HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-08-02 - Orange Coast Pilot~ . Dllllf CUii YIUR HIMITDWI llllY PAPER
< ) I c A N t , t 1 l l l • ~' ' / ., , I • 11 N I A / ' . C f N t t:,
:Fisherman's catch proves real killer
TUCSON (AP) -A surpriaed
fisherman reeled in a piranha
f rom a lake and now officials are
trying to decide whether to drain
the lake because of a possible
·infestation of the killer fish.
The adult piranha was snared
in mid-June from manmadt>
Kennedy Lake on Tucson's west
side June 16, and the fisherman
told ofhc1als a second piranha
wa.a following it. Late~. a youth
called authorities to say he had
caught one too, but he never
brought the fish in.
An unidentified caller told the
local crime hotline that a teen-
ager living near the 11 2-acre
lake had dumped at least five
adult piranhas into the water in
mid-June He provided a name,
but authorities have been unable
to find the 1u1pec\, Arizona
Game and Fish De partment
spokesman Bruce Taubert aa.ld.
Piranhas, normally found In
South American rivers, are
killers, averaging between 4 and
18 inches in length with
1nterlock1ng teeth like
raz.orblades, swimming in large
schools that in little time can turn
0.-, ll'tlo4 ,._... bf LM hJne
a human or animal into a
skeleton.
Tauber t said if other firanhas
are In the lake and "I we do
have another mild winter, they
probably will survive and
reproduce. . We think that in
Tucson with the water
temperatures the way they get
they would survive."
He saJd a Florida expert has
told Arizona offic:1als 1t 1s 11afest to
assume the worst and plan on
getting rid of the lake's fish. That
can be done by applying the
poison Rotenone, which alone
would cost $15,000, and then
dra1rung the lake mto the l'1ty's
sewer system
Or It can be ac:romphshed by
electro-shocking the water to
stun the fis h to the surfac:e,
netting as many aa potlSible and
moving them elsewhere, draining
the lake, possibly into a dry well,
and refilling it.
"To wait two or three weeks iJI
not going to be a problem whlle
add1t1onal electro-shocking is
attempted," he said But , he
admitted, "there are too many
pressures not to address the
-;1tuat1on "
-County inmates fight
Deputies que ll prisoners' battle on c atwalk
Flghung brokt• out among 30
inmates 1ns1de a th1rd-Ooor ceU
block at Orange County Jail
Sunday. but dcpuues quelled lht'
disturbance in about 20 minutes
No seriou s injuries were
reported.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said
the d1sturban<:e broke out at
about 6 p.m as 52 prisoners were
bemg let out of their cells to go to
dinner
Hart said the prisoners began
fighting with one another on tlw
catwalk m the module. wh1c:h 1s
c:ompoeed of eight four-man cells
About 15 deputies quickly
m o v e d i n to s e pa r a le t h t•
prison ers, who were lcx:kt·d in
their cells for the night and
today "It doesn't take much (to
start a fight) when you gPI
d1ffef'<'nt groups in thert'." Hart
said of the pnsonPrs
Though the group was rac1aUy
mixed, he said the fighting did
not appear to be.· either gang or
ral'e related
Two pnsoners were sent to UC
l r v 1 n l'.' M e d 1 c a I Cl' n t c· r f o r
tn·almt·nt of minor inJUnt•s.
Hart said one l·ause of the
f1ght1ng ma y have bee n a
eombinat1on of the heat a nd the
fact that the module was l.olding
about 20 prisoner.; more• than 11
was dt'!.1gnt"'C! to houS<·
Reagan, Shamir talk
Beirut truce broken following black Sunday
By The Associated Press The PLO chargt>d that lsnwh
tanks and cannon fired shc>lb intu
a battered refugee camp rwar the
airport Israel denied 1l Wo!-. 1Js ing
art1llc.>ry
Sunday. It was the· ninth l'east.··
f" 1 since Israel invadl'<i LA•banon
nn June fi
SUMMERTIME MECCA -Newport Beach of offices, restaurants a nd specialty shops. For
officials have agreed to level the Balboa Fun a nostalgic look at the block-long fantasy land,
l'>raeh forcc•s and Palesuman
guerrillas tradt'd small drms and
mortar firt• 1n Beirut today.
threatening w s hatter the cease-
! ire that bro ught an end to
Sunday's dl'vastating I-:rael1
assault on the Lebanese capital.
Israel's military command said
the Pales tin e Liberation
Organiz.ation was the first to
violate the 9-'asc-fire. shooung at
Israeli troops with small arms
near Beirut 's airport. A
spokesman said Israeli forces
held their fire for several hours
before responding with rifles and
mortars.
ln Washington. Prt>s1dt.'nt
Rea(itan was to meet with Israeli
foreign m1n1ster Yitz hak
Shamir. Reagan said he intendt>d
to make dear his belie( that 1t lh
"absolutely 1mperal1ve that this
cease-fire at this stage of thl'
negotiations must not be v1olated
by anyone."
But before th(' cea54.•-fire was
in plal't.'. Israeli tank!. pushl'<l into
PLO ternt.ory in west &•1rut for
lhC' first time s1n<.'l' tht• swge of
the city began They moved
north almost two miles. capturing
the t1..·rmtn<tl area at tht• airport Zone and replace it w ith a thre<'-story complex turn to Page Bl
-~~_;...~~-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~ PLO spokt'Sman Bassam Abu
S harif said thl' lsrael1!-. rained
morl• than I :io.ooo sht•lls on west
Bc:irut. the rC' was no way to
m n f1rm that figure. which would
mean 1ohe ~raehs fired 180 shells
p<>r minutl' lsraeh JCLS made 210
1See ISRAELI. Page A2)
Seven banks cut prime rate Reagan's envoy in Lebanon.
Ph11Jp C Habib. persuaded the
lsraehs and the Palestinians lo
agree to a cease-fire at day's end Cut to 15 pe r cent lowest level since Nove mbe r , 1980
NEW YORK (AP) Seven of
t he nation's biggest banks cut
t heir pnme lending rates to 15
percent today to match the one-
h a If p t•rcentag e point c ut
butiat.c"'C! by th£' Mellon Bank of
Pittsburgh
That put th<' prime a l 1ts
lowest l1:•vel smtx• November 1980
and markc-d the second big primt•
drop in a week Several smaller
banks began matching the 15
percent rate aft('r the large banks
made thC'1r announcements.
Joining the move today to a
lower pnml' were C1t1bank. the·
nation 's sec·ond-largest, No 3
Chase Manhattan Bank, No. 4
Manufacturers Hanover Trust
Co , No. 5 M organ Guaranty
Trust Co .. No 6 Chemical Bank.
No. 9 First National Bank of
Chicago and No 16 Irving Trust
Co
Th<· drops refle1:ted s harp
dt"<·ltne!-. in the banks' costs of
obtaining mom'y for lending and
lnVC'Stmcnt
Norman Rob e rtson. c hie f
t>conom1st at Mellon. said the
prim<' rate could dip another full
ixunt wtthm thl· nC'Xt fC'w weeks
"l think that 1t really reflects
the fact the economy is still just
ver y weak at the moment."
Robertson said Saturday
"There's been no really visible
sign of an e<:onom1c recovery.
"We feel s trongly that by
lowering the prime lending rate
we can make a contribution to
the economic recovery process
Obv1ously, one of the reasons the
c'l'onomy has been so weak in
recent mon ths has be('n the
persistence of vc>ry high interest
rat.es."
HB doctor,
friend kille d
in smashup
Site of San Juan
brush fire guarded
A Huntington Beach phys1c1an
and his companion were kllk"<:l
today when the 1981 Porsche m
which they were nding slammed
into a row of palm trees and
burst in to flames.
Police s aid the phys1c 1an.
Michael Robert J efferies. 35.
apparently was killed insl<lntly
ln the mJ.Shap. which OC'('Urrf'd on
Golden West Street just north of
Yorktown Avenue in Huntington
Beach at I 58 am
Offi cer s todav had not
ident1f1ed the doctor's femalr
eompanion
Traffic investigators b<•l1evc>
the Porsche was travelinf{ at a
(See DOUBLE, Page A2~
Orange C.ounty href1ghters art'
patrolling the site of a 300-acre
brush fire that broke out Sunday
m rough terrain east of San Juan
Capistrano to make sure flames
don't flare up again in th(' windy
rond111ons.
Tht' county's largest hre this
vrar was started at about l l :48 a m when a remote-controlled
modt'I airplane crashed in dry
brush along La Pata Avenue.
'>outh of Ortega Highway. fire
offinals said
No one was tnJured and no
-;tructures were damaged m the
f1v<• hour blaze, munty officials
said
Tht> fire rould easily be seen
from San Juan Capistrano and
BUSINESS
}
/ .
1L
Day care more important
Day-care centers for children of work ers 1s a
concept whose time has come, says columnist Sylvia
Port.er. Page AS.
Business ventures r e ported
Promotions, venturt'S, earnings reports and other
activities involving Orange Coun ty businesses arP
covered on Page 84.
NATION
Sarah spars with presidents
Sassy Sarah M cClendon has gotten into another
shouting match with a U.S. president. But the ruck ua
doesn't upset the hard-hit ting W ashington reporter.
Page A 4.
) J,
wasn't brought under control
unlit 5 p.m because o f 15 mph
winds that fanned the flames and
steep terrain that prevented use
of water tankers and o t her
equipment, said fire officials.
Firefighters brought the blaze
under control by surrounding it
with fire breaks along roads and
ridge tops and by dropping fi.re-
retardant chemicals from the air.
said Jeff Taylor. of the Orange
County Fi.re Department
Tay lor said four airplane
tankers fr om the state
Department of Forestry dropped
chemJcals from the air and 170
firefighters assign ed to 15
engines, three bulldozers and
five hand crews battled the blaze.
SOM ETHING TO CEL E BRATE A day
after part-time residents o f 23 cottages at
CrystaJ Cove ignored a state order to vacate
their summer residences. the cottage
community celebrated a wedding on the beach
in th e time-honored tradition of the cove. The
part-time residents who i,Rnored the eviction
Delly Pl&ot fltM»to bf LM ,..,...
order have said they will wait for the matter to
be resolved in court. The wedding joining John
Calnan and the former J ennife r Dana was
performc·d downcoast from the> cove o n
Sunday afternoon. preceding th e reception
seen here>
COUNTY INDEX
Las Vegas can be a lot of fun and excitement, but
a Daily ,Pilot r e p o r ter shares some of its
disappointmen ts, too. Page A 7.
Coast residents shine at Fair
Residen ts o f t h e Oran ge Coast did well in
competition at the r ecen t Oran ge County Fair
Winners of some of the events are listed on Page A8.
'Living Louvre' lauded
Time magazine, which has ~n known to digest
Southern California phenomena into two paragraphs,
has devoted two pages to the Pageant of the Masters.
This enlarged national publicity ls touted in the Just
Coasting column on Page Bl.
Sea of matrimony
Friends and relatives have launched 17 Coast
couples into married life. The ne wlyweds and their
ceremoniea are duly noted on Page 83.
I\ 1
At Your Service A4 Ann Landers 82
Erma Bambeck 82 Movi~ B6
Business 84-5 National News A3
Cavalcade B2 Public Notices 84,C4
Comics B7 Sports Cl-4
Crossword 87 Stock Markets 85
Death Notices C4 Television B8
Editorial A6 Theaters 86
En ter\ainmen t 86 Weather A2
Art Hoppe B2 Weddinrfe 83
Hor08C0pe 82 World ews A3
SPORTS
Angels win, cling to lead
T h e Ange ls b e h in d Geoff Zahn and Doug
DeCinces' three-run homer maintain a one-game lead
over Kansas City in the AL West . Page Cl.
----------~---------
~ I
I
. -l
i
..
ISRAELI INVASION a • •
bomb rum on the city, aocording
to Le~ police.
laraeU of{lciala aaid Sunday'•
attack w• not the start of the
tons-threatened lnvuJon to wipe
out the PLO's guerrjllu In their
last Lebaneee stronghold.
Israel s aid P a lest i nian
violations of the earlie r truce
prompted the massive air, land
and sea bombardment that began
before dawn. It was the most
devastatlDg Israeli onslaught
since the forces or the J ewish
state rolled to the gates of the
Lebanese capital In June.
Beirut's Moslem sect ion was
wreathed in smoke from raging
fir es kindl e d by t h e
bombardment. There was liule
Clremen could do to quench the
flames since Israel cut o ff
electricity to west Beirut a week
ago, drastically reducing water
Dally Not "'°'o bJ L .. ,.,_"'--pressure.
for vlctima we believe are atill
buried In the rubble,'' a poUce
apoketrnan .Ud.
The Votc:e of Lebanon, the Lebaoe8e ChriAl.an radio stat.ion,
said 14 civiliana were killed and
40 wounded whe n PLO forces
fired rockets, ml•Ues, mortara
and artiller y into Chrtatian-held
east Beirut and the Christi.an port
city of Jounieh, 12Yi miles north
of the capital.
Syria said two of ita aoldier1 ln
west Beirut w ere killed and 14
were wounded in the Israeli
shelllng. Israel re ported three of
its soldiers kille d whe n their
arm ored personnel carrier took a
direct artiJlery hit in the Beirut
area. The Israelis also reported
nine soldiers wounded.
There was no w o rd o n
guerrilla loss es and n o
independent confirmation o f any
casualty claims.
LUNCH CROWD -T h e bluffs above the m a in beach in don't m ind having every bite carefully watched by hungry {banese police reported 200 ead and 400 wounded. "W e
Sunday's b ombardme nt left
vast areas o f west Beirut in ruina.
The once plush neighborhood of
Bir H assan h ad scar cely a
building undamaged.
' _Co __ ro_n_a_d_e_l_M_a_r_ar_e _a....;g::.r_e_a_t_,p,_l_a_ce_to_b_n_· n_::::g..:y....;o_u_r_lu_n_c_h_-_i_f ..::.y_o_u ___ se_agulls. __
Petition
peel the d eath toll to climb
use reteue teams had to wait t 0 recall 0 first light to begin searching
judge makes ballot
•
DOUBLE FATALITY • • •
high rate of speed whe n 1t veered
out of control, crossed the center
line and struck the trees. Both
victims w ere thrown from the
vehicle on impact, oUicers said.
o Hlces in Mission VieJO a nd
Orange.
Officers said today's mishap
added to a series of recent traffic
d eaths. According to police, seven
people have d ied i.n Huntington
Beac h traHic accide nts in 12
days
S AN DIBGO (AP) A recall
petition aimed al removing San
Diego County Mun1c1pal Court
Judge Lewis W enzell from office
has qualified for the ballot and
voters will decide his fate in the
November election. the registrar
of voters office said.
It will be the first time m the
county's history t hat residents
will vote on w hether:: to remove a
judge from the bench
H th e measure 1s s uccessful,
Wenzell would bea>mc lhe sixth
judge m California history to be
recalled and the first s ince the
1930s.
Wenzell. 40, has lx>en a judge
since 1978. He was ('Onv1cted on
five misdemeanor counts of
solic1ung prost1tut1on last year.
but an Orange County S uperior
Court appellate panel overturned
the convictions Junl' :?3 a fter
deciding thl' trial JUdge
improperly instructed the jury.
His case was heard at Harbor
Court in Newport Beath
D.ity P1tot Photo by L" Payne
'CAMPING' IN CANYON -In spite of overcast skies that
ke pt beach c r owds a little off the record-breaking pace
they've been setting of late. it's obviou s that art festivals and
other attractions in Lagun a Beach transformed the Art
Colon y's Laguna Canyon into its t raditional parking lot by the
sea o n Sunday.
Registrar of Voters Ray Ortiz
said Friday a sampling of 5
perct'nt of the 57 .058 signatures
on the recall petil1ons con tamed a
large enough perc't'nl<lg<' of valid
signatures to place tht• mt•asure
vn the Nov 2 baJlot. Some 40.000
valid signatures w en • nt'l"<ied to
place the issue on tht' ballot
Oruz said a simple.• m<iJonty
would bt' needed to rc•move
Wenzell from his post
M eanwhile, tht> San Diego
County District A ttorn<'y's office
(;onst a l
Low cloud• to prevail tOday wl1h onty partial atternoon c1ee11ng nNr the beac1-A llttle coo!ftf with hlgha ranging from tile upper 60s at the beactlea to mid-70s Inland Lowa tonight 6" to 68 El1e where. from Poin t
Co~llon to the Mexican border snd out 60 m11es Mostly light varlabla winds In night and morning hours. becoming aouthweat 8 lo 15 knots on the evening hOura tOday and Tueadey Wind wavff of 1 to 3 feet trus
ette<noon. wttfl aouth-t 1we111 of
1 to 2 feel. Considerable tow :1oudlnes1 with only per11al ::Jearlng during atternoons !Oday
tnd Tuesdav
U.S. sunu11ary
Troplcal storm ''Glime hovered ......, HllWllll. forcing a lew famllles to go to hlgfle; ground and a
naat1-flood -ICh was In 8118CI for part• of LOUlllana and M1sa1ss1pp1 MINlallppl rivers were swollen Sunday by 5 lnel>M or reonlalt near
JllCkton, while some 1tr99" there and In Vicks burg were unde1 teYeral feel of water Smoke from lore.i !Ires on Canada tpreed throug'1 Ml»OUrl and rMChed Into Kent ucky, Wesr Virgini a end Pennsyl111nln by atternoon Th a forecall c elled for
thunderatorma to conllnue from florid• actoas southern perll or Mlululppl and Lou11lena Rain aleo waa In store 101 Arltona, aouthwMI Utah and Soulh Dakota Cloudy aid" we<e on tap for upper Michigan end the Washington
coatt
California
The National Weather Service
MVW South«n C.llforn<e 1 -•h« Tu.eday ahould be fair lhrovghOul the region once mo<ntng coaatal cloud• clear. with cooler tempe<lturet ove< mountain• and
ci..«11. High• wltl range from 78 to In Lo. AflOllM to the upper 801 In Inland v•ll9ya. from 75 to 85 In
inountlllna 9lwj from 115 to 102 In me Mofaw deMft 0¥9rnlghl IOw9 111e f orecut Ir om t7 In downtown Lo. Ange+ee IO I
COMt91 IOw of 85, bet-'"' IOw SO. .-Id mld-909 In mountllinl MO
In the 70. In the MoJ•Y9 cleMrt.
Boe, .. from POlnt COnotpllOn '° the Meltlc9" border cen exl*)i tight, ...,...,.. wlnde during night
end morning houra, b•comfng
eoutflwMt«ty •t tO to HI knoll durl119 efternoone with 1 1-to
2-foot~ .....
Hofttt-1 '8llndl oould r..c:n 215
llnott wftfl 5-to ...ioo. -,.,. .. """ eo nlllM ofltnot• from th• point to Sen HloolM ltlend.
Low clouds prevail
NATION
Albany Albuque Amanllo Ast>evolle Atlanta Atlante Cty Austin Baltimore Billings Blrmlnghm Bismarck
Boute Boston Brownsvlle
Butt Ilk> Burt1ng1on
Cupe< Chertatn SC l':hsrlstn WV Charllle NC Cheyenne
Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Clmble SC Columbus
Dal·FI Wtr• Dayton Denver Des Moines
OetroH Duluth Et Psso Fergo Flagatalt Greet Fells Hartlo•d Helena Honolulu Houston lndneplls Jeckan MS
JackMlVlle Juneau K1n1 Cll)I
Kno~vffle Ln Veges
Little Rock Louilvllle
Lubbock Mernphla Miami Milwaukee Mpla-St P Nashville
New Orleana N-York Norfolk No. Plane 01\la CHy Omah1 Orlando Phitedp/\la PhOenlx
HI LO Pre
80 57
89 65 91 68 83 6t 86 68 78 63 too 71 83 63 98 70 03 85 74
95 65
89 48 85 70 97 77 78 67 83 58 Nabelnal Wt1!11er ~ 100 NOAA U S Dept ot Commerc. 96 64 85 75
8.4 60 85 69
03 tllm1l; CQ..ld ,... Warm _...
88 61 85 69 02 85 60 85 84
85 68
84 61 94 78 07 85 61 93 70 94 71
82 65 02 67 66
98 72 06 91 86 78 52 94 52 03
84 61
94 54 89 76 01 96 80 83 64 78 73 2 40
116 75 .03
63 50
11'4 71 88 63 1oe a..
88 72
84 82
92 87
90 80 86 81 84 6" 1 •3 9t 60 85 64 88 72 01 84 70 84 87
911 84 92 74 95 73
114 75 0'4 8'4 70
t05 84 08
PtlllbUrgh 81 60 Piland Me 8 1 60 Piiand, Ore 70 58 0 I Prov1denc11 83 65 Relelgh 88 67 Repld City 93 64 Reno 85 40 Sell Le~• 99 67 Sen Antonio 100 17
Seattle 66 54 Shr!l'Yel>O(t 90 73 0 t SIOU• Falls 92 75 St Louil 90 7 1 St P-TAmp-9 1 79 03 St Ste Maroe 69 54 Spokene 80 54
S yr 8CU'4! 80 8 1 Topelca 92 69
Tuceon 99 78 Tula& 94 17 WHhlngtn 85 5g
Wtchlla 96 73
CALIFORNIA Bak81'alltl<S ,. 91y1he Eur8k• fr-10 Lenc .. ter Lot Angelff M1rysvf1te Monterey
Needles
Paao Robles Rtd Blult
Redwood City
Sacramento Sellnll Sen Diego San Franclaco Sant• Barbara Sante Marla Stookton
Therm•I
B•fllOW Big 8HI'
t01 68 t04 64 54 100 &4 97 87 82 88
95 65 102
117 53 93 6.4
77 54
89 55 85 48
77 811
8-i 52
71 82
72 95 t03
1 t8 84
86 515
SURf REP.ORT
~t n
llHf 1"'1 ....
hectl A¥9 ....
lurf fllTd 12
12 12 12
A~
t
..... ....
2
Swell
Dir SW
SW SW 2
2
2
Zuma 2 3 Senta Monica 2 3
Newp0r1 2 4
San Dteoo County 1 3 Ovtlooll for fueac:tay: Little cha.nge
w
Occl!.Jded ..-ca1a1one Long Beech
Monrovia Ml WHson Newport Beach Ontario Palm Sprtngs
Sen Bernardino Santa Ana
Tahoe Veltev
S,!ationarv ••
78 85
80 61
96 &4 71 78 66 92 63
109 86 97 67 81 65 79 53
Extended
weather
The Aor Quality Mlllagement 0111rlct predicts unhellthlul air quality tor SetlsHlve people today In lhe San Fernando and Sante Clarita valleys
COAST AL AN O MOUNTAI AREAS -Fllr ucept night momtng IOw cioud• In the coat1 areas. High temperatur .. from IO 701 et tilt beachee fo the eo. 1 lhe coutal cltln an<I 85 to 95 1
Inland velleye Low• 68 lo 68 Highs In mountain areea 76 to 8 end IOws In the 50t to mid 80s
Smog
Where to call (toll lreet tor latetl •mog Information Orenge County (800) 4'45-3826 Los Ang111u County· (800) 242·4022 Rlve ... lde and San Btrnardlno countlel (8001 387·4710 AOMO EpllO<le Center (800) 242-4668
Tides
TODAY S.C:Ond IOw 2·20 pm ~ond high 8:31 p,m
TU.M>AY
2.'4 8.0
Amlow 3 '48 a m 03
Finl hlOh......_ 10 18 • m 4 O Stooncf k,.. 2 84 p m 2 3
8toond high II oe p m 8
Sun Mtl todiry II 7.83. pm ,
"-n-c1ey et e;00 • m Moon r._ lodey It 1•311 p.m.,
Mte Tuteel~ al 3:57 a.m
,
J i) ...._ __
has appealed the d ecisio n to
overturn Wenzell's con viction s
and intends to retry the case 1f
the appeal fa ils.
Although WenzeU remains on ,
th e bench and contmues to draw
his $57,000 a year salary, h e has
been prevented by his c.'Olleagues
from hearing any criminal caiies
since the state Commission on
J ud icial Performance
recommended his o u s t er in
December.
The commission recomm~nded
th at the state Supreme Court
remove Wenzell from the bench
on grounds of moral turpitude.
The successful petition drive
clears the way for those planning
to run f o r W e n zell 's seat .
including a San Diego law yer
who started the recall cami-aign.
Registrar off 1t·1als s aid
prosp<.'Cllve candidates ha~ until
Friday to file .
White House tells
upport for Habib
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Wh1tc> House said today M iddle
East <•nvoy Philip Habib has
President Reagan's total support
and that there are absolute ly no
plans to replace him
Deputy press secretary Larry
S peakt-s saJd also that "no major
rev1s1on of policy'" 1s under way
as reported by the Sunday
Boston Globe The newspaper
1dt•nt1f1ed its source only as
som<'onc> w ell placed in the
admtn1Slrat1on.
/ .
,..; . J' ?~· , .• . ,,. • I
J e fferies was 1dent1f1ed as a
pediatric surgeon who lived m
Hunti ngton Beach and had
Anti-Castro Cubans
• • • tra1n1ng Ill desert
SAN DIEGO (AP) Anti-
Castro Cuban exiles a re being
joined by r ight wing Mexican
paramilitary groups m secr e t
training in Southe rn California's
high d ese rt , a San Di ego
newspaper said today.
About 80 membe r s of the
Mexican Stud ent Force and the
Popular Student Force engaged
m unarmed combat Saturday and
Bess Truman Sunday with 20 of the Cubans.
the San Diego Union reported.
Alpha 66. a milita nt anti-
hospl•taJi·ze d Castro organi:zation. periodically trains at the 10-acre site near
KAN SAS C ITY (AP) Lu t·er n e Valley 1n Sa n &•rnardtno County Former first lady Bess Truman,
97. was "resting comfortably" Soviet s ousting
today after be m g admitted to
Research Medical Cen ter over Newsweek scribe the weekend with irregular
breathmg and pulst•, hospital MOSCO W CAP) T h e
officials said. l.(OVNnmc•nt toda y ltfte d the
Dr. Wilson Miller. attending <H·crcd1tat1on of N ewsw ee k
Mrs. Truman whale Dr Wallace magazine> t•orrespondent A ndre w
Graham. her longtime doclOr. Nagorski and orde red ham out of
was out of town. said Sunday he thc> ('OUntry. Tass reported
was cautious about being The o ff1c1al Sov1t>t n e ws
opt1m1suc because of the pauent's a g c• n (' )" s a 1 d t h e U S .
age co r r {' s p o n d <' n l h ad . on t w 0
"But I think she'll probably go oc-cas1ons. tried to pose as a Soviet
back home again. probably in off1c1al and a Polis h tourist.
JUSt a few days. maybe a week." rcs!){'(·t1vely. in order to obtain
he said information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~
~ -/
I ~ J
" •
KT. ON THE BEACH -It was only a matter
of time before some en terprising beac hgoers
c reated a san d sculpture of E .T . thP
Al' Wlf'llhoto
extraterrestrial creature from the hit movie ol
the same name. This one appeared over th E
week end a l Manhattan Beach .
Mexico kills 15,000 wild goats
Animals ha Ye destroyed lush Foliage on Guadalupe Island
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mexico
has kiUed 15,000 wild goats l.n the
last two montha on Guadalupe
Island o ff Baja California and
plans to destroy that many more
in an effort to stop the denuding
of the landacape.
"We are not going to conserve
wild g oats if it means that
M e xic ans are g o ing \o go
hungry," said a Mexican navy
Ueutenant, Ramundo Beltran.
A maximum of 2,000 will
remaJn by the end of the ~ear
and be put in oorrala to produce
milk and cbeeee for the people,
Beltran said ln an lnterVtew.
!Ala de Guadalupe ia Mexico's
westernmost territory, an
outcropping 27 ·miles long and
seven mllet wide ln the ocean 160
Jniles we.t of ErlRnada.
1 ...
In the 1870s, a naturalist
described the island as a Pacific
paradiae !Wed with cypress trees,
pines, palms and blrds of many
kinds.
In recent years, goats
apparen\ly introduced by
whalers have destroyed the lush
foliage, leaving sparrows as the
only blrc:U. Thelr 1harp hooves
have cauted' e.l'Olion. ~Today. \here are about 200
residents, mostly fiahennen, but
Beltran believes the laland can
support 2.000 by the end of the
decade.
Beltran, who ooordinate. a $1
million federal proaram to
re1tore the lalancfa natural
rlchnetl. Mid the pta are belna
killed by knife and u humanely
u polltble.
The meat is salted, shipped to
the m ainland and \rucked to
Oanca in south~ntral Mexico
for' sale. Slaughtering continues
at perui, located at several polnta
along the island. ""'
The San Diego Union aent a
reporter to compare t h e
slaughter to the way the U .S.
Navy Sot rid of 6,000 wild pta
interlering with ita operatk>N on
San ~emente laland off the cout
of Southern California. ~~
Clemente !Aland can be'aeen ;
the southern Orange County
coaat.)
C.On.tervatlonilta lnalated that
thoee goata be spared, and the
Navy finally paid $239,000 to
have them remov.d.
"Our mentality la not Uk.e
)'OW'I,•' uld Beltran.
~I
f I ,
r -.
1 ~uffiu~ ff rnillu~rnrn l ..
. .
TAIL DRAGGIN' -Boeing's new 757 passed a
mile~tone recently when it completed its tail-
dragging takeoffs. The tests were done at
Edwards Air Force Base. The r ear fuselage
Af' Wlrepttoto
was protected by an oak s kid during the tests.
The aircraft is at the half-way mark in the
10-month certification process.
Handicapped education viewed
Administration proposes major revisions in regulations
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Reagan administration next
week will pro pose a major
revis i o n o f th(' rules that
mandate public school services
for the n ation 's 4 mil lion
handicapped schoolchildren ,
including a ch ange that would
make 1t easier for principals to
remove a d1srupllve child from a
regular classroom
The revision of the regulallons
will appear Tuesda y 1n the
Federal Register Education
Secretary T.H. Bell's proposed
changes already have won final
White House clearance.
The Associated Press obtained
from a child advocacy group, the
Children's Defense Fund, a copy
of the revised rules.
The revised rules still
guarantee each child "a free
appropriate public education" in
"the least restri c tiv e
environment," and they specify
th a t sch ools mus t p repar e
individualized educa ti n n
programs for each handicapped
child.
Court won't block
•t1 • • airport noise suits
SAN FRANCI SCO (AP) -
T he California S upreme Court
has refused to block action on 181
srr.dll claims court suits totaling
$1 35,000 brought by people
a cc u~1ng San Francisco
ln ..:mational Alrport of being a
noisy nuisance
It denied without romment a
request by San F'ranc1sco for a
stay until a Court of Appeal rules
on whether the San Mateo
County Municipal Court Small
Claims Div1s1on has JUnschcuon
to handle such nu1sanc.-c claims
Much study
planned for
Peru mummy
KNOXVlLLE, Te nn. (AP)
Careful study of thc 700-ycar-old
mummy of a Peruvian child that
was unwrapped at lhe World's
Fair may yield new insights into
pre-Incan c1vilizalion , scientists
said.
Des pi l e protest s from an
American lnd1an group, a team
of 13 white -robed scientis ts
opened the large funeral bundle
Thursday njght and showed an
amphitheater aud1cnre of about
800 people the skeletal remains
of the 21.i'z-year old child
Dr . Arturo Jim e n ez. a
Peruvian a rchacolog1st who
directed the unwrapping. said
the child probably lived between
1200 and 1400 near what IS now
Lima, Peru's capital city. That
date would place 1t before the
Incan Empire, whic h began
about 1476 and ended soon after
th e Spanish con quistad o r
Francisco Pizarro invaded Peru
in 1531.
The appeal court denied a stay
June 11.
San Francisco's petition said
t hat almost.300 small claims
action s have bee n filed in
successive waves as the resuJt of
activities "by certain ant.i -noise
activists who have threatened to
bring small claims actions every
100 days against San Francisco
with in creasing numbers o f
plaintiffs and to 'nuisance the
airport to death'."
The 181 cases in the second
wave of filings had been set for
hearing on May 17 by the small
claims court, but they we r e
postponed pending resolution of
the stay request.
With the high court's deniaJ,
the c a ses will n o w be
rescheduJed.
San Francisco, acting through
its Airport Co mmissio n ,
contended the small claims court
lacked authority to hear and
determine airport nuisance small
claims. But on May 27, San
Mateo County Superior Court
Judge Melvin Cohn refused to
restrain proceedings.
The Airport Commission told
th e high court that the
Legislature never intended small
claims proceedings to be used for
mass claims against a public
e ntity o r to resolve complex
litigation. It con tended that
plaintiffs acting in concert to
repeatedly file multiple claims
was contrary to the Legislative
intent.
San Francisco contended it was
denied due process by having to
defend the wave of small claims
without adequate procedural
protection.
It also noted Alameda County
residen ts are p lanning similar
action against t he Oakland
airport.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot
Claulfled advertising 714/S-42-54171
All other departments 642,...321
Thomas P. Halev Pu'*'!-ond ci.. 1:''.ecoJI,.. Ofllcet
Kay Schultz va........,1
..., Olrecl"' .,, "-~ Tom Murph1ne
fdltO<
Mike t1arvev ~of.....-.. lng (0r0Ulellonl
Ken Godderd Olr9C'lor of ()pe<ollone
R.y Mecleen
~
Tom McCann
--oinvf-
MAIN OFFICE
:QO W••I 8•V SI , Coole -... CA.
M•ll •dcl"'U Bow 15'0, Coola Mna. CA -
coovrl9"4 t"1 0r.,. co .. 1 PulllllfMnv C-
No ntw• •-le•. ltluoirallan•. KllO<'lal -.... • vertlM..-11 r.r.ln may "-re~ed wlt-
•PKl•I PllfmlHlanofCoVfrlQl!t-r.
VOL. 75, NO. 214'
In a preamble to the draft
rules, the F.clucation Department
st.ates: ''The overriding purpose
. . . 1s to improve the process for
e nsuring a free appropr iate
public education for handicapped
children . . by removing the
excessive regulatory overlay that
detracts from that process."
The agency said, "special
attention has been focused on
eliminating or reducing excessive
pape rwork requirements and
regulatory detail that result in
ex p e nditure of time and
resources on administrative
ac uviues and inappropriately
limit th~ discretion of educational
agencies in ca rrying out the
program. ..
"Th e secre tary belieyes the
increased flexibility resulting
from the proposed changes will
benef it both c hildre n and
ed u ca tional age n c ies by
improving the ability of the
agencies to address the needs of
handicapped childre n m ore
effectively. In simplifying and
streamlining these regulations,
care has been taken n ot to
w eaken the key procedural
protec t ions and rights of
handicapped children and their
parents."
But Whit Smith, an attorney
for the Children's Defense Fund,
charged that the revisions "in
numerous and subtle ways wouJd
gut, Public Law 94-142."
Congress passed that law in
1975 after two years of hearings
m which parents ~ advocacy
groups complained that schools
w ere not meeting the needs of
childre n with ph ysical and
psychological handicaps.
Smith charged that the new
rules w ould cut back on parental
involvement in the decision-
m a k 1 n g process. r e duce
e valuation procedures and
"trans form the con cept o f
mains treaming mor e ihto a
matter of discretion rather than
right.''
The draft rules retain language
stating that, "F.ach public agency
shall ens ure that ... to the
maximum extent appropriate,
handicapped children ... are
educated with children who are
not handicapped."
But the new rules also add a
proviso allo wing schools to
"conside r a s ubstantial and
clearly ascertainable disruption
of the edu cational services
provided to other children in the
same c l asses." The draft
document adds a cautionary note
that this exception "is a narrow
provision to be applied only in
very limited circumstances.''
On the controversial issue of
w hat m edical ser vices schools
must provide handicapped
stude nt s, the Educ ation
Department's document state
that Bell intends to leave it up to
the discretion of the schools
w h e t h. e r t o p r o v i ~ e
catheterization or particular
mental health services for
students.
The new rules also add a
provision allowing "public
agencies to establish reasonable
limitations on the provision of
related aervices in developing a
child's individualized education
program."
The federal government
provides $1 billion a/ear to help
teach handlcappe c hildren.
Pre1ident Reagan tried
unaucceufully lut year to cut
\hat aid by 25 percent.
We're Listening •••
~fndty II vou 00 n<i1 -
-,o.i< -by ~ 30 pm Call bftb• I P"' fllO Y0\11 C<lOV "'II"-114141-M
Whal do yolPlike about thebaily Pilot? Wh~t don't you Uke?
Call the number below and your messa1e wlll be recorded, ~ranscrtbed and delivered to the appropriate editor. •
The same 24·hour answerina service may be uaed to record let·
lers to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include
their name and telephone number ror verification. No clrcl.l,latlon
calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
_,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTJ.Mondly, Auguat 2, 1882 8
,
Cold prevention seen
Genetically engineered inter! eron said answe,t t
NEW YORK (AP) -Some
types of the common cold may
have met their mltch" u
reaearchen say Interferon made
by gene splicing can prevent one
kind of cold without harmful side
effects.
A team of British doctors said
in a preliminary report in The
Lancet, a Britlsij medical
journal, that interferon given in
a nasal spray prevented the
d evelopment of colds In all 19
volunteers ·subsequently given
potent cold viruses.
When the viruses were given
to 22 others who had n ot
r eceived i n terferon, eigh t
developed colds, the researchers
said.
In a telephone interview, Dr.
Scott, the prlnd pal author of The
Lancet report.
Or. Thomas Merlgan of
Stanford University, a leading
in terfero n researcher, said the
new report was "very exciting."
"I t h ink we can anticipate
that if Interferon can be shown to
be therape utic -that it will
·work after the first symptoms
have a ppeared -we might see It
eventually as an over-the -
counter drug," Merigan said.
The British team said that
interferon given before exposure
to cold viruses would prevent the
cold. They have not yet explored
what would h a ppe n If the
substance is given to people who
have already caught colds.
Interferon i s produced
naturally by the body in very
small amounts to figh t infections.
It is being studied intensively as a
•
pc-Ible cancer weapon and tqr
1ts effectlveneu qalnst lnOue~
and other vinuea. ~ /
M e r I s a n , t h e c h I o t ~f •
Stanford'• tnlectloua di1eaals :
diviaion, and Dr. David Tyrl ·
the principal investigator on t ,
Britllh team, d etermined
years ago that natural lnterfer4l
wouJd prevent cold.a, but they dt:f
not know until now wheth4='r
9Y.0thetic i.nterferon would do t!fe
same thing: •
Because the naturaJ producl J~
80 difficult to extract. from tt;:
body , it w ould cost tens of
thousands of dollars to prot~t
one patient. :
The genetically e nglneeretl
interferon ls made by splicing tHe
human interferon gene into the
genes of bacteria, which then
unwittingly produce huma11
interferon .
Geoffrey Scott of the Medical
Research Council Common Cold
Unit in Salis bury, England,
where the research was done,
said no harmful side e ffects
developed.
Colds, tho u rare ly ~er-
ious, can lead o more serious
illnesses a nd e a severe drain
on the econ y . The National
Center for eallh Statistics said
that Americans missed more than
31 million work days in 1980 as a
result of catching 93 miJlion <.'Olds
requiriJl8 them to seek care or
restrict their activity.
Reagan claim hit
" by woll1en's group
The British researchers tested
interferon only against a type of
rhinovirus. an infectious agent
that causes 25 percent to 30
percent of all colds in adults,
a ccording t o the National
Institute o f -Allergy and
Infectious diseases m Bethesda.
Md.
"We don't know the answers
for other viruses yet, but we've
got very hopeful results," said
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
women's grou p that keeps track
of presidential appointments has
disputed the claim by President
Reagan that he has named more
women to high-ranking jobs than
J immy Carter.
"It'~ just not true," said Gail
Melich. executive director of the
Nation a l Wome n's P olitical
Caucus. "He hasn't appointed
more wome n t o full -time,
policy-making posillons.''
S he acknowledged that "the
numbers are very close" when
AP Wlrepftoto
BIBTHOAY BATH -The statue of Moses Cleaveland gets a
thorough scrubbing from Barbara Koge n on Public Square in
downtown Cleveland in preparation for the 186tt:i birthday of
the city. Early maps misspelled Moses' surname (leaving out
the ''a") but historians say there is no clear<Ut reason the
spelling o f Clevela nd remained different from that of its
founder.
one compares the R e agari .
admin istration 's l is t of
appointments to a list of Carter
appointees in the first 18 months
of that administration. .
"Our complaint is with ti-(
level." Ms. Melich sajd. "Th
aren 't power appointmen
There's just no comparison.
they're often w omen's jobs
treasurer of the United Stat ,
director of the women's bure u.
Ca rter made sub stanti e
appointments."
To back up Reagan's boa t,
made in the midst of a runni
dispute with a reporter duri
the president's news conferen
Wednes day night, the Whi(e
House released lists of Reag$
appointees and a summary of the
president's record. .
The figures show that Reagap
has named 314 women to feder$l
positions, compared t o 28-9
appointments by Carter. But o~
71 of Reagan's appointments and
65 of Carter's were to full-time
jobs.
But M s . M e l ich , whose
organization kee ps a running
tally of presidential
appointments, said the numbers
by themselves are misleading.
"The jobs we care about are
the ones that influence national
policy," she said, and the best
measure of those is residential
appointments which re quire
Senate confirmation.
By caucus oount of those posts,
Reagan has named only on.e
woman Cabinet officer, U Jft
Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick;
and 51 subcabinet-level womeO.;
compared to Carter's 65. •.
"The reaJ difference is in the
level o f those na med," Ms .
Melich said. "There is not Or\fi
woman heading a m ajor
department: Cart.er had thre~
Reagan h as three womad
ambassadors; Car ter h ad 1 4~
There a r e fewer gene r a)
counsels. fewer -any leve l yoq
look at ... And many of tht
women in th is administration ar~
in agencies ta>.at are slated for th~
biggest c utbacks or eveq
elimination, the Department of
F.clucation, the Environmental
Protect.Jon Agency." ·
·l
cur VQ,,ry own bru5h:l.d.
pophn~nt ..
9nz.ot stylmg-
Y'i top p:x:ka,~, rle.p-O'v(U
watch pocket I hoc.k flap
p:x:Mt and 'Ml.ll<z.d
~iOO ecze:rns.
w.:r~tila.,qasy cam,
durabl4. and s11Z.dt ~ !hbu~ cotof-..e ltktz. ten,
nt!Ny, ~. ro.d,)(tllow
6lid l<.Cil l.y.
; l
I I
II I\ -,.---------:·-1----• I . ; .. l ...
~.?tJ. J.2.R:.JITZ '
DEAR PAT: W~at lt tltt 1&a&•&t of
llatsaU..1 la CaWonla for Small Claim• Cout ..... ,
C'< B.N., <*ta Meu
9';) 'nlen la no ld.nale atatute of UmltatlODl ln
on
.d California , but dft(erent tlme llmlta for"
sf: different kinda ot lawauita. Some of the mollt
rlJ common are: penonal Injury -one year; oral
nJ contracta -two yeara from the date the
'l 9 oontnct wu broken; written contracta -four
bt years from the date of contract breach; and
• r. damap to per.Jn or real property -three
Midwile exam d veloped
DEAR READERS: tered nunee in
yeara from the date damage occurs. .,
Canned food still good? . " $11 DEAR PAT: My net11tbor moved to
California can now beco e certified aa
nurae-mldwlvea by paa~tna an exam
adminilt.ered by the State Board 01 ~
NW'ling, the board~.
The new exam wu developed to provide
an alternative route to midwifery certi&atlon
for registered nunet who Pleet the same standarda of proticlency, knoWledp and akill
currently required of certified nune midwlvee
who attained quall1lcatlon throush formal
education. c P .L, e rt Beaclt
:21 09dler 1tate ud save me aeveral doiaa cau "~ of fnU ud ve,etablet. SM aaid 11te'd ltad
.. . Hme of ~ CUI for a IODI time. Now rm
" WOIHlerill1 lf I 111tollld ue dleae ca.uecl 1oodl.
9r Caa yoa tell me ltow loa1 cau~ooda keep?
.., That depends on the kind o food and
aJ. storage conditions. Canned foods stored for
many years have been tested and found still
rl, safe. But eating quality -flavor, texture,
a' color -and nutritional value decline with
~·· age. The wanner the storage temperature, the
.a faster the decline. Canned foods keep best in
Regiatered nuraea will qualify for
certification if they have post-licenaure
trainina and practice in maternal and child
c.are which partially fulfil1a traditional board
requirements for certification and .ar~
successful in pusing the exam.
Application fonna may ~ obtained by
calling the board at (916) 322-3360, or (213)
620-4200.'The first admtniatratlc>n of the exam
will be on Aug. 28, in both i.o. Angeles and
Sacramento. Applications for thJJ exam should
be submitted to the board by Aug. 13. Tbe
board plans to offer the exam again in late fall
and 1everal times a year the~r. For more
information, contact Barbara Bruaatar,
Executive Officer, Board of Registered
Nursing by writing to her at ·1020 N. St.,
3acramento 95814, or by phoning (916)
323-7595.
cool temperatures -between 60 and 70
9 degrees F. A good rule is to try to use canned
9'' food within a year; within lB to 24 months
br maximum.
a· -Mealy bugs problem
},
, , DEAR PAT: Can yoa 1agett any aon-
lc cbemJcal metllod of getttag rid of mealy bags
oa orcbicl• (papblopedllam1)? I ltope yoa
1r amwer quickly a1 I am 101ln1 pluta!
· Try applying rubbing alcohol to the ~ D.R., Corona del Mar
' orchid leaves with cotton swabs. Reapply
.-; every week or 10 days.
·t1 · • Got• problem~ Then write co Pat HOl'0-"1 wlu. Pat will cut r«J tape, getting the ~,1 Duff el bags on the way
~·I . DEAR PAT: I ordered two sport daffel
r...d bags from R & R Sales ud Marketlag of
Riverton, N.J ., moatll1 ago. My SI0.05 cit.Ck -
aJVWers and action you need to 110l~ in·
,.... equities in government md business. Mail
·your que.tlo.u to Pat HorowJU, At Your Service,
Orange Co#l Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1580, Carta mesa,
CA. 92626.,
Japanese toot their own horn
l~uzu car maker hails passage of 'lemon bill'
~
.s The Japanese, no one needs to ~ ~ told, have done very well in l'-
the American market, especially ~~ o
iA-automobUes. where their share \. i ~'
of new-<:ar sales has been hitting ~~
the 30 percent mark this ~ s mmer. That's their national _..-...-...-K.. ____ _
netration. In California, it's lllJll •llNITZ
re than 50 percent.
hen you'ce successful, in
ker or in life, you have to
w how to comport you.raelf.
ere's nothing more obnoxious
an overbearing winner. It's
n t clear yet that the Japanese
h ve maste red this lesson.
H · ·ty may not be their long
s •t.
onsider, if you will , the
nt crowing of one Japanese
maker , Isuzu.
n July 3 th~ Ca~ifornia
gisl.ature pasaed °""hat s known
the "Lemon Bill." This law
tects consumers from being
k with a defective car. From
w on, if you buy a new car in
· omia and then have a lot of
problems with it, the dealer who ~d it will be responsible for
ting all the repair bills or will
ve to give you another car or
relfund your 1DOney. rY ou can imagine the w arm
gU:>w this legislation created in
tHe hearts of our automakers in
~troit.
Isuzu, on the other hand.
t1'ought it was great. Isuzu is
Japan's sixth largest car maker
(J,.pan has more car makers than
we do), but It's only in the last
year or so that it has been
shipping cara and truck.a here
under ita own name. Seeing how
well Toyota, Oat.sun and Honda
were doing, Isuzu felt it should
' I
get a piece of this actior\.
Now what's the first thing you do when you come here to tell
cars? Everyone knows the
answer to that: you get yourself a
clever advertising agency. Isuzu
retained one of the cleverest in
the buaineaa, Della Femina
Travisano, and they soon began
turning out ada and commerdals
that win priz.es in competitions.
The "Lemon Bill" prompted
Della Femina Travisano -and
its c lient, who must have
approved -to run full-page
newspaper ads congratulating
California on passing this law.
"As an auto maker whose goal
for the put 67 years has 'been to
build problem-free care,"
trumpeted the ad. "we at Isuzu
applaud this historic l.egialation,
and hope that other states will
follow. That way America will
become a nation without any
lelllOl'\8 ...
How do you like thoae apples,
General Moton (which happens
to own a one-third interest in
Isuzu)?
The ad cloeed with the Isuzu
logo -and this final shot: "We
didn't b · it to America until it
was righ~ That's susceptible to
two interpretations; (1) Isuzu was
building it wrong for about 65
years; and (2) all those other
clo~ brought in cars before
they were right.
The Isuzu ad it, reminiacent of
an early Volkswagen ad, back in
the early 1960s, one that showed
a Beetle with a one-word
h eadline, .. Lemon." Copy
explained that once in a while
Volkswagen does turn out a
lemon but when it does, it get.a
rid of lt instead of telllng it.
But those eal'ly Volk.awagen
ads were such winners preciBelv
because they had a touch of
humility to them. They admitted
to human error. 'nley admitted
they made ugly looking can. Not
ao with I.auzu 1'da, which must
rank high ln the arrogance
league. I.auzu ls preening itael.f at
the expen.ae of others.
What's really ironic about the
Isuzu ad ls that it comes from the
agency headed by the
irrepressible adman, Jerry Della
Femina, who once came up-wilh
a claaaic line abo~t another
Japanese product, mostly to
shake up 1ome 1uptigbt
colleagues. The line pever was
used but lt did become~ title of
his autobiographical account of
the advertising business. Della
Femina tells the story himaelf.
The Ted Bates ageQcy hired
him u an "enfanl tenil:ie" -and
he was asked to ait ln on a
meeting where ideas for
Panuonic advertising were being
ditcuaaed. Della Femi.na flnally
burst out and aald, "rve got it!"
And he gave them the word:
"From Thooe Wonde~~lk.o Who Gave You Pearl r ."
Now that he haa h i own
agency -and the Iauru unt
-here's hia chance to it.
[ ~assy Sarah sparring
I
1 r.v ASHINGTON (AP) -Well,
S h McClendon haa done it
. She got into another row
the president of the United
tea, shouting more than a
Ut e, giving not an inch, ignoring
n4fwa colfeaguea' laughter, c1iiudna to her point like a coll to
( itli motl\er.
,And , in the wak e of
Wedneeday'1 nationally televiled
rMtwa conference, Sarah -and
her questkln about a purported
i~ternal report on federal
~lion apiNt women -=:~lk of Washington. on the floor of the House,
talked about it. •
But the stir didn't us-i Sa.rah,
learned to dodae 1ife'a rocka
ftnwmlJf up tn Tyler, Teua.
"You don't 1et anythinl by
a ttl~• dow~." ahe aald .
yWna I eot in my life, I had fteht f« it. It would be nlce 11 ~t thlnp Just handed to wu. But whm yoU dGG't work tar '!be New York Tlmel and
and NBC you don't have
....... to you."
80mt ciollffau• admln her
ft rve, but' tblnk 1he waatn
opportunities with il'relevant
questions hued on W-reeearched
facta. Othen think she'• just
plain rude.
At 72, Sarah McClendon la a
fixture tn the Wuhington pn!99
corps. Few others could write a
book called "My Eight
Presidents." And even fewer
could claim, .. ahe does, that she
WU blamed f.or 8ivina Premdent
D.:!f ht D . Eiaenhower hl1h
b ptellUl'e.
President John F . Kennedy
once accu.sed her of chuact.er
aaaaaainatlon in the way ahe
phrased a queatlon. Another
time, he confe11ed be coWdn't
reeist the temptation 10 recopbe
her at newa confenmc..
In her b'ook, ahe recalled
proUclly that Richard M. Nixon
Mid ahe uked ~ t,bat ,.no
man would have 'the nerve 10 ..it." ..
She la ~een on women•• riih._
She *YJ the Qnly time in btr
new.piper e8l'eel' when IN! ••
not dllcrtmlnated aplp.t ~ for bein1 a wom•n wu ln
JournaH1m achool at the
Univentty of MJliourt.
\
Her method la to let
reporten aak about the ecoirtmy,
foreian atfaira and o her
gird for
finale
8ACRA.MJ:N'ro (AP) -HM a
mcnth·lani YM9don cooW the
fiery A--"Ny-a.a. .. t.MI that broU out twer the budllt'f
rind out. folkl, when the state Leclalatw. mum. today f« the finU Mctlc month ot lta 1981-82
.-lol\.
It will be the lawmaker.' lMt
chance thll year to IM.-b throuO
the hundnda of bllJa alttiJ\I ln
vutoul commltu. or on the two
~· Oocn. Some bWll date to
January 1981.
Any blU. \Mt don't make it throulh both ~ and to the
aovemor'• dee.k by the t1me the fawmaken adiourD Aua. 31 are
deed. The aut6on would have to
start over with the new
Lep.lature in Jan~.
It will allO be the J.ut chaDc9
for aome lawmakera tt> do
anything. Twenty-two ~Y
members and aeven aenaton for
sure won't be back next yeu;
that number la always aubject to
lncreaae due ' to November
election upseta. Et1ht of the
uaemblymen, however, are
hoplna merely to move down the
hall tO the Sena~. ·
Two thlnp ue compl.icatina
the usual end-of.-.lon political
1tru11le1: the feud and the
finances, .
The Legl.tlatw'e ~ a $25.2
billion budget one day be1ore the
fiacal year began July 1. But final
paaaage came only after the
Senate reoeaeed and fon:ied the
Aaaembly to end a five-day
deadlock over extra money for
9Choola.
Aaaembly ·Speaker Wlllie
Brown, D-San Francisco,
retaliated by putting all aenaton'
billt that were on the Amembly
floor and ready for paasage onto
what ia called the .. inactive file,"
which means they sit in limbo until they are moved t>.ck.
He a1ao aald no Senate bills
would be heard by Assembly
committees, although they are
still listed on the agendas.
H la Senate counterpart,
President Pro Tero David
Roberti, D-Los Angeles, called
tne move childish and aald there
were many more Aaembly bills
awaiting action in the Senate.
The other inhibiting factor thia
month la money. There la none.
The budget waa paaaed by
cutting and squeezing almost
everything that could be
squeezed. It contains no extra
money to pay for any bills that
would CXJSt anything.
However. Brown aald he
would pursue in August the
school funding dispute that
cauaed the lnterhouae fight. The
A.saembly "'9anta more money for
schools, which got only a tiny
funding inc1'eaae in the budget.
The Senate insista that any extra
money ahould go into a j\.ast-in-
caae reBerVe becauae the budget
is ao tight.
Interest rate
hikes limited
FRESNO (AP) -Guarantee
Savings and Loan will limit
interest rate increaaea on
asaumable mortgage• to 2
percent, the firm announced.
Tbe move waa made the same
week that the atate'a 21st largest
savings and loan converted to a
fedel'al charter.
A U.S. Supreme Court rulin&
last month in a Huntinston
Beach cue supported the right of
fed:=f( Chartered aaoc:iatlona to loam when property la
told. Some conaumen feared
1ew-intere1t mort1aget would
disappear aa a result.
.,.., ,... ...... .,, a.tee...,
SHADOWS OF SUNSET -A few diehard beachgoers linger
for some last dips as the sun sets on Newport Beach over the
Balboa Pier. Wann weather and water have lured throngs to
the coastal sands.
her eighth president
-'
let go. Later, she aald she wasn't
aware of belng 1n a shouting
match with Reqan.
"I'm aware of trying
deaperately to •et aomethlna
answered. a aolution to.a l.ona-
atandtna problem that I have
tried and tried and tried to pt
for many months to aet anawera
through the White HOUie pn9I
office, throuab the Juatlce
Department. And I think it'a an
injuatice, an untortunate thlna
for the people not to have the
amwer and l was~ to cover au the eomen becau. I didn't
want him to uwwer and llCt like
that .. the end of the~·
"I liMw bl ~ a 111$ bit'
Washington" concentratin1 on
veteran• affairs, defense,
women'• laauea and social
matt.en.
For how man.r papen?
"Not enoup. -'
People atopped her on the
street. A Senate s-ae. a White
House policeman, people on
elevatora, ahe aaya, told her
"right on."
On the floor of the Howie,
Reps. Charlea E . Schumer,
D-N.Y. and Patricia~ D-Colo., aakl they were appall
at fteaaan'1 jokfna reepome to
herqumdon.
White Houae pNll aecntarJ
Larry Speake1 \Old a bri•fina
that Banh'• "mlloqU)" whh tbi
pnetdent drew 80llle nepttve
ruponaoa, mo1Uy about
cUlr..,.ct for the ~."
Sarah t1 l\lrprtied Rea1an
would ttonewall her on a
quoatlon about aexual
Mnmnmt. urm tht oilllJ w...n I know," .... ..,.. ...... wrthladm
............. ~toclO
IClllllliClllln "* rm" ..
'
I
I I
I
' I,
I I I
.,..,,_,..._br......,IC .......
NOT AS BAD AS THINGS SEEM -Although he looked
wounded, Patrick Williams of the Newport Beach Explorers
Post could relax with a Coke because he was only made up to
look hurt for a triage drill conducted by Hoag Memorial
Hospital doctors for fire department personnel from Newport·
Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine. David Young of Costa Mesa
came to the reacue of Eileen McCabe to practice allocating
treatment to disaster victims.
More women working
Saturday lineup,
not for realists
ay rRBD Wl'llENBERG
.,, .. $ ...... ,, ... NEW YORK .. -It you have a
e11e of Saturdty Nllbt J'ever !.... la
televtaion a home remedy? uo
th• n•tworka offer any and ac>lna out aft.erwarda," •YI
• com~p? Oeotire KerarnklM. an ABC vb
That, of coune, dependa on prettdent f« televtllon NllMICh.
you.r.qe, and your -..ceptJbWty In thoae days, CBS made
to the kind of entertainment that atavirur home worthwhile, with demanda you cloee your eyet and auch OOmedy clMlica u .. All ln
drMm you were eomebody elte the Family," .. Mary Tyler
or eomewhere elte. Moore," "Bob Newhart," and
ABC' a "Love Boat" and "Carol Burnett." It waa
"J'antuy laland," which have respectable -and rewarding -
been· tot>.:..rated Saturday to be datelea and ~pend the
· ~ for eeveral years, nlsht with Archie « Mary.
prove there's a market for And, in the early days of TV.
wtahful thinking.' Lut aeaaon, Saturday nlaht wu the ahowcue
"Love Boat" ranked 15th. for 90l1le Hall~ Fame programa:
"Fantasy bland" was 31st. Sid Caesar'• "Show of Shows,"
"A Jot Qf people at home are "Gunamoke," "Perry Mason,"
unmarried. We also have an and the "Jackie GleMon Show."
'enormou. teen-age audience," A.C. Nieben figures for the
•YJ llouglu Craminer, executive 1981-82 sea.son reveal that 5
prod~ of "Love Boat." "Our million fewer houaeholds were
appeal ls pure escaplmn. Our triP1 watching TV on Saturday night.I
are romantic, glamorous and than Sunday nights.
a d v e n t u r o u s . T h e y ' r e ''Therc;'a some dorrelation with
everybody's dreams. the type of programming, but lt's
"These fantasies are about really more a fUnction of people's
people who find happiness ln living habit.I," aays Ker811)1das .
alamorous surroundino. Viewets "They go out on Saturday."
lantasir.e that that's them. It's a Another factor la that the
way of not being depresaed. We stay-at-home Saturday audience
have three stories, and if you ls an odd mix of teen--sera and
don't like one, bold on. There are adults over 50. Advertising's
two more." most coveted demographic -
But what if you do~'t like arty women between the ages of
of them? What if mind.lea TV l8 18-49 -ls lowest.. on Saturday,
not your favorite w eekend says Larry Yuams, manager of
activity? What if you're looking prime-time raearch for ABC.
for some intellectual stimulation, Cable has been making some of
aophistlcated comedy or reallatlc its blgget audience Inroads o
drama? . Saturday night.I. ~ altemativ;
I Industry must face day-care need.
Saturday's network lineup had Saturday, the two major cab
"Walt Disney" offering "Pluto networks had PG-rated movi
and His Friends," NBC had "Raggedy Man,". with Siss
"Here's Boomer," and ABC had Spacek, on Showtime, and
"Today's FBI." exclusive showing of "The Ni
Other "highlights" include a the Light.I Went Out in Georgia.
CBS cartoon called "Faeries," starring well-known TV
I
j
I.
I
1 ·
By SYLVIA PORTER
ITEM: Intermedics Inc., a
Texas medical technology firm
with the largest industry day-
care facility in the United States
(292 children whoee parents pay
$15 a week)/ recorded a 23
percent decrease in employee
turnover and 15,000 fewer work
hours loat to absenteeism during
the facility's first year of
operation. .
"The center is more than
paying for itself," notes a
com_pany official.
lTEM: Wang Laboratories, a
word-processing leader in
Lowell, Mus., reported a marked
drop in employee turnover and
"very positive effects" on
employee morale after
establiahing a day-care facility
for 150 enrollees in a nearby
elementary echool.
ITEM: PCA International Inc.,
a North Carolina photo
processing company will!
roughly 1,000 employees, states
that Its day-care center
substantially reduced coats
relating to recruitment and
turnover - a saving estimated at
$50,000 a year.
Day-care centen to take care
of the young children of workel'tJ
la a concept whoee ti.me has come.
It's here. It's now.
A recent Harris Poll finds that
MONEY'S WORTH
corporate-sponsored day care as
part of any employee benef.its
package will be one of the key
'labor-management issues of the
1980s. .
Gh.ild-care advocates shrug off
the view that industry-financed
facilities are unneceaaary;
unworkable and utopian.
Orpniz.ed labor and leaden of
the women's movement openly
state they will be in the
vanguard of this puah.
It's• scarcely a surpriae
considering the followina facts:
-More tlaaa ball (52.5
percent) of the adult female
population work.a outside the
home and nearly 6 million of
these women are mothers of
preschool children. --WI._ etpt yean -by
1990 -there will be 11 million
more women in the work force;
an estimated two out of three
mothers will be employed; and 55
percent of them will have at least
one child under 6.
-Meanwbile, tbe depres11Dg
fact l8 that existing private and
publicly sponsored centers can
accommodate only one out of
every six of the preschoolers
The Day-Care Dilemma:
It Could Get Worse
t More than half of the adult
t fem ale population works
outside the home.
t By 1990, there will be 11
t million more women in the
work force; two out of three
mothers will be employed; 55
percent of them will have at
least one child under 6.
t Existing private and publicly
t sponsored centers can
accommodate only one out of
every six preschoolers whose
mothers now work, and a 20
percent cutback in federally
funded programs is threatened.
-
f_
whoee mothen work, and most as $1,440, depending on Income NBC'a "Ha~ Valley" and K.riaty ldcNichol, on HBO.
centers have long waiting lists. andnumberofchildren-forthe "'Naahville-P ,"starring Joe Further r.roof that t
An even more depressing fact is portion of the overall day-care Namath. Then, of course, there's networks don t regard Saturda
that a threatened 20 percent <XlSt that they must pay. more "Love Boat" and "Fantasy nights highly ls that two l!
cutback In federally funded ~ laland." l'fews Specials were slotted f programs would reduce ·by more Stat.ea, too, getting on the This is a far cry from the t h e pa at l w o wee k e n d
than 100,000 the number of day-care tax fit bandwagon. heyday of CBS comedies in the Documentaries never get hig
children who can be cared for in Connecticut has passed a law 1970s, when "All in the Family," ratings. .
these facilities. providing a state income tax at 8 o'clock, was television's top-So, while "Fantasy !Blan~\
-Aad tile U.S. Labor credit equal t.o 25 petcen} of the rated program. Traditionally, was last week's No. 3 show, CBS
Department itself believes that a ooat of construct.l.na. acqlll.rlng or viewer levels build through the had the lowest-rated broadcast,' a
minimum of 20,000 children expanding a chlld day-car e night, but "people were staying program on the Juilliard mud9
under the age of 3 are left alone facility, up to $10,000 annUJlly. · at home for 'All in the Family' school. . •cfJ
for all or part of the day while ,-----------------------.:::::..:.------------..a.i
parent.I work for pay. Th.la does lo
not include the vast number of d J
ao-<:alled "latchkey" ki~ achool-
age youngsters who are left
unsupervised for at least part of
the working day.
"Unless strong initiatives come
from corporate leadenhip to help
fill the gap," says Arnold Hiatt,
head of the Stride Rite Corp., a
leadin' manufacturer of
children s footwear, "many of
the working mothers who are
also single parents will be forced
out of the. work force and back
onto welfare" (precisely the
opposite of what the Reagan
administration's programs are
trying to achieve).
,,. Hiatt'a company is a well-
known corporate sponsor of
work-site day..care facilities -
pioneering in 1971 the concept by
opening a day-a.re center that
has become a prototype for
similar faclli ties a~ound the
country. Located on the first
floor of its Boston plant, the
center includes a kitchen, office,
laundry, gym, classrooms and
outdoor playground for infants,
toddlers and older children.
Average ooat to parents: $20 to
$25 a week. A eecond center will
be opened at ill new Cambridge
plult aoon.
Congreaa is clearly urging
employers to take action. In its
massive, catch-all 1981 tax act,
there is a tax benefits package
for finna sponsoring non-profit
child care that la extraordinarily
generous.
For instance, a company can
claim a tax deduction for its
total investment in day care if it
la a formally· written plan
available to all employees on an
unrestricted basis. Buaineaees can
deduct from the gross iaxable
i ncome all expenditures for
employee chUd care whether
build~ and maintaining an in-
hoUle facility, purchesina lptiee9
in private centen (callecf ~
programs), or .lau.lna vouchen
(for money payment•) to
employee-parent• who make
~eir own arranpmenta.
And thia ls not all. The act
makea any direct outlaya or
rei..mbw:'mnenll tax-free and Ut>
provides parent• wJtb an
Mldldooal tax c:ndit -M much
Overweight? Just a
tittle out of shape 7 Or
,both 7 Don't give up.
"Live-Ir up at Richard
Simmons new Anatomy
Asylum. Now with 5
locations, and many
· more to come. ltS all here.
The fun. The fitness. The
results. All the right lngre·
1 dlents for your success
formula. Join on a 1-year
I
membership and get 2 years
of fun and fltn~ free. ThatS
3 ye~ for the price of 1. Get
started now. Rlchan:l Slmmom
"llve..ff:6 concept wlH work for
you. ~ an exC/tlng combina-
tion of exercl~, proper
nutrltJOO and a~
IET
mental attitude that
can last for the rest
of your life. Call or
come In to Richard
Simmons new
Anatomy Asylum
today ~ucan
do It Join now.
URRVI
RNAL
DAYS
-,
1'
irport area height
imit change prOposed
The Orange County Plannlna
Commiuion thlnka it ls time for
some changes ln the way limlta are
imposed on const.ructton in
unincorporated lands surrounding
three airport.a.
Basically, the changes would
ease current restrictions by giving
greater Oexi~ility on building
heights through closer cooperation
be tween the Federal Aviation
Administration and the county
Environme ntal Management
Agency.
Current county standards are
hard and fast. They limit building
heights according to the distance
of the building location from an
airport runway.
Unde r the new p olic ies,
,developers would be required to
submit their building plans to the
jF AA for a re vie w . Tt\e FAA
lwould make a determination on
whether the building would be an
obstruction to navigation or a
navigational hazard, or neither.
Following the FAA analysis,
the plans would be considered by
the county which, in view of the
analysis. would decide whethe~
the project 1hould be permitted,
rejected, or permitted with cenaln
conditions.
For example, it might be that
warning lights atop the propoeed
structure would be sufficient to
offset any hazard the buildtna
might create.
The FAA likes the n,w
proposal. So do the county
planners.
It had been proposed at the
outset of the inquiry into t})e
building height issue that th e
county simply repeal the e>CiaUng
regulations and let the FAA make
the sole determination on what
should be permitted.
Fortunately, that idea was
tossed aside after it was learned
the FAA has only advisory -not
r e gulatory -power over
construction in airport area zones.
So the county went back to
the books and came up with the
proposal that now carries the
planning commission 's
endorsement. T he planners have
found some middle ground. The
county Board of Supervisors
should agree.
1A brake for Watt
This month, for the first time,
Congre~ will have an opportunity
t o put the bra kes on Interior
lSecretary James Watt's drive to
open national wilderness areas for
oil, gas and mineral leasing.
I The Wilderness Act of 1964
allowed such leasing until Dec. 31,
1983, at which time all areas in the
' National Wilderness Preservation.
System would be permanently
closed to new leasing.
In fa c t , previou s
administrations have re frained
from granting leases, pending the
permanent closure . Se cretary
Watt, however , has said that in his
view he is obliged to grant some of
the 1,000 pending wilderness lease
applications, and has proceeded to
do just that.
Resp ondi ng t o an angry
House Inte rior Committee, the
secretary finally agreed to a
moratorium on wilderness leasing
until the erid of this year to give
Congress time to analyze the issue.
In the meantime, he offered a
wilderness "protection" bill of his
own which would have made it
easier for wilderness to be opened
for m in er a l d e ve lopme nt and
would have ended protection for
the system entirely after the year
2000.
This set off a new furor, to
which Watt responded by saying
he would have to abide by the
present law, which does not ban
wilderness leasing until the end of
Reniinder on
A plan to prepare a special
lunch for congressmen out of food
rescued from supermarket trash
containers had all the earmarkS of
a publicity stunt -and so il was,
to a degree. But the point was
worth considering.
A Washington , D.C. group
titled Committee for Creative
Non-Violence dreamed up the idea
to call attention to the fact that
good food by the ton -more than
130 million tons a year it has been
estimated -goes to waste in the
United States.
Members of the committee
make pre-dawn forays into
marke t trash bins and say they
find enough good, edible food to
feed several hundred derelicts a
day at the church soup kitchen.
They hoped the congressional
lunch -it featured crab quiche
tnade from $100 worth of frozen
Our pray er
The California Legislature Is
now in session. God protect
California.
1983. unless Congress felt inclined
to change the law.
With a bipartisan hill, HR
6 5 41. introdu c ed by five
Democrats and five Republicans,
Congress has a chance to do just
that. The measure immediately
and permanently would withdraw
from oil, gas and mineral leasing
all lands that otherwise would
have been available until the
permanen"t---withdrawal date of
December 1983.
It does, however, contain a
provision allowing the president,
with the concurrence of Congress,
to open any withdrawn area in
case of urgent national need.
A study completed in
December 1981 showed that the
designated wilderness areas
contain only about 1 percent of
potentially producible oil and gas
found onshore in the United
States. Tens of millions of acres
now are available to oil and gas
leasing and mining on open, non-
w ilderness federal, state and
private lands, which contain the
bulk of the potential. ·
But for some reason, Watt
seems to feel this is not enough -
that continued wildern e ss
protection is not justified.
Given the secretary's
arbitrary attitude, and the fact
that, as things stand, he could
continue to grant wilderness lease
applications throughout next year,
the new legis lation is clearly
needed.
•
food waste
crab found in one bin -would
encourage participants to support
a resolution calling on government
agencies to make surplus food
available to the needy.
They also support expansion
of "Good Samaritan" laws that
limit the liability of those who
donate food to the poor. California
is one of 39 states that now have ,
such laws, but 11 st.ill do not.
Because market patrons insist
on perfect, or near-perfect
produce and other foods, the
practice of trashing anything that
does not meet these high
standards is widespread.
Yet, as the church committee
members point out, hundreds of
Americans are undernourished
while an estimated 20 percent of
the nation's food production is
thrown away, a fact invariably
remarked upon by visitor.s from
other countries.
The congressional "garbage"
lunch was a stunt -but it could
be a stunt that might lead to some
serious thinking about getting
surplus food into hungry mouths
instead of into trash blns.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Otner views ••· pressed on this page are those of their authors and a,rtlsts. Reader comment 11 lnvlt· tel. Address T)le Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 91626. Phone (7W
6<42·4321.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Thomas P. Haley
Publlsner
Thomas A. ~IM
Editor
B1rbara Krelbfch
Edltorlal Page Editor:
Double-dip'ping at the top
WASHINGTON -The mllllon.a of
ordinary Americana on Social Security
are 1eVerely Umited in what they can
earn without forfeiting part of their
pensions. The b'"er their earnings, the
smaller their Social Security checks.
The privileged people in the federal
government are bound by the same
Social Security rule. But where other
pensions are concerned, anything goes.
THE DOUBE·DIPPING starts right at
the top. President Reagan draws a $22,
444 annual pension from the state of
. California as well u hJa presidential
salary and expenses of $250,000 a year.
It took a special ruling by Reagan's
good friend, Attorney General William
French Smith, to get around the U.S .
Constitution, which states that a
president "shall not receive . . . any
othe.r emolwnent from the United States
or any of them" while he's in office.
Emolument is a 50-cent word for
payment, salary or other compensation,
but the Justice Department ruled that
Reagan's state pension isn't actually an
emolument. The explan ation is that
Reagan kicked in for his pension during
the eight years he was governor.
Thls must puzzle Social Security
pensioners, most of whom pald into the
trust fund for a lot longer than eight
years, get a lot less than $22,444 a year in
benefits -and stand to lose much of
what they do get if they earn more than
$6,000 a year, let alone $250,000.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger
also draws a pension from California -
$5,708 a year -in addition to his $60,000
JICI llDERSDI
federal salary. Last year, Weinberger
also received $93,583 from his old
employer, Bechtel Power Corp., as
"compensation for past services."
Ambassador-at-large Vernon Walters,
a former Army general, is entitled to
$60,000 a year in salary. and reported an
additional military pension: $44,101 in
1980-and $57,904 in 1981.
The real ice-cream parlor f o r
double-dippers iS Congress. An official of
the National Taxpayers Union told my
associate John Dillon that 56 me mbers of
the House and Senate receive dual
compensation of one sort of another.
One of the champs in this department
is S en. Strom Thurmond, R-S .C. A
former governo11 like Reag~. h e draws a
state pension of $6,965 a year . As a
retired general in the Army reserve, he
also gets a $12,668 military pension.
These payments help him scrape by on
his Senate s ala r y of $60.000 plus
expenses. '
OTHER SENATORS who get military
r e t i reme nt pa y inc lude Barry
Goldwater. R-Ariz. (who says he donates
his pension check to charity), Robert
Stafford, R-Vt., and Howard Cannon,
D-Nev . The military legis lators,
incidentally, have handily ignored the
explicit proVlSion of the Constitution that
states: "No person holding any office
under the United S tates shall be a
member of e ithe r ho use during his
continuance in office."
ln money matters. as In so much else.
there is one set of rules for the bigshots
and a differe nt set for the people whose
taxes keep them living in high style.
Some reruns didn't merit first run
It's hard to find a show on television
these days that you haven·t seen before
unless it's so bad you purposely didn't
watch it the first time it was broadcast.
You have to admire the nerve the
television networks have, not giving us
anything new a ll summer. The network
summer often •runs for five months. too.
I've always been worried that they'll
decide to save even more money and
re run last year's news shows every night
inst.cad of going to all the trouble or
reporting what's going on today. If they
did tha t, we might be getting Wa lter
Cronkite from Oct. 6, 1980 ... tonight.
That was a good night for news and
definitely worth repealing. Some nig h ts
1t pro b ab l y wouldn't m a k e a n y
difference 1£ they reran the news from a
few years ago A lot of people wouldn't
even notice.
IT WOULD BE a waste, of course, 1f a
good broadcast was shown only once and
then stored away forever . Some sh ow s
are definitely worth repeating. Some are
worth seeing twice. and you often want
to have a second chance to see something
you missed the first time.
· Wh i l e som e s h o w s a r e worth
r e peating. oth e r s w e r e n 't w o rth
broadcasting the first time and they
should be thrown away. There's no
reason except greed for the networks to
give us re runs all summer. Where's the
experiment.al stuff? Where are the new
shows by young writers and producers?
Some might not be good enough. but
some might be g reat. too. Why can't we
have some or these in the summer?. We
don't ask for a lot on a hot summer night,
but we would like it to be something we
haven't SC<.'n before.
I'd like to see a new network ('rc:ated
that would broadcast nothing but reruns
all year. It w ould be l'Onvenient to have
one "hannel that we t'Ould depend o n for
seeing the thmgs we missed the f11-st
time or the good shows we'd Ukt• to see
again
It would evl'n be interesting to have
t h<' new n l'lwork rt>run old nc•ws
,~~'
·-AID_Y _RDD-11-Y -!i=
broadcasts on a regular schedule. News
broadcasts from the 1960s or the 1970s
would inte r est a ll o f us who lived
through those days. and they'd amount
to a histor y lesson for t h e younger
people who didn't. Ir they put me in
cha rge of the project. l'd take the lx·st
news stories from the three networks and
throw out the junk. Some times now l
watch more than one of the network
news shows and l often wish I oould t"Ciit
them together, taking the best stories
from each of the three networ ks.
It's possible to feel sorry for network
programming ul I 1e1a b It's a thankl~
pb. olthough mnst of tht•m <1 rt' pald
S<'Vc.>ral hundn.J 1huu-..ancl dollars ,1 vt•ar.
w h1l'h makt•s up l11r <1 lot vr t h1 I h·anks
lht'.V don'I g1•t F1ll1ng t hl' ,.,,. \\llh
prognim:-. l'V1•1 ,. d<1v. dc1v in and d..1,11 out.
all yt•ar ltm~ 1s ,1 111ugh 1>h You havt• lo
<'XJX'C'l that II 1:-.n't •• 11 J!Olllg tll b<· good
b«:<1use tht'rt:, n11 W<JY y11u t'an produ('1.'
that mut·h good programming. Tlw rt• arc·
JUSl so manv l'rt•at1v1· g1·n1usc.':. among us
a nd t h t•v a r1·n ·1 a ll \l.nrk ing for
l<'lev1s1on
THE NE TWORKS havC' bt·t•n !':o
sut'l'<'SSf"I at making mom'y w11h tht·1r
reru ns. though. that I'm surpn st'<I tht'
pral'llt'<" hasn't :-.prt':..d to other 1ndustr1c~.
Wonder Bn·ad m uld ... wrt making d;i_v-
old bread fn.•sh t•wr.v day Ford might go
ba"k in to produt·t1011 wu h its HH I spor ts
coupe. selling for undc.•r $1.000. I'm sure
there'd bl· a markC'l for tht• t·an. 1f
Volkswagen :-.ta rlt·d rt•running the
produ('tion hne that produced 1ls dass1c·
bug for so many _vt'ars.
Reruns on tl'lev1s1on to the c.•xdus1on
O( any nt'W material for four or five
months of thl' yt'ar are offensive.• be<:au:,e
we arc all CJbhgated to move on. to
progress a nd to kt:'ep tr ying for nrw and
differl'n t things. We nl'<."Ci new novt·ls
wr1llen, not bl'<·ause som<' of the old onC'S
aren't still good, but because change and.
progress ar(' essential lo tht• human
spirit. A little rerun in o ur hves, whether
it's a class reunion or an old t.elcv1sion
show, g<X'S a long way.
Trying to change people usually fruitless
There are aorne things you can help
change in people, and tome thinp you
can't. There are aome thinp people can
change in thetNelv~. and there are
aome thinas they can't. · Part of the wt.dom of learnina to live
with othen is knowinl what can be
changed and what cannot be, in o~ll
u well u In oth.,., Some peopS'
m1n111111 ~
learn It: t.My sPe9d their livea 1owering
bucketa Into welli'and expedinc to br1l'\8
up wlne. You can chance c~. a little, by
example or perauaalon, but not by
precept or author1ty. You can c~ I temperament, ve,.., Uwe, but oftly 6y
tact and affec:tton. never bY criddam or
eooldi"8 or naat.na. You can dWice ntbttlet but only 'l'lth
much dUONlty and only lf Uwy Wtn
not formed ln dilldhood • a rw:dan to an unpleaaant environment . And,
finally, 1t I• far eaaler to cb a na• ..,.Ullnl about yountlf than to c:huJet
another.
All theae may b• p1yoh olo1lul
truisms, but lt ia surprising and
dismaying how many persons torture
themaelves trying to change aomeone
who does not feel the need to be
changed, who does not want to change,
and who actually fean or re9enta what
change ml&ht do to him or her.
Someone, let us say, drinks too much
becau.ae of low aelf~esteem. Drinking
gives him or her a aeruie of confidence,
even of ebullience. You ·cannot deprive
him or her of the liquor unless you
provide the eelf-.esteem.
Another penon ls habitually law. Thia
la partly a matier of temperament, and
partly a pattern of childhood experiences
too complex for any easy analy1l1.
Tardlneaa can mean any number of
thlnp; lt can alao mMn atmply that eotne
people have an inherently defecUve
eel\le of time. tf t.bla Aa eo, no rellmen or
diM:ipllne on ec'th wW do much good.
You have to Uve With lt or adapt to It u
belt you can.
I MAU TllDB ellmlntsy potn'8
b9cauae I ... all around nae~le ~With thlti' nae. or withthelr cblldrift at.out vali. a
haball Md dlii$Gilltlillli tUt &ml MYW be
chan:pd Witfl' &be .. u.odl they are Illini. Mid, mo__. .. --... at all
by an~ JmChacll yet k:nOwn IO lnanldnd.
There is no communication -only
fixed attitudes and accusations and
anger , a ll of whi c h are
counterproductive.
I am far from suggesting, God knows,
that the e xces&ve drinker cannot change
or be helped to change. But first he or
she must want to. It must be through
collaboration, not coercion. Through
compassion, not contempt. "I yam what I
yam," a.s Popeye was fond of declaring,
and while most of us can become a little
more than we were, and a little better
than we were, a few of us can become
other than we are.
CllllYm
Ltv•na in Southern CaUfomla really
mak'9 you with people had not takm i\ '° literalll when_-_ told to to fOfth and
multiply. ,YenonaUy. I wish they'd ltUck
to artthmetk:. J.C.V.
l'a.'a2el' ,
Yau Olft put th» ... of a lolt WMktnd undlr ·~-of UM ~ !\mid" or the ''Tbere nwat be • *'°" tri hieni ~bee" 11•••y. .
:-Summer weether tttaen the reetlem eemt of adventw. ln
my IOUl. H.virilr been hit by auch a apell late on a Friday, lt eeemec:t
natural to liellCI for Neon Oty, Lu Vep1. The familiar Itch could
hav.t been advanced roulette fever. Maybe it wu just the t1eu ln
my Colta Neu abode. I'd been faithfWly bombini them for a
week. )
FINDING SOMEONE EQtJALLY. ITCHY and
adventureeome to 80 alons wu the euy part.
Then there waa the declalon between clrlvina the 1aa-
auullna ltatlon waeon with air condit.ioning or the econom1cal llttle Pinto ans such lwcuriee.
Optina fw air condlUonina, we eet forth,
only to meet our first obstacle: the money
mach1ne (you know, the automatic 24-hour
bank teller). It was on a break w 10mething,
which ahould have been my first clue.
After 1<>lvfna the money problem, we
fairly sailed down the o~n road, swappiJ\a
yams of travels paat.
It was a short sail, coming to an abrupt
halt 16 miles ahort of Barstow where the
radiator threw a full-on tantrum, steaming,
sputtering and spewing. IANIMm JOY
WREN IT COOLED DOWN, I fed it the only liquid 4vailable
-six cans of lukewarm Diet Pepsi. Then. after determinlng that
a young couple conveniently broken down behind us weren't
highway bandits, we provided them with.a lift.
The four of us treated my chariot to lots of water, oil and
TLC.
Imbued with a sense of responsibility for these two less
fortunate travelers from the Orange Coast, we vowed to make
sure they, too, were able to speed merrily on their way.
Do you know how difficult It is to get a radiator hoee for a
Public safety
costs disput~d
By ROBERT BARKER OftMO.-,NotSt.ff
Costa of public safety services for California's
426 cities increased 18 percent during the 1980-81
fiscal year and accounted for 36.5 percent of all city
expenditures, according to a report released by
State Controller K.en Cory.
The costs for public safety in cities along the
Orange Coast generally were in line with the rest of
the state, according to the report.
Huntington Beach, the biggest city on the coast,
spent the most for public safety.
Newport Beach had the sharpest increase -58
percent from 1979-80 to 1980-81. But officials from
both cities said there is something wrong with the
figures.
Newport Beach Fire Chief Jim Reed said.
1980-81 expenditures were $400,000 too high.
Reed also said that the 1980-81 figure increased
dramatically because of changes in accounting
procedures.
He said nearly $1 million in expenditures that
were charged to other budget areas were assigned
t.o the fire department. lfe said sharp pay increases
also inflated the increase from one year t.o another.
Huntington Beach City Administrator Charles
Thompson a:Iso disputed the validity of the report.
"I don't know where they get the figure for
our 1980-81 expenditures for public safety as $20,-
582,354. They take figures from our financial report
and we aent in the figure of $20,105.354.
"If the right numbers were used and unusually
high capital outlay ccsts were removed, the increase
would have been 15.3 percent," Thompson said.
The state report indicated public safety costs
increa8ed by 19 percent.
Thompson said there are often discrepancies in
the state report because cities report publ,ic safety
expenses in different ways, ·
"For example, we intend to spend about $160.
000 for croesing guards in the coming year, Th.is
comes out of the police budget. But other cities may
not choose to put the expense there."
(See PUBLIC, Page A8)
llUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
................ s..e
1922 ...,IOI ILVD.
COSTA MHA-"541·115~
!~.,!',!
All COMllllOl •tlll IClUI WAm MU'91G IATMIOOM w.GllllM
5' le 217U7
NEW'l2
V.W.RAUIT
CONVIRTIRI
Fully equipped:
$10.600 Cop Coif
$5.600 Relk:luol.
1N2 Buick tn llntow at a LID.7 "V-~· W9 i.m.d. W. ~ CUl'nld up eome-. ..., .....,, at a
UUCk atop and tUW tMm; Una With aw mwly foUnd frMmda,
to tMlr car ~ M dawn WM t.rMJdna.
HoUn -it IMl1*I Wea daya -law, w. rolled onto the
Strip u &emJ*'lltu.ree soared ~ a lhlde thil llde ol Hadel.
IT WAI A TYPICAL. llAPPY, ~ V .... day,
awde rnon eo by my moes.t ~ ~
A few mlnol" dilappotfttmenUI ol the trip baNly qualify for
mentiain, bUt f«W the ncard~
-We encountered heavy ra1n. com~i. with lJChtnlna,
while climbifte 1-15 to 5,000 feet.
-I dkl tome fancy drtvinl and qukk th1Dldna 10 avoid
coWdina brolldltde with a car hW\I up on the~ suardnU and
atradcWna the roadway, a vtctlm of the llidt ai&rf.llce, jult,.if we
crmted the h1ah9I\ peak.
-The oia friend I wanted to look up had an unllated phone
nwnber, the friendly Vea-operator tnformld me.
-My companion'• relative in 1\an Oty n\.llaed out 6n our charminc company, too, becauae at h1a home, we reeched only a
friendly anawertni m.chine.
Day Two wu lela eventful.
WE'D Jl'QllGOTTEN TO Locg the hotel room dQor, we
learned upoo awake~ but the buJ'l)an ~ ua. 'Ibe dealers
didn't We left town oonai~bly poorer than we'd arrived'. SaWnc homeward, pedal• to the metal. we CONOled ourselves
with thouaht.a and oommenta about how nice it'd been to get out
of town and next Ume • • •
Then we hit :ear.tow. And, there we remained Ulltil nearly ~
a.m., entertained by country and western music and counting our
bletainp that the alternator bad failed in the rflltaurant parking
Jot and not on the open road. ·
Ninety-four dollara and 79 cents poorer (thank goodness for
plastic money), but with a new alternator, we opce again sailed
along.
WE HIT MY DRIVEWAY IN Costa Mesa juat before 7 a.m.,
not exactly brighi·eyed and bushy-tailed. And, definitely with
slow machine elbow. .
AB I quickly showered, 'shampooed, etc., my companion
unpacked the car and brewed strong coffee.
I swooped up the coffee on my way out the door, grateful to
be in time for work. My companion offered the wt straw: "The
fleu are back."
Market-Rate Checking combines the high earning power of
money market funds with unparalleled checking convenience.
Qpen Market-Rate Checking with $2~ or more. Immedi-
ately, every dollar over $2,000 begins~ earn a high money-
market rate of interest. All funds up to $2,000 earn the highest rate
allowed by law on a checking account-51A%. The $2,000 is in-
sured by the Federal Sa~ings and Loan Insurance Corporation. ....... Time··-.. y-Ooot 1Cf11 tnor. -Yovr "'99)
COSTA MllA 641-1289
U2'......,...lh4.
MISSION YU> 495..()401 11'22 c;_.,, ¢ p' ,,_
~ .... flwy •• ...., l"wy.J
NO Cl!# REDUCTION.
41 month lea ..
hJyrMf\t plus tax
*20817mo
Ordef Youn Today! tta.9.
call
Bobllah
Funds above $2,000 are not a savings account or deposit and are
not insured by the F.S LI C. They are backed by United States
Government securities. With Market-Rate Checking you may
write checks just like with any other checking account, or arrange
for the exclusive TELE-PAY" system to pay bills by phone. You
can also withdraw cash at any of our seventy-two 24-HOUR
TELLER locations. Annual Yield
Whet a W~ Wor1d of 811opplng, rlgllt at
~ ftnoertlpa ~ Dally Fi'llot Claaalfled
Ada. To oiece ~ ad.
call 842-~71 end let a
aa.lfled Ad·V'r help you. Get all the details on exciting Market-Rate Checking by calling
The Fina~cial Line-direct or collect-(714) 231-4023, or visit the
nearest Association office.
15.335"
PIRATES PLATTER
Steak & Enchilada
Dinner Special
5:00 to 6:JO Daily
per annum•
'Subitcl lo thana• d11t1 Ann111l efftclivt 11ttd 1U4?m .. 1ellweslmu1 ol pnnclpal and inltiest •I rnahrri~ al same rate allhou&ll lh«S ttn'I be averanleed
.,
... ;
,'!.
' J
.,
'I ...
.~ ..
TOWERING IMPRESSION -Laguna Beach
~t teacher Russ Butle r takes his 5 to
!5-year-old students to Victoria !!each each
~eek to paint the old tower on canvas. The
0...,,... PM4oe !tr~ .........
summer sessions teach children techniques of
oils, mixing colors, ca.re of brushes and style.
Jennifer Brost, 10, of Laguna Beach, gets some
personal tutoring.
'Method to my madne~s'
Animals cutups in artist's detailed cartoons
). ., PAMELA STEINRIEDE
J»(ttie OeltY Piiot Sten
.: Robert Marbl e ,is a se lf-
d escribe d 36-year-old jus t
ng 5 -and it shows in his
p eanut butter or giving an
elephant a nose job.
Whatever the topic, Marble
always includes the figure of a
small redbird somewhere in the
While working on depictions of
professions lik~edicine and
law, he solicits estions from
thoee in the tra e and then does
his own research.
I . . . . . Marble, ex h1b1t1ng hi s
"I'm going for accuracy,"
Marble said in a serious
·evaluation of his work.
I: • I
outrageous and often hilarious
car.toons at the Art-A-Fair in
Laguna Beach, grins like a
Dennis the Menace who has
~ormed some mischievous act
at Margare t's expense. Marble act.s like he has done something
wrong, but is glad about it.
"All my
customers are
His art works are priced from
$20 for small -prints to $4,000 for
original drawings and have
become collectibles for some
customers. Purchasing his art
indicates a form of insanity,
according to Marble.
a little strange."
"I try to take a situation and
!'lxaggerate it, and then take ii
one step further but make it
believable," said Marble.
"I'm dealing with the sixth
sense -the sense of humor."
. Marble's limited edition
lithographs feature numerous
afibnals and the themes range frwn a law firm and dentis t's
ofllce to the process of making
drawing, and the bird often is in
distress. Struggling through a
waste basket, riding atop a hard
hit soccer· ball, or~simply
observing the scene, the small
creature represents the artist
within his art, according to
Marble.
"All my customers are a little
strange," he said.
Art-A-Fair, located along
Laguna Canyon Road at Canyon
Acres Drive, is open 10 A.m. to 10
p.m. Sundays through Thursdays
and 10 a.rq. to 11 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays. Admission is $1,
50 cents for senior citizens and
children under 12 years free. The'
event runs throu~ Aug. 29.
"AB crazy as all this is, there is
a method to my madness," said
Marble.
M'ETHOD TO HIS MADNESS -Robert
Marble says his work deals with the "sixth
sense" of the viewer, a "sense of humor." His
.
'
0.-, ............ .., ~ .......
cartoons are usually outr~geous but beli~able
and often hilarious.
PUBLIC SAFETY COSTS RISE • • •
(From Page A7) .
Thompson also said the report shows that costs
for building and animal control regulation are listed
tn 'the public safety budget but ihe report doesn't
~ect the amount of revenues that the two services
briJlg to the city.
(Police and fire expenses comprise the principal
public safety costs. But cost.a for building and
ilnima1 regulations and for civil defenae also are
~uded.)
Here is how the Orange Coast cities stack up
between 1979-80 and 1980-81, as aeen in the Cory
~OOsTA MESA! 1979-80: police, $4,638, 891; fire,
i2,'463,3M; total, $7,490,558. 1980-81: police, $5,383,-
90~ fire, $2,641,628; total, $8,470,871. Increase: 13
~t.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY: 1979-80: poUce, $2,150,·
fire, $1,322,686: tot.al, $3,604,936. 1980-81:
. ' $2,469,953; fire, $1,429,292; total, $4,031,559.
ruse: 12 percent.
. IRVINE: 1979-80: Pollce, $~,512,909i.flre,
$184,792; total, $4,697,512. 1980-81. Police, ... 336,
367; (ire, $166,577; total, $5,760,9Zl. Increase: 23
pemmt.
•· HUNTINGTON BEACH: 1979-SO:'PolJce, $10,-
• ~ .230: fire, ~.060,589 tot.al, $17,293,314; 1~1: .~. $12,099,388; fire, $7,477,232; total. f20,582,·
... IMNae: 19 pereent.
.~. LAGUNA BEACH: 1979-80: Police, $1~93,912;
..... • tl.004.C>«: 1980·81: police, .l.704,022; flra,
:•:· ..... . ·:-: ····· ...... ~· .~
$1,111,000. Total: $3.018,840. Increase: 8 percent.
NEWPORT BEACH: 1979-80: eollce. '5,159,-
490; fire, $2,648,768, total: $8,&9l!J.399. 1980-81:
Police, $5,823,746; fire, $4,549,776. ·1·otal: $13,657,-
242. hlcreaae: 57 percent.
Controversy glows
over plate change
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) -Maine officials bad
no problm\ when William Berube Jr. ordered the
anti-nuclear menage "NO-U235" for his car's
licenae plates. But they didn't approve when he
chan1ed the plate•' "Vacationland" slogan to
''Radi.ationland.''
Berube, 21, a fl'UCk driver from '\he rural cown
of Somerville, aald that he UMd reflective tape
marked with \he letien l\-A-D-1, to cover the blMk
V-A-C on the promotional motto stamped on Maine
tap. Berube aa1d a state offtdal vWted hla home and
ordered )Wn to ::to:::ic for h19 cat or appe.r for a bearlna of the Sec:ntary of
State's oftice.
"I'll IO to court ll nee 1 r ey." Berube laid. "l
have vanity plac.; to there'• no way Ml pt rid °"
them."
'nMt main f(lww on hJI eped•Uy ordered tap,
whk:h omt an extra $10 per yew, an No.UU6, a
reference to the fuel \..cl in .... NldOn.
Coa t entries rate high
Local1 take n,_.merous prizes in fair contest&
Wlan•'• &a varloue
competltlon1 at the Oun1•
County Fair have been
announciMt by the department
eu~~untor Photo1ral>hy
Canpettdon, Millard Coolc from ~won MOOnd place in hla
•'9P'Y· Milli• vaejo reetdentt who
took honon ln other cateaort-wert Ttm Allen, second;
Ca1aanpra Ao1t1en, second;
Charlea 'LH, aecond; Shel
Osman, third; Jo11ph ,Payne,
aecond; Bruce &y. llCOlld; Chria
Re1alado, ftnt; Jeue Wallace, ~: and Tereea Watklna, flnt,
teOOrMi and third.
Car.ollne Randolph from
Newport ~ won two eecond
placea and one tint place for her
photogaph entries.
In the~ 8rtl COlnPlllltlOn, _., wtnnen
from c-. -. Inc** 8tuwt Mleon. a ncwiot who toot! tfllrd ~ In IGUlpt\M• and
tint .,. In mtlfed medle: kott 8atbouf plaoed flrat with hie OO!lege, and ,. aculpture
took ,aaoond In the now. dlvlelon· Stewn Da
Uicy took third pl-tionor• In the two
dlmenalonal /unlor cet90ory; and Joenna H•ndrlcka p ac9d third with har novlc•
dr9Wln09.
Other co.ta Meea .,,... lllc:lude: Anna
Okimoto, flret In prolwelonal ~lloraphy;
AdelekM ~ortar, third In ~ mlllacf media;
DouglH RoaebrOOk, llrat In profH1lona1
1c:Q~nd A. N. Wllkln1on, llr1t In
pt 8'11.
AaDecca Park• ol C--del Mar pieced
tl*d In now. wetarcolon..
................. wtnnerl -•: 8amentn• Ctlagollen. third with her two dlmentlonel
entry; Rob Oadtant, !Im In novloa llluttrallon:
Barbara Guyer. flr1t In prol•Hlonel oll
pelnllng; At1ena LknbcX*ar, llrtt and tlWd In
1119 novice oriantal bNltl comc>atltlon; Kenneth
MarapHa. flr1t In Iha novice drawing
cetegory; and Helena Wlckbarg, MCOlld 1n
two JllmelialQI ... art.
From ,_ .. Vellaf, winner• -•: All .. Lambert, MCOnd In novice wetaroolofa; Tr9C)I Rolf, thltd In junior two dlmanalon.i cataaOfY:
and Steve Wllllam1. third In profaaalonal
~
Annllla OtaeMn ol lntM pl~ Int wtth
h•r two dlm9flalonal ar1work. end Krlalln
Ha~ of Lall• ,.,... won nr1 -In the
prof9ealonal ~,.. catllOQfY. II T.,. pro two wlnnen; Sendy Kim
won tint ~ In Iha two dlmanaiOnal junlof competition. end Jannlfet L~wood tool!
third In the _,,. cat9QOtY
Wlnner1 lrom L .. 11na Hiiia ware: Mark Elllot with • !Wat and MCOnd In proleulonet
lltu1tratlon: ,Shlrl•Y Lyon1. aeco nd In
Pl'of..ional 9CfY!lca; anc:I Linda Jo Quinn,
third In ptoleeelonal ac:ulpture.
lllaalon Vl•I• r•ald•nl• who won
•OCOQliltkll'I -Charrnll'l9 Seblna. MCOlld ... novlo9 In the mixed IMdla compatl11on;
and Marton Thompeon, MCOlld lor en oil
p.int1"g tn the novtca cataQOtY.
Winnen from Newport 9-11 -•: Me<ge Chapman, flr1t In prol9Nlon1I w•t•rcolor.
Sheron Ferley. llrat and third In novice
calligraphy; KaYln F•rnhan, llrtt In
ptotaealonel KU!pture; Oeyl9 Gr_., third
In pto"-lollal oll pointing; A. 8. Otymplua.
MCOlld In novice orl9ntal bruatt pelntlng; Chrla
Steven, IOCond In prof..ionel oil painting:
end Maro .. Stocltman. MCond In novice
drawlngL
8evera.1 honors were bestowed
on area youngsters for their
entries in the 4-H and Future
Farmers of America cavy.
poultry and rabbit department at
the Oranae County Fair, which
cto.d Jufy 18.
Winners in various categories
from Costa Mesa are: Nancy
Hutinp. eecond place in rabbits,.
Jennifer M.anhall, two firsts and
a second for' ~ltry; Gwyn
Stanley, first p for poultry;
and Jim Stanavich, three firsts,
two seconds and a third for
poultry.
Foantaln Valley winners are:
Chris Barela, a first, two seconds
and a third place for rabbits, and
a firat place for cavy; Judy
---Barela, two eeconds for rabbits;
Melody Heximer, third place in
rabbits; and Patricia Lawrence
two firsts for rabbits.
Youngsters from Hutiagton
Beaclt who received recognition
are: Nichole Kendall, first and
.econd place for rabbits; Anne
Salzman, flnt place for rabbits;
and Ian Salzman, two firsts for
rabbi ta.
OLD-FASHIONED WAY -Laguna Beach's Barbara Cohee,
spinning yarn at South Coast Plaza Village promotion, was
one of various members of South Coast Weavers and Spinners
Guild demonstrating their craft at the just-concluded Orange
County Fair.
Kimberly Courtney and Dustin
Fisher from Irvine won second
and third place prizes in the
poultry competition.
Chris Stockman, of Newport
Beach, was a first place winner
with his cavies entr:v.
There was a baked foods and
confection s di vision of the
c reative a rts d epartment
compet ition at the "All
American" fair.
Co.le M99en1 wllO won lor 'their verlOIJ1
dellcecl•• were JoAnn Alllson. aecond.
St-811 Alllaon. ll<at. KMt Kotlnlg. second, Kethy Ko.nlg. nrs1: end Judy Lebaron, first
end MOOnd
Atso of Coata Mese: Jackie Llttle Poteo•.
llrat: Jacquelyn Matzger, aecond. Allee
Morrison. MCond; Sheron Patterson. llrat MCOitd and third, Cleudle Patetmen, lirll. end
Jen• Scelzo, first Other winners from Coll• Man ware
Sharon West, MCond, Diana Wllllam1, hral.
Laslle Williama. third: Sharon Vagarlan••.
third: Diena Currie, second, Jenine K•allng.
flrll, second end third. and David Ko.nlg.
"'''· Other Co111 Maaana who won war• ,,.,,,.,_, Marahel. fir1t. MCOnd Ind third. Met1l
McCardl•. llrll; Ltndny M•tz1111r, •third: Stecay Pattaraon. lhlrd. A ndra• WHt.
••cond; Amy WHton, third. and Sheron
Marllhell. llrat
Oeborlh Dully end Tim Sh810fl of El Toni
-• flrll pl-wlnnete with their t>ek9d
goods entrlel
Many Huntlnoton -..Cll reald9nls won •n
this category They -•· Frencia Ad11m1.
aecond: Kethy Allen. MCond: Margaret Baley.
llrat end MCOnd; Leurle Brlnager. first. eecond
end thlrd, T•rry Bryan. llrll MCOl'ld and third,
end Chat'yl Conred. llr11t end MCOnd
AISo, Berbet• C<ac:chldo. fnt, MCOnd end
third: Mn Merle C<INlll. nrat end second. IMZ Oad*1t. firat. Donn• GertlnQ, flrll. MCX>nd
end third; Janet Hall, MCOnd; Diena Hlakey,
l\lf.?.nd: end Donne Kell9f'. 1a«1nd end third tao I om Huntington Beech, Alloa Kiter.
end third, Laura Lembor1, first end
McOonllld, flrll end eecond; AnM
McGreth. flrll, ncond end lhlrd. Elu
Nlcholaon. aacond and third; Med•lyn
Strlelzel, llrat and second. end Rendl Taytor.
third.
Other Huntington Beech winner• ware·
Joanna Thill, flr11t Ind third, Lind• Wllal, ttral
end MCOl'ld, Llflde Baley, lint. Kethy Gargen.
aecond, Cheri Witllema, llrat end second. end
Jalf Warnet MCond.
In the 4-H/FFA landscaping
division competition , winners
from Costa Mesa were: Cost.a
Mesa Landscaping class, first
place in the patio featuring stone
category, and second place in the
contemporary garden group; and
the Costa Mesa FF A, third place
for their oriental garden and
third place for their formal
garden.
The Mission Viejo FFA won a
third place for a patio featuring
brick or stone.
The winners of a honey contest
conducted by the Orange County
Beekeepers also were announced.
Fairgoers were the judges at this
comoetition. Ron Laughery from Laguna
Beach placed fiftp for water white
honey, and Gus Benn.an Crom
Laguna Niguel placed second in
the same category. Berman abo
took fourth place honors in the
dark amber honey division.
Sandy Banis and Sam Banis
placed fourth and fifth,
respectively, with their light
amber honey entries. They are
residents of Mlaalon Viejo.
In t he crafts and hobbies
division, 4-H winners from Costa
Mesa include: Nancy Hastings,
first, second and third; Robby
Hastings, three first prizes; Sally
Kuhlman, first second and third;
and Jennifer Marshall, first and
third. Gwyn Taniey, abo from Costa
Mesa. won three first prizes and
a second place honor.
Stacy Van Liew of El Toro
won first place, and Cyndee
Krajsa of lrviae won second
place in their respective
categories.
Dana Point winners were:
Malcolm Alston, first and second;
Samantha Alston, three first
prizes and one third place; and
Vivienne Alsto, first and second.
Huntington Beacb residents
who won for their arts and crafts
entries were: Craig Catting, two
first prizes; Stacy Cotting,
second; Carol Grabowski, first
and third; Steven Grabowski,
first. second and third; and Julie
Smith, first and aecond place.
Celeste and Colleen Headlee
from Ml11lon Viejo won third
and first place prizes ,
respectively, in each of their
categories.
The Stock.mans from Newport
Beach had several winnera.
Jennifer Stockman won first
place; Ken Stockman won leCOnd
place; and Chris Stockman al.so
won second place.
*** Orange County
fair called
'best ev~r'
"It was the best fair we've ever
had," said Ken Fulk, 1eneral
manager of the Oranae County
Fair.
"The grounds had neve1'
looked better, \he weather waa
perfect, there were new
attractions, excellenit
entertainment, expanded _,...
which added another two acres
for better crowd diltrtbuU.on, and
virtually no security pc'OblerN. It
was a famllJ. falr with an
atmotphere we.,. beell WOrk1ni
hard to ii:hMIYe," runt tllld.
INBA&Y SNACK -Fout-~ Ja AWIOD of Cc.ca
M.a la about to put a dent In hla mocher'1 whole wheat
brwd, entered 1n the Oranp County Fair belc.ed ~
ciampetition. Jo Ann AWiorl took • llCODd place ~ fGr -
AlthoUib .~WU 33$,•
656, clown 7.9 Pl"*" flioln lMt
year'• record crowda, fair
offldAI& were plewd With the
reawta In Uatit of ·~ Uwndl at Other JiilluN ,....,, I
llK'OIM from ~ rw.;
(!puacecl bJ Canlval ,.. .. entry. ShaWa, lncr•••ll 14 "'*"'
CAVALCADE STOCKS TELEVISION
TIME MARCHES ON DEPT. -Laguna Beach, now
rounding the final tum to August in the run of its art
shows, got a recent naponal boost in Time magazine for the
granddaddy of the exhibitions, the Festival of Arts and
Pageant of the Masters.
The double-page spread replete with color photos ran
in Time's "Living" section, which was probably appropriate
since most of the piece was
devoted to the Pageant's
living pictures.
, r..\ Well, there w as a
T-8-1-1-0-1-,-8 .... 1 .. 1~1 ~--r passing ref~rence to the
l ~ ' fact that art1Sts and crafts ----------------~'----.--people are involved in displays on the grounds in an explanation of how the
Festival got started in the first place.
THAT ASIDE, for Time, which often Qas been accused
of shrugging ofl anything involving Southern California
with a sneer, a smirk and a couple of quick quips, the piece
on Laguna's Festival was relatively positive and pretty
accurate.
I mean, this was the same magazine that once took on
the rather complex and scientifically vexing .question of
beach erosion control between Newport Beach and Seal
Beach and cortdensed it down to a couple of paragraphs. It
thus sounded about as simple as sloshing a bit of sand
around in a test tube half filled with salt water.
But I digress. Time came up with a pretty cute line
when it dubbed the Pageant of the Masters as "a living
Louvre." The piece was particularly enchanted with the
amount of money gathered by the Pageant each year and
"Passing Leap" from past Laguna Pageant: Hold atill now . . .
the number of volunteers (500) who stand still during the
season during participation in the living pictures.
Additionally, Time was impressed by the fact that the
Pageant cast, stage crew and directors show the audience
one living picture actually being assembled before their
eyes and then lighted with one quick blink to create the
painting effect.
THE SEQUENCE, howe v e r , wasn't quite the
invention of the current director, Glenn Eytchison. The
festival crew has been pulling that gag for a number of
years just to prove that yes, those livin' pictures are alive.
Those volunteers who participate in paintings or
sculptures posing in the altogether of course could be
expected to draw Time's attention. The magazine piece took
the trouble to recount the difficulties of a nude pageant
performer who, in 1969, suffered the indi~ty of having a
pigeon land on h er body, which was slicked up with
greasepaint.
THE PIGEON LOST its footing on the slippery stuff
and clawed the model, drawing blood in the effort to regain
a claw-hold. The m~el never moved.
There are a lot of stories you could tell about what has
happened to unclothed Pageant performers over thf' years
but that one will do as w ell as any.
Considerable credit in the piece was given to Carl
Callaway, the technical director of Laguna's big show, and
properly so.
TIME'S CORRESPONDENTS, however, did seem a
bit puzzled to understand why so many Laguna people
volunteer to work on the Pageant, noting that it all couldn't
be explained away "by the town's lack of night life ... "
That observation may simply suggest that in Laguna,
Time simply didn't know where to spend its time.
lt\l adrigals eyed
' A televised re-creation of
Henry VIIl'1 court featuring the
•UCI Chamber Slngen hu been
R ·ecognition
Wue authors £The l'rlendl of the Costa Mesa
brary are teeklng c.o.ta Mesa
uth ora for a celebration
~nor1n1 local wrtten.
nominated for a national cable
TV award.
The. production of UCI'a
annual Madrigal Dinner wa1
taped at UCI lut Dec. 16 and
televt.ed by Teleprompter Cable Dec. 24, 28 and 30.
It 1howed co1tumed
performen 11nitn1 traditional
Christmas music with lute and
recorder mu1lc and dialogue
about the famous Kini'• court.
It wu nominated for a 1982
Award for Cableca1ttng
E"cellence (ACE) by the · National Cable Television
A11oclatlon. Steve Bosse
produced the proaram and
Robert Perry WU dinlctor.
The local cable ataUon won't
know unut th• National ,Cable
Protrammtna Confere~ Nov.
16 in Las AneeJee whether lt hu
won.
OellJ "'°' ..... Pflotoe
POPULAR PERCHES -As long as
there is a top seat available on the
Ferris wheel and a horse to hug on
the merry-go-round, there will be
memories of the Fun Zone.
ummer weddlnp
of 17 Or•nse Co•.a
couJll M ue ·described
on Pase 8 3.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of1MDllJN9t8teft
The Balboa Fun Zone is a place
of memories.
It's not very big and it's oever
been very fancy but since 1932 the
cramped waterfront arcade has
been a summertime mecca to kids, a
block-long fantasy land of carnival
rides, lee cr:;eam stands and noisy
pinball machines.
To some, the Fun Zone is a
nostalgia trip. Others bring their
kids back and wonder why they
ever found the place so special.
The Fun Zone hasn't changed
much in its 50 years. The pinball
machines have been replaced with
video games but the Ferris wheel
still stands and the ~umper cars
look like they're still ~ on
their original coat of paint.
Some say the Fun Zone has
become scruffy, dirty and a hangout
for the undesirable. Others swear
it's always been that way.
This past week, in a move that
was expected and, according to
some, long overdue, city leaders in
Newport Beach agreed to let the
arcade be leveled.
It will be replaced with a
three-story office, restaurant and
specialty shop complex.
There wasn't any crying and
there wasn't any pleading to let the
Fun Zone stand. But in ~ing,
some longtime citizens reflected
back on the arcade's heyday.
"I remember when it wu
built," says Ruthelyn Plummer, a \
Balboa native and now a city
council member ... It was a blg deal,
probably the biggest thing in town
next to the Rendezvous Ballroom. ·
"I went down with a friend
and we got summer jobs there in an
archery concession. I think I was 9:
Our job was to pull these arrows
out of the targets. I think pe0ple
won little stuffed animals or
something like that.
)'f
I,,
"I remember that our pay was ·.1
that we got to shoot the arrows
ourselves. Talk about ~lave labor."
'/'
She says the Fun Zone started
going downhill as the years passed.
· "The Fun Zone was great.
There just wasn't anything else like
it. But that's over now. I think it
served its purpose and it's time for .l
something else.·•
I ')
Dora Hill, an early Newport
settler and the city's first woman
mayor, never was a .l:''un £.one fan ..
"What I reme mber was the slot • •
machines. When I was .mayor we '•
made them take the machines out. 1~
All the school kids were spending ,J
the ir lunch money in the slot
machines. ~
"We never permitted our kids ,(!
to go there. At least I don't think
they went there.''
Others remember an illejital
bingo parlor th_at was tucked back
in the arcade and still others recall
the vice squad swarming into the
arcade one time in the early 1950s
and confiscating some X -rated films
that were being shown in a back
room.
Allan Beek grew up on Balboa
Island with a straight line view of
the Fun Zone from his house. His
dad owned the Balboa Island Ferry
and he got over to the arcade
regularly .
"I remember the boatyards that
were there first. You could smell
the copper paint a nd there was an
iron railing running along the
beach.
"I always thought the chief
attraction was the beach in front of
the Fun Zone. It was the most
crowded beach in town. It's where
the boys went to meet the girls.
''There was a float off the
beach with two springboards. The
city ended up giving the beach
away and the.owner put the marina
in. I think that really hurt the Fun
Zone."
Beek says in all his trips to the
arcade, h e only rode on the Ferris
wheel once and "I was scared to
death."
Buzz Person, now a Balboa
attorney, also grew up near the Fun
Zone. He says his folks took him
down to the arcade for his first
Ferris wheel ride when he was four.
"I remember you could pl~y
pinball for a penny. T here.was a
machine with a crane that yo1,1
could try to scoop out candy with.
That was my favorite.
"My mom would give me a
quarter and that would be enough
to keep me there for the whole day.
It was a fun place."
Person says h e took his own
child to the Fun Zone recently for a
ride on the me rry-go-round. He 1 h'
says the Fun Zone isn't what it .. M
once was. "f",
Peg Forgit and her late •
husband, Al. used to run a sport
fishing boat service out of the
Balboa Pavilion. She says they'd
stroll down to the Fun Zone
regularly for a hamburger.
" It was great at the time. 'l<J'
Everyone loved it and the place , t
always seemed jam.med. But times \ .,
c;hange."
The Fun Zone was the
ti ;
brainchild of an Englishman named
Al Anderson. Longtime Bal boa
residents say Anderson had been a
restaurant ch~f in the area and was CJ
a 'ambling man who wanted to '
bnng ~honky-tonk flavor to the ~J. '
Anderson had money p.roblema i
and was forced to auction off the ti
arcade in 1961. Nobody seems sure
whatever happened to him.
, A3 the years went by it aeerried
like the Fun Zone was always ~
about to be replaced with m
iOmethlng else. In the early 1970. i\
wu golr\g to be turned into condOll
and later a spruced-up marina wl~
retail shops.
But nothi~ ever hap~ned. ~ bW.ldoziers never came and Uw
F\&O ZOne remained ~· 'nlere are still thOee out on tht
S.ltri Pen1nlWa who.quietly
Wender whether the Fun Zone
won•t once apin e,ape belftl
turned lnto rW>ble. <
•
'
•ANN &;p4DIM
.•ART HOPPI
•!RMA BOMllCK
.,.
een's night . behind bars has tr8gic ending
D&IJ\ AHN LANDIR8: It bappll*.t ...._
~ ttme ln Belle, Idaho. w.u..m.uun. ,... ..
unaware of the r1lkl lnwlved, i.t tMlr' llf-~
IOft epend a weekend ln jlll ln the hope_ .that he Would learn a 1-lll ln .,..wonaJ &wpOlllllbWty. The
~y had falled to P*Y MO In 1raftk flMI.
Untonunately, the~ he learned w• not
the one hla parenta had intended. He learned that
behind ban a human lite la held che9p. After
*-al boun of beatln9 and tol1W'e ln4'c1ed by
bJa cellmatee, the boy, wnc.. onl~ w• t.llure
to pa_y '6(} ln traffic fi1*, WU .
Thia le nothina new. Teen...aae boy. have been
pna-raped and ldlled ln JaDa before, but the
.,Ublic'• tporance and/or lndlfference to what goes
'Otl ln theee 1.mtitutiona la both frightening and
~Ann, p1ew tell the parenta ln your vut nildi.nc audience that lf they don't know h~ to . ..... ' 1.:sv PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna Beach
( (
~--.,-( , , --} -f--f-i -·-I
t -·-
~ ) .
._..,.,__ ... _..,.._ 6·2.
"Watch tba& perlberal ogling!"
IOIOSCON
BY SIDNEY OMARA
1'aeMay,AqutS ~RIES (March 21-April 19): Romantic
involvement lends spice to life, stimulates creative procem. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius peuona play
im~t roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Partldpation in
community project lends prestige. Watch your
words. strive to be fair, impartial. l.Jbra, Scorpio
and another Taurus play significant roles.
-.i wtth ~ problmn .._ .. , rs. lillnd.lDI them to Jal1 '° 11teecb um a J.lioft" 19 not the ..,..., ...
All .,....ntl 9bould be aware of the rWm &!My Wut., when thef chooee NOT to ball the kid out one more time. -SIGN ME -Ir J HAD A SON, I'D
D CONCERNED
DEA.ft CONCERNED: We t~Hl• ALL h ewene4, _........ we u•e a .. ., Mt. "9
...... , .. Mic ....... " ..... erlme ........ aD Uvtq ereataret .... , .uteb of a petrW, lilUiD1w, .. ~ ..... , .... .
I re1d Gae de&alla of Ute atory 19 dae SpolraM
Review. Coatrary to m1 Immediate uaamp-.
tile 1'7·year-eW bOy waa Mt pq·nMd ud IMatea
to dea .. •Y uNewl erlml••1 •• Tie,.,,...... ...
of W. Mnible crime were Ove 17-year .. w )'MCU.
TMy 1hlek 1tvata1 totlet peper betweea die boy'1
Chicken • ID
waue I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly
there came a tapplna, aa of 80rDeOne loudly rappina,
rapping at my chamber door.
But rather than the ghastly grim and ancient
Raven, which I had every reuon to ex~ lt wu
only a lousy chicken -and a bopping mad chicken
at that.
"How come you animal lovers picketed the
annual Rabbit Breeden Conference at Penn State
Univentty the other day?" it demanded.
"Becauae we humanitarians, aa our placarda
proclaimed, don't want our children eating," I aaid
with a shudder, "Bunny Burgen."
"SO THEY'RE EA TING Chicken McNuggeta
instead," said the bird. "What about saving ua
chickens?"
"Frankly, you're not cute and cuddly enough,"
I said. "We don't eat what's aesthetically pleasing."
"Oh, yeah? What about deer? What about
lambll' Jega?"
"Legs of lamb, if you don't mind. And we don't
eat deer. We eat venison. On the other hand, we
wouldn't eat you if you were only uglier. We can't
abide aerving up ugly ~ like -ugh! -snakes
and slup and cockroaches. •
"You eat snails."
"No, we don't. We eat ea::argot. So you should
definitely strive to be uglier. And it might help your
cause if you~ to sing, too.''
"Sing?"
"Yea, I would certainly hesitate to consume a
meadowlark or a thrwlh. And I know I've never
been aerved a rout canary on a stick. Try humming
a few ban."
''Can a duck whiatle? Honestly, the standards
you humans have for •lectinc which of ua poor,
dumb creatures to consume . . . "
THAT'S ANOTHER THING: you're much too
dumb for your own good. We'd rather die than eat
a smart animal -liXe a chimpanzee, for example.
And it would help if you were more noble-looking."
"Are you telling me rabbits are smart and
noble-looking?"
......... ~ ..... ,.. ........... . ; ..... ...... ' fte IMrUf Mid: '1t
n1 a ..... , w ... SM....__. allow .. ealJ ,_, ,...._ • ••IJ se ..,_. ... HI lamatea 11 die
A* °"'9., JUI, futea4"of'&IM uuJ 11."
' A ktWul ao.... la T:ru, ltut., Dr. Karl Mtulal!!J_ ay· .frlead H ~•H•ltHt, wrote -...-i ... ~ .... , t1a19 ,._lem. TM Noll. "TIM We had been out for a .odal evening ln the home of trtiDe el ......._t." .....,.. M read lty e¥er'J a relative. The halt had recently lnatalled a ltereo J .... , .......,. ud llw {!!:~me.t off leer 19 tMt and he didn't want anyone to mill the po6nt. During eeatrJ. My Martfelt le.ees to Mn. Juice the dinner the music wu deafening .
Petermu. tM DM&l9tr of tbt 17-ynr-old .. Y' At one point I lhouted, "I CAN"r HEAR YOV.
ID ldaM.11 &1911 letter wu" •Pa dozen pffple, Iler WILL YOU TURN THE MUSIC DOWN A
,_ •Ul 90& ave died lll vala. LITTLE?" Mr. B. replied: "IT'S THE MOST
EXPENSIVE D;;lUIPMENT ON THE MARKET
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last ni1ht my ... STEREO, YOV KNOW, YOU'LL GET USED
husband and I came home with terrific headaches. TO lT." I told him I would be deaf before I got UlfJd
to it, but he Peid no attention. What can be done to
prevent future headaches? -DAMAGED
EARDRUMS IN EMPORIA e~ery . pot -DEAR DRUMS: Next tJme doa•t Hk tut die
ateree W'ftned dowa. Aak tlaat It be t11ned OFF.
ExplalD die bnclaelae problem. U die ltoat ref
leave. No apolopes are> necessary.
AIT HOPPE
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
"No, they're cute and cuddly. Pleue try to
keep this all straight. I was thinking of lion.a and
bones. Most of us are very reluctant to eat liona or
horlel.".
What ~ the do'a and don 'ts of teaching your
chJld about the bmu and the bees? Let .Ann
Landers' new booklet,-"~w. What, and When to \'
Tell Your Child About Sex," give you the ground
rules. For yocu copy send 50 cents along with a •
long, stamped, aelf-a_ddressed envelope to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611.
"You eat cows."
"No, we eat beef. And beeves aren't noble.
They're humble. They know their place and it's on.
the barbecue grill"
The chicken pecked thoughtfully at the carpet.
"It's because you domesticated them, ~t? You
domesticated us cows and chickem 90 you could
raise ua and eat ua. Maybe I should g e t undOmesticated .••
''To the contrary," I said. "We never eat the
two most domesticated an1ma1a of all -d<>gll and
cats."
"I thought you ate dogs."
''Never! It's un-American. I think only
Communists and &klmos eat dogs. You should take
a leaf from dogs and cats."
"OKAY. WHAT DO I DO?"
"Well. first get rid of that fishy-eyed at.are. It's
·no coincidence that we love fish and chicken. And
that spastic lurch has got to go."
"\'ou're not too flattering."
"In.stead, you follow me around, wagging your
tail feathers, nuz:zling up against my Jeiand ~
you climb into my lap, purr a little and look up at
me adoringly."
"Look up-at a human being adoringly?" quoth
the chicken. "Nevermore!"
Poor, dumb creature. It would never learn the·
ways of ua humans. I thought, as I took down the
flour for the dumplings.
llMA IOMllCI
ATWIT'S END
Hosts make
clean sweep
There are only two incentives I know for
cleaning a house: You're going to sell it or you're
expecting house guests.
-Of the two, the latter ia the more compelling. I
have aeen women postpone death to move
refrigerators. paint the Insides of cloaets and buff
the driveway.
There is something about letting people aee the
way we really live that start.a the adrenalin.
WITH ME, I DON'T want people to think I uae
the kitchen for cooking, so I clear EVER'Y'nlING
off the counter top. The can opener, the salt and
pepper, the canisters, the paper towels. Everything
goes until I get the~ I'm looking for: a sterile
recovery room.
.. ..
.~
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Define terms, steer
clear of aelf-deception. Re people as they actually
exist. Lunar emphaaia on law, spiritual values and
poaaible overseas journey.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Roadblock to
•· progress la removed; financial status will be
ctarlfied. Individual you formerly respected
diaplaya paucity of idees.
Ignorance not always bliss
J'm also big on bathrooms being color
coordinated and oomfortable -like you're going to
be spending a day or two hanRing around the sink. -
Anticipating needs is another one of my strong
suits. In the guest room, I put cold tablets, N:e
bandages, flashlight, mouthwash, dental floss,
shampoo, a deck of cards and a list of emergency
phone numbers. (There's no phone in the guest
room.) I have no idea why I do this. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don't bang on to losing
proposition -unleee aelf-punisbment is your aim.
Lie-low, do plenty of listening and obeerving. You'll
locate needed information.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Work methods
coJne under scrutiny. You are' capable of
perfonning basic taaka, but seem unable to teach
others.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Good lunar aspect
coincides with romance, creativity, individual sl):le.
apeculation and pbyaical attraction. Diversify.
~~eraatility, remain flexible in face of
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Follow through on
hunch -initial impreaaions are apt to prove
correct. You'll have chance to get on more solid
emotional-finandal ground.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your natural
qualities surge to fonifront -you are able to
ingratiate younelf with individuals whme ideas
may clash with your own.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Cycle ia such
that you locate miasing objects. recoup loaea and ·
increase income potential.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sudden tum of
1 events increases opportunity for success.
Circumstances now favor your efforts.
PJSCD (Feb. 19-March 20): You learn leCl"et
can almost immediately put information to
IWll*h'ltr11ve, profitable u... Older lndivktual lends
t of experience.
·:Q.1-Both vulnerable, aa :~outh 7ou hold: --•. I ' 1
For Our '"lllings We Didn't Know "nl Now"
Department 'Thia country'• decision to drop the
atomic bomb on H1roahima might have been helped
along ~w.e of a pomible mistaken interpretation
of a Japaneee word. Thia from Charlee Berlitz of
the Berlitz Scheola of Languages. After warning
the Japaneee government that we had a devastating
bomb capable of killing thousands of people, they
uaed a Japanese word in their reply, which hat two
PllSOllAlltr Q.&A.
BY MARILYN j\ND HY GAR£>NER
meaninp. One I.a "10 take under consideration." The
other is to "ignore." Apptuently, we cholle to
believe they meant to t,non our wamina -and 90
the bomb Wat dropped.
Q: Rock star RJek sert-lfielcl -ll It tne ate w fond WmseU a aew live-la atrUrteH? Owe of
t.Hae very yoac prl fut wio alw1y1 SU.w
&19emselves at tlae rock alan? -Mn. He .. 1 P ., Jeney City, N.J.
A! No. About thoee eager young girla, the
33-year-old record star ahrup: "I've afwaya found
older women more fun.''
Q: It lffllll daere lA~t too m9Clt 1o.. '"t
betweea Prlaee CIP,vlel' lovely bride, Pn.ceta Dt.
GOif i 011 lllDGf
ud Iler new 1lster·lD-law, PrlDcfta A.Dile. Wut I'd
lite to bow Is -bow doet DI get aloq witla lier
new aat. Prtaceta Marpret? -OUvta G., New
Bava, Colla.
A: Very well indeed, according to palace
insiders. They also appreciate each other's
delightful aense of humor.
Send your quertiona to Hy Gardner, "GI.ad
You Asked That," In care of the Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 19620, Irvine, Calif. 92714. Marilyn and Hy
Gardner' will answer as many quest/om a.t they can
In tMJr column. but the volume of mail makes
pent:>tW replies impoalble.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
THERE MUST BE
MOJ\E TO LIFE
THAN THIS,
OR WM~T
010 1 COM!
HERi! FOR?
t
Maybe because everyone does it. When we
visited our in-laws in Florida a few years ago a sign
flaP-ped on the front door that read ''THIS HOUSE, "'
IS CLEAN! We've worked like dogs in this place for~
three days. Please notice the return air vents that
have been vacuumed. Signed, The Management."
Probably the most extreme cue of Visitors
Fever I have ever witnessed waa a few summers
ago when I visited relatives in the Midwest. An
uncle met me in the center of town to direct me to
the house. "You've got to do aomething about thoee
women," he said, "They're killing themselves." ..
' ' THE HOUSE WAS QUIET when we got there.
Blooming flowers lined the walk, the roots still
square from the plastic pots. The pile of trash in the
garage waa stacked high with new carpet remnanta, ~
discarded boxes that held kitchen tile and light
fixtures. Inside the odor o! wallj>aper paste and
paint permeated the air. A WET PAINT sign lined • 1 the stairway. One aunt waa screwing a chrome ,
towel bar in the bathroom wall, while the other one , 0 hung shower curtains from a box. ·, •
They looked up startled, "We're just picki.na up i·
a bit."
"Then ru just hana up my old rap." I said. I
put down the piece of luggage with the price tag
atill on it and the key. still on the handle and
unpacked a brand new wardrobe, includln1:......
underwear.
W4!'re all alike.
.+&1711 <:> A5 O JU •75'
::1h• bidding baa proceeded:
~..tai Eut 8Mdi
BY QHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
What do you bid now? •
A.-There is a popular belief
that. as a passed hand, 7ou
have to jump at your flrat
turn to show that you have
near openJn1 bid values.
That ia a fallac7 -you
ahould jump only when YC!U
know where your aide la p
Inf. Here, detplte a hand
which you might b&ve open·
ed. you ahould do no more
the.n respond one 1pide.
spades with only a five-urd
auJt, you can't raise with
)'Our doubleton. You don't
have a heart stopper, 10 no
trump is out, and you surely
don't want to rebid 7our rat·
t.y five-card diamond ault.
The solution ia to malte a
temporldng, bid of three
cJubs. That wUl allow-pariner
to place the contract. ln no
trump If he has heart.a ato~
ped. If he rebids his spades
apln, you have enourh t.o
raise t.o game.
::J <:> I • 'l
·;.What action do you te.ke?
::A. -There ia nothln11ou can
!~o ~itb any del"" of aafet1.
:j\ bid of two apad .. would be
:;; virtuaJ pme force and
·:COuld euil! pt 7our aide too
·:il1h. You don't have enough ::to venture a penalty double, =-.net 7ou need mol'9 than A·x
~ bffrta to support partner' a :~uit. Pua and hope that part· ··ter cu r.open the blddJng.
Q.1-At South, vulnerable,
)'OU hold:
•AKQ11 <:7 A&l72 Oii •7
The biddlns ha• proceeded: ,._. W.t N_.. £ut
~ •:t • I • OW. r ...
I •f ' i : iWhal ld!On de> you take?
·~.-We ha•• peat raped
!:for partner'• low:le•tl peaa.1·
, •11 doubles, e1pedal17 when
the opponents won't make
game even if they make tbeir
doubled contract. However,
t.o every rule there are ex·
ceptlona, and thla 11 one of
thoae. You almoet aurely
have game, perhapa even
alam, in one ot the majors.
We would jump lo three
heart.a. Thia should convey t.o
partner that 7ou don't think
that any penalty 7ou mey ••·
tract from the opponents
could be worth your proepec-
tlve pin from endlnr ttt.
rubber.
Q.S-Neither vulnerablt. 11
So"th )'OU bold;
•106 <:>At7 OMI •AMII
The blddhlJ l9U pneaadld:
...... P.uit ..... ·-.i • .... t• ... ~
2 • p.,. 2NT P ... s• p.,. 1
What do 7ou bid now?
A.-You can bet 7our Ille
that, on this auetlon, partner
h&I a elnslet.on la one of the
red auli. and. almoet 1urel7,
a 1Ja-eud epade auf t. Con.in·
ly, no truftlP ta not the spot
wbere you want to )la7. 8Jd
• four apJdff. Partatr won't
Hpeft mON tha.a a double-
ton b'om JOU, but 70Ur thl'M
a"' ahould be a welcome
tllh\' to him. If a oontraet In
apacMt 11 un'4nable, be can
aJw111 till• you bAck .. to
eluba.
Q.4-Both val .. rable. aa
lout• 1ou bold:
•AQI c::?Qlft OA •cuota
The bidding bu proceeded: s .. tJi Welt Nerdi IAtt
•• J c:::1 1 0 ...
?
What do you bid now?
A.-The blddln1 hae not
developed aa you mlaht have
hoped. Even thouah 7ou do
not have the nc:ommended
dlatrlbuUon, the onJ7 ap-
petiana r.bid ta two no
trump. To rebid your clubt
Jutt beeauae JOU have a ~'•
card 1ult would 1u1p1t to
partner that 7ou have • far
better suit.
Q.1-E:att·Weet vulnerable,
u South you hold:
•&1141 Otl Olll •&Qll
The blcldl111 bu proe.ded:
..... W.t N_.. I:.&
PaM P .... I O l <:7 r
Partner mlJbt b&ve a 1hadld
opanlnt bid wl&b JtttJe tup-
port for apacMt, and JOU don't
want to put him under
preaeurt.
Q.t-Aa South, -vulnerable,
1ou hold1
" •U <:>171 OAJIN •AK4
The Wddia1 ha proeetded:
Nairdl Sul ._.Wei&
1• ,_IO PMa ..... ' WM\ dO fO'I Wd eow'l
A.-llaee C:!c."' ·~ ••• ..... to
•
Mrs. John Mackintosh Mrs. Robert Newell
Mackintosh -Terry Newell -Schwarz
Whitney Ann Terry, daughter of Bernard and Nancie
Terry of Newport Beach, and John Triplett Estes
Mackintosh, son of William G . ~tes and Eva Mackintosh of
Denver, Colo, were married July 10 in Denver. After a
wedding trip to Glenwood Springs, Colo., they are residing
in Denver.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church was the setting for
the marriage of Mary Kay Schwatz, of Corona del Mar,
and Hobert Hradley Newell, of Newport Beach. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Schwarz, and he is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Newell of Glendora. The couple
is living in Newport Beach after a honeymoon to Hawaii.
Jones Layton
Kristine R. LaYlOn and Dr. Jeffrey P. Jones
were married at St. Andrews PreslJyterian
Church , Newport Beach, with a reception·
following at the Irvine Coast Country Club.
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rex E. Layton of
Newport Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jones
of Northridge.
Gabriel -Cawthon
Cari Dawn Cawthon and Michael Gary
Gabriel, married in Laguna Beach, are at home
in San Juan Capistrano. Their parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Cawthon of Laguna Niguel and
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gabriel of Incline Villa~e. Nev. The newlyweds attended Saddleback
Colleg_e in Mission Viejo.
Goodman -Pethtel
Kimberli Pethtel and Stephen Goodman,
married aboard the S.S. Azure Seas, San Pedro,
are at home in Irvine after a wedding trip to
Mexico. Their parents are B.D. Pethtel, of
Huntington Beach, and Sid Goodman, o f
Cerritos.
Bunnell -Sheldon
Mr. and Mrs. Earnest J . Bunnell, nee Suzy
Aileen Sheldon, are residing in Costa Mesa
following their wedding in St. John the Baptist
Church and a honeymoon in Hawaii. The bride is
the daughter of Helen Sheldon of Santa Maria
and the bridegroom's parents are the James P .
Bunnells of Loveland, Ohio.
Kerstner -Koll
Marth a Lee Koll and Douglas Ralph
Kerstner were married at the First Methodist
Church of Hollywood, with a dinner reception
following in the bride's home. Their parents are
Mr .. and Mrs. Edwin Lee Koll of Los Angeles and
, Newport Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M.
Kerstner of Fullerton. The couple will reside in
Los Angeles. Mrs. Douglas Kerstner
Mr. and Mrs. David Schweikert Jr.
Schweikert -Doner
Debra Suzanne Doner and David
MacDonald Schweickert, married in Our Lady of I
Mount Carmel in Newport Beach, are
honeymoontnc ln Europe. Their ~nu are
Rob9l't and E\telyn DQ,ner, of Newport Beech and
David imd Cathy SchwetcMrt, ai.o of Newpcirt.
The~ owna Schwekun Real'Y ancf the
brideteecho in 'l\mtin Unlfted School Dlstr1ct:
Mrs. Robert Skafidas
F: . . .... .
Mrs. Brian Sullivan
Sullivan -Blake ·'
St. J ohn Vianney Chapel, Balboa Ialand, was the ·:~· ' ~
setting for the marriage of Therese Ann (Tracie) Blake, ·t '1 :
daughter of M ichael and Mary Blake of Newport Beach. ~I t
and Brian Patrick Sullivan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel 7 ·t:
Francis Sullivan of Fairfield, Conn. The newlyweds are · · -• :
residing in Philadelphia, Pa. ;
~ . .
Bullard -Leone
Susan Marie Leone and Robert Michael .
Bulla r d, married in the Congregationalf." ·
Community Church of Corona del Mar, are a\.:.:_ "
home in Newport Beach following a weddinL · -
trip to Puerto Vallarta. Their parents are JoM···
Leone Jr. of Valencia and Linda Leone of Cos'1i
Mesa and the George Bullards of Newpo~
Beach. .~:. ~-G· Diven -Gwinup
.. uaT.
Dayna Gayle Gwinup and Steven Cor~· ··
Diven, married at the Gorda Liz Restaurant iir,vrti .
Newport Beach, are at home in Galveston, T exas'cmf'
after honeymooning in the Virgin Islands. Thetmr"
bride is the daughter of Dr. Grant Owinup~ ·
Newport Beach and Mrs. James G. Simmons ornoo
Costa Mesa. The bridegroom as the son of R. H!jaw :.
Diven, of Tucson. Ariz .. and Betty O'Rourke of"dns-
Irvine.
Jeffers -Attai
nq
Kenneth R. Jeffers of Laguna Niguel and·'b
Shookoh A. Attai of Tehran, Iran were married 1db
during a Baha'i wedding ceremony in Laguna
Niguel, attended by more than 250 friends frommq
around the world. si..l
.'.X>I
Arnesen -Lrownove~~
riJo
Shelly Ann Crownover and Reid HlJ
Arnesen, rnapied in the Naval Training Center~~
North Chap41 in San Diego, are at home in Saf}~b
Diego following a honeymoon to Hawaii. TheY. 1
are both graduates of San Diego State6tb
University. Their parents are Joe and Je~rl
Crownover of San Diego and Marilyn and Ralp~
Arnesen of Newport Beach.
Skafidas -Bane cwp
11tni
•am
C~~hia Annette Bane and Robert Pa~arlt Skafi married In St. James Episcopal Church, .
Newport Beach, are at home in Miami Springs, :>tu '
Fla. Their parents are Mrs. Mary Anne Bane of
Coeta Mesa, Dr. Gilbert W. Bane of Wrightsville.,vs
Beach, N .C. and the Uregory Skafidases ofnO
Lewisville, N.t..:.
• Hawail w the hone~ ....... tf
Mr. and Mrl. Paul Richard rre.m.n. nee
Jane Peftfold. f their mal'Nll •
_.. paninta of the bride and Wanwa
I rriilman Of Newpot\ llliCh .... Paren• Of .. ~ The newl.yWd are iWldlnl In Bin
~Taal. --
: Glndale Fe4enl bu dropped lta ~
rate l point to 15 W percent for alnCle-
rate reflecta. in put. the U.S. Supreme
'• ~nt de la Cuesta decillon upholdlna
-ale-clauaee by federally~ha.rtenid aavlnp
Joana. Glendale Federal Mid.
SllicGa System• tac., of Tustin, had a 1cm of
,000 or 8 centa per ahare for the third quarter.
·Thia compares with a net income of $243,000,
cents, in the previous year.
· SWoon Systems spedallzes ln the design and
uction of Integrated circuits.. .
: Tile Good Sport has opened ln FOWltain Valley
52 Warner Avenue.
The Good Sport often sporting equipment and
1 for children and adult.a.
Edward Twbatag opened the store with Bob
OD.
. The Good Sport will sponsor a 5K and lOK run
. 11 at Mile Square Park. •'
I.Datum Ille. of Anaheim, haa introduced a
h cartridge tape atreaoling aut.yst.em for the
Series/I computer, providing data storage
p for Winchester and removal>le dDc drives.
~ Employing a tape speed of 90 inchet per
, the Model DSC 50 is ~ to obtain a
• utilization factor of approximately 97 percent. •
::Ronald B. Bart of Anaheim hu Joined Marni
Ir cUp, lac. of Newport Beach, inves1ment
~estate brokers, as a sales asaociate. He wu with
A.&&will Burke ln Orange. I! Alao joining the firm are: ,;
· -C. Brlu Wolf of Tustin. who waa with
well Banker in Santa Ana.
-Roser S. Marca1teD of Anaheim. who waa w18l Cushman & Wakefield ln Newport Beach. ~ .
~ l\eld AdverU1lDI .. _. Pabllc RelatloH of
' N6vport Beach has been named the public relations
a~ for Coppenree Batlnea1 Park, a 16-acre,
infed-use business park ln Costa Mesa.
~ TRW lac. has signed a five-year, $4.6 million le~ for the HeW90n Garden Office Building ln the
H~n-Daon Torrance Office Park in Torrance.
~The 62,832-square-foot building will be uaed aa
a tiarch-and-d evelo pment facility for TRW's
1 de and space systems group. Occupancy 18
: ala , Sept. L
WALKING THE RAILS -A worlman walks
along top of rails in Miami which are to. be
used in Miami's Metro-rail ~tern now being,
The bul..kiiq Wll ~ by HUI ..._.
AINela'" of IMne.
Pacific )11t1&l Life la11raace C•mfa•1
promo1ed Larq J. Cul '° ..a.tent vice ......-.i. fixed income, aecwitlel, and .,._..,. 1'iln-. to
uallt.ant vice p&wlldent, lndlvtdual employee blDetit
p1anL Both are relldenta of lAIUna 8-Ch.
Btraba•m A11ociatet, m1na1ernent
CONUli.nta .pec1.uz1na 1n ~ and nW'Udna.
haa moved to lar&et facllit:lel In co.ta Me1a at 18Q
Boa Vista. Wlll.lam S. Blnba•m la pnaident.
Dr. Baney L. Jlol•te of Newport Beach WM
awarded fellowship In the Academy of General
Dentlmy dUJ'ina the SJ'OUP'• 30th annual meeting
In lbton. He completed more than SOO conUnuJ.ng
educetion cred.ita within 10 yean.
Laau:na Hilla resident LJU ft. Sebeller haa
been iappolnted manager of Bull of America'•
Laguna Niguel branch. She wu assistant vice
president at the LaRUnA Be.ch branch. She abo baa
been at the San Clemente and Fountain Valley
branches.
James R . Qundt has joined Security Paclflc
National Ban aa vice .president and manager of lta
Newport Beach flnancial management center.
Tllad C. Lowery has joined Real E1tate
MartetlDlfMuagemeDt in Santa Ana. He waa vice
president and director of McComba Management
Company, Inc., a real eatate ayndication and
management firm,
Rockwell starts
design center
The Newport Beach baaed electronic devices
division of Rockwell IntemaUonal Corporation has
established a remote design cent.er ln San Diego to
support planned expansion of its aemloonductor line
and to help cope with a shortage of Integrated
circuit design eJl8ineera.
The center, which employs 19 design engineers
. working on VLSI logic and dn:ultry, haa completed
ita first chip design.
Employmenf la expected to expand over the
next two years. nie growth will come from adding
wactuatea aa well as experienced englneen.
uesa~ at the center will largely support
Rockwell • new CMOS capabWtie11 In it.I NeWport
Beach plant. Some will involve ~ng C?dOS
versions of exlsting NM~ proc1uc:ta:io~~· 5 MHz, CMOS R65o2 CPU la amonc micrppi r
desigm acheduled for completion by J~ •
oonstructed. These rails will be transported to
the sit.es under construction as they are needed.
•
. ~ -dllil:.t;: -~et ,.o:~ .. ""' rN'ntri .:-..:·:.·=we-&: .... -ilR'•·M' IMM:i.~ ., INIU .. ANOl COMllANV, • 011111 Of 11111\t o,ot1U1111 Ill • ,, .• Wi
T..-.. ~ ........... '= ''''"'•• lt•t• HOtPllll, 1101 IAD ... --"WJL'!!..iL:~~ •II 11 1 T,__.,.,.~ Her•or 1111d., Ooet1 MMI, i"' I AD ACM A Jlf D
liilililt. ~ ~ fr':i.:!u.': ~ N~AL : r J.: '.:::. "'.:•.: .:; P 8 T I T I 0 N T 0
• ......,llld ~ ... , •• , llTATl ITO"I· INC'..t.. llld p11•ll11y ope11td 111d r••d for ADllllNmD DTATSNO.
• ,_... ......... tw1 ""*"'I"' .one M: ,.,, ......... AIHlll '!! t.'!'!_ -;=""""' lnetru!Mflt No. 111'8, 111 IOor, "'11trt111, tool• 111• To .U ~ tillMCfd ,-._
Ne. 1 '.:L..'!'_.-~ 10111. '••• 1lff, of Of 111 -.ulp111ont ~to"~ d ·-· tm. et~....,....-' "•nro or or1111e 001111ty .. ,,.,.,,., .. -"•P•lr/rHIH• crHU.on •• oo::;::
---· Clltwllll. Md ~ 081tf0fllle Md 114.1reuM« to t ..-..no rOOfl of ........ r .... ' CHdltDrt "' w-_,. ""' Httel11 Noll•• of OOf1111t ost.1111 ~oto.n.M ,._.,-~ ....,_ .. o Zadech and pen= wbO v:.--=:ooor~=-:.~· rooorded "''" .,, ..... ""'.'".•111011 ,., pft11'1, toll, Oftf may be~ aud
In a':o :"::',.•••NA of =~o0f~1=; 0 :::'-:i.r~·~:"~ in tM wW and/or te: OMollt ,_.,...of Mid OOl#lty, _. unctor enct purwt to 1M1 Dlld ,_.... ..-.. r001nf .......,... A peddon hM bee miid r-= .r:::"IU':.:.c'tof~ Tl'llll ... M Pllbllo lllOUOrl 1of Clllfl, down to lllMlOUOll; a ... .,.... by ISorodly z.cs.:h Ua cM •
..::. of .. UftlMid ..... of .._.. moMY of tN Unllild..... dOtOllOrllM IOnt ''"P'.1. llHN. tru,..nor Cow1 ol Or~
.. __._~ __..__..... ~1CMftl*'1af-* wood n1llera, 1to.: 3. ,.,,, ... Coun•v requeaUn1 that -·-.-. 1 -• ..,_ .....,_ to Mid Trutt• drewn on 1.,.... dlMtlOt.-. -.... ,.....: 4, ...-.. ,,
to llld T""'91 drewn on • ..., °' llMlonlf blnll, 1 1t•te rx ltdlrll PllOtl pan1; 1. o.. 111 loll* °' D o r o ' b y Z a d a c h b • :::wi ~· • : °' =: ,Cr9d11""'°"·cw1 ..... Of '9cMrlll mot11 fluhlne: e. fllepluo appointed H paraonal
or • °' 1 :== 1nd I01n 111001111011 dttltlOr..S °' d9IMQ9d ~. 1-~catlw to ~ :,~1rr: • .,,, '°'" 11100 .11011 111 INe 1ta1o. .. "'° """' .. n ...... ry ,, ,.,,,~ 1t1•• ~ of Hetbart S&anlef
__ ..__ ~ ~~ ~ ont,.noe 10 l"lr1t AlftOFIOlll Tit .. ._.. ... In -danOI wttll ,_. z .ad teh ( n de r • h • .... ...... --"' .....,._. ·-lnlurWIOO Colnpeny ......cs It 114 8lld epeoltlaelloNI t""91ot. a a c u • ........ OOl'INlttdon looeled It 1!.Mt Fifth Su.et, lrlttll 01tY of lanta ftrtle,.nco Wlll be l"llltd to lndepandent ~don UO N. Mtlll It .. l1nt1 Ant, An, Collfomle, 111 tt-.t rfOht, Ullt Ind bldd1r1 property approvtct •• of J'.lltatM~. The~ • ~-::.='to~== =-:-i::CS0.:.~.:'1n": ~t.:n~. :_ :,'~ it tat for ln No
by" ""'8r Nld Dlld of TNll In IN Pf01*tY lltuai.d In Mid County Ctllfornla Ad1t1lnl1t,.U11t Code. 3 at 700 Ovk: W
PFot*tr ......, In 1111ct ~ Md atete dllcrlbed • AppllcatloNI tot prettiranc1 ""'*be Welt. ln the Oty of S.nia Ind "*'° .,_.,... ae: A condominium compolld ot: 111bll'lltted 10 thl arna11 lklllMee Ana Ca1Jfomla on Aua1.11t
...... ~_t!!.!!TtaotNo.Of~ PAfllCIL1: Oflla1, 1123 14th atr .. t , '"' lee2at0!30a.m
"' --c;;ounty ---Unit No . 1, of tl'lat 01rt1ln lact_..to, CA "414, not ... -. U o',.. ~ • ..._ ltate ot Cafftornl1, •• Ptf map condominium proJoct lflown and thin 11111 (51 c1t1ndar d1y1 In II' YO 1P11-..1. to w.-
NOOrdld In 9cic* 112, P1181117 to dleortbed on tM CCNICIOmlulum plan ldvMOI of bid OC*llncl ON, Tilll IJ'91ltina of the petidon, you
: ~ : ~~~ r900rded Julll 13, 1975 In Bo°* proterenc1 1ppf111 fo protect• lhou1d either appear at the
of __ ... t 11429, P1911754 of otnclll record• wMil tn. 111lm1ted profect OOlt hearlno and itate yot,ar ..., coun "I· Ind In thl daclarlttori of cownanta, a!IQOeda 115,000. • f l l • Th• atre11 1ddr1u or other condlUonl Ind rllttldtone = ltd propoeall muat bl llltlmlttld obffitlona or l e wr tten common d11lgn1tlon ol 11ld tn. enlbllno doclHMnt 111 ror the intlre work d11a1tb1d ob tlona with the court ~~~ Cllub Dr1w, a plan tor condominium OWlllf1lhlp ltllrlltl. Delllltlonl from pl-Ind be ore the hearing. Yoµr
,..:me end addr111 or th• ~.:715':; ~~ ~ ::=:-:"80::."r'Ofbe,.::.i::~ appearance may be ln penon
bllllflctaty at whole reciu-1 thl ot Mid <>r.noa County. bide. Thi Deplrtl'lllnl llall thl riaflt or by your attorney .
1111 " blilllO ooncluCtld: ~ boeottng 1111r1trom 111 o11. oaa. to wa1w any lrr1Q111111ty 1n 1 bid'" Of I F Y 0 U A R E A l"ederel t111tng1 ind Loin m1n1rlia 1nc1 ..111 GUiit l'l)'drOClrbon to Ntact lllY Of' Ill bld9. CRED. il'I'OR or a con~t
AllodlUon. 300 E.lllt li.t• 8tfllt, 1Ubltancae &y wh•t-n1me No bid wlll bl COOllCIWld ""'-h crecfj the ~eed you fll1ctl1nda, C1lllornt1 92113. known ttlll ari lylng l*ow 1 ~th I• mid• on 1 111nd1rd lorm torf"-to .::::::::::: ....... •'--D11'9c110ne to thl .O-property of llOO fell lrom 1111111rtac1 of Nkl turntllhed by 1111 Dlpar11'111111 and ta muat ""'your QIU.Ila""""''""' may b1 obt1tn1d by r1q1111t1ng land, but without the right ot entry mad• tn 1coordanc1 with th• court or preael'lt lt to the
111¥ fl Wl'ltlng "°"'Iha blntflcl"Y upon fftY portion of thl lllrllCI of INlructtoN to 8tddtra." peraonal repreaentatlv• within 10 d?.: rrom lh• llret Mid lend 10 tlka. matklt, mini. PrOIC)ICltw~~•llM'llnl appointed by the court P.~ .... n of ...... ~:.... without uplora or drltl for 11m1, 11 and obtain l'lan•. epac;fflcatlona and within four months from tlie .._, -r -._ '-* In 1111 oeld ,_dad J11111 bid rOl'ml by cllllng at « rnalllna I -*'' Of' -ant)'. UPf-« 21. 1978 1n Book 11779. Pega t86& r.qUllt 10 the OfflCA of thl Chia( ot date of flral l11uance of
Implied II to title, ~~ of offletll racorda. Plant Op1t1tlona II th• 1bo111 lett.en M provided ln Section
lllCMTlbl'IWlOll to llfllf)' tn. ~ PARCEl. 2 lddr-. tllephone number (714) 700 of the Probete Code ot
1111ano1 ctua on t111 note Of not11 An llndMdld 111ett1 "''-' 1n 957.5212 Th · f _,,. by Mid Dlld of TNll. to and to tlll common •• 01 Mid A ~1 bOnd, Standlfd Form California. e time or
wit: Un. 103."4, pl\ll tlll lckwlnG proilet b1tng l\Hthlr dlac:tlbad M 807 In the _,,,t of ntty P«Clflf Of fil.lng claims wW not ~ 11t1m111C1 co111. 111p1n111 1nil ro11owa: tlll contract prlee muet .ccompany prior to four months from
ld111n011 at 1M ttma of thl '8:l:. Lot 1 of TrlCI No. 8720, N lhown 1v1ry contnc t ln11ollllng an the date of the heorlna Pllbbtlon of thll Hotlol of .,.; on 1 map recorded In Book 355, 1Xp1ndllur1 In nc111•ol 125,· tJced bave
TN11111 1111 Ind 1xpeM11 --• PtlQll 21 and 22 of mllcllaneoua 000.00. no • · 101.ff. ...,R'"' OWNER m1p1 record• of 11td Orange Th• 1ucc111tul bidder wltl l>e YOU MAY EXAMINE the NOTICE TO PRO.... • • eoun.Y required to 1xlC\lt1 • contractUflll file kept by the court. If )'C>U
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A Excepting th1r1rrom 111 unit• 'l"'ment In th• rorm or • are lnterelted In &he est.a~ DI! ED 0 F TRUST , DATED lhowrl Ind dllcrlbed on 1111 plan " tand1td Agr11m1nt, Form 2" file __, ,_. with NOVEMBER 17. 1980. UNLE88 and In the Cllclatlllon whldl ahall bl binding ""°" the you may a ·--·
YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT The 11r111 addreu or oth1r s 1111 or C1tllornl1 only 11pon the court to recelve lpeda1 YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE common dHlgn11ton o r Hid IPCH'0\111by1111 Stall. no\lce of the Inventory of
SOU> AT A PUBLIC SAL!.. IF YOU l>'oplrty .. purported to bl: 313 In -danol with Iha prOYlalona eetate a11et1 and of the NEED AN EXPLANATION Of THE Altt latll Colla M-. CA 92827 of Sactton 1770 of the Labor Coda, i I d NATURE OF THE PROCEl!DINQ Said .... wtll bl made wtthOUt thl O.partment hit 11certaln1d pet t ona, ~ccount1 al'I
· AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CCMNint Of -ranty, expr ... Of' ttill Ille Olfll"ll P'9Vlllln0 r1111 of reportl delcribed ln Section
COHTACT A LAWYER. ~ •• to lltla. pan I Ion Of Wlgll eppllclbll In the county In 1200.5 of the California Dated: Jut>/ 1. 1"2 ~to lltlafy Ille unplld wtlldl tn. won. la to bl Oorll 1r1 Probete C.ode. ~ 1~NCIAL blllrlCI c1u1 on 1111 note rx notae tho11 r1t11 11t1bt1ah1d and HeleD Kemble Atter-.e,y
TN1111 ' ·· ~1~.~ ~: ~ fnd~~~:.·~~io!,~~ =•:t .:W: at Law, 711 OraQe G ... v~
Phllllp A. Broelerldl. 11t1m111C1 co•I•. 1xp1n111 anc1 wega r1t11.,. on NI It lhl Offloe Ave,. #St5, Soe~ P ... 4eaa, ~ adll-It lhl tlml of tlll ~ of lhl Chllf of P\anl OPl'•t~. CA tllSt; (US) IU-lltl. 300 EM\ Se.ta I t .. 8'1. l)Ubllcatlon of lhll Notlol of Sale: F1lr11lew Ho1pt11t 1nd II the Publlibed Orange Cout
::._,., Callfomla 92373 l7t1.00. NOTICC TO ~m~:::~antal Dally Pilot, Au,uat 2, 3, 9,
(714) 7t3-HIO ~ OWNIR Sii• ln1p1cllon wttl bl h1ld 1982 Publtafllel Orange Cout Dally YOU AM .. DU'AUU UND1J1 A TllMday, AUQUll 17. 1982 10:00 3432-82
Pilot, Jut>/ 19, 29 Ind AUOUll 2, DI ID 0' TltU 8 T, DA TID Lm.
1982 3178-&2 NOYIMHlt U, 1Mt. UNLIH ,..,.._ ...._.....,... PlllJC NOTICE
YOU TAKI ACTIOM TO ...oftCT vt.tlf........ . --------------------YOUR ,.ltO,.l .. TV, IT MAY H C ..... If ""'9 Ol*ltklna • C ...... ltoliOMI Wiier PUBUC llOTIC( 80&.D AT A l'UMJC 8Al.L • YOU PubUehld Orange Coaat Dally OualeJ ~ ~
SANTA IUJtCUIWTA NDD AM UJlt.ANATION CH' THE Pllol, Aug. 2. 9. 11142 '-"' --......
••---T NATutta Of' THI HIOCllDINQ ~2 -....._.A-. ....... .. ;;;r;t;o;"' AGAINST YOU, YOU aHOULD ..._....,CA -
l'UMJC HUMtQ °" COWTACT A L.AWYD. l'tllJC NOTICE NOTICI °" ~ HIAMeO °"""" ...-Ol.....,M. D~~~:mb~· mL£ AMJCAnc:-'~ WAITI :~C1-~= INSURANCE COMPANY, MN-11141 DIKtuW •CMMWJtTI
'Ae&mU,. .a1•11 STUDY • Cellfoml• corponitlon NOJ'lei: OF DEATH OF ~ ......... DhelW9I
Th• State Water R11011rc11 :"s.=~ HERSCHEL R. SWANSON D11tr1tlnr .,.._....., ~tr~!5°if.~. ~n=~-~ 114 Eaet Flft1I 8'NOI AND OP PETITJON TO ~ ._::.,n .,_.... Protec11on Aaer1CY r1aa app<<Wld Senta Ana, CA 92702 ADMINISTER ESTA TE NO. eL Or-. c..., grent funding' tor 1 w1ter (7141 S&8-32tl A-114111. Tllo County 8anltetlon Olltrtcta Of
'9Clarnltlon tacmtlll~ P11btJatllel Orange Cout Dally T all heirs. benefic:iaries, °'*'Ill County (CSDOC) ,.._ flld a
wttl*t 1111 8antl Margarita ., Piiot, JvkV 19, 2'. Aug. 2. 1982. 0 r1port of w1at1 dl1ch1rg1 and Dtetrlct end hu requited th l\'•1...a2 redltora and contingent apptlad for requlr~ll lM the
=NP0r1andanlnlllr "'8JC NOTICE creditors of Hersch el R. dl9Cllllrg1ofwut. 11lntotn.Paclftc NPOr1 be Pfeperod • part SwanlOll and penona who ac.n. Thi pr~ Ol'dlr wll be or the tac1ttt111 plen. The Santa NOTICI CH' ,,.,.,..... SAU may be otberwl.le interested • Joint Permit ""*' by botfld !."° M1r91rita Wiler Otetrict M L.Md ~ Ne. 10DS1t2-a ln the will and/ estate· R 1 g Ion I I Bo Ir d In I •• e Agency I• r1aponalbt1 tor T.&...., t-.e or · Enlltronn11nta1 Protec:tlOn ~
pt9p0r8Uon of lhl ltudy documenta BENEFICIAL SERVICE CO. 11 A petition haa been fl.led (EPA). Thi EPA hH t1nt1ftv1ly and l'lu r-lly COt'llplatlCI the duly llPl)Olnted Trutt11 undlr lhl by Edith T. Swanaon ln the dlclded to grant a vartanoa lrom
dratt IUMl'onmantll 1mpaet r..,-. tollowlna ~bid died of truat Superior Court of Orange th• ••con d "Y t "•' m • n t A PllbllC '-tncl for~ of WILL ltLl AT PU9LIC AUC~ c t e ti I that ~ .. of the a-i Wfltlr th• dratt 1nv1ronm1nt1I lmp1ct TO T~ HIGHEST BtDOER FOA EodulntbyTrequw~n~on be Act purwt~ 301(tl) to
NPOr1 1111 .,_, ICNdulld • 1*1 CASH (peyabll at t1m1 Of .... In • S Iha CSOOC ' of th• r1g1111r Dl1trtct Bo1rd llwful moM'f of thl Unhed StlWI) appointed a • personal On the bllil of prlllr'Mllry atlEff
mMtlng at 2:00 p.m .. Monday. ,.11ght, tltll Ind lnt.-t conwyect repreeentative to adminlater ravl-ind 1ppllc1t1on or tawtul ~ te, 1N2. Thi '-11'1!1 wllt be to Ind now held by It under Mid th estate of Herschel R. 111ndard1 and raout1Uon1, tll•
hlldlnthlDlltrtctOfftollloclled•t D11d of Tru11 tn th• property Swe anion (under \he~ .... • ~~~ ~ 21204 EMt La Pu Roed, M1111on hll'•..,.., dllcrlbld: • eon ..... Boarcf. a.... ....... __ ..
v1110. CA. A copy of Ill• dr•ll T "u 8 T 0 R : M I c HA E L Independent Administration •t•°""Y PfopGIOI to '9!' ..... ~ 1t111tron1Mnt1I lmp1ct report I• THOAHTOH 1 man1ld man of Estates Act). The petition dllCtlarge ,.qulrerMnl• ,,.......,~
IWlllllbtl for ~ It tn. Olltrlcl BENEFICIARY: FAR WEIT ill let for heuing ln Dept. 1lllu1nl llmll1tlon1 Ind 1pacl•
oflloll. WrlttM COfMllfttl l'lllY be 8 A v I H G 8 A N 0 L 0 A H N 3 700 Ci . Center condition•. P1r1on• wlehlng lo IUOmllted prtor to or at ltll Pllbllc ASSOCIATION, 1 oorpcntton o. at VlC comment upon cw ObtlCt to tfll
'-Ina. RICOf'dld AUOU91 13. 1H 1 .. Drive. Weat, In the City of propoald d':r raqulremlnta
Publi.tlld Or:J8 Coaet Dally lnetr. No. 1121t In boot! 14190, Santa Ana, California on -lnlllted to -.:.,-::
Piiot ..,.._ 2. 1 3447.a2 = ':: :_ O:::.=::-~ August 18, 1982 at 9:30 a.m. :,::. ~::.7: ~ .. °' eoun~ oeld of tru1t dllcrlbel IF YOU 0~ to the obJect1on1 race111ec1 prior 10 ttia rta.IC NOTICE "" ' property: granting of the peUtion, you lbo¥a dat9 ... bl oonlldalld In lhl
-----------• Lot 9 'fr8Ct NO. &483, In tN lhould either appear a\ the tormlltatlcn of ftnal ~ cc ..... ._ ..... n.._.._ elttll c...,_, City of Coat• M111, Co11nt)' ot heari ng and atate tour reoardlnll lhlWMl• ~ T......,, O..••-•• Orang1. Slit• of Clllfornll. .. Pl' f.l Th• IJoard wl1h11 to obtain el h UwtlW ...... map recordad In book 231 pao-objectlona or l e wr tten Information 10 111111 11 In
WllNM'°"' D.C. 22 and 23 Mllolllll!llOUI MIPI 1n objections with the court dttennlnlng prop1r wate dlldlWOI
WHEl'IEAS Mtlltactory IYICllnce lhl alb Of tn. Collnt)' ~of before the~arlng. Your rlQUlrwnenta and. for tllll ~. h11 b11n pre11nt1d to 1h1 Mid County p~ be In pe1"IOll _. hOld •pubic '-tncl -~ Comptroller of tlll Currll\Cy thl\ YOU ....... DOAULT UNDIJI A OAT£: llptlrllblr to, 1te2 LIBERTY AATIOHAL BANK locltad IMllD 0. T1IUeT DATID AUQU9T y your attorney. TIME: t:30 Lm.
In Huntlngion 811ch, 81111 of 1111 UMUaa YOU TAICI I F Y 0 U A R E A PLACE: City COuncll Chlmblrl.
C11llorn11. h•• c_ompUICI with •II ACTION TO ,.ltOTICT YOUll CREDITOR or a conUn41ent 3300 HlwPOrf Boulelllrd. ~ prollftlone or the atatutM or the ,.,..,¥ ITMAY•8°'.DATA tor of the deceued you 8-:h. Clltfomla Unll1d 811111 required 10 b• PUaJC aM.a, • YOU ... .utl .l ... _ In....., PIROftl -ln""9d to c 0mp111 d wt I h 111I0 r. b. Ing lldllAMATIOM °' THI MA~ must file your claim wiu:i ....,. lttilnd 10 ~ .,.., WMll Oii 1111hortzad 10 commence the o. THI f'IMICm>91Q ~ court or pn!llellt It to the .,.. ..._ rw111t1ng 10 Iha llbOllO
buW-of banking .. • Nettonal YOU. YOU IMOULD COWTACT A personal representative Witt• dllchafVI. ,..,_ ~ ea~~. ~,re'r(;RE. 1 hereby LA~._ Clrcla Coeta ..._, appointed by the court :::-'~to"::'a::":t;,~
c1rllfy that th• 1bo111-n1m1d Clltof1'lle 92U7 within four months from the tu11e1. Oral 1t111mont1 wtll be auocl1tlon I• authorized to "{II 1 ltf'Wt llddr.-rx ~ date of flrtt l11uance of i-cs. IJUt, tor tN aoc:urac:y. of.,._
COl'MllflCI tM ~of blinking d~natton 11 ehO'fdn 1bo111, no lettera M pn>Yided ln Section record, all Important tllllfllony u 1 Natlonll Banking Mtoc:tatton. wirrenty 11 11111n 11 1o 111 700 of the Probate c.ode of lhOUld bl IUbmlttilcl In wrttlnO. Onlf
Demand down
for btlsiness
• executives
Prices I or western
duds Skyrocket
IN TESTI MONY WHEREOF. ~-M oon.ctc· c llf l The time for llltlftllftt• lhollld be bttef to ... wit,_ my llgnlhK• Ind Mii of The blnlflclaf')' unoer Dlld • orn a . ,. lnllrelted ptr90nl tlmO to 1111 ollicll lhl9 2fld day of June, 1ta2. of 'fNlt by l"MIOn of a °' fil1nl cla1mt will not expre '-'Cf.
C. T. ~ ..,.. in tfll OOlfOllUO:• ~ price' to four months from The f9POf1 of _.. ........
Comt>trolllf of the~ ""'9by, ...,...,. _,., and the date of the hearing ~ docUIMntl. *1.....,""' Chari« Number 1730I dell11«ed 10 the 11nder1l9nect a ... __. ......__ 801rd'1 PfoPOMd reqvlre!Mftta; Publt•hlel Orange Co111 Dally -'"*' DtcllardOn ot DaflUft and no~ &uuv.,. and 111 commentl 1nd petltloftf
PllOt. <1111y 12. 19, :ze. Aug. a. 9. 1t, OOrNftCI tor 1e11 Ind wntten nottae YOU MAY EXAMINE r~11tct m•~.:r w';,-..cted Md
23. 30. Sept. e. 1112. .. br..ctl and of .-.on '° ~ file kep& by the court. u ~ .. ttll '._... °""'
. 31)5..ea tlle 11ndor=d to 1111 Hid OU are lnternted in the !M1 tndllnlld 0~-.lllO:c~
proper1!f 10 1a1ct oblgllllolia. te you may file• request " 119" •· " "' -Ml.IC NOta ind'"!;~:,=·~~ lth 'the court to receive ~:~1!~83.=~.,::.._.;
pemand for b~ulnen
execuUvea in the West declined
18 'percenl du.ring the eecom:l
q~rter from a year earlier,
~ Arthur Young Executive
MllOUrce Conaultanta of Co.ta
emand alao declined 8
t for the f1nt atx montha
982.
•Uonally, demand for
lnew executlvea dropped
pt.oualy durtnc the aecond
rler, down 27 percent Coll•ld to the Mme period ln . .._,Uw demand · WM off
reent tor lhe (lrat aix
tha of 1982.
are UIMJl\I ~ of
th &JcecutJve Demand Index
le ... ed by A Y /l!RC, whlch . re ne national and reatonll
e cuUve demand on a
exl41ipenat(·ve ~ bllla.
• HEL"ENA, Mont. (AP) -
"Urban cowboys'' and their fancy
clothel have mostly ridden Into
the aunaet. but prlcet farced up
by, \he fad have left real
cOwpokea feclnC bU1I up to $300
for a full ., of dudl.
The price of West.em apparel
leaped like a bronco ln recent
years .. tq-d.ty dudee cllmbed
Into wenem dotha, or fancier
varlallona like tllk pant.I and
frlnaed ahir1a.
WHtern-wear dealers tn
Montana found \heir ordel"I
backlo11ed for month•,
aometlmee a year or more.
Bulinem WM M aoocf U ll Wll pudy, I
"It WM ~ while lt lM1ed
-lt'a .kindi hard to be9t thole ~ -but we're IO(q back
to normu now," aa1a Birbera
Llndqul1t, mana1er of ttie W-.rn 8porbiDM In Ml-oula.
.. We're back to reaular
..... wttb rMcheri iDil• tlW
W~ ~It llD't • Gilti. The~ end ........... tba~• an ....
Bu\ not the hlah pricee. P1Cnnoue.,11•N ~to be l900fdad Air' 1 peclal notice of th• tlll'ollll'IFrtdtiy. "Prica are not down a bit -..,... ITAW 1111 .. lnltr. No. 12-12121t. Oi nventory of eatate wtl ,.... btln8 tN ~.,:. ._
ha•· boota. no~' aatd Tat fhe followtng .--la dol119 llld OMdll ,._.., ot ... _~.a---ta llttlnttOn of~,.,_. ;·• -_--. ' • . I aid 1111 •Ill bo "'ldt, bllt d '""'_ .. d 'jb;f' )'Oii Who~,_ tn• 1111 f In .... .,,. Caln of Mlk$ Oty · GIHIM 1 TAU()t(IHQ, 11119 wllho11t cove111nt or warr111ty, 8n ra1 poMlt. •O 0e~r l • h: ~;1 ... _ .. 0 ,.~ut ~ The dealers aay a wore.in 8an\I l.uola It., . ~ v.,,,.,, ..,,_ "' lfnplld, ~ a • ~ t o o .. , o • q.......... range -cowboy may 1pend $200 to t270I. 11111111100. "' ~ to c. Coda. Plot. oMt 28. 21. 30, i1, Alie. •
on a full aet of work clo ea. JAMd IDWAfllO HA~n1\ C: tM,..,,... P'lllOIS* """ of a. Vlr1U AllH, B•1'.J. 1 ...
Most ol lt 1oe9 on hia be9d and 10t.L.ua11at.,,,~v ,CA rn11C.-:::=::64.lr'..: ~.!!!!•f._a~ t.:..a• .. • 11!...' ---MUC--.,-TI-IC(_... ...... _ i ,..... bullnlll It oondll*d by Ill ~ ....... 'If lliy, llndor _..... ...... -·-· ~ .. eet=. _..,.._,.. __ .a wW nay 1nc111v1111o111. h termo ot llld-Olect 6f TMt. e1 AaatlH, Callfenta MGHWecH•lt ~ ·--™ -.Mmtt L Hall ..... °'*919 i111ct ...,_ti -It · .... ITAnR n about 00 to $1~ foe a better' Tilll .... ,,,. .. , -lllld w1tt1 tt1t TNMOl INI ot.,..,...,......, Pubuahed 0raq. eo.t ,.... ......,.. ,.,._. .. **I
p.trof boo1a. aald Cain. 1'.'=.°'°'81191~0ll =~n:=·.=..n.·~ ~ AytUlt 2, 11 9, --::'1t~TD,l"'6._
'lbe "plain old booa" that eoJd t P-.t et t ;OO 11».111. 1t tll9 °"°""'"' I IUNl,_,..lta 111, Hunt1119teft for $8~ before the cowboy fad '"bllltloct Or•nte eoeet C»lllY A'ftftue Oftt,.110•, to ,,.. CMo UM-a --. ~ ...a.
coat about $130, eald Larry '.lllfY 1" M. -1. "a:!. =::,.•::•in •::0J,•:J Ml.IC mm Cele"'S".::f ~":..,!~~
Jtmmona, owner of Pay'• -°'::":;_."'"°or'"• 11111111 "'°""'!! .. w ...,A".10"11 ANDI"'°"· I Honeman'• Supply In ~ -·-"an rm ., ... ...._ .,. ._. -..., -~ .... "tMn •• d ....... Oolllllll'9 v.r, floor.-,,_,CM The typical ranchhana !.'8 ...,..., ... unt*d...,_.,.,_ ,._ ....... -.... -.. .....
b d boot --.... ~ -..... llllelnW -~ 11111 .............. ., • ulOiftl t.O U)' a IOO 1 TIM~ A•-j. ~ ~ed dHd ol "Ht tnd 0 AL I fl 0"N1 A I AN IC ....... ........ · '(1 hand-IMt.ed," Mid Art Keelil', • ,_.... ...-.toc1 ...... .., ..... Md llfMCD. 11tM Mt. ..,*..,.. _ ...._. L. '-"Y
owner of Capital 890rt.a and ... .._.,.., 714\ti W. 1MI ...._. d 1"4.-.... IC .. ~·~n• 11111 1• ... .Jm tlad .. "8
W in H.ellDa. .. He exp«taa CO......_ CA_.,, To *'•"'*" .. =" _.., ..., ti M 0... _.. . ., 8'INt ~ • Jot-:;mWvlce, mnd M nay re.olit I ITH 0All0LI MOllTON, JIO'l""1.::?rJ-• w ... _.r,::;.:-,~.oA •'14, ..
thlW tim9, !W' ••..=.,,.,..,et., ~ ....._ Dll9: ...... CIAL ..... 00. a =them :o~or a -'• that oc.': aw: 11111 It OOl'I tJ *" by"' • Nld TNMOI Tll9 ..._ • oor t UI f ... e OUSWCilt r-. 8r. T.O. l9WICI 00.. w.t•ad <* .......
... tl mnd 'tle&." ..... ~ ... _~ T111e .......... ....-V !!1==~=;!!· Wlliidlltn hata •ll for t70 and ,.,. •••••te w t1ac1,..... • W ~ · 1111111 111 •14 -.., .. .. • 1a ~ ..... .ad. The rane)i hand °"' .. or..-Oourlly "' ;;'Ciif"........ Clft .. ow.-OollllW -
Ill... .._ _;;...a 1111. • ~CA--. ::;;: -IMJ·uuy two ..... a~. -~ ,......... • ,_ w~
1oo111 AN abaUt M ltnpONnt M i..::~ ~ tt,=..r llUHI,_ 0..... ~-~·~ ~'i.°:'£ .... ... ,.,_ ,~ udltcy, X..air .ad. .,.,. ,. ..._-. • •.\ ·';;M. ~ · . 1 •
\
\
How's this tor a good answer: money:f\ea~ our newspaper, and
cash in on advertised valu~s. discount hQyPons, food news and
consumer reports that can save you money every single w.eek .
We also save you time. Which is important tor busy women
managing a home. children and many other responsibilities.
In the market tor tun? We cover weekend enter-
tainment and special events a'round town. IV and
movies. Recreation , sports, hobbies, a whole package of
interesting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever
you have the time. So if you've been feeling a little
shopworn lately, get some help. Get the paper.
What'• In It tor you? The answer
appear• on every page of
642-4321
----r ---·-
(
•
~r
H
A~Wl~to
NEW ST AMP -The Postal Service has
announced a new commemorative stamp
honoring -the American theatrical family, the
Barrymores. Featured are J ohn, background,
Ethe l and Lionel Barrymore.
Two studios nix
niusic deal • 111ov1e,
NEW YORK (AP) -Warner Communications
Inc. and MGM-UA Entertainment have terminated
negotiations on a music and vintage film deal. the
companies said.
Warner, a major force in cable television,
· wanted to acquire MGM-UA's musk publishin~
assets and Warner Bros., pre-1950 film library.
"The termination of negotiations was due to an
inability of the parties to reach an understanding as
to the essential terms of the/mposed transaction,"
Warner Communications sai .
MGM-UA executives had said the proposed
sale would help the company's sagging earnings.
The package of films numbers 700, including
more than 300 cartoons, Warner spokesman Jonas
Halperin said'. Titles include "Casablanca," "42nd
Street" and "The Jazz Singer."
Warne r Communications1 had tentatively
agreed to pay $100 million for the film and music
package.
Daily Living
AIDS
FOR PERSONS WITH
DISABILITIES
"Lei us help you help yourself'
WE DELIVER
~4#Ufi,-~ (!A .
2907 W. WA.IUD, U .
12:30-5:30 662-1712/TDO
UHllll COllAMIU _._,. ·-'""''~ ,. .• °"·• ··-11• .. "''-~ l .. ~.f"-. ~ ,,. tfl\l) ,,. l~l)1 \lO "'°' .,.. 7\\l .u (l ,_ •-.nMlO• IUal WllT-11• U,A ...... • .... ~ ~· tc ..... 'VW ~ •• ~ .. ,, "°" .• " 1tO 4011 ~a ~·AO ,J14tt.fP OJ.I~ H I >t'1
•COSl A Mlll ,,,.,,,,.. ... ~ ''0 1f4.. •~«'rn3Sftwft00 ~±:!!!J
'"AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN'
IS A MIRACLE THAT WILL LEAVE
YOU FEELING 10 FEET TALL"
-AeaAMd
~~~NOWPLA~NG ~~~
MtUIGel JtUO OM.U _... WlSTMIUTDl
Edwlrds Viejo TWiii Clnedomt Pactk·s OrMIOI Ortvt Ill &tw1rds Clneml Wtsl a30 1990 13• 2553 ssa 1022 891 3935
llWl'tflT UACM Edwitds Newport C-6U 0760
With Burt & Dolly
lhl• much ltm
}Q., couldn't
be legal/
Salzburg Fest: Great if you can afford it
SAL.ZBURO, Au1i.rta (AP) -
lwope'1 ~ eodety, It.I mwdc loven
and hoc'd81 of eurioUI tourilta trom
around U.. world have c:t.cended on
'thJa ~ue mountain town for
the annual &ldjura J'..Uv-1, one of Uie world'• t famou1 mu11cal
.wnta.
Oraanwtr'I uy an •timated 40,000
peop[e are •Q>eeted dwiNI the flve-
week featlval, which opened 111t
Sunday.
''Irreverent,
"Wt are unique amon1 the top·
quallty fHUvala Jn Europe," NY•
Hana Wklrich, a lpClkMman for the
t•t1val'1 ~ commltwe.
SahbW'I'• procrmn lnchldm opera, theaitr and orohtatral1 work•
featurln1 tbe Vienna ana Berlin
Phllharmonlc orch11tr11. On thla
year'• schedule are 31 opera
performance1 , 2~ th•ater
performancM and 13 orchestra evenia.
Leonard &tmateln, Jamee Levine,
Sul~ra·bom Hert.rt yon Kara.Ian
and Lorin MuMl, the new dlr«tor of
the Vienna State Opera, are the
featund conduct.on.
But wtth dcket Pfk.-. ran,tna up t.o
about tl42, the t•tlval commitu-e hat
been ICCUllid ot eUtt.n.
.. ~ relfdenta will Mldom 1aln
en~ to felt •Piel (halll) durb\s f•tihl ....,.,, .. eald Fram Endler,.
cri~ for the Vlmna Daily Oie.PNllM.
vulgar, SOtnetlmes
disgusting, and
delightfully funny •••
I loved it."
LUXURT THEATRES
1tt Twt 111.ttitlff 5'llw itiatOll.YS2B U.leuOtlltrwiw lllte4
S 113til44•2utl6l63~ 2551/~a;:,) * FOR fUOI EXCITEmEml V111tOur... *
ga?J.!P• TJ·• ' Siio'!! at 12:00 2:41> 1:1 I 1:00 10:40
*BARGAIN MATIN•ES *
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform1ncu before 5:00 PM
(Except Special En91gement1 1nd Holld1ys)
'" MIUM>" ... ,.ll Muodo 01 llo1ecron1
LA MIRADA WALM ·IH 994·2400
"AN 0,,ICER AND
A GENTLEMAN" (II) ....... __ _
"ANNIE" Cl'OI ---·· .. -
"POL TEAOEIST" <PO> .-._ .... ,...,_
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALM IH
"THE BEST LITTLE
WHOREHOUSE IN TEXAS"
1111 ,,,., -. -.... -
..NIGHT SHIFT" c111 -----
'THE WORLD ACCORD&NG
TO GARP"1111 ·--·--
"ROCKY Ill" 1.-01--OOLH .-. ut. •.lo.-. ., ... -
Focully OI Condl••OOd
213/131·9110
"YOUNG DOCTORS
IN LOYE"C111 _ ........ ,,..._
"ROCKY Ill" <PO> DC.,._. OOUY 8TIMO ___ , ........ ," .. .. ITAR TMK ti: 1THE WRATH OF kHAN" C!'e ,,,.., ___ _
LAKEWOOD C ENTEJl
SOUTH WAlll IN
"N1GHT SHIFT" lfl/ ·------·
M9LAD1! R~" Clll ---~cONAN THll aA118ARIAN" (Ill -··
MM. ... fri. 1'.» -Sit.. S.. 7:15 Sllllw Slarb II 0..
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER 12 fRH! ,..,_ ... •-MM. ... fri. 7:tl • Sil. S-., ltlMIJt HO
CM-Fl SOOllO • 'IOUll 411 CM llAOQ IS 'IOUll ~
tf 0.0 AM CM MOO WITll ICl!mOll ACCUSOllY l'QSITIC)lj
-IMIG AM l'OlllAIU t• AU QllE.fl DIWMIS l30 Oii .... ~
AN,.H!I ...
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
It••"°" " 01 lemon It 179·9HO
-···-......... .-"Tttl aHT LITTti
WHOfllEHOUSa IN ttXAS" 1111 -"ALL NIGHT LONG" i•I
-----.--Ctltl fl SOUit~ ---
"fllOCl(Y •" !,.I "CONAN THll :..AMARIAN" l'tl I
"THll TMNG" !Ill
~'*' "SOUWo
8UfN" P,.lh
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
UncOln M • •••I ot ltnoH
121·4070
8Uf "'" P,.11k
LINCOLN DRIVE·IN
ltfteoln Awe we" ot 1non
121·4070
IQUNIAI'<
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVf·IN
Soft Oi990 ffWY 0111-1111n1 (Jo I
-"TtflEf" (II)
Cllltlt~I
"a,T ..
THll mrTIIA·TtRREITiltlAL" lH I -"DaADMEN DON'T WaAR l'LAIO" 1.-01
"TH« WORLD ACCORDING
TO QAlllP" 1111 ......
"AlllTMVl'I" 1.-01
"TffR 8HT LITILI
WHORIHOUSI IN nur , •• -"AU NIQlfT LONG" Clll
962·2411 Clltl fl SOUltO
•• , ....... _~r_099_~~_;_;.~_·3_:0, __
"ROCKY 111" {l'OI -MCLAatt 0, T"9 TITAN•",,.,
CM fl SOUllO M..,..,. .:.!""" Ill!
"MY WMICM WAY YOU CAW' .,..
CM ASOl..cl
/I. '"' ....
LA HABRA ~)I/I I/I IN
-. -
\,,A,4 .I
I ''Tlta TMINO" 1•1 -"8UN RUHNlll" 1111
:1ICf " $OUllO ---
"YOUNG DOCTORa IN LOVI" 1111 -.... ~-CM!
Cn.E fl MlUllO
••f'HINSTUTIU ~HOUM IN THAI" 1111 -"ALL NtQHT LONG" !Ill
O RANG E O~l'v l IN
Jtndl•r Hid In an 9dltorla1 that
Saltburr cltlwna 1hould be 1tven
c:lllcount tlcketl. Ot.berwtM U.y wW
end up paylnJ twice u much '° ... • f•tival 1how becal.lle \heir taxe9 are
Uled to JUPJ)OM. the f.Uval, he laid.
In recent yea.n •he f•tival hu
attraaed Monaco's Prine-c..roun.,
form•r British Prime Mlnlater ..
Edward H•atti, W•1t German
President Karl Cartten1 and many
lntematlonal film 1tatt.
., .. .,
~ ,~
~ • ..
'I '• ~ t ~ .. . . ..
~
" .. . , ., ..
., .
T•I
t• JllL''
Cl•Clil
..
.. . . . . . . .
"This Is the best month to go on vacation 'cause
AugUlt doesn't hove any holidays. Yoo
hofta make your own."
"Probably I Scottllh tlndplper."
by Brad Anderson DEN~IS THE MEN ~CE Hank Ketchum
~ If S·'l-J
If
i ,,
!
"They're both suffering from a bad case
of dog days." •LAl>IE~ FIRST,~T ~· '!) 7HE PAJ~ DRY YET?'
Jt:DGE PAR KER
~ FQP. A~ F'\.E.A5NolT I 1-0'E '°°
A _ • • E\IENN6 ... ANO I PPCMl5E TO 00'
Mb TONY DfWE6 CDN51DEA ~ ~E AeOUT O. 0. &ACK lO ACCEPTING DENNt6 _-.--....
THE HOTEL. Hf IS /46 A CLIENT! ~RE~T ~
CHAl"L.EY I5
etrnN6 IN THE
l.OeeY WAITING
FOR HER!
WELL, JIM OFF TO SEE
If I c..AN .ADD A LI TTL£
~NCEToSoME
NEIGHSORHOOC>
LADY'S LIFS/
EMMA ...
IATURDAY'I
PUmllOLYED
[)RAT! You C,AN
~SO fAAIT.ATIN<1
WtTH THAT L.ITTLE
SM~ SMILE!.'
by Harold Le Ooux
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
I WAt; BEING
Pol/Tl! l CoULC>
JUST BUST OUT
L.,AUGH IN~.' ,
~ \'
' ~' • ·-.. ,,,.
•
Orlngl COllt DAILY "S)T/Mondly, Augult 2. 1182 ,
SHOE
a;f!U~C~" Rf.W-'f' F~fW, IR\M.1~ •r'P '°° S\Y TO 'JUQ\~
l,000 ~. !>lR\
l'M Wt1'" ACME VAC~ ClUMf.~\
DL8110CK
WHERE DO YOU
LIVE'?
au.ow M£. 'fo 1~E.
~ 10 O\Kt Ntll)f!>i
lftOOf.\.' 1'14£. .. ~ -1000 '.'
---~--~--,
OKAY---
LET1S GO
etuE~E. ME, 1"~ f)Af>'I
""\.\. ~-. foR 11'~£.\.f I~
M01'\ME. A1' AU.' --
by Charin M. Schulz
~SIWPENIN6 TO THE W<>llD?
by Ernie Bushmiller
by Gus Arriola
r-r.
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
1
~
MO (I) IA8111ALL
MOnlteAlll~. eeoole NIM ~WOMAN
THllAINT
I t .W.A.T.
HAWAII ffl&-0
• OVPIASY
"WldoWtr: Man Alone"
GuMt: lhaalrlclll Pf~
Fredtrldl BtiMOn. (RJQ
• HUMANITIU
THMUOH THE ART1
"Sculpture. Motl Olfflc;ult
Of M a"
(I) CelNEW8
QIH9CNl!W8
(I) WIDCY WCftl.D M
JOHA™AH WINTl.A8
O MOVIE
* *~ "Vlc;tor;" ( t981)
Sytvwt• Stanona, Mlchtel
c.lne During World W11
II, Allltd POWa -their
tlCllttt 10 lrMdom In a
match between their
10CCtr team and Iha Gtf.
man Natlontl T .. m In Per·
It. 'PG'
e:aC> • UA8AH LEAGUE:
COHVENTIOH 'la
G!) AMERICAN
GOVERNMENT
"The Federal Judiciary"
(1)8HEW8
CJ) PETER AU1H AND
THE AOCKETTES
The Rockett•• join 11ngar
Peter Allan on alage 11
Rlldlo City Music Hiii In
thla mullcal apeclll
7;0> 8 C88 HEWS D HBCNEWS 8 KUNO F\J CJ KOJAK
• M•A•S•H
Charle• Wlnchealar
recotda 1 ltlllr to hlt
WMflhy l1tt>tr begging him
to UM 1111lnllutnc4I10 QI!
htm out of Iha unit
• JOKER'S Wll.D
• 81) 8U81HE88
REPORT
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
Sand. skin. aud• and aolt-
ball: • 12-year-old llMr1
tran1pl1n1 recipient 18 THE MUPPETS
(8)TOCLIMBA
MOUNTAIN: JULY 4, 1981
Eleven handicapped peo-
ple, po-.ed by lndomll-
1bl• courage and devo-
tion, dare 10 challenge
14,<il 10-1001-hlgh Ml. R1ln-
1er.
(Q)MOVIE * • ·~ "Seema Like Old
Times" ( 1980) Goldie
Hawn, Chevy ChlM. A
aotl·haarted l1wyar It t0<n
be.-ha< hoptlMt U ·
huab1nd-lurn1d-b1nk
robber and ha< uptight
pr_,I huabtnd wtlo la
running for Calllornl1
111omey general 'PG•
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
F11tutec:t· an tiiarnlnatlon
of Iha tHtcl8 of MXUal
111reumen1: 8rtl Hane
Prepwatory lnlarmedlale
School
8 800YWORICS
"Tiit Nervoua Syatem" 0.
T1molhy Jollnaon exam-
ines th• nervou• syatam
G) M'A•B•H
Wiiiie • ... ,ch gon on tor
a dog !hit blt Reder.
Hewlteye deflll Frank to
t•k• care ol 1 cue of hya-
lerlcal paralyals.
G»<IJ TIC TACDOUOH 9 MACNEIL I LaiREA REPORT 6D EVENIHO AT POP8
Ethel Merman join• Iha
Popa Orchlllr• In pa<·
forming • number of her hit•. lndudlng "ft>tre's No
Bualnaa Uka Sh<>w Bu9'-naa:· 8 FAMILY FEUO
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KNXT ICBS> 0
GJ KNBC CNBCI z
9 KTLA (Ind I ..
G KABC (ABC> c
G KFMB <CBS> f
0 KHJ·TV llnd I ,,.,
G KCST (ABCI (
C8 KTlV (Ind I $
'fll KCOP·TV (Ind I " fD KCET tPBSI <t
•KOCE (PBS>
BELTS 'EM OUT -The incomparable
Ethel Merman belts out a medley of her
favorite Broadway tunes on °Evening at
Pops" tonight a t 7:30 on KOCE (50) and at
8 on KCET (28).
(%)MOVIE '* * • * "The Sorrow And
The Pily" (1972) Documen-
llf)' Olrtcled by Mu
Ophula An a11amlnatlon ol
public ecqu1ncenc1 to
NIU.I barbarity during Illa
Garmin occupation ol
France In Wor1d, Wer II;
lncluded ere lnteNltwl
wllh Alben Speer and
Pierri Mandes-France.
1:00 IJ (I) PRIVATE
BENJAMIN
Judy auapecla that Cap111n
Lewie. '" umpire In Iha
War Games, hu ~
bribed (RI 0 8UTn.EHOUSEON
THEPAAIRIE
HHlllf Sut'a •lrtflOlld
husb1nd arrives In Wllnut
Grove 1nd convlncea
Charlea 1nd Caroline 10
help him win her baclt (RI
i MOVIE * • * "The love Boll"
( 11178) Keren Vllenllnt.
Cloris Leechman. The pu---o«• 1nd co-ew aboard 1
luxury hner have romantic
mi.advtnlurea D 9 BEST OF TME
WEST
Sam mlSlal<enly wound•
hlmsetf. end the new jell
begins l11lllng apart (R) 0 MOVIE
* * * '" "Suspicion"
( 1941) Cary Grant. Joan
Fonl11lna. Directed by
Allrad HllChcoclC A young
woman suspects her
charming husband ot plan-
ning a murder.
G) P.M. MAGAZINE
A 12-yeer-<>ld heart lrans-
ptant recipient: • romantic
wedding at sea. G» MOVIE
• • • "Such Good
Frlenda" ( 1971) Dyan Can-
non. J1m1a Coco. A
neglected wile letma ol
her "alhng" hulband'•
••lra-mel'lllll advenlur ..
wllh her "friend•" llttr ha
la Ulely lucked IWIY In the
holptlal SI E'IEHtNG AT POPS
Ethel Merman joins the
Popi Orcnestra In per.
lormang 1 number of '*'
hlla, tncludrng "Tha<e's No
Butlnas Like Show Busl·
"'" (C)MOVIE
• • • • "The FIKar"
( 1968) Dirk 8og11de. Al1n
B•t.. Baaed on I novel by
Bernatd Malamud A lum-
ol-l h 1-cen t ury Jewlth
peasant Is wrongfully
lmprieoned lor Iha death of
a child In Kiev
C8)MOVIE
* * * "Eye 01 The Na.
die" ( 1981) Donald Suther-
land, Kile NeUig•n. While
on a ramole Scotllsll
Island 10 meet a Germen
submarine. an Axis apy
finds shelter lrom the
On TV
Z·TV
HBO
1C1nemax1
(WORINY NY
IWT8SI
IESPNI
IShowttmt')
Spolllghl
IC•blt' News Nt'tworlll
storm In Iha cottagt ol • rouno merrttd c:oup1e. 'A'
(l)MOVIE
* • "Frld1y The 13th, Part
II" (19811 Amy Staal, John
Furey Tiit grltly kllllngt
continue al • iwmmar
camp that had btln cloeed
down 11tar • Wlta ol
bizarre murder• occurred
llltrt. 'R'
Q MOVIE
* • "The lncradlbl•
Shrlnkl"g Woman" ( 19801
Liiy Tomlln, Charltl Gro-
din A houMWllt lloda II
herd lo cope when llht
auddtnlY begin• to allrlnk
In II.le. 'PG'
UO 8 (I) WKRP IN
CINCINNATI
Momm1 Carlaon hlr• a
radio conaullant wllo turn•
out to be an old buddy ol
Andy'1,(RI D MOVIE
* * * ,.., •"C•omwell"
( 1970) Rtehwd Hwrlt, Altc
Gulnnlla Polll!QI lurrnoll
and tyranny INplra Ollwr
Cromwell to lead the
Roundh1ad1 In revolt
1tg81ntl Cherlea I ol EflQ-
land
G) 81NGLE'8 MAGAZINE
Fulured Interview wfth
ICIOr Ind •Inger Rick
Sprlngllttd. lnatructlon1 on
vlslllne singlet bare. ~
dy by MllUrMn Mut1>hy ~ OAEAT
PEAFOAM~
"Three Cl!Mver Slorlea.
The Five Forty-Eight" 'Lau-
rance Lucklnblll and Miity
Belh Hurl are featured In
Cheever'• 1tory about an
"ordin1ry" man who It
lh1t1ered when Ila find•
hlmftlf In 1 allulllon of
mon11 denger (RI 9 WOMEH IN~
Gary Colline end Carol
Lawrence hOat thla axamt-
netion ol Iha ptlghl ol the
t.6 bllllon women In Iha
world'• dawlopjng nallona
lhr~ the atorlea of alll
ol t9-woman
t:oo8 (1) M•A0 8 •H
Kltngtr •• •lnclten with •
eayera •-Ind no ~
can -to find either Ille C8UM or tht oore. ( R)
0 8 M<ME
• •~ "Movlola The Stlant
Lovera" ( 1960) Krlatlna
Wayborn, ~ 8oalwtck.
Dlr1C1or Mauritz Slllltr
brlngl hie PfOltlg4 Grell
Gerbo lo Hollywood. only
to -her 1111 deeply In
love with allenl·lllm ater
Jot>n Giibert. (R) CD MERV GRIFAN
"S1lul1 To Swing" Gullll:
Mel Torma, Jaye P Mor-
gen. Larry Elglt1.
fD GREAT
PE~E.8
"ThrM Cheever Storill:
Tiit Five Forty-Eight" I.au·
rence Luct<lnbill and Miity
Beth Hurt lft 1 .. 1ured In
Cheever'• alory •bout an
"ordinary" man wllo la
lhaltered Wfltn ha !Inda
hlmMlf In I llltuttlon of
mortal danger. (R)
(Q) THE GOl.OEH A.OE M
TELEVl8tOH
"Mlfty" ROd Steiger tnlf ·
Nancy M11clland atw In a
1955 Pfoductlon ol Paddy
cri.y.1111y'• ltieplay •bollt
I homely bu1ciltr WllO I ...
In love with • plain girt.
9':ao 8 (I) HOUH CAlLI
Charley comea to the aid
ol • young boy WllO ""°' an operation that hi• '"'ll'Y
can't afford. (RI
• CAUEL TY M BfAUTY
.. c
i:i~c:.
Wil'I -i A~: Md . .........,,T..._.,.....
~'lltCWY " Cl>,,.. tMICINe ~
AMCl9atll ~~tilt· ................
11t1d '" Plt11111n9 of Oil)etrllOgr~ _, .... 1111 .,. ~lldtd Ill •
lletlM-IN----~
of '*'-unique ~ llt• ,,... ......
-~ • "Twun, Tht Ap.t Mell"
{1911) Alolwd Ht1111, lo
Derell. A YOUllf women
~ tot '*' MIMlnt lather In the Aftleen Jutlgle
wllet'e ""' ~ '" l.lllCNllla.d wt111e man tne1
en Of'llllO\llll'I 'A' 10:00. (I) l.ou QAAN'f
TIMI ~I of •l)iolted rtl·
UtMt It llfoutftt to the
Trlb'e 1ttwitlon wt1tn II
hlr• 1 vi.,_ ptioto..
illPMr,!A) .......
ONJa TY CW 9l!MITY
T1tl1 documentary o n
Kabuki thee!« lndudtt •
Ptfformenc. of "Tera.
koyt " ("Tiit Temple
Sdlool"). "' 18t~tury J..,_ dremt fllmed al
Illa Ka.bwld-Za n-t• In
Tokyo.
9 MAHIYMUER
Romance mbc• With dUty
wt*1 Wojo Ind Oet. Jan.
Ice Wantwortll go Under·
' COV9f at a hotel to tracll
down • <:'-robber.
'(B')MOVIE
** "Friday Tiit 13111, Part
II" (108t) Amy SIMI, Jolln
Furey. Tiit grltly kHllngt
continue at • tummtlf
camp lllat had ~ clottd
down •11• • -i. ol
blarre murders ocx:urrtd
,,,.,.,'R'
(Q)MOVIE
*** "S.O.B." (1981)Wll-
111m Holde n , Julle
Andrews. A movie dl<tc1or
who has lull llnl"'9d •
multl·mllllon dolt8t luftley ooaa from attempted M-
dde 10 I blu"9ly lnepirtd
r•llloollng ol hie ec>IC. 'R'
10: ti CC> MOVIE * * 'h "Shogl.w'I ,._..,, ..
(1981) TomlstbUlo Walley •
arna. Muahlro Tomltl•-·
A tor"* tnogun _.....
who WU rMneUVertd out
ol hl• poaltlon by 1 rutll-
ICIM clan ol tPIM vowa to
lake bloody rlMlllQt.
10:aoe NEWS
(II ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
An Interview with Kenny
Roger1. •
(l)MOVIE
** "FunhOuM" (1981)
Ellnbtlh Befrldge, SyMa
Mii••· Four tttn·aoer•
spend I fflghtful night In 8
carnlvlll ~ Inhabit·
ed by • ci--tttd t>attttr
and his mc>n11rout eon. 'R'
1t:ooeo•C11oa
NEWS 8 SATUADAY NIQH'T
Hott: C1ndlce Bt«gen.
G.-t: &Iller PhNllpa. G YOU ASKED FOA IT
F•tured: "F«nlle Ball-
Hlltlng <::ham9" and "Pley-
bo(t Robot Butler .••
• w•A•s•H
When lt't tgunC1 a robult
nurM II klMly and MCI. Ille
Otl'ltl' nur.. dtdate tMy
will hold bQ thtlf ''"'°" unlM the geta a boyfriend.
• BEHN't'HU
&.My dOM an~
tlon of a PoPUlar aport•
oommentat0<.
• DOCTa.. .. TME
HOUSE
Mldlael I .... ao aorry for a
pallel'lt wllo doeen't want
10 leave Illa hoapltal ht
~,-to vlalt lltf at l!Omt.
11:301'1 ~
Quincy attempt• 10 halt
1bute of Iha elderly by
tl!tlf cNldran. D al Tlfll llEST OF
CARSON
Hoel: Johnny Caraon
Guella: Robert Blake,
Madellna Kahn. Tom
Dr-. Hlroehlma. (R)
8 0 MCNEW8
NIGHTUNE Cll MOYIE
• '"' "40 Gun• To Apect'9 P..... I 1967) Audit MIK·
ptly. Kenneth Tob9y.
• TlE .&'F£R80HI
.SAHFON>AHD80N
• UNDERITAHDNa
HIJMAH eatA"°' "Plychotharapy"' (Plft 2)
• CN'T'IONID MC
NIW8 (I) RICH MAN, POOft
MAH: llOQt( I
Tom (Hiett Nolte) and ~
TUBE TOPPERS
XHBC (f) 7:30 -"Body Work.I."
Tlruothy Johnlon t xainlne8 the ne
""f'·
KOCE (50) 7:30, KCET (28) 8 :00~\'l"'' ''INenlnc at Pope." Ethel Merman joina
the Bolton Popi1Orchestra 1n performing
a number o! her hltl. See photo, left.
KNBC (-i) 9:00 -·"Movtola: The Silent
Love n .'1 Krlatlna Wayborn, Barry
Boatwlcl,< atar in a story about Greta
Garbo.
KNXT (2) 10:00 -"Lou Grant." The
Trib diacovers the plight of frightened
and e xploited refugees.
("9tar 8trauee) JotdlCM
battle ror 111t1r petenta'
• llPC)foval, ~ le .,, ...
IMJrad by Ille gll'llrltnd
(lutan 81111tf'1) lo ......,.
Ultlf tlMll IOWfl for New
YOtll.
(8') L.AUOHI
Four 11~ c:omadl-
ar1 followed lllrough
nlghlCkJb l)tf1ortnanca1
and their btlllnd·lll•
~--.. ,My~
ltugllt and ·-· .MOW
**'.+ "Atntriean Poe>"
(t98t) Animated. Tiit .......
lory ol American pop
rnuelc, lrom vtudtYlllt 10
rock 'n' roll, le lractd
lhrougll MVtrll oanar•
tlon• of • larnlly of mull·
clana. 'R'
11:50 CC> MOVIE
•~ "CMapaf To l<aap
Har" ( 1980) Mee Oevlll,
T ovllh Ftldllhuh. In order
to meat 1111 alimony pay.
ment1. • rtctnlly divorced
prlv11t detacllvt trtQtla
down deOnquant hulband•
for I dllloret lawytt. 'R'
12:00 8 ENTERTAINM!NT
TONfOHT
An Interview with Kenny
Rogtta
8 9 MOVIE
• * 'h "The White Dawn"
( 1974) Wwen D•t•. Tim-
othy Bo11om1.
• MOVIE
*** "Behold A Pale
HorM" ( 1984) Gregory
Ptdt, Anthony Quinn
• LOW. AMERICAN
STYLE
(O)MOVIE
···~"The Sflout" (1979)
Alen Balff, SuHnnah
York. A dl1turbtd man
oonflntd to an lnatllullon
beltavea ha can make 1
"death thou!," I IOUnd
lhal will kill. 'R'
(%)MOVIE
• * "Drum" ( 1976) War-
ren 011•. IMl41 Veg1. A
rich plantatk>n owner la
dlalurbtd by hie young
dauglltar'a lnlerael In hi•
malt 11111 ... lndudlng one
lhat la flgllllng for hi• f,..
dom.'R'
12:06 CJ) MOW:
** * "S.O.B "(19811 Wll-
ll1m Holden, Jull1
Andrews. A movlt director
wllo h.. ""' flnlantd • muftl-mllllon doltr luttley
OOtt from •lltMC>ltd llUl-
ddt to • bliaffely ~
,.lltlOotlng ol hlt ec>iC 'R'
12::IO 8 8 LA TE NtGHT WITH
MVID L.ETTEIWAN
Gue1t•: Rolling Stone
magazine pnotographtr
AIWt Ltll>OYIU, comedian
Billy Crytlal, New Yortl
Yank-pitcher Tommy
Jolln.
• COUf'LES
• LOVE, AMEAICAH
STYLE
11:40 8 THE woAo
Public retanon• 111part
Steven Randall (D1vld
Jan_,) II hired to pro-
mot• a ,_ Bible butd on
• controverellll docu~t purponed lo be an It·
neat account ol Chi t'•
Illa. (Part tl(R)
t2:41 (8') THE DfAOl. Y GAME
Tht• rttlftd crlmlnal law-
Yet• play • game ol cat-
lrld·mouM wflh a ...,,._
lngly lnnoctnt vlotlll'I;
Georg• Segal, Trevor
Howard, Robert Morla)'
Ind Emtvn Wllllaml llW.
1:001 =UTfff
**"" "Tiie Hippy
Thltwt" ( t9152) Rex Hanl-
aon, M a Heyworth. A wlly
art lhltl cont• couple Into
11M11ng a pradoul Goya
paffltlng from • Spanl9h
muMIH'l'I.
1:ao D 8 HK HEWS
OVENC»n' 1=AllTI'Y
• •• "Jenlt" (t974) Ooc-
umtnllf)'. Jania Joplln
rl-from an u'1Nppy and
obtcurt patt In • amall
Taxae town 10 hMd Iha
Ollart• H • lop roclt and
biu. •Ingar.
.MOVIE
* * "Blood Beach" (111811
John SaJCon, Burt Young. A
pair ol police offlc«a have
their h1nd1 lull when Illa)'
lnveallgaft! the CauM of
betchooera being aucked
Into Iha eand, -IO be -aoatn.·R'
2:00 (%)MOVIE
* * "Friday The 13th. P111
11" (t981) Arny Stael, Joftn
Furt'(. Tiit grilly lll(llnge
continua at a --camp that II.cl been doted
down attar 1 _,.. ol
blurre mordtrt occurred
lha<t 'R' '
2:<16 CJ) MOV1E
* * "Return Of The Street
Flgllttr" (1975) Sonny Chi-
ba, Yol<o lchljl. A loner
takff on the Fii EM1
M1li1 and a llglon ol blaclc
belt expen1 In an lnctedl-
ble llghl.
2:tl D H£WS
2:308NEW8
2:41 8 HEWS
(8) OH LOCATION
"Alch Lltlle i\nd The GrNt
Prelendar1" The MGM
Grand Hole! In LH Vegu
I• the aelUng for thl• Show·
caM faatul'lng the gr .. t .. t
lmpreaaldi\1111 In Amerlel.
3:00 9 MOVIE * ;. * "I Hatt Blondes"
(1981) Jean Rochefort,
Enrico Mon1 ... no. Thlevea
dll<:O'ltf lhal a .....ithy
novellat'• l1tea1 work
datcribtl In det.. the
MCUrlty l)llltm Pfaltctlng
Iha valua.blaa In hit'-·
S:10CC>MOV1E * * * 'h "8arry Lyndon" (19711) Ryan O'Ntel, ~
u Berenaon. A handaomt
IOldler find• mc:tton Ind
forntnQa In the tatn-cen-
tury 8"11111 army 'PG'
1:11 8 MOYIE • *.,., "Color Mt Dead"
( 1969) Tom Tryon, Carolyn
J-. A men #"II from a
alow-acllng polton I•
de1trmlntd fo find hie
killer In the last f-houri
hahulettlollve.
s:ao CS) MOVIE
* * "Funh<>uM" (1981)
Elizabeth Berridge, S)'lvl•
MllH Four 1een-1gers
spend 1 lrlghtlul nlghl In a
carnlval lunhouM lnhabll·
ed by a demented b1rker
ind hla monatrou1 eon. 'R'
(%)MOVIE *. "Outregeoutl" ( 1977)
Craig Runell, Holll•
McLaren A good-nelured
JOHN DARLING
Blue-collar rQl~ suits ex-jock
By VARDEN A ARAR
Anaalt1M "'-Wrft;er
' BEVERLY HILLS -Al first glance, football
'star-turned-actor Ed Marinaro and Officer Joe
Coffey, the street cop he plays on NBC-TV's "Hill
'Street Blues," wouldn't seem to h ave much in
common. But Marinaro says tha\ he has more in
'common with h.la ICl'een penK>na than a strapping
build and a smile that lighta up hi.s dark features.
"He's a blue-collar gu y who likes hia job.''
Marinaro says of Coffey. "He enjoys bis life, erijoys
what he d oe1, e njoys w orking , stays cool
throughout, never really geta that flustered.
' "And. basically rm like that. I was a professional
1 fooiball player, that'• not whi~ collar. It's sweat
and physical. All of my auoceea came aa a result of
really .iruellng training for many years." Mirlnaro hU been ln the limelight for meet of hla
adult Ufe, fl.rat u an Ivy League college football
18nntlDn, later aa a member of two NaUonal
Football Leque clube and more recen~ for h1I
lfady teleYWon rol.ee on "Laverne and Shlrley"
and lfHUJ Stnet mues."
Marinaro is serious about hia work and reticent
about his love life; when he'a not on the set he'a
likely to be engaging ln auch putimes as racquetball
or golf. Coffey, on the other hand, .eems to spend
much of his time on the job romanclng his partner,
Officer Lucy Bates (played by Betty Thomas), and
probably wouldn't know a golf club from a croquet
mallet.
Marinaro grew up ln the blue-<:ollar suburb of
New Milford, N.Y. He admita that sports waa his
ticket out, fint to Cornell Univendty w~ he •t
'Taxi' to retu~n
National Collegiate Athletic A.aaociation records in
rushing and catter touchdowns, and then to the
NFL where he played with the MinneM>ta Vikings,
the Neiw York Jeta and the Seattle Seahawb before
he was forced to retire ln 1978 after suffering an
injUry.
He had ataMed taking acUng leSIOns in the off
eeuon. But like many athletes who have 90U&ht to
make the transition fro~ aporu celebrity to
enterialner, Ma.rtMro fou.rid that studying acting
and makina a Uv_tnc at it were two d.lfferent thlnll-
"It Wiii ~ I WU dabblina in, and havtnc
fun, aiid •Ytnl I WM ttudytna liicUnlt'' he aid.
For a year and a twf he had-QO ltrioua job often.
•
·~ • • • ...,.. at,,.. ,...: ..... , ... ~ ........
'-ld.~ ......... -
Ofl • '""'°"' loottllltl
lllW 10 "*' • ~
eu0m4wlne. Ill Alllt ti))'
find• 8'Mlll9r lrOfn IN
··-In the oottlge °' • youn0 married Couc*. 'llf
4:10e MOY11 * "Tanen, TN Apt.,.., ..
(1H1) Alqhard HarN, 9o
Derell. A YOUllf women
aearOllM fOf '* mlttlng lllhtt' In Illa Afrloan Jul""9
wtlttt the tf\OOUllltt• an
uneWIHied 'IW!llt• "''" Md an Ol'llnfUll n, 'R'
Taw•da11'•
Daflf l•e !llo"I~•
-MOR...a-
1.ao ~**~"Two-Way
81111011·· ( 1961) Pater
Selltra, Wiifred Hydt-
Whlle. A trio of prieo,,
lnmalM plan to braak out,
than break In again "l'flh a
lrucklOad of dlamonda.
1:46 CJ) * * ·~ "ant. In Peria"
( 1979) Wayne Aog1ra,
G1y1t Hunnicutt. Called lo
Plr1• to doctor • movie
• 1cr1enp1ay. a married
American flnda lllmNll lall·
Ing In •ove with 1 m11rlad
Englilh women. 'PG'
10:00 CC> • • "Oh Heavenly
Dog" (1960) Chevy Cll-.
Benji Whlle lnvettlg1Ung •
pol•llcll Mx 11Candal In
London, 1 prlv11a dettc·
llvt I• murdered and rein-
carnated u 1 11C¥ulfV do$.
'PG' CB> * '..\ ·'Under The Raln>-
bOw" (1981) Chevy CNN,
Carrie Flailer. Tiit t 50
midget• who ere In town
lor the filming of "fht Wlz·
•d Of Oz," turn 1 Calif<><·
nl1 hOlel upalde-down
'PG'
Cl) * * "The Mall-8lp..
py" (1969) Dan Rowan,
Olde Martln. Two unem-
ployed ptoductrl of porno
movlta become Iha 104t
aurv1vore ol 1 .., ... of
multiple murder•
0 • * "Siience 01 The
North" (19811 Ellan Bura-
tyn. Tom Sktrrlll. In 1919,
1 young women'1 marriage
lo a trlPl)tr lead• t>tr 10 •
Ille of herd1hlp In Iha wtl·
de<nesa ol northern Cana-
d•. 'PG'
10:30 (%) • 'h "Under The Rain·
bow" (1981) Chevy Chue,
Carrie Fl1her. Tiit 150
ml<lgela who art In town
lor lhe fllmlng ol "Tiit Wiz-
ard 01 Oz," turn • Cllllor-
nla hOtel upalde-down
'PG'
12:00 D * * * "Son Of Kong" (1933) Helen Mack, Robert
Atmtlrong A pelf ol jewel
huntera encounter 1 mam-
moth CO'Mturl Inhabiting
an llland where a lortuna
.. burled.
• ***"Man On A
String" ( 1960) ErnHI
Borg nine, Kerwin
MatMwa A Rusatan apy
forced 10 remain behind
bthlnd lllt Iron Cunllln
b9cornll a counterapy 1or
thaU.S
• •*"""Thtm"(t9~1
Jam. Whitmore, Edmund
a-in The ~,,.....,
llkH over an lnYMllg1tlon
looklng lnlo atrange
death• occurring In tllt
MojaveOeNrt
CH) **'A "Victory" ( t98 t)
Sylveeler Stallone, Mlchetl
C1Jne. During World Wer
11, Allied POW1 -their
tlcktl 10 freedom In a
m1tch between their
aoccer team and Iha Ger-
man N1tlon1I Team In P11-
lt. 'PG'
(I) •• "BrNl<klg Gla8I"
din, ~r::=:;
lleld .. ~~ in• ·.-o· 11:1f Cl) ••• ., .. ......,..,.
IUlltl" (1H0) JIMM Coourft. 0.-..... A
,amt lMll'llt pool ~
11'11.114 , .... &20,00I lftd
win 1 big towntiNn
btfor• Ill -fltl4
rtmatall wt1tl M old lll'f'll""I••
nanl -who llet '**
al any ~. 'PG'
1t00 a=J * * "The Hultltt Of
MUK.. lqOh" (ltlO
AICl\ard Httctl, Key
A IMtlltlll'll ..,...,
lrivtt • ~ 10 tUtn
llow.wffttd llNftuf Into
world d ... body~
"'~· 2:00 Cl) * * "Thundert>lrdt Ill
Outer 8~" (IN ti "'i>-
patt. Tiit Tnundertllrdl ,_ tgllnl1 time to .Coe>
rodltt from ~
!tit"'"
Cl) • *. "Hout Of Tiit Wolf" (1MI) Liv UlfMM,
Mu "°" I~. All art-lel'• IMlt)' btfllW to-.
bit a.It• ha ~ to •
remote llland wttll hie
prtgntnt """"'-· ~ •• ~ ''Kiii °' llt Kiiied"
(1980) J-Ryan, Cflar.
lotlt MlcMlit A I
Naz.I -ldat. wtM) 1oeC
an lmponanl kar-1• matcfl
to ttit J~ during the
WW, .... tO -.. hie
dtf .. I by anllstlnf the lop
kung lu flghlart lrom
around Ult world In • tow..i
ntmenl. 'PG'
1:00 CC> #I*'.+ "Toby And Tiie
Koal1 Bear" (1981) Rolf
Harrie. UV. action and ani-
mation combine to ltll Ille
lilt Of I young boy and hi9
pal koala In Auelralla'•
frontier deye. CID •• "Tiie Night Tiie
Light• Want Out In ~
la" ( I 981) Krllty McNlchoC,
Mark Hamill. A brolller·
and-si•I• aongwritlnf duo
hive many advenlur•
wNla trying to •• out • li¥1ng on Ult country..-t.
em circuit 'PG'
1:411 CJ) * * 'h "Onc:it In Peria"
( 19791 Wayne Roger•.
Gaytt Hunnicutt. Called lo
Pwls 10 doctor • movie
ecrHnplay. 1 m1rrltd
Amwlcen find• hlmNll fll·
Ing In love wttll 1 married
Englllh woman. 'PG'
4:00 G * * * * "The Man
From Lara mie" ( 1955)
JllMI St__,,, wan-
Ford A min •••k•
r~on tha~
r1aponalbl1 lor hi• :
brother'• dtath.
4:30 CC) •• "Oh Heavenly
Dog" (19801 Chevy ChaM,
Benji. Whllt lnvestlglllnf 1
poUllUI MJl acandal In
London, a Pflvltt deta&-
llve I• murdered and rein·
carnated u a ICNfty do$.
'PG' 0 * * '..\ "Tiit Mytlerfoul
Str1ngw" ( 1982) Cllril
Miik~. Fred QW)TV!t.
A d1ydreamlng Mlaaout1
boy landla an -.it•
""'"' an lflgel ol dubloua • origin In mtdltval Auttria.
1:00 CID • • "Glvt t.4t Ubetty''
( 1974 I Rot>ert CUip. Rim-•
ard Kiley A peddler'• • ad~lurH In cotonlal '
Amtr1ca talc• h4rn "°'" tha tdga ol Iha wlldw,_. 10
rMel lnQI With the founding f
lathan.
(Q) * * "Only W"9n I :~
Laugh" (1981) M•W .t1
Muon, l<rllty McHlchot. A
New Yortl act,... rtt:uma , ,
lrom a dlylng-out cllnlc Clt191'mlntd 10 ,_ her ...
'*-·ha< romanef witll 1
pllywrlghl and her rel• I I
uonahlp with ,_ 17 ·)'9et· t
Old dlughler. 'R'
8:30 CJ)** "Friday The 13th,
Pert 11" (1981) Amy Steel,
John Furt'( Tiit ~ klfl-
lng• oontlnYt 11 1 aummer , r
camp thll had bMr1 doMd : t
down altar • ..,._ ol
bizarre murder• occurred
there 'R'
by Armstrong & Batluk
OUD OF DUST -Reggie Jackson eludes the tag attempt
f former Golden West College standout Bud Bulling to score
nd-inning run Sunday at Anaheim Stadium. Jackson was
D .. ly Piiot Photoe br Cheftee • ..,,
one of three players to score on Fred Lynn's double and the
Angels went on to a 9-4 triumph.
raves on verge of collapse?
odgers creep ever closer with another comeback win,
I
9-4
TLANT A (AP) -The Los Angeles
gers have made a move In the National
gue West race by sweeping four games
OYer second place San Diego at the start of
the series, but the Dodgers' sweep enabled
the Padres to get back within six games of
the lead. Los Angeles, the defendin
World Champion, closed to with in 6 ~
games.
Harris, who did not call interference when
the play occurred.
Asked what he told Wendelstedt,
Lasorda replied, "You're not going to get
an underground tape from me."
the front-running Atlanta Braves, but
sty Baker says, "There won't be a
LUITu·., ,., point until we win some more."
aker and Pedro Guerrero belted
m11~~tive solo homers at the start of the
te enth inning to break a 4-4 deadlock and
"Everybody's satisfied and tired," said
Baker.
Baker's 19th homer came off Carlos Diaz,
2-1, and he got his 20th in the eighth off
Gene Garber. Guerrero's shot also was his
20th of the year.
er came back with a two-run blast in
th eighth as the Dodgers completed the
ep Sunday with a 9-4 victory.
Game one was what did it for us
be ause we hadn't b~en coming back
la ly," Baker said, alluding to the first
ga e of a double-header Friday night
w the Dodgers overcame 6-1 and 8-3
de cits for a 10-9 victory.
"I'm very very happy," 81\id Manager
Tom Lasorda of the Dodgen. "They did the
things they needed to do. They knew they
were way back and had to cloae the gap,
and they did. We've still got a ways to go
and I hope we go to Cincinnati and keep the
momentum going. That's what we need to
do."
Chris Chambliss belted a grand slam
homer for the Braves in the first, the fourth
grand slam of his career and his 12th homer
this season.
Dodger relievers blanked the Braves the
rest of the way, with Dave Stewart, 6-6,
going the final four innings.
That definitely got us down," said
A ta Manager Joe Torre, who cited a
~r akdown in pitching as the Braves'
lem. "We gave up a lot of runs. In this
k (Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium), if
y don't pitch well, you get killed."
Lasorda wasn't as happy in the fourth
inning when he was ejected by first base
umpire Harry Wendelstedt for a prolonged
argument in which We ndelstedt ruled
interference on a play at second, resulting
in a double play.
Steve Garvey drove in two runs with a
second inning double and a third Inning
single. The Dodgers got another run when
Claudell Washington booted the ball in
right field and drew into a 4-4 tie on Bill
Russell's sacrifice fly in the fifth following
e Braves had held a nine-game lead
Lasorda said he was irked because
Wendelstedt intervened aft.er Torre argued
to no avail with second base umpire Lanny
·a 47-minute rain delay.
"I hope all of us realize we're still 6 'h
games behind," said Garvey.
undquist lone U.S. winner
ff et pliJces third in World Games breaststroke race
1 GUAY AQUIL, Ecuador (AP) -World record-
ho er Steve Lundquist says the U.S. swim team,
he d to one gold meadal when it had hopes of
ng at least two and possibly four, on the first
da of swimming competition at the World Aquatic
G , ls not about to give up. t'Amerlcans don't fold," says Lundquist, of
J boro, Ga., who eet a meet record in winnfnR
th men's 100-meter breaststroke Sunday night.
" e have world and American record-holders
-WORLD GAMES
~ everyday on down the line. We have
While Lundquist won the gold and J ohn
Mtffet of Costa Mesa the brome In the same race,
other American stars didn't make the victory
World record-holder Rowdy Gaines of Wint.er
en, Fla., won a aJlver in the 200 freestyle
~lind Michael Oro. of West Germany. Tracy
Qlli&lkJlnl, of Nashville, Tenn., and Jill Sterkel of = won bronze medala In the 400 lndlMdtual and 100 freestyle, respectively.
"l certainly .hope we weren't counting on
w91rW:Mr everyth1na the tint day," Mid Lundquist.
time of 1 minute, 2.76 9eCOl'lda broke the
ra-old meet mark of 1:03.08 aet In the
l>l'lllm:lnalriel by Victor Davia of Canada. who wu
in the final, only .07 behind.
••1 knew I had· to fin.lab ltronl. becal.199 lf I
didn't, eomeooe el. woukl •• L\Andqulat lldded. "At
the end, I WM fwtunate to have Jone f:lnaemaila."
Caulklu wu blitzed in the 400 Individual
medley ftna1 by the bril.Umt world-record 8Wlm of
J'Mt German Petra Scbnelder, who la now firmly -~ M the.,_. all..around WOOW\ sWtmmer In wCll'ld.
.~ ,.. wmt ablolutely perfectly. tor me,'' ~ met After lhe WM clocked '.lft f :M .10,'
........ her pfttouii m.rk by .19. "I WM preny Ml· ittir 200 metll'a that I would wtn.''
silver medalist Kathleen Nord of East Gennany, a
staggering eight seconds ahead of Caulkins.
Schnelder said she believed her time "is my
limit for the time being. 1 could not have gone any
faster."
Gaines seemed to have the upper hand going
into the final 25 meters of the 200 freestyle, but
Gross paaed him to win In 1:49.84, only .08 in front.
Jorg Woithe of East Gennany was third.
Brigit Meineke of East Gennany won Sunday
night's other women's event, the 100 ftteetyle, In
55.79. She swam alower than she did In the prellms
when ahe eet a meet record of 55.34, but it was still·
good enough to edge Annemarie Verstappen of The
Netberlan<Js and S-terkel.
The one gold, one ailver and two broru.es In
swimming gave the U.S . a comfortable lead in
overall medals at the competition, which includes
water polo, diving and synchronized 1wlmmlng.
Eaat Germany's four swimming medals were Its
first of the games. while the Soviet Union haa yet to
win a medal.
Robinson through
chasing Hank Aaron
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -On the day
they both were ln<lucted into bueball'• Hall of
Fame, Frank Robinlon laid he finally was throuah chulnl Hank Aaron.
"It eeenw like I've been chatina him for a Jorl&
time," laid J\obinlon. "It 9eelDI llke I've alwaya
been one -r behind or one year behind him.
"When broke in. all the talk WM about Hank
Aa~. and I mull NY we've had a Iona and
friendl~ on the field,'' Robbwon ukl.
llD
An early
exploiion
Angels rock rookie, 9-4 • BY JORN SEV ANO
O(the Deltr,... .....
1f there's one thing Seattle
catcher Bud Bulling hat learned
about the 1982 baaeball &ea.son,
it's that the Angels are a pretty
damn good ball club.
"The Angels are the toughest
team we've played this season,"
started the Golden West College
product. "They've got a lot of
good hitters in their lineup -
moet of them high-ball hitters -
and if you don't get the ball
down against them they're going
to hurt you." ·Th~ Angels "hurt" the
Mariners io the tune of 9-4
Sunday befor e the 27 ,025 at
Anaheim Stadium.
THE ANGELS rocked Seattle
starter Rich Bordi, making his
first major league start, for five runs In the first inning and it was
all downhill for Seattle Manager
Rene Lachemann's squad the
rest of the way.
"Who's the better team
between the Angels and Kansas
City?" repeated Bulling of a
reporter's question. "Well, the
Angels have the better hitting,
but I would have to give the
pitching edge to KC.
"Thi s is one of those
exceptions, though, where I
think the Angel hitters are
stronger than the Kansas City
pitchers.
Baseball tradition says that
good pitching, will more times
than not stop good hitting. But
after watching the Angels unload
on the Mariners, a team whose
staff ERA is ranked third best in
the American League, Bulling is
convinced otherwise.
Trailing by only five games
coming into Anaheim, the
Mariners left town down by
seven. As for the Angels, they
took three-of-four from the
Mariners and s till found
themselves losing ground to the
Royals, who swept four games
from Baltimore and find
themselves only one back.
"If we had not won today
(Sunday), that would have
meant only a split against Seattle
and that's something we (as a
team) didn't think was
necessary," said Doug DeCinces.
who capped the Angels' five-run
first-inning with a three-run
homer to right center, giving him
15 taters for the season.
"U you can't take all four you
have to take at least 3-of-4 games
at this time of the year."
DeCINCF.S ADMITl'ED that
the Angels must now do the same
thing to Min1,1 esot a , which
invades Anaheim Stadium for a
BIG DAY -Doug DeCinces
got the Angels rolling in the
first inning Sunday with a
three-run homer.
four-game set starting tonight,
that they just did against the
Mariners.
"They (the Twins) are a team
that is definitely struggling," he
said. "They are the type of ball
club where we, as a first place
team, have to try to dominate
them."
The last time the Angels and
Twins met was way back in'W\pril
befor.e owner Calvin Griffith
cleaned house. Names such as
Butch Wynegar, Roy Smalley
and Doug Corbett still dotted the
roster.
Those three players have since
·departed to the New York
Yankees, the New York Yankees
a nd the An gels, respectively,
while the Twins have gone on to
compile the worst record In the
major leagues at 35-69, 24 'h
games behind the Angels in the
American Lea~e West.
"BASEBALL IS a funny game,
and anything can happen (when
we play them)," DeCinces added,
"but we have to go out and try to
show them that we're in a
different league than they are."
The Angels seemed able to do
that to the Mariners.
"Anybody could get knocked
out in the first inning against
!~ese guys . . . t_he ~ay they
swing the bat," said Lachemann,
trying to put the game -and the
series -in perspective.
"We've come back before
after w e've been down by five
runs in the first. The key.
(See ANGELS, Paie CZ)
• c.Ma1ldail; bl ..xJIXi plllL'l8 lDOlt of the nee, WU
.....,,, an the f:reeRylit i.s ol the fOW'...iroke event
to 6*ib 1blid In f:.M .&4, mon thu\ a MeOnd behind
an MVP In both ~ and now manapr· of the Sin J'rand8co Olanta, made hla ~ ....-. an the'""" ol the Hall of J'une
library SWiday. HA9 lnduodon toUowed t.hOle Of
fOl"IW' New Yertc OtaDta lta lalDp Trnte ~
and kB. .. Happy" O\lndler, pea.World War D
~ of, -.....U, an6 pNOlded Chat of
Aaron.
l"Vl'ILB DIVS -Siatde tlUrd .._..., Dllw
Edler dNft to try to tac l'nd Lynn but c.'IOll9
• • t • • • ... • t
Indy's top rookie
Hickman succumbs
FrolD AP dJ1,PaCcbea
MILWAUKEE -Jim Hickman1 the 1982 lndianapolll 500 Rookie or
lhe Year, died early Sunday o
Injuries suffered in a crash dur g
practice for the Bettenhausen at Wllconsin
State Fair Park. Hickman 39, of Chamblee, Ga., was
practicing Sat'urday night for Sunday's race
when his Cosworth-powered March racer
alammed into the concrete wall In the first tum
of the mile oval. . It took safety officials""about .15 minutes to
pry the road racing veteran and former Air FOl'Ce
fighter pilot out o'f the mangled wreckage, He
was pronounced dead about 12 hours later in a
Milwaukee hospital.
Dr. Steve Olvey, m·edical director for
Championship Auto Racing Teams, said
Hickman died of massive head injuries.
Quote of the day
"I do whatever I want to, I live wherever
1 want to, and if I don't like the city I live
in, I can always change it. Or If I don't like
the area, I can always change that. I can
change careers. Basically, I do pretty much
what I want. You can say what you want.
There's no pressure. I'm not afraid of
anything." -Steve Rhodes, formerly
Slavek Rotldewlci, a Polish Olympian who
defected to the United States three years
aJ{O.
Ollver fuels rally In Expos win
Al Oliver capped a three-run Ill
rally in the seventh inning with a
run-scoring single as Montreal. came
Crom behind to defeat St. Lows, 5-4 . ,
Sunday. The win pushe? the~ to within
four games of first place m the National League
F.ast . . . Elsewhere in the NL, Terry Kenne~y
collected three hits and SJxto Lezcano doubled in
a pair of runs as San Diego held on to ~at
Cincinnati for the third
straight time, 8-6 . . . BUI
Madlock'& tie-breaking home
run with two outs in the top
of the 10th inning lifted
Pittsburgh past New York.
4-3 . . . Leon Darbam hit a
two-run, first-inning homer
and Chicago wen~ ~ to snap
an eight-game lOSlJ\S streak at
the expense of Philadelphia,
Ol.tW" 7-2. before a crowd of 57,652
. . . Jack Clark hit his 20th home run of the
season a two-run shot in the top of the 10th
inrung'. to help San Francisco claim a 4-2 win
over Houston. Greg Minton, '7-4, the third ~
Francisco pitcher. earned the victory, while
Frank LaCorte, 0-4, was t.agged with the defeat.
Lietzke holds off challengers
Bruce Lietzke nursed home a
dwindling lead into a two-stroke
victory Sunday in the ~ian Open
Golf Tournament at Oakville, l!I
Ontario. The triumph, his second in this national
championship, was L1etzke's first of the season
and marked the sixth consecutive year in which
he has won at least once . . . Long-hitting
Beth Daniel fired a sizzling 8-under-par 64,
equalling the tournament record and overtaking
Sany Little to capture the LPGA tournament in
Denver. Daniel, 25, wielded a hot putter to finish
with a four-round total of 276, 12 under par,
which also tied the tournament record Daniel set
in winning this event in 1980. The victory was
Daniel's fourth of the year and earned her $30,-
000.
From Page C1
•. ,.
Gaettl'a blast give Twins win
Gary Gaettt powered a home run Ill in the to of the ninth which turned
out to ~e the deciding blow aa
Minnesota outlaated Oakland, 8-7
Sunday. Ex-Angel Tom Bnuwa1ky and Gary
Ward had slugged homer1 in the seventh to help
the Twins win the aeeaaw J>attle .•.
El.aewhere in the American League, Lee May's
plDch a1ngle triggered a four-run elJUith-lnning
rally that carried Kanaaa
City to a 4-2 victory and
four -ga me sweep of
Baltimore ... Rookie
Dave Hostetler drove in all
lo\ir Tex.as runs with a pair of
homer,, including a tle-
breaking three-run shot in
the sixth inning, to glve Texas
a 4-2 triumph over New York
... Harold Baines' two-run homer in the fifth
inning following a two-out error helped Chicago
tum back Boston for the t~ straight time, 4-2
. . . Loa Whitaker highllghted a 17-hit attack
with a three-run homer aa Detroit snapped a
four-game losing streak by beating Toronto, 8-5
. . .Doa Money drove in three runs with a.double
and single and Gorman Tltomaa added a two-run
single to help Milwaukee to a 7-2 victory in the
second game of ita double-header with
Cleveland. The Indiana won the first game, 4-1,
as Ed Whitson and Dan Splllner checked the
Brewers on four hits.
Plumer races to win In Ven(\Zuela
Polly Plamer of University High II
was a winner in the l,500 meters
Sunday as the Junior Pan American •
Athletic Championships came to an
end in Barquisimeto, Venezuela. Plumer won the
event in 4:23.07, as the United States captured 23
gold medals, 15 silver and 13 bronze to handily
win the wmpetition over second-place Canada
and third-place Cuba . . . Debbie Unaer,
daughter of three-time Indianapolis 500 winner
Al Unser, was killed early Sunday when the
dune buggy she was riding in flipped at a st.ate
park near Truth or Consequences, N.M., state
police said . . . Darrell Waltrip fought off a
challenge at the finish line by Baddy Baker to
win the Talladega 500 NASCAR Grand National
stock car race. Meanwhile, in Milwaukee, Tom
Saeva, getti.Qg a break when Rick Mears' car
broke down !fJ laps from the end, scored an easy
victory in the Bettenhausen 200 Indy-car race at
Wisconsin State Fair Park .
Televlslon, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratinp are: v v v v excellent; v v v
worth watching; v v fair; v forget it.
5:30 p .m ., Channel 7 V v V V
Baseball: Montreal at Philadelphia.
ADaoancen: Al Michaels, Howard Cosell
and Bob Uecker.
Montreal will attempt to tighte n the
National League F.ast race some more when they
send Bill Gullickson (8-8) against Larry
Christenson (6-5) of the Phillies. Philadelphia
leads the F.ast by one game, while Montreal is
_four games back.
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m.,
KABC (790); Minnesota at Angels, 7:30 p.m.,
KMPC (710).
ANGELS ROUT SEATTLE • • •
however, is making s ure they
don't get any more. Hell, they
were up 8-0 before we even had
a chanoe.''
Angel pitcher Geoff Zahn was
the recipient of the offensive
explosion. z.ahn. in winning his
first j(ame since July 9 (No. 11
Drug test planned
Chargers to defy association directive
LA JOLLA (AP) -Defying a
National Football League
Players' Association directive,
the San Diego Charger s
announced Sunday they have
launched a drug testing program
to "clear the' people who are
clean and help those who need
help."
Chargers' owner Gene Klein,
wtuiJe club wu heavily fined for
a 1973 drug scandal, said the
object of the mandatory ~g will be to "get all this behind UI
. . . get rid of this monkey!'
Prior to Klein'• announcement.
veteran running back Chuck
Muncie read a statement to the
media admitting he had a drug
problem, but prombed "I do not
intend to ever Ute druia again."
Muncie, who tied an NFL
record laat year wHh U
touchdown• ruahln&,
acknowledged apending ~n
~ period Of tUne at a =..,. f~ "~Uoo aDd ·-•" rn another uarprl1tn1
~~~w \ed&le J(.ekher ~
hi• reurement. A Mven-year .ww. Keicher. 28. Mi -.i m ~ do•houae wlCh coach DOn
Coryell over a weight problem.
Klein's decision to begin drua
testing comes after the NFLP A
warned NFL team doctors that
they face malpractice suits lf
teatin~ is done without the
players conaent.
Klein said there will be "time
to time acreenlna of players, the
times to be tet by managemenL"
He added that playen who fall
the tests and refute treatment
will face "very, very Urlct
di.ctpllnary action. ti
F.d Garvey Mn.PA e~ve
director. told The AP that the
ICJ'ffnlna procram 11 "clearly
Wept" and vowed the players'
union would -* an lnjunction
to have It terminated u an unfair
labor pndlct.
.. In addlUon to beh~I ia~
tn~ of prtacy.i It le an UJepl c~ of WWldiur concUUolla,11
~ llld :rrom· lill home tn the w~u.c..--..
a. ... •d ... , Kkitft ...
taldM'tit llilp"' ,...,. tM ....
of urtnalyaie and drµc ce.tinJ into current~_ne_.ouauon1
betw"" the NJ'LP A arid the
ownen.
overall against five losses),
pitched 7 ~ innings before tiring
and giving way to Luis Sanche%
in the ejghth.
As for the explosion itself,
Brian Downing had three hits
while Rob Wilfong, Reggie
Jackson, Fred Lynn and
OeCi.nces had two each.
"You just hope your pitching
can keep the ball down lon§
enough to make a run at them,'
said Bulling of the Angels.
"Everybody can be pitched to.
We just had trouble pitc~ to
certain hittera on the Ang.!la. '
Seattle isn't the only team this
aeaaon that haa encountered that
problem.
*
PUNCHED OUT -Home plate umpire Randy
Marsh makes no mistake in calling out Dodger
base-runner Ken Landreaux Sunday in the
,.,, Whpfloeo
first inning. Dodgers, however, went on to beat
Atlanta for the fourth straight time, 9-4.
I
Powerful showing by U.S.
Americans capiure four of six at Pre-Olympic Regatta
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY o.-vr Piiot lloellng Writ•
LONG BEACH -U.S. sailors dominated the
first race of the Pre-Olympic Training Regatta
Sunday, winning first place in four of the six
classes. · The second of the three Olympic type regattas
to acquaint world sailors with the conditions they
will face in 1984, drew 205 boats from 20 countries.
The opening race was sailed in light winds and
under overcast skies in the ocean off the Long
Beach breakwater.
U.S . winners were Steve Benjamin and crew
Chris Steinfeld in the 470 Class; Vince Brun and
Toddy Cozzens in Stars; Ed Baird with Tucker
Edmo~n and Larry Klein in the Soling Class, and
Randy Smythe and Jay Glaser in the Tornado
catamarans.
John Loveday and Jonathon Ward of Great
Britain, led the Flying Dutchman Class around _the
course an~ Paola Semeraro o~ Italy scored a WU'e-
to-wire win in the one-man Finn Class.
The Regatta continues for seven days with one
race each day.
t'-Jtlax o<verall Dana Point winner
V-Max, skippered by J ohn Hooper of the host
club was the overall Performance Handicap Fleet
winner Sunday in Dana Point Yacht Club's Dana
~ys Regatta.
Second overall was Cheap Trick, Byron
Watson, Capistrano Bay Yacht Club, and third was
Randy 'far. Steve Equina, DPYC.
Class winners:
CL.ASS A -1 Rand)' Tat. St ..... Equine, OPYC, 2. s..dora, Alan
Brouglllon, OPYC: 3. New Wave, Bob MelMIHI, OPYC.
CL.ASS B -1. V-Mu: 2. Cheep Trlek; 3. Moody Bk.le. Mlle• Hinton.
Capo BVC.
CRUISING CL.ASS -1. Condor, Wiiiie Lezlo, UMtleched. 2 Sea
Lynll, Waller Unit. OPVC. 3 long&. Ed Andrllde. Cepo eve.
LI00-14 -1. Evan Ma.lanoeky, OPYC; 2 Oeve lar--., King
H"rhnr VC: 3 Peol Frazier. OPYC. CORONA00-15 -1. Bob Anderson, Del Rey YC: 2. Connie
Theol>old, ORVC. 3 Benny Schwegler, ORYC.
SAILBOARDS -t. Kent Ker1tronn, unettllChec:t. 2. Gatry Allen.
OPYC, 3 PllUI Hengatebedl, unattac:Nd
SABOT A -1 Ktr1ny Kr-. OPYC; 2 Ale)I JohnlOl"t, OPYC: 3.
Marl• Rubio, Capo eve
SABOT 8 -1. Trey C,_ry, OPYC: 2. Tom Welte Jr .• OPYC: 3.
John 81eney, DPYC
lt'ake captures Hoble-33 regatta
Louie Wake of Capistrano Beach won the first
Hobie-33 one-design regatta in a three-race series
sailed off Newport Beach Saturday and Sunday.
Ten boats turned out for the event.
Trophy wtnnen In order of flnllh: 1. Louie Wake. Capl9trano Bea<:h, e PQ4nta: 2. Bob Boyes. Mlaelon Hlllt. 9V•: 3. Hobie Alter, C~trano
9each. ~; 4. Robbie HU-. SM Diego. 11: 5. Ron Mayfield, M8'1na
del Rey. 12~: e. Fletch« Olaon. Newport Belictl, 15; 7. Harry Reed,
Newpof"t e..cn. 21, 8. Dan Carpentef, SNttle, Wuh. 231 9 NM!
&teny, Salt I.Me City, 211: 10. Karl Sdlopp, Long BNch, 28
Shella Barnett to Tres Gora
Trea Gordo, skippered by Nancy Jo Price,
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club won the Shella
Burnett Memorial Trophy in the Orange Coast
Women's Racing .Association sailed Saturday out of
South Shore Yacht Club. Price was the winner in
the spinnaker class sailed in Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet yachts.
Winner in the non~spinnaker class wa Sirikit,
sailed by Debra Boiteau, Voyagers Yacht Club.
Trophy wlriners in each clasa:
SPINNAKER CL.ASS -1. TrM Gordo, Neney Jo Prloe, Bahia
COflnthlan YC; 2. Bang 8AOQ MAJCWlll, Kathy Adamaon, Dena Potnt YC:
3. Qotna Left, Sue Franta. OPYC.
NOH-SPINNAKER CLASS -1. •trt11t, o.bre Bott-... Voy8Q8'1
YC; 2. Rrecreat. o.t>bl8 Qlmter, VYC'; S. Seadofa, Jetlel 8'ougMon,
OPYC,
Harmony wins Catllll•• raee
Harmony, lk.lppered by Jerry Moulton, South
Shore Yacht Club won Claaa A ln SSYC'a Crew of
Two Around Catalina Wand race.
Clua B winner was Ragamuffin, aaJled by
Rusty Allen, SSYC, and the Ocean Racing
Catamaran winner was White Knuckler, Bob
Osmer, Windjammers Yacht Club.
ANALYSIS
Lewis' Nefertiti takes rel(atta
CABRlLLO BEACH -Stan Lewis' Nefert.iti
was the winner of the Cal -29 national
championship regatta sailed Saturday and Sunday
out of Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club.
Runner-up was Dandelion, Bob Griffin Seal
Beach Yacht Club and third was Frenesi II. Al
Carlin, CBYC.
Blank a winner at regatta
Eighty-eight boats in seven cl~ t_umed out
Sunday for Lido Isle Yacht ~l~b s Midsummer
Regatta sailed over courses inside the harbor.
Trophy winners: L"l00·1•A -1 Peul Blank. Soutll Sh<>fa Vaclll Club. 2 81alne
Thorne Bahia Corinthian V~t Club
LIOO· t•B -1. Don wi.e. Balboa vc; 2 &uoe Conklin, Lklo Ille
VC. SABOT A -1. Paul Norlng. Huntington H111boUr VC; 2. Megan
Tingler, LIVC, 3 Cusendra Smeltzer, N-pon Hart>of YC-4. Sterling
Cot>erty,BYC SABOT 9 -1. Mark Franco. LIYC. 2 Cati GrodllCI\, UVC, 3 Eric
Sluttky. LIVC SABOT C -1 Wlltlil Fre<lricl111on, 8VC; 2. l(eYln Stern. BCYC; 3.
JulHI Rogera LIVC. •
SABOT C·2 -1 Jcxy Twist, UYC: 2. Vln<*lt Pa'*'lno. LIVC: 3. cnne Miii.-, BVC; • Peter Grodach. UVC, 5. Lenc;e ShOemaker, Balboe
llland VC SABOT NOVICE -1 JOhn RNe<a. LIVC; 2 Jul111 Samgtler. LIYC.
Masquerade. Sunshine llnlsh first
Hunungton Harbour Yacht Club wound up its
four-race Bolsa Chica ~ries Friday and Saturday
with races around the buoys off Seal Beach.
Overall series winners:
PHRF·A -1. MaqU81'ede, J T"-wley-C 0.--.. Vtr1tura YC; 2.
Entourage, NII WillOn, long Beacll YC: 3 Gtrmo. Gary Henache,
LBYC. PHRF-B -1. Sunelllne, Denni• Humphrey, Cab<lfto 9eltott YC: 2. Ex~lbur, Al Jonea, West Cont YC: 3 S«enata. DaYCI Rustlgllln, Long •
Beech YC CATALINA-27 -1 Jqy Ride. Lee Kri_tey. SMI 8ellCh VC
CAL·20 -1. Lory L ... Kerl Hodgee. Alll/Tlitot Bay YC; 2 Nb, Nie*
Condo•. s 1 eve.
Trett victorious;
Vance denied 200
Elmer Trett of Oxford, Ohio, claimed the crown
in the top fuel classification at the National
Motorcycle Racing Association's national
championship series at the Ora nge County
International Raceway Sundav.
Before a crowd of 4,850; Terry Vance of La
Palma was hoping to become the first to exceed 200
miles per hour, but a broken blower belt in the
finals limited him to 132.54 and a second-place
finish to Trett.
Vance just missed cracking 200 with a plus-198
showing both Saturday and Sunday. Meanwhile, it
waa the fin\ win for Trett th.is year.
Earlier, Russ polllns out ol Huntington BMch
was beaten in the first round. Collins waa debutin8
in hia new Honda-sponsored Battleatar, the Ioncest
bike in the h1atory of the sport with a wheelbue
136 inches without the wheelie bar.
In the Funny Bike clalllfication, Crail Buma
of c.anoaa Park waa the vlctor, beltin& Houtton's
Terry Klier in th_e firi81.!:
Meanwhile, ~ Cook from Oreson was the
Pro Stock winner, de!eatina Deve Schultz from
d Fort Mye~ Fla. lt was the fint NMllA race of the Orange County ouste year for Cook. who beat Bob Carpenter 1n th•
1emifinala.
LOS ANGELES -The l8MDll few Onnce Schulu had earUer knocked off defendtnc
Countv came '° .. c1oee Sunday ln the Unltild St11i. -'---pl T v ln hla 1imiftna1 Deve~pment Leel\.le aher a 1~119 •u.lt to ,_'"'_MIUl_°" __ erry~__...ance.:......:-........ __._---:--·--7"""~
South Bay in the lint round of the l>luoffl,.
Ken Bard.~1•1· from Costa 1111• Hieb, en.toY9d a ....-blCh 34 ~9' wblle &.nta Ana'a
Rob LUCM added 10. *'' oc aouldn'l .,.,.C101111 a
poor 1&art whJch Md &hail tr.rune al the half,
71•54. Oran8t OMinl) ... _. .. wtth. ~ nCold.
the lelt two la.el condnl ., the handl ot &outh
Biy.
••
'Y' • • . ' " .
MAJOR U!AOUE 9TANDIN09
American Leeaue
W•ITIDIN DIVllfotl
W L Pct. U ~ S9 4• 513 Klll'lsas City 52 49 51S 8 Sealtle 51 SI 505 7
Oakland 4• 81 419 16
Ta.aa •O 59 •a. 17
Mlnt> .. 011 36 8fl .337 24'~ IAITE~!Uf OfVlllotl
Mltwauk• 6fl ~ 578
eo.1on 58 •• .see 1 Bal1tmote S<4 •S 5<45 3'> New York 60 •8 510 1
Oe1rol1 51 •fl 510 1
Cleveland SO 50 500 8 Toron10 •a 53 .HS 10·~
1unc1er'e 1c-A~ !I, Seallle • Oetroll 8. Tor onto 5
Cleveland 4·2. Mllw-• 1 1
ChlCllQO 4, 8oa1on 2
Kansai Clly •. Batllmort 2 M1nneao11 8. Oakland 1
Tuas 4, New York 2
Today'• Clam•
M1n....01• (B Cutillo S-81 •• A~
tW11t 5·3).n
M•lwauk .. tMcClu<a 8·31 at Toronto
1Stoeb 10.101
Boston (Rainey 6·3) al B•tttmore
(McGregor 12·7>. n
Taus (T•nan1 5· 111 11 Cl1val1nd
(Bartier 10·81 n Oetroll (Pasnnic:k 2·31 at K1nus Cuy
(Spt111ortt 7 6) n
Seattle (Perry 7·81 al Oakland
(Langford 7 11). n Only g1mea achedul«l
N1tlon1I Leeaue
WHTUIN DIVtftotl W L l'ct. 08
Atlanta 61 • 1 598
San O!ego 56 48 538 6
Doclget• 56 49 533 6'•
San Francisco SO 5• 481 12
Houston 46 56 45 I 15
C1nc1nna1t 38 86 385 24
EAI TEllN DIVISION
PhlladelPh" 58 •3 S 7 • St lOUtS 56 4S S63 1
3' • 13'> 19'1\
P•llsburgh 54 46 S40
Mon1real 54 47 S3~ New Vork 45 57 44 1
Clucago < I 85 387
l undar'• ac-
Doclget• !I Atlanta •
Montreal S. SI lou11 4
Pt1t1burgh 4 New York 3 ( 10 1nn1ng1I
Chicago 7 Pt111adelph1• 2
San ~o 8. C1nc1nna11 8
San F'1ano1100 •. Houlton 2 ( 10 inn1ng11
Tonlehl'• Qamee
Ooc19er• (Reuss 10·81 II C1nc1nnau
1Putore S-71 San Francisco (Bre1n1n9 5·31 •I
Atlanta (Camp 7·41
Montreel (GulllcklOfl 8-81 II
Phll•delphta t<:hrlstenaon 8-M
P1t1aburg/' J Rhoden 8-9) at St Louis cB rorach 10-5)
San O!ego CWel9" 5-51 at HOu11on IJ
Noekro 10· 11
Only g-achedul..i
Angel IY ... egee
IAmNO
ABllHHlllWll'ct.
LyM 339 83 102 13 63 301 ear-318 s1 es 1 28 m Oownln9 3!12 73 118 16 43 296 O.Clnce9 JM! s. 103 15 58 281
Ro.Jackaon 78 7 21 1 13 280
Baylor 402 50 112 18 Ml 279 Ra.Jeckaon331 5• 92 25 80 278
BOOM 303 25 82 • 31 271
Benlq\Ml 93 14 25 1 9 289
Gndl 331 42 87 11 48 283
Foll 322 ~ M 2 38 281
Clan< 83 8 16 2 5 254
Ferguson 55 5 12 1 • 218 Wiifong 120 14 21 0 S 1H
BurlMOO 45 4 7 0 2 156
KalteMr 31 4 I 0 0 032
To1a1s 3515 4118 1164 1oe •M 2 74
PITC~ IP H 18 10 W-L OU.
Mahler 9 • 5 t-0 1 29 Hassler 52''> 36 30 26 2· 1 I 71 Renko 12<W> 119 38 58 9-2 3 36
Wiii 103'~ 96 36 49 5.3 3.•0
Aue S2 45 23 •O 3-3 3 •6
Zahn 1•11\'> 1•1 41 51 11·5 362
Kiaon 88 78 32 •8 &-• 3 se
fortQI IS9 150 35 51 10-7 3 74 Sanchez SJ'" :>Cl a .u ,,_ 1 3 93
Goltz 53 53 2• 37 5-3 • 75
Corbett 70'h 83 31 4S 1·9 4.97
Totala9 .. ..., 887 339 0 8 594• 3 88
Anoel• I , Mertnen 4 llA~ CAU'ONllA ebr hbl a r hbl
3000 Oownlnglf 5131 20 I 0 Benlquz If 0000
4 1 0 0 WMfong 2b 5 2 2 0
3 O 1 O ReJ11eliaon rt • 2 2 O
1110ci.tkrt 0000 4113B•ytorclh •111
3 1 1 0 Lynn cf 4 1 2 4
10100.ClnCMJb 4123
• o 1oRoJllCkaon1b3000
• 0 0 0 Foll u 4 0 0 0
3021 eoon.c 3110 1000
•ODO
Jena 2b
ca11111o 2b
Edler 3b Bod'lle It
Brown If
Ziek"" Cowen• t1 S~rt
Grey lb
Henderson cf TCna cl
Sernan
&Jlttng c
37 •9• Totals 3611139 To1at1 ._.. b'f lnftlntll s..m. 000 000 130-
C•llloml• 630 010 OOll-11
E -OeClncee OP -Calttornl• I. LOB -S..ltte 6. Celllornl• 6. 2B -Lynn, eow.n..
T Crvz, Boone HR -OeClncea (15). Zilk
(I•).
IMttte Bord( (1..0-1)
Nelson Clwt<
CaudlU
CallfomlOI
If' N .... 5
, .... 3
~ 5
~ 0
IUR•IO 5 5 0 0
3 3 2 1
1 1 1 2
0 0 0 I
Z.ttn (W. 11-5) 7'1t 11 • 4 O ~ ~ '~ 0 0 0 0 2
PB -Boone T -2 32 A -27,025
•
Doclt4N'a ......... 4
LOI NtOlllal AT\.ANTA lllHhlll , ellrhlll au 2b 4 o o o WuNnotn rt 4 o o o L.Andt-.ot cf 6 2 3 1 Hubbatd 211 4 1 2 0
Baker It 6 3 3 3 Harper tt 3 1 1 o
OuerNro rt 5 1 3 1 G111ber p 0 0 0 O c.y 3b 4 1 2-0 Wl\IMlon ph 1000
GlllWY 1b 5 1 22 Murphy cf 3 0 0 0 AUMell u 3 0 2 1 M«ner 311 4 11 0
Sclotc:I• c 2 o o O Chambtl• lb 3 1 1 4
MerslleH ph 1 0 0 0 e.nedlcl o 4 0 I 0
Cr-c 2000 Aamlfflu •OOO hckwtth p t O O O Nlel<ro p 2 0 0 0 0<1• ph 1 0 1 0 Olu p 1 0 0 0
Niedenl\ler p 0 0 0 0 Liner .. If 1 0 0 0 "-**• ph 1 0 0 0 Stewart p 2 1 1 o
Tol•I• 41 II 17 8 Tot•I• 34 4 8 4
• lcor• b• lnnlfte9 LOI Angelel 02 1 010 230-fl All~ll 400 000 000-E!' -R•mlrez, WHhlnglon 2 OP -
Allaflta 1 LOB -Lot ~ fl, Altenl• 8. 2B -C.,.. GlllW)'. Hubl>erd. Siewert HR
-Chambff" ( 12), B•ker 2 (20), Guerrero
(20). SB -LandrHUX, Murphy 9 -s ....
SF -Auuall. Loe AneeiM II' H 11111 .. IO e.d<wtth 3 3 • 4 3 5 Mi.a.nluer 2 1 0 0 0 I
Stewert (W,MI 4 2 0 0 1 2 AliMU
p Nlelcro 4 10 • 3 2 8
C Olu (L,2· 1) 3 4 3 3 o 3
Garber 2 3 2 2 0 2 P Nleluo pitched 10 3 ba!ler1 In the 5111
C Diez pltc:lled lo 1 belt• In lhe 8th
HBP -by Nlederlluer (WUlllnQIOtll T -
3 12 A -33.957
Amerlcen Leegue
Reneen 4. v ... 11-2 N-Yorl< 000 001 001 2 9 0
Teicaa 000 103 oox 4 8 O Morgan, Alghelll 181 and Cerone,
Honeycult. Mat111ek (7i and Sufldbefg. W-Honeycull, 5-12 L-Morgan. 5-8.
S-Mallack (1). HR•-T••••. Hosteller
2 116\. A -18.905$
Twine I, A'a 1
Minnesota 000 300 302 8 1 I 1
Oakland 000 ca. 107 -7 8 2 Vlota. Pacella Ill), F1111on (11, Llllle (8). A Oavta (9) and Butera, Norrl1, Beard
(4), Hanna (7). T UnderwOOd (II) and
Newman W-P•c:atta. 1·3 L Beard,
8-8 S-A 01v11 ( 12) HRa-Mlnneeota,
9tunlll'lsky ( 1•). Watd 1171. GM111 ( 181.
O•kland. Armu 11•1 A-18.539
11ora11 4, o.lcMell 2 Balllmore 000 101 000-2 9 1
Kanaas City ooo 000 04x-4 11 1
Palme<, T. Mar!lnei (8), Stoddard (8)
and t:>ernpMy, Froet, HOO<I ( 11. Castro (6), OulMflberry (Ill aod O\Wk, Sl.ught
(Ill W-Ca11ro, 1·1 L-T Merhnez
5-S. S-OulHnbe rry (25) HR-,
Batllmor•. Alplten (15). A-30.280
""'" GAlff tndtaM ....... .,. 1
Cteveiand 000 300 100-• t3 0 Mllweulc.. 000 001 000-I 4 1
Whilaon. SplllMr (7) end HHaey.
HUS and Slmmona W-Wlll11orl 2-1
L-H ... , 8·6. S-Splll...., (U I HR-
Milw•uk•, Simmons (15).
llCONOOAME
lfeWere 7, lndlaft• 2
C-and 000 002 000-2 1 1
M"'*11uk.. 000 430 00•-7 12 0
Anderson. Brennan (4) end B•ndo. S1a1on. Bernard (8) and C Moor• W-
Stalon. 8·2 L-Andaraon. 0-1 A-•1.891.
T...,.l,8tueJay1 5
O.trOil 030 020 210 8 17 0 Toronto 020 000 111-5 10 O
Morris Toblll (9) and l M P•rnsh_
Leal, R L Jeckaon (8~ Garvin (7). G11se4
(9) and Whitt W-Morrla, 12· 11 L-LMI. 8-8 S-Toblk (5) HR1 Oetron.
Whitiker (71. L M Parrillll (181. Toronto. Powell (I). Whit! (9). UpahlW ( 1•1
A-23.033
Whl1e IH 4, Red lox 2
eo.1on ooo 002 000-2 1 1
Chicago 001 020 101 4 !I 1
Hurs1. Burgmeler (T). Aponte 181 and
Alllll'laon. Kooaman. lamp 111 •nd Hill
W-Kooam•n. 3-5. L-Hurll, 3·5 S-
lemp (2) HA Chicago. Baine• ( 151
A-26.047
Natlonel Leegue
Cube T, "1lllle• 2
Chk:ego 300 020 011 7 12 0
Phlledelphla 000 000 020-2 6 0
Molea. l• Sm11n \Ill •nd Moreland. Ruthven. Lyle (5). Farmer (8). Monge (!I)
lll'ld B Ole, Aol>«U(9) W-NOles, 1·9
L-Rulhven. 8-9 HA1-C111cago.
Durham (H ), Phil•delphla. M•llhewa
(18). A-57,852
Plldree I , Ride II
San OleQo 133 010 000-8 11 3 Clncinflall 011 001 003-8 11 1
CUrtls, Chiller (8). Deleon (Ill and T Klll'lnedy; Lell>randt. Harris (3). l<ern (7).
l eetey (II) and Trevino, Ven Gorder Ill) W-Curtls, 7-41 L-Lell>rlll'ldl. 3-7 S-
O.Leon ( 10) A 15,46 I
bpoe S, Catdlnete 4
St Louis 111 001 000-4 15 I Monl•HI 110 ooo 30x-5 12 1
Andujw Lahti (7). Kut (71. K-(7).
B•lr (81 and 0 Por1er. Ten ace (8).
Rogers, SchaUeder 16) RHrdofl (7).
frym•" (8) and Car1er W-AHrdon.
•· 1 l -Lahtl, 2-2. S-frym•n (7)
HA-St Louie. Hernandez (8) A-51,353
l'kal• 4. ..... a
P111st>urg11010 000 200 1-4 11 1
..... York 010 101 000 0-3 7 1 B1umgw1an, Guan1• (S), Serm1en10
(71. Tallutve (II). Scurry ( 10) and NIOOlla,
T Pena (71. M Scoll, Leech (Ill end
Hodgea. W-Teltulve. 7-5. L-LHCh,
1-1 S-Scu,,y (I) HA-Plllaburgh.
Madloc:lt 1111 A-21,871
Qlente 4,Aalt'Oe 2
San Fr anc:lllCO 000 000 10 1 2 -4 8 0 Houston • ooo 000 101 0-2 e o
A Mat11n. Lavelle (7), MlnlOtl (II) and
May; Ay•n, l.aCor1• ( 101 and Knk:ely,
PujOll (8). Athby 00). W-MlntOtl. 7-4
L-t..cof1•, 0·4 HA-San Frem:lllCO,
Clarlc (201 A-20. IOI.
Otan0t C0Mt DAIL V PILOT /Monday, Aug\llt 2, 1812
SCOREBOARD .
. .
Top 10
(lleMd --·bate) AMll'ltCAN IAAOUll Q.UflHht.
Wllaoll, K.C 77 ~ 43 114 .3-41
YOUlll, MN. fl7 31G 75 1a1' :133
11..,ra/I. Cte. " 311 77 128 .327 P~, Chi 80 HS 38 114 .321
H<bt41, Min 811 S4T 52 111 .320
Cooper, MU 96 Set'64' 129 .316
Whlla, K.C. 99 323 48 102 .316
'G1tcl1. Tor. 117 418 82 f31 .315 Ganin«, Mii. 78 256 25 80 .313 McRae, K.C. 101 34557 129 312
AUNI; A. Henderson, Oalllarld, 811,
Motltor, Miiwaukee. 711, Hurah,
Cleveland. 77; Yount, MllwaukH, 75:
Evana, Boalon. 73; Oowntn9, An .. ls, n. ABI: MGR••. Kann• Clly, 91:
Thornton, Cleval•,,d, 80, Cooper,
Mltwlillll ... 76. 0 ThOmu, MVw•uk ...
71, Li.Wnskt, Chlcaoo, 71 HITI: YotHll, MllWault•, 131, 0111cla.
TotOtllO, 131, Hlll<ah, Cleveland, 128,
Cooper, MllwaukH, 129; Mc;RH,
Kansas City, 120. DOUBLlt: Youn!, MllwaukH, 30;
While, Kansas Clly. 30: Lynn, A~.
2t; Evlll'I•. Bollon 21. Garcia, Toron10.
26
TAWl.Et: Httndon, DetrOll. 11. W
w111on, Kanu• City, 10, Yount. M.....,.. .. , !I; Barnuard, Ch~. 7, 5
Tl..i Wllh 6.
HOME RUHS: G. Thomae. Mllwauk .. ,
25. fie. hc:lleon, Angela, 25; Thornton,
~. 24, Ogilvie. MllWauk•. 23,
H•uah, CteYeland, 21
ITOLEN BAIEI : R Hender1on, Oakland. 99, Garcia, Toron10. 33.
Wllh•n. K•naas City. 26. J Cruz,
Sunte, 25; leF1ore, Chicago, 24.
PITCHING \ 13 Oecllllorta~ lluckovlch, Mllwauk•. I ·•, 2 92; Burns. Ch~o.
11_., 3 55. Guidry,,._ Y0<k, 10·•. 3 75,
Ceudlll, SHUia, 10·•. 2 04. Z•lln,
Angele, 11-6, >.a; Petry, Oelroil, 11~.
3 23. McGregor, Baltimore. 12·7, 3 92,
Gura. Kan..,1 City, 12-7, 4.32.
NATIONAL LEAGUE 0 Al II H Pc\.
Ollver, Mii 100 381 59 121 318 t..nd,_., LA 79 267 47 8• 315
KNQht, Hin 102 388 53 121 312
McGee, S1 L 611 235 27 73 311
Pena. Pgh 87 321 31 fl!I 308
Carter, Mii 95 3.. 58 10ll 308
Ol.lrhem, Chi 98 359 55 I 10 306 A•y, P9h. 100 403 58 123 305
Jonee. S.O 8!I 323 58 119 303
Madloe:lo, Pgll !18 336 60 1I1 303
llUNI: lo Smith St LOUii 83,
Mutphy, AUan1a. 78. Dawson. Montreal.
71; S•nd~g. Chlll•go, 8•. Schmidt, Phlledelphla, 63, Horner. A11afl1a, 63
RBI: Murplly, Atlante. 74. Oliver.
MontrHI, 69, HendrlCk, SI. Louis. 69,
Kingman. New York. 68, Lezcano. San OleQo. 87: Clarl1, San fr&nQSCO, 67
HITI: J. Ray, P11t1bufgll, 123. Oliver.
Mon1re•I. 121, Knight, Hou11on. 121; IH, Doc19ere, 111; Buckner, Chle:aQo.
117 DOUBLE&: T Kennedy. S•n Diego.
30 Kn1gll1. Houaton. 28; OIWIOfl, Montreal. 2S W•llach, MontrHI 24,
Madtodl. Potlst>urgll. 24 T'llU'LJ!I; Mcgee. SI Louis. 7, Garner
Houatou. 7. T.,,,pteton. San O!ego. 7;
M0<eno, Plllaburgh, 6; Thon, Houlton,
8, Puhl. Houston. 6 HOME llUUI: Murphy, Atlanta. 28;
Kingman, Maw York, 26. Carter.
Monlreal, 21 Horner. Allan1a. 20. Bait•. DodOWe. 20; o-o. ~. 20: Clark. San Franc:i.eo. 20
ITOLEN BAHi: Moreno. Pllltburgh. •1. Aaillel. MOtltreel, 48, lo Smllll. St
Louis, •4; Dernier. Philadelphia, 40, I••,
~..,:-(13 Oedelona)' P Nlekro.
Atlanta, 10-3. 3 36. Aogeta. MOtltreal. 13·4, 2 31, O Aoblnaon, Pmaburgh
11·5. 3 79, Lollar. San OieQo. 11·5. 3 31,
forlCll, SI Lou11. 10·5, 3 llS, Carlloo,
Phlladelphla, 1•-8. 3 08, Valen111ela, "Dodgera, 14·1, 2.111; Krukow.
Phlllldelphla. 10.8, 2 72
Deep ... tlehlng
ART'S LANDING (Newport lkach) -
126 •noter• 9 alb•core, I barrac:ud• t6
tionlto. 105 mackerel, 30 rod( hllll. 52
.. nd b•sa. 21 1cu1p1n, 2 c•bezon 1
lhMl>Sl>Nd. 79 kelp bMa
I E.AL BEAC H -214 englera 8
barracud•. 600 mackerel, 12s roek 111111. 1.
135 send b .... 20 1eulpln. a.rge -185 angler• 6 t>ua, 3 hellbul, 200 mackerel, .00
wt1ll• croaker, 1SO ~ flall
DAVEY'S LOCKEll (Newpon Beech) -253 anglers 8 1>erracuda, 139 t>ontto. 181
c;alico ~ 4 hallbul, 953 rT\Kkeral, 86 rOd<
ft911. 299 sand 11.... 2 yellowt•ll
DANA WHAR' -375 anglefa. 8 alllacore. 525 bHS, 10 b•rr•cud•, 287 bonito. 1
halibut. 818 maekeral. • rock llah, 2
~
NMRA Weetern Netlonel1
(et Ofllfl99 C-ly llac4W91)
Top tuel -I Elmer Trell (O•IOl'd,
Ohio). K...,uakl, 7 43. 190 87, 2 Terry v..-(La Palma). SuMI, 7 as. 132 ~ FUMY Bll<a -I. Craig Burns (Canoga
Per111. K .... Uakl, 7 92. 169 17: 2 Terry
K'1er (HOUS10t1l. KawaMkl. 1.91. 142 83.
Pro Slook -I Larry Cook
(Mltwa11kle. Oregon), KaweHkl. 8 83,
1•8 78; 2. O.ve Sdlultz (FOt1 Myer•.
Fla ~ l(aWMafll, 8 113, 1 .. MI. All~ 4,850
Cenedleft ODBn (et~6"c.) m
Btuci. UeUtte.171,500 m
Hal Sullon.145,IOO
aa..ae-e.&-79
M-81-72-71 -Tommy VatenllM.S24,650 7o-te-68·74
Ch111e1 coociv.*24,850 11-10-12-e1
291 L.ou Graham,$ 13.11111
Johnny Mlllet,S t3,t111
Nlek ,aldo,l 13,11 Ill
Andy 8Nn,l 13,fl1fl
Vanc:e Heafner .113.919
L11ry Nelaon,$13.9~
Sieve Metnyk,$11,350
Tom Weltlcopl,Sll.350
Wayne l9vl.S9,350 ' Peter Ooelertlllls,$11,350 ...
Pat llnowy,$7,012
Mark Plell,$7,012 Morrie Halal..,y,17.o12
Jerry Andereorl,17 fil2
Greg Norman,14. 796
Oen POlll,$4,796
Barry JMdeal,$4,796
Kellh Fer9111,$4,79t Georg• 9\lrn1.$4, 795
Bobby Wldklna.14,796
Clar~ AOM,S4,79t .. Mike Ntcolelte.$3,0ll 1
Jim Autledge,$3,08 I
David Graham,$3,081
Dan Halklorson,$3.081
Bill Oelf ... $3,081
Jack NewlOtl,$3,08 1 ,, .. ,.,,7
Torn Jlf>klne.12,252
Bl••ne ~hslr.$2 252
O•vld Edwerda.12,252
Brad 9ryan1.S2.2S2
ROii Streck,$2,252
Wally Arm1tror1Q.S2.21i2
Oenll Wtllorl,12.252
Perry Ar1hur.$2,2S2 ..
Bruce Oevtin,$1,899 Allafl Miiier ,$ 1,6911
Bob Murphy,l 1,69!1
Bob Sheerer ,S 1,8911 -Mike Reid,$ 1.213
Jim ThO<pe,$ 1,213
Mlllll Lye.I 1,283
Scott Slmc>aon,11.283
Fred Couptee.I 1 ,283
J C SMad.S 1,283 2911
01ve Barr,$1,0••
Bobby Clampe1t,$1,a..
Gary Koch.SI.~ 291
Mika Oonald,$900
Dale Oouglau.Sll90
Tommy Armour 111.Sfl!IO
292
J11ek Ferenz.S967
Lon Hlnkle.1997 as
Buddy Gerdner.S9'11
George Areher.S93fl
Skip Ounewey,$1139
George Cadle.$9311
2M Lance Ten Broec:lc,S905
Jeff Thorn..,,,S!I05
Peter JllCObeen.'805
Ed flort,SllOS as
Jim Nellord.$1173
Ertn Foaley.S873
Bruce Oo\Jglasa,S873
88-70. 75-ee
71-71-7o-e41 88-70-7$· 70
70-71..ff..71
71-72-417-71
73-71-67-70
71·71-75-MI
72-70-75-MI 68-70-75-70
89-73-941-72
88-71·76-70
71-70-71-72
71·71-70-72
73-70-69-72
61-71-71·76 7~7-7•·71
70-73-70-72
88-75-70-72
72-73-81·12
71-72-70-72 71·12-611-73
71-68-71-76
72-12-73-41!1 68-7 .. 73-71
70-73-72-71 76-70-70.71
70-72-70-H
73-70-74-70 75-69-72-71 71.7 .. 72.70
87-75-73·72 71-70·72·74
71·72-611-75
71-69-71-76
71-73-72-71
71·70-76-71
71-72·7 .. 71
72-73-71·72 74-70-70-70
71-70-76-72
89· 75-73-72 72-70-7 .. 73 71.74.71.73
11.72.72.74
69-76-71.74
71~9-80-70 89-73-76-72
111-75-71·75
76-611-72-74 70-71-74-78
71-68-75-17
72-70-75-75
71-72-74-75
71-73-75-1• 7 .. 70-7 .. 75
72-73-72·79 70-7 .. 71·78
89-72-79-74
72-72-78-7• 70-73-72-79
70-7 .. 71-79
72. 71· 78-76 711-68-715-75
57.74.7440
LPQA toumement
(•t Denwer) m
Batn Oanlel,130.000
2'71 Pally Sheehan,$ 111.600 no
Sally l1111e,S 14,000
a2 Sand•• Haynie,$ 10.000 .,
Pat Bradley,$8,000 .. JoAnne Carner,17,000
211
CIVIi JCIM9orl,$8.400 ..
Sendra Spuzlel\. 15,000
B O.-oooc>er.15,000
Vlolcl TabOr.$5,000
Calhy ~l\Olda.15.000
BeYerly KtaM,15.000
211
A Re1M11dt.S3,•25
Sharon Berre11.S3,425
C J Calhon,$3.•25 Donna H Whl1e,S3.•25
2IO Mindy Moora,$2,680
Shelley Ham~n.$2,680
Nar>e:y Aubln.$2.680
211 Matdell Willflna.$2.NO Vlci<I Fwgon,$2,090
S•ndfl PallnW.$2,090
Janet Alex,$21090
J-BlaiOCIC.a2.090
e.111 Sotomon.$2,090 m Amy AICOn,I 1.563
K•lhy Hlte,l 1,5e3 .i.nnetta Kerr ,S 1 ,56.3
Jan ferrarla,Sl,563 C Chwbonfllef ,I 1.583
HOllll Slacy.Sl.5413
Lenore Muraoka.I 1 .513 m J-Loc:lt,$1, 190
M ~·o.-.tH'I,$ 1, 190
L)'M AdMM,$1.190
s~ ErU.l t, 190 ..
Myra Van HooM.uee>
Bonnie i.-,$960
S.Uy KlnQ,$960
ltalhy Whilwonh.1.!!!0 J0Ann WUl'twn,_,
70·70-71-87
72.71..aa-11
76-64-67-72
73-73-69·611
72-70-73-71
76-70.7~fl
75-73-70.70
75-74-70-68 78-71-70-71
71-71·12·74
7 s. 73-7 3-a n.1 .. 1o-ee
75-73-71·70 72-70-72-75
77-7•·11·88 71-89JN.74 73-72-7 t-74
n-1~n..a1
75-77-72-417
1"-'lt-77-71
73-72-72-74
72-76-68-73
73-70-72-78
76--ell-76-71
71-73-76-72
I0-71-89-72
7Mll-7&-72 74-72·72-74
16-7M9-74
71~11-78-78
13-n·1M1 ~72-73-'fl
76-70-76-71
76-72·71·74
7~7&.7M9
71-76-77-70
79-72-1'1-72 78-72·71·73
7&-72 ..... 78
Oeflllet
IUMOAY'I "-IULTI (11111 of .... tMettllol , .. l"t AAC._ & 11.Vtonoa
"'-(Meza) 30 llO 18.80 10.00
Graben <McHeroue> 10.eo 1 oo
Wer Hou• (Or1ega) 11 00
Aleo reced: 8arn11orm Shadow,
Caplaln Al, Prof-Gr-. Miii Thi Tiii, Th• Me1hod1• Sall Sanda. flln1
Image, SI.Imm« Sanor
T1-1 10 •15.
llCOHO AACl. 8 turlonge
Leckie (Sll>ltla) 25 20 j0.80 7 80
0on1Ml911 (PIOQyl 4.00 •.00 O..lroy Again (McHarjlue) 11.llO
Aleo ••Cad' l<eH'• Boy. N•I'• Penny,
Ry, Wlfldy S•turday, HOl'\9 Cour1 RtJllng,
Pantoto, C1afty AibOI. S!Wai Tudor, Mr
Enllluaium
Time 1. IQ 115.
*2 pAILY DOUBLa (1·3) patd $324 20
llflllD AACI. 1'Ao mltea on 1urt.
Grey Susan (McCrn) 1 1 80 3.40 2.80
Saratoge Roxie (Plfl<:lly) 2.80 2 80
Mawal'• Love (Hawley) 2 80
Alao racad · M oun1me11ene.
Effuellrely, My Hothead Tim« 1.51 '6 IXACTA (8-3) paid $64.50.
FOUll'TH 11'4c1. 6 furlongs.
Show M• o..r (Vlnzll a 80 3 80
Natal .. N' Me (Blad!) 4 00
Ma Spetll>lnder (Cutaned•I
280
2 80
280 Alao raced O'Arquea,
L•kMide. R love Can
Lucky
TlrM, 1.12 2/5.
fll'TH RACE. 1 1/18 mllea
Matching (Plncay) • 20 2.80 2 80
In True FMm IMcCerron) 3 20 2 80
Chrlltmu 9or>us (Slblllel 5 40
Allo raced Sweet Maid, Courlly
Cennon, JHn Marie, GI GI, Sllky'1
NurM. llocallll.
Time 1·41 2/5.
'6 IXACTA (S.2) paid $28 50
llXTH II.ACE. One mite
Tank• Br lo •d• IC Tanks 8rlgadt(Ca1.nd•)24 00 6.80 4 00
Morry's Champ (~arronl 3 20 2 80
0.t>on•lr Herc (0.-gal 7 80
Aleo ra<:«t. Boston MllQIO. Sir Nalhan Tempaet Ways. B•lboa Native,
Whitpertng Waters
Time 138 2/5
llVUfTH AAC«. 8 turtongs.
Toreo (Toro) 37 .40 13.60 8 20
0.-1 Envoy IOthuyl 4 00 3 20 King-. Flnder' (Plncay 3 80
Also raced· Men-. Wlci<ect Hiiier. Buc:ttohoy. Long U.... The King, E.rupUve
Cet11c: Sat>er. A Storm le Coming.
Tl-. 1 Ofl 315
15 IUCTA (3-7) paid $400.00.
*2 ll'tCK IUC (3-6-2-5-3-3) paid $ 15,·
101 20 wllh -WlnnlloQ 1lolce19 '11119
11ar-1 S2 Plclc Six contlOlallOn paid
S126.80 wolh 78 Winning tlCl<•t• (tour
11ar-1 S2 Pick Soi sc:raldl c:ontlOlatlon
pakl 152 40 with 810 winning llCI<•••
(thr• hor'Ms. one sc:ratChl
llOHTtt II.ACE. 1.1116 mites Wk:kerr (Otl\Ny) 9 40 4.60 3 20
Cajun Prlnc;e (P!nc:ey) 5 00 3 80
Orouill'f IUptlern) 4 40 Also raced E(l9 Tow, Super ~I Oorcero, Senullonal Guy, T .. Again.
Prem+o Nobel. Tl-. 1 •1 2/5
NINTH llAC£. l'Ao mltee °" lur1
Aornl>4ft' Rude 1v1nz1 16 oo 11 80 8 80
Oera You (Toro) 38 20 15 00
p.,_,·a Leeder (Mau) 1• 20
Aleo ••ced Beech Grove ,
tnoompelenl. Ul1racnar9e, Nar.
Brummer, Pla'a Prine;• Al. Kundallnl.
Green Oew. El P•ncho Angel Tlfn4 I 4fl-4/S
Allendance -27.a.I
NA9L
I AITlllM DIVlllOtf
W L 0' QA IP Pte
Coemo9 21 9 83 40 S7 181
Toronto t• 13 •8 39 40 12• Montreal 15 11 43 3e 39 122 ~ 10 Ill 4• ~ 4 1 97 IOUlltlM DMllON Fl L.Mldtrdale 15 11 6J 59 48 136
Tulaa 13 13 55 47 47 121
Tampa B•y 11 15 40 ~ 3,5 fl!I Jecitaonvttte 9 17 32 52 30 84 WHTEllN DIVll!Ote
Snllte ,. 13 81 0 50 132
Vancouver 16 10 •7 •I 311 131 San O!ego 1• 12 51 ... 41 121
S.n JOM 13 t• 46 50 37 113 Porllend 11 111 35 38 31 113
Edmonton II 19 33 56 211 77
Six polnta are ew••d•d for • regul•llofl or ovetllm• victory. Four
po;n11 tor • Stlooloul vtc:tory One bon<d
point tor every goal acored wlll\ a
maximum of 1h<• per game. No bonus point la awuded tor overtime or
4\hOOIOU1 goals. ..... ,.. .....
Ootmoe 3, Montreel 2 TeclaJ''• 0-No g-ec:tleduted
Cley court toum11mt1nt (el'°""'°' .... tu.) ...,, .......... ,1ne1
Yannlclt "1oah (France) def. Reul
RAmi<ez (MHico~ fS.3. 1 ... ·-·a ........ flNI lll<otnte Auzlcl (Romania) def. Leigh
Ann fnc>mpeon (U.S.), ~7. 6-2, 8-2.
Grend Prtx toumement (el Horlh Conwar, N.M.) aemHNI ....... Ivan Lendl (Cacnoetovalcla) de! Joee
Lula Cletc (Argentln•). 6·4, 2·1l, 8·4 Joae Hlguaru (Spain) dal Pe1er
MGNamer• (Aut tr"allal. 6-3. 6-1
WCT toumement (el Cap D'Aede, Fr-) ....... """ Tom" Smid !Cacllollov•kla) daf
LJoyd Bourne (U S ). 6-3. M . 5-7, 8-2 (Smid wlna..SI00,000 Bourne win• 132.000)
Women'• toumement
(el II-ho lkmardo)
llntilff ,lnal
Tracy Auallfl (U S.) def K•fhy Rinaldi (U.s.i 7-6, 8-3 (Au111n wln• s22.ooo
Aonaldl wtntl '1 t.000~
WonMn'e Indoor tour~t (•1 l)'dney, AyalrlM!a) ••ns1ee '"'-' Cl\rla Evart Lloyd IU S.) ci.1 Be111na
Bunge (W•I Germany). 6·3, 6-0 (Lloyd Vllnt sao.0001
Cley Cou~":_,~~lfllp (et ) ·-·•'Int~ Slnglee Suaon Mucarln (U S.) def Btlh
Norton (U s ), 6-1. 3-6, 8-3. Dan• Giibert
(U.S.) ci.f. Kim StalnrMll (U.S.). 9-2, 6-2,
Aen•ll• Tom•nove ICzechollovakl•)
det. Balh Herr (US.). 3-e, 6-4. 6-3.
Misc.
World Aquettc Gemel
(al QueleQUll, I°'*'«)
Men 1 Swimming (l""le In .... .,.,
100 bra111 -1 Stava lundqulll
(Jonesboro, 0•.). 1:02 75. ~ lllctor
Oevla (C.,,ada), 1'02 12. 3 John Molfel (Costa M ... ). I 03.13
200 .... -1. Mlc:hHI Gross 1w .. 1
Germanyl. 1·49.84. flowdy OalnH
(Wimer H•van, Fla.), "49 !12. 3 Jorg WOilhe (EPI Garmany). 1 SO 1 J w-·• IWlmmlftt 400 IM -1 Petra ScMeider (Eu1 Germanyj, 4 36. 10, 2 Kalhl-. Nord
(EHi Ge1manr.). • 43 51, 3 Tracy Caulklfll (Nalllv lie, T eM ). • .. &•. 100 Ir .. -I. Birgit Mlllnetce (EHi
Germanyl, 55.711. 2 Annemarie
Veratappen (The Netherlands). 55 87, 3
Jill Sterkel (Hac:tend• H:\':::1-.,;:~7 l pfingbowd Dtwtnti
1 G••g Louganta IN•d•dO•HI.
887 33, 2 Aleunder Porlov (Soviet
Unlofl), 632 84, 3 Niki Slajkovlc
(AuSlrla), 6111.41. • Sergei Kuzmen
(Soviet UnlOn), 816 57, 5 ICongmeng LI
(Chlna) 61• 55, 8 Falk Holl~ (Eetl Germ•ny). 806 25 7 Ron Merrion ~tord, 1111. 596 67. 8 C?tn••OC>her Snodil (Bnlalnl, 596 28, 9 Cartos Giron
Gu1ierrez (M&lllCO). S90 70: 10 Hengltn Liu (Chin•). 580 89, 11 Maaaimo
Caste111n1 (Italy), 574 98, 12. Dieter
Wutcow (EPI Germany), 558 27
... ., Poto
Sovtef Ur110f'1 I. Un<led Stet• 5
Yugoela..,. 7. Holland 6
W"1 Germany 18. N ... Zealand 5
Hungary 10, Cuba 8
Franoe 12, C•nad• 11 Aus1rell1 23, Egypt 2 Ch4na 12, Gr.-10
Spelr'I II, ltllly II
WMl!end'I tr1neec:tlon1
ltAHBALL
HettoNIL"IW ATLANTA BRAVES -Activated Terry
Harper, oulli.tder. S.,il Kant O•yley,
ptt<:'-. to Rlollmond of Iha lnterfl•Uonal
LHgue
'OOTL\&.L Netloft8I Footbea lM9W
CLEllELANO BROWNS -Waived
PIMI O•vl•. ruMtng bac:lt, Kent OaVIS,
O•ryt Jollnaon. •nd Lind Murray,
corne1111ck1, Marcus MoKlnn4e,
delenalve back. Aodnty Thomaa. lullbac:ti. Eddie C<Me, llnet>aclter, and
Craig CllrMt, wide reoet._..
DENVER BRONCOS -Signed Latry
Even a, lln•b•~k•r. to • on•·Y••r
contrllCI
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS -Acqu.lred
Whllnty Paul, llneb•c~er. from th•
K•naaa Clly Chiefs lor • 11183 drall
choloe PHILADELPHIA EAGLES -W-Steve Oudall, nJnn1nQ t>aclc. and Terry Ou+nn.~ter SAM FRANCISCO 49EAS -Trllded
Arc;hla Raeae, noH l•cttle, 10 lhe
Kenaaa Ctty Chief• for a 11183 dran pick
Walvad Craig Pulll and John Gl•aa.
ltnet>ecke<I. MyfOtl Bell, fUMlnQ bed<: and Erle Herring, wide receiver
WASHINGTON AED6KtMS -Named
Chetl•• CHH•ly auts1an1 general
man
Camel. Where a man belongs.
8 mg. "tar'', 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Report DEC. '81.
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
T~at Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
. .,
' '"'
~.
'
I
I
(
I
I
•
CAUGHT -Angel baserunner Ron Jackson is
thrown out at second base as Seattle's Julio
DllTH NDTIClB
BAND \Ca., S h irley Anderson of
ROBERT HAND, a San t a Ana, Ca., Pat
resident of Costa Mesa, Ca. Cardwell of Sacramento, ~·
Paued away ·on July 28, and Judy Gatchell of llUno11
1982 at the age of 71. He is and 12 grandchildren. Mn.
survived by his wife Ethel Dunlap had been a Costa
Hand of Costa Mesa, Ca., 1 Mesa resident for 44 years.
aon Jerry Hand of San Alao a 23-year member of
Franclllco, Ca.. 1 daughter Women of the Mooee, ~ta
Judy Hart of Huntington Ana Lodge No. 65. Friends
Beach, Ca.. 1 brother Bill iJ:ft' call at Pierce Brothers
Hand of Costa Meea, Ca. and &oadway Mortuary on 1 lli8ter Barbara Morgan of Tuesday, August 3, 1982
Costa Meu, Ca. and 5 from 4:00P~ to 9:00PM.
arandchlldren. Memorial Funeral lerVlCeS will be held aervlcea will be held on on Friday, August 6, 1982 at
Tueeday August 3 1982 at 9:30AM at Balboa Pavilion
lO:OOAM at the' Pierce aboard the "Pavilion
Brothers Bell Broadway Queen." Pieroe Brothers Bell
Chapel with Rev. Cha.rlesD. Broadway Mortuary
Clark of the First United diredora.SCRIPTER
Methodfat Church o f f I c I a t i n g . P r I v a te DAVID B. SCRlPI'ER, a
Interment. Pierce Brothen residen t of Huntingt9n
Bell Broadway Mortuary ee.ch, Ca. Passed away on
directora. July 29, 1982. He is survived
DORRELL• by his wife Arlyne, daughter
Elaine Zemke and 3 WILL I AM DALE gran dchildren Chuck,
DORRELL, a re1ident of Rox-anne and Cynthia
Newport Beach, Ca. Pa&'led Bellington. Services will away on Juty 31, 1982. held on Monday. August 2,
Survived by his wife 1982 at 2:00PM at the
Johnnie Mae Dorrell. 2 Harbor Lawn Memorial
sisters Mn. Gertrude Stovall Cha,.1 with Entombment
of Costa Mesa, Ca. and Mary aervlcea immediately
Loulae Duvall of Hesperia, following. Services under
Ca. and 2 nieces and 2 the direction of Harbor
nephews. Mr. Dorrell was a La w n -M o u n t O 1 i v e
member of the K.nlghta of Mortuary of Costa Mesa. Pythias #85 of Tustin, Ca. 540-5554.
Services will be held on VINCENT
Wedne9day, August 4. 1982 GO R D 0 N AL LAN
at 2:00PM at Pacific View VINCENT. resident of
Mortuary Chapel, Interment Westminster. Ca. Pasaed
will fol.10w at Pacific View away on July 30, 1982. He is
Memorial Park. Visitation survived by hia wife Sally
will be on Tue9Clay, August and brother Douglas of
3, 1982 from 9:00AM to Canada. Services will be
9 :00PM at Pacific View held on Tueeday, August 3,
Mortuary. Contributions 1982 at 2:00PM at the
may be made to the William Harbor Lawn Memorial
Dorrell Memorial Fund, Chapel. Final Interment
Harbor Fellowship Church services will be held at
190 23rd St., Cost.a Mesa, Ca. Cedar Hill Cemetery. New
Pacific View Mortuary Brunswick, Canada. Services
direciors. under the direction of Baltz
MARY M . DUNLAP, a Bergeron-Smlth & T_~thill
resident of Cost.a Mesa, Ca. WestdHf Chapel Mortuary
Passed away on July 31, of C.O.ta Meaa. &46-9371.
1982. Survived by her WIMPR~
husband Johnny Dunlap of SUSANNE WIMPRESS,
Costa Mesa, Ca., 4 eons former resident of San
Me 1 v l n L . Du n I a p of Marino, Ca. Beloved wife of
Roseburg, Oregon, David R. Norman Wimpress of
Wesley Dunlap and Herbert Huntington Harbour,
J. Dunlap both of Phoenl.x, mother of Pamela Mitchell
Arizona and Dareyl E. of Irvington, New York,
Dunlap of Costa Mesa, Ca., 3 Cecily Farquhar of San
daughters Kathlee Marien Clemente, Ca. Richard N.
Owen and Betty Lee Dunlap Wimpress, Jr. of Houston,
both of Costa Mesa. Ca .. and Texa., alto survived by 1
Sara Ellen BOaon of Nampa. brother B. Arnold Otis of
Idaho, alao her father Sam Pebble Beach, Ca. and 4 Frame of Santa Ana. Cal., 5 grandchildren. Funeral
IU1erS Zell Pierce of Tustin, aervlcea will be held on
Ca .• Lou Carr of Santa Ana, Monday, August 2, 1982 at
,
IALT%H l GHOH
SMfTM & TVTHILL
WISTCUff CHArll
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa 646-9371
"°Cl •OTHHS SMITHS' MOlTUAAY
627 Main St HunllnQton Buch
536-6539
2 :00PM at St. James
Epiacopa.I Church, South
.., Pasadena, Ca. Private
Interment. In lieu of flowers
donations to Scrippe-<:ollege.
Claremont, Ca. Turner &
Stevena , Alhambra,
dlrectora.
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
BIRMINGHAM, &ig).and
(AP) -Jocelya Cadtiary,
38, a member of Parliament
and part of the chocolate
candy famDy, died Saturday.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -
Floyd Dewey Gottwald, 84,
vice chairman of Ethyl Carp.
and chainnan of lta board for
many ~ dJed Saturday.
MsCOIMM:IC MOltTUAlllS
lAQuna Beach
494-9415
LllOUf'la H•ll•
768-0933
San Ju.n Clp1strano
495-1776
OMtr ............ ., CMltee ...,,
Cruz handles the throw Sunday.
Kuhn decision
expected soon
CCX>PERSroWN, N.Y . (AP) -BoWie K uhn
says a •pedal meeting of National League owners
will clear up a question as k> whether Kuhn has
been baseball oommiasioner too long.
Last week, lt was learned that three NL clut:le
-the New Y ork Meta, the Houston Aatroe and the
St. Louis Cardinals -had asked for a special
meeting Aug. 17 in San Diego to try to oust K uhn.
Major leaeue owners will h old their regular joint
summer meeti.ngJ the following two days in the
city.
In a Saturday interview with George G rand. e
of E.SPN, Kuhn said: "the meetino in San Diego
will obviously be very important. They'll probably
resolve the pending question of Bowie Kuhn."
Kuhn said hia status ln the $12,000-a-year-post
has been ln limbo since the baaeball meeti.ngJ last
~ber, "and lt's been hanging, as far as rm
concerned, for too long~ We ought to get lt resolved.
The air should be cleared."
Under voting procedures in the Major League
Agreement, a one-fou rth minor ity from eit her
league can prevent renew al of the commission er 's
contract. K uhn's second seven-year tenn expires in
August 1983.
In the in ter view, which w ill be aired on
ESPN's "Inside Baseball" show this evening, Kuhn
was asked lf he felt the owners had dealt him a fair
hand.
"I have no complaints, no criticisms, no petty
charges k> make," said K uhn, in Cooperstown k>
attend Sunday's Hall of Fame inductions.
"I'm prou d of the fact that after all the
Incredible difficultles rve faced ln my 14 years, and
all the discipline I've had to impose io
baseball ... that a great majority of the owners, an
overwhelming majority, are firmly supporting
Bowie Kuhn," he said.
Kuhn faced perhaps his stiffest challenge in
1975 when Charles 0 . Finley, then owner of the
Oak.land A's, led a move to oust the commissioner.
With the strong support of the late Walter
O'Malley, then-owner of the Loe Angeles Dodgers.
Kuhn sidestepped the at1ac=k-.·--------
Garvey
repeats
threat
W ASHINGroN (AP)
-F.d Garvey, executive
director of the National
Football League Players'
Association, reiterated
Sunday that playen
would go on strike unle.s
owners provide a
percentage of gro1a
receipts for ularlee and
benefits.
During an lntervlew
on ABC-TV's "This
Pla..IC N011C( ......... NOTICI OI' TMltTU'a MU
YOU Ml .:9'DIJ'ATlr UNDlft A
Dl lD OF TRUIT DATID
JANUARY .. 1ta. UNUll YOU TAKI ACTION TO 'ROTICT
YOUR "'O,.RTY, IT MAY I I
IOU> AT A~ SAUL• YOU
NDD AN llDUNATICMI OI' THI
NATUllll Oft THI "'OCHDfff AQAINIT YOU, YOU IHOULD CONTACT A LAWYIJl.
On AUQUtt 27. 1912, • 11:00 A.M .. S£e1ewld• Forecloeure
Sefvlc:M, Inc. u duly eppolnted Tru•IM under end pureuant lo
Deed of Truet ~ded FebN8ly 9. 1M2, u lne1r. No. 82-048378. of Offlclel Record•, executed by:
Jemu l ewrenc:e Wede end Jay
Merton Wede, u INllOR. In the
ofllce of ltle County Aeoordlr of 0renge County, Si.te of Cellfornla. WILL SEU A 'f PUBLIC AUCTION
TO HIGHEST BIOOEA FOR CASH '.P«)'eble et tll'M of .... In ....,.
money of ltle United ~) Id: 9°"'h front entr.,_ to IM Orenge
County Old CC>Urt~~~ of a.n1a 1.na. s11i. of ..
r1gtlt, Utle end im.r.t ~ to Week Wlth Davld wnowN1<111y1tllnderMldOeed
~!inkl~y," willGarvey said :.J~IYt~ _::
me uruon contin ue Lot 23, Blodl 234 of l.ak• Trect,
its d emand for a pay rec:orded 1n boot! 4, pege 13 Of
s c a J e b a I e d 0 n a Mleoelleneoue Ma p1, Offlolal Aeoords In ltle office of tile County percenl.!lge of the gr<m. Recorder, Orano• Co11nty,
"The con cept la Celltomla.
n 0 n • n e Ii< 0 t l a b 1 e , • • Th• elrMt eddr•H end ottlar
G said common deelgnatlon, If eny, of tile arvey . ,.... PfOf*tY deacrlbed aDo¥e 1e
The union has been purponect to be: 303-303\t 34tti
,_i..1 .... f &a • f Street, ~ 8Mctl, CA. ........ ,. or •N peroeno. o Tiie undartlgne d Trutt•• all revenues, but Garvey dleclelm• •ny ll•blllty for eny
said that 11-·-lnoomot ... °'Ille etf9et ~ .. -a .... ., wu open end °"* oonwnon deltgnetion, " k> clilcu8lion. eny, lflOwrl ...,..,,,
He added that if Seid H I• w111 be made, but
ownen do not negotiate ~t ;0.:::;.:~ r::i:~·;:::
on the percen~ t.ue, p 'l!"hi. ot ~ to
then th e playen' only =z "" N1N11Nnt ~ """ °'
op tion would be a strike. ~~1~'7 =:=. :!
He said even thO\.tlh a 111 ..., "*(el. ::.:-.=
f ew veteran• h ave or'V~~,'::~:r= and r..tped from the wUon, ..,._. OI the T,,,.._ end OI the
lt atl ll had e n o uah l"'PI CrMted by eald Deed of iupport "k> abut t .. ,__ T'Nlt, for ._ llnOUftl 11•a:ll9bly
........._ " --... ...,.,,...., to lie: ... t72.71. ~· The ~ ""*' ... Died of fNlt ....... ...,.,.. lrlCI "8JC llOTIC( dellvefed to IM under ... Md 1 •
fltCm10UI -· Wffttlft Dtdll'MIOo Of ~ 1N1
LOS ANGELES W) -
Nlelt-Luas, 84, a at.ar of
vaudeville and early ~
filma, dJed Wettne.day. The SUJtar-a~ b'oU1*lor ~ aucb hit tune. .. '4np
Toe Tbrou1h the Tulip•
WUh Me" and "Bye, Bye
Blldcblrd" and performed ln
movl•• d urln a the 1920.. ·so., and '409.
-.. ~SJAW =--Ol~.:4..:.....--: ... .:=....:..--:""• Pll'IOnl -dcllnt M . TN ............ _.... Mkl --•· "°'°' OI Olflul("·Mct 8lllllln to IM,ORTI IY RO .. I, f 1' M to .. ,_.. In ._ oounty
N "'"-wtocl, Nlwpott lll9dl. ~ ....,. .. ,.... ,.,...,., .. .....--.. E W YO RK (A P) lltlO TIO: n .tMI -Vldlllllr ""ma ZwWJtta. IAAIAAA J . IAYI, 1 11 °" ... ,1·."t:/!·,~uira • Dtoneer ln the~t "'"-•Id . ......, ...... bA ...... ....
of telievWon, dJed Thunday ....,, ...... rn.e.e ~~: ~pd:.~::·· h•• '*·~ .. ::h·~: ilil~ .. ~····--._llllr ....... :..·::...
t10•..-... nDn.U_..A (AP)-Jm ~ Ollltl OI ~ • -,...._. Cotc1M;;.av &. ,,..._. h ., 80, • bmai' Ml ,., ,.., ,_., 91!'!h. ~-
M2'9t60 Bank of Ame rica v ice-"'°'..., 0r-. eo..o.. ~-0:: l....., ... ______ •,,,,.., !:~......!...and Loe Ania* ... Mr "· ... Aill I. ...... -.... ~ l':."I ~ ~ 'Iii•~ -· died l'rtday. ..... ......
•
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
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
ltPlllll•M.Cll
142·5171
1 TA'r' I.< >I i < '( >
I I
,. ...... ,,. ....... ..... 9'.11
AJI ,...I Mt•t• adver11MO Your ptac. In tM eun. 3 In thl• nevupaper 11 Bdrm 2 blll'I Meh. eon.
eubJec1 to th• Federal ~~~~~~~~!I venlent IQoatlon 10 bay, Fair Houllng Aot of 1"8 --_ beach end ahope. In•
whklh m•k" II lllea•I to --come 11900 mo. Owner ldYer1lae .. .,,y prefereo-man AIU m•y ... , In rtnandng. ce, llmltatlon 0t dlac:rlml---,._._ '355,000.
nation b11ed on race, -.,._.. 1.a• 1.aa color, rellglon, Hx or woe ~ acre In woodey 096• ... n1tton1I origin, or eny area of Nortll Tu•lln,
Intention to m•k• any near hot•• trall1 & IUCtt preference, ttmll•-Chapman Perk. lov•ly
•• tlon Of dllCflmlnetlon." pool & ape. Spac:loue 4 ·-Br home. Hlgllly UPQrl· A PETE
BARRETT
REALT Y UM Thia newepaper wltl not Md. Urge matter eulte. ~~~~~~~~~ :: knowlngly eccept any C•lhedra1 celling & llcy-1-
J• adverllelng lor rNI u-lltM. Space for tior ... & C•llN '" II# J llJ :: tl1e which i. In lltolatlon plfklng a ear• Excellent • •••• ••. ••• ••• ••••. ••• 1• of the IW. ueumeble 1oen 11 10%. ::liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A•duc•d 10 1275.ooo. CdM's BEST DPLX =-1111111 Advert!-C111 Joyo• Diboll or Compare veiu. of thl1 3
: aers should check , 1240,000. Attrecllv• 11-111111111 unit dupln for only
!! their ads d ally and n1nclng. Drive by 818 ·-N11cleaue or call lor de-= r e p ort e rrors lm-1•••••••••l~1~11~1·~·;c~11~1940-~::1~&&~5~med lately. The 1•
Jiii ------
DAILY PILOT as-1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ideal Flxw Upper In quiet 1• nelghbort\ood. 2 Bdrm &
sumes llablllty for STEALING ,, den, 1 It be., lnclud••
the first Incorrect " UM ol pvt bNcfl. t289,
Insertion only. II tWUL n 000. By owner. 76&-9149
=::i--............ .. BUT he<•'• one you can ..... ff YHr lffer llHI end gel awey with Home+G~l+lnc:ome .,. = ...... ,., ,.,, It. ll't e he.ff-mllllon doller OWC 111 • Fie)(. Terms probate properly lhll wlll 509 Acacia CdM nr bell
go lor wtietever lhe court Spalleu Vacant Duplex wlll •!low. ll1lecl II only Huge 5br/3b•+3br/3be 5295·000· Thie I• an of-440K own/bkr 845-7048 der home wllh • gor-~-------geoue WHITEWATER )Uni locellon 3Br, 2B•. llv view end POOL. Nr & din rm, lg lem rm, lg
downtown lagune. treed lot, by owner. MUST BE SOLD NOWI $309,000. 640-7007
.........................
-""''" I HI ::: .....•....•...•••..•..
: 4 IHI 2 IATN = 1101,100
:: Big, big houM on large ._ comer lot. Brlclc Ille kit· '* chen floor•, ,_ carpe-= ting, fresly pelnted In Ind ~~·an Oller on thle•-.-1-1-11-1-0-1-1-0-.-.-
.... 1211 out. Sell•r lllghly moti-vated and wlll aul1t In
-financing. Call todey
JIM 546-2313
I ftU$Jlt1 .--.-.. -.-.-.,-"-.-.--·
Plut IOw price mekee 11!11
2 bdrm. 1'h bath condo a re11 opportunity• Only
10% down -lalfl priced •t $85,000. Act nowl 646-7171
llDT Fllllllll 2 Mutera, 4 bdrm 3 be
Auume ultllng ~ ol $1851<, good llnanclng
THE REAL
ESTATERS
$103,000 with current OWNER 75-4-7855 C..t1 #n11 IOU
st• paymenta of S1096. A .... liiiii::::::::::miil~··~·~·~··~·~·I··~·~··········~··~·~·· SIM king $128.900 for lhla I Ullll lllllE = refurblehed 4 Bdr 2 B• LUSE mo home loc11ed In No. 12.11t. unmuu ,. ..... -Coeta M .... 831 7370 Super panoremlc oc:een, --bay & night llghl view Juel In lime for tummer, thl• lovely pool home l•eturH terrific finan-
cing. 4 l11ge bdrms. new
P•lnt, neer park• end achoole. Offered et
$139.900. 5-40-1151
-T~\DI T IO\r\l. from Ihle 2 BR, den, for-
mal din rm & 2 BA llome. Decorated llke 1 "Model" In the eerth RL\L'n 1'CI06 tones. Community tennis
rm court• & twlmmlng pool. lUIO -----------1 24 hr. guarded gete.
I
IEU VElllE Avelieble lmmedlllely
FllE• S 1900 per mo. Dona n Godshall 844~200.
~HERITAGE
REALTORS -------~ •11 Lowest priced 4 Bdrm : home In Meae Verde.
-Light end 1p111clou1 = room• lhrooul. Huge cul -d• 1ac lot. Super loea,-= llon. Needs eome TLC
-and wlll be WOflh much = mont. Call 54&-2313
'!/I: Macnab -Irvine 3Br. 281. dbl car gar~. 2 pellol, nagetone frple,
C>Wr*-cuslom bit home.
$129,950. With $29,950 WEmUFF down Owner wlll urry
Neal and conveniently let loan 911 ------------
THE REAL
ESTATERS
located two bedroom, lty •.o.r41e, llHr,
two bath condo Spark· 141· llJt
llng community pool I~~~~~~~~~
Exoepllon.lly quiet loce-LI IWI/ R•..,.•• Los Alamltot i:ondo: Nice llOn. Only $25,000 down _. .. , 4br, 2ba, 2 81ory condo. $119,000 Cula 2Br llOOM. Owner
Pool & •P•· Retr1g , H1·1100 t1ex11>1e Bkr $3&-1453
Wither & dryer Included. '-========~ liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $15,000 'down or wlll ji REAL ESTATE TAX IN-
lrade lor claslc eutomo-0 VESTMENT! S5000 blle, motor home or ? *1 '-NWI* CHh!ll $145.000 shere
111111 Owner/ egent. * 11'9 FllAIClll* purchase MINIMUM lax -7~589 Wiien you lake over deduction lat. yeet $10.
----------1 •xlstlng T.D .. OWne< will 000. Owner (investor)wlli = IEST IAllUlll •11l1t et 12% on this 3 Br supply tolel down pay--lovely Npl. Hgt• home llOUM on FEE LAND In menl up 10 $40.000 In ·= localed on lrg R-2 IOU BACK BAY AREA. Fea· eqully Shere purchH•
·-Seller will carry fln1nclng turlng herdwood floor In new luxurious 2-3 on this one. Well Pl'kled end ahlngle rool Only Bdrm. 3 Be. Condo, et $139,500. Call now: St35,000. 2870 San Ml-Colle Me1111. Maximum
648-7171 g u •I 7 5 9 -1 5 0 1 or Int. depre .. 1p(e. struc-752-7373. lured lor buyer, passlble
•-1 benelll. Phone
... -----.,. --
THE REAL
ESTATERS ... ,...., . . . '~~~~
•
714 /631 -5055 , 714/642-2000.
l '1 'h I W•E 10'9 IJ. DRAMATIC Exec. home, 4 br, lorm.
COUNTRY l:i:::::::~1 ~:~7~~~:t:~ HUI fltlT & frplc $149,900. S3o. llOLlllll ooo down, owe 2nd 11 ESTATE Your own llltle corner ol 12%. 1056 Concord. th• Io ca I co 1tt11 n •. _54o. _____ 5_560_0wl'I« __ . ___ _
!=v!'~:c"tr1~ ;:,~:: ~=~;om:~~.6r~·~~ .ll•P llJ.!ATll'I
cobbleltone motor cour-qul1l1e 4 Bdrm home r-tyltd, ~lar entry. plus pool and 1pa No-No quelltylng to m•k• 8 bdrm, 8 bathe, 5 lrpl thing ., .. Ilk• ltl A llatlng Ihle IP9Qtecular 3 Bdrm huge lrplce. Room tor ol the Von Geldwni. $2, pool home your own. t•nnla. No. Tu1t1n -500000 Juel $ t 17.900. Bkr Orange Hiiia wltll view. · · 848-0709
12-15 min. to Ill frwy., u.-.1oot t1()~fs1--.-11----.--
llrpor1, So Coael Plue. Reeltore, 875-8000 "_
$1400000 1~=======~1 Spectaculu trl-level · ' . Ii t>eeuty .,., So. c. Plaza. RICK ALD£RETT£ UN tlU !~uu~r:C,~·.'.'~.~~~ ......,,......,., IUIUTIO s229,900. 8kr. 848--0709
711-4444/111 .. 111 Splr•I 1t1lra Ind prof.... llYHfen lrt..S •.. .,..,..,..
llATIUn
PRIVATE COMMUNITY, 3&4 bdrm homH, our
alonal decOt throughout 3 bdrm, 2 b1. 'flteplace, 1111• •pacloua 4 bdrm, double gerag•. walk In 4batl'I home. Perfect lor tlle family. ,ex1a11ng H · c101et1. Townhou1e. eumabl• loena of $382, W•lk to w .. tclltt Pica. 000 effective t2.3% 1n1. Pr to NII. $110,500.
SELLERS Wiii FINANCE --or -DISCOUNT for cuhl Better hurf)' on thH•I Stlltlng It 1499,0001 -· -
SalM pr!Qe "49.000 fM. _.,__84_2-.3083 ____ _
-
Wt'\TI HI HONl
llOMI' hoc.
REAL ESTATE
IYIWIR*
J 11 .... 1~ II
llWll NII ... ... .. , --.., ---
Is' • ..,,,.. . ..... ... .. ,.. ... . 6.41-1400
.. ....,mar ·~· lnltantty. homel hMI------.......,.--~~1ir:r.:. '2 ~ .PAYIH lllTtn
den, 3 le. Wall to beec:tl HAVI OOOO & recrN llon feclllll••· INCOME?"? Priced for 1mmedl1te • ..... a.... wlll help "" nano.. fut! PflQe UH. 000. 7114,.,
PAYING TAXO??? ... ~ ..........
you'll men It fi=la• D yPnot
cl•lllflld •d.Cill ....... .. ,.....,
ff.VIWwlH ....,,.. .... , ..........
tRtecaa
------
!wtft.tf.!W.,..... l!Mf .f!!!t....... .f!IA'!.zif· .We ••••!it• "'= Itel I
........, I a...-J I ~ flfll .__, ~ J. •••• •••••••••••••• ._... llilllila .1111~!!~~!!!~~:!!'1 Ill••• ~•"';'\•••••••••• r:::i'\'i\•••••••••••• 1"1fe •••••• •• 'S7ml'lle"r111Tue •• fllOlflo Vl•w M•morlll ~ .. ••••1'1111
------••llll•••••••llllAITllOl 1 '*II Oo1t1 lr1nd N•w Hom .. a l"lril Hwot left Lot 744 ~AIN VU ~---..._.It. 1.ow~ltlt. condot.no~ctOWl'I Clre-A & 1 '~ ..................... .,.,..._ MIO. ••Ila& 11•1 lo fft, J ID Iba, rip, whllo tlloy 1111 (714) Terrooo . hioo. bf. 2 M OO!tdo, ''''°' · H ... , Prt. W..t =ytron&. 8U~fot 2 boilta, e1~~00 O•n•r. 64 .... HAOt. 17).7117 trHnflH wndw, 11r.. ...._ --...1..;.~ • • L.... ... •1 000 131 oc•aN l'FIONT 11~--J.1 ywd, eoo ...... No,,..._ •••u •e•Wl'•••• ._ ~ • _.,, ' ' ' ·-· llLJllT -" --Nto/mo. 1111 flMlfto HOMI '°" MNf Ocean & "°'ttv ~·WI Marine room 4 IY C'Mllllt XlHT LOO. ,, ' .. ,... AV ... 111 • "*' oell1 3 '*'"· & 4 ......... bdrm 3 'th 3700 • f • 385 oOo Yow own PoOI end ,.. '400,000 14(1..7llO ..... l.!i> ........ "en' 111~"4-1'722 lo MOO. ,.... _. & I br ' 1 b1. oerpot1,
• I , eq. t. .1. . ' euDI oomeo with Ihle 3 ...... nun 14a..teol OlrlOOlo ICldl i ,... Ylfd & pt .... l<ld• & d,.; ... b11l1t-ln1. No
ta. Oceanftont. bdrm llon'I• In on• of ..... 1t•• fll ........ 4 er 1 la INrp a olMn woloomo. 141·2000. :,. ~ 146-IOQO. ..-....... 2271 ~-,-.... ._..,. .... --U. llU .... ~:.;~:0~:!:~~ :n~:: You own tho i.nct. 2.000 Neer new 4-ptu, 1 bdrm, r.miiy ok. 1100. ordn; t, "° "° ' "° 1,,,_u_11_··2t;....;.ZT...,..,,._,..~~1 ... Pnmt lJdo N---a .._ .. front. 6 .....,_ jp..1. .__th through 11r1v1to cour· = "' 31~ fl~, I~ 2 bllh HOii 11nlt with Incl. •••.....,. ..... a...a. .IMf ~ lollOIOlll Ur. 1 .. at. S*lmo. '2IO IOOUtltY -r -L n """' "-J ..... ~ ... ~ -• 1yarcf •n on toy tho .,o0iwir ~ . "r' llrlC)llOI, tnCIOMd petlo, -•• .-... .-n.'n1"1J" ••• rr.: .... _,....,. H'-• •r . Ht ••• •471. lncl11dlno ut111t1 ... No
,,;
"'
~· .,.
..
..
.. ..
-~
~ ... ...
'· ..
~ .. :---··-.. _
··-
"•
..... .n .. 2 boelt .UPI •1.IW>O,OOO. many 1m1nttfH thl1 124e' •r mar .t oar~. 9tt-111. Pot. Hr. e.c ,.au. Sir ah. fll....,. ••• '!4::;;:r.::r ...... ~ L1undry tao., pool. "''·
hOfM oftlfl. Won't l11t tlon~·=-· ~'::° oP-cuti flow. Now 1189, u~. doCll petlo, PoOI, $ bf, a~ be. prof. doc. N9wpor1 loh llO Clnyon 84-tNe Call Beth 131·11230
Remodeled 3 bdnn, 2 blltb + larce rec. nn. 11 S 1 3 9, 9 o o . c 1 I I :~g;, T~'~ Grundy• Altr • otilldren/ Pl"9 ok. NaO. 1 m • n It I••. I 1 t Io. a It 2'A•BI, OOlfoour. .,.101mo. 1 er. 1 la. apt .. LuA. 2 IA 2'A bl twnf?I0.1
beern ceUlnp. fwniahed, peUOI. $t20,000. t714S70 New 4 IA leolel>ly er.lo ' t13.IOll °' 145-~ 11294"3 v I• w , p o o l , t pa , ~ celllnO, leundry ~· ~ 1100 mo. c.. uoo 1q.'tt. pM. oomm .• 0.-11xn/ a IA 1 e.. new floor, <141t, OC..NNTAL.8 11'400lmo. ~ rm .. PoOI· Avlll. July. Cell &. llQ or H 7..-LlllA llU llfflllT '307,600. Wiii trtde fOf , lTahl lft "11 '"' etow & Pllnl. No p«9, t"8bf'1 '200 to *2ooo Luxury CdM. 81y front for llpPt. EA8T8tDI 2 IA. 2 la. Lapn view from 8 bdrm. 5 blth_,_playroom, property, TD't . Wiii ••• .. ••••••••••••• .. •• 1HO ••~Pt. (Houle 111().)314 open 7-dep condo. 2 bdrm. t be. TSL Momt 142·1803 O.. I W.lor l)lld. uw.. dark den. Bo& aU N •1800 ooo. lo•H·OPllon or low s In back). 95211 A dep. IEAITBlU"F" Hr· 2b1 frpl, ep.o ivo rm 1 petto. ""5utn , I dry t11G. dlhww & c11p11. rm. t P· aw • • · down. A11dy to dHll LA T a.t-'4tA Avail Now tt200/~ · Now paint, corp1t1 I f 1 m I I y o o"' p 11 •. 1111111 OIYI .... hlat • lllf 0 w n • r I B r o k • r . 8 home for rent KkH '40-to19 · ippl. 2 car Q#IDO with IPU1•11 18211/mo. plue 8300 dep. S~ bllyfront view 2 br, 2 bl up; 2 br, ey•;;:,;;:•;•e;~·Be:•f;_ 71"'"5"-0eH. • :-0'*9QI(.11211.4 br. 1~ Speolou9 4 Bdr IQCUtl\le ~~1°.'3· 921100/mo. h1ut1:J1rd•n apt1.1_a._M_,,...,14_1 __ . __ .,.-__
20. dn. 2 boet alipe $1,000,000. mlly rm. apa. 15% dwn. Bayfront Yi.wc:ondo, 2 BA CHANCE bl . fr plo. A oger. home w/fam rm 2 frplc:o. :!lJOt/ I. Halt pekt. •2 BA. Dupllol ... 71. OWC 12Y.% 1tt. 33101 2 Ba, MO. bfdO. loet lllp 84M705 an.,.. peddle tennla court on 2 ~·a.. Now pelnl, !!.P! 9"°6ld
... -·--.... Buc:caneer. 496-'4711 anll. 11100.000. By Sl\'lall 1 br gar big fnod q11l1t Clll·d•·HC iu11 ........... ,, hndM-4 . 15811 petlo. 22e1 "A' POll'IOnO,
...... VIII• ownrlbkr. 876-IMl37 lo buy lhll bHutlful 3 yard. 1456. Ori\. by 790 pelntod & ~. lnol. -:rtt.-:-tt:'••••••••••••• 398 W. Wlllon l3t-ll5l3 145-IMM
CoroNdo laland cuat. blyfront lot. ~· boet !!!'!~J!lf~./.~f 8AVCAEBT: 38r, pool, Y9•r old, 4 unit 1p1rt-· w. Wll90n. 873-833e. g •rd• n • r . I 1 311 O. "1.M 8plrtillno dean. 2 Ir. 1Y. 1·1--B_•_d-ro_o_m_w_l_th_y_1-,d-. dock. Plana avail. Red. $370,000 w/terma. $3000 dwn, no qUlllfylng. 1p1, tlroplt, BBQ. VfHY ment houee In 8111 C... 146-1521 ""'-6.J. '111 Ba. 94IO. Flf\Old, utlta ~ eo.t. Meu.
3 Br 2 Ba, lrptc, 11200 prlvltel Fantutlc ISIU• mente with OCMn-hlllt & 4 bdrm, 2 bi, ••rplt, •••••••••••••••••••••• paid. Rofrlge. 2 1m111 1141-4&ee
.L.F,I OI... PITI 53&-32841 m1ble nnanclng • towott golf courM vl•w• 11 1 dr.,._, lrpf, oardner Ind. ....... ... WIMr lflut. CU9tom 2 8f 2 .. Chlldron Ok, no peta.
· prlc• In lrH at 12911 tr•mendout 11vlft99 di. I 8 2 6 . 6 51 • 4 5 811 , .......... llr blk to bHOh, 1plral, 1lle0 Wllleoe 642-4905 large 3 Br. 2 Ba. crpt/
Single ltOry end unit, e~ 3 br, 3 bl on •utlQIN 000. Vacant. 2007 Hoff.. Net from th9 owner IM-. 645-2428 3 bdrm, 2',. bathe lwnhM ttalrl. lkytll•. patio,..,. lllOOlmo 2 8f 2 t drpe. crptt. rwlOCC. no largest ~nbeli. .250,000. IHI} IHI day Rd. Bkr. 955-2&41, tore being fitted with 381', 1Ba, dll'IWlhr, lg yd, 11200 pot mo. 1!~1 & & ~ r . U 111 Inc I. n I d . . Ba. IP ' pet1, $1150. 751-38N.
•••••••••••••••••••••• 780-7292 br0ker1. Act NOWlll Call 207' Monrovia, ovafl Im-wkndt. 9711-8918, di 19
1 /mo. e73-t3M aft ~,Jc 1 1n3~r~::.· 1:~j 1 & 2 Bdr lr*n, 1200 & ASSUMABLE FINANCING OWnet It (714) 842--0138. med.1825 mo.1151·58e3 832-1023 · on p9i up & 1150 MC. No dlll-
Plll Liii Wiik t:~~~:'ir~thla BllW'Pff•aut 2 BfRlftllBm1 hte Lrg unite E.11de C.M. wl EISlde 3 br lg• yard 4 Br 3 Ba IPI 3700 eq ft C... #I JIM 111J TSl MQmt. 842·1803 d1!•,hnSotr dog2•·,.!~3 E. 3bdnna,2'hblthsoondonearpOol.$145,000. . . garag .. Low dwn •8"'0 "'"8 c' t M . ......:...... 12"""/ •••••••••••••••••,.•••• v ,ep.4:,..-2-ety De1ne gerd•n ~ lll'ldecaped. 1185 8 4, · · • "' · -01 • •H OCMll ....... fl'N mo Oceen view, b11utllully EASTSIDE 2 Br. 1'Ai Bl. 1---------h<>IM with 4 Bdrm1. 2 Ba 000 with aaeumabl9 tit 31· 584, 642-8233 St. 875-15'4, 720-1443. 4 Br 3 Ba, comm. pool, furn. townhou10, frplc, TownhouM. encltd QI· 2 Br lownhouH apt.
and contemporary 1ty-plut o wner financing mtg. 3 Br. 1 ea. large yard. No greenti.11, 11195/mo. pool & patio. 1895/mo. rege, frplc, emall pet otc. E11t1lde. Frplo, gar.
Ung. 1225.000. e.M-7020 av1ll. 842-7744 IH••• "-•rlw JM pati. Mont• Vlltl. Big C1nyon 2 Br 2 Ba, 873-0898. or .. 1 foe. laund f1cll, no P•tl. UHi lllAl. llTIR •••••••••••~•••'•••••• *880/mo si.<r1 Mgmt comm. pool '850/mo TSL Mgmt. 842-1803 1525imo. SELL o• y••11 Huo-5br/3bl+3br/3b• "' . . 3 Br 2 Ba. comm. pool nr 1 8r Incl Ulll. Newly redec. ALSO
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J-1' 'lny\•d· Dr,.. N B t.J~ blbl
lnUt IHI n "" owe 11t . Flex. Terms Co. 841-1324 s.c. PlllU 1750/mo gar, .,,,, patio. clo9I to STUNNING llrge 1 Br. Been. apt. 12711/mo. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! •••••••••••••••••••••• 1111111 lllNI 509 Acacia CdM nr bch 2 Bdrm, 2 atory condo nr Or try le11• option on tlorM. 838-7«7 Qarden apt, pool & r.c. MS..3420
----------------•IBr1nd New HomH & PrlrM rMldenllal lot. A• 440K own/bier &45-7048 19th & Harbor. 1520/mo. any of th•H. Have "'-· • •••~ rm. 1425/mo. 710 w. *2BA 1420 e..m __. Condos, no money down king 1500.000. 840-7885 831·5897 alt epm other• Fred Tenor• '""' ....,,,, ,..., <11-18th. SI. • · ,_.. FORECLOSURE hi h I (71 •) 2 house• on 2 dplx Iott · ..... 2• .... 831•2711'..., •••••••,.•••••••••••••• Ung. No pet1. w 1• I el Ill. .. WHt C.M. IUK ••. Nico 3 BR hOfM In M... -1 1 vv, . OcHn View condo, 2 LN,...., ...... .,. 2215-D M8')1e &45-IMM ••••Lm ITUL 548-9522 gt. EASTBLUFF: 3Br 2B• l15K dn. b1I at 10%. Verd9, $775 mo. Alk for 2Br 2b&. PYl~ar. apk to bdrm. 2 b1. luxury lum. 2 Br 2 B1 wl g1r1ge • ::I
..... BY OWNER: Well loc1t9d 11911,500 Sale/ 119/opt. Must Miii 8kr 842·9668. 8111, 831-1288 beach (1 Blk 1750 lnc:t 1950 mo. 982-8'45 1585, 1Br. pooltld• w/ ••• IM Pickup over $500,000 EQUIT·Y lrvtneOrangetreecondo. Great tlrm1 Agt utH.Avlll81 ,teo-&844 ,,_,, ·-uL .... ,, g1r1ge 1485. Bach WI ..., 1141 overnight. Once in a Wetime. I hive 1 Br & loft. PreHnlly 840•9019 Wll /11 "11 aZIO EISld• Ch1rm 1 Br. No or &45-1771 (Iv meo> ••·•rn:."!::::'. •• '!.'~.. p1110, carport 1405, .................... ..
rented tor lnv•1tmen1 •••••••••••••••••••••• pett. Avail. IL .... -v.,..._, lrg 2 er 2 e. frplc, pool, 198. laundry. """1.IYlll. . never seen a better buy. Won't last. purpoH1 or ev111. for IEWNIY • ....,_ llllll 11111 &4l-3t37 .,...r• penthoull. roomy kltcn.. Quiet, no pet•. M111 1 & 2 Br. Dlecount on Prime Orange Cty 2'h acre hilltop lmmmed. occupency. _._,. Approx 'Al acre. WIH Mil E/llcM 3 BR, tge yard, 2 4Br, 2~B1, end unit. din rm, lrplc, baeut. view Plnel. 549-2447. eome modlll. Pool, Spa, OCEAN VTEW NEW ESTATE. Pool, Pr iced a t actual Older houM ov•r 130C or Joint ventur•. Value c:ar gar. chlldran & pett 2412 Vitti Hoger. No of ocHn. Vear lone Gym , Sauna, etc. mks-1981 purchale price iq. 11. plut l1rg• dela· $500,000. Call 840-7885 OK 1790 mo 7~508· po I a . I 8 5 0 . mo . 1900 ... ft..., &42-8149 ..... .., lilt... 948-0819. spa, waterfalls, electr. gates. 5800 sq ft of $82,500. owner wlll ched doubl9 garage on · · ' '780-1573. · --7 ~U8" 1---------w/360 degree view of all O.C. Tennis he 1 p 11 n 1 n c e •ll•Y· New pelnt, tome #tHtala, Dnul, 851--0431 1 Bdrm ~ttage. tum. Utll ap&•nm11 1350 Bach. furn. Pool.
+HELICOPTER d 71 4 11155·2033or newptumblno&electrlc J.,.tl J4#2Br,1Bahouae,off-et. ~OtMe pd.Secllld«t. -1p1.1ett2Florld1 . court pa area. 75g..1011 Karen. 50x 117 R 1 lot. Own•• •••••••••••••••••••••• pkg .. encl. yard. Utll pd. for leale. 2 bdrm. 2.,. ba $475. &45-3477 h•utllully l1ndac1ped 8'2-21134, 842-3172 ASSUME LOANS & TERMS. nHd• c11h. 1189.000 L.MtfrHtll•lltllr Agt.$500mo.875-1842. onOolfCourae.Fuhec. gardlflapt-.Pool&Spa.NMtbMCtl 2 8r 1'.~Ba. Origi.nally listed for $2,200,000. Walnut Square condo. 3 481 S1nt1 Ana Ave 1876,000/olfer. owe or ~ 3 BR 2 Ba. new N .. r oc .. n. m1Jor A,ula•lf ~•r•d parking. No crpla, drpa, bit~. trptc,
Sacrifice at $1,128,382.63 approx. with BR 2 Be. tale, laelopt :~35~· EYM & Wkndt for oth41r available pro-d4'00f, lplC, bHn1. 2 ear ~ and entertain-fla/uald-4 1 er'. 14711 lnOlld gar1g1. l5eO/mo .
$350,000 approximate cash down. ~~~'·.~al~ :r~8 ~ 5o;-_ ~ Per 1 1•1 • c 111 gar. 1825. 842·1719 mint. lub Incl pool, •••••••••••••••••••••• 31 E. 18th. 846-M19 Call 538-0921
552 9549 551 2193 BAYFRONT. 11177 furn 7 14.6 .. 6 . 3 2 7 6 0, epa, tennis. 12900. "1M /J.la8' ,,,, l~~~~~~~~~-iiiiiiiii'iiiii: Only the serious need call directly to · · · mobile home. 2 bdrm, ~ 714-337-3635 wknd1. Spec:l1I 2br 2b1 wthuo-714-873-0475 ...................... 1~ IAl-.S WILi
PATRICK TENORE 760-8702 or lllYllE • ~2l,IOO be. bit-Int. 1125,000 Agt. gar, patio. bit-Ina 1495 LUXURY 2 BR Newport Yrtf 2 bdrm, 1 ba. o.ck, 1 Br.""* carpel. n.wty L.ge 2 & 3 BA townhouea ... , B 673-0807 213 99,. ....,55 OC..RE.NTALS 750-3314 T -_ _. Fplc ldry. No peta. '650 palnt9d. 1415/mo. plut 1pt1. y1rd1, encl gar, 631-1266 RE/MAX Realtors, agt. ~~~~h=·~~ ' • ,,....., 0.11/ C.u'1 THIS HOT cute 2br home t:.'Poo1~;.oOullt1 '.8: 875-<>349 1200. utll pd, no pate, lplC, hook-i.!pe. Nr Hunt.
Broken welcome. cellent fln1nclng 1v1lla-It~& JISO w/hk-upe. blt·lnt 1325 OK. 1895 mo. JHnle, "1M pool, Idell for quiet me-Hrbr. from 1575. Cllll·
RVM~ of Costa Mesa
!!~'!!!!. {'.'. !.'.'! •...... c .. 1. 11.,, 1024
b ... Many amenities In-Decor!!~1~~~lght It ••••• •• •••••••••••• OC·RENTALS 750-3314 844-7211 ••• ture working coupl•. dran OK. ~7
eluding 8 fruit Ir-. Cell SH,IOO l..U..U -1 S48-7ea9. Delulle 3 Bf. c:rptt, drpm,
979-6370 thl1 country Fron c t Buy1 1tart•r home In 3 Br 1'A Ba. lrg lot. P.ta Newport Shor• 3 Br. 2'A •••••••••••••••••••••• *MIN VlfM 2 Bf. 1 Ba. blt-lne. dbl gar. wld htc·
. \ { : ·I l l tl I~· 11
H. flt , .. f4 •I -. I 'Ii tJ f 'l
home. Gourmet kitchen l•k• Elelnore, good OK. 1850/mo Incl, gar-B1. 2 block• to bdch, 2 bdrm, 2 ba ,_ dplll. Newly r•lurblth•d. up. 1700. Clll 538-0921 French doore with oa~ cond. High & dry lake dener. 831-1288. Joyce ctoee to IOhool & 11nnl1. yrty. Mature non·tmkra, 14951 throughout. Detall•c 19W W..., ' Ow W1ltte 982-8883 no pelt. 1750 X 3 833 •117".,1°· No pell. ARLINGTON APTS . v · "' P•Y rent. • · 213/199-4195, 257-9792 ... .. wallpapering. landici ner 1"'498-34117 Charming 2br wldouble UPPER BACK BAY. 3 BR.. Quiet, tpaclou1 town-
ped patio. Owner m1~ J I•· gar,partypatloydl425 2'AIBA.,golfcouraevlew. $450, 2 Br, utll.,pd. 410 lge 2Br 2bl condo. Nr hOUM2Br.1'ABl.Near
contlder trade. lncr9dl II -1111 QC.RENTALS 750-3314 N-carpet, 11000 mo. Harding. Balboa. No So. Cit. Mo1t ulll pd. b • 1 ch . I 5 2 5 /mo. bi. t1n1nclng. $595.000. fxoia•t llOI 873•4483 gee..9087. ·pet•. 547.1155 AIC, pool, 1p1. 1575. 980-8859
·········'············ ..... ,,., 1111 . 832-1788 ----------' 191 S1H,OOO let's ... , I hall ••••• ~~•••••••••••••• Bluftt Condo 4 br. 3 ba, Winter, 5-ptlJune, Ocean AVAILABLE NOW EA~'fs~~E. $1200 mo 2 bdrm. 2 ba. ind den. ... Corporation detlret to 2-aty, 4 Bdr 3 Ba, family grffnbelt, pool. 11395 Front 2BR 2BA, etoc. pd. BEAUTIFUL 2 Bf. 2 Ba. 2 Bdrm 1 bath IPI. near
·····················-
CHAICELLOR
HOMES
Front bdrm. hat been trad• 135,000 11qulty In rm, frplc. ape, 33101 mo. v r 1 y 11 •. Bk r . 1830/mo. 559-1692 aft ~ Verd9, 1100 eq.lt. BMch!Yorktown. 1 c:hlld ~i. ~a.!~~~9C:::£ enlarged to mike • nice •xceptlonal 3 Br. N--~. 496-'475 844...0134 5PM -. Q':~r;:.':: ::0. ~·0~~· ~~~~:
•• __ • ~~ht. t:fr'~~:; -:i:r.:"r~ port BHch Condo. All Bullar-Spectacular view In pr• Duplex, 3 bdrm, 2 b•, 30IM M-. 549-4018 Agent, no f•. 'T" ---lid R fty 111um1ble financing. ._ .. _ ••~o etlglou• Herbor Ridge. flfeptac.. HouMI away
Cars.bl es• W 7 BR. Air cond. A terrific Q 9Q Want Income property, .. ~ .......... '!.~. pool, tpl, t•nnll, H C. from b ch . I 8 O O . 1 Bf, 1390, ltOW/ refrlgl 2 8r. 1 .... Ba. 1385+1385
PRE-FORECLOSURE buy at $137,900. rMlaurent. or whit have OC..RENTALS g a 1 e . I 1 7 9 5 1 mo. 875-8795 pool. No pota. Adult IPt. !Mp. Cf'ptt, drpm; Quiet
•skateboards• 3 Br. 2 ea. on •arve tot 6 73-7300 ~~."-king ~;,soo1,;.. t-5br'1 $200 to 12000 780-9307. 1295 nice bachelot, roa-423 w. Bay. Ma-9518 of<* pereon preferred.
t k ·bab I h & ...,,... -.,... 7"'" ""14 7 .. , ........ -Nr B11ch Blvd ' Mc-ruc S Y w t many am.nltlet ~ ~ -veyt 3Br, 2B1. 2 p1lto1, no poneible aduH, no P9l-. •-_.,, F 1 d den . No p •ta.
carriages •tea epi J.•lm -New--~--.-2-Br-2ba--con---4 petl, yrtt, 11-c>t to bdl. utn. paid. 106 E. Bay Apt 1 bdrm, carport, pool, 846-9243 & 8t3-48t4
$115,000. •••••••••••••••••••••• do. lmmed occupancy, l800 mo. 831-3417 9, Bllb<Ml Penl"9Ula. laundty. No P.tt. BHI• 101~~---..,.....----carts•trikes PROPERTY HOUSE • " •• 1800 2 R Beec:fll 1425/mo. 1131 w 3 Min to bctl, 38f 2~
rollerskates. .~2L ~'!8..,. lllRllR lllHE •• ~¥.!! •• ~!........ S«-15528 9 2 0 m •. EAST BLUFF 1500 lq. ft. 3 c.n.. '" JIM "" 19th SI. CM llrplc, dbl att gar. patio,
walkers•toys .,... ........., LUCERNE: 2 1tory :. JaJM Br. 2.,.. ea. frptc. 2 car •••••••••••••••••••••• 141-8412 ~· 1•62e.-3oo4:
.'
OWIE• bdrm, mttr bdrm retr .. 1 lnlal.ZI '101 HOME FOR RENT gar wl-.0 opener, oom-1 Bdrm lo 4 bdrm apt. •wagons•••" n w11rp1c, YM'#, N1Um1ble •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm. 17oo. Fenced mty pool~l•t "91gh· 1185/mo plus 1250 MC. 1~L.o--::2:-:bd~rm-. ':-:1'A77ba.--::2:-•"'.'tory-."1-D""'E-lU_X_E __ 3_B-r.-2-B_•_· -In
scooters*hot IESA IEL 1111 f5"21' ........ ft..,, .. ...,E. tit. Full price $5g5,ooo Winter Rental yard & gar1g•. Kid• & bomood. 11350 deye. d. p . Mr . D. n n I• $550/mo. 540-3888, 4-Plex, bit-In•. crpt1,
rods* COUpeS • Lrg 4 Br & fltl'llly rm. only '~ ~"';Jft: f\W"' Xlnt termt. 840-8900 Very nice 2 bdrm. patio, ~~· 545-2000. 780-8398 9YM. Mr. Begg _7_8().."9 __ 5_____ 957~2740 evel hk·UPI. drp1, dbl gar.
$132,000 w/173..000 u-lllYlll SlOt,IOO Bar. garage, 11undry. •' · BlUFl'S lg upgrldod 4 2 8f lb tlo 2er, 1ea, no'*'· patio, frplc. 1850 No pet1.
trailers*hard wmabl9.Make olf.,,1·m TakMonly$t3.soodwn l~~~~~~~~~I ::~U~o + depo111 NrBCH2br~w/= bdrm,3 t>,fool~pllnt& wunrm~·:U;r.: ;50: garage, 1450 mo. 54()..4484att8M-F
tops*convert· llexlble. 1179-2&58 to get 1830/mo P•Y-IEWNIY nm gar, IUl\let patio, c•pet•. . 0 pell. &41-11042 8'0-1419 673-2145 DELUXE 2 Br. 2 Ba. In
ibles•motor menta. 3 Br 2 B• condo. ttWl•ll Butl•1I•• OC-RENTAlS 750-3314 :.:,::::_.m~: v11t1 • . 1 BR •Pt. 1325 mo. No 4-Plex. crpt-, drJ>e. bit·
homes* lawn OILY $4008 Don't w111. call nowl 2 Br. 1 Ba. Vwy prlv•t• lllfA 3140 lnlat 1144 C..ta,,.,. 1114 peta, ICIH• pr.rd. nr 18th Ina. encl9d g11, hk-41P9.
mowers•ii·mos MOVES YOU IN 631·7370 rear patio Immaculate •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Eu1bluff exec, oceeri city •••••••••••••••••••••• & Nwpt Blvd. 5'48-a574; 1525. No pet•. 540-4464 TODAY plan 1. Sto0,000 all oath: 3 BR. 2 bl, nr Magno111 & LUIESU vl•w. pvt pool, Jae .• 3 Lllge 3 Bf. 2 Ba. Town-4119-4-451 1tt e M·F. •corporate 3 Bdrm condo · wllk to ••5.3194 Yorktown. Remod. g11 3 Bdrm.._._...._.. .. __ Bdr, 2'Ai Ba. din rm, tam hOUM In quiet complex,........, '.'."-.• -........ --.,-.... -1-1--
So. Cont Plaza. No "'" No P9t• $875. 1163-1777 In exc:.i,;t; ,4';~'; rm. !>91utllul am9nllles. large pool, gard«I Mt-2 br, 1 b1, cp11. drp1. ";b;••2t;;:biin:,r~
headquarters qull. t1% fin. 983-4759 FlllEllU Hiii w IH t Jlll b I• 1mmedlat1ly $1500. 840-8233 ting. $876. 845-3381, ~':Sf'~· 1~.'j~ 1.,. 'm11M beach. Adulla:
•garden carts In ,_r Balboa on Wett •• 'l. .. '!~•••••~•••••••n $800/moon 1 year...... BAY & OCEAN VIEW 875-5949. M&-2277 no pell. 1500/mo.
Model A 's•••• Bay. FAIR PRICE 4 BR. new cl«:. furn, Sec Five othert to chooM 3 Br. 2 Ba. lrv!MT.,raoe 1530/mo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 538-83e2
•typingtableS • 845-4220 gate. prlv Bch., tennl1. lrom. We'r• Ille onet to hOIM wlfrplc & garde· Townhou-. car portt, Spaclout 2 Br, 2 8a, new
• Turn your r.-..,...,. IHI vertalllM condo, 1 Br t Ownr. 4~038 call for,._ nw. palloe. 111 bll-lne, lndry crpt1, dr1pH, good 1tw1J ld1ttn1t•
Wheelbarrows• unusableS "::''••••••••••••••••••• Ba eouth41rn expoeuro /Ii IH t 3/ff (UI] 18111 Bon~oone rm, tmall pet ok. Won't e11t1lde loc1tlon. 2 bdrm, 2 ba, no peta,
recreational e Into Ol.DE LAG2UNdA CHA11RM 1ubterr1ne1n perking: •• "'!!r.!! •••• !......... ~i \\boclbrldtt .!1400tmo87... tutl !!r .. ~'~ MM~~ ldut1.~ em111 ~0:17':85 mo. h" I s•golf • Unique b rm oor Hcurlty enlr1nces .... ,.,... . Re I 87~1 .... 1 .... 2242 TSL Mgml. &42-1603 ...,,., ~ -·--~ .. 1---------ve IC e USable pl1n, 1 bath. llv rm wt outttandlng pooli I fl BIO CANYON TWNHSE Aft. 5, 842~1 E. 18th. St. "4", C.M. /mat lfH
Carts•rnodel • CaStl. Call beamed c.illnga. hard· ClubhOUH. By Own•r. lttl 11111... 551·3000 on Big Cnyn Golf COUr1o. Flrepl1ca. pool, dlth· 1375. 1 BA, POOi. Piiio, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••
trains•bikes • Dally Piiot wood 11001' & cozy log SH,900. A11um1ble. 2Br 2"' ·bath, Huna/ 4'21 &rrHf• l'tlW) toilw 2Br. 2B1 + den. prof Wither. pvt Pip· x LG peraon. 325 J. 17th Pl. OrwlgetNe Condo 2 Bf. 1 • . • burning frplc. 1167,500 Sll'ldr1 8'2-8149 pool. llOf Udo. 6th noor. . decorated, beautllulll Garden 2 B '580. 848-5137 lft 11AM Ba. pool. HOO/mo. pianos cars • Classified Full Price. Furn1111ed. 13000/mo. lllTIU 8117..ao87 Tracy.
refrigerators MISSION REALTY •--J Call Rita Writer, /4.g9nl lndacpd, pvt tennli 557-2&41. 38f2ba.petlo,cptlldrpa.
• 642-5678. 41M...0731 -. •a 752-5710 1 to 5 bdrm•. ltartlng 11 ~. f.~~500~ 2 .... 1 ea. u-----. w. $550/mo no pet1. All ta...~~ "" •skates•••••• ,,,.,a1 11•1 1450101i150. .._.. f9q . ...,. ...... ,,_,_ ... .-·-· itpm. 145-2199 ::7.~:.::=:····· ~~~;~~~=~;~~~~5~~51 Wt,.,.,, llSJ ••• ~.r.~!'.~! ••.•••• ~·. • II. 1 .... t.i.....a 878-1880 or 957~ Joann St. No pet1. 1.,,..........,--------i --• r TAR. GA'ZEK•._ ...................... •:~~2;:'c:!!/o~:~~':~ i;;;J;;·~!Z.::-:::-fiii ~:,'~!:.Rn!~!:.: ~fw: s1err1 Mgmt. ~=~;r~i/p~~ft!. ~~~S:..:· :!:i
a;..::..=..~"'---.a. CLAY l fOIJ.A IMIHtlt ...... loan, uklng 1114,500. •••••••••••••••••••••• ata5. 7119-'914 NEW BREED APTS. QOOd neighborhood. locltlon In town ~
M G,,jclo M ...... I~_,,._-881-3380 •m••s 1 Br & loft. Frplc, roe AQOnt. no ... 171-2289. liking vlowa. .. bultt-1n1. v !--,, .. °""',··•"""""•• , .... _... v ........,. n ... ........___ ·~ 2 ...._ 3 ......., ..... .. & ~ " -Seckldod epe, over 1,000 .._ • ..,..._ """"• room, ..,......, .....-. g 2 Bf. 1~ Ba., lrplc, pool. h • • t • d po o I ,
To d""•'oP ,....,_. ,.,. T"""°V. tq. ft. of decking. 2 Of.tit •HI '61111 Yurty·WMkly·Wlnter. 2, bl condo, llropl1ce, wet• paid. No pota. 393 IPI. attlldled garege. No 1ub.-gar1g•. el•v1tor. ~"'t'..:::;~,:1o.....-. custom flreptecee. •lr1um •••••••••••••••••••••• 3.4 Bdr~ pool, lr.10 mo. 9157-3177 HI m I 11 on • C . M . p e 11. Av 1 11 now L .... only. 1850 & up.
·-.,c-. •• ...., olf 11m11y room. dellgnef #eiHt ••n .IAOOIS RULn 2 bdrm, 2 b• duplex, ~11. 1825/mo. 931-4184 330 e11rr Dr. 494-f083. ;::=::. ~~. :;~-dreperlea, c•ntral air. 111 "11 1111 PllP ~ ~ c:ommYntty ICl'OM I,:::.._.....:........:.........: ___ ~========::!.::::::======:::::;
•Y.... Mc;,,.tu1 .. ....,. Ranch atyte 4 bedroom. •••••••••••••••••••••• 't5'~ l'AMMDa:fRVM fforn the wet•. H9W ktt· ::::~ ::=,., :~ 2 beth. Exceti.ri1 utu-N-port Beach 0. Ann IAIAIEIEllT chen with dl1hwa1her. ::::_ ~::: :.:=-mebl• 101n. 1115.000 b1yfront Park. Mini Ill .117• ~ Fl,..lac.. FlflOld yard. n.. ....... •r-· equity, wlll contlder cond. ·re dbl wide, fir• • • lovely 3 br, 2 bl, rim Yo1r round. 1715 mo, 90..,_.~,. ;~~ ~~ ;-:::-trade for North Orang. place. brick patio. 158, I f t I .., I rm, crptt. drpt, bltlni. Owner Will CJOnllder poll. s...:===i ;;=. :!!.. ~r..-: County praperty. Mlt.tlon 5 O O. B 111 Or u n d y I J rt I •I• t 1950 mo. 1 yr IH. 873...otGe
.. ,_, ··-,.,..,... Viejo Realty. Own•rl 815-8181. l1flra 873-5820 evea & wkndt. -3-'lf-old--N-pl-H-t1._S_Olul_ ~~ 3=-... $~.: agent. Ask for Carol. LMIN Ills Lido Prk Dr. 2br, d•n. Wooctbrld • 3Br 2~8a loft or 4er, 3 ba. Frml din
.. ... ...... ..._. ,......... 24' x ~ .. GREENBRIER MOUrlty bldg. 125001mo bolutlful ~re~. ltsO rm. firm. t 1350. Ordnt. ~=== :::-== ::!: 111·1• HOME. lge L .... Din. Am. DI ....... 8 /ferw mo. 85M~350. 551-tC).42 0 p. n s. t / 8 u n . ,._ ''"'" ••-·... Kit open• to Fam Rm r ve by 1 11 B1yeld9 64M78t, 831·2171 .,_ u 01 ••-Or.AvlllSec>t 1:3Br.fam e..u .1 lovel 2,000 eq ft :!~ ::= :::':• w.tbar. 2 BR 2 BA. Ught rm, dock. $3000/mo. home. 3 bdrm, 2 ~den. Chetm, H1rbof Hinde. 3
Pl'==.:...-i =·--= s~ ;~.:; : ::=· llll.OOO dn ................ Pnv fenced yard. Petto. Br homo n .. lled In
•-11c:..-aw; 540-5937 ••1 1_. In Twtllfodc. 14.Mn wtth ONIMl°Y• Olt'dMt. pd. "'• ••-.... :;;:~;::=::::;-~;;;11-=---=-::..;:~·..;;-:.:.~-,,...-~ poof, ape, ~1. Only N r 1 Ii am• n 111•1. ·-··-.": '70 FIHIWOOd, 12x40, C...a ,,, • '"' 1925 mo. all).13'7 ltOO/mo, 848-2319 ~G.o4 ®"'-()-.. 1 f1Um.,SNEW ranot &7 r• •••••••••••••••••••••• Turtl•rook 1750 111 2 HURAYI 3rm w/pool ~ rig, tlr11ght VIII. 141 Spllt leltel 2Br-den boa· ...... ' t kit ... NO 8 1 3 . 4 3 2 8 ' 2 1 3 I med c•lllno S19S 0 mltr """"'· oountry kit· er· cu • On.
DO ELON r I I I
TR 0 0 B
I I' I I
Lm-un .
It~ ..,,t IO build
your own 011110,
tlllt opportuntty Of •hlmor,~ c:omo . 3 Iota
7._1022 840-ell8 • '" • chon. 2"'t>•, next to 00-7~.,..ALS 7_ ... 1 .. p Ool. Av 111 lo pt 1. ·--"'"""--• ___ ....._. __ .. Mobile dlbl wide. 2 Bf. Pvt e.,11 .., IJlf 833-82n, 782...,.12 ,_ ..... or ..... ~
patio. Golf. Oo11n. •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ......_ ..... 2 -. ................ -or_....,.. Adutlt 140,000. Out of ~ALS ;//....,....... • ...... ,,,.,,.. -·""" ""' --· •t•I• own•r. No 1011• l·llbr'• t200 to s.aooo con 1oc1t1on, e•t•d TNdol ooolklalod. Awl 7141~192 750-3314 ()pen 7-dayo ~'::454.~ =·~,;,eo=:·:.=;
-·· ~e~y2:'e~~·r.~ CALL NOW 2br 2b1 =~vt.w.ly
Double wide 2 bdrm. ~Dll~U). HU/mo. =NY pool. IPI. btt-N 2 • 1\41>1 oondO, petto, 2
Cln*On With l"IOMd 51 22 OC.AENTAL..8 7~14 Cer 00'· Pool/ape. '100 . 1un rm. and carport. ..-tide 2 Ir 1 la. lnOd '11 4 I 1. 4 to I or
lo«a of ltOftlfll.-* In patio onoltd ou•o• '--.._., llfl t11-11M
1. Place your ad In tht Dally Piiot
Ct111wr.d llCtlon (It'• belt to run a
d8ye for mulmum expoein). " you pey for your ad tn ~ we'tl run It 3
deye and only charge you for 2t
2. QM 'f04I FA!£ Geraoe 8elo ... ( ..
you hev'8 to do II come tn to tM Olly
Plot .. pey for your ad '" adY8llOI -.. Wll ahe you two 11. 17 8lgnt -FRH o(ot.ge).
': ~,-'-..A•L-.....1...,D~ ~· . I I I r
on H~r r Aldgo,
tld .. by·t!Oo, With
.,..,. fOf • 10,000
equere foot tlOmo
with TENNIS
COURT and pool '°' onry •uoo.ooo. The o.n..-.. joint
vontvro, tr•d• or
you OM t• 011W .,,. wtM>l9 project.
.... end ptkie of~ • d f ~ ...... ~r. •••••••• ·------------norlhlp 0"°'°9 locllton now Olr~tt, ra~1. IMIAALD 814.Y i Ir 2 ._._ ~ ~
In 5 lter Ad11tt ,.,k, peln~t,::::,-.:::c:· la.""'°,bftclkj,.ao_;..,. ~Ten"n'e• .. •••nr:l ta.t.eoo..,..,.. o. .... -· · •P•· •1100 . ~~· .._.. ua111t-a11. c1er '*'-. Ol1llMI WOOd t114• 67M400 •. 1 lo. w/ orpte. dfpt, Pef!Ollng, frpl, HP·
3. "'* ~,...,. ~ ~.
4. ":.:.C.'•nty 01 011ano• on 11ana
1( • dtmee. quwWa, hllWe.
;: ~...,.H..._..E_M...,....C ..,o,...R_-4 ~~_1111r tf,4'00,000 Of
IUllM1b1e ti•
MnOlng.WOWI
llllUINUI y.,-d l/l&de. '51&/mq, ".:i':. c:'i: ::= It r •Ill Utt t too m, I
HAR80R 17Mciil: 1eo,.,... vu ot "-'*· ~=·Y:,:.•.i:~~-0 1ur , m1n1. lllr, lbl, U~1111
HOurlty, ·=·· •P•· ·---...; ___ .... ____ .. -.-.,--•ttM. 411-. ,,..
oo'C~·:.~.':":!, I :,~ t-P.i1
fl'po ltt• MO........ .... !!eft Me , ....
1ICMl1I -....
I
•OM end ~ ~ bah).
~ ,_. u. Ind oaunt 'f'IA" ~ ........ of.... .
IAILYMAn C.AI OMI .... ,. __ .....,. __
tor your motorcycle DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Sell your no-longer-needed Items for cash.
If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3 LINES
!!!~~~!.~!~~'····. "Lei lhe Su'*11ne In"
Call Sun!Ullne Window
Cleenlng, Ltd 548-8853
20% Monthly Olecounl
• days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads .
Call today for full detalls.
(Noft·Nfundable. Extr• Hn.. S1.00)
3 3DAYS
CLASSIFIEDS642-5678 =
A'U.'i::Z.. !A,.0:;.::d-' f,.'!!!!!.!!~!!!!.!J!tf ~!. .. ~'1!.!!.f~~.!.~!! '!!!!f!..~!~!~ .... !.~~ IJ!!!f!..~~!~ .... !!.! •·~':;{,l•n•t/ ••iJ!:l.n, rn1t SOJS .. !!.~.!.'.~~i .... !.~~ ,,,, •• .i
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• t Br. aleeps 4. acrou the G0<g8°'J1 2br. 2ba condo Wllmllml Share offlce or desk Fum •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• OST: at Sttaw·1 Cove, S.IYltH S310 ..... ,, ... ,. Jiff ..... ,, ... ,. ,,,. street from beech. w/pool, spa, amenities. Phones Copier p; ... ~ •• ,,.,,, .... um.u Laguna on 7124 2 band ···E~~i,;~·a;~~,;;;:··· •• -.-.'ii•••••••••••••••• •• -.-.";•••••••••••••••• $295/wlt. 67S-5068 Xlnt loc. Nr SC Plza. t200 or 2400 eq. ft. I)&. loc In. Herllag· e Bink ~ t l!l JOO• wecldlnn ring tel 5 dla· E
No FEE & C OCC, Flour. 6e2·2247 •ft I Ill t · '8111 •• ii lt.&.llt 0.. IH. monda···1otal P·-~-call ecort for Women I Apt. ondo Lido bayfront. yrfy lease. 3 LIDO ISLE -3Bdrm, tam 4 & wknda or 979_..teo. uxe ° Ce or 1 ore bldg .. Adame & Meaa ••• "••••••• •••••••• "• "'~ 497 5725 (bet 8 8 ) rental•. VIiia Rentals. Br 3 Ba, 4 t3 Via Lido rm. 2Ba. StOO/dy July. 1p1ce. t4302 & t4304 Verde or. EHy acceae Join the leader In the Speciallzlng In iat & 2nd 7 1 4 -8 8 8 • 7 o o 2 , • am-pm
675-4912 Braker. Soud. 6 7 3-t 283 or $3500 Augull. Ocean-* BAYFRONT * Beech Blvd. Btwn 2 lor client. Ideal tor con-swimming pool chemk:al TO's since t949 714-882-9817 t.•ltnafal
'H 11.EIYE m 675-35~t $t250/mo. front 2br, 1be, $500 PVT SUITE/GARAGE Frwys. Civic Centet VII-aultant. real estate, lnau-aervlce bualnen. Be a Robt. Salt~ NH/CM •• ~ •• ".-.••••••••••••• • ·c: -k. Biii Grundy, Allr. RESPONSIBLE N-SMKR lage Shopping Center. ranee or acctg. S200. Ulll "sparkle water treatment R.E. Broker Bd Realtors Found approx 6 mo1 Do-lfiHll'
NEW gated 20 To..,n-., •• l••••I• 3111 67~616t $750/mo. 673-t52l Bel. Prime locellon. 979'-8889 pd. 556-9250. eyatems dealer." Llc'd 642-2171 54S-061t Tbenrman Female. Red/ lallt•llloa 'f,005
home VILLAGE COM-•••••••••••••••••••••• 9PM or 660-0t44. terr i tory evall1ble. a MUNITY. 2 & 3 er. 2',.4, Near new 1 Bdrm. apt. 1 block from beaoh, 1 Br, Share new office IP with Orange Coast area, no HOT LllE 963·5076 ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ba. 1600-t600 aq. It. ol with built-Ins, carpeting sleeps 4, wllh garage. em to llhr 2Br, 2Ba Park Airport area • Exec. Sul· ul near Oyer, SIA up to uper nee. Wiii train. There are several op-
pure luxury. Garagea. & drapet, laundry faclllty, Prlv. patio. 63t-1268 Newport. $285 mo. Incl tea. From 225-450 IQ. It. 700 sq. ft. Prefer Ina. $50,000 full amount tlona rather than fore-Found: Male grey cat 4-6
apae In every home -under roof carports and ulll. Debbie 840-4320, St per sq. ft. Many xtras. brkr or similar office uM. req'd. some financing ctoaure. Without coll or mos olc~. 2 collars.
master suite. dining public tennle courts & WHILY IEITALI 752-8886 Call 557·70t0 714/S49-2t20 available. Wiii net $40, obligation, gel the lacta, i----64_2_·8_2_0_5 ___ 1
rooms, wood burning goll course right behind Available. Agl. 87S-8170 Mature Lady to •hare EXE 0 IT I. If f I 0 E Newport Center Office 000 I C II II t then decide wnlch plan Found: F Malamute. blk/ flreplacee. ml~ro-weve property. CIOM lo eve-••on-Fprlu•9·-6P~•. ~0ak efcor v s N.B. 1&2 Br. weekly. 11ep1 home In Coll• Meaa. u•oE II ... ,._...._ Space 1167 9q ft 4 pvt .... .... " would be besl lor you. wht. F. mixed Chow, blk ovens. private pa1lo1 & rythlngl 395/monlh. 10 bch s275 G 1 Move In Sept. tat. $325 • P" .,..,.r · · Tim 408/887-0tt1 Circle Home Loans. a F Cockapoo blk/brn yarde,gardener provl-4vallable August t5. one locale. 754-093"1· rea plus 'It utile. S40-4979. fer alttnMJ tr ttlttr ofllces. Lge recept. rm d I r e ct I e n d e r . Numerous cal• & kittens
ded. Elegant living only or two adulla only & no Btwn 6-9PM. •rtfttsltlll IH t supply rm. ~ele'/I. \WC::g Join Netlonal Co. 7t41499-226t NB Animal Sheltar 12s tS minutes from Fasnlon pell. Callo-at (71 4) Laguna Cottage nr beach. r • t procenor acll. 1· Mesa Or, CM. 644·3856
Island. 7 mlnutee to s.c. 642-0138 Sip• 8, $350 wk. (Aug/ Fem. Ammie, 1 blk from rtot,tl11l1t, Xtrtl per •If. M r Green We Will Train Au•••lf•nl1/
Plan or O.C.Alrport. Deluxe Old Spanlsn lge 1 Sept.)WINTEA$650/mo. beech, reep, S225 tll & law llhlFJo &ufi 644-9800 Hlg~x~::-~~':~~:eek l'flHWI/ L:'hSoTk~l~h~l~A:,3~1
Juel ant ol Newport br 2 be din rm' frplc 494-0077 tut. &3t·5S68-. l•-4., tall fer ... 21~50~1250W~mok-upCoffloeaa...-.1• Call Jim Swyer Wll I f•••I REWARD 84S·0383 or
Blvd. & 90· of San Diego $4J5. 496-7151. ' 3Br sips 6 pool Cd•• Non emkr 3 BA condo t II 11••1 a I · ,.,..., • Toti Fr" •••••••••••••••••••••• "'8 n595 Fr w y . S 9 o o / mo • ' "'• ' • I 1, tr •' drepea, paneling. CdM Au•••ff•••IJ SlOO ""' -v 631-S439, 2473 Orange Beech Apt. too yard to 5S4002.,53wtc59tS1250 mo. Aug lurn, S200 mo. & 'h utll. 1H/ll ... H11 752-1830 l-800-433-3322 •••••••••••:::. •••••••• 1_L_O_S_T_1_0_y_r_o_l_d_F_e_m_a_l-i•
"ve .• "-ta ••-· ··-" 2 "''". 1 Ba. ,...,..,..., .,.. St50 dep 9$4-3654 HB. 0 th I ••t F " vu. ..,_ _,.., "' • ..,.... occ s 0 ance en us aet .., Siiky Terrier MIH her S39S 496-7tS1. CdM 2 br. 2 ba apt. So of nr Ex<*lent Oftlcee -Up to cet17ngL own? Stahrtlng lllTllllTHI earn as you learn to very much 548-7t19
PCH. aundeck. Bal Newport Beach loll for 4000 eq rt. t80t Newport out ower over ••d StOOO mo.°' more PIT 1---------1 Pen Blvd, C.M. 84S-2t 1 t Ask maintain Image, otrlc:e at To Hll end d11trlbu1e LOii GUCCI purse In Univ
SUPERIOR
TUfllH IEIYIOEI
SEMI TllOI lllYHI . ..,
HAYYE .. NEIT
OPIUTHI
-National job placement .,.,.,
·Financial aid avalleble
-Accredited member
N H.S.C
-Correspondence/
rU1dence training
FOR MORE INFO
172S S Oouol11, Suite B
Anaheim. Ca 92806
714/634-3988 A,.rt•t•ls F.W1iM In .. blk lo bMctl, pa-rent. Family atmoephefe. !Of Joe Regency Center. Euc Nlllonally edverllaad u • travel club consul-Or, Irvine. 8 15 pm. Fri U. i Jflf tto. spa, S350 pr wk. FuH UM of hOU" Neer suites In Newpon nr Alf· Julllce Broe. automotive lent. Ifs easy, it'• lun
COUNTRY CLUB LIVING •• .'.' ••• ~.!!'!.......... 855-1743. 673-9384 pool & park Rent Incl Exec. Furn Suite, prime poaai..uy equipped & produott Operate 81 Mr. Franks 960-6866, ~~ ;!~=ard. Please CAes Training. Rialto.
IN NEWPORT BEACH SUWllD BAYFAONT. PVT BEACH uill 5375 mo. 75&-o780 N B. IOC. Phone and co-at~ for every bual-your own, Mlllng lo auto 542"9047 1---------1 Ca)
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
A 10111 envi ronment u1L• •IE Balboa Penln. Just com-Lrg N.B. home. Prof M.. pier avail. S225/mo ll8SI need. lndlv offlcel parta ator ... car deatet.. SCRAM LETS FOUND 2 Cocker Spa---------• apartmentcommunltyon 'f WI pleted. fabulou1 vi-. non-amkr, 28-3S. Avail. 9'8·1779, 640·62t5 mo/mo. from $375 service 1t1t1ona, & ga-• nlela. t black, I blonde.
Iha Upper Bay Prlv1te New 1&2 bdrm lu11ury Pvt prtc"g. Spec. 2Br 2be now. $ 3 5 0 . 0 I an a (eve) 833-9976 rages Choice lllH eval-W o O db r Id g e •re• J•i1 W••IH 1015
clubhouee end health apts In 14 plans. t Bdrm plus convert. den, alps 8. G31·t268 Office Of detlc •P-fl.Ir-leble lncludee Sen Cle-ANSWERS 8S7-8227 ••••••••••••••••••••••
spa. 8 tennis court1. 7 lrom SS15, 2 bdrm lrom S677~!~91y. 7S2-95tt or Flhu 2Br apt to •hare wll nl1hed or unfurn. Pacll Xlllf Int .. Leo. mente to Seal Beech. All Nood141 -Robot i---------1rgung married men will p0011, close to bualneu. SS70. Townhouse lrom ..-.... t 35 pl 1230 pl 'la 111 c 0 • 1 t Hwy . N . B . at MacArthur & Jambo-with existing 1ccounts. 1'111•••11 S350 ° general handy work
airport, Feehlon Island. $640 + pools, tennis, V•t•li•• ltatwflSO 54~ ua u · 645_7474 ree lnteraectlon. Lovely Vehicle and training Dal~· Chrome •••••••••••••••••••••• Call eves & wkenda.
Convenient ahopa on waterlalla. pondel Gae •••••••••••••••••••••• garden style building. program furnl1hed. EYONO * * * _9_7_2_-9_S_2_5 ____ _
site. Unfurnished beetle-tor cooking & heating OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br. MHter Bdrm, ba. wlk·ln Wanted to sublet 'la of 820-t200 1q It. Month 10 Moderate deposit re-My secret ambition 1' to Atlantis Parlor Swedish g1r1 20 seeking
10<a, , & 2 bdrm epta and peld. From San Diego Avail. now. Weekly thru ct 0 ae t. N r beach & approx. 720 sq. ft. office month avail. Cell Sandy quired on working In-earn s97o.ooo In one Open 24 hrs 1 day employment In home,
townhouses. F rwy drl ve Nor th on wmmer. 873-7873. Ad am,. p v I y 1 rd, space. profenlonal de-7 1 4 -8 3 3 • O 8 2 O or ventory. For Appl., call y.er. I'm just curious to 7 days 8 week this lall, qualllled child
SS40 . StOOO Beach to McFadden to Bal Penln -terlronl, •Br. S250/mo. 960-7874 1lgned, exceptional, 2t3·820-8857 9-S weekdaye see 11 there's •ny salary Jacuzzi, Sauna. Locals nurse, drivers lie
Severel bachelors and 1 See w lnd VIiiage 211 noell tlo 960~30 ' ocean view. Flexible for I ' (211) 114-0lll my family can't live as well ea tourlsll. 494·4200.
Bdrm units feature fine (714)893-5198. y, ca 8 n oppty. Pr 1 v • c Y • Ph 0 n '8 •1lan1 lnl•I 1150 BEYOND. BankAm~lcard. Maater ---------
d I f StOOOwtl. Aug. S900wk. Olllt• ltal•l 1100 644-4t40 •••••••••••••••••••••• Want a busln"' of your 1---------v• Nurse wantl private duty ea gner u1nlture and I IOOO Sept. (213) 476-7738 •••••••••••••••••••••• · Retail store at 2650 Avon own f0< minimum cost? Wll I F•••I 9300 Charge, American Ex· nursing In home, over 20
acoeaaorles. Move In to-.!!.'!!................ UIOITIYE llmt Executive office 1ulte. SI .. 1640 aq. tt. plu1 8 Compl aetup plus bull-•••••••••••••••••••••• press, Olnefa. All wel· yeara exp Will consider
day or reserve lor aom-Pool. 1ennl1. lake. club. tall It Ji•lf 4300 IAVINE. Phone answe-corner ol 40S Fwy, Near car garege. 64t-8777 nese coneullenl Guar come 7141645-3433 Ora. olllce locally For
mer months. Smartly washer/dryer, full El Toro •••••••••••••••••••••• ring, cont. rm. utll pd, Hart>or Blvd. Teke over Office and Laboratory prollt. 8S0...02t9 FOUND ADS 2112 Harbor Bl. CM lnlo. 842-t3S3
dlualrnlyl•hed model• open hOUae prlv. 'I\ utlts. 1280 llJ lee••ett eclry eerv1. e1c. Aleo lease. 1600 sq.It. at 90¢ .,.._. up to 1~ ..,, rt o
Ill & 1111 S86-M>38 Iv Contact largest Gay dHk apace. $150/up. It. Call 75t-6t9t e4s.211 t Ask for.,.,.,J;:: l•UHll WHIMSOIJ ARE FREE C EDS · Would love 10 B1/'1. WnlM 1100
msg ~'C~:'."~~e In 540-9745 Fountain Vllley Office ~ WAN.Teo0 &•:;•••••••• ~~rtk ~·~ :~;, ;~111 ;~ A~~ri.;,~i·;;;~;~;;,·~~: On Jamb<>ree Rd II
San Joaquin Hiii• Ad $27S mo, nicely lurn. 520 eq. ft. $1.1>0 per eq. ~. 2500 aq.rt. at eo. C...ftdal tnveetor f~r pf:;:,,~~~ 9S3-93&3 perlenC.CS, mature cou-
WHher. dryer. kitchen ft., 3975 Birch .. N.B. a ft Good expo1ure, l1atal1 fffJ rented , well-loceted CaH•. pie. tOO beautifully
prlvllege1. pool. No ROOIMITE Agent 54t·5032 OOod parking, Talt>en & •••••••••••••••••••••• Ortngelr .. oondo. TMe UllA I WIOll't malntelned units, Coeta
Spec. 3 BA 2 Ba fi>IC. gar. emoklng Pref. male atu-9 rook h u r • t . Ca I I lf'1ol M 111P all tax and depfeciallon M2·Hll Meae area. $750 plus
beectl 2 blka, S900 yrty dents 548-8058 fllDERS t8t7 w .. tcllff, N.B.. 25& 75t..et9t In ,,_ bldg on Coaat benell11 for monlhy PHOTO MODELS bonus plu1 apartment,
144-1100
No pets 845-t882 C'-ful room, klteh prtv. to 4000 sq. It tit."°°' • ......,, ••ra•1 Hwy, South Laguna Ap.. negetlve and small equ1-I~~~~~~~~~ OUESCTCC:LALTSIOAN2C•EAHSAS no pets 540·9626
Oldeet & largest agency. Agent 541·5032 IKW~ -... prolll. 500 eq. rt. Excel-ty down. BaMd on actual 10-•• A&f " .. wkdye $500/mo , Br 1 Ba llPI. pvt yard. E/Sld• CM. All ctlentl ecrMnlld with IEllOll um l ent private parking ml<l-198t pureh ... pnce ~5--llt-G20l enctl•d garege, lndry Pref middle •ged man. photos & referenoea. No depolltal Luxurloua behind bldg. $525 mo. paid 7141955-2033 or LOST. Sat, July 24th, 1-:::::::~= Aot A ... , Managers tac . ctoee to beach Cat 1200 S4S-S&e9 Crec:lltl: Cosmopolitan new otflce1. Including Turner Aaoc. 41M-11n 759-t07t Karen Eaetblulf Area. RE· 11 ElllP8flenced/acttve ua'I
oil, no doge Female Beaut. room w/ Good M(Knlng Amet1ca. receptlonlat an•-rf WAAOI SUNNY'S Executive managllll'ier'lt couple for
TSL Mgmt 642-1803 bath. Kitch prlv. HVH. The Tomorrow Show. ,/-.,~ service, c'onferen~: S!:,-:' .=· :,~ tq It., 1 • ..,,.,., da 83 ~!:S~· eves Str .... Aeductlon 200 units family complex
LIDO DELUXE 2 Br trplc S280 plus utll. 720-0375 M1·11ff ~=--,.._.., room, etc. 752-6408. 548-3•182 ~!f. lflS OtflciHlm-outcall In E.9condldo. ~S59t
lrg brick pello DA Adlta Room for rent, non...mllr, :/".,-Hatbor & Baker240 sq rt ·,·· •••••••w•••••••• Lost 7/25. Stack blnocu-,~~~~~~t~-63~7~7~~~1 Alt t' l':.t $t050 875-8359• $300 mo Incl. utll .. Pvt MIH KawaHkl need1 a ./r.a ---tat floor private entren: /Ulltd.J ftaf.Jff00 IYHftr'S llft~ lars In brown shoulder 1: rac JYe \Ill * BAYFAONT • Ba 546-4487. CM Mele protector/helper ~=::=. ~. S200imo. 641-1324 ;,~9~3975•9i;cti:•;;eo•.q: ~~!:'Jlty ol part-~~:.8A::~~:r~5~_r4~~ Prol man deelrea female S0phl111eated, ettractlve,
PVT SUITE/GARAGE EASTSIOE CM. Private rmmate In upacalel N.B. Newport Airport ArM 400 II . or 1 .... MIA zone. E1tab chain bu1lne11 Ext t7. 8-" hOUHkHper. mutt b• well groomed girl 10 RESPONSIBLE N-SMKR unlurn. room & bath. area. Pvt. quertere w/ 1 2 •oo f 111 Agent 54 t 5032 expel' In cleaning, shop-model privately for ln-
$750/Mo. 673-t52t Bet. Utlls. Incl .. refrlg .. $3l& belcony. All hH prlvl· e~ac; f o!q~ ~I re -. opening In oentral cout Loal Yorkshire Terrier. ping & 11 Cooking. Orga· dlvldUll 3.4 hrs per 9PM mo. 873_ 7544• betwn 1egea. $400/mo. Call h · r n· S750 up. 2t80 II. lndu-a r •a. PI ea•• ca II , .. , seen In F.V. nr Tai-nlred wt good refe In WMtl Slrlctly private and
4•8PM Eiieen dy1/me11aga• c udlng Janitor Mrvlce, atrial· Office. t8t01 Re-805/528-30t6 lor lnfor-beft & Magnolia. ··a.nit" elllchange lor apt In So. In good IHte. Utmost
2Br. 2B1, lrplc. pool, & · 8 3 5 . 8 4 4 8 • • v • 8 . *llLIXI """'* AIC, etc. lmmed. occu-dondo Circle #M & T m•llon. (2t3) 43o-.4t53 Laguna on the beach. discretion auured. refrlg. S850 mo. NEWPORT BEACH. quiet 640-t002 From t room to 3 room1. pancy · LH or mo/mo. Huntington Bea oh • -= PleaH Mnd reeume to: OrHt pay • flexible hr..
6'6-5625, 846-3122 haven tor buey prol. or From $1.18 a sq. ft. No 540-2960 642-2113.C. ' •Ill 'I' 1t•ll Found Med sz Calleo cat, Mr. Daniel. PO Bolll C.. Serid plloto end detal~
t Br 1 Ba, yrly uecullve. Non-emoker. M/F to ahr rny E.llde C.M. .. ... required. Adj. Air· 400-900 PLUS 1400 eq. ft. ' I 1031 long hair, vie Clay & C· t0525, Ir vine, Ca. de1crlpt1on to eox. Ad
S800tmo. prvt. bath. Avalt. 9/t, houu. Lrg. rm. Opt. port«lnn.2172Duponl. PenthOu .. BayfrontSul-lfflOIWUi.a •••••••••••••••••••••• Allao, Nwpt Hgtl. 927t3. No. 10t1. Dally Piiot.
87:J-3355 $300 mo 844-0389 turn .. laundry feo .. S325. Call AM. 833-3223 te, parking. patio•. Approx 2000 aq ft. Nr WIDOW HAS 1$$ for TO'• 648..,..577 Box 1680, Costa Meta, _________ 1--------·--646-7673 873 t003 Crown Valley Pkwy, & RE LOll'lt. 10K Up. No Judy And«.en where ere CA 92828
WESTCLIFF t Br. upgra-Laguna. furn., kite, ldry ROOMMATE d llAITlfll · Forbes Rd .. MIMlon Vie-Credit Check, No Pen· Found: Green Parakeet you? U~enl -call 81111---------
ded kitchen. $550/mo. ~~~~~flwe. beacl\. Ger'a::~ ,:,:~ llWPMT OllTD IEWNIT IUOH jo. (7t4) 545-02t5 :it1~nl1on a Auoc. ~~: ::1~~~~· ~~~~.~;:~~8-3882 sg~~ ~~::. ~=n:t:d~
Avail. now. Adult•. no · non-sMoker. 83t·8029 With UH of reoeptton, Ellec. of'llcel (1000 rt to t300 tq. rt. *'425.
pet•. 873-&640 Privet• BA. privet• en-arter 8. C()nf. room, lcllc:h. phone, t850 11). Attractive w.tl 1800 eq. ft $575 la•'-la.J la•l '-•'
Large Bluff• condo. 2 trance, H.B. nr Werner, Lux Dene pt VWw Condo eecretarlal & word pro-maintained bldg. Nr Front otrlOe, large r .. r •• ~A::":':'! ............. r.fl!f!! ............. r.fl?'!!~! ............. r.!l!!~! ........ ..
bdrm 2 ba 2 cer gar Golden Wut $250. 1 3 ut 11 ceNlng. Mell a 1M9Mi09 Hoag Hoepltal, C8f991t, dOor. 1779 Whlttlel' Ave. ,,...,, • ltlfttll I lft,.Ji I lttHll I ~ ~~·~~~~· 53&-0704 :ltn i':'°pic.mpoof. :',,a~ eerv. ava11. MP9flllely If mlnl·bllnd1. Oedlceted g.:~:40-9352. EvH
..... , ·-owo.;.ovuwu .. -., ·' • ·' 4111 644-9. dHlred. Call: Judy. prtc'g. Prof. enwonment t wtrNIJM 'f, lallnitl• 10H lartrffflM TIH buttNllM .,. tlo, 1925 .. 83()...()8.45 • 1!'!!!!!, •• !.'!:!........ 1-4K-2tet, 953 . 714l780-0t00. • quiet ""· 645-3323 lnW1 ftulM ff# •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
Cozy 2 bdrm, t ba • 11&1&11 llTll F~,~~= ~ llWNIT llAll dyL ..................... .
beamed cefl"1. Patio, Wkly rental• now avaff. Hiiia.. Tennie/pool ~ ex~tlve office 1n Can-FUii ~ otnc., Hunt-FAMILY neeclt 4-t>r. llome Oanige, Npt Helgl\11. No 1140 & up. Color TV. d •1 nery VIiiage, 1480/mo. lngton Bch, 1375 mo. 10 r9nt or leue. REA-
Pttl, 1625. 64&-t882 PllonN In room. 2274 • n r .. P 0 n 1 b 1 • • Sn*« 875-40t2 (714) 846-5581 SONABLE. 842·2t50. Newpor1 Blvd CM $300/mo, Evea 843-2190
t bdrm, yrly, ltepi to 646-7~ . uper 'llew. pOol, epa, r·------
beacll. gareg• prk'g, t t I ~ --i 1476/mo 770-204 or BE Ac H HO. ga •• tnn •• v, ..... r. ~ -. ~ You can be a •. 73t-6441 ARE A 7152"'0t12"'80. & hekpno ·~
r ,.
1
·• WINNER ! •• IM• ftl&Y $77/wk Prof. F. lhare pluth moci.I WA,__., Kltehenet1 Meld-P townl'IOIM • ...w.. oat•, I ; a.
W •T ... Nwpt eivd & wn.: =:.::..'°' """' •500 i ... · N 28',.,x,nrLldoVteteae. coetaMeu a..M1as 147• Just by sending us your name and f : :M ::.~':0!1t:=: YMl'IY ~~beech, 11pte1 A,:: :1:,.,w.~ °'2t1~'1:'~ address and by watching ror your J ·
116-0952 :;o/rno. PhJ•" ::::":! :i:-~ ~':.,~~-name ln the classified ads or the . :
.-.o.ooralf1t1a,frplc, po11t. 2aoe w oc.an-'A~lt.AMl64f·•7.•h Dally Pilot. . J earega, 2 bl1111 to bell, fron1, Newpor1 .. ICh. 12 846-2613 Y11V tn•at71 173-4154. ' I
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1---------LADl!S ONLY. Beaut. W n lkktti. lo the circus. area •m\Attmtnt 11trac· ,,.,.,._ ""° n..t...,.,.. CdM. Avllt Aua 1, °°""' H.I . ptlv nome. Av•ll llonJJ or 1portln1 events Ju.at rm out thb coupon 111d
aflOillkS .,._. otledl lie ,,i.tety tum Hr hofM, now. Mt-ff15. mall II today to th~
hrWlt DlreotorJ an tt1e ah or t w 11 k to b oh • ftOIMfllkr to w ter ONLY ,,LOT HOO/wkly plu• op. .... ........ CM. 1111 Oaalfled l>epattmnt, Daffy Piiot
tn-134t "'°· .,..., 33t W. Bay Street, Coeta Mn•, CA.-.
WE HAVE THE ANSWERI
YOGA IN THE MORNINGI
•Peace of mind •Whole Body
•Healthy Body ApptOaeh
•Breathing •Tonlna e~p •Tcnston
IU!l•x•tton •Mcdiu.Uon
FME DIMONITRATION
TUM. Momlna Aug. I 10 A.M. c-... Mlln tM ,,. ... ,
Wed.. Aug. 4 •t t::IO A.M •
YOGA CENTER
OfCal ......... .. 1.1"" It.
(btwn Tualln & trvtM St.)
(A ......... ldi11ll•lll ,........._ C-. ..... "'-I• •t
I .
..
( (, ) )
14NTBD
( ( ' )
Newspa,per
Carriers t~r routes
in Huntington Beach,
fountain Valley & Newport Beach
I
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
10b0 fl.U&OP 8Lv~
CO~!A MESA M1 0010
C OMMEll
CHEVROLET
'/' • ')o I j Ir ~ ~ • I ' '
... i \ "1 ~ ' \
54~ 1200
A•'1 1111 .•........•........... -,.-tten_t_1on_col*1_..._or_•t-1"""9....,5~9 IO WI HOO f•IM
~ .. 1 Aangar In good 2e.ooo mllee, fully IOaded
r\lnnlng COfldltlonl ONLY tunroof, gd cond. like
U50t Cell "42-2073 or new. 113,400 0 80. 845-82 11 Evet .
cond, new hHdllner.
rvo•.~·n~. bMhed tllurn wNI. ..... tedlel ....... a.... kept. as.ooo. Mt-7"6 ..,.,
-~
• ATLAS CHRYSLIR-ft.YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Tel. 54&-HIG4. 3 blockEI
aouth of San Diego Freeway off HarbOr BIVd. Complete
,body shop. Sales. Service. Pana. 5-rvlce Decit. apen
Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and i A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday.
HACH lwotn'S .
648 Dove Strfft, Newport S..Ch. Tel. 752-0900. Call U8,
we're the 1peclall1t• lor Alla Romeo. Peugeot, Saab a
M•Mratl . ·
THIODOillOllMS.olD
Modern ...... NfYlce, patta. body, paint a tire cf.pta.
Competitive ra• on , .... a :a ren1ale. 2080 Hartior
llvd .. Cotta M .... f.42.0010 Of 11.
JOHMSOM & SOM LINCOLN MmCUIY .
2828,Harbor BIVd., Coeta Meaa.. Tel. 640-N30. 17 YHta
of fri.ndly family Mn1ice -Ortinge County'• oldeat Lin·
OO!ft.M«cury CSMlerahlp.
. SOUTH COAST DOlll
2 ... Hatt>or Blvd., Coeta ~ Tel. NCMJ3.10. AV .-vloe
epeclalleta, ~.uatom van c~
MIWPOIT WOltrl
a100 W. CoHt Highway, Newport !'Heh. 942~1714. The,errert.......,.,..
MATCH THE NUMIERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE· NUMlllS IN THE IOXES • NIW,C>aT DATSUN aaa Dove Str .. t, Newport Beach. Tel. 83~1300. ,At the
trtllngM ot Jwnt>or... MaoAtthur a Bristol behll\d Vlc1ona
Station. SaJM, ~. L .... ng a Pam. We make greet
dealal
• MAIRS CADILLAC
2900 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Tel. ~100. Ore;nge
County's Largest Cadillac deal«. s.lee. 5-rvlce. L ... Ing.
• DA YID J. PtlWPS IUtCIW'OMTIAC-MAIDA
Laguna Hiiia
SalH • s.tvlce • L .... ng
~4111 Allele Parkway
• . CHtCic IVMSOM POISCHW.UOl-VW
415 E. Coat Hwy., Newport BNch. 17S-OIOO. Th• only
dN!efthlp In Orange Count) wth thaee thr" g!'Mt
malcM under one roof! · ~ •
• • IOI ~OM ... POMTIAC
13600 Beach BIVd., w .. tmlntW. Tel. ll:H4561. Orange
County's oldest and largett Pontiac dealership. s.-.
S.rvl~. Part&.
DICK MILUI PIATILANCIA "Prob9bly the iow.t priced Flett ".&Outhem Cdforr ...
(Located 1 ,,,.. north of South CC*t Plua
near Mein St. and Wamet Ave. In Sania Ana.) 120 W. Wtmef, Banta Ana 567·2132
• SANTA AMA DATIUM
2001 E. 17th Str .. t, SaMI Ana. Tel. set-7111. Your•
Original o.dlcai.d Dataun Deller.
•
COSTA ..SA DATSUM
2M5 Harbor B"'d., Coate Miu. Tel. 540-&410. 54tfvlng
Onlnge County tor 11 ,._... 1 Mlle So. 405.
SUMSIT POID, IMC.
(HOme of Wiiiie tM WMle~ 5440 Garden Grove Blvd., w.ti1•..-. Tel. ~10.
•
" By Pl\BDERICK ICllOEMIUIL or .. ....,,...1wr
SACRAMKNTO. -The
pollt.ical and pe~ future of
State Sen. John Schmitz, .ft.
Newport Beaeh1 .had CapHol
corrldora ab~u today u
California l~ton retwned to
work following a month-long
~rece..
Schmits, alle1ed to be the
father of two llle11timate
children, w .. en route to the
capitol by car with hl1 wife,
Mary, accordlna to an aide.
The aide uld there wu no
question u to whether Schmlta,
51, would be prwent when the
Senate reconvened early thl1
afternoon.
l>t.c}OIUl'ea that Schmitz, an
arch conservative and anti-
1bottlont1t, had fathered two
chUdreft out o1 Wedlock oec:u.rred
while lestalat.on were enjoying
their IWDm8I' break.
Schm1tl Ml not been leeft nor
heard ftaln llnce the dl8cburee.
That led to specW.aUon that he ~t not be pneent when the
Senate relUmed. today,
In other matters, Orange
County legislatou were
SUMMERTIME MECCA -Newport Beach
officials ha~e agreed to level the Balboa Fun
Zone and replace it with a three-story complex
...., ,... ..... "''-,.,...
of offices, restaurants and specialty.shops. FQr
a nostalgic look at the block-long fantasy land,
tum to Page Bl. . .
Prime rate cut widespread
Nearly al banks ~ecrease rate to 15 perce~t
Nl!W YORK (AP) -Virtually
all of the nation's major ba.nka
cut their prime lending rates to
15 percent today to match the
one-half percentage point cut
initiated by the Mellon Barut of
Pittsburgh.
That put the prime at its
lowest level since November 1980
and marked the second big prime
.
drop ln a week. Several smaller
banks began matching the U
percent rate after the large banb
made their announcements.
Among those joining the move
today to a lower prime were
Citibank, the nation's second-
largest; No. 3 Chase Manhattan
Bank; No. 4 Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Co.; No. 5 Morgan
Huntington death probed
Huntington Beach police today
were investigating the death of a
blonde woman whoee body was
found ln the playground area of
Oak View Park near Emerald
Lane.
Lt. Thomas Patton said the
cause of death appeared to be
strangulation. The woman wu
described as Caucasian, 18 to 20.
H e r identity was not
inunediately known, Patton said.
Residents in the area told
officers they heard screams
corning from the park Sunday
night. The body was not
diacovered until 9:30 a.m.
-National Bank of ChlQgo and
Guaranty Trust Co.; No. 8
Chemical Bank; No. 9 First
No. Irvine Trust Co.
The drops reflected sharp
declines in the banks' costs of
obtaining money for lending and
investment.
Norman Roberllon, ch ief
economist at Mellon. said the
prime rate could dip another full
point within the next few weeks.
"I think that it really reflects
the fact the economy Is still just
very weak at the moment,"
Robertson said Saturday.
"There's been no really visible stgn of an economic recovery.
"We feel strongly that by
lowering the prime lending rate
we can make a contribution to
the economic recovery process.
County jail irimates battle
Deputies quell fighting among 30 prisoners on catwalk
Fighting broke out among 30
inmates inside a third-floor cell
block at Orange County J ail
Sunday, but deputies quelled the
disturbance in about 20 minutes.
No serious injurle1 were
reported.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart uid
the dlstµrbance broke out at
about 6 p.m . u 52 priaOnen were
being let out of their oella to go io dinner. I
Hart said the priaoners began
fighting with one another on the
catwalk in the module, which is
composed of eight four-man cells.
About l~ deputies quickly
moved in to separate the
prilonen, who were locked ln
their cells for \he night and
today. "It doesn't take much (to
start a fight) when you get
different IJ"OUP9 in there," Hart
said of the pritonera.
BUSINESS
Though the IJ"OUP WU racially
mixed. he said the fighting did
not appear to be either gang or
race related.
Two priaonen were 1ent to UC
Irvine Medical Center for
treatment of minor injuries.
Hart said one cause of the
fighting may have been a
comblnatlon of the heat and the
fact that the module wu t.olding
about 20 prl80rliera more than it
WU dmiped to bowie.
COUNTY
____ ,Nl'll
( II U\ N ( .1 I l I l • ~ ( "I I ( ) H t4 I J\ . • ( I t4 l . '
pnparinc to advance aeve.ra1 bills
ranaina from mer1ln1 of the
court functions of th• Oran1•
County sheriff'• department and
mar1hal'1 office to petmlttlng
voters to decide whether the
aalea tax lhould be lncreMed to
fund tramportatlon projecta.
Auemblywoman Marian
Bera-m. R-Newpon Beach, said
she hopes 1he will be able to
enl.lat the aid of 1tate Sen. John
Seymour, R-Anaheirn, to move
the merger measure which hat
been 1ittln1 in limbo in the
Senate.
Orange C.Ounty voten, ln an
advilory vote ln 1980, aatd they
believed the merger should take
place.
The 1heriff's department
provides court aervices, such u
r
beiliffl'nc. in the IUperior COW1I,
while the manhat•1 offic• provw. lhnllat lel'Vicea ln the
mun.ldpal courta.
It hall been ettimated that $1
mUllon annually could be aawd
if a rnerpr were 80000\pUahld;
One reuon lt has not ii due tq
infighting over whether the
sheriff'• office or marahal'• oUice
(See SENATOR, Pase A!)
Reagan, Shamir talk .
Beirut truce broken following black Sunday ~
By TM A11oclated Preti
Israeli fon:ea and Palestinian
guerrtllu traded am.all anna and
mortar fire in Beirut today,
threatening to shatter the ceaae-
f ire that brought an end to
Sunday's devastating Israeli
aaaault on the LebaneM capital.
lsrael's milJtary command said
the Palestin e Liberation
Orsanbation was the first to
vlo}Jte the cease-fire, shooting at
Israeli troops with small arms
near Beirut's airport. A
spoke1man said Israeli forces
held their fire for several hours
befpre re1ponding with rifles and
mortars.
The PLO charged that Israeli
tanks and cannon fired shells into
a battered refugee camp near the
airport. Israel denied it was using
artillery.
In Washington, President
Reagan was to meet with Israeli
foreign minister Yitzhak.
Shamir. Reagan said he intended
to make clear his belief that it is.
"11beolutely imperative that this
cease-fire at this atage of the
negotiations must not be violated
by anyone."
Reagan's envoy in Lebanon,
Philip C. Habib, persuaded the
laraella and the Palestinians to
agree to a cease-fire at day's end
Sunday. It was the ninth cease-
fire alnce Israel invaded Lebanon
on June 6.
But before the ceaae--fire WU
in place, Israeli tanks pushed into
. PLO territory iA west Beirut for
the first ttme atnce the mece of
the city began. They moved
north almoet two miles.. capturing
the terminal area at the airport.
PLO spokesman Baaaam Abu
Sharif said the Iaraells rained
more than 150,000 abells on west
Beirut; there was ne way to
confirm that figure, whk h would
mean the Israelis fired 180 shells
per minute. Israeli jets made 210
bOmb runs on the city, according
to Lebanese police.
Israeli offidala said Sunday's
attack was not the start of the
long-threatened invasion to wipe
out the PLO's guerrillas in their
last Lebanese stronghold.
Israel aaid Palestinian
violations of the earlier truce
prompted the rn&lBive air, land
and aea bombardment that ~
before dawn. It was the most
devastating Israeli onslaught
since the forces qf the •Jewish
state rolled to the gates of tht
Lebanese capital ln June. '!
Beirut's Motdem section w ..
wreathed in smoke from ragtn;
fires k i ndled by th~
bombardment. There was little
firemen could do to quench tlw
flames since Israel cut oft
electricity to west Beirut a week
ago, f :astically reducing water
pressure· ·
Lebanese police reported 200
dead and 400 wounded. "We
expect the death toll to climb
because rescue teams had to wait
tSee ISRAELI. Page A%)
Beaches packed;
boat strikes jetty
Low clouds, cooling
temperatures and mediocre surf
did littfe to diicow-age weekend
sun aeekers who turned out by
the thousands along the Orange
Coast.
Weather officials predicted the
coastal ha7.e will continue most of
this week.
Off Newport Beach today. a
boater from Cerritos was trying
to figure out how -or if -he CO\llcl Mlvage his 27-foot cabin
CNi.9er that struck a rock jetty
late S..~ Swnday
in .n attempt to pull it free.
Ausustua Vanreed got Into
trouble when his unnamed boat
amacked a jetty off 44th Street
and sustained bull damage as the
surf pounded it against the
outcrop.
Orange County Harbor Patrol
officials said a fishing boat from
San Pedro pulled it off the jetty
Sunday evening but towed the
crippted craft lea than a mile up
the coast before it started to sink.
The cabin cruiaer, patrolmen
said today, is moored to a buoy
off 67th Street with only its bow
sticking out of the water.
In Laguna Beach Saturday, a
l~-year-old scuba diver was
pulled from the water after he
apparently rose to the IUrface too
qukkly.
Lifeguards said Ken Robbins
of Garden Grove-bed trouble
with hi. felulator at a depth of
about 20 feet off Shaw'• Cove
Saturday mornlng.
He wu treetecl by lifeguards
a nd paramedics and taken to
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport. Later, he waa flown to
the USC Recompression Center
(Sff BEACH, Page AZ)
ON THE ROCKS -Interested onlookers
wa1ch while a man clambers onto a power boat
about 7 p.m . Sunday after it fetched up on the
Delf ........... .., .... ...,..
groin at the end of 44th Street in Newport
Beach. A fishing boat later towed the craft less
than a mile up the coas~ before it sank.
I INDEX
Day care more important
Day-care centen for children of worken la a
concept whoee ~ hu come, aays columnist Sylvia
LM Veps can be a lot of fun and excitement, bUt
a Dally Pilot reporter shares some of Its
disa~tmenta, too. Page A7.
At Your Service
F.nna Dombeck
Bullnetl
Cavalcade c.omlcs •
A4
B2
B4-5
B2
B7
B7
C4
A6
Ann Landen
Movies
National News
Public Notices
Sparta Porter. Page A~.
Business ventures reported
Promotionl. venture; ~ repon. ancl other
acttvitiee lnvolvina Orange County bualnellf!9 are
covered on Pece M .
NATION
COBst re.identa shine at Fair era.wont
Deeth Nodcee
~torial
Enter1ainment
An Hoppe ~
86
·82
B2
Stock Markell
TeJevlidon
Thee ten
Weather :=-9'¥9
1
. . ewer,.....,._...., MMe9 ~
.,JUG BT OF WAY -There wasn't much
,)qaestion of who gets the right of way as a
'GOO·foot tanker ba.Qres through the race course
.'tit Long Beach on Sunday and a couple of 470 .,
Class bOats of the Pre-Olympic Regatta find
the~ves on a direct course to-Ward the ship.
Most of the 40-boat fleet had to .. go t6
windward and round up to miss the tanker.
:B B doctor,
1•1·
·r~friend k ill ed
:{i n sm ashup
;.!:.. A Huntington Beach physician
,.,,d his companion were killed
',\Oday when the 1981 Ponche in 'i:)Uch they were riding a1ammed • to a row of palm trees and
. ~ into flames. ·.,;.~Police said the physician,
wichael llobert Jefferies, 35,
·,~parently was killed instantly
. the mishap, which occurred on
Iden West Street just north of
Yorktown Avenue in Huntington
Beach at 1:58 a.m.
Officers today had not
identified the doctor's female
companion.
Traffic investigators believe
the Ponche was travelinj{ at a
high rate of speed when it veered
qut of control, croRSed the center
Une and struck the trees.
J~fferles was identified as a
atric surgeon who lived in
ntin ton Beach and had
· ces f n Mission Viejo and
., ange. •
Costa Mesa motel
.robbed by gunman
Police are searching today for a
blond gunman who robbed a
Costa Mesa motel Saturday tpornlnfl.
The 'suspect, described as
blond, about 5 feet 8, in his late
30's, fled witt. $200 from La
, Quinta Motor Inn at 1515 South
E:oaat Drive during the 1:35 a.m.
. mbbery.
.,... .......... .., a-,..,,..
'CAMPING' IN CANYON -In spite of overcast skies that
kept beach crowds a little off the record-breaking pace
they've been ~tting of late, it's obvious that art festivals and
other attractions in Laguna Beach transformed the Art
Colony's Laguna Canyon into its tradition"al parking lot by the
sea on Sunday.
)Coastal NATIOM ..
LO ""° Albeny 80 57 J ~ clouOI io prevlll today with ~ n es
J*1lal eftemoon dewing -01 ea , ~ bWNa. A llttle cooler, with ~ 83 et t11f101n9 from the upper eo. Attanta .. ea et the beed"'9 10 mld-70lt l!Und. AUemcety 78 83 tonlgflt IM lo ee. AuMln 100 n
E:!!:;•h•r•. from Point 8elllmcn 83 83 • lion 10 the Mexlc:en boJdar ~ oe 70 .03 •nd out 80 mllea: Moally llglll 85 74
, ll•rlab .. wind• In night and 8lllnarCk 05 65 ftlornlng l\oura, beOO"llng llol9e et 48 ~lnw.t 8 to 15 lcnota In the ao.ton 85 70
11cMs today end T~ ·~ 07 77 nd W8\'99 of 1 10 3 fMt I 8uftato 78 ..,.
• • .wlttl~ ..... of 83 58 8uflnolon • J to 2 fffl. Conalderebl• low c...,., 98 IM
'loudlneu with onty parllal °'*1atn ac 85 7S ::tMr1ng during aflemoona today C'.i-1atn WV 84 80 lfld T.-deY. ~NC 85 ee
~ .. 11 New Yen 14 70
V.S. summary CtllcllgO 85 • .02 Hottollc 14 87
ClndnNl1I 85 eo No. Platt• " 84
~ 85 IM Okla City 92 74
Wei WMtNr apr'MCI eoro. u• Clmb69 8C 16 .. On\aM 95 73 ~ Into Ille S0UtMMe today, ColulnbUa 14 81 on.ndo IM 75
and ctear 1klHJrev'•ll•d over D*-A Wltl IM 7S .01 f'tllledptlla 14 70
m09I of 1t1e reet ltle IWlllon. Omyton 15 81 Phoenix 105 84
s~a ano 1nuna.ranow.ra OenYer 113 10 Pltubu'f:'. 1 1 60 alretched over lh• northern Dea MOO-94 71 Ptlend, 81 80 AocklH, th• aouthwHI GrHI Detroit 82 65 ,02 Pllend. Of• 70 51 l•k•• and over portion• of Duluth 87 ee ProY!dence 83 85 f!:'!C and South Cerollne. Some El PNO oe 12 .oe =:t'Ctty 811 87 laola ed lhunderahowera apread F8lgo 91 ee 9G 84 from wHI Teua Into aoulh ... n Flega1•1f 78 52 Reno 85 40 New Mexico end OWi' Utah. Gr•IF ... IM 52 .03 8811 Leite " 87 Hall fell In part• ot llllnola, HW11«d 14 81 SWI Antonio 100 71 meanwhlle, and aome I~ •H Helena IM 54 Seattle ee 54 obeerv1d In parla o th• HonolUIU 10 78 .Ot = 90 73 Appalechlan Mountalna. 81clH ~on " 80 02 75 ... dew ....... lndNPle 83 IM St Loula 90 7 1 Scettered thunderltoone -• Jadctn MS 78 73 2.40 81 P-Temoa 91 79 '°'**' ... lo«la)' O¥W Ille Quit JeckalMle .. 16 .D3 Sll'9Meril 89 54 Coaat 1ta1e1a11d aouthern Jul-. 113 .... 88 ~ 80 84 PlatHll, central Roc!llH and i<.w City ",, ~ IO 81
nortMm Plelna. A few --.111o ~ ee ., Tcipalla 92 • were expecied ~ the PllCHlo . t.M ~ 1oe ... Tuceon " 78 ........... -'· lmll Rook .. 72 TlllM IM n ~ 84 ea Wf11Nn9tn 15 • Cal iforn ia LUbbo«* t2 .., WlcMa " 18
I ~ 90 eo ......... ... 11 ......... ... .. 1.43 CAUPOflNIA ~ 01 80 lakersflekt 101 II 14 ~ 104 .. 72 .Ot Euratl• 84
lllf RIPllT
•
.04
.08
. 01
.Ot
.00
..
84
Stationarv • •
Fr.-w> 100 IM
Lanc:aater 97 87
Loe Angelee 82 68 M.,,.... 95 Monterey 65 NMdlM 102 Puo Roblee 07 ~
Red 8Mt 93 84 'Redwood City n 54
Secremeoto 10 55 S811nu 66 ...
Sen Diego n 80 San Francieoo 84 52
Santa Batl>ar• 71 82
S.nta Mana 72 SIOOklon 05 Thermal 103 811n1tow 118 84 BIO 8Mt ee 55 Cetallna 78 85
long Beech 80 ..,
Monrovia 96 IM Ml. Wltabn 71 ~leectl 78 ee Onl•lo • 02 " Plllm 8pnng. toe ee San llemardlllO 07 87
•Senta AM It es Tahoe Vf/Mltr( 79 63
Smog
Where 10 call (loll lrH) for lat•t~tlon: ~ 'J'IOOl 44W828
2 no•tH ou11ty: (1001 U-4022
"'-"de end SM llttwellno COllllti.e: (S00) 3e7 ... 710
AOMO [pleode c:.n.r: (SOO) 242-4888
TODAY ~ low 2l20 p.m. 8eoond high · S:S 1 p.m.
TUllOAY
lllrlt IOw 3:44 ··"'· 0.1 F1f9t hlOh 10:18 t.m. 4.0 leoond' low 2:6' p.1'11. u
..... llilfl •• ·"'· .. , tun .... toeler. II 7:11 p.m., ...... f~ .. t:ol ILlll.
MOofl ,.... ~ .... •"'·· .... t~•l:l7UI
(
Con1tructlon, acheduled to
btlin today on dae •10 lftlJUon
amphitheater to b9 maul OD the
Oran1e County tall'punda ln
Cotta Mesa, hu been delayed
two weeka.
Rick Witte, vice _J)....ScWnt of
the Nederlander Or1anlzatlon
which bu th• state contract to
build and operate the l&,000-eeat
theater, aent a hand-delivered
letter to offtdala Saturday uylng
biddtn1 technlcalltle1 wllh
1ubcontractort and chanlet In
parking lot gradln1 will delay
work until Aug. 15.
"If "l had a contract in the.e
days I'd be renegotiating It,'' aaid
Ken Fulk, fair board ~r. "I
have faith It wW WOl'k out."
Witte blamed the delay on a
holdup wltb bidding between
subcontractors and C.L . Peck of
Irvine, the general contractor.
\ "I'm confident that work will
begin by the end of the month,"
said Witte. "We'll be ready when
we're ready."
The fair board requeeted last
month that work begin on the
long-delayed open air theater.
Thil t. not the fint time that
the bowl-shaped theater project
had been stalled.
.. Ground waa broken July 11,
1981, for the facility expected to
be open by May.
Witte sald financina fo~ the
Detroit-hued company to delay
oonstruct1on plans until thia year.
The firm has built 28 similar
thee ten.
Clint Hoc., chairman of the
fair board bulldJng and grounds
commit1ee, said he ls confident
the amphitheater will be built
despite the latest delay.
u1 don't think that they were
ready to start this BQOn:• said
Home. "It wu premature to start
today."
Three-car
crash k ills
Clem ente man
California Highway Patrol
officers are investigating a
three-car pileup on Pacific Coast
Highway in Capistrano Beach
that killed a 29-year-old San
Clemente man Saturday when
his car burst into flames.
Joaqufn Marti nez was
pronounced dead at the scene,
just north of Palisades Drive, at
11:10 p.m. CHP offldals said.
Two other motorists suffered
minor injuries, authorities said.
Patrol officials said Martinez
was driving south on an unlit
section of old coast highway
when he pulled out to pass a car
and drove he ad-on Into a
northbound vehicle driven by
Peter Zazzara, 21, of Whittier.
About a minute later, a third
car driven by Brian Bertha, 17, of
Capistrano Beach, struck
Martinez' vehicle from behind
and Martinez' vehicle burst lnto
£lames. authorities said.
Zazzara and bis passenger,
Jefferson Drum, 22, of San
Clemente, suffered minor
injuries and were treated at
Mission Community Hospital,
Highway Patrol officials said.
Bertha wasn't iJ'\Jured ,
authorities said.
Ken Daily, of the highway
patrol, said the county coroner's
office ls investigating whether
Martinez was killed in the first
collision or died in the ensuinS
fire .
f
lhoWd have control ayer the new
court~~ Mein~~· dlc'*>ft WU clue
today -Whlthel' Allembl)'l'DIU'l Richard Roblnlon. l).Santa Ana,
would continue to puah a bW thet
would permit an election on the
tran1&Jortat1on ••lea 1urtax
queetlon. A 1 l)eJ"Cent increaae In
the tax-would aenerate about
$ UO million annually for
\J'~~~has cleared
the A11embly but ts faclns
oppoaltion in the Senate over a
variety of amendments. '
Seymour, a member of the
I
~t• Tr n1port1tlon u.-. mlblll may die
----Of. • ~ eDr\lentUI amons ~· tY offldall
over what f~the bill ahouJd take. Seymour he probably
would vote t the melM4fe
when It ~ bltfore the Senate
Tran1portai.itn Committee
Tueaday afterriOPn. • Another bUl .-cheduled for
hearing thJa Wffk Would pennit
the 1fate to 'acC}ulre the old
Orange County Courthouse in
Santa Ana to houae· a new
division of the Fourth District
Court of Appeals.
ISRAELI INVAS ION ...
foe flnt light to be8in searching
for victims we believe are still
buried in l}ae rubble," a police
spokesman said.
The Voice of Lebanon, the
Lebane9e Christian radlo.1tation,
said 14 dvilians were killed and
40 wounded when PLO forces
fired rockets, missiles, mortars
and artillery into Christian-held
east Beirut and the Christian port
city of Jounieh, 12 'h mtles north
of the capital.
Syria said two of Its soldiers in
west Beirut were killed and 14
were wounded in the Israeli
shelling. Israel reported three of
its aolaiera killed when their
armored penonnel carrier took a
· direct artillery hit in the Beirut
area. The Israelis abo reported
nir\e aoldiers wounded.
'there was n 9 word on
guerrilla losal!s and no
(ndependent confirmation of any
casualty claims. •
Sunday's bombardment left
vast areas of west Beirut in ruins.
The once plush neighborhood of
Bir Haa~an had scarcely a ,
building undamaged.
BEACH WEATHER ...
on Catalina 1s1aJkl for treatment
of embolism.
Ultimately, be was taken to
USC ,County Medical Center,
where officials did not know his
condition today.
There were no other 'major
reecue incidents along the coast
this weekend.
In ,Newport Beach, 95,000 be8chgoen ahowed up Sunday.
In Laguna; 10,000 people turned
out while more than 120,000
visited city a'.nd state strands in
Huntington Beach S~y.
D e spite cooling air
temperatures, lifeguards along
the coast s aid the water
temperature has crept up to 70
degrees, the wannest reading of
the summer.
Inland county citi8 over the
weekend got a bit of smos mixed
in with the low-bangina clouda.
There were several first-stage
smog alerts in Los Angeles dties
but not in Orange County.
The Afr Quality Management
District reported that during
June there were 3l·violations of
smog regulation in Orange
County with $14,150 in fines
assessed.
Site of San Juan
brush fire guard~d
Orange County firefighters are
patrolling the site of a 300-acre
brw1h tire that broke out Sunday
in rouaJl terrain east of San Juan
Capistrano to make sure flames
don't flare up again in the windy
conditions.
The county's largest fire this
year was started at about 11:48
a.m. when a remote-controlled
model airplane crashed in dry
brush along La Pata Avenue,
south of Ortega Highway, fire
officials said.
No one was injured and no
structures were damaged in the
five-hour blaz.e, county officials
said.
TJ'ie fire could easily be seen
from &m Juan Capistrano and
B ess Truman
KANSAS CITY (AP) -
Former first lady Besa Truman,
97, was "resting comfortably"
today after being admitted to
Research Medical Center over
the weekend with irregular
breathing and pulse, hospital
officials said.
Dr. Wilson Miller, attending
wasn't brought under control
until 5 p.m. because of 15 mph
winds tliat fanned the flames and
steep terrain that prevented use
of water tankers and other
equipment, said fire oUicials.
J.t\refighters brought the blaz.e
under control by surrounding it
with fire breaks along roads and
ridge tops and by dropping fi.re-
retardant chemicals from the air,
said Jeff Taylor, of the Orange
County Fire Department .
Taylor said four a irplane
t a n k e r s f r o m t h e s.t a t e
Department of Forestry dropped
chemicals from the air and 170
fire fighters assigned to 15
engines, three bulldozers and
five hand crews battled the blaze.
hosp i talized
•Mrs. Truman while Dr. Wallace
Graham, her longtime doctor,
was out of town, said Sunday he
was cautious about being
optimistic because of the patient's
a,e. "But I think she'll probably go
back home again, probably in
just a few days. maybe a week."
he safd.
F IGHTER DEBUTS -The new Tigershark
F-5G tactical air defense fighter is <ijsplayed at
the Northro p Corporation in Hawthorne
before an inte rnational audience of military
and government representatives. The $9
,.,~
million fighter, the first to be built entirely
with private sector funds, has a climb rate•of
54,100 feet per minute and can be combat
ready at 17,000 feet.
wrnrnarn /1 rnmu~rn[(]
Kenya military coup crushed;
71 rebels reported killed
I NAIROBI, Ke nya (AP) -
Rebel diehards held out against
loyalist troops today at air force
bases outside the capital. but
President Daniel Arap Moi
appeared to be m control of the
country afte r c rus hing a n
attempt by junior air force
officers to overthrow his civilian
gove rnme n t. Governme nt
sou r ces said 71 air force
personnel were killed and 300
were detained si n ce the
attempted coup w as launched
early S und ay . Most or the
fighting occurred a round the
country's three main air bases at
Eastleigh, Embakasi, an,d
Nayuki. The Eastleigh area is
"littered with bodies," including
those of civilians caught in the
cross-fire, a witness said.
MEXICO CITY (AP) -The
gc vernment today imposed
sweeping increases in t he prices
of bread, tortillas and gasoline.
saying all Mexicans must accept
sacrifices at a time or economic
c r isis . T h e Ministry of
Com m e r c e , i n a s u r p r i s e
ann o uncement late Sunday
night, said t he inc reases,
effective immediately, would
double the cost of both corn
tortillas and white bread rolls,
a nd would increase gasoline ,
other fuel and electricity prices
as much as 66 p ercent. The
government acknowledged the
increases would hurt consumers,
but said the m easur es were
necessary l o c ul cost l y
government subsidies.
FORT NELSON, British
Columbia (AP) 7 The Alaska
Highway was reopened today as
winds pushed away a curtain of
smoke from a raging forest fire
on the Yukon border that has
consumed 400,000 acres of pine
and spruce, authoritie s said.
About 300 motorists. many of
them U.S . citizens on vacation,
drove ther camper vans toward
Alaska after waiting over the
weekend for a roadblock to be
lifted. Police said, however, that
the roadblock could be reimposed
if the smoke returns. The fi re
stretched for 55 miles at one
point parallel to the h ighway,
firefighters said. It w~ believed
started a week ago today by a
bolt of lightning and w as
centered north of this o utpost
town in the northeastern corner
of the province, spilling into the
Yukon.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -
President Reagan, on a political
fen ce-m ending trip to the
Midwest, said today that despite
his opposition to a long-term
grain-sale agreement with the
Soviet Union, "the granary.,door
is open" and large quantities may
be sold. Defending last week's
grain-trade decision before an
audience of corn growers, a key
Re publican constituency, the
president promised to be alert for
signs that "martial law may be
relaxing" in Poland. He said
there are some indications that
may be the case and told the
farmers, "We will continue to
watch developments there in the
hope that life will improve for
the Poles, and sanctions can be
removf'd." '
WARSAW, Poland (AP) -
Defying Poland's martial law
rule rs, thou-
sa nds of
Solidarity
supp orters
demanded
the release oi
Lech Walesa,
i n ter n ed
leader of the
sus pended
union , at a c e r e m o n y WALHA
marking the 38th anniversary of
the anti-Nazi uprising in
Warsaw. "We shall fight for the
rights of Solidarity," fugitive
union leader Zbigniew Bujak
said in a recorded message
broadcast Sunday from a
loudspeaker atop a monument to
veterans of the Home Army, who
launched the 1944 Warsaw revolt
ag&µlst the city's Nazi occupiers.
"We shall fight for the revival of
independent unions. W e shall
fight for the re lease of our
colleagues," Bujak said in a
message that was repeated three
times. Crowds responded w ith
cheers, many flashing victory
signs.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Environmental Protection
Age n cy is preparing t o
strengthen rules requiring a
reduction in the amount of lead
i n gasoline , hand i ng
environmentalists one of their
biggest victories since the Reagan
adm*1fstration took office. The
EPAI which earlier had planned
to w~aken the lead standards, Is
expected to propose regulations
mandating removal of a n
iiiiylliat CIHtHled lldvertltlng 7141642·58711
All other depertments 642-4321
Thoma P. HaleY
P\lblltw -CNef 6-.ti.... 0-
Kay Schultz VICI*~
.... ~ol~lllno
Tom Murphlne
fdllor
Mike Harvev '*-of Mtfttlllllg ic--1
Ken Godderd OW.-ol~
~!,.ct.Mn
Tom Mccann
........... l!dlor \
MAIN Offl E
J:JO WH1 a.y S , COIUI Mew, C.A. 'Mii eddr'Hs: IJ60, Cos~ llMM, CA tH»
c-.yr .. llt !"2 Or ... COllst PUOlllltl"' ~.
Ho newt~ 1111n1ra11on1. edMor .. t ,,,_or ... Y.,.tfMmMh ,_,.In ,,,_, be reprlMluc.. •ltlltllf
wieci.t permlsilllft of copyr...,. o.ner.
additional 31 percent of lead in
gasoline over the n ext eight
years. The recommendations
were contained in a memo sent "to
EPA Administrator Anne
Gorsuch by Kathleen Bennett,
head of the agency's air program.
Officials at EPA, who asked not
to be named, said Mrs. Gorsuch is
expected to give her approval to
the changes soon. The package
repr esents a dramatic policy
reversal for the administration,
which ftlld put the lead rule on a
regulatory "hit list" because of
complaints from small refiners
that it was driving them out of
business.
DIJON, France (AP) -Police
said today two children were
killed in a private car in the
chain collision in which a French
summe r camp bus burned.
bringing the toll of dead children
to 46. Previously, authorities said
44 children and nine adults were
killed. The overall toll of 53 dead
was unchanged, with seven
adults killed and four people
injured. The victims In the cars
all were in two vehicles crushed
and burned between the two
camp buses. Police said Mrs.
Yolande Fouga, 40, and her sons
Cyril, 9 and Arnaud, 7, died in a
small car. Louis Deyne, 24, and
his wife Martine, 26, died in the
other car involved.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
Two inches of rain this weekend
turned a scenic creek into a
raging river, causing almosl
$100,000 damage at the World's
Fair, officials said. Saturday's
downpour caused most of the
damage to electrical equipment at
the 22-nation exhibition, but on
Sunday -which was sunny -
all four of tbe fair's main gates
were open and all exhibits we~
operating, fair spokesman Bill
Carroll said. He said the damage
was caused by the flooding of
Second Creek , which runs the
length of the narrow, 72-acre fair
site.
Mexico kills
15,000 goats
on Guadalupe
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mexico
has killed 15,000 wiid goats in the
last two months on Guadalupe
Island off Baja California and
plans to destroy that many more
In an effort to stop the denuding
of the land!ICape.
"We are not going to conserve
wild gqats If It means that
Mexicans a re going to go
hungry," said a Me xican navy
lieutenant, Ramundo 8eltran .
A maximum of 2 ,000 wlll
remain by the end of the year
and be put in corrals to prod~ce
milk and cheese for the people,
Beltran said in an Interview.
!ala de Guadalupe la Mexico's
we1ternmo1t territory, an
out.cropping 27 miles long and
aeven miles wide in the ocean 150
milea west of r.n.enada.
hllr,......., ......... ~ We'l'i Listening •••
What you like about the Dally Pllol? What dbn't you Uke?
Call the umber below and your meua1e will be recorded.
transcribe4 and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The sarne 24·hour answertni aervlce may be used to record ltt· ler~ to the editor on any topic. Mailbox conlrlbutort mual include
their narne-end telephone number ror verltlutlon. No circulation
calls. pie ...
Tell us ,-,hat's Of) your mind,
~ ...
• Oranp Cout DAILY fllOT/Mondey, ~ I, 111a Hlf
~ITillIT~ ? '
Pilot dies stunt • ID
10,000 witness crash of p.Junging biplane
SCOT1'S VALLEY (AP) -A
1tunt pUot died In front of 10,000
horrified by1tander1 Sunday
when his biplane dived and
cruhed lnto a pond. John
McJ)owell wu flyina hls 1in9le-
engine Great Lakes biplane a1
part of Scotti Valley Daya
celebration, according to police,
who aald the Santa Cruz-area
pilot was in hla early 40s. The
plane landed In the shallow pond
upside-down; only lta wheels
were vlaible. A fire department
spokesman said several witnesses
jumped lnto the water and pulled
McDowell's body from the
wreckage, but he was already
dead.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Marcia Brandwynne, taken off
her job as ·
anchorwoman
for KNXT's 5
o'clock news
report, has
left the
station and
w i 11 b e
replaced by
CBS Sports
reporter
Sandy Hill, a Hill
KNXT spo k eswoman said
Sunday. The spokeswoman who
asked that her name not be used.
said t he management of the
CBS-owned Los Angeles station
told Miss Brandwynne Friday
that "she w ould not be any
longer assigned to KNXT's
'Channel 2 News Lave at Five.'
She requested that she be
released from her contract, and
the station moved to honor that
request," the spokeswoman said,
adding that Miss Brandwynne
was being paid for the remainder
of her contract, which was not
due to expire until nex\April.
FRAZIER PARK (~P) -
Firefighters made alrdrQp1·of
nearly 8,000 gallons of water
early today on a blne In the Lot
Pfldres Natlon11l Forest ........ aa
their efforts and weather
conditions slowed the fire that
had charred about 640 acres of
brush and forest, officials aald.
"Humidity was up , and
temperatures and wln~ were
down. The fire wasn't moving ln
any particular directlon and It
wasn't spreadiiig much," said
U .S . Forest Service
spokeswoman Kathy Good. She
said the blaze was 30 percent
contained at daybreak, but no
prediction could be made on
complete containment until later
i.oday. The fire W'5 burning five
miles away from the Sespe
Call(ornia condor sanctuary, she
aald. The sanctuary is home for
less than 30 of the giant birds, a
critically endangered species.
I
LONG BEACH (AP) -The
pilot of a single-enginf plane was
rescued unharmed from the
Pacific Ocean by the crew of a
sailboat after the aircraft crashed
and sank five miles offshore, the
Coast Guard said. Pilot Charles
Franz of Lomita had ~n flying
out of nearby Torrance airport
Saturday to an unknown
destination when he radioed local
air traffic controllers that has
Cherokee Aero had lost engine
power, said Coast Guard Petty
Officer Pat Gallagher.
CHULA VISTA (AP ) -A
fourth young woman has died of
injuries three days after a car
plowed into a crowd of touring
Japan e s-e students at the
U.S .-Mexican border. Chikako
TakalV, 19, of Tokyo aaccwn~
to her Jnjuriee Sunday in ChWa
Vlltf .Community ttosplkal
wl\h6ut regainlna contclouane.I. I ,
JJOS ANGELES (AP) -A ~kesman for three CBS-owned
evlafon stations under 1eru"1ny 11elllng "cancer teatl" to 27~,
poo viewers says the klt1 sa~
the lives of "dozens of people.''
The Loe Angele1 Times reported
Sunday that the three st.atif>ns
that sold the kits are betng
lnveatlgated for a posait>~
technical violation by the fetleral
Food and Drug Administration.
t.OS ANGELES (AP> -Pios
to re-cr:eate the fiery explosions
that preceded the helicopter
crash which kllled actor Vic
Morrow and two children have
been canceled because of new
evidence found at the scef\e ,
authorities say. A. Don Llorente,
an Investigator for the National
Transportation Safety Boai,d,
said Sunday that investigators
had f o und th'e s kin of the
helicopter's tall rotor at the
movie location where the July ~3
accident occurred during filming
of a battle scene for the movie
"The Twilight Zone." "l sent two
investigators to the site yesterday
and th ey found some things
there that we did chemical
analysis on," he said. "We kr)ew
at was missing, but we didn~t
have 1t until yesterday," he said,
adding, "We can now draw some
conclusions based on fact."
Airport noise
suits upheld
by high court"
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The California Supreme Court
has refused to block action on 181
small claims court suits totaling
$135,000 brought by p eople
acc u s ing San Fra n cisco
lntRrnational Airport of being a
noisy nuisance.
It denied without commen" a
request by San Francisco for a
stay until a Court of Appeal rules
on whether the San Mateo
County Municipal Court Small
Claims Division has jurisdiction
to handle such nuisance claims.
The appeal court denied a ~y
June 11.
San Francisco's petition ~19
that almost 300 small claims
actions have been filed ~n
successive waves as the result ol
activities "by certain anti-n~
activists who have threatened tq
bring small claims actions eve~
100 days against San Francib::
with inc reasing numbers p(
plaintiffs and to 'nuisance the
airport to death'."
• The 181 cases in the second
wave of filings had been set (oi;
hearing on May 17 by the sn¥Uf
claims court, but they w,ri;
postponed pending resolution of
the stay request. ' '
With the high court's dent~
th e cases will now be
• AP Wl,...ifl04o rescheduled. .
STORM VICTIM -The Japanese tanker Nikko Maru floats San Francisco, acting thro~
on its s ide by the damaged breakwater in Yokohama harbor its A i rport Co mmissiott:
contended the small claims i today after Typhoon Bess slashed across 3apan's main island lacked authority to hear d
of Honshu Sunday. The typhoon left 42 dead and at least 37 determine airport nuisance mi~ing. claims.
.-------------~-------------------------------------------
a..i-r v:zxy own bru:lha.d.
pophn i:;ont ...
9nzat f>tyh~-
Y't top px.ka,~> rJap·ovq,r
watch pocka.t > tec'k f1dp
pcx:ket and wt.<zd
21lde~
w~ti1e,<Za5Yc.ara.l
durabl4. and ~t ~
fabu~ cotor..s lil<a tan,
ner.IY1 piwl¢r I rad,)'Z-11CJw
and l<.Cil ly.
,. : ..
' . I : I ',
FINDING SOMEONE EQU,ALLY ITCHY and
advenrur...ne to IO able WU the ... y part. •
Then there wu the decl.ton between dri~j
aw:zllna siation waaon with air condltlonlna or the
llttle Pinto una IUCh luxwia
Opting for air conditionina. we •t f~
only to meet our first obltaCle: the money
machine (you know, the automatic M-hour
bank teller). It waa on a break or 10methtnc.
which should have been my fl.rat clue.
Alter aolvt.ng the money problem. we
fairly aailed down the oJ*i rmd, swappb\8
yama of travels put.
It wu a abort aaU. ·com1ng to an abrupt
halt 16 mllee ahort of Barstow where the
radiator threw a full-<>n tanttum. ltealnlna,
sputtering and spewing. ~IOY
WREN IT COOLED DOWN, I fed lt the only liquid available
-a.ix cans of lukewarm Diet PeJ*. Then, after detenniniJll that
a y~ couple conveniently broken down behind ua weren•t
highway bandits, we provided them with a lift.
The four of us treated my chariot to lots of water, oil and
TLC. ..
Imbued with a aell8e of responsibility for theee two lea
fortunate travelers from the Orange Coast, we vowed to make
11\U"e they, too, were able to speed merrily on their way.
Do you know how difficult lt ia to get a radiator hoee for a
Public safety
costs disputed
By ROBERT BARKER Ol'tlle DllllJ .......
Costs of public safety services for Califomla's
426 cities increased 18 percent during the 1980-81
ti8cal year and accounted for 36.5 percent of all city
expenditures, according to a report released by
State Controller Ken Cory.
The costs for public safety in cities along the
Orange Coast generally were in line with the rest of
the state, according to the report.
Huntington Beach, the biggest city on the coast,
spent the moet for public safety.
Newport Beach had the Sharpest increase -58
pen.-ent horn 1979-80 to 1980-81. But officials from
both cities said there Is something wrong with the
figures.
Newport Beach Fire Chief J im Reed said
1980-81 expenditures were $400,000 too high.
Reed al80 said that the 1980-81 figure increa8ed
dramatically because of changes in a~unting
procedures.
He said nearly $1 million in expenditures that
were charged to other budget areas were assigned
to the fire department. \{e said sharp pay increases
al80 inflated the increase from one year to another.
Huntington Beach City Administrator Charles
Thompeon alao disputed the validity of the report.
"I don't "know where they get the figure for
our 1980-81 expenditures for public safety as $20,-
582,354. They take figures from our financial report
and we aent in the figure of $20,105,354.
"U the right numbers were used and unusually
high capital outlay CCl6ts were removed, the increase
would ha~e been 15.3 percent." Thom peon said.
The state. report indicated public safety costs
increased by 19 percent.
Thompson said there are often discrepancies in
the state report because cities report public safety
expenaes in different ways.
"For ex.ample, we intend to spend about $160,
000 for croesing guards in the coming year. This c:omes out of the police budget. But other cities may
not chooee to put the expense there."
(See PUBUC, Pase A8)
· 'llUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
..... lltau .-S...
1922 HAJIOl ILYD.
COSTA MISA -"141-1156.
!A!i'.!
-~·II IO&M .,,.,.. ... ..... .. ,.... ........ ..
So hr 21707
S.W. TIIN II.-M Y-Door
(c.9 ............ y-Atal
NEW'l2
V.W.RMllf
CONVIRTIU
Fully equipped:
$10,500 Cap Cott
$5,500 Retldual.
NOC~ R£OUCTION .
41 month i.a ..
rayment plu1 klx
*20117mo
1981 .... In .. IOW at I a .... ?~--E:' we 1-med. w.·~·tunlldup ... ._"JijilM llUff aia
truck ... and .cw tMiD. ~ Wtlh "'JliiWl1 fNnde, to their cer ~ • dawn WM~
HOun -lt 111lialld like .,. -JaW, .. roUed •to the
SU'ip u tilmpentuna-* jult a lhide thll llde of Hlima.
IT WAI A~ BAPn, ~ V .... day,
inede man 16 by my modll& roullat~
A few mn. d••ppotntmenta ot'the...., ~ ~ for
mention. bu• for the record: 1 -We eneountinld heavy rain: ., .... wtth liih.~
while cUmbinC l-1& to 6,000 feet.
-l dkl IOIM fancy drtvlftl and ~ ......... to aw6d collidina broldlide with • CU' hun, '-'I» 00 die~~ and
ltradd.J.ina the roedway I • viedm ot the lllcll ...,,..., Jult • we
ClWted the hlahest pm.
-The ala fn.rid I wanted to look up had aa unlilted phone
number, the frlmdly Vep1 operator labsmd me.
-My ocmpMkin•1 relative lb ~ QtJ ~ ou& on our
charmiac company. too, beCau. at hll home. we NICbed only a friendly ....... IDldUnl. •
Day Two w..-. eventful.
WE'D PORGOTl'EN TO LOCK the hotel roam door, we
1-med. U_JMlll awaJc.esainli but the ~ milled ua. The dealen didn't We Wt town ~derably poOIW .tbml we'd am~. SaWna homeward. pedal to the metal, w. oomoW ounel~es
with thouchta and oucpnwnta about how nke It'd been to get out
of town and Mxt tlme ...
Then we hit Barstow. And, theft we ~ until nearly~
a.m., entertained by country and weetem mulic and counting our
bleealrip that the alternator had failed ln the restaurant parking
lot and not on the open road. •
Ninety-four dollan and 79 cents poorer (thar\Jl goodnet11 for
plaatlc money), but with a new alternator, we once apin sailed
along.
WE BIT MY DRIVEWAY JN Ccleta Meu Just before 7 a.m.,
not exactly ~t-eyed and bushy-tailed. And, definitely with
slow machine elbow. , •
AB I quickly showered. sham~, etc., my companion
unpacked the car and brewed strong coffee.
I swooped up the coffee on my way out the door, grateful to
be in time for work. My companion offered the lut straw: "The
fleas are back."
Market-Rate Checking combines the hjgh earning power of
money market funds with unparalleled checking convenience.
Open Market-Rate Checking with $2,000 or more. Immedi-
ately, every dollar over $2,000 begins to earn a higli money-
market rate of intere~t. All funds up to $2,000 earn the highest rate
allowed by law on a checking account-51A%. The $2,000 is in-
sured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
Funds above $2,~ are not a savings account or deposit and are
not insured by the FSLIC. They are backed by United States Q)ITA..s.l 641-1219 ,., ..................
...... YllJO 495-0401 tttnC.-..C ;''ow ........ Awf ... ._,...,,,
Order Yount~ q*·''. Government securities. With ·Market-Rate Checking you may ·•~.Z1Q"
write checks just like with any other checking account, or arra,ige ....
What a Wonderful World
of Shopping, right at
YfNf tlngeftlpe ~ Dally Piiot Cla11lflad
Ads. To pteoa YfNf ad, call ... 2~71 and lel a
Clwlflad Ad-Vlaor help
you.
call
llabma!INI•
PIRATES PLATTER
Steak & Enchilada Dinner Special
5:00 to 6:30 Dally
·'
for the exclusive TELE-PAY A system to pay bills by phone. You '*annum•
can also withdraw cash at any of our seventy-two 24-HOUR
TELLER locations. Annual Yield
Get all the details on exciting Market·Rate Checking by calling
The Financial Line-direct or collect-i714) 231-4023, or visit the
nearest Association office.
•s•1 to c~a• dllly Anftull eHectr-. yltld ...... rlilMal1111nt ol pt\nc1pel 1n4 intll'at It 1111t11oty at 11me 11tt tlthQl!p ll'liS un't bt 111111ntttd.
I
)
• •
..... "•' ...... ,,.., ..... .... ...... ... ..... ... •I-Cltw Cflt ft·•• Cle .. Cllt ,., ,_ CleM Cllt •I Me , .... C.. ft·I,,. ,._ C"t ~ #'l'lf · ; ll .... t: g~,'i; ·; ,·t u: m:. t , t ... Jt"': : Olilltlw -'-• .._ .... • ... :'.J:;. ,,. ii J; II"'· ~ '"" ... f :u :1 :=: = sJ:i. ic ,-.~-~: t: ··1,· 1i ,,~~:~ =1c 1:ia~,,: ii''":.: =··'·~::!• fi5tt"'·::: .
..... (-C "° 1' t "' ~ It •llt-"° fl I~ .... II Atl n .. ~" lot+"" l"'J t ~ .... _ UOJ ft 111 ... 1'9 !'f~~ I~ J I•+"' MW I •:t •r -1.: II Allf ~· '-• '-!·.!' + t ~ .. :!~ 1: *"~~ ·:· llM •
1 ml~: t: ~ l 1 , 1; U"' " ::":C': j 1• 6 h ~ ~ bi • f ...-t: :" f i1I • ~. ':: ~~ r, ~· ; :: l'ftSl ~ 11 tt~· t: ..... , 'l 1·~· lit = 1'' f •. == ,. . IM ':""• ~ :::::.., ,: • 5 : ~ , I • • .. "' • • ·rs . ,1"'+"11: =~ ... Ill•"'-' ,~ 1, •t " ........ , ..... u ..,_ ...
..._ a~t ., I'~+'-:! ·~ '1~1 'it::.::~ II' ~ff "' 11!!'! ''',, :,, 1\o. I .. .._: ~ ==~~.-ti 1t
11 1~-"' r:i£:. J~ 717 ~"'• ~ -I • ... ··-:_. '!:. jl 1 :! I ......._ 4.11 " 1 s·• ~y Ut 1 d'°' • t .. ~ '°' T1 .c tt S ,,_ \II !. ~ ~i.t. l't I -.,. ln.,M -+ .. ........ \-'I I' ~ I ) I '" ll•Wl'llll •» 1' ~ ~ Ttl&Vlll t°' '11M tt\ls• "-
AAll ... 'j • J i. :JCT !· t 1 ' .. •.1h =i J ?! ti"' ~ I~~ 1.0: 6 t -..: M> ,,,..M 1 ... a ta 1 -.. i. •on• 1 • ..?t .. 1 .. u 111 • ,, "' :ft U • JI r, t \It R, t.: J ft-~"':I t ts1 ''" • h 'ie. '"' + '°' ~Ml 1-. 1 •j 10 ... • 111 lla;llwl 1.• 1 IJU '"' • :: h••r.,. IM • It 1 • w :.r ,,, m P,;;+· .. :~~ 1'-1 . '11 a:: .. ~ ~:.<,,'°' :: ~ , ... ~ '~~pl ·~, .,: ~: ~ =~f.1411 ; 11 nr;:•"' tr.t:n:ff ... ,. : ... 1~-11 ., ,J .J~..:·i-i,
~ : ~:: !tii!·li ''f :i:1.1 H =· ~ ~'!I. ~ 1 ' r. .... 1:=1rr.."1u ., ur.::: ~ :m=r :.~·:'"I m:~·~ ·~ ~ ~ ·:..: ~ 1:::-..:: := : n ~ ~ AIA i tJ 11 ... ~ it~ .~ ·• -» ·:·f"" ·,~1!r: ::n ~ ~ ... : ,~ 1119 = =:·~ : 1 l!": ~ ==, · ' ~f u~ ~ !:l!l 0•1'i~ n !~· ~ ~~Hf;, 't ~. '(.i
$ ·~ ,) J m::::: :i: ':; 'i 1U ?F: S :~ .• , :~ l cJ1~.--~ 1;,~~~ '~ i i:i :ft: ~ $~3 ·,-: ~ :1, !Ir: E i:= • :~ :ii ·~: : J"'~' 11 i ~ it· ~ "'-.:it:iitit I 'J:.:.:•wo ~AO• IU ~· It Clll.f '/Bii 1• ii•~ 1'~""'1~113,_ i 11 »'-•1-. MurllO I 4 t " • llt !!•llCJl11t1,' .. 1I I n' • -. ... T 11'1 •. ti 1\1.• w AMO ·~ ""·~ .. Uo 1,. v,....."' ·-~1o1il. ; .1..:. \. as .. i.;-: ~Mu""°'··. ""'-"' "~" tot -Tl •• 1'71ll01 •. = •::.~-,. ~!:? • 1'.U':J~ """~-~ l::t~· . .: ! :f :r-· t: l~ .. .J ',~ • lt It::·~;=~'·=': l: ·~::.;ii; ::r:~ la -~ l ,i~-: ~ l1
1:::.l9'·\' ;t..:= m:-•= "*-" ., t tt. ~ 2.40 t I~~ ltlrlM ... I It I~ IMtlllv , I "°" ---=~=~~. 4~ ~ ..... T "''" lA 1 JO 4P'e• "' AlrPM •• ; .. ,, ...... ~ !l~I·~' 1!L"' ,•",1!..a''°• j ": n ... llllftll• • IO 1~."' NIO t• s 1 111\lo..... • , •. ,, u ... -.... T .. si. Ill. 1' ~· "' AinlM , .... 111 n +"' IL'-').... i......... ,.. .~ \• lf'lllifl'f'lftJ~I' a 11 • ._ .... ,,. JO 70 tl\1+ i., • T•IW'll ,.,. 1 M4 II-"-
:,, .at .' ~' i=~-~ ~~ ~:: ~ 'n a\;+~ ::::';.d!L II :~: ~ :~:~0111::. :i ~~: ~ =~~. ::1~ :; m:: ~==··-:I u !!E~ \lo l::1:1;8! 'J ::~·.:. ~
Alel" pfAJ.'2 • t ""'· . . cVI,\·,. i.ft '! ;? :z... hell iii J.10 ·; 12 ll • .... 11'11~.r. 1 IS . • IS\o-J NCll HO , ~ r.llt• 1\1 AetKU ·"I '* ,., .. :: TOIE!J.!I ,, ,. ...... .... ::-~,. ~ •• ~ ,• + "' C...•rOt • It 7... .... be.I+ UO .. '-+ ~ :~:rllJ t;: : ~ ~~• 1-. ~t~M 1.; : l~ :m: ~ == IM .• M "'9: -;::.;r.~ ~· ' :t~.•. \lo A.:I" pf t,l... llO .: ·+ i" Cc"tf'll')1Tl1 1~ '• '°! .! ... ·• ~. ==~:: l,t'; h~ m:. .... lnl1\lu .0 t 1' •lo. . .. NV, Ur .. Iii ~.,.,. ........ ·!:! • Ii m ., '" Tr<-1.60 • Ill t• • I,; ·:::.: ..... 1100 51W.--ivl ~ • •• -_,_ llM ,. .. 112'1• .. ,,. .. N•l>te• tos 1.. . .. llHlll'd 'li' 1 .i~: ~ Toroco .. IJ •• , ...
A t .. 4 t 14 + "' Crt-= .. ,. ""'""" ,MC UO J 44 U"'+ "' ln.,tav I U 1,. 72~ "-NalCu l.ltH 211 ,.,._., ==~::n t.,11 m 10W-,. TM<O It t »2 I~• lit
A=-l.JO 1 11 14 ..... ~fl~ ::,: 1;J u1i'-: ·a .. 1e 147 17'-H ;,,. l11IHarv 266 • "'° NaP<Ot .U ' I '"'""' AthVClt 1.4' t !'2 tlW. -Towle ... I 11• 11-.-\1 A .90 1 1 It~ .... , C""" pf 4... ~ ~ ,. .12 t 21 11-. + \'I lnlHr pl , . 1J ' • lo N•plFd .toO U 1' II + ~ lll ... IT I.to 1 IO ll \lo + loo feylllJ t 11 00 ~ ...•. A 111 ll9 a5' U + 11o· c"'"' Sp -.. " • Felr< .IO 8 H I I•~ "'° lf1IMl11 UO S '1 U~• • .._ Ner<o ... IS 21 Ul't-.. AloGr.,. 1.60 J U 31 + '°I Trec0t • .JO IJ 2M 20 '" Ale... .to\4 )» 1t +Ill d::~ ·~~~ tt; ~:::: Falrcpfl,to •. 12 ~· .... llllMull t60 • 10 2• -..... NH ...... m , .U t \lt+ .... AloG pf ID • 11 _ "1 traM 1.:16 1 h1 2t"-+11o.
AkoSl.tl 1.91 1 11 ,..... • . • . '"'rt wt • • 11 ,._. F•mDls .iM 12 " ••~·· "' 11111•e•, 2.!0, • ~ 3S\oo • ., "c·'~ ...!. t !? i.\lo-~ A.II•;, :.o it ,. ~ _ "" fw eo .. 1m '"'. 1,. AJt•AI 111,'4 I 20t 22\'l+ "" Chart pf l.4'.. .. ..... FrWllF 2 ~+ \'I f'I "oc • , ·~ ••• + \o N nv,.. ,_, 1, lu• IN+ ... AOblhw l.40 11 IO II + ,,. 'l'W wt .. 10 ..... ~,
All.cP 1.91' !! "20~· ... ;~ CNN J-40 4 IUI » + ,..,.. ·; • '~ .... 11'1 TT , .. s "°' ll~· .. N•IDl•t uo • ., JCM41• .. AobttntUO • t2 2,.. ..... TWwlA ' 14 ·~·-.... :1~ 4:~,. -.., .. Cha pis.JS S » '°' F~ . 110 Jlo.-\'I ITT 1>fK 4 . 20 '1~1 • ... NelEdU 1.32t 5 J 12 •• .. . AotllM •• a IOI 1~= I'll TWC pl 1 tO 1J !Ho+ "'°
Altl;,:J.lt .. =1.dl~.~ ~:::~.-:i .! s:i. ..... ~:t·~: uo:g J# :~. t: :~:~ ,,~/o ~,"',~~~: .• ~=~~p '~I~ ,J m~-; ~ =:~n: J ~~ ll"'• ... f~~:. ::: ·; ~~ ~:"9:. ~. •!ti IUS.. ~ -CIWMCI ,,, " .,, ,,.., FdMoa 1.22 • ,,, ...... ... l11tPGp ''° I , )II\,, ... NIHom •. " 2...... Aocllwt ..,, • ,., JJ .... ~ Tra11l11e t.12 . • '''•• ;.;
Ant 2." 5 '" lltlt+ 11o CllNY ",· •• ·--.... FMNAil •• .. 1111 11 • .,., 1n1llt11r 10 2 1• .. '• NMdCr• t4 1 1u •'-···· ·-H t.m 1 .,-~ • ,_ TAlllllY u JO a • 11. AUtftG 110 17 IJ\11+ .. CllH 1 • •-••n• l'eclPI 1.20 4 II '""• "'-llllllPw 144 • U "" • ... NMdEn 40 '1111 ISw• h "~"" -j:._ • Tranteo 1.IO J 43 2~· '-Alic. t.40 • 427 ~. .... y pll 17 . • '"'• FdSQlll l .Ill • ' IS.... ... lo-eEI ' n ) JO 1) • • • NMINS nu •S 1". .... ROhr In s ''; ,;;:-• .... Trn.K pf J,, " » ... ~19Copft..U1 ., 11 "14+ 14 CllNYpf • S4Yo ••• ' 1'.00SC 1.10 I U• •I • .. IO-llG l») 15 11'9 NP"l\llOil • .. H ROhrpf JIJ l-..1~~· T<Gl'plt.44 dO.. '
.. ldMri( y .. 1' + .... ~Va l.91 • • ~ ...... F•rro 1.20 • ,. 20~· ~. low•PS 2 .. I ?S "'· NS.Ml lltl ""'-.... ROlllllEl'I . ,, . ,,.. . TrOP pf 2 . .SO J .... ;... :~,,·~ ! 1i ~~-· .. ~ ~7r 112 ,; 'i ~1~ ~:~'7' 2·-:,1 ,~ n~::.: ::-:t: ,~,~ :t 1!"~ ~ =~~::;:, 1-= • >: i:--. i= :::~ .. 1~,,. u = ~ m=:v.:.: t ~ ~·
Alll.cl\ . MS e-.+"' ClllPll .40lD M 121oo.·\.o F~,!<! .. 4 lD '"'° lrv98k U• 4 It 34.. NallSll 1 n 1•\.o -11 =::: :it 2jt ~ ;,. TICon Ult . tt1 11• .. AlltCll ,,,,... • ""' ChkFul 40 u 07 '"' F~Sb.' ... 10... """ .. lltkCp .JO< 101 .. N•lom 1 <Ill • 1410 IS •ow... .OI J '11 • • Tr,Gn pf 2..SO . • 20 • "' AlpflPr .. J 14\lt •:::: CNllCll 1 n• 1' I It Jn. . i._ Ff'IS 12 3 .. • \1 -J~J -NalM DI 4 4'l ,,...,_ \ot A-•n plt.44 l lt\•: t Tr Soln S 35! J"t • •,. :~11u. ··~1!•1rs 1:"".:.1~ 'c"''"" ·.,,·· • ·~·"" =:~:: .to i• ~ :~:~~~.~::cm t~ ~-· ~==~"'rt ~ H"':-:.~ 11ceo. ua.. 40 11 ....... l~::~ ··rn •1! !!~: ~ Amta .aD .. 4't 20 •I ,.,._ "'s n ISS •-• 'Vi, l'IAll11 I •• • ll 141.>+ '• JAl.,.r .40 I l2 l•t.o-l+ Nev~ n ,. ' • . . . . Aot:-0 117t 4 ml l''"· · · • Trlco 1' S •S ••, + ~
Al'ftHpf ).. t ,. ........ ~~;'!.~ :: 201~ ·:"·;·i.: F1Ctw1 .m •. J2S """• 4-JaJ)llP IJ5e '°' ea.. \1 NE119EI l ••• 21 + .. Au m 1.24 12 1JJ Jta.-..... Trlntl .50 s ll 10'•• ... Amr<e l.llZ t 4 lf'h ..... Chrywt JO 2" I'll FilChlC 1.10 •2U> 14''• ;,. JlfPlll i ... S Ut t•\,. '> NJAKn t ... • 1'ul3h+ ... Auslog 1 S •• :.2:'.!•. ~ Tuu P 1.'2 Slll) JO'o.• \1 Al'ftHet 1.10 10 St1 O\ot + ~ Chrvs.., )6 • F18TH 1.20 t 330 17'1 + ~ JtrC pf 4 t.O 22 -'• NYSEG 7 20 S JJ6 17\ot+ "° Ay•nlf 1 403 .. .,. ~ Twin OJ 1.10 • 1 11 AHHpf J.50 . 1 '2:W.-14 Cllu~ch I ·; • ,:!=• ~ Fl111ll• l.14 s 11J JS~· ~ Jere pl • tlD .. • . N•well ' s " u ......... AvdtrS I.Ge. , .. JI ...... Tycol. •. 10 s 112 .. • .,.
AmAgr .10 .• 1'6 !flt+ \ot ClnBell •2.72 ·PFIN~I~ •i.·U 10• ~ u'"•• '' JerC p1 USO 1100 '3v1• •1 Nw"•I .n 11 JI J6 + ... ...._, -Tyler to 1 250 14 • "-AmAlr .. 27'7 IS'-+ ~ • 1' _.., • ,..,..lnGE ...,. • •• -JtrC pf ? 18 t U~. ~. New!lll 1 14 254 IJw • it1 SCA 20 I l6J 10-. + .. Tymw 11 2'3 •t•o .... AAlr wt . . no ~. -• 1 • 0 ., s ... J. IO FNSl8n 2 ?00 • • n-"" Jtwelc 1.. • ... )S• • • • • NwP•r11 I• , •> •'-·.... SSCM 2 • l) ti~ -U-41 -A Air ,,. 2. 11 .. 22 ,~. .... ClllG pf t.sz . 1110 " ; ,. FllP• 101 1~. • . )tWl(t 1 ' ... NlaMP •. ., s 201 ,,_.. .... FN '· ,. • 12 21 ..... UAI. . .,, ,,.,. ... Alallr 34 I• W. ..... ClllMll n t '°' tJ\lo+ ... FIUllAI 116 1 2l 1''-+ '• JohnJn 1151161 41 +1 ... NleMl>I J'I) UO n• .... SPSTac n S 9' 12 -.._ UGI 204 ) » It.._. ,,.
Allrtnd ).JO •• .., Jtllt+ ~ Cltlcrp 1:n s .... 1SI-.+ ... FIValll< ... • 39 ,~ ,, JoMI!' 20 J 2•'· Nl•Mol • 10 rJSO 2"'• "" Sabine <Ill 11 20 ""'" ..... UGI pf 2 IS ·~ It\. ~llckll~~ U01 11 "! ?!~.· .. '"'.. Cltyl-t.-S -1'-'-' FIWIK J 10 J 11 211 > • ''-JOhnCn I 40 • tt 11'•, ... NIMpl 10 60 1.0 11 I~• St9d8• \ J2 11 II IJ ... • '9 UMC to t 10 I•, -,... , .... ... ~ -· FIKNI 2 S 21 32"-• .. JOllL911 60 n ll NleMPI 7.72 . tto SI • 1 SfQdSc I l ', '• UMET ~ 10 I 1 ... AmCMI J.tO 10 11S 21 + .,._ Clyln pf 1 411121•-'-FISllfd 10 2 122 111, • " Jor-1 S J ,.,, '• Nl•9Sh J llt 14 14 •.•• Salewv 2 to • 110 U \ .. 11,. UNCAH :114 U ) '• ACl!Cry 10. 1 ' S\11 Oablr to.., ,. • .,, ~. Flll'lnG J • ,. ,.~. 1, Jotl4ttl '211 410 Jl<,. '• NICOii ii ,.,, ,. ........ S-Co ,. • ,. 21• I UNA l ID ....
ACYtf'I 1.15. "° 21 ... :;·\,0 Cle rkE 2.20 20 .... Fl"IEn .szn "° "'• ... )OYMIQ I <Ill • SI ~ NICOR J • 101 ,. ....... SP•"' 120 11 ·~· .... USFG Jto • , .. ,, ..... ADl I S2 10 IS ,,~ ClvCll 1., • s " ,. ... Fluiv .IO.. ,, 10'--1(-11 -NoblAI 12 s "' 10 -~. SIA99P I 12 • '"' """. '. UlllNV •.1.. • ) ,. .•. Al!IPw 2.i. 1 l'1 " "+ · ~ c ... e1 J •• s ,,, U••· "' Fltxl pf 1 • .i s 10". " 1<01 11 1 '° ... NorSOll 10e s ••O. •ilo• "-Salant '° • 40 1 a. UC.mp l 1 t• ., •• Aml!1qt 1.20 7 2'JI Jin+ tit ClevDk .0 I l 1 ... ,_: Fl'91Sls 1413 u 11'·1 • .. l<DT ts 1"" '• Nori111 J l ""'• '• SOle<;s IC S 2J1 ""-Uf'IC:.rb J40 ·-42'~· •1 AFamll ·'° • in 10"' + ~ CIMO• .'7 • 2SO """• .. FtoalP n " 344 JO" l(LM II • ,,.. • ... Norslr ", 20 s 21 ,,_ .. SJuan& .... II 2'6 • Ur>Comr .20" .,. 11'. AGl'ICp 2.al 5 JJ0 d.12'h-h Cl,..llP .M • 1 IJ~> FleEC 10 13 J 1J '• K m•rt 1 11 111 ,,._ Nortell DI J 11 '"'• "9 SJuanA 14 ~ .• I ... UnionC .2'1 13 J:\o '• AG18d 2.CM.t • 21 ""'. '" c1 .. 1 pf ' l II . .. Fl•PI. 3,. • IMI ,, ...... l(al\tAI .0 100 12.. NACoel .ID • .. lD ....... Sanders .. 1J :i. ... UnE•ec ' ... 11)0 IJ' .... AGl'IC• 1.IOa .. u 21 ......... Coa<"m " " IH .... Fl•Pro I.ID 1 •• IS .... '·• Kal•C• I'° • 12• 11 ... NoAPl\I '10 • • JS'" ...... SAnllAll .. I • u.. UnEI pf • tJOO ,, ' AHerll Mt 1J 111<.-a. (OHi ... 40 . 211 17'o I'll flaSll .U . 19 11~. Kal•rSI 3 :JO '•"-'• NEur0n221t t 11 19'-.-... SFtlncl 1 1 GO U"-• w UnElpf t .<111 rlOO 0 'M• .. AHOISI .5'1 • 110 , ....... .., Coe.Cl 2.41 ',.,, ,,.,. • .,, FlwG«t • 2tl • • .. KentMI 28 • 3 12.. NoeslUI ' ,. ... , ·~-'• $91Wet 1.20 • •10 11~. . UnEI plM • 11 M· I• ... AHome 2.20" ,.,, • • ' Cc>MN l ... ,, " u ..•.. FlllOt .ID • MO 13~ ..... KaMb '1b ,.. . NlnclPS I.SO 10 102 ,_ SaulAE ·* 12 d s~ ... UEI oil. •.. t«IOO s11,, AHOW>' ... u 1SJ6 ,.~. ~ Coleco • "s I~-h FOOl.C J,20 1 2 3J KClyPI,.. 2 96 ~ 92 ~~~.: ~= NoSIPv¥ 2.7• • :1'11 21 + a. S•llEIP I.JI s ,, 10 ....... Un El pl 2.U • . I ....... ,. AMI s .52 U U4 2Ht+ w Colemn 1.20 t 17 21 • ''° FordM .. 21U 23 , .. KCSo 1 • 1 1' JO + ~. NSPw Pit.II • rlOO 21 -'' Savl11 XI .,, • '"' Un El pl 2 n S 22 :~:: .. , • m ,.~ ... "~Pl:~':~~ 2: :i~:-~ ~~! H~ 7 4: ~· :-: KenGE 2·12 : M ~~: ~: ~!~T~: ~-·;:~ ;t~2t ~~~i~~·:io.n\ m:: ~ ~~~~ ,·1:»:n: n ... • ~ :~J ~ 1 ,: ,:.....:;.. ~::~· 1.40 • ·: m:·. ~~~=·::ii :~ m.:: ·· ~=~~~'1'': • ,~ ,,\oo .•. ~:.-~::1.1·:· ~ ~~:·~ t~';7b ~.~31:: f, .. :':: ~~~c:1~ · ·.~ .:t:: ....
ASltrll .• ~ 11• Ullo • IOI Colllll S 1ID11 '" 23~• . . . Folomt S l"" • 1 ~:~t ~ ~ ! :t. ,_ ·~ Nwl8cp 1 44 S •'• ·11~ • 1'• Scot l 44 12 UI u... . UnllD,, .., 2 11 • AMSlr I I 2' 4'1'11 • ft ColG .. 1.-S IU 21\lo + h FoaSIP ... · 7 • 10', Kelyln s 22 I'•• 1,, Nw1IE11 1 _, 4 41 ,. .. • •,. Scollad U 3 J\.o + ... Unlrncl 40 3' • 1\lt • • • ASlr pf S 51 . 2 lth• In Combln 1.m • US io..-In Foa~ I.CM 1 11• ,. Ka .. tBr 24 10 1 ... " NwE11 llf1 11 . •• ,..,., ScotFet 1., 1 I Jt u&ro pf 1.20 • I •, "
ATT ).40 • ,.. 52-.... CmbEll l.M ' , .. JO.-... "F•,PtMc,_ 40 • ~ ....... K ,._ 'so ' 1(11 w .... ~=~~ :·: 1 s:~ ·~~: ~ ScoctP I , ts .. ~. . UCDTV n .. IS IJO 211.. " ~H = ,..: ~ ~t .. : ~ ~= ~ ·~ : ~ ·: ... ·. ~ Fr~· 1::
1 :w :~:.:· ~ l(:llwo 40 • ri ·~~:. :· NOtlOll 2 • n m,. ,, t:~t~ s 1 ~rn ·~ ""' . ~~.~~ :.: s1 n ~!:~' ""
AWatr 120 t 17 , .... ~ C#ndll IS"ll ,_Jlll G•F -G-4 -~=~I :: ~ JJdU ·,~ NorS<m I OI 1•2tl 10.i.+ • .. SetClpfl•. 11 ·~: ~ Ulllt,1 pf l'1 1 u•-. AWal pl I". 1210 '"'. -CmwE 2.111 • IOOJ 20h• ... ~ .JO • 11 IOl<o '• KyUUI 2 20 1 ,. ,.. ... Not!S pf I'° ............. Se.Cl pf 2.10 . J ,,.. Ulllu pf 2 20 tlOO .. • "• A,,,_.,. I.AO J l .. ...._ .... CwlE pl l.<12 . s '"'•. lo. GAF,,, 1.20 J I)>. .... KerrGI .. s Sl .~ .. Novo ~" J2' .,,,. •I'• Seac-.42 ' 11 ""'-.... Ulllu pf • J 1J\oo. "• Am.SD•.,. 1J u ..... CwEfJf ltO. 1 12"-• '•GATX 2.40.,,. 11 ••• K•rrMsllO 1 11l 1~." Nu<or ~2.!.0 -·~ 3''>+ •. , S.•l•I IMJI 167 ,, .... ~ Un111nc1 lbll ....... Amelk 1.20 11 1' 1' + \It CwE fJf 2 5' ll' • GCA .10j 131 tS IJ"-I( Int 41 11 IS 141 "• ~ Set9<m t m 4 11J .... , w Untllm 22 I 2} 20•,
Amfac ' .. IJ " '*"'-.... CwE,,, 11 10 d.SOO l l\1. "'' GEICO .2~ .J ,,,, 2,0': ••• l(r.r;;. ~ 10 • 11• II ..... • • 00c•~·~ 1 ~ ~ ~~ :~:.: ... ~-a •• •• ~ 1100 2,.1 ....!.,_ ..... UUJld·:.~ 1 •2 • 1913 ·r ... .
"MPln I 40 ,',' 25'. " •• ~ .. lie g:~ :e:·: r2000,_ t!'•: ' ... GG~OE-• ) • • • Kid pfC • ,, :?~ .... O<~:P'.;n 50 I 11 ~ ::: s::~~ l.M 1 J1 "ii' • ~ us~~o$. ~. 3 1•' .. .. Amr·~ ......... eomes , • I 10 1)"9 GTE -2 .. "4 • 1121 11 -14 t(lode .,,, ... --OCtlP pt'J., , ••• .,. + \.t S.•r'\eG "13 ,,, ,. ....... usAir AVl'2 • tlSO ,, .. ~; ::::::.. ::= ! ,: ;:~:.:·~ Comiat ,:lDtJ .. ,, .... ~ GTEpf uo . J , ....... (iMbCI •• ~~ s•·· Oc<IPpllU7 J1S'2\ ..... Se•rs 1.1' •11n .. ~ •• , USGy~2.40. n ,. .•• '•
""'''"' M .. s s ......... CComoPsvc•.Ult "', ',·,~·· ~ GTEpf 2.41 ..• ""' Kn9MA ~,10, )9 ~ .... ,, OOECO' ' s SI "~·· •• S.cPk J.40. 1s1 21 ... "" USHom .:isa ,., ,, ..... " • t ~ 10 •• pgr -~ Gal Hou .S? II lS2 ll • '"• tCoge( 'r• OQd<ln 1 ID • 139 ''"-• w Sedco .M • 40 711"' USlncl .7• • . 1• ,._ .. m.1 td '·-... 20""-"" CompSc io m 13'" ,,. G•11,.ti 1.n 11 lAI JS l(ofm&r 1 ~11'1 ~ 11.., "• OliloEd 1.1• • 1103 12,,...... Se191.1 .to • 11 ''" • ~. us1.-to 10 l• n , All<~ n .n !?...!.f. l~!~ Cphlsn It 1611 '1\!o • Ga1>Slr .SO I nt II"' '• l(opers -ilSO 111"1 011EX1D2 O O 2 I PF .... 1.~1? SvcCp S4 9 l3 JJ • ''" USSllOe t.M t <1114 J2 , '"' A11<"°' t.:i.1""iil .,.,,_ I'll COllAor ... I •• 20"-• •-.. Gessvc 1.i. s • 104, Koor p1 Jt '• s,,.-1. 1 5 ,.. 11 . • uss-2 2 ·~ ""• • .,. Af'IClay 1.%1 4 11 71'4-.... c-MI 1.20 • ~ 111,, '• Ge•rllt .lt I .. I)'.• '' l(r-lr J l\oo • 1'> OllEd pf •,. tlOO lD • •~ s ... w111 10! JI SJ S\o-\ot USToOc: 2 m • , 4J ,,. Ancl<G 11 JO e 1 1114-°"' COME n2.60 J 9 lt\!o • '• Gtl~o 1.12 • 10 U'" '> Kr~r 1 n I .,. 11'•• .._ OllEdpl 114 121~ .. +1 SllellO 1.IO • G JI._• w UnTe<h 2Ao 5 '21 41.._ •..
Angelle 'to 10 IS 20.i.. ..... C11nNG 2 20 ' ' ..... _ .... Gemc. ., .. lS'o + '. Kull oc"' •, ,s !! 1,r.: :~ OllP lllGJ 71 I IS ... SllelGIO JO • ... ,,,,. : .. , UY<" pf l 17 " " • '
A-... '. 10 .,, ""'. .... COl'lt'at .eo 11 • ,,.. GA In" • He .. ., "" .. Kyot . •r ' -OhP pfF " tJSO 100 St>.lG "" u • " 2J• I • UT<h pf 2.SS ,., J2\!o. '" Alllatr 20 11 13 12\,-\oo Coll Ed l 1 ... J 1'l3 1'1.. GAmOll 60D 11 14• JO'o l(yW>r .. 24 IO 1' • Ok .. GE I.It • ... 1•:\o + .... Sllrwo11 1 1 " 1•" • • • Uni Tel I.ti t JOO 11 ... A,......., .... s IJ •Vt-.... CollE pl 4.45 l100 JJt, + lh G111k"' .• • _, 11',. " -I.~ -OkleC. pf m 11100 •"-• .. Si.rPac •.• 1 :W 10'• Unit'* HU •I 1' .. --·· ... E pf s I )SI.. .... GCl11m .. 10 1'2 ,, ... ' L N HO "3.Ste • • JO"-01111 ' 20 s ••s ""'. ..... 519,..i ... • m ,, • ... U11lvar ... • IS ,....., • .... Apache ·24 e Ill ....... CollFdl 212 1 21 JS>o Gf'IO.ta 11 ti, lFE 3 1 • '• Om•rll I • SS ..... '• S~9-2 ll llS .... '• UnlvFd 1.IM 7 I 1.-.. "' ::c~ :i.tt 11~ i~.: ~ 11sFrt IM 4 •-•11• • \> GnO.,.n .n 1J ... Jt• 1 tJ...°". I SO 1~ ·~ ,;:--'• Omn<r n ID 1J IS lD '• SoMPre J4 I 1• ,, ... '• UllL.tef 1 M 1 ti lra..• "' ApPw pff. II . . 1 27..., + '9 CMNG SI.!! S .!! U.... •, ~ GDyn pf 4.U I 10 wvln l • Oneida n S IOS IJ • SlmoPI 211 IJ Ill ... • '• UpjOfln 111 1 IOS ,._.,, • " COCtsPw L-, ~ ""' -G41'1&1 J.40 • 111'7 .. , •• ,., L.CG.M , <Ill , 2 JO>. " ONEOK 2 40 s 40 ,, • "' Slnoar 10t 1J l• 12 ..... USLIFI! M • JI• •Slf>• .. App!Mg at 12 411 IJ .. • \oo Cf'IPw pU.J0 t20 JD GnFds 2..20 1 121 ll', • .. LemSft 2• J ' '" 0.-h~• I S'..-... 5•"9' fJf J SO I 17' • UslfeFd 1 1• , .. Arc.M>I\ .le • .aJO IJ"'+ -Cf'IPw llff.Sl . iSO '61<t+ , .... GGlll .on • IJ\1• '• Lanier• JI 10 ?2 IS'• OranAk 1 m • 41 IS • ... S"yllM 41 l4 Ut , • ._. " UtePL. J.21 1 114 ""° Arl1PS 2.st. '11 '"-• \It C11Pw pl71t rlOO "41t+ ,._ GHoll l SO 7 S4 It • '• l awlllll n 12 II •'>• '• O•enoa 2Qlt ' .... w SmilM 111 1 I '> UIPl.pf 2.Alol I ,...., \lo Arll" pl >.•. 21 24 ...... ·.. Cl'I,... pf . 4 . ' U l<o • .... GllHCllll 12 S u 11, L .. rPI 11 tl 10• 1 grionc \ '° •l "'-·.. . Smtlhln " J ~l io... "' _ v-v _ Atll8sl AO 12 J 1..... ... . CllPw ,,,,... II , ........ GIMI. .Cl II 20>4 »"". " LHr~ I so s 12 21 • " rlcwl .. • + ,... :>m•• 2.32 12 ,.,, .. • 1• .. VF CP 2.., • " so • I :~~~~: .. ~ 'Pt I~ ..... Cf'IPw ptl.IS . 2 , ....... GnMlll• 1.M 10 SOI .. •I t••\ ',; : JI ;: ..• :~ OulbM tO • ns 22"-• !>m"<"' 140 • ,, ., .. , .... Valaro ·n • tO ISl'll• ..... ~rm-_10 .2! 1•s_:::;: ~~~:>;U~·· : l~"' :: g=L.l'.,~'M! ~~~:: L..!:ln; 11, : m.~ ~:.1,96,. ·~;4 J >~'"'.: ~ ~ 1 ~1~ m ~;~: ~ ~!!.9J:~1::f ~ >j ,~-"'
.. rmc.o 1·-•--• '" COll1Alr .. 12 • .._ + "" GNC .OI,. 1 "'" "-1.~Pl•I .. • • 11 ... QvrTrf'I .tO I n """• ~, SonyCo Ile 1121,. ., .. • '> Va rco :u J ,, 1, .. ;·;..; :~~wf.. ~·\~It al:. ft .... :.:. ii: ~~::~pl:: : m ~!'" ! ~ GPU 11 241 '"• '• tt.~~ IJ 1~ 0 .~: ... 6v5'11p 50 J Pi ·,·,.,_ + '-• Soot.In 2 . .0. 6 10 21"•· Varian }7 11 101 ,... • '-Ar"'• lb I 1 1SW. • '"° c~g: ~ 2 ~ 1·~ • •-Ge11At s 1 OI t 121 401,. + 10.,. 1.e,,--7 Tie I" 1 n . Owen(. I 20 JI 'ID 11'-+ "9 SovrcC 2 .0 11 21' .. .._ Vero .40 14 n 1 • , A,;;e . 1'" S 11"-. . ,'.:! p ::4.SO .. -1 3•1:-_ ;.:_ Gf'IAelr · · l 3 ~. l.e_::::; 1 _ IJ i:'t 17 Owen Ill 1 .. S a IOI 21._ + ... SrcCp Pf2 40 t ., .. • "" V~o .2'1> 13 -'" ,,,., • '-• r 2 I 2 2~. ..,,. ,.. -~ G11Slanl 1 . .0 I n JS • .. ..._ ~ O•lrdln 1 s • JO• SoAllF·" 10 1•~ V•llCIO •1 6 rv 11 1.I 1 1 -····· Contlll 2 ~ t~S I~+ ''-GTFfpf 1.lS 11'00 e-.+ \oo t:=:c. 1 m : : \190:: _ l"-0 _ ' ... SCrEG 1.'1 1 Ill ,. • • .. VtttS. i.a. JO ''•• ..... ::rgi, ,:.: j :~ n :_ ~ CoftlTtl 1,5' 1 314 I~• :--. GTFlpf 1.lD . t20 9\1 \i '• P11H 1 14 10 ••5 1"H •~ SC•Efl' 2.SO. ' '1'1 Viacom 3013 S• 10"'• ... ::~::\ • 2:i ff~ .. e~ :~~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~= '·: ,! * :;.. : :·: ti:ff.i:\ ~I~ ~:: ~: E =~lMI ?5 i ~ ~~: ~ t:::r 12>~ ; ·ii :E .... ~:!:£ 6 4 lt: :~
•• ,,._ IAO 1 • dll -14 c=r 2 '°. IH ,,... ,, 8:~"' I: 12 !!! ,;t : ... to~ pf ! ~ .• '~ 40 •• ..., P.cc.E l ) ,,., U\o ... SC••Ed 32• 41,.. »•· " V•EP 111'.1) l1IO ... • .. !!l~ rs ;.,a,~\o•.: ~-T : ; ~ m:: ~~ &:~acpfg: ._.,: m:• ~ tl~ ~:~ 1~ i!~: ~ ::~:~1! ,ll :t: :: ~~~;:: ~ ll~· ~ ~~~:. ,: ~\,,. :~
AtlAC pf£• al .. • 1lo COPWd l I 1' J 1' IJ GaPw pQ.7t 1 1J l.o I.Illy Ell 1.60.t 10 l2• JS • • ' PacP pl • 01 II 7'1.. • ,.., SoAy pl 2.. I ,... . . VulClllC 40 2S •O 10' • • '
AtlatCp 1 I 11~:... ~:rn· :: ; t ':t-. ~ GaPw 1111.S• l I~ t::·:. n , ': ~ r,:!: :.; PacScH l2 1 ., IOt.. • .. ~~ n: : !~ ;;~ • ~ v .. 1cnM 2:., 1 I) 11\,, •:
A,,. .... 12U J2 %1 •••• Corf'IG 2nn 47 ·~· .. &:~~~~ .! :~. '• l111CPI , .. ,, , ..... '• :af~ :~1st:~\,:~ SoAoY 0911' m 1•1-,. i.'. WICOA i1.•-s •sz-, ....... ~~~ d~ 1
: m f~! ~ ~: 1·7t ~ 1! =.:-Gtrb~ st.)6 1 • "'• t:l::: pf 1 ~ S '6Cf 41 • '' p:1m11c 1 20 ) JO "". ~. Soumrt. .Cll!a J I" S...• ... wee:-t.i• 6 :n u ... Avco pl J.'.211 J » •It;. Co•8d $ 21 U ft ltl 1 • ~ c;.rDSc .12 IS Jt 1~ + :, l.OOrtd .. ~;::: :.; PaftAB I\ 14 I S2 I• + •-.. SwAlr l R 1J 20'I ,..._ • \It WaO lll 4411 10 ti u t 1 • ;.: Avery ·'° e l ,,...,_ ~ Cr•I~ n 10 •1<. '• Gtlly l.to S •SS .... • lo< Ille 5412 11 IP•• .. PanAm t11 ,.,, , Sw8Slll 1.20 S 20 tt\,i+ ... Walf'IOC 14 .• I) • .._. "-• I I 10 U1' 41'-llo " GlanlP • ,... 90,,, Pa"" EC J JO 4 37• 22"° • :\o SwFIBll m I • 12 .. • '" WIMrt s 10 l)O 11 •u A= J , , .. 21~: ~ CCrraaneyAs' 60.t ,•. ,.U ,'',~,: ~ GIDrFn 44 l'"• • ' 1.1.o~/n :·~ IS ~~ '"I Pepett 1 1"Jt • I• UI-. • \It SwtF-ISi JI .... ... Waklrn 1 1 10 114 U• •.
•••• 1.u. IS ........ a. Crllon s i6 ,. .... -Gldl.• ... IOIO 4) 2'1'• ~ LOmM1 2 . .4; I ""~:::~ Perovn "S2l ,..,,., SwtO.• ',,, JI '"" Wklfl"91.n 1 ,. ... ;;; Aydin .. 174 uJ:J""• v. CroON 2.40 • 10 7l' .... GlllHlll .'2 2S II 10 ..... lnSter I 90 12 12 20 + .. Part•P 2ob s 20 Ul.o •• ,, SwE11r I\ .n 10 II ,,.. ·~ Wales.. .. 10 11 ,. .... .. -1-1 -CrclN pfl. II n , .... • '• Glll•ll• J.lD 10 "3 JI'•• '• l.ILCo 1.07 s •40 ...... .. . PariDrl . 14 3 1'S ·~ • o, ~~!PS 1 SO I ,. 1>'-W•l!Jm • llt 21n ?2' 1 •I BAlrnc.o ,_, • U 1'"-"" Crmpl(n I 04 1 S ll'" •~ Glt••W ID U •1 ... • 't LIL pfJ I 12 ll.0 SI'.,. ParH ... t .. 1 14t Uh1 . .....,r1n .ta 1 12 17 W•llJ pf I.to If f4'> • 11. BkrlnU ., " ... " • -c .... n0 I II "" ••• GI-•. 1• J l94 I '• Lil. pfU." lt ,,.. . Par"Pn SJ,, •) 1u.... So+<IP ., " •s ..... Warnac 1.20 • 145 "'I •.. &al-37 11 n It GldNuo 1 '•2 U .. • .. I.II. plT 2I', _ "• ParMO 1 I 1 .. 14'-+ "" Sclerry 1 '2 S IOU 17\,, •II, WrnCm I 10 ... 441.. :\o
&aldU• . I,,. -.·;..; &"i'.'rpl!~' 1:! ~:~~= ~ GldWF' 04 s• ,,. ... lll.pfP ~!; ·~ IS'• ..... PatP1tl 12 100 .......... '• So<lllQI 1.:... IO.J 1''-• .... War11rL 1.4011..,. 2111 .. "• lldU"' 2.0I ' ,. .1 .... c le p1ej OS ,,.,. ... Gclrlcll 1" • 125 11 ... I I L-Dr '04 II u lD'• •• , P•,l,C .. • 1 I... •. SQuarD 1 ... 1 ., u • "-•SllGs 2.7• 1 If """ .
e.tlCD 1•. ,, --· .... r ·~ . 21 -Gdrdtpf).IZ 3 22'-l.Otal mu ISi JS"-•• PayCllln20 '"°'' 22-"' $Qutbb 11'1J ,,, J1 • '• lllNal IAI , ,. " "' ... :l,Mf :. t IJDI JOl'll-'-' ~'r:,. I~ ~ 44: ~-~ ~ 1.40 I 25'J n.. .. i..c;...i Ml> I l3 10 • , , PHDd\' I• 41 '6 "-• ... Ste All• 40t U 10.J llh • w WlllWI 2.40 • Jt 1r-.. • • •
Bal EL~~ 1~ ~-14 Cul1lf'111 1' !ti ..... , ..... ~ •1 ;: ,•,n: ;~:• '• 1.al.•lld 1m11 m w•: ~ ~~ Ol!e ! m ,: .. :): ~:= :1~ 1~ ~r: .... ui.111 !:a ':~;;:•''"'
:::::;-ID ll I~ :: CcumEl'I 2 ' ,. ,. .... ~ Grace ,·., • 217 ~: 'I t::~ ~ 3:0.;~ "" .• p~ ~JI 211 70 S10llC~ 2.40 ,._ ~.:."' ::.u OSI , ,..
Bk NY 120 .j 20 Jl\o. .• c::r~nc I '1' J : l~: Gr•lf19r I 1• 9 •1 14' •• '' l.~I 1 JO s 11 2• P4"W!Cp 141> 10 701 1:0. • "-51011111 J e '1"5 U ... • .... t1100 . . .. 1 llofV• I. I• 1 JS I~. Cyc~ 1 IOe 1J IO 1.,_ "" Gr•11ilv II d ... 4-I.OW.• 1 41 1' 103 IJ'• • "-Penney 1 1 _., :1t11;-: •. .... Sld()()to J 40 • IM'J ~ + ~ JIM 1 1' t al> 27'9 • ... lf'lkAm 1.SZ • '11 1''-• "" D-0 GIAll"< . m1 '" • '• lul>rrl 1 DI 9 436 151., • 1., Pa PL 2 J2 • 111 -\It S1Pa<C.. .20 22 S1 .... + w. •llaF 1.'2 4 Jtt 11'-• "'9 lkAty 2.» • • Jltlt. -DMG -l ,_ Gll.lln .eo • IS ,, ••• LUDY• n .0 ,. ,, ,.,,_ .. Pa Pl. pf • ..., 1110 " . . . Slandu "" ' 2• IJ • "• t i FM 2.IO 1 ••1 dl14o-a.
llal'lllTr 2 OS 4 M 1''9 • • o...-20 J2 • "" GNlrn 4 Sle S • JJ '• LIKll'tS 1 14 1 101 134-. , P•PL pf 4 fO • t10 JO -\It Sle11Wk .1• 1 11 IJ"9 + ... ·~ .JI 11 411 I~• .. 8kTr pf 1 fO . J 1114 .... 0.nAiv I IZ I ., II~• •~ GINoNll 2 • 21 JOl.1 1• .. Luk-n 1 5' ·~ • "-PePL pl I .0 .. tSO ""'• 'h Starrett IA • ,. It"'• v,, Hts .M t 1n 14 • .... llkTr,,.•22 J -·.. --GIWFln .40 1) 111 12~ .. ·~ -M--M-PaPl.P<t.40 rioo SS~•I .... SlaMS.1.209 . IS ...... Wh11Ppl•..SO rllOIJVt•I ..,._ : 11 . • t7 • • \0 DalltCp l . .O • u u... ..... GMP II .... J • 12 • '. ACOM 1• ,, •20 """. "' Pa Pl. pr IJ . dO .,--. ... :>!autCll 1 ..... ,,. 1•'111 + .. Wslf'IP l.111 1 JS 1 • ...,_ "' BardCR .J6 14 14 l6 -'h Dalllef ,., 7 IJ llh + .... GrtY" I.JO S SJS IJ.._ 1.SOtll7 •H9 6S"° + 1 Pa PL pr e . l «I s;o...,_1 SI-,ltb I• U ,..,_ \ot WllAlrl. , 101 ""' "-Barf'IGI> .to .. t 12~-+ i,_ O.r•I( n 3.to t !12 JJl't + lfa Grev WI • • SO 11·1' El SI 11 24 391, • 1.1 PaPI. prt,10 . 110 S6 -1 Sl•rclll .7. IO 4 t'9-"' WAlr.r • a 12W-.. Samet '·°' , SI 20 -v. DataGll • 147 24'-. w Gr-G t.:MI> I 21 H t . .... MGMGr ... ' 122 SI•. "" Ptnwtt •. ,., ' ., l:W.. .... Strlll<P .n ' • 1 • .... WCN .14 • 1S1' .... .. BarvWr ,_, 10 11 IS-'It g::~t i6 S;1 ""-·" · · GlllAty ·. 1 1' > + ..... MGMGr pl... l 6\oo .. Ptnn1ot l JO I <IOJ 21~..... Slrl8 rt . SOD 1.ue.... WPt<I S II WI!.• '> := i~~ ;: .~·~ O.yco .J6' ti 'f~ := 8~~:".,J:=3~ ~: ~ :
1!; :i~~;·':" 11' ,:.,~."' =~n ~ i ~~ ':~:.:·~ tl:~~ L~'~ ·~ ~!~; = =~~~!.: 1 ~ Ir--_.:: Baatra A 15 15'5 JS¥>+ w DayHd st. IO 11 "'° JJ.\o • Guardl .M I 1' ••~ '-Macmlf SOD 1 35 12\ .. w ~•ICo UJ 10 m ,..., + "' SlwWrt 1 M • i. ti "' WU11 dDlt.11 .. 1 • -~. llayF111 34 20 •• "' DartPI. ''° '.1 .. 14~ ... GllWll .7) • 10.1 ,, .... '. Macy. ' ' 242 JS\ .. -... PerllEI so 12 151• 17'o-"' S•OllVC , ... , 0 ,, ...... -WUT'I pf • 2 .. , ,. '' laYS«) J,J2 • S 11 + .,. DPI. r l2.!ll ylOOO -• •w GllW lfl.I 2 JO 1 lD • '• Md'Fd 1 7S. !OS ,.,, PrMI.,. l.Jlt • 41 ' ··. StkVC pl 1 1140 llto + " WUTI pf t~ · ' 17 ... • 1-. ... ,:,, 1 t l • + "' 8::,'. n 1; 1~ .!: ll::! • .. GullOil l.IO . 4 xlJJJ u • .... ::f.ICt 4112 •' 10\'I • ,,. Ptlrtt' 14010 '1 tl . .. . SIOllC 1 60 I J3 11-.-1o. We1t9E Im 5 •lliO 27'°' • ''·• ;;,:~ ua,'·~IO·ioi .. : .,.~: ~ ~,1:':!~.··,..! .~ lDU~·. ~ &W~~J. 1.S6. ,,: :t ... :~ 1~~c1401~ it lr-· ... :::~~ .,: • 'HU"'~~ r:~1 • ~111~ :~: ~ ::n t:·. yr:~-w -..., ·-.... o;,i;. 1 J 7" -GllSU ol• 40 1100 :w•. Ma""'" lDD • "' ll'o-... Pl~•· ' .. " 1114 ,, .. +2 Stotw .n 12 ,.. ""'· IJ w..,.rtv l.»20 ,.. ,.~ .... .... . 21 , . • DhCll • I IO ZI ,..... GllSU pr•.411 40 ,.... ... Mall"U .:n • l s.. PJWtpO .lDI . ,,. "". .. Strlda11 ,_,. • 1 "'' w.,. pl , ., 11 »"'. I i51? i ~~:~ ""YI•'.:,~ ,,,1 :~-~ &=:i~~ 1:!~ S :~-:: ~ :rr=~s,:: J~ iii;· " E~!~J.in ! 3 H~~:~ 5~ 1~ s. ;: 2!~.: ~ $1:t~ • 1i ~E.: ~ ..... ,,. :tA I 10 15-llo llllY .•fJ 1 ll"'-1-. ---~tll m 77' t i. l"hlll!Pi•.40 tJIOO 2tl<t +2 :>111'181111 1 t ft Uh + -.whtlJ<pl l 1 27\.o• '-a.40tt t • fJ 1' + 141 5* 1.12 24 • I... · HMW U 1 I "• -•I ll'IS <Ill . J9 21•, l"hllE pf 1 lSO 0 +1 ~II .e 4 17 !Jw \It Wllell.E US . 1llOOtNJ\;,-~
krftl• 1: .. 'j 2 t~+ 14 !Ed IM "°" """ ... HlllT A 1 • • ...... MAPCO 1 m io tJ ,, ••• "" PllllE pf' 7). Oto 5-4 -.,, S..11EI .ltl.. n ...... WhflPlt .. ' "'--lit
a...tl• J.:112' ...... 141 ·,~~·1·! ·'',ooso ... ,. ·,~ H" .. 11•FW8 2,.101•,'01 l75• 1,7s:, ~-Marcdn • ,., "-·:... PP~lllEl!~11"1· ·~,o,l!\lt+J S<>llGo 2J6.,.. ~· "'Whlr1pl l"°. 712 ll"-"" 1lallfQI J 1ff 1'.\o • 1lo "' "" .~ 1 + ~ a · 1 -MarMld 1 1J 4 '2 IS • •• nl "' • • • 1• ·-• · · · • 5uf'IC pl 2.H . . 1 ti .... WhllC .SO II 41 U.. • .... 8-pl 4.» 5 1114 .. \> IE fJf 7.• · · 13'0 4'~ ..,, Halb!ll. t.tO 4IOIO 1J""+ • .. Marlon ·_. :14 .. ,, .... + w Pl!llE! PU fO . '100 Siio. .. ·.. Sufldslr Im J 14 "'-· ••• WllllN I 1) , .. U.\o.-'"' 8-fr z.50 . 110 U-.,.. E fJfF 2.15 ". 1 '*"'· · · H•mrP 1.M 5 11 n•~ • '• Mar~C 'n SI 17 '"' • "-PhllEl pl 7 IO., r2!00 "°" + '-' SuflMll .. 140 t'-+ "'° W"lll• j·to 4 116 20 ,. 11t 8tf1G1 t 11 ah+ "9 E pl8 2 7S I 11.\o + "' HanJf> Ula ·· S 11... Mark pf 1·20 • dlJ 141 Plllls..b 1.20 1 IS lO ..... Sunilat 11 J S'-····· Wiiiiam .20 t 100 14"9. ,
Beriay • 411 Hu "'° E prl. 4 · IJ ,,..,.._"' HanJI I.Ma .. 11 14 .. \<; Marrlot .lllli 229 :11h+l 141 PhllMr 2.40 121'S ~· .... Suot'Vls ,jt 11 1°' ltl!o• '9 WllmEl'I AO S U2 U -\Ii E 12 I ,,, I~ .... E Oflt 4 1a 1 ""-lo\ Hncllmn I • • '"" + ~. Mr"'M r:to 10 •I 32~ ...... PillnO ,, 10 St ,.~. w S\lprOtl .ilO n ,,., 77\ot. "' Wllall<O..,. 10 .. 1-.-.... I . 1 9" U.,._ \lo E llfJ 1$..... 1 ,7 ..... Henclti .to • ii 13 MartM SI t2 6 JIS 14"9 • ~ Phllln pl 1 . 2 lt"-., " SllPfMG ... 1 H ~ .. WlllO. 2._, t » • ..,_ \'t
IW .n ·;.,. 11\11 + .... Ellfl 12.111 .• 0 .,.,,.,.., HalltWI 2 s S7 II ..: MaryK :,". 133 ""'• -PhllPel 220 S.700 2,-.."' SUpscp .• , ,,.. ..... Wll!Nt 3' .. •IH-....
tlM'( \,IO ti 17 J1 + \ot IE pr t.21 • • 1 14,,,_ " ~arrl&lldrJ .J 153 S041 Ill-. -Md eup • I • 35"' • ... PllP,.!!,~'!,_ ·.~ .s •'I 2144.,_ --~ Sw-1 10 1 I~ , , Wlal!ff" l 11 112 ""'" ..
:ls,Sl. l 2" •tar t.IO t 1 2~"' ,... • JJ-Ma M t m Jlf'o "° ,...,..., •• -•• S~ l.OI I U2 I~• .. WllGllf 2,JS •. I 2'11 -"'° la<kD .1' ii M 1~ '~ !Glor _.. ' JI t · .. · Htl'lllsfl .JOj 30 SJ •4-• "" sco • PltNG I .. 6 D 14...._ "" Sytwf'I p12 40 . 11 27 ... • ... Wlt<PL 2,24 S tool fO't • "' IJllHPw l.40' • Ull>-"' '°"'2.U.. t 20 •\lo Herrllll 2.26 t • 24\lt-... :tMNI l.l2 i ltl 2S • ... Pier 1 1 10 ~ .... Syf'lteut.21111 I.SJ 1'""•1'111WllCl"S1.12 1 JJ lt'H ..... llalr.111 I • 1 JS • ... tc.. 1A n IJ ~. .... Herr11 .• I IS. 1'"-+ ... JM 17.. • 11 ... Pllalltv 2 14 • ... ltYt.. .. 51'.KO. IS • " .... Wl"'O ,.., s t1 ''"' ...... A ., • U1 16\'r .... lrtl IA l7 104 ...... 1 .. Ha.-o I.JD , I) u.-.. "" Ma .. .,, 242 1"' • Pl-I s '°' u ... T T Wel"' • • 11 =~= \·_., • 2• , • ..,!"' mS 17' •"" ""''"' ""•art,,!1" 1..24 __ .•0 '°'~ n • '• Ma~ '" 3 17"'• ~ Pttnw• '"°. 1 "' m.+ .t TD1t 11 -,; .,.-12'-• "'w.:::;' '.u12 1s ™":·\ol a.lflt t.• • 1000 16\H. \lo .. " n1 ~ "' .... -• u~. M.Hll'IC l.32 Pl1118 pf 2 " U7 Jt'-. .. TECO 1• 1 JU 1• ..... 'lllloMlll .... 10 )S ~ .... ... ..C: I.to t .. ., 22 .... + ._ t 1112 ~· lllo Ha115e 1-t 1 IJ'n i,. MatiuE ,:. t :, ~; 1 .. Pilbltt 1.Ja S llfll U \li t \II Tittl 115 It 14 "' WOlwtfl IM I 2'J 1•-. ...
..... J.22 '•IOI JJtlt+ .... I .·?!! •1 !', 'n'l':I:.:·~ HwtlEI t.14 s 1 U\<o Ma1i.1 • JO J 20tl 11.\o "' Ptaf'lltt< IS .. •n . .. lfiw 2 '° • -SI .. + .. w~ • ' 2 .••• ll«tw SI 40 ' 1• U\0-lo\ .... y 'G" ch s1;:;. "' ~-y..-.. n ·-"' Mal.t • '" ... : ... Plt111r11 1611 .. 1 .......... TllW pr.... I '4w ..... wr y ..... t 11 )I ..... . .. ,... " .. 4'9t ..... El UIS JO lO .. '':"" Mlt U ""'• '-Martl;\90 M Jl .. •I l"l•l'lllOy ·12 • $7 ·~\lo Ta<lloet I '1 ~• 1'o W I.If •• J ,.... .. .. aotE• tAO ' SJ 11111• \II •"'" • t"'9 KI .U e ';: :-.. ~ May~ l.G • IU u-. ••.• l"lo~?!!,.1~ ~ ,.!~ !111-1:: T.i18"1 I I 11 30'.-'It Wy~ 10f . • J , • '"I" .... dOO ~· "' ..-:.. .... io 112 , ........ h ~I,.,,, "·, H 21--w Ma~ ,. 12 "' 211 ... ~ ""--·---Tai'" ' II '" "" WyJ'f u 10S 10 .... ....... pr 11·!! •• ! 1~+ ~ r_..,I ·: ,, ..., •141'+ _, :::. '"" ' Mc m I ID ) 2077 ISt.-"'-"" ·'° I ll5 '9\lio+ "-h .. W llf I •• • 1-+ "' WyllM M e 1:3 If -"' .-, ......-~ ,., •~ tw 9 .I .... "1 ~-~ Mc _, 2. to 104 ""' + ~ Jl'ofarkl 1. SI 1D 11-+ \II !W!dY 14,,... 21~ .. ~-Y-l-ar , .. •• • 1~• "' u • • 11 ,.,. ... .,.lone .. Ill ,, .... "" ... ,.., • .. 1 1111 l"lldrOt ., ' 41 171'1+ WI Tllll~cft " 10 10"'+ "' X'"• ) s , .. !tlU .. • t .)011 tlO ~.,.. 1.Allt .. ""'~ .... H•lrif'lt 1.J1t1• "' ....... .. ..... ptJ,60 .. ' ... ~ .. POjlTel :.Os. • llllt-" 19N1't •• • 1 •i. ..... XTftA .. ' 14 1rn .....
"" i 71t s " ·~· -. rwv 1.,. ~-. 11 ,,, .. ~ .,.'"'" .ii s 21 ,. ..... "' =°"~ g~ 1~ 'm ;:_~1~ l'ortec ,., 1 11 !~• "' TtMlr .n ' 11 10 ..... f•JeCp 1.3' 1 1 1119• "' ·1~~ d~lt7 '! :l-7:.~ ¥8fl :i.:·°"~lf ~ ~ ~=~ 1.ii'i u1 I~~=~ =8~.f 1.l1t = =• '4 =°J1i:~,~ =~"~·to; J~'= 1 ~·an l£:::~ t:rr:' ,~J 1: ==1\11 ~~ * _: . . ~ ~\t':. ~ raw :.. .. 1 1011t..... t::~~ '\t0 'J ~ •~: :;: Mc 1111 9 • • S f?"•• ..., ::8 !! ._-:g '' sJ ~ ! ~ J:t::"' i !~ • + ~ !::!";" '.: IO tAJ = ! t: ·= ,,,. 1 Q IP~ .. . AD • 1 u~..... HMstoll .26 .. 10 • • "' ~~ ·"l · i ~ 1t::: ~ "'°, ""•~ IA i ,., n + ..... T-uo • ;1 ~· .. tllf'lllf'I I •• l4J 1119+ .. •E-: 1l !! ~·. 1:: ·~...: ·:· ,, ~ .. ! ~ :::ti~ '1,i .J: sfl:; ~ tM•tr"ll .5011 .. " + ~. ocm • , .. 1 Ste ~ • "-T-pr 11 • n • "' · _.,.ta jj )N+ i. ,_. tA 17l ~· -H-lft a .2A IS IOIO 41 , .... =:."~ 2t:1f ~ ~l;:,!.1~ :~": 4·.,10°' 11 '': ~: ~ =::; .. ·: • ' :!~:: ::~ : t ~: : :r=. !1! 1~ 1~.,.. \, • ..,., .. 2·°' • 1" .. ._. .. .......... "'. 1 .: :-.. G-at ..,estera ·1raias ._.fi .... !~1 .• ~~"',.-•• • .... , m ''If mh II HIVett :1;12 SJ 1 .,. '°"'<M 1 1 IOS '7~ • ~1.:C IJ 4'D f~:t'i; ·~ .... 8' • •i. fl 11 . • tL. + t "l1,,.. • IO t • 21\to .. .-WrTea l.12 • JD n '-"''"'"" t " 11 st ~ ..
,, • .1. ... a::-+~ !f • SJt; '" H IW 1a t ,.. f! -..... =~1,'f. 1•alt7'r.~ + \'t l"to<.IO 411! t .. ~ at~+ llt
• -1 ,. .. iii t · 'fl ! "' ::..""'~" 11 • '' ~ ;~~: ~ "" .. ;.r 10 •:., , ..... ! "' ,.,. ....... 't~-. l.!..:..~t. .~ LOS ANGELES (A.P) -Great • • ' ., . Ii I ~ ..... I II ~·"' "---. .. 11·,... 10' """ ..... ' '1 '14'"1: w • 8 i h tb '· • -k ~ "" '" • i•" ii=llf'l10 • • "-+ ... ._.,... "' 1 " ,. .. "" • ·~' 114 ""-~.. ff.em av np u e .. ra••· ......... ~ .... 9tAUi.. I • ... " ••• $1) n-.. • ._ ~'""" ti ' I"""•'"" ~''U 't ·m .... ... number of offlcli of any •Yinll and. •• S 1J "'::. ~ Pl'lll: ..,1 : : a1 .... ~ ..., ~1 )'= : .J1 D~: ~ Nill~J " ·: ,f,. :ji?' ~ ~w =-a-t~ .. ' l111i ·; · i.i an in thi eta• with 180 att.r its MA,,1:JI ·'ftr : ~ ~ ~1'....2-..... ~~,? ~ 1L..-"' ==lfw.~·; >fa~:;:::" H '·· l ~··\'i merpr with Northern Callfomia ·.;u '~ii:;·~~ ,:='•'If! tJ~~-~ m.rt1: ·t a~: .. ~ t·~ ~-. 8ntle ~111111~,,.f : t: :i • " ... ~ , .~ ' tt ••~• "' ~ f•! '* 1~ : "' •• n ... .. uinila· II a aw-OI two Melthy u:. r 1 -~ "i' . ~ ··r "I .... ~. ,; • ., ... __ ::; lit:= ~i.'l= =~bt!i
" li : :: '...... ~ • , -~ • ! .t.:. •" ti , ..... "-of U..t wu11m. ··1 -;:: .,.,, as::ll .J' ,, .... ·:~;;-·:: :-. :·~ .~-,.a:~--a:: ·~':' .. u:.;: .~': ~·~ f\l "J ~ 't it:.: '11 =.;. = la. ......... -......... .. ' 11 ......... • ..... , ~ -u ,,~ ...... -_..._ _ ...... • tl IMI ltle+ ... ,.... • ..,.. -.._ . ' • -..... --·~
' . ., '
State utility
faces penalty
t . ' SAN DIJXlO (AP) -The utility aupplytnc power IOI the San Dlitao ar. acted ''imprudently" when ft
enoatd 1n • aeilet of montY·lollna oil twapt with a
Uttle:'known Houlton oU dealer three yean ..,, It wu
reported.
A atate adm.ln1ttraUve law Judie reached that
concluaton, endlnl a year•a testimony and study into
the bunaled tnnucUona, the San Dte10 Union
reported.
Accordtna to the new1paper, the Judi•
recommended that the atate Public UtlUUea
Corn.mi.-ion reduce enef'8)' bUla in San Oleao by f4.4
million to remove any pcmibWty that the $37 million
Jomes were made up by iocre8led rates to SDG&E
customers.
United matching cuts
-·· LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -United Alrlinel Mid i1
will ma~h Pacific Southwest Airlinet fare cuta on
most. but not all, United flighta on competitive routes.
PSA announced that effective Aug. 3 it will cut
fares on flight• between Los Angeles and San
Francisco airpor11 to $45 from $69 and the limited·
availability discount fare of $49. The airline also
announced similar reductions in flights to San Diego,
Phoenix, TuC90n and }leno.
Western and AirCal inunediately responded by
announcing plans to ma~h the lowered fares on routes
where they compete with PSA.
Power pool started
-LOS ANGELES (AP) -The cities of Burbank,
Glendale and Pasadena have joined Loe Angeles in a
municipal power pool that utility officials estimate will
reduce electricity costa by $10 million a year.
The pool will serve 1.4 million customers in the
Los Angeles area, the utilities said.
Low auto interest
DETROIT (AP) -Low 12.7 percent interest rates
are available for buyers of 1981 and 1982 Datsun
trucks in California, according to Nissan USA,
distributor of Datsun and Nissan cars and tn.acks.
The firm, based in Carson, announced it will offer
the loan financing rate th.rough Sept. 30. The current
interest rate is 18 percent. Nissan said.
Coast I irm declines
For Better Living Inc. of San Juan Capistrano,
reports lower eami.nga for the six months ended June
26.
Net income was $82,000, or 9 centa per aha.re,
compared with net income of $288,000, or 33 cents, for
the comparable period of 1981.
·.
The quarter ended June 26 resulted in net income
of $138,000. or 16 cents. as compared with net income .•
of $256,000, or 29 cents, for the comparable 1981
quarter.
Arco move pays off?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Atlantic Rich.field's
decision to drop ita credit card business in favor of
lower wholeeale prices appears to be paying off in
higher volume aalea, oil industry analys t Dan
Lundberg aays.
Los Angela-hued Aroo ended its credit aervice in
early March, telllna c:uatomers lower gas prices would
offaet lost convenience. Charge sales cost the company
$73 million laat year, Aroo aid .
C.Orponte offidala won't say what impact the
move has had on ules. Lundberg, who writes a
weekly newsletter on the industry, said they moved
the company from fifth to second in California's
competitive market during May.
·pan Am loses $56.2 million
NEW YORK (AP) -Pan American World
Airways reported continued mounting l~ In the
second three months of the year while Trans World
C.Orp. reported a $41.6 million ga.in and American
Airlines recorded a slight profit of $466,000. Pan Am
said it 106t $56.2 miUion in the quarter.
Gold, metals quotations
Gol,d
By The Associated Pre11
Selected world gold prices today:
London morning fixing: $352.13, up $9.23.
London afternoon fixing: $351.35, up $8.45 .
Parts afternoon fixing: $347.73, up $7.36.
Frukfart fixing: $352.98, up $6.18.
.w
In
Zaricb late afternoon: $35U50, up $8.50 bid.
$352.25 asked. ·
Handy & Harman: (only daily quote) $351.35, up $8A~ t Englebard.: (only daily quote) $351.35, up $8.45.:
Enf.ebard: (only daily quote) fabricated $368.92.
up $8.8 . ~
Meta/.s
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metal;):
prica today: 1.!p
Copper 72~-75 cents a pound, U.S. destinations,z,., i.eaa 28-29 oenca a pound. .. n
Zlac 37-40 Cents a pound, delivered. M
Tia -6.1&79 Metals Week composite lb .
Al1millam 78·77 cent.a a pound, N.Y.
Merary $3!W.00-$370.00 per flask. o
Plattawm $284.00·$290.00 tl'Oy ounce, N.Y.
S.ilver
Handy & Hannan, $6.930 per troy ounce.
Goldcoina
Indy's top rookie
Hickman succumbs
Prom AP dlepatcltet
MILWAUKEE -Jlm HJckman, • the 1982 Indlanapollt 500 Rook.le of
the Year, died early Sunday o·f
injuries suffered in a cruh during
practice for the Bettenhawien 200 at WllcotWn
State Fair Park.
Hickman, ,39, of Chamblee, Ga., waa
practicing Saturday night for Sunday's race
when his CQsworth-po\vered March tacer
slammed into the ooncrete wall in the first tum
of the mile oval.
It took safety officlala about 15 minutes to
pry the road racing veteran and former Air Force
fighter pQot out of the mangled wreck.age. He
wu pronounced dead abou~ 12 houn later in a
Milwaukee hoepit.al.
Dr. Steve Olvey, medical director for
Championship Auto Racing Teams. said
Hickman died of massive head injuries.
Quote of the day
"I do what.eyer I want to, I live whe~ver
I want to, and lf I don't like the city I live
in, I can always change it. Or if I don't like
the area, I can always change thaL I can
change ~rs. Basically. I do pretty much
what I want. You can say what you want.
There'"s no pressure. I'm not afraid of
anything." -Steve Rllodes, formerly
Slavek Rotk.iewlc1, a Polish Olympian who
defected to the United States three years
ajlO.
Oliver fuels rally In Expos win
Al Oliver capped a three-run Ill rally in the seventh inning with a
run-scoring single as Montreal came
from behind to defeat St. Louis, 5-4
Sunday. The win pushed the Expos to within
four galhes of first place in the National League
East . . . Elsewhere in the NL, Terry Kennedy
collected three hits and Slxto Lezcano doubled in
a pair of runs as San Diego held on to beat
Cincinnati for the third
straight time, 8-6 . . . em·
Madlock'• tie-breaking home
run with two outs in the top
of the 10th' inning lifted
Pittsburgh past New York,
4-3 . . . Leon Darllam hit a
two-run, first-inning homer
and Chicago went on to snap
an eight-game losing streak at
the expense of Philadelphia,
ouvr11 7-2, before a crowd of 57,652
. . Jack Clark hit his 20th home run of the
season, a two-run shot in the top of the 10th
inning, to help San Francisco claim a 4-2 win
over Houston. Greg Minton. 7-4, the third San
Francisco,patcher. earned the victory. while
Frank LaCorte, 0-4, was tagged with the defeat.
Lietzke holds off challengers
Bruce Lietzke nursed home a l!I
dwindling lead into a two-stroke
victory Sunday in the Canadian Open
Golf Tourname nt at Oakville,
Ontario. The triumph, his second in·this national
championship, was Lietzke's first of the season
and markf!d the sixth oom1ecutive year in which
he has won at least once . . . Long-hitting
Beth Daniel fired a sizzling 8-under-par 64,
equalling the tournament record and overtaking
Sally Little to capture the LPGA tournament in
Denver. Daniel. 25. wielded a hot putter to finish
with a four-round total of 276, 12 under par,
wbich also tied the tournament record Daniel set
in wanning this event in 1980. The victory was
Daniel's fourth of the year and earned her $30,-
000.
From Page C1
Gaettl'• btut give Twins win
Gary OaettJ powered a home run Ill
in the toJ> of the ninth which turned
out to be the deciding blow a1
Minneeota outlasted Oaklahd, 8-7
Sunday. Ex-Angel Tom Bruu1ky and Guy
Ward had aluaged homen in the eeventh to help the Twins wln the aeeaaw battle ...
Ellewhere in the American League, Lee May'•
pinch sinp! tJ1ggered a four-run etA.,hth-lnning
rally that carried Kansas
City to a 4-2 victory and
four -game swee p of
Baltimore ... Rookie
Dave Ro1tetler drove in all
four Texas runs with a pair of
homers, including a tle-
breaklng three-run shot ln
the sixth inning, to give Texas
a 4-2 triumph over New York
. . . Harold Baines' two-run homer in the fifth
inning following a two-out error helped Chicago
turn back Boston for the third straight time, 4-2
... Loa Wltltaker highlighted a 17-hit attack
with a three-run homer as Detroit snapped a
four-game losing streak by beating Toronto, 8-5
. . .Don Money drove in three runs with a double
and single and Gorman Tlloma1 added a two-run
single to help Milwaukee to a 7-2 victory in the
second game of its double-header with
Cleveland. The Indians won the first game, 4-1,
as Ed Wlllt1on and Du Splllner checked the
Brewers on four hits. .
Plumer races to win In Venezuela
Polly PIDJDer of University High •
was a winner in the 1,500 meters
Sunday as the Junior Pan American
Athletic Championships came to an
end in Barquisimeto, Venezuela. Plumer won the
event in 4:23.07, as the United States captured 23
gold medals, 15 silver and 13 bronze to handily
win the oompetition over second-place Canada
and third-/'lace Cuba . . . Debbie Unser,
daughter o three-time Indianapolis 500 winner
Al Unser, was killed early Sunday when the
dune buggy she was riding in flipped at a state
park near Truth or C.Onsequences, N.M ., state
police said . . . Darrell Waltrip fought off a
challenge at the finish line by Baddy Baker to
win the Talladega 500 NASCAR Grand National
stock car race. Meanwhile, in Milwaukee, Tom
Sneva, getting a break when Rick Mean' car
broke 'down 53 laps from the end, scored un easy
victory in the Bettenhausen 200 lndy-ar·race at
Wisconsin State Fair Park
Televlslon, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: .,.... v.,.... v excellent; v v v
worth watching; .,.....,..... fair; .,.... forget it.
e 5:30 p.m ., Channel 7 """"""""
Baseball: Montreal at Philadelphia.
Announcers: Al Michaels, Howard C.OseU
and Bob Uecker.
Montreal will attempt to tighten the
National League F.a.st race some more when they
send Bill Gullickson (8-8) against Larry
Christenson (6-5) of the Phillies. Philadelphia
leads the F.a.st by one game, while Montreal is
four games back.
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m.,
KABC (790); Minnesota at Angels, 7:30 p.m.,
KMPC (710).
ANGELS ROUT SEATTLE 1
• • •
however, is making sure they
don't get any more. Hell, they
were up 8-0 before we even had
a chance.''
Angel pitcher Geoff Zahn was
the recipient of the offensive
explosion . Zahn, in winning his
first Rame since July 9 (No. 11
Drug test planned
Chargers to defy association directive
LA JOLLA (AP) -Defying a
National Footba 11 League
Players' Association directive,
t he San Diego C hargers
announced Sunday they have
launched a drug testing program
to "clear the people who are
clean and help those who need
help.''
Chargers' owner Gene Klein,
whoee club waa heavily fined for
a. 1973 drua scandal, said the
object of the mandatory tesUns
will be to "get all this behind UI
. . . pt rid. of this monkey!'
Prior to Klein'• announcement,
veteran running back Chuck
Mundt! read a mat.ement to the
media admitting he had a drug
problem, but promlaed "I do not
Intend to ever uae drup again."
Muncie, who tied an NFL
recol'd last year with 19
touchdowns ruthin1 1
acltnowledaed apendin1 an
umpeclfled period of t1Jne at •
dnll '*'* tor '"Valua*" .m ~··
I• eno&ber: eurprl1ln1
develODmeftt. veteran defemive tedde.il.oWe ~)cher announced
hl1 reUre"'ent. A 1even.year ttart.er, KeJcMr, 28, hM been in
the doahouae with coach Don
C.Oryell over a weight problem.
Klein's decision to besin drug
testing comes after the NFLP A
warned NFL team docton that
they face malpractice suits if
testln~ ia done without the
playent conaent.
Klein aald there will be "time
to time ltteeftinC of players, the
t1mee to be eet by inanaeement."
He added that players who fail
the tests and refuse treatment
will face .. very, very 1tric\
diadpUnary acdon .••
I'd Ouwy Nn...PA executive
dkector, tokl The AP that the
tcreerunl .:PfOITam ii "clHrly
Wepl'' and ' YoWed dae. •Yer9' unkJn wOuJd llek ID ~
to haft It tllnninated Man Unfair
Jaboi'~.
11tn addillon to beln1._a~
ilmlllon Of privecy, lt ii an Wlpl
~ ol wOrtdrw. eond.idolll.'' ~ liJd f!Ombll bcmelll .. w~u.c.,.,..,
lie ... ,..,. ....... Wiiii
taldftll the dip to fOftl9 the ....
of unnaly.la and *"' •Una Into curr•nt n•10UaUone
betw•n tM HFLPA: anct the
ownen.
overall against five losses),
pitched 7 ~ innings before tiring
and givinB way to Luis Sanchez
in the eighth.
As for the explosion itself,
Brian Downing had three hits
while Rob Wilfong, Reggie
Jackson, Fred Lynn and
DeCinces had two each .
"You ju.It hope four pitching
can keep the bal down Ion!
enough to make a run at them,'
said Bulling of the Angela.
"Everybody can be pitched to.
We just had trouble pltc~ to
certain hitters on the Angels.'
Seattle isn't the· only team this
season that has encountered that
problem.
PUNCHED OUT -Home plate umpire Randy
Marsh makes no mistake in calling out Dodger
base-runner Ken Landreaux Sunday in the
-
uw.,.,.....
first inning. Dodgers, however, went on to beat
Atlanta for the fourth straight time, 9-4.
Powerful showing by U.S.
Americans capture four of six. at Pre-Olyi:npic Regatta
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Oiiltr Hot 8oe""9 WrtW
LONG BEACH -U.S . sailors dominated the
first race of the Pre-Olympic Training Regatta
Sunday, winning first place in four of the six
classes.
The second of the three Olympic type regattas
to acquaint world sailors with the conditions they
will face in 1984, drew 205 boats from 20 countries,.
The opening race was sailed in light winds and
under overcast skies in the ocean off the Long
Beach breakwater.
U.S. winners were Steve Benjamin and crew
Chris Steinfeld in the 470 Class; Vince Brun and
BOA.TING
),
Toddy Cozzens in Stars; Ed Baird with Tucker
F.dmonson and Larry Klein ln the Soling Class. and
Randy Smythe and· Jay Glaser in the Tornado
catamarans. John Loveday and Jonathon Ward of Great
Britain, led the Flying Dutchman C~ around the
course and Paola Semeraro o~ Italy scored a wire-
to-wire win in the one-man Finn Class.
The Regatta continues for seven days with one
race each day.
t'-Max overall Dana Point winner
V-Max, skippered by John Hooper of the host
club was the overall Perfonnance Handicap Fleet
winner Sunday in Dana Point Yacht Club's Dana
Days Regatta.
Second overall was Cheap Trick, Byron
Watson, Capistrano Bay Yacht Club, and third was
Randy Tar. Stf1ve F.quina. DPYC.
Class wirufera:
CLASS A -1. Randy Ter. SI...,. Equine. DPYC; 2. Seedora. Alan
8rOUQhlOn. DPYC; 3. IW# Wave. Bob MelMlle, OP.YC. CLASS B -1 V·Max; 2 ~ Tric;lt; 3. Moody Blue. Mille Hlnlon.
Capo BYC. CRUISING CLASS -1. Condor, Wlllle Lazio, unall.ched; 2. SN
Lynx. Walt« Link, OPYC; 3. Longa, Ed Andrade. Capo BYC.
LID0·14 -1. EYan Malanoell)', OPYC; 2 Dave Latten. Kint
M•rtvw YC 3. Paul Frazter. OPYC.
CORONAD0-15 -1. Bob Andereon, Del Rey YC: 2 Connie
Theobald, ORYC: 3 Benny Sctlwegler, DRYC.
SAILBOAAOS - 1. Kent Kenlrotin, UNlteched; 2. Gerry Allen,
DPYC. 3. PllUI Hengttet>eek. un&li.cn.d
SABOT A -1 Kenny Kr-. OPVC. 2 Ale1t Jol\naon, OPVC, 3.
Mena Rubio, Capo BYC. SABOT B -1. Trey 0-ry, DPYC: 2. Tom WelM Jr., DPVC: 3
John Blen9)'. DPYC.
Wake eaptares Hoble-33 re11att11
Louie Wake of Capistrano Beach won the first
Hobie-33 one-design regatta in a three-race series
sailed off Newport Beach Saturday and Sunday.
Ten boats turned out for the evenL
Trophy winnen In order of flnlah: 1. Louie Weka. Ceplatrmno BMcll,
8 point•: 2. Bob ~. Miiiion HRla, M\; 3. Hobie Alter. Capialrerl() Beeeh, ~: 4. RobtMe Hllnea, San Diego, 11: 5. Aon Maytleld, Marine
del Rey. 12¥.: 8. l"letcher Olaon. Newpoft &eecti. 15; 7. HWY)' Reed, ~ Beech. 21; s. Dan Cetpenter, SM1tl•. Wun. 23, 9. N9al
Eater!)', Salt LAke City, 29: 10. Kart Sc:hqpp, Long 8Mc:h, 28.
S•ella B.,.nett t• Tres 6era
Tres Gordo, skippered by Nancy Jo Price,
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club won the Sheila
Burnett Memorial Trophy In the Orange Coast
Women's Racing Aaociation sailed Saturday out of
South Shore Yacht Club. Price was the winner In
the spinnaker class sailed in Performance Handicap
Racina Fleet yachts. \
Winner in the non-spinnaker class wa Sirikit,.
Beach Yacht Club and third was Frenesi II. Al
Carlin. CBYC.
Blank a winner at regattll
Eighty-eight boats in seven classes turned out
Sunday for Lido Isle Yacht Club's Midsummer
Regatta sailed over courses inside the harbor.
Troohy winners: l"100-14A -1. Paul Blenk, South Sh«• Yacht Club, 2 Bleine
ThOrne. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club.
YC llD0-148 -1. Don Wiese. Balboa YC; 2 Bruce Conklin, Lido ....
SABOT A -1. Paul N0<ing, Huntington Harbour YC, 2 Megen
Tlngler. llYC: 3. CUMl\<lra Smeltzer. Newport Harbor VC: 4 Stllfling
Coberly. BYC
SABOT B -I. Mark Franco. UYC; 2 Cer1 Grodadl. llYC. 3. Eric
Sluttky, llYC SABOT c -1. Wlffle Fr9drickton. eve. 2. K9Ylf'I Stem. l!ICYC: 3.
Jutle Rogefa. LIYC. SABOT C.2 -1. Jory TWlat. llYC; 2 Vincent Plllldino, LIYC: 3
Chris Miiier, BYC; 4 Peter Grodrdl, llYC; 5 L8nCe Shoemaker. Balboa
laland YC. •
SABOT NOVICE -1. Jonn RI--. llYC; 2. Julte Samgstllf, UVC
Masquerade, Sunshine llnlsb llrst
Huntington Harbour Yacht Club wound up its
four-race Bolsa Chica Series Friday and Saturday
W1th races around the buoys off Seal Beach.
Overall series winners:
PHRF·A -1. Muque<ed•. J Thawley.C. ~. Ventura YC; 2.
Entourage. Nat Wilaon, Long Beach YC. 3 Glvno, Gary Hemctle,
LBYC
PHRF-8 -1. Sunllhlne. Dennis Humphrey, Cetlfitlo 8e9Ctl YC; 2. Excalibur. Al Janee, w .. 1 Coast YC; 3. Sereneta. Deva RU$llglan, Long
Beaeh YC. CATALINA·27 -1 Joy Ride, l .. Krltey, Seal 8-:11 YC.
CAl-20 -1. Lory l ... Ken Hodgea. Alatnlloa Bay YC; 2 Niil, Nie*
Condos. s 1 eve
Trett victorious;
Vance denied 200
Elmer Trett of Oxford, Ohio, claimed the crown
in the top fuel classification at the National
Motorcycle Racing Association's national
championship series at the Orange County
International Raceway Sunday.
Before a crowd of 4,850: Terry Vance of La
Palma was hoping to become the first to exceed 200
miles per hour, but a broken blower belt in the
finals limited him to 132.54 and a second-place
finish to Trett.
Vance just missed cr&cking 200 with a plus-198
showing both Saturday and Sunday. Meanwhile, it
was the first win for Trett this year.
Earlier, Rtm C.Ollins out of Huntington Beach
was beaten in the first round. C.Ollins was debuting
in his new Honda-sponsored Banlestar, the longest
bike in the history of the sport with a wheelbase
136 inches without the wheelie bar.
In the Funny Bike classification, Craig Bums
of Canoga Park was the victor, besting Houston's
Terry Kizer in the f inal.s.
Meanwhile. Larry l:ook from Oregon was the
Pro Stock winner, defeating Dave Schultz from
Fort Myers, Fla. It was the first NMRA race of the
year for Cook, who beat Bob Carpenter ln the
semifinals.
Schultz had earlier knocked off defending
champion Terry Vance in his semifinal.
..Ued by Debra Bolteau, Voy•n Yacht Club. s~f~/.. =~ f. :110~~.noy Jo Price, Bahia Orange County ousted
Corlntlllln YC: 2. lel'I ~· K.eh)' Adanwon. 09M ~VO: •
3. ~~K~LA89 ~ 1. k1t1ct1, DeOf"a ~.VON" LOS ANGELES -The season for Orange
vc: 2. Flf'ecr .... o.bble Glezler, vvo: 3. a..dora.. Jtnel BrouoMon. County came to a cloee Sunday In the United Staie. ~c. Develop~nt League after a 130-118 1ett>.ck to
South Dav In the first round of the playolfa.
Ken Bardsley, from Cotta .Ceta Htah,
ef\)oyed a came-hllh,. points, while 8.nta Ana'a
Harmony. aldppeM by Jerry Moulton, South Rob Lucu ~ 1:>. tk!t OC couldn't OWlll'llllM a
Shore Yacht Club won CJ.ala A ln SSYC'a Crew of poor at.art which had them tralllnc ·~ the halt,
Two ArCJund Catalina lllahcl ~. 71-56. -~
••rm••Y •I•• C.tlflll .. raee
ci .. B wlruMtr .., .. a.piriufffn, Mllecl by Oranae COUnty'a'Meion endl witn a M record.
Rutty Allen, SSYC, and the Ocean Racina the last iwo ~ ~ at the huMla or
Catamaran wlnner wu White Knuckl~r. Bob Bay. Oimer,WlndjllnmenY-.:hlOub.. ..--:.__---~...;....:..._._ __ -:--~777_;._----;-~~""'!"':
IAiwlil' Nelerdd t.lr• .._,,.
CABIULLO B&AOI -lean lAW' NMlill
was tti• winner of the C1l-JI naUon1I c~p.ttali&lld~aftd&mdtr
out OI CabrtDo 8Meh Y.eht OUb.
R...,....-up _... Dindellon. Bob Gnffln 8ea1
•
l
. I
f
'
CAUGHT -Angel ba.se1"4nner Ron Jackson is
thrown out at second base as Seattle's Julio
DEATH NDllCIS
RAND Ca., Shirley Anderson of
ROBERT HAND, a Santa Ana , Ca., Pat
resident of Costa Mesa, Ca. Cardwell of Sacramento, Ca.
Passed away on July 28. and Jud)' Gaichell of Illinois
1982 at the age of 71. He iJ and 12 grandchildren. Mn.
survived by his wife Ethel Dunlap had been a Costa
Hand of Cost.a Meu, Ca., 1 Mesa resident for <M years.
aon Jerry Hand of San Alao a 23-year member of
Fra.nci8co Ca l daughter Women of the Mooee, Santa
Judy Ha~t of1 Huntington Ana Lodge No. 65. Friends
Beach, Ca., 1 brother Bill may call at Pierce Brothel"I
Hand of Costa Mesa, Ca. and Bell Broedway Mortuary on
1 sis1er Barbara Morgan of Tuesday, August 3, 1982
Costa Mesa. Ca. and 5 from 4:00PM to 9:00PM.
grandchildren. Memorial Funez:al services will be held
1ervicea will be held on on Fnday, August 6, 1982 at
Tuesday August 3 1982 at 9:30AM at Balboa Pavilion
lO·OOAM •t the' Pierce aboard the "Pavilion Br~thers Bell Broadway Queen.'' Pierce Brothers Bell
Chapel with Rev. Charles D. Broadway M o rtuary
Clark of the First United dlrectors . .,"°..._ER
M e t h o d I a t C h u r c h ~rur a o Cf i ci a ti n g . P r i v a t e DAVID B. SCRIPTER, a
Interment. Pierce Brothers resident of Huntington
Bell Broadway Mortuary Beach, Ca. Passed away on directors July 29, 1982. He is survived
· by ~ wife Arlyne, daughter DORRELL E I a i n e Z e m k e a n d 3 WILL I AM p ALE grandchildren Chuck.
DORRELL, a resident of Roxann e and Cynthia
Newport Beach, Ca. Passed Bellington. Services will away .on July 31, 1982. held on Moncjay, August 2,
Survived by hts wife 1982 at 2:00PM at the
Johnnie Mae Dorrell, 2 Harbor Lawn Memorial
sisters Mrs. Gertrude Stovall Chapel with. Entombment
of ~ta Mesa, Ca. and Mary ae r vices 1 m mediate I y
Louise Duvall. of Hesperia, following. Services under
Ca. and 2 nieces and 2 the direction of Harbor
nephews. Mr. Dorrell was a L a w n -M o u n t 0 11 v e
member of the Knights of Mortuary of Costa Mesa.
Pythias #85 of Tustin, Ca. 540-5554.
Services will be held on VINCENT
Wednesday, August 4. 1982 G OR D 0 N ALL A N
at 2:00PM at Pacific View VINCENT resident of
Mortuary Chapel, interment Westminst~r Ca. Passed
will follow at Paci~ic,..Yi.!._w Jt.Way on July 3o. 1982. He is
Memorial Park. Visu.at~ s~ved by his wife Sally
will be on Tuellday, August and brother Douglas of
3, 1982 from 9:00AM to Canada. Services will be
9:00PM at Pacif~c V.iew held on Tuetday, August 3.
Mortuary. Contr1but1on1 1982 at 2:00PM at the
may be made to the William Harbor Lawn Memorial
Dorrell Memorial Fund, C hai,iel. Final interment
Harbor Fellowship Church services will be held at
190 23rd St., Costa Mesa. Ca. Cedar Hill Cemetery. New
Pacific View Mortuary B~wick, Canada. Services
directors. under the direct.Jon of Baltz
DUNLAP Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill
MARY M. DUNLAP, a Westcliff Chapel Mortuary
resident of Cana Mesa, Ca. of Costa Mesa. 646-9371.
Passed away on July 31, WIMPRESS
1982. Survived by her SUSANNE WIMPRESS,
husband Johnny Dunlap of former resident of San
Costa M esa. Ca., 4 sons Marino. Ca Beloved wife of
Melvin L . Dunlap of R. Norman Wlmpress of
Roseburg, Oregon, David Huntington Harbour,
Wesley Dunlap aud Herbert mother o( Pamela Mitchell
J. Dunlap both of Phoenix. of Irvington, New York,
Arizona and Dareyl E Cecily Farquhar of San
Dunlap of Coeta Mesa. Ca .. 3 Clemente. Ca. Richard N.
daughters Kathlee Marien Wimpress. Jr. of Houston,
Owen and Betty Lee Dunlap Texas, also 1urv1ved by 1
both of Costa Mesa, Ca .. and brother B. Arnold Otis of
Sara nlen Billon of Nampa. Pebble Beach, Ca. and 4
Idaho, al8o her father Sam grandchildren. Funeral
Frame of Santa Ana, Cal., 5 services will be held on
alaten Zell Pierce of Tustin, Monday, August 2, 1982 at
Ca .. Lou Carr of Santa Ana. 2 : O OP M a t S t. J a mes
r
l.ALTllHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTC:Llff' CH.Af'EL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtHCI UOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAlY
627 Main St
Hunt1nQton &ach
5J6.-&S39
PACIRC v•w
WIMOllA&. PMK
' Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel·Cremalorv
35ClO P11<:1flc View Drive
Newport Bell'Cl"I
~()()
Episcopal Church, South
"'I Pasadena. Ca. Private
intennent. In lieu o{ flowers
donations to Scripps-College,
Claremont, Ca. Turner &
Stevena, Alhambra ,
directol"I.
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
BIRMINGHAM, EnaJand
(AP) -JOC!elya Caclhry,
36, a member of Parliament
and part of the cbooolate
candy family, died Saturday.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -
Floyd Dewey GoJnrald, 84,
vice chairman of Ethyl C.Orp.
and chairman of Its board for
many yean, dJed Satu.rct.y.
McCotlMtal MOITU.&lllS
Leoune Beecl"I
494-9'15
• L9Qun1 Hills
768-0933
San Juan Cep1strano
•95-1776
HMIOI LAW'6-MT. OltY ..
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Nick L1ca11 84, • atar of
vaudeville and ee.rly taJ.k1ni
(ilme, died Wec:lneday. The
P.tar~ tnNb9dor ~ euch hlt tu.nee .. "Tip
Toe Throu1h the Tulipll
With Me" and "Bye, Bye
Blackbird" and perfomied In
movies durln1 the
1920s, '308, and '4-0I.
~ .... ,._..." ~ "8rY
Cruz handles the throw S u nday.
Kuhn decision
expected soon
COOPERSTOWN. N .Y . (AP) -Bowie Kuhn
says a special meeting of National LeaRue ownen
will clear up a question as to whether Kuhn has
been baaeball commissioner too long.
Last week, lt was learned that three NL clubs
-the New York Mets, the Houston Aatroe and the
St. Louis Cardinals -had asked for a apecial
meeting Aug. 17 in San Dlego to try to oust Kuhn.
Major league owners will hold their regular joint
summer meetings the following two daya in the
city.
In a Saturday interview with Gt!orge Grande
of F.sPN, Kuhn said: "the meetings ln San Diego
will obviously be very important. They'll probably
resolve the pending question of Bowie Kuhn."
Kuhn said his status ln the $12,000-a-year-poet
has been in limbo since the baseball meetings last
December, "and it's been hanging, as far as I'm
concerned, for too long. We ought to get it resolved.
The air should be cleared."
Under voting procedures in the Major League
Agreement, a one-fourth minority from either
league can prevent renewal of the commissioner's
contract . Kuhn's second seven-year term expires in
August 1983.
In the interview, which will be aired on
F.sPN's "Inside Baseball" show this evening, Kuhn
was asked if he felt the owners had dealt him a fair
hand.
"I have no complaints, no criticisms, no petty
charges to make," said Kuhn, in Cooperstown to
attend Sunday's Hall of Fame inductions.
"I'm proud of the fact that after all the
incredible difficulties I've faced in my 14 years, and
all the discipline I've had to impose in
baseball ... that a great majority of the owners, an
overwhelming majority, areWirmly supporting
Bowie Kuhn," he said.
Kuhn faced perhaps his stiffest challenge in
1975 when Charles 0 . Finley, then owner of the
Oakland ,\'s, led a move to oust the commissioner.
With the strong support of the late Walter
O'Malley. then·owner of the Loe Angeles Dodgen,
Kuhn sidestepped the attac=k:.:...· --------. Ml.IC ll>T1CE
Garvey
repeats
threat
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Ed Garvey, executive
director of the National
Football League Players'
Association, reiterated
Sunday that players
wouldgoonstrikeunlea
owners provide a
percentage of gross
receipts for salaries and
benefits.
During an int,ervlew
on ABC.TV's "This
Week With David
Brinkley," Garvey said
the union will continue
I ts demand for a pay
scale based on a
.....au .
MOTlCI 0# 1'Ml8TWra &AU
YOU AM ~olJ:lr UNDO A
DllD Of TRU8T DATID
JAMI.MY 20, 1m. UNUl8 YOU TAKI ACTION TO ll'ROTICT
YOUR ll'ROftlllTY, IT MAY 81
SOLD AT A~ 8AU. • YOU NOD AN ~TIOM 0# THE
NA T\Atl Of nts PROCllOtN
AOAINIT YOU.I....!.~U IHOULD
CONTACT A LAWTtft.
On Auguat 27, 1982. at 11:00
A. M., Statewide F oraclo1ura
Sarvloas: Inc. u duly apt>Olntad TrustH under and put1uant to
Dead ol TNSI r900fdad FebNely II. 11182, • Instr. No. 82~78, of Olllolal Record•, nacutad by Jam•• Lewranc. Wada and Jay
Marton Wade, 81 INlt<n. In the
oftlca of the County Rec«dar of Oranoa County, State of Cellfomta. Will SELL A'T PUBLIC AUCTION
TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
:payable .. time of .... In lawful
money of the Unit.CS Stat•) at: South front entrance to tlla Orange County Old Cour1hovM. City of s.ni. Ana. State of Clllfomlll. 1111
right, title and lntaraet ~ to and now Mid b)l 11 under Mid Dead of Tnm In Iha property .ituat.CS In
Mid County and State dtecnbed as:
Lot 23, Block 234 of Lake Trect, recorded In bOoll 4, P9 13 of Ml1callanaou1 Mapa, Official
Aeoordl In Iha olllCle °' tM County percentage of the gross. Recorder, Orang• County.
"The concept ls Clltfomla,
n e a 0 t I a b 1 e • • The atrHt addr•H and other n o -n ,.. • c:ommon daelgnatlOn, If any. of the
Garvey said. rMI property deecf\bad aw.. 11
The union hu been ~ '° be: 303-303~ Mth
kin f ,..,. f Str•I. ~ a.en. CA. as g or •N percent o The unclaralgned Truat•• all revenues, but Garvey dl1c111m1 any 1111>111ty for any
aaid that figure was open =r=-' ~ =~
to di8cuasion. any, .._ '*'*'· . ·
He added that if Said Hie w111 b• made, but
owners do not nean~-te without oovanant or warranty, a-w. upreae Oii lmplltd, reoatdlne tltt., on the percent.ace lllue, pa 111 nlDfl, 01t thOUml>rWIOlt. to
then the players' only f: tM ,.,.... ... llftncilpel """ot
option would be a strike. Tru:."!~~~ .. 11( =~ :!
He said even though a ~~Mid noMC•>.1 :::D:I
few veteran• have 0{"'J;u11, ,t::~:rg•• and
resigned from the union, ~ of 111a T"*91 ano o1 111a lt atlll had enou1h lfll•t• or .. t•cl 1>y 1alc1 Deed 01
aupport "to shut thlnp ~~ .!'911et ~.7:-o'~ clown... The ~under ... OMcl of TNet ._.... • .--0 and rtaJC "°'1CE dallveract to the undetalgn-4 a
PICTmOUe WM written ~Ion of ~ and
MAim ITA~ DenlMd for ..... lltd a Wrltten
The .....-...... ---........., Notloe ol OIMM Ind l!IMUOft to ~-;"'• ~---1--...... The~_.., eald Menu.IV• Cemetery
J Ct~tort 1~ G1sfflr AWi .
Cotta Mesa
540-SSS4
Hotlol "' ~ and .... to IMPORTS IY RONt.~111lel10 be,..,_ In lie C10Wfty
N E W Y 0 R K (AP) =:-•Id. N9Wpoft leectl. CA ....,.. tM ,_. ~ .. IOoelecl
VWlmir ltMma Zw...,'19, IAAIARA J IAY!, I 11 ~~ .e...... a~ in the development ~wet. ~ IMcfl. CA leMoll. tno.
o( i.levlalon, died Thul'9Clay, tlf:· ..,_. .. ~by In • ;"' .t= '=f:::::::: ~before hla Hrd ....,..i.t..J F5:-~~ y ---T1111 •l11Nf'A _e.a........ .. .... ~ ft ............_
MCMITUA8Y PASADENA (AP) -J• COlolfltr a.-°' o.W'.ee ~ • Ni 11.11 ,. --1 tO Broedwav • F J .My 11. tt11. ... 0..-. .,_.,. Coat• M•11 D . .....,. r., 80, • fonner ,_11 ~CA...,
042•9150 Bank of America vtce-PVblllMd Oran .. Coett Dell)' II'~~ c 0 ,., ... .._, ________ •,,.. pC'91i4ent end Loe ~la "*"· Mt 11, H. ~ a. •1..!!!1.:._ -..J •·--a •""' 1•"" .itr • cMc leeder, died l'rlclaY. ~ ..._., .._. · •· 11· -...
'
I
6
4
2
•
5
' 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
•
IOUAl HOUllNO OflflORTUNITY
....... ,,1 ...... 1
642-5678
'9fjff!.!.,.~ ..••.. f!fttft.~~ ..... . ~¥. ..•...••. 1.IJI .'111#1. ••• I~ "!!..r:.r' .......
""" f'edeocweled Mt Iba on Pl'lme looMlon. 011&19, Elt'thlonet tl'INout.-' bf, ~. pettoa. Nr. No. 2"' ba. femlty rrn. dining lay, 0-. will oonelder . rm, 2.371 IQ tt. View of 87~1t, 111-1211
tt111lllon, nlte lltH & •-•&.....
Catalina -9"-4111 ,,..,,. 1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••
Tl\ Y I.OH < '< > .........
AN fMl Mllte ildveftllad In thll ntWIP•P•r II
IUbfect to th• Ftd•ral I~~~~~~~~~ l'elr Houalng Act of 1"8 I:
Your~ Ill tN eun. 3 Bdrm 2 bath eecn. c.n-
venlant looetlOn to bey,
b•eeh Ind lhOP•· In-come 11eoo mo Owl'9f may a.lat In flnancinO '355,000.
wtliOtl malt• 11 illegal to ldYenlM "any pr ......
oe, llmtt811on or cfleorlmt.-
natlon b819d 011 race,
ooror. religion, Hl or
national origin, or •ny Intention to make any
IMIOh preference, limit••
...... manuu ........ " Large ~ 11<1re In woodty 142-IHO
i• tlon or dlecrlmlnetlon."
., .. ol North Tu1t1n,
n11t hot1e Halli &
Chapman Park. Lovely
pool l IP& S~out 4 Br home. Htghly upgra-J PETE BARREn
.. REALTY t: Tl"lll ~aper will not :: knowingly accept any J,. advM111lng for rHI e1-1• tall wf'llah re In vlolatlon
1
1.• of the law.
ded. Large master aulte. ~~~~~~~~ Cathedral c:eillnQ a lky· r.:
titM. Spece '°' nor ... a c.11 .. '" #u JIU perking 8 car1. Excellent • •• •• •••. •• •• ••• • • •• •• anumeble loan 11 10%.
Reduced to $275,000. CdM'S BEST DPLX I..... A Csll Joyce Oabolt or Compere value ot thlt 3 • -1 '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim 111111• -UN -Ull
I dvertl· unit duplex for only
Mrs should Check $240,000. Attractive ff.
their ads dally and nanclng. Orlve by 818 · 751-9100 N1rcl1eu. OI' c.it IOI' d• report errors Im-11111. can 840-76&5 --,,. --med I ate I y. The '=jjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ideal Fhter Upper In quiet -"'•nl&IM<ll llAI DAIL y PILOT as-I• nelghbort\Ood. 2 Bdrm & =~~~ : sumes liability for STEALING •• den, 1'1\ ba .. lnclud .. c:::.:=:: ~~· = the first Incorrect UM of pvt beach $2&G, == ~,.,,.. : Insertion only. II ILLIUL 11 ooo. By owner 759-111411
• rvre -BUT her•'• one yoo can li .. -ff Ynr ...,. __
o..ttt .. U•I -i--------• •teal and get away with -~ _.., .,._., """' "'"' mo It. It's a helf-mllllon dollar H.,.,tVTUuaeh-.ncome = ~~~:.. U•I = ... IH fll $a/t probate properly that wlll OWC 111 • Flex. Terms R-.ua .. •••• ••••• •• ••••••• ••• • I ... ...._ 509 Aeaci• CdM nr bch ~ • ...,~ -Itani/ I OOZ go or w .. atever ""' cour1 Spotless Vacant Duplex =:i:.:.."': ::: •••••••••••••••••• •••• wlll allow Listed at onty Huge 5br/3b1+3br/3b1 ~.::, ~=~ :: • 11111 2 IATM ~:5h~e T~~1~1.8~0~:1_4_40_K_own_l_bk_r ..,64_5-_704_8 =:.'1:\::: = $107,100 geoua WHITEWATER )(Jnt locatl~ 3Br, 288, llv
omc .. 11-a1 -Big, big booM on large view and POOL Nr & din rm. lg lam rm. lg =r:~~' ;= OOfn« lot. Brick Ille kll-downtown Laguna. 'reed rot, by owner. ._ 4it0 MUST BE SOLO NOWI $309,000. 640-7007
11 .... '.S!w-'"' -chen floor•. new carpe-Make an ofle thl ft NIK lltftlab -ting. lresly paJntad In and onel r on s llOT llUCI IOWI
IU$IN($S, INYEST· out. Seller hlghly moll-u•7211 Plus low,.,....._ -•ket t.h ... vat9d and wtll aulat In -... -.. _ •• MOil, FINANCE financing. Call today 2 bdrm. 1'1\ beth condo a .__o.-.• -646-2313 real opportunltyl Only -wa.c.i .... 10% down -Hie priced ~r,' i i l!!!"f~~'~,,·.!IJl;llllll"8§•}•lJll9•, --... -k-.-.-,-.,-.-.==-i :!s!:fi~OO. Act nowl
AMMOUMCEMENTS,. llUT FllWIOIH 2 Maatert. 4 bdrm 3 be
P£1S0tlll$'
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
LOST & fOWNI --.... CNl'eol
IAcMNtllltn IMI• ,.,. ... P"10flA.b• loftalO.bo• Tuwel•
S£1Y1C($
Sontc'C o.. .... ,
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPAIATION s._, 1 .......... _
JoftW••lett• Help Wtntod. M • r
MEICHANDISE =:...
~ ::= ........ ,. g::o• ... !:~ ... ,-...
~tov ... Plorftltwn a ......... --c-. ~ ........,._ .,......, ....... _
·--11•1KM 11-a11u,,.,....,.. orr .... l'\irft • 1:q..,, .... =~~c~:. ffert.iftC G-...... -..., ....... , ~r...."'".Sl-MATS & MAllNE
EOtltrMEMT
, .. H• ... ... 1* ,..
$eSf --NU 7100 -tlOIO ... -----------.,, --.., --Ml ------
•11 -= --.,. --
Anume exlttlng loans of Sl85K, good financing
$103,000 with currant OWN£A 75'-7655 Ctil• ""' llU
payment• of I 1096. Arr liiiii~=::~=~·IZ· ·~·~·~·~··~·~·~··~··········~··~·~·· king s12a.9oo for th11 r llUllll lllDIE refurbished 4 Bdr 2 Ba home located In No. LWE Coat• M .... 831-7370 Super penoramle ocean,
TRlDITIO\,\L
RL\l.'n
MESI YElllE
FllEI
bay & night llght view lrom this 2 BA. den, fOI'· mal din rm & 2 BA home
Decorated Ilk• 1 "Model" In the earth
tonea. Community tennis coons & swimming pool. 24 hr. guarded gate. Avallable lmmedlately
S 1900 par mo. Oona
Godlhall 64'"'6200.
12.11% llHllllLE
FIUHlll
Juel 1n t11na lor aummer, this lovely pool home leetures terrific finan-
cing. • large bdrms. new paint, near parks and
1cnoo1s. Offered at
$139,900. 540· 1151
~HERITAGE
REALTORS -------
3Br. 2Ba. dbl car garage. 2 patios. flagstone trple, owner-<:ustom bit home
$129.950. With $29,950
Lowest priced 4 Bdrm home In Meal Verde.
Light and IPICIOu• room• thruoot. Huge cul
de 1ac lot. Super loca-
tlon. NHdl 1om• TLC end wHI be worth much
more. Call 5-48-2313
wtmUFF down. Owner will carry
Neat and conveniently lst loan.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
located two bedroom. lllJ Mo01fllt1 llHr,
two bath condo. Sperle-141-1121
llng community pool l•--iiiiimliiii•-•
Exc:eptlonall)' quiet loca· -L-0-1-.. -1-ir-ut99-1-1-1 Lot Alamltoa condo: Nice tloo. Only $25,000 down. ~, ..
4br, 2ba. 2 1t0f)' condo. S 119,000. Cute 28< tlooae. Owner
Poot & spa. Refrlg, 111-llOO 'flexlble .. Bkr 538-1453
wastter & dl')'ef Included.~~~~~~~~~ S 15.000 down or wlll Iii trade IOI' clNlc autorno. blle, motor home or ? * 10'9 llWI*
Owner! agent. *11'9 FlllUClll* 768-4589 When you take 011er -1-E-1-1-1-1-11-0-111-1-1 ••lstlng T.O .. owner wlll
aasltt at 12·~ on this 3 Br
Lovely Npt. Hgts home hOOM on FEE LANO In
loc•tld on lrg R-2 loll BACK BAY AREi< Fee-
s.tier will carry financing turlng hardwood lloor
on tills one Well priced and ahlngle roof. Only et $1311,500. Call now. $135,000. 2670 San Ml-
646-7171 gual 759 -1501 or
152-7373
REAL ESTATE TAX IN-
V ESTM ENT I $6000
cashl!! $145,000 share purchue MINIMUM talC deducllon tat. )'ltar $10,
000. Owner (lnve1tor) will
1upply 10111 down pay-ment up to $40,000 In
equity. Shere purehasa
In new luxurlous 2-3
Bdrm 3 Ba Condo,
Costa Me11. Maximum
Int. depre., apra. struc-lured 10< buyer, possible
"· 1 benefit. Phone THE REAL
ESTATERS . 714/642-2000.
-
714 f 631 -S055 ,
~~----
DRAMATIC llSlllE 10'9 I.I.
Exec. home, 4 br, IOl'm.
din. rm. New kit .. applet,
COUNTRY mlOfO, cprt1 & drapes. Poot. jac. deek. BBO pit MUI FlllT & frplc. S 1411,llOO. S30. IEOLISIH ooo down. owe 2nd at ESTATE Yoor own llt11e corner of 12%. 1056 Concord
I h. I oc •I co a It II n •. _M_0_·5_5_60_0wner __ . __ _
~~:iv!'~,::.,,~ ;:,~~: ~;::",'~fm!~~n.d!~~~~ JIMP ",.' 11w1n11 •s
cobblet1one motOI' coor-qul•lte 4 Bdrm home lylrd, apactacutar entry. plui pool and ipa. No-No qualifying to make
8 bdrm, 8 blthl, 6 lrpl tl"llng elM Ilk• ltl A fisting lhl1 apactacular 3 Bdrm huge lrplca. Room for of the \Ion Galderns, S2. pool home your own. 1annla. No. Tuatln -500000 Ju•t S1 '7,900. 8kr. Orange Hiiis with view, ' · 848-0TOll
12-15 min. to en frwy1, Ul'llll VUI: f1VMl:S --1-ir.-.----1--
llrpor1, So Co8't Plaza. Aee.ltor1. 875-6000 ~ .. _..
$1400000 Ii~~~~~~~~' Spectacular trl·level ' ' · Ii ~uty neer So. C. Plata. RICK ALDERETIE Liii llU ~u':°r=·~~~.~~~
le....,/hHlt•ar llWllTIO S22UOO. Bkt. 8'8--0709
711-4M4/ll1~111 5p1r11 "'"•and prot-,.....,.. .._I alonal decor throughout tl"lll 1paclou1 4 bdrm, 3 bdrm, 2 bl, llreptace,
*W•TIUUlf• '4bltll home. Perfect for double gere ... walk In • J II.Jn the family. Eiclttlng U• cloaeta, Townhou,e. IU 1umabl1 loan• of 1382, Walk to W•tcll1f Plaza_ PRIVATE COMMUNITY. 000 affective 12.3% Int Pr1oed 10 .,rl. 1110,!500. 3&4 bdrm hom ... our Sales l)flce SMll.000 , .. 1_0ed_e_64_2_-3083 ____ _
SELLERS~ ANANCE-*'' ..... -0t ·DISCOUNT fOI' CNhl -Better hurry on th•MI "'All HI HU'll I
•1 Starting at $.499,0001 llOMI' 1-. 3 lll1n11t6 U
-._ ........ _ .., REAL ESTATE COLUll Piii ·::: -,,.,. 6,il-14()\)
= *'~=· ••Nnmst ·~~"" : ~~~~~~~~~I tnatantty, l'lomel Beeu1t.----------. ! ~~·.~du=~=· '2 ~ PAYlll lllTtn
-den, 3 Ba. W9* to bMch = & reorHllOll flOHlllH.
.11n Priced for Immediate
HAV! 0000 INCOMI??? . . .... -.... a.... will help ft· ..... . = nano.. FuM pno. UH. SH~TON
OOWtf PAVMINT??? . = 000. 7114111
....... ·-...... ..... ~ ... ft:·:;·= ~ Pl'YING TA)CQ?17 .... __ .. _Mt _____ •I "IOhty Upt(adecl 3 ...
home wtttt ..... pmete --With our ,,,..,..., ~ &
ywd ~W.Otped, m IW Plllft g1ln *Irectat\on In
olOM '° . p.ni '"*' ""' '*' a Ole9I a '"''•'° ". ~ ... new a eo110011. eke over """ ..,_ 19 fuel fOf oondo, t to II llWlp-=., a:;-~~~·g· you. l11cetl. ftftenolnt ~..:Om~~
""911CM--.: ' .... Ml-n1bl11et fOf ~ OOM ~
... Ill T,D. II·~~ Plul prtDe =:..f/JM:· I
v ..... ~.. .,,, .. ,..:£.~ ...L.......1~ .... _ ~--........ -·-.,......,...,. ....... .................. MICWl_.,1 12 ti :'.::.. ~-.. ':, .:r ...• ,..., :!i.:•.=•:; =~ ~ty w'-a )'Ola o 1111 Ul e d t e de r . "91. No dOwn. "*""""" jl\ lhe rwalte )'OQ Ml-llfl OI O~ 001t. Calf nn&. a1. filf 141.aooo
-
abor\lonilt, bad fatherid two
childiWa out of \iWdJadc occwred
whlle ........ were enjoytnc
their llUIDllMI' break.
Schmlu hM not been ... nor
hMrd frcim .me. the c:tilcloM&ne.
That Md to 'l*\&laUon that be . miaht not be preeent whm the
Senate NIUJ'neCl f.o4ay.
·In oth•r rnattere, Oran1e
County le1tslatora were
SUMMERTIME MECCA -Newport Beach
officiah have agreed to level the Balboa FUn
Z.One and replace it with a three-story complex
DelJ,... ....... "' .... ,.,..
of offi~ restaurants and specialty shops. F«
a nostalgic look at the block-long fantasy land,
tum to Pagf> Bl.
Priqie rate cut widespread
~early all banks decrease rate fu · 15;;.pereen\· " ·~. iu: ... ~••'*i
NEW YORK (AP) -Virtually
all of the nation's major banks
cut their prime lending rates to
15 percent today to match the
one-half percentage point cut
initiated by the Mellon Bank of
Pittaburgh.
That put the prime at lts
lowest level since November 1980
and marked the second big prime
drop in a week. Several smaller
banks began matching the 15
percent rate after the large banka
made their announcements.
Among thoee joining the move
today to a lower prime were
Citibank, the nation's aecond-
largest; No. 3 Chase Manhattan
Bank; No. "4 Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Co.; No. 5 Morgan
Huntington death probed
Huntington Beach police today
were investigating the death of a
blonde woman whoee body was
found ln the playground area of
Oak View Park near Emerald
Lane.
Lt. Thomas Patton said the
caute of death appeared to be
strangulation. The woman wu
deecribed as Caucasian, 18 to 20.
Her identity wa s not
immediately known. Patton said.
Residents in the area told
officers they heard screams
coming from the park Sunday
n ight. The body waa not
discovered until 9:30 a.m.
National Bank of Chicaao and
Guarant( Truat Co.~ No. e
Chemica Bank; No. 9 Flnt
No. trvtne Trust Co.
The drops reflected sharp
declines in the bank.a' coats of
obtaining money for 1end.1ng and
investment.
Norman Robertton, chief
economist at Mellon, uid the
prime rate could dip another full
point within the next few weeka.
"I think that it really reflecta
the fact the economy la still ;.ast
very weak at the moment.''
Robertson said Saturday.
"There's been no rully visible
sign of an economic recovery.
"We feel strongly that by
lO'Vering the prime lending rate
we can make a contribution to
the economic recovery process.
County jail iri.mates battle
Deputies quell fighting among 30 prisoners on catwalk
Fighting broke out among 30
inmates inside a third-floor cell
block at Orange County Jail
Sunday, but deputies quelled the
disturbance in about 20 minutes.
No serious injuries w e r e
reported.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart aaid
the disturbance broke out at
about 6 p.m. as 52 prlaonen were
being let out of their cella to go to
dinner.
Hart said the priloners began
fighting with one another on the
catwalk in the module, which is
composed of eight four-man cells.
About l~ deputies quickly
moved in to separate the
prlaonen, who were locked in
their cell• for the night and
today. "It doesn't take much (to
start a fight) when you get
dlfferent groups In there.'' Hart
said of the prilonen. ,
BUSINESS
Though the group was racially
mixed, be said the fighting did
not appear to be either png or
race related.
Two prilonen were tent to UC
Irvine Medical Centel' for
treatment of minor lnjurtes.
Hart said one cause 9t the
fighting may have biten a
combination of the heat and the
fact that the module waa toJdina
about 20 prt.onen more 1han it
waa desqpled to house.
pnp.rtna lo advap ll'Venl bWa
ra,..tn1 from rd'er1tn1 of the coun functiona of .the Oran1e
County sheriff'• depwtment and
manbal'• office to permhtlna
vo&en to decide whether the
..... tax llhoWd be mcr..ed to
fund tranlportaUon projec11.
Auem&lyworna" Marian
Ber,aon. R-Newport Beeich, said
ahe hopes she wtll be able to
ecal1lt the~ of ltate Sen. John ~. R-Anahelm, to move
the merser meuure which hall
been 1ltttn1 in limbo In the
Senate.
Oran,e County voten. in an
advilori vote In 1980, said they
believed ihe merger should take place.
The sheriff's department
provldea court services, such u
bUllfflna In the .. Plrior ~
while the mantial'• offtct
provkt. limOAI' ..rvioes ln tM
mu.nidp-1 COW1a.
It Ml been ettimated th.a=' t million annually could be u
ff a metaef' were ICCOIDP •
One reuon It Ml ~t la due ii
inf l1htlna over ..)"hether th'
therifra of(ke Of .aanhal'• offk»
(See SENATOR, Page Al) ! • •
lJ.S. wants end to war
' ' Reagan rejects Brezhnev's request on Beirut!
I
WASHINGTON (AP) -Amid
a18IW of a new chill In U .S.-laraell
relationl, President Reagan told
llrael Foretsn Minister Yitzhak
Shamir today the United States
wants a "complete e~d" to the
flahtini in west Bein.it.
But Shamir blam e d ·
Palestinian forces for repeated
cea1e-flre violations and
augeated that Israel may use
addIUonal force if negotiations
for evacuating Palestinian units
from Lebanon break down.
Later, aboard Air Force One, fteaaan said the United States is
dolna all it can to stop the
fighting in Lebanon. He rejected
Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev'• request that he uae
everything at his disposal to halt
larael'a "continuing annihilation
of ~pie in Beirut." ' We reject the implication
contained I n President
Brezhnev's letter that the United
States ls not doing all it can to
bring about a peaceful solution to
the crisis in Lebanon," Reagan·
said In a statement. "Thro\.18h
Ambassador Philip Habib'•
efforts, u well as through the
United Nations, we are striving
to brina about a 1astirig cease-fire
t.¥t will end the suffering."
He said the Soviet leader's
"propa1andiatic exercise casta
doubt.a on Soviet motives
reprdlnc the Lebanele crisis."
Brahnev's letter to Rea1an wee t"eceived Sund•Y· prealdttntlal spokesman Larry
Speekee aid as he traveled with
Be,epn to Des Mohles, Iowa.
~ his 20-mlnute ";:~ wtth Shamir, Reagan "1
the ~ for a complete end by
all parties to the fighting" to
allow Habib to negotiate a
settlement between Israel and
the Palestine Libe r ation
Organization, a White House said "m\.Hlt be 'bsolute an~
statement said. "The world can mutual and not onie-slded." •
no lqer accept a situation of The White House statement
constantly eacalating violence," it said Reagan "empha.med that &t-
said. early diplomatic settlement ~
'nte meeting took place amid the current problem of weat
signs of U .s.. irritation over Beirut is the eaential first s1ep in
Israel's decision to launch a ending the trauma of Lebanoq,
devastating sea, air and land beglnninf the process for a betf.el'
attack Sunday in and around fu ture o this ravaged country,
Beirut's airport. and moving on to the broader
Shamir aaid the renewed peace procea."
hraell attacks Sunday were in Israelis and Palestinians traded
response to Palestinian cease-fire small anns and mortar fire today.
violations. He accused the Israel said the PLO opened fire
Palestinians of taking advantage first and that Israeli troops had
of various cease-fires, which he <See ISRAELI. Page AZ)
Beaches packed;
J
boat strikes jetty
Low c louds , cool ing
temperatures and mediocre surf
did little to dlacourage weekend _
sun eeekers who turned out by
the thousands along the Orange
Coast. •
Weather offlciala predicted the
coaatal hue will continue most of
thla week.
Off Newport Beach today, a
boater from Cenitoe waa trying
to figure out how -or if -be
could ulvqe bis 27-foot cabin
Cl'\dlef that struck • rock jetty
late Saturday .and sank Sunday
in an attempt to pull it free.
Auau1ius Vanreed got Into
troll~ when his unnamed boat
amacked a jetty off 44th Street
and sustained hull damage as the
s urf pounded it against the
outcrop.
Orange County Harbor Patrol
officials said a fishing boat from
San Pedro pulled it oU the jetty
Sunday evening but towed the
crippled craft less than a mile up
the coast before it started to sink.
The cabin cruiser, patrolmen
said today, is moored to a buoy
off 67th Street with only its bow
sticking out of the water.
In Laguna Beach Saturday, a
15-year-old scuba diver was
pulled from the water after he
apparently roee to the surface too
quickly.
uteguardt aeid Ken Robbtns
of Carden Grove had troubl~
with his regulator at a depth ol
about 20 feet off Shaw's Cov~
Saturday morning.
He was treeted by lifeguards
and paramedics and taken to
Hoag Me"\orial Hospital in
Newport. Later, he was flown to
the USC Recompression Center
(See BEACH, Pase AZ)
ON THE ROCKS -Interested onlookers
watch while a man clambers onto a power boat
about 7 p.m. Sunday after it fetched up on the
DelJ .......... "' Le9...,...
groin at the end of 44th Street in Newport
Beach. A fishing boat later towed the craft le9'
than a mile up the coast before it sank. •
INDEX
Day care more important
Day-care centers for children of worken ii a
concept whoee time has come, says oolwnniat Sylvia
Porter. Page M .
Lu Vegu can be a lot of fun and excitement, but
a Dally Pllot reporter a hares some of 1 ts
diaappolntmenta, too. P,age A 7.
At Your Service
Erma Bombedc
Buainem
Cavalcade
Comkll en.word
De.th NoUces
Editorial Entertailwent
Art Hoppe
HulCMmpt
A4
B2
84-5
B2
87
B7
C4
AS
Be
Ann Landers
Movtes
National News
Public Noticee
82
B6
A3
Bf.Cf
Srock market rallies .
NEW YORK (AP) -Buoyed by lower lnterelt
rate.. the stock market rallied 'today, and the Dow
Jonee 1ndn of 30 atocka pned 13.~1polntato822.11.
'>
Coa• re.i•au shine at Fair
B2
i B2
SPORTS
'sporta
Stock Marketa
Televialon
1beeten
Weether
:='Tew.
Cl-4
~
88
B6
A2
B3
A3
••
--•
UP 13.51
CLOUMllll.11
S t'ate utility
faces penalty
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The utility 1Upplytnc power
for the San D6e80 area acted "imprudently" when it
enoaed in a em.. of mone~lolinc oil swape with a Utile-lmown Houalon oU d three yean ago, It WU
repol1ed.
A state tdminlatrative law Judie reached that
conclusion, ending a year'• i.estlmony and study into
the bun1led transactions, the San Diego Union
reported.
Accordlng to the newapaper, the judse
recommended that the atate Public Udlltiea
Commialion reduce energy btlla in San Diego by $4.4
mllllon to remove any poaibillty that the '37 million
lOlleS were made up f>y increued rates to SOO&E
coat.omen.
Y.nited matching cuts
LOS ANGELES (AP) -United Airlines said it
will match Padfic Southwest Airlines fare cuta on
moat, but not all United Oighta on competitive routes.
PSA announced that eUective Aug. 3 it will cut
fares on fllghta between Los Angeles and San
Francisco airport.a to $45 from $69 and the limited-
availability diacount fare of $49. T he airline also
announced aimilar reductions in flights to San Diego,
Phoenix, TuC90n and Rend.
Western and AirCal immediately responded by
announcing plans to match the lowered fares on routes where they compete with PSA
•
Power pool started
-LOS ANGELES (AP) -The cities o! Burbank,
Glendale land Pasadena have joined Los Angeles in a
municipal power pool that utillty officials estimate Wlll
reduce electricity costa by $10 million a year.
The pool will serve 1.4 million customers in the
Loa Angeles area. the utilities said.
Low auto interest
DETROIT (AP)-Low 12.7 percent interest rates
are available for buyers of 1981 and 1982 Datsun
truck• in California, according to Nissan USA,
distributor of Dataun and Nilsan cars and trucks.
The firm, hued in Canon, announced it will offer
the loan finandnc rate through Sept. 30. The CWTent
interest rate is 18 percent. Nissan said.
~oast firm declines
For Better Living Inc. of San Juan Capistrano,
reporta lower eamin&9 for the a1x months ended June
26.
Net lncome wu $82,000, or 9 cents per "share, •
compared with net income of $288,000, or 33 cents, for
the comparable period of 1981.
The quarter ended J une 26 resulted in net income
of $138,000, or 16 cent.a, as compared with net income
of $2~6.000, or 29 cents, for the comparable 1981
quar1er.
STOCIS IN THE SPORIGHT
METALS
NEW YOAK (AP) -Spot nOfllerr
metll cwto. lodey. ..
UPS AND DOWNS c~ 72~75 c•nll • pound. u.s o.tnetlona.
ta
II
\I
£1
d
J
r;
ll.>
fa
w.11 D-2' _,.. • pciund, ~ ta
llM 11~ oenta • pounc1. __... '"'
"" M. tan .,... w.. OOfnCIOllte 1b. I ._, , 1a.11 cent•. pound. N.v •1 a
....., aao.~10.00 ii-...... 111 ......,._ 12U,00-S2I0.00 troy OUllGI,
l'l.Y.
SILVER
"9ndy' H-. am,,.,~-.
------4..l GOLD QUOTA DONS
SYlllOLS
I·