panrierahlp et 1o:oc)1.m. el: ' • Ptll.IC NOTJC[ NlllC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTICE Piiot, Juty 16• 22• 29• Aug. 5· 1N2 Steven J. Shenwood OrMge County Sller'lfl-<:oroner, SUSAN M. COX, 28592 Ootoroeo, Mlulon Viejo, CA 92891 GERALD LEE COX, 28592 Ooloroee, Mlulon \llejo.-CA 9~1. Memory training offered Los Angeles Federal Savings and the West C.oast School of Memory Training will be sponsoring a two-hour seminar Aug . 5 in Newport Beach on how to apply tec~ques of memory traLnLng to business and social life. The instructor, Dan Mikels, is the director of the memory training school. The 3eJJl.inar will be held at Los Angeles Federal Savings, 3201 Newport Blvd., from 7 to 9 p.m. For information. call 675-4500. Video meet topic T he Orange County Entertainment Write rs' Assn. will go t o the movies, in a manner of speaking, at a meeting Wednesday. The program wi 11 begin at 2 p .m . at Coopers, 1601 E. Lincoln. Orange. Guests will be Dwight Cromie of Cal-Coast Video, Dena Jeannette of Videovision Associates and Clark Dwinell and Dar rell Reagan of Saddleback Productions. For information, call (213). 592-4596. OM.NGI COUNTY SUNNOlt COURT no etwto c..... Dr. w.at p,o.1u .. a.taAM.CAtl?Oa PUMTIFI'! CAIM>L V. Cfll08L D•,INDANT: l 'INI ST C. CROSS, CUMIS INSU'IANCI soc-. TY t INC., e Wll09Al ln •• r per a ti o A, WIST I It N llOitTQAQI COltPO'IATION, e C•11• ..,,_...._ DOH f..X, 1--~=-------------~=~~------i·---------· ----f 3204-42 Thia tt1tomen1 wu flled wllh the Hart>orPettOIBurMu, 1to1 Beyllde fl1ClmOUS llUS*EN '1CTIT10US ..,..... FICTTTIOUS llUatNEH •-.,. 11111\-County Clerlc of Orange County on Or!ve, Corona del Mir, CA pureuant NAm STATWmNT ..... STATE•NT ..... ITATEMENT "'-·"' ""'~ Juty 8. 1982 lo Harbor •nd Navigation Cod• Thi followtng peraon la dolng The following petlOnl '" doing The following peraon 11 doing ACTrtlOUa was '1127• 6()().5(M, the Shoriff-<:oroner of Iha bullneN ee: bual,_. u bull,_. u · ...._ STATDm#T Publlalltd Orange Co111 Delly County of Orarige w11 MN It publlo DOCTOR DETAIL . 944 WINOSLIPf<ITES,829Termlnel CtiUBBY"S , 2233 Fairview The lollowlng pereon la dolngP!IOl,Julya. t6,22,29, 1982 llUCtJon to the ~t bidder, for Cheyenne. Coste ~. Caltfornlo Wey, No. 12, Colle Me11, CA Road, Colle M .... CA 92628. buel,_ u : 3103-82 cut\, In lawf\ll money of the lJnl1*! 92e28 92627. STEVEN R. SHULMAN, 4002 OIL PATCH MAINTENANCE Stat•, the fOllowlng voeeel: Petric le Shannon , 944 DOUGLAS ~AV MORAN, Weel Cryatal Lene, Sanla An1. CA 1980 Lake Street, Hunllngto~ flt8.IC NOTIC( H~~:_~ CoeM Cheyenne, Coete ..._, California 20402 Bayview Avenue, San11 Ana. 92704 Beedl, Colllomlo 92648 FIClmOUS "" ......... .._. 490 9282e CA 92707. Thi• bullneN la conducted by en Jamee Thtyer Berney 4 !9 ...._ ITA~S Aeolttretlon No.: Cf 7491 AX ,Ji:!:.""9" la conducted by en ,nJ,=.,~11ness IS conducted by en lndlvlOull Steven Shulman Mein Streol, Suite 134. Huntinciton The IOllowlng l*IOnl are doing ~I ~~·~ Pllrlejo Shanno11 Oouglu R Moren T · Beach, Collfomla 9~ ~ 8I: A-::r,ebl I I Thia 1t1teman1 wu flied with the This stelement wu hied wUh the cou"n~ 'be~~';:'nge~~ •:: Thie~ II c:onduc1ed by an MISS I 0 N VIE J 0 SWIM 119oa • or nepectlon· 8 OO County C1er1c of Orange County on County Clerll of Orange County on June 30, 1982 lndfvlduol. RACQUET CLUB, 28221 Tierra 1.m., 'e~~ATES June 22. l9S2. July 6. 1982 F11254M J-T. 8amoy Circle, Ml11lon Viejo, C1lllornla SHEAIFF-eoRONER Thia INlllneu 11 conducted by a generel panoerlhlp Suun M Cox end Ger aid Lee Cox Thia 1tll1ement w .. fllec:I with tho County Cleril of Ofenge County on June 21. 1912. ..... ,..,, Ir-., A ~of111hNll Colp, 1111t I . .,_ SL l l10 Whittler, CA 11101 121a1..._. F1am Publlahed Orange Coeat Oalty Piiot, Juf'/ 1. S, 15, 22, 1982 2913-82 ,111-"1-Thie .... _, ... fllod with the 92et1 "-·-"--1s Publlahed Or1nge Coeat Oallw Coun~ C1ert1 of Or-"'--ty on s wt•• & "•cou ,,,_.,ty of ""ange Publllhed Or1nge Coast Dally Published Orange Co 1 o 11 "' J 8 5 2 ...,. ' -..,... """"'' '"' '""' ET CLUB, • ,._, .. __._ ' -----·• Pl aa I "I ... 101. uly . 1 . 2, c•, 1982 Juty 1 , 1982. Cellfornle """""Allon, 20221 Tler're .,..,.,.,_ .. ,...,,....,_--. fol, June 24, July 1, 8, 16, 1982 Plto1. July 8, 15. 22. 29. 1982 2999·82 ,_,n Circle, Mi'UIQ;; Viejo, Catllornla P By: K. Brown. Ser1t9Mt N.Am STAT'DmNT _________ 2_10_1_..a_2 2935·82 1----Nll--IC_NO_T1C£____ Publlehed orang• Coast Delly 92881 ubllahed Or1nge Co11t Dally The following POf'90nl -doing NIUC NOT1C£ "8.IC NOTICE YOU ·-.. -·ULT ·---Piiot, Juty 16' 22• 29• Aug. ~·1~12 "~a=-11 conducted by • Pilot. Juty 15 ' 1982 3170-12 ~W~EEL PARTNERS, 302 _ _...,. _ ------------1~,..... Onyx, Belboe l1lend, Celllornle YOU.,. M DIFAUL T UNDIR A YOU AM .. DVAUL T UNDO A A DUD °' TRUST DA'RD M'M. •-.,. MnnM' Swim & Racquel Club fltllllC NOTICE 92802 0.ID °' TflUST DATB Al'M.17, DHO op: TltUST DATRD APM. 21, 7, 1H 2. UNLI SS YOU TAK• "~ l'IUlrK T1m Eaton, Ned H LM ... tt ... 302 n...... 1•1. UNUSS YOU TAKa ACnON t•1. UNUSS YOU TAKI ACTIOM ACTION TO ,'IOTICT YOU'I Manager FICTITIOUS IUllNllS ' ., "'" ~., ... To --er y---TO ---ACTTT10U9 ...,..... n..-... t II ...... ST ....... .._NT Balboa llland, Collfoml• 92842 ,......,a ......... nvrwonfY, rTtVoaCT YOUR"'°"'"""· "'°"RTY,ITMAY•IOU)ATA NAmSTAW ,.,,..,1eman1w .. ledwtthlhe ,... .. ,so-.o AichltdH.VanOeVeent.2981 fT MAY • IOU) AT A PUmJC fT MAY • IOU) AT A PUllUC PUllUC SALL • YOU Nim Ml Tiie followlno ~eon •• doln :OU,,ty Cleril of Orange County 00 Ttie foltowlno peraona .,. dolno ChllHU Wey, Legun• Beech, SAL I . I' Y 0 U NI ID AN SAL I . IF Y 0 U N 11 D AN IUl.AMATION Of' ,,_ NATUM ~ e1: une 18, t982 buslnna ae· Collfornla 9285l ~TIDN °' THI lllAn. IXPLANATIOM °' THI NATUM °' ,,. "'OCISDIMO AGAINST HILLSDALE ASSOCIATES '1t1804 u NI 0 u EL y Ac c ENT E 0 Robert E. Br 4401 ............ OP THI MOC._ AGAMef OP THS PROCllDINQ AOAINeT YOU, YOU SHOUl.D CONTACT A Publleh.O Orange Co11t Delly IMPORTS. 8055 Atlente, Sul11 142, °"'"• ~~, ~~SHOULD COWTACT A~~ SHOUU> CONT.ACT A u:,v~Of'TWUST'lnSA&.I ~~.~~7~200 llot.June24,Juty 1,8.152~~2 Hun~".f~~·g::~~:ORT. ~Or., u Conode, Cellfomle NOnca OP 1'1'UITB'a SM.I NOTICa OP TilUSTU'S SALi T.S ..... M1t0 Norman A. z:.Her. 2127 Yadl -----------20242 Remona Lene. Huflt~too Stanley H. &inker, 226'/t P-1, T ... .._ --.S. "9dlent. l\ltwpol'I Beach, COl'fornllll Beach, CA "'2848. ROB RT Belboo llland, Cellfomle 92M2 -_,,. T .... MUI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thol t2teO • Thie bu*-Is-....~ .... .... NOTICE 18 HEMBY OIV!H. INll NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. lhal on w_..._,.~ ..... --4, 1iii .. DAVENPORT, 20242 Ramone Lane, ..... ,..._ .... .,. e W....__._. ~ .. 1-w-----• .._. Tlllil ~ 11 oonductiect by -1enT.-... --•• Hun1·1nglon ...... __ ... CA """•& generel pertnenhlp. on --.. ... -· ot on --•· Auguet •. 19'2, ot. 9':00 o'cloc* 1.m. of IOld cley, In the lndlvlduel. ... , ..,.,. --,_.,, .,.,.. Heel H L.....ttt Jr 9.00 o'aodt L m. 916d ""'"'IN t:OO o'aodt Lift. ol IOld day, In tti. room Ml u lda for conduc:t1n9 Norman A. z:aHer MAm STATlmWT ThlS bull,_. i. conducted by This ltltemant wu 111.d with 1111 room Ht H ide lor conducting room H I aside for conducting Tru1tiee'1 Seloe within the of11oM of Thia etatement -fllod wttl'I 1 The following !*'eons •• doing husband & wife County Cler1t of Orange Cour'lty of T~•·1 Seloe. wllHn Iha ofllc9e of Truet•'18elee. wlthWI the offlo9 of REAL ESTA TE SECURITIES Courlty C1ert1 of Ofonoe Courlty bullneN ae: Rober1 M Devenport .My 14 1982 REAL ESTATE SECUR ITIES REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, located et 2020 Nonh Jully9. lN2. S A.VE INC . e Calllornle Thl1 atalemenl was hied wllll the ' . F191m SER\llCE, locol9d et 2020 North SERVICE. locetod *' 2020 Nor1h Broadway, &Ille 206, In the Qty of p:.,_ corpor1llon, 1520 Paclllco, County Cieri! of 0<1nge County on Publlahed Orange Coul Diiiy Broadway, Suite 208, In the Cl1y of Broadway, ~ 20e. In lhe Cl1y of Sonte Ana. County of OrltiQe, State p blllhod Orange Cou l Dell Aneholm, CA 92405· July 8 1982 Piiot ~ .... 16 22. 2t .... _ 5 ,......., Santa Ana. County of Oranoe. Slate Sante Ana. County ot Orange, Stele of Cellfomle, COASTLINE BXJITY u . 29. Y Europeen Perll lnterne11001J · '1ta10 '~, ' · · · ._. ' ..... of Cellfomla.. Cooetllna Equity, Inc.• of c.11fotn1a. Coalllna Equtty, Inc.• INC. a Collfornla corporation, .i Piiot, Jl"'1 15• 22• • Aug. 6• 1982 1nC . • Cal1fomie corpor11Jon. 1520 Publlahed Orange Cou1 0111y 3203-82 C111fornle corporation, H duly California corporation, H duly cWty appointed T""1• under end 1-------------Peanco, Anaheim. CA 92805 Piiot. M>ty 8, 15, 22. 29. 1982 NlJC N01lC[ appointed Tru11e1 under end appointed Trualee under end pur1uent 10 the power of sole rt11JC NOTICE Thi• bullneM is conducted by• 2930-82 1------------ pureuent to the power of Hie pureuent to the power of 11le conferred In that Olrteln Oeod of COfPOtlllon K..-n oonlorrod In 11\at oerteln Dead of confwrod In that oerteln Oeoc:1 of Trull eaecuted by PAMELA A. YOU AM .. DIPAULT UND9R A Europeen Perll ln1n1 PtllJC NOTIC( ACTTT10UI llUH•SS Trull executed by PAMELA A. Trual eaecuted by PAMELA A SHIER, an unmameo woman end a.a °' T1'U9t DATID lllARCM Inc. ..... •TA~ SHIER. an unmltr'led woman end SHIER, en unmarrteO woman end RICHARD ST. THOMAS end DIANE 1t, 1M1. UNLISS YOU TA9tl Peter J Piper, Pree FICTnlOUI -.SS The followlng poreons -0otne RICHARD ST. THOMAS ANO RICHARD ST. THOMAS end ~NA ST. THOMAS, hueband and wfte .. ACTION TO PltOTICT YOUlt Thia llet-t wu !Mod with lhe ,.._STA~ bullnele M : DIANA ST. THOMAS, hulband end ST. THOMAS. hulband and wife .. community property, recorded Mey PWIJlf'f,rTMAY• IOU) AT A County Clerk ol Orange County on The follOWing peraon la doing FIRST C A PIT AL; FIRST wife u community property, oommutllty property, '9COfded Mey 11, t911, In Book l4062 of Offlclal "*JC SAL.I. • YOU MIC AM July 8, 1982. butlneA •: AP ITAL C 0 RP .: C 8 G & recorded Mey 11. 1981, In Book 11. 1981, In 8ook 140!52 of Of11c1a1 Aecorda ol Mid County 81 page IXJl\.AMATIOM OF THS NATURR '1 .. 11 FOSTERS PHARMACY. t835 ASSOCIATES, 17891 Mitchell 14052 of Official ReconSa of Mid Aecordt of Mid County, 11 page t701. Recorder'• lnllru;,,.nt No. op: fl9 NOCUDllQ AGAINST Publlahed Orange CoHI Delly Newport Blvd .. Coate Mau, North, Irvine, Celltomle 92714 County. et page 1897, Recorder'• 1896, Recorder'• tnetrumenl No. 12678. by reuon of 8 broech or YOU, YOU SHOUU> CONTACT A Piiot, Juty 8. 16, 22, 29, 1982 Callforni. 92827 FIRST CAPITAL C 0 R • Instrument No. 12074, by,_, of 12873, by reuon of a bfeach of defeult In payment or porlormanc. L.AWYEI 2951·82 Terry 01vld Grent. 3177 0 RAT I 0 N. e Ca I If or n I e e bfeech or defeufl In peyment or def9Ul11n payment or performance of tti. ob41g•llona aecured thereby NOTIClr 0# TWUST'lrS aAU ..... IC NOTI Country Club, Coate Mau. cor-por1tton, 17891 Mitchell Nor1h, performance of Iha obllg1llona of tti. obllgetlona aec:ured thereby, Including lhlt breecn or default: T.S. Na. -""°'" CE C1llfomle 92628 Irvine, Cellfornle 92714 HCured thereby. Including that Including lhll brHCh or dofeull, Notice ol which wu recorded NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, thet FICTITIOUS llUSINESS Thia business la conducted by en Thlt bualnNI II conducted by I breech or deflUlt, Notice of whleh Notice ol which wu recorded February 1 1982 H Recorder"• on Wedneeday, Juty 28. 1982, et NA• STATE•NT lndlvlduel. cor-poratlon. wee recoroe:cs febNl.ry 1. 1982, .. February 1, 1982, 81 Recorder'• lnatrumenl 'No. 8iz--037S84. WILL 9:00 o'dodl e.m. of Mid day, In tM The 1 11 Terry OeYl<I Grant Flrlt Cepltal Corp Recorder a ln1trument No. lnatrument No. 82·037079. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE room HI u lde for conducting bull,_: .~ng peraona are doing This atetemont wee filed with IM M~t A. Cohen. 82..0071178, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BID DER FOR CASH TN1tee'1 s ..... within lhe otflceie of IRVINE SWEEPING SERVICE ='jg Clerk• 1982 of Orenge County on Thia .. :~='wu ...... with ....... AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, lewful money of tM United Slotee: REAL ESTATE SECURITIES 18372 Conatructlofl Circle Ent' ,._. u,. BIDDER FOR CASH, lewful money lawf\ll money of the United Siii•, or e C&lhler'• cf** drawn on • SERVICE. loco1ed et 2020 North Irvine CA 92714 . F11:M61 County Clertl of Orange County on ol tho United Stat•. or a Clllhler'a or a c:uhMw'a checl! drlW!'I 00 a 11118 or netlonol bank, e 11119 or 8'oadway, &Ille 20e. In IM City of Cerlyle O. Cornwell Inc Publlalled Orange Coeat Delly Juf'/ 7, tN2. chock drawn on 1 11111 or notional 1tete or netlonol bank, • atote or federel credit union or a etote or Santa Ana. County of Orange, State c 111 1 • • a Piiot, Juf'/ 1. 8, 15, 22. 1982 F1tllm bank,• 11e11 or federal credit foderal credit union, or a 11a11 or ledorelNvtoglandloeruuodetlon of Catlfornle, REAL ESTATE c!,.,~i!ric~~~'t;~~':rv.183~1 2791-12 Publlahed Orenge Co111 Dally union, or ...... or federal....,... 19der'al Nvlng9 and IOan eeeocllllon domlciled In lhlS ll•t• ... PIY9btl., SECURmES SERVICE. I Collfomle g27 t4 . ne. .._.,. MnnM' PllOt, .My 15, 22. 20. Aug. 5, 1982 and loan 8SIOCWtlon domlcMed In dOmldled In thi. alate, 1111 poyebleal the time of Nie, all rigm, tine and corporation, H d uly appointed Thlt. butlnMa 18 conducted b l'UUU\I l'IU1n..; 3201-82 this ...... .., peyat>M at '"' time of tho time of ....... 11ghl. thle and lnter•t held by It, .. TNltoe, In Trwtoe undot and purtUant 10 Iha corpor111on y • FICTITIOUS Ml ..... ..... Ill right, tl1'e end lntereet held lritereet held by It, e1 Trutt•. tn lhot real property 111uete In IOld -of •elo conferred In lhll Cerly1e 0 Comwolt Inc NAMlr STATlmNT "8.IC NOTICE by II, u Tru11ee, In that , .. , tnet real property situate In Mid County and Stele dHc:rlb.O u Oeoc:1 of Truet ~ by Carlyle 0· eomw.u' J The IOl!owlng pot9on1 ere doing _.__.., •Ull•N property tltuate In Mid Cour'lty and County end Slate, deecrlbed •• followl; · RtCK BYERS, reoordod Merc:fl 23, President. · r. ~ r ..... ,_. ---~ State, deecribed .. 1o11ow1: follow9: Parcel 1: Tho North-•t•rly 1911, In 800k 13991 of Ottlclel Thie····-· ... filed with the THE :fevEL CUT, 408 E 17th The ~tA~ Parcel t. The Nor1~erty half 40.00 fHI ol the Soulheellerly Aoc:orda of Mid Cour'lty, et P801 County ewtt oC Orange Count Street. Room 100. Coste MeH. ~"'";;""" ~ doing of the North'#Mterty 40.00 feat of PARC€L 1: The NortMelterlyllelf 24().00 .... of Lot 313 of l\ltwpol'I 1017, Aocorder'I lnelrumont No. Jvty II 1982 . yon California 92$27 H.L. CROUSE & ·ssoc .• lti.Southaae1erty2.-0.00IM1ofLot oft11eSouti-terty2.6ecreeofLot Helghta •• ahown on e map • by rtMOn of• br-=tl or ' ,,... Je 1 L Altcl 17 "' 313 of Newport Helgltte. a lhOwrl 313 of Newport Heigl'lll, ae lhOwrl recorded In book 4, peg1 13, IUlt In ~ or perfolmance Publlahed Or1nge CoHI Delly ne ynn neon, 22 10780 W11n« A~ &.lite 202 on• map recorded In book 4, PIQI on • mAP recorded In book 4, page Mlacellaneoua Map1 record• ol Ille obllgetlone MC\.red lhoreby, Piiot Juty a 15 22 29 1982 W"1dl", No 11, Newport Beach, Fount.eln Valley CA 92708 • 13, Mlacellenoous M11>1. recorda of Orl3, ~ MIPI. record1 of Orange County. CoNt«ru.. 11\ot br..::tl or dlltlllM. . . , • . 3102..a2 Cell'r::. 9~ord Dunmire, 1722 AckeCHrmUCKen FARHOU>o.unteln' V1eli.1l2 C~ Orange County. 81'119 """'"Y Excepting therefrom the of wHc::h -'~ Ac>r1I WMtcllft N · -, ,. P1rcel 2: An eHement tr Excepting therefrom Ille Nort'-t_.., half "'-eol. , 1"2. • Aocorder'a Instrument • 0· 11· Newport 8eecfl. 92708 ' lngrHI a nd egreu over the Souti-terty 2.-0.00 feol thereof P1rcti"2: An HHmenl for No. 12·118403, WILL SELL AT ~ l9TICf C.~t!!: It onclucted by ED HAYES, Loli Clrcle, Northweaterly 1.00 feet of the Aleo Excepting therelrorn the lngreu end epreu over the PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE cior-a1 portnerahlp~ 1 Hunllnalw°'1~~"' 107 .... B Sout'-81erty 247.00 feet of Lot 313 N~terfy S0.00 feet thereof. Northw11terly 7.00 feel of the HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH, FICTmOUS --.U Jen Atlclneon Tlbur~~ F~ ""V'=" CA 92-.. of l\ltwpol'I Height.a, ae lhown on a PARCEL 2: An lllement tor SoutMllterty 247.00 feat of Lot 313 mOl'l9'/, of tlle United Stet•, MAim STA~ This ai.t-t W8I llled with the Thie 0,......__ la ~ ........ :._.-8 mop~ In book 4, page 13. lhgreu end 1gre11 over tlle of l\ltwpol'I HolQhts, u e11own 00 a I CAlhlef • ctlOdl dflW!'I on I Tiie lollowlng poreot11 -........,. County CWtt ol Or Coun --,._,,_,_ ¥J Mtacellaneoua Mepa, record• of Northw11terty 7.00 feet or the map rOCOfded fn book 4 PIQI 13 • or national bank, 1 ttate or l>ullrMal ... ~.., ange ty °" general panneral\lp. Orange County SoulhMllefl'/ 240.00 feet of Loi Ml1cell1neou1 M1p1, records oj al credit union, or allele or KIMBERLEY FINANCIAi. June 29, 1982. Chu«* Atnold P1rcel 3: An HHment for 313 of l\ltwpol'I Height•. ee lhOwn Orarige County. eleavlnQlandloeneaodetlOn SERVICES, 1511 Tahiti Av•nue p bll hed 0 C F1'Ma Thie ttatemonl.,.. flled wfttl l1la lngreu end egren over the onemaprecordedlnbook4.poge Parctl 3: An HHmonl for ornlcl6edlnihle1ta1a ... peyableat LAgunoee.dl,COllfomlo92$6t • Pffou 1 range ont OellyCountyCletllofOranoeCountyon Northw111erly 1.00 IHI or the 83, Mlacel**>us Mapa. r-d• of lngrtu Ind egrHI over 1119 the lime of..-. 1111 right, tltle and Claude Bem1rd KOllOCk 1511 t, July 1• 4• 16• 22• 198~114.,.2 July 14, 1912. ·- SoutheMterty 240.00 feet of Lot 313 Orange County. North ea 1t1r1 y ha 11 of th• t-t held by h, • T""1•, In Tllllll Avenue Laguna Beech 1---------;:;.;..;..;..;;;.;;, .. ·-of Newport Height1, u allown °" e PAACEL 3: An euem•nt for NorlhWllllrly 7.00 feet ol lhe rNI property lltl.la1e In Mid Callfomll t2t61' • rta.JC NOTIC£ Pubtllhod Orat1ge Coall Delly map recorded In book 4, PllQ8 83, lngreu and agreu over the SOu1i-terty 240.00 feet of Lot ounly and Slit•. dHcrlbed 11 8rtan Scott Wood, 1511 TthlU Pilot, July 16, 22. 29, Aug. 6, tte2 84WOM Mllcellaneoua M11>1. Northw11terly 7.00 IHI of Ille 313 l\ltwpol'I Height.a 81 lhO'#ll on Olowl: Avenue ~ 8Hoh Celltomia f'ICTfTIOUI ........ 11~ c-No..1'7·72.e .Excepting therefrom the Sout'-terty 247.00feet of Lot 313 1 ,Mp recorded In t>oOk 4 ~ 83 Lot 19 of Trec1No.2334, .. .,., 92181 ' ' ...._ STATtmWT .......... NOTICal v .. lw\IO ""' ....s. Nor1'-tterty half. of l\ltwpol'I Heighll. ae lhowll oo • Mlacellaneoua Mapa,' orange map '9COfded In 8ook 12. Paoe 20 Thie bullnetl 1e oonducted by • The following e>eraon I• dOlng 1'lllt MWt-., lleelde....,... JOU Tne 1trHt eddren or other m1P recorded In book 4, pagee 13, County. • Mlsoollaneow M~ In Iha oflloe gener.i pertl'IOt'INp, bullneel .. : .-... ,_ ltelllt ....,... ...._ common dHlgnetlon of the rHI Mlecellaneoua Mepa, record• of The etreet eddron 0, other I the County Recorder of Mid Claude 8. KOUaok ADM.ARK, 21746 Ooeer1 Viale. HCllllOU8.,.. •a ,.. ,........ _.. • ...,._....,. property herelnebovo de9<:rlbed la Orarige County. common d"lgnetlon of the real County. 11)5.2&5-7110 ~ LAguno, Cellfomle t28n MAim STA1-t ille """' •••n ....... purported to be: 23t Alber1 f'Mlce. Excepting therefrom th• property lleteinat>ow deecrlbed le The atreel 1ddrH1 or other Tiiie lt8'emont -fllod with the Zetlerlund Corporation, 1 The follO*lflO pereon 11 dolno If you w11f1 to a.ti the edvtco of Coate M ... c.lltomle. Nort"'-terty hlllf purported to be: 232 Ced! Piece. common dMIQnatlon of tti. real County a.ti of Orange County on Ce llfornla corpora tion, 21745 buelnele • en attomoy tn 11111 m1tter, you The underalgned hereby The llrttl 1ddre n or otller Cotta Moat Cellfoml&. property llOlolllllbo\oe doecr10ed IS June 22 1te2 Ocean VIiia , Soulll Lagune , Cotw °'**"'-3153 ..... lfloulddoeoprompttyeoll\ot'f04JI dl1clelm1 11t ll1blllly for any common doutnetlon of 11\e reel The undorelg ned he reby urported to bo: 1541 Dolpllln ' · p:,._ C.iitornlet2tn L.ane.Ootle Meea.Ce19omia ._. -""" ~ If f/11'/, mey ti. Incorrect,_ WI Mid llreet add,_ property horelnat>ove deectlbed 11 dl1clelm1 •II llablllty for a ny errace, Corone dtl .._, CtllbnlL Pu~ Orange eo..1 Oalf't -'!'!!~ 11 ~ by • Je,i1' ......... 11A .,_ l.Me, -.cionllmo. orOlllorcommondMlgnetkln. llU'POf1ed 10bt:22t.Albert~. tnoorrectneeelnMICl *"'lldchoe Tiie und•rt l g nod ll trobyP1ot,June24 Jutyl 1.,,5 lta ..... ,...... -co.ta.,._,c..omlelllll AV I IO I U 1 t e d 11 o 1 1 d e Bald Nie wfl be m.ede wltl'lou1 co.ta Meea. c.llfomlt. or other common doeignetlon. dl1cl1lmt 111 ll1blllty for ony ' ' 2730-a ~ COrp. Tl* bl8lnell "~ "r • .._ .. ,_,,,II trtlt ... of ~warranty, eapreu or lmplled, Tll• 11nder1lgne d llere by Seid .. w111 be IMde ~ llloOit«h,..ln lllld Mnlllt..,...1____________ Mr.~ llldtoi1 dt .. ....., .....,. Ui&. • • 1111 e regarding title, po11111lon, or dl1cta lm1 111 llablllty for 1ny iHrrlnly, Hpre 11 or lmpllod . octw OOflllnOf'j da1191ottor\. ...C "°11C( ~ Prelldenl ~....., -.. &M. ........,. ....,. oncumbrancee. 10 utlefy the 1ncoowc11 ... In IOld..,... eddr-. r•gerdlnt lllfe, POlltlllOn, or Seid .-.. be mede wllMut Thie .....,... -flled wlltl the Tl* ••meiic -tllld .._ .. ••..._ LM le W-lu • prtnclpel ~ of the Nola or or Olllor COfMIOl'I Oellgnotlon. encumbrt ncH, to H tl1ty the arranly, HprHt or lmpt110.l--iiP1CiCinnm10U1ouii•iiiuii1i1i•ii11ii'-County Clertl °'Or-. COUflt'/ on ~~of Or-. COUflt'/ • ...... OCflor obliaietlon -ed by Mid Seid ...... be "*" wtlflout prtnolpol b~ Of Illa Noto Of ... ,dint tltl•. POIMMlon, or ..... STA~ June "' 1112. .My 12. -. •• u111 d deHI eollc:ller 11 Dood of 11'"1191. with lht•eot mnc1 ••rtt nty, 111pr111 or lmplled, ow. OblaeOon MCUnld by NICI t ncumbrtnce1. to H ll1ly Ill• Tiit .....,,. ,.... .. doll'I ,__ ,__ --io de un llbooedo en Mt• otllef 1um1 u provld.cl tll«oln: ,._.,ding lltlo. po11 .. 1lon, or Deed of fn.«, wtetl .,,....__ Ind prtnolpel btllllnce of lie *'t or ........ • PubllaMd Ot1ngo COMt Oelty "'-btleMcl Ottnt-0091 0..., oeu n to, d oberi e ll •o•r to 1*18 OdV9noee. N My, ~ Iha enculftbre ncH , 10 u ll1fy the otller eume u prcwtde4 IMfeln; 00.. au111h 1 ...-by llld 'l·f'.A.t . ,.ACING, 1011 w . Piiot, "'-14. Jlll:t 1, I. ti. 1112 Not, .Altt 11.12. n. Aue-5, 1tll ..., , r ' _..., de eota l!Wletl. t9me thereof Ind ,,.,..,... on Midi prtncepel ..,._ of Ille Noel or 1*18 OINonoel. H 1ny, under Iha Deed of fNll. .-....,_ Ind *" ..,_ o.. .._, ~ 11't 1-la _.. ., 1-..p -....._ II My llOuM. edvanctie. Ind P4lfl ...... = ottw ~ ~ by llld *""' tt..ot Incl ..._... on eudl otMr "'"" M Pf~ fMNln: 7 ' _.,. -•-.,. -,..... ............ ~. Md..,.....of111aTNllte of Deed Cit f M!l, Wltll intet9ll Ind~. Ind 1*19 ..... cNr1ae1 -........ If My, W.-lie Alan H.fleM,lt.11 .. ~, .._ ""'IK ~ ""'IK t. TO THtE DVIHOAHT; A cMI "" lruetl cntteCI by Mid 114 Ot'* """' .. prowtctecl tllerotn: Incl --of "" T~ MCI°' *"" .....,, end ....... 111111\ ........ QlllorNa tam -·--==" ........ ..__--.... T It fllo t t I I .... _ _. ... =-llCN.,_ II _,, under the ......--Md:J:: .... :'=: ~~ I ITAWOPr.•1@ ••@USA i. _, -19r Ille ru • o I ~II v• -• -·•• Ille tr"8t9 Cll'IMed ~ llld Deed of -A. o.iea. tn. ..._ -.,.. -........ ...,.. ,au. If )'Oii wlefl to obllgallon, lnc:ludl11g rffllOnably . tfl9f9Clt Md 1nW91t on IUClll Truot, Tiit 10111 ~nt Of Mid ...,_ lie T,_.. ol C.. ...... o.ltlw'Ala .... T1le ........ Pl'IOft le d9lnt MOii NIT• II ...aA,.. .....,.,......_)'Oll,,..,.iwn H llmate d f1t1. cllargee •nd mvMo11 end t*'8 ,..., dWOll oblltttlon, lncludlno r~ ._'"""'......,'W llNO...of Tllelftu I . fl t lr, 17501 ...,.... - .. d•)'t lffet tlll• evmmon1 •• ...-OftheTruetee,etllletlfN lfld ..... oflMTNltleend"of Hlflllettd ..... ohtrOll I nd Tr~ • .,,.., .... .Wt of Nici ....... c... ..... ~ ONI 11'0, AUTO I UPPLY HC"'10Ue• IH 111 W -*on ~ ... wtltl ltlle ooun 1 oflnltltloutltlctllonof thll Noel09.I• Ult tl'Wtl OtMelcl by Mid Deed of ...,._ olttlo TNlllOe et""""" o..._.lon, tnoludlfta ~.... ttOH arooour ll l t rott • Tiit fell1wln1 p1u 1n 1191 ..._,......to tflt otMlllWnl. m .•.31. Trull. f M lotat amount of eel4 otlnfllatDUltbUonoftNeHotoe.11 a11r111111eo IHI, o1'•«tH 111d 'lonilct Ho uilau•, 11102 .... -....---.~-.. ~~-......... ,.,......_ UMw ,_, do IO, ,_., ,.,.,. .. oe..t: .My 18, 1112 Obllt1Uon, lftoludlllf '"tontbty IH,MS.M. ....... of tile TNNe.11 • .......... C.. ..... Ollfor'Allt , ltl r O, k a I b 1 04 1 1 ._ PlllWWW ~ ........ .. ........ Oii ........ an of tflt CoMllll1e lqully, lnO. llllmt t td ..... ollergu I nd DIMd: .My 18, ,... CllMNllPl"*"'°"of•Nollol.11 .... Moo11orHI c irol• HUflllllfton flotltlOUJ 1tu11n111 nl"'' •• .... .......... .._.,..,, e CtllfotnlliOOtPOtatton :=:ollNTl'\IMll,ltttlollme OOAITUHllQUfTY INC, ... U M.17. ,,_ ....,_ 1100I ,_,by 1 ~~--Z:::.&,VH llNl"T I fWtGI ,..,_,. ....,._,., .. V. l'lllaf 11 TNINe of Pllllflolllon oftflll Notloe, le 1 ~_,,,,,.ion, ' OMed: JIM t.i.-,.1tlt W ......... ...11:"' •• ~ II 901'1 ........ 111 ... _ 'NfTl. 1 110 110 I I.• a._ .,. ...... lfll_.._.1 ~ "" •• .-... ...., 1y: ~L UTATI m-.at. .. Trwe.. MAL ••AT'I ..._ H.11111' ·----.. _,.,,..,.,.... •· e>r-.. ~ .... , reeutt In ptnltfl!NAI ol *""" o..;. ~ 11, tsa ~TATI llOUNT1a llfMCe. O.. ....., o. Mlt ...._ .............. flf .... f/f ..,...ny 1 ~ ~ 0111•1 ...,, .... a 0•1 ... MJMCI. I c... ..,......... TNI q 1m11 w -wtlfl .. 11111 Ill mtl W....... , ~flt ftltltleul Mllwl .._. ., =., ,.... ~ "' ti.. * "-"' ...,. • Oll9Drftll ..,....... • ~ ~an" a...-a.,.."' o.. an ., a..,..~• ... •·•· =• .., ......... - ...... ~ (llM.) 0 J ....,.., "" --..,_.,. __,... ... ~.'.. ~~ .J. ....... -11, .... -,.. ..... • ..... Ill .. -.... .. Maf .... f.-.-~"'='~.~ .... n,:..: ... _ :rn:··-· :I:'=-·-· '"':"ft:!-.. _ .. _ ~"\:,;:;.;-""' f;JO. -.,_ IOt, a • ,_ i.... ........ =AM QA...,. NII. ti,. ; .-., -ti. M. •, ---., • llt r..lr' .. • =~"J" "' ~ .. ,,,,:ni::,r:. t----=----------~.i.....~---...;..----11.1:• ,., !!'l':llt I'll~ Of~ 0.... Olllr ...... lo.... 0.... ~ I ,_.. =·--.. .. ,_ ..... ~1.a.""·•"·•-.-..... ,.,.::;i ........... 11 .. ~r.r -==· .......... __ .:t:=f.tn.'t: Orange 00..t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, July 15, 1912 ~ . Southern Calilornia's most complete selection ol lighting at • • • eompet1t1ve prices. Some of the brands we carry: Casablanca Eagle Lightolier Framburg Forecast Lavery Hi-Lite Lectra Nulco Luxo Stiff el Victor Westwood Crystal Import Frederick Cooper Dixon Brite Lite Hadco London Lamp ELA Westgate Carrie Litecraft Wolfe Creations Norwell Becker Tri-Lite P.D. West. . Majestic Sonne man Phoenix illuminating Tensor Quoi7.el Experience Schonbeck Remington American Troy Duro-Lite Lantern Hinkley Electrix Halder Halo Hubbell Juno AI.tI!D !.ighting July Sale • now in Progress 222 Victmia Street, Co.ta M.11& 646-3737 I 646-8194 · (.oroee from Nunerylud Nunery) ---"--------------· -___ , • ' I Puritan Nutone Plantation Thomas Dini co Atlas L&S Lightco Laurel Keystone Weiss & Biheller I SAN DIEGO 1RWY. , er - ·~ ' . ·~ .·· . -: " .. :::1 ...... . . . . .. ' ~ . 1 . . . i . . . . . • ' . •: :; ... ' ~ ' .. . . ~ .... ·. •.. ' ' •II ..... ••A .. ; .. ..ate mTa MOC lln'ICI MJll NDllCI 'IDJPJJ,.. TAWA... 1IDPWAW -~~ ...... iJi1J;W\;i'.-,MI\ It •alnt ,.,_ foilewlnt l*'tOM.,. Cloi"t Tiie ~ per...,. ete '°"" T i'itft_. ltl'. ~ Ill ~Ill 10ll .,. In ... ""*' IWIOTOfllltOtn, 1111 ,.,.,tO•A IOfltWAllll MAltHICI OHi HO • IOOO aO-..offNlt ... llidO.O.I, !Mt. . lo, New Hr I ltHll , IYITIM , 1140 Nortll •11'1\0f\ *"9t llllcl , ...,.. A11•, 'eo.a. Un6IM )'Oii lalct ~loll lo Pf°'*lt ..... ~ Untt Q , ANl!tlm, OA lllOt -...., Oellfojflle IHl'P ~ pro..,ty1 " l'lltY lie told al• •n•• Onoto, • 1 UI c.u IOftWW91110 .• Clllfomlt .... ~ • ..,., '"" P111Jll• HI• II )'011 nHd t n r=:"· H111111n11on IHOll, COIPotlllOI\. 3410t VII o .. .-itn•. ~ ... '""'· Qerd•n. Qrow•. ~ ot tN IWll\lte of !tie Ho. I, ~MO IMotl. oA ...... ~ 11MO P'OOMO!nt tOliMI you, )'Oii tflould la aonductecl II)' Ill Tl\11 llll9IMM It oonOllOteCI lly I ~ OeiofM Ila!.,, 1n11 OOllllOI t faW)'W --OCH'PClflllon Newttepe 8tr-eal, Qardan Otov• On Auoult I, IH2, at t:18 A M .. -...-Ollb«M CAI lottWtll't lno. CelllOfnta HMO • laYlftil• MonglQO Cof Pot•llon .. =Thie ~t -lllacl wlttl Ille Devld H. 'l'n,111m1n, PrH. Tiile tMineM le oondll01ed by dll!)' aPOOlnted Tr111t• 11nd• and ..,... OI Orange County on Tiii• 11etamen1 WM llled w1111 tn. (l\ulllland Ind wit.» l>UfllUlllt to Deed of TNtJt reoorded •• 1MI. Coun~ Ca.tit OI °'"'°° Counw on lllerwln M. II•• Jan11ary H . 1eu I.!'' ln1t. No. P1t,_ J\>ly I, IHI. '1-Tiiie al&temtnl wu fttec1 wttll tlle 12.021~. In book rvA, page NIA. .!J'llllttled Otan~ COHI Dally P11llll1llltd Orang• COlll Dally Coun1Y Ci.ti Of Oranoa OOunty on OI Oflloltl llleoo<da In !tie otfloe Of ......,., J11rw •• •. July I. I. 11, tH2 ltllol • .1u1y e. ta, 22. at. 1N2 Jvk'; 12. ttt2. tllt Oountr "ecotdtt 01 Orono• 170M2 3104-92 '1Mtn County, ltltt 01 Oelllornla . ---MU--IC-.,,.------1 P11llll1htd Orl l\0-COHI D1ll1 beoutecl II)' "°°911 V, ln)'dtf and ..... ,._ ......: MOTlCl P1101. J\lly ta. u. ao "· Auo. 1. 11• "· tnydet. 1111tblnd end..,. -==::=~==~==-1---=-==:..::::.:.:___ lff2 .. Joint ten11111 •nos TO CONTRAC1'0ftl '"•m 3t42·12 WILL SELL AT PUILIO AUCTION c~ '°".. NOnc11,. ,..,.,.. •• IAU TO HIOHEIT llDDll• l<OR OMH COllTMi,.,.... YOU ARE IN Ol~T UNDER A Ml.IC N()TlC( =~1 ·1~1~11~ =:i :fi: lollool Dl1trlct: NIWPOlllT· DUO OF TRUST DATED Febnlary &-t .. H front tntranoe to IN old Ottnte MUA U~'1.08CHOOI. DllTllllCT t1 1092. UNLIH YOU TAKE NOTICE OP o• County Co11rtll011M IOGlted 011 lldOtedllM:t:OOp.m.otttwtnd ~:.tTI N TO ••ot•CT YOUR c.ATJJ OF a t .. I d ' ,, u ,..., "' •oDGER P BURR .. an • ""1 tv ·• batw••n OI Auou9t. 1112. IT MAY le IOU> AT A ft • • ••• lyoemora ltrMt and llfCIMWey, ltet ol l ld Receipt: 1117 ftUILIC IALL IF YOU NEED AN RODGER BURR, ab ft. P. 8111111 Ana, Celltomla, ti rtgM, tlllt Ptaot ntla It., Coit• M .. 1. CA EXltlANATIOH Of' THE NATURE BURR a k I R 0 D 0 ER end lnt••t ~ to Md now ~!teot ldenttttotton Nome. ~~ T~~~~~O~A~8! PENNOYER BURR AND ~h:Y ~·r~=k 11111=: ~ r,':cl ~INO • VARIOUS LOCATION& LAwYeR 0 F P E T I T I 0 N T 0 Countv and 811 dMorlbtd •: IN OllTRICT On Au0utt e. 1Na, 1111:00 A.M., ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. lot 30 of Tr0C1 o. 11'12, In Ille Olly Piece Plane lrl on Ille: 1187 8TATEW10f FORECLOSURE A·llUU. ot Cotll M .... County ot Of'ano-Plaoentla St .. Ooelt M11a.J. CA SE.AVIOES. INC. M duly 8P90!nted To all helnt beneCldarles 81111 ot Otlllomla, M lhown Ot1 t 12Q7 and 2tl6-A 8Mr &t., 1,;oeta Tru11 .. 11ndtt and pura11ant to ' ' map r.e<>rded In book 53, Paott 4'7, MeM. OA t2t2t. D9ed 01 TNAt rtoOfded Ftt>ruary credltora and contingent 48 and 40 of MlteeltAntOU1 Mepe NO'l'ICE IS HEREBV OtVEN that 2e, 1082ulnltt.No.12~.o1 creditor• of RODGER P . rtcord1 of Oreno• Co11n1y : Ille~ School Dlttric1 ot Offlotat Record. 1, necuted by BURR, a k a R 0 0 GER CalltomtL Orange County, Cellfoml•. IC1lnQ JIMMIE E. FA.U.IN and NANCY J. BURR. aka R p BURR aka Tiie •trHI addr111 end other by and tllro11oh 111 Governing FALUN .. INltOfl, In the olftoe of • • • common dttlgn1tlon II any of the ~d. '*,~ft• rel«Ted to 11 the County Aecordtf of Ortngt RODGER PEN NOYER rMI proptrty o..cnb.d above 11 Ol8TRICT • will reotlve up 10, but County, State of CllttOf"nle. WILL BURR and pereona who may purported to II• 2182 Slate not l•ltr than Ill• AllOVt·llatto SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO be otherwile lnt.ereeted ln Av1nu1. Coat• MtH. Calllornlt '""'· Mlltd bide for the award ol • Hl"HEST BIDDER FOR C"'SH ... _ wW and/ 12827 oontrt1el I« the above pro)tc1. (payable 11 llm• of .... In 1~1 u"" or estate: Th• u n d •re I g n • d Tr u 1 t .. 81d1 llhalt ~ recelVed In tn. place money ol tht United Stet••) 11 A petition has been filed dt1ctatme any lfalllllty tor eny ld~nllfled abovt, and 111all lie South front entrenoe 10 !tie Of'anoe by PATRICIA A SCHUDA tncorrtctr>MI ol the ttrMt tddr ... opened encl tc,bllely read tloud at County Old CourthouM City of In the Superior Court of •nd other common dttlgnatton, II ~~w~ be t':'9N~ :::·,11 San11 Ana, St• .. of ce11iomia. all Oranie County requeating ''l.~i~:m· II• mad• b 1 required lor ••ch H t ol bid ~·::~ti';'~ oo::rc'O.: th. t p AT R 1 c I A A . wltlloul COYtntnl or warrant~ document• lo ouwant .. the return of Truai In !flt property lllual.cS In SCHUDA be appolnted as •KPf-or lmplled, r901rdtng 1111e: 111 good condlt.lon wtllltn NIA dt)'t Mid County end Stet• deec;rlbed • pe1'110nal representative to ~Ion. or encuml>ranc., to '":'.:' .,:en~1, d=i d ... Lot 25 of Tract 3800, In the City admin ia ter the estate of P•Y the remaining principal eum ol orm 1111 uc ot Newport Be1ch, Recorded In RODGER p BURR COST the note(•) aecurtd br Yid OMd ot re1pon1tve lo the oontr1c1 MIP Book l32, Paget l4, 15 and 141 · • A Trust. with 1n1eru thtr•on, 11 dTmen~ of Mleoellaneou• M1p reoo<de 1n Ille M ES A • CA . (under l he provided In 1ald nott(e), advanOM. b ": ~tit :9 :companied otflc4 ot tn. County Aecofder ol Independent Administration II 1111y, unde< the term• ot Yid Deed Y I _,, 'I r wr to In Ille Of'ange County. of Estates Act). The petition ot Trust, rua. chugu end cr'"~menbcont• and lly lllt "" The 1trHI eddrH1 and other Is tel for h .. ""'"" in De l Hptn-ot the Tru•I" and of the 0 ~~RIUICT trectora. common ci.lgnatton, If err;. of the N 3 700~;..'!' .. _ ,._ P · trutt1 crHltd by H id DHd of rMW'ltt the right ,.., P'operty dMcrlbed •t>ovt la o. at '""'v"" ....... nter Tru11 to reject any or all bid• or to waive purpontd 10 be: Drive West, Santa Ana CA TM total amount of 1n. unpaid any lrreouterltlta or tnlormtffll• In t812 Anita LaM, Newport 8eedl. 92701 on A,...,,_. 11 l9S2 at l:MllllllOI ot the obllglllon aecured any bide or In the lliddlng. CA . --· ' II)' the property to be IOld end TM DISTRICT hu obta.lntd lrom Tiit ond•retgned Trustee 9.30 a.m . re11onablt ullmtltd co111, the Dlftctor ol the Dtptrt.-it ot dlectalma any llablllty tor any IF YOU OBJECT to the expen-and edvll'ICtl 11 tllt ttmt tndullrtat Ret1llon1 the general lncorreclneu 01 the llrMt addr-granting of the petition. you ot the lnltlal publloatton ot the Pf1.,!';~~1 rt1t• of per diem wegea In and other common dutgnat10t1 If ahould either appear at the Not~ 01 Sale le S!lll, 1112.28. ,,. ......atlty n which this work le to err; lhOwn htttln h Tn. btneflclary under aald Deed ~performed for tllCh craft or type Said ute wttl II• made llul earing and state your ot rru11 hwttofor1 executed and OI wortcman nMded lo Htcult the without covenant or wurenty ob~tiOnl Or flJe Written dtllVtrtd 10 !ht undtrllgntd I contract. n-r11t1 •• on nit 11 txptte1 or tmplltd, ~Ing imt: ob)eetlon1 with the court written Otc:lar111on 01 0tt1ut1 anc1 the DISTRICT olllce loclltd •1 l857 ~. or tf\CUml>fanc., to before the hearing. Your Demand for Seit, and • wrtuen Pt1cenll1 St., Coete Men, CA pay lht remaining prindpal tum of be in Notice of Oelault end Eltctlon to 02412'7. Copitl ~ be obtained on the note(•) MCUl'td by Mid Deed ol a.ppearanc:e may pen10n Sell. The undtrWgned caused aaJd ~.A copy of"-rtltl lhlll Trull with tntuu1 thereon H °'by your attorney. Nol.lot ot Default and Eltctlon to ~ potted at Ille job ..... J)(Ovtdecs In Mid note(•). adv~ r F y 0 u A R E A Self to be reoo<ded In IM county The toregol"P. llChedlJlt ol per If any, under the t•m• of Mid OMd CREDITOR or a contl.ngen1 Where Ille ruJ i>roe>tr1Y ta located. d iem w1gH I b11td upon • ol Trust, feu. chergH and creditor of the d ased Date: July 2, 1082 working day of tloh• (8) l'toure. The ••pen-ol the TrullM and of Ille ece ' you S1\lfng1 Mortgege rtt• for l'tolldey and ownlmt work truate crelled by ntd Deed ot must fUe your claim with tht! Cofporallon llhlll ~ al ltall time and on.halt. TNt1. tor tllt amount rMaOnlbly court or present it to the 1411 W Olympic 81Yd., Cg N~A~T~tlllory 11upon ~he t1tlmated to t>a: $24,820.00. personal representative Lot Angeltl, CA 90015 contreet 11 ftWdtd,0.:, ~~of ~rue~°''::'.::!,°= al?polnted by the court ~:=~.: eubcomrac10I' llnder him, 10 P9Y not delivered to the underatgned • WlUun fo~ months from the Manao-r .... than lht aald apeclfltd rwtM lo written Dtclaf8tlon of Default and date of first Issuance of Publlalltd Orange Co11t Dally 111 wor1tmen employed by !Nm In Demand tor Sale. anct a wrttten letters as provided in Section Piiot, July 15, 22, 2Q, 1182 tti.N•~~ of ~.~~!... ...... Notlot or Deleutt encl Eltctlon to 700 of the Probate C-Ode of 3171-82 o .,..,... may ... .,...._._ ....., Sell Tile und«llgntd caused ttld · for a period of forty.flW (451 d"YI Notice 01 Dtfautt and Eltctlon to California. The tame for "'8.IC NOTICE •fttt the dale Ml for tn. opening ot s.tt to ~ rtcOfOtd In the county filing claims will not explre YOU AM IH M'AU\.T UNDSR A bide. Where IM ..... Pfoper1y .. localed. prior to four months from DllD -... IT 0 TID ....... A peyment bond ind 1 Oate:July7 tM2 · the date of the hearing 1•t.~a~You"TA«i'AcTI:c ~~ -:r,:: == StateWtoe Fcnclolure noticed above. TO PflOTICT YOUR "'°"°""· 'file peyment bond ahall be In the !::'T!:.. YOU MAY EXAMINE IT MAY• SOU> AT A PW&JC form ••t forth In the conttect a., ~ the file ~pt by the court. lf ~~Y g,u i:J ~~ documtn~ Boerd ~~:O~ you are Interested in the Of THI "'OCUOINO AGAlldT Dorothy~ Flahel , $92& Cerrttoa Ave. est.ate, you m.1y file a reques1 YOU, YOU aHOUU> CONTACT A PUr~ Director ~ Celfof'l\la with the court to receive LAWVER. Pullllllltd Orang• Cout Dally (714) 82M2'0 Ip e c i a l n 0 t l c e 0 f th t! NOTICI OP TMllTH'I IALE Piiot. JuiV 15, 22, 1 82. Pullllelled Orer Co11t 01tly Inventory of estate assets NOTICr~ ::E'Re:1~1VEN. that 3 lOM2 Piiot, July 15, 22. • 1082 of the petitions, aocounta on WedM9de)'. Auguat •. 1"2. et DllTH IDTICIS 3172_.2 and reports deacrlbed in 1-00 o·e1oc1c a.m. of Mid day, In tl'9 Section 1200.S of th• room H t H ide tor conducting " Trust .. '• s ..... wtlllln the olftoal 01 California Probate Code. REAL ESTATE SECURITIES LAW OFFICES OF JULIUS SERVICE, loctted at 2020 North W. FELDMAN, INC. Broadway. Sutt• 209. tn tilt City o1 A .. ~ t La 511111 Ana. County o1 Oranoe. Stale BURBANK """ .. ey a " ol Calllornla. u duly 1ppolnted ELIZA.BETH BURBANK, Harbor, New Jersey, listers 1911 St. Aadrews Drive Tru11 .. under and purtuant 10 the a resident of Costa Mesa, Ca. Margaret M. Wimberg and Seal Be.ell, CA H740 power of sate conferred tn that Pa11ed away on July 14, Claire M . Frank of Egg (%13) 4?1 .. HI cet1aln Deed of Tru11 executed by 1982. She is survived by her Harbor. New Jeney, Kay Pubhshed Orange Coast =!.iLA .,,:·R~~~~·D 's"T u;~~~~ ton Rembert, sister Marion Huver of Summers Point, Daily Pilot. July 15, 16, 22. and DtANE ST. THOMAS. 11u1t>and Lathrop of New York and 5 New Jersey and Mary Ann 1982. 3197-82 and wtte u community Pfoper1y, arandchildren. $e.rvk:es will Kunnlavage of Philadelphia. rtc0tded May 11, 10& 1. In Book be held on Friday, July 16, Pennsylvan ia. Mass of l't.ellC NOTICE ~;!~~~~1o;:!' 1~~~C:~ 1982 at lO:OOAM al Pacific Christian Burial will be held NOTICE OF DEATH OF Instrument No. 12875, by reat1or1 ot View Chapel with Rev. on ThW"9day, July 15, 1982 BLANC HE J . RUSSELL, •breach or def1ut1 In peym..,1 or Father John Ashle~, St. at 7:00PM at Our Lady AKA BLANCHE JOHNSON pertormance of the ob11g1t1on1 secured thereby. Including thal James Episcopal C urch Queen of Angels Catholic R USS E LL A N D 0 F breech or dereutt. Nolloe of wnlch officiating. Services under Church, Newport Beach, Ca. P E T I T I 0 N T O A D • wu reco<dtd Febroary 1, 11e2. as the direction of Baltz lntermenl Friday. July 16, MINISTER ESTATE NO. Record e r's Instrument No Ber-ron Smith & Tuthill 1982 at lO:OOAM at Pacific All488Z. 82--037683. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC o-AUCTION TO THE HIOH EST Westcliff Chapel Mortuary v I e w Me m 0 rl a I park. To all hel'rs, benef1c1anes. BIDDER FOR CASH, lewful money 6Ml-9371. Newpon Beach. ln lieu of creditors and contingent of the Untied Stett1. or a CU/lier'• MULHOLLAND f l o ~ e .rs memo r i a I cred1 tors of Blanc he J . Chtck drswn on•••••• or nattontl contnbutions 'P(; be made Russell and persons who bank. • state or federal credit E RICHARD (DICK) "---T Bo union, or• atate or ftd.,et aalllnga · to"""""' eresa, x 1143, may be otherwise interested and loan anoct1tton domlclltd In MULHOLLAND, a resident Santa Ana, Ca. 92702. Pacific In the will and/or estate: thl• 11ate, all payable 11 the time ot of Newport Beach, Ca. View M or tuary, Newport A petition has been riled sate. 111 right, t111e end lnteraJ held Pasaed away on July 12, Beach directors. by F.dward c. Russell, Jr. tn by II, u TrullH. In 111e1 reel 1982 Born June 16 191" in property llltuatt In MkJ County and · • .., the Superior Court of Stete.descrtbtdutollows: Atlantic City, New Jeraey. SCHWARTZ Orange County requestJng PARCEL 1· The Soutlltultrl)' 2.s Survived by his wife Carol, A DD 1 E Lo U JS E that Edward c. KusseU, Jr. acrH of Lot 3 13 ot Newport daughters Gerrit Ann , SCHWARTZ, a resident of be 1 d 1 Height•. •• 1hown on • map L M appo nte as persona recorded '" book 4. page 83, a u r e n 8 r g a r ~ t Costa Mesa. Ca. Passed away representative to administer Mt1cell1n1ou1 M1p1. record• ot Mulholland, a son David on July 12, 1982. S he is the e state o f Blanche J . OrangeCounty. Kevin Mulholland, a brother survived by her son Willard Russe 11 (unde r l h e Excepting therefrom Jhe David Mulholland of Egg of Costa Mesa, Ca. and l d d t Ad · · Southff.aterty 240.00 fMt lhe<eol. n epen en m1mstralton At10 Excepting therefrom the ----------~ d a u g h t e r L I n d a N . of Estates Act). The petition Nort"-tttly 50.00 '"' the<eot. Herington of Washington. 1S ael for hearing in Dept Alto Excepting therefrom 1111 HAalotl L.AW.._MT. OLIVE Mortuary ·Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa S40·55S4 "HCI llOTHEa 5 llU llOADW A Y MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 tALn & IHGllOM SMn'H & TUTHILL WHTCllff CHA"L 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 f'IHCIMOTHUI SMITHI' MOITUAIY 627 Main SI HunllnQ1on Beach 536-6539 'Ac.te ••w ...., .. Al 'Al• Ctma ll'fY Mortuary Chepel-Cf•m•IOry 3500 Pac1hc 'l/1ew Drive NewPoft 8HCh 8"-2100 Private services were held No. 3 al 700 CiVlc Center Nort'-ttttty half thtrtof. under the direct.Ion of Ba.lu Drive, West, in the C ity of PACRCEL 2: An ._, tor S h •-Tu h S C tngre11 and egre11 over lht Be.rgeron-m il °' t ill anta Ana, alifornia on NorthwHttrly 1.00 IHI of the Westcliff Chapel Mortuary August 4, 1982 at 9:30 a.m . Soutlleutttty 240.00 fMt ot Lot 313 646-9371. IF YOU OBJECT to the ot Newport HtiQhta. aa 9llOwn on 1 gr U g f th tJ'ti Map recorded rn book 4, page 83, an n o e pe on, you Ml1cet11n1ou1 M1p1, record• ot BERGFORD should either appear at the orange county. PAUL S. BERGFORD, h earing and state your PARCEL 3· An HHment lor resident of Orange, Ca o bjections or file written tngren and egren over the Passed on July 12, 1982 at objections with the court Northeasterly 11111 of th• the age of 80. He was a before the h earina Your Nortllweaterly 7 00 !Ht ot Ille " Southeuterty 24 7 00 fMt ol Lot former resident of Costa appearance may be in person 313, Newport HtlQl\11, u lhown on Mesa. Ca. He la IW'Vived b y or by your attorney. •Map rec;orded In book•. page 83, his wife Elaie, 2 aons Paul of I F y O U A R E A Ml1cett1neou1 Map1, record• ol Burke V and ,,....____ CREDITOR Orange County. , irginia ~nun..... or a conungent Tiie 1tree1 eddre11 or other of Tacoma, Washington , crecUior of the deceased, you common dt1tgn1tton ot the rHt daughter Carol Tonjea of mual rue your claim with the property htrtlnabove dalctlbtd II Fountain Valle{• Ca., 6 court or present it to the purported to be: 230 Cecil Pl-. d h d b h COltt Mete, CalllomlL gran c II ren. rot er perso nal representative Tiit underelgned hereby Harold Bergford of appo inted by the court dt1ctalm1 111 lleblllty for any M.lnneeota. Servm will be within four months from the Incorrect.-In Mid etrttt addr- he.ld on Friday, July 16, 1982 date of first i11uance of or:'.::'~ ~~tllout at lO:OOAM at Chrilt lettersaaprovidedinSectlon wirranty, npreu or tmptted, Lutheran Church, 2715 Kast 700 oC the Probate Code of reg1rdtng 1111•. po11e11lon, or La Veta, Oranie. Ca . California. The time for encumbrlnCH , to n t11fy ttle Interment at Falrhaven CUlng claims will not expire princlpll b.,anoe of the Note or Memorial Park Friendl may prior to (our months from otlltf obllQallon MOured II)' Mid • . DMcl Of frutt, wttll lnt•ttt end call et the Shanno n the date of the h earing other 1Vm1 01 provided th•r•ln: Mortuary on Thunday. July nolkt-d above. J>lvt ldvencee, If any, ~ ttw 15 1982 from 12:00 noon to YOU MAY EXAMINE """' lhertol and tnt.,_ on IUCll 8:00PM. Memorial.I to the the file kept by the court. If =::oi'= T':..:*.J: Memorial Fund of Cbr11t you are interes~d ln the IM tt\1111 Ct'Mttd 11y Mid Deed of Lutheran ChuN:h will be t!lltate, you may file a ~uesl Tru•I Th• 10111 amount of Mid appreclat•d .• Ralph W. with the court to receive 01111oallon, lnoludlno 1M1ona1>ty Shannon F\&neral Servl<:8 1peclol notice of the Htlmettd ••••· OllllJH and Oranae i n C ha rf• of inventory ot estate a1H\a :r'Nt:'C:~C::h.~"': UTU\etm•U• 8U· 180 • and of thf' pelltiotv, accounta Id.MUI. n-----------1 and report.a de-.crlbtd In ~ 1f. 1tu. PeQPle ell along Section 1200.0 of the AOJllf• •='•IMC. C..Womla Proba .. c.. • ,......... ' the Orenfta coast &-. eu. a Giff.,. llAL 11un ~ ..... .. ..... , ...... rely on the '" ,...., •.,.111•• ~·=J ~r' .... ' 11111 ..... Pu &ahtd Oran1• COMI r.11111 D!lll.Y PlM. Jw1 1. •. 11, 1111, ••·12 6 4 2 • 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 • 5 6 7 8 642-s61s "9¥.!1..'1!.le! ••••••• !~!!!!.~~! ...... !~!!!!.!~.~~· ....... ~ ..... '!!'..'!!.~'1 ....••. ~'l. ......... !.~f '1:\~~~ •••.••••. !.'!ff '1.'.!'.~{ ••••••••• J.'!fl ~'!.'l. •••.....• !~ FORECLOSURE Pickup over $600,000 equity overnight Once in a Ufoume opportunity. Won't lutl Primest Orange C ty 4! '-"' at'. hilltop UL'tmn view new estate. Pool, spa. w1Ht•r(alls, electr. gates, 5800 IC! Ct w/360 degtee view ot all O .C. Tennie cou rt + h eltcoptor pad area. ASSUMABLE LOANS & TERMS. Originally hsled tor $2,200,000. Socrlflce at $I, 128,382.63 approximately with $360,0 00 approximate cash down. Only the serious need ca ll direct ly t o PATRIC K TENORE. 760-8702 & 631-1266. REI MAX Realtors, agt. Brokers welcome. RVM~ of Costa Mesa LIQUIDATION Forced sale. two beautiful prestigious Newport pool homes valued at $400.000 will be sold Cor $318,000 and $325,000 lmmed. Fee land. lf you are a serious buyer contact Patrick Tenore at 760-8702 or 631-1266 n9w! RVM~ of Costa Mesa PlllUIU .. U Priz.e W..t Bay bAyfrcnt SU .. fM 2 bo9tt. moode.led 3 bdnn, ll bAth St.200,000 . Ocean & jelly viewa. Marin room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 tq ft. $1 ,386.000 . Oceanfront. Liii llLI 11111 Prime Lido Nord bayfront. & bdrm. 5~ bath. Lae L.A. 2 bo&l sllii-S 1.500.000. Remodel.t ll bdrm, 2 bAth + larg• rec nn bRm colllnp. furnlahed, pal.klta. $420,000. ._., llLI UYPlllT Laaoon view from 8 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom. darl< rm, den. Boal &lip. Now •1.000.000. UYllll OOVI Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br. 2 bA dn. 2 boat allpe •t.000.000. 01111111 CAYS CAronado Lsland cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat dock. Plans avail Red. $370,000 w/terma. ILIFFI CDllO Sina.le story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba on largest greenbelt. $250.000. PAlll LIH 3 bd.nnl, 2 ~ bat.ha condo near pool. $14!>,000. Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\•<fr D•·••· "I B 67~ 6161 NEW VIEW TOWN · HOMES. 2 Muter Sul· WtllY-flHllUS 3 tro 8drm1. lamlly rm/ country kitchen. Greet neighborhood. Good fl. nenctng av1t1able. Full price $131,000 751·3t91 11'1111.11 ...•••................ EOUAL HOUSING OPPORT.UNITY P1llll1laer's letloet All r .. l ellale advertised In this newspaper la 1ubjt ct to the Federal Fair Hou1lng Act of 1068 which makes II Illegal 10 advertiae "any preferen-ce. ttmll11lon or dlacrlml· n11ton ba1ed on race, TEll••CE VIEW ,.. v tew ol ocean & "" night tights. Quiet Ar" e.11 model, Npt Tem1C4I. Parka. open 1pace1. Lrg 3 Bdrm 2•,; Ba $125,800 dn. Xlnl Fin. townllome w/lront loco-Hal or Pat BIWtt, Agla. llon & llrlklng vt-. Lo-4173.7300 vtly Bdrm 1&.11te & loft. ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cell for flnanetng deteli.. 11 Full price S 13 1.000. 751·3191 c::. .,, . t ( • -t""' I •q( !Pt i < 1 1l ', C::. SE-1 U' -t""' P4( JµI i < 1 I ' , IY Ill IEmOIY llOIE REDUCEOI Neat, llghl and airy home with 4 spacious bdrm1 on huge cul de sac lot Great ft· mlty tlfea. Children wllk to Kh<>OI. Many. many t 11lrll. M111I Hit lhll week. 548-2313 color. religion. sex or IEWPHT SIHll nallonat origin, or any THE REAL ESTAT&:RS THE REAL ESTAT&:RS Intention to make eny High beamed oelllng In Whet a Wonderful World auch preference. llmlll· llvlng room Skyttgllled ot Shopp111g. right at tton or dlacrlmlnatton " kitchen Two bedrooms your fingertips everyday• CIM HPLD and beth plu1 bonu1 Da1ty P1tot Ctust11ed Thia newspape< wtll not Rece ntly completed room up1talre Walk to Ads To pteee your ad knowingly accept eny CUiiom unit w/uMd brb beach s 11g,900 cell 642-5678 and le1 a advtttl1lno lor rHI H · flreplaoe, Mexican ttlel. 111·1100 Classified Ad·VlllOf 11etp late wtllcll 11 tn vtolatlon 1 vaulted cetllnga. MBA~~~====~~1.=you======;;;;;::-i l:!jjjoil ilheiiilliwi.iiiiiiiiiiiiii I suite w/ctlhedrel win· Ii 11 1• dow1. 2 BR rear unit & HUIU1 Advertl· sers should check their ads dally and report errors lm- m e di ate I y . The POii guest qtrll Gr .. t financing. $356.ooo. A Cot11n1-Hltt llallng GEORGE ELKINS CO 759-9100 DAILY PILOT as-1'=======1 sumes llablllty for ••JJRllT W/IUP • ._.._. 1 \C '' 1 M ""~ -• low cost the first Incorrect - Insertion only. VI-lrom kitchen, llvtno 1rr1y Your 1d appeara thousands of timee all over our community for only pennies• day-you'll like our special money· saving re tea ...... ,., i.11 .••..•.....•.......... l#•n.J JOOa ...............•..•••• IOYE II 0011. "' Plllllll One of th• neatell hornet In our Inventory. Upgrade<! wallpaper and drapes. beauttlut carpe- tt n g and tile Huge r oom1. large kitchen and dining rooms. Enjoy " 1urtny dey1 from lront IEWH OU deck on the water. Loi• Low malnl . no noise A• of extra ptlfklng tn tne c;ondomtntum area JI · area. On lee land. $550, amine Creel( 11 lope! This 000 with good financing 3 Bdrm one l•vtl n11 1vtll1blt. detail, tocellon end 11 142-1200 lmmecutele. $335,000 ,. UlllWl ()Uf t1()~f S Realtors. 1175·&000 .·l~ll Cluslli.d Ada 1142-54178 Daily Pilat cla.slfled ads 642·5678 pantry, greenhouse kll· --------•I chen 1'1rlndow. window a ir. w1ttr purification aylltm, elec:lrlc garage door, etc., etc. Mu1t Mii Ihle weekend. A ltMI at !~-y ~-ttil;i!I ~ .,.~~ ,. ...... When you tak1 over exlatlng tit T.O. Popular BIRCH Model with lplc, central aw & the larg .. t backyard In WOOD· BRIDGE GLEN. Onlr. $130,900. 2670 San M • guel Ot., Newport Btech. 750-1501 ()( t52·73'73. ~ Walker G Lee uu."•u llllYAll Quiet, Plfk·Nke aettlng Am IOI' paddle tennl1 eno pool. GrMt lor orchltd. CAii 0. MC II. 3 bdrm1, tam rm, '379,500. M4-4111 IEllOU Hiii& Ill llU Motivated Mlle< wlll alao Mllp flnanoe this low prl· c ed rental property South ol the Hwy. In Corona del Mar. Current Income S 1450 per mo. Yoo can llvt In one unll Ind 11111 Mrn $950 per mo. •I present r1101I Prloed DOW at lull $229, 000. 1714) 673-4400 IJIJI U .. lUI • HARBOR A ()\\ 1~11111 ol llJrbor lme-;lmttnl ro MAKE OFFER LIDO ISLE lltlec $257,500 DRAITIC MDUCTIOM 1M•ft11t1.•H1t1UJ11•1a4llel .... ad I l ' ............ ..,Y ..,...Metaou1_.. .. ..,...._....,. 11t11wtsa • INa I Wfftt wMll IWtok '9tlo .. tM -.,.. OM TM 18LAMDt RfSIOfNllA.1 RE Al fS1ATE SERVICES UITlllfF U12,10t Sparkling city lights & ocean view from this popular 5 BR or 4 + den home. Nicely landscaped w/room for pool. Close to schools & shops. Owner will assist with financing. INNEWPORTCENTER . 644-9060 CLASSIFllD D9lAITMIMT HOTICIS To place your Class1f1ed Ad call 642·7'67 All rul estate 11dven1sed In thla ne w5p11per 1, iubjecl to the Federal Fair Housina Act or 1968 "'h1ch m11ku It lflea•I to 1dvert.lse "any prefert'nct'. IOUAL ltOUt1HO I I m 1 l I I l 0 n . 0 r OltltOllTUNtn d11crlminat1on based on race. rolor. rtll1lon. JU. or n11honal on11n, or an 1ntenllon to make any auch preference llmllatlon. or d11crtl"(ltn11ton ·· Thia newspaper will not k.no\\1n11ly accept any lldverllalnJ lnr r.-al tst•te "h1ch 11 in violation or the law .. OHi Ad\frll'trs )hol1ld theclt 1ht1ir 1d~ o n publl l'lltlon and rtl)Orl trrun lmml'd11tely The lrvln4' Mirror I Numo llahlllty ror lllt' flrtl lnt<W~ lnHrt.iOn onl> • CUISl,_l4Dll Real Ealate .............. tOl1·2900 Rent.al• .. .. . .. . . . . •....• 310CMISO blneu/Flnance ........ 5QG5.5035 AMounumenla .....•...• 5l00.5a00 Loll. round .....•.•..• stOO Penionllt • . . . . ..•..••..• 6380-MJO S.Vtu Otreclory ...••••. MO l'.mplo)'mem .............. 100I-noo ~bandlH ., ............ IHI loMa • M1rtne Equ&ll • .••• INOIO TruwponaUon •••• , , , ••••• tl&0-1111 ====-\.-..._--~=------ If it's got wheels, . you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. . Orange Ooue DAILY PILOT/Thured1V1 July 18, 1882 .; ,. .. 'I ·-----. ---·---• • .,. ~ •••••••••••• , '-'•*1111 ............ ~~ .............. ftAf!!llfff ......... . M•.OCllU iliar ... iclAN-l'rloet HOMI IM"'°VIMINT ""°'· 11-.VIOI ~·~-' ~. 'd..... rlt llt. ''" Mtl1t1•t• on , .. ,.Al"-"t..IJMllHQ Hdna. ~ olMll "" New~ UP rw -.. II-Mn Ml-111• iaroe °' 111'11111 ~ Ow'*'ti}.lleO. t,11e. ,,... OulClk' o1een. Jlr .. eet o.~ '42-4tU ...,. l'lnlehtct Carl*!trv uo. Itta 1. ns.out Mt. No b too tmlll. er~• M .,. .. Uta fWl\od. loeo. lllMcW uc•o lLIOTNQIAH 1-1111 -VANDIHHM Uo. 411M1 7I0-1HO Ouel. wortl•AeM. rat4'1 IXPl"l HANDYMAN ~:::fltf........ LANOllCAPlNO WAY CONITAUOTION Jlree .. 1. 831·8012 Tom CatJ*'\l'Y • Aoofll\a AC>elN'I OLIAHINO Melnt., eod, p11ntlng, "9lnOOtt • Addltlone lLIOTAICIAN ~ .ro. '4t-IOt3 ~·It~ Med lewM. ~ l CHIU> OAAI: my 110fM. UO. 420802 142·1l00 Sml lobe/Repair" Lio. LOV'I HOMI AIPAIA olMll houee. ~1 trim. UO'd. 17f-11 tunatll-**• ~. ~_.................... 2331oe..o-10. ua-120:1 1Jeo.C11f!9!!ll'Y'"Pklmb. Joen'• ~a... ,. 111111m , .... _...... .,. .. _,.,.,... -.·~ ~ P!Mtet•Stuooo-Pelnt Hoveee-.11.-...·Atnllle •...a ~ ....... I .... -·b --....... -.... ,., .. •t. "ial.= ·-·rloal contractor ---......._ •1· ~ .......................... ·~ ..... 1211 ........ .,... ..... _ .... .. • .1.....~ Ind ""--•-Lio ._ ,.._ -.,,_ _. ln1tellet1on. Our work 6-,._ Ouel. ~. UC. 7111. ·• """""'' -· ,. ..... i.... I tc DO IT NOWI :r.rm-:1••••••••••••• l3t·n41 m211. Ptt 1181·113' _ .... ,.. Cerpenlry Need a meld or • ~ only oo • up1n1lv1 . ..._a.-.__.__ Jl\nllt\ I fOUOh 09IPl'itry, ""~11 Con RUID/COMM'L/IND. Ceremlo 1111. Qu1Uty tc...,.r, tiounv ot weekly, ~~ov =uoulr LP'l-olOM. 20~°'11', - -_.. oabln1t1. room addl· --!rl01or wortll'NnfNP. "91&. ,,.. fOf oomp1 ~ oe11 .... ~~ doN • ..,.7ttt Llo.1~2~~~;1,. ~!1~~1~1,~wcrle •t. Henk ~8aot VleJo t ervlce Agy. ,..,.1881 . ._. .. ,,9"¥1 6.-1 ,.,.,,_ futopMrl Ortfttrnlln 714·17~9000. bonded ~· ..,._ a., :r.r.: ................ CREAT IVE Muonr)'. &In'• Home flnj)f'OV.. by It. Of c.ttt. ..... "'"' ..... ... , .... , .. eat. UJ Ofptt lnltall/1"9Pe1r9d Oonorat1. Carr•ntry. Mllnt. "4-6231 .. f!..~~ OP~HA88l~ 11 • ............_ •• 1 .. 1•1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Flood dlirl\aoa. 8tMm 8vlld t o 1ul Lie:. ._ ,._. --. -• .;;: dng.854-1810, 97s.&8M 846-0781 .,.,. ..._.. hlf.i ...... MO-4'2 •WU.11 ~ ·~ & etwn dMn Au~ •~-..~ ••••••••••:.77:r •••••• o~e1 H .................. I"" ••*-••••••••••••••••• ~••••••••••••••• __ ,......, ' "1 ,_ "'--· ....................... ,.....__ .,..., --· ··• MAGICAL IL'' .. ,~. ~:.=~ Lot Color brighten., •• wtit ................... • w~'.s~or----. Aelleble.,.,., 10 yn ...,: JIO• AL' L ,..,!';:"A8..,._ION8 --..-:l:io orptl • 10 min. tMMch. Kii. Aimed .. '*'""'° t~. ~m• ..__, ··-·-• N2..ol10 ldl 4 " ..,...,.... .~..:.. .... 1.~1 · Hell, llv/dln. rrN 115: •'t'.O oablntta. 0111 now • "" ••••••••-.•••••• •••••• 8lnOI 1141. Oomm/r11, · •· Steve Ma-84ta -.. .._.,,.... ... room 11.&0; couon 110: 11llmet1. 842·0811 Complete Lawn cere, 811·11891121~740 Ouellt)' Ho!~ Den .. ...,.._ Or--.. I" 0 Ollln-~. t~ MrVlce, with I P«lonal Toucih ,,___ ·-• _.."' ctv "' uer. ellM. Pit 1prlnkl1r1. Mike, lettleao-oeis3 :rntt.i ............ .. I~ Co. AM/Coml. odor. Crpt ,..,.ir. t5 )'fl llNkht• 531·1570 ... 11-IAICKWOAK: 8mlll J<>bl Uo. M1I04 t.42·1120 exp, Do work my1111. ••••••ill•••••••••••••• ••• ~A•••••••••••••• HOUSECLEANING Newpott, Co111 Mela, Rife. 831-0101 01cor1llv1 weterproof Tllll DUMP J088 ey 8cendlnevten Ledy lrvtne. Alfa. 875-3175 AeM112ftw No StMm/No Shampoo dec:ktng, 'IP1 '1",!,:.~; T---4/removecl. CIMn 'c~•mlltt .. 1KME°!!.ng 1Jot>e3.,1 Ellp'd. 548-21)'1 Ex_,. Muon"': Ouatlty ••••••i"••iiueoo•••u Stain sw1a11tt. Fllt OYlf epecla let. ......,__ ..,....-.. ., .., ...... • .,..... ' ·' Pro'"9lon1t Auto C .. ,. dry. F•M..-.•t .• ,..,1.,.2 Fllldl Co. 973.5n9 up, llwn renov. 781-3478 Home CIN nlng: fionett, worllm1nthlp, rHllttlc ft!N~=· Pollthlng. • ..., .. ..., MOWING . CLEAN UPS HAULINO-ORAOINO relltble, herdworklng & prlOll. Aefl. 551-4555 Int/Ext, towHt retH. R .. umet. profllllonll. The t40-81M. EXCEL CAAPET CAAE 0..nlJf Havllng • Lend~lng ~~~~~"ire!'=~: refwenc:et. 554-4464 Cuetom Brtck·Stone ~:fnP!',~~.::.z:: lO Writing~::~·~ Typing Automoblle NI Cond. Jec:lc Buffington •••••••••••••••••••••• Fr11 .. t. 842-8907 Quick --... 142·7838 Thorough old-'Ullloned Blod<..Concret..Stucc:o ""*'· 190 w .... Piece Ownet/e>peretor •KATRINA'S: LIVE-IN Maw, edge, rek•. twllp, Complttt llMCIMl\lng. Alf•. Fr11 .... 549-9492 lnl/ut. HonHI, tober. 1#11•1. CM. 8on..-COI 841-5208 Cerpec, \IC)he>I, ., .. NO =· :,~~"~ :';i •Pring CIHn-up, h1ul r~~~~~~~~::C. Ref•. Jen 53M199 Brlckwork-•m•ll or to• ~;;1·~:: .!;~:'f~?8d ·ti~i,; R~N~~:ii;;;;.° Id .,_ ~'E'!t. ~1~· ~. 835-2118 Chuck 842·2873 blf 9 Lewi• 175-4180 HOUSECLEANING Jobe. 100'• loc•I reft. N--<ecOvtr-deek• ... C.Eff ........... C....tlc..n.,. ,,__"1 am. Heullng & quick clNn-up, ~/~NEST & A~:.~~~ Since 1989. 845-8512 '*;~~~ :.~/~:~~ Lie. U11&o2. 548-9734 Pre-eoflool 11•cher wlll •••••••'•••••••••••••• ':':I.":.' ................. Reaid. Cln-up1, gerdtn yd•. OlflQll, Job-tit .. & __ o_u_r. _____ • -'-., ... FrM "'· 882•1718 lt•~l,,ll•• babyelt, 1otlvlt111. Cement·MuonrrBtoc:tt DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC terv, m1ln1, tr .. trim. pr"" mgmt Rlctc '"'qf. •••••••••••A .. ••••••• IUPl'Vleed play 8utherd W.n.cu.t Fr11 .. t. 141-109e Wiiiy 831':0aes. Krt1 831~53 W.'u1.J•• •••••• ••••••••••••••• 11 .. tl•• BUDGET RATES I ..... ~-HB ,; ... u .. 2•• "38 0•1. n:..~· L~a... Alpalra, new I Old. 11 •••••••~"•••••••••• • ABC MOVING . ••'•"•••A••••••••••••• L~ min. Sim Jobt OK ,.,......,., · .....-... "° ,. 1 " nuu ~7·2-.. Y" lllP. Bud 552-9582 l....ut~ a .. ~ .. .....a John Mull-& Son• Oulctc, Cwtful Slfvlcl. v-._ __ ...,.... H1ullng·ttudent wltrucl!. -~, ASR PAPERHANGING Lie: Free .. 1 841-7581 ~~,!~~ ............ . MOit tubJICtt, K-14 Oty•v....,mmer l10wtl Mr Morgen, 845-5178 !~~!!.~{~~'····· "L.et tile Sunlhlne In" Call Sunlhlne Window Clllnlng. Lid. 648-8853 2both 1ldee, terllnt & lrackt. Honeet, depen- dable. Guer. no 1tr.U1 Alu. prlclt. 540-5654 BABYSITTING-my home. Concrete-emall or 101 Wiit tlllt~Ac:ou9tlc Tr11 trim, gen. dnupe, Low rat11, retlable . Concrete, brick. wood Fr11 •tlmet• 552-0410 7 yr• local exp. Guar fncd )Id, hot mMll. An)'-lob•· Almov9, r.p!ICI Of Hang-Tape..Stlll ttud1 cement wort!. FrM "'· Th 1 nk you. S 11ve. deck•. retendecaplng & *A·1 11.,.H* work Prlcea 1t1r1 11 S 1 i JS 'c Window welhlng, •vv 1 time. 8*2t74 repair. 145-8512 Lie:. 389944 1·532-5549 Cell 549·1804 enytlme. 759--0128 tree removal. n0-2953 91 $8/roll, Alec 751-7027 .~!~.~!.~ .. !.'!!.!! •.• 11Y $20. Av~ 2 tty '35. --------Top quellty. Spec111 care --------Screen• Incl d. 873-7804 INFANTS I VP CONCRETE WORK & DRYWALL TAPING J ... te·• Gardening HAULING a DUMP Thi ....... ClrlW In lhl In handllng. 26 yre exp. Wellpeperlng·P•lntlng CLERICAL SERVICES Mark Dey Ot Night, '60/Wtt. BLOCK WALL REPAIA All Textur• & Ac:ooetk: ClNn.Ype, tr11 trim & JOBS. Atk lor Randy, Wiit. .1 Delly Piiot Competitive Retu Rtt/com'I. Sc:andln1vl1n Bkkpg•T)'Plng•Ftlea 1--------- COlte Meta 84'-5168 •711-6278 lft 5PM. Fr11 Ml Kevin 875-9088 melnt. MfV. 540-8035 841-8427 Cla .. lllld Ad. 842·5678. No ovet11me 73()..1353 qu.Uty. Hllm11 548-7875 PU/del. avail. 842-8518 Want Adi Cell 1142~71 DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS Sell your no-longer-needed Items for cash. If It doesn:t sell, we'll run it another 3 INES days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads. Call today for full details. (Non NfWld.-fan.._ tt.001 3. 3DAYS CLASSIFIEDs642•5678 fP.'!!!'!.fP..'Hf.1 .... ~'!h.!!.?.e!.1~ !t'!!.~H! .... ~ ~!!~!.~!~!~ .... !.t. !~~'!! .. '!~.'!!..H!.f m!.,.!.'!:!i .... !H.f 1nNUI• fJJ '!!!l .. '*r!~.'.'!. .... '!.1.~ '!!ll .. '!!!1.'!. .... !.'.~ ~!!1..'!!!'!!. .... !.1.'A Unmf Shift ooeen view Dana OlllTM lllTll Wanted: Udo ltlend 1 or 2 LOST: WHtclllf er11. ••••••••;,•;•;,•••••••• Wllll mlllll HOMEMAKERS w/c1r 4 bdml, 4 beth, NIMfy Pt. houte, own tumlturt IRVINE Phone 1n1w1• • .. NIT* br apt, yrty leul, prof. F Grey Coctc11111 "Corky". lffattll Parltr Exper with teaCSerehlp PAIT Tilll ~~gde•der~~~.~o~~:'~~ bledl, dodl, '8000. Alto • plut. '350/mo. 'n utllt. ring c0nf rm utll pd Alrpe>rt Ar ... IKIC tult1 wtgood ref•, nlldld by A • w • r d • u r g • n t · ablllty. Good with figure• LldO Ille 3 bdrm, ftm 49&-011• actiy aer~t. etc. Aleo expandt, ctuey turroun-Sept. 15.' 845-7080, Wl'k. 831-4'408 Open 24 hre e day and hlVI buslnetl aevyl Be I cerrler coun11tor H1orough, dersenel1bl1. ~A~.:.:> ci:J;. F/M non "'*' owr 30 10 dHll •P•C•. I 150/up. ding•. prof 1tmoephere. 770-3364l97M492 Loet: Biii trt-ctr •h•ltl• Jec:u:Zi~'r,~n~oc•t• Sllet •llP« helpful Fun if~ !.'~~~11e~~:·~:g:;: ~=~7861~ mC:~ ay, Ahr, 8 5-41181. 11\r fentutlc: 2 BA 2 Ba 540-9745 hU 120 to 250 eq ft Of· J U ,/hnft '/ ltm. Vic:: Santi Ane Ave, It welt 11 tourlttt. place. prelty f11hlon1. ae.ry Work only l2 hours ---------1 Pltll Nwpt 8'>L 2 pe110e. 1817 Westctltf, N.B 256 no.. & dlllt ~ from U fU/' I CM, R9wwd 552~171 B1nllAmericerd M11t1t Startt~ r•t• $5 50 plua •week. $75 to sten plus lllSUIDll 1 Br. 8'Mpe 4, ecroea the tennle gym pool epe. 4000 It t floor 285/mo. lncludlng cont 11.,.n Cher Am j E lncentlvee to quallfltd aeldltlonal lhare 01 pen Qwty for 1 IOYlng, reep. •H••t from b1ech. $315 & utll. S.........948 to eq. · •t. · rmt. r1c•ptlonl1t, •n•· •••••••••••••••••••••• r o•. •r ca n X· perton APPLY Beck • · non-trn<>«er lo orn•n~1 •~""/wk 875-5088 Agent 541•5032 wiring 11rvlce lot• of I•·'-•• P '"· Diner•. All w•I· Street No. 25 F11hlon nershlp • profltt. -· -. Retpontlble ~ noo-520 $ 00 kl WP & Tl " llU fNU\ ans com• 7 U /845-3<433 . I d N Be ,., real fun jobl hOme of lemele execu· 3bf/2bl 1 sty 1111 poot II t lhf Perk' LldO eq. It. 1. I* eq. par ~. X Iva · n..-trgJ11r llOS UUl1ll nu 2112 HerbOr Bl CM lien · -pon ach. Manaoemenl 09ponunl· Ova and to care for 3 yr ~ Sr&/da)'' 2 _.; C' rd o S 3 7 5 fl .• 3975 Birch., N.B. 833·M78 ••• ~r.-: •••• ;'•••••••• . Phone cells e no not tlee. For Interview call Olel Exehange for MP min 54&-e1M..,.; on o . mo. Agent 541·5032 $300/up: Cerpetl, drapea. Children'• Book Store IDf FREE Your Cer Reneclt You At •au.ai ;p••y TI•I after 8:00 PM 8<42-5678. fully aqutp'Cl apt end · ... 54&-&238 H.B. In fut11row1ng Sedor. M Cuttom Wu & Dltall -._ -ext 312 small ae.tery Must~ N.8 .1 br,llpe4,aundldl, M/F to eh< 2br, 1~ N.8. ~2· 21~1 a..ch, .B. back Valley. 831·1888 Alu.• Tony 547-8241 Lookl~ for lntereellng English, drive end pre- 1t1p1 to Hnd, 1vall. oc11nfront. No drug• .,.. • ......... PARTNER WANTED Cal•, COEDS . Would love to work? Typing. no •hor· FLlll PllSltl ASST H n t qu a lttled r1t 1111. $325. 75-4-0ll38 S500 mo. yny. 87U114 BBQ r•t. GrHt loe. 10K. ,,......_, with C II S lhend 8-Noon Ole on Sewing prodUC11on ex.p 640-622•. &40.4309 *SUITE DEALS* 524-1908. 11&-1130 142-1111 ~"keth~~y~l m~ P.C.H 6<46-7•31 Cos1a Mesa. 642-9651 r. a1 ,_ ,_,_4 ••• Femlle to find end.._.. _ oc Air..,... .... Prof aftuM ,_ ._ aipt with urne. AllOI ._..,, ,.;..,,·,on..:.:;t •• ::., .:... ........ ·. MINI RESTAURANT 953-9363 CODI •Fii 1H I• •••••••••••••••••••••• 11()...5()31 ~~...,.. .... , .. , ,,,,_, ""' .... ""19 • LAKE TAHOE on W1tw ---------i ¥.-or no frtlte. lndtvldull of. S-& wine. '30.000. L t M 1 t 8 EJlp'd llne coot!, lulltlrT\41 M11ketl~ co needs 10 llSIUIOl 4Br 3be, •••c home, IEIT TM _, ~:::.,-no.. or dle6I ~. 150 548-9289/979-1919 (4-8) ~: c:o:mu J;.,,, m~~ Lma t ""'" nlghlt, health fooel demonstrator• over 18 compl furn, 1700/wll. ~-_ eq ft . 3500 eq It. t MO Join th• l•tder In 1 .. 1 H · a Rt Id 'A PHOTO MODELS ortentld. Apply In per-tor dynamite new pro-yetre c:omp1ny 1xp1r. 5 5 2-2 1 1 5 or 1 v1 t Ledlll: IQl. empl. & O¥er i-All'9,...... FREE. 759-8971. ewtmmlnn pool ~ N:v AewwJ•~:o:, 'w ~:t ESCORTS/DANCERS son Pufllnt , 3050 E. dUC11 No exp. nee. • -Flex time. Call Barbera Irvine Branch of mejor Co Mlks Sr. multi~ comm't reter wllh min. 2 915-0311 45? W.,,I lo talk about _.,,~ 'bu.intte. Be 1 ttwY 845-4S351 . OUTCALL 24 HRS CO I I I H w Y, Cd M train ExpenHe aelvan-Delport 8 em to 11 tm OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 B<. ~"f ~rtO N.B. VllW lff1ll "tparkle water tr11tment · MMHl 840· l573· ceel. wO(k locelty, or Ira-'°' appt. AYlll Weekly th tytlemt d11ler." Llc'd LOST 1110 F/Pug puppy, Counter Clerk & iome vel w/group. Call Ms 71•4/545-7100 EOE · now.;... ru 11•• ,__ •--i 4•11 --------''--.:.! Well-appointed office w/ terrttor&,.:v•ll•ble, fewn w/blldl lllCI, MIU drlvl"" Pert Time Help Pridgen 10-4 Mon-Sat ---1N-S-U-.. -.N-CE __ _ IUl'ftlnlr.v,-1873. _. ..... ,.,_ • ·---* Nwpt vlew.Approx1,000 Vw"·1r ... 862--0148 THERAPEUTIC MAS· .... · tor l""'I "•84187 "" ••••A•-••••••••••••••• F -...-W'r_. 913. ft. Orange t .,.., no .,. SAGE Orlvera License req Ory .... · .,.. • a....t ,_,.,,,, .... 4,_ Sing It Jl":~t" Cott• rom 1 room to 3 rooma. 84s-7100 uper. nee:. Wiii treln. Loet: Ladtel Gold Squere For Men & Women by Clllners 760-1•10 A4•lahtralw •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ bl · ISO/mo. From $1.18 • eq. It. No $50,000 full emount mounting with Merqult certified maueur ·NB Counter Person for dry Generel Roommate wentld, nWI, Stonigl onty. 851-2175 llul required. AdJ. AK· CdM dill tulle, A/C, emple req'd , tome flnenclng Diamond Ring. REW/4.RO 780•3825 ' cleenlnn co. l l·&PM. 4 INFORMATION on Aiu- to lhr 28r IPt. C.M.1250 12x20 Geragea for rent, porter Inn. 2112 Dupont. pkg, utll pd. 2855 E. Cat avell1bl1. Wiii net J.40. 84-4-9893 1tt 8. d•Y ~;.k Mature per· kan. out of 1t1te and mo. George 842-41381 pvt entry, ttor•o• or Cell AM. 833-3223 Hwy. 815~900 000 plue. Cell co11101 • IOO EW&ll • son. 494•9596, The ovl!"seu j0b1 naw avel· 2500 eq ft Condo, wtlt ec-Clrt, sao mo. M&-2568 COSTA MESA ofllce Mon-Fri t-8PM. All! lor • I ,.,.,..,.,., Ofoppe Shoppe table. 120,000 to $50.000 OIPI 2 edttl, Of 1 edit Cotll M111, MHil dtl BAYfRONT 'Peet for 1411se, ewrox, Tim 408/887-0111 • ......... lab4 .. :&~;;............. ~,.ls:.:3~. ~~.:,; w/1 child Of Juet 1 ldlt. Mer ., ... ..i-11 ,,.,,_, 2.000 eq.lt. of pvt offlc:ee. ·~ -·1 20" bf-bird cege w/2 $ejHJ1 I Dell counter, PIT. Mon-Fri ..,,....... Poot. IQ kit, 2 petlOI, to sso. 11oxtt:'°S4&:.4'71 Pnm.omo.. 873-1003 a-11 wortc ., ... pk.I• .... , u.. mtetlentcel orenge tin· ,.nn1ll1• 1IOS ~8,';~,; ~~arold. •95 1•04•0 ______ _ ~!110_7~~ ~/bey vl1w. 11 ..... , 97~745 1 ... 8. Exec: tultet, lull aerv., reception room. Prof. llJf gtn g blrdt. Stolen on •••••••••••••••••••••• 1---------._ _.., _ ~ .,..,,. " tum/unturn., Qflllly,.. decoreted. Xlnl loc:allon. •••••••••••••••••••••• Batbol PenlntulL July3. Credentleled t11chtr In Gen Otc Muat type duced. No'"· 754--0274 14.t tile •OS Fwy a Harbor .... umu 714/54M058 my home tutoring math. IEITIST SOwpm 1()-t(ey by touch, M/F 3 Br. 3 Ba. hornt In 01JJn ... Ill 4411 --------Blvd. eJtlt. For more Info lleftslllt ... .... reedl~ Gredll K-4. Mrt 0-el dentist wanted, gel. w/phone•. Meture prtv. commty. 2 blk• •••••••••••••••••••••• llAITIFll call ..-dayt. 761-8191 Speclellzlno In 111 & 2nd Found: Cockellel, vie. Putman 548-9161 be.ch are1. exp. In 111 person. P/tlme. 1-5PM lrom bell. J1c. frplc, lllT lllLn llWPllT OllTtl TO'• .rnce 1a4e Beech/Hiii, HB. Ph•-· Ex.oellent pay + Could teed to F/llme $390/mo. 831·1188 Bill With UH ol reception, mOl'flYI .. fTIS Robt. Sattler NH/CM Mt-1481 {~.'!!!.'!!. •••• !.~~! percenlege. 8-46-2411 Non-emkr prelf'd Apply; Offlcl tpect. Newport cont. room, kl1ch. phone, 88l Oov9r, NB. 831-3851 R.E. Broker 8d Relltort Found: Stenderd ez. Fem. Kind lntllt1-..t PrectlCll ORY CLEANING 9•5· 821 W. l9th, CM c.n1er. 720 IQ. It. Fum. ••2 2l71 ,..,. ,..11 c ''V""'' Eallblllhed lrvtne tnw· ra nee brokerege w/ excel. reputellon requl· r" an eec:ount ldmtnl- strator. Thia commerd&t position requll'M • high degree of technlc:el knowledge and 1trono c1erlcal sic lllt. 2 plul yrl expr. In 1101f1CY environ· ment. Highly compe1ttlve benefit•. P1MN cell Judy Bell 714/752-2255, ext 500 Anderton & An · Clerson ln1ureno1 Bro- llera. Inc. EOE. M/FIH -llTE or untum Avlll. Jul)' 19. tec:reterlal & word pro-Offlol for rent, eoo eq. ft. .,.. • "'"~ 01111 wt broken red nurse otfere cheerful lmmec>llle 1t111 for l\Jtty Heir er-~Id. vu. Wende, 114-4-7520. Ollalng. Mall a '1-.gl on s. E. BrlttOI, $350. WIDOW HAS $$$ for TO'• , ... h. (B11u11ful). compenlonlhlp a ••!>« lllptrllnced lege Felrt Mell. Laguna -------- FlllEll _.,, IVlll . ...,.,..,11y If p. r m 0 5 4 5. 108 0; RE Loen•. 10K Up. No BrookhUm/ Ademe. HB. pertonll C.I. 720--0779 '!! Cl11n1r Beech. 494-11100. lllllOAL ASST. Fill Im dulred. Celt: Judy, 545--4050 Credit Chec:k, No Pen· 530-0387. or 875-3704. Or.'• ott1c11. Tu11 & Oldllt & W9Mt egency. 714neo-<>100. 1 ..._ & ... ~ • Exe lent Hlary end Help, need 25 aupervltora Thure only, Et Toro, Alt cllenta ICfllnld with Lrg omc. IUlll, localed LAGUNA BEACH-Down-• ty . ..,....nleon ......... FOUND: PrHc:rtptlon •• ,. ,,,.,. 1100 1trong Compeny benltlt• FI T. nu weloht IOU 770-1960. p11otoe&1••101L onNwptBeytrontlnhl-llW'9lfllAll town, 500eqIt 1275. 873-7311 gt ..... ,lnHarverdPlril, ... ,.-.................. awlllyou program, W/traln .-------- er.dlta: Colmopollten rlM omc. bldg. w/tmllll ElltcUtlve offlc:. In Can-Stop by 333 3rd St. "' Irv, Sun. eve 551--4310 Accounting • Gr11t """""'unity with ,_83_1_._260_1_____ 11Q11&L IPHllUIT Good ................. __.... w at bey. All or pell VIII ••"'O/ call (213) 393-23-47 .tu.un.atrrj PENSION AOMIN, H · ..,,,...... .-·"I Ill & ~·-.., ~·--from $1.•!S..., n. 2 mo.. nery 1g1. • " mo. Found: HU911y/Mal•mull, pendi ng Ptntlonl lnt'I recognized Or'apery ,._ _______ ,1 Letrn m .... cet •k • The Tomorrow Show. ,,... rent to'"qulllflld t• Broller676-4912 oceen view, privet• of· 1......U/ Red Kerchief Hnlg contultent flml In lrvlol OINnlngflrm. •-Hrv• In the Army Ref. l1,1rt 141·1MI nant. Call 84~ for •Tm WlYD llcH, N-port Center. i..t I IHM Lendmarll, HB. S at. IMk• en •llPtr pentlon • Extreordlnary repute-for Ad Action erw near home. Call to- Info, DI " 2012 T1lephon1, tec:retarlel. •••••••••••••••••••••• 114·~952 Admln. Smokere nHd tlon dey:Tuttln 731 ,_.81 Prof. M 2&+ nontmkr, 101-liiniMin"iiiiUim-•·exec."' •. • tel offlc• t1rvlc11 av111 . ..._...,....,. II# Found cu11om mac1e bllCk no1 tippty. Con1.ct Lone 1~1 1311 C II ...... ek.. • a.. ..__In CdM,1 ..,., 11111 ft. Newpot1 Archie M• $ 2 0 0 I mo & up . ....................... + Vic Ot (114) 851-1204 .. • a a S1nt1 Anl 542-4783 .. ., " "' ,..,.,,. .. -rlne Bldg. 842-484-4 759."""• nU UIYllllM rMI, wet tult. 1 h USAA C1r. 552-3113 c:c:•th. 1'A blk• to ~ ... ,5 .-y•• , ... ..., ""'"'" -.m I B1lbo1, NB. Cell to1-A-N-SW-ER-l-NO_S_E-RV-l-CE-COIT D 'I Pilot '450. -.?:2 .. ~~lndry Incl. == == Pr1m1 on::'11c1~~-V tlon Bible Sctioo1 ldentlfy. &J6-0502 P/1111'11 ...... wtindt wrf IUPllJ ILUllll al y Nf;,~Ni ;:-::: t~n18!: F1mal1 18·35 to llv• 900 eq fl . tmlnltJet ted dlrtctl)' eaOM from IUS.tu lnlll ffH J:-19-23, 9-11:30em Lott: Brl411 t1m111 Pit/ ~~on;-'· 1Hl Lte• ht 0.a. AD-VISOR ,,_,, lcMno cw.. U.. •board !57' Yecht In UJ-2111 Civic Center. euy ec· •••••••••••••••••••••• C.M. Church at ChOlt Lab X. Jliy •from Slettr 1---------In, Nwpl Bch. 835-7772. CHI to frwyt, llexlbl• Office and Lebora1ory 287 W. Wlteon 145-3191 •nd Edwerde. Very · New In town? Cl1Hlfled 642·5678 535-9893. ~~~'::!~ ~·;c:.5 ~~I~ -..... iii .. ;My9iiaiH111•-011101 tultll from IP-. up to 7500 eq ft. ~· PIMtl Allum. Attractive Gil can help you meet many WANT ACTION? 142..t300 24 hra. Extcutlveofftoel 1,000" 235-1430 eq. 11. For eel-~2111 Alk tor Joe SCRAM LETS 71 2-2339 8opNetjca1ed, ettrecttve, or your llMdt. 642-5678 --------CINSifed Ads ~2-5&78 ---------1 to 1,650 ft. AttrlCt. Wiil dllionll tnto cell Retell tlore et 2650 Avon • LOST: Jul)' 4 Femell dog well groomed glrl to r-------...;.:;:.:_ ________ ..'..;:========.. Prof'° ft Condo, houle, m1lnt•lnld bldg. N11r •• ,.. .... St., 11'40 eq. ft. plue 8 ·NSWERS bm, blk wht. Mid toe model prlvltll)' tor In· 111 1m1nltlH 1215. Hoao Ho1plt11. Cpt•. 141-1121 car g11ege. 141..atn. n 548-0183 dlvldu11 3.4 hrs per _M2_·_2_..-._. _...,... __ .,._-! mini bllnde. Oedtc.ted c....mll PellCI • Or-' LOii bled! Lab meill. Vic. weelc. Strictly pttvall and , "°'*"*' to lhr 2 br pklng.. Prat. environment NEWPORT BE.AC!!_..,.. ....._,,_, 1 fflf Chime · Fletly Orenge/O.t Mtr, C.tit. In good t11t1. Vtmolt dvplex, E/Sldl C.M. In quiet --. 845-3323 "Tum Key" Offlot .-v. -~. WALLET 831-4337 EYM. ~ dltcretlon 111ured. 1221 Incl. utltl.146-7220 d•)'I "Brench" office S75, •••••••••••••••••••••• Thi trouble with gerdl----------OrMt pay -llelllbll hrL ;:~i;;;=-iii:t.teM.~tu:"f:i*i:i•iiiin••,.iiiii;yriaii .. Uiiiil.*~I Semlnw meeting room• "'* M.. nlng 11 t1111 to bl tuc-\.ott: Kitten, ory Mall, 10 Send pfloto end ctetlllld Stir Mr 1111. t + utltl. hourly. T)'Plng. milting, 1n ,_ tMdg on Cout ClllM et tt, you need 1 Ml•. Aldl1nd1 & River· delctlptlon 10 Box. Ad ptut 1100 teO. dep. S..A, 1101 Dove St. PrHtl· phonH. Cati for Info · HWy, South Legune. A(>--gr11n thumb, end an Ude, NB. 1>)11 7S4-e801, No. 1011, Delly Piiot, Nt-1191 Ill Spm. Qb.ta N.8 . loe. Plrlec:t 762-6406. prox. 600 eq. 11. Ex.eel· even Qtllnlr WALLET. Ivel 146-1502 Box 115«l, Colla M1ea. -0--1-,-0-n-t_N_•_w_p_o_I_, fO'tttoml)'.OfllcllUltel lent privet• parking , __ a .,_,_... -..1 a.-.--...._ CA 92828 cHn r • from 810 thN 3900 eq. n. WUTWTD behind bldg. $525 mo. _., • ,,.., SJ hi"' ... t"' lbl-· ..... "' 1---------1 non-tmll miture reep. lmmed n111. Mlnut11 1200 or 2400 eq. ft. 0.-Turner Ateoo. 494-1177 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1 r Cl w ue •Y••· llTI ..... fem, •235mo .. yrly • from O.C. Alrpor1. For luxe off let or •tore Lott: longhelred or .. my neutered IMll. 494-4&42 Wtll lllgnmt. a brtca. Own _548-__ 1_•_7 ______ , more Info cell 1p1c:e. 14302 a 14304 STiii/"'* white cet w/orange 111'9, FOUND: Cat, long 1111r, hend too& Newpott Tlr• N.8. prof. M Wll lhr ... 1,f& -BHch Blvd. Btwn 2 300 to t00 eq. ft. Ontwn Hlmelayen type, Llgune orange w/wht pewe. C1r .. 3000 E. Cll. Hwy, Herbor vi.w home w. ..,.1111 Frw)'I. CMc <Ant• v~ i..eouna 494-eeM. 8Mch. Aewwd. Woodbrldg1. 01nt11. CdM ;~u+. UH .1 _________ 1 ~s~~9~ lalutml'-NllM 494-38721487-6464 Mt-11oe 1--Aut-omottw ___ a.... ___ , .i --.aT Of 645-12t0 ...................... Loll: UaM Apeo, Fen!, Found: Qoederl Altrtewr, I Ull ftrol. M., ncwMmllr, n..s5 120 eq ft """*'*' fOf · 1180 1q ft, conelet• of vie. 8111 CfeetcL.Monerdl fem. Approx 8 yre . •I II to •fl r NI fl om•. ert11t1 or archlteote, Ntport .,.. • &le. Sul-~ ... ~of• 8ey. Aewwd 4n-1m Hunt 1 n gt on I c 11 . 1 *318/MO. UMlM oe.-Newport C.nter, avell .... From 22M50 eq. ft. "°' W/fNI bath. Ground Loet alnce 1 11 mlle HI-"3-M41 for 1WO CMIM!ed. EJt .,. 140. Wende 644-7820 ~~J'irany .,,... ::: :'f':,p ~ MALAYAN CAT. " brwn "9wwd ...... 0mo M ~i ~n= Coron• del Mar. Mate EIC09llftt Oflcal • Up to Attrecllv1, quiet 0491• w/oooo. bfwn feoe,..,., Britteny ~. bf... e xoellent future end Doc. 10 to* 19r a. 2 4000 ICI fl. 1801 Newport LMlf ... ... ..._. ~ compm ,... I '811. Biiie ~. ftel bell on ooller, mteetno IMf'I)' befteMa. ~ In erry, IM ent, 2 bib to 8MS, C.M. 84'-2111 AM Owner~~ to tJt-tw ' collar. I yre 010. Vic 1-1a. 147-2118 Plf90n to a.... u1111• water, •Ith .,,, 11on-fOf Joe 111 .. 1800 ft of new v.-. rw Hoea Holp. Ill'· •nillr. 1100 plv• vtll. o.oer ... mvll ,.,., OfCI •P•c• In Hunlln9ton N.a. 3171 llln:tl. MIO aq. C... .Angellql.le ~ .... Ill I. 1'1111 ~ Mf or -.,,. 1ttfl St. IHCh L .... ::ult a ft. or 1 .... ndulttl•I • "8iwerd Loet: 7112 * ~ -1 ..... -· ' . . ... omo. 11()11 Aeclondo end MonnMa. -...... ---·-""'"'•'• •*"eel tor II C.M. Xlnt hnt oto loo. percent owneietr In-. Clroie' #I Huntington ,ound: lml brwn/whll• ted oollar. Nt ... '197 N· Hart»or IMS et Fair Of Toro .UI .. Me. -ptue .. 1117 000 ICI ft bldg doll to IM ' OOllle, pfnll ooller. OM, rw Collea Mw vtll. No pete. Tom. CdM OflPa IUITI bMch. No dn peym't. ..._,, 142•2 · ....,/College ttr-aot _w_A_AD_. _____ 1 __ UiMiiiiiiiiiii--I ~ A#tfS, IOO eq ft. New ?1::.:.1~ Ir o o II t ... Wss&ll• Jlound: 2 Mby Clloo ~ ~In tl1~00f w.-..... 18 .....,... Hiiie tlofM lo ~ta/ ctr= &~. AWOIC lOOO ~ ll. Nr tent 1tvne NI NMd ll#f. llftll. CMd..,.. ,...._In :'7. =:-:.:=r MTllN. , .. 1 4.::~·=~ ~~.~~~ pdhome.~ :.:;.='to ldHtlfr ~fol:~' .. : :,•i1~'1c : IPI. ~... ptt. "9f, ...._ llPW In ._ HI. "°"' ~ lie Jo. (7 C4) 141-41t'6 ...... ,... 'ound oer .:.:r.: & tH . 7 ~~'r.i' •:tot 'l "'11\':· =:r"',.':{.,~!=..~u: ~.~1~1.I011•11~fl.rt. llO, 1100 M 1100 ,_ft. lotT: T/11 MllllOft vi,. ~1_Me ,_.., llBalll ,:.,~ l• • Of,._,. ....... , X.., Oott1 Metta. Qall ftr ~?;rr·· llM1H, z:'8...:'9 Nwtr Jetty, N.I .-rlNI ... fttf -~-...... LUXURVomc••~ ... 11111,11M111. • ~-'"~ , :.* .!:£: = 1'MINe1~., i.'1:.i :-:-:;; t-~· ~---=-.. :: :,::. ,41. '!f2i ..... 'Etr'=';,:., 'kt =~ ... ,.,. ttl 1111· fl.,_; Ce-.ttal Ottta Mt11. .....,. ttr='· 114~ tt11,· U " '"'· .. .. ltffllf, •w111, ,,..,.. •• , , ...... ~ ~..-""'' '"" ,,.. I ,.... • .. • .,..... ,....... =.,:-~~ "'°,.•·Ml •• • .,. fiirtMt........ Mith ji: I L!!!!!;,!!!:!!:_= .... ~ ~,~-:-• '"'I A.!!J!\a!\!!t!J'lt ~~~ -====i~=-::::i== .. I ..... '= lllJ= .::.a it"\'" ...... ' ma~ t { c. ) ) 14NTBD Newspaper Carriers tor routes in Huntington Beach, fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good Enrnl11CJI • Super Tdpt • Great Prbe1 , • CALL CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT lllJPlll I Orange Ooelt DAILY PIL.QT/Thul'lday, July 15, 1912 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1000 HU80 R 8LVO COSTA MISA 641 0010 C::l I Top Dolar Paid SOU T t-t ( OA~ T Dodge ~ IOt'CARVER I0..1.SiOta·IMW ---·1111-0Hllll • -L'I04 ll"IMQ- 1MO BMW A3t. l..oeded. ----:.~, •m-... A4l'O, .. , • """"' oeu. -'* .,,. ..... .,.... "°'· ~"°°°· 1 lilt.-f'Mll ............ N.lf lta.toa.•-.Mlll PM --., °"*"' .::0 "'"·*~ ml. IJ'D. I • .. • ·~ .. • 4 • -! .. .. . . .. .. • .. ,. , ~.t •.• "'~ ~·· .... . ... ~ .. . -. ;~ . ... ': ' I 1111\fJl •••••• 111M.f111tt!IC..... ""'1.~ ...••. M'-'r.~...... M.-.W. •••••• M~.~ •••••• ~.itM.~ •••••• .,.ftftt .......... M"'6.fm< ......... . l\tM .. 1/M llt ........... 11.1 fltdl ••••.•••••• l!M flt ........... ~_,.. • ~ ......... l!M ~ .......... II.ff T."1.'1.,,,, ...... 11!.f M. ........... 11.tf fMflr .......... l!t ft!tf111W. •• ~ Y1 MCI ............... '° ,,, I Tit ........ Ot '7011L.Tg_v..oQTAT '11 ...... It. "" llr... Ill • ~ 1MI UMeM o.t ...... ~;;u;;·~· """ .... ,....... ... ... °""'.... -.. u.m ~. ~ ~· T·TOf I ..... t HOO I OIO. N4-7IOI ~.-.a1s *.., llU. * L~ ::fri.:r."~u~: ~ .• ~1:':'n~ = I~ )'OU relH)' love c:. -~. . ~~ .... • ~ .............. ~ -·~,~:~. ~~~·i· ;t~:!t ~~·,:r:!m~~=~~N~: . .,uooo, vwow·~.::1 M:.., v;~ =· c:. .. ~. Olll. I , ....... UMoln,~MAM.,, ' =.. ·' _. v 1 • 10 o o · eoonomy w "'°'1 •'Y-........ ...... ....... 111 .. "'" .................... 1'1•u • VI • -· • -lllYllllTY 1mllm o .... te. l•0411· •r'J o ••n . ....,.., ·-,_.. eng. ,_,, ._ " bOO ·-UUI • ..,. lent cond. o ,ooo ml. 142"°447 m .. ·=· w~~i call T14/ttS.7HS. Aft~ t:.~: .:,;.p~ ~ 11Mt21 ~ ltl. MIO Hetbot INd 9$100. 112·1'01 'U SM-I 18008 ooupe. j024UIV) JUlt need ,.. 714/842-eat1 Pi tt)' to "'a lee 11nell N~ llAOH COll'A MUA • HI u•. ~ Mint oond. Aed/ll1ok llbl• per.ty to m•k• '1 1 p• .... ••i montllly pmte. No Old ~ MH Ill... •o• YOU• a..J ffM lnteflOt. OrlQ!nel Owner. .,.,,.,, montllly pm11, No ,..,..., oonttMte to....._ Ho r.:;•1n ••••••••• rr.rr 141-1141 NUTMAlk ;r.;o••••••••••••••••~': Fectort '-* manual In-Old oon\feotl to~. Mu1t H iii ><1111 ooncl. I •I .. ft.-C....., beOIC pmta M. Alk for '1t CoMICte 110,400 or 1 ________ 1 , ' '14 OP!L, auto. weo<H'· cld. 110.1111. No bee* pmta. due. All! SUnroot, amlfm OMMlt• -·~ ,. 0 1 • e '4 1 . 4 4 0 0 , beet ofW, New.,.., Lo '11 Honcl• Aooorcl 1191YI 81300. for "o•• 842·4400, 1111eo.newp&1nllllrM, 28 0 2 08 5 H• .~· IM-,OOIPYotoL/M ml.Loeded . .,.._lwML H•lctlbk, ,_ IUtOIT\l\lc, ~ - -... 7141184-7942 M~~o8~~ d:,~o'rt:IZ SM-loot Proto U M. -11500. 84t-2Ma TAM_,.. . 7eo-t7l4 ::O.'::c.=:.M.,:: fAClml ·1~:,~oT, NM good, 112'.1392 '12MltilllW:fmNHor ·11 IUI, New eng, new 111-2HI ~ ~~~ fi-'ed-----,,,,- 411__, llH 111111. Urll •U l'SUM e4a.ota7 '11"' 824 MMoon w/tan offer. Air, A /FM. Call :"'°"• ~C, :: oond. ~If MJf exlra1. IS500 or bell ~·•••••••••••••••••••• lnl, xtn't cond, S5K, M2·27H 2800• 2•1 ••••••••••••••••• r.... ofter. 714/831-<t177 13 9 PIM. W(lfl, NI. A/T, HOnd1, TO)'Otl, 0111un. "" MOOO. 848-4149 "' ~ 1111 '14 T~• Corotla. Aune mll9UT91 rlCHO, 11.0001 ml. 1t3S : r:::·:,~ no~ ..... .... 1141 !!.~ .............. '72 Porecme t 11T Show-... f!'! ............... perf9l)I. L9ook..'7!2ugtl. UM.Liit ~~·.~ ........ 11.~ ,7':':*"'•TCO:.~ ....... ___.. ett. No lie. tee. OeltYett ····:·····=············ LIAll a 111! rm oond. Prtoed 10 .... " 'fl TA?. IO ml, yell, od 1815• call 76-· ..... W• apeolaHzit In ...... UI •• Pllm .. .-ord L . ~ ......... eny ...... 1>Uy1 lln)' w ... • PIMllT Ill I t1eoo. t40-t1ee ~;~ tir ... auoo. 'l1 "'"'9r IMtlt for 111e t>ullneee ••ecli-11400. ~~~~;;~~~jjover;;ou~rf_ooe~t~. A~ll~Saver~r:• IM4 ..... ._.. .... .,_ ........ ...... ......... t~ t. ptofeNlonel W• llew • OOOd Mlec-Cell 84e-8233 lft 6 • ..: LMllnO 114/~1• tt I... TIUI lllllL ;';.~-~ ~~p0d':°'Aft1™'. Lnt ltl1...e. 110" or Ne\ll ' USED 55 FOAO 2 doof 52.000 'll 111 -~ 'IO Prelude. 28K, em/tm .. ,,., .... , 1289 ,~!l! ......... !!.'1 r.~ ...... !.'lf 82500. 113-16211 .,.. ... 1111 a.w-.i ,,..., 1 owner. No ~ t I '"'"K p t d llW 71 VAN, xlnt cond, dbc ~ 8700, 941-129' autq, •:!.1.."" , 1upar 0111, 110, w . oon . Compare HouM of Im· tunroof, told-down bad, 11 .... oonf, MTW. 1eo..eoe1 •1000101>o. 842.a155 ~. pone~ 1e11a and eo 'ti IMlllt Lt•-· brllk 'lt YW IMt '"11 ...._.,, .... mo1. Hn1lble pymt1. -,_ ... rune r,•t. -T;'.'";; • '13 DATSUN '71Accord,AC,xlntcond. 0111213 or 71 4: MEA-permonthplultax ManytoehoOMtrom. '2200flml.83141 7 WIW/W.teOOml."600 N~W:CR~ •••••• ••••••••• •••• l::c,bla~~1°~~:"· '4200/~IM4 c E o es 11 2 1 3 0 r 48 month oloHd end lmmedla1• Oa11Yery '74 euo, idnt. cond. New 213/Mt-laN (Cyprw) ~ .. 2 ~ .. · • 714/837-2333 l••M on approved ere· (011390) tlrM, run• greet. S2,300. '97 Cal lug. NW tk'M, C l LA cond. 2-4910 ·._ '81 A d 4 d • dll. Coma In and Mic for •• ,... 148-7759. 942..oaM NW eierao, Mii f:Mt. " ,J .. ,._~ ~""" ,,,, coor • '· " ep, H•Ytt'.I ....... Welted ......... AMlalltl -2600 turbo< Blvd. E•t•t• '7t Cll•vy v-. ·n ......_ 4°'· V8, *· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12K ml,_, k>Msad, xlnt, en090t1'to own a Mw .... .,.. WE'VE GOT FUEOOSI '72 SUPER IEETLE 8 1895· 945•4 28• Cotu Meta S40·9100 Htchbk, 41,700 ~I. pie, p/b, euto trena. 33K -.... Hldh'i !!.:.!50. 8'73·0051 aft Ced .. e.nz? Don't let w• llPllTI 111111 llUT 11900 973-1'7&4 11375. 494-84H dayl. ml, 83500. 545-e189 -' 1-I 1111 ..,.....,, lhll .vvvvtunlty n••• """"' 148 Dow Street 1-/ .. _/lf•111aT Call 848-7481 #i fl ·• -··· ·--............ • ,.__ ·--h -•Hr -'lt .vllTllLI '79 Se'lllle, med! .. body, '75 VEOA H•IChb1ck. .., .. ,. •• . • , ..... , '19 Civic: Auto tlllnl, 14, by ... acl nowl W• hive • 1Newpor112-0BMQllD -~~2!"H2ar3 bor 8!:'~~ c.,.,M7.0 ·ea vw Bui. new ........ s -..-..... ......... I ' I • " 8 0 0 A/C 36K ml ,_ llr• ••••••••••••••••••••• • ...._ 000 ml ... $3500 tantutlc Hleotlon of ._ .. ...., '""" ..-· u...-.._.,., .,...,.. w. n · per · •· · • • • ·ee Mu11ang 2811 ve '......... 54e.113211· modelt & ~ avall• eng. & brekae. 12000 or ri: trim, xlnt cond. ,,,._ 497-33211. 913.-.1oe , mini cond. 11&501080. A9blt eng .. ~o trant;. •791 .. ,,,_ Hond ,. _..... ble. l.u1 ~ l1JI belt. 548-1184 ng 19~~·1820 TllE UllEIT ~153 braku . New paint. · (~ re..... •· ~ ...... • u.a 11mj1 1111 •••••••• ••••••••••••• c1unea111ock ·74Bug 1n 'l! MnnTIIU ·75 vag1, 4 1pd, good a20001080. 54M538 Air. Xlnt cond. c .... n.. ••m . .. .................... •t DEALER IN U.S.A. 1ownl DI• fHturu. llLIOTllll cond. 11500/ bet olr. '380011111·1525 telJST£R $3100. 675-1399 Iv m"" $35001080. 538-1995 "3-5011 'It .... L 1301 Quall 8trwl .... of l•t• model, IC'# mllea· MACH I Fut~51 ve -----J---NEWPORT BEACH mCAR\fER '74 VW 412 u J 111• ge CldlHace In Soutri.tn '70 Mallbu, 350, p/1, p/b, • Su _ _. • .,..,.,,. 3100 Weet COU1 Hwy. ·=••••••••••!!~.. lll·t• NllOll/Alll _nrto..r"'C SOUAREBACK. 11595. !!.~••••••••••••••••~ Callfornlal Sae ua todayl 1lr, radio, auto. 11200 .. fPd. 11;;_9979"""'· Newport 8MQtl '74 JenHn HHly. Well 13e31 Harbor 81vd. l~l\.....C 840-1298, 848·8238 '70 Volvo 144S, P«*:1 llAllll 080. 840-1211. 842·9405 ~-r ... ~~~~~~u~<t. '7!:~':*oond~i3~: .o.!...~ ~~~ ~~IU '67 vw euo, •2'00k6001 ~,· ~50. ~tr~~' & Int. OUILUG ·e.2 ~1'1er.ol1 3~!f.d,· ~~ ~ ""' 1111 14750, 1142·0714 ev, 975-0578, 81~24 -L.=-ClOSEO SUNDAYS run• grH .. or..,.. 2600 H11t>or Blvd. " ~. '*3 . nu ,,_.,. or bait offer. 992.9799 •••••••••••••••••••••• deyt 752-3722 --. olr. 842-0219 #1 ftfyt lteltr COSTA MESA 11600/080 . 657-2187 AM ,. 7~~~!8·~1=: ·~an3:,>~ '°='~~~ 114 111·2133 f~Ld£!f ·~!~r;~~n~u fn!·u~~ 11 lr1111 a..tfl 140-1111 ~~~•••••••••• ·ee Mutteng 289, 4 tpd. 1 21100 . Andre a......_ Ala 1114 982-8392 '81 35e8, rbl1 eng, IMI ... 1110.. Irena 13000 obo, •••-·--UncolnContlnlntlll PS, chroma Cragare. 118-MOt. ;•;•i(;,;;•at:i:•c;;; '71 300SEL. 8.3, mini than 500 ml. New bet· -=-~-. 875-7506. -•• -11•-1111 llYIW *Tm .. * 12200. 495-9584 73 AAT 124 Spec:lal. ,,._ Peftlmmon 30000 ort0 cond, 83,000 ml, fully tery, clutch, no ru11. ••l -~•• •••t .71 Bug. New engine, 1111 OVE~EA=ERV Elegant1 Del, 25,000 ml, Long 11etad u the ulU· 0~ Hff buMl '~• p lltak•, ml mini cionct' u OOO equip~. wall metntal· W h It•. I 4 6 0 0 I b I 1. • • .,_ ---gr-•~ ml... •1950 EXPERTS xlnt cond. 1 owner. 110, mate In partOn11f luxury. •••••••••••••••••••••• New pelnt, loc*1 l rune oOnn. .... ~1ee::i.. . ned.Ouldt ..... •12,000. 49~75 8 ....... ..,... . • . 900. 979-7200 dye Right now, nva modell '79 Cullua Cal1l1 d1I. Ml. &41·2813. l8IO ...._..., 080. 540-5821 ext 25 ·eo 924 Turbo IOeded ·eo ~ I 1111 73-4195 evae. 875-0558 •11 llPM. ere 1v1ll1bl•. poulbly beeutlful ln1ld• & out, , '74 Kwmen Ghia, euperb dyl, 840..()838 eva. 924 Take ~ i.u.. .!!! •• '. •••••....•..••• '65 Squareback, poor UIU Ill •79 Eldo o: .. et, SllH5. one for YoUI JUlt need 111ra lull 111111, ltereo & 13 Flat 124 Conv. Oood cond, new hHdllner, -71..:_125-1808 · '71 COROLLA. S895 ofr. cond. '400 or betl rMI Vil.YI E•c;el mpge, A1 cond. rellabl• perty to mek• 11pe, Mlchell n llrH. cond. AM/FM 0111, 5 ruge, lheaplkln covert, llf n41 Good trenepottallon. . oftw. 546-8849 Loaded 945 7253 amlll monthly pmta. No 14950. 873-7078 evea. tpd. 12600. 873-99211 bruahed etum whit. tt.., •••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 92.4, xlnt cond. Low 6e2·2788 1* Herbof Blvd. · • old contr~ to uauma. a....."'--._1 radltll t" ... Gar:r kept. MO Midget. COf'lvert. mllH , a ir, 1unroof. '81 VW Rabbit Conv, 5800 COSTA MESA 'llO Eldorldo, 25K ml, all No bad! pmta due Atk ..._,_ ,_ , !~~ ........... !!.~ 15800. 842·79 evM/ 1974. Rune well. e .. 1 19000. 876-9132. '71~~~c~:~M~~/FM. 1Jr, ~'F~.,':':!:~wi~· Ul-HH 141-1411 utru, •Int cond . for Rou 8 42•4400, ;979 .. ;1;;i,j;J·;~;;~,~~ '78 CIVlo Wagon. 4 tpd, wtmda ~:~7211400lobo, ·73 9 11T, 1lr, alloy1, 958-6224 Amlh. Urn Mat. p.int Special 1977 Volvo 2420L, red, lll.OOO/OBO. 94e.7511t 556-1008 Proto LIM. ldnl cond. MU91 -10 .,. new llrH, xlnl cond. '70 OHIA 11500 Bl1upunkl, xlnt cond. uau. S/wheel. AT. atenderd tran1. 1tereo, Haye aomatNng YoU want Tum to today'• dueHled 1pprec. 127 50. Oy1 •· 12800obo.497·5289or Runtgr•l,80mlruat. '11-.Tllllltr Mut1 Mill $8300 080. 19490 Marty.973-1345, cle1 n. 13995 firm . 10Mll?Clullfleid adl do tor Ill e bu t buy1 . 714-754-1271: eva. . 87M887 831-3527 Ofr. Nu pam. 499-4722 536-2887 873·1344 851..e993, 493-4928 II well. 842·5t71. 842.st78 714-842..:t90e • A Tl.AS CHIYSL&oft. YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd., Coate MeN. Tel. 546-1934. 3 blocu 1 eouth of Sen Diego Freewey off Harbor Blvd. Complete ,_body 1hop. Sain. Service. Pitta. Service O.pt. open Mondey lhru Frldey 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. on S1turday. llACH IWOITS '48 Dow StrMt. Newport Bach. Tel. 752-0900. Call u1. 're the •~lall1i. for Alf• Romeo. Peuge ot, S1ab & Mrltl. . JOHMIOM I ION UMC0LM MmCUIY 1928~ Blvd .. Co• Mtl&. Tet &«MaO. 17 y_.. of fritndly tMllly ..vlCt -er.,. County'• ofdMI Lin· cotn-Mercwy d1111rrlp. • MIWPOITMOfrl 100 w. CoHt Ht9"w1y, Newport 'Hoh. ..... ,.,... tM ,••U'• '• ...... , MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NIW,OU DATSUN 888 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At th• trl1ngle of Jl/Tlbof ... M1cArthur 6 Brl1tot behind Vlctorl1 Sl1tlon. Sales. Sarvlc•. Leulng & Part•. We mike gr .. t dMlll • HAIRS CAOILI AC 2900 H1rbor Blvd., Coate MeN. Tel. 540-9100. Or1nge County'• L1rgHI Cadlll1c dNler. Sit•. Service. Le .. - lng . • DA YID J. PHILUPS lutea-POMT1Ac.MA%DA SalH • Servloe • Leulng 24888 Allele Plrkwey &..gun• Hiii• 837·2400 • CHICK IYHSOM POllCHM.UOl-YW 415 E. Cout Hwy,, Newport BMch. 873-0900. The only dNJerahlp In Orange County with theM thr" greet tNlc.-under one roof I QAl•AUTOMOIUI 711......, .... 0-. ..... , .... ,.,. "JMIUAM °""Plew.TY'' XK 1IO't11•111W""'= ---"'*'-Alla. • • IOI LOMGPll POMTIAC 13600 BHch Blvd .. We1tmin1ter. Tel. 892-6651 . Or1nge County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Ser ... Service. Pans • DICK MILLll PIATILANCIA "Pr®-bly the loweet priced Fleta (n Southern C&llforr 1" (L~ted 1 mile north of South Coest Plaza neer Mein St. and Werner Ave. In Sant• Anl.) 120 W. Werner, Santi Ane 5S7·2t32 • SAHTA AMADATSUH 2001 E. 17th StrMt, Sen&a Ana. Tel. 1568-7811. Your' Orlglnel Dedic.led D1t1un Deeter. • MllACU MAZDA Wt'w movedl Our new loc.tlon la 1425 Baker StrMt, Cotta Miu. Tel. 541 SS3'. Step by a wtelt ~' br1nd new lhoWrOOnl Ind ... why we•,. the f1 Mude dMler In '°""*" Callfomla. a.tea. a.Moe, Pert• Ind Lealng . • AMAl9t1MAIDA ....,o.c. ......... . .. .............. c... 801 8 . An1helm l lYd., Anantlm es.tl20. Juat north of lante An• Frwy_. on ANN!m lfvd. Cell ua flrttl 'WE AAI HAAD TO F1NC>-eUT WOATH ITI" COSTA MISA DATSUM 2845 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 5-40-6410. Serving Orange County for 18 ~ 1 Mlle So. 405. SUMSIT FORD, IMC.. (Home ot Wittie the Whele~ 5440 Owen Grove Blvd., Wwbnlo.-. Tel ~O. • • COM ... rr'°"' UledMN .. ln-..ndMCt ................. 111 I , In d artfied To "8C• fOU' ..,....-ty • ...... '--. .....,.. • • • 11m111111UC1 1.t•11111W1 llllJH'-,lll\Y .1111 'I I '• l '•Ji.' (JHl\N•.I l •llJN' I '1\1 II (IH NIA /', (I Nf S ·Valley .school trustees la01baste critics 1tY PHIL SNEIDERMAN or .. ..., ........ ~ and oounter-chargee are beln1 exchanged among three Fountain Valley &hool Diltric\ tn&atees and a parents' =that haa larleted them for The truateea, Cheryl Norton, Ro1er Belgen and Susanne Moore, have l11ued written reapomee to chargee made by the Committee Advoca ting Raporwlble Education. CARE. CARE memben have aocuaed the truatees of mismanaging district finance• and lmplementing an insufficiently planned middle achool (gradft six through eight) prosram without adequately determining whether local parents want auch a grouping. . A spokeswoman for the Orange County Registrar of Voters office said the CARE parent. have filed their notice of lntent to recall. The Regiatrar'a office now must approve a printed petition containing the CARE charges and the trustees' respol'\lleS. Uthe peU\lon ii approved, the parenta will have 120 daYt to collect about 6,0':!:ftnaturea needed before a election can be conducted. In hia re9pon8e, Truatee Be]&en claimed the recall lfOUndl are "f alle and rnialead.lna'' and "a amokeecreen oovertna peUtiooera' true concerns about my vot.e on two illues -clclure of Nleblu rather than Fulton, Tamura OI' Masuda echools and aupport of intennedlate echoola." Belgen, who la 1n hia fourth term on the board, added, 110nly 1Mt November', the community re..elec1ed me. I campaianed then for lntenned!ate IChooli. I have vl11orou1ly 1upported lnterinediate IChooll llnce 1976. "PeUtlonera contend I acted lrrelpomtbly beca~ I d1d what I prOmiled ln my cam~ lMt November and prevlou1Jy. 1 contend I ml.Wt be IWpOnllble and llCOOW\table to votera, not to a .nail •pedal lnterelt lfOUp.'" In her rea~, Mrs. Norton questioned CARE parenta' preference for the current klnderaarten throuch eiahth IJ'8de J>l'Oll'&m, inatead of the mixture of middle, klnderpnen throuch fifth grade and klnderaarten through elahth arade tchoola approved by • bmrd majority. "PetlUonen would like to deny parentl the riabt to chooee the oraanlzatlooal structure beat aulted to their chlld," Mra. Nonon c:ontended. She al9o claimed that she haa vote<l for programs benefiting the dlltrict as a whole, rather than individual school communities. Mra . Moore'• re1ponae addreeaed the CARE crltidlrn of almoat $ J million a pent t o transform the cloeed McDowell School into the district's new adminlltratlve headquarters. "I was not on the board when that decilion waa made," Mn. Moore saJd. "I do want to 18f that I don't consider the facility to bo 'pluah' and that Ha refurblahment was recommended by a committee from the (See TRUSTEES, Pa1e AZ) 'Lack' of TV data hit Official sa ys cities ignored by agency By ROBERT BAR~ER or ... ..,,... ..... Fountain Valley City Councilwoman Barbara Brown ls criticizing the operation of the Public Cable Televisi o n Authority, the agency that oveneee cable televilion in parts of West Ora.nae County. Mrs. Brown says that the four-member agency has made important financial decisions without involving city councils and without providing infonnation and back.growld in aome caaee. She says the alleged lack of i nformation has been compounded by destruction of PCTA files while they were on loan to the Fountain Valley City Council last Christmas aeMOO. Mrs. Brown says one of her concerns fOCWICi!S on the raising of fees paid to PCTA from $60,000 to $85,000 last fall. Thia la money paid by the cable system company to PCT A to assist in the starting up of the services. The money must be repaid to the company before cities start r ea lizi ng revenue fr o m s ubecription fees. As of thia Dec. 31, about $400,- 000 will have been paid to PCT A over the years. "I'd like to know where all the money went. The PCTA is a small board and the cl ties are all partnen. They should be made aware of everythinR." GETl'ING HIS GOAT(S) -John Matar of present from Matar's brother Sam, a car dealer Chicago stands in his front yard after taking in California. Each year the brothers try to delivery of a herd of 50 goats -a birthday outdo each other with outlandish gifts. The PCTA is an administering arm of Dickinson Pacific Cablesystems Inc. which provides cable television aervlce to Huntin1ton Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Mrs. Brown said sh e also wants to find out why Dickinson Communications (now a partner in the West Orange County cable system) eot 8 franch.lae before, ahe aaid, it got a buaine9s license. Ben Nielaen, the president of the PCT A board of directors and also a Fountain Valley city councilman, said that the board has operated openly and made information available to city officials. ................... FV senior citizen housing endorsed A slx-atory senior citizen fttidence that might also serve as a community center for older residents throughout the dty has been approved unanimously by the Fountain Valley Planning C.ommialion. No opposition to the housing project was voiced at Wednesday's commissio n meeting. Plana for the facility, which would be built behind Fount.ain Valley Community Hospital near the corner of Warner Avenue and Euclid Street, still must be approved by the City Council, acting as the local redeve5,:~· . The .enlor ta propo9ed by the Fountain V ey Medical Development Company, which also owns the hospital and ad· t medic.al office building,. Cn Saylor, the company's construction coordinator, said the structure would include 200 rooms, a central dining hall seating about 200. plus several recreation and meeting rooms. Residents would pay a monthly rent that would also cover the cost of meals. Saylor said the developer (See SENIOR, Page AZ) Money safe Church returning $24;000 By JEFF ADLER or .. ..,,... ..... , When Olen Thibedeau of Capiltrano Beach goes to church Sunday morning he will be rewarded in more than the aplritual aeme. For Thibedeau will be _(>resented with approximately $24,000 by the church's spiritual leader, the Rev. Esther M. Mallett, of the Community Chapel World Outreach Church in Norwalk. The money i1 a substantial portion of Thibedeau's penonal uvinp. It ta money he believed wa1 lost after it was stolen during a burglary in 1977. But the money -more than $19,000 in cash and several checks -turned up se veral weeks ago when a white envelope lodged in a safe caught the eye of a church officer. The safe was one of two sold to the congregation when it purchalled Thibedeau's Golden Weat Ballroom as its new home in 1979. "That was my savingll out of my paycheck over 16 years," Thibedeau recounted. "I would stick every extra $50 or $100 into (See MONEY, Pase AZ) TELEVISION Another war documentary • · "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why 90llle Vietnam veterans turned to crime after returning, but instead is just another war documentary. Page 86. BUSINESS Mortsase plan deta~led GNat Watem Savinlt annooncie. lw plana to ct.al with due..on .. ..i. ~ and IMldl It wUl not tn.t .. With pMt ..i.. P ... A12. Flnm •ddU.. d•y CllN ..,.. and man oom,..,... ~ ~~on4te clq _. for U.. IJ'OWinl numbiri ol -who rih • ..., wortdnl .,.., livinl birth ....... Stanton. P h The 1y1tem baa not been atrons soug l 1 completed but it ii operatini in almost all areu of the cities • CJ except Stant.on.. I D em e n te Mn. Brown aaici toc:1ay if more disea se scare information lan't forthcom1n1 about PCT A activities, ahe would be in favor of explorinc a pullout by FOWltaln Valley from the cable synem and looking for a new franchi9e to eerve the city. "I'd like to try to get the best deal for the dty," she said. He J8id the money baa been well spent on buslne9s matters and not WMied on "grandia.e trips or expenees. '' Meanwhile, officiall are looking into the destruction of PCTA files in Fountain Valley. They were loaned to the city. CRITICAL -Fountain Valley Councilwoman Barbara Brown ~kes issue with the operation of the Public Cabl e Television Authority. They were reported miaaing alter a cleanin$ of library shelves. Mn. Brown said a failure thus far to produce complete duplicate files containing PCT A agendas, progress reporu and minutes causes more questions. Fearful that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis rnight oa::ur, Orange County health officials are attempting to locate any people who ate at a salad bar at a San Clemente Ca rl 's Jr. restaurant July 2. Dr. Thomas Prendergast, county epidemiology director, said a male employee who helped prepare the salad bar that day has bec ome infected with' hepatitis A. Mom acquitted • ID slaying Father convicted in H untington death of inf ant son The junior college track team member apparently contracted the disease at a central California restaurant while away for a track meet. Prendergast said. Between 18 and 20 other persons 1n the state pave contracted the diaeue after eating at the restaurant, he said. Prendergast said health officials are seeking any people who ate at the Carl Jr. salad bar after 3 p.m. July 2. Any affected person should either contact the health department at 834-2683 or a physician, Prendergaat recommended. Thoee people should receive an injection to prevent becoming ill with the viral infection. Hepatitis ta a liver di8eue that requires conaiderable bed rest. ''Nobody diea o1 Hepatitis A for practical purpoeea," Prenderpat aald at a Wednesday newa conference. He said any pel'llOn ahould try to receive the gamme globulin injection on or before Friday. SPORTS A Huntington Beach woman who was cha rced with murdering her 10-week-old eon was acquitted by an Orange County Superior Court jury Wedneeday, but the father of the infant was convicted o f involuntary manalaughter. Both defendantl -Sidney Green, 24, and Cynthia Evans, 20 -were found guilty of child e~ and child beating in the death of young Joey Green in June, 1981. Body of drowned youth d iscovered 'nle body of an 18-year-old Downey youth who disappeared while swtmm1ng in Sumet Be.ch lMt Sunday haa been recovered. A 1heritf department a))C)kelman aald the body of John n. Bouqus ,,.. .. ~about 8 P~:"'.'· ~edneaday by a peddleboardet' at Su.met ee.ch nev Andenon Street and Pacific Co.st Htihway. Hanging. tough in Shrine Ed.lion High product Rick DlBemardo bu played it tough for two years, and will do the ume Saturday niaht in the Shrine All-star football pme at the Rcee Bowl. Page Cl. Good racket l or McNamara Fonner UC lrvlne t.enn1J coech Myron McNamara ball ~tumed to the iood life. and ii the hMd WWI pro at John Wayne Tennlt Club. The Duke would have want.ed lt that w•Y· p._ Cl. COUNTY The nine-woman, three-man jury's decision late Wednesday came after nearly two days of deliberations that began Tuesday. Several jurors wept as the verdicts were read, as did both Green and Evans and their families, who were present in the courtroom. Proeecutor Bryan Brown had argued that the defendants were guilty of murdering the child - Creen because he violently ahook the baby the day he died and Ms. Evans becauae she had custody and allegedly knew she was e:ehlm to danger. Coun Supe.rior Court Judge enne:h E . Lae, who predded owr the trial, instructed the jury Tueeday that it could find Ma. Evans guilty of aecond detD-ee murder or acquit her. .Juda Lae had aaid that Green could be found guilty of aeoond- dearee murder, involuntary manslaughter or acquitted. "The jury did the right thing, II defense attorney Larry Bruce, who represented Green, sald INDEX after the verdicts were read Wednesday. Bruce said he never denied his client was rough with the baby, but his actions were nol meant to k ill the c hild. "The jury determined that it was not reasonably apparent the child would die from the treatment," he said. The 10-week-old youngster died June 1, 1981, in the small Huntington Beach apartment where his unmarried parents were living. The prosecution had argued that Joey was beaten and shaken because he cried too much, enraging his parents. After the infant died. doctors d.iacovered Joey had 12 broken bones throughout his body. including a broken collar bone. Accord i ng to medical te9timony, the child died after being violently shaken, causing injuries to the brain. "The jury didn't let emotionalism decide the case," Bruce said. Attorney Donald Rubright, (See MOM, Pqe A!) At Your Service A4 Ann Landers B2 Enna Bombeck B2 Movie9 87-8 8Uline9I C4-5 Mutual Funds C4 Callf omia A6 National News A3 Cavalcade 82 Public Notk.9 IM;C4,6,8 CJMlified C8-12 Sportl Cl-3 Comb .,., Dr.Stetncn.lhn B2 Ciomwonl B3 • Stock Marketa cs 0.th Nodces C8 Tel~ Be JDdatorial Al0-11 Tbeawn 87-8 J::ntitrWnment 81-8 W•dw A2 Hcl«OICOCle 82 Wodcl News Al NATION I 1 11 I ever, the first thing eau wUl do w ith the ii preaent 10 percent to cb~h and it& congregation. Rev. Mallett ii one of the ,. honeetThi people I have ever beditau 18.id. "She had obllgatlo,n to pay me the y, ahe owned the aafe. I II there waa a highe r Uon to God's law, ao ahe it back." e speculated that the money mUI\ have become lodaed in a alot ln th• ufe over the yean becaUlt he Mid, he IMl'Ched the uf• lhorouahly att•r the bUl'llary. When the church pwcll.ued the property, the aafea were truafm'Nd by c:rane from mw part of the buUdlng to another, Thibedeau .-ld. pnt of the aafet WU 10 heavy that lt dropped du.ring the move and. that'• when the ~r,wrt have juftd lOOR, he . "I'm sure glad they moved It and I'm sure glad it dropped," he added. Thibedeau also aald he ia looking forward to Sunday's 11 a.m. service, even though lt will be the finJt he has ever attended at the church: "I'd go over there every Sunday to pick up that kind of money." RUSTEES RESPOND • • • mmunity after a six-month y." • the CARE parents, site added, "Differ e nces of on are not caU8e for recall. misconduct has occurred. cbarse-are blued, lack substance and are just not true." In a reapon1e to the trus1ee9' statements, CARE chairman Devon Dahl said, "Theee three trustees being r ecalled are ignoring the signs all around them that indicate there is no strong fU:Sh to middle schools. .urhe board refuses to even survey the community before charging forward to spend a million dollars (on lhem)." MOM ACQUITTED . • • o defended Ms. Evans, tted his client had struck the ca ld once, but that she was unaware that Joey was badly h1Jrt from treatment by his i.ther· ?poing in her favor, Rubright ~·.was testimony by the family p~iatrician that he did not ~any t;>ro~n bones in the , r child several days before he died. Both Green and Evans could be sentenced to up to 4/ears in state prison. They wouJ also be eligible for probation. Ms. Evans is free on $60,000 bail after serv ing 7 months in Orange County Jail. Green has been held in custody for a year. Sentencing proceedings were scheduled for Aug. 20. $ENIOR HOUSING . • • Hunttn1ton Beach City Councll memlml haw ~ a num~r ot projecta that they 1 would like to .. funded by a contribution from AmlnoU tfSA • Inc. I The ldeM ranp tor a.a.tanc» to w a r d 1 t h e e v e n tu • l •I replacement of the Huntinaton Beech Pier to addina wheelclWr ramps IO ha.ndicapped people can ' more conv•niently vJ1lt the ' betlch. Amlnoil Chainnan Georp E. Trimble 1<>Udted the ldeM while at a meeting. wiih city offidala last May. A spcikesman for the company said the propoula will be e valuated for the company's participation later thll year. "The company ls interested in making the community a better place to live," said Amlnoll spokesman Joe Helewicz. Councilman Don MacA.lllater'a suggestions included contributions towards a new pier, a new YMCA in Central Park, financing of the 4th of July parade, a youth sports complex in Central Park and senior citi7.en projects. John Thomas called for the ramps at the beach. Ruth Finley suggested using funds to stimulate activtt)" of the newly formed library financial support group. Ruth Bailey s ugg es t s contributions to the library, Council on Aging, linear park, youth programs and playground equipment at the park. R o n Patti n son urges a contribution to Orangewood (a home for abused and neglected children that will replace the Aibert Sitton Home.) Aminoil 's oil o perations , con centrated n ear the Bolsa Chica marshlands, produce about 20,000 barrels of oil oer day. WELCOME , SON - Argentine Navy commander in chief Adm. Isaac Anaya welcomes his so n , Lt. G uillermo Anaya after the latter arrived with 592 other POWs released by the British. Post office burglarized A burglary at the Seal Beach post office is under investigation today. Police said that five post office boxes were smashed early this morning and that cash, checks and other valuables were taken. No post.al employees were on duty at the facility at 2929 Westminster Ave. at the time of the theft, police said. N o suspects have been arrested. . , to make the facility a citit.en center that can be by other Fountain Valley ~denta even though they don't li~ there. He said the Fountain Valley Seniors organization, which has been requesting its own center for many years, would b e able to conduc t activities in the new residence. Killing suspect's ? 'l Pilots warned JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Iiidonesia has ordered aircraft to stay clear of the Galunggung Volcano in West Java following the near-crash of a Singapore Airlines jumbo jet that flew through a volcanic cloud, officials said, The warning, fro m Communications Minister Air Marahal Rusmin Nurjadin, has been sent to flight controllers throughout the world, the officials said. He added that older Fountain Valley residents who do not live in the new housing would be able to dine at the facility at reduced prices. • arraignment set In addition, Saylor said, senior citizens throughout Fountain Valley, would be able to use shopping center shuttle buses leaving from the new residence. He said the cost of the project has not yet been determined, but he said the one-year construction period could begin next spring if redevelopment agency approval is obtained. The arraignment for Gregory Way n e F i gueredo, who is suspected in the shotgun slaying of a man who was sleeping on the patio of a Huntington Beach home, hu been rescheduled for Monday In West Orange County Municipal Court. Figueredo, 25, was slated to enter a plea in court Tuesday but his arraignment was resched~ed at the request of his public defender. 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" u ,.., : I i 11::-: li IS & I WI ltll f.l't· .0 ... ,, ......... J! llllf ... '""·· .. ... I It':.:. ,_ HI '"'' • • in Orange County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bail. He tum.ed himself In to poli~ Friday morning shortly after the body of Robert Lee Sampeon, 21, "'as discovered on a rear pa ti~ at. • 19868 Cla rem o nt Lane. Huntington Beach. Police said Sampson was the victim of a shot.gun blast to the chest. Police said Figueredo, who had been living with friends at 9809 Cornwall Lane, attended a aocial gathering last Thursday night at th e Claremont Lan e condominium. Witnesses told p olice that Sampson, who was visiting from Loma Linda, stepped in to break up a quarrel between Figueredo and a wo man acquaintance. b~eQks; lown flooded 11'.STIS PARK. C.olo. (AP) - A 24·foot earthen dam on the Fall River 1av• way today, ltndlNI a wall of wacer up to 7 fHt •P throu1h the tcenlc main street of th.la reeort town juat eaat of Rocky Mountain National Park. There were no immediate reporta of injuries. But Mary Karraker of the Park Servict office Mid 25 people. bad permits to hike ln the flooded area of the park and aearch parties were being organized. The bolllns brown water churned debril from along lta path, including a small car. Mayor Harry Tregent, aurveylng the damage a half- block from Elkhorn Avenue, the main street, shook his head and ap~ near tears. At least 3 feet of wate r was reported atmdlna in all of the 160 to 200 bu1ineaae1 along Elkhorn Avenue. '"Ibll la the first I've ever 1een in th1a town." the ma voe Mid. "I auppdte it can be cleaned up, but the damage is done. I'm just sick." The flood c losed U .S . Highways 36 and 34 and Col«ado 7, cutttnc oft Eli. Park in all d1recUona. • Authorltie1 beaan warnln1 motel l\*1' and Mdenu at &he WHt end of E1tee P1rk, to evacuat.t Juat before 7:30 a.m., a re&ldent Wd. Jlm ffarp.ter, ·~ for the U.S . Park Service, Mld the failure of the Lawn Lake Dam, owned and operated by Fannen Ditch Co. of Loveland, an ltTtaatJon company, appatently occUrred ln the early momin8 hours. There ar e about 6,000 pennanent retidenta in the &tel Park area and now ls the height of the 1ummer aeaaon, which meana another 30,000 to 40,000 touriau a nd vacation-home owners were in the area when the flood hit. Jim Crowe, a county employee answering the sheriff's phone at the county offices, said town streeta were dry when he arrived at work at 8 a.m. By 9 a.m., power was out in the north and west ends of town .and there was a heavy smell of propane gas. P eo ple w e re warned to move away from propane tanks that were seen rolllng through the muddy. brown waters. Martial arts workshop slated A workshop series focusing on martial arts skills and holistic health principles will be conduc ted Tuesdays, beginning next Tuesday, at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. .The three-week program will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in Fine Arts Roo m 2 10 . •K atlly Ba clloz, W es tminster c ity councilwoman and former ~fr~~~r:h"e f!.fn:! division of the 1982-83 fund campaign for the United Way of West Orange C.ounty. The United Way busin~ • The community services department of the City of Huntington Beach will hold its 28th annual Distance Runners Derby on AUR. 7. Pre-regbtratJon will be taken until Jµly 30. There will be a 10-mile nm Registration fee is $10 . Loaia D. Mikelson, a black belt karate instructor wilh a doctorate in holistic health e ducatio n , will w eave together these disciplines in the w o rks hops . M ore information can be obtained by calling the college at 891-3991. division will contact all smau businesses in Huntington Beach, Fo untain Valley, W~r. Seal ~h and Garden Grove t o seek contributions to support 34 participating organizations of United Way West. The drive will s ta rt In mid-September. for adults (20 a nd up); a three-mile CWl for teen-agers (16-19) and a 1 ~ mile for youths (15-under.) Contact the community services d e partment at 536 -5486 for furth e r infonnation. belle £ranee Dresses from Belle France. You 'II find them in our ladies department. A storr 1"'11 offns f IM trodltional sportsw«Jr /or~ womm, and f>oys. 1 WORLD Israelis, PEO trade fire • ., ..... AIMda*9 p,... hraell and PalHttnlan aunnen exchanald fire early ~Y around a J>enlYl'd alrport ln Beirut. Lebanon, ln ftelh violationl of a four-day-okl U.S.~ ceue-fire, the Leba1*e tta1e radio reported. 'At the auno time, U:S. and Lebaneee mediaton echeduled conferencee ln laraeU· rin8ed w.t Beirut and the piwidentlal palace in IUburban Bubda in att«npta to~ a atalemat• on how, when and where to evacuate YUHr Arafat'• 8,000 Pal"Une Uberadon Orpnbat&on ~ Iarael invaded Lebanon June e to annihilate PLO f0ft9 ahd hM rtnpd Welt Beirut with an elUloaied 16,000 troos-and 300 t&nk.t. tru.tenanc to bi.rt the "*"'1lM out WU-they -.r-to S.ve Leb&ricn. Cop blunders pr~!iisure ehlel LONDON -London police chief Sir David McNee may quit to take the beet for police blunden that enab)ed a prowler tc enter the Buckingham Palaoe bedroom of Queen Elizabeth II, Britiah newapapere reported today. The Daily Telegraph said government miniatera and aenlor conservative Party leglalatora who received preliminary details of laat Friday's break-In by 31 ~year-old unemployed drifter Michael FafCan were NATION "appai)ed· at the police las-" at the palla. The London Times, re~ what lt called an "utonlahlng catalotUe-of police error,'' said the trouble started when an officer outaide the palace and unconnected with the police there apotted the Intruder climblnC over a wall in broad dayUCbt at about 6 a.m. He went to the police duty room ln the palace, where officen treated hia story "with 101De akepddml." They carried out a brief aearch, found nothing and returned to their room. ~ paper said. Columbia back ln Florida CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -Mounted atop a jumbo jet. the space shuttle C.Olumbia returned to Kennedy Space Center from Its California land.Ing site today to prepare for its fifth rm.ion on Ort 29. Completing a two-leg, ooast-to-cout trip aboard its Boeing 747 transporter, the reuaable al)llCe9hip touched down in a light ra.i.nfal.l on the apace center's 15,000-foot runway at 10:33 a.m. A crowd of aeveral hundred, mostly apace workers and reporters, applauded aa the jetliner-orbiter tandem taxied to ita "demating" facility. Shultz confirmation expected WASHINGTON -George P. Shultz is headed for swift confirmation aa secretary of state after two daya of Senate hearinsa that revealed differences of atyle and emphaaia but no sharp change in direction for U.S. foreign pol.icy. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee wound up its questioning of the 61 -vear.old Shultz on Wednesday and voted ·17-0 to recommend that the' full Senate confirm him. Senate leaden scheduled action for today. Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-m .. cha1nnan of the committee, urged the unuaually quick oon.fi.nnation vote, saying he felt "a 8en8e of urgency about having a secretary of state" at a time of turmoil in the Middle F.ut. Spending bill approved WASHINGTON -Moving to head off the unpaid furlough of thou.sands of federal worken. the Howie today quickly approved a compromiae ~.5-billion emergency spending bill that waa intended to avoid a third veto by President Reagan. By a vote· of 389-13, the Houae sent the measure to the Senate for easy expected final ~ bill parallels a measure previoualy paaeed by the Senate with the bleal.ng of budget director David A. Stockman. La11e Canal cleanup due NIAGARA FALl.S, N.Y. -Government offidala today announced another cleanup project at the Love Canal chemical dump even though a controversial new report says the neighborhood ls now safe for residents. 'The state Department of Environmental Conservation and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agerw:y said they have sW1ed an STATE a,areement for the cleanup of oontaininated eedirnent in storm aewen, two a-eeks and in two other area. The EPA said $7 million from the federal Superfund anJi-pollut1on program would be u.ecl f~ the project. 'Ibere was no immediate word on how much the state will kick in. Sex prof wants job back LONG BEACH -A state university p r ofeuor who realgned d u rin g an investigation of his "Plychology of Sex" clala in wh ich he offered course credit for experimental aex experiences wanta th e resignation n!9Cinded, his attorney saya. Dr. Barry Si.JlBer desitts to be rei.n.atated at Cal State Long Beach, attorney Dean Hyatt sai d Wednesday. He aaid Singer had submitted his restination under durel8. "He became 80 depr e m:d that be aent in his relicnatiol\ written no the beck of a postcard," Hyatt aald. "He w• very, Vf'!r'J ooncemed about the anger of the public over hia COUJ"9e ••• Candidates set debates LOS ANGELES -Gubernatorial can didate• Tom Bradley and George Deukmejan have agreed to two debetea SepL 29 in Sacramento and Oct. 26 in San Dlego, the League of Women Voten has reported. The debates will be limited to ata1ewide. mue.. laid 1eque president Kenn1 Friedman Bradley, mayor of Loa Anaelea, la th e Democratic nominee and Deukmejian, th~ atate •ttomey general, la the Republican nomtn~ for the November gubernatorial election. CIHdled lld¥ef1telng 714,4142-N?I AH otMr..--.nl9 MMU't San Diego judge publicly censured ~~ -Dll'lllllr .. .-....... • Tom Mwptln ... SAN F RANCISCO -Sanl Dtea o Superior Cour=1 Hueo l'lllher hlll been y. oemured by the ltate Court for privately conaulttn, =-~ tc9t I t ~Goddlrd '*-" fll °"'*"" ~ ......... a....L.ooe .......... wtth at1ameys from anl)' onej lkle in a c=-e pend1nc befon him The atate hlah court ln lta Wectn.day llid 1'1her'a :!:Jtct "brlnat th• jud lclal, °"""' into dllnPute... \ A WEIRDO ON HIS NECK -Robert E. Jewell of Tustin tours Orange County Fairgrounds with stuffed toy he won at midway game. The toy is called a weirdo. Jewell won the pri:ze on his third attempt to 0...., ............ "' ca., ......... upright a bottle by using a ring attached to th8" end of a pole. The game, one of many offe~. huge stuffed toys as priz.es, oosta $1 a try. Thi'.• fair continues through Sunday in Costa MesaT '•. B.J. Thomas at fair tonight Ii B.J . Thomas, best known for writing "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head," headlines the entertainment bill tonight as the Orange Coounty Fair heads down the homestreich of its 10-day run. Thomas, who claims a born- aga in Christian experience changed his life and eliminated a one-time addiction to drugs, sings at 7 and 9 p .m . on the Amphitheater stage. ferform e r s at the Am_phith e ater have been attracting nearly 7,000 at each of two nightly shows. Crowds at the Wednesday night s h ows of vocalist Rita C.OOlidge overflowed onto the grassy area of the hillaide seating area. Attendance through six days of this year's fair run is 177,811 , down 24,872 compared to the first six days in 1981. A total 10-day attendance of 368,903 in 1981 aet a record. Other entertainment events tonight include "Woo Woo" Stevena at 5 and 7:30 at C.Ountry C.Omers, the Tim Doran duo at 5 and 8 at Greenplace C.Omers, the musical duo of David and Roeely at 6 and 9, Uncle Sam Stage; Montezuma'a Revenge at 7:30 and 11, Country Meadows; Funs-A -Poppin Circus and Hypnotist Vandermeide at 8 at the grandstand arena; and the Lumberjack Show at 7 and 10. A m1lking contest is slated at 6:30 p.m. ln the show ring near the animal barns. The fairgrounds, with the main entra.noe at 88 Fair Drive between route S5 and Fairview. Road in Costa Mesa, open at 14': a .m . Friday, Satu rday an4'' Sunday. t.1-. Friday is children's day wilt( all youth 12 years and undet ,admitted free before 6 p.m. Wolfman Jack will bring hUI Ametican Graffiti Revue to th~' • Amphitheater at 7 and 9 p.m._~_. Friday. A rodeo championahip-... opens a three-<iay run at 8 p.m. in the grandstand aren-'. Admission to t he rodeo ia $3• adults, $1 for children 6 through 12 years. Fairgroundf admi-.ioa is $4 adulta, children 12 ancf · under $1. _·· · Other Friday events include··; beef judging. a family look-allke "· contest, di.aper derby. quiltina _ demonstration and perfonnanceK, by mimes. i(..f'j: .. .. I , .... .. ·;. ... SFA 5 Final Clearance Begins Today. .. 50% to 67% Off Original Prices* On Special Selections From I • Better and Designer Dresses • Contemporary and Updated Dresses • B,etter and Designer Suits • Contemporary and Updated Suits • Designer Collections and Better Ready-To-Wear • Swimwear and Beachwear ' • Contemporary Sportswear 'i • Designer Sportswear 1 • Better and Updated Sportswear • Right On! for Juniors - coordinates, separates, skirts, blouses, sweaters • Intimate Apparel- Sleepwear, Robes, Loungewear • Fashion Jewelry Collections • Blouse Collections •Fashion Accessory Collections •Handbag Collections • Small Leather Goods • Women:S Shoe Salon, Designer Salon, 'SFAntastic Shoe Collections • Th«f' miy hi~ bfifif'I int~m«J,.tf' PflCf' tfductiotn on ~.ttem• ""'"to tllrs w~ Naf h'«Y ltY,. If! f'\lt'fl' <:ob Ind N4 Video game eruption oses city problems The vtdeo aame revolution ca\Jaht mo1t dttee by surprile, and many munlclpalitiee have found them.elves arappllng wlth the question ol whether these amu.ementa should be regulated atfi to what extent. • ~~e !'i:t:C.t•t.i~ vv't~~ 8~ ilfUe last week by giving ~llminary approval to a measure th.at will designate any business equipped with more than four games to be an arcade. Convenience markets, liquor stdres and other businesees that ex~ this figure will be required to, obtain a permit to operate an ~de from the Fountain Valley Planning Commission. City officials say the arcade d&finition is n eeded in the enforcement of zoning laws. They cla1m that an excessive number of game machines can change the character of a busine.M as it was ort1lnally approved by cl ty plannen. Council members admitted that settling on a ttaute that transforms a liquor store into an arcade was a aomewhat arbitrary proceu. In fact, the council ultimately was a bit more liberal than dty planners, who had asked that the arcade label be applied to any business with more than three game machines. City officials said they could no~roperly enforce local zoning re ations without this arcade de inition, so the council's action appean justified. At least, the Fountain Valley City Council has not taken video game regulations to the extreme that their neighbors in Newport Beach have. In any event, the Fountain Valley arcade matter once again illustrates the thorny problems associated with regulating a form of amusement that wasn't even dreamed of when basic city laws were written. Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is th.is problem more serious than at institutions such as UC Irvine. The cost of livjng in Orange County, especially near Irvine, already is high, and university officials have been decrying for some time their problems in recruiting top-flight professors. Despite the economics, though, they have managed to asaemble a noteworthy faculty. Many professors evidently are interested in more than their savings accounts when they accept a position. UC professors were granted a 6 percent pay raise in lut year's state budget, but the new $1.185 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials such as Dr. Joeeph McGuire, chairman of UCl'a Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary freeze may spur some of the top academicians to aocept more competitive offers at o ther institutions. But Dr. McGuire says he doesn't expect a mass exodus of the 600 faculty members. For one thing, most faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other universities similarly beset by economic restrictions. lnsttuctors at UCI earn from $19, 700 as starting assistant professors to $43,600 as full professors on nine-month contracts. A few may earn as much as $51 ,500. It also isn't unconunon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as royalties for texts they authored, fees for consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesees. The best people in any field, of course, are entitled to market themllelves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer eome l088eS if ita best people departed for higher salaries. University professors , however, and the institutions themselves, are not immune to the economic temper of the times. Everybody has felt the crimp of the current economy. Academia just isn't immune to those forces at work. Generosity poorly timed Salaries that some cities award to their top executives 9eelD to conflict with economic conditions and the complaints of revenue restrictions that many city govenunenta voice these days. The issue was brought into focus recently when the Huntington Beach City Council railed the salary of Huntington Beach City Administrator Charles Thompeon from $65,016 to $72,924 per year. That is $72,924 in straight salary. The city also reimbuned Thompeon for payments to his retirement fund equal to 7 percent of his salary. At the time they raised his salary; council members also awarded him a $150 month expense allowance, bringing the total pay package to $79,824. He also receives a $300-per-month automobile allowance plus health, life, dental and long-term disability insurance. Other cities along the Orange Coast pay well, but not that well Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wyn~ is paid $71,750; Eu1ene O'Neill 'a "Stranae Interlude" opened in Quincy, M-. ln 1932. The theeter WM rtaht aero. the street from a near-bankrupt restaurant. lnternUmion c:rowda ..vect that Mtery. Thua dki Mr. O'Neill do bla put ln the foundina of me of this country'• ~ ho9teky chabw. The restaurant owner'• name: Howard J<>hna\. There u. thmR, t.oo1 who Utp the bathroom bowl apou.. by droppmc a Irvine Cit y Manager William Woollen Jr., $61,000; Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal, $60,- 264; Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank, $47,784 and Fountain Valley City Manager Howard Stephens, $45,244. HuntinJ{ton Beach, with a population of 172,000, is the largest city on the coast, and there's no question that Thompson is an effective, intelligent a nd hard- working executive. But some Huntington Beach City Council members who complain the loudest about financial troubles try to put all the blame on the state for the fiscal plight. Their generosity -most of us consider ourselves lucky to have jobs-seems out of tune with the economic times. It just ia not reasonable for Huntington Beach officiah to award significant salary boosts in these difficult times and then expect the citizenry to react with sympathy and understanding should budget constraints require reductiom ln municipal services. denture cleanlnc tablet into lt every day. Aa for that old claim that the hand la quicker than the eye, I'll believe it when I tee lt. History'• youn1nt beat-aelll~ author (a a 13-year-old En1U1h echoolboy named Patrick Beu 11n. Hit book: a peperbeck on how to filW'e out the RubUc Cube called "You Can Do the Cube." Tftemli P. Hiiey Pubtllher "'*'-A. --·-Id I tor .. ,._. KNIMclt 1'9eert.t ,... ... .., Saudis hold economic cards WASHINGTON -The United States today la more vulnerable to foreign preesure than lt has been since the early days of the republic. Thia pressure i.s wielded by the remote de.ert kingdom of Saudi Arabi.a, whoee vast oil wealth is mismatched to a small, backward population. The cautious Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They are inclined, therefore, to deliver their threats delicately, lamenting that it must be done and 8COlding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli thrust into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil ahipmenta to the United States and withdraw their billions from U.S. repositories. But the internal dynamics of the Arab world may compel them, however reluctantly. to uae their economic weapons against the United States unleaa the Reagan administration can restrain larael. Thia stranae tyranny of the weak over the strong may be succeeding. For President R eagan appears to be acquiescing to the Saudi demands. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, who wanta to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Secretary of State Alexander Haig. Supporting Weinberger ia the president'• national security adviser, William Clark, who has fired some pro- Iarael strate1l1ta from the National Security Council. Then add George Shulu, who has been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shultz and Weinberger were brought into the Reagan administration from Bechtel, which did a minimum of $666 rnill1on worth of bualnees in the Arab world laat year. By far their biggest single customer was Saudi Arabia. The Saudi.a can surely be forgiven lf they get the idea that their behind-the-tcenes threata had something G -J.-1:.-•• -.-111-•• --~ to do with Reagan's realignment of his policymakers. Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who appear ao quaint and picturesque in their flowing robes, sit on one-quarter of the world's known oU reserves. And the mighty United States has fooliahly allowed it.elf to cross the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a rel1ance on Arab oil. It's easy enough for Americana to understand the consequences of a &iaudi oil embargo: gas lines and huge increases in fuel prices. But the tlireat of withdrawina Saudi inveaunents from the United S~ is not ao easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S . banks, bwine.es and land holdi.rtga. Their investrnenta have giv!n them a ailent partnership in ever-widening circles of our business community. But their biggest partner is the U.S . government itself. Of the estimated $50 billion w orth of known Saudi invesunenta in this country, the bulk ia in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the back.rooms of the state, defense, treasury and energy departmenta. The reaaon is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S . economy. U the Sa_ud.is cashed in their Treasury chips and transferred their billions to banks abroad, the federal government could still borrow the money back from overseas. But the mov~ would drive up interest rates, undercut business recovery and prolong the recesion and high unemployment. As far back as 1978, a CIA report warned that "temporary dialocati.on of international financial marketa would ensue if the Saudi Arabian government ever choee to use ita accumulated wealth as a political weapon." This is now precisely what th e Saudis are threatening to do. WHAT CAN THE U.S. government do to counter such a Saudi move? The answer is: Freeze their aseets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian government of Ayatollah Khomeini would have disastrous political effects, of course, but It would be effective. Except for one thing: The Treasury might not know the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. For information on Saudi investments i.s scarce and has gotten even harder to find since the Iranian freeu. Aa ·one Middle East expert noted: "Since monopolies are corrupt, it is hardly to be wondered that the disposition of OPD: wealth is no open book." The Saudis have shrewdly been channeling billions of their U.S . investments through the Bahamas to disguise the true origin of the funds, a source told my associate Vicki Warren. The Saudi government's secret holdinp, plus thoee of private Saudi investors who might cooperate ln a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens of billions. But even the CIA doesn't know for sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now considered potentially as the most powerful lnfluence ·on U.S. foreign policy. Anxiety symptoms yield to treatment To the Editor: The July 11 Daily Pilot Sunday Special featured two articles on one of the oldest of known medical conditions, anxiety diaorders, populariz.ed in recent years by much publicity in the media, aome infonnative and useful, others less well informed and misleading, if well intentioned. The phobic type of anxiety symptoms, claaified u 8'(0faphobia, will be familiar to many people when d escribed in MAILBOX temlS of feeling a marked fear of being' alone, or being in public places from which it would be difficult to either e.cape or receive aid in c:aae of sudden incapacitating penonal disaster. TRIS CONDITION baa been well known for hundreds of yean. It hat been ineffectively treated for over 80 yeara from the emergence of paychoanalyaia to the present-day dlvene treatments de«ribed in Sunday's articla Effective treatment has been available and ln i. by psychiatrt.u for tbe pMt decade. The accepted atandard and aped&: treatment for pnwndon of the acute panjc ep6lodee and the resultina antlctpetory arucietJ (e.1. ttap frilht) util.ila the pn!ICl"lbln& of a recently developed clua of medkatkx18 known .. beta-b lockers, wblch are for this condition, one of tbe moat specific medlcatlon1 available ln th• entire lpectrum of med'-UY nated condltlonl. HAROLD B. KATI'S, M.D. DeptMit law needed To the F,,dttor: l would object atrenuoualy to the atnmely ...-JudJced artJde 00 the front Quotes page of your issue of July 8 were I not e ntitled t o a rebuttal. Frederick Schoemehl's a r ticle h e adlined "Container Deposits 'Cos\ly' " is but the first of many such broadsides that we must endure b e tween now and November 2. Without the backing of a multi-million dollar lobby or multi-page college study that is, in my opinion, factually biased, may a private citizen speak in favor of the proposed container deposit law? Any law which acts as a deterrent to the blata:nUy inconsiderate disposal of beer bottles by breaking them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be all bad. Three times have I personally pushed my bike home because of cut tires, and once I took a slashed bare foot to an emergency room for treatment thanks to some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of the lobbyists if the cost of medical treatment or of new tires and tubes is in c lud e d i n their previous "microeconomic analym." GERALD OORLEY Protests sentences To the Editor: l wish to publicly protest the receqt sentences handed down by Judge Mark Soden in Orange County Superior Court to two men, age 26 and 21. who abducted and raped a 14-year-oJd deaf mute. The girl was driven to the beach where she wu raped and aodomised by both men, then driven around Santa Ana and offered to st.rangers. She was raped by a total of seven. men in alleys, cars and trailers. THE JUDGE decided that tiec.uee thae were 10 cloee in Ume and place, they oona\it'fted "A llnale oo'Nlion of aberrant behavior." The men were uni.enc.cl to 12 y~an each, which accordlna to Judae Soden, would ctve them a chance to r.build tl\etr llvee. Another man involved in the case was sentenced to 44 years by another judge. How is that child ever going to forget that l}ight of terror and start her life anew? When are w e g o ing t o s t o p mollycoddling these vicious criminals who kidnap, rape and torture our children? Because these animals could be on the streets again in 8 years, to protect my own daughter who will then be 14, l wish to remain anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Federal intrusion To the Editor: The City of Fountain Valley strongly oppoeee H .R. 4929. Thia bill is in clear violation of the principle that the federal government has no role to play in regulating state and local personnel practices and other. traditional services. It abo rum counter to the Reagan administration's policies advocating New F ed eralism and deregulation in all sect.on. There is presently no compelling case to warrant federal intrusion in the administration of 1\ate and local government pension plans. Indeed, such plans have improved their pnctices over the yeara. while the federal pension progama have not. (Current unfunded liability exceeds $1 t.rilUon.) In addition, H.B. 4929 further expands the penonal liabillty of public officials who are already overburdened with liabWtiee on other fronts. MARVIN P. ADLER Mayor -· • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtd1y, July 15, 1082 * ~· . Lettervs from 'nor·mal' person habit-for ming l Thia la really ptt.lna pervened. Wh9n the leitert bepn to .:rrlve, I tanored them. 'n\at wun't hard to do. A lot of mall comet lnto thll office, much of lt nuta. It you want to read •bout desradaUon, evi~1 depnency, larceny Ind n\adneea, It'• au there. For 10me reaon a Croll lleCtion of the wOl"lt upecta ot humanity 1how1 up 1n NCh of my mail dellveriet. So I wu a little aurpriled to read the me.aae contained ln the firat letter: "Hif I'm writina to you neither to complain nor to be very lnteresUng or Important, but becawie you ought to get eome mail from aorne normal people. I a11ert th.at I am normal." THE WRITER wu a woman from the 1uburbs. She wrote: "B e fore backing my claim to nonnalcy, please let me state that today I.a every bit as sunny and lovely aa yesterday! I am normal because I like America, good steaka, 80da pop, my nice husband, our little rented houae, multivariate calculµa and 'Tucson,' a fur-bearing dog." I had to admit, the letter was different from what I am uaed to. The woman wasn't asking me to Intercede In a child-custody case; ahe wasn't telling me how her husband was beating her or how she had been abused as a child: she Ari Show Huntington Center doily thrv Sun. SATISFIED WITH YOUR IRA/KEOGH YIELD? SELF-DIRECTED TRUST MAY BE YOUR ANSWER Don't welt another day. Call now for professional Information & detafls. Ian Rednall (714) 955-1191 RAW SURFACE WATER 18 NOT SAFE TO DRINK It Is no longer conaidered l&fe lO drink raw .url.:e water from eilher lakes or ltreama. Ovillzation, with its potential contamination, has Invaded even the wlldemea area. When traveling diaa.nces from approved public water 1Upplh. It Is wiae IO have a filled ~rTl'lOll or cantttn. For an emergency u.e, two dropa of Tlnctun of Iodine In a pint of water, left IO 11.and for a half hour before drinking la aafe. Easier IO uae is a product we carry called Haluone. One tablet pwiCies a pint of water. Elcploren 1.11e them. YOUR DOCTOR C AN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up 1 your prescription If s hopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people. entruat u s with their J>rescrlptlons . May we '\::ompound and dl1pen1e youn? flAlflC UDO PHA/tMACY ,,.. o.llrety •1 H#plUI lfMd -:r~ -convert- ibles•motor homes*lawn mowers* limos •corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typingtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles•golf carts*model trains*bikes *pianos*cars ref r lgerator s *skates•••••• If it's got wheels, you'll move It faster in a Dally Piiot ) classif ied ad.Call 6'2·5671 and a f rlendly •d· vlserwm help you turn your whlttt lnto Cllh, wun't "°""Plainlna th.at a lawyer or a doctor wu defraudfna her; 1he wun't, ln ahort, waWf\I about any of th thtnp that the people who write me usualfy coMentrate on. "Al. a normal penon I feel that I have a certain obligation to com.pond with , Ill GRllll you," she wrote. "So this is my fint in a serlea of letters." Like I say, I ignored It. But aoon there was another message from her: "Did YoU watch the Indy 500 race on the TV? What a great race! The can were ihcredible and the drlvera superb! 1 am happy that Gordon Johncock won the race becau.e he ia an Indy veteran, be had won an unhappy victory in 1973 and becawie he wu Mario t\ndretti's team partner. My husband and I drove to Indiana polis to see the final day of time trials and ao had the opportunity to watch Andretti practice. His car was excellent; he suffered a great loss when his car was ruined before the race ever began." I went about my~. The new1 of the wodd wu the Utual: murden, wan, meanne.. And then WM a letter from the woman: "WE ENJOYED a pt...ant Memorial Day holiday. w. began the momtna by drtvtna our bk:ycle1 ~ to crown Point for the annual Owiee Century bake ride. We followed th• ..-row1 that ue painted on the 1treet to the 'Y,' and golly, I 1ue91 the ride WM on Sunday, IO we drove the bikes back home. Boy, thoee hilla outalde of 'Crowntown' went smooth that morning!" After work I hit the placee I usually hit. I heard the uaual ration of complalnta and groaning. When I Fl to work the next day, I reallied tNt I waa s ubconacloualy antlcipatln& the moming'a flnt mail delivery. When lt arrived l quickly fllppeq throuc.b all the envelopes. I figured out that I waa huntln11 for aomethtn1 from my "normal'" corresponden~ She didn't dlaappolnt me: , "My dad came over with his electric lawn mower. Remember how lt rained last week? Thia ia the Ume of year that grass aends up its ital.ks of aeed. My husband scythed down the lawn with the ol' push-mower. I got to mow most of the lawn, instead of my dad doing it, How does Now stack up? At the bottom.. NlMf~~ TM loUlle• in ..,.qf flll .......... , ... becaUM he would have, but he did do the doa yard and he followed mo, hoWna the cord and polntlnl to 1pota." A man called up yeWna about 10mO diapute he wu havrn1 with a aovemment. agency: a woman told me that he had hired a private eye to follow her cheaUf\I husband around, and would I expoee the huaband 1n print? I waited tor my next letter. HERE IS what the "normal" woman aaid: "My mom had a barbecue with salads (Breen, Jell-0 and potato) steaks charred on the 1aa grill, baked beans, the choice of two homemade salad dressings, garlic bread, hot dogs and hamburgers, cottage cheese and tomato slices and then watermelon and chocolate cake. My a.later and her new husband brought the center 1riles from their lovely garden. and hi.a ifandpuenta brought two of the 18.lads. Afterward we went home. My husband drank some b eer and we watched celevialon." I went out to do an interview that night; eome public relations people from California were trying to sell me on their client. They were quite persuasive, but I found myself wondering if I would hear from the "normal" woman again. The next day, 1 did: 7mg 5mg 4mg 4 mg 4mg "My mother and 1 went tom~ new husband'• ifandparenta' t.o pick peonies. My mother lov• ~ After ~e had lunch, we took • walk." 1 AS f MENTIONED, thia ia ptt.lnl perverted. But I can't help It, with all ~ terrible newt the world hu lo ottei;. I find my1wlf tookint forward to he~ the details of this "normal" woman'1 llfe. For exarople -you might not know lt, but ahe and her husband are lhinkina about renting another howie: .~ "lt'a a n old-faahtoned hou.te. It'• .,..., block aw.1y from the commuter bua atop. It has Jt washer and dryer In t~~ basement, a large kitchen, porches, flfl{ attic, a Jard for Tucaon the fur-bearing f dog. an n garden. And what a garden lt is! The owner keepe the garden aa a . relaxing bobby. He's a barber. ~e's aJaO> J quite friendly, a silver-haired ~· H~~·, doesn'l sell the vegetables, ao we can eatiq all we want." rtJ [don't lrnow where this Is lea~lng. AU.:1!1 I know is that when I arrive at work'•~ each day. I have my choice of the two Chicago newspapera, the New York :f Times, thn Wall Street Journal, and a · :l stack of m.ail. I can read any of it. But lc•l these days. all I want to do is read about qi the "norma l" woman and what she's up.'ra to. Perverttod But nice. 1'1 ft• #;.,,•, .. ~, °1'1': -,,~ . ., .,;~ 1Jr t:r. ,,~ ..J- "?."i >fl ('!, .'n .. :t~ fr ?t. •-<'1 .. . . .,~~ ~;:!, ·t'',; .r ... 'l;°I :,1, . ·/ ··.:t': ... "~ ·~: . 'h . ·, -"\ "' ~.; .. "'•. .· ..... ~. : .-j,i, ·-:-r;1 Cam~~~e 3mg ;..,~ '~~)!! ···~? .-~ •"'·•r rn . IOO's ~~· • ..,ft'-'! -·.~'!' ~'~ "'' 1'1 Tr.~ 1v/t ~ ·':~·· 't, t1ll& ~I~( '~')-) ,(f'.,\ . : ·"t . Warning : The Surgeon General Has Otttrmined Thet Cigarette Smoking la 0anglfoua to Your Health. ~ bf'lnd tar 1Mt1 rtftlct the lowlf of tither flC method or Dec '81 FTC Report SOFT PACK I00'1 FILTER. MENTHOL. 2 "'I· "llf". Q.2 llJ nlCGUnl I'!•""'"' by FTC mt1hod , 11 Hilton earnings dip BEVERLY mLLS (AP) -Hilton Hotels Corp. has reported seoond- quarter net income of .23.3 miWon or 87 cents a share, down 22 percent from the $29.9 mlllion ar $1.12 a lhare ~ In the earne 1981 periqd. -Hilton said Wedn8day revenuea for tl\e qun ter ended June 30 were f let.• mU.Uon. up .u,htly from the •1eo.e million poated ln the 1981 lle(lOnd quarw. Hilton Chairman Barron Hilton blamed the overall economic 11owdown for the decline ln eam1np. Teledyne prolita down LOS AMOILl8 (AP) -'hleclyna JDD. a. ,.parw mt lnciDrm o1 tn.1 million ar.M.71 • IMn b dw..N CJU91W, .... ,._ •••.e mlWon • ............. \ht --,.,.. • ~· H/F Solar facility due for desert Cl ROSEMEAD (AP) -Cooatruction of a l&-rnegawatt aolar-operated electric pn.ereung facility wlll begin thla year ln th Mojave Oieut, the lacllhy'1 builder and Southern Callfomia .Edilon C.ompAny announced. The plant, to be bu.llt l.n ·~ of three or alx megawatts, wW be constructed on -ioo acret of F.dlaon property adjacent to other 10l&r t«hnology _projecta at the Cool Water Generttina Stotion, near Daggett in San Bernardino County. L\U International Ltd. del1jJ1ed the eolar trough {acility, and will aerve u bullder ~ operator w{th SCE to purchase the electrldty. 1pokesmen for the companies sald Wednmav. Office building finished 1 Topping-off ceremonies have been held for the three-story Lake Forest Profe11ional Center, a $~million, 27,000-equa.re-f~ omce bullding at 23201 Lake Center Drive, El Toro.' Diversified Project.a Develop~nt of Laguna HiU. la developer, of the proje(:t. Coleman ~ Caskey of Irvine were architecia ol the project with Saffell & McAdam of Irvine the general contractor. The Newport Beach office of Grubb & Ellis Company is exclusive marketing agent. Heritage Bank of Irvine is funding the construction loan, with completion scheduled for Sept.ember. Cycle gets 282 miles per gallon SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A smalJ. streamlined motorcycle rolled 136 miles on less than a half-gallon of gasoline -282 miles per gallon -to win a mileage competition. it was announced. The driver and builder, Charley Perethian, won the July 10 San Luis Obispo-to-Carmel race along U.S. 1 riding a customized Yamaha 185. He beat about 50 competitors. "No one really thought that anyone would get anyplace near to 300 miles per gallon," said organizer and former cycle Caring maker Craig Vetter. Data system s acquired firm Data Systems for In'dustry of Los Alamitos has acquired a majority interest in Systech, Inc. of Countryside. Ill. Both specialize in turnkey systems on the HP3000 series of computers. No management changes are anticipated, an announcement said. Data Systems, a JUbsidiary of TMS International, recently acquired Online Design the Detroit area and will pursue acquisitions in Bost.on, New York/New Jersey, Atlanta and Texas metropolitan areas. Businesses cutting inYentories By Tbe Associated Press A brisk sales pace helped U.S. busmesses cut inventories in May. the government says. The Commerce Department said Wednesday businesses cut inventories of unsold goods 0.9 percent in May, the biggest decline in at least 15 years. Total sales in May rose 2.5 percent. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOAKCAPI l'11wl Oo"' J~ •"9j '"' Wto Jul ,. AMERICAN LEADERS STOCKS °"" Hi.ti L-C-0. JO ll>CI *'' ~ elf U llS U m >t, ' 1l 10 Trn m 11 :12•" 311" m S4• om Ii Ull 10. 11 101 S6 IOS IS 101 OS-0.4t U St~ 119 .cl '11 OS J1601 310 <II ~ 0. .. ~~· ~:!~:= Utill •.10C U SI-t,61'.-.i WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK ll'PI Jul 14 ACl••nted Decll,,.., Un< l\•"9f<I Tot•I lswt• N~w NQh• New~ -~• 4 .. (1 OIO Tooav '" 13'1 .... , llSJ J<I M NEW YORK (API Jtil U ACl•an<<O De<ll,,.., UI><~ Tot•l l_. New 11'91>\ New~ METALS T-• , .. .. m llS s :M Prev .,., ... 1S1 .... •IU .. ., ~ ... O.y ta 110 UI ,,. 1 u NEW YORK (API -Spot nont..-rous metll prlcM 1odey Copper 70-73 oent1 a pound, U.S destlnellont Leed 26-28 '*'''.pound. ZIM 37-~ '*'''•pound. dell__,, 1111 le. 1878 m.ta Weett OOl'llC>CMllt• lb. ~ 76-77 oenta I pound, N.Y . ...., $370.00 I* flalc. "9e1Mm $298.00 ''oy Ol., N.Y. SILVER Hendy 6 H1rm1n. SS.490 pu tror OUnGe. --1 "'-...... ~ .. .._ ,r&1•11m11•~r Wa&• ~ WON> '9tOI011•11 , "' .:J'::::I •t.::•n ".. ,.,.,.,.WD-.r... ~· .,.. ,.,.. .. -.. CINTP. *· • MMll T,. ~ ~of ....,. .J..h follewl111 ,., .... llH LY~ I YA LI If T 111111 • ~1£: ...... r ... a.. ~....,., ~-:t::,......,:.":: ,,.o,,iy, •. • 01111~..?.!tf·· \.tN,.,... """ TIMI oUtlowt .... ,.... ....... , .. f.i:U •• "'l: .. '.'nH•O of ~.:.ii .. ' ":~ MIN L. T .......... ·~ ,.,.,,.d to Oovo Wit flled 111 0 Al,1'0"N IA CLAI ... ....... fe' rt .~ y,_ L--. ...._ 01iMwNe -111 Of~ 04Miftty Oft ,~ H . CONIU\.TANTt .. 1000 MaaMt1ut -...,, ..... --. TNt ....... II ... ....,. by on ,... llW .. IMte AM.~ H704. TNI ......_ 11 .,,......, =:!?.'"' Guy H•t1Hn, 1700 Tll• 11ot1t1ou1 llu11n"UM1• .,.,, ~ • ...,.. .... r.,.. ....,.., 0-41. flUlllt1oft =•m11d * .. ,.,,, ... w _,....-...., Tiiie MlllMllt ... tlled -""' ..... ' Or en 641-11 In .. ~ of JoM W.~ County ~ of 0reneo COuftty on TNI ......... oonduOeN ~ rz'N-.. Md .&AA-. of the -..... .......... -Mt 1t. 1•. 111 lnidMllUll. '"'°" Wltfldj••uo:-,,_ .... .,,..,. .. llllld _.."' PWW ~Guy HWt1N11 l.utfl w. ~N . ....,.., C*trti Of Dflrl(jl cowiey Oft 'ulllltNd 0rt"l9 Oout 0..., Thie ~t"" ftled wltfl tt11 11,_., °'= ntM I • 1Na. r-"'4>t. ~ 11, U , 19, A&iO-!.!.,91! ~ .. Oiertt1 °'. Ortn(jl County Oft •-• 1.. T -•• • -Nie t: , 1Na ....,. • . 1 lift A\f9flUI, flubllel!M Otenee Coelt D91f> '""" OrMoe. ~ = Nit 1f, 22. at, A4lf. •..t ·-PmlJC NOTICl Publl•hed Orenge Cout Diiiy , ,_ ~tu.a fliCllllOUe •-11 "'°'· June 24• July 1• •. 111• 1M2 Publl1htd Or•no• Cout D•llr •-.,. -Mm ITAftiii;r 2704·12 P~. July 1, I , 18, 22. 1N2 .--""'._ IAJ TIOUIU OUllWO IAJ fll Pm1JC llllMIH 2112•12 ~ TOiil AT QMJllO cumwo I.A.: CO) 0.0 _,,_ ...._ AUOtlOlt NIQ"O t .A. Koll C911ter, lulte 'f~ .,.... PWUC M>TICE Notloe 11 ~ tl'*I "* on :1T1•ooo M~Arthur lh1d., 8TATWT ....,..1..-A T~,Ulet7tndl!Yot.My, tMI. =:.u'rr'o u/rfo a .A .. ~'°':i:••no '*'°"'.,. dotl10 ~=TllCT ":~L~ .,.,..Oofow, ~Co., r ••11 M In OA .. 1,INI OftlQINALa, 1 ... 1 Mota le._.,, at-~ ttlt HetborJt91tOlk..,, llOt..,.,. • de DiW-. ... ~=:'*• Hllntl"14on IMctl, lo•rd of l!duoelton of 111 1 DrM, Cofone del ...,, OA """'*"' =:. • LOMlll, Mmlloo 10 Oft, •-~L..., Newport•M•H Unlflff 1011001 to Herbot end N•vtootlon COde Thll -·•"7 ....., .-__., 1 ... t ,.,_ D19t11ot et 1t1 regu1er meettno of .My 800-SCM, tl'9 ~ of 119 bulll"9I 11 oonduoted by • =· H\imlnoton 8Mcll. ~ 13, 1M2. decNnd ltt "*"'Ion to County of °'""' .. "' et PIMo ........ ..... Ult Undbwgti ldloOI IOCIMed lllCClorl \o tM ... IMddot ... =. °'*"O I.A. Circle~~~~ 11 HO Eut a&rd ltr .. t, Co1t1 ~In t.wfUI lftOf'IOr of h u..d Der'IClll« C. Inell t2MJ ·-·-.,,..... · ..,__... ...... Callfornle. The Nol~ to .._ ttl9 fOlowlno ~ I Thie ltUlm°'il ........_ AcHunlo ..-. -.. Thie ... .............,_ II ~--.....-__. ._ l lddert •nd l lHI l'Otllll lrt ~~~ °°"" ....... """..... .... ----VJ • ~tot ~llP9C1'0n ... oMol --. -· OFZ 1211A0064V \Ao' ...... 'II ~ .... ::.~.-°'*"' ~ Of\ 111'*91 =-· Of tlll lu1lno11 M•f\89«. 11117 At(jllttetb'I No.: CF '281 AV -J ............ ---.......L.tN ~ Plea.ntl• A~ue. Coet• Me11, lo9C l)pet C11b1n CNIMr p-'·-...__,_,. -,_, wfth Ult botWe1r1 tM "°"'9 of 7:30 AM 1o lAinOttl: 22'1" Pubtlefled Orange Coa.t o.lty County Cllr1l of Orenoe County on 4:30 PM, ~ ttwough Ff'td9y. Avellebla for ln1pectlon: 1:00 Piiot, JWo/ 18, 22, 2t, ~ 8, 1Ma June 17, 1Nt. a .. iad Bid• to LHH muat b1 un .• date of .... 815f.12 ,,._ reotlved on °' befofe 2:00 PM BAAD GATES. ---.. ~~~-IC-----------1 Publl111ad Orano• Coul Delly ~t 4, 1Ma, •t ltlo ~ °'.... IHEAlff'-GOAONER --==~~""'-·~~;....---1PllX. June 24,,,.,., 1 .•• 18, 1N2 .,..,_ ~ .. "'*" ..... County of 0r.,,... -, 1--21....aa w• bide _.. -.o E.t ,..,.._,. Thi C.ittom1e .._ I -._.. ----~~-------1 eo.td of Educetlon ..... ~ 8y. I(. lfown, 8er0Mfl1 The ,=.er~.J. IC1tofl to ...,d tt1o i.w .a lb Publllhed Orange Cou1 Dally bulllMlll • --::~~::::Tl:T=-:IOU~a~IU~ ... ,;.:...-.--1 regular mMl"'JI.~ •I 7:3C Piiot, .My 11, 1N2 A·AUTO ACCIDENT, •40 NAm ITAT'DmNT Pt.l, Tuttdoyndf1t 10, 1982. 3189-t2 MaoAnllur Bo"'9¥ard, 11111• 870, The tOl!owjng '*'°"' .,, <IOlng :::;::' 8dlnief'lf Pl&.IC M)TIC( Newport llMGtl. c.tlfornla t2MO IM.tnw •· ....__..,.~ All.IN' FLATT, Attorneys Ol cwa LEA SINO 17 220 rn&c..oo. Dlttnct ~~ ....... GET ALONG, BIG DOGGIE -Whether Sally, a German shorthair, knows it or not, she has been turned into a horse by 22-month-old Audrey Johnson, dressed up for the California .,..,~ Rodeo in Salinas. The city is filled with horses and cowboys, who will compete for $250,000 in rodeo prize money. 81.aWl.t 4•3007 MacAnllur loute11•rd, Nt111thope Strtet, s'u11e 103 Publl1hed Or~e Cout Deft. 8TAT'llmNT u • 0, Now port •••oh, Fountoln Vdey, CA 92708.. • •• Tiie fotlowlng l*90nl .,. doing Callfomta 92'80 JAMES l. C LAYTON: 54 Piiot, .My 15• 22• '1882· bu"'-M: Thlt bulllMlll 11 oonducted by.,, Cleorw9ter, !Mne, CA 82714. 31~ SUSAN M. COX Ind GERALD lndlvtdual.,;...__ F ......... ., BYRON L. WILLIAMS, 18272 .,._.,. Mftt"M'r LEE COX, doing bu1lne11 II ._, · ,_, .,.. Tiibury Circle Huntington Beach .--nu1~ RELIABLE PILOT CAR SERVICE, Tlllt .....,,,.,. -Ned with "" CA 8348. • • -... MITIIN;;:::;m;::IOM=;';To=-= .. :'.u~A=T-28692 DolorOM, MIMton Viejo, CA ~ 1~ of Orange County on s..J:.EVEN J . SHERWOOD, 15 fiUIUC AUCTt0N 8289~U8AN M. COX, 28192 • · P'*711 Thll . !Mne, CA 82715. Notice .. hereby ~ lt\al on Doloroea, MINlon V191o. CA 92tt1. Memory • • tra1n1ng offered Los Angeles Federal Savings and the West Coast School of Memory Training will be sponsoring a two-hour seminar Aug. 5 in Newport Beach on how to apply technJques of merpqry training to busi.Dell and social life. ~ The instructor, Dan Mikels, is the director of the memory training school. The aeminar will be hoeld at Los A'ngelea Federal Savings, 3201 Newport Blvd., from 7 to 9 p.m . For information. call 675-'\,500. : Video meet topic Publl1hed Or11n9e Cout Detty oen-•~~ed by I ~"=·.'.':.2~~hdOyol.JWf, 1M2. GERALD LEE Cox. 28592 fWlJC M)JIC( NIUC M>TICE DI-IC Mftro-t Piiot, J4*t 11. 22. 2', "4lo. s. 1912 81_, J. 8hetwood OrWIQ9 County 8htrtff-Coroner Dolor-. Miiiion Viejo, CA t2981. 1---===~~~---------==~~--------1·---r-\IU\.--""-'-,...;----4 ~2 Thll •t••-1 ... ""°with me Hwbor l>8trot aur.u. ''°'.... Thll ~ .. conductlO by. FICTmOUa ._.. flCTI'TIOUt IU..... FICTmOU8 llUaMH --.,. llM'll't County Clel1l of OrMge County on Dr"4. Cofone d9I .... CA pw9Ulflt gen«al ~ MAim ITATD9.NT ..,... ITATI..,.,. ..... ITATllllll#T I'-"'11f'K J4Jky •• 1882. to H1111>or and NeWgallon Coda 81-.n M. Coll 9'1d The tollowlng par900 11 d0<ng The followlng l*90'11 1111 dc*IG The following per4on 11 <loin ACTtTIOUe ••wa 1'1127• 900-504, IN 8Nl'tlf-COrOIW of tM 0.lld IAe Coll ~et: ~ el: bull-u; NAm ITA,_.. Publlahed Or•nge CoHI Diiiy County o1 Orange w11 ... at pul*c Thll ~I -llllO Mith the 00 CT 0 R DETAIL. 8 4 4 WINDSLIP KITES, 828 Terminal CHU8BY'S . 2233 FilrYle The following perton II doing Plk>c, July 8. 15, 22. 28. 1882 11UCt1on to IN hlQh.f bidder, tor Coun7i Clerk ol Orengm County°" ~· Coet1 M-. Calttomte W•y. No 12, Co111 M11a, CA Roao. Co.I• M .... CA 82626. bull-..: 3103-82 cash, In lawful money of ttie United June 8, 1982. 82627. STEVEN R. SHULMAN. 4002 OIL PATCH MAINTENANCE, •-.,,. St9t-. tne fOlowlno ,,,.._.: ,,._ P•trlc la S111nnon, 1144 DOUGLAS RAY MORAN, Wiit Cryslll \Me. S11nt• Anl, CA ttllO L•k• StrHI, Huntlnoton .-~ M>11Cl 8ulldar: South Cout ~ ,..,, ~ ~. Coet1 M-. Callfomll 20402 S.yvtaw AYenUe, Smn11 An1 112704. 9-:11 Cllfornla 92&48 Hull Humber: 480 A" lh h wl C"Po 9212e CA 112707. . Thll bu"-II conducted .... '" J . Th B • .. ~nnoua .,..... RegiMtltton No. CF ..,481 AX ~. p._ca -at. ,.,. Tlllt ~ ... _ .. UC1__. ..... aft Thie~-'--· 11 ~ ... -......... ~ VJ •m•• •Yet erney, .. 1. NAm ITA~ "-~ T .. ......_ .. •• '""'"' -VJ-· ........ _ _..,...,,.,. v1 -· lndMdull. Mein Sttwt. Sult• 13-4, Huntington The 1-........... ,,__..... -•........., ......,, ypo: llunctt (2U) ..._ lndMduol. •ndMdu.!. St.,,.,.. Shulman BMch, Celfomla 92648 bullnett-;;-"" ....----~.,, ~: 18'8" This • .:.-:, ~ with Ille Thb .... =1::·r::lh the ~t;:: ·~·=:·~ .. llledeo:" the ~ ~ .. conducllO by'" M 18 s I 0 N v IE J 0 s w IM L~"~'!t ~ lnapectlon: 8.00 ,.,:.~b~~ 8~r1rn. ~:.-;· Dlllty County Clerk of Orange County on County Cler1< ol Orange County on June lo. 11182 ange ty on .i-T RACQUET CLUB, 28221 Tl•rr• .. SAAD OATES 2813-12 June 22, 1982. July 8. 1882 Ftt:tf04 Thlt st•t-1!:':ci with the =~· Min ion Viejo, Celltornl• SHERIFF-CORoHER NllC M>m Publlahed Orange Co~~y Publi1h1d Or•nge Co:.~•11~y PltoP~bJl~~e8d 05r•2nge Co111 O•lly ~ty2 Clertl Of 0r_,. County on SWIM & RACQUET CLUB I g::i...'!..~ Orange, "11CTlr--•UlllUM .f>llot, June 24, .My 1, 8, '5, 1982 Pltot. July 8, 15, 22. 28, 1882 '• v•• ' 1 ' 2• 29· 111~82 _, 1 ' 1982· Cellfomla COf'POf•lton 29221 n.:,.,. B .,.,_ ...._7A,....,- _________ 2_10_1_.-_2_, 2836-82 Publlahed Or•nge eo.:.~ =~· Minion Viejo. C111torn11 Publlah~ Ko~:::· g:~•lly The fotlowlng l*"Ol1I .,. doing · rtaJC NDm rtaJC M>m rta.JC NOTlCE Piiot. -Mt 15• 22• 21• Aug. ~·1~2 Thlt ~,. condUC1eo by• Plloi • .My 15' 1982 317()..82 ~w~EEL PARTNERS. ao2 YOU AM .. DU'AUL T UNDIR ------------t COf'POt•tton. DI-.,. Mn'l'M't Ony11, BalbO• l1l1nd, C•llfornle YOU AM .. DIPAULT UNDlll A YOU AM .. DlllMILT UND111 A A DUD OP TllUaT DATIO AllM. NlJC NOTIC( Sllflm & Rlicquet Club .-~ ""'~ 82M2 DODOP1'1U8TDATIDAllM.11, DllDOPTWUaTDATIDAllM.17 7, 1112. UNLIH YOU TAKI Tim Eaton. r><" Ned H. lMvftt Jr., 302 0nyii. 1111 ......... YOU TAD ACTION *1 ......... YOU TMI MmOM ACTION TO , .. OTllCT YOU.. PICTmOUa ...... Manoger .-... TITIOUa IU..... 8aiOoe llland, c.iltomla t28Cl2 :,o=:F-"l""T..,.':'~ TO "'90T'ICT \'GUii llWll!ih, ,_..h,rTMAY•IOUATA ...._ ITAW Thlt 1tatem1111 wu flied w1111 the N,... 8TATE•NT Rk:twd H. v.,, o.v-.. 2811 -A A " llAY -IOU AT A ~ fiUIUC 8ALI. • YOU MllD M Th• following parton ,, dol :ounty Cttft Of Otfll'IOI County on The IOllowlng persona.,. doing Ch•IHU Wey, l•gun• BHch IALI. IP YOU MllD AM IALI. IP YOU MllD AN IJIPLANATIOlll OP TMI MA'NM ~-une 18, 1982. butlneu"; Cellfomlot2e51 • lllPlMA11Dll 0. 'IMI MAW UPI.MAW 0. ntl MA,._ OP THI MOC...-.0 AOAMT HILLSDALE ASSOCIATES '1t11M UNIQUELY AC CEN TED Rot>en E. "· .. ,. ........_ °' TMI MOC•111 '99'llfU -,,. MCICW w.T y~::' 8HOUl.D CG.rACT A 1570 8roolthol?ow onv.. lkllW 200 Publllhed Or•no• COH I D•lly IMPORTS, 8855 AllM119, Sult• 142, ... own . .._l ~-7 YOU, YOU IMOUla OGlnACT A YOU,. YOU IMOUla coetrACT A LA Santa AN, Callfomla t2705 llot, June 24, .July 1, 8, 15, 1982 11unllngton Beach, CA 11264e. ~ OJ .. IA e.n.ei._ Celfoml9 L.AWYa. LAtfYa ~ OI' T1tUITD'9 ~ Normen A. z.Hlr, 2127 y 2780-e2 BARBARA DAVENPORT, Sllrlley H. Bunkw, 22$~ "-!, eecmca.C!' ,_,___ _ 8M.I MCmCa OP TMMnrl UU T.e. Ma. Mf• Aedlen\, ..__.... Beedl, Ct11for -----------20242 R9rnon1 L.,,., Huntington .. ~ ...... -, ... _ _.. ,. _ _,_ ....,...., •--·-T.e. ... 11111 ..,.,,...,.,. 18 .__..., ,.........., -....._ ,__,...., Be1ch, CA 112648 ROB(RT .... .,.,. _..,, ...,,..,,_ •""""' NOTICE•._~ .........,_ ""''"""" ""'""""'' -·~.._ •-DA "'"'PO Thll ~ .. oonduct9d by• ._._. _ .. _.. ......,,--=II......, GIVEN thot on~ Au(jl.e 4 -• Thll bulSIW .. conducted by v~ RT, 20242 Ramone i.-. gener• pertl•lhip. on Wedi 1 S •· MOlllt 4, tm, • on Wectt s >· ,..._ 4. 1M2. 111 9:00 o'dodc L~ °'Mid d.y ~"" lllCIMduol. mnnoua ..,..... HuT'!!.lno, ~~;_c~~:.... .... Ned H. 1..-tn Jr. 8:00 o'doc* &Jft. of..., crw. 111119 9JOO o'doc* Lift. of -6d dl!Y. In IN room Ht 11ldo for cono:.Ctino Nomwn A. z.Hlr ..,._ •TATDmMT '" ......_ .............. ..._. ... VJ Thie room Mt .. Ide for conductlna roo111 Mt eeldo tor conducting Trwe.t'• a--. wlttlln tnt OIM..o of Tllll ltatllllent -fled wlttl The IOllowlng l>IJ9onl .,. dc*IG huatMlnd & wife Cowlty ~ii~~ ...,.. "" TNMel'I a...""'*' ..... cit T,,.... ................. ~ °' RE Al EST AT" sec u RtTI ES Col.wtty Cttft of 0r.,. County bullneaa -Rober1 M. ~ .My 14 11112 --..ity of ~~fv':,..~8~ Sl!CU .. ITIH REAL ESTATI IECURITIES SERVICE. located •t 2020 Hotth Juty 8, 11112. c 8.A.~.1E. IN1C5 .. 20• CP1111011rn11 Thia stal-1 WU NICI"""" Ille ' . ,_ Qc;;n ~ ...... _. 9t 2020 Nottfl SEAVU, located et 2020 Nor1ll Brdecfwey, &lite 208, In IN City ot ,_ orpor1. on. •cl co. County etertt of Orfll'IOI County on p blllhed 01 Broectwey, 8'llte 208. In 1'11 City of ~. 8'llte 208. In the City ol Sant. AN, County of OrwlQo. State Publl1had Or•nge Co111 D•lfy Anlhelm, CA 82805. .My 8, lll82 ,...: July 15 'l21~ Cout Deify S11nta Ant. County of Orwioe, State SalQ AN, County of °'8nge, Stl1e ol Cellfomla. COAaTUNE ~OUITY Pllo4 JWf 15 22. 28. •·-5 1982 Europa1n Perla lnlematlonlll 1'19211141 • · · • "4lo. 5, 11112 Of Callfom6a. ~Equity, Inc. I of~ C-... Equity, Inc. 1 INC., 1 Callfomia COfl)Oldo"· .i ' ' ' ,...... 3 tnc .. • Clllf0fnl9 COfl)Oratlon, 1520 PuDllshed Or•nge Co11t Dilly 1---------~-....;.;; C•llfornte corpor•tlon, .. duly C1lll0tnl1 c.orporetlon ... duly ~ 9PPOll•l«t TtU9tee under and 1------------Peclflco, Aneheim, CA 112805. Pilot. Jut/ 8, 15. 22. 28, 11182 NllC NOTICE oppolnted Tru1t11 under tnd appointed Tru11eo under and put1uanl to tht power 01 Hie rtaJC M)11C( Thll bu.in.a Is ConductlO by • 2936-e2 1------------pur•u•nl to the 'S>ower of 1ate purautnl to tho power of HI• conferred In !Ml <*taln Deed ol COfl>Of•llon. K~ ICOfllfernd In that cert.in Deecs of oontwreo In !hot oert.in Oeecs of T ruit eucuted by PAM ELA A YOU AM .. IMD'AUL l UNDlll A EwopHn Parts lnlnl. PlaJC M)TIC( AC II I iOU8 -.i 1111 .. Trutt Htealed lly PAMELA A. Tru1t ueculed by PAMELA A. SHIER, 111 unmarried WOIMn .,id DID> OP T'MMT DATID llARCff Inc, ...... aTATWlmWT SHtEA, .,, unnwrted _, 9'1d SHIER. .,, unmen1ec1 _, 9t1c1 AICHAAI> ST THOMAS 9'1d DIANE 1', 1N1. UNUla YOU TAKI Pller J. Piper, Pra. ~IT·a~N ~ ~-IQ per-. .,. doing RICHARD ST. THOMAS AND RICHAAO ST. THOMAS and DIANA ST. THOMAS: huebMd Md wife• ACTION TO ,ROllCT YOU.. Thia 1111-1 wea llled with the -.. ,___,, - OCANA ST. THOMAS, hultllnd and ST. THOMAS fllllOond and w119 M community property -did Mmy ~IUY,ITllAY • aou> AT A Counf)' Clerk of Orenge County on Thi lollowtng par1on la doing FIRST CAPITAL: FIRST wife u community property, community pr'°'*'Y, r9COfded Mey 11. 1981, In 8ook 1:.0S2 of OfllQal l'U9&JC IAU. • YOU MllD M July 8. 11182. bu"'--AP ITAL CO RP.: c B Q & recorded Mmy 11, 1981. In Book 11, 11111. In 8ook 14082 of Ofllolal Alcordl of Mid Counf)' ... pege DJILANA'TIOM M T1tR MATUM 1'1921Ha FOSTERS PHARMACY. 1838 SSOCIATES. 178111 Mltchell The Orange County 14052 of Offtdal Aoc:orde of Mid Alcofde of Mid County, .. PIO' 1101. Rec°'der'• lnetrumanl No. M THI MOCaB4NQ AGAINeT Publlahed Ot1nge CoHt Delly N•wpor1 Bl11<1 .. Coat• Mtu, Horth, trAne. c.ltornio 92714 E te ta. W . , County, 9t pagoe 1987, Aacorder'a 18115, ~der't lnitrull'llllt N"o. 12878, by ,.._, of • bf-=tl °' YOU, YOU 8HOUl.D CONTACT A Piiot. July 8. 15, 22. 29, 11182 Cellfomla 112427 FIRST CAPITAL CO R . n r 1nment raters lnltrument Ho. 12874, by r-.i o1 12973, by ,_, of a tlr-*' of default In peyment Of porlonNnQt l.AWYDI 285142 Tlrry D9Yld Or•nt, 3177 O RA TI o H . • c •llf or nt • Assn. will go to the • t>rlKh Of delMlll 1n payment Of def9Ult 1n PllY"*'lt Of~ ol lhe obllg•tloni MCUted ~. HOT1Ca M TWUaTU'I •ALI ____ Dl ___ IC ______ Country Club. Coal • Mu•. . 17991 Mltdlall North, · in f pertorm•nce of lh• obllg•tlona of the obllg9tlon9 MCured 1""9by lncludfng lhet b<eeen Of deltutt; T.a........ r--. M>TICE CellfOfnla 82928 lrvtne. Callfornl9 t2114 movt~, a manner. 0 .. curtd thereby, Including '"'' lncludlng tti.1 breectl Of defauft: Notice of which WH recorded NOTta: IS HEREBY OIVEN, INit FICTITIOU• IU..... Thi• bullnMI It conductlO by .,, Thil buolnlll II conduc:ted by • speaking, at a meeting tlfNCtl Of defeult, Notloe ol wNctl Notice of which w11 recorded F1bru1ry 1, 1962. •• Rtc<>rd«'• °" W~my_. July 28. 11182, •t N.U. aTATDllNT lndlvldull. OOfl>Ofetlon. Wednesday. -(IC)Of~ FIC>rullry 1. 1882 ... Februlry I, 1882, .. Reootdet'• lnatrument No. 82-037884, WILL ll:OO 0 c:toc« Lm. of Mid day, In Ille The followtng persona dol fifty O•Yld °''"' F1tat Coplt.i Corp. Th . Recorder 1 lnatrument No. tn1trumen1 No 82·037878 WILL ELLATPUBLICAUC'TIONTOTHE room HI Hid• lor conducting bullnMSH: •• ng Tht.11111m1n1waNldwtthlhe MldloolA.Oohln, e p r og ram w 11 1 82-037878, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION To THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH TNl1•'• Satea, within the offlcel ol IRVINE SWEEPING SERVICE County Cier11 of Orange County on Prel6dent b egin at ,2 p . m . at AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, money of the UnlllO Stita: REAL ESTATE SE~URITIES 16372 Conllructlon Clrcle EHi. June 28, 1982. Thll "'1_.,t ... fled with the Coopers 1601 E Lincoln BIDDER FOR CASH, l9wful money lawful money of the United s.... • euhler'a d** drawn on a SERVICE. toe.tee! at :i020 North INine CA 92714 . ,,..... County Cllr1l °' Orangm County°" Or • · • of the Unlled Stat•, Of • c:.nter'a or • cahllr'a ChtCk d,_., on • 1111 or n•llonll bllnlt. • 11811 Of BrOlidw•y. Suite 206. In the City of Culyli 0 Cornwell Inc Publlahed Or•n~ CoHt O•lly .My 7, 1M2. ange. checll dt9Wll on I "'1t °' nattonat ltete Of nellonal blink, I 1tate Of .. Cf'edlt union, Of a lt9!11 or Sant• AM, County ol Orange, Sl9te C•lllornl1 corpor1t1on' 15:)'7; Piiot, July 1, 8, 15, 2. 11182 ·~ Guests wilJ be Dwight b1nk, 1 11•1• or leder•I credit filcletll credit unlOll, °' 1 ltltt or tllavlngl9'1dioM-.octetlon of C•lllornl•, REAL ESTATE Conltructton Circle East .;,,.,,. CA 27111-82 Publllhad Ortnge Cout D.ity Cromie f C 1 C t union, Of• •at• or_,_.. MYlrigt Nderal M""'9 Ind loon ..oclatlon In'"'' •tat• .. ~ .. SECUArrtES SERVICE. • CaMomle 82714 • • •-"" lllt\ftl'C Piiot. .My 15, 22, 28, Auo. ~...!*1 -. ~ a • oas Ind 1oon ~ domldled 1n domlcled 1n ""'stet• ... payable 81 111 time o1 .._ 111 .1gM. 1111e Md °'poreuon. H duty •ppolntect Thia t>uw-11 conduced .--""'~ -._ Video, Dena Jeannette of th61 etat•. 111 payable .. the lime of Ult time o1 ..... rtght, tttte Ind ,.,... held by It, • Trwtee, 111 NttM under and put"WMt 10 1t1o corpor•tton. 1 b'I • ACTmOUI kll•M Videovision Associates ..... rtght, tltle 9'1d "'..,_ beld Int.,. held by It ... T""*' In hat ,.., propeny lltu9t• In M6cl of "1' conferred In th•t Certyte D Comwell 1nc ...._ aTAT'lllmtT fta.IC fl>TIC( and Clark Dwin 11 by It, II Tru1t ... In lhet rHI that ,._, proper1y lltuela Ill ltlild ounty Ind St•te, cMacrll>ed u Deed of Tl'UM eucutad by Carl)'le 0· Corl!Wlll' Jr . The folloWlng P"90ftl .,. ..,.._ --ACiimciiiliUiiiiiiiiiii--e and property lltuat• In Mid County and County end St•I•. <IMCtlbed .. . Ala( SYERS, ~ Mord! 23. PrelicSlnt . . ~ -= ~.,, Darrell Reagan of St111e.dllcrtbodMto11oM: lolow9: Pucet 1:TtieN0r111-1.ny tee1,1nlook 13H1otOffJcllll Thil9lalement ... flledwtt111he THE8EVEL.CUT,488 E.171t1 n..=-.a"A~ Saddleback Productions. of U:..,~~~ ~ PARCEL 1: The~--,.,.,, 0.00 '"' ol the 8ou1he11t«ly 1017• ~::. ~~ County Cler1I of Or8ngC County on StrMt, Room 100, coat• M"' ~ea; per-. -doing F . f . 11 Sou _., ol ..... Sout -·J 40.00 fwt of Lot 313 of Newport .My. 1982 c..nomi. 82627 H.L. C"OUSE ' ·saoc. l or 1n ormatton, ca tlll ~er1'/240.00teetolLot t... '-111ty2.5-o1Lot ••01111, u shown on • map ·by r1010n of• br9ldl °' · · ,_ J• 11 L A'kl 7 .. • 213) 592-4596 313 of Newport Helghta, • lhowll 313 of~ Helgllta, • .,_ •corded In b k 4 8'" In PIY"*'t °' pertoin..,_ P .. II .. _ .. 0 ·-n ynn ' n1on. 1 22 10790 w.,.._ A__,., Suite 202. · on • "'llO rec;otded In book 4. on• "'9P recorded In book 4 PIQt oo • pege ... 1'IO otlllgallol• -.9d tfloreby, u., 1...., r•nge COHI D•lty We9lclff, No. 11, Newport 81ec:t1, Fouf1t1*1 "*'°· CA '270t. -----------83, Mlaclllaneoul Mepa. ,_::e; 83, M~ ...... ~ °' 114:111=; ~ordl of "* brw:ll °' ~ Plot, .My 8, 15, 22. 28. 1~102-82 CelHomle 829eO CtiUCf( AAHOl.D tata Mt. •-"" Mn~ 0r_,. County. Orange County. Txceptlng therefrom the Notice Of wfllcti -~ Apfl Welti: No~d Duntnlt9, 1722 Acaer1111111, Fount.in' V9dey CA "-""'~ Puce! 2: An IH•ment fr E11cept1ng therefrom the tioeatq half ltlereol tN2. • "'°°"'91'1 ~ ' · 11• ~ 8Mcll. 9270t. • ORANQe COUNTY lngre11 end egreu 011•r '"' Sout'-terty 240.00 1911 ttlereol. P•rcel 2: An HHm•nl tor o. 12-118403, Will SELL AT ... Illa ~ t:iu!:: Is • ED HAYE8. 8542 Loll Ciro.. ......,.. COUIWT NorlhWHlerly 7.00 IHI of th• AllO E•c•ptlng lhtretrom the lngre11 end egrell over th• PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE gen« .. pertl ... ...,~ed by. Hun~~~~ .. -... e ,_ CMo C..... Df. W..C Sout'-ttrly 247.00 feet of Lot 313 Horttwtwly 50.00 feet thereof. orthwHlerly 1.00 IHI of tho IOHEST BIDDER FOR CASH. ACntlOUa WN Jan Atklneon --~~~V-,.~:.:9-.. fl.O. .... of.,..,..,,, Heighll, a ltiown. on• PARCEL 2: An HHment 1or q24700feotollot3l3 money ol ttlt Unlled ac.., um 8TA~ Thia 9l9'amerit fllad ,....,....,,._..,_, _,,..,.._,_ ._..AM, CA 11791 INIP recorded In book 4, P9 13. lngre11 end egre11 011er the ~ Helaht" ".,_on• • cethitt'• cf-* drown °" • Tho ta1ow411o ,__. .. doing Coun Cttft -with 1111 n. ~ II condudlCI by• P\.A8nW: CAROL. v. CllOe8. Mltc01t1111eou• M•p1, rtc0r<11 of NorthwHt1tlv 1.00 fHt of 111• ~in booll 4 PIO' 83. °' .-lonal .,.,.., • .._ °' ~ • June 'le of Orange County on """'* ptt119"11Np. D•PIMDANT: IRNl8T C. OrllhQe County. SouthMllerly 240.00 fa.( of Lot l1eellantou1 M1p1, record1 of crodlt llfllon, °' • ..... °' ICIM81ftLEY FINANCIAL . ' 1M2. a.di Amdd C .. 088, CUlll8 IN8URANCI 15"arcal 3: An HHmenl tor 313 ol.,..,..,,, Helohfl. • lhown .,,ge County .. ..W.endloon WCl~llii 8E .. VICE8 15'1 Tohltl A-. Publllflad O C p,._ Thll "81ttn•d .. _,..., h 80CllTY, INC., a Wltoo1t1h1 ln91111 •nd egre11 over the on• "'9P recorded In book 4, PIO' Parcel a:· An HHment lor tel In ihll ...... ol ~ • Lf1oune ....._, ~ IH6f ' Plloc JWf 1 I. ;~~ ONt Dolly County Cllr1l o1 Or*'9I Councy • o orporetl •• Wl8 T •" N Northw1111rly 1.00 IHI of Ill• 83, M~ Mmpe. reoordt ol nor•H •nd egreu over the tlmt ol ..... • 11(jht, ttll Md a.. 8-IWd l<ollld( 1581 ' ' • • 1N2 .Mr 14, 1912.a llORTQAQI COf.,ORATIOM,. Sout'-ter1y2.40.00feetofLot313 OfangmCounty. o rt hUtterly half of th• httd by It.. T.,...., In Tehltl Avonut L19u11a ·•-011 -2114-82 ,_ C•11111a .....,....., DOma 1-X. of Newi.-t Height•, M ~on a PAJICEL 3: An HHment for orthweaterly 7.0o fHI 01 the ,._, property ..,... In M6d c.r.omeo 12t11' • fta.1C M)TIC( PublllftOCI Ofene-COMt ~ ........., rntP -docl In book 4, pagoe 83, lngreu end •1rH1 over the 240.00 t..t of Lot ounty and State, daocflbed •• lrtll't 9oatt Wood 1581 Tllllftl 1--;;cm;nc;ii"Miiiiiiie--Piiot • .Mr 111. a, n. Aug. f, 1111 Wiii• M~ M11p1. Nor1hw111er1y .00 fHt or the 13 ~ Halgl1tt • lhown on A--. a...,.. a.di CalltorN9 I ,,.._ ca.. .... 17 • .,,._ hcepllng therefrom the ~247.00fMtoll..ot313 rM.>reoordecllnbo06t4 P1Gtl3 Lot1tofTr8CtNo.t3M,•Ptr-1 • NOTICE Y• ........... --. HorthMlterty hell. of ~ Halghta, a ltlowr'i on • l1cet11neou1 Map•.' Ore11oe reoordod In ~ 82, ,_.IO Thie .....__ .. OOftduc'8d by • n. -.t _, ....._ ....... ,_ The 1tre1t •<ldre11 or other l'llllP reoorded In bo<* 4, pegtt 83, ty ......__....,.,In IN_... 111'*91 ~-- 5 ,_ ......_ ....,_ ..._ co"'mon dulgnetlon oJ the rHI MllOOll1naov1 M•p•. record• of The ·,,,.11 •<ldrHa or other the Ca..nty Racordlf of Mid a.. a.~ ,....... llWtM • .,._ "-d P1'°'*1Y heretnabc>Y9 dAcr'lbed It Orenoe County. ommon dnlgn•tlon of th• reel · 1QS.215.11l0 ...,, ••• t --.. purpor19d to be: 231 Alllllt Pleo9, Eacepllng therefrom the operty ~~bad II Tho •lrHt eddren or Ottter Thll -tn•tt -... Wtltl ,,_ If YoU wWI to .-the advtoe o1 co.ca M..., Cllffomla. Nort'-tar'ly hllf. ed to be: 232 Cd PtlCI "'°" cMoignetlon of 1'MI ,..., ~ atrtc of ar.., cc.ny on an attorney In 11111 m•tter, you The undet1lgntd hertby The 1treo1 •ddrH1 or olher Miia. c.iHomt.. ' llel•lllbo<M S11 llNNS II "'-21. 1MI. llQllcl do eo ~ '° tfWI your dl1ot11m1 •II llablllly for eny common dMtgnellon of the rOll The i1ndet1lgneo hereby urport.o lo be: 1141 Dotpllln p- __. ~ If ""' moy be lncon'ec:tMll In ltlild *-OdcSrW property herallllboW cSe9crlbed • l•cl•lmt •II lleb lllty for any "'-·Corona del Mer.i ~ ~ Orange CONt Dolly , __ ,_.Mi llllld on.,.., °' 04Nt COftlmOl'I dtalgn.uon. purpor19d to tJo: m ""*1 Pleoo. In-Mid...,..,._ Th• underelon•o horelly Not,~ 14 Nilt 1 • '\=.a A 'I I a O I u • t t .i It• • 141 • 8eld .... wll be meoe wttnout co.ca Miia. Callfomle. 04Nt common dllloillllb laclelmt •II ll•blllty lor ony ' • • l1•u•1•1 It.,..... .. .._. wtrrontr. upre11 or l111pt1ed, The under•lontd hereby 8eld .... wtl lie me.~' lno0i1oc:u .. 1n...,..,....._, ___________ _ ......, ....,. w, • 1 • ... , r .. erdl119 tltla, po11011lon. or dl1cl1tm1 ell ll•blllly tor a ny errtnty ••PrH• or lmplloct ..... OOfllmClfl f 1StAuc1. MJC llR'lll -.. w. ':Z: = ...... encumbrencet, to H ll1ly th• lnoOi•9ClnMI In ltlild..,... .,._ erdlno tltl• poe .. Mlon ofi 98lcf .... • be "*" ....,.1--;;m;noii'iiiiiiiii"--••..., a....,,. .. pJtnc:llpol ~ of tM HOit °' °'°"*common dnloiwtloi1. ncumbrtncei, to Htlafy 'thel errtnty, '"''"' or IM1tlle4.1 flllCmlOUI • H• 11 ...... .._ ~ _., by Mid 8eld .... _.. be made ~ rlnOlpel .,...,_ Of Itta ,._ 0( .. .,ding tltlo, pottOM+oft, °' .._ 8TAW .. I Uttect CSHH tollc:ltor e l OMd ol TN&t, wtttl .,,... ones wuronty. upra11 or lfllttlled. obllQeltol." ..,,.. by _... '4\Cu111llr•nc ... to ••tl•fy tllo n. ........ ,._ .,. ,... ODM1fO dt un llllo.to .n ... °''* avm. u provided therein: r .. ardlftO 11tte, PotMHlon, or fl Tl'Ull ...,. .,_...~ .....,_ ol 1fto ,... • ......_ • oeunto, dobarfe h l o erto ..... ~ If #PJ, wider t110 onc11111brencH. to tatlaly 1i.o ii« 1Ufne M ptovtded t Giiis oers Han ........, eiy -6d fll.fll,A.T, MCINO, 1011 W. l • 1 Pll ••• dt _.. __., "'-tMrW end"*'-on IUdl ,.,.,,... ~ of "' HOit Of ~ j Wit UftCStr of T""'° Wiii .,._ eM Mii ..... C.... ..... ~ ., mip....,--. 11 twy ...... ~ lllCf PM ...._ ~ °"* allllgatM111 ..ncs eiy ..., ._.,.Met .,,..,._ °" lllf llHftt .. provtct.d ttlerolft: -,.- ....... ,..,,, ... • tlllftpo_ Met ......... of._ Trwe. oncf o1 0..CS ol TNJt, ..,. .....,.. Md Met 1*.11 ..... ........ W -. .... 119 Miit H.. ..... IMll.ClafMIJ, '· TO .,.. DIPIJtDMT: A ct.t .. wwu CNMod ., ...., o..cs °' .. ._ Wiiie .. prcwtcted tlloreM; ........... ,,..... ....., .,.., .....,.. "'.-•-.. CitlDINI.,., 1--~iij)ijiti;iiiir-I ~=====ir:~:m;n; 4tH• Illa MM 11M by .. Ttuet. Tiie tot81 MWMll!t Of Mid ...... ..,.,. ..... tt ony, llfldet t11e .._. et...cs ~..., 0... llld ....... -.W -A. o.et, ,,_....,., --_... "*-• ,_. """to ~. lneuslflCI rl!OIOnebfy ..,_ ....... Md "*'-on Miii rvet. Tllo total llllOWtt Of .,.. ...,..... of .. T,,_.., If la.....,~ -.............. ,.. .......... ottflftated '"'· oltor901 and....,_ llld ..... re..,........ Ion lfto!udlfta .,_.....,~...,Olaf-'"•Mtt I . '•Ir, UIOI • dal,. oftet tftle MltftlllOfll It ...,_ ol .. Ttullee, Ill .. tlfrll llld ....... CJf .. T,,..._ ""_, 1t1111atod feet. oi..,,., an '"*· l'-totol .....,.. ef ........... 0... ..... Qalllr9 ....r .. YGIA. .. .,. • OOUf1 • fn.": ouuc111on of w. Nottae." "' tnme oreMtcf ~ ..., OMd Of of .. rn.....11t.. 11119etton, .....,.,._ rw11r•~ - -,.._ to .. ........ ... Tnm. Tiie tote! OlllOVftt of Mid IMllDllD • .. ... ........ Htllltotd '"·· oller1 .. etti . .. ...... HOHlaHb y•:: IHI!_ .... """81...:::. '°-. ,_........ ()Med: .Mf 11, 1tet O~ellOfl, ~ rMIOftabty MUI, 5 .... T ...... II ..... =e: c.e. ..... .. .. •UHllofl ol.. eo..no ~. lnG. .., ...... ~ fH!;..!_UI•• end 0...: J/11/t ''· ,., ...... ..,~u111a ............ .. =IMM wt~• a Cllltom6a OOfPOfdon ==="' "'-··-·et._...... COAITIJNI IQUfTV INC • •· .._II• f , -e ···--······-r==:. ... : =~TATW T.~lrlon.:•--it :.'==~'·. 0Mod:41-..,..,.TL-W':'tli. .......... ..... ....... M .............. , of 1111MC1, -1 • ,_ lrl MAL llTATC _....__, 0.. ~'-'1k~ r..'§!.--_...... • ===-==· ---· .::...:..-:re:-~: ll ,,. 1 lw: 0 J .__ -•••. -. ........ ~ ... • ·--· Ir! °'"' ........ :W E .. _. .. ........... :::; ::r • ,A·:r.'l!l!f-ft .rr -.. ·='-t-~~~~ .......... ~~.-:..;;...;...-......,u1m1 ..... .., •,a .... ...,, .. j'8" ••·•·· NI.IC llJl1CE MMIOue •m NI .. ,, I Pili iii& . MUI 11!!!!!.. MUC Ima w,w "!D!Pl,m• ~-· N01'll pt UUI ""'·~"""".,...,,. .... ~"'"'""le'°'"' ,.... ....... .,.. ... 'to~!' O~IOPTWA--• -mlfoToi.1.-o"r ........ L 0-. "°· ..... e.=:01ic.~~.= . • •o No11y1"'0" ~··· N1wpor1 i u 111 . ~.,... Au•. o.e ~ -. '°'*' • ..,.... Q, toe. ..... ~ ... ., ~~.,.~ ......... .......,. ll'lo, a NI I r~ .. 01lur111, 11111 ~ ••· '"'' P41.llo u lt . If ~011 1111ct '" Mtllelll MtOt Via OelellM. Wt\llellorM, H1111lllltlOl'I 1 ... ti. ~ltteel, 0.,..,, Groff • .,..,....,, of tlMI ~ of fie C ..... ,.,,. leldl, OA '"'"· OtlltOtNa '"4t MM Pf~'llll you,~ llllOUlf ...._II ......... tty I Ttlll ~II_,.......~ WI 011ote1 lletet, 1H11 oomMI I . _,.,llClon IMMclUll~ ~ H•wflOtle l1r .. 1, ••"'.,, Grove, .. °" ~· IHI. II tl11 A.M .. CAI loftww9 Ina -r-_...111 ClllfOfNI 1"40 Ylntl 00tpot1Uon .. DllM H. Trueman, Prw.. TNt llllen'leftl 111111 .. Wit" tlMI Thie ~ le ~ by ~ appoint Nltw l#ldtt end Ttlll tiatelNlll -llled wit" tlMI CounlY C*11 of Orat\11 County on (llulblnd end wlft). ~110 DI.cl ol Truet -dM ~ C»lftl OI Oftftll County on Jut'9 ta, 1Ma. lher#ln H. Ila~ J1n111ry ti, Iha, 11 1n11. No. Nit t. 1MI. ,,.._ Thie ltll'"*"I ... 111111wttn1111 H.03133t, In book NIA, P10t NIA, ,,_ '"l>ll•"•CI Ot1n1• Co111 Dally Oountr Olltll ot e>r.,. County on Of otno1a1 "9oofclt In tlMI oftlot of '111>t1111td Or1n91 Co111 Dally fltlol. JuM M, .NtJ 1, I , 11, 1N2 J1i; 11, IHI. Iha Count~ llltOOtdtt 01 Ottll9• fllkM • .M; a, 16, 22. ff, 1N2 11oa.&a .,,.,.,, Oounly, llalt ol Callfornla. ________ ,_,_04_.a_a "*JC 11)11Cf: P,:~o~~~a~~~·:O ~~·~~1~ I:':.' 8~J!~~;Y!::;: "9lJC M011C£ .... "' 1812 .. Joint llfW/111 ::C::::: TO .. -... t:....• MOTIOI Of ,,.,.,.... 1AU 3142•H WILL ll!LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION -·-..,_,,_ -·-TO HIQHEIJT BIDDllll f'OA CASH CALUNe '°" _. YOU AAI I .. Ol'AUl T UNOlll A P\atC NOTICE (peyablt 11 llmt of 1111 In I"""" c~.... ono oir T..UtT OATID FtONary l'ftOMV of lht Unit~ tlll•} It lht moot Olelrlol: NIWltOtllT• 11, 1111. UNL.lH YOU TAKI 1.-MMI ltonl tnlrlnOI to the dlcl Of'lngl ........... -AOTION TO PlllOTICT YOUR NOTICE OF o••Tff or OOUflly Oo111lhou1t, looaled on M~~1'""':00HOOL~~ ·=flTY ITMAVIUOLDATA RODQ•n p •u-RR 81n11 An• Blvd., bttwttn --. p.m . .,. ..... ,.., ••ICJ 1·1 I. .. c.n • P 1 aka lyo1mo11 SlfMI end ,, ......... ,,y, -of""°"" 1112 ... AL . ,,. YOU NllO AN RODOER BUM ab R. P. 8Mll All•, Ollllor,,., .. ,~iiue Piao• of i1e1 111•o•lp1: tU7 g~~Ol~I Ai::.~~ BURR, aka lODO B1l Ind lnt1tMt conVIY«f to Md no- ::;"111 II., Colle Mtll, OA YOU. YOU IHOUl.D CONTACT A PENNOYBR BURR AND htkl by 11 wl\Cltt Mlcl OMCI of TMI ~I ldt nllt101uon Ntmt: LA~:!u. 1 1812 :00 M 0 F P E T I T I 0 N T 0 ~~i ~P:[~T. =:!c,1~~ICI IN OllTNCTVA IOU8 LOCATION8 8TATE~1~i FOA:c1~os~'RE ADM1Nl8TER BITATE NO. ot otTrtotN0.1172,lnthtClty ,lact Plane .,1 on Ill•; lH? 81!l'IVIC£S, INC. a cMy llPPOlnt.cl A·lltlil. of Coetl Mtu, County of OfMOt 11111ctr1Ua 11 Cotta Ma.. c.-Tru1IM undar ind pureuenl 10 To all helra, beoefld&rioe, Siii• Of c.lltotnla, N lhown on • ...... -:.:. • --.... S :.:. -: Otld of TNlt t900tdM Ftbnlary dit d t map rte0rdtd In book 63, P10M 47, •"'titit:'" .._ 1 .. uostt 28. 1812 .. "*'·No. '2..()0MGO. 01 ere on an cont naent 48 and 48 o1 Mlaceftantou1 MllC)t NO 18 HERESY GIVEN lhal Olllclel Rteo1d1, tHOutld by credltor1 of ROOOER P . ttcorda or Orfng• County: IN ~ 8dlOOI Olel~t ol JIMMIE E. FALUN and NANCY .J. 8 u R R • • k ~.. R 0 D GER Cllttomll OrlllOI Coun1y c.lltornla. acting FALLIN u trualon, 11'1 Inf oltlol of BURR, ab R. P. BUJtR. ab Th• llrHI lddren and otlltr ~d~ 111 Oov1rn1ng g:,.,~us~.:•:t~' Or~ R O DOER PEN NOY ER ~~=i!,97~": .. .. reftrred 10 .. SEU AT PUBLIC AUC~N TO BURR and penonl who may purporlld 10 be. 2182 S111a ~~lh w!MI~ up lo, bul HIOHE8T 81DDEA FOA CASH be O= Interested In "vtnut, Colla MIH, Calllornla r1m1 :.:-:s. ,; :,. 0;::111•d (payablt at tlrnt ol .... In lawful the wW or estate: 82827 oomiaci for IN~ Pfflt«;td of I monty ot 1111 Unllld Slllll) 11 A peti hu been tiled Th• undtralP.n•d TruatH lldl IMll tit rtotl'4d 1n l11t iuoe South tront ... trtnot to tilt OflrlOt by PA TRiCI.A A. SCHUDA =,~:_:n~ :t!b~~~ '~:~ lcltnllll~abov•. •rnd 111111 b• ~::'.'YA~.d 8~'!;0C::.-~ :! ln the Sdperlqr Court of and other oommon c1tt1gn111on. " :-::v....~ = = 11 ~1. 1111• ltld lnttrUt oonvayecS to Oranae COunty requeetlng arl,~n1~~~1· b d ... \ Eactl bid mu9t contotm and be Md now htld by II undtr Mid Oeld th a t p AT a I c l A A .. w • m• ., uul t 11pon•l.n to Ill• contra ct ~!.!"'eou•t In tilt Pf'S°'*1Y altua1 I.cl In SCHUDA be appointed ~ ::::.• ;~~·!,:' r~::~·ri:~· dooumtnla _,, nty Ind Stat• dtlCf bed .. : l "' · ..,. ""' · &en bid 11\all bt 110COm ltd Lot 26 o1 Tr.ct 3800 1n 1111 City persona repretentative to polMMllon, CH" enc:umbranoea, to by tN MCUrlty rtttrrld 10 ~~tht or N1wpor1 BHoh, Reeordtd In administer ihe estate o f ri: ~~.{j'1nl~pbrt":'C::::: oont1-.ct doourntnta Ind by tht llat ~~1= 132. P:f: 14• 1~ and 18 RODGER P . BURR, COSTA Trull, w~1~r1111.V tlltrton. 11 °'.f:P=A~~trac1CH"1. ~tflcA 01 •;:-eou,:':o.'o:t'; MESA, CA. (under the r,rovldtd In aald ""'I(•). ldvtnCM 10 rtllct eny or .,'1~ \'-r~ OriltlQt COunty Independent Adm.lniatratlon I *".f· undtr tilt ttrm1 or Mid o..d any lfflgllllrttltl or ln~~.ri1:. In Th• alrHI eddrtll and otll•r of FAtat.ea Act). The petJUon ol ru11. , .... GlllrgH end bide or In tilt blddl eommon clelignltton. If any. of tilt ia ael for hearing In Dept. tXptnMI or tilt Tru1IM and of tllt DISTAICT 1111 ob~ntd from rtal proe>lf1Y ~btd abovt II No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Vr~::• erealld by Hid OHd ol Dnotor ol lht Ote>artrntnt ot pu~r,;t~0 t:M, Drive Y{j!st, Santa Ana. CA Thi 10111 amount ol Iha unpaid lndullrla1 Rtl1tlon1 Ill• gtntral CA 1 Ntwpol't 8uch, 92701 on August 11 1"82 t balanct of tilt obllgatton MCUr.cl Pf'W1lllln9 rllt of par dltrn Wlg9t In ' 11 a b 1111 ~ I be tlMI 1oc:11111y 1n w111c:11 tllll work la to T"• undtt1lgn•d Trull•• 9:30 a .m . Y pr.,......., o IOld Md .... parfotmed tor Mdl 11 ,,_ dl1ot1lm1 any llablllly tor any IF YOU on""""" .,. •'--rueonabla ntlmll•d eo111. ..... CH Of''"" lnoorreot of tN t Mt add ...... ~ .. ...., u"' txptNU Md ldViltlQM al Iha time •:.,~INl'I~~ to •xteu~ ~ and °"*,_common ~natl~ granting of the petition, you ol th• ln lllal publleallon ol 1h1 IM OISTiucT 0~ -:,::~:., 11~ any, ~ lltrtin should either appear at the "'°~'°' or Stlt II S58. 112.21. Plaet nU• SI .. coat• MtH. CA Sa id Hit wlll bt made, bul h earing and atate tour ol ~ ~or~ndtr ~°::: 92'27. CoeMtl may be OblAllned on wllllout eo1t1n1n1 or warr1n1y, object!ona or fUe wrltttn dtllYlftd to th• un';~ttgn•d • ~ ::1to~~ rat• lhllt ::.:'..!. ~~~~":~ objections with the court wrttl""~ton Of Oelautt and Tilt lot9QCinQ ~ of per pay 1111 rtmllnlng pMclplll aim of before the hearing. Your o.mand tor ISalt. iltlCI • Wfllttn dltm w1ge1 fa b111d upon • IN nott(a) _.., by lllkl Deed of appearance may be ln penon :~!ctn!'~ Eltctton to working day of tlgl'il (I ) hou<I. Tiit Trull, with ln11r111 thereon, 11 or by your attomey. Nollet of Otfeutt Ind C:, U::: = ': := ~ :::.:" !:'~ ~ ~ =~·~ = I F Y 0 U A R ~ A Stll to bt ,_dtd In Ult county " 1f1A1t bt INlftdlt thi or frual, l•H. chargu 1nd ~ITOR or a contingent wll«• Ult t..r P<OC>lf1Y II IOeel.cl CONTRACTOllt IO~h'::' Ill• txptNU ol lhl Trust• and ol the creditor of the deceased, you Date: July2, l982 conttK1 ta awwdld, and upon MY 1tu111 crHtad by n ld Oatd of must tile your claim with the ~.~gage :.~'::':'*"·•opaynot !.~,:.~~~~court or present It to the 14t1W .. Otymple81Yd .• 111 ~man~~= 1° Tiit btMlldaty "'*'Mid o..d p erson al representative Loa~. CA 90016 tbt AlllOUlton of lht con~act n Of TNll 11arttotor1 axtcuted and appointe d by the court TBy•:~ ~: "'° b'do.r mey withdraw tile bid d1llv•1•d lo tlla und111lgn•d • within four montha from the M • : ·~ ol for1'f-tlvt (46) ~ =:o~S:: '!c,°"!eu11.,::: date of first laauance of Publlah~ng• co111 0111y ~ tt Ml foo"thl ~of Nolklt of o.tault 'Ind Eltc:tlon 10 letters as provided In SeciJon PllOI, July 16, 22, 28. 1982 A pay mint bond a nd 1 Stll. Thi undtnlpn.cl elUMd Mid 700 of the Probate Code of 3171-82 pttt~ bond w111 bt rtQU!r.ct :ocit ot OtftlUll and Btc:tton to California. The time for Pt&.IC NOTICE prior to lllltCUtlon of 111t contract. 1 10 bt reeorded In thl c:oumy filing claims will not expire Thi paylNfll bOf\d lhlll bt In tilt whtte thl rNI Pfot*IY 19 IOQtld, · to f ths f YOU AM .. DU'AUl T UNDO A form ••t lortll In the con111e1 Datt: July 7, 1942 · pnh ord our mon rom DIG Of' TRUIT DAT'ID APM. 21, doc::umtnla Sllttwldt FOf9Cfoturt t e ate of the h ear Ins 11'1. UMLIH YOU TAKI ACTION oOv.rn!no Bowd s.rw-. ltlc. noticed above. TO .... OTICT YOUR "'°"""· Dorothy .wwy FlllMir "llld Trutt• YOU MAY EXAMINE IT MAY .. IOLD AT A "*JC P 1 Pvrclllllng Director =~ ~=~ the file kept by the court. U ::,t:NA ~~Y g,u J.1 ':J~ P~b~. ~~';1:2~out Dally Ex.cutlw Vlei PrRlo.nt you are interes.ted In the °' nw flfW>CllDINO AGAINeT ________ ...;3:;1:.:04M::;;;:l2~1 61126 Cerrlloa Ave. estate. you may file • reques1 YOU, YOU '"°""'° CONTACT A . ~ ... ~ with .the cou.r.t to re«lve LA:,V~1 Of' TIIUS1D'~ IALI Published NtwpOt1 Harbor,.._, ~pec1 al n otice of the TA.No. •14111 · Pren combined with lht Onlngl inventory of estate asse ta NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that eoaa1 o.11y P11o1. July 1s. 22. 29, of the petiuens, accounts on waontldly. AUQU9I 4. 11112. 11 l982 3172 a nd reports described In 11 00 o'CIOCk Lm. Of Mid day, tn !ht ------------Section 1200.5 o f the room HI 11ld1 tor eonduellng DlllH llTICIS Trust•'• Salta. within tN offlctl of California Probate Code. REAL ESTATE SECURITIES LAW OFFICES OF JULIUS SERVICE. toc:at.td •I 2020 Nonh w. FELDMAN, INC. 8roa.c1Wey. Suitt 208. In Iha City of BURB .. a.nr A .... ,. t La Santa Ana. County of Or1111ge State n."la •-ey a " ol C1lllornla. 11 duly apPbtnted ELIZA.BETH BURBANK. Harbor, New J eney, sisters lnt SL A.Ddrew1 Drive Trust• un<1« Ind punuant 10 111t a resident of c.o.ta Meu, Ca. Margaret M. Wimberg and Seal Bea~ CA H?40 powtr of ult eonltrrtd In lhll Paued away on July 14, Claire M. Fra nk of Egg (U3) 43l·U!I ~~~nLA°'t' ::.1~~.11~x=~r~ 1982. She ii awvived by her Harbor. New Jersey. Kay ~bl~hed Orange Coast womln 11\d~ICHARO ST. THOMAS IOI\ Rembert. lilter Marion Huver o f Summers Point, Daily Pilot, July 15. 16. 22, and DIANE ST THOMAS. l\uat>iltld ~f New York and 5 New Jeraey and Mary Ann 1982. 3197-82 iltlCI wit• u <:0mmun1ty property. . Services will Kurmlavqe of Philadelphia, rtc0t ded May 11, 1981, In Booll held on·Frtday, July 16, Pennsylvania. Mass o f Pt&.IC NOTICE ~~~~.0~,0~=1 1~~~ 1982 at lO:OOAM at Pacific Christian Burial will be held NOTICE OF DEATH OF lnttrumtnt No. t2875, by '"'°" of View C hapel w ith Rev. on Thunday, July 15, 1982 BLANCHE J . R USSELL, • bre41C:ll CH" detau1t In paymen1 <>< Father John Aahley. St. at 7 :00PM at Our Lady AKA BLANCHE JOHNSON pertormanet ol lh• obllgellona Jame1 Epiacopal C hurch Queen of Angels Catholic R USSE LL ANO OF ~~;~:~d0,'~~~=~1t ::C,~!;,.d~1g.,J.":. offldaUng. Services under Church, Newport Beach. Ca. P E T I T I O N T O A D . was racCH"ded February 1, 1982, u the direction o f Baltz Interment Friday, July 16, MINISTER ESTATE NO. Recorder's ln11ruman1 No. Bergeron Smith & Tuthill 1982 at lO:OOAM at Pacific Al1408Z. 82·037613. Wil l SELL. AT PUBLIC WestclW Chapel Mortrn•rv V iew Memo rt'al Park, .., AUCT ION TO f HE HIGHEST -J l 0 all heirs. beneficiaries. BIOOER FOR CASH, lawful money 646-9371. Newport Beach. 1n lieu of creditors and conti ngent of th• Unl1td States, CH'• cashier's { 1 owe rs memo r i a I c reditor s of Blan c he .J. chac• drawn on • a111a or natlonal MULHOLLAND contributions 'P6 be made b1n11. • 11111 or ledtral crtdll E. RICHARD (DICK) toCasaTa...... Boxll43 R usse ll and p erson s who un1on.0<11taltorltdtral11vlnga MULHOLLAND · .. _ ~· ...._ • may be otherwise interested and toan llS90Cllllon domk:lltd In • a rellucnt Santa Ana, Ca. 92702. Pacific in the will and/or estate: lhlS 1111a. alt pay11>1e at 1111 tlm4t ol of Newpo rt Beach, Ca. View Mortuar y, Newport A petition has been filed Mia, IM rlghl, lltlt and lnllfest held P~d away on July 12, Beach directors. by Edward C. Russell. Jr tn by 11. u TrullH, In 1ha1 rHI 1982. Born June 16, 1933 in P<<IP"1Y situate In aeld Counly and Atlantic a N J the Superio r Co urt o f Siii•. detCril>td M IOllOws ty, ew erwy. SCHWARTZ Orange County requesting PARCEL 1· Tiit Soulhtasllf'IY 2.5 ~vedb• by hiaG' wi 1 fe CaroA 1, A DD I E L 0 U I S E lh.at l!:dward <..:. KU16eU , Jr. ecru of Lot 3 t3 or Newport ~UI .era err t nn, SCHWARTZ. a resident of be appointed as personal H1lgh11. u aho•n on • map L a u r e n M a r g a r e t ea.ta Mesa, Ca. PUied a way ti adml ••eordad In book •. P•g• 83. Mulholland, a ion David on July 12, 1982. She is ~~~e v:f toBlanch':~~ ~=·~:;Mapa, rtcorda or Kevin Mulbol.land, a brother awvived by her 80l'l Willard Ru as e 11 (und e r th e Exoeptlng tll•ralrom I he David Mulholla nd of Egg of Coata Meaa, Ca. and Independent Admin.i.strat.ion Sou1i-a1ar1y 240.00 IMl ltlw.ol. ----------~ d a u g h t e r L i n d a N . of FA\ata Act). The petition ~:~~t~P~~8o 11~·~'.11• HAU0a U.WP4-MT. OLIVE Mortuarv • CerretetY Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 PIHCI llOTHll'\ H U UOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 141.n & IHG>HO .. SMITH & TVTHIU. WISTC:Uff CHAPk 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 ,..Cl IM>T'Htal ~S'MOITUAaY 627 Mam St ~nlinQ!on Beech S36-65~ '~ Ill •• HeringtOn of Wu hi.Qgton. ia aet for hearing in Dept. Allo Excepllng lllertlrom 1111 · Private services wen.I-held No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Northlllllfly hllf thlf.of. under the diNdioo of Baltz Drive, West. in the City of PACACEL 2: An ..-nant ICH' Be Sml b •-T hill S Ingran and •Ort•• ov•r lh• raeron-t ... ul anta Ana . California on Nonhwelltrly 1.00 , .. , ol Ill• Weatcliff Chapel Mortuary Augwt 4, 1982 at ·9:30 a.m . Sou111tu1trty 240.00 feet ot Lot 313 646-9371. IF YOU OBJECT to the at Ntwpo11 Ht10t1t1. u anown on a grandni of the petition, you Map reeordtd fn book 4. page 83, BERGFORD lhouJd either appear at the ~=·ec:~;. M191, rtcorda 01 PAUL S . BERGFORD, h earing and stat e your PARCEL 3: An unm•nl tor realdent o f Orange, Ca. objections or file w ritte n lngrH• ind 1gru1 ovar 1111 Pa.ed on July 12. 1982 at objectlon1 w ith the court No1tha111.,1y hall of the the ·-of 80. He was a before the hearing. Your Norll'i•t1tarly 7.00 11111 ot th• --Southlllllrfy 247.00 fMI Of Lot former realdent of Coata appearance may be In penion 313, ~ Htlghta, u 11\own on Me.a. Ca. He la awvived by or by your attq"ney. •Map rtCOfdtd 1n boolt 4. PIQt 83. hi.I wife Elaie, 2 8lllW Paul of 1 F Y ..() U A R E A Ml1ct llantou1 M1p1. rtcorda of Burke, Virginia and ThomM CREDITOR or a conungent °':~ .~~·•ddr111 or otlltr of T acoma , Waahington, creditor of the deceased, you eommon dtalgnallon or '"-real dauabt.er Carol Tonjes of must file your claim with the proptrty lltrtlnabovt d..ctlbed le Fountain Valley, Ca .. 6 court or present it to the purportld 10 bt: 230 C«:ll Piece. arandchildren, l brother personal re presentative ~:.~~·~~d hereby Harold Bergford o f a ppointed b y the court dlt cl1lm111t 1t1blllty tor '"Y Mlnnmota. Servloea will be within four months from the lncorrectntae In Mid atrttt tddr9lt held on Fridalf July 16, 1982 date of first l11uance of or OIMr common dtllgnlllon. a\ lO:OOA at Cbrl1t JettenaaprovidedinSection w~n~e:r~•~m~:::. Lutheran O\urch., 271~ EM\ '700 of the Probate Code of t~ardlng 1111•. poHHalon, or La Veta, Oranae. Ca. California. The time for 1ncumb11noH, 10 11111ry Iha Interment .. t Falrhaven filing cla1ma wUI not explre pMOlpll ~ of IM NcM ~ Memorial Park. Frlendl may prior to four montha from C ~ =-:.: = call at the Shannon the date of the hearing otlltr "''"' u provided 1htreln· Mortuary on 11nnday, JUiy nodced above. ,p1414 ~ H any. unoar tti9 151_1912 from 11-00 QOOft IO YOU MAY EXAMINE *"" l'*90f MCI~~~ l :uoPM. ~ ao the the rue kept by the court. If acMn01t. and p1ue .... :':J: Memortal Fund of C hrllt you ue lnt ereated ln the ::: :':!.f.csltle~T=-o.o : Luthe.RD Chu rch will be estate, you may flle a reque.t T111et. Tiii 10111 llMW!t ot Mid A!Pf'Hla,ed. llalj>h W. with the court to recelve 01>11t1t10". lllOIUflnt reMOl\allly lllmnm Pu.neral ServSce9 1 p e ct al n 0 t l c e 0 f th• 11tlm111d f11t. clla~H and Oraa1• ln C h trt• of Inventory ot HlJt• a1Mt1 ·~~-.:::..~ at ... ., QS.lU . and ol the peUdona, aerounta • ' and report• detcrlbed In ~~ ~ ti. tllt. PeOPle •II along Section 1200.5 9f 'h• ~::"'"'ilte. CaWomill ........ COde. • ,...... ' •• the Or•nge Coa1t ~ _:~-:~ 11AL HTAT9 ..,.,... rely on the l:~ttal:Jlf, " ' ,. c1ui'IMi1 PuWtrw 0ranr o... ~ . .1 ......, July t '· al, 1111. ... ... 6 4 2 • 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 • 5 6 7 8 -----~-------- 642-5678 ~."1.1111.. •.•.. !~.'!!.#lh....... ~.'!!.!!I!. ...... ~.'!!.~! ....•.. flttl!ll. ••••••••• l.'!lf ~~ ••••••••• l.~I '11'.'!.aJ. ...•••••• !.l:fl~~ .•.•••. ,.!~ FORECLOSURE Pickup over f 500,000 equity overnight. Onct In a Uf Um opportunity. Won't lutl Prlmetl Orange Cty 21h ac. hilltop ocean view new est.ate. Pool, spa, waterfalls, electl\ gatet, 5800 eq h w/360 degree view of all O.C. Tennis court + hellcoptor pad a rea. ASSUMABLE LOANS & TERMS. Origin.ally llllt.ed for $2,200,000. Sacrifice at $1.128,382.63 approximately w ith $350 ,000 approximate cuh down. Only the aerious n e ed call direc tly to PATRICK TENORE. 760-8702 & 631 -1266. RE/ MAX Realtors, agt. Brokers welcome. RVMt« of Costa Mesa ......... 11111 Prllt W•t •Y baytront. BU.-for 2 boet.a, NmOcs.led s bdrm. 3 bath t l.200.000. ~ & jetty vlew1. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 tq. tt. $1 .38&,000 . Oceanfront. Liil llLI •ID Prime Udo Nord bayfront. & bdnn. ~~bath. Lje L.1\,1 2 boat .Upe tl,500,000 . Remodei.d a bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. ""· beam toeWnaa, fumllhed, patloe. '420,000. Liiii llLI llYRllT Laaoon view from 8 bdnn. ~bath, playroom, dark nn, den. Boet ellp. Now l l.000,000. IAYllH OIYI Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up. 2 br, 2 ba dn. 2 boet ellpe •1.000.000. OlllUll OAYI Coronado Ialand cust. bayfront lot. 85' boet '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~! dock. Plans avail. Red. $370,000 w /tenns ILIFFI otlll LIQUl>ATION Forced sale, two beautiful pcestigious Ne wport pool h ome• valued at $400,000 will be 110ld for $318,000 and $325,000 immed. Fee land. lf you are a serious buyer cont.act Patrick Tenore at 760-8702 or 631-1266 now! Single 1tory end unit, expanded 3 br. 3 ba on Iar1eat ireenbelt. $250,000. PAii Liii 3 txinna, 21/J bat.ha condo near pool. $145,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR RVM~ of Costa Mesa 34 1 Bu y\•d•· Q,,.,. I'll 8 b l~ 6 161 IHI 111•1• ............•......... EQUAL HOUSING OPPO ATUHITV P•"llll•r'• lletloe1 All tell Nlllt ldvenleed NEW VIE W TOWN · HOMES. 2 MHltr Sul· n1110E VIEW .... Vl•w ol oc11n & Beel modtl. Np1 T trrlCt. night llghll. Qultl AIM . Puke, op•n ap1e1e. Lrg 3 Bdrm 20), Ba $125,800 dn. "Int Fin. lownhome wlfront loca-...i p 8autr lion & atrllllng vltw.' Lo-873-r'JOO 11 ' Agta. vtfy Bdrm IUlll & IOft. 1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Clll '°' nnlrlcing ci.1111t. 1• Full price S 131,000. 761·3181 llWPllTllMU wtllY·PUI TllU 3 lrg Bdrm1. famlly ml/ country klleh•n. Gr111 neighborhood. Good fl· nanelng 1v1ll1bl1. Full p r ice $131 ,800. 751-3111 C::. '1f I I ( I -1""' I >11( lP t ~'' •t '> llY IU IEmOll RIE REOUCEDI Niii, llghl and 1lry home wllh 4 apteloua bd1m1 on huge cul de NC 101. Great !a- mity area. Chlld1en walk 10 achool. Many, many IXllll. Mull H it lhll wttk. 548-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS In '"'' n1w1paptr 11 1ubl1c1 to Ille Fed1r11 Fair Houelng Ael of 1068 wlllch m1kM It Illegal to ldvtr11M "any preftren- CM, llmll•llon or dlacrlml· nallon bHld on race, color, 11llglon, Hx or n1llon1I origin. or any lnttnllon 10 mike 1ny aucll pr1ter1nce, llm1t1-llon or dllCflmlnallon." THE REAL ESTATERS HIQh beamed ctlllng In What a Wonderful World llvfng room. Skyllghttd ol S hopping, right at kitchen. Two bed1oom1 your fingertips everyday! o• MP\.D and t>•I" plu• bonu• Dally Piiot Cluslfled T"l1 newepaper wlll not knowingly 1ce1pl any 1dvertl1lng for real ••-1111 wllleh It In vtoltllon ol tlll 1-. Recently completed room up111.lrs. Wilk to Ada To plaoe your ao, cuetom unit wluaed brick beach. s 11g,(I()(), call 642-66~ and let a llreplace. Mtxlcan Illes. 111-llOI Claas1!1ed Ad-Visor help vaullad celllng1. MBA~~===~=~~ you 1ulle wtcethedral wln·li lf.:====:::;;;;;;;~I dowa. 2 BR rear unit & pou. guest qtr11 G1111 flnenclng. $356.000. A Colllna-Hlll llatlng. HIHla Advert!· sera should check their ads dally and repor1 errors lm - m ed I ate I y . The GEORGE ELKINS CO 759-9100 • low cost DAILY PILOT as-1~======1 sumes llablllty for _. ...... W/ .. •• , ... u 1 " 1 t 1 M .__, the first Incorrect -1r-• -Your ad appears thousands of times aU over our community for only pennies a dey-you'll like our 1peci1l money· saving rat.et . Insertion only. view trom kitchen, 11v1119 •RST and dining room•. EnfOy ~ 1unny days rrom rront Ill.Ult AIU B1..,. /11 i.11 ........•...•.....•... • .,,,i IOl2 decil on tlle w1ter. Loll Low malnt .. no nolM. Al of extra parking In the condominium "" Ja· area. On rte land. $550, 1mlne Creel! 11 1opsl Thia 000 wit" good financing 3 Bdrm on• l1vel hll 1vlll1ble. d•t•ll. 1oc1t1on end 11 ...................... IDYE II OMI. 142·1200 lmm1CUlall. $335,000. Dilly Pilat llY Plllllll One o f th• ntattat l'iomet In our Inventory. Upgraded wallp•P« end drapes. beaullful eer~ ting ind 11 11 Huge rooma, large kitchen pantry. greenllouM klt- eht n window, window air, watar pu1lllc111on lylltrn, lllClllC g111gt dOOf'' tie .• tic. MUSI Mii thlt WMtctnd. A a1ell al - UN l()U~ 11(),..CS Realtor•. 875-eooO .·~I Cluslfltd Adt 642-6678 clesslfled eds 642-5678 ~~-~" @i011 •1~~ ..... W"•n you take ovtr existing 111 T.D. Popular BIRCH Model with tple, central air & lht latgtet b ackytrd In WOOD· BRIDGE GLEN. Only S 130.900. 2870 San Ml· °"" Or •• Newpor1 Beedl. 769-1501 0( 152-7373. ~ Walker & Lee ua•wau •. , ... Qultt. park-Ilk• Nttlng. Rm ICH' paddlt ttnnll and pool G!'MI tor ordletd. Cul di NC et. 3 t>drma. lam ""· $370,500. u.-4111 llllOU MlllU IR IUR Motivated Mlltr wlll alao help llnanct Ihle low prl- c e d rental prop•rly Soulll of 1111 Hwy In Corona del Mar. Current Income $1450 P8I' mo. You c:en llve In one unl1 and 11111 earn $950 P8I' mo. 1t p1111en1 11t11I Priced now 11 fuat S220. 000. 17141 '7J.4400 IJl)IUe.uu HARBOR A Otv1s1on of llarbor lnn•stment ro MAKE OFFER LIDO ISLE ...... $257.,500 DRAITIC MDUCTION ll•n.•"'lll•M•'ll11el _. Mlfllill ....... 1Mt'1.,.,, ................. ...,...... .... .. ................ w.. .... ..-..... .. IM.._,.,., ON THI 18&.AMDI •WPOM ... UYl'RONT1 Alt .. udllit• ~••...., .. till!· ............................ .... ,... ......... 111111 ' ........ -•J;:i • ........ OWC .... .._, T.O. ·-..... WATERFRONT HOMES.I'< Mt \l ruM .. ............. ~ ... -.. t A[StOENllAl AEAl ES TA1£ SERVICES USTILIFF $112 .... Sparkling city lights & ocean view from this popular 5 BR or 4 + den home. Nicely landscaped w/room for pool. Close to schools & shops. Owner will as.sis\ with financing. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 CLASSI ... D9'MTM9t'T MOTICll To place your Classified Ad call 642-7667 ® All l"tlll Htalt adverltsed In this ntws p1ptr 15 subject lo tht Ffderal Fair H ouslna Act or lee8 wtuch m1ku It lll ta•I t o advtrtlst "11ny preference. = .. ~ I I m I t • l I 0 n . 0 r dlscr1m1n1Uon bued on rice, color, reh1lon. sex. or n111on1I ori1in. ' or an tntent1on to m•kt any auch preference II m It a t Ion. or d 1acr1"''"1tlon " Th 1 s newspaper v.111 not knowln1b acrepl 1ny 1dv1rtilln1 for reel t1t11e whlc" is In violation or the lav. llaOISI A_dvertlsers should cl\Kk IMlr tdJ on publlr1tl on and report errora lmmtdlattl)' TM Irvine •11rror 111um11 ll•blllty for tht h r-t lnl.'Ol"f'ed 1a1ertlon only -. CLAISI ...... ~al lltlte . : .....•••...• 1001·2800 Rent.It ........ ' ......... lloo..850 a-.lneaa/Flr\1nce .••...•. 95-5035 Announc:1m1nl1 ...• , ...•• !100-5200 Lolt " Found .. .. .. . . .. .. 5IOO Perlon•l• • . . . . . • •••....• 5Jll0.5450 ltrvlff Dtrtttor)' , ....... ... Dnploymeat .....•.......• 119-1100 llm-cbaMJ.le .. ' ... ., .......... --INU6Marta1bJlllip. ••.. •1NllO rt.,.naUon. ~ ..••••..•• ~ . ... • • I tt11 1, ,(If\ I ,111 I , I•.\,' llHl\N l.I (CH IN !' I ALlf O llNll\ ;'> ( lNf '> Bloodbath • seen in Iranian invasion of Iraq WASHINGTON (AP) -.\bOUt 200,000 1raAlan and Inql troo1J1 &re Jocked ln I bloody beUle t.bat oould have lona·n.nc-eoneequencee tor U.S.·6acked Arab countrlea In the oil produclna Persian Gulf, U.S . ln~ anal)"111 •Y· An t9Umat11Cl 100,000 troops on eeeb ... are concentrated on the Baara ana of eouthern Ir!lqt which the lruUana have lnvaaea with the apparent aim of OYVl'UJ\IUnc that key oil lnduatry center, according to these analysis. . * * * ''It looka like th.la may be a bl~bath," uld one apeclallat .,ho compared the scale of filht.tna to Wodd Warn combat. At the White HouH on WednHday, deputy preH eecretary LaiTy SpNkee said the United State1 11 uralna "an lmmediate end to holUlltiel and a neaotiA\ed settlement.'' Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of 'renneeeee attended a briefing by a national aecurity officlal ana then said, "It's a very real danger the war will spread." Accord ing to the U .S . lntelllaence 1peciallat1, the tmmedlate Iranian objective *f'peen to be to cripple Ir.q's o l·baaed economy, with a pcm;ible drive to cut a crttical rnllltary supply route into Iraq from Kuwalt. Iran'• bulc aoata. the IOW"Cetl aald, probably are to shatter Iraq's fighting power, badly shaken by previoua defeats, to undennlne public support for the Baghdad government and to ~le the regime of President dam Hu..aein. "The Iraniana not only want their pound of fMllb ln revenp tot lrMa'• lnvMioft ot Iran 22 monthl .,o. but they obviOUlly want to humWat.e Hu..ein and perhaps ... him replaced by a lWldamentalllt repne," aaid an intelllflnce analyst. After 9DIDe initial tetbaclul. the ItaNan anny rallled to puah the lraQ1I t.:k and the momentum la with Iran, the analysts aaid. They pndJct.ed the outcome will tum en whether the Iraq& troops, whose weakneaa in leedenhip and fiehtinc qualities were expolled in previous battles ln Iran. will now "pull up their toek.a" and fight effectively on their home ground. Up to now, they said, the I.raNana have had a clear edge in motivation, lnclud~ what wu de1crlbed as the 'fanatical fervor" ot revolutionary auarda who hurled thenwelves at the Iraqis in hwnan-wave attacks. Despite polltical divisions within Iran, the analysta said, the Iraqi invasion had a "rallying effect " which e nabled the Iranians to turn the bala~e ~ the Ireql.a. . .l Both Iraq and Iran are hcsq,Le to the United St.ates. But U .S . analyst• said the American stake in the war lie. in the impact lta outcome will ~ on the aecu.rity of U.S . ...upported Arab reaimea ln the area, including Kuwait and Sal4CSJ Arabia. • • U .S . officials worry that a vlctoriou. Iran mlgh t turn on Persian Gulf nations which have supporte~ Iraq. . ' .. Iranian drive halted? Watt plan· blasted longressmen claim legalities ignored BJ fte Aleedaa.4 Presa Iraq claimed today that its forces drove invading Iranian troope back acroaa the border after a oou.ntenattack tba t halted an Iranian offenlive apparently aimed at the major Iraqi oil port of Bura. But Iran, which invaded lraq on Tuesday ni1ht, said Iraq's "feeble counteroffensive" failed and the Iraqis retreated. . "The a1Jre11ora' perfidy boomeranae<1 on them.'' an Iraqi communique said . "They retr'8ted in failure across the bou.ac•·, pushed by blows and cur9eS.'' Tehran radio, quoting an Iranian military communique, aaid : "A feeble enemy counteroffensive was defeated thil morning'' and that the 1raqis lost at least 10 tanks. It said , Iranian jets were bombing 1raqi pOllitiolla. l'Ar'lier' Iranian broadcuta said today Iran 's "Operation Ramadan" invasion forces completed a 12-mile thrust into lnq -Iraq ldmitted a lix·mUe ptnetration -and were 1 coneolidatina poaitiona near ...,.. Iraq'• aeccnd ~ dty acroaa the Shatt-al-Arab wate:;;:i· The communiques, IMni in London, said the lraniam were preparing to drive toward the Iraqi ci t y of Tanaumall, on the eut bank of the waterway oppmite Basra. ~ERED -Frater, the non who sired 33 cut. at Lion Country Safari. went t.o that Great Pride in the Sky 10 yeen ago thia week. M ore than two dozen Democratic congressmen have aocuaed Interior Secretary James Watt o f ignoring l eaal requirement& in his expansive prop'8Jll to open virtually the entire U.S . coastline for oil drillina-Three senators, including California's Alan Cranston, and 26 House members sent a acathing letter to Watt Wedneeday, saying hia (ive-year leasing plan , "Seriously undermines legislation passed by Congress to assure efficient development of our natural reeources while protecting the envirorunent. '' Fourteen California representatives signed the letter, including Jerry M. Patteraon. of Santa Ana. The letter said Watt's program • 'J.ac.ka any aeme ot oompromi.e, lacks any concern for our national 8eMhore and lacks any appreciation of ita potentially devastating imJ*:l.'' Watt'• plan offers nearly a billion acres for leaae in 41 1.-e saJa aver the next five yeara. The Interior Department held an ~ In Loe AN9W 1- month for leue of 140 tncta off the Southern California coast that drew b6da for only 35 ol t}Qe. Two dozen tracts, includtna some off Newport Beach ana Laguna Beach. were .. off Umlta" to oil companies durin1 that auction, bidden followfnc an injunction iaaued by a U.S . Dlatrict Court judge. The state, along with the cities of Newport, Laguna and Los Angeles, argued the lease of thOlle trac18 would poee a threat to the environment and the tourist induatry. The letter sent to Watt Wednesday by the congressmen asked the interior 9eeretary to modify the leasing program to better protect environmentally sensitive areas, and to pay more attention to state objections. A spokesman for the Interior Deputment said the department would have no respome to the letter. Clemente hepatitis outbreak feared Fearful that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis might occur, Orange County health oUiclals are attempting to locate any people who ate at a aalad bar at a San Clemente Carl '• Jr. restaurant July 2. Dr. Thomas Prender1aat, county epidemtotocY director, said a male employee who helped preplft the Mi.d ber that day has become infected with ~-A. ~~~~;:*we: the cllreme at • oentnl CaK1Gi'nia ..uur.nt whOe •-.=z. for a tnck imet, Paendetpat Between 18 and 20 other-pawww in the 9tate haw contncted the d-..e after eattng at the restaurant, he l&id. Pre nd e rgast said health officials are seeking any peo* who ate at the Carl Jr. salad w after 3 p.m. July 2. Any affected person should either contact the health department at 834-2683 or a physicia n , Pr e nde rgast recommended. Thoae people should receive an injection to prevent becoming ill with the viral infection. Hepatitia is a liver diaea9e that requires considerabie bed rest. "Nobody dies of Hepatitis A for pnctlcal '.. Prendergast aatd at ~esday new• conference. He said any penon should try to receive the gamme globulin injection on or before Friday. Iran's interior minJater, Nategh Nouri, laid in m interview with the Jomhuri la1ami newspaper that Iran would fieht Iraq until Iraaian cities were safe from au.cka and "as lona as our rights are not met completely." Lion's anniversary passes 'unnoticed' By JOEL C. DON "' .. .,.., ......... mourners keeping vigil at his hillaide grave overlooking Lion Country Safari in Irvine. Chureh returns1 $24,000 Frasier the Sensuous Lion passed away 10 years aao Tuesday, yet there were no Dam break floods town • ID Colorado !STES PARK. Colo. (AP) - A 24-foot earthen dam on the Jtall River gave way today, 1 limdinc a wall of water up to 7 feet deep throu1Jl the scenic mllln street of thia resort town just east of Rocky Mountain National Park. There were no immediate rep:irta ol injwie9. 9ut Mary Karraker of the Park Service office said 25 people had permits to bike in the Oooded .,... of the pu-k and ?artiea were being he boilina brown water churned demit from alona its path, including a small car. Mayor Harry Tregent, surveying the damage a half- block from Elkhorn Avenue, the main street, shook his head and appeared near tears. At least 3 feet of water was reported standing in all of the 150 to 200 businesses along Elkhorn Avenue. "Thia ia the first I've ever 1een in this town," the mayor said. "I auppoee it can be cleaned up, but the damage is done. I'm just sick." The flood c losed U .S . Highways 36 and 34 and Colorado 7. TELEVISION Another war documentary "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why 80lne Vietnam veterans turned t.o crime after returning, but inste ad is just another war ~tary. Page 86. BUSINESS Mol16•6e plan detailed GNet West.em Savinp announcee lta plans to ct.I With due-on--.Je ~ and adds It wW not lnllrfare wtth p..t.i.. P9le A12. Flrilu •dd'-6 d•r care llon Ind man aam.,..... are ~ on-lltt c1Q _.. far the. ll'OWinl nurnbBI Of WUllMll who rih to.., warldnl ... llvinl b&r'th. ..... •• ' He was once king of a sprawling drive-through wildlife preserve, an aging beast who catapulted the park into the international spotlight with his rather special talents with the ladies of hia breed. Capo Beach man's money found in safe Much has c hanged in the decade. A finand.ally ailing Lion Country Safari has recetvea 10me relief from its 10 percent cut from Irvine Meadows Amphitheeter concerta. The lions and t1gera and bears are going to have to make room for more (\oleats, this ti.me in the form of Big Bird, Kermit the Frog and Mi8 Piggy. Lion Country officials announced Wednesday that a ''Sesame Street'' theme amu.ement park wW open next to the animal preeerve by 1984. Harry Shuster, pretldent ·of the corporation, aaid Sesame Place Inc. will sublet a 26..acre percel of the 300-acre park. He aald the new addition wW have .epe.rat.e admillion and will be an (See FRASIER, P .. e A.t) SPORTS By JEFF ADLER or .... .,..,,... ..... When Olen Thibedeau of Capistrano Beach goes to church Sunday mornina he wlll be rewarded in more than the spiritual teme. For Thi bedea u will be presented with approximately $24,000 by the church's spiritual leader, the Rev. Esther M. Mallett, of the Community Chapel World Outreach Church inNorwallL The money ta a substantial portion of Thibedeau's penonal aavinp. It la money he believed was lost after it was stolen during a buralarY in 1977. But the money -more than $19,000 in cash and aev~ral checks -turned up several weeks ago when a white envelope lodaed in a aafe caught the eye of a church oftic:er. The aale WM one of two sold to the oongrecatlon when it purchued Thibedeau'• Golden West Hanging tough in Shrine F.dilon High product Rick DtBemardo has played it t.ough for two years, and will do the same Saturday night in the Shrine All-star football pme at the Rose Bowl. P.,e Cl. Good racket tor McNamara Fonner UC Irvine tennil co.ch Myron McNamara baa returned w the good life and ta the hMd tenn1a pro at John Wayne Tennis Clu.b. 11\e Duke would have wanted it that way. Pa,te Cl. COUNTY Lo,..ilme pen ,,.i. meet Pelt pall for almalt 1 half c.ntury. 1 ~ waman and blir Au.u.l.Lln .,......._, haft flially "*· P ... Bl, Ballroom as its new home in 1979. "That was my savings out of my paycheck over 16 years," Thibedeau recounted. "I would stick every extra $50 or $100 into a special compartment in the safe and then I got robbed and there went the whole thing, at least I thought." Thibedeau, who is retired, said he is certain he will be able to put the money to good U8e. "I might buy a bond with it or put down a down payment on an RV, there are a lot of things I can do with it," he said. However, the first thing Thibedeau will do with the money la pre9ent 10 percent to the church and its congregation. "The Rev. Mallett is one of the molt honest people I have ever met." Thibedeau said. "She had no obli&ation to pay me th e money, she owned the safe. I ,;[Ueaa there was a higher INDEX Obligation to God's law. so she gave it back." He speculated that the money muat have become lodged in a slot in the safe over the years because, he said, he eearched the safe thoroughly after the burglary. When the church purchased the property. the safes were transferred by crane from one part of the building to another, 'l'hibedeau said. One of the safes was so heavy that it dropped during the move and that's when the ~J"Wtt have jarred lome, he ~· "rm sure glad they moved it and rm sure glad it dropped," he added. Thibedeau a lso said he is looking forward to Sunday's 11 a.m . .ervice, even though it will be the first he hu ever attended at the church: •. "I'd 10 over there every.. Sunday to pick up that kind of.. money.'' At Your Service A4 Ann LaDden B2 Erma Bombeck B2 Movielt 8 7-8 Bu91.ne91 Ct-5 Mutual Funds Ct CalJf omia A5 National News A3 Cavalcade B2 Public Noticem B4;C4,S.8 Clulified C8-12 Sporta Cl-3 Comkw 83 Dr. Steinc:rohn m en.word 83 Stock MarMta a O..th~ C8 TeleYWoft Be IWtarial Al0.11 'l'hMWI 87.S Eni.rt.ainment 87-8 W•ther A2 Huacavpe 82 World Mewl A3 NA1"10N SIER REMEMBERED .. Lion ~try reeched all-time popularity dwinl rruw'I NF· An acSAI feline nm:ued from • Mtxbn dm.11, he w• brcM.laht to Lion Country 8afart to Uve out hia ten&or )'Mn freely roam1nC the park. ~ u an Alricln antma1 pneerve. An ootopnerian by human 1tandard1, ll'r11ltr remained productive In hi.I old .,.. He manaced to lire 33 cube by eeven Uone• 11 in just 16 monthl. In addition to lncreued vt.ltora, lenen came ln 11kln1 for Fruler'• daily diet and contenta of bl.I vita.min lhota. Then ln 1978 Bubblea the Wandering Hippo died after park offlclala tried to retrieve the elualve animal from a nearby lake. The death brought an · avalanche of hate mail, bomb threats and a public relations nightmare. \ A Huntlng1on Beech woman who waa char1 ed with murderlnl her lO·Week~ eon wa1 acquitted by an Oran1• County Superior Court Jury w~. but the father ol tlie Infa n t wa1 convicted of lnvoluntary manalauchter. Both defendant. -Sid ney Green, 24, and Cynthia Evana, 20 -were found sullty of child endanaeritw and child beatina In the death of YOUl\8 Joey Green In June, 1981. The nlne-woman, three-man ~·· dedalon late Wednmday came after nearly two days of dellberatlona that beean Tueeday. Several jurore wept aa the verd1cta were read, u did both Green and Evans a nd ·t heir families, who were preeent In the courtroom. Democrats respond ., Proeecutor Bryan Brown bad argued that the defendan1a were guilty of murdering the child -CreenbecaU1e hevioren~yahook the baby the day he died and Ma. Evans because she had custody and allegedly knew she was exposing him to danger. io GOP pension ad Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth E. Lae, who presided over the trial, Instructed the jury Tuesday that it could find Ms. Evans guilty of seoond degree murder or acquit her. W ASHINGTON (AP) - Democrat& responded today to a Republican television ad on Social Security with a ••true side of the story" commercial of their OWP and asked TV stations to run it,free of charge. !fhe 30-second Democratic ad 11hows a S<?Cial Security card being clipP.ed repeatedly by ~rs until there is little left. AD announcer blames the cuts on Republicans. Democratic leaders said the ad ia a direct response to a GOP oommercial in which an actor p ortraying an elderly letter carrier delivering Social Security checks to recipients. 1>resident Reagan "kept his prOmiae to the American people" on'an automatic 7.4 percent cost- ofLliving increase in Social Security benefits, the Republican spot asserta. "'W e will be calling on television stations that have run the Republican ~tatements to provide us with equal time to run our side of the s1(>ry -the true liQe of the story," Charles T. M anatt, chairman of the .Democratic National Committee, told a news conference. "I t h ink we have a real legitimate request,'' Manatt said. He said the party also plans to buy time for the ad, and for three similar commercials still in production, at a later date. Manatt and other party leaders called the Republican ad, Coastal Amarillo Mllevllle Atlanta Atlante Cty AU911n Baltlmor"• Mostly aunny. Biiiing• Coutal low 113. high 70. Inland ="' IOw 63, lllgll 83. Weter 65. 8olae Elaewhere, aouth to San eo.ton Clem•nte laland west to BrOW!mlh ~t winds 12 to 22 knots wltl'I 5 to 7·foot HH. Inner Buffalo waters. llght variable winds ='on thrOUgh Frl<l9Y ••cec>t -1 to Charise SC ~I winds 10 to 15 knot• .~ afternoon end evening l'loura. =~ :d Wind wavea 2 to 3 feet during the Cheyenne an.moon. Sout"-t -.111 1 to· Ctllc:ago IMt. Locel c:loodlnea and fog Cincinnati with afternoon dMrlng. CleYeland 15" s . ~ --Clmbla SC .;::J. ummary g:i~~" Thundeneonne rumbled acroee o.y,on Ill• Plaint and dumped rain Denver ecroee ~ Nebrulta and o.. ~ fie~ Plalns. Detroit ,._, *e> ... Wecm.cs9Y on Ille Duluth MMt1 Attam61: COMt and Ille lower El Puo lliUMIM lppl Valley. Tll• GrHt Fervo Uk• _.. _.. """ tog. . Aegetalf At leHt one tornado ••• Greet F• r•ported In northwHt North Hartfe><d Dike*. In DMde County, but no Helena ~ °' derfleOe-• ~9d. Honolulu ,.... °' the 9l9te _. ll9o hit by HOIMton ~ '1lln and nwble 111«1 hall. Ind,..._ Todey'• forecaat called for Jacltlln MS ' ...,_. wlcMty IC:att«ed -the Jadlsnvile hdllc NortlWt and rnudl of Kw Clly Ute E.aet, with tl'lunderatorms Kno.IMlle OOtK8oii II.cl akWIQ the ~ and L..m VegM '°""*" Atlentlc COlllt9. CMr Little Roc:tl .. etller waa •111pected In t11e ~ ~tllweat, wltl'I partly eunny Lubbodl ............... ........ T•mc:!ur•• atound U1e "'8ml • ftlllan 0.-. ranged hm ....._._ 41 Ill "-lmOnd, Ore •• to 98 at ""*'8LP "'°"*' Al1L NMtMh ..., _________ .... OrteMa ~ ea·lilornia :::;Oftc • No. Piette Tiie ...,,_ w ..... 8eMce Okie Clly , p r •Cllot• eun ellln• ecro•• financed by the Republican National Committee and being s hown in 58 TV markets. misleading and in.accurate. They said that the 7.4 percent cost -of-living increase had nothing to do with Reagan and was suaranteed under a law passed by Congress more than a decade ago. "The president has repeatedly proposed delaying or diminishing Social Stturity benefits," said Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Calif., c hairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign. Committee. "The Democratic Party cannot match dollar-for-dollar the Republican media bl,.ay, nor will it attempt to match them lie' for lie," Coelho said. "But if the Republican Party wants this electio n to be decided by television conunercials, so be it." The Democratic commercial features an announcer who states, as the GOP 9cissors are slashing away at the Social Security card; "The Republicans all say they believe in Social Security -a sacred contract with the American people. That's what they say. Look at what they do." "In 1981 they tried to cut cost-of-living increases by $60 billion over 10 years. In 1982 they said either increase Social Security taxes or cut $40 billion to help balance the budget." Judge Lae had said that Green could be found guilty of seamd- degree murder, involuntary manslaughter or acquitted. "The jury did the right thing," defense attorney Larry Bruce, who represented Green, said after the verdicts were read Wednesday. Bruce said he never denied his client was rough with the baby, but his actions were not meant to kill the c hild . "The jury determined that it was not reasonably a pparent the child wouJd die from the treatment," he said. The 10-week-old youngster died June 1, 1981, ln the small Huntington Beach apartment where his un married parents · were living. The proeecution had argued that Joey was beaten and s haken because he cried too much, enraging his parents. After the infant died, doctors discovered Joey had 12 broken bones throughout his body, including a broken collar bone. According to medica l testimony, the child died after being violently shaken, causing injuries to the brain. "The jury didn 't let emotionalism decide the case," Bruce said. 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"-,_ C01...,•011 ........ .. ..... --~ .... ..................... ~---.. = =:i..i:-J· .. 11 iiiiii1M' ... ~ a ~" """ . ,. .. ="-~ .... , t1 .............. .. •• ]---·· ........ LllMM ... _ ................ = ...... ........................... .. _ .. ,........ . DIM!rllllfl em,,_.,Ul# ~-- =v :::: .. 17 .. t1 ... t1 ... 17 .. . = : .. " ES I """'I ~. TWl .... '""' L.ltw ,, .. ""' .... • , TidM GETl'ING HIS GOAT(S) -John Matar of present from Matar's brother Sam, a car dealer Chicago stands in his front yard after taking in California. Each year the brothers try• to delivery of a herd of 50 goats -a birthday outdo each other with outlandiBh gifts. Republicans plan picnic A picnic will be held at Deerfield Community Park in Irvine Saturday to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the South c.out Republican Forum. The family-oriented festivities will begi n at noon and partidpantl should bring their own lunches. Beverages will be provided, said Bonnie Bohlig, program chalrman. More information can be obtained by calling 831-7896. Court OKs d ee~ slaying MIAMI (AP) -A state appeals court has refused a la$t- minute bid to halt the killing of more than 2 ,000 Florida Everglades deer, which state officials say are starving because of heavy rainfall. After a morning hearing in a courtroom jammed with animal lovers, a three-judge pane) of the 3rd Distr ict Court of Appeal denied a request for a stay of the hunt. At daybreak Fri.day, as many as 3,200 hunters will stream into the Everglades .aboard airboata and swamp buggies to begin killing the deer . Body of drowned youth discovered The body of an \8-year-old Downey youth who disappeared while swimming in Sunset Beach last Sunday has been recovered. A s heriff department spokesman said the body of John D. Bouques was discovered about 8 p .m . Wednesday by a paddleboarder at Sunset Beach near Anderson Street and Pacific Coast Highway. Lagunail nanied to alumni hoard Laguna Beach resident Joeepb Lelgbton has been elected to a three-year term as governor-at-large of t'he University of Southern California's General Alumni Aasociation. A 1938 graduate of USC with a degree in business administration, Leighton has long been active in alumni affairs. He is president of Joe Leighton & Aasociatea, a Newport Beach advertising agency. Leighton is a member of the USC Com m e r ce A ssociates and of USC Associates, a unive r sity support group. He and his wtfe, Linda, have three children. ------ • Openings are still available for the remaining four summer aoocer sessions pu t on b y Laguna Beach Sports Co. which teaches youngsters the fwidamentals of soccer. Instruction includes beach • Actor, dancer Bea Vel'Htl will perform at the Irvine Bowl in Laguna Beach Sept. 18 in a benefit for the Museum of Art. Tickets at $25, $17.50, $15 and $10 are on sale at the museum, 307 Cliff Drive . Hours are 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p .m. daily except Monday. Patrons contributing $100 or • The Laguna Beac h Alliance for Survival will sc reen the film "Eight Minutes to Midnight, A Portrait of Dr. H elen Caldicott," Wednesday in St. Mary's Church, 428 Park Avenue. soccer, indoor speed soccer. as well as daily swimming and lunch. The $93 per week fee includes a soccer camp tee- shirt and camp photo. Advanced classes are also offered. For information, call 497-6011. more will have reserved loge seat i ng , parking and in vi ta ti on to a museum cocktail party prior to the 8 p.m. event. Vereen was Leading Player m the musical, "Pippin." and played Chicken George in the television series. "Roots." More information is available by te le phoning 494-6531. Nominated for an Academy Award in 1981 as best documentary film, it will be screened at 7:30 p.m. A $2 donation is requested. More information can be obtained through the Alliance for Survival, 499-3190. b elle £ra ne e Dresses from Belle France. You 'II find them in our ladies department. ' • A st<»Y that offm fine trodltiolfll/ s,portswear for men ~. orrdboys. ... Hospital supporters ~ust off er to help South Coast Medical C'.enter directors want more baby business and we want to join the Laguna Beach and South Laguna boosten ln' wishing them the best in a new baby-boom campaign. · What has happened is that ttje maternity unit at our South ~ hospital has been losing more than $400,000 annually. ·, So the directors last year said they would be forced to close the obstetrics unit. Now they have reversed that decision after some community protests to the--closure order. Fund-raising committees and other sources now hope to go out arid seek $500,000 in donations this y~ to keep the hospital's baby business going. So far, donations of $155,000 have com e in and will be used to reduce the unit's annual losses and to refurbish the 18-bed maternity ward, according to hospital officials. Additionally, the hospital directors say they'll increase the obstetrics staff from four to eight doctors. The hospital is counting on t hese advances, plus projected population growth in the southern Orange Coast region to more than dou ble the number of babies delivered by 1984 and the years beyond. There w ere 300 births at South Coast Medical C'.enter last year. Officials say they need 650 babies per year for the maternity unit to break even financially. Our hospital obviously is going to need something more .. here than just a refurbished maternity ward and more doctors. Some of those prospective paten'-out there are aoina to have to cooperate. There's going to have to be some declsion-lnaklng on starting fa mill es and less dawdling about on the issue. PrOOuction is going to be one key to the hospital's problem. After all everybody, just about, loves babies. Some allies in the baby campaign might also be fot1nd in officials of the Laguna Beach Unified School District, where the lack of a baby boom has caused dwindling enrolhnenta and losses of state revenues. More seriou sly, of course, South Coast Medical C'.enter, as a non-profit institution, has faced some difficult economic times. The hospital has been forced to reduce employment and cut $1.3 million from its $23.5 million budge\. There is also increased competition from new~r area hospitals and cutbacks in government medical reimbursements. Perhaps with increased contributions and support, and a bit of cooperation from prospective parents, a small baby boom will brighten the picture for South Coast Medical Center. We might keep in mind the famous toast to babies by American humorist Mark Twain. He noted: "We haven't all had the good fortune to be ladies; we haven't all been generals, or poets, or statesmen; but when the toast works down to babies, we stand on common ground.'' Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is this problem more serious than at institutions such as UC Irvine. The cost of living in Orange County, especially near Irvine, already is high, and university officials have been decrying for some time tneir problems in recruiting top-flight professors. Despite the economics, though, they have managed· to assemble a noteworthy faculty . Many professors evidently are interested in more than their savings accounts when they accept a position. UC professors were granted a 6 percent pay raise in last year's state budget, but the new $1.185 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials such as Dr. Joseph McGuire, chairman of UCl's Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary freeze may spur some of the top academicians to accept more competitive offer.\ at other institutions. But Dr. McGuire says he doesn't expect a mus exodus of the 600 faculty members. For one thing, most faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other u niversities similarly beset by economic restrictions. Instructors at UCI earn from $19, 700 as starting assistant professors to $43,600 as full professors on nine-month contracts. A few may earn as much as $51 ,500. It also isn't uncommon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as royalties for texts they authored, fees for consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesses. The best people in any field, of course, are entitled to market themselves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer some losses if its best people departed for higher salaries. University professors , howev e r , and the institutions themselves, are not immune to the economic temper of the times. Everybody has felt the crimp of the current economy. Academia just isn't immune to those forces at work. Consider canine comfort Now here's a Laguna citizen with a solution to the town's age-old dog controversy that just might work. David Tickner, who operates a "pet hot.el" in the canyon, says he's come up with a plan that should e nd the battle between dogs-on-the-beach advocates, and tha;e who prefer not to see what the canines leave behind on the sand. Tickner suggests canine comfort stations be placed in strategic areas of Main Beach Park and Heisler Park as a means of alleviating the biggest problem caused by dogs on their daily walks. He'll even chip in for the first two stations -gratis. If dog ownen were trained to take their animals to the stations for relief, Tickner says there will be less mess on city beaches and parks. W ere his comfort station program to work, he says that, perhaps the city's strict laws about dogs-on-the-beach could be relaxed a bit. Currently, Laguna dog owners cannot leplly walk their dogs on the beach between 8 a .m . and 6 p.m. in the summer months. Tickner has sent his suggefiion to the City Q)w\ci} in the form of a letter. The council will have the letter in ita reading file at next Tueeday's meeting. The council should put the iasue on a regular agenda and give it terioua consideration. • • 'Opinions upresHd In the s~ above art thOM ofethe ~lly Pilot. Otner vltws ••· pressed on this~ ere those of their authors and artists. Atader comm.nt 111nvlt· Id. Addreu The Dally Piiot. P .O. Box 1560, CosUI Mesa, CA '262'. Phone (714) 6'2·4321. \' • I ORANGE COAST 111'1PHat T'9tma1 '· HlltY ftublllMr , ...... A.,.,,.., ... ldltor .. ,.., ..... ...... ....... .t,... .... ., Saudis hold economic cards WASHINGTON -The United States today ls more vulnerable to foreign pressure than it haa been since the early days of the republic. This pressure is wielded by the remote desert kingdom of Saudi Arabia, whose vast oil wealth is mismatched to a small, back ward populaUon. The cautious Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They are Inclined, therefore. to deliver their threats delicately, lamenting that it must be done and scolding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli thrust into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil shipments to the United States and w ithdraw ttteir billions from U.S. repositories. But the internal dynamics of the Arab world may compel them. however reluctantly. to use their economic weapons against the United States unless the Reagan administration can restrain Israel. This strange tyranny of the weak over the strong may be succeeding. For President Reagan appears to be acquiescing to the Saudi demands. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger. who wants to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Secretary of State Alexander Haig. Supporting Weinberger is the president's national security adviser, William Clark, who has fired some pro- Israel strategists from the National Security Council Then add George l:ihultz. who has been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shulfz and Weinberger were brought into the Reagan administration from Bechtel. which did a minimum of $666 million worth of businES in the Arab world last year. By far their biggest single customer was Saudi Arabia. The Saudis can surely be forgiven if they get the idea that their behind-the-scenes threats had something Q -Jl-Cl-11-D-IR-SD-I -~ to do with Reagan's realignment of his policymakers. Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who appear so quaint and picturesque in their flowing robes, sit on one-quarter of the world's known oil reserves. And the mighty United St.ates has foolishly allowed it.self to cross the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a reliance on Arab oil It's easy enough for Americans to understand the oonsequences of a Saudi oU embargo: gas lines and huge increases in fuel prices. But the threat o f withdrawing Saudi investments from the United States is not so easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S. banks, businesses and land holdings. Their investments have given them a silent partnership in ever-widening circles of our business community. But their biggest partner is the U.S. government it.self. Of the estimated $50 billion worth of known Saudi investments in this country, the bulk is in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the backrooms of the st.ate, defense, treasury and energy departments. The reason is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S . economy. If the Saudis cashed in their Treasury chips and transferred their billions to banks abroad, the federal govenunent oould still borrow the money back from overseas. But the move would drive up interest rates, undercut business recovery and prolong the recession and hlgh unemployment. As far back as 1978, a CIA repon warned that "temporary dislocation of international financial markets would ensue if the Saudi Arabian government ~ ever chose to use its accumulated wealth • as a political weapon." This is now precisely what the Saudis are threatening to do. I' .. ·' ~ WHAT CAN THE U.S . government do to counter such a Saudi move? The answer is: Freeze their assets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian government of Ayatollah Khomeini would have disastrous political effects, of course, but it would be effective. Except for one thing: The Treasury might not know the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. For information on Saudi investments is scarce and has gotten even harder to find since the Iranian freei.e. As one Middle East expert noted: ''Since monopolies are corrupt, it is hardly to be wondered that the disposition of OPOC wealth is no open book." The Saudis have shrewdly been channe ling billions of their U.S. invesunents through the Bahamas to disguise the true origin of the funds. a source told my associate Vicki Warren. The Saudi government's secret holdings, plus those of private Saudi investors who might cooperate in a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens of billions. But even the CIA doesn't know for sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now oonsidered potentially as the most powerful influence on U.S. foreign policy. • Anxiety symptoms yield to treatment To the Editor: The July 11 Daily Pilot Sunday Special featured two ai'ticles on one of the oldest of known medical oonditions. anxiety disorders, populariz.ed in recent years by much publicity in the media. some lnfonnatlve and useful, others less well informed and misleading, if well intentioned. The phobic type of anxiety symptoms, classified as al(oraphobia, will be familiar to many people when described in MAILBOX tem\S of feeling a marked fear of being' alone, or being in public places from which it would be difficult to either eecape or receive aid in case of sudden incapacitating pe~nal disaster. THIS CONDITION has been well known for hu_ndreds of years. It has been ineffectively treated for over 80 years from the·.emergence of pJycho•nalyaia to the present-day divene treatments described in Sunday's articles. JlUecUve treatment baa been available and in uae by peychiatriata for the past "1ecade. The accepted standard and apeci.f:k: treatment for prevention of the acute panic epllodes and the resulting anticipatory = (e.9. •taae f:riaht) uWl.r.et the bing of a .recently deveJoDed clall of medications known aa beta-&lockera, which are for this condition, one of the roo1t 1peclflc medlcatlon1 available In the entire 1pect.rwn of medaD1 tniated eondJUona. HAROLD H. KATIS, M.D. Depo1i1 law needed To the ldiMJI': I would object 1ttenuou1ly to the •"1N1Mly preWlced ankle on \he front Pill' o1 your '-at of July 8 wwe I not enUtled to • rebutt1l. J'r•dtrlck loho•m•h I 11 artlole head II n•d ''CanWnlr ~· 'Caltly' " .. but \he flrll of mlftY ash bMadi!'del &Nt we '""" endure belwHn now incl ..., ...... ,.. •• ::tl the proposed container deposit law? Any law which acts as a deterrent to the blatantly inconsiderate d isposal of be<-r bottles by breaking them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be alJ bad. Three times have I personally pushed my bike home because of cut tires. and once I took a slashed hart' foot to an emergency room for treatmc ht thanks to some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of the lobbyists if the cost of medical treatment or of new tires and tubes is in c lud e d i n their previ o us "microeconomic analysis." GERALD CORLEY TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Protests sentences To the Editor: I wish to publicly protest the recent sentences handed down by Judge Mark Soden in Orange County Superior Court to two men, age 25 and 21 , who abducted and raped a 14-year-old deaf mute. The girl was driven to the beach where she was raped and sodomized by both men. then driven around Santa Ana and offered to strangers. She was raped by a tot.al of seven men in alleys, cars and trailers. THE JUDGE decided that because these were so close in t.ime and place, they constituted 11 A single occasion of aberrant behavior." The men wel'.e aentenced to 12 years each, which acmrdlng to Judge Soden, would Jive them a chance t.o rebuild their lives. Another man Involved 1n the cue wu •ntenced to •4 Yffrl by ~nothtt ,e. How la th.It child ever : that nlcht of terror and at.art her f• anew! When are w e goi n g to sto p mollycoddling these vicious cr iminals who kidnap, rape and torture our children? Because these animals could be on the streets again in 8 years, to protect my own daughter who wiU then be 14, I wish to remain anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Oust incumbents To the Editor: Because of the complacen cy and indifference of the American voters by oontinuously returning the incumbents to Washington , our esteem ed representatives finally have succeeded into turning our national capital into another Sodom and Gomorrah. Not unljke the doctors and lawyers who protect their incompetents, the investigative committee w ill never divulge the names of those who were caught. It takes months and sometimes years for any biU to get out of the maze of committees because half of Capitol Hill is too busy calculating ways to fiU their own pockets while the other half is prostituting themselves by any vile means to satisfy their sexual desires. The time has come for tlie Voters to take a aeriou.'I look at the foul smell emanating from Washington and make a clean sw~p. If we have to throw out the baby with the bath water so be it. The innocent' (if there are any left) may suffer in the process but at least all hues will be touched and the tax:peyer wW have the 1atilfactlon of giving their favorite reprnentaUves the heave ho they IO richly deaerv . 0 . KOVAOC -· ~~~'F ~~ .... '6·..uMlft ••·;w;=r• 1111Mwii • 11 . . ' . I ttllH 'd lJ\ v 11 11 't' I 1·1·1.' < , 1 • A N 1 , 1 ( ( > l , N . ,, 1 11 ' > 1 < N 1 . ' 'l '> c E N r '"> Irvine city hall designers · opt for no 'pop' 8y OLBNN ICOTT ., .............. lrvllw'• new Qty Hall will not. repeat not. be a monwnent to pop art -a cold, modem 1truct1p9 edomed on lta roof by a h\&89 onnp with a revolvtna navel tram which villton can 1ee the ocean. That much u been decided. But the team of architects dellp1Jll a muter plan for the propmed---..t Irvine City Center still aren't 1ure exactly how the municipal meetln1 place wlll ftnally take lhape. Aa 1omeone 1u11e1ted Wednnday durlna a meetlna •between the deai1nera and community repreaentatlvea, partidpanta teelQ to know what they don't want, not what they do. The pop art City Hall WU broulht up dwina that meeUnc by architect Norman Hoover u an example of the ran1• of J>C*lbWtiet available to Irvtne. It waan't taken aerioualy, ~. Not in The Plan.Md CotnmWtfty. Hoover uJd he hu dt.covend that Irvine remdenta expect a hilh deaee of quality and • aenae of uniquene11 in thelr center. But he added that no slnale concept aeema to be favored. 'Hoover and colleaaue Tom Hann of the Texaa firm of C.udill RowleU Scott allo noted that Irvine rHldent1 are ~ '° u,ht arch!iactural controla. .. It'• textbook plannJnc and there what we"re trvirur to work wtth,'' laid aan..:-11Y0u're IU1l wtr1 unaque an the~ ln yuur plannlftl hen .•• The architectl offned 1tx preUmbwy ..._. Weclnm.tay that were nothTna more than aenera1 Jayou111. Bulld1np were not labeled, except to dellneate which were for aovernment, office or retail. rn each cue, delipen mingled the atl\.lctUJw and t.Nd varlou.a circulation and park!J\l aystema. The demp that aeemed molt favored by the team wu one 1-d architect David Klapa dla'lbed u creet1na an at.omospbere of an old-fMhioned downtown, with a pemment tquare IUfTOUnded by c:ommercial bulldlnga. An interior street dividina t1'. two could be paved wlt1l cobbleetonea, or aome oth•r 1peo4al covering to ctve it a pedeatrlan feellna, ))e aal~ . Hoover explained th•t u11n1 1overnment building• ln the center of the design wu one way of en11Jrina the city retal'1• ar~hltectural control over t~ centerp!ece. • Much of the parkina would bti (See CITY BALL, Pase Al) Iranian drive halted? Watt plan blasted longressmen claim legalities ignored By fte Al.oclated Pree• Iraq claimed today that Its forces drove invading Iranian troopa back across the border after a counterattack that halted an Iranian offensive apparently aimed at the major Iraqi oil port. of Basra. But Iran. which invaded Iraq on Tuesday night, said Iraq's "feeble counteroffensive" failed and the Iraqis retreated. "The agJressors' perfidy boomeranged on them," an Iraqi c ommunique said. "They retreated in failure across the border, pushed by blows and curwes.'' Tehran radio, quoting an . Iranian military communique, said: "A f eeble enemy counteroffensive was defeated this morning" and that the Iraqis lost at leut 10 tanks. It said Irani.Im jeta were bombing Iraqi politiona. Earlier, Iranian broadcasta said M ore than two dozen Democratic conc;:men have llCC'U9ed Interior tary James Watt of i1norlng legal requlrementa In hl• expanaive procram to open virtually the entire U.S . coastline for oil drilling. Three aenatora, including California'• Alan Cranston, and 26 H o use members sent a s cathi ng letter to W att Wednetday, aaying h.ia five-year leasing plan, "Seriously ~detmines legislation pamed by Ruptured daID floods • • resort city • today Iran's ''Operation Ramadan" invasion forces completed a 12-mile thrust into Iraq -Iraq admitted a lix-mUe penetration -and w ere conaolldaUn1 po1itlon1 near 8-'a. lfaQ'• lieCODd 1ara-t dty acro11 · t&e Shatt-al-Arab waterway. THe communique., monitoft'd in London. aaid \he lran1ana were pttP9fing to drive toward the Iraqi city of Tannwnah, on the east bank of the waterway opposite Basra. BBllEMllDED -Frasier, the lion who sired 33 cut. at Uan Country Safari, went to that Great Pride in the Sky 10 ,_,. 91'<> this week. ESTES PARK. CAio. (AP) - A 24-foot eerthen dam on the Fall River aave wa~ today. .encltJw a wall of watet' up to 7 feet cfeep throu1h the acenic mMn IVMt ol th.la l'90Ct town ju.t eut of Rocky Mountain Mational Park. There were no immediate reptrtaof~ B\lt Mary Karraker of the Park Service office said 25 people bad permit• to hike in the Lion's anniversary flooded --of the perk and ~ .. ~!J>artiea were bein1 ""T'h;-;,mnc brown water chumecl debrill from along lta ~th. including a small car. 1ran·. interior miniater. Nat.egh passes Nouri. aaid in an interview with the Jomhuri 1s1ami newspaper 'unnoticed' Mayor Harry Tregent, surveylna the damage a half- blocJl from Elkbom Avenue, the main street, shook hia head and appeered near tean. At least 3 feet of water waa reported standinC ln all of the 150 to 200 busineues alon g Elkhorn Avenue. that Iran would fight Iraq until Iranian citiea were safe from auadl:a and ''as Iona as our ri$thts are not met completely." The interview, teen in Nicosia, Cyprus, apparent!~ contradicted earlier promiaes to fight until Iran's fundamentalist Moslem ~ armies toppled Iraq's regime and marched t o Israeli-held Jenasalem. *** By JOEL C. DON or ... .,_.,,...,..., Frasier the Sensuous Lion passed away 10 years ago Tu,esday, yet there were no mourners keeping vigil at hia hillside grave· overlooking Lion C.Ountry Safari in Irvine. He was once k i ng of a sprawling drive-through wildlife Arab oil nations affected by battle , WASHINGTON (AP) - About 200,000 Iranian and Iraqi . troops are locked in a bloody battle that could have long-range comequences for U.S .-backed Arab countries in the oil producing Persian Gulf, U.S . lntel1.iaence analysts say. An estimated 100,000 troops on eldl aide are concentrated on the Baara area of southern Iraq, which the Iraniana have invaded w ith the apparent aim of overrunninC that key oil industry center, a ccording to these analysta. 1111 llllYlll "It looks like this may be a bloodbath," said one specialist who compared the 1cale of fighting to World War II combat. At the White House o n Wednesday, d e puty preu eecretary Larry Speakes said the United States is urgin1 "an immediate end to hoetilities and a negotiated settlement." Senate (See WAR'S, Pase A!) TELEVISION Another war documentary "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why eome Vietnam veterans turned to crime after returnlng, but instead is just another war docUmentary. Page B6. BUSINESS Mol16•Be plan detailed a,...t Wettem Savinll announcee ita planl to deal with due-on....ie ~. and Idell It will not lnWfere with pMt --.,.,.. Al2. Fhm• addl• day care .... Incl more oampanite are~ on41 .. • .,. for dw_ powlni nwnben of .... who ......... wortdnl .,. llYlnl blnh. ~ •. • prelierve, an aging beast who catapulted the park into the international spotlight wtth hia rather apedal talents with the ladies of his breed. Much has changed in the decade. A financially ailing Lion Country Safari has receiveCl some relief from its 10 pen:ent cut from Ir v ine Meadows Amphitheater concerts. The lions and tigers and bears are going to have to make room for more guests, this time ln the focm of B6g Bird, Kermit the Frog and Mt. Piggy. Lion Country o ff icials announced Wednesday that a ••Sesame Street'• theme amu.ement park will open next to the animal praerve by 1984. Harry Shu.a~r. president of the corporation, said se .. me Place Inc. will aublet a 2$-«re patcel of the 300-KTe park. He uJd the new addition will have aeperate admilllon and will be an educationally oriented park aimed at children ..-3 to 13. Shuster cited Lion Country'• aluglah attendance u a prime reason for lnt.roducing a new attraction to the area. "The concept of the free- (See PllASJEJt~ Pap Al) • SPORTS ''Thia .. the first rve ever aeen in this town," the mayor said. "I suppoee it can be cleaned up. but the damage i• done. I'm just sick." The flood closed U .S . Hlghwaya 36 and 34 and c.olondo 7. Authorities be1an warning motel gue9t8 and residents at the weal end of Estes Park, to eVllCUAte just before 7:30 a.m., a relidlnt laid. .Jim Harpster, apokemnan for the U.S. Park Service, Mid the f.aUure of the Lawn Lake Dun. owned and operated by Fannera Ditch Co . of Loveland, an lniption compeny, apparently occurred in the early mominC houn. There are about 6 ,000 penmnent relidmta ln the Eatea Park arm and DOW ia the heiaht of the aummer 1euon, which meant another 30,000 to 40,000 tourl1t1 and vacation-home ownen were ln the area when the Oood hit. Hanging tough in Shrine F.dllon High product Rick DiBemardo hu played it touah for two years, and will do the aame Saturday night 1n the Shrine AU -star football game at the Roee Bowl. Page C 1. Good racket lor McNamara Former UC lrv1ne tennia coech Myron McNamara baa returned to the FOd life ud II the heed Wmll pro at John Wayne Tenn.la Club. 'nM Duke would have wanted it that way. Paae Cl. C OUNT Y Congress to assure efficient developme nt of our natural reeources while protecting the environment.'' Fo u rte e n California repreeentatives signed the letter, including Jerry M . Patterson, of Santa Ana. The letter said Watt's pl'Ol1'am "lacks any sense of compromise, lacks any concern f or our national seashore and lacks any appreciation of its potentially devastat;lnJ{ impact." Watt's plan offers nearly a 69th District billion acres for lease in 41 lease sales over the next five years. The Interior Department held an auction in Los Anieles last month for lease of 140 tracts off the Southern California coast that drew bi~ for only 35 of thole. Two dozen tracts, including some off Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, were "off limits" to oil companies during that auction, bidders foJlowrng an injunction issued by a U.S . (See WATJ', Pase A!) Roosevelt supports Hanson candidacy·:· By SANDIE JOY O(llie...., ......... Jamea Rooee-velt, oldest son of former Prealdent Franklin D. Rooaevelt, has thrown his political weight behind Robert llanaon, the Democratic contender for the 69th District State ~bly teat. Roo1evelt, a lonatlme Democrat and former consre-man. haa been named bonanry cbalnnan ol Har.on'• eJectian committee. '1 don't think Bob Hanaon la a ahoo-ln," said Rooeewlt, who ii a Newport Beech n!lklent, ''but be baa a good opportunity to win.'' Hanlon. a Costa Me.a retident and a di.rector of the Costa Me.a Sanitary District, la making his flrlt bid for an MRmbly aeat. "It's nominally a Republican diatrict," Rooeevelt aid, "so I think Hanson has to be termed the underdog but I think he'll make a good fight." Hanson facea first-term incumbent A.eernbJyman Nolan Friu.elle in November be.lloting. Frizzelle beat former Irvine Mayor David Sills in a close primary race for the Republican (See RANSON, Page A!) Clemente hepatitis outbreak feared FearfuJ that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis might occur, Orange C.Ounty health officials are attempting to locate any people who ate at a salad bar at a San Clemente Carl's Jr . rataurant JuJy 2. Dr. Thomas Prendergast, county epidemiology director, Mid a male employee who helped prepare the salad bar that day baa become infec ted with hepatitis A. 1'he junior college track team member apparently contracted the dileMe at a central California• reataurant while away for a track meet, Prendergast said. Between 18 and 20 other penona in the state have contracted the di9eue after eating at the restaurant, he aaJd. INDEX Prendergas t said health offici.als are seeking any people who ate at the Carl Jr. salad bar after 3 p.m. July 2. Any affected person should e ither contac t the health department at 834-2683 or a physician , Prendergas t recommended. Too.e people shouJd receive an injection to prevent beoomin8 ill with the viral infection. Hepatitis is a liver di9eue that requires oonsiderabie bed rest. "Nobody dies of Hepatitis A fw practical I I Prenderps{ said at :UCesday news conference. He said any penon abouJd try to receive the pmme globulin injection on or before Friday. At Your Service A4 Ann Landen B2 Erma Bombeck B2 Moviee 87-8 Bul1ne. C4-5 Mutual Funda C4 c.automla A5 National Newt A3 C.vakade B2 Public Notices B4;C4,6,8 a..tfied C8-12 Sporta Cl-3 Comb B3 Dr.Stelncrohn B2 era.word B3 Stockl4arkecl C5 Dlath Noticet C8 . Televialon 88 Sd&Wlal Al0-11 Tbeatlln 87-t Entertalnment B7-8 w ........ A2 Horoecooe 82 World N9WI A3 NATION Th• money 11 a au"11&aadal porUon of 'n\lbedeau'1 ~ 11vtn11. It It money he wa.e l oet after It wu atolen duriNI. burlW'Y ln 197'1. 9uf &he maney -more than t l8,000.tn e11h and aeveral check• -&urned up Hveral week• a10 when a white envelope lcidpd ln a Mfe cauaht the eye of a chwd\ oUictt. 'n'9 Mf• wM one of two IOld to the conareaauon when lt purch.utd Thibedeau'• Golden Wett . ~es believer of him a.Droom • la new ..._ bl down a dOwa .-~t °"an RV, Obltpdan to Ood'• law, '° atw that lt dropped durine the move 1t'11. tblre _.. a lot of d\lnp l c:an do pw tt beck." and that'• when the ~ f.'UI'\ '6That WM my •vtn. (Mat of with U," he ..ad. He 11*\Llatlld &hit tht money have juTed loole, be . my paycheck over url 'Ht11''. However, the first thins muat have become 1odad ln I "rm IUte tS.ad they moved it Thibedffu r.count.cl. " wowa Thtbedeau wm do w ith the alot ln the Mfe over tM yean and l'm au.re illd it dtopped." he •tick flVW)' e>Jtra $50 « •100 lntl\ money .. prtllftt 10 pen:ent to btcawit, he Mid, he IMtCb.d the added. a ..-:.tat compartment In the 11!1 the church and ita oongrepUon. ufe thorou1hly after the Thlbodnu alto aald he I• and then l aot robbed aod there buralarY. lookina forward to Sunday'• 11 went t.he whole thlna. at lellt l ''The Rev. Mallett I.I one ol the Whet\ the church purchued a.m . .ervtce, evftl thouch It wW \houaht." • moat honelt people l have .wr the property, the aafea were be the tint he hu ~attended Thlbedeau. who la retired, lakl met," '11\ibedeeu uJd. "She had tranalerred J>y crane from one at the church: ht la certaln he will be able to no obll1aUon to pay me the part of the bUUdlng to another, "I'd 10 over there every put the money to aood u.. "I money, ahe owned the aafe. 1 ThJbedeau .id. Sunday to plck up that kind of ~ght buy a bOnd Wtt.h lt ot put aueu there waa a hl1her One of the ufee wu IO heavy money." acquitted in slaying T wo escape d cons grabbed at OC Fair The nine-woman, three-man jury'• dtldaion late Wedne.day came after nearly two daY1 of dellbe raUona that began Tueeday. Several juror• wept a• th...,. verdkta were read, u did both Green and Evans and their families, who were preeent ln t.he courtroom. Proeecutor Bryan Brown had ed that the def.endanta were ty of murdering. the child - reen because he violently shook the baby tho day he died and Ma. Evans because the had cuatody and allegedly knew ahe waa expoetng him to danpr. Oranje C.OUOty Superior c.outi Judae Kenneth E . Lae, who prftlded over the trial, lnatruc1ed the jury Tuesday that it could find Ma. Evans guilty of leCOnd degree murder or acquit her. Jwdge Lae had said that Green could be found guilty of eecond- degree murder , involuntary manslaughter or acquitted. Continued stories FRASIER REMEMBERED ... atandlng a&fari park haa not been one that'• successful," he said. '"fTbe drive only takes 45 fllfnutes to an hour and you're not offering enough time to a tot@'iat or visitor. So you have to h•e other ac\ivltiea in the entertainment area." ~ Place ~. is a joint project of the Children's Television Workshop and Bwich Entertainment Corp., a branch of the giant beermaker. Shuster said there are similar "Sesame Street" parks in Texas and Pennsylvania, reple te with oversized, furry characters from the popular public television program. Lion Country reached all-time popularity during Frasier's reign. An aging feline te9CUed from a Mexican cin:us, he wu brought to Lion Country Safari to live out his senior years freely roaming the park, designed as an African animal preserve. CITY HALL DESIGN ... tudlsen within clusters of stores ~offices and not visible from the· street or square. t. a aecond ~ "-;n, called by Ol\.f t he "Fashion Island Scliipme," the buildings would be IUriounded by parking. The San ~ Creek channel, enhanced by5 terr~ced slopins and ~ping, would run through ~h'-_plaza with government ~on one side, commerdal QI\ the other. rn another, teparate clusters ~o u l d hold government t-i11cttnp, regional shopping and village-oriented stores, with landscaping used to tie t.he three together. Klages said the team will return Friday with as many as three designs for repreeentatives to consider. The architecta hope the participanta will chooee one favorite, he said. 'The 25..acre aiy Center site under design would ait between propcmd exterwiona of Alton and Berranca parkways aoutheut of Jeffrey Roed. It ii just IOUth of the Saddleback College-North Campua and the propo9ed site of an extensive Irvine Medical Center. Proposed for the City Center are a new City Hall, senior cit.iz.ens center, performing arta center and headquarters for school and water districta. Besides the usually dry creekbed running through it, the site al9o ls bordered on the eut by a windrow of eucalyptua trees. Architects aaid W~y the y are surprised t h at participants don't aeem too concerned about integrating the wind.row into the design. WAR'S CONSEQUENCES ... IL .Majority Leader Howard Baker intelligence specialis ts, the of 'l'ennemee attended a briefing immediate Iranian objective by a national security official and appears to be to cripple Iraq's thenaaid, "It's a very real.danger oil-based econ omy, with a the war will spread." possible drive to cut a critical from Kuwait. According t o th e U .S . military supply route into Iraq Iran's basic goals, the aou.rces said, probably are to shatter Iraq's fighting power, badly shaken by previous defeata, to undermine public support for the Ba~hdad government Nice suninier 112 71 78 ee .oe 87 88 .84 711 72 9e 75 84 6t .18 87 55 ee 88 .02 83 83 80 50 78 85 118 n 87 83 84 57 93 se .11 ae 78 .11 87 118 84 70 .<M 15 S4 " 87 .17 88 88 ae ee 89 71 2.48 ee 11-4 .. 78 ee 82 90 eo ae 13 15 82 87 S4 101 71 u ee 87 ., 78 53 85 83 78 51 87 78 90 78 1.28 15 86 se 70 .oe 112 74 ae 75 ae 10 107 71 111 73 17 87 11 70 13 71 II 73 .51 17 ... 47 t1 70 80 81 et n .02 95 73 .27 M 73 .27 .. 81 .01 .. 72 . ee 13 92 74 87 72 l 13 811 15 83 78 57 13 411 .oe 82 83 88 72 .CM 116 53 91 ... 118 78 15 49 .17 112 70 .31 ae ee .22 15 70 112 74 1.20 75 55 .01 88 45 .01 81 82 87 73 10t 11 •n IS 14 .05 13 75 c~ ........ 106 80 = '14 t7 52 ~ 100 72 LancMI• .. 11 ~.,.:&:-12 ... 102 lllf llPllT ""' ,, ........ c Smog • .. 82 541 17 M " 72 .. 80 t5 .. 87 ... 77 .. 73 51 70 57 81 " .. 108 97 105 7S 13 43 95 10 87 12 53 12 u 97 II 11 .. 10 a ... .. 111 n 11 to 100 • •1 a IO • t7 • ... .a . . Two eecaped convicta .ervtna time for burglariea were arreateCI Wedneaday night by Orange County Sherlfrs Depudes at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Kevin James Burbridge, 21, waa arreeted on suapicion of . being drunk in public and Daryl Lenny Pipes, 20, WU arretted when he allegedly attacked one of the deputiel shortly before 11 p.m., police said. The two men were transferred to the Coeta Mesa jail, where it was dilcovered that t.hey had both eecaped laat Saturday from Chino State Men's Prison. A spokeswoman for the prison said that they had apparently walked away from a minimum security aection where they were housed and were discovered missing during a roll call at 4:45 p.m. Pipeti arrived at the priaon last May and WU acheduled to be released July 1983. Burbridge also arrived laat May and was to be released in December. Police seize Irvine boys in vandalism Four 10-year-old boy• have been arrested by Irvine police for vandali.an ln Greentree School, 4200 Manzanita St., Irvine. Damage to "'e achool. eatimated at $300, included smashed world globet, spilled paint and 8Cattered boob. The boys were arrested Wedneeday alter they told their parents they were resp<>Nlible for the damage, said Irvine Police Sgt. Richard Bowman. The quartet had entered the school through an unlocked 11idiDJ door. The police aergeant said the boys were released in their parents' custody after they agreed to make restitution through the city's Yo uth Services Program. F loods cla im 5 LA PIEDAD, Mexico (AP) - Five people have drowned and 20 are missing in floods caused by heavy rains in western Mexico, a Red Cr<m spokesman said. Car wash to aid junior howlers A car wash to raise money for junior bowler• will be held from noon to ~ p.m. Saturday outside Irvine Lanes From 20 to 30 o f the competitive bowlers will be washing cars for $1.~ each to • The Irvlne Senior Center ia hoeting monthly "mixers" for people intereeted in sharing their homes. The -1ona are conducted from 3:30· p.m. to 5 p.m. on the third Wednesday of each month. Th e next will be Wednesday, said Bedl Reni, <Jenior aervices outreach • Free Concerts Under the St.a.rs for Irvine teen-agers are planned every Thunday night throughout the aunmer at the Herftage Patil Youth Servka Cent.er next to Irvine ~1~r, a community • A 90-minute aemlnar to help families W1denrtand and deal with adolescent drug abu se will be presen ted Thunday, July 29, in Irvine. The seminar ~pon80l"ed by the ctty'1 1~Y Service~ From Page A 1 earn funds to pay expenses at r egion a l and statewide tourname nts, said Kevin Slllpman, junior activities director. The car wash will be staged outside the front door o( the bowling alley a l 3415 Michelson Drive, Irvine. coordinator. By sharing their homes, participanta can fight high housing cos~ while adding security and companionship, she noted. More information on the new program can be obtained by calling Ms . Renz at 754-3889. services leader, said anyone who's in junior or senior high school is eligible to attend. This Thunday, the bank Hard Times is to be featured. Concerts are planned from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Unit will be held at 7:30 p.m. at University Community Park. Admission is free and partldpanta can register by calling 754-3814 by Friday. Gary Manglofico of Problem Talk Shop will be ~on leecier . WATT ACCUSED • • • District Court judge. The Btate, along with the cities of Newport, Laguna and Los Angeles, argued the lease of those tracta would poee a threat to the environment and the tourist industry. The letter sent to Watt Wednesday by the congressmen asked the interior secretary to modify the leasing program to better protect environmentally se?Wtive areas, and to pay more attention to state objections. A spokesman for the Interior Department said the department would have no response to the letter. belle £ra nee Dresses from Belle France~ You 'II find them in our ladies department. A SIOIT tltot ojJ~flM trodltioMI .ipott.nww for IMP! ~. tlltd lxtys. • , .. Community sU.pport .. not key to hospital Efforts to build a hospital In Irvine continued last week with a pqtition drive led by volunteen for Irvine Medical Center (IMC), a proposal backed by the grass .. roots People for an Irvine Community H<>spital. About 2,500 signatures were g~thered, bripging the group's total to more than 10,000. Yet IMC must take blame for misinforming Irvine residents on the actual value of those signa tures . In a mailed announcement, the group said 10,000 signatures were needed or the planned 222-bed hos pital would b e r e jec ted by s tate officials. Actually, it is not that simple. Community support, as represented in activities such as petition drives, is only on e among nearly two dozen criteria considered in a certificate of need application filed with the state. Other factors considered by state h ealth official s in clude financial feasibility, impact on ot,h er hospitals, appropriate service facilities for the area and less costly alternatives. State officials say all criteria are weighed equally . IMC s upporters believe strong community backina may puah their applicat~n paat those submitted by othen al.lo vying to build a hOlpltal 111 the dty. Indeed, IMC iJ a local group and commendably has won the s uppor't of thousands of community members. None of the other groups w1Bhi.ng to build a hospital bas launc hed s u ch community support campaigns. However, asking community members if they want a hospital is like asking them if they're against crime. Everyone wants the best health care available, until the full details reveal the financial impact of hospitals in the county, state, even the rest of the nation. De bate continues over whether or not Irvine needs a hospital of its very own. Orange County Health Planning Council officials say no. A:n IMC-sponsored study says. the oppPSite. ¥ administrative law judge eventually will d ecide which county health care projections are most accurate. Until that decision is made, the community should not become unalterably affixed to t~e notion that a tiospi tal is an all-or-nothing proposition. 1 Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is this problem more serious than 1 at institutions such as UC Irvine. The cost of living in Orange County, especially near Irvine, already is high, and university officials have been decrying for some time the ir proble ms in recruiting top-flight professors. Despite the economics, though, they have managed to ~ble a noteworthy faculty . M any professors evidently are interested in more than their savings accounts when they accep\ a position. UC professors were granted a I 6 percent pay raise in last year's state budget, but the new $1.185 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials such as Dr. Joseph McGuire, chairman of UCI's Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary freeze may spur some of the top academicians to accept more competitive offers at other institutions. But Dr. McGuire says he doesn't expect a mass exodus of the 600 faculty members. For one thing, most faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other universities similarly beset by economic restrictions. Instructors at UCI earn from $19,700 as s tarting assistant professor s to $43,600 as full prof es so rs on nine-month contracts. A few may earn as much as $51,500. It also isn't uncommon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as royalties for texts they authored, fees for consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesses. The best people in any field, of course, are entitled to market themselves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer some Loaes if its best people departed for higher salaries. University professors, h owever, and the institutions themselves, are not immune to the economic temper of the times. Everybody has felt the crimp of the current economy. Academia just isn't immune to those forces at work. Generosity poorly ti:med Salaries that some cities award to their top executives seem to conflict with economic conditions and the complaints of revenue restrictions that many city governments voice these days. The issue was brought into focus recently when the Huntington Beach City Council raised the salary of Huntington Beach City Administrator Charles Thompson from $65,016 to $72,924 per year. That is $72,924 in straight salary. The city also reimb~ Thompson for payments to his retirement fund equal to 7 pen:ent of his salary. At the time they raised his salary, cou ncil members also awarded him a $150 month expense allowance, bringing the total pay package to $79,824. H e also receives a $300-per-month automobile allowance plus health, life, dental and long-term diaabllity insurance. Other cities along the Orange C.oast pay well, but not that well. Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wyn"! is paid $71,750; • Irvine City Manager William Woollett Jr., $61,000; Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal, $60,- 264; Laguna Beach City Manager Ken Frank, $47,784 and Fountain Valley City Manager Howard Stephens, $45,244. Huntington Beach, with a ~pulation of 172,000, is the largest city on the coast, and there's no question that Thompson is an e ffective, intelligent and hard- working executive. But some Huntington Beach City Council m e mbers who compla.in ' the loudest about financial troubles try to put all the blame on the state for the fiscal plight. Their generosity -tnoet of us consider ourselves lucky to have job& -teems out of tune with the economic times. It just is not reuonable for Huntington Beach officials to award lianificant salary bool1a in these difficult times and then expect the dtiz.enry to react with sympathy and .._nderstanding should budget oonstraintl require reductions ii1 municipal eervices. Opinions expressed In the s~ above are th<>te Of~ Dally Pilot. Other views tx· pressed on this 1>899 ert those of their euthors and m lsts. Reeder comment 11 lnvlt· ed. Address The Oally Pilot, P.O. Boie 1.560, Costa MHA, CA 92626. Phone (714) 6'2·4321. ;' ORANGE COAST ··-•1111 Tltemal P. H1tey· Pubtllfter nemetA.Mil.._ ... ldltof 9arW1 Krttaldl ldltofial , ... ldUot Saudis hold economic cards WASHINGTON ~ The United States today ls more vulnerable to foreign pressure than it has been since the early days of the republic. This pressure is wielded by the remote desert kmgdom of Saudi Arabia, whose vast oil wealth is mismatched to a s mall, bac kward population . The cautious Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They a;;' inclined, therefore, to deliver their threats delica tely, lamenting that it must be done and scolding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli thrust into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil shipments to the United States and withdraw their billions from U.S. repositories. But the internal dynamics of the Arab world may compel them, however reluctantly, to uae their economic weapons against the United States unl~ the Rea,gan administration can restrain Israel. This strange tyranny of the weak over th e s trong may be succeeding. For President Reagan appears to be acquiescing to the Saudi demands. Secretary of D e fen se Casp a r Weinberger, who wants to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Sec retary of State Alexander Haig. Supporting Weinberger is the president'• national security adviser, William Clarlt. who has fired some pro- Israel strategists from the National Security Council. Then add ~rge Shultz, who has been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shultz and Weinberger w e re brought into the Reagan administration from Bechtel, which did a minimum of $666 million worth of business in the Arab world last year . By far their biggest s ingle customer was Saudi Arabia. The Saudis can surely be forgiven if they g e t the idea that their behind-the-scenes threats had something G -J1-c1-1-1a-11-11-1 -~ to do with Reagan's realignment of his policymakers. Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who a ppear so quaint and picturesque in their flowing robes, sit on one-quarte r of the world's known oil reserves. And the mighty United States has foolishly allowed itself to cross the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a reUance on Arab oil. It's easy enough for Americans to understand the consequences of a Saudi oil embargo: gas lines and huge increases in fue l prices. But th e thr eat of withdrawing Saudi investments from the United States is not so easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S. banks, businesses and land holdings. Their investments have given them a silent partnership in ever-widening circles of our business community. But their biggest partner is the U.S. government itself. Of the estimated $50 b ill io n worth o f known Saudi investments IJ\ this country, the bulk is in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the back.rooms of the state. defense, treasury and energy departments. The reason is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S. economy. U the Saudis ca.shed in their Treasury chips and transferred their billions to banks abroad, the fede ral government could still borrow the money back from overseas. But the move would drive up interest rates, undercut business recovery and prolong the recession and high unemployment. AB far back as 1978, a CIA report warned that "temporary dislocation of international ·financiaJ markeia would ensue if the Saudi Arabian government ever chose to use its accumulated wealth as a political weapon." This is now precisely what the Saudis are threatening to do. WHAT CAN THE U.S . government do to counter such a Saudj move? The answer is: Freeze their assets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian government of Ayatollah Khomeini would have·disastrous political effects, of course, but it would be effective. Except for one thing: The Treasury might not know the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. For information on Saudi investments is scarce and has gotten even harder to find since the Iranian freere. AB one Middle East e xpert n o ted: "Since monopolies are corrupt, it is hardly to be wondered that the disposition of OPEX: weal th IS no open book." The Saudis have s h1ewdJy been channeli ng billion s of their U .S . investments through the Bahamas to disguise the true origin of the funds.. a source told my associate Vicki Wan-en. The Saudi government's secret holdings, plus those of private Saudj investors who might cooperate in a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens of billions. But even the CIA doesn't know for sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now considered potentially as the most powerful influence on U.S. foreign policy. Anxiety symptoms yield to treatment To the Editor: The J uly 11 Daily Pilot Sunday. Special featured two articles on one of the oldest of known medical conditions, anxiety disorders, popularUed in recent years by much publicity in the media, some infonnative and useful, others less well informed and misleading, if well intentioned. The phobic type of aruriety symptoms, classified as agoraphobia, will be familiar to many people when described in MAILBOX t.enns of feeling a marked fear of being' alone, or being in public places from which it would be difficult to either e.cape or receive aid in case of sudden incapacitating peraonal disaster. THIS CONDITION has been well known for hundreds of years. It has been ineffectively ~ted for over 80 yea r s from t h e emerg e nce of psychoan alysis to the present-day diverse treatments described in Sunday's articles. Effective treatment has been available and in uae by psycbiUris1a foe the put ,1ecade . The accepted standard and 1pedfic treatment for J>reYentiQJl ot the acute panic episodes and the resulting anticipatory arudet).' (e.g. N&e friaht) utll.i.%8 the pre9C.Tibing of a recently developed clua of medic:at1om known as beta-blockera, which are for t his condition, one of the moat s pecific medlcatlona available ln the entire ip8C'trUm of medically ~ted conditions. HAROLD JI. KATES. M.O. Deposit law needed To the Editor: I would object 1trenuouely to the extremely prejudkll!d arUcle on the front pace of your J.ue of J\&ly 8 were I not enthled to a rebuttal . Frtderlck Sc hoemehl '• ar\lclt headlln ed "Comalner Dlpolila 'c...&1)1' " .. but the '1"" ol ~ ~ browf"del &hat M •uu endure between now and 1towmblr a. Without d.e ~GI a mulU·MOlJon ... ..., ............ *'• t1UdY =~==~w~ the! proposc.'<.i mntam£>r deposit law? Any law which aclS as a deterre nt to the blatantly mc:ons1de rate disposal of beer bottles by breakmg them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be all bad. Three times have I personaJly pushed my bike home becaust-of cut tires, and once l took a slashed bare foot to an emergency room for treatme nt thanks lo some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of the lobbyist s if the rnst of medical treatment or of ne w ures and tubes is i n clu d e d 1n t h e ir p rev i o u s .. microeconomic analysis ... GERALD CORLEY TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Protests sentences To the Editor: I wish to publicly protest the recent sentences handed down by Judge Mark Soden in Orange County Superior Court to two men, age 25 and 21, who abducted and raped a 14-year-old deaf mute. The girl was driven to the beach where she was raped and sodomized by both men, then driven around Santa Ana and offered to atrangers. She was raped by a total of seven men in alleys, cars and trailers. THE J UDGE decided that because these were so close in time and ptaee, they constituted "A single occasion of aberrant behavior ." The me n were sen tenced t o 12 years each, which according to Judge Soden, would give them a chance to rebuild their lives. Another man lnvolved in the case wu aen~ncod to 44 years by anothel' Jud.le. How is that child ever 90ang to foraet that night ol terror and alAlrt her fife anew? , • t~tllf'rl frt>m rt1odu1 art wtlcomt. The r•ght to cond1n" lttt1r1 lo /1t 'flO(t or t'ltm1M11 lt,,.l 11 r1ttnlfd L.ttlttt of JOO word• ur It•• well bf p111t11 prt/trntef AU ltlttr• mu•I •ittlo 11Qft01urt Qtlld nwulfftf odd r•., "'-1 "°"'' • mo11 bf ""' "'-"" °" ,. qu••t •I •t1/lltlHI l'IGIOn -· ..... ,,, .. PMt rN tutll "°' I» ,..,,..,.. IAtlm ~ W t1lr~ 10 NJ-Norw _, JMl'fW , ...... ,.,, ol ,, .. ..,...., .............. ,., .,,.. ....... ...., .... ' Wh en are w e goi n g t o s t o p mollycoddling these vicious criminals who kid na p . ra pe and torture o ur children? Because these animals could be on the streets again in 8 years, to protect my own daughter who will then be 14, I wish to rema in anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Oust incumbents To the F.ditor: Because of the complacency and indifference of the American voters by continuously returning the incumbents to Was hington, our esteemed representatives finally have succeeded into turning our national capital into another Sodom and Gomorrah. Not unlike the doctors and lawyers who protect their incompetents, the inve stigative committee will never divulge the names of those who were caught. It takes months and sometimes years for any bill to get out of the maze of committees because half of Capitol Hill is too busy calculating ways to fill their own pockets while the other half is prostituting themselves by any vile means to satlafy their aexual desires. The time has come for the voters to take a serious look at the foul smell emanating Crom Washing100 and make a clean sweep. U we have to throw out the baby wtlh the bath water 10 be iL '"'e innocent (If there are any left) may suffer in the procesa but at least all hues will be iouched and the taxpayer will h ave the N tlalaction of living their favorite repreeenta\lvea the heave ho they IO richly deserve. 0 . KOVACIC ~ , , llllJH',()A Y .H H Y 1•, 1'111.' OHA N L t <<HIN I r •Al 1• OH N IA ~'>CE NT S Bloodbath • s een in Iranian invasion of Iraq . t i . WASHINGTON (AP) - About 200,000 Iranian and Iraqi troopl are locked in a bloody battle that could haYe Iona-range conaequencea for U.S.-f>acked Arab count.-lea In the oil produclna Persian Culf, U.S . lntellJCence analysts aay. A:ra estimated 100,000 troopi on Heh side are concentrated on the Ba1ra area of southern Iraq, which the lranlans have invaded with the apparent aim of overrunning that key oU industry *** center, accordlns to tbeae analysts. "It looks like this may be a bloodbath," said one specialist who compared the scale o f fighting to World War U combat. At the Wh ite House on Wednesday, deputy press aecretary Larry Speakes said the United States ls urging "an lmmediate end to hosUlJties and a negotiated settlement." Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee attended a briefing by a national aecurity officlal and then laid, "lt'a a very real denser the war wUl spread." Accordln1 to tbe U.S . in telllgenc• 1pet:la llat1, the Immediate Iranian objective appears to be to cripple Iraq'• , oil-baaed econ omy, with a possible drive to cut a critical military supply route into Iraq from Kuwalt. Iran's basic goala, the 80Ul'ce8 said, probably are to ahaUer Iraq'• fi1Jhtlng power, badly shaken by pnrvioua defeata, to u.ndenn1ne public .upport for the Ba1hdad aovernment and to :m the ~ of Pretident HUlleln. "The 1raniaN not only want their pound of flesh in revenae for lnq'a invuion of Iran 22 months -ao. but they obvio• ..ty want to hwnlliate Hu.ein and perbapi .e him replaced by a fundamental.Ltt resf.me," aald an intelligence analyat. After aome initial aetbaclu, the lran1an anny rallied t.o p\&ah the lnQil back and the momentum la wtth Iran. the analyata said. They predicted the outcome will tum on whether the Iraqi troops, whose weakneu in i.derahip and fighUna qualities were expoeed in previous battlet in Iran, will now "pull up their 90Cb" and fight effectively on their home ground. Up to now, they said, the lranJana have had a clear edge in rnotlvaUon, including what was deacrlbed aa the "fanatical fervor" of revolutionary ~ who hurled ~Ive. at l.JlC Iraqi.a in human-wave attacka. • Despite political dtvlaiohs within Iran, the analysta aald, the Iraqi invaaion had a ~·rallying effect" which enabled the Iranians to turn the balance against the lraqls. Both Iraq and Iran are h06tile to the United States. (See WAR'S, Pace A!) Iranian dri.ve Watt plan blasted Longressm en claim l egalities ignored halted? •1 Tk A1soclatecl Press Iraq claimed totlay that its forces drove invading Iranian troops back across the border after a counterattack that halted an Iranian offensive apparenUy aimed at the major Iraqi oil port of Basra. But Iran. which invaded Iraq on Tuesday night, said Iraq's "feeble counteroffensive" failed and the Iraqis retreated. "The agsressors' perfidy boomeranged on them," an Iraqi communique said. "Th ey retreated in failure across the border, pushed by blows and cut9eS." Tehran radio, quoting an Iranjan military communique, said : "A feeble e n emy counteroffensive was defeated this morning" and that the Iraqis lost at least 10 tanks. It said Iranian jets were bombing Iraqi positions. Mor e than two doz e n Democratic congressmen have accu8ed Interior Secretary James Watt o f Ignoring leg<&l requirements in his expansive program to open virtually the entire U .S . coastline for oil drilling. Three senators. including California's Alan Cranston, and 26 Ho u se me mbers sent a sca thing letter to W att Wedn.e9day, saying his five-year leasing plan, ''Seriou s ly undermines legislation pasaed by Ruptured darn floods • • resort city F.arlier, Iranian broadcasts said today Iran 's "Operation R a m adan" invasion forces completed a 12-mile thrust into Iraq -Iraq admitted a six-mile penetration -a n d were con10Ud ating positions near Bun, Iraq's second laraert dty acro11 the Shatt-al-Arab waterway. The communiques, rrionltored in London, said the lraniana were preparing to drive toward the Iraqi city of Tannumah, on the east bank of the waterway opposite Basra. BDIBMBERED -rr.ler. the llol), •ho sired U ~be at Lion Country Safari, went to thit' Great Pride in the Sky 10 yean ago this w~k ESTES PARK. Colo. (AP) - A 24-foot earthen dam on the Roarinc River gave way today, aending a wall of water up to 30 feet fil g h through Roc ky Mountain National Park and flooding this resort town, the U.S. Park Service .-id. At least t h ree people were reported milliAl-Glen Kaye, park public Lion's anniversary information officer, Mid an aerial survey of the Roaring River below lAwn Lake Dam showed the banks scoured of a 11 vegetatio.n. Water levela reached aa high a. 20 to 30 feet above normal along the river after the 80-year-old dam gave way, he said. Iran's interior min.iater, Nategh Nouri, said in an interview with the Jomhuri lslami newspaper that Iran would fight Iraq until Iranian cities were safe from attacks and "aa long as our rights are not met completely." passes 'unnoticed' The interview, !Men in Nicosia, Cyprus, apparently contradicted earlier promiaes to fight until Iran's fundamentalist Moslem armies toppled Iraq's regime and marched to Israeli-held Jerusalem. By J OEL C. DON o<lhe~PIMllM'I Frasier the Sensuous L ion passed away 10 years ago Tuesday, yet there were no mourners keeping vigil at his hillside grave overlooking Lion Country Safari in Irvine. He was once king of a sprawling drive-through wildlife Seniors' housing project OK sought ' By JODI CADENHEAD °' .. ...., ......... Oty officiala in Costa Mesa will be asked Monday night to approve the construction of a lon1-awaited senior citizens bouslna project to be built on property owned by a local church. Earlier this week city planning CIDIDID'-'ooerl approved the final fellJftlng for the development of 36 apertmentl at St. John the Divine Episcopal Church, 183 E. Bay Street. The federal department of Housing and Urban Development will fund the project for $1.2 million. If approved by the council, construction would begin in September and be completed by July. 1983. Rev. Conrad Nordquist said that the three-story comrlex would be built on an acre o the church's two-acre lot at Bay Street and Orange Avenue. In 1979 the church formed a (See SENIOR, Pa1e A!) TELEVISION Another war documentary "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why aome Vietnam veterans turned to crime after retu rning, but instead is just another war documentary. Page 86. BUSINESS Mortsa6e plan detail ed Or.t We.iem Savtnp announct11 lta plant to deal with due-on....ie ~and .&ti it will not tnterfen with r:-t lalel. Pace A12. Firm• •ddin6 day cue MGl'4I and man oompent. are ~ on~ .. day mn for the. powtna numberw of woawn who rib to U., waridnl aher liviftl birth. Pill Ba. • ,, preserve, an aging beast who catapulted the park. into the international spotlight with his rather special talents with the ladies of his breed. Much h as changed in the decade. A finandally ailing Lion Country Safari has received some relief from its 10 percent cut from Irvine Meadows Amphitheater concerts. The lions and tigers and bevs are 1oi.ng to have to make room for more (U89la, this time in the form of Bia Bird, Kermit the Frog and Mias Piggy. Lion Country officials announced Wednesday that a "Sesame Street" theme amusement park will open nen to the animal preserve by 1984. Harry Shuater, president of the corporation, said Sesame Place Inc. will sublet a 25..acre parcel of the 300-acre park. He said the new addition will have separate admiaaion and will be an educationally oriented park aimed at children aaet 3 to 13. Shuster cited Uon Coountry'a sluggish attendance u a prime reuon for introducing a new attraction to the are9. "The concept of the free- (See FRASIER, Pa1e :U) SPORTS A few hours later, water levels were at 3 feet above normal in the park, Kaye said. Search parties were aent up the Roaring River as the water subsided, he said, because there were 2~ people with overru,ht camping pennita along the flood's route and "we've already found out the re were at least four illt:gal campers in that area." Mary Karraker, a Park Service spokeswoman, said one camper reported seein g his camping partner swept away from their campsite just below the dam. She aaid campers at Aspengle n Camparound -whe re the floodwaters washed out an accem roed -told the Park Service they aaw two campers swept away by the waten. The boiling brown wate r washed out the Aspenalen acce8S tOlld. then ooureed through the HOl"leShow Park area into Fall River, which overflowed th.rouah Estes Park's main street. At one point, the Larimer County sberlff'.s department cloeed U.S. 34 through part of Big Thompeon Canyon. but it wu reopened before noon. 'The lloodwaten of the Fall River, a normally clear trout stream, at one point al80 cloeed U.S . 36 and Colon.do 7. Hanging tough in Shrine Edilon High product Rick DiBemardo baa played lt tough for two years, and will do the same Saturday night in the Shrine All-star football game at the Rolle Bowl. Page Cl. Good rack e t I or McNamara Former UC Irvine tennis Ci09Ch Myron McNamara hu returned to the good life and !a the h..cl tenil pro at John Wayne Tennia Club. 11M Dub would tuive wanted it that way. Paae Cl. COUNTY • Congress to assure efficient developme nt of our natural reaourcea wl1Ue protecting the envi.rorunent. '' Fourteen Ca lif ornia representatives signed the letter, including Jerry M. Patterson, of Santa Ana. The letter said Watt's program "lacks any sense of compromise, lacks any concern for our national seashore and lacks any appreciation of its potentially devastating impact." Watt'a plan off.era nearly a 69tb Dis trict billion acres for lease in 41 leaae sales over the next five years. The Interior Department held an auction in Uis Angeles last month for leaae of 140 tracts off the Southern California coaat that drew bids for only 35 of those. Two dozen tracts, including some off Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, were "off limits" to oil companies durinB that auction, bidders following an in junction issued by a U.S . (See WATT, Pace AZ) Roosevelt supports Hanson candidacy By SANDIE J OY o<IMDlllJ .... S..., James Roosevelt. oldest son of former President Franklin D. Roosevelt, has thrown h is political weight behind Robert Hanson, the Democratic contender for the 69th Di.atrict State A.19embly aeat. Roo1evelt , a lo ngti me Democrat and former congreuman, has been named honorary chainnan of Hanaon'a election committee. "I don't think Bob Hanson i.s a shoo-in," said Rooeevelt, who i.s a Newport Beach resident, "but he has a good opportunity to win ... Hanson, a Costa Mesa resident and a director of the Cost.a Mesa Sani District, is making his first~ for an aseembly seat. "It's nbmlnally a Republican district," Roosevelt said, "so I think Hanson has to be termed the underdog but I think he'll make a good fight." Hanson faces first-term incumbent ~blyman Nolan Frizzelle in November balloting. Frizzelle beat former Irvine Mayor David Sills ln a close primary race for the Republican (See HANSON, Page AZ) Clemente hepatitis outbreak feared Fearful that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis might occur. Orange County health officials are attempting to locate any people who ate at a salad bar at a San Clemente Ca rl's Jr. restaurant July 2. Dr. Thomas Prendergast, county epidemiology director, said a male employee who helped prepare the salad bar that day baa become infected with he titia A. ~ junior college track team member apparently contracted the diaea9e at a central Calif omia restaurant while away for a track meet. Prendergast said. Between 18 and 20 other persona in the state have contracted the di.9eue after eating at the restaurant, he said. Prendergast said health officials are seeking any people who ate at the Carl Jr. salad bar after 3 p.m . July 2. Any affected penon should either contac t the h ealth department at 834-2683 or a physician, Prendergast recommended. Thoee people should receive an injection to prevent becoming ill with the viral infection. Hepatitis is a liver dilease that requires considerable bed rest. "Nobody dies of Hepatitis A for practical purpoees... Prendergast said at a Wednesday news conference. He said any peraon should try to receive the gamme globulin injection on or before Friday. At Your Service A4 Ann LaDders B2 Erma Bambeck B2 Movies 87-8 Bullinesa C4-5 Mutual Funds C4 California A~ N•Uonal News A3 ~vakade B2 Public Notices B4;C4,6.8 Cl.-tled C8-12 Sports . Cl-3 Q>mica B3 Dr. Stelnctohn B2 Crcmword B3 Stock Marketa a Dlatb Nodcel Cl Televtlkla 88 Edliorial Al0-11 Theat.n 87-8 En.&erWnment 87·8 w .. u. A2 HorOM»pe 82 Wodd Newa AS N ATION OIN t• • Or1nge Oout OAIL.Y PILOTlthUrtday, July 15, 1Na Th• money l1 a 1ubl1anu.A panSoq of 'nUbedeeu'a DlrlCIMl •vina It II money he~ WU lo1t •h•r It WH ltOltn du.rlnc a bw1larY ln 1977. But the maney -l'AOl'9 than •1•.000 In CHh a.nd HV•tal chtck1 -turned up Hveral week• aao when a whht envelope lodpd ln a u!e cauaht the eye of a church officer. The aafe wu one of two told '° the cor11.re1aUon when it purchuecl . Thlbedeau's Golden Weat m im. i..rhat w• my •vtnal out of my paycheck over Hf ytara," Thibedeau recounted. '1l would •tkk flVfif"J extn $60 O(' noo "'r. a 1pedal compartment ln UMI aa e and tht'n I tot robbed and there went the whole thlna. at l ... l I thouah"'' nilbedeau. who ill ndred, l8id he 1a certain he wW be able to put the money CO 8ood w.e. "I might buy a bOnd with lt or put es believer of him down a down PQ11W't Clft an RV, then art a lot or lhln811 l can do with It." he 18id. However, the flrat thln1 Thibedeau wUl do with the money ll preeent 10 percent to the church and Ill ~aUon. "The Rev. Mallett la one of the rnc.t honeft people 1 have ever met," ThJbedeeu ..Sd. "She had no obUaatlon to pay me the money, ahe owned the ufe. l J{Ueta t h ere wu a hlgher Obupdon '° Ood'1 law, eo the pve 1t blck.'' He 111*\llaced that tht money mUlt have becomit 1odaed ln a alot In the aafe over the yeen becaUM, he uki, he eearched the u f e thorou1hly after the bUJ'll.ary. When the church pu.rchaaed the property, the 1afea were \l'anaferred by aane from one part of the building to another, Thibedeau said . One of the safes wu 10 heavy that lt dropped du.rlnc the mov. and 1.hat'• when the f!!OM_!JTI~ havt jarred lome. he ~· "I'm au.re &lad they moved it and I'm aure ~ It dropped.'' be adde(t. Thibedeau alao aald he la lookinc forward to Sunday'• l l a.m. aervice, even thouah It will be the flnrt he haa ever attended at the church: "I'd 1 0 over there every Sunday to pick up that kind of money." Mesan's colorful protest may continue -rofit corporation and to aell the ~roperty to for ~third ita value or t $180,000, said Nordquist. return, the govecnment .alll~v agreed to build the one- units and to subsidize CW)tal payments so that residents ~ no more than 25 percent of ti\eir income. "We recognized the housing ah'ortage in the Southern ~omia area particularly the hlitdahip on the elderly who are unable to rent or buy housing,'' said Nordquist. '!'he Costa Mesa project was ooe of three federal subsidized proposals in Orange County ~ved for HUD funding last ~. according to Terry Zellhart, d!euty director of multi-family • • • development for the federal agency. Last year the county received enough funding to construct 186 units and this year the number la expected to drop to 65, he said. Cuts in the federal budge t have nearly wiped out rental subsidy funds, for families and reduced them for the elderly, he added. Nordquist said that he expects to receive numerous inquiries when applications for the new complex are accepted next summer. Costa M esa c ity officials received 927 applications from senior citizens wanting to move into the 74-unit Casa Be lla project when it was completed two years ago. George Van Dam, who painted h1a Costa Meta howie a rainbow of colon ln retaliation for h1a neighbor'• new construcUon, h.u vowed to take h1a fight to the City C.Ouncil after losing a bid before the city Planni ng Commission. Van Dam lost an af peal Mo nday to fo r ce Wi 11._m Gallagher, 492 Magnolia St, to From Page A1 HANSON • • • nomination and nearly two years ago unseated the then-incumbent Auemblyman Dennis Mangers, a Democrat. • The newly apportioned 69th District include1 Irvine, Cotta Mesa, Fowitain Valley and part of Huntington Beach. FJ{ASIER REMEMBERED . . The d lltrlct has 163,245 registered voters of whom 72,932 are Republicans, 65,956 are D e m oc rat1, 17 ,956 are uncommitted and the rest are affiliated with minor political parties. Roosevelt, who is a member of the Orange County Transportation C.Ommisaion, said he's "especially interested in Han so n 's grasp o f the transportation needs of Orange C.Ounty and getting our fair share from Sacramento." atuding safari park haa not been one that's succesatui," he said. "The drive only takes 45 .Jlliiputes to an hour and you're nqL offering enough time to a ~ or villtor. So you have to ba.ve other a ctivities in the ~· · t area." , Place Inc. ls a joint p, :oj ect of t h e Childre n 'a T-t~n Workshop and Busch Ait.ertainment Corp .. a branch of the giant beermaker. Shuster ~ there are simUar "Sesame S$Yet" parks in Texas and !:;~~:uvania, reple te with ,.. • furry characten from the popular public television proararn. I.Joo Country reached all-time populairtty during Fraaier'a ret,n. An 8Clllc feline l'e9CUed from a Mexican drcua, be WU brought to Lion Country Safari to live out bia lellior years freely roaming the park,.designed fl an African animal preserve. An octogenerian by human standards, Frasier remained productive in his old •· He managed to sire 33 cubs by seven lionesaes m just 16 months. In addition to increased viaitors. Jette.rs came in asking for Frasier's daily diet and r.ontents of his vitamin shots. · Then in 1978 Bubbles the Wandering Hippo died after park officials tried to retrieve the elusive animal from a nearby lake. From Page A1 WAR'S • • • The death brought an avalanche of hate mail, bomb threats and a public relations nightmare. Shuster, however, said Lion Country finally expects to show a profit thia year, an achievement he aaid la partly due to the SUCCle9I of the amphitheater. But U.S. a nalysts said the American stake in the war lies in the impact Its outcome will have on the security of U.S.-suppocted Arab r egimes in the area, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Car plant eyed DETROIT (AP) -General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor C.O. of Japan likely will decide on the vacant GM plant in Fremont. for joint production of a small car in this count ry, United Auto Worke rs P resid ent Do uglits Fraser said Wednesday. U.S . officials worry that a victorious Iran might turn on Persian Gulf nations which have supported Iraq. Even if I raq w ithheld a ny overt military action against Kuwait or Saudi Arabia. it is feared that their victory could be followed by I rania n su pp o r t o f fundamentalist Moslem groups in p~U.S. Arab countries. Nice SUll1ll1er 92 71 78 66 .08 87 69 .&4 79 72 96 75 8.4 69 .18 87 55 66 69 .02 83 63 80 50 • 78 85 98 77 87 63 84 57 93 56 .11 66 78 .11 87 68 84 70 .().4 85 54 Nlt~I WH1"9t ~ 100 NOAA US Oeot ol COtT'~ce 89 67 .17 88 66 88 66 Fronts: Cold,,..... Warm ,.., Occluded ..,.. Stationary •• 89 71 2.48 86 64 94 78 88 62 90 60 88 73 85 82 87 54 Omaha Orlando Phli.dpflla Phoenix Plttaburgll Ptl'lnd. Me Pl*'<!. Ora 101 71 84 89 87 47 76 53 85 83 ,,. . Provldenca .~ IWelgll 78 51 87 78 90 78 1.28 85 85 88 70 .08 92 74 86 75 88 70 107 78 91 73 87 87 91 70 93 76 Reno $.it L.alc• San Antonio SMttle Sllreveport Sioull Falla St Louie St P·Tamc>a St Sta M.,I• Spott- SyracuM Topeka TUC90ll TUiie Wlllfllngtn Wldllla 86 73 92 74 87 72 113 89 as 83 78 57 73 49 .oe 82 83 88 72 04 95 53 91 64 98 18 es 49 .11 92 70 .31 86 ee .22 85 70 92 74 1.20 75 65 .01 88 45 01 81 82 17 73 1oe 1 1 93 n 86 74 .06 93 75 15 73 .57 17 61 A7 91 70 c~ 90 67 19 73 .02 15 73 .27 85 73 .27 19 81 .01 119 72 Blllenfleld 10& ~ha 114 Eureka 17 F~ 100 Lane.aw .. ~ 12 102 l lR f l lPIRT 80 62 72 71 64 Monterey ee Oakland 82 58 Puo Aoblel 97 5e Red Bluff 99 72 Redwood City 88 80 seer-to 95 ee Sallnaa 87 49 San OieQp 77 ee 8111 Frencl8Co 73 5t S111ta Bert>era 10 57 Santa Marla 88 Stoett Ion 99 88 Tllarmal 109 Ukiah 97 Blt'llOW 105 71 Big Beer 83 43 81th09 66 Catalina 70 57 LAii• Anowtieed 82 53 Long 8"ctl 82 es Monrovia 97 58 Mt. Wllllon at M Newport 8Mall 70 es Onl8rto ... 5t Pllm Sprtnfl 111 72 PaMdane ., to 8an 8ernarCllnO 100 • San Jc.a ., u Santa AN IO u a.nta Ctul e7 .. T~ Va119'1 14 42 Smos Tid~ tear down the buildlna he and h1a wife are constnactlni be• .and their home. The couple 9COft at Van~·· suggestion that they'll tum the former aar~e into • bootleg apartment. They eay they'll UM it to park the family car. play games and atore toola. City offidala admit that part of the con1truction contln uod wi~.~ proper pennita and that the bu1lding la up to five lnchea higher than the allowable 15-foot limit for one atory buildlnp. But planning commiaaionera agreed with city officials who said it would be too expensive to uk the couple to slice off a few extra inches of the nearly finished building. M e anwh i le , Van Dam'• handpainted stars and moon on hia roof remain along with the splash of bright colors covering a side of hia houae and fence. "That stays," said Van Dam. "It's deflnltely not coming off until that building comes down, for however long it takes." Ne wport nixes time-sharing condo plans .. CdM \Voman gets Tourists vacationing in Newport Beach can forget about s tay i ng in time -s h a ring condominiums -at least for the time being. art museum post Fearing that the idea would lead to a myriad of problems, the City Couc il h as re jected a Plan ni ng Commiss i o n recommendation that would have allowed the resort-type projects in sections of the city zoned for hotels. Janet Byers, a Corona de! Mar resident, has been named the Ne wport Harbor Art Museum a ssist ant development director and co mmunity relationa coordinator, museum officials announced. Ms. Byers has worked in the pro'llotion and pu blic relation field for more than 20 • CUrlea R. Criqle and Prucb W. BroWlt have been hoooft!d by the Rotary Club of c.o.ta Mesa. Cringle, a charter member of the aervice club, started the first CPA firm in the Harbor • Oran a e County Supervisor Tom Riley will speak at a breakfast Aug. 6 at 7:30 a.m. at the Balboa Bay Club, the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce has announoed. • Clair Taylor, the Orange Coast YMCI\ Parent-Child Program Direc t o r , has resigned after being named a Senior Di.rector by the YMCA of the USA, 'Y' o fficials recently announced. • • years. Her e mployers have m cluded Field Newspaper Syndicate in Irvine, L os Angeles television and radio stations KTLA and KABC. and the Los Angeles Times. The Newport Harbor Art Museum is located on 850 San Clemente Drive. Newport Beach. Area l n 1954 . Brown, a retired achool superintendent, joined the Costa Mesa club in 1972. Both men were named Paul Harris Fellows, in honor of the man wbo founded the service club. Remervations are $10 and may be made by calling 644-8211. The Balboa Bay Club is located at 1221 W. Coas t Highway, Newport Beach. Taylor has worked with the Orange Coast YMCA'a Indian Guide, Indian PrirK'ess and Y -Trailblazers programs for the past three years. His fonner ~tion will be filled in August. "l think it's something t.hat's coming," said Councilman Phillip Maurer. "But Newpor t Beach isn't read y for it yet. ''It 's bee n fraught with problems. I hate to see us rule it out," he added. ''The day will come when the bugs are worked out and it will become a means for people to vacation." Objections to the vacation h ou sing idea, which permits owne rs t o u se a unit for a specified time of the year, came from residents who contended the notion has been a failure in other parts of the W'>rld. From Page A1 WATT .. • District Court judge. The state, along with the cities of Ne wport, Laguna and Los Angeles, argued the lease of those tracts would pose a threat to the en vironment and t h e tourist industry. The le tte r sent to Watt Wednesday by the congressmen asked the interior secretary to modify the leasing program to better protect environmentally sensitive areas, and to pay more attention to state objections. belle f ranee Dressesfrom Belle France. You 'II find them in our ladies departm ent. A SIOIT '""' offmjiM troditk>MI S/IO'ISwtar for mm womm. oftd ~J'S • t•• 0 Referendum approach not without pit! alls Referendum' is a method whereby a specific government measure or statute ls placed before the people for a popular vote. It has taken on inc reasing importance in Newport Beach ln recent times. L ess than on e year ago, citize n s upset with project proposals by the lrvine Company at Newpo rt Center passed petitions and qualified the issue for a ballot referendum. The vote failed to m aterialize when company officials withdrew the City Council-approved plan. Now a second referendum has been qualified in Newport. This i nvolves the B a nning R a n ch properties above the bluffs of West Newport. In March , the City Council h ad a pprov e d development of 379 homes and 300,000 square feet of office and industrial space on t h e undeveloped land adjacent to the Costa Mesa boundary. Thi s w as actually a compromise that diluted what developer Hancock "Bill" Banning III had sought. He wanted 239 homes and 750,000 square feet of office and industrial space. It is not even clear to date if Banning agrees with the City Council compromise and would go a h ead with t h e project as approved. Yet, despite that rather hazy status, a group calling itself the West Newport Legislative Alliance gathered 6,300 petition signatures, far m ore than the 4,300 required, to f o r ce the ques tion to a re ferendum vote of the people. A s is tl'leir option, City Council members Monday voted to place the r e fer endum o n the November ballot. It will go to a vote of the people, regardless of Banning's eventual position on the project. Wh at ap p ears to be happening is perhaps not so much a vote of n o-confidence in the decisions of the Newport Beach City Council as it is a vote, or petition. by the people against any kind oftnew development proposal on a grand scale. Thu1 if it appears to the people that a project means tarae, new d evelopment, there is an immediate reaction agalnat it. If the trend here oontinuee, what this may mean ls that developers will recognize lt is futile to make any grand scale proposals in Newport Beach. Perhaps, they will reason, the only way t o push through d evel o pme nt will b e in an unobtrusive fashion; by bringing projects before city governme nt bit-by-bit; one small piece at a time. This might e ntail large landowners selling off to smaller developers who would t h e n propose Q'lodest projects on individ~ basis. \ •.• ·~· ,, .. , ..•.. , T here could oe some perils to this approach .which might create just the opposite effect that is sought by no-growth or limited growth advocates. Bit-by-bit development might achieve a final result that is far less desirable than could be controlled with larger scale master planning. Then t oo, there is the question of provision for public utilities, s treet and r oad i mprove ments, parkways, landscaping and many other public amenities. In a practical sen se, city government ca n d e mand-a nd often get-much more from a single large developer than can be demanded from each individual small developer as he brings projects in to city hall piece.meal. Referendum action is a part of our law and certainly fonns a safeguard again s t extreme misjudgments by o ur e lected officials. Its u se, however, in the application to broad and extensive land use planning, does have its perils. The Newport Beac h electorate should be aware and sensitive to those pitfalls. Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is this problem more serious than at institutions such as UC Irvine. The cost of living in Orange County, esp ecially near Irvine, already is high, and university officials have been d ecrying for som e time their proble m s in recr uiting top-flight professors. Despite the econo mics, though, they have managed to assemble a noteworthy faculty. Many professors evidently are interesled in m ore than their savings accoun ts when they accept a position. UC professors were granted a 6 percent pay raise in last year's state budget , but the new $1.185 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials such as Dr. Joseph McGuire, c hairman of UCI's Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary freeze may spur some of the top academicians, to accept more competitive offerv at other institutions. But Dr. McGuire says he doesn't expect a mass exodus of the 600 faculty members. For o ne thing, m ost faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other universities similarly beset by economic restrictions. Instructors at UCI earn from $19, 700 as starting assistant professor s to $43,600 as full professors on nine-m o nth contracts. A few may earn as much as $51,500. It also is n 't unconunon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as ro yalties for t ex t s they author ed, fees for consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesses. The best people in any field, of course, are entitled to market themselves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer some losses if its best people departed for higher salaries. · University professors, h owever, and the institutions themselves, are not immune to the economic tern r of the times. ~kl felt the crimp Of~~ my. Academia ~ thoee forces a t work. • I ~ . • Opinions expressed in the spa(;e abOve are thOse ot,..fl., OifHY press8'f on this page are those of their •uthorS ~..,.S.fR~ ed. Aadress The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa ~·a. t. Otner v iews ex· comment Is lnvlt- '7626. Phone ( 7 W tY 642·4321 . • -• ...'i'~ { L.M. Boyd I Restaurant rescue Euge n e O'Neill's "Strange Interlude" opened 1n Quincy, Mass, in 1932. The theeter was right across the s tree t I rom a nee r -ban kru pt restaurant. Intermi.-ion crowds saved that eatery. Thw did Mr. O'Nelll do hlJI part in the founding of one of this 1:ount.ry'1 biggect hoetelry chalN. The irestaurant owner'• name : Howard .Johl\IOn. Dblcovery ot the X-ray cau.ed a certain anxiety amon1 timid folk. They feared plctun11 taliwn of them ' I I unawares might show them stark naked. Clothina makers immedlately came out with line. of "X-ray proor· underwear. Q. What was actor Peter Falk'• job when he was in the Merchant Marl.M? A. Fry cook. There are thole, too, who keep the bathroom bowl apotleM by dropplna a denture cleanJJ\8 tablet lnto it every day. T"omal , • Hatey PubUIMr T...._A.Mat""IM ldltOr llrWIKNM*lt ldttori.t '"' ldltor Saudis hold economic cards .... WA&~-IPhe .UO.te8 S•tee today is more v ulnerable to foreign pressure than it has been since the early days of the republic. This pressure is wielded by the remote desert kingdom of Saudi Arabia, whose vast oil wealth is mis matched to a small, backward population. The cautious Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They are inclined. therefore, to deliver their threats delicately, lamenting that it must be done and scolding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli thrust into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil shipments to the United States and w ithdraw their billions from U.S. repositories. But the intenuµ dynamics of the Arab world • may compel them, however reluctantly, to use their economic weapons against the United States unless the Reagan administration can restrain Israel. Thia strange tyranny of the weak over the strong may be succeeding. For President Reagan appears to be acqu iescing to the Saudi demands. Secr etar y o f Defense Caspar Weinberger, who wants to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Secretary of State Alexande r Haig. Supporting Weinberger is the president's national security adviser, William Clark. who has fired some pro- Israel strategists from the National Security Council. Then add George Shultz, who has been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shultz and Weinbe rge r were brought into the Reagan administration from Becht.el, which did a minimum of $666 million worth of business in the Arab world last year. By far their btggest aingl-e cu1tomu· was Sauctt-·C'ht'plr and transferred their billions to Arabia. bank.I abroad, the federal government The Saudis can surely be forgiven if could1 still borrow the money back from they get th e idea that their over~as. But the move would drive behind-the-scenes threats had something up illterest rates, undercut business G recovery and prolong the recession and high unemvloymenl. As far back as 1978. a CIA report ------------, r warned that "temporary dislocation of JACI 11111111 ~-~..a.. international financial markets would §Y, ensue if the Sau~i Arabian government -------------...... •-•-~ ever ohose to use its accumulated wealth to do with Reagan's realignment of his as a :Political weapon ... This is now policymakers. pre CI s e I y w h a t t h e Sa u d is a re Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if threatening to do. tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who appear so quaint and picturesque in their flowing robes, sit on one-quarter of the world's known oil reserves. And the mighty United States has foolishly allowed it.self to croM the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a reliance on Arab oil. It's easy enough for Americans to understand the consequences of a Saudi oil embargo: gas lines and huge increases In fuel prices. But the threat of withdrawing Saudi investments from the United States is not so easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S. banks, businesses and land holdings. Their investments have given them a silent partnership in ever-widening circles of our businE!$ community. But their biggest partner is the U.S. government it.self. Of the estimated $50 billion worth of known Saudi investments in this country, the bulk is in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the backrooms of the state. defense, treasury and energy departments. The reason is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S. economy. ll the Saudis cashed in their Treasury WHAT CAN THE U.S. government do to counter such a Saudi move? The answer is: Freeze their assets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian govetnment of Ayatollah Khomeini would have disastrous political effects, of •' course, but it would be effective. Except for one thing: The Treasury might not know~ the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. Fort information on Saudi investments is ~ and has gotten even harder to find 1ince the Iranian freeze. As one Middle East expert noted : "Sin ce monopolies are corrupt, it is hardly to be wondti:ed that the disposition of OPEX:: wealth is no open book." • The Saudis have shrewdly been channeling billio ns of their U .S . invesfnents through the Bahamas to disguAe the true origin of the funds, a souTc4 told my associate Vicki Warren. Thi Saudi government's secret holdinp, plus those of private Saudi investors who m ight cooperate in a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens of billions. But even the CIA doesn't know for sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now considered potentially as the most powerful influence on U.S . foreign policy. Anxiety symptoms yield to :treatment To the F.c:iit.Or: The July 11 Daily Pilot Sunday Special featured two articles on one of the oldest of known medical conditions, anxiety disorders, popularized in recent years by much publicity in the media, some infonnative and useful, others I~ well infonned and misleading, if well intentioned. The phobic type of anxiety symptoms, classified as ~oraphobia, will be familiar to many people whe n described in MAILBOX terms of feeling a marked fear of being' alone. or being in public places from which lt would be difficult to either eecape or receive aid in case of sudden incapacitating personal disaster. THIS CONDITION has been well known for hundreds of years. It has been ineffectively treated for over 80 yea r s from the emergence o f p1ychoanaly1is to the present-day diveree treatments described in Sunday's articles. .-· Effective and in uae by d ecade. The accep te apedfic treatment for aicute panic episodes resul~ anticipatory anxietx ( ... ~ '>'fl~'\ uUllzes the preac:nbing of a recently developed c1-of medicatiom known u beta-bloc kers. which are for thll condition. one o f the most specific medications available in the entire lpeC'tCwn of med.ical1y treated condiUona. ~LD H. KATES, M.D. 1Jeposit law needed To the Editor: I would object strenuously to the extremely prejudiced article oo &he front • paae of your mu. of July 8 W\ft I not •ntlUed to a rebuttal. Frederick 8choemehl'• articl• h eadlined ~ ....... DlpJllts 'Co.tly " • but &he an& Of meny ..m bJvNttld-that ,.,. 111u1& endure between now and ~2. Without the~ Ola muld·~ =a.by ar muld· "'°TJ::l the proposed container deposit law? Any law which acts as a deterrent to the blatantly inconsiderate disposal of beer bottles by breaking them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be all bad. Three times have I personally pushed my bike home because of cut tirf:s. and once I took a slashed bare foot to an emergency room for treatment thanks to some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of the lobbyists if the cost of medical treatment or of new tires and tubes is in c luded in th eir previous "m1croeconom1c analysis." GERALD CORLEY TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Protests sentences Wh'e n are we going t o stop molly~oddlmg these vicious criminals w ho ltidnap, rape and to rture our children? Because these animals could be on the streets again in 8 years. to protect my own daughter who wiU then be 14. I wtsh to remain anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Ous.t incumbents To the F.c:iitor: Because of the complacency and indifference of the American voters by contim1ously returning the incumbents to W fshing t on , our esteemed representatives finally have succeeded into turning our national capital into another Sodom and Gomorrah. Not unlike the doctors and lawyers who Jh'otect their incompete nts. the investAgative committee will never divulg• the names of those who were To the FA!itor: caughd It takes months and sometimes I wish to publicly protest the recent years fl>r any bill to get out of the maze sentences handed down by Judge Mark of cornmitt~ because half of Capitol Soden in Orange County Superior Court Hill is,too busy calculating ways to f?ll to two men, age 25 and 21, who abducted their o\lVn pockets while the other half is and raped a 14-~ear-old deaf mute. The prostit.utlng themselves by any vile •~ \0 the beach where she means ao satisfy their sexual desires. was ra . e~ The 'time has come for the voters to t un n take ~serious look at the foul smell of o ers. emana ng from Washington and make a t.o f men in all , ~ clean eep. If we have to throw out the •t.raiJeC'ii: baby~th the bath water so be it. The • l n · 1 ' ' ~ • inn<>l'e t (if there are any left) may THE JUDGE decided that because suffer the process but at least all bases these were so close in time and place, . will touched and the taxpayer will they constituted "A single occasion of have e satisfaction of glvinl their aberrant behavior." The men were favorUe repretentativea the heave ho aente nced to 12 years each , which they~ richly deserve. according to Judge Soden, would give G. KOVACIC them a chance to rebuild their lives. Another man involved ln the cue was tentenced to 44 ye.rs by another Judge. How la that child ever png tQ forpt that night ot terror and start her llfe anew? • lttU" from reodut att w.rfcomt. Tlw right to apncU111« lell•ri to /ll lflOC' or • thml'ftott hbtl ft rtltrwd l.Atltn of JOO 11.10rd• or Lt,. wfll bf ,..,.,. prt/.,fftef, AU utt1r• """' lnclMIU riQMlurt _. ,.,...., oddrt11 bul IMUMI mGll bf •MfW °" ,., ""''' •I •um~•••• "°'°" '' .,..,,,.,, ''"'''11 tilUI,.., ~.,.. ,..,,.,. ,.... ,. tll#~ IO ... NOIM _,,.,.... ........ ., ............... .. 11111111IUa I1• lllal lllllll'.01\Y Jlll Y ,., l'tl\.' () H I\ N (. t ( ( ll J N I r' 1 I\ l If 0 H N I A ~ r 1 C f N T S Bloodbath • seen 1n Iranian invasion of Iraq WASHINGTON (AP) - About 200,000 Iranian and Iraqi U'OOIJ9 a.re locked tn a bloody battle that could have Iona-range conaequencea for U.S .-backed Arab countries In the oil producln1 Penlan Gulf, U.S . lntellJaence analyata say. An •Umated 100,000 troops on tech aide are concentrated on the Bat ra area of southern Iraq, which the lran.lana have invaded wltb the apparent aim of ovenunnlng that key oil industry *** center, according to these analyata. "It looka like thia may be a bloodb.th," said one apeclallat who compared the scale of fighting to World War ll combat. At the Whl te House on Wednesday, deputy preu secretary Larry Speakes said the United States la urging "an immediate end to hostilities and a negotiated settlement." Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee attended a briefing by a naUonal security offldal and then said, 11It's a ver~ real danaer the war will spread. • According to the U .S . Intelligence speclallata, the immediate Iranian objecUve appears to be to cripple Iraq's oll-baaed economy, with a l)(*ible drive to cut a critical military supply route lnto Iraq from Kuwalt. . Iran's basic goa.la, the llOW'Ce8 said, probably are to shatter Iraq's fll!fhting power, badly ahaken by prevlout defeats, to undmn1M public wpport for the Baghd ad 1overnment and to fol>ple the recfme of Pre.ldent saddamH~ '"nle IraniaN not only want their pound of OeUi in revenae for l.nlq'• tnvalkln of Iran 22 montha ..,, but they obvtO' ~Y want to hwnillate lluaeeln and oerhaPI tee h1m replaced by a lundamentallat realme." aald an lnteWcenoe analyst. After tome initial 1etbacka, the Iranian army rallied to push the Iraqi.a back and the momentum iB with Iran, the anal)'lta said. They predicted the outcome will tum on whether the Iraqi troops, whose weakness In leadership and fighting qualities were expoeed in previous battles ln Iran, will now "pull up their IOCka" and fight effectively on their home ground. Up to now, they said. the Iranians have had a clear edge in motivation, including what was described as the "fanatical fervor" of revolutionary guarda who hurled themaelves at the lraql.S in human-wave attack.a. Despite polltlcal dlviaiona within lran, the analyst.a said, tb.e Iraqi invasion had a "rallyi.J)g effect" which e nable d the Iranians to turn the balance against the Iraqis. Both Iraq and Iran are hostile to the United States. (See WAR~. Page AZ) Iranian dri.ve Watt plan blasted Longressmen claim l egalities ignore d h8lted? I By ne At aoclated Prell Iraq claimed today that its forces drove invading Iranian troops back across the border after a counterattack that halted an 1ranian offensive apparently aimed at the major Iraqi oil port More than two dozen Democratic congreumen have aa:used Interior Secretary James Watt of !snoring legal requirements in his expanalve program to open virtually the entire U.S. coastline for oil drilling. of Bura. But Iran. which invaded Iraq on Tuesday night, said Iraq's "feeble counteroffensive" failed and the Iraqis retreated. "Th e a gsressors' perfidy boomeranged on them," an Iraqi com munique said. "Th-ey retrated in failure across the border, pushed by blows and C\ll'9e9, '. T ehran radio, quoting an Iranian military communique, said: "A feeble enemy counteroffensive was defeated this morning" and that the Iraqis lost at least 10 tan.ks. It said Iranian jets were bombing Iraqi positions. RBllSMBERED -Fnllier. the lion who sired 33 cube at Lian Country Safarl. went to that G reat Pride tn the Sky 10 yean ago th.is week. Three aenatora, including California's Alan Cranston, and 26 House membe rs sent a scathing letter to Watt Wednesday, saying his five-year leasing plan, "Serious l y undermines legislation paued by Ruptured dani floods • resort city ~~ PARK, Colo. (AP) - A 24-foot earthen dam on the Roaring River gave way today, send.ina a wall of water up to 30 feet lilah throu gh Rocky Mountain National Park and floodin1 this resort town, the U.S. Park Service Mid. At least three people were reported rn1111n1. Earlier, Iranian broadcasts said t o day Iran's "Operation Ramadan" invasion forces completed a 12-mile t.hrult into . Iraq -Iraq admitted a lix-mile p e n etration -and were con solidatinc position• near ...... lraq'a second largest dty acr oss d i e S h att-al -A rab waterway. T he communiques, monitored in London, said the Iranians were preparing to drive tow ard the Iraqi city of , Tmnumah, on the east bank of the waterway opposite Basra. Lion's anniversary passes 'unnoticed' Gle n K aye, p ark p ublic lnfonnation officer, Mid an aerial survey of t he Roarina River below Lawn Lake Dam ahowed the banks scou red of all ~Uon. Water-lew1a re.ched as high • 20 to 30 feet above normal along the river after the 80-year-old dam save way, he said. Iran's interior minister, Nategh Nouri, said in an interview with the Jomhuri lslami newspaper that Iran would fight Iraq until Iranian cities were safe from attacks and "as long as our rights are not met completely." The interview, seen in Nicosia, Cyprus, apparently contradicted earlier promises to fight until Iran's fundamentalist Moslem armies toppled Iraq's regime and marched to Israeli -held Jttuaalern. By JOEL C. DON Of the ~ Not ..... Frasier the Sensuous Lion passed away 10 years ago Tuesday, yet there were no mourners keeping vigil at his hillside grave overlooking Lion Country Safari in Irvine. He was once king of a sprawling drive-through wildlife Seniors' housing .1 project OK sought I. av JODI CADENHEAD i( ... ..., ......... City officials in Costa Mesa will be asked Monday night to approve the construction of a Iona -awaited senior citizens houlina project to be built on pro p erty o w ned by a local church. k ller th.i.a week city planning C\lfld• a..tonen approved the final raonlnl for the deveJopment of 36 apartments at St. John the Dlvtne Ep68copel Church, 183 E. Bay Street. T¥ federal department of HoUSUlg and Urban Development will fund the project for $1.2 million. If approved by the council, construction would begin in September and be completed by July. 1983. Rev. Conrad Nordquist said that the three-story comrlex would be built on an acre o the church's two-acre lot at Bay Street and Orange Avenue. In 1979 the church fonned a (See SENIOR, Pase A%) TELEVISION Another war documentary "Requiem" could have been an in-depth look at why aome Vietnam veterans turned to crime after return ing, but instead is just another war documen~. Page. B6. BUSINESS MorfBage plan detailed Great Wettem Savinp annowva Ir. planl to dMl with due-<>n-aJe rnortpa-. and addl it will not lntarfere with put alel. Pap A12. Fimu •ddm• d•r esre J More and mon oompan&. are pi~ on ...... day C11N f« the. srowt.na numben of .._ who wtlh so _, wortdnt atwr ISvtna btrth. PIP 86. , preserve, an aging beast who catapulted the park Into the international spotlight with his rather special talents with the ladies of his breed. Much has changed in the decade. A fi.nancially ailing Lion Country Safari has received some relief from its 10 percent cut from Irvin e Mead o ws Amphitheater conce"8. The lions and tigers and beMS are going to have to make room for more guest.a, this time in the form of Big Bird, Kermit 'the Frog and Mila Piggy. Lion Country officials announced Wednesday that a ''Sesame Street'' theme amusement park will open next to the animal preserve by 1984. Harry Shuster, president of the corporation, sald Sesame Place Inc. will sublet a 26-acre plU'l'el of the 300-acre park. He said the new addition will have eeparate ad.mi.-ion and wlll be an educationally oriented park aimed at children ages 3 to 13. Shuster dted Lion Country's sluggish attendance u a prime reason for introducing a new anracuon to the area. "The conc9t of the free- (See FRASIER, Pase A!) SPORTS A few hours later, water levels were at 3 feet above nonnal in the park, Kaye said. Search parties were sent up the Roaring River as the water subsided, he said, becauae there were 25 people with ovem.lght camping permits along the fiood's route and "we've already found out there were at least four illegal carnpel"S in that area." Mary Karraker, a Park Service spokeswoman, said one camper reported seeing his camping partner swept away from their campsite just below the dam. She said cam pers at Aspenglen Campground -w here the Ooodwatel"S washed out an access road -told the Park Service they saw two cJmpers swept away by the waters. The bolling brown water washed out the Aspenglen acceea ro.d, then oouned through the Honeshow Park area into Fall R iver, which overflowed throuab Eat.es Park's main street. At one point, the Larimer County sheriff'.• department cloeed U.S. 34 thrOUgh part of Big Thompeon Canyon. but it wu reopened before noon. The lloodwaten of the Fall River, a normally clear trout atream, at one point abo cloeed U.S. 36 and Colorado 7. Hanging tough in Shrine F.dilon High product Rick DiBemardo bu played , it tough for two years, and wtl1 do the same Saturday night in the Shrine All--8tar football pme at the Roee Bowl. Page Cl. GOOd rack et tor McNam•ra Former UC Irvine tennis coach Myron McNamara baa mumed to the good life and lt the heed ten.nil pro at John Wayne Tennil Club. Tbe Duke would have wanted It that way. P~ Cl . COUNTY Congress to assure efficient development of our natural resources while protecting the environment.'' Fourt ee n California representatives signed the letter, including Jerry M . Patterson, of Santa Ana. The letter said Watt's program "lacks any sense of compromise, lac ks any concern for our national seashore and lacks any appreciation of its potentially devasta~ impact." Watt's plan offers nearly a 69th Dis trict billion acres for lease in 41 lease sales over the next five years. The Interior Department held an auction in Los Angeles last month for lease of 140 tracts off the Southern California coast that drew bids for only 35 of those. Two dozen tracts, including some off Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, were "off limits" to oil companies during that auction, bidden following an injunction iasued by a U.S . (See WATT, Page ~t) Roosevelt supports Hanson candidacy By SANDIE JOY or-. Dlllr ,.... ,..,, James Roosevelt, oldest aon of former President Franklin D. Roosevelt, has thrown his lltical weight behind Robert kan aon , tn e Democratic cmteoder for the 69th Di.strict State "-nbly seat. Roosevelt, a longtime Democrat and former conare-man. hu been named honorary chairman of Hanlon'• electlon committee. ''I don't think Bob Hanson ii a ahoo-in." said Rooeevelt. who ii a Newport Beach resident, "but he hall a good opportunity to win." Hanson, a Costa Mesa resident and a director of the c.osta Mesa Sanitary Di.strict, is making his first bid for an assembly seat. "It's nomlnally a Republican district," Roosevelt said, "so I think Hanson has to be termed the underdog but I think he'll make a good fight." Hanson faces first-term incumbent A..emblyman Nolan Fritt.elle in November balloting. Friuelle beat former Irvine Mayor David Sills In a close primary race for the Republican (See HANSON, Page AZ> Clemente hepatitis outbreak feared Fearful that an outbreak of infectious hepatitis might occur, Orange County health offidab are attempting to locate any people who ate at a salad bar at a San Clemente Carl's Jr. restaurant JuJy 2. Dr. Thomas Prendergast, county epidemiology director, said a male employee who helped prepare the salad bar that day has b ecome infec ted with he tit.is A. ~e junior college track team member apparently contracted the disease at a central California restaurant while away for a track meet, Prendergast said. Between 18 and 20 other persons in the state have contracted the diseue after eating at the restaurant, he said. INDEX Prendergast said health officials are seeking any people who ate at the Carl Jr. salad bar after 3 p.m. July 2. Any affected person should either contact the health department at 834-2683 or a physicia n , Prendergast recommended. Th09e people should receive an injection to prevent becoming ill with the viral infection. Hepatitis is a liver di8ease that requires considerable bed rest. "Nobody dies of Hepatitis A for practical purpoees." Prendergast said a1 a Wednesday news conference. He said any per90n should try to receive the gam.me globulin injection on or before Friday. At Your Service A4 Ann LaDdera 82 F..nna Bombeck B2 Movies 87-8 Bualnes C4-5 Mutual Funds C4 California A5 National News A3 Cavalcade B2 Publlc Notices 84;C4.,6,8 a..tfied C8-12 Sports Cl-3 Cornkl B3 Dr.S~ B2 OClllWord Ba Stock Marketa C5 D9ath .Notlicei C8 TeleYlllon Be rdltortal Al0-11 Thea ..... 87-8 l'.n*1&1Mwnt 87..& W•ther A2 ffAll'olcope 82 World News A~ NATION O/N Orange Cout DAIL. Y PIL.OT/Thureday, July 18, 1812 hureh's find kes believer of him or Thibedeau will be nted with approximately ,000 by the chW"Ch'• aplrltual der, the Rev. Etther M. llett, o f the Community ~pel World Outreach Church .Norwalk. The money LI a aub9tantlal port.Ion of Thlbede.u'• DSIOl\A1 Mvinp. J\ ii money he believ.ci wH lo1t aher lt w11 atolen durff\8 a burglary in 1977. But the money -more than $19,000 In cash and aeveral check• -turned up 11cv4'ral week• ago when a white envelope lodged ln a Nfe <:atJ4iht the eye of a church <>$fleer. The aafe was one of two aold to the t'Onpgation when it purchaaed Thibcdeau's Golden West Ballroom U l\I MW 1979. ''That wu my aavtno out of m y paycheck over ur years." Thibedeau recounted. "I would tUck every extra t&O OC' tlOO intn a apeclal compartment ln the Mfe fll\d then l got rob~ and there went the whole thlnt, at lee.at I thought." Thlbedeau. who la retinld, laid he ia certain he will be able to put the money to aood u.ee. "I might buy a bond with It or pu\ down a down peymlt\t on an RV, there an a lot of thinp l can do with lt, .. he .tel. However, the flrtt thing Thibedeau wm do with the money la ~t 10 percent to the church and ltl conare1auon. "The Rev. Mallett la OM of the moe\ he>l*t people I have ever met," Thibedeau· aald. "She had no obll1atlon to pay me the money, i&he owned the safe. 1 ~ueaa there wu a higher ObUaatkJI\ \0 Ood'I law I JO • pve lt a.:k." He 1p«ulated that the money must have become lodiecl tn a alot ln the aafe over the yun becaUM he uld, M lllU'Ched the ufe thorou1hly after the bur1lary. When the church purchued the property, the Hie• were tranaferred by crane from one part of the buJlding to another. Thibedeau aald. One of the safeM waa ao heavy thet lt dropped dwi.na the move and that't when tM ~U"\ have jlrred lOOllt, he ~· "I'm aure 11.ad they moved It and I'm tun aJad lt dropped," he added. Thibedeau also said he Is lookln& forward to Sunday'• l 1 a.m. aervice, even thouah It will be the fint he h.u ever atimded at the church: "I'd go over there eve ry Sunday to pick up that kind of money " Mesan's colorful protest may continue .. ENIOR HOUSING • • • George Van Dam. who painted his C.O.ta Me.a hou.e a rainbow of colon in retaliation for his neighbor'• new con1tructJon, h.u vowed to take his fight to the City Council after bing a bid before the city Planning Commission. ' rofit corporation and to sell the 1property to for one-third ita value or $180.000, said Nordqu.ist. return, the government ~ agreed to build the one- bidroom units and to subsiclii.e rental payments so that residents P"Y no more than 25 percent of ~income. 1:w e recogni:r.ed the housing sli~rtage in the So,u thern ~ornla area particularly the hardship on the elderly who are unable to rent or buy housing," said Nordqu.ist. The C.O.ta Mesa project was ooe of three federal subsicli:ied proposals in Orange County approved for HUD funding last ye.,, according to Terry Zell.hart, deputy director of multi-family development for the federal agency. Last year the county received enough funding to construct 186 uni ts and this year the number is expected to drop to 65, he said. Cuts in the federal budget have nearly wiped out rental subsidy funds, for families and reduced them for the elderly, he added. Nordquist said that he expects to receive numerous inquiries when applications for the new complex are accepted next summer. Costa Mesa city officials received 927 applications from senior citizens wantl!lg to move into the 74-unit Casa Bella project when it was completed two years ago. Van Dam lost an af peal Monday to force Wi llam Gallagher, 492 Magnolia St., to From Page A1 HANSON • • • nomination and nearly two years ago unseated the then-incumbent Assemblyman Dennis Mangers, a Democrat. The newly apportioned 69th District includes Irvine, Coata Mesa, Fountain Valley and part of Huntington Beach. The district has 163,245 registered voters of whom 72,932 are Republicans, 65,956 are Democrats, 17 ,956 are uncommitted and the rest are FRASIER REMEMBERED .. ·affiliated with minor political parties. Roosevelt, who is a member of the Orange County Transportation Commission, said he's "especially interested In Hanson 's grasp of t h e transportation needs of Orange County and getting our fair share from Sacramento." 1\anding safari park has not been one that's successfui," he said. ''The drive only t akes 45 mi\lutes to an hour and you're not offering enough time to a , towtst or visitor. So you have to have other activities in the entertainment area." Sesame Place Inc. is a joint P•\oj!~t of the Children's TeJoeVWon Workshop and Busch En,tertainment Corp., a branch of the giant beermaker. Shuster q there are aimllar "Sesame Stf eet" parks in Texas and P~naylvania, replete with ovtniz.ed, furry characters from th~ popular public television pnicram. Llon Counuy readied all-time popularity during Frasier's reign. An acbll feline reacued from a Mexican circus, he was brought to Llon Counuy Safari to live out hil senior years freely roaming &he park. designed fl an African animal pre9Cl'Ve. An octogenerian by human standards, Frasier remained productive ln his old a_ge. He managed to sire 33 cubs .by Coastal Mo9Uy tunny. Coeetll low 83, h!Qh 70. Inland low 83, high 83. Waler 65 EtHwher•. aoulh lo S•n CJemtnl• Island w•al 10 !X>f1'-1 wtnda 12 10 22 knoll with 5 lo 7-1001 HU. lnn•r .,at•ra. fight verl•bl• wind• tfvOUQh Friday DC4C>1 -t to Amarillo Asheville '-llante Atl8ntc Cty Almin Baltlmot• Bl lings Blrmlnghm ~ell BolM SO.ton 8'ownsvtl9 Buffalo 8Yrllngton ClllC* Cherlltn SC ~winds tO to 15 knoll Chwtetn WV •fternoon •nd •v•nlnQ hours Ctlwttt• NC Wind·-2 10 3 i..t dunng the ~ eft•noon. Sotlt"-t IW9lls 1 to· CNe9QO f. leM. Loe.I c:IOudin.a and tog Clncinn11tl ,,ith •fMmoon dMrlng. Cle¥eland • . ~ • Clmble SC IJ.S. Summary ~~h 111underst0f'IM rumb*S ectoa Oeyton the l"l•lne •nd dump•d r•ln 09rNer *'°" MlnMeota. NetwMlc• and Dee Maw-the eouttMrn "'9lne. Detroit Alllr'l lllO ... WedM9dey on tht OulUtl'I 101M1 Atlllntlc OOMt and the iow. El Puo MIMlutppl V•lley. Tiie OrHt Fargo YIUe ... ~ with fog. ' F\egetaff At l••tt on• torn•do •H O,..t Felle r-.>Ot1 td In northweet North Hertford Dlllo4a. In OM6t Coumy, bu1 no Helene lnturiet Of demll09-• ~. Honolulu P.n. of the etate -. el90 hit by Houeton ~,...,. end ~hell. lndneplle Tod•y'• lorecHt c•ll•d tor Jecun MS ~ wldety -'1...cl -IN Jedl.nvtle "-* Noi1hwelt and mudl of KMw City the EH i, with thund•retorm• Knox'lll9 0000••...., e1ong the GUif end Lu vegae eouehern Atl9ntlc ~. CIMr Uttlt Rocle .,..,.,., wH up"t•d In lh• l.oulloAe Soutll ... •t. with p•rtly evnnt Lubbock ........... : MempNe T•"'C::!"'•• •rovnd tlle ~ ~ d9wn ranged from ..,._... •1 Ill "9drnond. Ore., lo • • ~P PtloMll. ML ~ ..,. _________ .... <>NIN (4lifornia .._Yortl Norfolk No. PtMte n. ......., w..... ....._.... C>el1e Qty 11r•4l lot• •u n •II I 11• ac ro H lolllllafn Cafffomta on Frtctay seven lionesses m just 16 months. In addition to increased visitors, letters came in asking for Frasier's daily diet and "Ontents of his vitamin shots. Then in 1978 Bubbles the Wandering Hippo died after park officials tried to retrieve the elusive animal from a nearby lake. From Page A1 WAR'S. • • The death brought an avalanche of hate mail, bomb threats and a public relations nightmare. ShWJter, however, said Lion Country finally expects to show a profit this year, an achievement he said is partly due to the SUCt'e9t of the amphitheater. But U.S . analysts said th e American stake in the war lies in the impact its outcome will have on the security of U.S.-supported Arab regimes in the area, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Car plant eyed U.S . officials worry that a victorious Iran might tum on Persian Gulf nations which have supported Iraq. Even if Iraq withheld any overt military action al{ainst Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, -it is feared that their victor y could be followed by Iranian support of fundamentalist Moslem groups in pro-U.S. Arab countries. DETROIT (AP) -General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor Co. of Japan likely will decide on the vacant GM plant in Fremont, for joint production of a small car in this country, United Auto Workers President Douglas Fraser said Wednesday. Nice summer 92 71 78 66 .08 87 89 .64 79 72 "-ln&ml Snow :·.· Showen. Ftumeslfi] 96 75 8.4 69 18 87 55 86 69 02 83 83 eo 50 78 85 98 17 87 63 M 57 93 56 .II 86 76 .11 87 68 8.4 70 04 15 54 89 67 .17 86 68 66 66 89 11 2.•8 86 6" 94 78 ee 82 90 60 86 73 85 62 87 54 101 71 64 " .04 87 47 76 63 85 63 78 51 17 76 90 78 1.26 15 65 61 70 .06 92 74 86 75 86 70 t07 71 91 73 17 87 91 70 ., 7e 16 73 .li7 :~ ro .47 80 t7 .. 73 .02 15 71 .27 85 13 .27 " t1 .01 " 72 Nar.ona1 Wea~ ~ 100 NOAA US Oeot °' Com,.,..ce 90 Fronts: COid .. Warm .., Occluded ...,. Omaha Orlando Ptllledphla Ptloenl• PltUbufvh Pli.nd, .... 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In Hltltt wlll re~ ftOlll ll'le ........ 111&.oe"'-to .. 111 ... .-...111 •••111 lllOUM-. ........ ti MCI U Ill .. ,_..,. ,_. MCI lrofll lllf ll!llT ii4 . lillltli111'1'i1111istiliillilllltr .................. ~ Smog Wll.,• to o•ll (toll Ir") tor •.-c~~· OrWlp , (IOO) 44&oM2t Loe Ano•••• Oountr : ltOO) 242.-40n 10lto1ttllt ......... ~ and Sen lw'nlrdlllO OOU11Ct11: (IOO) M7-4710 AQMO ._. CerMr: (IOO) 2U-4MI ..... '""',.. C.••011 ........ ~::=-~5~ ... ='='M .i:-:·.. •• r:::....., =t······-::.: •· ..... t·~ v.~ Tides .,,.;:::=:·=:;: ..... ~ E+.!F-=··· ~ ... ~,Urel ·'= • ' , tear down the buildina he and his wife are conatructlng be•..ind their home. The couple ecoff at Van Qun'• 1usgestion that they'll tum the former garage into a bootleg apartment. They aay they'll u.te it to park the family car, play games and store toola. City officiala admit that part of the cona\ruction contlnuod without proper permita and that the building 11 up to five inches higher than the allowable l~-foot limit for one story buildingJ. But planning commissioners agreed with city offida.la who said It would be too expenalve to ask the couple to slice off a few extra inches of t he nearly fi.niahed building. Meanwhile , Van Dam'• handpalnted at.an and moon on his roof remain along with the splash of bright colors covering a side of his house and fence. "That stays," said Van Darn. "It's definitely not corrung off until that building comes down for however long it takes." ' Newport nixes time-sharing condo plans CdM woman gets Touris ts vacationing in Newport Beach can forget about staying in time-sharing condominiums -at least for the lime being. art museu01 post Fearing that the idea would lead to a myriad of problems, the City Coucil has r ejected a Planning Commission recommendation that would have allowed the resort-type projects in sections of the city zoned for hotels. Janet Byen, a Corona del Mar resident, has been named the Newport Harbor Art Museum assistant development director and co mm u n i.t y re 1 a t Ions coordinator, muaewn officials announced. Ma. Byers has worked in the promotion and public relation field for more than 20 • Oarles R. Crtqle and Frucb W. BNWIJ have been honottd by the Rotary Club of c:o.ta Mesa. Cring)e, a charter member of the aervice club, started the first CPA firm in the Harbor • Orange County Supervisor Tom Riley will speak at a breakfast Aug. 6 at 7:30 a.m. at the Balboa Bay Club, the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce has announced. • ClaJr Taylor, the Orange Coast Y MCA Parent-Child Program Director. has resigned after being named a Senior Director by the YMCA of the USA, •y • officials recently announced. • • ;years. Her employers have included Field Newspaper Syndicate in Irvine, Los Angeles television and radio stations KTLA and KABC, and the Los Angeles Times. 'fhe Newport Harbor Art Muaewn is located on 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. Area in 1954. Bro w n, a retired achool superintendent, joined the Costa Mesa club in 1972. Both men were named Paul Harris Fellows, in honor of the man who founded the aervice club. Reservations are $10 and may be made by calling 644-8211. The Balboa Bay Club is located at 1221 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Taylor has worked with the Orange Coast YMCA's Indian Guide, Indian Princess and Y -Trailblazers programs for the past three years. His fonner position will be filled in August. "I think it's something that's coming," said Councilman Phillip Maurer. "But Newport Beach isn't ready for it yet. "It's be en fraught with problems. I hate to see us rule it out," he added. "The day will come when the bugs are worked out and it will become a means for people to vacation." Objections to the vacation housing idea, which permits owners to use a unit for a specified time of the year, came from residents who contended the notion has been a failure in other parts of the wQrld. From Page A1 WATT. • • District Court judge. The state, along with the cities of Newport, Laguna and Los Angeles, argued the lease of those tracts would pose a threat to the environment and the tourist industry. T he letter sent to Wa tt Wednesday by the congressmen asked the interior secretary to modify the leasing program to better protect environmentally sensitive areas, and to pay more attt:ntion to state objections. belle france Dressesfrom Belle France. You 'II find them in our ladies department. A stew tlwlt offtnfi~ trvdiliOltlll spol'UWtor /<>' ~ "'°'""'· """ "")'S' Orenge Oout OAIL.V PIL.OT/Thurtday, Juty 15, 1MI R e ferendum approach ~ot without pit! alls Referendum is a method w)lereby a specific government measure or statute is placed before lt\e people for a popular vote. It hais taken on increasing Importance in Newport Beach ln recent times. Less than one year ago, crtizens upset with project proposals by the Irvine Company at New port Center passed petitions and qualified the issue for a ballot ref erendwn. The vote failed to materialize when t'O!Tlpany officials withdrew the City Council-approved plan. Now a second referendum has been qualified in Newport. This involves the Banning Ranch properties above the bluffs of West Newport. In March, the City Council had a pproved development of 379 homes and 300,000 square feet of office and industrial space on the undeveloped land adjacent to the Costa Mesa boundary. This was actually a compromise that diluted what de":'eloper Hancock "Bill" Banning ill had sought. He wanted 239 homes and 750,000 square feet of office and industrial space. H is not even clear to date if Banning agrees with the City Council compromise and would go ahead with the projec t as approved. Yet, despite that rather hazy status, a group calling itself the 'iJest Newport Legislative Alliance gathered 6,300 petition signatures, far more than the 4 ,300 required, to fo rce the question to a referendum vote of the people. As is their option, City Council members Monday voted to place the referendum on the November ballot. It will go to a vote of the people, regardless of Banning's eventual position on the project. What appears to be happening is perhaps not so much a vote of no-confidence in the decisions of the Newport Beach City Council as it is a vote, or petition, by the people against any kind of new development proposal on a grand scale. Thus if il appears to the people that a project means large, new development, there ls an immediate reaction against tt. If the trend here continuee, what this may mean ls that developers wUl recognize it is futile to make any grand scale proposals in Newport Beach. Perhaps, they will reason, the only way to push through development will be in an unobtrusive fashion; by bringing projects before city government bit-by-bit; one small piece at a time. This might en tail large landowners selling off to smaller developers who would then propose modest projects on individual basis. There couki.ba-~~so this approach which might create just the opposite effect that is sought by no-growth or limited growth advocates. Bit-by-bit development might achieve a final result that is far less desirable than could be controlled with larger scale master planning. Then too, there is the question of provision for public utilities, street and road improvements, parkways, landscaping and many other public amenities. In a practical sense. city government can demand-and often get-much more from a single large developer than can be demanded from each individual small developer as he brings projects in to city hall piecemeal. Referendum action is a part of our law and certainly forms a safeguard against extreme misjudgments by our elected officials. Its use, however, in the application to broad and extensive land use planning, does have its perils. The Newport Beach electorate should be aware and sensitive to those pitfalls. Academia feels pinch One of the serious side effects of tight budgets and decisions to forgo employee raises is that workers naturally begin looking for higher-paying jobs. Nowhere is this problem more serious than at institutions such as UC Irvine. The coot of living in Orange County, especially near Irvine, already is high, and university officials have been decrying for som e time their problems in recruiting top-flight professors. Despite the economics, though, they have managed to assemble a noteworthy faculty . Many professors evidently are interested in more than their savings • accounts when they accept a position. UC professors were granted a 6 percent pay raise in last year's state budget, but the new $1.185 1 billion budget recently adopted in Sacramento allows no funds for raises this year. Officials such as Dr. Joseph McGuire, chairman of UCI's Academic Senate, are predicting that this temporary free7.e may spur some of the top academi~ to accept more competitive offe McGuire says he doesn't expect a mass exodus of the 600 faculty members. For one thing, most faculty members probably would find nowhere to go -or other universities similarly beset by economic restrictions. Instructors at UCI earn from $19,700 as starting assistant professors to $43,600 as full professors on nine -month contracts. A few may earn as much as $51,500. It also isn't uncommon for faculty members to have other sources of income, such as royalties for texts they authored, fees Cor consulting services or even profits from unrelated businesses. The best people in any field. of course, are entitled to market themselves to their best advantage and UCI could suffer some losses if its best people departed for higher salaries. University professors, however, and the institutions themselves, are not immwie to the economic temper of the times. Everybody has felt the crimp ~~llill!F.Y· Academia hose forces at at other institutions. But D . I • . , l Opinions expressed in the spa,e abovt(.,.. Jhose of;. oa(l~Otner views ex· 1 pressed on this page are thOse of their •uttior's M\d !rtJ$j~. R • comment is invit· ed . Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. BOllC 1~, ~(•.._.,.. \ 26. Phone (714l 642·4321. . ~ I , .. , sz_.f. ,,, ecw - L.M. Boyd I Restaurant rescue Eugene O ' Nell I's "Strange Interlude'" opened in Quincy, Mua. in 1932. The theater was right acrcm the street rrom a near-bankrupt I restaurant. Intermission crowds saved th.at eatery. Thus did Mr. O'Neill do his part in the foundln«i of one of this r:ountry'a bluest hostelry chains. The ll'ettaurant owner's name: Howard • JohNon. Oia'overy of the X-ray caaued a certain anxiety amon1 timid folk. :they feared pictures taken of them ORANGE COAST D1bPllat .. unawares m lght ahow them stark naked. Clothing ma.ken immediately came out with Ilnes of "X-ray proof" underwear. · Q . What waa actor Peter Falk's job when he waa In the Merchant Marine? A. Fry cook . There are thoee, too. who keep the bathroom bowl apotl• by d.ropplna a denture cleanina tablet Cnto l\ tlYefY day. T9'omai ft . H1l1y PublllMr ,,...,... A. *""'" ldltor ....... "~" ... .., .. , , ...... ,.., \ SEC~O 1li£ MOTION! I Saudis hold economic cards WASHINGTON -The United States • '10dar'b""ftftlll't''~1'1m1! 'to tbt~lg'il pressure than It has been since the early days of the republic. This pressure is wielded by the remote desert kingdom of Saudi Arabia, whose vast oU wealth is mismatched to a small, backward population. The cautious Saudi rulers are aware that their influence is not rooted in real power. They are inclined. therefore, to deliver their threats d elicately , lamenting that it must be done and scolding us gently for the follies which force them to do so. THE LATEST threat was precipitated by the Israeli thrust into Lebanon. It's not, the Saudis explained forlornly, that they want to cut off oil shipments to the United States and withdraw their billions from U.S. repositories. But the intemal dynamics of the Arab world may compel them, however reluctantly, to use their economic weapons against the United States unlea the Reagan administration can restrain Israel. This strange tyranny of the weak over the strong may be succeeding. For President Reagan appears to be acquiescing to the Saudi demands. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, who wants to take a harder line with Israel, prevailed over outgoing Secretary of State Alexander Haig. Supporting Weinberger is the president's national security adviser, William Clark, who has fired 90me pro- Israel strategists from the National Security Council. Then add George ~hultz, who has been appointed to take Haig's place. Both Shultz and Weinberger were brought into the Reagan administNtion from Bechtel, which did a minimum of $666 million worth of business in the Arab world last year. By far their bigg~~t s~n&!~ CU.SJ,Ql'l'}ef .• 'V,liS Saudi Araf>ta. The Saudis can surely be forgiven if the y get th e idea that their behind-the-scenes threats had something G. -JA-c1_1_11-11-so-1 -~ to do with Reagan's realignment of his policymakers. Meanwhile, the Saudi threats, if tactful, are not idle. For those desert tribesmen, who appear so quaint and picturesque in their flowing robes, sit on one-quart.er of the world's known oil reserves. And the mighty United States has foolishly allowed it.sell to er~ the great divide of oil dependence and slide into a reliance on Arab oil. It's easy enough for Americans to understand the consequences of a Saudi oil embargo: gas lines and huge increases in fuel prices. But the threat of withdrawing Saudi investments from the United States is not so easy to grasp. The Saudis have poured billions of petrodollars into U.S. banks, businesses and land holdings. Their investments have given them a silent partnership in ever-widening circles of our business community. But their biggest partner is the U.S. government itself. Of the estimated $50 billion worth of known Saudi investments in this country. the bulk is in Treasury bills and other government securities. This gives the tribesmen in their burnooses great clout in the backroo.ms of the state, defense, treasury and energy departments. The reason is that a sudden wholesale withdrawal of Saudi funds would cause serious disruption of the U.S. economy. If the Saudis cashed in their Treasury chipl and transferred their billions to banks abroad, the federal government could still borrow the money back from overseas. But the move would drive up iJlterest rates, undercut business recov•ry and prolong the recession and high unemployment. As far back as 1978, a CIA report warned that "temporary dislocation of inte~tion.al financial markets would ensue if the Saudi Arabi.an government • ever chose to use its accumulated wealth , as a political weapon." This is now •' precisely what the Saudis are threatening to do. WHAT CAN THE U.S. government do " to counter such a Saudi move? The ..; answer is: Freeze their assets. Treating the Saudis like the outlaw Iranian government of Ayatollah Khomeini would have disastrous political effects, of course, but it would be effective. Except • . .. • 'i for one thing: The Treasury might not know the Saudis were pulling their money out until too late. For 'information on Saudi investments is scarpe and has gotten even .harder to find sJ.nce the Iranian freeze. As one Middle East expert noted: ''Since monopolies are corrupt, it is hardly to be wondered that the dispo6ition of OPEC wealth is no open book." The Saudis have shrewdly bee n c hanneling billions of their U .S . investments through the Bahamas to disguise the true origin of the funds, a source 'told my associate Vicki Warren. T~_:i....Saudi government's secret holdinp . plus those of private Saudi investors who might cooperate in a withdrawal action, are estimated in the tens of billions. But even the CIA doesn't know tor sure. Small wonder that faraway Saudi Arabia is now considered potentially as the most powerful influence on U.S. foreign policy Anxiety symptoms yield to treatment To the F.ditor: The July 11 Daily Pilot Sunday Special featured two articles on one of the oldest of known medical conditions, anxiety disorders, popularized in recent years by much publicity in the media, some informative and useful, others less well informed and misleading, if well intentioned. The phobic type of anxiety symptoms, classified as a,Roraphobia, will be familiar to many people when d escribed In MAILBOX tenns of feeling a marked fear of being' alone, or being in public places from which it would be difficult to either e.cape or receive aid in case of sudden incapacitatiJlsc personal disaster. Deposit law needed ' the proposed container deposit law? Any law which acts as a deterrent Lo the blatantly inconsiderate disposal of beer bottles by breaking them on our beaches and bike paths cannot be all bad. Three times have I personally pushed my bike home because of cut tires, and once I took a slashed bare foot to an emergency room for treatment thanks to some drunken lout. Ask those paid lackeys of lhe lobbyists if the cost of medical treatment or of new tires and tubes is in c luded in their pr evio u s ''microeconomic analysis." GERALD CORLEY TELEPHONE YOUR L ETTER TO THE E DITOR See instructions below Protests sentences When are w e golng to s top mollycoddling these vicious criminals who kidnap. rape and torture our childre n? Because these arumals could be on the streets again in 8 years, to protect my own daughter who will then be 14. l wish to remain anonymous. NAME WITHHELD Poot loser To the Editor: Mrs. Coffin and 1 received three of Mr. Allan Beek's questJonnaires on June 30 or July l . The postmark was June 29. Is Mr. Beek speaking as a private citiren or as planning commissioner? I suggest that one-man crusades are fine in our free enterprise system. but not when the one man is representing himself as a city official. As to the proposed redevelopment of the Balboa Fun Zone. the present plan as repo rted in the Daily Pilot seems reasonabile. Although there may have been or may be areaJ where we disagree with the actions of the council. as to this particular matt.er, we support ats actions. The council should not be intimidated 9r swayed by what appears to be a poor 1,oser, taking inappropriate action as if he were a dty official. Ms a~~~mily. t h e Coffins have maintal~ a residence in Balboa since 1914 and have been full-time residents since 1169. We are not casual or disintere$ted particlpanta to the problem at hand. .MR. GEX>RGE H. COFFIN, m i MRS. GRACE OOFFlN 11m1• t Dow JOnes Final OFF 1.05 CLOSING 827 .33 Solar facility due for desert ROSEMEAD (AP) -Construction of a 15-megawatt 10lar-opera\ed electric generatinR facility will begin thls year in the Mojave Deeert, the l aciUty's builder and Southem CaUlomia Edlton C.Ompany announced. The plant, to be buUt in stages of three or six megawatts, will be constructed on 100 acres of Ediaon property adjacent to other solar technology projects at the Cool Water Generating Station, near Daggett In San Bernardino County. Luz International Ltd. designed the solar trough facility, and will serve as builder and operator with SCE to purchase the electricity, spokesmen for the companies said Wednesday. Off ice building finish ed Topping-off ceremonies have been held for the • three-story Lake Forest Professional Center, a $5-million , 27,000-square-foot office building at 23201 Lake Center Drive, El Toro. Diversified Projects Development of Laguna Hills is developer of the ·project. C.01~ ~ Caskey of Irvine were architects of the pro,ect with Saffell & McAdam of Irvine the general contractor T he Newport Beach office of Grubb & Ellis Company is exclusive marketin~ ag~nt. . Heritage Bank of Irvine 1s funding the construction loan , with completion scheduled for September. Cycle gets 282 miles per gallon SAN FlfANCISCO (AP) -A small, streamlined motorcycle rolled 136 miles on less than a half-gallon of gasoline -282 miles per gallon -to win a mileage competition, it was announced. The driver and builder, Charley Perethian, won the July 10 San Luis Obispo-to-Carmel race along U.S. l riding a customized Yamaha 185. He beat about 50 competitors. Data system s acquire d firm Data Systems for Industry of Los Alamitos has acquired a majority interest in Syst ech, Inc. or Countryside, m. Both specialize in turnkey systems on the HP3000 series of compu ters. No management changes are anticipated, an announcement said . Data Systems, a sub&ldiary of TMS International, recently acquired Online Design the Detroit area and will pursue acquisitions in Boston, New York/New Jersey, Atlanta and Texas metropolitan a.teas. Businesses cutting inventories By The Associated Pren A brisk sales pace helped U.S . businesses cut inventories in May, the government says. The Commerce Department said Wednesday businesses cut inventories of unsold goods 0.9 percent in May, the biggest decline in at least 15 years. Tota.I sales in May rose 2.5 percent. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 1'<:1 Up 111 Up t • Up t.l Up t .1 Up 7.t Up 7.t Up 7.1 Up 1.1 Up 7 .. Up 7A Up 7.1 5-7.1 UP U Up 61 Up ., Up ._, Up •> Up •.l Up •.O Up ._O UP St Up S.7 UP H Up U uo u Pct. Oft 't'O Ott ' ... Ott u °" '1 Off ... Off LI Off 1.l Off 7.7 Off 1 A §ii ... u "' Off .. , ~ tl I tl ... lj ll ... ... u AMERICAN LEADERS METALS NEW YORK (AP) -Spo1 nonferrous melll prlell lod1y· c...-70·73 cenll 1 pound, U,S. detllna llona. lb &.Md 26-28 cen11 •pound. ZlflC 37-40 oen11 •pound, OeM...,ed, Tin $6. 1876 me1111 Week composite ... ......._. 76-77 OWlll I pound. N.Y Mefwry $370.00 I* llUll. flt9ttnuft'I $298 00 I roy ~ , N. Y SILVER Handy & Harman. $6.400 per lro~ ounce. GOLD QUOTATIONS Ir TM A1110!1td "'-~ WOttd go6d Pfloel today. ~ mom1no fixing· $347 75, off u .oo. L.-..m anemoon fixing. 1350 25. on $2.60. Pwte: 1ttwnoon fixing· 1342 78, up $8.80. ,,llflllfWt: $349.72, ott $4 28. Zllftotl: Illa l111lflg: 1352.25. off St 75 bid: SS63.00 Mlled. ....., a ~ onty deity quot• .,50.~ off 12.50. 'iT.'..... only dally qvoll '3e0.25. oft .50. ......... onty ~ qvote fabticattd iae1.lt. off tu~. SYMBOLS J I " I '1 Q J I