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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-08-09 - Orange Coast Pilotl YDUl -lllDlll llllY PAPll I\~ ( ) r J I I \ I {, I ' , 1 , I 1 ' u H A N ( • t l . ( 'l I N I ' I '" ' ' I I ' N ' A '} 'J c E N I s Hinckley ordered to mental ~ospital WASHINGTON (AP) -John W. Hinckley Jr., looking pale and weaker than on the day of hia stunning acquittal .even weeks ago on char ges of sh ooting President Reagan, was committed indefinitely to a federal mental hospital today. U.S. District Judge Barrington 0 . Parker, flnding Hinckley to be mentally ill and dangerous, read hla commitment order from the bench aft.er Hinckley told hlm he waived the right to a hearina on hla releaae. But Hinckle:;, said "I don't necessarily agree" with the conclusion of d octor s at S t . Eluabeths Hospital who said !he presidential assailant suffered from a "severe chronic mental disorder." The judge, who Lns11ted that Hinckley appear in person to waive the hearing, aaked him a aerie~ of questions to make certain that he understood hi.a r ight to prese nt evidence disputing the doctont' report. Standing before the judge m a pin-stripe shirt but without one of the aport coata he always wore during his trial, Hmckley said he was aware ot hi• right to a hearing and had no queationa about the rights he was giving up. "Are r,ou under any medication?· Parker asked. "Yea sir," HmckJey responded. "Ooe9 it affect your ablllty to understand what la happenins this morning?" the judge aaked. "No air," liinckley replied. W hen Parker asked If Hinckley understood predaely the meaning of the waiver he was aignJng, he answered, "Y~. I do." But Hinc kley quickly added, "I want to say for the r~ord by signing this waive r I'm n ot admitting to agreeing to what's In the report." Moments later, he told the judge, ''I don't nece.arlly agree with their (the doctor9') opinion." The St. Elizabeth& report aald Hinckley suffers from four major personality disorders and major depression which the doctors aaid is an parual remlllSion. Parker concluded that "because of thlS mental dl80rder, the defendant John W. HmckJey !See HINCKLEY, Page A!) Shells pound Beirut I srael , PLO trade artillery, rocket fire By T he A11oclated Presa War-ravaged west Beirut s huddered under another heavy bombardment today as Israeli and Palestinian gunners traded punishing salvos of artiller y, tank, rocke t a11d 1nortar fire . Israeli warplanes also bombed Palestinian artillery positions 19 .:11les east of the Lebanese .:apitaJ The latest shelhng came amid reports that Israel agreed to a phased withdrawal of PLO fighters from west Beirut. But completion of an agreement was stalled by Syr ia's continued refusal to accept any guerrillas until Israel agrees to withdraw its army from Lebanon, and by nettlesome details about the urrung of the withdrawal and the a rrival o f an international peacekeeping force. ENVIABLE POSITION -Wh en the weather's too hot and beaches are too crowded, Delly P11ol Photo by LM Peyne Erin Kroening, 4, of Costa Mesa knows where to find welcome relief in her backyard. Sporadic s helling overnight picked up intensity after dawn, driving residents back into basements and shelters after a brief weekend respite, during which the Israelis turned on the taps allowing water into west Beirut for the first time in two weeks. Smoke detector saves pair In today's exc hanges . witnesses said Israeli tanks fired massive barrag es at PLO positions near the National Museum c heckpoint on the Green Line. dividing Chriatian east Beirut from the Moslem western duitrict. The guerrillas battled back with mortars and baz.ookas. Huntington Harbour mom., inf ant escape blazing home Firefighters said a smoke detector may have averted a tragedy at a Huntington Harbour home when 1t alerted a sleeping woman and her infant son to a fi re that had broken out an a nearby bedroom Chopped liver used in statue of Nixon NEW YORK (AP) -Richard Nixon may favor cottage cheese and ketchup. but a Manhattan deli owner chose to remember the former president on the eighth anniversary of his resignauon with chopped hver Leo S teiner, owner oC the Carnegie Deh, !!Culpted a likeness in liver of Nixon's face in honor of the anniversary Sunday of his "abdication of office " "I felt l wanted to remmd the pe ople." he said "From California he's come to New York and he hasn't tried any of our New York food." Steiner stood outside his Seventh Avenue deli offering samples of his sculpture. He held a tray bearing five pounds of liver, molded in the form of a human face, with rolls of salamj for h air and h ard-boiled esg portions for eyes. A green halo of parsley ringed the edible visage. STATE Huntington B e a c h Fire Captam Roger Hosmer said the woman. Jan Annijom. and her 14-month-old son Joey were able lO flee their home at 16261 San Cl<'mente Circle safel y early Sunday and call ftrefighters from a neighbor's house. The blaze, which was apparently triggered by a short l'lrCU1t an the wiring for an ,a q u a r 1 u m . s e n t s m o k e throughout the two-story house and caused $2,500 an damage, Hosmer said lie said 14 firefighters were called to the scene, bringmg the blaze under conlrol within five minutes No injuries were caused Russian breaks hunger s trik~ MOSCOW (AP) -Ernac1ated hunger striker Yuri Balovlenkov brok<' his 36-day fast today af ter has visiting American wife lied to ham, saying aut~orities had promised he could emigrate to the United States if he resumed eating "What else could I do? He was going to kill himseli," said Elena Balovlenkov, a 29-year-old nurse from Baltimore in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "I've never lied to my husband before but this lie was necessary -a lot nicer than watching him die," she said . CSLB classes analyzed .. Controvers ial women's studies program and a class in experimental sex experiences at Cal State Long Beach are analyi.ed. Page A5. Smaller households draw attention Neither politicians nor ho mebuilders paid attention to statistics in 1972 s h owing smalle r households. They have to n ow -and they are. Page A8. COUNTY Valley man has honey of a hobby A F ountain Valley resident has honey of a hobby but it can ~ve a real sting to It. Page Bl. i n the incident, which was reported at 8:35 a.m FIREMEN DOUSE VAN BLAZE -Nearly 100 county firefighters, hand crews and bulldozer operators extinguished a 20-acre 'fire in Santiago Canyon Sunday a fter this three- , SPORTS Dodgers prove real Braves killers The Dodgers did it again to Atlanta and are within l 1h gam es of the division -leading Braves. Page Cl. Freeway World Series on horizon? The Angela tak e a 1 'h -game lead in the American League West and sudd enly there's talk of a Freeway World Series in October. Page CL Former stars bring on nostalgia Daily Pilot sportswriter Howard Handy does a little reminiacing at an oldtimeta' game held at Dodaer Stadium prior to the Dodger-Braves conteet. Page C2. Ass ociated P ress correspondents Tom Baldwin and Samuel Koo, watching from a rooftop vantage point cl06e to the museum line in Christian e ast Beirut. said there was no sign of an lsraeli armor advanet> despite the intensity of the tank fire Blaming PLO fighters for sparking the latest exchange, Israel said its gunners fired at the guerril l as who l a unched katyusha rockets at Israeli forces (See ISRAELI, Page A!) Lifeguards rescue 350 along coast Earl) morning coastal fog broke an tame to attract about 300,000 people to Orange Coast beaches Sunday, and rough surf that produced riptides kept l..afeguards busy with more than 350 rescues. T here were no inJur1es reported. Na tional Weathe r Serv1(·e s pokeswoman Pat Rowe said patchy low clouds and fog tonight will clear Tuesday to fair skies. She said beach highs will be 76, dropping to 65 Tuesday night. Inland highs are expected to reach 88 with lows of 65. had big strong rips (riptides). Even the good swimmers are having trouble." Huntington Sta t e Beach re ported 90 to I 00 rescues and a crowd of more than 25.000, while Huntington City Beach 1e ported 45 rp-;cues and a crowd of 5A,OOO Nl'wport Beach aur~cted about 130.000 pl.'l)pl~ and hft!guards therl' repor:oo 100 rescw:-s, while Laguna Beach ~ifeguards reportt-d 50 rescues in a crowd of 20-25,000 Though moderate surf of JUSt two to four Ceet was reported Sunday, its intensity caused problems for many swimmers. San Clemente's st.ate and city beaches reported crowds totallin~ about 67,000 and about 75 rescues San Clemente Beach lifeguards said they helped pusl": three pleasure boats wruch foundered on the beach's surf lme back into open water. "It (the surf) just picked up and at s going crazy,'' Huntington State Beach lifeguard Brian Hopp reported Sundav. "We've Water temperatures S unday ranged from the m1d-60s to the low 70s. Deity Not "'*9 ~ "'°"""' IC..._ week-old van caught fire at Santiago Canyon and Williams Canyon roads. It took fire fighters, aided by two aerial tankers, about 40 minutes to knock down the flames. INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoecope A7 ~~beck C2 Ann Landers A7 A7 Moskowitz A4 Buatness 84-5 Movies B6 Cavalcade A7 National News A3 Cluaified C4-8· Public Notices B4,C4 Comics 87 Sporta C1-4 Crossword S 7 Stock Markets B5 Death Notices C4 Television B8 Editorial A6 Theaters B6 Entertainment B6 Weather A2 Art Hoppe A7 World News A3 BUSINESS Kuwaiti ruling means profit R.J. Reynolds Industries of Winaton-Salem, N.C. is profiting immensel y from • Kuwaiti rullng lnvolvlrli Aminoil. Page A4 . I ll HINCKLEY COMMITTED. • • Jr. ii ln the praent time and wlll In the reaaonable future be danaerwa to himlelf Of others." The laat time he wu In .Parker'• courtroom, Hinckley atood, tean •treaminl down hia ~heeka, while a jury found him 'nnooent by reaaon of lnsanlty of 1the March 30, 1981 shooting of .Reagan and three other men. 1 Tnat verdict generated nationwide outrage and gave 1vigor to a congressional dsive to change the Insanity law. f Hinckley, 27, faced life jmprisonment if convicted on charges of attempting to ~ssassinate the president and ~ssaulling, with intent to kill, Reagan. White House Press Secretary James Brady and two 4aw enforcement officers. oommtt.ment. U .S . Attorney Stanley S. Harri.a explained ln a letter to Parker he wu concerned that unleaa all precauUona were ta.km to safeguard Hlnckley's right.a. he could Tater return to court and claim he should be released because those rights were violated. Even after today's hearing, Hinckley has the legal right to petition the court every six months for hia release, with the determining IBlsue to be whether he ia mentally ill and dangerous to himself and others. r Instead, as required under the law. he was sent to St. Elizabeths /or evaluation June 21. The law entitled him to a hearing within 50 days to determine if he should remain institutionalized. It was tha t proceeding Parker !!Cheduled for today. Although Hinckley later stated he wouldn't seek release, prosecutors insisted he be advised in person of his right to a hearing and, possibly, a jury trial to determine h is conlinuing The written waiver signed by Hinckley. submitted by him to proaecu tors, says, "I hereby voluntarily and intentionally 'waive and relinquish any and all right.a and privileges vested by statute, the Constitution or appellate decisions lo any hearing to which I am entitled at this time. This waiver specifically includes any riffhl I may have to a trial by jury.' He also signed a stipulation saying that if St. Elizabeth& doctors had been called to testify they would have told the court -as they did ln a written report NUCLEAR SUB PROTESTED -Some of the thousands of protesters parade on beach on Puget Sound near Trident Nuclear Navy base. ~~to The protesters are gathering to show their opposition to this week's arrival of the Trident submarine USS Ohio. -that Hinckley suffers from severe and chronic mental illness. denounced Weapons ·ISRAELI INVASION . • • 1 near the city's race course. The 1 Tel Aviv <.'Ommand also said its troops "consolidated" their positions around the PLO enclave at the Bourg al-Barajneh refugee camp on the southern edge of the city. Minister Ariel Sharon denied a deal had been struck. Church leaders head protest of nuclear sub The military command also 'reported that Israeli jets bombed "Palestinian artillery positions in Syrian-controlled territory 19 miles east of Beirut . The command charged that the guns had shelled Israeli positions east 'of Beirut. It was the first Israeli 'air raid in three days. On the political front, Prime Minister Menachem Begin expressed optimism Sunday that the Palestine Liberation Organi:z.ation's forces "will leave soon and we will not have to enter Beirut.'' Begin in a speech in Jerusalem said that up to 2,500 guerrillas could remam in west Beirut to protect the Palestinian civilians there until a multinational Western peacekeeping force is deployed. Previously Israel demanded that all the estimated 6,000 to 9,000 guerrillas leave before the peacekeepers f~m the United States, France, Italy and Greece come in. Begin added that Israel would e vict any guerrillas who refused to leave after the multinauonal force started moving in However, lsrae la De fe nse "There is no arrangement, agreement or deal possible at the moment,'' he told Radio Israel after meeting with U .S presidential envoy Philip C . Habib at his headquarters in the Baabda suburb of Beirut. Sharon said the main problem was that Arab countries were not willing to give refuge to the buJk or the PLO forces. "Since no state is ready to take the m. there is no agreement, no arrangement," he said. He added: "The terrorists are on the verge of bemg rooted out of Beirut in one way or another." Sharon said Israel also demanded guarantees that the deployment of the multinational force would n ot ''serve as a screen behind which the terrorists could go on operating." There were reports in the Israeli press of friction between Began and Sharon over the negotiations, )Vit.h Begin repol1ed more wiJling than Sharon to accept the withdrawaJ plan offered by Habib. According to those reports, Begin criticized at Sunday's Cabinet meeting those who, behind a cloak of anonymity, were telling the press tM Habib plan was "a fraud." PORT GAMBLE, Wash. (AP) -Religious leaders denounced nuclear weapons as thousands of protesters gathered on beaches and in boats awaiting the arriva.l of the first Trident nuclear submarine. "We have intentionaJly chosen to challenge our government and its war policies bec ause we believe the decision to depJoy nuclear weapons as immoral, illegal and unjust,'' said United Methodist Bishop Melvin Talbert at the rally Sunday, which drew a crowd esumated at J ,UOO to 7,- 500 people. The first Trident, the USS Ohio, in the next few days is expected to enter Hood Canal en route to ats new home base at Bangor. The protesters did not see the Ohio, alt.hough an older Polaris missile submarine did ·pass through the area. The protesters rallied on a beach at Point Julia on the Port Gamble Reservatio n o f the Klallam Indian tribe, about 10 miles north of the s ubmarine base. The rally also was to mark the 37th anniversaries of the Aug . 6 , 1945 , bombing of Hirosluma and the Aug. 9, 1945, bombing of Nagasaki at the end of World War ll. Low clouds, fog Con~tal SOUTHERN C ALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS lr1 coastal areu. night and m0<nlng log or I-ctouda near the coasl. othe,.....IM lair Highs ranging from mid to upper 70• et beech•• to near 100 war,,,.r v1lley1. Lowa In upper SO. 8rlCI llOI. Mountain.,... llllr Hlgha 78 to 86. Lows 52 10 112 U.S. su.nunary A col d fr ont puahed th\lnder1torme acrosa Ar111n ... and 1he C>nlO Valley and Into the Gull Cou1 1tet• Among the eteas hardetl hit Sunday "'"' Feye11evu1e. Ark • with 2.24 Inches ol rein ind C<o .. vlUe. Tenn., wnk:h recorded 87 of .,, lneh. s~ lltlO mewed through the Pacific northwMt Into 1he Nor1hem Ple1.u region. It w• fair In Not1h OU0111 91'<1 Mlnnet1<11e, end the SouthwHI had generally eunny aid•. The loreca1t celled lor thunderllorms ov1r the Gull Cou1 tletM. moet of the All811tlc; •••l>oerd end the northern Aoclclel. Suothlne ..... ••P8C1ed over mo.I ol the Mld-•t the Plalna end the W•t Temper1ture1 around the nation et mld-dey Sonday renoect from 47 In Arca111, Calif. to 114 In Palm SP<lnO• Calif ornis The Netlonel W•ther $enlloe ••Y• Southern C1lllornlt 0 1 -tiler "1«ild be lair T.-dey with continued eunny l)Mt. Hlghe wHI r11199 from ea In lo. A~ from 112 to flA.11n ~ Vfllwf, from 78 to ea In mountllln .,.., from 98 to 108 In ~hern ~ to the ups>« 70. °' mid eo. In IN 1ow o-t. Boettn lrOfll Potnt Conception to the M9xlcen border ~ ~ fight verlable wind• during the night and morning houre. beoomlng w.t to llOUttlweeterty at 10 10 18 knota during the afternoon with • 2·1o-3-loot eouthwell ..... Noft..,.....t w4M8 could rMGfl 28 knot• with &-to-8·10!)1 -t111thef thin eo mll .. offlhor• "°"' 8eft NloolM i.latld. -----Temperatures MATIOM ' .......... a•.~ t1 M Ot t7 ... 14 • Ot 17 70 .07 76 .. Aull in Baltimore Bllllnga Blrmlnghm 819marck 8olee Boeton 8'0WNIYl1e BuffllO Burlington Casper Ch8tlstn SC Ch8tlstn WV Cherltto NC ~ Clncinn1U ~ Clml>l1 SC Columbut Del-Fl Wth Oeyton Denver Oel MOINS Oe1rOll Duluth El Puo Fargo Fleg•t•tl Great Fllll1 Hlll11ord ~ Honolulu Houaton lndnec>Ha Jacl<ln MS Jaclctnvtle t<tns City KnoJCWle LU Vegu llltle Aoctc Loulsvllte Lubt>odt Memphis Mleml Milwaukee Mpl....St P NNhvtlte New Orteen• Hew '(Of11 Norlotk No Platte Ott•• City Omaha Orlando Phfladphla Pnoenht Plttal>urgh Ptlend, .... Ptlend. Ore Providence :=,o" Slit Lake Ban Antonio S..ttle ~~ 115 88 71 86 65 09 87 73 17 7' 52 92 74 01 87 67 93 80 37 78 112 22 88 6-4 OJ 114 5' 90 78 M 68 07 ea 11 11 80 53 88 87 3e 83 70 82 72 0 1 91 71 18 81 67 91 73 32 85 811 117 511 112 6ll 83 68 52 89 58 92 n 82 58 85 55 81 5' 88 64 78 80 88 75 8-4 72 70 86 74 01 87 71 105 9• 74 90 70 90 72 58 105 78 ea 71 183 8-4 73 01 83 Be 89 77 87 81 82 68 01 78 &4 87 8G .01 89 13 .oe 111 70 88 73 2 11 91 57 112 78 02 82 ea 113 74 Ml 89 112 87 81 68 39 78 59 1a ea 01 85 88 90 72 89 S8 ea 10 .01 lie 72 22 78 82 ea 12 .o3 78 57 S I LOUii S1 P-T~ SI Ste Marlo Spoilene Syrecuae roe>e11• ruc:90fl TulM Wllhlngtn WIChltl 88 ~ 71 811 80 80 104 IM M 9• CALIFOMeA 72 2.20 7• 18 80 .38 84 63 28 71 75 73 88 75 70 Bakertfleld 108 75 Blythe 112 Eurek• &4 55 FrMtlO 105 73 L.enCU181" 119 117 LOI An09'M 115 68 Mety9ville '°' 68 ,...,... t11 Peao Robleol t02 55 Aed Blufl tot 70 ReOwood City 711 59 s.cramento 117 se SellnM 87 St Sen Diego 111 10 Sen Francieco 80 55 Sent.a Sarti.re 80 58 Senti Marte 70 Slodrton 102 88 Thermal ,,, Ukiah 115 Bartlow 103 79 Bio 8Mr 81 42 CetllllM 75 112 LOng 8-:tl 90 116 Monro-M 103 eo Mt W1leon 86 117 Newport e..ch 81 86 Onl#10 100 82 PMTI 8pMgl 113 711 PMlldana 911 115 Sen 8enWdlnO 104 8' s.n OatJnet 100 ee Sen JON Senti An• T lhoe Velie)' CeJoary Edmonton MonlrMI Ottawa Regl'I• Toronto Venoouv.r WlnnlP4111 CANADA Smog 78 54 76 51 82 ee 80 85 73 •8 71 63 73 Ml ea '8 Shower• 1no thunderatorme d1mpened ar••• from the nonhefn Rodllel to the Plllinl and lhrough peru ol the EHi and Southee9t today A r"""1orm OU1nC*1 "'°'9 11181\ 4 lncMe of rein on Allentown anO Bethlltlern. Pe.. cauelng one dMth end lr\ggerlng mudelldM, ~ outagee and etrandlng motor18t1 In ltlelr ~-A North1mpton, Pe .• min drowned Sunday night w~ h• ••~ Into • dralnege dltcn wt111e ~oeelng • 11 ..... Ind ... ewept ... y. offldell Mid. A •-t!Mindettho-1 ttruck 1oulhern Oregon end p1rt1 ot IOUthem Attzona. The Oreat l.M• region wH cloudy. EIHwhere a11r.. -moe11)' clMr. Temperatur98 around the nellorl before dewri rttneed trom 47 et ....... &c.-.... -,, t-..._-, __ -SU-_R_f _l_IP_H_T_ ~:~:~~~ ..... ·- ~. ~ _ leoondhlgh 1:18pm. 48 leoond low 7:06 p.m. 2.. 1 1w1 llwf IWf .... .... .... lUUOAY A'9'1 ... ,,.. A'I -Dtr Flf"ft high 12:4' e.m. 4.3 Flr9' low 7: 17 Lm, 1.1 Zuma 2 4 Senta Monloe 2 ' Nrawport 9eed'I 2 4 San Diego CWMy 2 ' OvtlOo4l 10r T u.ci.y. Utile cn.ng.. 12 12 UI 12 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 SW SW 8W SW 8-!d hlOft 1:111 p,m 4.7 8-!d low l tl1 p.rn. t .O 9un Mt• tod1y •t f:411 p.m .. ,.._ T'*ldlly et 9110 Lm. Moon rteea tocltyat 10:11 p.m .• .... T~ et 10:11 a,.m, Shelley Douglass of the Ground Zero Cent"r for Non- Violent Action asked the crowd for a moment of silence to commemorate the atomic bomb victims in Japan. Roman Catholic Archbishop Raymond Hunthau.sen of Seattle, an outspoken Coe of nuclear anns, also addressed the crowd, seated on ·drift wood logs or standing on wet tideflats. The Ohio. a $1.2 bi Ilion , 560-foot-long vessel built by the Electric Boat division or General Dynamics or Groton, Conn .. IS th e first of 10 Trident submarines the Navy hopes to base in Bangor. The Tride nt is capable o r sending 24 Trident 1 multaple- warhead nuclear missiles to targets as far as 4,000 miles away. The Ohio has bee_n undergoing sea trials in the Auanuc since it was launched in November. A "Peace .l:.ilockade" composed of the Australian ketch Pacific Peacemaker, the Canadian ship Lizard of Woz and a dozen 12-foot orange rowboats planned to try to stop the Ohio by blocking its path. The Navy has said at will close the 18 -mile-long Hood Canal when the Ohio arrives and declare a 1,000-yard security wne around the submarine as it m oves through Was hington waters Violating the security zone would make blockaders liable for penalties of up to 10 years in jail and a $10,000 fine, authorities said. The blockaders spent Sunday practicing for the submarine's arrival. They made no try at stopping the Polaris sub . organizers said. Penalty procedure upheld by judge By DAVID KUTZMANN 0( the OeNy Not lteff A superior court judge has refused to dismiss a death penalty allegatio n ag~1nst a former Costa Mesa man accused of killing one girl and wounding another in Cleveland National Forest last September. Judge Robert Fitzgerald ruled Friday there was sufficie nt evidence to support a charge that defendant Thomas Franc is Edwards shot and killed the youngster by "laying in wait," a speciaJ circumstance allelJation that could lead to impoeiuon of the death penalty. Edwards' attorneys said they would appeal the ruling to the 4th Di.strict Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. The defendant was not present an court. He was found by sheriff's deputies early in the day laying in his Orange County Jail cell bleeding from wounds to his wrists. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards had apparently tried to kiU himself by slashing his wrists with a raz.or blade pulled out of a dise<J&&ble cartridge. Hart said Edwards was taken to UC lrvine Medical Center for treatment and then transported back to the jail. The d efendant is charged with murder and attempted murder for the shooting death of 12-year-old Vanessa Iberri and the wounding of her companion, 13-year-old Kelly Cartier. The two girls from Lake Elsinore ~re hiking along a dirt road near Blue Jay Campground last Sept. 19 when, ac:cording to Mass Cartier. a man in a red pickup truck drove alongside them and opened fire afte r saying. "He:v girls." i!;dwaras was 1dent1fied by Miss Cartier as the gunman during a preliminary hearing an January. lt#'fttJf ... MOTORCYCLE MECCA -Mo~ Une tM lldewalk on Cherry Street betwe.n 16th and l'tth Strftta in downtown Philadelphia. Police ~~ permitted motorcyole c:ommutera to park on the strip provided they do not ride on the aldewalk. The strip wu on,lnally de9tgnated a bM:ycle park1na atta. 6 live thanks to te~n DALLAS (AP) -A )'OUl_ll man who uked that h1a llh9 Iii ~ from the clltta ot Ha..b Ulo wanted to donate h1' «aa- to people who needed them - and hi.I death pve llx people ln four atatea a better chance to walk, see or aurvtve. David Gllaaon, 19, died of mualve head lnjurie. atter he fell from a marquee at a theater whett he worked. Ever at.nee he had a kidney removed three years a10, he had told hia ~ta that donattna hi.a organs • wu aornethln8 he really wanted to do," hl1 mother, Dorothy, of suburban DuncanvlJle, said Sunday. "It , waa very important to him." Orpn tranapJani, are pot rare -the Southwest.em Organ Bank alone expects to arran&e O:w> thia year through " nationwide network -but cru.orta atory showe d the difference one person c.an make. After he was pronounced dead July 23, the transplant service at the University of Tex•• Southwestern Medical School immediately began rnatchin1 requests from local d.octon and other transplant banks ln the nation. A c orn e a was flown to Youngstown, Ohio, where a 28-year-old welder feared 106ing his job because of deteriorating eyesight. In a Dallas-area hospital, doctors restored vision to a 62-year·oid woman blinded by an eye disease that had destroyed her cornea. From Mullin, Texas, and Columbia, S.C., patients needing bone transplants to walk normally again flew to Dallas. Brian Henderson of San Diego was readied for knee transplant surgery. And surgeons at Parkland Memorial Hospital here worked anew to save the life of a 34-year -old man burned over half his body in an explosion. Knowing other people were helped "doesn't make losing someone you loved any easier - except that what he wanted is happening," said Glisson's fat.her, James. But Henderson, rec1.4perating from knee surgery at Southwestern Medical School here; said, "That family gave me a new start at life." "They must be fine, caring people. I would like to thank them. I would like to tell them what a happy person I am because o r what they did." he said. "David made sure we all understood that, if he should die, that he wanted his remains to be used to the absolute fullest," his father said. '"When he talked about it, he almost always related to some child being able to see again. He was very specific in his wishes." As doctors performed 90me of the transp)anl o p e rations, Glisson's family and friends gathered at a memorial service. Afterward, Glisson'• brother, Rick, flew to Hawaii, and spread the ashes over the cliffs where hlS brother had played during his boyhood years. Laguna crash • • YJCt1m, 16, said serious A 16-year-old girl whose legs were partially severed in a car c rash Friday near El Morro Beach in Laguna remains in serious condition today at 1.JCI Medical Center. Ramona Lauriano of Laguna Hills, who California Highway oatrolmen said made a U-tu.m on Coast lfiBhway lnto the path of a ia.ge truck, underwent surgery Frlda_y to re-attach the two pattially severed legs. The 4 p .m . crash backed up traffic for more than a mile in both directions as paramedics and firemen worked to free the woman from her crumpled vehicle. A helicopter landed on the highway to take the injured girl to the hospital A spokesman at the hospital said today it will take time to determine whethe r Friday's surgery waa suocesstul. Pig disrupts lawyers, press SAN FRANCISCX> (AP) -A fri1htened, filthy baby pig ecam~ lnto a meednC rocm of lawyen at the Hyatt Refmcy Hotel, dlaruptinc . an Amel1can Bar A.n.Uon debate on ethb and the ...... Two unidentified ra\tn were teen dumplJ\I the ptc Into the room Sunday from an • excrement·ftlled plutk carrier bef•n they ran. The IN& about 2 moot.ha old, bad •flf.Dry Roy'' wrltWI on lW lkSe In r.d paint. READY FOR SHOW -Russell Renick. 50, ·of Columbus, Texas, and his wife, Nita, polish up their 1958 Edsel Pacer convertible outside suburban Detroit hotel. Mrs. Renick also owns an Edsel. M embers of the Edsel Owners Club ., .. ....__.. are holding their 14th annual convention in Dearborn as they celebrate the 25th anniversary of the F.dsel's introduction by the Ford Motor Co., whose headquarters is just a short distance away. Grain embargo Carter's secret Failed to tell allies of action against Soviet Union WASHINGTON (AP) -The failure of form er President Carter to personally tell foreign allies ahead of time when he em bargoed grain sales to the Soviet Union was a "damning mistake," says a private report by an Agriculture Department economist. If the Carter administration had planned and executed it better, the embargo "could have been substantially more effective than it was," the report says. Even so, the embargo did hurt the Soviets, and didn't hurt American farmers as much as many said, it concludes. Announcing the embargo p-an. 4, 1980, Carter said: "After consultation with other principal grain exporting nations, I am confident that they will not replace these quantities of grain by additional shipments on their part." Ca rter "was ei th e r misinformed or intentionally misleading when he made that statement," the report said. "Th ere is no evidence either Carter, any top White House officia l, or any Cabinet member · ever s poke with officials of the other grain exporting countries before the embargo." "Cooperation of t h e other grain exporters could have been lined up more adroitly," it said. "Clearer articulation of the objectives and expected impacts of the embargo could have better reinforced domestic support for it." Fonner Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland, who said he had Ex-einployees sued for picketing firin INDUSTRY (AP) -Three former empl oyees of Tom Sawyer's Old Fashioned Krispy Chicken simply wanted what they thought was due them when they put together a picket line urging customers to boycott the fast-food outlet. But 1 'h years after the protest for back pay, they are faced with a $200,000 lawsuit by the restaurant's owner charging them with an illegal conspiracy to wreck his business. Glendora resident Deborah Skjerve, 24, Victoria Dunnaway. 19, of La Puente, and her husband, Mike, 21, were accused by their form er boss of negligence and "unlawful and continuing conspiracy" to "intimidate the customers'' in connection with the protest. Steven Sanford, a financially ail.i.ng Beverly Hills businessman, filed the $200,000 civil suit against the young picketers after they quit and set up t heir plcketline in December 1980. "I con sider myse lf lower- middle class, and there's no way my husband and I could come up with that kind of money," Ms. Dunnaway said. M a . Skjerve , who was manager of the restaurant in this small town about 20 miles east of Los Angeles, said she was seeking $650 in back wages in the protest. Ms. Dunnaway, former assistant manager, said she wanted $190 owed her. They say they still have not been paid. Meanwhile, other factors have complicated m atter s for the former employees: -Sanford has filed a personal bankruptcy petition. -They have been told it could be 2 'h years before the awt is placed on the crammed Los Angeles County Superior c.ourt docket. In the meantime, Ms. Skjerve and Ms. Dunnaway have been forced to r e present themselves in Stanford's bankruptcy case, of which they are perties. -The attorney representing the three in the civil suit is retiring . and the former employees a.re finding it difficult to find a replacement because of the lack of potential for return on a countersuit they filed against Sanford. "We can only get an attorney interested if there is the pomtbWty of collecting damages from Steve Sanford," Ms. Skjerve said. "Since he's gone into bankruptcy, no one we've talked to is interested In our caae.'' ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Claa1tn.d edffftlalng 7141142-5179 All other depertment1 142~ Thomaa P. Halft l'\MINr _. a.. ........... Ofllow Kay Schultz VIOe~· ... onctor ol ~ Tom Murphlne lcMor Mk• H.,-.,.y Dir-. ol ...n-. ~ Ken Godd9rd ~-~ ~Kleen Tom McCann ........ Y9ot MAIN Of'FICE JJ0 Wett 1.., St .• C.ta -·CA. Mall ........ lo• U.0, COit. Mew, Cill n.M COPY•IOl'll '"' 0r-. Cont P.,.,.1.,,.,. ""'-· No newt S10rle-. lllustrall0fl1, "".,,...' m.nK M-. v.rtfMrnenll ...,...n nwy be r...-ed wHtwolt -lel perml1MOfl Of <Cll>Y•i9M -r. VOL. 75, NO. 221 read an early draft, called the report a "generally accurate" account of Carter's embargo action. "In my judgment, it would have been much more effective had there been a prior contact to at least advise those foreign leaders that this decision was imminent," he said. Bergland was among a number of f o rmer senior Ca r ter administration officials, including White House aides. who had been interviewed f or the analysis. The report was written by Jack Roney, a career Agriculture Department employee, while he was on a year's paid leave of absence to study at The Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies. The paper was undertaken as part of his class work. The report said the action did have a significant impact on the Soviet Union and did not fault Carter for moving quickJy once he made the decision to impose it. However, it said, "The relegations of the responsibility for contacting other exporting nations to an agency staff person, only three h ours before the actual announceme nt, was a damning mistake.·· Other major grain suppliers, including Canada and Australia, were caught off guard. Both countries promised initially not to exceed "normal" sales to help the Soviets deal with shortages of U .S . imports, but wound up boosting shipments sharply above historical levels. Argentina, miffed by Carter's human rights policies and by not being informed in advance of the grain embargo, r e fused to cooperate at all and turned out to be the main supplier of grain to the Soviet Union that year. Prior to Carter's a ction - intended to punish the Soviet Union for sending its army into Afghanistan -the Soviet Union was expected to buy a record 25 million metric tons of w heat and corn from the United States unde r terms of a long-term agreement that had been in effect for four years. The agreement guaranteed the Soviets up to 8 ·million metric tons of U.S. grain annually. Sales exceeding that amount required approval by American officials. Carter's embargo order let the 8 mllllon metric tons continue but effectively barred the shipment of 17 million additional tons. The report said it was apparent within a few months that the Soviets were getting grain from other 90urces. Nonetheless, it said the embargo did cause problems for the Soviet Union and did not hurt U.S . farmers as much as many have said. "Analy.es do not support the notion that the e mbargo aip.iticantly depre.ed U.S. farm prices and income, but aome vocal farm leaders who Insisted othe-rwlae dfd receive considerable support." the report aafd. We'Te Listening ••• . ' MONl~F"rldey II ~ dO noc ,_ •.,.,.,, -by II 30 o m cell 119be 7 0 Ill llAd "°'" COOY """ be "*-eel laMmy -Sun<tey If!°: C10 "°' ::,r.-... c::r ~. co:; ... c:: --eel .. • Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot! What don't you like? Call the number below and your me11a1e w111 be recorded transcribed and dellvered to the appropriate editor. ' The same 24·hour an1wertn1 service may be uaed to record let· ters to the editor on any topic. Mailboit conlribbton m•t include their name and telep,bone number for vertllc.uon. No drculaUOn calls. ptease. . TeU us what's on your mind, Mexicans watch their economy deteriorate • M&XlCO CITY (AP) - Stunned and anll'}'. M•xlcana m watching th• bottom drop from thelr once-growing ffc>nomy and are bracing for more price tncreuee thl.a week after the aecond big peso. devaluation in six month.I. In te. than a year, a country which estimates It haa the world'• fourth-large9t proven oil raervet hU plunged from the brink of prosperity into lta wont recetllon aince World War ll, end there ia no immediate improvement in light. An ambitioua development program, flnanced by revenue from vast new oilfield.a to tum Mexico Into a major Industrial power, is atalled. Jobs, which were getting plentiful after centuries of poverty, are scarce again and worker's wages buy on e-third less than last year. Within a year, inflation has doubled to an annual rate of 60 percent, the foreign debt has doubl ed to $80 billion and economic growth has fallen to near zero 'from a previous annual rate of 8 percent. Bankers who once flocked to do business with "'1exico are now reluctant to lend. To force the countrr to stop spending more tha n 1t earns, Treasury Secretary Jesus Silva Herzog on Thursd&y imposed a new, two-tier exchange system, causing the peso to lose about half lts value in one day -on top of a 46 percent devaluation i.n February. A few daya earlier, the government'• withdrawal of conaumer 1ub1tdiea almoit doubled price• for 1a10Une, electridty, pa, tort1llu and other b8* foocb, "Better not even think about ft becauae one gets a complex. The price of tortillaa went up, everyt.hina la ~oina up." N.ld a IMeXico City worker apUdna up strewn paper and dry aummer leave. in a downtown park. "It la cataatrophlc and a very ugly thing.'' The park cleaner, who refuaed to give hla name, said he earns the minimum -280 peeoa a day or $5. 71 before Thursday's devaluation and about half that now. He predicted crime wfll lncreMe becawe •'tome people WOl be delpente." P'fdenclo, a portly waiter at Cafe La Habena, oomplalned the'l h1a aa1ary I.a ... milery, will not buy me anything anymore." He too makea the mfnfmum but aometimet triples it with ti ... The oU boom ~ted 4 miJlkln new Jobe between 1978 and 198f. The receufon may leave 1 milllon people joble., eapedally conatructlon workere. The country needs 860,000 new Jobe a year to mat~h it• population pwth. The new exchange ayaiem ae~ a preferential rate of around 4t peaos to $1, financed wtth~l revenues, to keep down lm prices of basic food and ey industrial products. Government rejects gene patent claims. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Two universities seeking patent claims on products created through genetic engineering say they are confident they ultimately will overcome the federal government's rejection of their requests. "This is an adversarial process," Niels Reimers, Stanford University's director of technical licensing, said. "In this case, a reiection is a routine part of the procedure between the patentee and the pa~t office." But Gene Tegtmeyer, uaistant cornmiaioner for the U.S . Patent and Trade mark Office in Washington, said the claims had been deemed "not patentable." ''They can argue the rejection. They might overcome it or they might not," he said. At issue is a patent to give Stanford and th.e University of Califo rnia infringement protections on the genetic materials -bacteria known as transformltnts -produced through genetic engineering. The unversit.ies already hold a 1980 patent on the gene cloning process, the Cirst patent to be issued in the United States on processes that ocxur in nature. Transformants can produce a variety of compounds that previously were available only through n a tural proceasea, including human inaulin, a growth honnone that might help victim• of dwarfism and a vaccine for a diseue affecting swine. • Problems with the application included questions of whether the s pecific proceasea were adequately described, reservations about patenting a process that occurs in nature and concer ns o ver a visiting professor's refusal to sign a disclaimer of inventorship. The universities have 90 days to reply to concerns raised by the Patent Office before final action. If they get a final rejection, they may file an appeal with the. Boa.rd of Appeals in the Paten~ and Trademark Office. 1 Failing that, they could file.: lawsuits in federal court, said Tegtmeyer, who r efu sed to discuss the merits of the application. The gene splicing and~· processes covered by the 198 patent were devised by StanJe Cohen of Stanford and H .,, wnptloto DEEP FREEZE -IBM engineer Bob Emberty keeps cool inside a test chamber at the company's T ucson , Ariz., plant, as desert temperatures soar past the century mark. The environmental chamber, capable of lowering temperatures to 40 degrees below zero F~renheit, is used to simulate conditions encountered during shipment of magnetic tapes and other products. Boyer of the University of ~ Franciaco. Since it was Issued, th~ universities have collected $1.~ million by licensing 73 private oompanies to UM! the technique, The cost of a single llcenae i.a $10,000 initially and $10,000 ~ year. -. from a..w privatq, labz.1 ool lq.ction, our moet p:>pulor 1oajs~ ~ .ehirt,s ... yiar in end. )'Ullr aJt theecz. .9hitt& ere~ a be&ic in CNtryhx:ty.5 watdrcbz. . a favorite fur~ or CSSUl!ll 'Mlllr. evmlalici in ~sd wa.cr docrocV coU.on er 10Jro cxilon -- Bottled water compared BY PAT aoaowrrz or .. .,..,,... .... DSAR PAT; Wll•t'1 tlle •tffereace betw ... Seiber, eaiMU&ed .... ,, •Nl'ldJu water ••• cl•lt t0•a? I'm parafcalarlj latereta.4 la dte tall eo11S..C of ea~ ol llMH typet of bonl .. water. G.J., Corou Ml Mar Seltrer ia purified, tap water with carbon d1ox:kle lldded to make lt fiD and bubble. No ult ll added to Seltzer, whkb con~ only the ult nonnally found In purifjed "atel'. Tap water, acco~~ln1 to the Environmental Protection Afeb!:Y• typically contalna fewer than 100 ma: of eodlum per quart. which exceed.a ita recommended level of 20 Dll· of eodlu.m per r for tap water. Sparklina water' ta carbonated with carbon dioxide. The water comes from a aprtng and containa only the natural ult found In 1prtna water. Some aparkllng water -called natural 1parklin1 water -ia carbonated naturally at lta underground 80W'Ce. Club 80da la carbonated water. However, salt is usually added for tute. Thia additional ~tin 80IDe brands raiaes the total amount of aOdium chloride to about 200 mg. per quart - 10 times the EPA-recommended level for tap water. In comparison, the amount of salt in Seltzen and sparkling waters is determined by the salt In the water aource. Some Sela.en contain up to 44 mg. of salt per quart and certain branda of sparkling water have up to 16 mg. per quart. Slow cooking urged DEAR REAOERS: High temperatures and long cooking time for protein-rich fooda, such as beef, pork, chJcken and eggs produce substances that bring about extensive genetic mutation in bacterial test cells. Thia finding, reported by UC Berkeley food toxicologist Leonard Bjeldanes, suggests that in sufficient doses these substances may contribute to causing cancer or other genetic diaeases in hwnana. The longer and hotter protein-rich foods are cook~ the greater the mutagenic activity produced. Frying, grilling and broiling pr~uce the greatest activity followed by baking and roasting. Cooking methods that retain the food's own juice, suCh as simmering, stewing, boiling or microwave cooking, produce very few mutagens. Foods do not have to be overcooked or charred to produce extensive mutagenicity. Carbohydrate-rich foods are leas likely to produce this reaction. The research did not demonstrate definite links between cancer and various foods cooked in certain ways . Mutagens may not be abeorbed or human cells may have defenaes against them. However, until more is known, Bjeldanes recommends using slow, low- temoerature cooking methods (280 to 360 degrees F) on protein-rich food . Rent deposits limited DEAR PAT: la ~ere uy llmit oa tlle amout of a aecarlty deposit a ludlord cu demaad of a teaaat before reatl•1 aa apartment? R.G., ButlqtoD Buell Normally, lf you rent an unfurnished apartment, your land.lord cannot require you to pay more than two months' rent for a depoaitj lf you rent a fumlahed place, you ~ be ~ to pay more than tlitee monthl• Nnt • • oepoe1t. Your depo1lt cannot be withheld (no matter what lt'1 called) when you move out to cover the COi\ ot ~~which mn be conlldered normal wear and tear. You allo must receive an ltemlled, written atatement expla1nina what wu done with your eecwity dei>mtt wTtbin two weeks of your movm, out. Tax line stiffened DE.ta PAT: I lleanl "•n'1 a flM for flllD1 a fra9daleat W-4 tax form. Wit.at It It? C.S., Cotta M ... The Economic Recovery Tax Act 6f 1981 lmcreued the amount fineG from ~ to $500. Thia penalty became effective Dec. 3ll 1981. Heatstroke treatment DEAR READERS: The Greater Loa Angele• chapter of the National Safety Council wama that heatstroke ta an extreme medical emeraency. lta early symptoma are aimllar to heat exhaUltion, but very IOOJl the · ~ redwtll-=t~~~ ~bl';111 ~ conadouaneaa or even go Into convulalon.s. NSA 1ay1 that ftrat aid must start immediately With the 1oal of lowering the body temperature. Keep the victim out of the sun and In the coolest J>C*lble place. Strip him and pour on cool water, or lmmenie the tono In cool water In a bathtub, pool or lake. If med1cal aid cannot be brought to the victim, he should be moved quickly to a hospital, but only lt the cooUna procea can be continued on the way. Heatstroke and heat exhaustion may or may not be caused by din!ct sun rays. but they are acute symptoma that develop quickly, and they can strike at any age. Avoidfna the 1un'1 rays won't necessarily prevent heat exhaustion and heatstroke, for heat is the enemy -espedal.ly when it joins forces with humidity. The council advises trying to keep cool, drinking plenty of fluids and limiting salt during hot, humid weather. In heat exhaustion, the symptoms develop in this order: headache, alight to severe dizziness, mental confusion or physical incoordination -followed by nausea and vomiting; extreme weakness and difficulty in seeing properly. By that time the victim will be pale and sweating profU11ely, the skin will feel cool and the puhe will be weak and very rapid -up to 200 beata per minute. The council advt.es moving the victim to a shady, cool place where he can rest. A light covering to prevent too rapid cooling may be helpful. Elevate the feet and gently massage the anna and legato increa8e circulation. Give the victim as much water aa he can comfortably take. U there's no improvement, get medical help promptly. • ·~t a problem? Then write to Pat· Horowitz. Pat w1l1 cut red tape, -.1 19tti.ng the aMWen and action you • ueed to •olve inequities Jn IOVernment and bualneu. Mail your qlM!9tlorv to Pat Horowitz, At Your &rvke, 0raiwe C.out Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, a.ta Meu, CA 92626. A.t many letten as postdble will be answered, but pboae lnqulrler or letten not including the l"ellder'• full name, addre68 and bualneu hours' phone number cannot be considered. $179 million windfall R.J. Reynolds wins settlement from Kuwait By MIL TON MOSKOWITZ If you see and hear much more advertising for Camel, Winston-Salem and Vantage cigarettes -or for Del Monte's canned frulta -you can thank the govenunent of Kuwait, the tiny, oil-rich sheikdom at the top of the Persian Gulf. It's providing the wherewithal. At the end of June, Kuwait forked over a cool $1 79,751,000 to R.J . Reynolds Industries of Wlnaton- Salem, N.C. It's not every day you get a check for nearly $180 million, even a big company like Reynolds. lt was cashed Immediately. resulting in the biggest quarterly profit, by far, ever eeen in Wins1on- Salem. After-tax profits for the three months ended June 30 weighed in at $295 million, up 60 percent over the profits In the first quarter and up 48 percent over the profits in the same quarter last year. Kuwait ldcked In about one-third of thoee profits. The one-time payment settled a dispute that goes back to 1977 when Kuwait nationalized the business of the American Independent OH C.ompany (Amlnoil), which Reynolds bought for the barpln price of $55 million In 1970. Aminoil had oil wells in Kuwait and In the Divided Zone between Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. 'lilere was no way Reynolds could atop the nationalization. The isaue wu: How much would Kuwait pay foe Aminoil's oonce91iona? r-> ----------------~~/.}/ 11t111 1a111m .... replacement value of a concemion that was pumping 89,400 barrebl of oil a day, plus the "lost profita" that Aminoil expected to reap under a concesaion that ran to the year 2008. So the dispute went to a three-man Arbitration Tribunal. One member, Sir Gerald Fitzmaurice, a British attorney, was named by Reynolda; another member, Professor Hamad Sultan from Cairo Univeralty, wu named by Kuwait; and the third member, who acted aa president of the tribunal, was appointed by the president of the International Court of Justice: he was Profeaor Paul Reuter from the Univeraity of Paris, an expert In international law. · This tribunal came down In the end on the aide of Reynolda, hence the $179.7 million award as appropriate compensation for the nationalized properties. The dedaton, Interestingly eftOUlh, waa unanlmoua. And Kuwait paid prompUy. L COMING UP -The Tudor-era lhip, the ~a.ry ~. •unk ln battle oft Porumouth, &igland, 437 years ago, will be railed from the de th.a this fall. lf all well. The .., ,, ... tlagahip of Henry vm WU locaied 17 yeen ago 40 feet down. Some 25,000 dlvea were made salvaging artifactl fro'm the wreck. CANCER DETECTION CENTER OF ORANGE COUNTY A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION OFFERING BELOW COST COMPREHENSIVE SCREENING FOR EARLY DETECTION OF CANCER • SCREENING INCLUDES• Thorough_ Physical Complete Blood Count Stool Bleeding Check Pap Smear For W·omen Self Examination Instructions Medical Center Profflssionar Building 18800 Main Street Suite 105 Huntington Beach, Calif. 841-1871 People all along the Orange Coast rely on the DlilJ Pilat 6424321 The Kuwaitis, flauring that Aminotl had been rtppinl them oU for years, propo1ed this deal: (1) Amlnoll'a uaeta there had a book value of $38 mlllton; (2) under an earlier aareement Aminoll owed Kuwait $32 milllon, ao that bri.nO the value down to $6 million; (8) the AmlnoO unit ln the Pend.an Gulf had debta of $19 million, meaning that R.J. Reynalda reaJq owed Kuwait $12 million: and (4) Kuwait allo wanted Beynolda to .rebate what it oalled ''windfall proata" Am1noll had made in PNVloUI years. Reynolds laid it was putUng the money to work rtlht away tMICkin81'• cigarette branda and new Del Monte product&. It came at a crucial time f0t lleynolda, locked in a dodl&ht with Philip Morris for leaderiblp In the U.S. cigarette market. PhWp Morris hu been nlbblina away at thia 1Md for a looll time and when 1981 ended, lt had 32 percent of the market compared to 33 percent for Reynalda. 1 KNOB presents ·M & M's Week· begin- ning August 16. Listen for your chance Re.ult; AIDQM)ll WU l\tP,l>C*Ci to ~watt for natlonaJf1ln1 tta a.J. JWynoldl na&unlly obJldad. lntJatlna tba t U 1houfd be compenNted on the bails of the Meanwhile, no one aboufd feel aorry for Kuwait. a country J.he .._ of Hawall with a pop.alatlan of le9 than 1 mil1Jon. It recently bouaht Senta h International. an Amertoan aupplier of oil dril11na equipment (ex-.P"rieldent Gerald l'ord 1lt1 on lta board); lt already own1 a bl' chunk of Dalmler-Benl\ th• bullder of Mercedee-Bem automobOel; and lt WM NpCJl1ed fO haw ncllltly tUm a e&aable ~Uon ln another German :::r·=. the wodd'• lara-t Kuwait 11 the world'• Mventh 1ara-t ~ producer. I to win tickets to see Melissa Manchester on Sunday, August 22 or Anne Murray 'on Friday, August 27 at the beautiful I / ::1 I .·-.....---~ ...... ,, Sex studies • • dispute boils .at Long Beach BJ ~M'SJJ: BYMAN Alllllt!l•fllW--' LONG BEACH -l'o. of a women'• atudJe9 ~ ay lt promotea lutilanilm and feminiln), whlle aupporten MY academic freedom la betna threetened by Ji&ht.-winl critb. The l'elUlt hM been a loni1 hot "Tbe issues go beyond any one university ... ,,. aummer of con troveray at a publlc u.n.lvenlty. Since the dilputa bepn at Cal State Lona Beech. the inlti™tlon baa 1uapended the Women'• Center and canceled a c1ua ln the Women'• Studiea Program. Thirteen faculty members and two students responded with a lawsuit against the univenity. ••1 think everyone on a • unlwrettr ""'"PW tabl that far ll'*Dt.cl and I think we bei&eve that when IOeeOOt tabl what we •1 out of context that. the u.n.lwnlty will then •erdle lta rtaht to protect ua. It hun't =ned that way at Loni and we'~ not exactly IW'9 why.'' Jo Ellen Allen,~ of th• comervatlve CatUorm. ~ Forum. Mid •'()wo tita-t objection i• that the eoUre women'• 1tudle1 pro1ram la imbalanced. It te.cbes one potnt of view about women'• 'ltUdlee PI'OlfUDll and that polnt of view ii feminlmi . . . Yee, there ii an emph.uil on leabianilm and an advocacy of it."' In another campus controversy this summer prompted by criticism from conaervatlves, Dr. Barry Singer, who tausht a class ln "Psychology of Sex." restgned after admitting he ottered coune credit for experimental sex experiences. The F.ag1e Forum WU founded by a n t l -E q·u al RI g h t 1 Ame.ndment cruaader Phylll1 Schlafly. Mn, Allen WU among four women who aat ln on eome women'• atw:lies claMe9 ln the spring, read textbooks and interviewed students. They complained to state Sens. IJ.L. Rlchardaon and Ollie Speraw and Aasemblyman Dennta Brown, who took the oomplaplta to the admin.lstratlon. The complalnta included an allegation that a part-time inatructor, Betty Brooka, showed slides of her genitals ln clasa, told studenta to imagine themselves on a beach "doing things" to other women and invited a lecturer who partially disrobed. Ms. Brooks was relieved of teaching asslgnmenta and the university baa not said whether her contract will be renewed. OWL'S WELL AT NEWPORT -These plastic owls on a boat in Newport Harbor are supposed to keep gulls away, .,.., ............. but this fellow doesn't seem to know thai. The gull is using the plastic "scarefull" for a launching pad. "The thing that ticks the evangelicala off is both women's atudies and I are impartial ln our coverage of homosexuality," Singer said at the time. lfe ls trying to get his job back. The issues in the dispute go beyond any one university, said Sharon Sievers, a history profeaaor who serves on the women's studies advisory board. "rm quite sure that women's studies programs are going to be a target in the '80s of rlght- wtngen especially," she said. ''The power of the right wing rests on its political alliances and ita ability to raise enormoua amounts of money either to elect people or defeat them." Academic freedom "sometimes involves raising controversial ilsuee," she said. ~ Overweight? Just a little out of shape? Or both? Dortt give up. Ma. Brooks could not be reached through the university, and her telephone number was not available. The Women's Center, where women could seek advice and counseling, was temporarily closed and no coursea were offered ln the Women's Studies Program during the second summer session. The future of the program ia unclear, with university administrators re to comment. "Live-tr' up at Richard Simmons new Anatomy Asylum. Now with 5 locations, and many Adminiatratora alao removed the director of the program, Sondra Hale, from that position although 1he apparently will. continue as an instructor, said Susan McGrievy, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney. Ma. Hale, Ma. Sievers and other faculty members 1ued the university with aulatance from the ACLU, eeeki.ng to reinstate Ms. Hale as director and reinstating the canceled classes and Women's Center activities. "Thia ls not a matter of academic freedom, but of academic quality," University President Stephen Horn said ln respon1te to the suit. "The university is completely within lta rights and will not be intimidated. by anyone in its quest for quality." The cam us Aaaociated mental attitude that can last for the rest of your fife. Call or come In to Richard Simmons new Anatomy Asylum today \bu can do It. Join now. URRVI FINAL more to come. ltS all here. The fun. The fitness. The results. All the right Ingre- dients for your success formula. Join on a 1-year membership and get 2 years of fun and fitness free. ThatS DAYS 3 years for the price of l. Get started now. Richard SlmmonS "/Ive-It" concept w/11 work for you. ttS an exciting combina- tion of exercise, proper · nutrition and a positive '°" mr-CONST"UC710N CHA"Tr" MrMtr"5HIPS. Charter rMmbarshlps now ,,.,.,,,,,,,.. Join today and _get.,,.. Ncltard Sim AMtomy Alyfum J.shlrt. WOOOCNIO HIU.5•Z3Zl0 ~ntt.n tJlvd. •884-ZZOZ ~•ZOO N. &'and 1'1Vd. • !W0-04Z3 ~ HIU.S• 9.5C>e Little ~ta Monica tJlvd. • ~-'0-8879 "°""""' ~· J8030 tJrookhcv3t~ ~ OTV•8432 van NfJY' tJlvd. •8SU·87gJ \l'ATOl l'Oll OCAt NrJllUT L«ATION C'Ow.G SOON TO OMOllN CMOWI Students passed a resolution calling for Hom to "stand up for the academic freedom of thla university and oppose the attempts at repression ... " Ma. Sievers said she believes the laaue of lesblaniam was seiz.ed on because lt'a "such a volatile issue, it's easy to use to get people excited" but said that in the program "it's one of a series of presentations on various sexual lifestyles." "We were not aakl.na for them to Slof. any program," Mrs. Allen said. 'We were asking them to have a women's studies program that presents more than one point of view regarding women." Shenna Berger Gluck, a part- time faculty member and plaintiff in the lawsuit, said that to suggest women's studies be taught from an anti-feminist viewpoint ls "like telling someone in black studies to teach from a racist perspective." Booster recovery to he tried Mrs. Allen, who said she teaches political science at West Loe Angeles College, contends the program is biued. "Anytime there was a mention in textbooks of traditional morality, lt was den.lgrated," she said. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -The space agency has decided to try to recover parts of the two space shuttle rocket boosters that sank into the Atlantic after Columbia's launch June 27, officials said. failed to operate correctly. One of the pieces ia a 40-foot-long section containing the flight recorder and other electronic equipment of one of I the rocket casings. according to an announcement from the investigating board set up to detennine cause of the failure. She denied reports the objectors all were fundamentalist Ch.rl.stians. Underwater cameras that mapped the site where the boosters lie have revealed they were broken up by the impact when their parachute systems The other rocket was broken into a large number of parts. "MAKING IT" IN A RECESSION WITH NO SPECULATION, NO NEGATIVE CASH FLOWS, NO "BALLOONS" AND NO RISKSI "There are at least seven ways to make money In real estate assuming no appreciation. Real estate la the only major Invest- ment that~ appreciate last year, but you can make big money safely even if It doesn't!" -Bob Allen "If you're going to make money you·ve got to be out of step with the world. You 're buying when others are selling . . . selling when others are buying!" -Hollis Norton Gold has dropped from SSOO to the S300 range. Silver has dropped from S50 to· SIO. Diamonds have dropped about 50%. Most other major investments have gone down in value, but REAL ESTATE went . .!!I! ln value about 3% last year. For those who knew how to buy it CRE- ATIVELY. It went up much more! BUT ... you don't even have to buy it to make great profits In real estate. Many people are becoming CREATIVELY SELF·UNEMPLOYED because their no·cash Investments are bringing them more Income than they could make on their jobs. A little Information brings FINANCIAL FREE· DOM, and It can happen to you! Cah't do It In a recession, you say? YES, you can! It's even EASIER in so called bad times, and thousands are doing It (as shown on the TV documentaries, "Making It!" and "Success!"). Over 90% of all milllonalrea made thelr fortunes In real estate and with the NEW. CREATIVE methods of buyinQ, plus receuio~ry drops In some real estate prices, there's NO BETTER TIME THAN NOW. It takes little or no cash, and only a few hours of simple Instruction. A major unlvertlty studied the auccesses of those who practice the methods taught by Robert Allen ("Nothing Down" and "Creating Wealth") and Hollis Norton ("How To Make It When You're Cub Poor"). They projected that 20.000 persons 'ltho'vt learned the simple concepu tauQht by lhtse men buy over s20.ooo.ooo worth of real es~te A WEEKI That's over Sl BILLION A VF.ARI . Almo1t every one o( those people started learn· Ing "'how·to·do·it" In a free .emlnar presented by Robert Allen and Hollis Norton. The frtt ntnety·mlnute serolnu will demonttnte IOIK SPECIFIC .. NOTHING DOWN" technique• YoU can use r6'1rt away. ~u wfll also learn one of the many ways to ELLMINATE NEGATIVE CASH FLOWS, how to become FINANCIALLY FREE in FIVE YEARS OR LESS. how anyone can quickly establish GREAT CREDIT, how to earn MORE THAN 50% on your little·or·no·cash investments. and scores of other NEW. creative facts! You can buy depressed·price real est.ate with LESS THAN 10% INTEREST RATES. and even get interest·only financing NOW! Just want to own your own home or trade up to a better one? Five years ago about 10% of all home sales were creatively financed. Now. the "ROBERT ALLEN NOTHING OOWN" revolu· tion has occurred. and in the past year, MORE TMAN 60% of all home sales are financed with the techniques taught in "NOTHING DOWN~ (In some cities, more than 90% of all home sales involve creative financing.) Most real est.ate experts agree. if you want to buy a house in the future YOU MUST know CREATIVE FINANCING techniques. Take ninety· minutes out of your life to attend this no cost. no obligation, illustrated lecture. You11 learn about America's fastest. simplest, safest road to success and financial freedom. The "Nothing Down .. seminar is not just a variation of the old, "fix·up·the·dump" concept with a different name ... it's a whole new 1980's pro· gram for success used by thousands across the country. Attend the no cost, no obligation, ninety· minute "Nothing Down .. success seminar. It's presented by a successful associate of the two famous multi·millionalre investors, ROBERT ALLEN and HOLLIS NORTON. (Starting time is 8 P.M., but come early for a good seat. Please ... no children under ten!) · -LOCATIONS- 8 P .M. -MONDAY, AUGUST 9th SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL 666 Anton Blvd. (1-405, Bristol exit) Costa Mesa 8 P.M. -TllSDAY AUGUST 10th ANAHEIM MARRIOTT HOTEL 100 W. Convention Way (off West, opposite Conv. Ctr.) Anaheim 8 p .M. -WEDNESDAY, I AUGUST 11th HYATT LONQ BEACH · MOOE. PaclflO Coat Hwy (acroea from Long Beach Marina) Long 8Moh I ~ I I Prop. 13 decision .isn't a gold rush THE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court'• late•t declalon on ~ ProPQlltlon IS. the Wt UmftaUon lnitfauve adopted by tha voten ln ·une, now appean to open new doora throu1h which local govemmenta may adopt~ taxes. Under Propoaltlon 13, any new local tax adopt.eel for "•pedal pu.rpoaes" would require a two- thlrds majority vote of the people. rThe framers of the Initiative 'tn\ended to make lt very difficult to levy new local tQea. , The test cue came before the high court out of San Franci8co, where a 55 percent majority had approved a new annual payroll and gross receipts tax. The levy would pump an additional $17 m illion into San Franci1co•1 general fund treasury each year. San Frandlco's new tax was challenged and eventuall~ reached . the state Supreme Court. Then last week, in a 5 to 2 decision, high court justices nlled that the new tax was legal and the two- thirds rnajori ty vote rule did not apply. ' THE REASONING of the court majority appeared to be that because the new San Francisco tax money would be going into the city's general fund, it was therefore not a "special tax" as defined under Proposition 13's requirement for a two-thirds yes vote. . The reasoning of the court majority appears to be based on a very narrow definition of the word "special." That is, the tax must be earmarked for a special purpose in order to demand the - two-thirds majority balloting. Supporters of Proposition 13, who have generally bee n disappointed and angered by the decision, felt that the wording meant that any new tax would be a "special" tax. Thus the two- thirds rule applied all the time. Along the Orange Coast, the city of Newport Beach might be cited as an example of how the two-thirds rule might work under • the lateat ttate' Supreme COun lnwrntadon. · Newport voten hiM.1q1119 to the poU. twtm In ,...... .... to ballot on a ~ lDCNtille In the etty'• bobtl-motal ti9d tax. Ma.t ~Uy }U8t thJa put June, the tax wu on the ballot • a Jpecial levy with tunda earmarked for UM Iii rqed and leWel' conatruc:tion. . SINCE TBll WM.~ tu for a apedftc purpc.e, tt NCiWr'ed the two-third• majority to be adopted by the VO-.. Both Um. it won a 1imple majorlt~ but failed to gamer the two-thtnb required for adoption. Now, it would ap_pear that unc1er the tuch court ruuna. lf the money were earmarked to IO lntO the general fund, rather th.Im for a specific purpo11e, the new bed tax would have been adopted. ~mrity vote would have been s dent. No doubt there will be. all kinds of analysis and interpreta- tion of what the Supreme Court has actually done in ita Propoeition 13 ruling. Numel"OUI local officlala are hailing the decision as a great victory for local government& and an opportunity to beef up revenue through taxation. This newspaper oppo*ed Proposition 13 back in 1978 w'1en it was on the ballot. We feared it would severely reatrict local governments and that 80IUe ot it& applications were inequitable and unfair. Many of theee fears have indeed come to paa. Despite the new high court ruling, however, we certainly hope that local governments of our region do not ruah to the ballot with a whole series of new "general fund" tax proposals. . THE ECONOMIC times in which we now live still dictate pn.&denoe and reatraint. If local governments start crying for a new tax handout on each ballot, the voters could become totally turned off. Even a simple majority would then be impmsible to achieve. Caught short again? CALIFORNIA DRIVERS now use one-sixth of all gasoline used in the United States each day. That amounts to 1.2 million barrels used daily by our state motorists. There are 160 million registered motor vehicles in the United States today. California has 40 million of them. Those unadorned statistics make it abundantly clear that Galifomia lives by the motor car. The freeways and byways of our state are its vital arteries and economic lifelines. Against this backdrop, there was very little solace in the doom-and-gloom predictions last week of California Energy Commissioner Gene V aranini . . Varanini, wh09e term on the coIIllllismon expires next January, predicted California could suffer a major gasoline shortage within the next 10 years should a crisis in the Middle F.ast disrupt supplies. IF THAT happens , he e nvisioned gasoline prices eecalating to $3 a gallon. If California's gasoline supply were reduced just 5 percent, he · d, it would boost prices at the ump by 50 cents a gallon. er, the energy commissioner ested that our state is totally npYe pared for any kind of line shortage. V aranini could aee California n the face of a fuel 1hortage rung to the odd-even gaaollne )'Sand the long pump lines that ted UI in 1979. This is a grlm pieture. Three llan a gallon for gas would be a • devastating blow to working commuters of Oranae County and t h e Los An gel es b a 1 i n . Curtailment of supply would be another economic blow that was bad enough when we experienced .it just three years 880· Numerous offlciah in transportation have been pinntna • their hopes on ma11 tranait systems to solve Southern California's present and future transportation needs. If Commissioner V aranini ii conect in his dire predidlona, however, there may not be enough time now to get anLet~d of viable system in place -get into another fuel equeeze. THAT IS not to l\llP9t that mass transit efforta should be abandoned. In fact, meaningful mass transit programa should be accelerated. Meanwhile howewr, we have little altema~ but to depend upon motor vehlclet and our freeway system. If the threat of fuel shortage is real. then at the very least our government off iciala ahould be planning on how the criaia nlllbt best be handled. Increased car pool program. and coordinated connection to existing mass transit mi&ht be a start. 't.ducation on corwervadon would be another approach. Taxing and Uc_enainc lncentlvn for ~rista drlvinl hilh fuel- eff iciency veblcle1 1hould be enacted into law. Calif orniana 1hould never again be caught· by IUrprt.e and revt.lted by tbe nJ1htmare of 19'79. lnlons expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Otntr views u· rtssed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Rffder ~t 11 lnvlt· .•Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1$60, Cosi. Mesa, CA t262t. Phone (714) 2·4321. . ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Letters to the editor Our nuclear diploma.cy To the Editor: What exqulslte timing! How eenaltive! What a prime example of intemat1onal dlplomecy! I refer to our lovely U.S . Dept. of EMro which telected the morn1na of ~· 6 to detonate one of our latest ela of the atomic bomb at Yucca F1ata, Nev. That wu, of OOW"le, the eve of the day that the Japanese, and pace-loving people around the world, pawed in many a eolemn tribute to thoee who died when we set off another atomic bomb, on Aug. 6, 1945, over H1roe.h1ma, Japan. People everywhere celebrated that anniversary of death and destruction with prayers for peace. Our Energy Deparlment celebrated it by testtna a new momt. Just lign me, DISGUSTED Marilyn's deatb To the Edit.er: On the front of tonight'• paper (Dilly Pilot. Aug. 5), you have what appears to be an intel'Wlinl p6cture of a Marilyn Monroe loolt-allke, an attorney and IUllWbody elle. It mentioned that at the LA.Prall Oub they were dia.'umlng why they ~t Marilyn was murdered 20 yara ago. Why can't you tell us? You know we would like to know why she WM murdered too or what they think about lt. You haw a picture, you have a caption. you have no story and that'• what we would like to find out. CURIOUS We ran earlier account• on the ann/Wrury of Mt.a Monroe'• death. Alle1aclom that ahe waa murdered rematn rJIJl1ftlVed. The official ooroner'a wrdJct atands -that ahe died at ap 38 <11. dtvB ovetdole. -Editor. Taking lich To th& r.ctitcr. I have di1patehed a letter under ...,.,... cover to Mayor Larry Aaran and members of the Irvine City c.ouncn. -9dna bow they'd like to be called a bunch of "damned politicians" and '°moochen" llvinl off the citizenry of Irvine. Would tbae remarks cut or hurt? Are they fair? Would they lib beina lumped lnto a cat.eaory? Do they have any -.we of outnaef An they indJ81wlt? Would thme rel'blrka. be the iac:tion of a very 1wpormble, unpreJudJced penon? I would Uke you to con.rider theme quadclnl in UCht of belna all the above at to my penona1 react.ion to Council rMIDMr 08ido'1 remark that all Realtcn .,... ''moodlen!'' It II stranae that IUCCeldul. reapected national flrm1 such H Sear1 and Merrill-Lynch ate on an aasreulve MqUtllltlon .. opo""on pncJ alb tnto i.i ..iate brolterap contrary to Ml. a.Ado'• ....... 'n'9 strencth and delilrabWty of Irvine 11 the rHult of 1ood real eatate iliUtiliUnc by the IrYtne Company -do cbey allo tall Into the aame cateaarY, • tbey mutt u.se licenled Rulton to aarket their pro&~hl• i• a ~t of the t of B..i ...... t feel Ml. OaSdo needl 1111 ocilrli.tion and education aa to the funetlone of .a.ltorl, and et )9lllt proytde • DUbUc apolo11 to all the hard worldn-1, dedatld ....... of W.oammunltyft ,_ \elf8lrl7 Md ~ a'ltlcmd. DOif 8Ct4D ......... ...... / MAILBOX completely out of oontext. It bothera me that our governor would approve of a commercial implying that typical voters are like that pair of nlnnles, and that he believes real voters are mlndlem enough to be influenced by such appeals. A leader should inspire by example and appeal to us on the highest level of intellect and motive. Jerry Brown has apparently decided we don't deserve auch an approach. The aecond item was the Daily Pilot editorial of (Aug. 2), "Our Prayer: The Callomla Legislature is now in session. God protect California." I hope it was an attempt at Menckenesque humor. U so, I can smile and dismiss it. But I'm afraid too many readers will smile and ta.Ice it to heart, nodding in agreement with its cynidam. It has become fashionable today to conalder the government to be our enemy, and your editorial , unfortunately, adds another little brlquet to the barbecue. W ell, Balderdash! The government is not our enemy! Point to whatever falling or ecand.al you like, the fact remains that for moat of us, most of the time, the government la the only guy on our side. Who do you turn to when you need help? These two items may seem unrelated, but they are not. Our governor thinks the people are stupid and appeals to them at the lowest level, seeking the votes of the gullible. The Daily Pilot thinka the Leplature la malicious and offers a cynical prayer, seeking the applau.e of the ienorant. We cannot amtlnue along this path of mutual d isdain. Does anyone e lse remember, as I do, when the 1overnment and the people worked ., . r. thoee days California was proud to have the best of everything: education, transportation, public safety, and quality of life. Lately, we've been letting it all slip away and blaming the other guy. It's tlroe to begin the process of restoration. I suggest we begin with trust and respect. CHARLES W. DAWE Cash misplaced To the F.ditor: U the money which the people of t.hia country had placed in Social Security had instead been placed in retirement plans bued on home mortgage loans, small buainess loans, and other such investments, the retirement security of h\.lndn!da of thousands of hardworking, de9ervtng Americana would not today be in jeopardy. Suen investments made early in the J)l'Oll'llm would not only have reaped larle dividends (effectively adjusting retirement aecurity for inflation), but would also have served as a badly needed eource of private investment cap(tal. THE MONEY PLACBD ln Social Sec:wity has been very blldly invested by ou.r pernrnent in ita own Operations, •pecially In several 1enerat1ons of expenllve overkill rnWtary hardware, whJth H ever ueed would end civilization • w. know it, ~ which bas returned to ua no dividend• but increasing lrweNrtty. How ueete.. Imteed of real economic eecurity and a ltl'Oftl economy, h\lndreda of thouwKlt of older Amerlcant can point to a cloubduJ t.cwity ~ tM ahedow of mutual annlhlladon . 'l'lli PBNT AGON and military hr.-tot every pdpt they want, and our PeoPle haw no redrement -..wity. la UU. rfCht? We'w IOI to 1top ~the a-rU. livinl il'9n ewrythlftl they •• uo1n ,_ r.-itf•-~ Tiie ,._.lie.._ .... ''" .. '" .... ., tft ............ ,_...., ......,.., ---., ..... " .. ~~··All""'" ......... c ........................... ~ ... ........... ,...... "-"" ,.._ .......... ....., ........ ,...... '-""""'W•• • ..... ....... ............. _., ...... ,....,..., ........... .., ""......_,_..,... . . want. We've got to stop running IC8l'ed everytime they say we're insecure. Where does our security lie? It lies in a strong economy, a healthy environment, tlie care and the love with which we hold each other, and in trusting'God. I am 32. When my mother and father retire soon, I doubt they'll get much in the way of Social Security. I know that I won't. I know I won't receive one penny of my money back from my govennment. I invest my time, energy, intelligence, love, and creativity in my work. for my own enjoyment, and the welfare of myself and others, and I deserve my income! ADDITIONALLY I AM willing to support those less fortunate than me in enjoying life and reaching abundance. I am not willing to support the fantasy of military security, which is in reality nothing but insecurity. Please act immediately to place all Social Security receipts into home mortgage loans a nd Ame ric an reindustriallz.ation, for long term fiscal responsibility and economic stimulation; and act to fund the retirement aecurity of retired Americans with eome of the bloated military budget. STEPHEN J . PEW Fantasy land To the Editor: Will wonders never cease? Not if you live in Costa M esa and watc h the fantasies played out at City Hall. You aee, we have this group of the eliteo the planning commission, and this group of the more elite, the city oouncil. Their total numbers 10 and when you count the number of stooges gathered around them, you'll understand why the high coat of city government. What I don't like especially about these sage leaders ls their sly mannerism in which they take common eenae, twist it around ln such a way that it leaves the community in a state of bewUdennent trying to figure out what happened. Some of us, that la, but not all. The mood, the pube of the city la a saying that, "We're getting 'Wille to you, our leaden." We understand why it is that only two of you are up at bat come election-time. Just how we'll de.al with this is yet to be figured out. but we're working on it. You see, we've dbcovered that if you can't even get thoee equeeky hinges on the doors oiled at the entrance to your coundl chambers, then you're equeaky younelves, and need olllna too. WARREN 0. ALTHOFF Sends thanks To the F.ditor: I wiah to express sincere thanks on behalf of myself and family for the prompt and expert assistance rendered by Ch ief James M. Reed's Newport Beach Fire Depiartment engine company and paramedics who responded to our emergency call on Monday, July 26 at approximately 4:30 p.m. The eUorta on the part of tbe9e re.cue crew members and paramedics to resuscitate my wife demonstrated excellent teamwork, alon1 with remarkable speed and efficiency. Due to my emotional state at the time the emergency OCCWftd. I waa unable to obtain the names of U¥.e membera of the crew and paramedics. I want to expreu our deepHt thanks to them for their dedicated effort1. Our community la indeed fortunate to ha~ such aervicett at ita diapoaal. O.E. MADDY •EfWA IOMIECK •ART'HOPPE DEAR ANN LANDllRS: Liit w.tk•ad J 1D1t a terrUtc l\AY in a llnc1M bar. Pae.. don't .Sve n111 • lectun. "l tried church ll'OUPI. Ub you .._.... and tha'e were three pya, ax men owr e1> and • couple of c:rees-. AllO the w..-n outnumbered the men 3 to 1. Mr. Marveloua and I hlt It off r1Cht away. We sot to talldna about hiah-clau 1ubject1 1uch .. Henry Kiatnaer. eet, uvtna the whales and David Brinkley'• Sunday momina news p!"Olr&m. After about an hour of wonderful convenation he Invited me to h1a apartment to Uaten to his Helen Reddy album. He opened a bottle of wine and we flnJabed it, whSch la more than I usually drink. The ·---""~·"'""'­.. -~ ............ IF" "(OU K ._,SW MOW MANV OTMC"S MAVE VOUR SAME FOOi.iSM F"E'AA$1 • wine on top of it. two vodka marUNI J bid tp tbe baf IOftktcf me. I am uhalDied to tell you I c1on•t ~ much that happened, but I do know he ubd JM to spend the ni&ht with him. I mu:at haw eald yes becau. I woa up the next mom1na In h1a bed. He WU~ and tMre WU a$& bW Oft tJow cire.et' With ~note aaytna be had to leave town and I ahould take a taxi home. (I felt like a you-know-what). A whole ~-k hu ~ and I haven't hMrd a word from Mr. Marveloua. He hu my home phone number, but I don'! have hla. I know where he wodm. Should I call h1m tbel'e? What If he Md an accident or eometh1nc? Maybe be fortot my name. Pi... tell me what to do. I would~ to ... him ap1a. -L08T WIZKEND IN SARASal'A DEAR LOST IAllA: I laan· a ~le feellq )'otl ............ --alnHJ . .0.'t eaJ1 Mm. Let~ eaU JM. AM MD time J• wot to lieu a Delft Reddy albua. bey oee. DEAR ANN: I want to reapond to 'the Miallalippt mlntnlr'• wife who 1s envious of the affluent lifestyle ot the doctot'a wife. My husband la a SW'leon. I followed him throuah four yemt of med1cal IChool and five yeen of reefdeney. Alona the way we had four children. He often worked ~ hours straight, then went on to do 12 houri Of moonllahtlnC IO we could pay our bUll. WMn he •tarted hJa practkie, we owed '20,000 tn pemment 1ouw fM Ilia education and another t120,000 to eet up h1I offlce . .In the lut ax ye&l'9 he hat •Pl"t one Chriatmu •t home. He hu ml.Med countl-bh1.hdaya, annivenart•, echool playa and the birth of one of QUI' children becaUM of hla reapontiblllU. to hJa patlenta. We now have a nice ~J ... ~t mv clothes are flam Sean, not Saki. Our cnuarm go to a YMCA camp for their awnmer vacaUon fl we continue to pay off out debta. Both the mlalater'a wife and I mAn1ed out men becawie we loved them. So why campleJnT rd live anyth1na to .. my huaband at the dinner table two n'8hw 1n a ivw. It probllbly will MYe!' happen, IO rn Ml keep Quiet -and IO abou1d she. -TENNBSSb DOCl'OR'S WIFE DEAR WIFE: YH ..... like a woaderfa.I lteJpmate. Aad aow I'd Ilk• s. ••a••t to tllat ltaabaad of yoan tut Ile owu '" more tua yoa've bee• 1ettl•I· All tlle world .. mlrea a dedlatecl pllyalclaa~ bar dlen'• a UmJt to ' ltow m9dl Mt tamily UHJd uve to Aertflee to keep &bt Mio • lt1t ltead. Get wl* la, Doc. --· A no-nomelJlle appl'OllCh fO Jiow fO deal with life'• moat dltlicult and mo1t rewarding ~e. Ann~· booklet, "~ - Whllt to »cpeat," w1lJ ptepare you I« bett« « WOIW. Selld your requst to Ann LlmdMJ, P .O. Box 119'6, ChJcago, DI. ~11, enclmin6 60 ~nm md • Jong, awnped, 11ell..addtt#tld etive]ope. ' YOl> MIGMT &E MUCH LESS F"EARF"UL. No time for wasting ·-~ · .. ·.ii;-/''.:- EIMA IOMIECI ATWIT'S END Hooked on • security U it doesn't bother Queen Elizabeth, it should. A drifter whipped In and out of her bedroom at Buckingham Palace with lees flap than it takes to get inside a Loehmann's fitting room. What's more, he bad visited a dozen times or more where he simply drank wine and talked. I read where workmen spent the weekend stringing strands.of barbed wire atop the Iron spikes. I can only assume that up until that time the Royal Palace was made eecure by a revolving door. IF I SOUND LDtE AN authority, it ia becauae I live in a nation where, during the past 10 years, the No. 1 industry h.u become "Securlty." It's a country of alarms and buzr.era, beeps and dead bolts, guards and X-rays, sirens and electronics. It's a nation where Elton John d.remes up u a policeman to get to his own concert, jewelry stores are patrolled by tarantulas and cobraa, gu tanb are locked and libraries have an alarm syslem by the door. It's where airlines give your pair of needlepoint 9dsaors to the captain to ride In the cockpit. but give everyone on the plane a steak knife. It's where a sensitive alarm system went 9ff 1n a tchool one night and six police cru.iaen appeared within three minutes to dlacover a rat was trying to get out of the cafeteria. Maybe Great Britain just isn't paranoid yet about security. U we had a Queen (and eome say we ~ do) there would be a bulletproof glass bubble over her hone and newscasters would remind everyOoe, "It's 11 o'clock, do you know where your Queen Is?" OF COURSE, GOD ONLY knows what she carries in that handbag. It'• big enough for five gJ'e118des, a rifle and six ground miaailes. It's none of my business, but rve learned a few th1nga living In this country that it might behoove the Queen to try. Lock the front door at night. Sometimes when people try the front door and it's locked, it dDcourages them. Tell unannounced visitors to your bedroom you're married and your husband is a prince, but doesn't like strangers. Buy a dog. Which reminds me, it was also reported that last summer a man who said he waa in love with Princesa Anne was found wandering around the grounds. He was found to be mentally diaturbed and went unpunished. What Joan Rivers will do with that line, I don't want to know. In what la undoubtedly the moet amazing breakthrouch 1n the anna1a of modem adence, a team of l.'e9l!al'Chen from lpena University haa come up with a cure for the age-old bane of human existence: WuttnQ Ume. "Ever l1noe tlie first cave man sat on a rock and said to the aecond cave man, 'Now what'll we do?', mankind bas been wasting time,'' explained the team'• leader, Dr. Homer T . Pettibone. "We Al1 HOPPE THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER estimate that over the millenia, inore than 987 trillion ~-hours have been ldly thrown away •tandlna in line, tytn, fllee and wrltlnc letten to rock stars... ' Dr. Pettibone said the re.earchen were nbt oaocemed with time that was. un unproductive, but rather time that w.. unremembered. .. WE BA VE FOUND that a~ on reaching age~. can look bllck over the high pointf-of life and recall an averace of only 94 hours and 17 mlnuta of experience. The remalniDC 04 yeen, 11 months, three days. 21 houri and 53 minutea - being totally fcqettable -were, of c:ourae, totally wuted. '"l'\ie pl of our project, then. was to eliminate that 1mmenae amount of wuted time IO that people might live ccmpJeiely meaningful Uvea." The team beon with laborat.ory rata. Al.1er several yeara of experiments with artificial hormonea and metabollan stlmulanta. the dedicated reeearchera were able to produce a rat named Al who WU born, afe a plece of cbee9e, Sot in a fllht. had teX and dropped deed in eight hours mcf 4.2 mlnutea. "And,"• Dr. Pettibone said triumphantly at the time, "what elle bas a rat aot to live torr• The time had c:ome to apply the technique to a human subject. A newborn orphan aptly named Speedwell Swift waa choeen. The team employed such adval)Ced computen that they were able 1n !em than nine minutes to teach Swift speed reading, speed writing, speed Uatenlng and speed piano playing. ~ Indeed, be wu declared eometh.lng ot a child prodigy when he ..... able, tbouch oruy four hours old, to run tbrouch Chopin's entire "Minute Waltz" in just three~. THEY FED SWIFT NOTIUNG but pre-cooked steroida, minute rice and lnatant oatmeal. Kia growth. both mental and physical. wu phenomenal and he graduated from high 8Chool at the age of 14 houn and 31 minutes. This time spent lncl.uded his fl.rat eolo ride on a two-wheel bicycle (27 le!ClOnds); two raids on the girls' tent at the Motheraill Summer Camp for Underweight OverachJev.era (nine minutes, ten seconds); and the embammtng 99ueaks the plastic of hit aecond-hand Volbwagen t>ug made during his Initial foray Into the art of necking (27 minutes, 14 aeconds). Needlele to aay, although Swift enrolled In college, he never attended a clua, thereby aavtns ' four completely forgettable years right there. Instead, he showed up for the final minute of two football games, the last hour of a fraternity pot party and the two 1econd1 it took for Dean Fotherforth Colgrill to take hJa aeat on a Whoopee Cushion at the 98th annual oommencement . After graduation, Swift traveled. spending 14 minutes aboard the Concorde, during which he covered a distance over water that would have required at least 53 days if done by breaststroke. IT WAS ABOARD THE Concorde that he met hi.a bride-to-be, Hastely Quick.~ were never formally married u no man can the details of a formal wedding. But they dJd enjoy a 47-minute honeymoon. That was when Swift diacovered that hla loved one, among other th.ln&a. could not sleep on the Jiaht side of the ~ while he could not sleep on the left. Four minutes later, neverthel~.. they had their first child b~ the Lamaze Metnod, which requires the p~ of the husband In the delivery room eo that both parties may suffer ·equally. That was unlorgettable. Unfortunately, Swift was sued for divorce 8eYeral houri later when Hutely caught h1m on hi.a charitable Christmas rounda dellv~ a dressed turkey to Mill Lorelei Cuddleby, who wasn't. At the ripe old ap of g3 hours and 12 minutes, Swift wu told by hJa Wnily physician that he had an occluded bivalve and should avoid exertion at all cmta. Four leCODds later he ran into Miss Q.addleby, who said ahe wu sure glad he wasn't a silly oJd acaredy-cat. In delivering the eulogy, a proud Dr. Pettibone said Swift had aet an enviable goal for all dwellers In our fut..paeecl modem aocfety. "He didn't," said Dr. Pettibone, "waste a single, aolitary minute." BY PHIL INTEALANDI of Laguna Beach " .. c.,, .. ;Jttff' •• ELMVILLE A UN!Q..U£ TOWN NOONE H~OM HERE LIVING IN CALIFORNIA ---- "Eamonn knows this amazJng short cut." • HOIOSCON BY SIDNEY OMARA Taesd.ay, Aapat 10 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Emphasis on independence, creativity, originality, ability to communicate ideas in direct, articulate manner. Popularity increases, requests are recei~ ~o~ pe~nal appearances. TAURUS (April 20-Ma~ 20): You discover new techniques which enable you to build on a more suitable structure. Secreta are revealed, you could be Invited to clandestin e conference. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on desires, business investment&, communication with one who has special infonnation to impart CANCER (June 21-July 22): Famlly member di9ctm ea career, buainesL Focua a110 on standing 1n community, prestige, promotion, production and ability to overcome obstacles. You'll have opposition on the run. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): What eeemed a lost- cause may again be within reach. Open lines of communication, streamline techniques and define terms. . . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Hunch is on target; you gain access to extra information. Focus on money, detective work and news concerning financial status of one who would be a partner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Maintain low' profile, flnish rather than initiate project and be receptive to one who confides ideas. .Aocent legal rights, permission and unique agreements. : SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): New approach" brings desired reaulta. Accent also on health, nutrition and removal of safety hazards. Individual who previously was indifferent will now be an enthusiastic supporter. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dfic. 21): Sentiment tends to cloud logic. Strive for balance. Penom cloee to you pull in different directions. Solution 1s found by heeding Inner voice. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Personal horizons broaden; ypu'll have reason to be optimistic. Invitation received which could lead to travel and an educational project. Gemini, Sagittarius native. figure prominently. - AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Clash of ideu ptoves stimulating. Hold your own by being versatile, di1playi.ng eenae of humor. You have opportunity to rebuild on a more aolid bue. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20); Make chanaes, correc:tiom. You'µ have a wider audience. Meml>er of oppo.ite sex la faacinated and will pay meaninJful compliment. .... , -~ GOif ii 011 BllDGE Q.1-Both vulnerable, ae South 7ou hold: +QN <:;)10t OAQ8'2 •IUS The bidding bu pl'OCffded: N_.,. Eut &.-. WM& 1 <:;) p ... 2 0 .... J <:;) P .. !NT P ... I+ P ... 1 What do you bid now? A.-Part1Mr bu t.old you that he does not Uke no trump particularly. probably becau.e be hu M dletrlbo· tlon In heart• and dube. To per•l•t with no trump OD a •~1 1,U. •M>pper in Uaht or tbat lnrormaUoe would be foolhardy: We •unest that JOU siv• partne~ a Uttl• bnatllfn1 room b7 almpi, mura1D1 '° three ltearta. If • ... laaa • toad •alac b&d. lie wW aooa. .. I Q.Z-A• South, vulnerable, )'OU bold: • 5 <:;) AQJOl5 0 KQJ5 • AQ1 The biddinJ hu pl'OCHded: &.-. WM& N.-Eaa l <:;) •• t• t• t Whal do you bid now? A.-Sl.nce it eeeme that few, il an7. of partatr'a .. hau are ln spades, <10Ut UH look• very tlammialt. Howevei:. there la DO nMd 79' far • draatlc acUoa. Be coateat with a bkl of three dlamoada to conU.ue the clacrlpUon •f your hand. Stace partner made a free t'HpollM at tM two-level ud 7ou are aow la· U'Odud .. a aew 1111& at th9 t~•el. tMa alld.loa aU\ be ..... Yoa eu •~ 1our d•b 1..,on I.aw. BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Q.J-Neitber vuJnenble, u South 79u hold: •AIOMI Cl:) ATMJ OT •U The blddlnr hu proceeded: Ntrtll s.11& ._.. WM& IO P ... 1+ P ... 1• r ... I<:;) P ... ,. ,_ ? What action do you take? A. -Don't evell think of,...... lnr -partner'• Jump ahlft WU a pme foree,,..... Ja DO polat In reblddl•1 1our heU'UI -~ ...... , .... tell, ,...tbl1 •~ eardt In the minor awta •ad •noot bav• mort ~ a doublfloa la eltt..r -.Jot. We woukt opt for I q~ raiM W five clubs, ancl plat in wbal we bow to be at a.ui a ~I flt. + IU7 <:> J171 0 &JUI +I The bMldins bu procMded: S.... WM& Ntrdl t:a.t ...... ~ .... I <:> p... '1 • • ... t What actJon do you take? A.-81.Dce partoer bu shown a IOOd hand by llnt do11blln1 and thea l.ntrodudAf bla own 111lt at tbe th.rM·iev•l, 7011 1Wel7 •ant t.o be 11 pme, dtepite the fact that JOU lllft DO fU for dub.. ln v&.w or 70/Ur poeltioD&I atoppen In .,_.., tM obvloua choice la thrte DOU'tamp. What do JOU ~ now? A.-Deaplte the fact that you have onlJ aiJl pointt in bifh carda, you ..have a Verf iood band alter partner'• takeout double. You have a 1ood aia-card ault. a •l•ton in the opener'• auit and a worltloc queen. We •u1,..t that 700 jum., to tbtff bearta. That II not fore- lq, but it ii hJPI) lnvft.a· tlonal. A bid of two hearta almply doean't do 70u.r hand justice. -It's only a queaiJon of which suit. The ftnt thins to do ia to make partner awue of your inwntJona. Do Uua by cue-bk!dinr three dJa~. That dou oot paraatee fi,..._rouoct coalrol of tM auJt 1ou cue·bld. IL simply atabllabea a pme-fordll,J auction and allows tbe part. nuahlp to uplore all poulblUtlH. 1 • j NEW'l2 ...cll>ll·llNZ Diii& SEDAN Fully equipped: Cap Coif $20.000 hlldual $11 DOO NO CN REDUCTION . 60 month Lea .. ~tpluatax *35650mo Order Yoww Toclayt «IJI ,, g ~ Bobm.Jllta .. .. 1ll1t•M' V 842•2008 Dally Living AIDS FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES 'tit "' -,. .. ,_.,,. WE OEUYm ~.et-~(!4. 2907W. WMIO.U 2:30-S:lO &62-1712/TDO •• Tumyour unUAbles • Into e usable e c•sll. C.11 .• D•llY Piiot e cl•ssffled • 642-5671. PRESENTS OUR DYNAMITE BUFFET 52 99 Mon. th.ru Fri. 11 a.m . to 2 p.m. 548-2224 3300 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH NOTICE DISSDLmDI DF PIRTIERSHIP PUBLIC AUCTION Ordered by the Attorney for Globe International Handmade Peralan and Oriental Ruga We have been commluloned to llquldate the entire Inventory plua others for Immediate cash. A• per lnatructlona ALL 8108 WILL OP!N AT ... on the dolar, end lote wit be Mid from the next bid on. RUGS FROM: China, Perala, Afghanl1tan, lndla, Turt<ey, PaJ<11tan, Romania, Egypt, and Iran. 8lze1 range from 2 'x3' to 18'x12'. AUCTION WIU TAKI PLACI! ON AUGUIT I, AT I P.M. llAllRIOTT INN IOO NnfPORT CINTl!R DR. ltlWPQRT •ACH ~ 1 hOut Pttor' to -.otton-PIMM at19nct ........ 'nie ~ by D.niocntie etate S.. Hmt)' MellO ol atlonvm. compela all locial ~ta co allow MCOnd W\Jta on at lMlt t0me ot thelr ~=lota. • unlll Mapl tM eidlUnl ~ ltOCk. built ~ far ....... IMMMholdl. co the l'Mlity of c:u.net population trmda," Mello .ad. '"They lllo help YGW'I houlahokll purchw hornet ana meet CW'l"lftt U.iinlt ra•. In~. tt helps the howlq market tn many wa)'I." Adcf1 Don Terner, director ot the 1tate Department of Hou1ina and Coqimunlty Developmmt. ''Thil ii a hoUllnc 10lut1on that can be ICt.ed on Wckl • are no new land COltl . ouseholds lrid wtruodoe Ill able ... than MW ~ta bem\m MW•n, waw linel arid lhl Ila aJ..NMy exlat. Second "nl&1 al10 make for a ufer home 'environment. becawe 101DeOtM la at home mon often.'' And Jilek Hillil, a i..cs.-of i1w CallfomJa Gray Panthen ~ aiu..nt ll'OUP. •)'t lt11 hardly a MW idM, "Wherwvw ~ M9dl oulltrtp availabWty, lhit aoluUon hM helpilcl It mak.e .._ co let people alter their hom9.'' But OJ>POMntl warn of overloaded 1ehooll, ltreetl and ..... l'elUltina from ldC:Utional people 1n areu that U'9 alrMdy developed. And they uy the lfaMY unlta can lower property value1 by altertna the charl!Cter ot neilhborhooda. (Il3JM i. • column.Jat baed in .9.tnta MonJc.). • I --.....----. _ .. _ --. WORRIED -Mike M1n1fi e ld , U .S . amb•rtdol' to Japan, 1ay1 he ia concerned by t.eme U.8.-Japan relatlonl. Today's Store for Smart Shoppers Today. women accomplish more than ever before. They meet today's tough demands. And their store should meet today's demands, too ... by deltver- ing quality and low pnces. At Marshalls, women find fantastic savings every day, on some of the most classic styles by America's top makers. They enjoy dynamic new looks from the latest designers. Brand name after brand name, they find all the quality fashions their busy lifestyles demand, from fully-lined blazers and s kirts to lingerie and shoes ... all priced les s. Twenty to sixty percent less than department store regular prices. For the women who haven't discover- ed Marshalls yet, what better time than with the opening of our newest store in Costa Mesa. And, for the women who have been our loyal cus- tomers, now you can enjoy quality at savings in four convenient locations. . OPENSTHURSDAY,AUGUST12 IN COSTA MESA MlllliSl~•llls .._... ____ ............ .._gfwii:J, N~ !fiirLesst.· --------- TURNING BACK THE CLOCK: We had an anniversary of sorta just the other day here on thia coast. It happened 10 years ago. How time flies. It was Aug. 6~ 1972, when the Orange C.Ounty Grand Jury handed down an indictment of 29 people, charged u co-conspirators in one of the world's largest international drug rings, ~\ k n o w n a s • • T h e TOM MURPHINI ,~){ ~~ntv~therhood ~ The brotherhood wu headquartered in a head shop; a quaint little storefront facing Coast Highway at Sleepy Hollow, in Laguna Beach. And in the indictment was the name of the high priest of drugs and LSD, the spokesman for the hippie generation, Dr. Timothy Leary. BUT THE SMILING, affable former Harvard orofessor and LSD 8W'U wasn't around at the time. ~acy. 50, earlier had brolten out of the California Institution foll Men at Chino and fled to Switzerland. Thus a $5 million warrant for his arrest was issu~. Authorities all over the United States had been trying to bring a drug rap against always-smiling Leary, who urged his flower children to "tum on" to drugs and "find love." Leary always seemed capable of elu~ the ~p although h e was facing a federal drug smuggling ~e in Texas. But it was actually a Laguna Beach cop who put Leary behind bars on a drug arrest and made it stick. It happened almost fdur years before the large indictment of the Brotherhood. IT WAS A CHILLY night after Christmas, 1968, when Laguna police got called to the hippie residential haven of Woodland Drive. There the arresting officer found Leary, 'his wife Rosemary and son, John Bush Leary, in a station wagon. · Laguna officers also found 40 LSD capsules and 10 ounces of marijuana in the station wagon. They arrested and jailed all three. Most people figured, as usual, Dr. Leary would somehow beat the rap. But the arresting officer had been a veteran of the drug wars in Newport Beach before he switched to the .,.., .......... "'9te Always smiling, Dr. Tim Leary heads for jail on Jan. 19, 1973 Laguna Beach department. Leary had met his match, this time. LISTEN AGAIN TO that officer's testimony in court Oct. 20, 1969, as he recounted the condition of Leary's son in the vehicle: ''He was craw ling around aimlessly with his hair hung all over his face. He had a fixed grin and his eyes were staring. From time to time, he would part his hair away from his face and then let it fall down again. "My experience told me that the young man was under the influence of narcotics." That officer was Neil J . Purcell. TodaY., he is chief of' police of Laguna Beach. DR. LEARY WAS convicted and got 10 years. His wife ' and son were also convicted. Orange C.Ounty Superior Court Judge Byron K . McMillan called Leary, "A pleasl1re-seek.ing, irresponsible, Madison Avenue advocate of free use of LSD." Leary never did face trial on the Brotherhood of Eternal Love rap. After he fled prison, he returned here and finished his sentence in 1975. The drug ring and to large measure, the guru drug culture, had been cfestroyed by a small town oop. There never was a brotherhood and nobody found eternal love. We will never know how many young lives and young minds were forever destroyed. Tiie clrc• i. '.>N.cJr. But •re dJe thrlll1t ...., ............. ..., CMnee lien PROTECTION -Jim Green's suited up and ready for action. HONEYCOMB HUMS -Worker bees on the job. He's the keeper of the ~ees Co:mbining business with fun BY BARRY EBERLING or .. D.-,,......., Fountain Valley'• Jim Green has combined h1I business with pleuure, which is no amalJ. feat, considering he'• a pest controller . .But two years aao· hll ctvilian job at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, aave him the idea and the hives for beekeeping. Now he spends 13 hours a month tending his colonies and extract:ing honey to give to friends and to lell. "It's a break-even deal," Ureen aald. "I could make money if I pushed it, but it's a hobby to me." With five good working hives and plans for three more, he prefers to keep their locations a lea"et for fear of vandalllm. Before approaching his hives, Green dona a white ju.mp cotton jumpsuit and a wire mesh mask. l!Nen a few 1tinp will cause him extreme diacomfort betause he is allergic to them. "I won't die, but I swell ur, pretty badly and I ~t aching, ' he said. "I could hardly walk on Saturday (recently) after I got stung on the ankle. "I get stung about once or twice a month. It depends how careful I am and how angry the bees are. Some hivea are mean." His hives are in amalJ. white boxes, 90me stacked in groups of three. Green "builds" hives up by combinina boxes. "It's Caned marrying," he said. "I pick the colony -with the moat productive queen, kill the other queen and stack the colonies toaether with new1paper in between them. By the time the bee1 eat through the paper, they're \&led to each other." He could build up to four or five boxes durtna the summer if he had time, and maintain three boxes year round becau.ee of the w~ ~te. In most areas., bees atop producing honey in the winter. ·· Each box contains a wax frame called a foundation on which the bees build \heir oomba, capping each individual tube. To extract the honey, Green takes a tr.me, ahakel it free of beet, and removea it from the hive are.. He then removes the LIFTING THE LID -Green harvesting the honey he sells or gives away. caps with a hot electric knlte. Next he puts the frame into an extractor, and' the metallic centrifuge spins and removes the honey. He usually does this process at home. Green was introduced to beekeeping by a friend ln Texas. &:au. he often e:ncOunt.ered the inlectl In hil pest control wo.rk, Green decided to learn more about them. He took a eemester coune on beekeeping at Orange Coast College, borrowed some equipment and a hive from a friend and started his hobby. His job gave him the means to build up h1I colonies. During the sununer he bas to deal with wild hives. "An old hive divides in two and half of the bees move to a new location," Green aaid. "It' .. how they propagate the species." UCI profs • receive MSI grants Cuh granta totaling $12, have been awarded to four U Irvine computer scienc e_rofeaora from the MSI Da Corp. of C.O.ta Mesa. f;x-FedMart . t·o be Target Stores outlet • After the wandering .bees find a new llte •. whether it be a tree oc 1omebody'1 car, they 1wann around it. Sometimes Green collectl the wild beea, and 1omeUmea he 11 forced to ellmlnate them. The one -year facult fellow1hlp1 were given t A11odate Profes1or1 Geor1 Lueker and Jim Meehan A11i1tant Profe11ou Ra Ruouk and Scott Huddlenon. posed facility at Adams and Brookhurst one of 33 leased across U.S. :91 PBJL SNEIDERMAN »I .. ...., ....... The Huntlnaton Beach hdMart 1tore II expected to be I F 33 cbed l'edMa.N that reopen ln nine months under Tarpt Store. benner. 1bie 102,()()0..equue-foot store AdmDI Avenue at Brookhunt Street 'WU UDOftt 46 l'edMart toret tn Southern California, Arlllona and Texas clOled laat tb. . s.cuuv.. of the San ~ bued dilcount aupenna.11:.et and general merchandise chain blamed continuina ~and the declinlna economy for the dec:laion to clole the '*-· But the Mlnneapoll•·baaed Taraet Stores, a dlvl1lon of D a y to n -H u-d 1 o n Corp . 1 announced thil week 1\ would leue 83 of the clOlld ...... Floyd Hall. chairman of Taraet, Mid remoclellnc wlll ~at once on &he shuttered 1toree, and hirtna woWd .tan Qfly Ntxt year. Tenm of &he II ...-ment were not d•1eloeed. ~ oftidala in San Dteso refmed to di8Cloee which atoree were included. but a Tarset 1polcHman ln Mtnneapoli• cooflrmed that the HunUncton s.c)l aton la unona thole to be leMld. Before it cloHd, the local l'edMart employed about 100 people. Tht ~the 33 tedM.art ale. • new °"""" could. rnetm about t, ~ for the Affected communities. However, Taraet ii a nan-union operation that hal wap -1• much lower than t.tM»e formerly ln •flee\ at l'edMart. Forft)et Jl'edMau chlet executive Helna Gundlach blamed the •ton cl<m.&19 In part on the chain'• hlah unfon. mandated pay IChedule. Afthle hou.tly pay WM .10 at hdMait. more d'9n tw$cl tM 119 It octMr non-union "'dltcoYDt 1~, he cWmed. He aaid that hi• love for beekeeplna la an outarowtb of h.11 love foe' .,..i control. ''lt'i fwl n.anninl ln8ectl and vermin out ot pl8cel.'' he .aid. 1'1bere'• a lot of •tilfact:lon ln eeelna what ~·w done.'' • But few of Green '• aquaintancet 1hare hl1 en\huatum for inlecta. Hardly anyone bl1m him with hJa hiw. ._.. far. hla flanole, Kim. who "r.lly dljl into thin." Green11 other frtendl prefer menly to •t the bane)' he ...... them. J ~to Richards.~ .. MSI vice pre1ident o en,aneering, the awards ee "to encoura1e theae hi1hl qualified younf educatora S their choice o the teachtn prot"'1on and u.nivenlty, ._.UM MSI hal a direct ltake the education of comput. enctneen at UCL" · The American Electron Amodatlon, be lakl, -tound critical natlonal 1bortaa• e~nMrlnl mduatea ca pi'jinarll~ a lji:k of S:..:IWO-and y fa-Wty . AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Harbor cruises on Pavlllon Queen ~ND THE WINNER IS -Don White, apsistant man.ag_er of Kenn Rima Hardware, c$ngratulates Robert Colua:i, winner of.the store's recent "Nuts and Bolts" guessing centest, cosponsored by KYMS FM radio. For ~ near-accurate guess of the number of nut.a $\d bolts in a gallon jug, Colucci received dinners for two at four area restaurants. A .- Ocean ~ lovely tl1ande. beautiful harbors and luxury yachu . . • 110und like • nice vecadon apotPfff All th.la can be foiund Sn OW' own ''hick yard.'' . . Newport lfarbcll' ii one of the moet beautiful u well •• the J.ara-t nall craft harbors ln the world. A narrated crulle abcwd the Pavllio11 Queen riverboat takH you from the hi1toric Balboa Pavillon throuah the tranquil waters o1 the bay to the , harbor entrance for a unique view of the coutline. Seals and .. 1ionl can be eeen •unnlni on the jetiy rock.a or crowded on the bell buoy. ..........,,,. recent arrival from New York, Colucd wu having h1a new car ael'Wled down the street; and vfait.ed the store'• fifth annu.Jl parking lot sale to paas the time while he waited for it. Of 652 entries, he .came within thirteen of the exact number, 1713. Who said 13 was an unlucky number? SriluaJera Cove, a beech-cite location for many Hollywood epka. China Cove, the Willlarn C. Kerkoff Marine Laboratory, u well u water-front manalona and the lamoUf old l81llng IChooner ''Arl'Ja" are amona the •lahta akJnc the lhores of one 43 minute crui.e. Another 45 minute crulae departs on the hour heading up the harbor in the oppoalte dlrectl.on for a gllmpee of famous movie atara homes. (John Wayne'• and Joey Bishop 's ·: The· Qulltlng House opens arnon1 them.) Luxury yachu, and colorful aallboau amldat amall ll1anda that dot the upper end of th11 wonderful marine recreation area. A pel"IOD could .travel all over the world and not find a more beautiful harbor. Returning to the Balboa Pavtllon it la well worth the time to atroll through tht• claaalc ' . example of a waterfront peYilJon at the tum of the centW')' and Newport Beach'• moet famoua landmark. Built ln 1003 .. the tennlnua ~ the Pacific Electric red can from Loa Anplea, it w• named by the state of c.atlfomia lut year a "point of hiatorlc lnterest." LOVELY VACATION -The Balboa Pavilion offers two 45-minute cruises of the Newport Harbor on its Pavilion Queen Riverboat. Returning to the Balboa Pavilion gives the vacationer a chance to stroll through a classic example of a water-front ' pavilion at the turn of the century. ·~~~!~ o~T~~!!~~n !«>!!_e;a•gners Jean Marie Body Boutique aou.e, manufacturers of Cult.om In addition to fabrics, The ff • a Quilted Bed1pread1, recently Decorative Fabric Houae features 0 er s ex er c Is e pr 0 g r m moved to a •l>acioua 15,000 custom bedapreada and ready to aquare foot building. The bang drapea at manufacturers' Decorative Fabric Houae otters prices. Alla available are pillow • the publlc an opportunity to do forma, polyester fill, piping their own interior desijptlng at po 1 y • f o am an d d r a p e r y c:oeta aubatantially lower than acce90riee for do-it-yourself. Favorite Pair specializes in casual clothings Opening another clothing store ln..t..guna Beach la crazy at best, b\Jt ln a rece91ion7 So aaid nearly e\feryone w'ho heard of the idea when mentioned by Ellen ~y and De Francia. They ~ both been in the Real Fatate b!Jirinea for aeveral years, but w~re tiring of the growing flJtancial problem• of the industry. mte rag bua1ne9I appealed to bQth of them. Looking around Liguna, tbey aaw a gap did emt. . Tflere were plenty of places for toU..Nt trade, but few for locals to fiDd just pllan ol' cute clothes. ?rheae enterprising young wpmen went to work to get aOOoullta opened with companies •UCh aa ·Levi Straua, Lee Co., Yves Danielle, Wilkins, Trousers Up and many more. They 9tarted with a Western theme, but that waa aoon changed to casual clothlng with comfort in mind. After a year in buainell. the ladles are proud to have built a wide range of happy regular customera. They also emphasize that they make every elfort to special order items for their cllentele. Chlld photographer returns to Newport Jan has juat returned from Zimbabwe, Africa, where he pthered a multitude of pictures for hi. new book, "BLACk AND WIDTE IN COLOR." He ii DOW devoting the rest of thla year on a eeek and teareh mi.Ilion to find the ideal counterparta to ahow the contrasts and 1imllarltle1 between African and American children. If you see a aiant ahadow beinC CMt in front of 1°"' (Jan la stx-foot-ei&ht), and hear the map of a camera. ..• your child may be one of the lucky few to reach immor1ality in hi. up and coming book. In eddition to 'bavtna been teen on many talk aboWI, Jan'• other credentiall include three 1ucce11ful book• e-ntltled , "CHILDREN OF AMERICA," ~~i~w~ri:~ WORLD." using outside Ullltance. Profe11ional a11lstance is A.. a manufacturer•' outlet, available from a knowledgable The Decorative Fabric House aales staff as well aa a design features thouaanda of yarda of consultant. designer fabrics, displayed on By working in conjunction full bolta ln their abow room. at with their own manufacturing aavtnp of 6°" or more below facility quality control is normal retail price9. The fabrics maintained throughout all are among the moat current with manufacturing. sample opportunity to mix and They are currently celebrating mat.ch motifa. It ii now poeaible their lat anniversary at their new to decorate like a profeeaional at facility. The Decorative Fabric approximately half the ooet. Houae and The Quild.na Houae The Decorative Fabric Houae are located at 18085 Euclld St. ln atockl a wide variety of fabrics Fountain Valley, at the Euclid off for draperies, bedspr eads, ramp of the 405 Freeway. Store headboards, 1lipcover1, hours are 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. upholstery, etc. From such well Monday through Friday and 8:30 known n\illa aa Waverly-a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday and Schumacher, Spectrum, Ametex. Wedneeday eventnaa until 7 p.m. Kaufman and Wolf, including Call 549-1498 or 963-5659 for printa, velvets, pollahed cottons, further information. T.V. Lock Control your, child's viewing Parents who would like to control the amount and type of televtaion their children watch can do 90 now with a new TV locking device called "The Enforcer.'' The device ia a 2" x 3" x 4" lock box which ia ea1lly and safely attached to the electrical power cord of any televi.lon 1et and permlta parental control of te1evlalon viewina with the Ule of a key. It can be \.-d to llmlt children'• viewtna of commerdal. cable and aui.:riptlon TV. It also permits control of chlldren'• u.e of TV pmea. ~e TV lock ClOl'DelJ at a time of increaain1 alarm about the neptive effect.a of wwupervlled television viewtJw, 'n'8 f(adonal In1tltute of Y-ental Health recently reported on the na&lta of a five year ltUdy of l8Vel'a1 hundred children. The 1tudy found a diaturblna correlation between 1everal typea of aggrenion (includin1 fighting and delinquency) and the total amount of 'l'V viewing -not just the watching of violent programs. Inatalllng The Enforcer ia almple. No electrical wiring la required. All you need la a small ecrew driver. The attractive brown and caramel-colored lock box am be kept on top of the te1evWon let or nearby on a lhelf. The key ii kept by the parent. Complete satllfaction ii ,uaranteed. The F.nloroer aim $19.95 (two for $37.H) plu. $2.00 ahlpptna and handllna and 8 pemmt aalel tax f()f' Callfomla raldenta. Send cbedr. OI' money crier payable to "Tr1dewindl Enterprl..... to: 177-F Riven.Ide Avenue, Dept. Newpori Be.ch, c.atlfomia nee3. Be aure to tnclude your name, lddnll and dp eode for ahlpplnl ~ For complete ad copy and art services advertisers all along the Orange Coast rely on -. Jean Marie Body Boutique in Fountain Valley offers a supervi8ed program of exercise done on a variety of machines. Some have w e ights and re1i1tance, are for cellulite, poature, circulation, 1pot reducing, firming and toning - flexibility and strength. The nice thing about this method ia that there ts individual attention and cloae supervision, whether you are new or like many of Jean Marie's patrons who have been with her for years. The main attraction ls the treatment of Jean Marie'• own Therapuetlc Exercise Lounge. Even thoee with bad backs and arthritla call this a "Miracle Unit." Ernphaaia ls of COU1'9e placed on leamlng leD&ible whole90me food management. The addition of free Aerobic Exerc:Ue to muaic · (optional) completes her program. Jean Marie had received 10 many complaints from women who felt "out of place" and could not keep up with the youth-oriented inteme aerobics that were being offered 10 . . . aa a fonne:r dancer and phyai c al therapilt, she cboreosraphed her own routines (and offers thla ler'vice to other Toy store offers Laguna the best Fantuy Excluaive Toya & Gamea ia an experience you won't want to misa. Thia very apecial shop for children of all ages it located on Maln Beach right next to the Hotel Laguna in Laauna Beach. Owners Sharon and Larry Deaton have created the perfect environment for their unique le1ection of domestic and imported to)'ll and games. You'll find everything from porcelain dolla and remote oontrol can to book• and miniature lead IOldien. Bear collecton will delight ln Fanta1y'1 1election1, ~hlch include. Stelff, Hermann and handmade bean. Not to be outdone, doll fanc:ien will love the Effanbee atorybook characters and everyone'• favorite, John Wayne . Cont1nuln1 your adventute, you'll find every kite lJ:uc1nable -dr.,on.1, Snoopy, box klta and even atunt kftea. Games ranae trom the lat.eat. lncludine Pmtie, 'lbe An a.-and Paria Metro, to old favorite• like Monopoly, Domlnoea, Rummy and popular card 1•mH. A complete 1election of Role- playlna pm. ii also featured. At raniuy. the accent ta on ~ eet'Vice. Sharon and Larry enjoy chattlna with cuatomen about thelr favorite coy1. Gift wrapJ>ln1 II complimentary. Another extra touch la a 1um maobln• that requtr. no money! So whm the · everyday wol'ld ,.._ to be toO ~ oome ~ the warkl of l'AnTASY. 1be ........ open dailY triD ' 9:30 LID. ID 1:00 p.m. iDd ladatlld at 160 t.acuna Ave., Lapna Beech. <4'.-a). health clubs) to meet the needs and ability of the age IJ'OUP ahe is w orking with. "H ere it is designed for mature women, with emphasis on firming anns, fannie, tummies, aa well as cardiovaacular improvement. The women love it! We al.so teach them how to do the movements properly and walk through the routine with the new members after class, to enable them to learn quickly and f eel comfortable. She began modellng and dandna while lt1ll in hiah 9Chool and majored in Drama. She won the Mia Virginia title at 17 years of age. She came to Callfornla to pursue an acting catter, but then went to work for Slenderella International in Lakewood. Wanting to g o into management with Slenderella, but under their age requirement at that time she left and worked in a Doctor's office and studied physical therapy and nutrition. She gave lectures, seminarl and did some television talk shows. She then went to work for Gloria Marshall, who at that ttme had, only locationa. She apent 4 years as a Supervilor and later Training Di.rector for the chain. She traveled and opened many of their locations. Preferring the more personalized attention and working with the patrons rather than employees, Jean Marie opened her own aalan, pollahed h er techniques and developed her own passive reducing table. Unique sporting goods opens on Orange Coast A new concept ln sporting goods has been introduced to Orange County sporta and fitness enthusiasts with the opening of The Good Sport in Fountain Valley. The Good Sport will offer a complete line of popular name sporting equipment and apparel for botfi children and adults. According to F.dward Twining, who opened the ltol'e with Bob Million. The Good Sport la the first sporting goods store in the area to off er a deraonalized aervice-oriente staff with expertiae in the sporting goods industry. "U you go lnto a large sporting goods store and uk for the best ltind of tennis 1hoe1 for your fitness routine," aaya Twining, ''you may get an inexperienced clerk and the wrong pair of shoes. Our idea is to train our people caretuµy, aelect our stock carefully, and \ake the time to fit our cuatomera with the exact equipment they need." Million added by aaying that "it doesn't take any longer to find the right equipment if you atart with a good selection of top- quallty choices, and that la what we offer at The Good Sport." Grand opening of The Good Sport, located at 8852 Warner Avenue, will be held through August 7. Throughout the week, shoppers will receive chances at a number of grand prizes includlna a one-year membenhlp to Super Nautilus, Nautilus Plus, and Shapemaker health clube ancL complete tennis and aerobice ensembles. On Saturday, Ausust 7, there will alao be.free refreshments and hot air balloon rides. Regular store hours will be IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a .m . to 5 p.m. OJ'l Saturday, and 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. The Good Sport will also be aponaoring a 5K and lOK run on September 11 at Mile Square Park. Further information may be obtained by contactina the at.ore at 841-1407. Center teaches hypnosis With the increued interelt in Hypno1i1, and ita many appllcatlona ln Health and Penonal Growth~ifemionala In all f:leldl are dM>01a with a hJChly q staff of lnltructon. In addlUon to doctor• and dentl1t1, nuraea alon1 with Marrla1e, Family an<l Child Coun1elon are becomtn1 .equalnted wtth the valuea of hypnolU and the appbeetiorw of t.a-1llChmqu. In theU' day to dl1 p.tA 'anal ldlvttiel. Tbt J:lypnolll Omw otten a =OQal cour. In ~ to • cUpkjna •• Hy~cnJat and an Advanced caur. .. H1Jmodc ~In • H=ta•rapy' lHdlna to a ii • a Hypni:MenpAet. ... ....._.,..-~ a.,IM ........... tmaint Of PUbUe ~ The Rypnolll Omw anc1 an of ita course• are approved fot' oontact credit houn by the Callfornla State Board of Re1l1tered Nur1ln1 and the Board of Behavioral Science Exam1iwn of Marrl.lp, hmUy and Child Coumelon. Amon1 the profe11lon1l• a.oclat.ed with the Cenwr are Its Director, Geor1ia Bol1clat3. Hy_pnotheraplat, William -.. ~ Ho.uoway, M.D., Bot.rd ~ Ptychlatd1t; H . Clay B.:rtOa, M .D., Intemllt and All*""8t; c h • r 1 e I a . L • t 0 • •tt ~1Pft~therapl1t, Llceau" Clll)IOll 8oda1 won.. The Hypnom Center aleo. of fen Clinical Hypna.18 fM, S..... ReduclloD. NWt ..... "8Un C..trd. ~ lniomnSa. 8n\lal and more ta ...s=•te thee-a r' am. 1be '• am. II ill • 1411 Garden Grove 81•d., 09ldln OrcMt. I~ .... ' .. Mrs. Robert Ettinger Mrs. Robert S. Yardley Ettinger-Clary Alanna Louise Clary of Balboa and Robert Daniel EtUnger of New Orleans recited their wed~ vows in St. Stephens Epiacopal School Chapel m Austin, Texas. . Mr. and Mn. Michael Reilly Clary of Balboa and London, England are her parents and Dr. c.arolyn Ruth Ettinger of New Orleans an4 Lt. Col. Marvin Morris Ettinger of the Philippines 8fe the bridegroom's parents. After a honeymoon at Jacbon Hole, Wyo. the newlyweds, who graduated from the University of Texas, will establish a home in Houston where he is entering Bates School of Law. Yardley-Railsback Linda Diane Railsback, daughter of Mr and Mn. William Railsback of Anaheim, ~ the bride of Robert Schoyer Yardley, aon of Mr. and Mi;-a. George Yardley III of Newport Beach, d~g a ceremony performed In Santa Ana's First Baptist Church. , The newlyweds departed afterwards for a ho~eymoon in Hawaii. lie graduated from the Ui:u.versity of Redlands and lhe is a aenior at Bob Jones University in South Carolina. lla'$es-Olson Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Hayes Kristen Jean Olson and Timothy Charles Hayes. who were married in Newport Harbor Lutheran Church, are residing in Corona del Mar ~ a wedding trip to Lake Tahoe. . The bride is the daughter of Bruce and Alberta Obion of Newport Be.tch and attended Orange Coast College. Her husband attended UCLA and is the aon of Sally Hayes of Costa Mesa. IHI INGAGIMINT RING Byers-Rauh St. J ohn Fisher Catholic Chiarch, Rancho Palos Verdes, will be the setting for the Sept. 18!Wedding of Mefl.aaa Ann Byers anct Richard Michael Rauh. A'nnouncement of the en~agement is made by her ~nta, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B~ of Corona del Mar. The fuiw'e bridegroom is the aon of Frank Rauhs of West Covina. The bride-elect received a ~rate of veterinary medicine ~ UC Davi.a and her fiance received his master's degree in architecture from Cal Poly Pomona. Alison-Garr Mr. and Mn. Roger M. Alison of Newport Beach announce the engagement of their daughter, Karen Jean, to Glen Carlton Farr, aon of Mrs. Patricia Lloyd of San Diego and Gary Farr of Pasadena. The USC graduates will be married Oct. 2 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Karen Jean Alison I °""81 o-r ONLY '9LOTI~, A•ilt I, 1NI £ $ Mrs. Greg Wallingford Wallingford-Ferris First Christian Church in Platte City, Mo., was the setting for the marriage of Kathryn Lee Ferris and Greg Wallingford. Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Ferris of Irvine are parenta of the bride who graduated from Saddleback College. Her husband, the aon of Mr. and Mrs. David Wallingford of Platte City, attended Mlsaouri West.em College in St. Joeeph. The newlyweds visited the World's Fair in Knoxville, Tenn., on their honeymoon. Groth-_J?ayne Terrie Payne of Huntington Be.tch and John E. Groth of La Habra exchanged wedding vows in Blessed Sacrament Church, Westminster. They are the son and dauahter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Groth of Canoga Parle and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Payne of Huntington Beach. The newlyweds are residing in La Habra following a honeymoon in Hawaii. The bride graduated· from Golden West College and her husband attended St. Louis University in Missouri. Barnard-Johnson Richard Eldon Barnard and his bride, the Mr. and Mrs. Richard Barnard former Valeri~ Lynn Johnson departed for Europe after their wedding in COmmunity Congregational Church, Corona del Mar. They are now residing in Newport Beach. Parents of the newlyweda are Mr. and Mrs. Allan S . Johnaon of Newport Beach and the James Barnarda of Newberg, Ore. The bride attended Cal State Fullerton and her husband studied at Cal State Loe Angeles. Reinbolt-Hunt Costa Mesa High School graduates Christine Lenore Hunt and Dale Alan Reinholt exchanged wedding vows in the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa. San Francisco was their honeymoon destination and they plan to reside in Irvine. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hunt and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Reinholt.. all of Costa Mesa. Corral-Martinez Mr. and Mn. Gabriel Corral are residing in Costa Mesa following their wedding in the First United Methodist Church of Orange and a honeymoon in Hawaii. The bride, the former Lisa Antionette Martinez, ls the daughter of Albert Antionio Martinez of Citrus Heiahts and Mrs. Linda Sue Robinson of Tuatin. The bridegroom'• parenta are Raul Corral and Ma. Amelia Corral, both of Carpinteria. Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Corral • .. .. .. :· Women's clubs: Why can't they draw crowds?' .. LOS ANGELF.S (AP)-ln the beginning, two w~n had a dream -a stylish idea suited, they th°"'8ht. to the feminist climate of the 1980s. .. They would open a snaU}' private club for profe9sional women -a combination health apa- reitaurant-boutlque, a plush spot for the C8Jl)al'aderie and contacts that private men's clube ha~ prued for decades. . But in 90 days, their sweet dream, the Wilahire Cll.Ab, went financially sour. The demise of the Willlhire and the problems auffered by two othen that:have opened In the last two years are now leading aome women to wonder if they want or need such a club. The Blatedell Place Club in Minneapolis baa filed for ~ganization under bankruptcy lawa. The Women• Commerce Club in Atlanta hat attpct.ed only 250 memben, few of whom attend cl~~ta. , , ''I don't need to fiave a place to go," aid Janke Welner, a MlBJ~~~olia paychotherapiat who ~ from ell Place alter diaputea about ita ~Uon. "I like to go to different placel to eat. I like a coed atmosphere. I don't need to be around all..1Vomen." ..., Joanne Obaneaian, who ha• an executive aee.l"ch bullnem and aerved on the Wl1ahire Club'• ..Svlaory boud. had aeen the Wllahlre Club u "a pi.a I oould be 1UpJ)OC11. ve of other women, help them pin ~ arid make money." ,, "l probably would have WMKI it for meettnp," ' Mid LOI AnpJee Deputy Mayor Graioe Davia, who ~ on the WUah(t9 Club'• ..Svt.ory boud. "Men alwaya Invite me to plac.9 like the Athi.uc Qub for lunch. Wbc_ the)' called, I could ba19 IUI. 'How about the WlllhlN Clubr and I ~~would Mw aafd )WI." ''We felt lf w. aJUld ~ a-t the club open, ~ would ltart \lllnC It. women would jo(n and _ _.. flow would Iner ," Jennifer~ illllt'ot the WUlhiN a.ab. ., .... , ... CLUB FOUNDERS -Joan McCarthy, left, and her daUlhter Jennifer Armstrong didn't. get enough support from professional women to keep their WUahire Club afloat: "We didn't find that to be true ••• We weren't setttna a Jot of aupport from women." The club cloeed July 18. M1. Arm1tron1 and her mother, Joan McCarthy, loll theV •vtnp, apert:mentai oara and the~ will of ln~ who lost~. 'TIMM nro wonwn have walked away with barely the c:lothft on their beck.I," 1atd their atton.y. Beth ffanlen. "It Wll • wonderful idea. But there Wiii • 1ot °' Md tUQlna lnYOl• .•• The club 099ned whlle:·t1'e J:qual Rt1hta Amendment and the economy .._.. flounclerlna. she said. and had too little capital. "In the economic climate of the last few yeara, you have to have tremendous business akil1a to open a business and stay in buainea," Ma. Ohanesian said. "These women were not $100,000-a-year exeeutives with thoee sk.illa." The president of Blaisdell Place, Sandra Daddio, said running the Mlnneapolla club has "been a lot harder than anybody envisioned . "We all •tarted with the uawnption that. given ~:~~'::;: i:~~~~ lt," Ma. Daddio said. In Atlanta, bookkeeper-.adminiatrator Claude Nolen said the 1-year-old Women'• Commerce Club has had trouble ettablilhlng an lJna&e. "Memben do not undentand fully what lt is," Mila Nqlerr said of the club. "They're w1lllng to aupport us with their dues. but they're not coming to event• we achedule. Very few are really involved." Blailldell Place filed for reoraanlzatlon under Chapter 11 bankruptcy law• March 15, and supporters hope for new f1.nanda1 bllCkina . The WUah1R Club'• pl'Oblema, were far wone. M.. Anmtronc, 28, and Ma. McCarthy, 48, turned down by traditional f1nandna imUtutlont. took promJaet Of private lo.na for aliout $800,000 """ "*" '"'" 1111' ...... I 11*•11 SUINMI Pl•• 10 """ Ille ....................... and announced they would open at a swank Wilshire Boulevard address in September, 1981. That week, an investor who had promilled $150,000 pulled out, Ma. Armstrong said, and the opening was delayed. Employees went unpaid while the club acrambled for money. Some 800 potential members had paid $1,500 to join by the time newa stories reported money trouble and a chanae of location to a fonner Elks lodge in a less desirable area of town. Many members demanded .refunda, which the two women could not provide. Some angry employees led by the club decorator went to the district attorney demanding 111\ investlption, which ao far has produced no charpa. The advi8ory board of prominent local women resigned en mame. Ma. AnmtroD8 blames the publidty u much u tnoney troublea fOC' the death of the WUahire Club. Others <iflllree. Freddie Miller, hind u the club'• prosram dJrector, ii 8UJna for $11,300 in unpaid ulary. ''The~ ~ the killed the club," ahe aaid. wrhllt'a balone~ rnaNgement killed the club. "They were undercapltalized from tbe beginnlna. They didn't have the in-depth buaU*I experience that wu needed." ORANOI COUNTY 3 TOWN a COUN1"V. OMNCll (1t4)M? ... ,..,. """"""'call ..... ,.,. .. fMCll...,._. ............. . ... ............... .. ..._cl .............. .., ....,......,... "''*"""'~-. ,. ........................... __ .... _ Avoid Monday . for job NEW YOaJt (AP) - It YoU'n laoktnc tor • Job, don't t•t up an lnt.etvtaw tar 4 p.m. en a Monday: A peuonal NCtuluna Ml'VlC. NY• that'• the wont time to talk with a pn19pecUve employer. A aurvey conducted for Robert Halt International Inc. by Burke MarkeUn1 Research Inc. aald lta 1urvey of executive• fr o m 1 00 larae companies found 51 pertient aid Monday WU the wont day and 40 percent who wd. p.in. la the wont time of day for a job interview. "Monday la the moat hectic day of the week,': Half said. "And since 10 many people launch their job search on Mondays, there are usually more candidates to interview." WHAT'S THIS? -Eddie K.oskey, 5, ts puzzled over this upJide down sign alongside a highway in Bucks County, Pa. Owner:s o~ the sign say It waa installed bottom side up p\U'PC)Sely because it attracts more attention that way. '9al a. W..._, fGl1Mr pro_Jlet',......, at w-...... Inc., ·~ ....... -been ..... jiNildent al l'ard ·.~ tne .•• ~ flDnaed IUbUcUAry ol J'cWd ~ • OnmWn&otdw c.arp. w.u.m wm bl ,_ Chit Ol*8doll ot an In.._.tied OrCuit t Cater that the J'ord Jlo&or Co. aUllla&e w 11 Htabll•h n .. r c.m..do lpi'tnp. °*>. lie fclliDMl WM ttandard c:.ll proSfam man•a•r for Inc.l Corp'• 1peclal oomponen• operatioril In Phom&x. Aria. Dr. 0Hrt• I . McCaH hu ret1ped u an tnt.ertm d1nc10r of the EaterprlM Natloaal Buk {In oraani-Uon>. Newport Beech, due to another bullMilll mlher. The bank Nld MCC.nn doee not e¥pect to ~ 20,000 W... of ltock u indicated 1n an oUerift8 c1rcuW'. 1M a ...Wt. C>tflcen, orpni•n and interim diNcton are expected to own about 20.7 percent of the total authorbed capital if 800,000 tharea are Mkl, and 18 penwnt lf 676,000 are .old. Dr. Larry ltlmbell, director of the UCLA Bu.aln~ Forecutlna Project, wlll addre .. the Orange County Forum ot Town Hall of California on Thunday at a luncheon at the Newporter, Newport Beech. He will pi.ent an "Economic Outlook for the United States and California." For information, call (213) 628-8141. Patae Webber Jackson Ir C.rtta, lac. will bolt a seriet of free breakfast seminars at Bob Bums restaurant, Fashion laland. The tchedule: Wedne9day: commoditiel, with Bob Troat, speaker; Aug. 18: C&K Petrolewn, Bob Irvlne-ba1ed Olvenlflecl PrepertlH, la~. formed an lllOclatlon rnanacement divillon and appointed Juet Tarola cllrectOr. She wtll aupes"Yt8e operation of client homeowner ...Utlona. Sh. wu vice president of traJntna and o~ratlona analyala for Alta Property Manacernent. lr\ltne. BIU Pattenoa ha8 been named vice presldelt of Or•••• City Bank. Fonnerly with Cithena Bank. llJA TTRRaoN he will man.aae Orange City'• new office at 4526 MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach. Denali ltlarla, Accoaatanta, Inc. of Newr.rt Beach reports Danie J . Get11Dger of El Toro received his CPA acceptance and haa been promoted to supervi.aor in the tax department. · f Housework' that pays Sale opens on PacTel phones Drew, the speaker; Aug. ~: Baloor pension plan, with Steve Nelton, and ~pt. 1, NPI Apartment real estate partnenhtp, with Mart)' Me&qer. For infonnation, call 640-1850. Frank Lopez, of Fountain Valley, bas been appointed president and chief operating officer of Wettlanda Dlvertlfled~ Bancorp, lac., headquartered in Santa Ana. Westlands Diversified was fonned in the spring as a holding comp any for Westlands Bank, Automa ted Proce,sing and Development Corporation and possible future subsidiaries. I Hobby-like pursuits can mean money _l .By JOYCE L. KENNEDY l'IDEIRI Dr. Ray Cataluo, chairman of the Irvine . Planning Commlsalon, will dlacu.sa the future of Irvine on Aug. 17 at a meetlng of the Irvine Federation of Business & ProfelSional Women. Dear Joyce: Altboa1h my children 111111 are grown and married, I do not ~lab The meettni will be held at the Hungry Tiger Beginnins today, restaurant on F.c:l1nser Avenue tn Santa Ana. The August general membership luncheon for the Lapaa Nlpel Chamber of Commerce will be held Aug. 16 at 11:30 at the Crown House. to work outside my llome. I'm simply looking for a hobby-llke pursuit I can make some money at. Suggestions? business by studying various craft and small busiriess boo~, many of which are available in libraries. Or you can spend $7.95 for 10 pages of advice from Jean Wilks, Gillyflowers, 1527 Papillon Drive, St. Louis, Mo. 63141. Orange Coast residents For infonnati~n, call 833-9704. will be able t o buy Design Line telephones The board of directo.ni of the Oranae County at Pacific Telephone's chapter of the National Aseodation of Women in Costa Mesa, Irvine and Construction will be installed at a meeting Aug. 23 For further infonnation,' call Carole Bowman at 495-3300 or C.G. Forrest, 495-1187. -O.P., Shreveport, La. I After her daughter's wedding, Jean Wilks of St. Louis used a special technique to preserve the bridal bouquet. The result was so 'beautiful that friends an d relatives began asking her to preserve theirs and paid :h er handsomely ih return. :: In her words, here's how Wilks :C:lescribes her "at-home" business :tailed Gillyflowers: * * * Dear Joyce: I recently beard about a book written for people who want to ear'o money clipping newspaper and magazine articles at home. Cu you tell me the name of the book? - W'.H., Odessa. Texas. M i s s i o n V i e j o at the Foxfire Restaurant, Anaheim. PhoneCenter stores. President will be Gerry Cardone of Newport The three stores will Beach, employed by Calta Plumbing Company of offer teVeral Design Line Santa Ana. Nancy Nlclaola of Huntington Beach is models until Sept. 10 at incoming vice-president. savings of up to $40. Jack E.· Baker, of El Toro has been ''The sale allows appointed assistant vice president I assistant Harrla Corporation, Digital Telephone Systems Division, has set up in Southern California a direct sales office for lts line of PBX (private branch exchange) business telephone switching systems. The independent (non-telephone company) supplier of PBXs opened offices in <Asta Mesa aDd Culver City. Robert Kreiger will manage the Orange County office at 1503 S. Coast Dr .. Suite 320. custo mers to own Bell manager of Valencia Banlt'• Newport Beach office. :; "I take the bouquet apart, preserve ;each blossom and the greens, and ·reassemble the bouquet in either a ~dome or shadowbox. Some of my :~omes are made by hand with leaded :t>anels in the manner of art glass :~indows. ': "The shadowboxes are the most :popular because they can contain :other mementos of the wedding such *5 the invitation, boutonniere, garter, :hankie or small p icture. The :Shadowboxes are usually painted :white and antiqued. The large ones 1'elJ for $85. products at reduced He wu assistant manager and loan officer tn prices for the first time," Valencia's Irvine office. said Debbie Bowman, I tracked "Starting and Operating a manager of the Costa Claarlea E. Blam has been promoted to vice Clipping Service," by Demaris C. Mesa store, 3033 Bristol president and regional director and Jerry P . Smith. It's available for $3.95 prepaid St. Reagan vice president and division manager of the from Pilot Books, 347 5th Ave., New The other two stores Wyle Laboratories electronics marketing group, York, N.Y. 10016. are located at 14805 baaed in Irvine. Newport Plaarmaceattcala IDternatlonal lac. of Newport Beach extended the expiration chlte of Newport's B warrants from Aug. 31 to Marcll 31. The company also added a redemption provision allowing the company upon 30 days notice to redeem the warrants in whole or in pert prior to the expiration of the warrants at a redemption price of 5 cents per share. Individuals in the clipping service Jeffrey Road in Irvine business say it would be difficult, if a nd at 24000 Alicia Ctaarlet Wehrly of Tustin has been promoted to not impossible, to perform th.is service Parkway in Mission vicew;:restdent of operations for Plessey Precision on your own at home. v; .. jo M Inc T -Angel News clipping bureaus operate with r::=""=·==========-i.;..-e __ ,_..;;; .• ::LA.Ja====es:r.==========i large staffs which spend their work PlB.JC NOTIC( "8JC NOTIC( , ........ OfflCll M THI Comptfollef of the CllfNnCJ All other terms and conditions of the warrants remain unchanged. The extension is subject to a post-effective am e ndment to the company's re,pstration statement. ;. "Not much space is needed and no Jreat outlay for materials. And you ~eet only happy people.'' ~ You can learn how to preserve Jlowers, make shadowboxes and build days reading hundreds of different publications looking for anything written about their clients. Obviously, the business must have access to an incredible variety of newspapers, magazines and other literature. Would HOTICI CW T1'U8TU'a eAU .....-.-CWIL Trwury D•l*1-t No. -COUNTY CW OltANGiil of the United •t•\M YOU AM .. DDAUl.T UNDEt A NOnc:a CW eAU WHhlftttOft, D.C. D 11 D 0, T" u. T DAT ID UNDmlt DllCMS "" WHEREAS aatlsfectOt)' evldencie .IN«4JAllY 20, 1tll. UNLaU YOU fOMCloeuM hu b•en preaented to th• TAKI ACTION TO PROTICT Woodbridge Parltelda, ete .. Complrol141f' of the Currency that YOUR "'Of'IRTY, IT MAY II Plalntllf ve. OeWd Slleh Smith, et LIBERTY NATIONAL BANK located eOU> AT A "*.IC eALa. •YOU al .. dtfencNnt. No. 3'&293. In Huntington BHeh, State of The Aastln Compuy international engineering and construction organization, promoted \Yallace I[ Edwards to manager of its Western district, bued hi Irvine. He succeeds Andrew E. Carltoll, named group vice president for U.S . operations at Austin headquarters in Cleveland. Edwards has been manager of Austin's Southwest district, baaed In Houston. you? . NKID AH ~110N CW THI t. the underelgned, BRAD GATES, Celllornla. has complied with all 1---.. ---.,.-..,,.-:Tll'I'.--------.. ---.,.-llftTM'r-----NATURI OP TMI f'ROCllDINQ Sheriff-cotoner, County oC Orange, pr0Yialon1 of thi ·alatutea of the .--"'"~ '"~ ""'~ AGAINST YOU, YOU IHOULD SteteotCellfomla.doherebyoenffy United Sletea required to be•--------------------CONTACT A LAWYIR. that by virtue of Decree of com plied wllh before being MN.allt5 On Auguat 27. 1"2, at 11:00 Forecloeure and Sale In the authorized to commence the MN~81tU NOTICE OF DEATH OF A.M., statewide Foreo101ure superior CouY1 of the County of t>u&lneu of banking u a National NOTICE OF DEATH OP HERBERT STANLEY pee offers 'E.T.' to spur .6 classes I · f I · h Services, lno. u duty appo1111ec1 <>range. State of Catlfomta. en1ered Banking Aaaoel•tlon HERSCHEL R SW ANSON ZADACB _.__ DV11t••RT S ~ Orange Coast College's sa e 0 0 ng J 0 ns potel management j:lepartment is offering ~ claaeee. Tru1t .. under and purauant to on JVty 9, 1M2. and -ded on NOW. THEREFORE, I hereby AND OF PET• ITION TO ' ... ~.a:. • Deed of Tnm recofded Febnlery 9. JUIV 9, 1M2 In the.9bove entitled certify that the above-named · Z A D A CB A N D 0 F 1982, u lnatr. No. S2~78. of action. wherein Woodbridge u1oela1lon 11 auth'orlzed to ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. p ET I TIO N TO Oflletal Reeorda. executed by: Plttltlde Malntenenee ~tlOn. oommenoe the t>oalnees of banking A-114111. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. : Semester classes begin ·~pt. 7 at the c.osta Mesa .JK:h,ool. ~·courses include: 1'lntroduction to the ~01pitality Industry," ,'F ront Office J>rocedurea," "Basic Housekeep ing," ••Maintenance and Engin eeri ng ," "Institu tional Buying," and "Sales and Banquet Promotion." NEW GLASGOW, Nova Scotia (AP) -No one has been able to get a handle on the connection yet, but at least one textile manufacturer expects that the hit movie "E.T ., the Extra-Terrestrial" will wann up sales of long underwear next winter. Robert MacNeil. national marketing manager for Nova Scotia Textiles Ltd., of Windaor, explained during a speech to a New Glasgow Rotarians how the box-office smash about an alien marooned on Earth could help sell long johns. E.T . is befriended by a youth named Elliot who shields him as best he can from adults, espedally scientists. In one scene, the boy appears wearing long underwear. = ~:,": =.~:,:.n:-::: ~.~a~~·b=n~ .. ,~ ~~5;:~0~1~~~R1a~~ Tdo1tan bend. benefidarit.t ea.1· Autsa1 office of the ~ AeeOtcter of ludament and decree of knclolure wttneee m,. elgnature end ..., oi ere ors an con ngen To all hein, be.nefic:1arie9 Orenoe County, State of Callfomla. Md' .... IOllll9t DevlCI !'Jlleh Smtth offloe thla 2nd dey of June. 1982. creditora of Herschel R. creditors and contingent WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION and~ Ann Smith cw.nd8nl(a). c. T. ConoYet Swamon ~nom who creditors of. Herbert S•--t-. TO HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASl1 for 11!9 NIUlf One ~ Elaht ComptrOlle< of llHt Currency be in•.....-.....i _......, [peyable II time of Mle In 11wfJU1 HvnGl'M Thlty One and 101<00 Cfllt1er Number 17308 may t o •en'."..,.. Zadach and persona who money of the lJnlted Statea) at: Dollen..._,, money Of the United Publl1hed Orange Cout Delly In the will and/or estate.. may be Otherwi8e lntensted South front tntranoe to the Or11nge Stat•. and by W1\MI oC a wrtt of Piiot, July 12. 19. 26, Aug. 2. 9, 16, A petition bu been filed In the will and/or estate: County Old CourthouM, City of enfof09ment In Mid ICtlon ""*' 23. 30. s.pt. e. 1ee2. by F.dith T. Swamon In the A petition baa been filed Senta Ana. State of Cetlfomla. Ill on JVty 23. tte2, I em oommended 3t36-82 Superior Court of Or•noe b Do th ... _ .. __ ._ in ... right, Utle and lnterMt eon~ to to ... Ill the property In the County -oe 'Y ro ty ........:n o.ue and now held by It uncter Mid Deed of Orange, State o'f California. rtllJC NOTIC( County requesting that S~rior Court of <>ranae OfTruetlntheprooertlfelt\latactln .,_.,bed•lollowt: Edith T . Swanson be County requesting that NlldCountyenctStetedwtlbed• Unlt4,Lol1,ofTrect"58.• '1CTmOUl.,_H appointed u personal Dorothy Zadac h be Lot 23, Btoc:k 234 of l.Alke Tr.ct, ~dad In Book 429, pagee 30-33 Mm ITA~ . _ ... _,..,,_._ . ~ In bode 4, Pli!Q9 13 Of lnolultYe of the otflclll ~·of The followlng Pet'llOn la doing repreeentaUve toH ........... \CC appotnted as personal Mlaoellaneoua Mapa, Offlolal Oranoe County. State o1 Oatifomla. bu9lriell ea: the estate of erschel R. representative to admlnlat« Record• 1n the office of the County The propeny ta more eommonty C A I. 1 F o R N t A 8 A N K S w a n a o n ( u n d e r t h e the estate of Herbert Stanley Rec order, Orange County, known .. 27 Ea.gle Point, lrvlne, SERVICES, 18134 Mt Waehlngton Independent Administration Zadach (under ihe For information , phone 556-5772. OC fire drills Graduate c.r,,~••t addreu and other C~O:::. wttll 111 and a1ngu1ar the St, ==A~~~:O~~N, a of Estates Act) .. The petition Independent ~Uoo common deelgnetlon. " 9'1lf, of the tenement•. heredltamenta and Celllont_le corpor•tJon, 1S1:M Mt. it set for bearing in Dept. of. Estates Act). The ~­ reel property ct.er1becl llboYe i. _,_ thereunto 11e1ong1ng Wallhlngton St., Fountain v.ney, CA No. 3 at 700 Civic Cent.er la set for bearina in Dep\. Mo purported to be: 303-303'At 34111 In anywtae ~· . t27oe. Drive West, In the City of 3 at 700 Ctvlc Omter Drtw St.reel, Newport 8eactl CA PUBLIC NOTICt IS HfA!BV Thie bueiMM le condueted by • S ' A Calif i ' The underelgned T'ruatee IVEN Tllat on Tueeday cori>Or•tlon. ania na, orn a on West, In the City of Santa dl101a1m1 any llablllly for any eptember 14, 1N2, at 10:06 Windward Corporation August 18, 1982 at 9:.30 a.m. Ana, Califomla on Auauat Tanya Lee Snoddy of Huntington Beach graduated from Abilene slated in Canyon lnconect,_ of the atr-t actor... ·~. A.M..-of that ~ at Main Tina Johneon, Seerelwy IF YOU OBJECT to the 25, 1982 at 9:30 a.m. Ind other common deelgnatlon, H Lobby, Courthou H , 100 Civic Thie etat-t -flled with th9 granting of the petition, you IF YOU OBJECT to the Christian University in The city of Anaheim ...;T~e;.;..xas~·--------and the Orange County Fire Department will be coordinating their efforts in s imulated wildland fire exercises in the Anaheim Hills area this month. 81·.~1~· b• m•d•. but 'f .. ~ ::-'~ :.!:: ~~.~.°'Orange County on should either appear at the grandnt of the petlUon. you without eovena11t or warranty. roperty, u11der eald writ end P1t1Mt hearing and state ~'C>Ur lhould either appear at U'.)e expr ... or lmplMcl, '908'dtno tltte, . or'° mudl lher9of .. may Pubt11hed oral\ge coue Dally obEtlona or ftle wr&tten hearing and atete your Canyon, c::;·us t off the pcu111lon, or enoum. .nbranoile. to • neceuary to aattefy utd Piiot. July 19, 28, Aug. 2. 9. 1"2 ob tiona with the court obEtlona or me written Ri ·d Pelf tN ~ prlnctpal eum of wllfl lnt..ie and ooeta. · )180-l2 be or th h i ,. Yo b i b b vers1 e way near the note(t) -.ct by Mid tJe.ct of 0 the hlOl*lt bidder, '°' CMtl In e e ear n.. ur o tiona w t t e ClOW't Eucalyptus Drive. Truat, with lntereat thereon, •• llWtlA money or the United StaMa. .. _.,. ..,,._ appearance may be In penon be ore the beartn1. YoW' These exercises are going to be held on Aug. 10, 16 and 24 between 9 a.m . and noon in Weir On scene will be 11 prcMcted In Mid note(•). ~ O.ted at Santa An•. Cellfomla. .._ """'-or by your attorney. appearance may be In penon f i i t If any, under the terme Of Nici Deed i.,.i 2. t982. . u:nnout __... I F Y O U A R E A or by your attcmey. re eng nea, a wa er of Truet , feee. chart .. and 8AAOGATES, MAmlTA~ CREDrI'OR or a contingent IF y OU ARE A tender, one bulldozer mcpen-of the TNllM anct of tt1a ~.cor-......... --........ ......._ trueta crHted by aald Deed of ~of Orange. Oaltf. ....~ ""::."."",. l*'ION .,. ........ .,. tor of the d~l you CREDITOR OC' a conU,...t and the ORCO Mobile Ttutt, for ttla ,amount ~ ly:K. llrown, IMPORTS BY RONI tf18 muattileyourclaimwltnthe creditor to the dece•ed pi Command Unit. MlllMted t<?, be: M, 17Ut. ~t 9'.tmtnelwlod, Newport 911acih. CA court or present it to the ml.Wt file your claim wftb tbe The purpose of the. Of "t'9n:"~ tinder Mid Owl .,:.";. ~ _..., t MeO. personal representative court or preaent it to tht exercises la to give both dellv•red to th• u:=.:": AM, ea...,., BAABARA J . SAYE. '18 aepolnted by the court peuonaJ repreHntatl"• departments a Chance to wrlttert OecWatlon of.._.. and 11'9 MfllrMr ' SUmmalwlod, Niwport e..atl, CA Whhin four months from the appointed by the COW't utilize the Incident Dlmend tor a.... anc1 • 1IWltt4n P\tbllalled Or•;_r c~'.:11.'I ~·~-~by M date of flnt iaauance of Within fow; ruootha ~the Comm and Sy ate m ; =:1oe of Dlfault and E.leotJon 10. •un 1 1•· • tM2 tndlVldulll. J.etterl • provtded in Section date of first laauaoce of · The 111tder910tlld GlllMd teld "8JC ll01lC( ..,.,.,, J, ~ · 700 ol the Probate Code of Jetten M provided In Seic"6D Us famillarlzation with new :=ic: ~~an:. ~COU: Thllt ~mn ... ftled-"tl fie California. The time for 700 of the Probate C44i1 ol C post equipment; _atrensthen wtlat9 tt1a,.., prooany 11 iocet.c1. ~~~ ~ 1'Ni. Of °'*'It ~on fWnc claUnl will not ex.pre California. The time fo~ cooperation thro\lgh pre-DAT£D: Mt a3.1tta. n.. fOloWtnt rieraone .. dolno ,_,; pi«' 10 four months ~ fl1lnC cJa1nw wW not .... Mark Br ad le y fire plannln& and •1..-.:w,_~ ar. PublllhN Orane-Cout Deity th• date of the hearln1 P,rlor to four months~ Chitjian.lk>nof Mlkeand euppreulon, •nd to :r:'t,__ A&,Pfll0Hfm~_,2114Maln ~.i1u1v 1•.H.Aua.t.•.!..'!'.;. .. noeked~. the date of the hHrtna Grace Chitjlan of c.oata provide the opportunity 1y lutlMltuUon trHt, tull• 198· "'"'11noton .... _.. YOU MAY EXAMINE nodmd aboYe. Mesa,hasbeenna.med to to improve wlldland ~~· e.c:icC:A~:PEAFIV,21H1 thefileMJ"by'thecow1.U YOUMAYCKAMINltbe . the guest relatfona atatt firefightin& ak1U. and 9...__ ~SeMoee tie V1!d9t. MIMlon VleJo. CA -..C NOTIC( you are Interested in the file "-P' by the oourt. U Pol f ..... ,,... _ 1 ' .. 6 a • • t y MU~ AYf/IUI . ..iate, you may We a requel\ are tn~ ln the ......_ 0 .. ue '-"!Der• Alumni rel ... A 0 r c e • ' .. c~ CA~ . MARJORtl ANDIRI ON. s N'RTIOUI t=r• with th• court to receive you ~ me a NCP*t "'-tb n Jadcle• n...aLoclv A..>d.ation of USC. He ia procedun!I. C714112Wlt0 , vi.. '°'1da v•. CA Tiie ==A.-.on ,. doing ,peclal notlu of the the oourt to ,.,.w. .-i .. .-.. u 1 a •en i or at u dying ----------Pub"8fted Ora~ Coa•t Diiiy TNI ~ le ~ by 1 ~ • inventory of atate .... ._ notict of ~ lnwn~ of llCo. '"COIPOIATIO bWlineal ad:mlnistr8tion. --;;;;MUCm;iiiiiillOllC(iiiiiiii--PllOC, ~ 2• .... lM2Moe.t.... • .......... OENQle I TRUCKING, 17219 -qf the petltklna, ~ .. ••tat• •H•t• and of \Ile ---=.!!!1.._,,...... t-------------1 NTmOUI •11•• RlaNrd L. "-WV ~ LUCiie It .. · Fountain V'*'f, and reportt deacrlbed ln petition• acco-.nt1 aad W.ITAW ~=i:c:.....,cc::,e:: CA~fDWAFIOtW.1.. t?l1t 8ectlon 1200.1 of the ...... ~ ID 8ec11ii ~~olw.._..USA O.WC..,Ttm1 n.o...o.ti. ..... ~.,.Q ,..._'Y'Orl.. lloe!Oft, l't!! .... pM •• °*•· S." fl•lltllco, W. A!Wtlft A1i. ... ., o.n-. ""-c11,. ind )C) .clidMloNI nllQI -6cfwl*. !!!!i,J .!..~°::-"" ""°" 19 dotna I ~ 14, 1-. a.n..LUC1111t..,.,..v*t.CA eautom1a Prolietel O>dlt. i200.o or ll•• CaJlfoeD.li ..... IMllY'I. n41' w. 19th ,_ ta10I. •• Vlre:t• Al ... •t.1'1. Prolielle c:io.. ltf'Mll.Colla._.,CAHtt1. ta.nw81J&.1• l'*Nl!nwlloorldwotNbrM AUerH at Law, H I .... &.-. .. &..-, MOOl.,J •II . IDITH O~FIOLEMOfllTON. • tUIWn'&~ .MMDa IMMd.i .,_..I.Hiii ....... 1111ta 11•• al t.ew 711 ~ll . ==':== 61'°~~8t .. Ooa...... Af\ 111111m1111,1 a ,,. ..... ,_._._. .... LH ........ Calll•.c.••a • ...,,. ..... So I.II tl7•R T1lll ~II oondUNd by"' w 24•=r:-Ooiinly Clllflt of 0.....,. County°" ...... CA ··•-l•••> .... '=9 '"-C:. .. .,.. tllOf ;MMdull. • ..... •· Mt ~ ,.. Pubu.w 0r.,.. eo..t PuM111aec1 on.. Cailiil ..... Y-ANll 11)11 ..::.=:.. tliMt wllh tM ~-:... ·-....... °'91191 c.-"'J:l, DlilY Piiot, ~ 2, I, f, Dd,y ~ w I, I. .. ClalfA ~ 641·12" CouMy· an_. 0r.,.. 0ouney on ~ Or-.. a.... .,_ ....., .-, "--.-....a. e. 1• lllf. ·-_ lNf lltt ~..... -14, 1*. .... NI/ 11; -~I. t. MM. 11.... _._ Mll;aa ----495"°401 ,,_ -.,, C...... Cll' ._1... Pul>ltetled Of.,,._ CoMl ~ ............... ..:..,•=., l'llOC. JVtt 1t, "· """ .... ""· ........,; .............. ;.;.,;.;;,;;,;,..:11 ., ..... I I ! ~ .. • • \ 11EAE ARE Read all today's ~ews, ~very day Local, county, state, national and international events, come to your doorstep in the bright, light and li- vely Daily Pilot. ® Keep an eye on ~local government No other newspaper brings you more news of your city c9·uncil, planning commis- sion, school and college districts and county government. ~ Laugh, ery or get ?J smart Advice from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombeck, interesting (J To .keep .up.with • all that's happening in . Your eom~unity yo11: ·1:1ee!f the_ Daily Pilot . . , · ••• every day • AEASOrlS Wl1Y.-•• Ill Follow your team '-r/ The sports . acti6~ at. 15 · -Orange Coast ·high schools, three community co·1- leges, UC Irvine and Cal State campuses is regularly reported by the Daily Piiot sports staff. Keep up with nationally ranked college and pro teams, tool ,, . . 9 Save money and dJ shopping time Real values on Items 1rom apple- I sauce to zippers are advertised . . every day in the Daily Piiot. Because the ads are from firms in this area, you save time, effort Enjoy your gSunday . \SJ Family Weekly, color comics, finance, "Style" section and fea.- t u res about you hlghJight the inter- esting reading packaged in you-r Sunday Daily F:>ilot. it::;;Y Enough· to read - and enjoy. UiJ Tune in to the {/ latest TV logs The latest, most accurate televi- sion guide is published each . weekday in the Daily Pilot. On Frloays, Pilot TV Log charts the tu be in a conve- nient, easy-to-fi.nd features on people, opinions, informa- tive columns and comics brighten 1 1 and 11'.loney. _ -format. A~ Get into the Daily Pllot Dll.IJ Pl.lid .for only· $4.75 per month. UI . We deliver · days a week . l your world. .. 1 delivered Dally Piiot every -'day. i::~::ro· ' : ~---.... -•' Enclosed Is $4.75 for one month. u"''~o':ms ._ ______ I!!'! I I Or•nte Coast D•llY Piiot ... '560 ..... ya Createst bow a le' of fun • in Anaheim I i.1J!~-Oobol·-II ...... -unit" of the JUna1lnl ·lrodMn. a.mum and a.u.y Circlul; llvln Bela"~ to \he 11blue \mlt.''. c~Uc 1upert\ar who earM hia Uvlna by f1lr'1nl with death daily. • BUI, a londme pll'fannlC' wtth the o.._w.t 8bow on J'.artfi. aboard the whlrUDI ... Mel of •Cb" and hlah-wtre motor'CYde. hal 8'idecl • new twllt to bla act th.la ~· it the elm.la contmu. lta ~...,.., tbroulh next Monday at the Anaheim C.onvenUon Center. It'• called the "mechanical monater," an ~ dra&on that boblt and w•v•, breethlna tirt and llDOldt, and on wh4ch Bale, a muter ol balance, f' Jaye St. Georse. 'nle act hu a built-In ~ o a ftnale in whic:h it appears the draaon hll won the Jouat. the 90rt of fin1lh that wlnl adaed admiration for Bale'• unique arUatry. Bale II thll year'1 und.llputed he9dl1ner of a drcUI that often a .rood dee! of variety, lncludlnc .Ome aenulne performance• from Michu_, the world'• ~ man, whoee debut nine years aao wu more of a novelty than an attraction. The 33-inch Hungarian puta dop and bones throuah thelr &*Mt dwarfed by a large white poodle at one point in the ahow. · Wbil~ Michu and fellow tiny Hun&ariana Sandor and ·Elisabeth Raaki handle the tame • stations I ·gp stereo \Y,ASHINGTON (AP) -~ handful of AM stapons across the country are broadcasting ln ste reo after t h e government cleared the: way for them t o ·start competing head-on with FM 1tatU>ns for the muaic-listening audience. "l think it's here to stay~" said Phil Lerza, the ·chief engineer for San' Francisco's KFRC- AMj which turned on its ste~ system recently. "We've spent a ll weekend going cr.azy (promoting it)," said Kim Cu~ry , the progra m ~ at KTSA-AM in San :Antonio, Texas. "It's a gOdaend for us, becaae noW. we're finally going bacl into competition witH FM stations." KTSA, according to an lnfonnal sw-vey by The Associated Press, became the first AM station in the country to offer Cull -time stereo broadcasts. i •ONE OF THE HIGH-RANKING iURPRISES OF THE SUMMER. rr IS ; A MOVIE TO BE SALUTED." -P•t Colllna, CU Nl1'WORK ----NOW PLAYlNG---- .... ,. WIUO OAMCt OUllOt WllTMt•STU Edw9ds Viet0 T'*lll Cinedome Pac1lic s 0.M>Qe 0.rve In Ed'#~ c.ntma West 830-1990 634 25~3 558 7022 891 3935 .woAT HAQI &1wa1as Hewpon e.ntma 6U 0760 WitlrBurt & Dolly thl• much lbn ju1t cdUldn 't ~ lttgalf .. ......,, SETSAILFOR THE MUSICAL COMEDY ADVENTURE Of THE SUMMER! -.. - SC01T Md WILLIE BAIO AA~ ... , ... _ .... ,o .... 7:JO ,,. '•"7,1.S ' .... ''"''" .. " IMPO!'TANT NOTICl' CNllDflEN UNDUI 12 fflll! llotW ..; w._ .... 11n Fii. J:tt • s.t. Ila, .... l:tt 1'111 ~ IOlllC • l'OUll AM CAii -II YOUll PIMfll tff Ill) AOI CAii MOIO WITH OCl10lt llCCtUOllT IOSl!DI -IMIG AM IUll!Mll i•AU Cllf.'I --D Oii AM - A~A ... fl~ ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN ,,. • ...,, ti ot ~-St 179•HIO ~Dl 1•1 l'\.US THI MIMICTIOM 1a1 Cltll ,._ 11!1Jf .. ._ PAil• BUENA PARK DRIVI IN l*otl'"' ......... _ Hl-4070 8•. ~· • ""'" LINCOLN DlllVt IN lJMOlft A¥• .... Of •M>ti I 121·4070 "'°"'~"'' MY wttlCH WAY YOU CAN !N I Cllll · N 90IJllO ..... ..,. ' LA HABRA [•~i'wl IN THI .. .,. UTT\.I WMOMHOUM .. TIXAa CAI ~ue UflllAN COW.OY IN ) Clll( Ji tooaO . -------- THI NATI MOV. 1111 ~ .. I.OMO, THI GAY lk.AOl - tl'lt ··- LT~ THI HTIV•·TlllMSTIUl ""' IHI DeAO 1i11N DOWT.....,. l'LAID '"' THI WORLD ACCOM>IMO TO OAllP 111'1 -A"'*"' INI Clllt"SOllHO lt«n 11\ol SO 01 0..lt•Ot-fl-• &91•3693 YOUMO DOC=I .. LOV. 1111 AWl.ANl4"1 C1 ... II SOllllll.~-­ C ... Ctt 6 CttCMMa ,,_. AM TOUGH~ ova "" .,,...1111 c ... "'°""° THI NIT UTT\.I WMOMM0~• 10A• 1111 -• -• -.-a,...., -\IMAM COWllOY !NI .,.. ... 1 -----.... ORANGE CHllVf IN .. . MISS ION t•lllVI IN . ....... . ...... ,.,..,""' • ..... c ...... 634-9161 moN 9IJOd honllt IMl&h'*' Ul8ft eny rOuUne of the ublqufiou. clownl. lt11 one of t.he mmi en~ llC1a of thla or any other dn:UI. Other meanorable momenll In thl1 year"• tdttion lnclude the Dobrttch Duo, • Swill hlah•rtM ba1anclnc act: Bulaarfa'• Duo Krlatov, a the -of the 1how'1 Hrlill1t1, and human cannonball Ch.Ntopher A.dama, who taJwe a literal 11~ 1hot" juat ahead of the finale. · M alwa)'ll, there ta aplendor on all sldee, mop than one pair of eyee can behold at one alttfna. The elaborate pre-intennluion production nwnl>er ta I \ by Brad Anderson '. 1 'ko . ., "" • I . I • &'I, o··-----. .. "He wants to grow up big and strong, like Marmaduke." ~.WM A MINJTE. D &. ... OON'T 'IOt.I ~ UP ON MEI ACft08S • MlnCe 1 Door hinge 55 lnlUrNCIOn ,... •OtlrOOf> • to T"911 fhCMI••• • ,..,.. ........ ttOn ... 11V.... '2TJ(1..._ 11 AIMtt a ElllU'fl ........ ,.. t7WON• UAMr .... °' .,..... llOol. t7 ........ 1t...... a...ton IDLllC D•Mlud DOWN rJ """""'~ 14Mrl.C::.... ... ........ .... ,.. ...... .... ... . ) r·q '1t Nyt, 'No doga on the beach."' Hafik Ketchum //, l ~'r ~WHAT 'JlilS IS, &IT IT COUW USE MCR ~TotUP." by Harold Le Doux GORDO \lOOlO ~ \.lt(t 1'0 eoQOli) ..w CN..GOllfott 1 by Gus Arriola· -, ·I .. <') ...... , New York Yank .. • •t Danit w11a.:WOMAN I ~;'.""°..., MAWMIWS.o cw..,.., ''Heartrlg'' ... : I010t ~~(lt)Q ..... st. ~1"1MTW "~TMlhtt>-r::e f.~ lMmy Of The PMPI•" (1177) 11.w ~. ctlerlel Oum-"'°' eMed on lbearl'• play. Tiit oltllane of • ltl'l9ll town llrel IC)pleud then pareecUte • IOOtll pflyelolan '°' dec6tmg the local hot .-tnoa ...,_,,. due to poi.. llltlon. 'O' (II) MOCIHOHll..D A~ofone .-.on·• JOurMy Into and clut of the Unification Cllurcll 11 P'-ted. (ll)MOVW * * * "ParedlM Alley" (11171) ~., Stallone, Annand AManlt. nw-'°'*"'"9 bt°"*9 ,,__ the Hell'• Klldlen eectlon ol New Yorti City oomblne tNlr trallt of bfalne and bf-In their llfor1e to ct .. 11 be«« llYM f0< "*"-'-· 'PO' (l)MOVW • • ... "8-nl Uk• Otct TlmH" ( 11180) Goldl• Hawn. CMYy ChMe. A IOft~ leW)W II tom --lier hopeleee ... hueband·turn•Cl·b•nlc robber einct '* uptfgN .,,_, hueballCI who .. running for Calllornle attorney general. 'PO' .MOVll * • "Falllng In Love Again" ( 1 HO) Elllott GcMd. ~ Yortt. l:IO I DOC CAWTT UA911C>,H CIOWN .. 11' "Que Pr-And Equel Protection" 7:001'-"=-NICNEWS t<UNQFU C4llne encountere • men ll D II 1111 ~ l>y Ille devll. I THISAINf M•A•a•H The 40nth 11 11uey 1e1o111ng alter wounctect Ko,..,, cMll*W when • llNny 1141 a-otet pulll Into CM19. I JOl<IWS WILD ......... ll90RT' (I) , Jot. MAQAZIHS A oon,.,any that Mii an In, "°'* lleallh dub tor "' empto,-; • pwl twrn In Tlllltt. ClllMI~ 'au.t: M ...... ...,__ CID nt1 -.ACH IOY8 IN OONOMf The t-. group from tocl&'• golden era perf«m INlr grMtelt ""'· lndud-lng "Callfomle Otrll," "Svrftn' U.S.A." and "Bar· banlAnn." (Z)MCMR •• "Outctma" (11171) John Mllls, Cerol Whit•. A young l'loullkeeper 00¥84• 1"9 •!Mhect fortune of '* mlMrty emplo)ler, • -fngly lmpovertlhed old '-'PO' COURTROOM DRAMA -Robert Culp atan _. proeecutlng attorney in "Thou Shalt Not Km:' about a mechanic acculed of two murders, tonight at 9 on KNBC (4). 7:t0. i ON THI TOWN Feat"'9CI: ., ln-dapth tooll et eom• 01 lar•••'• ~AMILY..UO •w·A':l.H A leclufe, a 8hlrlly T emc>ie movie and • picnic -among th• actfvltl•• ~tot"" 40nth. I (I) TIC TNJ DOUGH MAOB./LIHMR ""'°"" • IVINNQ AT"°" John W'*-and the Boeton Popt OrchMlra ere joined by 1•11 dr1'fnmW lklddy Rich tor • "Weat 8ICle Story" medley and • perlormanoe of Ger· lflwWl'e "8trtke Up The Banct."(A) e:OO. Cl) "'9VATa ~ .... The troope al Fort Bractley -ordered to •I-all • reporler checlclng out ,,_, of polluted ground wat«.(R) 8 8 UTTUl HOUU ON THIE~ The o.-i. .... In • girl from Ille orpheneoge to talc• the 111-of Nallle, who hM moved to New Yof1c. (Part 1)(R) Q .MCMI ••• "C.tu. ~Of Montena" (11164) Barbera s~. Ronald Reagan. With the help of ., fnCllan. • girl lrlel 10 P'Olec1 ,_ Pf~ from • rvtllleM fand..9rabber. • MIT Off THI WDT Parllw Tiiiman'• ect.,-ne to open • bank bllcilcnr.. whel1 lie II liken hoetege ·r=(R) * * ~ "&oalpel" ( 11171) Robert lanllng, JudHh ~-A doclOf wtloee mlNlng dauClhl• Inherited • large lbUfll decldee to 1ub1tllul• on• of hie pellentl fOf IM gift and COllec1 the money. • ICa: THI WAA YeAM Aober1 Duvall, LM FWnldc and Dane And-..., ,,, ""' fllm that folowl a.-. ,_ In EngMnd '""" .,,. ._ ..... leedlng 10 0- 0ay ltwougtl Iha culmlne- lfon of lhe battle that lumed Ille Ude of Wortd Wer II. (Pert 1) • MOVIE * * *'4 "And Then There W-None" (1945) Louie ~d. Barry FlUgertold. Ten people lnYflect to • r«l!Ot• ...,,., lllanCI -my1tetlou1ty murcter9d one by one. • IEVINNi AT PON John Wfltleme and ltle Bolton Pope Orm.Ira •r• Joined by Jan dnHTllMf Buddy Rich fot • ·w ... Side &1ory" mec19y and.~ of Get· ahwln'• "8trtc• Up The a.nd."(R) 9 YOU AltCID PICM rT F .. l!Med: "Pig Anet 1'0td A_ ... and "The Man Who W..._Money." CC)MOVll ~ "Nlghtmw•'' (1111) Baird 8tett0<d, lllwon Smith. Deeplte • Cln'9 ~ ICl'1ptlon IN1 le auppoeed to I004lle hie llomlc:ldal lendellClea, • ~ ... turtled young man OOfllln- uH to commit grl•ly IM:lcllet ll'IUl'dera.. CIDMOYll • • • • 'Tiie Other 8ICle Of The MountMI -Part It" (1971) Martlyn Hu.It, Tlmoehy Bottome. FOffMlf chernP4on .... Jll Klft.. mont, rendered • quect~ pleglc by • tragic eocldanl, .,...... with Mlf·Cloubl when • ,_ to... ant.,. her ..... (II) NCH.AN> PRY~ .. OONCMT The well-known oomtCllan ~ pol'lltd barbl •• ""'°91 wwy tnetttutlon ltntglneble In tNI -eor9d, no-ftokl .. barr9d oonow1 perfomwlnce. (l)MOVll **'-' "Victory'' (11111) 8ytvelt• StalloM, MtchMI Celne. During World Wiii II, Aiied POW• -thelt llil*et to fl'9edom tn • metch between their -1.-n Ind ltle o.. man N•Uonal Team In Par- le. 'PO" • MOYll *** "Tommy" (11175) Roger DallNY, AM-Mer· gret. Bued on the roctt C>P«• by The Who. A young boy ltNC* deaf. dumb and bllnCI by the eight of llll latlW'• rnurcter becomee • moClemedoly meellall uplOl!ed by • gr.-cry uncle and • wot· IJlllpplng publlc. 'PO' l:IO 8 (I) WKNt IN ctHQNNATI Jenn1ter plene IO UM her pretty f-and Mmlnlne .._ to calm en ~ --dw.(R) • MOYll ***'A ''llleWlld ~ .. ( 19811) Wttllam Holden, Em.at Borgnlne. Oul'-9 ceu•• vlolence anct OM!ructton whlle battlltlg the Mulcen ermy. eGMAT ~ "ThrM 0-Stortee: 0 Youth And Beauty!" Kelhryn Welker end Mldleel Mutphy -..... tlnd In 0-'• etory eboul • ~aotd uec- utlve'• •truggle to recap. IUfe the QltOtry ol "" college yewa.(A) al efTIRfANmff TONIGHT An lntervl9w with Devld s~. • t:40 CZ) CK.4JllL8 CHAM~ T AUCI WITH-. CHANNEL LISTINGS 8 KNXT CCBSI D KNBC <NBCI • KTLA (Ind.I ' .1CABC <ABC) . e KFMB CCBSI D KHJ· TV (Incl.I eKCST CABCI • t<TTV (Ind.) 'e KCOP-TV (Ind.I .• KCET CPBSI e KOCE (PBS) cm °"·TV Cl) Z·TV ® HBO ft) (Cinema•> (!) CWORI NY ,NY @ CWTBSI (f) (ESPNI (I) (Show!,,,,.' • SpoUtoht • (Obie News Network) "Marte Wlndllor" .... (1) ... A·a·H Hawtceyit rnovee out of the 8-s> •ft• • fight wttll 8.J. and etwt.... (A) GCllMOVll * *. ''Thou 8Nlt Not g •• (1812} L• Grant, Mlctlael Gwynne. A dtt«- mlned ~ ettomey llghle to dMr •young man of two ...,....... murder ctlatgee, dMpll• over· wheiml"G t¥lder'°9 agalnll hlm.IRl ~--.... 0 YHlll AH •MVtrt" .................. ................... ........ __... *" .... , ........ _. ..................... i~,., ........ • • "llwl'll Ofteflftte" ( .. ,., .... Dewie, ICet9ll lliaak. A fwlllly ,..,.. a ~ ~on.n INMIOn wlttl••ClfMtown. (J)MCMI .. **" "1-*Y LMftt" (t117) JH11 Artllur, laMI ...... ,.,, ........ ptor•• eteftoti••ll•r .._ ............... ............ ....., .. ·~-···---­out • WlfldoW. .... ti) "'-'"' ID4 (~ A Tllll*Mt IMCI Mtoll ...._.. • ..,..... .............. """' '°' .... ~ """" ~""--"",......, • HO#MID t• PlOY: OOLLIOTID WT'INOm A Pfoftlt of NnlftOa'I ._ linguWlld pOl4 end no-. let...._ In .... with Nemerov, Ill• l•mlly, friende Ind~· (ll)CMNOY . MUDTIOHI Patti Awtln, ,,_ Ingram "'° ''Toote" ThlMllnllrl -"'"°"' the ...... .,.. lormlne -. with ~ "°'" Ille "" album llThe Ol.lid9 ... 10:00. (I) ONaHIV & LACrf 0-oney and L-v •• ...igrled to ptot.cf t ... UM of en outapolltn E.M crtl· le. .···--HOWAN> t• IPICIY: cou.80TID llNTINC8 A proftll of Americe'e dt9- tlngullhed po.i and novtol- let fMtvr• fnltrY!ewa with NemerOY, hl1 l•mlly, tnende Ind~-­ Cn>MOVll • * "'Tiie laltlmof9 ..... tet" (IMO),,.,_ Coburn, Omar 8Nwtt. A '"'811-tlme pool llullW muet '8IM '20,000 and win • big ·~· before he -llllW • '*"81ctl wtth .,. old CJl)poMnl -who haa ,_ toet •I MY gama. 'PO' (8)MOVll **~ "Vlotory" (11181) S~ Stallone, MlchMI Calna. Dur1ng Wotld Wer II, ..._, POW1 -their tlclctt to ffMClom In a m•tch between their -IMm and Ille Ger· man NatfoNll Tewn In PW· la. 'PO' Cl)MOVll * • "Senlote" Denni• Oueld , Gery Imhoff. Enterpttafng oolegt -~ ctantt wm tt1t1r fraternity ~ Into e bordello. 'A' .MOVll •141 "Smolcey Bh• The Duet" (1981) Jimmy McHl- cllol. J~ Jullan. A high IChool cMl!nquenl 1191• the wllOle town on hie trail whel1 he maltee olf with Iha ~ ~ and "-le llCtOM the llele In e --of llolan .,,_ 1>4181. 'PO' tO::IOl NIWI u.a.QW)HIOU "Crime Vlcllme" Flobet1 MacNell report• on vtolent crime f\'om the perwpeo: ttvee of the Ylctlmt, their f.,,,.... and the atmlnela. (ll)MOVll ** "8Chlocll" (1978) John Landll. Beul t<AcNln. A_.., bellt¥ed to be a genetic "ml .. lng llnk" goee on • rampage of ter· r«. 'PO' (%)MOVIE **"" "Hardly Worttlng" ( 1811) J«ry Lewie. a.-i Olvet. Aft• the droUe a-CloM\. • Y9terWI ~ trtaa hll llanct .. .,.,. loul )oOe, fallng ""9lbr1lbly at them ... 'PO' tt:OO ••• (I) al Cll . NIWI • IAT\#IDAY NIGHT Hoat: ~ Bleclc. Oueet: JohnPrlM. G YOU AIKID PICM fT Featured: "Walklng On A W1ng And A ~· end "Engl9nd'1 Toe-Sniff· Ing Factory." • M•11•1•H Frri Uvowa hit bad! out Ind appllM tor • PUtpl9 H••rt whit• Htwkeye -the !OM of. Mend and -.Ide an ~ eoldler~ • ....,HIU Go aboard lfllp with Benny lncflarga. I ..... M"°"1 DOCTOft IN THI HOtm OMng mMlcel edYloe to a llrangar on • train land• Or. Upton In "hot_..,_.. TUIE TOPPERS KOCI (60) T:ao. KCET (21) 1:00 -••1Yen1ne at Popa.11 Drwnmer Buddy Rich tftlNI th• Botton Pope Orchettra tor • r.w. Side Story'' medley. K'ITV (11) 8:00 -111ke: 'nMt War Yeua." Ftnt ot a thrH·part drama about the yeara that 1haped the man and -the lel•nd. 1t.arnn, Robert Duvall. K.NBC c•> e:oo -"ThOu Shalt Not KW!' A det9nn1ned det.nle attormy tiahta to c.1Mi' a YOW\I man of two separate murder char&ea. s.e photo, 18ft, KN5tT (2) 9:SO -"Filthy Rich,'' Premiere of UmltAld comedy lerlel abc)ut the heln ot a wealthy Tenne11ee land baron. See photo, below. u:11.(i)wv 1,1,..TMi..,.Olf Hoit: Johnny • C•reo11 . Gueete: Om•r lhtttf, K•rHm Abd\ll·J•blHr. Sharon 0 ..... ChuOlc MM· ~.(") e9MONIM ......n.M • ....... ONlll Gery Collne and c.tol ~ holl ttll9 ~ nation of "" pllgtlt of tN 1.t blllofl --In "" world'• dlvtlop1110 Mttone UWOUOh "" .Corlee of ... ofttltla~. • THI JMIMIONI o-oe .. owtfOY!ld ...., Loulat -him of hev• lfl9 M """'· • • LOVI. Al>llQ~N am.I "Love Md TM Mein ,_, Door"' HeNey and Card ... ,,, "*' honeylnoon ..... ...., tM gowrnrnant walkeln. • owrtONIDMC NIM CJ) 9'0MANCI: LAUM. IW8T'l.AUM (ll'er11) .MCMI ........ v..-. £vii'' ( IHO) Roir K.ity, Kip Niven. The dl9C jodley ... punlc roclc dub raoelYel • ..... of pflone calt9 Pf()me lafl1g that IOIMOM wtll be mutdetect In '* honor _., "°"' .,.._ nine and mldnlgll1 on N- YMr'e Ew. 'A' 11i41 CC) MCMR • * ~ "laclc Road•" (1HI) lally Fllld, Tommy LM Jonee. A hook« and a down-on·ht .. 1ue11 bOxer ,_. and he9CI _, ,,, llMrCll of• -life. 'R' 1t::OO. 1N1'1"1AHomff TOMl8HT An lnteMew wfl:ll De\llCI ;.·a;-~ ··~ ''Thie HouM ,._, -.cl" (11181) Parller 81• __..,UM Etlbllch« • • MOYia **'" "My Qtrl TIH" (UMI) lllll Palmer, &em Wenemelcer. • LOW, AMINCAH 8'TYLI CIDMOW! * * ''The NIOhl The Ughte Went Out In Oeor9fa" (1881) Kliety McNtcho4, Marl! Hemlll. A broth«· ancMllter IOtlgWfttlng ctuo h•ve meinr actventur" 1111"'9 trylnt to eke out ~ M\g on the oountry:weet, em drcull. 'PO' 'CD>MOVll • • "P9nltenttary'' c 1980) Leon IH•c Kennedy, Tilommy PolWd. A young bladt-Illa boxing 1111111 to~ In Pfllon. 'R' (l)MCMI . *. "la Ceoe Aull Folee II" (1NO) Ugo Tognazl, M1c:M1 SerraulL A "'6ddle- agld G9Y COllPle -"" quarry of • _.. OtgarVo ut.lon trying to gel the mb'ofllm that -of them .., .. owect. 'R" CZ> flCHAN) ""'~ ... OONCIRT The ..._._ comedian lhoot9 pointed berti. .. ~ _., lnetJtulfon ~tnthll-. IOfed, nowllOICle-barr9d oonotf1~ tl:IO •• LATI NICllHT wmt DAVID LmllWAH OUelta: lllly c.rter, lllmo melcer ltrol Morrie, - dlan JfKry lelnfeld, "" Mutt11. '"' ·=-··~''The Troten Hone" (1912) ... "--· John Or .. latrymore. • UM, AMtrti:C>.N em.8 -, 1t:.40. Cl) QOI I.., 1!00·~ .... ....,_ .. (1171) Alu Aoooo, otvll ~. A rettlMMk• ~ • VllitlWft ..,.,, •• per-.. .. ~ of revenge ~ INollklllct. 1:11 CC) MOVll **'A "Papltlon" (1873) 81-~. Oullln Hollman. A pelt of DtYll'e IManct oonvtot• ec>enCI their time jllannlng their eecape. 1:IO e Cll NIC NIWI CMIN•rT ·=AlmtY * * 14 "11'1 My T11rn" ( IHO) Jiff Oltyburgh, Mfdlaal DouglM. A bf11- llanl Ct"°9go math Pfof9t. -,..,._ "" PfOb4eml ,,, '* ~ Nlatfonltllp ...., .... ftndl • -to... wt111e In New York for h« father'•,_.,,., 'R' CZ) MAllAGI: THIE TOUCH Off LOW The stecie lnvotved In giv- ing end reoeMng • - Mge •e POtlrl!Y9d .. oou- plee demonlltate llO'# to ...... eectl -of the body. 1:40 CJ) MOVIE • • "Ollellenol The rn. gon'' A~~ operation'• attempt to deetroy • f~· lend einct ltadltlon .. """ with e ~ antffgtll. 'R' t::00 CID MOVll ***'A "Allen" (11179) Tom Skerrlll, Y~ Kot· to. The «"' of • epeoego: Ing ectap canter follow • myeWloul algl\al 10 • IUP' poMdly deed P'8t* and. after laodlng. Cllecover that the n-.-•wwn.-(!=ewey.'R' • * .... "Otct Boyfrlendl" ( 11178) T8"1 Shire. AlctwCI Jordan. A oonfuMd d!Yor· cee ttlle to llnd Ille key to lier .,,_, ~ by em~ on • Jourrwy to tooll up .,.,... boyfriend• t:a0 llrom ..::-" 'R' 1:41 • NIWI l:OO MOYia * ·~ "The Kid• Are Alright" (111711) The Who. FC>Olage o1 eon'9 of the roclc band'• parlormel- -~-wttll "'-· vt.w. of the group "*""' berw.. 'PO' a: 10 (I) MOVll • • ... "S-Ulc• Otct Time•" (11110) Goldle Hawn, CMYy CtlMe. A .aft"-ted tawyw II tom '*-.Jler hopeleee ••• hu1bar11f-turned·b•nk rol>W and her uptight JOHN DARLING 1'M NOT IN THE M00P, JAN/ l 'LL JUST WIN6 IT ANO p0 A COLD IHT'eRVlf!W! ! 'Met to emphasize German works NEW YORK (AP) -The Metropolitan Opera wm offer televialoo audiencea IOIJlething different thla 1euon, paalng over popular standards by Pucdni and Verdi In favor of te.-farnO!ar work:a that emphasize the German repertoire. lnltead of ."La Boheme," or "Rl(Olett~>." .~ l982-83 aeries can1ed by the Public ~ Service opena In October with Richard St.raUA' '*Der Roeenkavalier," followed on Chrtatmal Day by Humperdlnck'a "Haneel and Gretel.'' Abo ec:heduled are one of Mozart's leut-known mature works. "Idomeneo," and, for the tint time on a Met TV ~ a work by Richard Wagner '-"'Tannha~.·· "We don't healtate to repeat worlu we've televl8ed before, but we felt that pita year ~ur c~ repreeent the belt we have aolnl," aaya Michael Brol.won, the Met exec:\4tiye ID cliarae of the ••uve from the Met" 8eliea. wh.lch started In .. ~lyPilDt \ , aprrng of 1977 and hae averaged about four programa a year aince. "And we do have a certain confidence that we wlll attract a large audience lf we keep doing quality works," Bronson adda, "Even if we do a mixture that might not seem aa popular. "We alllO feel an obligation to make oertaln we include the majpr a1npn the public Wanta to !lee," he says. That may explain the 0 Idomeneo," whoee star-studded cast la headed by tenor Luciano Pavarotti, undoub1ed.ly the ~ chaw In opera today. And "&wnkavaller" It.an soprano Kiri. Te K.anawa frcm New Z.l•M, wtw. air.dy brilliant career aot a further boost when lhe ~ at last year•a weddlnc of Prince Chad• and Lady Diana. "AJthoucli 'Ro9enkavaller' may not be quite u loCl.'allble • the PucdnJ « Verdi repertory, lt hal over the ~ yeen become one of the molt popular," MY9- u fH.anlel and Gntel' of coww b.a alwayt been a cb.Udnn'a bo~ favorite," be Mys. "We hope the Christrou telec.fl m~t become a yearly nd!Uon." much • Mmotd'1 Amah1 and the Nicht Vlltton" w• Oft HBC for muy 1Mf9· ''We re1U1 felt I\ WM time we did tome Wacner," BICIGilOft .,., "and ot the pl'OducUom that we MYe, tt .. med to \II the one that would be ~ ..uy t.echnblly Mndlld.." ~t cto.n•t w tt wt1l ... =·= tbe murky u.htinl and elabon•-. that mOdem w...-,.... proclucdaal tind tO me. 'n. major' ll"lda In ·~· 9 -tMl8ftC.DIOW ahlft In Act One from the dark lair of the goddesa Venus to a tranquil German fore.at, "We will remove the front ICrim, repaint 80lne projection slides and lncreue the Uahtina ao the Wu.ion on the TV ac:reen will be comparable to what the audience aeea ln the opera bouae," Bronson aaya. . Despite the Met'• wtl.11ngnem to try a 11¥9tier menu of workl th.la eeucm, Broman la quick to acknowleda'e that ratinp are ''a newr-endlna 1.-..e of concern to the Met and our lponlOf', Tex.co. · After all, one of OW' p.arpmee la to Invite a larpr audience to undemarid and beccm:ie IUpporta'I of opera. I !:Yer-. lf we do very well, OW' ratinp on PJliJ are at the low end of the spectrum." he •YL "Lut year we avwued & ml1llmi to 10 m1Won people for eeich lei.ec.t. But that111Ull a tremenc:ku n\amber of peoll• to H lntroductn1 to opera, and a tNl•WPAW fund.,.... JWOIUl'C9 for the Met." Dae. .nd m.'8 for thia ,.... •• IB'illl are • follows: .. ~." en Thunday, Oct. 7, wtth Te Xanaw•. meao Tatian, TrOyanoe, eoprano Judith • r. bw Kurt MOil. and ·PaYUOat In a 1u•t appearance; "HaDHl and Gretel," on s.tUrd.i attemoon. n.c. 11, wttb Mm ..._ and mealo trederlca von Stade; 11Jdomeneo," a piedormMCe ~ Nov, e and ~ Jan. •. wttb Pavaroui, ltbll van Scade, ~ n.Da Cotrubu aail Hllde1ard •••ren·•. and ·~."---Die ................. JS, wtth ~ 11w. Marton. Miii n.,,... libel t11na1-Nabard c.i.m,. .. ~,,~~ It ........ , • .,., .... 0&4111 Kill OW• IW A ._._.. _.,.., ,..,,.. ~ .. ...... ... .... .,.., .... .. ....... ....,,__, .... ,. --.... llWfttd II' ............ .. (J)..,. ··~ ............ (tt7•1 LAIH• ~. T4#'1 '«ro. A n•w hou1ak••P•r ~ IN oOjeoi of .... tot • ...,.,., Md -~MM.'lt' .. (II) n41 IMOH IO't'e IN OONOIRT TM IMIOUI group !tom rooll'• golder! •• perlotm !halt ..... Me, lndUd- lnp "Ollllf0tnl• Girt•," ·~· U.l.A." and ''let• we AM." .olCn>MCMI •• * * ...... (1930) ~ LMrt, lllen Wlctmann. ~olfoe p.,•l~H th• uildal lllortd .. UltV IMtdl DI 11 .. dott tor • ~lo OllllCI murderer. Ttw•d•11'• Da11tlme lffo.,le• -MORl•G- uo ...... ''Victory'' ( 1911) ~ 11411ont, MICtlMI c.tn1. °"'1ng Wortd Wer II, Aiied POW• ... It* tide.. to ll'eectom In • metch between their tocoer llMI and Ille Get· men Natlon81 T..,.,, In Pat· le. 'PO' t:OO (%) *. "Klllet'• f( ..... ( 11155) Frri 8INera. "- I(-. Wiien • pril9llgllter Int-10 ptoi.c1 Ille glfifrtenct'. honor "°"' • ctence·llall owntt. the ~II murder. 10:00 CC) ***~ "TheW9Y We Were" (11173) Barbra 8trelewld. Robert Redford. A young coHege couple In the 1.,.,. dlec:owr that !Mir pollUc;el ctltlet- -lltong enough to Jeop- ardize their mentage. CID** "Seoul'• Honor" (11180) Oery Colemen, t<tlhttlne Helmond. A lonely Otptlan cone .,. eictremety reluctant NIC>PI· ly·•lnglt executive to become den mother 10 • pack of ~I> Scoute. Cl) * * "Penelope" Anne B«glnarl. George Murcell. Two "*' 111empt to -the _., ...... of • decadent family. 10:10 g * * * \4 "Derby O'GIH And The Uttle People" (11169) Albert SNrpe, 8Mn Connery. An otct lr1ell -lak• who le about to loee NI job 10 • younger man ~ the Icing of the ~ and IOfc:M him to gtW\I ""8e ...,_, ·o· (%) * *. "The Kllllng" ( 11158) St«llng Heyden. VI,_ Ectwwcte. An U · oonvlct'• lalt•lno mar· rtegt leede 10 hie downfall when he plot• • ,_.reek Miii. t2::CIO • * * .. Rep1lllcul" (1M2) Cer1 Ottoeen, Mimi ~. Alter a glatll prehlllO<fc ~ure le ~. the tell le -· to • Denlefl teborlllory w11«•, to Ille "°"°' of all, h btglnl 10 ~ ... and --• fife '°""· • **'A "Fllg"1 For F,_ dom" ( 1943} Aoealrld Aue-- ..... Fred MecMun'ay. An ambltfoul llYlatrhc flncte h« to... llfe out lflOt1 beceuM of her wiel IUCClllll. • * ** "Oreal Mlelourl Raid'' l 1950) Macdonald Cerey, Wendell Cor.y. The J-and Young« bOVI beglll to ncte the outt- tn:ll agMI. CID •• * "CIMtl Of The Tit-" (11111) Herry Ham- lin, Laur-Oltvlar. ~ le IWo Pw-... II helped by '"' tether z.eue ,,, • --of dengetOU• tuk• .. lie ,,... to win Ille hand of • Ph<*ltclan ptlnctN egelnet Iha ...,_ of a wngeful ... godd .... 'PO' s:.···----'!l!.!!IPt:. =r....--. ................. F.~~ ll'eaf'' (t t aft 1ea•-..... A ,~ .... ,·~,~ .. .. -.n Ill NU.I .,........ .. ,_ ............. In IOll9 ..... ~ --· ''°' .... CCl * ••• '""-..... Of it LouM" (1111} ..... '*-1.Murr .. ~ In 1tl7, ciw... A; l.llld-...,. ......... ..,.. IMlllO~~--­ tNA ... 0.-.to~· ... • ·~ "Ullc:Mr Tiie ~ Dow'' ( 1 .. 1) Ot*Y CNle. CMfle ....... .,... ;'° ~wflo--ln!OM tor IN tllllint of ''nit Wiii· " Of °" .. """ • ~­,,.. !!01.. u~eldt d...._ ·PQ· • t:IO (I) ••• "L.Olt ~·· (1tn) ~ ~. JMa ~.A ,_.llllSlld cllplomet dlUOYlfe IN Hlmaleyan II~ of l'*'Ori-La. • ..... °' ~ PM09 .,., fmlftOt· ~. (J) •• ··~"(1t11) Jofvl .... C.ot WMte. A young"°' .. ...,., ... IN 11..:Md '°"-of IW mlWly employW, ..... lngly lmpoWl'leMd okl ,.,,,,., , 'PO• 2;00 QJ) • •141 "H•dly wonc. Ing'' (1H 11 J«ry LAwl9, 8ueen ~. Aft• 1"9 Glrcu9 doMI doMI, ..... 9'1111 down tn. .... hMd .. ---)oOe, 'lllnt mlMtebl)' et INM ... 'PO' 2*1•***141 ''1' .. MeA Riddle'' (1HO) Mel'l'yn DouglM, Ul9 ~CML A withdrawn,~~. unaw•e that IM II ctytno. embertte on• tong~ to reecqualnt harMlf wttJI '* geogt~ and emotfonafly HP•t•ted family. 'PO' l:IO CID * * 14o "Somectllng 8hot1 Of PwedlM" (1819) 8-Sarandon. De~ Steinberg. Two young New y °".,. ...,.,, llbovl low and the vtclMlludm of • one-I-relallonehlp. 'PO' (%) **'"' "Vlc1ory" (1811) ~ Stallone, Mlchell Celne. Dur1ng Wortd W• II, Aiied POW1 -ttielr ticket to fl'eldom In • metch between their .-team and IM Ger· 1'N11'1 NtllloNll TMn) In p.,. le. 'PO' 4:00G **"An Eye For An Eye" (18M) Aober1 ,__ Ing, Pat w~ A bounty hun1• Melt• r-. on tlloM N9P01 llible tor Ille OMth of hie Wife end ~. Cl)** "Countdowl\ To Oleutw" (IMO) Puppe11. The tntnic>ld Thunchrt>lfdl .,. lllCed with the .... of preYenttno the Empire Stele ~ !tom ool- ~141 "Vlc:lory"(INI) ~., St.Ilona, M6d-' C8IM. During Wortd W• II, Aiied P<N/1 ... ltie6r tlcl<et to treedom-#1 • metch between their ._ IMn't and Ille Ger· man Nallonel Tewn In Per- le. 'PO' . leOO cm * *" "Blrdl tntarwll'' (11178) Eddie Albert, Alp Tom. A young girl II Mnl to 11¥e wfth Amlltl ,..,_, wtlere IN lelw'ne about the ,.ittlM of the MkA1 wot1d. 1:30 CC) * * * * "The Flller" (IHI} Olrtl Bogerde, Alan Bat-. B8Md on • r\O'tllll by 8«rwd M~. A tum- of·lhe-century Jewleh pH11n1 I• wronghllly trnpl leolled fO' the deattl of • c:fllld ,,, Kle'I. CID••• ''The~ Myl" (11173) lnglid a.o- men, Johnny Denn. T- chlktren run _., frpt'n ,_ and hide In .... YOIW City'• MetropollUln ~ofM.wtler'91tley -beto lal lded by • .,.. ed,..__·o· • ID .,.Dodgers complete sweep • LOS ANGELES (AP) -It ~nfident our club wW play waa the climax of a remarkable lt did the flnt 100 game. of 10 daya ln baseball'• National eeuon, not like we have ln th League West and both the Loe laat 10. It'• really frua1rating f Angeles Dodgers and Atlanta us not to be ICOring any runs." i Braves were trying to put things Welch, 13-7, restricted th ln ~rapective. Braves to three hita du.ring th • Well, it's easier to take over eight inninp he worked, ana ha4 first from 1 ~ games back than It a perfect game going unt.iJ la from 10~," said Los Angeles Horner sl.n&led with one out ii) outfielder Ken Landreau.x, who the fifth inning. Th& Braves theft ICOred both runs Sunday to back stranded two runnen in each of Bob Welch's fine pitching the final three inning• ..:.. performance as the Dodgers beat including In the ninth against the Braves 2-0. reliever Tom Nledenfuer. The Dodaers fot one run in the "WE'RE A little down," said 0 first inning of Atlanta's Rick Braves' third baseman Bob Camp, 8-5. Landreaux slnaled, Homer, "but we've still got some stole second, went to thlra on 50 games to go. We have the Dusty Baker's fly to center, then same team we had in the first 100 scored on Pedro Guerrero's games." single. They added an insurance On July 30, the Dodgers went run in the eighth against reliever Into Atlanta trailing the Gene Garber as Landreaux division-leading Braves by 10 ~ reached base on a fielder' a choice games. Los Angeles won all four grounde r, again stole second, games ln that series, then, after a then came home on a single by drama-packed four-game set at Baker. Dodger Stadium ended Sunday -the Dodgers won the first three in extra innings -the Braves' lead had dwindled to 1 ~ games. The Uoctgers nave now won six straight and 10 of their last 11, while the Braves have lost six straight and 10 of 11. Dodgers' Manager Tom Lasorda was amazed at the rapid tum of fortune. Atlanta skipper Joe Torre was frustrated. "WE HIT the ball good, but they made some good plays." said Homer. "Things just didn't work out for us." ' Welch. who's now won four straight, said, "I felt I pitched well in the early innings, then we got some good defensive plays." DllllY ,... ...... bJ a.ry .,,.,_ DOUBLED UP -Dodger shortstop Mark Belanger manages to escape Atlanta's Bob Homer who unsuccessfully tries to break up a double play in fifth-inning action at Dodger Stadium Sunday afternoon. The Dodgers nipped the Braves 2-0 to sweep the four-game series. "It's really amazing ... now we're in it," said Lasorda. "We still have some hills to climb; you're nobody until you're in first place. "CLOSE ONLY counts," he added with a grin, "in horse s hoes, hand grenades and dancing." Torre trie d to remai n philosophical, saying: "I'm still · Los Angeles shortstop Mark Belanger cut down a possible Braves' run in the seventh inning. Terry Harper opened the (rame with a single and went to third on a single by Rafael Ramirez. Chris Chambliss then • lined a ball off Welch's glove. Belanger charged in, acooped up the ball and gunned down Harper at the plate. Welch got Dale Murphy to ground out and Horner to fly out to end the inning. Flo.yd ref uses to .he· humiliated Late aggression helps veteran win second PGA title TULSA (AP) -The potential hwnlliation of it all drove Ray Floyd to the 64 th PGA Championship. The man all the other players said couldn't lose was giving it away Sunda~~ng the trees, rough and bunkers of Southern · Country Club. "I don't know if I could tiave lived it down," said 20-year veteran Floyd. "All I would have read in the newspaper headlines would have been how Ray Floyd blew it ... I have a lot of pride." The 39-year-old Floyd said he gave himself a ·talk on the 12th tee that was the kind of stuff that would get you committed. "THEY'D PUT me in one of those places if I told you what I said," Floyd laughed. At the time a fat five-shot lead had dwindled 'All I would have read in the newspaper headlines would have b,;en bow Ray Floyd blew it.,. RAY FLOYD Masters) and it puts me winning a major in all three decades, the 60s, 70s. 80s." Floyd earned $65,000 while former PGA champion Wadkins, who siz:zled with a final round 7-under-par 67, bagged $45,000 for his 275. Couples' 66 tiecTitlm for third place with steady Calvin Peete, who posted a 69, at 276. F.ach earned $27,500. AT !7'7 WERE Jim Simons, who shot 69, Greg Norman, a 72 final round shooter, and Jay Haas, who shot 72. · Bob Gilder was alone at 278 with a final round 72. At even par 280 were Tom Kite, 67, Tom Wataon, 68, Je.rry Pate, 69, and Lon Hinkle, 71. Jack Nicklaus, seeking to become the first player to win six PG.AB, fired a final round 67 and was at 3--over-par ~. Floyd said "Some day rn be able to look back at this tournament and rll be proud to say I was able to gather it up." It WU Floyd's 18th tour victory, giving him $305,409 this year and .2.097,396 lifetime. Pizza caper: trial set RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina State to two strokes as Fred Couples eagled the par-5 No. University basketball player Loreruio Charles has 16th hole. been charged with stealing two pizzas from a pizza Determined to be more aggressive, Floyd delivery man. · birdied the 12th, 15th and 16th holes to build the Charles, 18, of Brooklyn, N.Y., was charged lead to five shot.a and coaste? home despite~ 18th with larceny from a peraon, a felony, said Capt. J.J . hole double bogey to earn his second PGA title and McGinnia of the N .C. State public aafety third major conquest. department. Even though he had a three-shot victory at . The incident occurred May 30, but Charles was 8-under-par 272 over runnerup Lanny Wadkina, · · ·-not charged until July 24, after the pizza delivery Floyd's final round 2-over-par 72 wouldn't let him man identified the Wolfpack player u the IUSpect. enjoy it. His trial la ICbeduled for today in Wake Diltrlct n1 made a lot of bad mental errors," he said. "I Court. was in the trees, the rough, the bunkers. But my McGinnia said Charlee Is aocuaed of i1eallng the pJay from the 12th on in wu equal to any during pi.zzat as they were belni delivered to an N.C . State the week." · donni Floyd'• flnt major tournament triumph in six H~d the nillU were forcibly jetked out of years lVil1 be remembered for 54 holee of pure . the delivery man'ihmd., although no weapon wu ~~u=:~ ~~ ~iwd~= ~~~in the theft and the delivery man was not .:xn of 200, 10 under par. ' GOOD OV TIMES -Ex Dodger Pee Wee Reeee (left) ia fitted with a microphone, while former Dodger great Sandy Koufax ls all srniles while participating in an oldtimers' But the Pft91UN built as everyone .. unec1 be WM a Aire winner. · "ft' TOO& ALL the prellUl'9 away from the field.•• be sald. '"They know I UIUally play well from the front 10 tlwv nlued and free.wheeled it. Ole' Ray Floyd wwlt blow it,' they laid. lt'a not -.y to wtn under a atuaUon lib that. /;led-hot DeCinces, Angels take The atrugle h'l the 94-deiree heat, the pn!lllW'e,. the nervee. all bit home .. P1oyd stood OYW bJ1MCCJndahot·onthe434-yard par-4 cb:lng hole. "'lbe awe of it all bit home,'1 he aakl. '1 WU lookt.nc up the fairway at all the people and ~re.us.cl the to\4rnament wu mine . . . it all ~-qukS. MI don't renwnbw even atandlna over the bell. I~ bow the lbot aqulJ1ed riaht, low and bid.'' Jrom a bocawwto. lie ln tIMt steel wool·t.hkk ...... l'OQlb. J'loyd d\Unped .. n.xt lbot Into. bUftlr.ilr, ~ out Md two-pUued tor * llx. ~~ ftltorJ ....._ a beltiMi lot to me," 9ld PIOyd; 11Ji ~ m7 ftnt major Ucl 18'71 (tM SEA TI'LE (AP) -Ancell Mana,er Gene Mauch hu aeen home run blna-before, but "rve never aeen anythlna like thla." ~t·• how Mauch retlCted after Ancel third bueman Doua o.anc. ripped three homen ln one gtme for the aecond Ume 1n 1-thD a week, helJMI the AJ\eela pound the Sea"1e Marinen. 9-6, Sunday nlcht. Deane.. who ran hil home-run total to 23 with the victory, now hM hit 11 homen ln hil pMt 10 fllUI*. With two three-homer 8amet ln the tame -.on, DeCinom tiea leaendaiY Ted WUUanw for the Amertcln ~ mirk. wou.m. accom~ thii fMt m 19&7. n.aw tu\ ~ bomen 1n AMMtm ~~JM\.~· nve "•tlaMI Lr ...... baw 1mtCMd ~--ud WUJlelnl; ..,l'be way DeCtncea Is swtnatna the bat, It doesn't matter who'• pit.china." Mid "Mauch, who wW tend hll AnaeJa a&alnlt the M1nne.ota Twlnl ln the Minneapo!J8 Metrodome Tuesday. In their f.~oua vialt to the "Homerdome,'' the Anpl.a to bit. ruund-trlpper. On Sunday, DIClnCeia amaahed .:>lo shots ln the ftnt and th11'd lnDlnCI and a two-run clout In the ~th. Bobby Ortch alto hit a two-run homer for the Anaell. 9*ho now have at lealt one home run ln ..ch of thetr PMt H pmes. The Mariner• scored all their runs on roundtri~. Rlabie Ziak hit hll 17th ln the;; and Todd Crul follllwed In the wne trlrDe wi hll ninth. • two-hm .... fir • brief 1-t ...... Cnll·~ .......... l*'k twM\11 bmnirrJ:. .. ....... !~...,ad • Wcdr................ ... Dllf Nit ..... "..,~ game at Dodger Stadium Sunday. See Howard L . Handy's column on the nostalgic contest on Page C2. a break today i I n't t ere, but there we e ll IOik a ~ iMMblt to f~ 9'i:h I love for th• lllll9 of ba11ball dHp In my I*= l WM Drivileeld aloni with othin to ieUw tht pill& and W&e UMt playwa J waa welChlna and ~ In a Un. cap.ule In my m&nd11 .Y.1 fi UC> ... ..-,.ii. how fortuna• I have bMn in my lit.time .. ~ lpOl"tl wr1..-. WbMl tb9 J:>od8el'I came to Southern celitomia ln 18M. bMtMIJ J'lff my bMt. '!bin WM a time wbeo ~ I Dodpr home pme WM almolt ~ IT ALL BEGAN ln UM6 durinl the ~World War a en when tM Rama moved from Cleveland to mab Southern Callfon)Aa their h.ol'M. Th.II Md the charae of eutern and mtdwe1terl'\ teama movlna to the Southland. They moved Into ftamMW' Stad.Jum at Compton Collete to train that flrllt year ln the .,... . Yankees trade Dent; John deal nearing? From AP dl1patclles NEW YORK -The New York • Y ankeee have traded shortstop Bucky Dent to the Texas Rangera for outfielder Lee Maz:z:Ull, the Yankees announced after Sunday's doubleheader with the Rangers. Maz:zilll will return to his hometown where he began his major league career with the Mets. Dent, after the trade was announced, aald, "I feel kind of relieved it's over with. It's been an honor to play here. I've had some great moments and a lot of fun. I guess it's part of the game." Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner called a neWli conference shortly before Sunday's doubleheader to comm:f,.~r, reports of the Dent· . trade. and that DMr pitcher Tommy J ohn would go to the Angela for pitcher Bruce Kiaon. "Concerning Tommy John, I don't know at · this time of his going anywhere," Steinbrenner said. "In line with convenationa we've had with his people, we've talked to eeveral clubs. "Boston offered us a minor leaguer, but that waa unsatisfactory. We've discussed it with California but we're getting mixed reports on Kiaon'a physical condition. We're not interested in anybody who might poeaibly be an injury problem." Quote of the day "I said to Rickey, 'I have to meet my maker some day, and lf he asks me why I didn't Jet these guys play bueball, and I said becaUle they were black, he might not be satisfied with my answer'." -Baseball Hall of Fame inductee A.B. "Happy" Claaadler, former commissioner, recallin8 a conversation with Branch Rickey of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Baseball today On U1il claw in 1980: Boston Red Sox alu.ger Ted Wllllama belted h1I Gllth career tiXne fW'.li tylna Mel Ott for fourth place on the all·wrie Uit. Today'• blrthdaya: &.ton Red Sox Manacer Ralph Houk la 63. ChScago Cut. J)itcher Bill Campbell ia 34. Milwaukee Brewers catcher Ted Simmon.a la 33. Cub1 lnflelder Junior KeMedy la 32. San Diego Padre9 catcher Steve Swisher ii 31. Lansford's four hits too much •• Canaey Luaford drove ln four runs with three llnClet and a double and Gary Alleaaoa and Dwtp& Evu1 smacked aolo home runa to apark Boston to a 12·6 victory over the CbJcago White Sox Sunday to highlight Amorican League action . . . Ebewhere, Terry Crowley'• pinch·h:it grand slam homer ln the bottom of the nJnth gave Baltimore a 10-6 victory over Kansu City. Royala MaMger Dick Boner was ejected fr<m the game for the fii8t time ln h1' managerial career . . . Paal Molitor cracked ~ t'Yo-out, two.run homer to spark Milwaukee to a 7-6 win over Cleveland . . . Oacar Gamble, smarting from a $500 fine and a one-game benching for throwing a temper tantrum Saturday1 drove in three runs to help New York beat Texaa.S-~ and gain a split of their double-header. The Rangers · took the first game 6-4 . . . Oakland ecoted a 5-2 victory over Minnesota aa the A'• won their fourth straight game ... Era.le \ftltt belted a two.run homer to spark Toronto to a 7-4 victory over Detroit and a sweep of a double-header. The Blue Jays took the first game by the l8D)e 7-4 advantage. Johnstone's homers sink Phillies Jay Jolm1tone'1 ~nd straight • homer triggered a four-run eighth inning Sunday afternoon and sparked the Chicago Cubs to an 8-5 victory over Philadelphia and a sweep of their three- game aeries . . . In other National League activity, BW Madlock drove ln two runs with a triple and pitcher Doa Roblaaoa singled in another nan as Pittaburah downed the New York Meta 4-1 . . . Davld Palmer and Woody Frymu combined on a six-hitter, and Tim Ralnet' RBI double highlighted a two-run aecond inning as Montreal edged St. Louis 2· l . . . Dave Draveety, making his first major league start. went six inningl to earn the victory and Tim Flannery drove in a pair of runs as San Diego topped Cincinnati 3-1 . . . Jilek Clark knocked in the winning run in the ninth inning of the opener and addea ~RBI in the eeoond game to 1park San Franci8co to 'll sweep of Houston with 3--2 and 8-3 victories. All1ante tops Tidelands race By ALMON LOCKABEY .,.., .................. Mel Richley'a Amante from Lido Isle Yacht Club was the International Ottahott Rule Class A winner Saturday in Balboa Yacht Club's H\.Dldnit.on Tidelands race, the lixth of the 1982 66 Series. IOR-B winner waa Bigwig, lkippered by Ron Melville, and the IOR.C winner was Big Apple, ~lkippered by Dave Powell and Steve Grant, Newport Harbor YC. 1n the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet the ea. A winner was Tory, Bob Dodds, NllYC, and the Claaa B winner was Porpy, Roy Sinclair, BYC and the Claaa C winner was Mackinac, Wea Thompeon, Ca~ Bay Yacht Club. Summary of results: 10R-A -1. Nnlme, Mel Alc:flley, Udo ._ Ye; 2. IWdllf, Jim ~ BYC; 3. ~.Don HaMll, eve. Drifter • survives IOR-8 -1. Bigwig, Aon MeMlle, BYe; 2. f'lemt>uoywrt, e.m.y Rem, Long BMctl Ye: 3. Splflt, Allen Brown, v~ YC . IOA-C" -1. Bia Aoole. Oell9 PoMl-Si.ve Grent, NHYC; 2. Vldlot, PN1 "-"-· NHYC: 3. Cellfomla Ootd, F'r9d O'eont., Dina Weet YC. PHAF-A -1. TOfY, Bob OOdda, NHYC; 2. No,,_, PIUI Queyrel, v~ YC; a. P9le. Jim Emmi, e.tM COrinthlen YC. . PHRF..8 -1. Porpy, Roy Slnc:I*, BYC; 2. ~Too, Jim end l<Mlft NuQent, IYC; 3. 'l.ikyrle. Bii Murrey, Cepo B C. PHAtf-C -1. Madllnec, W• 'Tlloml*ln. CtlOO BYe: 2. Dlwtl 8tw V, Jeff end 81-F.,....., NHYC; 3. T,.. Gotdo. 'rom Purcell. eve. lVinds Sloop is first to reach King Harbor· REDONDO BEACH -Harry Mobhco'a 69·foot light diaplecernent lloop. Drift.er led the 172·boat Santa Berbara to Kina Harbor race acrcm the flnlab line rriday at 8:15 p.m. for an elas-d time of 8 houn and 15 minutes in the 81-mile dash. 'nle race started at Santa Barbara at noon Friday and was bit by strong . winds .. the fleet rounded Anacapa bland abowt aunaet. One boat', Richard Compton's Geronimo, wu dllmuted as the wind.a whistled to 20·85 knota creating lumpy aeu. Sewra1 yecbta had blown out uDa. Cortected tlme win In the Perfonnance Jfancflcap Radn8 fleet wmt to KeYtn Mlller'• Mfllet 'l'lme, a Catalina 22 that Wiii the ll'Dallelt ln the nee. ....,,__ Big ovations greet Richard TUCSON (AP) -Fonner HoUlton A1tros pitcher J .R. Blchard. felled by a stroke two yeuw .,o. received three ltanding ovatlona Saturday n!aht aa he pitched b1a flrat 1ame ln CW. AAA competition 11noe 1974. Henderson steals his 105th base MINNEAPOLIS -Rickey • Henderson 1tole hia 105th baae Sunday to become~ 2 on the all· time lilt for molt in a teUOn. Hendenon puled Maury WW., who stole 104 buee with the Loe Angelea Dodgen in 1962, which at the time .et a new major·league record. Lou Brock tet the current standard of 118 with the SL Louil Cardlnals in 1974. Connors breezes past Gottfried Jimmy Couon overcame gusty • winda and roll~ past No. 4·aeed Brtu Gonfrted 7 -5, 6·0 Sunday to win the National Revenue tennis tournament ln suburban Grover City, ou~de Columbus, Ohio . . . Robbie Knievel, aon of daredevil EvU Knievel, waa injured when he tried to jump 15 cars without holding bis motorcycle'• handlebars. Knievel went to the hospital with ~ble fracturea of his thumb, wrlsta and rim, a spokesman said . . . At'tor Palll Newman driving a Datsun 280ZX Turbo, vaulted from leVenth place into the lead on the first lap, and then ran oU with an easy victory ln the Pepli-CRC Chemicals Trans-am auto race in ,Brainerd, Minn. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. RatingJ are: v v v v excellent; v v v worth watching; v v fair; v forget it: e 5:30 p.m .• Clwmel 7 ~ ~ ~ BASEBALL: New York Yankees at Detroit. Auoucen: Keith Jackson, Howard Coeell and Don l>ry8dale. The Bucky Dent-less Yankees, who split a double-header with Texas Sunday, will send left-hander Ron Guidry (11-4) to the mound tonight against the Tigers' Jerry Ujdur (5-5). RADIO Baseball -Cincinnati at Dodgen. 5:30 pm., KABC (790) PIRATES PLAITER Steak & Enchilada Dinner Special 5:00 to 6:30 Daily . •COED WHIRLPOOL '°""" -1 .......... ~HllW YO: I. "*' .. ' ·=~~ --:..::...~ Richard left the pme in the alxth lnntn1 wtth a 4.3 lead, but tbt Spokane IndlaJw came b9Ck to belt bl. 1\aon TOl'OI M ln extra lnnlno and oomp&et.e a sweep of theU' Pad& Cout I.;ea1ue doubleheader. The lnd1anl won. &he op9I*' 4-3. Tuman .. the Aatmt' fann -.n. •AEROBICS CLAUEI •COED SAUNA HellW....1*111 ••• Kltll "*""·· Dll "" • ~-1.~w~V--,KHVCJ !'.-,~°""*'~'"'*-· KHVC: I. T~ ~-~.~,,..,_, .......... YC;L' 1~er.w.v....vo:a. ..... =~°== ~OIMl9a......~ 0. ' ICHWC: ......... """ o..-,._,.ra'I ..... '°' &~.te!-:zifr== ........... ~io:: -'°' ,......._,, .... ,... .......... ~ ' The M rllbt.-.handw threw a total of 86 pt~ tnobtcftnt 38 in a rocky tsnt ~ wblD be pve up thlw l"\&M. He r.Uncl tM lllcle Ill nJM pltdl• ln the MCOnd lbDlDI and tlnW m1y .wn ~ m ta.. tblrd. ~ doWn....., batten In a row. . J, •NAUTILUS EXERCllE EOU•MENT •SUN TAN ROOM • •OLYMPIC FREI WEIGHT •NUTRITIONAL COUNSELING •COMPUTElllZID DYNA VIT. •IODY FAT ANALYlll •P.ROF!UIONAL INSTRUCTION •ILOOD ftRlllURI TllTING •ITRll8 TESTING •GUARANT!ID RllUL Tl .. . . •• ~ ., (, I J t! ·' ~· . .. .. ,. .. .. '• 'l , I ,,. ~ • • .. . . " MAJOR~~· ... ,.... W L Pee..Q9 ~,..__ a 47 .1n ...,_ ...... ., ... lleO ,.,. ~o 57 51 .an a _,.,. 54 M .481 9 Oekl.nd 49 IS .QI 15 T-43 11 .JM 19 Mw-ota 3a n .$42 25\i ... .,.,.. DMltOM Mllw8Uk• 13 45 .IN eo.IOtt ., 41 .lleO 2\i llalllmote 61 41 .548 4 o.lrolt 55 54 •.805 l\i Clewlend 54 5S .SOI I"" ,.._ y °"' 54 53 .506 l'AI Toronlo 52 61 .473 12 ...... 9~5--- T••• e-5. ,.._ Yoni 4-t Tor0ttto 7-7, o.trolt 4-4 Banlmote 10, Kai.u City I lloetOtt 12. Clllcego I Mllwel.lk• 7. CleYeland I OMiand 5, Mlnneeota 2 Todef'tO- Boaton (TotrH 7-1) at Toronto (JtclltOtt 3-i), n Balllmor• (Palmer 9-31 at Chlo.go (Hoy1 t3-10), n THH (Hough 11·1) at MllWaukM (LAtdl 7-7). n New York (011ldry t 1·41 at Detroit (Ujdut 5-5). n CleYeland (Sor9Non 9-7) at K.,,... City (Blue M ). n Only 0-ecMdlMd Netton.I LMaue ntTPN DMtk>N W L l'ot. Q9 Attanlt 62 47 .M8 ~ 62 IO .554 1'AI San Diego IO 5t .541 3 SIVI Francl9c0 5 7 65 .509 l'AI Houeton 41 62 .438 t4"" Cincinnati 40 7 t ·* 23 UtTIJIN OM..oM Phi~ 11 47 .MS St. Loula 8 t 49 .&55 t Pltttt>u<gll 58 50 .637 3 MonttNI 57 51 .521 4 H9w York 41 11 .440 13'h CNcaoo 41 ae 41 t 11 ...,. ...... Dedget9 2. Allenlt 0 Ptttaburgh 4, New York t Monti.I 2. St. l.oute 1 CNcaoo e. Phlledelphta 5 San F raneltOO 3-1, Houeton 2-3 SM Diego 3, Cincinnati 1 T..,-.o- ctnctnnatl (B«enyl t-111 at~ (Wrlgl'll t-0). n Pltltburgh (Candelaria 9-4 and McWllHtm• 7 -5) •I Phtladelphl• (Carlton t5-8 lll>d Farm« 2-4). n St. Louie (LaPolnt 5-3) 111 New Yortl (Puleo Ml. n Chleago (Jenltlne I-t3) ., Mon"991 (SendertC>n l-10). n Hou9ton (SullOtt tG-e) at San Diego (MonttlUeco M ). n Atlanta ( R. Mahler l ·I) at San Frenol9co (Barr t-2), n Anaeta I, MMtnete I CAWo«tu MATTU .. ,"... .," ... 9011~cf 3000 5120HellOtltOttcf 2000 5334CMlllo3b 5020 3t008oc:llte" 4010 , ..... TWIMI " Oelllelld 000 103 100-1 10 0 M~ 100 010 000-2 10 0 J . .xin.. unclllwood (5) Ind HMltl; HIWnt. ~ (8). Atdfern (I). Ill. Ol\'te (I) and Butera. W-Unclerwood, l-4. L-44e-, M . A-10.IOa • ...... ,., ......... CNeeoo 111 200 100-• 10 0 8oelOfl 430 103 01•-12 ,. 0 TIOll1, ie-oa (11. llwojM (4). 1etM8 (I) end 'ltll; Re!My, Bur11:::::J:i• c.... (I) and """-· w-. 5-0. L-Trout, 8°1. Hfl-ltotton, ~ (3). ~ (11). C!JlcloO, Flak (10). A-27,312. .._,, ...... M._... 010 202 002-7 10 0 a...tend 100 I02 010-t 14 0 vuei*o'ltell, ~ (7). 8arNrd (7), F1flgers (II end SlnvnclN; ~ end ~. BendO. W-8ernwd) &-1. L-Barlter, 11-7. 8-Flngert (28). HR- Cle veland, Herrell (24), H1y .. (t). MltWllUtl•, Thoma (27). MolltOI 03). A-32,337. l'llttTOAm ............ Y ...... 4 Tuaa 200 011 020-8 II 0 N.w y ot1t 000 003 1()()-4 1 1 lkllc:Mt, Mnbela (8~ o.nwtn~) end Sundberq; Rewlev. . Mtv I •nd <:«one. W-Oerwln, ·•· -wiey, 1-7. HR-Taxu. Hoatetlllt (111). Parrtell (8). •CONDOAMI YMll_t,......,_I T-011 000 021-5 12 t N.w Yot1t 230 030 OOx-8 14 1 Schmidt, Matlack (2) end Werner; John, LaRoehe (8), Ooa .. ge (I) and Foote. W-Jolwl. 7-9. L-Sehmldt. 2-4. 8 -0oauge (21).HR-TtXll, Grubb (3). Naw Yorlt. Mayberry ( 10). A-33,421. l'lflU0.-_,,...7, Tlllera4 T01onto 002 140 lloo-7 10 o Detroit 101 002 000-4 10 3 Gott, Mclaughlin (7) Md MartlNZ. Underwood, Toblk {5), Ja m .. 191. Ruell• (7) lll>d Pamtl\. W-Oott, 3-T. L-U.IOtlwood. 3-8. S-MeLaugNln (8). HR-Toronto, A. ~ (2). Deir~. Wlaon (3). MCOMDO.- -..,. 7, Tlllera • T01onto 300 010 11oo-7 12 1 Detroit 001 021 Cl00-4 10 1 R.L. .i.cuon. 0-.. (6). Murrey (II end Fehtv. ~arrltl\. W Oelttl, 1--0. L-Rueker, 2·2. S-Murrey (3) HR-Toronto, Whitt (11). Detroit, Hebner (7). A-23,550. ~~. Phil~ 004 000 100-6 11 1 Chicago 000 004 04•-• 10 ' Krull-. Reed (8). Monot (7). McGrew (I) end Diez; Bird, Proly (3). Cempbell (ii. Tldrow (7). Le. Smith (Ill and OaVlt. W-Tldtow, S-2. L-McOrtw, 1·2. S-La. Smith (I). HR-Chicago. Johnaton1 2 (8). A-28,21111. ..... 2,~1 Montrael · 002 000 000-2 8 0 81. Louie 000 001 OCIC)-1 8 0 Pelmet, Frymen (8) and c.rtw; For.QI and Potier. W-P•lmet, M . L-Fortch, 11.f, 8-Fryaman (I ). ,._,Oft. ,.,....4, ..... 1 New Yot1t 100 000 OCIC)-1 8 2 Plttabufan ooo 030 ota-4 • o Swan. l.MCll (I ) end St--: 0 Roblnton. Tak\M (9) and T. Pen&. W-0. Roblnton, 12-1. L-Swen. 7-5. S-Teltuhtt (18) A-19,819. ooooZlllcdll 311t 51200-tt 3020 . ,....1, .... , 3 2 2 2 Rewrlng lb 3 0 1 0 Clndnnatl 010 000 OCIC)-1 5 0 4000 Orey lb 1000 San Diego 010 001 0111-3 t3 1 5 o 2 1 s-c 1 2 o o Pellora. Price (I). Kwn (I) and Tr....ino. 5 1 3 1 Edltt ph 1 O O O Ven Gerdner; ~. CNft9t (71, Lueu (9) lklllngc 0000 end Kennedy. W-Draveeky, 2·1. L- T Cna -4 1 12 Putora. S-9. S-Lueu (15). A-12,097. JCNz2b 4112 Total• 41 9 15 9 Totai. 34 515 ""n GAim ._. "' lftnlllet Glenl9 I, Aetroa 2 Clllfomla t t2 030 020-9 Houaton 000 002 000-2 4 0 Seattle 030 000 200-5 San Fr~ 000 100 002-3 13 1 E -"--1n0· OP -C.ittom1e 1. L09 -Knepp«. leCo<ta (I ) 811<1 Aahby; Gale, Callfomle 10, SMllle 8. 28 -Downing. HR LeV911e ($), ~elnlng (7) 811<1 Brtnly. W- -OeClnCee 3 (23~ Ziik (m, T. Cruz llJ: 8<elnlng, 8-4. L~, 4-12. • Ortch ( 12), J. Cruz (Ill. SB -Ra. Jedtt0tt . c::.... I, =I S -Clerk. Houston ooo 030 ooo-3 11 1 Cellfomla • H fl DIN 80 San FrllllCiec:o 102 100 40x-8 g 0 Renko (W. 10.31 8.,.. 7 5 5 3 2 LACotl. Roberge 15,, LaCo<t• 17). o. Smith H-::::.4) N 2 0 0 1 2 (7) and Knletly; Fowtk•, Le...ite (5), Minton Ml.Mo<>re(L.1-9) N 5 4 4 4 1 (8) end May. W-Lawlla, 7-1. L-l.JICota. Andet&Otl 2 5 3 3 O O 2-4. A-22,937 · B«dl 2.,..42201 Vitnde8a<g 2 1 0 0 0 4 Botdl pllehe<I 10 2 ballatl In Iha 8th. WP -Atnko. T -3.13 A -13,211. Dodaef9 2, ....... 0 AnMtfl L09 ANGE.RI .,"... .." ... Herperrl 4010 S..21> 4 010 RemlfR• 4020 ~cf 4 2 tO Ct1amb11M lb 4 0 0 0 Beltw II 4 0 2 1 Mut1>hY cf 4 0 0 0 Nltdenfu« p 0 0 0 0 HorNr 3b 3 O 1 O Guerrero tt 3 0 1 1 WMNngln pr 0 0 00 <:.y 3b 4 000 Hubberd 2b 4 0 0 0 0er-ey 11> 3 0 1 0 POCO<oba c 3 0 0 0 Sdoada c 3 0 1 0 WNMCon" 2000 ~-3010 Cempp 2 000 Wt*:flp 2000 Port• pll 0 0 0 0 Roenldt• II 1 0 0 0 OWl>WP 00 00 Tot• 300 40 Totele 312. 2 ._. "' lftnlllet A-000 000 000-0 Loe Mgelt9 100 000 01x-2 OP -Loe Anoei-1. LOB -Atlenl• 8, Loe~8 Sll -~(2)24. Atleftta • H 111 ... NeC> Camp (L.1-51 7 8 1 1 0 4 Gerl>W 1 21110 Loa ...... Wtldl (W, 13·7) 8 3 0 0 2 4 Nltdeniutt (S,81 1 1 0 0 1 0 WP -Garber. T -2.09. A -51.494. ~~ Ken .. Ctty200 001 002-• 13 2 Belt!Monl 203 010 004-10 10 0 Leonerd. Ceetro (5), Arm11rong (II Ind &laught. Qutrtl; Atneaen. ~ (8), T. Mat11nez (t), Stoddard (DI Md NOien, Oempaey. W-8todderd. 2-3. L-Annt1rong. 3-4. HR-1<8MM City, =::Ion Iii>. Manin (II); BalllmOre, eln ( 17), Murray ( 17). BumO<y (51. Crowt.y (3). A-H,Ott. Top 10 (laaedOllMOatllett) ....CNIL.aAGW 0 A8 Ill H ~ 114 :sea 51 124 .343 108 420 ., 142 .$31 IO 293 37 IM .321 102 418 79 134 .S21 101 425 70 138 .120 ee 311 ss 111 .a1e toe 457 u 145 .317 109 •15 82 130 .313 17 355 IO 111 .313 71 2711 ... " .112 flUNS: Hendtnon. Oakland, 93; Molllor. Mllw1uk••· 15; Htrra h, ~. 83; E-eo.lon, 71: Yount. Mllwaulc•. 71 . 1181: McRH, Kanne City, 91. Thornton. Cltv•l•nd. 87, Coopa r, M-•· 114; 'fl>omaa, Mllwault• 74; Luzlnaltl. Chlctgo. 7 4. HITI: Olll'de. TOl'CW'to. 145; Herreh. Cleveland, 142: Cooper. MllwaukM . 138; Yount. MllWauk•, 134; Molitor. MllWault•, 130; McRae. Kanta City, 130. ooua&.H: White, Kanea ~~ 32; Yount, MllWllUk•. ao: Lr-, A .. Gerc11, Toronto, 27; McAM. 1<1n .. 1 City, 27; C-, 8Mttle, 27. T1'11'Lat: WHton. l<anNI City, 12;' Hemdon, Oatn)ll, 1 t; Yount, Mllwauk•, It; Whltek•, OatrOlt. 7; Mumphtey, .. York, 7; 8emautd, Chicago, 7. HOMS flUMt1 Thonla. MllWaultM, 27; "9. ...,._, ......, -. Tllomton. CM\leland, 25; Herrell, ~, 14; Coopar, MllwaukH, 23; OQI ~••· MlwaUUa.23;o.ct .............. SCOREBOARD ,.. tfOLIN •Attl1 Handareon, OINllelld, 101, oarola, Tcwonto H : Walhlll.1..IC•nH• o~,~~I J. Orus, ....-.-.~ .... "TCt•t• (14 ~le Vuoltovtcfl, ........... 11-4, 1.24; autnl, Chlc:eGo. 12-4, I N J (Mdry, ,_ Yottl. 11-4, UO, Ot11dllt, te1ltle, 10·4, 1,17: !el1111; ........ ,, ... ""' l"Wy, O.oll. , .... s.11; hf lier' Ci.v.ilftd, 11·7, I .II; Gull.~ City, 124. UT, an•1outa1 taa11,,1a,.,, a..111e, 184; lltler, ~. 124; OUidfY. N9W YOftl, 111; ldl.,_, lloeton, 108: ....,.. ...... 108. MATIOMM.~ 41 M ll MN. 04M(, Mtl. 108 403 IS 12t .$11 MbO-. tt.L. 75 • ao 12 .s11 Knlllht. Hin. 110 411 M 12t .aot Lo.8rnltll. at.L. 1oe 402 11 124 ·'°' can.., Mii. 10t :117 to 112 .805 Ourtwll. CN. 103 3n 87 115 .305 ..._, ~ 100 312 10 118 .I04 ~Jonee, lb H 323 58 N .ao3 Mldloek, ll'gh IOI 3'3,11 111 .303 ~LA II 2" IO 88 .3021 ~UNt1 L. Smith, St. Louie, 81; .,.urphy, A11'nta, 78; Dlwton, Montreal, !4!. l&lldllerg, Chlclago, 70; Setwnklt, Pnttadelpllla, ... MMI MutohY, Allantl, 71; Clerk, San Fr111Cltc0, 'i'5i Klnclman, New Vot1t, 72; OtlYer, Montreal, 7 f; "-'drlek, 81. Loula, 71. HITt: Ray. P11t1burgl'I, 132; taa, DodtlW•. 111; Knight, Houeton, 129; Ot!Yer. MonlrMI, 121: Buckner. Clllcego. t28. ooua&.111: Kennedy, San Diego, 32: Knight, Houaton, 21; 0..-., MontrNI, 27; Madlock, Pllttburgh, 21; Oliver, Mont ..... 25; ~. Plttll>Urgtl, 25. T'Nkal: Thon, Houtton. 8; MoOet, 81. Louie, 7; 0 1rnar, Hou1ton, 7; Templeton, San Diego, 7 ; Aay, PtttttMgll, 8; Morano, PltUbu<gfl. 8; L Smith, ft. Loula. 8; Puhl. Houtton. I . H0m ~Kingman. H9w Y~. 28; MUl'phy, Allent1. U ; HornW, Allente. 23; Sdlmldt. Phlladeiphl•. 22; Ctn. Sen Frlilldteo, 22. STOLRM tAHI: Raine&, Montreal, 51; Morano, Pttlal>IKgh. 51; L. Smtih. St. Loula. 41; Dam•. Pllltadelpllll. 40; .... ~n. PITCHING (14 Deol1lona): Roger1, Montreal, 14·4, 2.31, Roblneon. Pllltburgh. 12·1. 3.14; Carlton. Phlladalphla, 15°8 , 3.12; Wal•"· D•deara, 11·7, t.97; Krukow, Phlladalphl1, 11-8, 2.7~; Foneh. St. Louie. 11·8. 3.H ; Loller, San Diego. 11-e, ue: v .......... Dadtera. 14-1. U1. ITiltKIOUTt: Soto, Cincinn111. 194: Carlton, Phlledtlphla. 183; ~yan. H0111ton, 188; Valanauela. Dadgare, 111; Rogare, MontrHI. 121; Sutton. Houeton. 121: We6o.' ~ 121. NA8L LUT'PN DMtlCMt WLOl'OA•Pta 11..co.moa 21 1 ea 43 61 1a TOlonlO 15 13 50 40 42 132 MonltMI ti 12 48 39 31 131 CNcago 11 17 " 61 45· 109 to4ITMSNI DMttOlt Fl La;dtrd ... 18 12 541 18 Tutu 14 14 81 48 Tempa Bey 11 17 41 82 Jtcllaonvtlie 9 19 35 62 WltTDIN DMIM* s.an1e 18 13 ae 48 Vancouver 18 10 63 43 Sen Diego 11 12 61 47 San Joee 13 11 47 53 Porllend 12 17 43 43 EdmontOtt 10 11 38 51 x -Cllnc:had dMalOn tnle. 52 141 51 131 38 100 33 87 55 149 43 145 48 138 38 114 37 10!5 31 85 Sia polnll are awarded for a ra9ulatlon or overtime victory. Four polnll for a tllootOUI Ylotory. Ont bonUI point tor a very go11 acored with • "'9lllmum ol th<• per O-· No bOl'lul point It awarded for overtime or Mootout ~· .....,..o- TulU 5, Jeek&OIWlla 0 MontrMI 4, CNcago 1 Vent1041Ver 4, Fort Laudlrdtle 1 S-llle 2. San ,,_ 1 San ~-=·~"'°"'::';' (ol) Porllencf 5, T emfl& Bey 0 T .......... 0-. No--~ T~O­Q.ic:ego et~. n MofttrMI et Tempe Bey, n ART't~(~lhadl) -112 enatare. 10 bonito, 450 meek ...... 40 rOCI\ ""'· 15 Mind ~. 22 ecutpln. 115kelpbete.1~ DAWY't "°":'Jo.,..... llMdl) -23a ..,.,.. 3 0, d calcO l>Mt. 2 llllllbut, 1,2ot mec:bnll, 18 rook lllh, 136 Mnd.,.., OAMA WHAN' -402 ....,.. 914 baat, I barracuda, 178 bonito, j9f mackerel, 1 rock ""'• 2 ecutpln. tlAL tlACH -154 1nglart. I berreeu~!.J. 80 oalloo ban, 100 medlenl. ~ rook tw1: Ml Mind .,.., PQA~--m Ray~.eee.ooo m LMnY Wadklnt.'4~ 71 ........ 7 Freel Cooip1ta,12'1,IOO Ctl,.._..,127,IOO .,., Jim sw-..111.000 Jrtt H-.111.000 Oreg Nomwl.I 18,000 m Bob Glider ,t 11,000 -Tom 1<1te.e1.111 Tom WeteOtt.S7.'11 Jerry Pata,17,919 Lori Hlnkta,'7,911 111 -....12-12 73-70-7o.17 72..fl.71.fl 72 ..... 7o.et 70-tl-71-71 a.... Bellet1woa,18,500 71.ee-et-73 -Curtta Strange.ta. 780 Nk:k Flldo.15.150 -J~ Nlckl-.M.825 Tom Puru..1.1;4,126 Jim Colbett,.-.,825 Bruce lJetlQ,M 828 pan HllldOftOl'l,14,625 Craig Stadler,$U25 .. Peter Ooattr!MM,13.800 Martt Pfell.13,800 -.eon1td TllOmc*l,13.800 Doug Tewtl,13,800 Denny EdwWcta,13.800 01 ~13.800 Ron Stteek.13.800 -Mike Holland,13. 100 Biii Rogen,13. 100 Hal Sutton,U, 100 -Scott Slmpeon,12.650 Johnny Mllw.12.NO Jl7 Bobby Nlc:holt,$2,350 Jim Thorpe,t 2,350 Millet BerW.12,350 JolV'I Cook,12,350 Bob MutllhY.12.350 George Arc:Mt.12.350 Mer11 Hayee.$2.,350 p-Jaeobatn, $2,350 .. Mike Rtld,$1,1143 John Mallelfey.1 1.143 Berry JMCl<el.11.843 Helt lrwln,$1,543 Gaotge lklme.11.843 Deva 8arr.11.IM3 Maulllro Kurtmt.11,843 -Bobby Wadlllne.11,315 IMO Aold,Sl,315 O.Yld Oraham.11,315 Gene Utttar,11.315 Tommy Valtnllne,1 1,315 -Mark McNlllty,$1, 112 Ed FlorU1,ti2 Roget Maltbla,$1, 182 v..-Haafner.11.182 L)'l'I Lolt,$1, 112 Olbtly OllbWl •. Sl.182 Morrie Ha~.11.112 ., Jim Ntlford,I 1, 137 Brad Bryent,SI, 137 Ed Snaed,lt.137 -Jafl Mhehel,$t, 122 Tom Jenklna,$1, 122 -Billy Caepar .I 1. 110 Don Poolay,$1,110 Mn Lya.S 1, 110 .. qon Padgalt,11.100 - 72·70-71-et , 11-70-73-72 74-70-7W7 73-el-7f.fl 70.72-72..fl 73-71-7<>-ee .... 71-72-71 71·70.70.72 72-72·74"88 .... 7a.7M7 72-72-71.f8 72-70-72-70 71-71-M-74 7 ...... 74 71-72-71-70 7t-73-70.71 73-71-70.71 72-tl-70.75 71-71-75-89 71-87-73-70 73.fO. 7 4-7 t 72-71-73-71 71-74-70.72 71-72-71-73 71-7 ...... 74 71-70.71-76 81-72-70.78 73-70.fl-75 71-72-73-72 7 4-70. 72· 72 72-tl-74·73 73-81-73-73 72-72-71·73 71-72-71·74 71-70.70.77 71-71-75-72 111-75-71-74 .... 71-74-78 73-72-87-77 73-81-10.78 1e-ee-1e-ee 72-71-71-71 71-73-71-71 .... 71-71-75 70-73-72-75 72-73.fe.78 72-n-et-78 73-71-73-74 74-70.71-78 12-12-10.n 72-73-75-73 r.1-11-12-n 72-73-70.18 72-72-74-77 Woody Blac:ltbum.11.100 74-71·7!-77 .. Lannie ettrMnea.$1, tOO 75-ee-t2-71 LPOA tOW"MftMnt ( .. Deft.,.,, ..... , . , Sandri P""*'· 128.250 74-t7·71.f8 -Terri Moody, $17, 150 -71-71-70.70 Mllmn 8. o.vr1n.1 12,'2SO 70.71-73-ee Vicki Ttbor. 17,175 J""1 Cl.n.. 17 ,875 .. -VMtn Brown ... ,15.at2 JoAnne Camar .15.A2 -.11#19 Loelt, 94, 725 JoAm Wetllam. M.725 Patty 8"eeNn. M.725 .., Lynn ~. 13,650 Kelhy Whttwar111.13.llO -,,..,,,.,. Ktrr.12.117 Holle Steey.t.2."7 J-Blalodl.12 ... 7 JWI S~.'2.9'7 -Sandr1I PmU2.520 .. Donna Caponl,12. 181 Beth Solornon.$2. 181 Petty ~12. 111 ., Kathy Mc:Multn, 11,752 l<alhy Poati.wa11.$1,7$2 8-rly ~.11,752 Stlaron e.rr.tt, 1. 752 SIM& &ertOlecelnl, 11. 712 -CarOla Charbonnlr,I 1,431 Bonnie L.aYtrt 1,235 Pat 8red~.a1,43S -Mindy Moore,l 1,280 HOiiy Harlley,$1,280 .. Catl1y~1 Joyce l,t1,041 Janet Altll.11.041 ll·Olenne Otlley,11,041 Pam~·~, Janet Colee 1, 1 -=Alooll--au.:r.::l'SIOI Debbie AlllM.J:' Cetfly ll4«W 71·74-7().89 70.75-17-72 70.71-78.fl 74-ft-74-fl 73-10.71-7'2 n-t1-10.11 73-70-70. 73 72-73-70.72 7 ....... 74-70 73-70.72-73 .... 78-71-87 70-71.72.75 72-70-72-74 73-73-73-70 n ..... 11-14 71-77-71-71 1&-72.-73-70 78-73-72-81 70-71-78.fe 74-fS.74-70 74-711-72-10 71-70-14-72 71-7$-77·71 71-73-71-72 81-76-12·71 711-74-72-72 1a-14-1t-n 72-78-74-72 70-74-71-73 f4-73-73-74 74-72-7&-71 74-74-70-711 71-74-71-71 7$-71-74-70 73-70.78-74 72-71-73-74 73-7 4-73-71 73-73-7'2-75 .,.._ --.v-aMtULtt (1"91 .............. --., ~ uce. I IUrtongt. ""'*"'* HOllw (Moeml7.40 4.00 2.to uo 4.00 Uo toltr Gold (Meaa) t .40 5.20 .._ .,.. Inda (""-Y) 3.40 Alto racecr: Ira lay, Rln,.:,,:;::. T odo, Oleco Gitt. Pnm Duet. 't NIK•. /4 !Na Kia Time: 1:10tll. •eotaD RAC& I furlonot. Ealy Caall (~ 1.20 ~.00 uo Moneltur~ (Dllehouwye) uo uo Men ~ (MCH1t~l uo Alto raced: Burlad Tr•••Ura, hoetallngL~wHI M_a!), Adollo, Nallualt0tt, K'"V N-. S«10t Rulleh. Tim« 1:11. • OAIL Y DOUllLa (8-101 paid 129.20. '""° MCI. One mite. M1t Noatrum (Plneey) f ,40 4.20 3.40 s.&voY (8hoamelclf) 4.00 3.20 Ca 8harp (MeHargue) 5.80 Aleo raced: Brummer, Cela.t>enoa, Stlnglngly, M11ter Surgeon, Envoy of o,_; Prrnc.ty Verdlet, Aeupllnc:ture. Time: 1:3'. .. UACTA {1CMI) paid 144.50. ~MCI. I IUrlongl. Cellndt (~25.80 10.40 5.00 AdleOlllnl ( 7.IO 4.80 Comedy Act ( ) 3,40 Atao ..-cl: Ful Grandy, N1otly Nettw.. Pre91dent'• Lac!Y. Summer Sort-B6d. 8noywood, Ohoat Dancer, Joye, Honey'• Flag, Ubby'a Megle. TIMe! 1: 10 215. ,_,,.,. MCL 7'h turtonga. Shagberlt (~ uo 3.20 2.40 &enor1 (~•) 8.40 3.80 Catarmen (Mc:Carron) 2.80 Alao raced: Quantum Leap, Juan Berrera, Al'#eye • Chance, Nuc-tear, FlytnQ CNc:a. ~ 1:21315 • IXACTA (5-2) paid 114.00 tnm4 !UC.. 8 Mlonga. Sareld \Mc:CarrOtt) 10.40 4.20 3.80 Brendy • Rab (C41t!arrf) 3.80 2.ao 0 . tor Olt18 (~) 3.fO Alto riced: Teat or Time, I'm Fatllloneble, Sonnet Aglo. Oollble Fluff. TlMe: 1:09 415. HVDfTH IUCI. 8 luflonoa. Ftllulout Pttlent (Olww)11.40 1.00 3.20 11.40 5.00 3.20 Sobtellombra (Shoemek•) 4.00 2.80 Lt 8mlrll (0\JWr&) 3,ao Alao racad: Lind•'• Brol""' Patltlnthedattc, Unbellnownat. Tlme: 1:09 4/5. • lllACTA (74) peld --. " ~" ... (10·10-2·5·1-7) pa)d $41,MO.IO with lhf .. wtntllng tietleta (elll horW). 12 Pldl Sbl 00illolel1ol1 palO $484.IO With 90 wtnn1nO ,_ ... I"""' horaH). 8cretcl'I contolallon peld $507 .00 with eight wWllng lldl• (tour horW and • --1dl).. l)QHTH Mca. Ont ml&. Hugaby ~:~ 31.40 11.00 8.40 8erQeln SM*rl 6.00 4.40 Tha Cac>t*i (Mc:Cenon) 00 Aleo reced: Sun WOt111'11p. Aall Me. Wetw Bank, Pr09Cltrout, Wet1 Coaat ~ Tim« 1 :35 315 . l9ITtt !UC.. One mle. fella Ille Root (Mc:CnlMl.20 3.IO 3.00 Craellut (8/loamekar) 2.IO 2.40 Sword Bledt (MeHargua) 4.00 Aleo recad: Squareyour H1I. Ceuelerla. Tnoor-. Cadt u Bandit, Arll Were. Tlma: 1:35315 . • IXACTA (1·7) paid $41.80. "'~--25,419. tcOM ~a:::::&1a1 .. ( ...................... ~, 1800 00 V9Nc:Mt -t. Mil• a.nan. Senla Ana, Qllmen vw, 10 ....... ,, mph: 2. Mor"9 ~. LM Vegas. 10 ~ 3. Soon T~, llthldtre, ... 10 .... B•l• bug• 1800 ee -1. Johnny Jol'lnton, Lemon Oro••· nine tape, 48.13t mph; 2. JoM T,..,,,, W....,,..,_,, nine lape; I. Tom Co!IPW. Alp!M, Nit .... Modified lout~ -1. "oeer MMn. W...neld, Jeao H°"*, 10 11p1, 41.377 mph; 2. John R•dall, .._, Nil., Jeao Honc:llO, 10 1ape:; a. Ool\ ~ Mettwop, Colo~ Jeao CJT, to .... Production tour-wlleel-drl¥• -t. Shwmell llelotl, Frtmonl, IH Soout, 10 lepe, 45.381 inph; 2. Mike Rendall. W.., NIL, Jeep Honoho, 10 jape; 3. ..Chuck JOhneon, Roelll0f'd1 Ill., Ford ·-.101apa. Unllmlltd lwo-_t.,. -1. Marty Latner. Or•noe1.. ,._ vw. 10 !apt, .. 7.111 mph; 2. 1td Mar1eMM, "'-'tk, ArtL. 10 1111)&; a. Aon lltlnl. 8-1 "9dto. tOlapa. 1200 00 vel1ldte -1 ...... ....,.,, Yucalf>I , Funeo VW, 10 ...,., 4a.$tt mph: 2. Mont• c......-.. ~ v..-. cn.no..th VW, 10 1ept; S. J.C • ....,.,.. llanitow. ~ vw, 10 lipe. Camel. Where a man belo~s. 8 mg. "rar", 0.7 mg. mcotine av. per c1garttt1. FTC Repon DEC. '81 Oettvn Mlnl·rMtll Cllllltf19& fTilnl• #UH -f "oeer MMte, Wtrtfllld, 1171 DlttlUI\, 1CflNlt. 41.794 'm911: 2. JollMy JOhfleon. L&f!IOl'I Grove, i .. 2 , Cllewolal a 10, 10 leoe: 3. John Baker Senta Fe ..,,_, 1~ Mlttubltlll 10' •• • tcOAI Olltlfellge of CNtnplone -1. ~ ....,., tellertfleld. Cftenowlll VW, 10 lape, H .093 mph; 2. Scott Oilman,~. OlllfMn vw. 10 lapt; S. Miii• OHlmen, tent• M•. OHiman vw, 10-.. Pernod HMvy ....... ~ pldc11P ~-1.W,._l._,~ 1tt2 Dodge, 10 .. •6 388 mph, 2' Jell MaoPhetton, Tuelln, 1912 Chawolal, 10 lapt; 3. ,,_. H1n11oN. M• Valley, 1M2 Ford, 10 i.ot Oennen Gtend flrbl HOCl<lNHllM, WMI Otfmany - Official rt•""' of Sunday'• Otfmtn Oland P"1I: 1. PetrfOll l~IMy, Fr.,_, F•rwl tutt>o, 1 "'· t1E: 25.171 eeeond•. ...... ..,_,, 1 .42 ITlj)ll 2. Rant A~ Fr1nce. i..na111t turbo, 18.3711 • behind. 3. K*le Rotb«g, Flnland. Wllllam1. ona !tip behind. 4. Mlelltle Alboralo, Italy, Tyrrell, one tap. 5. Blono 01aoome111, Italy , Alla AorMo. OM lap. I. Mero 8utar, 8wltHrland, Arrowe, ona lep, 7. 8tlen Henton, Brttein. Tyrrell, ona lep. a . Roberto Querraro, Colombla , Entlgn, ona 111>. 9. Nigel Mtnatlt. Brllalfl, Lotue, two ... 10. Oar.-WttWIClt. Brit~. Tolarnen Hatt lurt>o, twO lePI 11 Ohloo Serre. BINll. Flttlpafdl, two tape Oreftd P'ftJr lltMdtnge t. Oldllr fllront, Franca, 39 point• 2. Jolln W1tt0tt. Britain, 30 3. Keila ~. Finland. 27 4. Allln Proec. franoe, 25 5. Niki l.auda. AUltrla, 24 I. Ille) Ricardo P11-. Hely, 19, Rena Amou:a, Franca. 11 I Halton Pique!, Brell, 17 It. Patrlek Tembey. Fr..-. 18 10. Mlotlele Alboreto, ltllly. 14 11.0odeMoellt.Mlly, 13 12. f.ddlt a-. u.B., 10 13. (1191 Nigel ManMI, Britain, 7, Darell Oely, Ireland, 7 15. (tie) Car1oa Ra\11-n. Argentine 8 0111aa .....,_, c .. ac:1 •• e · · 17. AncltM de C-te. Italy. 5 1a. {lie) J..,..Plerre Jtrler, France. 3 Mite Surer, Swttnrland. 3 . 20. (tit) Manfred Wlnkelhock, O.many, 2. ~2 ~ ttely. 2, EllMO Sllazat, .................... , .. c ......... ONe) ............. Jlrnfl\Y Connora (U.S.) def Brien OonMed CU S ), 7-5. M (CoMort w111t S20,000, Oottlrled • 10.0001 .............. Tom 01111._,_Bemlt MIUOl'I (US I def. Victor ~ Pftllw (US ), ........ ,. 8-4 ca., cowt tourMment <•.:==:·> JoM Hlgllfi .. (9peln) dtl Jimmy MM (U.S). 7-6, 15-7. W""9ftcl .,_tlon• U9UAU BALTIM~O~ Rtellled <Menn OulllWr lnllelder. front Rocheeter of th• lntarnallonal Leegu• 1nd optioned ,.o .. Orlmeley. pitcher. to Aoelleat•. MINNESOTA TWINS -Pleoad John P1ioelle. pl1dlW, Ott Ille 21-dey dlublad lltl end atllvll9d ..... "9dfem. pltct.. "°'" the dlM.bled 1111 NEW YORK YAfjl(E£S -Tr1ded Buclly Dent, allot1llOP. to Iha TtHI Rengere tor Lee Madi, outfttldet. SEATTLE MA.NNEAS -Sant Gent NeleOI\ pltdlet, 10 Seit Lake C1ly of Iha Padfte COMI Laague. LOS A.:=s~oE,.s - Aaactlwited Burl Hooton, pllc:Mr, and ••nt Steve Sl'llrley, pltohtr, 10 Albuquarqua ol th• Pt clllc CoHI ~H PIAATES -Sent Paul Motluw. pltchtf. to Po.lland ol Iha Pacific COMl L..,a on I 20-dey Injury NllaOlllt.uon ==: ........ ,.....u..-~ 8AOHC08 -8lgnad Tom JadttOl'l, llntbaeker. to •_... ol - yMI' 00tl1Tec1L NEW YORK JETS -Pl~ John Nitti, tulbec*, on Iha lnfutad -tlat. Waived CrelO Jor-. -Idler; Jeff Kahn. ~ Ind o.ve ~elgtl. tight end. ~r~t.,(AP)-~=t'.":n~ reUNd NBC ·~· ebow holl J'rank Bla ir, died Saturday. OltlZNVJLI..& 8.C. (AP) -.... ,. o ....... 1.-!•..! founder ot Barbtcue AU'S Inc., whlch produce• commerciel barbecue equlpm1nt, dJed Sunc&.y. SALT LAKJ: CITY (AP) - De.W "· Bvau. 88, founder of t.M national advert1sJnc and public relatton1 fJrm1 Davtd W. Evana Inc., diea Sa~. MOSCOW (AP) Nlhlal Pll7a11a, 74 , c:ndJted with ~ the contJ'Ol 1y11em1 for Soviet launch vehlclet and apace lhlps, died Monday. BELGRADE, Yuaoslavta (AP) -Veljko MJcuovtc, 66, a veteran Yugoslav Communilt who served aa ambauador to the United Stat.et and the Soviet Union. died Monday. COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) .:__ Col. JOHI* B. Ba.P. 56, an Army phylidan who treated both Praldent Dwight D. Eiaenhower and Gen. Doualu Mac.Arthur before becoming c~mmander of Fort Ben.nln('s Martin Army Hoapital, died Sunday. BALTIMORE (AP) ....:.... MordecUJ Sltuly, ~9. a Nazi concentration camp survivor and fonner United Nations correspondent for a Yiddish neW1paper, died Sunday. MIAMI (AP) -Vernon SmJa., 83, a veteran blimp UPENDED _ Atlanta's Terry Harber doesn't pilot who loaed more hOW'!I anks llying llgnter-than-air have a chance to reach home plate th to a .,.., ..... ,..... .,, Gery amw- seventh-lnnlng action at Dodger Stadium Sunday. Looking on is umpire Joe West. Dodgers won, i-u. aircraft than anyone in the block b the Dodgers' Mike Scioscia in history of aviation, died _.;;...;...... __ _..._ ____ -= _______ ..._ _________________________ -I Friday. PEORIA, Ill. (AP) - LawreD« Fo1elberg, 71, a retired mUIJc educator and f.ather of rock musician Dan Fogelberg, died Thunday. He fullfills -a dream NEW YORK (AP) -Eric Zimmerman, a became a baseball fan, I guess," said Zimmennan, of 5-year-old baseball fan dying of cancer, passes Wap1>_ingen Falla. HONOLULU (AP) -Yankee Stadium every day on his way to his The boy's request reached friends at the Emory B. Bronte, 80, who treatments, and he asked if someday he might get to Yorktown Heights Chamber of Commerce. They navigated the first civilian look inside. called the Bronx Chamber of Commerce, and the flight between Hawaii and With the help of two chambers of commerce Yankees organization was contacied. the mainland in 1927, died and the Yankees organization, he not only looked On Friday afternoon Eric and his family were Sunday. inside, he was driven to the stadium in a silver driven to Yankee Stadium in a long silver EDGARTOWN. Mass. limousine with a police escort, got to meet Dave limousine with a police escort. The boy was given (AP) _ Francll Clarke Winfield and sat next to the dugout to watch the an official Yankee jacket, cap, bat and an Atwood, 89, an inventor who Yankees piay. And they won, 6-0. autographed Yankee yearbook. I developed latex paint and "He knows he's very, very ill, but I could tell 1 1 • ' Technicolor motion picture by his face that he was very happy last night," THEN BE MET newl~ •P.J?Olnted Yankee! film, died Saturday. George Zimmerman, Eric's father, said Saturday. Manager Clyde King aud shook handa with aome of his favorite players, including Winfield, Lou FLORIDA CITY, Fla. ERIC HAS SUFFERED from bone marrow· Piniella, Dave Collins. Roy Smalley, Bucky Dent (AP) -Lblda Had1on, 112, cancer sinCe he was an infant. Doctors have tried and Ron Guidry. • I • mother of 24 children, died many treatments, but now say there is no cure. "He asked to see Reggie Jackson when he first Saturday. Mn. Hudson is F.ach day on his way to therapy at Manhattan's found out he was going to Yankee Stadium," said survived by lix children and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Eric Zimmennan, "but fie wasn't too disappointed when at least 98 grandchildren. passes by the stadium. Once, he asked his mother if we told him Reggie im't a Yankee anymore. He NEW YORK (AP) -he might someday see the inside of the Bronx likes Dave Winfield and Lou Piniella, too." lrvtag T. Mania, a longtime ballparK. He sat next to the dugout to see the Yanks sports writer for the defunct "1 watch baseball on TV and that's how he triumph over the Texas Rangers. New York Herald-Tribune, _____________ ...:...__...:..._..:_...:...__...:...__-=..:..:::..::i:..~:...;_;;:;_;.;;;;.;;._;:_;=,;;:....;....;;;:..;JiiL;;.;;.;;;.'-------- dled Tuesday. Manh also was a co-editor with Edward Ehre of an annual book, "Beal S porl1 Slorie1," published by E.P. Dutton from 194:1-1980. PARK FOREST, Ill. (AP) -Leo B. Samdaltl, 68, a relired Army Lieutenant Colonel and commanding of fi cer o f the Counterintelligence Corps in Korea durlni the 1950s, died Thunday. LONDON (AP) - CaU1leen Nesbitt, 93, a Britilh chanlcter actresll who played Mn. Higgins in the original "My Fair Lady," died Monday. Mia Nesbitt's career in stage, film and televi1lon spanned seven decades. · ' ,_CllaOTtmS SWIMS' MOITUAIY 6Z7 Main St Huntington Beach 53&-6539 PACIAC VllW MIMOllALPAll c.m.tery Mortuary Chapel-C~ematory 3500 Pacific ll1ew Drive NewPort Beach &M-'Z700 McCOllMICll MOITUAll•S Laguna Beach •94-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan C&piatrano •96-1ns HAl80tl LAWM-MT. OUYI Mortuary • came tery Crematory 1625 Giiier Ave .. Cwta Mesa 5.-o.5554 THE BIG BOYS -They w ere once advenartee, but former Dod.-r Sandy KO.•f•x (left) and Atlanta sreat Haftlr. ANon mJoY the ·~ ' ......................... fun and ,.._. at an oldtlmii'a' eonteet at DOdpt Stailium Sunday afM noon. · • s· 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 • 642-5678 CLASSIFIED INDEX , ......... Cal &42-5171 . IMISFllSAll lllSHl£SS, INVESl· MOO, FINANCE ==~ :::::::~, -,.1oi-.._ ... _ ...... -.To·, AllltUMCBIDITS, POSOIW.S & 1 LOST & rout11 • ~fMMJI car,,_.., 1.ou1-.... tAt6rouod ...._. ... S...lllQwta• Ttavel• SEIYICES s.n ... Dtr ... ..,. EMft.OYMDIT & PIEPUATIOlf ....... llMtnlt'tJa ............ Helplliatll .... lt., IOATS & MUlllE EQUIPMENT .................... 1:: All rNI ..... acMwtlMd iua In thl• new1paper 11 1• 1ubjeet to the Federal l=.. Felt HoulingrAot of 1"8 I wtlld\ mMcN It Illegal to t:: actvenJee "any pr.r.r.n. '"' oe. llmltatton or dltctlmt-:: nation bued on race, •• color. rellglon, Hx or 1 11 :: n1t1onal or10ln, or any .,. Intention to make any :::: ~h pt9*9'1C8, llmlt• -tlon or cMecrlmlnetlon." ,. ·-... This ne~ Wiii not knowingly aceept 1ny advertising lor rut ... tat• which Is In vlolatlon ta of t"9 !aw. ••1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ..,. u• u• J• ..,. •• •• -II« .. Diii --.. -,,. -- HIHl1 Advert!· eera should check their ads dally and report errors lm- m ed I ate I y. The DAILY PILOT as- sumes llablllty for the first Incorrect Insertion only. , ........ ,,, ,.,, Dal •••••••••••••••••••••• I» ,,.,,.i ''" ~ •.•......•..•......••• LAST m -----CHANCE ---... ... --... ~ ----:r...- E.atthtonea dlniout. 4 br. 2'.t ba, lfl/Nto/ rm dlnlnll rm. U71 'lq. ft. V. Of Pavlllon, nit• llt .. & Cetallna. M4-411t T/\ Y I .<JI: c '( > UUl&l&lll ............... Cute and clMn 3 bdrm cottage wlpetlo. 8Mlnl and p1nellng. You can llve H 11 or eventually build 1new. Pl1n1 for Cape Cod 1re lnduded w/HIH prlc. ol S2915, 000. Drlve by 206 Tope and call. ZllU ,. llPLll Uttle old IUhloned hoU- M on a good lot that II zoned lor duplex. Both for ju1t th• lot price. Drive by 204 Opal. S289, 000. 873-&llOO. WettrfrHllt•H 111·1411 - Wl\TI HI HO~l llOMI.., i.e. REAL ESTATE 6J1 1400 .. -... to buy this beeutlful 3 year old, 4 unll apart- ment hou .. In San Cle-~~~~~~~~ mente with oceen-hllll & golf course vi-• 11 1 trem1ndou1 savings di-rect from tti. owner t>e-lore bi...ng !lated with brol<er1. Act NOWlll Call owner It (714) 642.()138. .,.. --... -Ml< fOLI llEllOEI FOR FIST llLEI -Ta11elul Herbor View = Hom•• 3 Bdrm 2 bath -located near greenbelt, pool & clubhOYsel Priced below market at $189, 500 -call now1 c:.46-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS ,.. l lJI YO! m llYEllS Nit ::: OILY NILIOME Thie lrg S Bdrm 2 Bl hOme hu blerl remode-led and lnoludH a lrg m1tr Bdrm, den Ind gi-gantic pool . A11ume 1177.1.000 In lo1n1. Al· king a2315,000. 831-7370 TR.\DIT 10\.\l ~L\11 \ ================ t.I lfro;. f \ I ,. '•' Thi• ador1ble EASTSIDE ---.. ----n-- R-2 home 11 not In mul-•-tlple. Not only does It 14 ...... • have 2 roomy Bdrm.. It One of 1 klod CU9tom 3 h11 I workshop w/ BR In 1ecurlty gated zoning to bulld above. community. Two private Fruit treee abound. Fi.-be1che1 & marln1. xlble financing. Tasteful decor with qua-~ Don't delay Illy detllll lt>wnd. Ltg '* Call Diana today! corner lot, J><of. landlce-Dlana Pletenpol-Volpe peel & malntllned. ........ -•K * BAYCREST-NB * · = BELIEVE IT OR NOT. 11m Only $289,000 fee. Lge : 4 IR, 2 II vacant famlly or enter--111,100 talnment .home. Priced eou I --REDUCED. B"',...,., hou-for quick ..... at 51,000 .. ..... below .... Y'M"• eppral--M on corner lot. Brick Ml. 2007 Holiday Rd. Go = tlled kltcMfl loor • n-d I r e c t o r ca II bk r . em carpeting, big rooms 955-2841 or 7~7292 -thnJOUt. Freshly painted iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii : In and out. Owner wlll -a11111 In financing. = 541-2313 ------THE REAL ESTATE~S UllllUU YA LI. 11 8'Ar% on thll 4 bdrm home on E'llde of Co111 M ... with pool, spa, and many other 1menltlH. •it 1110.000. In enumable = lo1n1. OWC. On I CUI· -de-sac tool Reduced to = S1159,900 Cell 979-5370 ---\ f >I l / ti/:• I I ! ,o,, • • \ •-t I , . •.tt "• • LOI AIMlltOI condo: Nice ::;: 4br. 2ba, 2 story condo. tlJD Pool & 1p1. Relrlg, .... washer & dryer Included. ::: 115,000 down or wlll '"' trade lor ctUlc automo-::: bll•. motor home or 7 Owll«/ agent. 7~589 WlllAIU Y.A LI. :: at 8~% on 1 3 Bdrm, 2 ... be home with large lot, :: wet bar, llreplc •nd -community pool. AeMg, = lreez«, & dryer are Incl. -Only S120,000. Call 979-6370. \ ( >I l / 11 F If I I I " , •, I ' J ~ I ... ' DRAMATIC COUNTRY ESTATE 8000 111 on 1 ec:re, maallve eleetnc g1tM, oobbteatone motor oour-tywd, spectecular entry. e bdrm, 8 bath•, 15 lrpl huge frplc1. Aoom for te nnl•. Ho. Tustin -Of1nge Hl"9 with YW#, 12-, 5" min. to all ftwyl, llrpott, eo-c:oeet ...... •t.400,000. .. RICK AUIRET1E ..... "''tt.'' 111 YllW LITS ... Ill ... Ocean & bay Ylewl from lheM 2 contlouOUI R· 1 1011 on 1 qulat street away for summer crowds. $595.000 each 75% llnlllldng IYlllable. A Division of Harbor Investment Co. lllLIMI EITlllllU llUI P11P11n Large ~ acre In woodsy erea of North Tustin, near hor11 tr1ll1 & Ch1pm1n P1 rk. Lovely pool & :,A. Spacious 4 Br home. Highly upgre- ded. Large meater IUlte. C1thedral Clillng & llt)'- llghtL Spece for t!Of.- & periling 8 cars. Ex<*-lent auumabte loan at 10%. Reduoed to S275, 000. Call Joyce Debolt Of Sally Shipley. GEORGE ELKINS CO 758-9100 *'"'-* · 1 *117.NAll•I• When you take over existing T.O., OW1W wll uellt at 12% °" this 3 8' 110UM on FEE LAND In BACK SAY AAl!A. FM-turlng hardwood floor and 1hln9te roof. Only 1 S 135,000. 2t70 Sen Ml- Outll °'·· N9wPOtt Beach. I 1ae.1eo1 or 112-nn. ~ Walker r. Lee ,I. ., ' •I I .. • J ~. . ~ ·1:· :. . . . ,• ., " I ' , . 1- , 1 ;.. ' -1. f 1· RllECU•• -.... •H•rtneh Steal tNI MSW=-I"' ACU MO l>IDUI ~ Aft. Qrta. Ii.Id for '91200,000, forteloture ~rice f1,l21,a&O appx.. w/ta&0,000 dn. Don't =·contact PA.TBJCK TmHOJ\& • 10'l or 081·12ee RVMti.X of Costa Mesa .n..«itow911f'•· m:.loe. ,...._,. '"*· -cu.tom tilt hotM. 127,000. Owner wlll OMry 19t loM . Cl RVM~ of Costa Mesa .., ....... ... llU •ID Ml-Utt Pria Welt &y ~t. SlJJ» tor 2 t.ta, ~~~~~~ ~ont ¥tew conoo. a .,, a h. eao. ~· '°'' .. 1p IYllL U00,000. ly remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 beth fl,200,000. LI IWI.' ~ ownt'll>ler.eTa.ees7 .lM1l• l390/1br: beet 11nol•'• llOO/mo. a"· 2 ...... • PICll Yd 4 pet & pOOI 4 VlrHHlll luxury 1 Br.. 1ncl1d 0er1g1, p1tlo, Ocean & iAttv vieW1. Marine room, 4 C4.rte He houle. Owner .. IVAI .. r-.. J flexJble, ll(r 6*14N -----=;.;.;.::;~• rwuw 11 bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 aq. ft. fl,386,000. i.-. .. a.-a. J. Secllld~ 3 ldrm Luu ..,......,..,.,.. you 639-8190"" t• oourty•rd. U95/mo. lfplc lndrv fac Submit ' • 707~ Acaicll. 840-8188 ' ., ' . Oceanfront. AEAL ESTATE TAX IN· e:I\.':':':'.~... .. home nr FMNon llllnjf. VISTMENTI 80000 ........ , '376,000. Patrick Te· Lnt-UTI ff you want to bulld your own ,cHtle, ,thla oPPOttunfty of 2 llrl lot1 In 1xc11t1nt looat on on Edoew1ter. '1200/mo. 1 Yr old 3Br, 381, 2 car on pet. att•Ch•d oerao•. fncd ,,.,. bl "'' T8L Mgmt. MMIOG yd, 5 bike from bctl. S750 •••••••n••••u••••••• EAST81DE 2 Br. 1"' Ba. rno. 1·62042•8 '325 Aini• 1 br dphc Townhou11. encled ga· Liii ll&J lllU oHlllll S 14&,000 ill1r1 AWARD WINNEA ncwe. 7804702 Aot Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 5 ~ bath. purchale MINIMUM tax "--"--1411/......,/.... lrri•t · 1144 TH°J'1:;'~"1!v:~:_:;90 rege, lrplo, tm•ll pet Oil. ' ·-L.R., 2 bolit Ill-$1,600,000. deduotlon 11t. YMt 110, ~kit• YleWI./ $ bd~..:.....41 11••111 11111 _... r-000 OWt'9t OnYeltot) Wiii ..,., ' w conyen_,...., IUlft • llfetlma:ll "'"' come o. 3 ioi. 28r dln:·Ciieen~·l neat 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• Or .. t loc • bite• to bell. MOO/mo: LUIElll Jac:uu1. Pool enh1nc:1 TSL Mgmt. M2·UI03 eupply totii down !>•r.· 111\'1. rm, toe Olfden, pa.. t.UCEANE: 2 •tor~ 3 Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + lar8e rec. nn. --t P to , .. 0 000 tlO, formeJ din. rm, 1Q41 Hv. bdrm, !Mfr bdrm retr9et beam -\.It•--furnished ........ u '" • n rm. Quiet cul·de-Hc. w/frplc, vi.w, ueumeble .....,. .... ..,.. • patioe. $420,000. equity. Shere purollUI sa12,ooo. By OWYW". 11t. Full Pfloe 1596,000 on Har or Aldg•. •ld ... by01ld1, with pl•n• for a 10,000 1quare foot home with TENNIS COURT and pool tor only ta.eoo.ooo. The Owner Wiii joint venture, trade or you can take over the wt\ole project. $1 ,400,000 Of •••umebl• fl• nanclng. WOWI 3 8d dlllldted homn 1tyll1ll 2 br condo, pvt STUNNING l1rg1 1 Br. 191 lell/...... In ex:i11n1 .,..., AY•ll•· ger.m &c'!lf:e BEST garden ept. pool & rec. 100 lido Park Dr. (8). bl• Immediately. 1· 530..a190 rm.710W.18th.8t. In new luxurlou1 2-3 873-<W11 Xlnt term•. 840·8800 UllA 1111 HfPlllT Bdrm. 3 ea. Condo, Bier -Coate Meh. Maximum · Call for ct«llllt. 1700/mo. '800/mo on 1 yMt 11 .... •---"------' Wlltrfrtwt ..... FIY• other• to 01100•• Wnmi•llll 3#1 Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom, lnl. <Mp(t., e.pre. •tNC· ~ •lf!tl Ill dark rm, den. &.t .Up. Now $1,800,000. ~u~f' :::n':'ri:: ~~ ··s;·L•E•••OR• ••TR•••ADE•••••• .l .. 1,11 from. We're tlll on11 to •••••••••••••••••••••• ca" for 1e..... Qerege. ehop. dbl lllarp 2 9N!81iBJlll IAYllH MYI 1 1 4 / 8 3 1 • & o & & • n Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, 7141&42·2000. ~ /lhU ,,., br, country kltcll, pvt ...................... (~ir-·b Id lncd $470. Kid• ''"'· 3 Br 2bl, yrty. Submit on "'""' r ge BEST lee 63&-6191 AP&amm· Beeutlfully l1nd•c:a~ garden ap11. Pool a . Covered perking. o pet• 2 children wal· ame. 2 ba dn. 2 boat slips $1,000,000. Haltilll OIYI Coronado Ialand cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat dock. Plans avlil. Red. $370,000 w/tenm. ILIFFI Ollll Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba·on ~ geenbelt. $260,000. BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR J.11 fhy,·tl•· Dr,. ~ B 67'> o'b H••111 /11 S1l1 .................•.... *'' ..... * I 11 .... 1~ II OILLlll PUI 1121,111 141-1111 PIYlll IEIT1TT HAVE GOOD INCOME??? SHORT ON DOWN PAYMENT??? PAYINO TAXES??? 3 Bdrm , A·1 Condi Iodation. Owner w1nt1 older home In Npt Bell or E'1ld1 C.M. P1rt trede,1---------1 xlnt financing. Call Kerry Spectaouler Herbor Ridge wkdy• 548-033 1, other 3 BA 3 B• c:ondo. mutt 551·2812 Mii. 5% dwn, 180·9307 ~~~~a:~1 ta251mo. c111 Realtu C••'•'•' .. ' 551.3000 U•/rurd1Ji" 341S Vrty $725. Out• 2 br. gar.. Int Pll 1, Int •••••••••••••••••••••• pr kg. N •a r water . uranu '">. v Lux. 2Br. 2Ba, S.C. Plua, 875;3()63, 879-0867. Vu, AC, pool, IYall 9'-1. 1 Br. $475 131 E. 18111. 6A&-e815 ,,1a..... lllTALI S575 mo. No pete, Sher· Wit,,,.,, IHI Ele91nt 3 Br l den, -1 to 5 bdrm• •tarting at ry 970·2390 dy1 3 Br. 2 Ba. '825 •••••••••••••••••••••• country aty11 home. ltai..•/a 1111 ... 50101• 11..,, •--L 151 E. 211t St. ~2.-08 F ..... b • • .. • •••• • •• ••••• ••• •• ... ""· • --•••n .. W""4 d:;,-•11::ic:~ ~.Ina Older' Br. Mlnllon It~ f•tllllJiH JSaS 1 Br, $390, etove/ refrlg/ ,..... • frplc'a, very lge lot. OWC --------' llonll, llU ~hlng ln-••••••••• ••••• ••• •••• • pool. No pet1. Adult apt. ...... LffetlH total, 5% dWn, xtnt loca· e d N H Cid llh' rent. NE w p 0 R T <;:REST 423 W. Bay. 548-9518 Secluded 1pe. ovw 1,000 Ion $ 79 900 F I d Conran ew omu & BEST fee 639-8191 TWNHS. by bell. 4 br. 3 BEAUTIFUL 2 Br. 2 Ba . 1 ft ol d kl ... 1 · t • · ee '" · dOI, no money down ba w/d pool jao tennis ~itomllrepl.:..:t~lu~ ByOWner831·213' wllll• they 1u1, (714) c.n.i,tl#u 1JIJ 2,,.;caroar.0..1'yr.lea; MeaaVerde, 11001q.tt. -T 1•1am ·15-9522 Agt. •••••••••••••••••••••• $1300 mo Need f fplc, lndry, patio. dlh-olf lemlly room, dellgner -"'~ l5ftl -Split level 2Br-den be•· ae. · a-wsr. gar, no pets. 1550. dr1perla1, central •Ir. Chermlng 28r 2b• cot-BAYFRONTCONOO med celling S79S mo m lly 9/1/82 . Daya 3094Mace.54e-4016 Ranch ltyte 4 bedroom, tage. Huge tot. Fin. avail. W/PRIVATE BEACH a..o.e188 ' . 8 3 3 • 5 8 0 6, eve a . --------- 2 bath. Excellent INY· 1185,000. 5•8-71•5. In tlll cove o..,.,.lool(lng 675-7977, 673-2338. ava1• •••••Wt m•ble loan. S 115,000 e.42-eaet 8alboe llland, with 2 Br, 2 Br & den dupte11. 3 Ba. 1 u.57~ C .... .,.,1\-,euwc •--equity, wlll c:onatder den, patio• and frplc. car g1r, pvt courtyard, ,. ~ "f'lrv I/IP.: ""'""" A II I l'i .i, JiH 1 bdrm, c:erport, pool, tr1de for North Orange '825,000. 6'4-7020 comw tot. '895/mo Inc. .'r...!!!~.! •• ~! •• !.... leundry. No Pet1. Bike to PllTID W&ml :~~~ ~~~::::.i~'~ 1~ ~l~y ~~~·o~~ .. ::.-:~Tl U• IEAL mlTI ~. ~3~et1~:11 Im· Love~~·~~. 1em f!!!!! •• ~!{/!~! •• !.~~~ ~1t.~~lmo. 931 w lentutlc 3 Br. 3 ea. new egent. Alk for Cerol. _, 1111m rm, c:rpt1. drpe, bltlns, Oce1n Ylew. beautllully 141 0412 c.n. •• ,. 1121 ..••••.•..••.....•.••. II you 111ve cull or bOr· condo. next to ell lhop-lla.••-Sophl1tlc1ted llvlng on o"idrowr-300 Yrty $575. Cute 1 br. P•· 1950 mo. 1 yr lse. !urn. townhouee, lrplc, ----·-----rowing powel', l1t'1 t1lk. I ping. No down payment, .... Lido Ille In thl1 16 room er llouM over 1 tlo. Gardener I urn. 673•5820 evee & wkndt. pool & patio. $895/mo. Spacious 2 Br, 2 Ba,,_ have a w ide lot with minimum c:aill nlld•d 111·1• I home on 3 Iota· 7 BR1 & 1q. It. plu1 large deta· 676-3063 or 879-9667 673-0896. c:rpta, drepu, good llOl1ll & rental lnveet R·2 lor c:loelng coet. Phone . 8 batllal Open1 to en c:lled double g•aoe on .. _ .-a ~ IHI 4 Br. 2 ea. 18971 Antioch. eastslde location so. ol Hwy location. 831·5055, 842·2000. ----------'· expansive l1nd1caped alley. New paint. tome .... ,_,, M S1100/mo. C•1l1 #111 ,1Z4 ... 751 M 1 d 11 · 673-9208. ---------• M ti IH Ji IHI courtyard & lg. pool. Ex· new plumbing & electrtc. home In pr .. t loua area. Agent 5-41-5032. •••••••••••••••••••••• .... mo. 1 ure a u 1 ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Perfect l\oorpl1n, (2 or 3 .!~••••••!••••••••• catlent fln1nclng.11.250, 50x111 R1 lot. Owner 4 bdrm. 3 ba. g1me NEWPORT VILLAGE only, See Maniger 141 11 c8.!:.p3uBlr..._ ,_ ... conwltlldof)r.leFnord lll&&.../llstrtll 000. Clll Tom Altlnaon or need• cull. $189.000. room. Speciacular entry. Rate 3br 2ba w/gar, pool, Beautllul shady apt. E. 18th. St. "4", C.M. ~ '"' n• Tef'ry Hanel to -this 481 Santi Ana Ave. intercom. Yac:. Some wife S8Yef'S kltcll, multi· Pallos & deok. gaa & wtr Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. c:rpt/ or reletMI. Enjoy ~ Bonita plan, 3 Br 2 B1, one-ol·a·klnd hom1I 631·3520, Evea & Wknde view ol mtn and ocean. lam Ok. $435. Kids & sm pd, pool & sauna, tennl1 drps. nr/OCC. no pet1 • • ~bl-'"' ...................... ISUll CUii Redecor1ted 38r 2ba on prime location. Garage, sundedt. patlOI. Nr. No. llW M lllllT Say. OWner will c:onsldlr 3 BR 3 Ba, 2 BR 2 Bl, 11 n 1 n • 8 7 5 • 5 3 1 9 • lmmec:Olate c:ond. 1295, 673-5291 ooo, $58,000 down. --------,-a-· 87MO<>Oj e76-51SM ~ .. !.~~ .. ! .... ~~~~~~~~~' 111,000 .... Premium dup6ex, So. of b1y1lde. Durell Pa1h, FIRST TIME OFFERED; 1gt Re/Max 759-1221 Tlllt neat 3BR 2bl wltll ---------1 OYW 1800 lq ft with lo-C..fl ... JIJ4 -TllUll 1111.- vety patloa and gardens. •••••••••••••••••••••• Owner wlll flnance tub-a 1111 ITW. 1tantlal 11t TO at 12% Int A beauty on Golf Couree. • 7 yr tenn . A leuatlold $124,000. Agl. Fred T• eet1t1. Priced to Mii In nore 831·12&6 lee. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 144-1111 ..... , llUTLlllMl 1 Ills (tax & apprecl1tlon) end unit. PYt patio, M4-6200 ~-5041. $2,000 mo. 759·1015 pet811EnSeT. lee 539._6191 Cl1s. sand. volleyball Cl1, t'550. 751·3896. of ownerelllp. Super greenbelt. Owner rec rm, 1Br furn. $470 =--------- locallon with all 1m1nl· 780-1097 or 752-8871. "11 JflM C..11 #.u 1n4 mo. Jr 1Br furn $430 mo. 1 & 2 Bdr trallers, $200 & tlel. No down, minimum •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR 2 8a condo, no pets, Call 557-0075 up & S150 sec. No chll- cloal ng c:ot1. Call SELL II TRUE C.•l1tr1at 1111Westside 2 Br. 1 Sa. lncd pool, AIC, $700 mo. 0.-· dren or doge. 133 E. 5 ••••~••••••••••••••• p1t10, enc:l1d gar1g1. n I a•. 9 7 8 • 8 8 5 7 or Du• r•l•I 3121 16th St. sp. 42, CM 831·505 or 842·2000. .. ..... , $800 mo. p~m•,n! for new carpet•. drape•. 552·9549 ·······················----'---'---- Exec. Home. OWner llY11i~P~r1~me~r~lll~d~1n~tl~al~l~ot~.~Aa-~11~~~i~iF~, 21 Br •. 2Baconkl o,. ?~Ye50V0A paint. No pete. $510/mo. 3 Bdr 2'h Be townhome Super neat 1br. em older WESTBLUFF VILLAGE ulll $10,000 under king $500,000. 640-7845 oan, u ng • • · plus MCUrlty. 5'46·5.,.2. lam rm, patio. A/C, up~ YI Ila, c:ourtyd, P/V , C.M. ·ocean view. Nr market. 5 er. 3 ea. 12% • -llU 681-3380 no-5829. d d 1 t 1 $400/mo. 497-7066. new 28R, t~ BA. lrg., ..,.. gra e • poo • enn •· a po o I S 6 5 O lnterllt. Only 1165,000. ILlfFI •••••• Fabulou1 Mexican Ha-•--• •---L 1••4 "er. tea. w/ c:r~t1, dr .... , k II I d ' •-Ji 3141 g r ·' · Prlnc:lp111 only. Tony, --~.~ ••••••• !":'!. ' ...-. par • ava · mme · .... ••.•.•.• ••• -•• 1.'•••••••••• 875-0118 You own tlll land. 2.000 clend1. Hand pelnted IY .... yard. E/alde. 595/mo. S865/mo. 669·1543 '' ---------Agent, office 730-1222. ft 3B f 2,-' tlle1. roof top gerden, 67s-.5068 FREE. -II-furnished ba· $490. 2 BR. 2 per1ona, home 5411 8833. ::!. Wide ~r.:'~'r·,,.., 1unny p1t10 with foun-Prtv1te BHc:h commu-· 2 B d · 2 Ba· c 0 n d 0 · c:helor apt. Cable tv, ape. p811o, pool. 325 J. 17th IOUI YIEW pool. Fer below market taln, 4 lerge er. formal nlty. New 3 bdrm, 3'Al ba. 3Br, 2'-'8a Condo, min to mlcrwv .. pool, Jacz, $735 sauna, pool. Exchange Pl. 646-5137 1ft 11AM ........ _. 2 ... __ ,,.0. Full $2A5,ooo. WIN ..... ""'-dining room, family 1ac:. roof gerden. Peno-bell & •hopping. Pool, mo. 494-5063. for oc:easlonal night bell'-EA-S-TS-1-0-E-L-g-2-bd-rm_ln_ '._..... ....., ""'"' -.. room. 3 car garege and ramie: view. '370,000. Jee. & 11un1, annual lel call at our Inn want · · emenltlll and MC. g1te. tlon. Bkr. 844-0l3' m1ny extr11. Prtc:e re-213-592-3897. S.111 $765 mo. lit & lut + W .... ,.,,. 3Zfl quiet retiring uriencum 4tplex. Prlv sundec:k and No quallfylng with '8000 ... Surfside. n..... 2-8 MC. dep. (714) 750·527• ••' ... •••••••••••••••• .d · 661_..808-gar. $510. Adlt1. no pell. down. 10.75% loan New 4 BR. &ac:kbay ., ... dUGtlon-95,000 1 _ __;, ___ .,..........:...:._'_~1~~-------EMERALD BAY. 3 Br. 2 ber person. 752·2550 program 1vallabl1. Call 3,200 IQ. ft. prvt. comm., -Ofjtt •NJ 111•11 21~~ :-P=. 1~'S:.~: ;~ :r~li ~~~rt~ ~1? !'.f!r.!!.!!~!! .• /.~~! 1 Br. Garden Apt. stove & RI ch. 0 .,, n. r I Ag t . sse7•500. Wiii trade for •••••••••••••••••••••• 1950 8, Meyer Pl. (HOUM 87&.2255. OCEANFRONT • sharp re I r I g e . N ° pet •. 064-6171 property, TD't . Wiii -..Il••••n In b1ok). $525 & dep. 2BR.wlnter.no ...... a,gar. $370/mo.5'8-l377· le11e·opt1on or tow ~ I I •~ ...... . Ulll 2 • TWllU down. Ready to dHll Id R lty IN Wt 1111 5'9-3484 IO •11 _,. S850 mo. 675-3033 1 Br. clean & sharp. No .,,It" 2,L b t .. _ 2 ~·· --• 0 e r I B r 0 k er 0 ea •••••••••••••••••••••• B B If OC AN VIEW. 2 ba, 2 B 2B pet e $ 3 6 O Imo "' • ,,., ..., .,..... w n . Newport Beach De Am• 1 r, 1 a houae, o -st. lrpc: $1150 mo Incl water. 2 r, a, completely l\Jrn, "•5.9950' . ger l yard. '5000 down 71~14. 673-7300 baylront Park. Mint pkg., encl. yard. Utll pd. 760_8376 llnene, dl1he1, etc. Nr -"'"---·----- ~NIGEL llAILEY Ii. ASS8CIATES end pymt Ull•ted prog·1·~~~iiiii~jiiiiii!!~1~~~~~~~~~1 cond. '78 dbl wide, fir• Agt. $375 mo. 875-1642. Hoag Ho1p. Wiii short 2 er. 1...+ 81., private pa- pt1ce, brick patio, 58, 3 Br. den. lrplc:, d.r .. lnc:d , _ UI .,, ••I ••a• r · o · llo, no pets. AYall. now. r•m. Call Rick. Owner/ 8 I t e m S 1 oo o m FIVE bedroom• end Agt. 964-6171 0 UN llU 5 0 0 . B 111 Grund Y yd, patio, quiet It., aep '::l. •••• ':'11. ••••• '!!'.'!'! 675-25'43 or Ans-r Ad $525. 1552 8 Elm St. THREE batlla In U'tll two $ l O Q Q T Q TA L ~-New c:uitom home on 675-8161. gar. l85 Buoy. $850/mo. Niguel s11or .. pvt comm. #261, 642-4300 24 hra. 646-3627 no c:a111 aft 8. ---------• story 11ouae near SA end extre ~Id• etreet to IEW'PllT IUOI 559-1833. 645-8287. 4 br & lamlly. 2 ba, 1 BR. quiet. pvt. prop on •IUmFa/"1Et• ...... YHr lffer Newport Fwya. Colorful etreet lot. Frenc:tl doora, Bel Aire Home, light 3 Br. l'-' Ba. garage, lncd atrium, 3 car gar. Pvt bay. Blks to bell. Ger, l Br. enclid. belc:ony, Home+oueet+lnc:ome front patio end lhaded DOWN ~--.. 1 v1ult1d celllng1, 4 fire-Interior.. 2 bdrm. 1 bath, yard. 245 E. Wllion. beech & rec: center. S 4 9 5 . 6 7 3 • 6 3 3 6 : c:rpts. drps. stoYa, fr1g. OWC tit. Flex. Terms emall back yard. ...-· places with quality de· front kit .... -. expa-"'-"' 1695/mo . ., .. .,3627 no S1250/mo. 759-1465 642-9666. Dix 1 BR, I I d F ._. 509 Acaci1 CdM nr bch P-t ONLY talll"" th-·out "---··1 .. ,...,, ,....., ~..-quiet, pvt. prop on bay. poo • aun ry. or qu .... _, .. ~. · ... •v • ...,.,.,..,. llY, dining erH. Young calls aft 8. #i J, y.•ti 3111 single No Pets Water & Spotlell Vecant Duplex ~~~ ~ ~~~,:::,~oa~ Beeutllul 2 bdrm 2'h ba ( •nxloue • 1ubmlt on adulte & peti welcome •• !!.~! .. '.'J!......... :~~~:36bc:h. Gar. $495. gas pd. $375 mo. Huge 5br/3ba+3br/3b1 condo, frptc, 2 car gar, ~ tredN. tarm1, po11lbte 124 500 5<40-5937 . E/Slde 3 br, 2 be, lge encl. HOME FOR RENT 145 E. 181h 6'5-2708 4.-0K own/bkr 645-7048 aeparat• entr11nce make yard1, both bdrm1 ere ~ leHe option. C1ll Ann _ • · 6.o-b1c:k~rd, frplc. S760. a Bd & 4 ..... $695 r:tl I t t It S t/S p... .., rm. uvrm. 2Br, 1Ba. $550 mo. 48r. 2 8 I ... 50 C t UllN VllW up praq ce , 1epare e mH er au ••· 1 un •• en. '70 Fleetwood. 12x•o. to seoo. Fenced yerd• & 2aa, s750 mo. Across r. w ger. ... . rps, Sauaallto lUlk home on ~e~~a"gtr'1i 1qnu~:t:r~. !!~~de::~ ~~~:i;~~ ~~ '-.. . 142·1200 ~~··s~~~~. '1::i '325 2Br Houael garegea. Kid• & pet1 from bell. Sept.June. watlf' pd ... .. feeland.3Br.2Ba.11v& Another two bedroom• EveaMB-6482 -8113 -4326 , "13 / llST,.eNl.-1110 welcome. 545.2000. (213)848-2232 1sn~~;~ I I ~ ' Agent. no lee • din rm, g am rm, all and a bath are upclalra. -.-0-W--E-R-W-l L--F-l_N , 799--1022 2 Br lb $500 1 111 Newpo rt Beac:ll. 39th amenltl ... lg treed lot. N l • 1' P ui u " ..... rl ,,,cj 3Zfl Street 1'A bedroom, 'h 2 IM• APT By Owner. $309.000. Flreptece In LR, llldlng · 12"•% Laguna Bc:h, 2 br, lge pvt Y •rd' n ° g • r 8 g e · ··-·•--••••••••••••••••• blk lrom 11nd. Ott street 1'h mite to beach. 640-7007 doors lrom LR end FR 2 New Dix Cullom dick wlhot tub. Pet OK. 5'8-0113. 2 Bdrm & den home, prk'g. AYall Sept 1st. Eve 6-9 831-4816 exit to covered rear P• Homet $20.000. 49-4-9623 1111 I PITI II Newpo,rt5Hgta. 3 car $650/mo Incl utllltle1. 2 BR 2•L ba dup'-• 1600 3 bdrm, 2 ba home In Ir· tlo. Slldlng door In MBR 2 BR, On, 38a, DR. FP. 1t--1•1 2 B d partl. 10 Olmo & gar-540.8632 "' "'~· vine Terrece, lee lend. Many ammenltlel. Buy t _.,,,., r. 1 Ba. W1at11 •· diner. Rae Rodgers. sq.ft. ol luxury. E11ery $275,000, lg prlv•tt ~r::,,~~~t t~1.:_ERV or both. Alklng 179K ... ~ BEST IN .._.,,. 1100 1475. 831-1266. Agt. A .. rflltall .·~.as·. ~~~-gar, fnc:d yd. yard. 873-2717 or 1754 S1nt1 An• St .. cars•bi·kes• •• :.·.~·.,_·•••••••••• o4 Br. Weatllde. big lncd ____ _;;_ ____ r-vv .,.."' 9666 &44-0357 Open Sat/Sun, 1-4. Call &nU YAUIY yard. EASTBLUFF: 38r, 21>a. U•lrullldH A1klng $149,900 with 873-0359 *skateboards* BLUFFS Tu .......... , Apl~~t about 1nve1tment AYall Now. $1200/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••• l11ttMW &,I STUL Ill S85,000 uaumable ll'ld t k •ba --· 640-9019 "1HI 111,.I 3116 Tot11 privacy. NEW 1 -wlll c:ooper1te In II· DECORATOR'S DREAM rUC S by Near new 4-ptex, 2 bdrm. Agent 662·1700 •••••••••••••••••••••• bd $425 N ~=:ers4 ~~sl ~qB~d~!! nanclng. For 1a1e by aw· HOME: warm country carriages•tea LIQUIOITION 2 beth Hell unit wttll ILIFFI OllN Yrly 2 bdrm, 1 ba. Deck, Pert'",·. g;'59 .1g'1 4 ~ ner. French decor W11Comes carts*trikeS ft llrepllCI, encloeed p1tlo. 3 bdrm, 2 bl, 2 c:er gar, 4Br. 2'~8a, end unit. ldry. No pets. $650 873-5768 ~x·0~: ~:::· ,~.~ 979-2748 you to tlll• epec1ecular 4 Owner 11y1 "Sell my garege, 9¥•-111. POI. large yard.1725. 2412 v11ta Hoger. No 57s.oa..9 --------- 5419,000. Darrell P .. ll. (Pl .... call 9-5) Br nr SC Ptu. Nothing rollerskates• Hom11". He wlll reduce cull flow. Now $150. 673-3048 p e 11. $ 8 5 O. mo . Yrly $175 Deluxe 2 br Large 2 Br. 1 Ba. wltll agent. Re/Max 7511-1221 ~~~~~~~~~ llke It. 1174,500. Bkr walkers*toys tlll·Pf'!Oe by the amount 500. 8111 Qrundy, Rltr, S1200 mo part furn & 780-1573. gar .. prkg. Near water'. C~~~· dJw, laundry rm: = _8-48-0 __ ,_oe ______ , •wagons••.. of your down peyment•. 875-8181. poolllouM, 5 Bdr, 3 Ba, HARBOR VIEW HOMES 67~3. 679·9667 Al9C> lrg 2 Br. 1 Ba: $490. •u::ila SCOOters*hot 1111 VI-A ... a...... /ls~•fflr. pool, 838 Pr11ldlo Cultomlz.ed 4 bdrm fa.m ,,.. Avail g-1. 845-6825 ·~':...i.~-~.~ """ "' '"'"' '""' llrnple -di I OUTSID I 1 111 r1 ~:!!!j" I SHHAC I ' I I r I i WOH .... I RUROF Ii'·' _ . Cute young thing to fellow I I' r I •!lopper: "1 lound. •lmple ••Y r---------..•o cu~. my grocery blll In 11111 - l.SOCARS I I I I I' r e c:;.:i... .... dl..ck•• -..i ...._ .... --'·'--"-· ......... __. _ __, -t..;!1.! ::_ ~"! = • r::~:.~~~m r r r I' I' r I' I' I • ~SC=\ lnTUSI I I I I I I I I •••un.....,.t.. ........... 11• •---JIUI ""'' ..-. •.., •-• '"' 966-5308. 831·7370, rm pool 0 Except1on11 ..~ •••••••••••• ~. rods•coupes• 2 Bdrm, 2 yre new. fM •••• ~':'..!!.~!!...... 661-7822 renill. 11~50 mo. lm•1•l1 3101 sm1111 Br. '325. 1 peraon tend, beck bey Ylew, Hug• c . M . 0 uP11 x Euttldl 4 BR 1 Ba. IQe 055-3-454 •••••••••••••••••••••• only, No pet1. Go 111: ~~ ~::''c!n~~'. l~a~ trailers•hard pro!. daeor•ted. Alklng $t75K/Olfer Only SSOK ard 236 Cost• Mesa St. 2 Br. 2 Be. duplex, g•-1916 "C" WllllCI Ave. ocean. Flexlbl• term•. tops*convert-l305,ooo, · 1195.000 loan dwn. AHu.me S145K Y•50·. 87" 15,... · IUffllYll rege, frplc:, yearly. Bkr. 53M987 ibles•motor •t 15~ VIR. Owner wlll 1o1n .. t 105% ta ~ ~ 3bdrmnmw/1ove1yv1ew 876-4912 ~~·1a::.1:ihtv21~~~ homes* lawn help fln1nce. Agent &.2:teee Cost• M ... t>eeutlful 2 br. to Nature Center. $875 2 bdrm, 2 ba ,,_ dplx. tlo. In quiet ., ... large GLISE TO OOUI 2211 Yltta hr• 2"' t>e. dbl •ttactled o-· mo. s48~. 4M·0395 yr1y. Mature non ... mkra. poo1. sa15. 845-33111 or No money down. no mowers* limos Excel 38dnn "F' plen on ,.,_. "9r.!!f. .. rege. sns. 1"96-03&3. Undlrltated Elegance ~~J/1'99.~~:.X2~7•9792 875-5949. qu111fylng • own your •corJ)Orate wide gr11n belt. Being ea .. Sh:,;;~·a.. ~ E/Slde 2 Br. 1 B1. new ltw ,....... Children welc:ome 2 a 3 home on our unique headquarters ~ted, new Clrl>lt. garage•, 12 bldg'•· All carpet•. dr1P19, 1 atory, For ..... 2fl00 aa ft 2 M50, 2 Br. utll. pd. 410 Br. s475.se251mo. lm- 11\ared appreciation fl. S285,000, 1110.000 loan 1menlt111. Atklng 13, prlv1t1 p1tlo. S545/mo. bdrm and den. 21~ b•. Hardi ng, B1lboa. No med. occupancy evall. n1nc:lng. We lllYI 5 •garden Carts : Jt~~ :Ri~ll~=-for 350,000. 1,250.000 380 18th. Pl. 851-9522 Golf c:ourH view. Near peta. 5'47·1165 now. Mon thl\I Sit. 9-6. ~In Hu;:,o~;~ Model A 's•••• •Call Agent tor Oetelli. D~wn . Existing loan Leese/option, d111r1bl1 Oo11n. Full Hcurlly. y 1 ., ty I ea •• 1 B r . Corner ol Ad1m1 & F1lr• iq 1~i.~ment~1 run •typingtables s.. IOl"t tt ~n hou· 14 ~%. Wiii car'l note. Mesa Vef'de 1rea, 4 Br. 3 Club w1111 pool, apa. ten-$500/mo. s1v1ge. Wiid• view. 557-4785. No'*'· 11200 to $1800 per mo. wheelbarrows• •. 714/845-4411. y Ow· ea, pool, lmrnac. c:ond. nl1. 714-e73-o415 & Co. 675-eeoe ••A3Br28anrSCPlau. C ,.,, 8 1973 V' ... a ... _, Oro. nlr. $1300/mo. 522-0332 •ft ---------1.~.;,,;;._;_....;....;;...;...;...;._ __ -1 " -all ... 10. rook1 It recreational ,., .,.. 1--liiiaftii~t-l 8PM ......,ndt Roomy 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo ~295, nice beotielor. reap. Fmll, tunny, airy, ~It 4 71'1891·555& Dt'ILY 1·5 1 111ft11111 °' .,.,. · In Clllt H1v1!:'1 frplc, adult, utll. pd, no pats. plex. no P•tl c:pl pref *"I IT vehicles* golf 1°'41 eso..n. no quellfylng 1 BR,,.., 11ou ... 0n Vtr-oommty pool. M50/moi 1oe e. ea,y; ept 9. $525. 979·2418, a.11w carts•rnc)del PIMMI buy• an xtnt Orange t'::,~~ce. 1425/mo. 875·1051. C.,... 't/ lfu Jiii Latge E .. talde 181'.1 ea. 111 I Ill* trains•bikes 1 ...... 11 ........ ='Y~: .:::.'~; OHARMt 5 br, 3 bl HVH. •••••••••••••••••••••• New carpet•, br1011t a OrHt term• on 11111 2 • I • nnenotno wranged ..... I.... F~ dr1. l blya. Sk~ lg cllx 28r 2bl IUlte. oe-cllllry. $425. 851·0522. bedroom 1lngl1 lemlly p anOS cars ~ly maneotd :: Clllld welcome, dlCOfl-llglltaS 11cuut. $1800. dar, 2 pat~. E'lldl. PINE BLUFF APTS H.B. lloml With ldd on refrigerators no hMdacllM. ilnt tax tor cerpets. prfv1tl 'YS'd, &40-2 23. 833-2375• 1575• ph 128 1 Br. with IOft, 2 81. Child l1mlly room. Flrepteoe. *skates .. •0 • writ.off a. PfOflt poten-oar1g1. water p.ict. No NWPT HOTS AREA ..... •l•r w °"· on tlll Blutta, petlO, ~:t.·~oc:,o.,·~~ ~:w; @ t111. Cell Oeor~ N .. I Pet1-. .2tir/1ba. No~. '82&. 'CORONA DEL. ~AA 1 view, lrplo, enct ger .. OM low lnterHt 2nd T.D. 790-71•7• R.E. R..i &-424 ''B" Hlmltton M5-e44T room Wltfl" be, Wiik. to llOYI, di~ .... IAM "'"' StOOO •month tit. IMI0-3Mt 38r. 2\48a. Baok B•y blacll, alt utll pd., no I~ rm. M95/mo. total pymu. O all IMJl#lai. HME'tidlll0me:~2bl,2 er••· Cfllldfln ok. kltch . e mo lea, SP 0 a 1-e101 720-0391 •••••••••••••••••::;:i cw gar. *800. s 1 o o o I mo • Ag t '325/mo., ref, S4t-ta22 ea~Ot. utll. pd, aood --... ~1 e.42-3e50. Mon-Fri .,.., no pet .. '274'/rno. ~! ••••••••••• !~ If lt'snnt 1~~~~~~~~~ Apprq• 1-t ••· Wiii •• RINT TO OWN: Nllw 28r....,... or...._ option Iv· Nlo• olHn 1 Br. 1 81. Me-3-420 . 8r1nd New Homea a -I-Of' joint ventu .... Value ~ c:ondo. cait "'°"· g• • Br. canal front, tnoltld gerage, patio. No 2 Br. '"' 81. No pata. Oondot, no money down wheels, IL .... 4 II aaoo.ooo. Cell t40-7MI OWMrlAClt 984-8171 yw'ly. ev111 e-1. oommty pet•. Has p1u• 11t. & Laundry. Avt/A. seot. ,. wlllle tll1y l11t. (714) YOU'ii move t\t ... ...,,.. -_.to, .... 1-1.0Y91 Hr th tn tam p<>Ols & tennta, Wille to IMt. 1200 llOUrfty. 803 $4$0/mo. 8St-M11 S4M622 AQ1. "'"'"" --. r-· -'t "' • • • bMctl t1soo1mo tamtty. M'"tO'd. !Mf.tna , It faster Jn a Nr ttlOpplng, ~· & ...................... rm. ""*· 2 Cit,.,., nr e.4&:'3170 aft 8 wlitcfya. 2 bdrm twnflal, 1 ~ "' Hr UCI. 1brcondO.1111, D II Piiot pool. A:;:.fln. t1MI<. coneo• Pk. no p1t1. ,_,..., Ulf QafllOI, patio. No p«a.. 000 Aalumlble, no qual, a Y O#Mr 11 .__ hnlbW ttoo '"°'yr, 541 4134 Of OITY LIGHT8/0CN VIEW ................. m.. "4H. Nr 19lh/Pomoft41 5~13&2, 562-0N3 classlfled OPEN tONOAY 1·6 ...-.:;r................ M2-t111 2 Mttr bdrm ""*· dbl 1 ..... I .. ~1 Woo:brtdr. 1mm10 28r • ad. Call 1--2132 __ Vi.t_a_c1et_0ro_--1·~ llfl I~• s br, lg• ,.,d. :: ~xt,..., Na& ~:C~1~,~~c:!;~;~::.: ...; ... .....;.......;, .. ;,.;_ ____ .. -1 ....... - ll> • Al • 8'Y owner. '642·S678and a Nl'''D ...................... :::=·1~4~1°' 1 ·No · l>t>g. Adults, no p1t1. LIV a.di w/trpl, _. & Mu1t 1111. ltcr oo-op. friendly ad· Deh;xe 1 bdrm COndo s.,. I bl."' Meeftol9 & .,.._. IMo ClnY.O" Condo :a "· e.42.&o7S. oat PCltt a.. 1 • up. 181·2CMI Pantllou11• ••••loo vo.itto,m. "-'Of. pr bltlldeCINm\ 1.,,JdMI full golf court• view. po°'9lde wfllrl*. • .._ ....... •..a. vTser will tr:ountlln eourt, ~ No Pt4I 1111 ...... ,m '°' 1. Ho.,.... AwM nowt P o o ' , t • n n I • • ll*lloue a er. 111. t.qs., drat 01111no. d•llwehr, 1•111......,. h f you oate, pool, 1pa, gym, !ffl! •• ...,__14141S1 t1SOO/ll .... '44·?'424 $ Ir. 1"' Ba. t-476. blllOony & _.... ....._ Cute Hr/Iba flomt. 8 p olubl'IOuM. botli•it f1i. ft--' •• ar. Lau;.~ feo .. pool. No pate. Mete Pinet. Own l1nd. &.ow m11nt. turn ~r """""°'"""" 11aooo •... •••11••• ........ M lflft l!lf Ml-1t-1PM. ..1447 ~7-:':o':.~:· wheelsfnto <>wner"'11...-..tiii ~':.'r":a·.1,':0''ct~ 1 •:.. .;,·t::..:tnu. .... --:~=::..:» "!:f.::o•, poo1. dt•tt· _Mal/mO......_ ..... _, __ .... -,-... ---.. 714/181"*3 cash, I ... Dir! OOftdo. \t milt Ooa•lftont t bdnft, 1.. ~ --. nr ~. no br, nt bt, ttaOO/mo. • P"' ~· X LG ftl*, ~ ""' II ....... to Med\. l1M~ t7" mo. 1111 CINftdy, pete, eYall frOfft ltft. --m..1011; .,_ & GUdln t Ir. UtO. 1n1i .. ~ W• Adi O.it IU4tTI wvw.toan. ,..,, t7M111. "'°· -:JM ...... .,....... M'T-1141. Tll..... ...,...,. \ -~~~~-1~=.~.~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~.~.~11=··-·········· l1lttrJflf. •• _...... IMf.BNdlll ....... 1111•~ """~ .. ~I X:t W111M ...._ a:•:H: .......... LOW """''· Otflffe, "*'"' ._ **..VAHfi** ,...._, '41"1 rllllftl ~ ..,.._ ...... & b1C1t1. VIGeftCllle, ... I WOM1 IO,_..._ lllt/ Wllloo_..""""" 1weepll\t. ,, •• Htl:. ptoP;~ t'!Wfftt. Nok W •I. et O, 0 H" II ..... ~ ..--. All Twiee l@.!MI .. /OM Ml.eMI met• 141-1117. •n~; Kt11 •1~ 11'-MO tall De*,..... 9'14~ qo ~ ...... ""<>fl· """a ,,..,,,1," *...._.. .... ,...,... ~ ....... ""11fr.11Jffm ..... ftAVUl'"'LI'"""" •• ~tColftm ~. H*""8. ~....,"" :r..... hi'.......... ao vr1 ••P· 1" · haofi ID'I lll'\AITINNG ~ eo. lUO'G....,,.. '"""""" .. ~""""'"'TIO Ltt. l'l:li'*'CI ' ......... OUIOll I GllNn, ,,_ -ar1~k·llOOk·Tlle·Co110 .,.._ ,,_ e1t tl2•1f11 He9t ~ I Vltllftl for t!OIH I ~=.:.:..11 Que!.~. r«Nmbel' 11H&41 Deolcl, OCMrt, f91tOM, Cwtom Wort! !flt & ext ALL TVPU .. · -IMlwe, lee. iYM! 6 .._,. • ,.r-, I .. c. UO. Doug Ml-0111 llo'd to .ft ,...: 14UN ~ "-· ......... :~: re.cs:~::.= .......... J.l!ftf:::fM ........ ·--~m .. r.:; • .,. Pl.AIT!A "ATCHIHO ._,.M-. 00.,. HOWi ~ ~ &. ......... ....al uo .,.:. ' AOtNN'I OLIANINO ~, .... ~..... I; . Aettucoot . •nt/ .. t. to :r::r.:n: .......... .. •• ••• •••• ., •••••• Jm'itt"•'liHe'nTn':lee · 1-631 Oompl•I• Lawn oa r•, ~·a thOl'GilldllV lfll~. ~~. ~ L.. ... TD ... --wn. NMa.,...,. 146-ltn y.,,lllWICl=&~Co. All W..... No lttillln/No lhampoo ~L/AOD-ON8 ft flfllal Cllllfl "'9t W.. ~. .._. ,._, ~1 ._.._., ...,., --. """'""""' _..._ Y-~ ~ -~ 8tlln "*"""'t Falt l ,,_. ... , UO'd. 21 fi!!:.'f.T............. a pr I n 111 er 1 . '4111 e , ,.___._.,, 1Mne Alfa, 175-S 111 IH!CIALI IJct. Id MOO; .... .,,. ~) 111 tlll -_, ,.....,. dfy. ,,.. eel • ., .. 1Ma -....-·~r ILICTAICIA... " I d U1 7170 .-, 1 ___ ,. ~ ---------2 lty ltOO. f 001t. Jh'"~•••• .. ••u•• --..:.;..~,;..;;..;;....;.;.;;,;;...._ ,_.. DQatory vrt ellP· lf"'4n 841-2111 "-r ca • Mouw~.._,.... I Cuatom ~·Stone 145-Nl3 ATLAI fl LU Mii MG & ftlt "9pf-1te1M 11\M\pOO a at..,,, dMn, a..u1ee ..... I .. right, ''" Mtlmft• on ......... Offloel. "40-1217 8locll.conor.i.Stucoo HIATINO • ..,..,..,..,IO ..................... . Color brlghl1n•r1, whl - ---l•I lerge or lmall Jobi. ;-;:;:'f::r."............ "'"'· Fr• en. 84t..94t2 CANYON "AIHTINO • 14 In A9P•lra & Al"'I•~· Tl!.! IN8TALLm •• IU-1111, tit. 121 c1pta • 10 min. blMcti. l'r• .. ,. AMI. PflOM, I.lo. Hte21. en.os19 Bin'• oornpleta melnt NHd • mtld or • hH· yr• In o.c. 8atllfactlon ment 11141 14&-leil AH l<lndl. Ouer....o ··~·~~~~~~~~! Hiil, ltv/dln. rm1116; •VG 0\111, wot'k. Uc. M'11M. LIC'O ILICTAICIAN l home lmproV91Mnt kffper? Hrl)' or wkly? Brlckwork·•m•ll or lge guw • ......,.141 -.. JoM MO-tUr ;;; room 11.10; ooucti S10; ____ ..,_1_._2S4_1 ___ 1 ..... a1. __... • ..___ ,.... tMV. 184·6~•1 fOf :m:: Nnllott, Olll Jobe. 100'1 10011 raf1. l•d•l' .. m-& ... r .... Ouar ..... _ ..... ...... _ .. ,_ .. ..., VI I I A Since 1MI 84M512 QUALITY "AINTINQ -.r.m.t:r1.-.r.;;... Cfluca FOf ni. Wottc ~~ ""' " ...... ....... .. ..,....,.. ,,.. Mt. IS1·I072 Tom Cerpe ntry, Ceblnet1, • 0 arv oa 0'1· EJtt/IM 0·00:.~ AeAc)rHii ... = g:i.r:rt.n~!&.~ ~ ~/Cornml !l.eoTRICIAN fttumb .. thin ~. ::~· bOftded by t, -~.. uo 8341a.7e--=-..... ...... ...... ~~ :',WJ~~ ... \JHL!SS Reta. 531.0101 I EBTIMATU UC S1022t Srnl )ObtlAlptilra. Lio. Elect .• Tll•. R•fl. . .. -;;;-;w............... IXT!AIOR PAl .. TIHO ci,':, :!:.c~ ~. _.....;.. ______ _ You're tlr•d OI Bank --------M«ttterr..,_,, .2.3310l-C•10. *••.•20• eee.-0149 TIRED Of HASSLES? • A9C MOVINO . "' flfl,.,. EXC!L CARPET CARI! c I \IC11on lno ...... .. ol Ou1lltY ~Ing help I• Quick. Cw.tul e.rvtce. Cuttom wot'k. Fr•.... 131·2345 ...................... . Stetementi or kHptng Jeck Buttlnglon a.9~/11 .... f"' J·-REilO/ COMM'L/IN~. C•'l ._.eeo-112381 ...... 1 haral Aeta. H0•7<l52 lfr .. eetlmat• 552-<MtO flleu. +fine Int. & Itel· ROOM ADDITIONS ILOW RATE8' Bu1lnff• Aec:ord1. Cell Ownaf'/~etor • _.. -"'"' 20 YI'•· 00 my own wonc. .. •Vf em COl'lt r.,,,. on. *.1 -· nlng, $ttv9 847-4281 H ...U.ble & Ref • Tr• trimming & rtmOYal, the Aeoureta ~. Carpet, uphcl, arM rug Ct ,.. ·~~ Uo. 278041 Al 841-812.8 repalre, alaotr .. plum· MAIDS Of ORANGE CO. .. -"-OMll, .. Ill CllaeNIPI & mow4no , .• H&C~~> 3,..~· cllanlng. wort guar. K··n·.~.:~·::.·. ==· .. .:. -11-.~-,.-fM-----..;.;.1 _bl_no...;...._3_5..;.Yl'9_•_~_. ___ , Oueltty T1!!"' ~~2 2 T1 OC> _!!e11111y. 2spec111 care ,,_,_ ~":r.:,f:f .... ~: Uo. ___ 584-__ 1_01_1 __ _ Fr•~. 84S.1]71 ..,......... ...., .. ,,_ ,_ ..,.., Bonded, ·-""' n h • .., ng. 8 Yl'9 exp. ..T.':'.":Kt•••••••••••• 1---------• • ~ ~ 1------......0--eab!Mta. Clll now • ,,... •••••••• •••••••••••• Carpentry • MllOl'lty Competltlft Ret• FwthlnO lntlrlOr = ·~ ... ·~-.. f "·· ~~ •ti--• ........... , Tlllll Roofing. Plumbl~ Gtnerel Hou1ee11anlno No--•-·. 7""1353 H'""t0l..u.1s·TRIPPI ':'fl ••••• ~••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••.••• .,.;,Ml NW ,, .. , u-.a..-vvo n..u..w...u s .. ~ jt. Aeff1ble refa.10Yf'9QP ".....,.'-'",.. ..,.,,.. "~ rn;i, Mott IUb~• K 14 ·Drtveweys Parking Lot ............... ~.... ~1--. ·-. .. . . ST .. RVING COU.EG"' VIN-MC 8oot184&-9325 PROl'f8810NAL RE· •• ·:. Aepen.'SetJcoettno. CRPT/UPH. CLEANJNO Deooretor ttyle Int, bare, Toppad/rarnov.d. Clean Remodel J.8.114&-Heo ee2.osto '"· 4 ,. .. SUM ES & CAREER Oey/-5. t10/hr. S&S Alphtt 1131_..1e9llc Deodorlztng-SCotehQerd m1ntel1, llbrerl11, high up, lawn renov. 151-3A711 •,~--_. n--Exper. HouH Cleenlng. STUDENTS MOVING ASA PAPERHANOIHO COUN8El1NG.115t-0700 Mr. Morgan 845-5171 ---------• Guer. FrM •t. 113&.!S.3 11yte rllMd p1MI wall• a. • .--....., G·-'-""" ,., ,._ .... "'-'l•bl• ........ CO. Uc. Tt24-4311 1 yrt looal exp. Ouar. ., _ _.~ 1n •• _1_ n..ft Hlltblfg Gradl"" ,,,_ .,.,..,,..., •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ · ..,.,.. lnMired. 141-&.42.7 work. Prlo11 11•rt •t •-n-..,,.__.. .,,...,.f. ;f:~v1ng Co. ReeJoeml. C.UI~ AHefflt celllng. UC. ll31-2388 mc:nr.=:: t,..~ ~:.i.t:'!~'::an. ,.,_.ft llHS3·l9~ ,_ WATCH US OROWI II/roll. Alec 751-7027 =~••••••••••••••• •·.~L;c.jh;&;;;:,~~.·· Lio 391804 842·1720 ;.;,; ... ~·;;,;:;ftj,:;.: ~J............... Sll'IOI 1M7. Comm/r... ..,_,~~ ...,,. ,.,,_ WllllpapetlnO-PtlntlnQ Hu=-~~· Cllll Sunthlne Window LA...IHI-Avg. 3-Br hH $225. Dtcor1t1ve waterproof Oalff...... • ..... 881·11991727-3740 (714) 873.-7212 ·····"'·············· Rlelcom'I. 8cwldtnavien Uc. #411802. 54t-9734 ci.n~. Ud. 5-484153 F~~·.:ttF........... 1151-18711 =:c'':;.:.:f.!:~o:u;: ltnttt. 111 .. 141 a ""' '* PAllMI qudty. Hiimer is.7875 lu4ih ,,_ 20% onthty DllCOUnt ~to~~ ~.':~ '::'::: f!!!!~!l~!!!!!..... Fllld• co. 973.5n9 9Rr;o~·~B~~dRP.~N01~11~r ·'-···~M,;·jo&s······ M~~; ~::iw~~'.v~~~J: ~~~~3d y~1~1r,;~v e:t~~~t11:11~11R::r•Pn~C:: ····B··u·00·~·er·~::ies······ W11' '*••mr. .. 3 F JC: ii ... & s 611 .. _~ J ..... S'"I '-' ..... •1•11 IOCll cuetomert -""' ••••••••••••••• •••••• ,.gea 1·, Mon-rl. Cement·Muonry-81oclc .,_n,~~ 1 , .... fltff.Mllnt m .. ..,.,, ... ng o.,. ,,r_,~.,.... · Coneultlnt AHlgnment Lowmln.Slm)OblOK Oompufer word proc•~ 54t-72ae W•ll•·Cus1. woni. Uc. ;KATRiN•A:ost•Ltve:i;, Land~. e7&-t3118 c.ii MIKE 848-1891 Selllng 1nythtng with 1 Thank you, 1131-4410 &11-e590 uc. Fr• eet 841-7581 ting. l'Mt, 1CCUret• wv Compare before you buy. #3111051 Rob 541-2.113 l\Uprt, dally meld MN, Y•rd melnl. a ctein-up Trade your old 1tulf tor Diiiy Piiot Clullliad Ad Sell wHh EASEi For quallty lnll•llttlon, Mike your lhOi)i)i"Q N · Rau. rat ... Notary. Fr• ,Cleaalflecl mile .. II -.y. ShoP 1t home. 11'1 Mt)' office cle1nlng, crpt Joba. Loc11 rel. Dey & new goodlu with • 11 • llmple matter .. . 11'1 •BREEZE call• PAO. Comm/rM. tier by u11no th• Dally pkup a. dellvery. Len. 842-56711 with clUllliad 842-64578 cleanlng. 113M111 evee. 842-8785 Neel CIU81fiad Id. 842-511711 Jutt call 842-5611. CIUllfled Ad• 842-51178 Mr Vllent• 492.1755..,. Piiot Clettlli.d Adi. 751-1311 OLLARS DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS Sell your no-longer-needed Items for cash. If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3 days FREE. Qne Item per ad, must be priced. Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads . 3 3DAYS INES · • Call today for full details. (Non~. E-1re l!Me 11.00) CLASSIFIEDS642-5678 ~-A1~:;:::::hd A~=::w t !'.'!!!c.'!!.'!J! ... !.~'tf ~!.a.W!.f!.f~!!!.!J.'!f !'/!!~~.~!~!~/ .... !.~!! ~l!!!!!!!.~~!fJ!!.!f m!.f.!!.'!!~ .... 1.~!flf!!ffll!!!. ....... !~ff ~!}l.~'!'!/.~.;f/·ff •••••••••••••••••••••• ..................... , •••••••••••••••••••••• SOWi lt11L llJ IN•.... Fount Jin Valley Olllct N.B. 3975 Birch. 3980 1q. .... .... tr Da.• ,., 3111 • ._11 .,,. Jiii .,.....,, llHt 1111 w1<1y rent••• now 1v1u. Cont1ct 11rgut Gey spec•. 2500 1q.1t. at so. 11. or leu. MIA zone. FOUND •OS SUNNY'S Exeeutlft exper..lenced In 111 •••••••••••••••••••••• •• -.-.~••••••••••••••••• •• -.9r.;;•••••••••••••• S 140 & up. Co( or TV. Male Fem1le MrVlce In 1 ft. Good expo1ure, Agent 541-5032. n Str .... Reductlon: ph ..... 40 hrs. Blnlflll. 2Br2S..oceenvu,S525. NO FEEi Apt. a. Condo Westcllfler ... xtrelarge1 Phon11 In room. 2274 SO.Clllt.540-e719 good ~king, Talbert a. 1750 up. 2160 It. lndu· IR£ FREE omo.-tvn-<>Utcall Huntington Bch . t Br t•oo. Both with rentlla. VIII• Rental•. fJr. 1pt, pool. patio a. Newport atvd. CM. Brook h u rs t . ca I I ttrlll • Offloe. 18101 .,.._ n 131-8377 53M5el. O/W & stov.. 661·11,92 176-4912 Brokw. carport. 645-11152. &49-7«15 751-9191 dondo Clrcle •M & T Automotive ••• 1i.1,.,, 1tLUX. Jr 1 br VertllllM, BE Ac H ARE A ROOlllTE 2nd floor walk-up otflcel. Hunllnglon. Beach. can·. Prof men dell,... rem.ie p ART s HE L p ER I founl1ln vu, relrlg, nu FllDERS $l50·S:250/mo. Carpell, 1142-21134. houMk•per & glrl Fri· DRIVER IHt. 3140 crpt, pool, ipa, He. $ / . drape.a, panellng, CdM. 142 1111 dey, mu1t be orgenlzed Cle1n driving record, •••••••••••••••••••••• S 4 915 . 8 4 0 . 0' 3 7 . 77 Wk Oldest & lergeet agency. 7152·11130 1300 l<I· ft. $425. • a. c1peble of hendllngl Some part1 expr. neo. WllFFUTIH 760-11390 All cllentl ICreened with 1800 lq. ft. $575 hOuMf\old dutlel. s11op-WIH trlln. Good WOf111ng 1 & 2 Br. Dlacount on COUNTRY CLUB LIVING KlteheMtte-Mllld-Pool pholot a. relareneet. Scellng Down? Sterling Fronf office, lerge rear ping & H cooking. In ex-condltlon9 Md co. benl. eomemodeli.Pool.Spa, IN NEWPORT BEACH 2 Br. 1 B1. Steps to NwptBJvd&Wllton Credlta:Coemopollten out? Lower overhHd door.1779WhlttlerAve. Lo11 Cat , 8urme•• chenge for apt In so. Herbor & M•c Arthur Gym . s au n 1 , etc. A 10111 environment bHch. S825/mo. ut1l1 Coste M... 548-9755 Good Morning America. maintain lmege, oft1oe at Days 540-9352. Eve1 (Brown). fem1le. Vic Laguna on the beach aru. Slll#y 14'°"1 quel. 64~l9. apertment community on pct PROPERTY HOUSE I I lb 4IOO The Tomorrow Show. Regency Center, exec 846-0681 Newport Crelt a. N.B Pl .... cell Terry 17141 Por1ch• TunlnLShop. $350 Bech. lurn. Pool, ~~~.,~~~:~ B::d ~r!~~:~ 842•3850' 842-lOlO .~!!! .. !~} ......... le!f!!1 141·11ff IUP~:~. )~1~7°'1qulpp~dAI~ lt•ttl• WHIM 4100 ~~~9~~~· 5411 •3 lOll, :~:::~ _e:.n 9•15. or :~D~A~ :~At n ~':1: 1pa. 111992 Florida. 8 1 7 ~ Cl••••ll 3111 WIULY lmlLI -' •••••••••••••••••••••• 714/957-3900 842·283<l, 842-3172 spa, tenn s court1, •••••••••••••••••••••• Avallable Agl 875--8170 stefled for every bual-Conalderele M. itudent Lo1t: M Hlmal1yan ctt. LADIES: Lei Tom •how ------------------• poo11, close lo buslneu. N11r new 1 Bdrm. apt. · · * BAVFRONT * nesa need. lndlv ol'flcn 20, seeks room. It kltch neut. & decl1wed. might you 8 great tlmel For• B•byalltw needed.,,. & Neer beech 2 Br. 1'..\ Bl. airport, FHhlon 1111nd. with bullt-ln1. carpeting N.B. 1&2 Br, weel<ly. ttep1 PVT SUITE/GARAGE mo/mo. from $375. p<lv In famlly Mttlng nr haV9 ID, Tur11erock. Irv. dllc<eet Intro a. the beat wtcnd1. Experienced. Sen ai>t•. drps, bH·lns, frplc, Convenient •hops on a. drapes, i.undry teclllty, to bc:h. $275 up. Great RESPONSIBLE N·SMKR 833-9978 OCC. 842-8331 833-3708 Reward. llCOt1 write # 116. 2005 Clemente. 4911· 7314 enclsd garage. $590/mo. 1lle. Unfurnished beetle-under roof carport• and locale. 7~-0938. $750/mo. 873-1521 Bet. SO. LAGUNA. 3 Arch Bav. W B lb Bl d NB Jenny Call 536-<>921 Ion. 1 & 2 bdrm ap11 and publlc lennl1 court• a. 9PM 500 ...,. ft with good ~ IHi111U/bl"'t/ F1~ Vllkoung• PttfemBu~. b1kog&. · a oe v ·• · · --'-·------townhOu-. goll ~·rM ""''"t ..--.Ind IW NllY ...., N 11111_ l....,,..an. ••• •2..., Ce. 92193 BARTENDER (lem1le) ARLI NGTON APTS. ~ '"'" .,..., Lux Deni Pt vi.w Condo vlalblllty. 497-2 51 ••· •• _....., ,,. I ded No Quiet, sp1clou1 town· S S~.d!.1000 d 1 property. CIOM to eve-$012/00/ll~o, E1vaJI. 8/4 to for 3 mo., m11ter IUlte ••••••••••••••• ••••••• ..... wfteltt, nee . B exp.5 noec. hOUM 2 Br. l'..\ Ba. Near evera ors an rythlngl $3915/month. 1 2 . xecutlve 3 with lrplc, pool, spa. Wmnl 1•6/•,,I Found White Samoyed E1rn Money Whl1ky 1111. 44 Id b •• ch . s 5 2 5 I m 0 . Bdrm unlll feature fin• Avallable Augu•I 15, one bdrm and den. oc .. n 1-496-2681. 644-8539. llWPHT oama ~r..r•ul!l, IOOS Husky. 1pprox 1 yr. 963·3337 l Newport Bl. N.B. s .. 960-11656 :~=~~r~~~~91n1~i ~t~:u'o!!"Zt ~7~4l ~,.e~;nis, pool, ipa. HouHm•I• wanted for With uM of reception, j~in 11~:·i;;d1~·j~·~h; ;:•:;,~l~.M~ge"~'~'-3'. 1aHul ~~e.w,:. ~h~c~ DELUXE 3 Br 2 Ba. In dey or r-for aum· 842-0138. Lagun• Bch Cottage • 2Br home In College Pk, conf. room, kllctl, phone. swimming pool c:hemleal te2-32e1 •--1~ ·~· PLEASE. 4 Pl• bit 1 t mer month•. Smartly c M. $335. Clll Ad litter Mefetlrlal & word pro-1 1 B ~. "' ---------• x. • n1, crp s, lurnlalled model• open lt•ll .t.1 3UO Woods CoYI. 38r. frplc, ......,, ...... Miii a-·-Hrvee bu1n .. 1. ••FOUND' Fem white.,..._ ••••••••••••••••••••••Bath •Id• 7AM-1PM, hk·UPI. drpe, dbl gar. •••••••••••••••••••••• wlk to bch. SSOO/wk. #259. 642-4300 24 hrt. _..., .. ._.. "spefkle-ter tr .. tment · ...,."'"· Mon-Fri, Ntwpot1 VIiie. frplc. $950 No pets. dally. B A 5 57 9 MN. 1""11· aepatllely 11 1y1tema d .. ter." Llc'd M black L•b OC t•o. E .... 1111\11111 4000 Hllerte w-. NB 5'0-«8411t8M·F 1 r. pt.CIOMI017th.& 49 ·O 1,' 4·1942, Prol.F25-30tollhr2br,2 detlrtd. territory 1v1ll1blt lllO,lnHoep.MCt.wtllte EIQortforWoman 842·5Mi On Jamboree Rd al Mtln. S325/mo. 494-0349 ba CdM apt wllrplc & Cell: Judy Orenge CoHt trH no M. neutered cat. M white DELUXE 2 Br. 2 B1. In San Joequln Hiiis Rd. 839-0709 I« Ill 1 Ii 4300 gar. $338 mo. Non1111kr. 7141760-0100 exper. nee. Wiii tr'ain. kitten w/bleck 1pot on 4 9 7 • :.~~~\ b 9 t w 4-Plex. crpla, drp1, bit· 144-1100 A,.rl•••ll F•nlitf4 ••"-••! •• ! ••• !!!...... N78-1775, 873-8340 SISO.OOO full amount hHd. 14'·3951. NB I~~~~~!-!!·~~~ Ina, enclad gar, hk-ups. •t U.Jru. llfO Fem, <l5 ahr lge l1vl1h ency req'd, iome llnenclng Shifter 1: IDT Piil-Tm ••llWI ~2i·M~ petl. ~~ '500/mo 1 Br. 1 Ba. apt, ...................... twnh• w/relf>. worttlng M/F ahr 3Bdrm twnhH. • ... T lllTtl 1v1ilable. Wiii net '40, -LO_S_T_: -P-le_d_C_o_c_k_e_tl_e_I, la.f!!f!nl • • · encal1d garage, lndry SUWlll lem. unbelievable rooms, Pool. Fnt. Valley, CIOM to f••-a.t •-000 plui. C111 collect C.M. arM c:an talk. Oen-•• • ••••••••••••••• Deluxe pooltlde xtr1 large tac .. clOM to beech. Cat overlooklng brook & IChll/ frwy. $350+ ulll. -,.._. Mon Fr1 9-9PM Ask for ou1 rewerd 641 1575 ~ANb I 2br, 2 ba. bltn1, dawtlr, Ok, no dogs. YILUIE w11erlall. Pool, Jae. lake, 964-53031•1• evea. n m 4081ee1-0i11 ., · • '-""'"''• 1001 1'A mites beech. Adults. TSL Mgmt. ~2-1803 New 142 bdrm. luxury etc. NB/CM area, from ltlnt Prtftult•ll Found mW SlarneM Ktt-•••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. $'500/mo. LIDO DELUXE 2 Br. f~plc apla In 14 pl•A1. 1 Bdrm $325. 790-8045 Like Forni 3 bdrm eon-.-.M *llllPltlT ot, ten with wtllte plwt, red ********** Be • teMphone promo- tion dertt for IOc.i MW· 1peper. Private dHk, cuuaJ attire. Only requt. rement II 1 good phone volcl 1nd lot1 ot enthu-• -· do. 3 ba. Sun and Sall •n... collar & nee coll Vic •-n• •-1 536-8382 lrg brick patio DR. Adlts. from $515. 2 bdrm from Rmmte wanted to thr 4 Br club prlvllegel. $350, ·~ From Suite with aeparllt Central O.C. Locetlon. er. · --· tHft 2Br, 2ea. trplc, Wlhr/dryr $1050. 97>6359. $570. TownhouM from condo, Npt Blutf1. $240. u II I. 18 t 1 n d 1111. entrance to alnglt 1201q S90K yrly grou $35,000. Woodbrklgl. 559--6472. AND Houri hook-up,,_ rugi. drps * BAYFRONT '* S840 + pools. tennis, 720-0572 959•1973 alt 8 It olllcH sub-IHHd. (714) 633-o2251t ,,,,,.11, llSI IUYY q• ... • .. -n• Mon-Fr1. 5:30-9:30PM 11um. & Pa Int . S 5 7 5 m 0 . w11erfall1, pondel G11 N B S.Crelarlall~tlonltV .. _,.. •••••••••••••••••••••• IPlllTlll Sit 9:30AM.-1;30PM n•" -....2 •It •p••. PVT SUITE/GARAGE lor cooking a. heetlng .. lull condo, Herbor NWPT: r91P .. cleen F/M to telephone/ copier / •-"-.... * * '* SO ,..1 T-'nl~ 8_111 184.00 lo 1t111. ~ .. m RESPONSIBLE N-SMKR paid. From Sen Diego Ridge, 1tt'y thr, llraight thr nice 3br/2bl home Want I bual,_. of your ..,. •• •• After 1at weak, lhet9 In' 2 Br. 1 ea. Mlnut" from $750/Mo. 673-1521 Bel. Frwy drive North on S550. 752-9442 dy1, on Canal. 11ep1 to ocean. ~~ 11181'-~ 11 g:. own for minimum cost? Atlalfls Parler Nation wide & ocal par1nerthlp profltt. ocean . S <l 8 5 I mo . 9PM Beach to McF1dden to 640-243<l eves. $325. 645-2485 (Molly) ..: ... ·M~ ~ ng. Compl. mup plus l>llSI· Open 24 hrs I d1y JOB PLACEMENT 18" For lntet'IW. 720-0644 or 720-4691. B B Se aw 1 n d v 1111 g • p a.aa' ••ti nen conault1nt1. Guar. 7 deya I week lll1anoe call .rt• 9PM 1 r t a, yrly (714)893-5191. rivet• entrance, deck. C.11•n /11lt•I4110 --prolil. 850-0218 J1cuzzl, Sauna. Locale Compe.te tuition FINAN-1•2-Hll 2 BR a den, 2 bl twnhae. 1600/mo. private path, matn kll· ••••'••••••••••••••••• 11 well 18 tourist a CINO IV9Heble. ~ tennlt a. ape. Nr beech 173-3355 ,_., 4000 chen to shire. Female Garaoe wanted for 1m111 RWPllT IUll #1n,.,n, fn1t BenkAmerlc1td. Muter CALL FOR INFO: tB 112 2202 ~Cr 9eo-37~ Winter Rentals 9ch hM •••••••••••••••••••••• preferred. Lagun• tPOrt• Clf, vie Olkwood ,,,., SOJS Charge. American ex-(714)834-3918-24 HAS I~~~~~~~~~ ..... I Wu• 3 Br 119 39th. St. $650 EASTSIDE CM. Prlvlte Beech. 1'25/mo lnc:ld1 Gardent. No. 845-7278 OFFICE SUITE OYerloo-•••••••••••••••••••••• preu. Dlnere. All wel· SUPER I 0 R TR NG .J: Latge 2 Br. 1 Be. Apta, 2131208•1234 0tck Incl relrlg $315 mo 7 14/840-32215 Evu 2CARGARAGE Lutepeoeevlll.Approx • com•H 1419'5c·3433· 1725S0."""""lu,SteB Provenr.cord•execln -I !urn. room a. bllh. Utll1. utlls. Deya Mike RUIMll king Newport Harbor. U UTT\la 7 SVCS. BOILER MFG co. CEO •nClld ger. frplc. Nr New Decor 3Br. 2Ba. frplc, 67~7544. .. . ..99 .... 264. • STORAGE ONLV 1 • 0 0 0 • q 11 . ••rtcac• .... •••. 2112 arbor Bl. M Anllhtl,;,c:. 92806 ~-butlnlll required. Hunt. Hrbr. 1535. Chlldr· 1 g1rag1, 2 bike to bch, $90 mo. HB te0-5280 714-845-7100 Specializing In 11t & 2nd COEDS • Would love to (Rel. Trng.· Rlelto. Ce) Wiii hMd co. w/unllmlted en OK. l40-ll07 yrly673-2571 1 blodl tr bMctl. W/Oyr, Psro f1111ona1 Mele Large storage g1r1oe S ""-of..._ T0 '1tlnce 1949 party with you. Call Su. ••••**'*'**'* potent111. F1nt11tlc""" 28 or Older, S215 mo. 1at trelght, non-1moker. ub-191 ""'ec. ·-Robt. Siltier NH/CM K th 1 " -,.. Im.I 3U4 2Br. 1 'hBa TwnhH, din a. tut. No pet•. teo-ea 18 25-38, to lhare 3 Br. ~ n .. r 19th & Newport, Prime 1lrport IOCell on FlE. Brok 9d AMlt :~~ Y • n Y t m • J'-&.. w Ill .,0., ~.'~r r~O~~ •••••••••••••••••••••• rm. 2 patio•. t>alconv, Be. W1terlron1 Bal 111 C.M. $100. 759-02811, M1cArthur Blvd. Price •• 2•2171er ..... ,..,.~,, -.. u '' •· ........ ~. ' w ...... 1ng .._ ..... 25 40 .. .,, •101 ~ ..,...~ •••••••••••••••••••••• n.-1._ ceo eo 141 °-3 Br. 1'h Ba lownhome. garage. no pett. $850 ""' ,.,,_ to mer conalder female .,........, · reduoed. Mutt-' Voong m1rrled men wtll ..._ x '...,, Pello, AIC. lrplc. W/D, I mo. 111 . 1ut + dep. non lmOke, 'A blk bctl. 960-2471 133-2111 HOT LllE &.ml A YlllPS do gener11 handy WOOi. Juen C•pl1tr1no, Ce. Woodbridge So. L1kea. 8•2·2949 eves/wknd1 NB. $300. 875·1106 alt 4 N a..c: loraoe garage for rent llW_.. •••-f'"ere ire eeverel op-PHOTO MODE LS Cell evH & wlcend1, _9_2_1_9_3 _____ _ pool1, tennis. 1775 mo. for appt. L ewpor1 h townhou· on Belboa Penlniula ~• -" ESCORTS/DANCERS 972-9525. BOOKKEEPER wanted. Cell Denny 845_2018 aguna furn rm, pvt ba. •• fully furnished. Fe· n • x 1 to Fun zone. 1......., ••t1s llon1 rather than fort· OUTCALL 24 HRS LI h 1 ffl weekdeva; 5<l8-51133 BEACH/VEAALY non-smkr, over 40, TV, mete 25-35. Own bdrrr 10'..\x20'h'. 873-2943 .,__. -Closure. Without cost or M1ture Uciy, llve In com.-g t work or o ce & • D 1• 3 B r 2 t> • 0 a r po o I. Bu 1 I P r o I . end ba. Pool, tennla No depoaltal Luxurlou1 obllgatlon .... t ..... f-s llt .. -l 1 t ...... ......, .. ~ 1P9C1, CdM. 1~90 -wtrnd•. $8001mo •21 E. '0a1bo9 <l94-0451. court, ape. 5425 mo. w Ol/111 l«•tll UH n-oflfcH, lncludlno thin dacld:°'~'~ -;;i~ ~~~~~~a~·~~~I ~:>"eeo1;h:""i.'ao;;; Bootlkeeper ~ ·-· .. ··~1 Bl. 173·27"", 97" "7"7 .,_ e utll ........ &l\IU •••••••••••••••••••••• recepllonllt, ln1Wer•-would ...... ..__. for ........ ~ p ... I bkk' ••••• I•-••••'•••••••-••"•• ,,., .,.... • ,...n. 'tide CM 3 Br 2ba. .....,.....,.,.. ll1'1 Weatclltf. N.B. 256 ... ...., .,... 1--W 0 : MALE MOD· area. some hOUMWOl'k, er.on went ... or O tMent f/p pvt ba gar S250/ A Ill 1 1 000 It 1 t floor service, conlerenca Clrcle Home Lo1n1. • E for photo WOf'k Le-have cir & ref's . end a1cre1erl1I PIT, Bdrm, fant11tlc YI-. 1 Br. 1 Ba. Step1 to a,,11•..,.3 ' ' mo. v · mmedl 10• eq. • 1 · · room . .ic.752-9408. d i r eel lender . glllmete.4""""''""5 · 7•"'".23d ua ....._ _ __,,_, . .-.. 5 te50 yrty. 1 blk town & b .. ch. $350/mo. u1111 •"" • .,. taly. Co111 M811 ne11 Agent ~1-5032 ---------• 7141'99-:21!91 ..,......, ....,..,.. a1-· ..._..... ..... '" ........ beectl. Call '97-<l773 paid. Property HOUH Lg B•¥tlful rm w/pvt s.c. Plua. 850-9180 •50 .. S1 00 _, .,, 400p:..,9001hOUPNLUBSe~onaql .. uftt~ ---------· 842-3850, 848-1169. bath for rent nr bch. kit .. lq. ... . ...... ..... ~· ,.. I s WIDOW HAS SIS for TD'• .._., llMi Jiii B B 1 prlv. '300 mo. 9ell-2951 Share buutllul 3 br lurn. II., 4001 Birch .. N.B. te. perking, patio•. RE Loana, lOK Up. No .-.-;;~;-;;•••••••••••••• 3 r 2 a, pk:, patio. Dix, houH, Jee. g1r. S395 Agent ISAt-5032 873·1003 Credit Check. No Pen· I fll llSllft m etepe lo -ter. No pell. College Perk •POOi 1 Incl. ulll1. 731·ee30 ---------1 al Denni I Aaloc !New gated 20 Town-209 4111 St. $725/mo. room lncludlt ulll 1250. Fem1le roomm11e went· IEWPlllT IUOI 6.g~731 t eon • ~iome VILLAGE COM· 873-3057 $l00 depotlt (non 1mkr ed: Leg. Nlouel home, n. Exec. offtcet (1000 tt to ~UNITY. 2 a. 3 Br. 2'..\ STEPS TO THE OCEANI pref.) 557-27113 •mkr, 127! on utll, no 1150 It). Attractive welt 2114 11 Ba. 1800-1800 lq. ft. of Large 2 Bd. ytty ....... ROOM FOR RENT. Non-pat•. U0-3742 d1y1. " ... ~ m1lntaln•d bldg. Nr On Sin Ol•m•nl• dU· pure·luxury. Oar1gH, $850 mo. no pets . tmkr. S300 mo. utlllllea 531·IOl4 tll 11pm, Aek ~~-......,'-' mHolnegl·bHllnOldP1 1.1•k_C:.-10'pet•t•'d· pltx. 21% yllld, 134.000 •PH In every home • 975-7907. lncld. 548-44117. tor Cerol v . ....., red'd. Agt 1·758-03111 meeter 1ulte, dining -.. -1-F ___ k____ :/t ... _ prk'g. Prof. environment pp S roomt, wood burning Spac. 3 Br 2 Ba. fplc. gar. Room In 2 Bd. CdM home. ,.. non am r thr 4 br :/""' --• quiet area. &45-3323 I needl 1201< 111 TD, flreplac" micro-wive beech 2 blka. $900 ytty. Nr. bch, F, quiet, frpl, houMlnC.M.Avall.S11M> ~=:.:. dye. owner occupied ,..11d'I owna ~•t• patlot a. No pelt. 845-1682 w/d, avllll 911. 1325 mo. + ut111. 8&0-0907 -1-.-.i,-11-,..--.-,.,11 ff f.~;/~~7.r7i,f.::i ~d1~e1n1~r~ Verselllea Condo Studio, ""'"'°21 alt. 2:30. .~11VFE 0! B2EAbCHI ;.~:..·1 ••••••••2•;:;_•:••• Av,, H.B. t211ts. ,_.. .. .. .., """' 1ecur11y. 1500/mo. Private bllh, prlv111 an· .,,. to ... r r ~t. ._,., 1tor1 •t """"YOn•---------15 mlllut• lrom Fllhlon 731·3371, 559-0353 trance, newly redeo., Nr Xlnt loo. 790-8570 1---------1 St., 1940 lq. ft. Plua 8 DESPERATE! MUil Hll i.lend, 7 mlnut• to S.C. Werner/Goldenwett, ,.~......, or 1 .,. t ... *Ml.ID......... car g11ege. Mt.am. 3rd TO of St2,IOO. 1~ PIH• or O.C.Alrport. Lo• pvt epertment. Mo· H B 1280 836-0794 ...,.....,... .,,, 0 .. ,r From 1 room to 3 roome. •trllght 4 '/Ml no1a. M. olu•t •••t 01 Newport dam w/bttln1. 2 BR l!be, · · · beeutlf\ll oceen view hae, Fi S l 11 It Office end Lebor1tory 000 or be9t offw. Ir.,. lfY{S. & eo. ol Sen Diego wallt 'A blk to beech. 2 BMfh1 ..,,II 41• Oena1 Pt, wtcoupte1 .1Pool, ..:: .-:utr!t ~I ·A~ ~1•111P1 .. !!7fl00~ It. erter tPM & wknd• P~wy . 19001 mo. cw parking, Large clo-•••••••••••••••••••••• len111, aecurty. 300. ..... · · • --~or,,_ 551-4211 Ut·543t, 2473 Orange Ml.a. Gr•t I« tlnglt or 2 YMl1y on the bMc:fl, hotel 240-2148 ~~~~~ ~t. e..utltul ~!119 db ---------• A..,. eo.te MIN couple1. Pillo. L1und room. kttehen l .no-, lrvlnl lrg "" non..amkr F · 2 1Utta p1u1 ~ 1n Aa11,......ll 1 .. -. lecll. 1100/mo lnCI u111. '320/tno. plu1 MO. de-25-35 Ill amanltlel • ... Alll>Of1 ., ... Exec. Sul· prllttgloul ~cent ,, N• ~~? ~=lfted Drive by 5403 River Ave. potll. 2308 W. Oc .. n-ullte '300 644-8018' t•. From 221-450 eq, It. on '*lhlll. 1778 aq. ~ ~/ o9n • ._. ,~ Then call. 115·1711 Iv lront, Newport B .. ch. · · 11 par eq. It. Many X1r-. t'16-H12 from t0-5· '-t I'--' of~ needa. 842-617 mag or IHI0-6844 173-4154. M/F lhr 3 bdnn llM I bib OaM 657·7010 844-tQt lfter e.. ' •••••••••••••••••••••• ========:=!;============±==~~=======::I bdl H.B. Meet Bdr, prlY -of.......... In..... ~---· 11• : • be. prlY bale, w/d, dlehw, rr • .,,._ IP9Ce • .,.... C--mJ ~~.-;;-;tt•••••••• You can be a I : ~~~v. uoo mo. ;1~·'sir'::..::..~u: ... Mb 44ti sCR• .. m WINNER I of r90ept1011lat, Xerox, •••••••••••••••••••••• n-. · Large Leguna Bctl. HM. law Hbrary. Avalt l!nmed. ... "' .. A..._.~ , .: HR 2 ... anr w/fll, 25-35. a.II for da\a.111. Mlk•ll « In ,,__ bldg on CoMt "'1RtlW I; ~ Fri>k>, dacll, '318 + utN. Art 'T14/955-2411 Hwy, loutf\ LtiGUfl&. Apo 8tud.IO • OIMrYI ..., s 08·U20 lun 0111~. ,,,...__ r.ox. IOO eq. lt. Excet-F\#Of . Aoroee Just by sending u your name and I · ~e111 ova. 4t7-4313 ~ ,r;=-1 ~ ent privet• oerk•no SCl890M • .._ ....... "" ,_.._. bafllnd bldo, 15211 mo. Cute~ttllno '° ..._ address and by watching for your I :· INYd, c .M. 94s.2111,.. Turner Aeeoc . ..c.11n iow : .. , "bind • ., F hM 2 IA llPI. to ~ fOf Joe name In the classified ads or the I ·.1 .,, 31+, '230 + ""utll 1-------1 CA~ W.LAGI! •lmpl• ••Y to out my D 1•.:. PU u• OIOe E.Aac. Furn 8ulta, p(lme Unl~u· a •tory bld9. ~!!' In half • " a ,., ot. t . '1M •h•r• 3 I r hOUH ~i:~ ":;.~a;:,: MOO ... "· 1~ be. W9t -----· ---- Win ticket.I to lht circus, area amusement IUfli(• I n. a r •• 0 . p I I 11 . HI· 17 7t. 940·H 1 II = ~ =-. "= fffl.l.l'l!rfl ••••• lion• or 1eon1ni evtnl3 Just hll out this coupon ind J J ~~-t';'4~· 11t & IHt. (4'W9> ptu1 lntw lor ,,..,, .... L08f: fllem. a.....,"*' mall It lOda)' tot~· 1°1 .. !1ecut1ve office au1t1, manta .... "'operttee. Oowntowft .. .,.., , 1 ... i IMr• 4 er. home i.twti oomer of a irwv • ...., Ltd. l?S4etO 111>1•• - Cluallled Department, Dally Piiot I . t ~ th• bay I th• ocean. HerbOr 8'Yd. TIM CMr fi\lt your .. ...,..... 1n9o ,.... 118 g ,.. ...... ~ ti Av .... """*· 91&-HU IMel. 1900 aq.ft ... 10t .... ..._ -......._ h .__ .............. ...., SM W. Bay Street, Coa&a Mtsa, CA tHit I 1 ;;; 0 t"t .,. ePM. 1t e111t 111 ... 19' ..., .-.UI ·-· NM..__... ....... ,· ( c. ___ cc-_ ... ~ __ > __ , ) \UTBD ' ( > ) Newspq~r Carriers tor routes in Huntington Beach, fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good Earnings su,•r TdP,I • • GNat P.rfzn CALL CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT .,,. e•2-4321 ~-I '"° vw ...,.. ,,...,.,. ,., !Ntor. 40 "·'·· 11 VOit ltOl.:;c11or I ~, . .-. . .... ,tr •·· ATLAS CHIYSt.aft.YMOUTH . 2129 Harbor Blvd .. c'o1ta ~Tel. 541-1934. 3 block.II .IOuth of San Diego Freewey off Herbor Blvd. Compl.W 9body 1hop. Sal ... Service. "-ta. Service Dept, open Mondey thru Frldey 7:30 A.M. to &:30 P.M. and a A.M. to 5 P.M.,on Saturday. MATCf.I THE· NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES NIWPOIT DATSUN 688 Dove Str .. t, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the trlangte of Jamboree, M•cArthur & Brl1tol behind Victoria StaUon. Salee, Service. Lea11ng & Parts. We make great deal1I • NAIHS CADILLAC . 2800 Harbor Blvd .. Co1ta M9u.. Tel. 540-9100. Orange' Couhty's LargHt Cadillac diet«. Sal•. Service. Leu· Ing. • • DA YID J. , .. W,S IUICIW'OMl'IAc.MAIDA SelH • Se"11Ce • lelllng ~4888 Alicia P~way Laguna Hlllt 837-2400 • . CHICK IVllSOM POISCHi-AUDt.vW 415 E. Cout Hwy.: Newport BNch. 873-0800. Th• only dMlentllp II\ Orenge County with tMM tt\l'M great !'Nik" under one rooll • . ALAM MAGMOM ~C.SUIAIU • -- MIO Hatbor Blvd., Co1ta Male. Tel. &4~. Sal .. , 1 leNice, Ltulng. :·Mr. QoOdwftnoh." • • IOI LOMGPU rotmAC 13600 S.ach Blvd., Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange County's oldelt and largest Pontiac dealership. Sales, Servlc~. Parts. • DICK MILLll PIATILANCIA "Probably the lowett priced Flat• (n Southern Celllorr a" (Locetld 1 mite north of South Cout Plaza ,,.., Main St. Ind Warner Ave. In Santa Ana.) 120 W. Warrw, Santa Ana 557·2132 SANTA AMA DATSUN 2001 E. 17th Str .. t, Santa Ana. Tel. 551H81 1. Your• Original Dedicated Oa'-un Deel«. • MlliCU MAZDA . w'ew moved! Our new location le 1425 Baker Str .. t. Cotta Mela. Tel. 64e--3334. Stop by & vltlt our brand new lhOwroom and '" why we·,. the •1 Mazdl deal., In aouttwn Cellfomla. 811 .. , 8elVlce. Petts and L...ing . ANAl•ltMdDA ~o.c:. .... ,... ... ......... Lemc..· 901 8. Anehelm llvd., Aftehelm ... 112(» Jutt 1'10r1h of Santa Ana ~rwy. ~ Anllheim IM:I. Clll UI fh'ltl 'WI AA£ HARO TO.....,....,., WOATH ITI" COSTA MISA DATSUM 2846 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-6410. Serving Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mlle So. 405. SUMSIT llOID, IMC. (Home of Willi, the Whele~ 5'MO Garden Grove Blvd., w.tmlntt•. Tel. ~10. ..... COM--.L CHlftOUT • .. Hatt>or Blvd., Costa Mlle. Ower to ~ lefVlng Otaf'OI Countyl s. .... INttng, ..vk». Cell 546-1200; epeclal perta llne; 5*-9400; bOdy 9ftoP HM; 7&4-0400. WA,SHINGTON~)-Johl'\ W. Hinckley Jr., pale and waker than on the y of hia ltUnn1na acquittal .even weeks • a10 on charges of ahootlna President Reagan, waa committed lndeflnltely to a federal mental ~tal today. U.S. D1Jtrict J Ban"inlton D. Parker, flndina lfu ey to be mentally ill and dangerous, read hJa commitment order from the ~h aft.er Hlncldey told him he waived the right to a hearina on hit releue. • But Hinckley aald 111 don't necesaarily agree" wlth the concluaion of doctora at St. Elb:abetha Hospital who aald the prealdentlal asaailant suffered from a "severe chronic mental di8order." The judge, who lnliated that Hinckley appear in peraon to waive the hearina, Mked him a aerlea of queatfona to make certain that he underatood h1a right to preaent evidence diaputing the docton' report.. Standing before the Judae in a pin4trlpe ahirt but without one of the sport coata be always wore dwine his trial~ J:llnckley said he wae aware of bit rl1t)t to a hearin8 and had no qu .. tlont about the rtptl M WU llYi·"I up. "Are you under any medkaUonT' Parker ~. "Y• 81.r," Hinckley reapanded. "Does It affect your abWty to undentand what 1a happening this roomiNI?'' the JUdle Mked. "No air." llinckley replied. • HBman slain in Cypress Police were continuing their search today for two men wanted in the fatal weekend beating of a Cypress service station manager who lived in Huntirijton Beach. Cypre11 police Lt. Daryl Wicker said officen responded to report.a of a fight Saturday night at the Arco station at Moody Street and Ball Road and found manager Wadih Baran, 26, lying on the floor ln the service bay area. Bedran had apparently been bludgeoned with a hammer and a piece of lumber. both found nearby, Wicker said. The station manager was taken to Los Alamitos General Hospital, where he died Sunday of head injuries. police said. Dalfr "°' "'°'° .., Lee ,.,,.. ~ ENVIABLE POSITION -When the ' Erin Kroening, 4, of Gosta Mesa knows where weather's too hot and beaches are too crowded, to find welcome relief in her backyard. l>~ motorists gave officers inrormation on an auto spotted at the station, leading police to obtain search warrants for two residences in Westminster, Wicker said. At one of the homes, officers arrested seven men on drug and narcotics violations apparently unrelated to the fatal beating, he said. Dead driver in HB crash identified Coast gas station VJr,,.1-A1ll\ ..t . .::F! Wicker said police also obtained arrest warrantl for two men believed to have been involved ln the beating. The men, Ali Berri and Mabomoud Hazine, both 22 and both Westmlnawrresldents,remained at large. sells for million Police today identified the motortat who died in a weekend Huntington Beach traffic accident that also injured two othera, including a six-months- pregnant Newport Beach woman who gave birth after the mishap. Tratflc investigators said Barbara Welch. 40~of Lakewood., was pronounced dead at the ecene after her Toyota crossed the center line on Pacific Coast Highway just east of Warner Avenue and struck a Datsun 280Z driven by Michael Burton, 39, of 214 35th St., Newport Beach. (See DRIVER, Page AZ) A Newport B each man reportedly has shelled out $1 million to buy a Shell Oil Company service station in Huntington Harbour. The station, which changed hands ln June, is located on 26,- 000 s quare feet of prime commercial property at 15922 Pacific O>ast ":1.~al. The buyer. · · ied as Jlm Salter of Newport Beach, apparently doesn't plan to continue the use as a service station, according to a spokesman for Coldwell Banker office in 'Santa Ana. Steve McArthur said today he "guesses" that the bottom floor of the facility will deal in marine-related activities. He said that commercial retail developments might be located on the second floor. The buyer a nd his representatives couldn't be reached for comment today. Police said the station manager had been closing for the night when the incident occurred and may have been struck during a robbery attempt. McArthur said the previous o-w ner, R on Schirm~r of Nisei parade Fountain Valley, sold ga90line for vehicles and boats and developed-d Ii ---d-=--- a bait and tackle facility and a raws 1g crow mar:tne garage at the rear .of the LOS ANGELES (AP) _Some station next to the Huntington 100,000 people turned out on the Harbour waterways. streets of Little Tokyo to watch "But I think the new owner is floats, beauty queena, ceremonial buying the land as if there ls no dancers and high achool band.a longer going to be a service during the annual Nisei Week station on it," he said. parade over the weekend. Escape artist plans dive Mesa man to give shackles the slip 20 feet down By STEVE MARBLE Of ttle Dalfr ,... ..... Mike Griffin ought to be locked up. Here's a 21-year-old guy who'• going to have himself wrapped in 30 pounds of chaina, handcuffs and leg lrona and then jump from a boat into Newport Harbor. The watery site he's se- lected is 20 feet deep and STATE there's little doubt that he's going straight to the bottom. Griffin figures he can hold his breath three minutes tops but that it should take him double that to wiggle out of all the hardware. "If I don't make It," he says, fingering a aet of handcuffs he claims are the latest fashion at Scotland CSLB classes analy•ed Controvenlal women•a atUdies program and a class in experimental eex experiences at Cal State Long Beach are analyzed. Page M . I Smaller households draw attention Neither poUtlciant nor homebuUdera pald attention to 1tatl1tic1 in 1972 showing amaller househoJds. They have to now -and they are. Paae AB. Yard, "I look great in orange coral." Griffin is a Costa Mesa resident, a professional es- cape artist and a one-man publicity show. H1a .chedu- led Aug. 16 stunt ln Newport Harbor is only the latest ln a career of taking on all makes and shapes of handcuffs,. ~traightjackets and lrona. SPORTS He claima he first got wrapped up in the profeaion when he wu 6. He says h1a brother would tie him up in rope and then watch in amazement as Griffin un- wound hlmRlf. He saya he had himself wrapped in barbed wire, padlocked inside mail hep Dodgers prove real Braves killers The Dodgers did it again to Atlanta and are within 1 ~ games of the divlsion-leading Bravee. faae Cl. I lllTllllll Bl/11111111 IUI When Parker asked if Hinckley understood preclaely the meaning of the waiver he wu atsning, be amwered, "Yea, I do." But Hinckley quickly added, 111 want to say for the record by 1lgnln1 thia waiver I 'm not admittinl to agreeing to what's ln the report." Momenta later, he told the U.S. Copters judge, 111 don't MCe1811rily 1411'" wtth their (the doctors') oplnlon." The St. Ellzabethl report aa1d Hinckley suffers from four major personality dlaorden and major depression which the doctora aaJd. la ln partial remillton. Parker concluded that "because of th1a mental dl9order, the defendant John W. Hlnckley (See HINCKLEY, Page Al) Team b -uzzed by Israeli jet WASHINGTON (AP) -An Israeli F -16 jet fighter plane made PilS8eS at U.S. helicopters carrying an American military liaison team from the carrier Forrestal t.q Lebanon in 'one of three harassments by the Israelis over the w eek end, Reagan administration sources said today. In the other two incidents, the sources said, an Israeli gunboat trained a mac hine gun on American helicopters heading for Jounieh and members of the team· were prevented by Israeli troops from leaving that beach north of Beirut until the U.S. military attache intervened. The U.S. European Command has asked the United States to lodge a protest with the Israeli government, conte nding that such incidents are "very serious." According to administration sources, the F-16 in cident occurred Saturday and the other two epiaodes Sunday. The incidents ·involved a liaison team from the U.S . European Command that apparently has been doing ground work for the possible introduction of American troops as part of an international peacekeeping force. On Saturday, as two U.S. RELATED STORY-A% UH-1 helicopters were heading for a landing at Jounieh, a U.S .-built F -16 plane of the Israeli Air Force made a number of passes close to the choppers, reports said. As far as could be determined, no shots were fired. On Sunday, reports said, the helicopters carrying the American team were again heading for Jounieh when they were u-acked by a machine gun on the patrol craft, which w:i.s Identified as probably Israeli. When the helicopters landed, Israeli military vehicles blocked exits from the beach. ~,... ....... .., ...... O'lt• •• ESCAPER -Mike Griffith demonstrates how he•n be chained for his underwater escape attempt when he jumps from the Balboa Island Ferry. INDEX A4 C2 A7 84-6 A7 C4-8 87 S7 Ct A6 B6 A7 HOl'Ca'Cipe Ann Landers Mo.kowitz Movtea National Newa Public Notices Sporta Stock Marketa Television 'nleaters W•ther World News '\ I I ~I . ! I I Jr. 11 ln the .,,_nt WM and will ln the reaaonable future be danaeroUI to hhmllf er othera:" r Tne tau Um• he waa In Parker'• courtroom, Hinckl•Y I •tood, lean ~ down bll cheeb, while a jury found hJm innocent by reuon of buianlty of ,the March so. 1981 mhootlnl ot Re.on and three other men. 1 Tllat verdict 1enerated natlonwtd' outrace and 1ave Yip to a congremlonal drive to • cbanae·the lnlanity law. I HJ.nckley, 27, faced ltfe imprtaonment lf convicted on chargea of attempting to 1 auaulnate the president and assaulting, with intent to kJll, Reagan, Whlte House Presa Secretary Jamee Brady and two law enforcement offk:en. ' Instead, as required under the law, be was sent to St. Elizabetha !or evaluation June 21. The Jaw entitled him to a hearing within 50 days to determine if he abould remain institutionalized. It was that p roceedi ng Parker scheduled for today. Mtvtled In .,.,.... of .. richt to • beu1AI Md, pcmtbl)t •• jury trial to det•rmln• hi• conUnulac cammitlnlllt. U .8. Attorney Stanley 8. HarN lllC~ iii a letter to Parker be w .. concemitd that uni-all ~utionl ... caket1 to~ Jtinddey'a n,hta. be could later return '° COW't and claim he ahould be releaaed because thoae riwhta were violated. Even aher today'• h1arln1, Hinckley hu the legal rtcht to petition the court every tht months fOC' h1I releall&, with the detennlnln& l.ue to be whether he is mentally W and danaeroua to himlelf and othen. FIREMEN DOUSE VAN BLAZg -Nearly 100 county firefighters, hand crews and buJldorer operators extlnguilhed a 20-acre fire in Santiago Canyon Sunday ~r this three- .,.., ........................ week-old van ~ught fire at Santiago Canyon and WlWaini Canyon ro.da. It took firefighr.era, aided by two aerial ~ about 40 minutes to knock down the flames. Alt.hough Hinckley later stated he wouldn't aeek release, prosecutors Insisted h e be The written waiver ~ by Hincltley, submitted by him to proeecutora, eays, "I hereby voluntarily and intentionally waive and nilinquiah any and all righta and privileges vested by statute, the Constitution or appellate decisions to any heartna to which I am entitled at thJs time. Thia waiver 1ped.fimlly includes any ~t I may have to a~ ~y]ury.' Huntington man, infant escape fire 6 killed in shooting spree ,: ' . .. . l ESCAPE ATTEMPT. Berserk gunman gunned down after Texas rampage and buried in the snow in handcuffs. Shades of Hou- dini. Griffin claims nothing stops him. He haa a standing offer to give $1,000 In cash to the penon who can tie him in rope and get away with it. He's says he'• not worried about losing the money. "If I don't make It big in this business, I can become a criminal," he jokes, noting that on a dare he broke out of a steel door jail cell in Oklahoma laat year. In six minutes, no less. But his date at the bottom of Newport Harbor likely wW make the biggest splash yet. Originally he was going to jump from the Balboa Island Ferry. But he's gone high- • • claaa and now wiU do hla thing from the bdw of a 125-foot yacht owned by Magic Island, a Newport nightspot. ''If I panic," he aaya. with a heavy touch of melodrama. "all's lost." Griffin, who claims part of the art of e9CAP.9 is leamlng how to dislocate a wt1at or an arm to Sain greater flexibili- ty, hopes the Newport Beach stunt will put his career ln fourth gear. Providing Griffin does Alr- vive playing anchor for a swanky boat, he haa another stunt lined up in Hollywood. "I'm going to chain my.elf to the H in the Hollywood sign. That's Wegal. of course, but lt the police arrest me -ru be gone. No handcuffs can hold me." Firefighters said a smoke detector may have averted a · tragedy at a Huntington Harbour home when it alerted a sleeping woman and her infant son to a fire that had broken out in a nearby bedroom. Huntington Beach Fire Captain Roger Hoerner said the woman, Jan Annijoni, and her 14-month-old son Joey were able to flee their home at 16261 San Clemente Circle safely early Sunday and call firefighters from a neighbor's house. ' The blaze, which was apparently triggered by a short circuit in the wiring for an aquarium, sent smoke throughout the two-story houae and caused $2,500 in damage, Hoerner said. G.KAND PRAIRIE, Texaa (AP) -A man on a sboottna ram~ killed at least six today and slammed an 18·wheel tractor-trailer rig into a police car before officers gunned him down, authorities said. Four other people were injured, and two of them were in critical condition. The man began ahooting at people ln a warehouae district of thla Dallu suburb at about 8 a.m., police spokeswoman Alexia Grtffln said. The shootings took place in three locations before he engaged in a running gunbattle wlt1' police, authorities aid. He critically injured one officer when he rammed the police car. The man fired at police from his truck and the officers returned the fire with pistols, rifles and shotguns. He manag~ to aet out of hi• truck and continued firtnC after the vehicle rammed. celephoDe pole. The rampaae covered a 16-equare-block .,_ in the west central part of town, aald Ma. Grtfftn. Three of the wounded were taken to Dallas-Fort Worth Medk:al <:enter ln Grand Prairie, said J~900. a medical oenter . She said one woman, Ruth Jamea, 19, of Alvarado, was wounded in the ahoulder and neck and waa ln guarded condition and Robert Sarabia, 30, of Grand Prairie wu in surgery and in critical condition. Another woman died at the h08Pital. she Mid. Three people were killed at the first site, one at the second, and two at the third. One site was a Jewel-T dDcount grocery store. A spokesman at Jewel-T said, "We do not wiah to di.cu. It at this time." Two people were taken to Methodist Central Hoepltal. A ~pokesman there said Burnett Hart. 41, was in .-erioue condition with a gunshot wound In the head. The other, police officer A.T. Patton, 32, was also in critical condition with multiple fractures. He was flown by helicopter to Methodist Central. Ma. Griffin said P..atton waa standing outside his patrol car at the barricade when he was hit by the truck. A witness at the Jewel-T lite said the man walked in and opened fire. "I was iii the back and I heard tw o cracks go off," the unidentified man said. "I walked up front and he had a rifle ln his hand." The witness said the man got in his truck and drove off. DRIVER IDENTIFIED. • • The mishap oocum!d at 8 p.m. Valley. The baby, trandernd to Saturday. apedal fldlitite at Martin Luther · He said 14 firefighters were called to the acene, bringing the blaze under control within-five minutes. No injuries were caused In the incident, which was reported at 8:35 a.m. W. Beirut shelling resu:rlles Burton and hls 25-year-old llospltal ln Anabelm, wu wife Su1an were ru1hed to Nported in stable condition early ff I PLO pullout agreement stalled by new hitches Fountain Valley Com~unity today. eart transp ant By Tiie AHoclated Presa Hoepjtal, where the woman gaw Saturday'• traffic death wu War-ravaged west Beirut birth by Caesarean section to a the latest in a nM of fatalities effort fails shuddered under another heavy baby boy, three months reported in Huntington Ba.ch PITTSBURGH (AP) _ A bombardment today as ltraell premature during recent week.a. Officers and Palestinian gunners traded · said it was the city'a 15th traffic 31-year-old woman whoee heart punishing salvos of artillery, The husband and wife both death of the year, the eishth transplant was financed partly tank, rocket aud mortar fire. were reported in serious since the recent 1~ of fatal by a $120,000 charity drive has araeli warplanes also bombed condition today at Fountain died, offidala said. p_,__.._, __ artillery nnor; ........ 19 accidents began July , iUC3UIUiUI ....-~v•- Coastal .Jll---------------------------1-miles east of the Lebaneae capital. Low-clouds, fog IOUtflwell ..... NofthWMt wlncle could rwdl 21 knot• With 5-to-1-foot .... farth9r than IO ml._ offlhora from San NlcolM i...rlCl. Temperatl!'res MAnolt .. Le ,,. Albany 82 17 . ~ t1 .. 17 .. 'nle lat.est shelling came amid reports that Israel a.ueed to a phased withdrawal of PLO fighters from west Bel.rut. But completion of an a~ment was stalled by Syria 1 continued refusal to accept any guerrillas until Israel agrees to withdraw lta army from Lebanon, and by nettlesome details about the timing of the withdrawal and the arrival of an international peacekeepm, force. Sporadic shelling overnight picked up lnteNlty after dawn, drivin1 residents back into basements and shelters after a brief weekend respite, during which the lanella turned on the tape allowin1 water into west Beirut for the flnt time in two weeks . In today's exchanges, wi~ said Israeli tanks fired mauJve barrages at PLO positions near the National Museum checkpoint on the Green Line, dividing Christian east Beirut from the Moslem western district. The guerrillas battled back with mortars and baJOokal. Associated Press correspondents Tom Baldwin and Samuel Koo, watching from a rooftop VUltAp point dote to the MOlllly daat lod8Y Allcac>t tor IOIM low douda and log nMr tt. coaat. Fair and 1unriy Inland. Hlghl 70 to 78 at the t>eecNe and IO to 90 Inland. Fair Mr1y tonil!M wltll tow dOud9 ano iog 1:1'/ n nlgM. <>-night low 58 to II. Low otoucta and log nMr tM c:oMt *'Y Tueactay wttfl *"1ng In tt. .... mom1nO and an.moon. Fair lfld ~ Inland Tueldey. Hight 70 to 78 et tM ~ and 80 to 80..iand. !lt•WllHa, lrom Poi nt Conception to tha Mexican bClfW and out eo m11ee: Smell cnlt ecMaory aYW ouw ....... wlttl l'O(f!IWMt wind• 11 to 28 knott and 5 to I foot Ha• tllfouctft Tueeday. l~~ _..,...,. nigllt and ~ Attenta AtlantoCty Au9tln 8altlmore ~ llalnan:* .,... loeton BrOMllVlla .... 17 70 75 71 t6 74 ae 12 .. 15 87 74 74 45 t2 ... .., .. 93 7' . 03. .Oii .18 .oe .07 .01 .J! .~ t=-c. 10ll 79 Mt. Wlll9n SS fJ7 Lifeguards rescue 350 along coast 11ourt becoming wait to _,..... 10 IO 11 knob .tth 2 to 4 foot -by .... an.moon today Ind Tueeday. 8outi-t ...., a '° a flMt. Local too w1tt1 ..... ~In ttla _.,.,IOOI .. U.S. summary A oold front pu1ll•d tnundetlfe>nne actOll Anc-tnd IN ONo V.ir.t and Into tt. <kM COMt ...... AlllOftO tN .,... llarda9t IMt 8unc1aY ... Fayattevtlta. Mi., with 2.24 lncllH of rain and CroeA11Ma, Tenn., whloh raoordad .17 of an lnctl. lfloWarl alao mowct tllfOuatl Illa Pacific llOf111waat Into tfi9 ~.:·~-~~ota and, MlrlnetOt&. and IM Soutl'lw.t ... ~eumy-- 8ulfalo Burington &:,,sc ~WV a.ma NC E a...land C1mb1e SC ColumbW o..Ft Wttl Dayton 0.-Dal~ Detroit Duluth El Paao F-vc> =r ... Hallford Hll9'la ~ Houaton lndll9Cllt Jldlal'IMS .HIClllrwlla 7' 71 .22 .... 1.11 .... to 75 .. • . ot .. 11 .11 eo e1 .. 58 a 11 .M 12 .. t1 72 .01 81 • .11 t1 74 .u .. 15 .01 S7 17 12 5t 83 58 .20 .. 51 t2 17 72 47 15 54 11 IO ... ... 71 IO .. 74 a 7t .oe .. .. .01 t7 72 1.00 .. 13 tO ., .. 72 1.93 ~ ... 71 .01 L.ubtloclll 13 15 ....,.. • 71 c~ ......... 1oe 75 = 112 ... " FfWlflO 1oe 13 ~ .. 17 ~ .. .. 104 58 ....... 11t . ,..,~ t02 55 Aad llluff 101 70 AedWOOd City 79 158 8actlmaftt0 17 H ..... t7 51 ::=r.-1 ., 70 eo 55 .......... IO 58 ..... MMI 70 StoOktOI' 102 14 1"*"'91 1t4 """" M ....... t03 7t ... ..., 11 42 ~ 71 '2 '"°"'...., to .. ~ 74 71 .11 MorirO'M 103 IO Tfl• foraoa1t called for tllundw1tor"'a ovar Illa Oull ..... .,_ ____ ..._ __________ _ c.-....... MOii of ... MlaMlc Heboard and Iha northern ....... ~-~ OY9t moat Of tM M~t. ttla .....,. and tM w.. TamparaturH •round Ill• ~r1n"=.~~ ,..,.~ Newport a-!11 It On1M1o 100 Palm 8p1ngl 113 Paaadlna .. San Bamardlno 104 San 01bftal 100 CANADA Calgaty Edmonton MOlttfMI Ott-. Regina Toronto Vancovwr Wlnnlpag Tides es 82 79 15 .. M 78 114 75 51 82 .. IO " 73 ... 71 83 73 M ee ... Early morning coastal fog broke in time to attract about 300,000 people to Orange Cout beaches Sunday, and rough surf that produced riptides kept lifeguards busy with more than 350 reecuea. There were no injUriea reported. National Weather Service apokeawoman Pat Rowe aald patchy low clouda and fog toniaht wW clear Tueeday to fair ekies. She aid beach highs wW be 76 dropping to 65 Tuetlday night. Iniand nigns are expectea to rMCh 88 with low. of 65. Though moderate surf of just two to four feet wu reported Sunday, ti. Intensity caused probletm for many awlulmen. "It (the aurf) just p6cked up and lt'• tolna c:ruy,'' llUll~ State JJeacb Ufeauara Bitan Hopp reported Sunder. "We've Md bla atr~ ripe (rlptld .. ). Even the 1oci awlmmen are ha~ trouble." Huntln1ton State Beach reported go-to 100 NtC\MI ana a crOwd of man than 26,000, whlle Huntinpxl a~ 8Mch repor111c1 45 reecuel and • crowd of 58,000. Newpon BMch attncted about 110,000 ~plt and ltfeparda tl.-e npaned 100 ~ whlJ9 La1una Be.ch lUe1uard• ~ 00,.... In. c3'0Wd of -...ooo. ... Oilnil\w. ........ dty ti. -Npll1ed •Owdl WeDtna aboUt 6'T,QW-and about 75 reecues San Clemente Beach lifeguards said they helped push three pleasure bo9'9 which foundered on the beach'• surf line back into open water. Water temperatures Sunday ranged from the mJd-60a to the low 70.. Chopped liver used in statue of Nixon museum li'1e in Christian east Bel.rut, said there was no sign of an Israeli annor advance despite the intensity of the tank fire. Blaming PLO fighters for sparking the latest exchange, lsrael said lta gunners fired at the gue rrillas who launched katyusha rockets at Israeli forces near the city's race ooune. The Tel Aviv command alao said its troops "consolidated" their positions around the PLO enclave at the Bourg aJ-Barajneh refugee camp on the 10uthern edge of the city. The military command also reported that Iaraeli jeta bombed Palestinian artillery poeitions ln Syrian-controlled territory 19 miles east of Beitut. The command charged that the guns had shelled lsraell poeitions east of Bel.rut. -· NB hit, run driver begins jail sentence The hit-and-run driver who struck and killed Newport Beach resident Donald Warner lut September has been ordered to begin serving a 240-day jail sentence. Samuel Gibbe, 21, a resident of Orange who appeered In <>ranee County Superior Court on Friday, was granted 10 days to .eek appellate court review. Unless Gibbs aecu.res review by the Fourth Diltrlc:t c.ourt of Appeal in San Bernardino, he wW be jailed Aug. 16. Warne, 26, was hit and killed ln \he pre-dawn houn Sept. 19 while cro.lna Balboa Boulevard at 82nd Street. 'lbe drlwr and a pa11en1er atopped briefly, according to wt~ and then took off. The death car wa1 located several daya later, abudooed In a Whittier llhoDPna eenw . Gibbs hu admlit.ed to bem1 the drlwr and .ad be PMkbd a.her the acddent. He -..... that he w.. drivfna reckhc3ly. The YOW'\I drlvw, who PIM bar1a.tned tor the HO-clay jaU sente~ wt lprint, w.nt to court Jate lMt ......... the ... tence ata,.S and bift • fWl. ~=-malntalaed lite flnl ~ .... flll!I'......: :.. poll=...ta:,.-:.•: ha -~ wtth~r.. aNfm'tmlMtaow iii& .... . H&1 motion for a llaJ .,.. ...... - WORL D Nagasaki recalls ato ic holocaust dead, 15 wounded in anti-Semitic attack . PARIS (AP) -At leut three men with autom atic weapon• aprayed bullet• at a lunchUme crowd at a popular Jewish 1'91\aurant today, ld.llJna at leut m people and wound1na 16 other'a, before ac.ptna, police aald. The attaclcen opened f~ ahortly after 1 p .m . (4 a.m. PDT) near Jo Goldenbetg'a Reataurant on the Rue des Re.ten in central Part., then ran down the ltreet ahootlnQ wtldly at P .. Hrab y an d ~·caped on foot a own • aldeetreet, police and witneaaea aald. Earlier unconfirmed repona utd the IUftJ'Den opened fire near a l)'DAMUe. No 1 r o u 9 immediately claimed reaponalbWty. It wu the fourth anti-Semitic attack ln Parta in a week. Police patrol ambushed in North Ireland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -Irish nationalllta ambushed a police patrol ln Armagh early today and youngatera burled gasoline bcmbs ln three other cities ln protest.a mar.king the 11th anniversary of Britain'• internment· without-trial order in Northern Ireland. Five polloemen and one British IOldier were wounded, none 1erioualy, and authorities jailed at leut 42 people ln dlaturbancel that erupted after midnight, police said. But the trouble was reportedly less widespread than in previous years. Turkish troops guarding "against .terrorists ' ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -The 80Vemment assigned extra troope to Turkish airports and reeort areas to protect them against any foUowup to the Armenian terrorist attack that killed nine people and wounded 71 at the Ankara airport. Authorities feared the three-hour rampage of explosions and gunfire by Armenian STATE natfonallata was the first of a aeries of attack.a in Turkey'. The Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia clalmed responaibWty for the attack Saturday and said more bombl.ngs and killings would follow within seven da}'l if 85 Armenians are not released from prisons in the United States, Canada and several Western European countries. 3,500 in Oakland join hands in peace rally OAKLAND (AP) -It wasn't the largest hand-to-hand circle ever made, but it was still a lot of people -about 3,500 of them -who , joined bands for peace around the bank of Oakland's Lake Merritt. Another 600 held a vigil in Berkeley to commemorate the atomic bomb blast over Hiroshima. ''This many people joining hands around the lake bas to take a message back to Congress," said Toni Adams, 35, a worker in Mayor Lionel Wilaon's o'ffice, as she gazed past the sailboats at the figures holding hands on the lake's far shore on Sunday. "If everybody all over the country could hold hands for world peace, we could do something," said Ellen Wiegger, 45, of Alameda. Striking hotel, res taurant workers replaced MONTEREY (AP) -Struck hotels and restaurants on the Monterey Peninsula say they've had no problem filling their work force with unemployed people eager for a job. "With 10 percent unemployment, there are a lot of people who want work. They're happy to have the jobs and rm happy to have them," said Ned Thomas, general manager of the Outrigger restaurant in Monterey. The strike involving the 22-member Monterey Peninsula Hotel and Restaurant Aaoeociation continued into a fifth day today with no negotiations. The 1,800 members of Local 488, Hotel Employees anti Restaurant Employees International Union have been without a contract since July 31. F e w turn out for Anti-Khomeini rally LOS ANGELES (AP) -A march and rally protesting the regime of Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini attracted 400 to 500 people Sunday, far fewer than organizers and police had anticipated. Police Sgt. Roger Deranian said the rally NATION lasted about ~ hours and was very, very orderly. There were no arrests and only two minor scuffles as the demonatrators marched from Wilshire Boulevard outside the Federal Building through Westwood Village and onto the UCLA campus fat' a brief rally, l>eranian said. Little chance for del~y in e x ecution RICHMOND, fa. (AP) -AB a acheduled Tuesday night execution for convicted murderer Frank Coppola approached, there were no signs the former policeman would revene his stand and try to save his life. Nashville, Tenn., minister who oppoeea the death penalty. Coppola, 38, is the oldest of the 18 men on Virginia's death row. A former Portsmou th policeman, he was tentenced to die for the 1978 fatal bea1ing of Muri.el Hatchell during a robbery in her Newport N~ home. Coppola fired his attorneys last spring and said he wanted no further appeals. Coppola, who would be the fifth person executed in the United States since 1976, was to meet again today with the Rev. Joe Ingle, a Airline strike averted a s pact reached WASHINGTON (AP) -A tentative agreement between USAJ.r and the machinists union that averted a ltrlke today now faces a ratification vote among the union's nearly 2,000 members. deadline eet by the international Aaociation of Macbinista and Aero1pace Workers. '"nu!y don't want any detalla to leak out before they have a chance to talk lt over with their members," said Jack King, spokesman for USAir. No detaila were released about the pact hammered out ahortlv before a 12:01 a.m. strikt'. iiiiyiiat Thomas P. HU9V ............... a.(--.°"'°" ~~ lllflllr-.fl~ Tom MutpNne e.. Mll•Har\19¥ ~-......... ~ KM ~d ~-~ =--MaclAIM Tom McCann .............. .., ........ ..., ........... ClaHtn.d ""9111alnt 714'142-1171 All other departments M2"'m ~,.-~~~~~~~~~~~ MAIN OfF1CE SID West...,, St., C-.. Meta, CA. Metl ...,_, ... IJIO, c.-. Mela, CA.,_. ~ ...... ,.Or .... c-te ~ ........ ~. ... _. ......... llltntleftl. .....,..., ,,...,....., ... V.n!MIMMI ..,. Mey ... ~ ........ ~lal~IU-.Ofc~-. VOL. 75, NO. 221 ' Oil firm see king buyer for company NEW YORK (AP) -The chainnan of Cities Service, the nation'• 16th lareest oil company, u1d bia company will go into the market to buy up to 20 million shares of lta own Uock and la 1earchln1 for a buyer for the oom2, the New Yori< nmes re today. b e a n nouncement by chairman Charles J. WaldelJch came le. than 48 houn after Gulf OU Corp. abruptly dedded to back out of a U billion takeover of Cities Service. We're Listening ••• Whal do you like about the DaUy Piiot? What don't you Ilk•? Cail the number below and your mt1aa•• will be tecordtd, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate ed&tor. Tbe same 24·hour 1n1wer11t1 H rvice ma)' be UMd lO NCOrd la· tera to t~ edilOr on any topl'~ JlaUboll eGDlrtbuton mUll lild llll their name and teleJ)flont n•mMr for vei1fte•UOft. No ttr'Olll .. U llt , pleaM. • Tell ua what '• on your mllid i JN HARMON Y -Members of the Fifth are Kelly Blacka, Eric Leviton, Phil Gold and Avenue barbershop quartet reheane at their Evan Ramer. headquarters on Meadowsweet Way. From left Harmony in Irvine Barbershop quartet 'Fifth A venue' entertain s n eighbors By GLENN SCO'M' Meadowsweet Way ln Irvine is a quiet residential loop where, until recently, nothing except the magnified voices from an overzealous television program were likely to break the tranquility. But that was befor e Fifth Avenue came to Meadowsweet Way. During the last three weeks, the distinctive chords of four- part harmony have resounded off the shady sycamores, the wooden fences and the attached housing of this block. They are live sounds that probably no other neighbors in Irvine, perhaps in all of Orange County, are likely to hear. The voices belong to Fifth Avenue, a barbershop quartet recently formed by Eric Leviton, 16, Evan Ramer, 19, Kelly Blacka, 16, and Phil Gold, 15. The foursome practices almost every day at 3 p.m . in the upstairs lamily room of Gold's Meadowsweet home. They stand in front of an open window. There they blend their way through ."My Wild Irish &se," "Coney Island Baby," "My Evaline," "Tell Me Why" and "Down Our Way." They named themselves Fifth Avenue because it carries the cosmopolitan yet traditional image they wanted. A barbership _quartet is a peculiar summer job, but a fun ·one. Gold, formerly a member of another quartet called The Ramblers, said the group intends to stay together after school resumes in the fall for as long as the experience is enjoyable. All but UC Irvine student Ramer attend University High School. Said lead singer Ramer: "We started the group mostly because , It's something we like to do and people don't hear barbershlp music much at all around here.'' Added Leviton, the baritone: "And the money's not bad." The four' singers stand next to the Golds' grand piano when they practice, although they use it only occasionally to punch oUJ. a note for reference. Mostly, they rely on Phil's knowledge of the t un es and his ease ii) remembering all four parts to ~·1e7 one of the 15 to 20 songs they re learning. Gold says they still have a ways to go before they achieve the "p erfect blend" -the moment whe n the ha rmon y seems to transcend each of their individual voices. But sometimes, adds Blacka, the harmony gets so tight that the sound just sort of takes off. "When we ring," he says, "we can hear It bounce off the other houses and echo back." Jail suicide attempt fails E x-Mesa murder defe ndant reco vering from c u t wrists By FREDERJC'lt SCHOEMEHL Of'IMIMIJ"'9tewt Murder defendant Thomas Francis Edwards, a former Costa Meaa resident, is recoverlbg "without problems" today from wrist wounds Inflicted Frid&y during an apparent suicide attempt at Orange County Jail. Edwards is awaiting trial in connection with the Sept. 19 slaying of one girl and the wounding of another at the Blue Jay Camp~round In the Cleveland Nauonal Forest east of San J uan Capi.strano. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards removed a small blade from a disposable razor and cut both wrists. Hart estimated that Edwards lost about one-half pint of blood before h e was discovered in his cell by jail personnel. Edwards was taken to Western Medical Center. Hart said, where the wounds we re s titched. Edwards was returned to the jail and placed in a medical unit for observation. Hart said the wounds were not particularly serious. In a related development in the Edwards case, Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald refused Friday to dismiss special circumstance allegations that could qualify Edwards for the death penalty i1 he is convicted on the murder and attempted murd e r allegations. The shooting incident at the campground left dead Vanessa Iberri, 12, of Lake Elsinore.· Her companion, Kelly Cartier, 13. recovered from head wounds. . Edwards was arrested in Maryland several days following the shooting incident. He has remained in the county jail since he was returned to California. Clerics denounce nuclear sub PORT GAMBLE. Wash. (AP) -Religious leaders denounced nuclear weapons as thousands of protesters gathered on beaches and in boats awaiting the irrival of the first Trident nuclear submarine. "We have intentionally choaen to challenge our government and its war policies because we believe the decision to deploy nuclear weapons is Immoral, illegal and unjust," said United Methodist Bishop Melvin Talbert at the rally Sunday, which drew a crowd estimated at ;f,000 to 7 .- 500 people. The first Trident, the USS Ohio, in the next few days is expected to enter Hood C:anaJ en route to its new home base at Bangor. The protesters did not see the Ohio, although an older P olaris missile submarine did ·pass through the area. from a.w privatJz. labz.l col l<tetion, our moat p:>pular 1ofl9eltuiw. ~ .shirtp .. L ~ m arld.yzar wt t}w.eQ, shirt~ ~~.s a basic in CNZT)'b:xiy.e wordrcbz. . a iavont<z. fur~ or caeua1 'MZM. ava\loble in wa!hond 'M1.Ct" decra'>{ ccilon er 100% cx:tton ' 1 Or ... OOlit DAILY f'tLOT/~, ~I, 1112 Hlf' •• ......... ~·--C• C"t .... ,~ h1 "' _,, 11 .. ·--· •• • 1~~ =-, ... J ..... 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"--\lo ~!'-b IOI ti !J ::-: ~ ~ ~.!. ~~'--1 -r.lirm.+~ 1 .. j =:" • I) -~ , .1f~ i~·: Mortgage f~rm offers buy back By Tiit AIMeta&ed Preti In what la believed to be tt$e tlnt such ....-ment ln California, a mortpae inve.tment company under tnvestJptJon by ltate-offJcl.all hu~fered to buy t-=k al.molt l12 m!Won worth ot teCOnd·t.ruat deeda from tta investors. The state Department of Corporation• has approved a plan under which Sierra Realty and Investmenta Inc. of Orange will attempt to NCW'8 • larJce loan and ute the ptoOeedl to repay 841 lnveaton who are owed about $11.8 rn11lJon. Sierra aaid it plans to o&taln a loen from Sun Savingl & Loan of San Diego eecured by t.he firm'• real estate holding• in Orange, Riveraide, Sal\ Bemardlno and Loa Angeles counties. Phone bills decision due SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Californ ia Supreme Court will decide whether more than ~.9 million in undeliverable refunds from Pacific Telephone will go to current customers or be turned over to the state as unclaimed property. Justices Stanley Moak, Frank Newman, OUo Kraus and Allan Broussard voted to grar. t the hearf.na sought by state Controller Kenneth Cory. Chle1 Justice Rose Bird and Justice Frank Richardson did not participate. • In 1979, the state Public Utilities Commission ordered Pacific Telephone to refund some $363 mlllion it had overcollected due to use of a n accelerated depreciation method in fixing its rates. But many of the checks it sent to fonner customers were ret~ as undeliverable. Gasoline prices drop LOS ANGELFS (AP) -Gaaoline prices. which usually go up during the peak summer driving.~ have dropped almost a half cent a gallon naUonwtde the past two weeks, an oU industry analyst says. Dan Lundberg said Sunday the average price of all grades of gasoline, taxes included, dropped from $1.295 a gallon to $1.29 a gallon in the two-week period ended Sunday. Lundberg publishes the weekly Lundberg Letter and heads Lundberg Survey Inc., which audits 17 ,000 I gasoline stations nationwide every two weeks. . Credit cards discounted LOS ANGELES (AP) -Several more major oil companies are moving to discourage the uae of credit cards. "The oil industry appears to have embraced the idea that cash customers should not subsidize credlt customers by paying the same prloe for gasoline," petroleum industry analyst Dan Lundberg said. . Lundberg said a number of companies are moving in the same direction as Atlantic Richfield, which recently dropped its credit cards, and Texaco, w.bich a year ago began charging dealers a 3 percent prooessins fee for credit card transactions. Exxon, Amoco and Mobile are ex~nti.ng with projects. Electric cost to go down? SAN mroo (AP) -u California's energy uaers shift from d ependency on M iddle East oil to geothermal ene.rgy from Mexico~ coal ~Arizona and New Mexico, costs of producll\g electricity will go down according to a utility oompa.ny executive. But the rates consumers pay won't decrease, said Ron Watkins, who buys fuel and plana future fue,l ~nsumption for the S an Diego Gas and Electric Company (SDG&E). • By 1985, 25 percent of SOO&E"s electricity supp~y will come from burning 1.5 million tons of coal tn Springerville, Ariz., and Farmington, N.M., he said. And 10 percent would come from Mexicali where a geothermal plant extracts heat from hot water located deep in the earth. Gold, metals quotations Go/,d By Tbe Associated Pre11 Selected world gold prices today: London morning fixing: $337.75, off $7.00. London afternoon fixing: $336.001 off $8.75. Paris afte~n fixing: $334.80, off $8.56. Frankfan foong: $3~.98, oU $9.02. Zurich late afternoon: $336.50, off $7 .00 bid; $337.25 asked. Handy & Harman: only daily quote $336.00, off $8.75. E•gelhard: only daily qu~ $336.00, off $8.75. Engellulrd: only daily quol.e fabricated $352.80, off $9.19. i. Metals • NEW YORK (AP) Spot nonferrous me~ prices today: Copper 72~-75 cent. a pound, U.S . destinations. Lead 26-29 centl a pound. • Z1Dc 37.40 ceni. a pound, delivet'ed. Tia $6.1520 Metall Week oompostte lb. Aa1m•am 78-77 oenia a Pound. N.Y. Mer~ $365.00 per fluk: Platbiwm $284.00-$289.00 troy ounce. N.Y. Silver ' I I Greatest Show a le' of fun • JD Anaheim ~JYIDM. What Oun\her Oebel-WIWUnl ti to the "rid \Wt" of UM~ Brothen. Bunum and a.tJey arcw, J:lvtn'·Blle • 1*Xlmlnl to the "blue unit." a cbariamaelc 1upentar wbo eama hill llvt.na by ~ wtth death daily. &i., a ion,t1me performer wtth the Or.t.eet s•ow on Eartl\ aboard u. whlrllnc "wheel of ~th" and bilh·wire mocorcyde. hal ldded a MW twtl& to hia act thil year Ii t&. dm.18 lllfttimall itl en1aaemen.t ttv'ou1h Au1. 1e at the Anaheim Convention C.enter, · It'• called th• "mechanical monater," an ~· dnaoa that b9bl and weava. breatbina ~ And amoie, and on which Bale, a mMter ol bmlance, playa St. Qeorae. The Kt baa a built·ln thftller of a finale ln wlilch it appean the clrqon bu won the jouat. the aort of ftnlah that wtna ada.d ~tion for Bale'• unique artiltry . • Bale 19 th1a yev'1 undllputed headliner of a ~that offen a aood deal of variety, lncJudinc ~e 1enulne perlormance1 from Michu, the ~ld'1 smalls man, wboee debut nin~_yean aao w• more of a novelty than an attracUon. Tl\e 33-lnch Ht&naarian pµts dop and hones through their .,.._. dwarfed by a large white poodle at one point in:the ahow. ! While Micbu and fellow tiny Hungariana Sandor and Ellubeth Raski handle the tame AM • stations go stereo WASHINGTON (~) -A handful of AM ata tlons across the country are broadcasting ln 'tereo after the government cleared the way for them to start competing head-on with FM stations for the muaic-liatenlng audience. "I think it's here to stay," said Phil Lerz.a , the chief engineer for San Francisco's KFRC- AM, which turned on lta stereo system recently. "We've spent all weekend going era%¥ (promotina it).'' said Kim Curry, the program director at KTSA-AM ln San Antonio, Tex.as. "It's a godsend for ua, becaae now we're finally going back into competition with FM stations." KTSA, aa:ording to an lnformal survey by The Auoclated Press, became the first AM station in the country to offer full -time stere.o broadcast.. · "ONE OF THE HIGH-RANKING SURPRISES OF THE SUMMER. IT IS A MOVIE TO BE SALUTED." -Pat Collfna, CU NITWOAK ---NOW PLAYING--- ••uioei flUO OUllGI OUtlGE WHTMIUTUI Edw1rds Vlljo Tw111 c.ntdolM Pac1lc's 0.jl1Qe O<.ve In ~ C.-WeS1 uo HllO 63• 2553 sse 1022 e91 3935 With Burt & Dolly lhl• much llln )u•I couldn't IH t~1all ..... 111. Dmlel ...... tM AJllll 0.UtW fllmllj ..a ... ol iM ........ .._.._the ~-the~ Debutina With RliWii&.li Brothen dlil )'Ml', luakow dilplay• th• Bahl touch of a Gebel· Wl1Uanw • he ernceea a troupe ot 1natUnc Blnala. t.eMma the b6a ceta throulh tome lntriclte rouW-. TM O&uU... -AMl wife Donna and &em· •I• aont MlchHl and kevln -handle the ponderou1 pachyderm• with lt)'l• and lhowmanilhlp ln an act that ·~ from one end of the Convention Center'• "baa top" to t))e other. 'A SETSAILFOR THE MUSICAL COIVlEDY AfNENTURE Of THE SUMMER! *BARGAIN MATIN•••* Mond•V thru S1turd1y All P1rform1ncH before 5:00 PM th• lpeclll En .... tllllltl IM Hellcleyt) i A M •LI A f A ~A M11odo 01 to .. croftl LA MIRADA WAllC IN "'·2'00 "THI WON.I> ACCOROtNO TO GAfUt" 1111 ---- "AN OFFICI" AND A GIN11iMAN" 1•1 -----"CHllCH A CHONG 1,_. THINQ8 "THI ""Ale MOVIE",,.., ARI TOUGH ALL OVI"" 1:00, a::ao. Mt. MO. 1ctllll ------LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN ...,...aTUTTU"" WHORIHOUM IN TEXA8" ----- ""OCKY lN" !NI • 11 .. DOLaY ITIMO _____ .... LAl<EWOOO CENHI:> SOUTH WAl K "' "MGMT 8Hlflr' 1111 ----- foc11lty 01 C:o~1ewocxi 211/H1·fll0 "YOUNG DOCT°"a .. LOVFm -·-.--- 8TM TMK II: 1lte ww.ATH Of' KHAN '"' ----- THI NATa MOVll !NI ----- .... flW• • ...,, ..... J •JO , .. \.-7: U \.Me' ltM fll h1• IMPORTANT NOTICl! CMllDRIN UNOlR ll fRH! .................. n..r.i.1••"4. ........... .. CIN(.f!-•YMAMCMl-lll'Ollll-.JI tlf llO AM CM MlllO 1111111 IGNllOI acauGllY fOSlnoN -1M1G Ml 1'11111*1 l•Ml C1llf.ll -UI Oii Ml - A .... AHf I~ ANAHEIM ORIVf·IN f ree.,oy ti ot l•MO" St 179·ffl0 THINITUTIU WHOMHOU .... TWXA9 1111 -URSAN COftOY C .. I ---~-_c•~!·~--­ TMS l'IRA Tl llOVW 1111 ~Ol 1•1 'Lua THI HDUCTM>M 1111 CIMll- &H~APA5'• BUENA PARK ORIVI IN U..CO!t' ..... • ... 04 ""°* 121-4070 -- "' f ,.,. ... ~ ... ~ .. LINCOLN OlllVE·IN '""' ... 'J:"" (II) ANV WMtCH WAY YOU CAN IN I C111t N 90llllO ~ ... . . ' LA '1ABR A ,, ''' '" ....... -·--·---17MIH -%OMO, THI GAY 111..ADe (NI Cl'tt .. _ LT~ THI lllCTRA·TDMaTMAL -... , DCAO _,. DOWT WSM PLAtD .... CtMt " 1011110 h«ll "'° so oc J ;,,r_g,_,._, 191·3693 YOUNG DOC~ .. LOVI 1111 AIRP\ANI.., C1llt " IOllllO...._ __ C ... CM a C"°"9 T'ltlMal AM TOUGH~ ova fllll •~1111 Cllll " IOUllD THl...,UfTU wtta•IO"l!,.• TUM 1111 UMMCOWMY ... -... ___ ,,., • ..... c ..... O RANG E 0 1nv1 ,,.. "4-tM1 C::J::! hontlt lauchter than any routtne ~ &be u ~ c:lowna. Jt'• one ot the mmt en~ ICtl of th1I OC' any other otrcua. Other memorable momenta 1n thl• )'Hr'• edJdara Include the Dobrttcl\ Duo, a Swim hlah·rile t.landna act; Bulprla'• Duo Kril1ov •• the l>elt ol the 1how't aertal11t1t and human cannonball Chriltopher Adami, wno &aket a literal '1partf.nc lhot" Juat ahead of the flnale. Aa always, there 11 1plendor on all lldel. moN than one pair of eyes can 'behold at one aittJ.nc. W ASHING'rON (AP) -John W. Hincldey Jr., Jooklna pale and weaker than on U.. dly of hll .wiu:unc acquittal aeven weeka aco on cha r1e1 of 1hootln1 P re 11 d e n t Re a 1.a n , w a 1 committed indefinitely to a feckftl mental ~today. U.S . District J Barrlncton D. Parker, finding Hinddey to be mentally ill and cf.anceroutt rod hta commitment order from the bench after Hinckley told him he waived the rtaht to • heuiJ1I on hla releue. • But Hinckley aald '41 don't nece11arily agree" wlth the conclualon of doctors at St. Ellt.abetha Ha.pital who aaid the prealdentlal usailant auffered .from a "1evere chronic mental di.lorder. n The judp, who lnallted that Hinckley appear In peraon to waive the hearir\a, uked him a aeriea of queatfona to make certain that he underatood hia rlaht to present evid,,nc~ dlaputtnc the docton' report. Standina before the judae in a pln-ltripe lhlrt but without one of the aport coata he always wore durlnl hla trial~ Hinckley aald he w•• aware of hla rlaht to a hearina and had no queatlona about the rilhC. M WM Clvt.nc up. • .. A re you under any medkatklnr' Pe.rbr Mked. "Y• air," Hinckley~· "Doea lt affect your a ty to undentand what la happenlnc thJa mominaf" the Judae Mked . "No alr," lilnckley replied. pr By STEVE JTCHEL[; Ot'theDelr ..... David Wille and his adopted Liberian aon were in Los Angeles today, a ting to find out why the U.S. nmigratlon and Naturalization Service hu ordered Sam deported next week. The family returned from a week's vacation in northern CaUfomia this weekend to find a certified letter fro m the immigration departm~nt orderine Sam deported to h is native Uberia on Aug. 17. The letter comes a month after the San Juan Capistrano family received assurances Sam could remain In the U.S . at least through next February. "Dave and Sam are in Loa Angeles right now trying to find out what happened ," a distraught Ruth Willett said today. ENVIABLE POSITION -Whe n the , Erin Kroening, 4, of ~ta Mesa knows where weather's too hot and beaches are too crowded, to find welcome relief in her backyard. "Theee things always happen to us on the weekend and let us live through real hell while we wait for an anawer," Sam's mother said. -Laguna crash victim, 16, said se.rious Lil eguards rescue 350 along eoast Sam, who is about 26 yea.rs old, was adopted by the Willetta 10 years ago in Liberia while the couple wee •!'Vina in the PMOe Co.JC family arbitrarily set his age at 16atthattime,lince he bad no blnh record. A 16-year-old girl whose legs were partially severed in a car crash Friday near El Morro Beach in Laguna remains In serious condition today at UCI Medical Center. Ramona Lauriano of Laguna Hills, who California Highway oatrolmen said made a U-tum on Coast mptway into the path of a large truck, underwent surgery F~iday to re-attach the two partially severed legs. The 4 p.m. crash backed up traffic for more than a mile in both directions as paramedics and firemen worked to free the woman from her crumpled vehicle. Early morning coastal fog broke in time to attract about 300,000 people to Orange Coast beaches Sunday, and rough surf t hat produced riptides kept lifeguards busy with more than 350 rescues. There were no injuries reported. National Weather Service spokeswoman Pat Rowe said patchy low clouds and fog tonight will clear Tuesday to fair skies. She said beach highs will be 76, dropping to 65 Tuesday night. Inland highs are expected to reach 88 with lows of 65. Though moderate surf of just two to four feet was repo~ Sunday, Its intensity caused problems for many swimmers. "It (the surf) just picked up and it's going~ ... Huntington State Beach lifeguard Brian Hopp reported Sunday. "We've had big strong rips (riptides). Even the good swimmers are having trouble." Huntington State Beach reported 90 to 100 reecues and a crowd of more than 25,000, while Huntington Cty Beach reported 45 rescues and a crowd of 58,000. Newport Beach attracted about 130,00Q people and lifeguards there reported 100 rescues, while Laguna Beach lifeguards reported 50 rescues But under U.S . immigration law, he was too old to be considered an adopted child and was ineligible to live in the U.S. without a aped.al act of Congre.. Sam arrived in Orange County two yean ago on a student visa which has since expired. Meanwhile, Rep. Robert Badham. R-Newport Beach, has introduced a private bill that would allow Sam to remaiJ\ with his family. · Laat month the immigration department granted a atay to allow Sam to remain with hJa family while Congresa decides if it will reheat Badham's private (See LIBERIAN, Page AZ) Escape artist plans dive Mesa man to give shackles the slip 20 feet down J By STEVE MARBLE ~tMCWIJNa4•'9ft Mike Griffin ought to be locked up. Here's a 21-year-old guy who'• going to have himself wrapped in 30 pounds of chains, handcuffs and leg lrona and then jump from a ·boat ihto Newport Harbor. T-lje ~atery site he's se-lecte<I-~ 20 feet deep and STATE there's little doubt that he's going straight to the bottom. Orlffin figures he can hold his breath three minutes tops but that it should take him double that to wiggle out ol all the hardware. "If I don't make it," he says, fingering a aet of handcuffs he claims are the latest fashion at Scotland CSLB classes analyzed Controversial women's ~udies Arogram and a clam in experimental sex experieDOeS at Cal State Long Beach are analyud. Page A5. Smaller households draw attention Neither polltlciana nor homebuilders paid attention to atatlattca in 1972 ahowtng smaller houMholda. They have to now -and they are. P9 A8. COUNTY Yard, "I look great in orange coral." Griffin la a Costa Meaa re.ldent, a professional es- cape artlat and a one-man publicity show. His IChedu- led Aug. 16 atunt in Newport Harbor is only the latelt in a career of taking on all makes and shapes of handcuffs, straightjacketa and irons. SPORTS He claims he first got wrapped up in the profession when he waa 6. He says his brother would tle him up in rope and then watch in amazement aa Griffin un- wound himself. He aaya he had himself wrapped in barbed wire, padlocked lnalde mall bags (See DCAPE, Pa1e AZ) Dodgers prove real Braves killers . The Dodgers did it again to Atlanta and are within 1 ~ game1 of the diviaion-leadinc Bravee. Page Cl. ... Frffway World. Series on horizon f 'nle Anaell take a 1 ~-pme lead in the American Leaaue WMt and auddenly there'• talk of a FNeway World Seri• ln October. Pace Cl .• Wh en Parker aaked if Hinckley understood precisely the meanln1 of the waiver he waa atanlng, he answered, "Yes, I do." But Hjnckley quickly added, "I want to aay for the record by aignlng this waiver I'm not admitting to agreeing to what's in U1e report." . Momenta later, he told the Sebmltz ease Judie. "I don't neceeurUy_ ~ with their (the docton') opmlon." 11).e St. Ellzabetha report Mid Hinckley aulfera ftom fOW' major peraonallty dilordera and major depreeaion which the doct.on aald la In partial remllllon. Parker concluded that "becaWle of thia mental dllorder, the defendant John W. H1nckley (See HINCKLEY, Pa1e A%) Child . returned to his mother By DAVID KUTZMANN «ttte 011111 ll'llot • ..,, A Superior Court judge today ordered the rel·ease of a 15-month old child -believed to be the illegitimate son of State Sen. John G. Schmitz -to the custody of his mother. The infant was taken from his mother, Carla Verne Stuckle, 43, of Tustin, several weeks ago after he suffered serious injuries to his genitals. "I am delighted. My son is coming home," Mrs. Stuckle said this morning after appearing in juvenile court in Orange. Judge Byron McMillan authorized the release of the child after hearing the results of a county Social Services Department investigation which concluded that the child would be safe in the care of the mother. Today's proceeding is separate from crimin al proceedings pending against Mrs. StUc:kle for alleged felony child neglect in connection with injuries the child suffered. His penis was nearly severed by having a strand of hair wound tightly around it. Reconstructive surgery was performed and county officials said today the child Is doing well. The baby has been in county custody at Albert Sitton Home it Orange. Attorney Michael McDonnell, who represents Mrs. Stuckle, said his client would be able to keep custody of the child pending the outcome of further dependency hearings in juvenile court. Judge McMillan scheduled further proceedings Sept. 10. Attorney Harold LaFlamme, the court-appointed lawyer who ·(See BABY, Page AZ) .,..., ,... ....... ~ ....,.. 0,,... ... ESCAPER -Mike Griffith demonstrates h ow he'll be chained for his underwater escape attempt when h e jumps from the Balboa Island Ferry. INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoeccipe A7 ~~beck C2 Ann Landers A7 A7 Moskowitz A4 ~ ~-~ Moviel B6 Cavabde A7 National Newa A.3 Ow fled CA-8 Public Notlca B4,Ct ec:.mc. B7 Sporta Cl-4 Cr.. word S7 Stoclrc Marketa m Death Notlcea CA T~ B8 Editorial A6 n..~ Be Entertainment B6 Weether A2 A.rt Hoppe A7 Wodd Newa A3 BUSINESS .. I Jr ... in the pneent dme and will In tht reaaonabl• future be d.anae!WI to hbmtlf or .,.,_.._,, Tne 1 .. i Um• ti• waa In Parker'• courtroom, Hlnc~y stood, tean lu.m1na dow1' llla cheeka, whUe a ).ary found him Innocent by reuori of tn..nity of the Match 30, 1981 ahootina of Reeon and three o«her meA. Tnat verdict ••nerated nationwide outr .. t a.nd aave vteor to a ~ dltye to change the lnlanlty law. _ Even after today'• hearlftl, Hinckley, 27 taoed Ufe Hinckley hu the lep1 rllht to imprisonment U convicted on petlUon th• court every 1lx charges of attempting to monthl tor hla releue, with the asaaaslnate the president and determinina blue to ,be whether assaulting, witb Intent \o kill, he la mentally ill and danaerom Reasan, White House Pre11 to h1.mle1f and others. Secretary James Brady and two law enforcement offlcera. The written waiver ~ by Instead, u required under the Hinckley, aubmltted by him to law, he was tent to St. Ellzabeths prosecutors, aaya, "I hereby for evaluation June 21. The law voluntarily and Intentionally entitled him to a hearing within waive and rellnquW\ any and all 50 days to determine if he should righu and privOegei vested by remain institutionalized. It was sta\ute, the ConatituUon or that proceeding Parker appellate dectslona to any FIREMEN DOUSE VAN BLAZE -Nearly 100 county firefighters, hand crews and bulldoi.er operat6re extingulahed a 20-Rcre fire in Santiago Canyon .Sunday after this three- . D.lr ........................ weelt-old van caught fire at Sahtiago Canyon and Walila.ml Canyon roads. It took firefighters. aided by two aerial tanierS. •, about 40 minutes \o knock down the flames. scheduled for today. hearing to which I am entitled at Althoufc: Hinckley later .iated this time. Thia waiver apedftcalJy B • · · k h h f e .. ~-~-os_~-~-~-t-~-~-~_i._~_=_r_s~_e_d_e_~_ee_a_·:_e_· -~-~_-udes_b_.Y_any_jury_r.tf_. _h_t_l_ma_y_ha_v_e_to.... . urning van spar s rus ire ESCAPE ATTEMPT. • • and buried in the snow in handcuffs. Shadea of Hou- dini. Griffin claims nothing sto him. re has a standlna offer to give $1,000 in cash to the person who can tie him in rope and get away with it. He's says he'a not· worried about losing the money. ''If I don't make it big in this business, I can become a criminal," he jokes, noting that· on a dare he broke out of a steel door jail cell in Oklahoma last year. In six minutes, no leas. But his date at the bottom of Newport Harbor likely will make the blggest splash yet. OrilJinally he was going to jump from the Balboa Island Ferry. But he'a gone high- clau and now will do hia thlnf from the bow of a 12~-oot yacht owned by Magic bland, a Newport nightspot. "If I panic," he aays, with a heavy toUch of melodrama, "all's lost." Griffin, who c1alms part of the art of e.:&P._e ls leamlng how to dlalocate a wrist or an ann to gain greater flexibili- ty, hopes the Newport Beech stunt will put hla career in fourth gear. Providing Griffin does sur- vive playing anchor for a swanky boat, he has another stunt lined up in Hollywood. "rm going to chain m)'llelf to the H in the Hollywood sign. That's illesal, of coune. but if the police arrest me - I'll be gone. No bandcuffa can hold me." LIBERIAN SON . . . bill, killed las\ year by a HOuae of RepreeenGtives subcommittee. Saturday~'• de rtation notice came u a to Badham's staff which a attempting to determine why the notice (XllDe9 at this ti.me. "We don't know what's going on in Immigration,," a apokeanan a t Bidham's Newport Beach office said today. "'Y!e have a call in and they are checking on it," the 1pokemum said. Meanwhile, aa in the times past, the Willetta lit on plna and needles awaittna news of the fate of their IOll. "We hope someone (in the immigration department) m.cle a stupid mistake, bu\ we're awfully tired of the tallsptn that agency throws human betnaa in." Mn. Willett said. Orange County fire official.a say a three-week-old van that caught flre in Santiago Canyon late Sunday sparked a 20-acre brush fire that took nearly 40 minutes to extinguish. County fire Capt. Gary Stenberg said 100 men and two aerial tankers douse d the stubborn blaze that erupted From Page A1 BABY. • • represents the child's interest, said the baby's care would be monitored by the county's Department of Social Services. LaFlamme said this morning he "felt comfortable" with the judge's decision. SChmitz, R-Newport Beach, ha.a maintained silence about the lsaue of paternity in the case. He is listed as the parent of the child on Orange County birth records and on court documents pertaining to the c::aae. Mn. Stuckle a18o has aseerted that tbe GOP leglalator ls the father of her IJ\f.ant daughter. A birth certificate on file in Orange County also lists Schmitz as the baby girl's father. It was the baby boy's injury which led to disclosures that Schmitz allegedly fathered the two children. Attorney William Hulay, believed to be Schmitz' attorney , said in Judge McMillan's courtroom this morning that he could not discuss the case. Low clouds, fog Coastal Moetty dew lodey ex~ tor -IOW dolad9 and log ,_the COHI. Fair and aunny Inland. Hlghl 70 107&11 lhe ~end to lo 80 Inland. Fair Mtty lonlaht with IOw ~ llflO log oY lit• night. 0-nlaht low M to ee. Low clovde and log neer the coaat .-ty T~ with~ In the .._ morning and llttwnoon. F• and 1UMY Inland T~. Hlllhl 70 to 78 81 Iha .,_,.. and 80 to IO lnllnd. Ela•wh•r•, lrolft Point Conception to the Mexican botdlr and out eo m1e1: em.a ct'lft lllMaory over outel" weter9 with nonhwMt wt~• 1s to 21 knoll and 6 to I foot HU thfOi.IOh Tueeday. Locally ligflt vartMlil ..... ,..,.. end morning 11our1 beoomtna ••et 10 _,.,.,.. 10 to 11 b-. wfth I to • toot -tl1 .... an.noon tod41Y and T.-dey. Soutl!.- 9'#1111 2 to 3 ... Locm log """ pettllll dMmO In Iha~ U.S. summary A oold front puahed ttlunder91«m• ecl'OM Arlcanau and tN Ohio v..., and Into the OUlf eomt .8tata 11"'°"9 IN -haldeet hit 8uncNY ..,. F~*""· ,,.,._ with 2.14 tnchH or r•ln •nd ~ Tenn •• Whlc:tl reoorded .17 °' In lndl. 8howwl aleo l'llO¥ld through Ill• Paolflc nOf111wMt Into tJie Hol'tHem ......... raaton. " -,.., In Noftl\ o.kcN and. Mlnneeot.. and the Sout"-4 Md Ol'*tllY ~ .... _,.,_, ..... NorthwMI wlndt could rMCh 2S lcnola with s-10-8-fool MU rar111et than eo mll• offetlof• from Sen Nicola 1119nd. Tempemt.'!'res NAnc.t .. "9 ..,. Albeny 12 e7 . == t1 M S7 M A.lhe¥lle 14 ea .03. Atlanta S7 70 . 05 AtlentcCty 76 71 ~ tel 74 . ,. 9elttmor"e .. 72 ~ .. e5 .os 17 74 .111 IMlmlrck 74 48 8olee ta 84 .111 eo.lorl 17 • .u 8IOM4 .... II 71 -~ 8uffllo 79 71 ~ Bultngton .... 1.11 ~SC .. " llO 76 QwtllnWV .. . .OI a.ttta HO • 71 .It a.,.nr. IO 9' =.~:.ii .. 51 a 11 .14 ~ 12 .. Clmble 8C tr 72 .01 Columbul 11 • . 13 Del-Ft Wttl t1 74 .82 Ceylon 16 16 .01 ~ 17 87 O.M~ 12 .. 0.Uoft a • .20 Duluth • 11 El PllO t2 f7 F8r90 71 41 ~-. .. 11 to twttol'd •• .... ........ 7t IO HonolUlu • 74 HoulilOll D 7& .OI =:=. 11 M .01 11 12 1.oe ........ .. 71 ~ IO to 7~ 71 .11 t='C. '"°""""" ~ ........ oaur1-,a. ......... 76 ~ 112 ~ .. 56 ,,,_ 10& T3 L.--.r .. 17 ~..:.=-ts .. t04 M ...... 111 PllO_.... 102 66 Aed.,., 101 70 "9dwOOcl City 79 118 ~ 17 M ....,.. 17 61 Ian DletO ,, 70 IMfflMiloo IO 56 ..... ~ IO M 8anta,,..,... 10 8'odlton 102 f6 TilenMI 114 Ulcletl " :r-.: 103 7f 11 42 QNllla 79 '2 LOnl lell:lfl IO M MOIWO.ea 103 eo Th• roreoaat called tor tllundet8tOtftlt over t111 Gulf COMt ....... _..ol .. MllMlo """"~------------------­•••board and th• nortller11 111111"81 Aook-. ...... -~ OYlf moat of ............. tfle ..... " .. ... Temper1ture1 1r-ound th• ::lr1n"=. tno'~,-r.= Palm_... ' 85 Mt. Wlleol'I 87 fWWpOf1 8Mcll 11 85 omano 100 &2 Palm~ 113 7t Plllldenl N 85 San 8erna'dlno 104 ... Sen Gabttll 100 M CAJCADA Celgaty 71 54 E~ton 76 51 MonlrMI n ee Ottawa IO &5 Aeolna 73 48 TOFOfltO 71 &3 VlnCOWlr 73 se Wkwllpeg .. 48 I between Santiago Creek tload and Williams Canyon Road at about 4:20 p.m. Sunday. The fire began when a motorist, not identified by flre officials, pulled his new van otf the roadway when it erupted in flames for unknown reasons. Flames from the burning van spread to nearby brush, and by the time county fire units arrived, the canyon area was ablaz.e. Filteen fire engines from the rounty and four other engines battled the blaze, Stenberg said. In addition, two hand CttWS, two bulldoter Opt!ratpra, two aerial tankera, an air coordinator and two water tenders arrived to fight the fire. "The (aerial) tankers were very instrumental in retarding the spread of the fire, allowing ~i·ound forces \o encircle ana eventually put it out," Stenberg said. He said damage was limited to $18,000 -the value of the new van. Israeli jet buzzes U.S. copters One of three incidents of harassment reported WASHINGTON (AP) -An Accordin1 \o admin11trat1on identified as probably IJraell. laraell F-16 jet fighter plane sourcea, \he F -16 incident When the helicopten landed, made passes at U.S. helicopters occurred Saturday and the other Israeli military vehicles blocked carrying an American military UH-1 hellc:opten were heading exits from the beach .. the reports liaison team from the carrier for a landing at Jounieh , a said. Forrestal to Lebanon in one of U.S.-built F-16 plane of the The U .S . military attache three harassments by the Israelis Israeli Air Force made a number residence to try to get the over the weekend, Reagan of pasees cloae to the choppers, American team through the administration sources said reports said. ~ far as could be barrier and it was allowed to pass today. determined, no ahots were fired. after a 45-minute delay, 1<>un::es In the other two incidents, the sources said, an Israeli gunboat tra i ned a mac hine gun on American helicopters heading for Jou~leh and memb~-:1\ o( Jhe team w~ prevehted f>y IaraeU troope from leaving that beach north of Beirut until the U.S. military attache intervened. The U.S. European Command has asked the United States to lodge a protest with the Israeli government, contending that such Incidents are "':'ery serious." On Sunday, reports said, the said. h elicopters carrying the Members of the team were American team were again allowed to leave the landing area heading for Jounleh when they only after providing their names, were tracked by a machine gun rank• and Soci-.1 Security on the patrol craft, which was numbers, sources said. ~· • I t The Incidents ·involved a The team apparently has been U aiaon team lrom the U.S . making repeated tripe ashore to European Command that confer at the U.S. embuay. apparently baa been doing ground work for the posaible introduc:tlon of American troops as part of an International peacekeeping force. On Saturday, as two U .S . After the U.S . helicopters departed, laraeU military vehicles were parked on the landing zone, apparently \o prevent further U.S. heliC?pter operations there, sources satd. Berserk trucker kills 6 Driver slain alter shooting, ramming episode GRAND PRAIRIE. Texas (AP) -A truck drive r on a shooting rampage killed at least si x today and slammed an 18-wheel tractor-trailer rig into a police car before officers shot him dead, authorities saJd. Four oth e r people were injured, lncludlng a police officer hit by the truck, authorities said. The officer and anothef' person were in critical condition . The gunman, identified by police as John F. Parish, 46, of Dallas, spoke to no one this morning when he walked into each of three warehouses in this southwest Dallas suburb, witneaes said. Starting at about 8 a.m., he fatally shot three people at one building, two at another, and one at a third, police spokeswoman Alexia Griffin said. The man got i.nto a tcuck and drove away, but smashed into a police car at a barricade . ''The truck hit the aquad car and the officer went flying acroa the pavement," safd Wayne Standifer, who owns Wayne's Cu.tom Automotive across the at.reel from the police banicade. "It sent the car about 75 feet backward." The truck rolled up an embankment near a parking lot, knockinl down a telephone pole and slidin1 into another car , shoving it into a building owned by a trucking company. Standifer said police were firing at the man during this time, but he managed to get out of the truck and go inside the building, where police converged on him. The rampage covered a 1~-9Quare-block area ln the west central pan of town, aaid Ms. Grl.ffin. Three of the wounded were taken to Dallas-Fort Worth Medk:al Cenw-in Grand Prairie, aald J~n, a medical center esman. She Mid one woman, Ruth James, 19, ot Alvarado, was woW\ded ln the 1houlder and neck ancl wu In 1uar.ded condition and ftobert Serabia, SO, of Grand Pra1rM WM ln surgery and in critical condltSon. Another women died at the hoapltal, abe aid . 'three people were killed at ·coas~ gas station sells for $1 million A "Newport Beach man reportedly hH ahelled out U million to buy a Shell OU Company aervice atatlon in ffununpJrl Harbour. The 1taUon, which chanaed hUdl In June, la locited on 28,- 000 square feet of pt'lme commercial ~rty at 15922 Pldftc CoMt w.y. Tht bUyer, i entified u Jim Salter of New'port Beach, apparently doe1n't plan to ~ntlnue &he UM u a •rvlce ~-=tek:r9PJ,:e~ 81:v.~ ...... 1 ... .......... tbi& ... IMtitDn Goar ol the facUttr will de•I In the first site, one at the eeoond, and two at th~ third. One site was a J ewel-T dJ.scount srooery 11\ore. A spokesman at Jewel-T uid, "We do not wish to dl9cull it at this UJne.'' Two people were taken to Methodist Central Hotpital. NB hit, run driver begins jail sentence The hlt-and-run driver who st.ruck and kWed Newport Belich · resident Donald Warner laat September has been Cll'dered to begin aerving a 240-<lay Jail aentenoe. A .. Samuel Gibbs, 21, a ,..aeent of' Orange who appeared t.rr QJ:an8e County Superior Court on Friday, was grant.eel 10 days to eeek appellate court review. Unless GL~ review by the Fow1li Court of Appeal in San Bemardlno, be will beJailed Aue. 1e. Wanfer, 26, WU hit and killed ln th~ pre-dawn houn Sept. 19 ' while cromin& Balboa Bouli!wrd at. 32nd Street. The clrtwr and a pa11en1er stopped briefly, liocord1ni to wftn ; and tMft took off. The death car ,,., located eevenl days law, abendcJMd in • Whittier ahoDD&Jw (9l .... Gibbl hu aa.an.t ~betq the ditwr and laid be ... ~-­atw the acctdln\. He hM .... that he w dltvtac nV1 ')'. The younc clftwr. whO pleil barptnecl for &he,._., jl11 Mntence lut apnq, went to court la• 1llt ,... to -tit ... .... ~ -haYe. Ml· ~i=-maln&alnecl hl1 flrit attal'MJ ... ldiD poor ....... Otbblmd ID ~Mii fleli· ..... = ... ~ tlMil ..... ... ... .. . ................ .. tr\11 • Hie moti• IW a ltaJ WM dllliled I t WASHJNGroN (AP) -John W. Hlnckley Jr., lo6klna pale and weaker than on the day of hla 1tunning ~utttt} teVen weekl a10 on char1tJI of shpotlng President Reagan, .wa1 commuted in def lnltely to • federal mental h~tal today. U.S. Diltrict J Burington D. Parker, finding Hine kley to be mentally lll and ctanaerous, read h1a ~tment Ol'der from the bench after H.i,nckl•Y told him he waived the right to a hearlna on hia releale. · But Hinckley said "I don't neceaaarily agree" with the conclualon of doctors at St. Elizabetha Hoepital who said the presidential assailant 1uffered from a "severe chronic mental di.order." The judae, who lnalsted that Hinckley appear 1n person to waive the hearing, aaked him a aeries of queatlon1 to make certain that he understood hll ri11H to present evidence disputtng the doctors' report. Bt.endinc before the judp in a pin-stripe ahlrt but without one of the 1port c:oata he always wore duriJl8 h1a trial~ Hinckley aaid he Delly ............ .,,'-,.,,.. ENVIABLE POSITION -When the ' Erin Kroening, 4, of Costa Mesa knows where weather's too hot and beaches are too crowded, to find welcome relieL in her backyard. Center site choice i0101 ·nent waa aware of hl• rl1ht to a hearin1 al'Jd had no qU•tlom about the npta he WU l'ivinl up. "Are 1.o u under any mecbeat1on. • Pvar ..ad. "Y• llr," HJnckJey, ,..panded, "Doa it af!ect 1oa: a6Wty to understand what ii liappenina this mornina?" the judge aeked. "No air," Hinckley replled. Fe~oily crashes reported A La Jolla man waa arrested on suspicion of felony drunken driving after h1-car collided with another at Culver Drive and Ferris Street lri Irvine, according to police. Colin Hugh Perry, 19, the driver, suffered a fractured right shoulder when he and paaaenger John Henderson, 19, of San Diego were thrown from their car during the Saturday night acddent, said police Officer Mike Ogden. He said Perry apparently tri~ to tum his car left from CUiver onto Ferris but was struck by a car 90uthbound on Culver driven by Phylis Arnold, 26, of Santa Ana. She waa treated and rel~ at Western Medical Center in Santa Ana for minor cuts, but her passenger, Jacqueline Jones, 19, of Santa Ana, was admitted with internal injuries, Ogden said. In a separate accident Saturday, Linda Stuard, 19, of El Toro, was arrested on auspicton of felony drunken driving after a 5:36 p.m. crash at Jamboree Road at Campus Drive. Council may act Tuesday; school offices doubt qi Miss Stuard apparently ran th.rough a red light at Campus and struck a car croulna Jamboree, according to police reports. She aulfered a broken left arm and wu taken to H~ Memorial Hospital ln Newport Beach by pa.ramecijm. By GLENN SCOTJ' o<ttieO.-,NotSUft A definite location is expected to be choeen Tuesday night for Irvine's planned City Center, but it probably won't include headquarters for <he local school ' district. The Irvine City Council will review at its 7:30 p.m. meeting Tuesday at City Hall a recommendation from its administrative staH to develop -the long-aought City Center at Jeffrey Road between extensions of Barranca and Alton parkways. The center initially was envisioned to mix offices of local governments with retail and commercial buildings, thus creating a comfortable plaza-like atmosphere that would serve as a central meeting place. That plan still is in the works. In fact, an architectural team already is at work on designing a master plan for layout of the plaza. The city is paying the designer $127,000 for the design. Until recently, however, most all the officials working on the project had expected that Irvine Unified School District's proposed new headquarters would be included. School district leaders have urged others to hasten selection of a site so they could begin construction of their offices soon. But now they say it may be too late for their participation in the plaza, and city officials agree. For the school district, the issue is economics. It needs to have a location, design and environmental impact report prepared for its new offices before the Nov. 2 election. Officials say they need to commit a voter-approved $5 million bond toward the project before the election, when a statewide $500 million school bond is up for passage. If that $5 million bond isn't committed by then, Irvine would receive that. much less should the statewide measure pass, said Ron Upton, deputy superintendent. In a memo to the council, Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. admitted the Jeffrey Road site may not be a feasible location for the district. An environmental report couldn't be (See CENTER, Page AZ) Noisier 3 days due from Toro The noise level In southern Orange County will be lncreued on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thunday, according tO offidala at the Marine Corpe Air Station, EJ Toro. Due to increased flight operations, the noise level will Increase Tuesday from 8:30 to 9 a.m.; Wednesday from 3 to 5 p.m.; and on Thursday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m .. offlctala said. Escape artist plans dive Mesa man to give shackles the slip ·20 feet down By STEVE MARBLE or.,.. o.-, "'°' ...,, Mike Griffin ought to be locked up. Here's a 21-year-old guy who's going to have himself wrapped in 30 pounds of chains, handcuffs and leg irons and then jump from a boat into Newport Harbor. The watery site he's se· lected is 20 feet deep and STATE there's little doubt that he's going straight to the bottom. Griffin figures he can hold his breath three minutes topa but that it should take him double that to wiggle out of all the hardware. "If I don't make It," he says, fingering a set of handcuffs he clalms are the latest fashion at Scotland CSLB classes analyzed Controversial women's studies program and a class 1n experimental sex experiences at Cal State Long Beach are analyz.ed. Page A5. Smaller households draw atl Neither politlcian1 nor hornebuildera paid attention to 1tatl1tlc1 in 1972 showing smaller houaeholds. They have to now -and th~y are. Paae A8. Yard, "i look great in orange coral." Griffin is a Costa Mesa reaident.,_ a professional es- cape· artist and a one-man publicity, show. His schedu- led Aug. 16 stunt in Newport Harbor~ only the lat.est in a career o~taking on all makes and s h es of handcuffs, stratsht kets and Irons. SPORTS He claims he first got wrapped up in the profession when he was 6. He aays his brother would tie him up in rope and then watch in amazement aa Griffin un- wound hlmlelf. He says he ttad himself wrapped in barbed wire, padlocked lnalde mall bags (See ESCAPE, Pase AJ) Doi!gers prove real Braves 'li.iHers The Dodgers dld it again to Atlanta anct are M~ 1 ~ games of the division-~ Bravea. Page Cl. • • Fre way World Series on lJornonP e Angela take a 1 Yi ·aame leed In the Alrilr1can Lea Welt and Nddenl.Y there'• talk of a Freeway Word in October. 'P• Cl. . . When Parker a1ked U Hinckley understood precisely the meaning of the waiver he wu elgnlng, he answered, "Yes, I do." But Hlnc&~ley quickly added, "I want to say for the record by signing thla waiver I'm not adinltting to agreeing to what's in the report," Moments later, he told the Schmitz case Judie, "I don't necellarily llJ'ef wttn their (the doctott') optnlon.'I The St. Elizabeth.a report laid Hinckley suffers trom fOW' majot per'90naUty dl8ordera and major depreuion which the doctors aald is in partla) remisalon. Parker concl uded that "becaU9e of thll mental dilorder, the defendant John W. Hinckley (See HINCKLEY. Pace A!) Child returned to his mother By DAVID KUTZMANN Ofttle Deity Plot s..,, A Superior Court judge today ordered the release of a 15-month old child -believed to be the illegitimate son of State Sen. John G. Schmitz -to the custody of hls mother. The infant was taken Crom his mother, Carla Verne Stuckle, 43, of Tustin, several weeks ago after he suffered serious injuries to his genitals. "I am delighted. My son 1s coming home," Mrs. StuckJe said this morning after appearing in juvenile court in Orange. Judge Byron McMillan authorized the release of the child after hearing the results of a county Social Services Department investigation which concluded that the child would be safe in the care of the mother. Today's proceedin~ ts separate from criminal proceedings pending against Mrs. Stuckle for alleged felony child neglect in connection with injuries the child suffered. His penis was nearly severed by having a strand of hair wound tightly around it. Reconstructive surgery was performed and county officials said today the child ts doing well. The baby has been in county custody at Albert Sitton Home ir. Orange. Attorney Michael McDonnell, who represents Mrs. Stuckle, said his client would be able to keep custody of the chi ld pending the outcome of further dependency hearings in juvenile court. Judge McMillan scheduled further proceedings Sept. 10. Attorney Harold LaFlamme, the coun-appointed lawyer who (See CHILD, Page AZ) Deir "°' ..._.. _, ........ O'DoMlll ESCAPER -Mike Griffith demonstrates how he'll be chained for his underwater escape attempt when h e jumps from the Balboa Island Ferry. INDEX At Your Service A4 Hol"09C.'Ope A7 ~~beck C2 Ann Landers A? A., Moakowit.a A4 &•oe-'84-~ Moviea B6 Cavata.de A7 National News A3 Clumlfied C4-8 Public Notices 84,Cf Ccmica B7 Spo11a Cl-4 en.ward 8 7 Stock Marketa B5 Death Notices Cf TeJevWon B8 Editorial AS '"'-... B6 J!ntenairunent B6 W•ther A2 Art Hoppe A7 World Newt A3 Jr. la ln &M pn11nt time Ind wt1l ln the rea1on1ble future be ~to ... ,,,..,,. Olbm." Tne lut tlme h• ••• la Parker'• courtroom, Hinckley stood, t.Mn lu.m1na down hit cheelca, while a jury found h1m ~t by NMOr\ of inunlty of the March ao, 1081 ahoollna of Beuan and three other men. ' Tnat verdlct 1•ner•ted nationwide outr••• and cave vigor to a~ diiw to change the bwlnlty law. Hinckley, 27, faced life lmprlaonment U convicted on charges of attempting to aa11&11lnate the president and aaQultlng, with intent to ktll, Reagan, White House Pre11 Secretary James Brady and two · taw enforcement officers .. Even after today'• beartn•, Hinckley •··the lepl n,ht to petltlbn the court every alx mon'tha for hJI releue, with the detennlnlna 1.-ue to be whether he 11 mentally m and cSanaeroua to himlelf and othen. Instead, as required under the law, he wu 8ellt to St. Elh.abeths for exaluation June 21. The law entitled him to a hearing within 50 days to determil'\e if he should remain inatitutlonallzed. It WJS that proceeding Parker ICheduled for today. The written waiver m.-by Hinckley, ·SUbmined by him to prosecutors, aaya, .. I hereby voluntarily and intentionally waive and relinqulah any and all rflhta and prlvtleaea v.ied by statute, the Constitution or appellate declaion1 to any hearing to which I am entitled at this time. Thia waiver apec:Wcally Includes any ~t l may have to a~ ~Y jury.' FIREMEN DOUSE V.AN BLAZE -Nearly 100 county firefighters, hand crews and bulldOler operatan extinguished a 20·acre fire lh Santiago Canyon Sunday after thls three· .,.., .......................... week-old van caught fire at Santiago Canypn and wuu.mi Canyon roads. It took firefighters, aided by two aerial tanken, about 40 minutes to knock down the flames. Although Hinckley later stated he wouldn't seek release, prosecutors insisted he be Burning van sparks brush fire ESCAPE ATTEMPT. • • and buried in the snow in handcuffs. Shades of Hou- dini. Griffin claima nothing stops him. He has a standing offer to give $1,000 in cull to the person who can tie him in rope and get away with it. He's aayi he'• not worried about toeing the money. "U I don't make it big in this bulinea, I can became a criminal," he jokes, noting that on a dare he broke out of a steel door jail cell in Oklahoma last year. In six minutes, no leas. But his date at the bottom of Newport Harbor likely will make the biggest splash yet. Originally he was going to jump from the Balboa Island Ferry. But he's gone high- clasa and now will do hla thing from the bow of a 12~-foot yacht owned by Magic bland, a Newport nightspot. "U I panic," he aaya, with a heavy touch of melodrama, "all'• lost." Griffin. who claima part of the art of escaP.t is fimhl& how to dWocate a wrill « an arm to pin greater flexibili- ty, hopes the Newport Beach stunt will put hit career in fourth gear. Providing Griffin doee IW'· vive playing anchor for a swanky boat, he has another stunt lined up in Hollywood. "rm going to chain m,.elf to the H 'in the Hollywood sign. That'• illegal, of ~. but if the police arTett me -ru be gone. No bandcuffa can hold me." CHILD RETURNED . . . represents the child's interest, said the baby'• care wou\d • monitored by the county's Department of Social Services. Ld1amme uicl thU IDOl'1lln8 he "felt comfartable" with the ju«!r.'• declaion. Schmitz, R-Newport Beach, has main1ained silence about the issue of paternity in the cue. He is listed as the parent of the child on ~e County birth records ana on cour l documerH• pert*1rUng to the ca.. Mrs. Stuckle allO hu ll8lerted that the GOP lelia1aic>r JI tb9 father of her infdt d.Milh•. A birth certl.ficate on file ID Oha«e County al80 lista Schlnib .. '6e baby girl's father. It Wiii the baby b0y'11njury which led to dl1eloeure1 that Schmitz aneaedly fatMrecl the two childfen: Orange County fire officials say a three-week-old van that caught fire in Santi.ago Canyon late Sunday aparked a 20-acre bruah fire that took nearly 40 minutes to extinguish. County fire Capt. Gary Stenberg said 100 men and two aerial tankers douse d the stubborn blaze that eru'pted Laguna crash • • v1ct1m, 16, said serious A 16-year-old girl whose legs were partially severed in a car crash Friday near El Morro Beach in Laguna remaiQS in eerioua condition today at UCI Medical Center. Ramona Lauriano of Laguna Hilla, who California Highway oatrohnen said made a U-turn on Coast ffiBbway into the path of a large truck, underwent surgery Frida_)' to re-attach the two pertially sexered legs. The 4 p.tn. crash backed up traffic for more than a mile in boll) ~tiqna as~ and firemen W'orkecl 'to frt!e the woman from her crumpled vehicle. A helicopter landed on the highway to take the injured IJlrl to the hospital. A spokesman at the hospital aaid today it will take time to determine whether Friday's auraery was successful. Low cloi:tds, fog 90Wtti••--· ~ wlnde could reed! 28 knot• w1111 11--to-&-foot - farther then eo "'"" offallore from 8an Hlcolma ltlllid. Coastal T M09Cly dMr todey •cec>t '°' emperalf!'rea 101M low c::louds end fog ,_ 0. NAT10el coul. F•lr and 1Unny Inland. ,. &.e ... HlgN 70 10 71 al tt. ~ lllld Alllln)' II f7 .04 to to 90 lnlenc:t. Fllr 9llly lonljfll ~ 91 14 with low CIOUOtl ano fog f1't .. Amlrilo n "4 nlgtll. Ovwnlahl low 118 lo II. low • AIMVlll 14 • .03. cloud• llld fog -Ille COMt Atlenla 87 10 .OI 9111y Tueeday wt1t1 dNttng In Ille A~ 711 71 i.t. m«n1ng and an.moon. F. Aue11n 16 74 . 11 and eunny 1n1enc1 Tueect«y. Hlahl ~ ti 72 70 to 71 e1 tt11 bMct.-end IG 10 BmrlOI tt 86 .06 80 lnllnd. ~ ., 74 .07 e111wllere, from Polltt Bl9MNk 74 45 Co11upllon 10 Ill• MHloan llolM t2 f4 .01 border and °"' eo ~ 8fNll eoeeon • ., • .~ cnn ecMIOl'y owr ~ __.. • .,...... N 78 ~ .tth nofttlwett wlndl 11 10 21 .,.. .,. 71 .2:1 knoll end 5 10 I loot , .. , """""°" • ee 1.1e through Tutadey. locally llghl• C.-MIO 711111 wrtab19 wlnda night encl "'°"""" ~ SC tioura becoming ••at to a.tam WV 14 • .OI aouttrM11t 10 to 11 knota wt11'1 2 awttt9 NC tt 71 .11 to 4 toot-by .... .,..,,.,... ·~ to ., locl1y end TUMCS-r. Souttlwwl QliclOO M 5e .-1 2 10 3 tMt. lOClll fog wtll Clndrinlltl IS 71 • 14 pertlll dNttnO 1n tt1a .,..,_,., a...1Mct 12 ee C1mb11 SC 111 72 .0 t CdUmbum t1 • .13 V.S. summary Dal-Ft wth 11 ,. .32 Oeyton es 111 .01 A cold lron t pu•h•d ~........... & U thund«11onn1 ecrON Arkan... o;rolt .... -13 111 .20 and 111e Ohio v~ and Into tn. ....... ~.. et 111 Olllf CoM1 Itel... ...-u• Among Ille ar-hwdell 1111 ~.::o ~ ~ 8undty _. Fsyett~. Alll.. .._._._ • 5' wllh 2.24 Inch" of rein and o;;;."'f. 11 IO ~· T9M., wtllCfl IWCOl'oed Hantord tt • .M .1" of en tndl. .._,.. 79 IO an-. ~ mO¥ed lllrouall HonoMu • 74 lhe Pacific north-t Into ll'i• .. _ ... _ ., 78 .oe NOrthlm Pllt-niglon. .._...., 11 wee flllr In Nor1fi Diii* end, lndnllpll M ~ .01 Min-'•· and Ille 8oulllwee1 ~!'2!! 17 72 t.OI Md ..,_1111y 1AJNP1 tltJea. -·-.-14 7a Th• lorecaat c alled for = to IO thund•talOrlH ov•r lh• Gulf 74 n .It t:.~ LoullWtll ~ ....,,,.,.. • 71 CAllfSIIH .........., IOI 711 ~ 112 Eur*9 ... &II k... 106 73 ~ ••7 ~.:ii:-,: :: NMdlaa 111 Pl90 Aobt11a 102 1111 ~ lllUft 101 70 "9dWOOd City 7t H ~ 1711 ...... 87 11 S-..0.... 81 10 .. ~·· 1111 to .. ..,_..,_,. ION ..... Mllit 70 ......,, 102 N rt-ml! 114 Ulllefl .. ~ IOS 7t llO..., It 42 C4MtlM 11 ta ~Ol'I---tO t6 ~ '°' eo •••board and Ill• nottllor11 * COllt ....._ iMlll of 1t1t Atltntto -.llll!l _____ j __________ _ =--~=== f: .. _ ··~ l~lf IEPIRT Ternporetur•• 1ro11nd tll• ~ =r111~t':ro~ Pllm~ T._. !:£';, ~ ......... ~ =' California ~..,... wtt .... ... Tiie ....._. --..... ~::::, ~ M ft Vfll'J :::: : ••Y• loutll•r• Qellf,ti\ln :.\.~ :::; ~ • ..... ~ .. -.... -M .. ........, a ............. ...., ..... ..._ ,.. • --t4 ~~,...-cl.5 ~ :::~ ~ 14:: v.-. ~"'°"' 711.'.. ...... .. .,... ... " .-rt,.':'= :;:9 JO: or • Dal9Mr lnlfl 14 ft • • ) .. .,. .. •--'· .., a.-."" , .. " .... • .._..,...,..c..-a: ,.....CT _. • ........................ (T...., •-tft .... ..................... eo..·....... ... ~ • ftlttlt •!'II IHfl'fi\I llO~tl, ~ • ~ :::1 • UI ....... to_.. ''" IMOftofPt ... • at to to 11 11 ..... ...,.._. t9'0 TOllltOfUW)W'I TIOU1 Htlfl 1:11 '·"'· a... J:,Y e.111 ..... •".,""" wltfl • l·t ... 1·•••1 Olreatloll ~ 4 Ml. WlllOll es 17 ~8Mdl 11 es Ontll'lo 100 f2 Palm Springe 113 711 PMl!dene 911 86 Sen B«natdlno 104 14 s.n Oabnll 100 .. CAMAOA Celg9ly ' 78 5o4 Edmonton\ 75 51 MonttMI 112 .. 00-80 15 ,,... 73 .. Toronto 71 13 v~ 73 lie Wlnnlp-o 88 4e Smog Showera end lllundetllOf'fl\I demp•n•d ., ... from Ult not1h9m Aodllm to lfle Plelrla and througll pert• of lht Eut and Sout'-1 todey. A ,..,,..°"" dumPld mote "*1 4 lnofl9I ol r• on AlltnlOOMI and ~.PL, calllng OM deelh lllld tr1Qo911no l'lllldlllldee, si-outegel ind tltenGlilt motottall In .. _._ A Nottllamp1on, Pe .. man dt<*'Md ~ey nlol'tl ""*' N •wed ""° • dtelnlOa dllGfl ..... orotllnl e .,... encs -IMIC)I MMYt .~Mld. ,. _ ~· 1tru0tc ecwllltfl' Oreoon and part• of eoutlltnl .Mione. Tn. Oreat ~ .. rttlon w•a Oloudy. P!l .. Wlltre ......... ~ ... T..,,.,.,...,,_ •ound lfle ill9'on ..... .....,_ ,...., frOft'I 47 .. Werroed, Mint\., t. N 11 Yla!M, ...... Tides • nllDAY laOond • 1:18 p.m. 4.t kloncltw~.f·m• 1.1 lllrll llllfl 1~ Lift. 4.1 .... • 7:1? Lift. 1.1 ...... """ 1:11 "·"" •.7 ..... ... 1:11... l.O ........... , .. , ......... . ..... r.....-.. tl10 UL ................ ,...,,., .... r.,...... 10:ll ...... between Santiago Creek ftoad and Williams Canyon Road at about 4:20 p.m. S\ll\day. The fire began w h ~n a motorist, not identified by fire officiala, pulled bia new van off the roadway when it erupt.ed in flames for unknown reasons. Flames from the burning van spread to nearby brush, and by the time county fire units arrived, the canyon area was ablaze. Fifteen fire engines from the rounty and four other engines battled the blaze, Stenberg said. In addition, two hand crews, two bulldozer operators, two aerial tankers, an air coordinator and two water tenders arrived to fight the fire. "The (aerial) tankers were very instrumental in retarding the spread of the fire, allowing ~1·ound forces to encircle and eventually put it out," Stenberg said. He said damage was limited to $18,000 -the value of the new van. l~raeli jet buzzes U.S. copters One of three incidents of harassment reported WASHINGTON (AP) -An According to admtn11trat1on identified as probably Iaraeli. braeli F-16 jet fighter plane sourcea, the F -16 incident When the helicopters landed, made passes at U.S. helicopters occurred Saturday and the other Israeli military vehicles blocke<l carrying an American military UH:1 helicopters were heading exits from the beach .. the reports liaison team from the carrier for a landing at J o unieh, a said. . Forrest.al to Lebanon in one of U.S .-built F-16 plane of the The U .S . military attache three harassments by the Israelis Israeli Air Force made a number r esidence to try to get the over the Weekend , Reagan of passes close to the choppers, American team through the administration sources said reports said. AB far as could be barrier and it was allowed to pass today. determined, no shots were fired. after a 45-rninute delay, sources On Sunday, reports said, the said. In the other two incidents, the 10urces said, an Israeli gunboat trained a machine gun on American helicopters heading for Jounieh and members of the team· were prevented by Israeli troops from leaving that beach helicopters carrying the Members of the team were American team were again allowed to leave the landing area heading for Jounieh when they only after providing their names, were tracked by a machine gun ranks and Social Security ~!I the patrol craft, which was numbers, sources aaid. The incidents Involved a Thtf team apparently ha.a been liaison team from the U.S . making repeated trips ashore to 'north of Beirut until the U.S . military attache intervened. European Command that confer at the U.S. embassy. The U.S. European Command has asked the United St.ates to lodge a protest with the Israeli government, contending that such incidents are "very serious." apparently bas been doing ground work for the pos!Uble introduction of American troops as part of an international peacekeeping force. On Saturday, as two U.S . After the U.S . helicopters departed, Israeli military vehicles were parked on the landing mne, apparently to prevent further U.S. helicopter operations there, sources said. Beserk Texas trucker kills 6 Driver slain alter shooting, ramming episode GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas (AP) -A truck driver on a shooting rampage killed at least six today and slammed a n 18-wheel tractor-trailer rig into a police car befor~. oftlc.ers shot him dead, authonties sa.ad. Four oth er people were injured, including a police officer hit by the truck, authorities said. The officer and another penon were in critical condition. The gunman, identified by police as John F. Parish, 46, of Dallaa, spoke to no one this morning when he walke<hinto each of three warehouses ln this southwest Dallas suburb, witnesses said. St.a.rtlng at about 8 a.m., be fatally shot three people at one building, two at another, and one at a third, police 1pokeswoman Alexia Griffin Nid. The man got into a U'UCk and drove away. but smashed into a police car at a barricade. "The tntck hit th! squad car and the offioec went Uying across the· pavement," said Wayne · Standifer, who owns Wayne's Custom Automotive across the street from the police barricade. '"It sent the car about 75 feet backward." The truck rolled up an embankment near a parking lot, knocking down a telephone pole and sliding into another car, shoving it into a building owned by a trucking company. Standifer said police were firing at the man during this time, but he managed to get out of the truek and go i.nside the building, where police converged on him. The rampage covered a 15-square-block area in the west central part of town, said Ms. Griffin. Three of the wounded were taken to Dallas-Fo rt Worth Medic.al C.enter in Grand Pralrle, said Jenny Andenon, a medical center spokesman. CENTER LOCATION ... ~pared until Dec. 14, he noted. CONePT' CAUM»AR Said Brady: '"I'bere ts a .t ...... na '\~of Nie tt Md J4ltt 1S ,,_.lnOL ·---e 2 Clalm9 '°' ........ pcmibWty the school district may 3 second.....,. fllf eioi'dlcllni1111nclOl9• 8mlflCllng <lecide to locate itl facility outside ~'=-~~ = the Civic Center alnce they ll)=of"noemoklrlO"-wtttlln require a site location with ..an P.ibllo a °"*"""''· approved EIR." 11 "-""' euth0!1zln0 c11teetor of publO .or\ta 10 owtlfy tllh' of "'I tor ~· Alo. 0 t h e r m a j or b u 11 ~ i n g a Ur;')" ei:.= .c of Chld c.r. Committee. e>tpected to remain \n the center I) 1ntna PllllllO , .... Cott> • are City Hall, lnclUdins • new • ~>~: ~= ~~i:c~ police station, Irvine Rench ~ ... ....,..._, -.... Water District offtcea, a new H).....,..,....,., 19'M3 t111C41t )'Mr. d 121 Al*OWlt"' wemnt ~ Senior Citizens' Center, a ay U) Inter-cur Llelaon Oommlu .. care center an4 a petfonnlna arts tr•,...•ort ....-~· 1 _..., 14) !MM ~ ...... req1Mt or ""'" cent.er. AMlllll HOlldlw .._on o.o 4. The council chOle to hold the 11) ~ :=. .. specla1 dilculllorl about locations ,., flul* .....,. '°' _... °' ~ beca~ of lMl-ililnuie attemptl ComtnlNIOn ~=•OOf!ll "" to move the lite llCrC* Campus ~,..":.,., "'OMfllld Drive frOm UC lrv\fte, when the '11 h•ll• N&rlft1 en 1tt1•men1 of center WM (int 8"viaioned when oom""'nltr 11eve1~1 ·~~ anti the dty WM fQml'd, ~OfeatM 11~..: =-'"""' ueanwhlle, tr11•tee1 of the ,:,1::".=4 ¥ ll'llMll.•I.., "*- Pl> -lllllMM ~fer_.,.. ............. 1ehool ,dlatrict. are expected to ~-et.. a Ihle for tbi&r new office ttt L....-n...,. o1 ,.,...,. oMo at their ~:30 p.m.. meetln1 at ~·-•• n em• "' ... ~ t;ake1ld• Mlddl School, 3 ~· l'l ,,......... il .. IR., tu -...... ~ ..... the .... Ultlld -;~::.. .... ondMQtyOii.,..... lll:•w.·w. She said one woman, Ruth Jamea, 19, of Alvarado, waa wounded in the shoulder and neck and was in guarded condition and Robert SatabLe, 30, of Grand Prairie was in surgery and in critical condition. Another woman died at the hospital. she said. NB hit, run driver begins jail sentence The hit-and-run driver who struck and killed Newport Beach resident Donald Warner laat September has been ordered to begin serving a 240-day jail sentence. Samuel Gibbs., 21, a resident of Orange who a,Ppeared in 0ranae County Superior Court on Friday, was granted 10 days to seek appellate court review. Unless Gibbs secures review by the Fourth District Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. he will be jailed Aug. 16 . Warner, 26, wu hit and killed In the pre.dawn ~.Sept. 19 while crmsina Balboe Boulevard at 32nd Street. The driver and e passenger stopped briefly, .ccordlng to witnemes, and then took otf. •• The death car wu located several days later, abandoned In a Wh.lttier ahopptna cen .... Gibbt hu Mmitt.ed to ~Inc the driver and aakl he pillUdtecl alter the ea:ident. ff• .. ct.did that he WM drtvinl Ntklillly. The YO\U\C driver, whc> plea baraeined for the 240.aay jail sentence lut 1prlna, went to coun law lMt week to pt the Mnteol .,.. and ..,,. a fUll. )uy trial. · Oibbl maintained hla flrat ettarney pve bJi'o poor ldYICe. Glbbi aafd In .adfta hla PM· ..... =:: .......... , be .. Wllb ,.,,~ •• an......_t.anow.-'* tNa: Hta motion for a ltaJ wa1 diiinled. ' / I i I WASHINGTON (AP) -John ,W. Hlnckley Jr .• looldna pale and weaker than on the cfay of hil •tunnlnC 1111.'Quittal le\'en weeka a10 on char1e1 ot 1ho0Un1 Preaident Reaaan, waa committed indefinitely to a federal mental hae!etoday. U.S. Diatrict J Barrington D. Parker, find.in& Hinckley to be mentally W and dangerous. read \ hil commitment order from the bench alter Hinckley iold him h8 waived the rilht to• heertr,c on hil releue. But Hlnckley aald "I don't nece11artlY, aaree" with the conclusion of doctora at St. Ellzabetha Hotpltal who aid th4I presidential uaailant suffered from a "severe chronic mental dlaorder." ' ~ Jud.-, wbo ...... that Hlnck.ley appear 1n J)enon ·io rive the heiarUUr, ~ him a aeriea of queatfona to make certain that he undentood hll rlaht lo preaent evidence dll.PUtina the docton' report. Standing before the Judae tn a pin.stripe ah1rt but witboUt one of the apon coats he always wore du.rin& hi.a Uial~ J;llnck.ley IAld he WH aware of hi• rl1"t to a hearina and had no qu"tlcma about the n,hta Jw WU Civinc up. "Are 1-ou under any medkation. 'Parker uked. "Y• llr," Hinckley~. '1Doee it alfee\ your a6Wty to understand what la happenlnc th1a momlnaT'' the Judae Mk.eel. "No alr," llinckJey replied. Hit~ run . . . driver faces jail The hit-and-run driver who atruck and killed Newport Beach resident Donald Warner last September haa been ordered to begin serving a 240-day jail lef\tence. Samuel Gibbe, 21, a reatdent of Orange who appeared ln Orange County Superior Court on Friday, waa granted 10 days to eeek appellate court review. Unless Glbbe aecurea review by the Fourth· District Court of Appeal in San Bernardino, he will be jailed Aug. 16. Warner, 26, was hit and killed in the pre-dawn hours Sept. 19 while crcming Balboa Boulevard at 32nd Street. The driver and a passenger stopped briefly, according to witnemee. and then took off. The death car was located several days later, abandoned in a Whittier shopping center. DellJ .... ,,_. 9'r LM ,.,_ ' Erin Kroening, 4, of Costa Mesa knows where to find welcome relie(. in her back ard. Gibbs bu admitted to ~inl the driver and said he panicked after the accident. He hu denied that he was driving reddetaly. Conflic of interests uncertain The young driver, who plea bar1alned for the 240-day jail sentence lut sprlna, went to court late laat week to pt the tentence stayed and have a full-Jwi trial. NewPQrt officia s in dileDJfJla over condo conversion Gtbba Mid in taldnc hJI .... barpln PQllition. he ajp-eed that he WU drivtna with neaJJ&ence, an adrnimlon he now dabm ta not true. By STEVE MARBLE 0£"'9DellJ .... IUft The California Fair Political Practices Commission has presented Newport Beach with a dilemma. City officials, concerned that a majority of the City Council might have a conflict of interests that could block members from voting on a condominium conversion law tonight, asked the state commission for a ruling. The commission acrutiniU!d the matter and came back today with a ruling that goes something like this -maybe there is a conflict and maybe there isn't. City Attorney Mike Miller admits this is not the definitive answer the city sought. Miller explained that the fair practices group, though, did leave the city some breathing room. He says the entire council can move ahead and vote on the controversial condominium proposal as long as a public hearing is not held tonight. Miller says the commission has suggested that if a public hearing is not held, council members who might have a conflict would not have an opportunity to debate and lobby each other on the pending law. "Personally, it seems a little ridiculous to me," Miller offered, pointing out that the council already has held one public hearing on the condominium law. The conflict of interests concerna were touched oU when it was discovered that five council members owned or have interest in property that could be converted to condominiums. The members are John Cox, Paul Hummel, Phil Maurer, Evelyn Hart and Mayor Jackie Heather. The proposed law would permit owners of duplexes and triplexes to convert to condominiums if a lengthy set of conditions are met. The propoaed law has been met with critid.sm from persons who feel the ordinance would mean the lOflll of apartments. Noisier 3 days due from Toro The noise level in aouthem Orange County will be lncreued on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thunday, according to officlab at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro. Due to increased flight operatio~ the noUle level will incre8* Tueeday from 8:30 to 9 a.m .; Wedneaday from 3 to 5 p.m.; and on Thunday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m .. offldals aid. Escape artist plans NB dive Mesa man to give shackles the slip 20 feet down t By STEVE MARBLE o<tM Dtlllr .......... Mike Griffin ought to be locked up. Here'• a 21-year-old guy who's going to have himself wrapped in 30 pounds of chains, handcuffs and leg irons and then jump from a boat into Newport Harbor. The watery site he's se- lected i. 20 feet deep and STATE there's little doubt that he's going straight to the bottom. Griffin figures he can hold his breath three minutes tops but that it should take him double that to wiggle out of all the hardware. "If I don't make it," he says, fingerinf a aet of handcuffs he claima are the latest fashion at Scotland CSLB classes analyzed Controversial women's studies program and a class in experimental sex experiences at Cal State Long Beach are analyzed Page A5. Smaller households draw attention Neither polltlclans nor homebuilder• paid attention to atatiatlcs in 1972 ahowlna smaller bou.ehold.a. They have to now -and they are. Pap AS. Yard, "I look great in orange coral." Griffin is a Costa Mesa resident, a professional es- cape artist and a one-man publicity show. His tchedu- led Aug. 16 1tunt ln Newport Harbor is only the latest in a career of taking on all makes and •hapes of handcuffs, 1ttralll}ltjackets and irona. SPORTS He claims he first got wrapped up in the profemion when he waa 6. He says his brother would tie him up ln rope and then watch in amazement aa Griffin un- wound himlelf. He aays he had himself wrapped in barbed wire, padlocked inalde mall bap (See DCAPE. Pa1e Al) Dodgers prove real Braves ldllen The Dodgers did it again to Atlanta and are within l ~ games of lJ).e divlaion-leed.lna Brawe. Pqe Cl. Freeway World Series on horiam1 The Angels take a 1~-lameleld1n the~ Le-.ue Weet and 1uddenly there'• talk of a rt.Way World ,Seriea in October. P-ae Cl. i When Parker uked If Hinckley undentood preciaely the meanln1 of the w.tver he WMlllanina, he answered, "Yet. I ,fudae, "I don't nec:e.ari.ly....., With their (the docton') op&nlon." The St. Ellzabetha report uJd Hinckley suften from four rnajot pel'IOl\allty d.l.orden and majot depre.lon which \he docton Mid ~~t Hinckley quickly added, "I want to aay for the record by 1l1nln1 this waiver I'm not admJtttna to agree.Ing to what's in the report." Momenta later, he told the i. l.n partial remlaslon. Parker concluded that "because of thta mental diloc'det, the defendant John W. Hinckley (See BINCKLEY, Pace A!) Schmitz ease . Child returned to his _mother .; ~DAVID KUTZMANN ~ from criminal proceedings :' 8=e~'c:w.i judge today pending a~ainst Mrs. Stuckle for ordered the release of a alleged fe ony child neglect in 15-month old child -believed to connection with injuries the child suffered. be the illegitimate son of State His penis was nearly severed Sen. John G . Schmitz -to the by having a strand of hair wound cuatody of his mother. tightly around it. Reconstructive The infant was taken from his surgery was performed and mother, Carla Verne StuckJe, 43, county officials said today the of Tustin, several weeks 11go child is doing well. after he suffered serious injuries The baby has been in county to his genitals. tod Albe SI H · "I am delighted. My son is cus Y at rt tton ome tt. corning home," Mrs. Stuckle said ~~ey Michael McDonnell, this morning after appearing in who represents Mrs. Stuckle, juvenile court in Orange. said his client would be able to Judge Byron McMillan keep custody of the child authorized the release of the pending the outoome of further child after hearing the results of dependency hearings in juvenile a county Social Services court. Judge McMillan scheduled Department investigation which further prooeedino Sept. 10. concluded that the child would Attorney Harold LaFlamme, be Safe in the care of the mother. the court-appointed lawyer who Today's proceeding is separate (See CIDLD, Pa1e A2) .,.., .......... .., ....... O"D " •• ESCAPER -Mike Griffith demonstrates how he'll be chained for his underwater escape attempt when he jumps v from the Balboa Island Ferry. INDEX A4 C2 A7 Bt-~ A7 C4-6 B7 87 C4 AO B6 A7 ~ Ann Landers Motkowitz Movte. National News Public Notioel Spo111 Stock Markets TeleYtlfc)n ,,_ .. Weather World Newa A7 A7 A4 B6 A3 84,ot Cl-4 B5 B8 88 A2 A3 HINCKLE I Jr. la ln the ~t dmi Mid WW I D th• reaaonabl• f\&ture ije ~ to hlmlillt GI' CKMft." 1 11' ' Tn• ... , Um• bt WH In Park9r'1 courtroom, lfflncli.ley nood, ...,. ~ down hll l cheeka. while 1 jury found h1m lAnocent by reMOl'l of lnmnit)' ot ~ the Much 80, 1981 lhooUnl of I ; 8euaft and tNee other rneft, ir.dvtlld In ~ ot rtcht to • belrlnc and. jo.Ably, Jury trial &o determl"• hit oo dn.alna ........ L A netit!borhood apet between Newport a.th botMownera and mem"bel-1 of a church over a U .a. Attorney It• 1 I. Hair1I ~latMd tn a le to Parle• he W• c.'Ol'aMl'Md that ~.U~u.._.wwe~ to ....... ~· iilhta. he coUJd Jaw return tD Court and :r==-~~f~ C4und.1 tonJaht. . · 1 t Tnat verdict 1enerated I neUonwlde· outraae and 1•v• 1 vtFI' to • ~ c1rtve to cbanCe the lnanlty law. claim he 1hould be releaHd becauH thoae rl1ht1 were viola~ Mayor Jackie Heather, who ha• presided over two clev9lopment controvenlel that have re1ulttd In referendum drives, laid the church dilpute wut be the "tou1heat, mou emotional'' lmue of the year. r • HIJ\cldey, 27, faced life 1 lmprlaonment lf convlciecl on c:har1ea of attempting to , fl•aaulnate the prealdent and aaaaultlng, with Intent to kill, Reasan, White House Preas Secretary James Brady and two Even after today'• he~·, Hinckley Ml the Mp! rtiht to petition the court every ahc monUw for his rei-, with ~ detennJ.nlna mue to be w~ he la mentallY-W and danae~ to hirmelf ana othen. Members of St. Andrew1 Presbyterian Church, located near Newport Harbor Ht1h School, are aeek1na pennlmon to construct the 8&-foOt aanctuary. they prevlo\ . .1ly asked for a 106-foot sanctuary but ha'Ye lowered their 8'Chta. 1 law enforcement offlcen. ., Instead, aa required under the The written waiver sltPwd by Hinckley, aubmlu.d by hi.n to proaecutora, nya, "I hereby voluntarily and intentionally waive and relinqulah any and all rt1hta and prtvilea-vested by statute, the C()natltutlon dr appellate declalona to any hearina to which I am entitled at this time. This waiver apedfical]y lnc;ludea any ~t I may have to a~ ~y jury. Critical homeowners of the ctum:h plan claim the u.nctuary ii too high. too big and likely to draw too many Sunday law, he waa eent to St. !liabetha for evaluation June 21. The law entitled him to a heering within ~o days to ~etennine lf he should remain inatitutlonallted. It wu that proceeding Parker acheduled for today. Although Hinckley later stated he wouldn't aeek release, prosecutors inaiated he be wonhlpera. · Mayor Heather, a member of St. Andrews, baa asked the dt)' attorney to decide whether ahe ahould be allowed to vote on the matter. Following are the items listed on the council allenda: •{ CONllNT "CALIMDAll ,, ESCAPE ATTEMPT. 1) Aleolutlon requiring vehlclel on Proepect Street to elop at s-.tlor• DrW.. ,. and buried in the snow in handcuffs. Shades of Hou- dini. Griffin claims nothing stops him. • • 2) Ent• lltig.tlon 8Qllnlt Orenge County -county lend ftll ll*l• '-· 3) Appro.... a dam lallufe evacuation plan. ~":=-<>:.-~.:.=~ NOl1t'I Star 8Mc:h. ·' He has a atan<iing offer to give $1,000 in caah to the person who can tie him in rope and get away with it. He's says he's not worried about losing the money. class and now will do hla thing from the bow of a 12~-foot yacht owned by Magic Island, a Newport nightlpc>t. "If l panic," he aaya, with a ~avy touch of melodrama, "a1l'a lost." &) Iner .... rate for lnlmll ahell• ~ 8) Hire JHn Tandow1ky •• publlclty coneultant lor City Art• CommlHlon lor 19412-83. '· " ONMNANCH ·' Griffin, who cla1ma part of the art of eeca~ is le8ming how to dialocate a wrist or an a.rm to gain greater flexibili- ty, hope9 the Newport Beech stunt will put his career in fourth gear . t) A law •t•bltehlnO regulations on video getne operations and IOcatlona. . , ., "U I don't make It big in this business, I can become a criminal," he jokes, noting that on a dare he broke out of a steel door jail cell in Oklahoma last year. In six minutes, no Jess. But his date at the bottom of Newport Harbor likely will make the biggest splash yet. Originally he was going to jump from the Balboa Island terry .. But he's gone hlgh- Providing Griffin does sur- vive playing anchor for a swanky boat, he has another stunt lined up in Hollywood. "I'm going to chain myself to the Ii iri the Hollywood sign. That's illegal, of coune, but if the police arrest me - I'll be acme-No handcuffs can hold me." CHILD RETURNED ... represents the child'• interest, aaid the baby'• care wo\lld be monitored by the county's Department of SodaJ Services. LaF1amme utd thia momJ.na he "felt comfortable" with the ~·· dedsion.. Scbmltz. R-Newport Beach, has maintained lli1eDoe about the 1-18 of patemit)' in.the cue. He ii Ua1ed as the parent of the child on c:>ran&e County birth records ana on court documents pert:alntn« to the cme. Mn. Stuckle also bu uaerted that the ~p le,Wator is the father of her infant daulht.er. A birth oertWcate on file bi Onnae County alao lim Schmitz .. the baby girl's father. It WU the baby boy's injury which led to dilcloaurea that Schmitz allegedly fathered the two chlldren. ~ = from city attorney regarding ·-·*" ~ McFadden deWloper RlcNld ~and the ~i Repor1 from otty attom9)' on pr~ city poflc:y on Mallo 811. COUNCLllUeMll 11 Acoept reelgnallon of Rlctlvd Foxx from the Newport Beautlflcallon Cltlnnt Advtlofy Commlt1•. 2) AeqUMt from South Coat Repet1ory board of trust-lot • $10,000 grant. Tongue used to call cops INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A 19-vear-old gas station attendant who waa tied up by two robbers wriggled her tongue from under a gag and pushed buttons on a telephone to call for help, police aaid, I Thisby R. Brannon said she waa inside the Marathon service station Sunday whe~ a man with a beard pulled a handgun on her. She was tied to a chair and sagged but said she was able to scoot the chair across the office to the telephone. Miss Brannon called manager Thomas V . Veste r, a former Indianapolis policeman, who came to her aid. .. ~\' Low clouds, fog _,.,_..,...., Nott~ wlnde could r.edl 21 knot• with &-to-I-foot .... farther ttlan eo rnll• off!lllOt• from San Nloolaa lllend. Coastal Mody clMr today _..,. fQI' 101M low doude and log -Ola c:o .. t. Fair and tunny Inland. H10N 10 to 78 at the bMd'9I and ' 10 to 90 Inland. Fair .-1)' tonldlt with low dOUClt -tog Dy .... night. CMmlght tow &a to ee: LOw clcluda and fog ,,.., the cout .-1)' Tlllltda)' with a-Ing In tM .... '"°"*'Cl and an-. Fair and eumy Inland T~. Hldla 70 to 71 at the ~and IO to IO lnlend. !ttewllere, lro111 Point Conception to tlle Mexican bonier and out eo rn1aa: 8Mal cnft 9IMeory ~ O\ltW ..... with ~t wind• 11 to 21 knot• and 5 to I foot HH tllrouoll TUltday. Locally MOtlt • _...,.. .... nlgflt and "'°"*'Cl lloure becoming •••t to ·~ 10 to 11 lu1otl wlit 2 to 4 toot -by late lftlmOoft today MO Tuaeclay. aou...... ·,... 2 to 3 teet. l.OC8I fog with par1llil dWing Ill tlle .,..,,_ .. U.S. summary A c old front pueh•d 1~torme -OM M- and 1"' Ohio Vr/lwt and Into the OdfCOMCetatee. Among 1"' .... ...,.. hit Sunday _. F~, Ml., with 2:24 Inch•• of rtln and. er--.. Tam., wtlldl ~ .17 of ., lnctl. 8"°"" elto nlO¥ed ttwwall tlle Pacific north-'1 Into t'ie NortMm ~ l1IQlon. " -.. In Nor1fi 0.0C• and, Mlll,_.a, encl 1M loutllwwt hed~9#'"Y--Th• foreoaat oall•d for thuMJeratormt' over tlle Gulf .Temperat~rea UTtoel .. u..,.. = ea .., ., ... 17 ... Alhfttlt .... .03, Allam.a 17 70 .o6 ~ty 11 71 Al"*' M 74 .11 . ~ .. 12 ::=,.,.. .. 16 .oe rT 74 .07 ~ 74 45 8alet t2 ... • 01 9oeeon c• .3:! l!ltOWI ....... n .4:! .... 7' 71 . ~ 8uflngtOft 11 ea 1.18 ~IC .. 158 '° 75 CMttlel'I WV ... .. .OI CNrtfte NC .. 11 .11 =~· 10 81 .. 5a Clnc*lnatl .. 11 • 14 ~ 12 • amClle SC t1 12 . 01 COMlltlUt 11 • .13 Dal-A wttl t1 74 .u Daylon 15 11 .01 o.r-17 f1 Dee~ u Ill o.trolt as SI .20 °""""' =~ .,., FaflO n 41 =::r ... . .. 11 • ~ . .. ... ...... 7t '° HonoMI .. 74 HouMOn ea 11 .OI ":..-::. ...... 01 f7 11 1.05 .IMblwle M n l(aneClty IO to ~ 1• n .t1 t::-ci * 79 .. 12 1.83 t:= ... 71 .Ot pee ....,.,,. .. 78 c~ ...... 108 75 _.... 112 EUreka .. 65 ~ 105 n Laft09W • .., ~~ 15 .. 104 H ........ t11 !'MO Aobtea 102 55 "'°~ 101 10 Redwood City n ff leol••••o .., .. ...,_ 11 fd =~ ., '° 16 ........... IO N ........... 70 ........ '°2 16 Tiler'INI 1'4 ~ .. 10I 19 ....... ~ 42 C*llNI 12 t:::::.• IO II 10I eo CoeM ....... lftOl!t fl/I the Atllrltle ""llilllll"!I ________________ _ eaaboard and the nortllern Aoddlll. ~ -~ 0¥« rnoet of ttl9 MldWelt, IN P9ail'9 and ....... Temperature• around tlle ~r1n"=. =io1~1T: ,...~ ,...,.. .... A.....- Ca •.!1ornia 5:' =" 1i'r .::::, T!' TM~..._._.. a..:WNwwJettr :::: i'E G H11 10..tllern Oallf!,[•:1;: = ~ ~ M fl : _.,.,.._.. ... .., '' ---~· Mfl ......,_, 13 .......... ,...~ ... &Al ---.l.... ..... ~ ... ~~i.1:= === t:: -:: ................... '*'= =i.1:: ~= ~ :: =-.::::111 • ._ ,..., Mfl .... M ....... ,_o.-:::J ~ , .. ft .... .. ·-:=::::=.... -a.-'I.... ... .... .. :r. .. , ... , •• ,,., .. , , .. ,:. l:r"'o.a. I: :::: : ll ........ .,YI " at 10 to 11 llMt•a'"", .. ~f= TOMORROW'I T1DU: "Ith 1:H '·"'· "" 7117 a.M ..... •'*''"""' •"" • . . ..,.... .....,..,._, • Mt. Wllaon ea 87 NewpOr1 8eld'I 111 es Ontario 100 82 Palm 89r1not t13 79 Paaedena N 116 San 8tmardlno 104 84 San Gabriel too .. CAMAOA Cailglwy 71 54 Edmonton 75 51 Montrwl 12 ee Ott awe 80 15 Regina .,. ... Toronto 71 83 Vanoower 73 H Winnipeg ee 48 Smos Sh°"" Ind thunwetorme dampened areaa lrom th• n«them "°'* ... to the ,...,. Ind througti part• of tha Eut and 8outlleett today. A ralnttonn dumf;ltd "*-!Mn • lnCftle ot n1n on AlantOMI ... eath1911arn, Pa.. Olll*"O one dtMll end tr1ggerlflG lftOdelldel, power oucao-Md lhndlnt motoNll 111 .,.cw.. A Northampton, Pa •• man drowned ~ay Nght wllel'I "9 ~ ""°. drttnaga Clltdl .... oroeelna • ..,._ and -...,. tlWeY1 olllclale ...... A ,.. tllUnclerahowefe etl'llCll 1outlletn Oregon and pttte of 90Utfletl'I Mione. 1" ~ Liii• rttlon ••I oloudy. II...._• ...... molllV oteal'. r..,.....,,.. around 111e flelloft Mfor'9 clllwn rMOtd "°"' 47 .. W.,.,..,, MINI., .to M tt YUIM, Ml. Tides . o.., ......... .., ...... " ...... TWO-WAY TRAFFIC -A windsurfer looks sails full of wind. Lifeguards estimated more for the right breeze to take his board out of than 130,000 beachgoers crowded the shores of traffic lanes as a passing sailboat -one of a Newport Beach on Sunday, several .thousands long line making its way into Newport Harbor of them to watch the boats pass by the mouth off the jetty at. Rocky Point -slides by with of Newport Harbor. Guards rescue 350 swimmers Rough surf., riptides plague Orange Coast beaches Early morning coastal fog broke in time to attract about 300,000 people to Orange Coast beaches Sunday, and rough surf that produced riptides kept lifeguards busy wiUl more than 350 rescues. There were no injuries reported. National Weather Service apokeswoman Pat Rowe said patchy l ow clouds and fog tonight will clear Tuf!9day to fair skies. She aaid beach highs will be 76, dropping to 65 Tuesday night. Inland highs are expected to reach 88 with Jows of 65. Though moderate surf of just two to four feet was repor1ed Sunday. its intensity caused problems for many swimmers. "It (the surf) just picked up and it's going crazy," Huntington State Beach lifeguard Brian Hopp reported Sunday. "We've had big strong rips (riptides). Even the good swimmers are having trouble." Huntington State Beach repc;>rted 90 to 100 ~es and a crowd of more than 25,900, while Huntington City Beach reported 45 rescues and a crowd of 58.000. Newport Beach attracted about 130,000 people and lifeguards there reported 100 rescues. while Laguna Beac h lifeguards reported 50 rescues m a crowd of 20-25,000. San Clemente's state and city beaches reported crowds to~ about 67,090 and about 75 reecues San Clemente Beach lifeguards said they helped push three pleasure ~~ which foundered Coast gas station sells for $·I IDillion A Newport Beach man reportedly bas sheJled out $1 million to buy a Shell Oil Company service station in Huntington Harbour. The station, which changed ban& in June, IS located on 26,- 000 square feet of prime commercial property at 16922 Pacific Coast Highway . The buyer, identified as Jim Salter of Newport Beach , apparently doesn't plan to continue the use as a service statk>r;t. according to a spokesman for Coldwell Banker office in Santa Ana. Steve McArthur said toda~ 0 gue.ea" that the bottom of the facility will deal in marine-related activities. He said that commercial retail development& might be located on the second floor. The buyer and his representatives couldn't be reached for comment today . McArthur said the previous owner, Ron Schirmer of Fountain Valley. 80ld guoline for vehicles and boats and developed a bait and i.ckle facility and a marine garage at the rear of the station next to the Huntington Harbour waterways. "But I think the new owner is buying the land as if there ia no longer going to be a service station on it," he aaid . Newport mom serious after crash Police today ldentlfled the lftOtorilt who died in a weekend Huntington Bead\ traffic accident that alao injured t.wo othen, tncludfna a alx-montha- prepant Newport Be.ch woman who pw bb1h after \he mlahap. Trefflc lnveau1aton said 9ubera Welch, 40, of Lakewood, waa pronounced dead at the 8C9IM alter her Toyota cro•ed the 09nter line on Plldflc Cout Hilhway just eut of Warner Avenue and atruck 1 Dataun 3IOZ cklwn by MichMl 8w1ion. It, of 214 35th 8t,, Newport .... ~~P OONl'rid ., a p.m. Bunen and hq u., .. r-old wtfe lu1an were ruahM '° Fountain Valley Community Hospital. when the woman pve birth by c-r.n MCtlon to a baby boy, thrae months premature. The husband and wife both were reported ln aerioua condition today at Fountain Valley. TM beby, transferred to apecial flialldil at Manin Luther Hoapltal In Anaheim, waa reDOit*I Iii IMble Oillldt1'oo 9Ulj toaay . S8tunlQ'1 ~ cWth .... tM .... 1n ....... of ,. ...... N~PH• .... ··JllllCh duftnl ,__, ...a... Offloln md h -..1119 allj'l lldt ..... dHth of tM ,...., tJ.e 4'11bth ..... .......... Offatal ••-~n. on the beach's surf line baek into open water. Water temperatures Sunday ranged Crom the mid-60. to the low 70.. ~esa planners eye high rise for 5th time Costa Mesa planning commissioners will consider tonight the fifth proposal for high-Ne offices to be built on four acres south of the San Diego Freeway on Bristol Street. For three years James Gianuliu and his partner have tried unsuc_cessfully to win approval for various projects that range from five to 14 atorfea. CommisaJonera will consider a proposalforconstructionoftwo five-story office buildings on land between the former Montgomery Ward Co. store and the San Diego Freeway. The portion of the plan calllng for 85-foot buildings does not exceed the recently adopted 8~foot height limit for the .,.._ Homeowners in the ne•rby Brookview condominiums have . indicated support for the latest plan, though they oppoeed put propoula. The dty staff ls recommencling approval of the project to be unveiled during the hearing at Oty Council chambers, 77 Fair Drive. The meeting begins at 6:30 . Israeli jet buzzes U.S. helicopters WASHINGTON (AP) -An Israeli F-16 jet fi1hter plane made pu9l!8 at U.S . belicopten carryini an American mllJtary Ualeon team from the carrier Fonestal U> ~ in ane of. three har...-nentB by the llnella over the weekend, Rea1an admlnlatration 1ourcea aald today. ' WASHINPTO~AP) -John W. Hlnckley Jr., pa19 and weaker than. QI\ the y of hla ltunnina ~u1ttal MVen weeks a10 on char1ea of 1hootln1 Pretldent l\eacan, waa COfllmltted lndef~nttely to a fecleral mental hot~today. U.S. Diatrict J Barrtnpm D. Parker, find.lng H1rick.ley to be mentally ill and aan,erou.. read \ hla commitment ordef' from U. bench after H1nckley told him ~ waived the right to a bMrina oo hla releMe. But Hinckley aaid "I, don't nece11arlly agree" with the conclusion of doctors at St. Ellzabetha Hospital who ta1d the presidential ueallant auUered from a •1aevere chronic mental d19order." The Judae, who iDllltild that Hinckley appear tn J)eflOn to waive the heartna. Mked him • aerlH of q\&ettfont to make certain th.at be undentood bJi rt1ht to prHent evtdenc:e diapu~ the docton' report. StancUnc before the JUd'9 In a pln-ttzipe thitt but without one of the aport coeta he always wore dwina hia ~ J:linckley uJd be .,.., ........... .., ..... ,.,... waa aware of bu rl1ht to a hearia& •aftd hM DO flUl9tioM about th4t n,htl Ille Wiii ~ up. "Are you u1adet any rnedDMunfl' PUbr Mlwd. uy. rtl," Hlnddey fN~.....,-aded~. "°'* lt affeet yow a6'lit)' to underltand what la happentnc thi8 mamlne?'' &be judee atlulcl. '1No .U/,'-Hlnddey replied. Hit, run driver faces jail The hit-and-run driver who struck and killed Newport Beach reaident Donald Warner laat September bu been ordered to begin serving a 240-day jall sentence. Sam~l Gibbl, 21, a resident of Orange who appeared In Oranae County Superior Court on Friday, WU 8l'aJlted 10 days to seek appellate court review. , Unless Gib!» aecu.res review by the Fourth Diatrict Court of Appeal in San Bernardino, he will be jailed Aug. 18. Warner, 26, wu hit and killed in the pre-dawn hours Sept. 19 while croaing Balboa Boulevard at 32nd Street. The driver and a paaaen1er a topped briefly, according . to wit:nemes, and then took ott. The death car was Jocated several days later, abandoned in a Whittier shoppina center. ENVIABLE POSITION -When the ' Erin Kroening, 4, of Costa Mesa knows where weather's too hot and beaches are too crowded, to find welcome relief in her baclcyard. Gibbs haa admitted to ~ing the driver and said he penicke4 after the accident. He bu denJed that he was drivin1 reckle.tly. By STEVE M.Al\BLE Of"'Mle Deir......... . The California Fair Political Practices Commission has presented Newport Beach with a dilemma. City officials, concerned that a majority of the Cit~ Council might have a conflict of interests that could block members from voting on a condominium conversion law tonight, asked the state conunlaalon for a ruling. The commission acrutiniz.ed the matter and came back today. with a ruling that goes something like this -maybe there is a conflict and maybe there isn't. City Attorney Mike Miller admits this is not the definitive answer the city aought. Miller explained that the fair practices group, though, did leave the city some breathing room. He says the entire council can move ahead and vote on the, controversial condominium proposal as long as a public hearing is not held tonight. Miller says the commission has suggested that if a public hearing is not held, council memben who might have a conflict would not have an opportunity to debate and lobby each other on the pending law. "Personally, it seems a little ridiculous to me," Miller offered, pointing out that the council already has held one public hearing on the condominium law. The conflict of intereats concerns were touched off when it was discovered that five council members owned or have interest in property that could be converted to condominiums. The members are John Cox, Paul Hummel, Phil Maurer, Evelyn Hart and Mayor Jackie Heather. The proposed law would permit owners of duplexes and triplexes to convert to condominiums if a lengthy set of conditions are met. The propoeed law has been met with criticism from persons who feel the ordinance would mean the loss of apartments. The youn1 driver, who plea barpinecl for the 240-day jail sentence last 1prin1, went t-0 court late lut week to 1et the 1entence atayed and have a full- jury' trial Gibbe said in taJdna hia plea- bargaln =-he llreecl Ulat he WM with nealJaence. an .adrntw'm he now clalma ta not true. Noisier 3 days due from Toro The noise level in southern Orange County will be l.ncreued on Tuesday, Wedneadffk:tai:'d ThUl"lday I aocordinl to 0 at the Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro. Due to increaaed flight operation.a. the nohle level will increue 'IUeeday from 8:30 to 9 a.m.; Wedne.day from 3 to 5 p.m.; and on Thunday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., offidala said. Escape artist plans NB dive Mesa man to give shackles the slip 20 feet down t By STEVE MARBLE Of"'tMO.-, .... ...., Mike GrUfin ought to be locked up. Here'• a 21-year-old guy who's going to have hlmaelf wrapped in 30 r.unds of chains, handcuf a and leg irons and then jump from a boat Into Newport Harbor. The watery site he's se- lected ia 20 feet deep and there's little doubt that he's going straight to the bottom. Griffin figures he can bold his breath three minutes iop. but that it should take hl:m double that to wiggle out of all the hardware. "If I don't make it," he says, fingering a set of handcuf:& he clalml are the latest fashion at Scotland CSLB claBBes analyzed Controversial women's studies program and a c1ua in experimental eex experiences at Cal State Long Beach are ana1)'7.ed. Page A5. Smaller households draw attention J Nelther pollticlana nor homebuildera pald attention to 1tatl1tlc1 in 1972 ahowlna 1maller hou8ebolda. ~ have to now -and they are. Paae A8. Yard, "I look great in orange coral'' Griffin is a Costa Mesa resident, a professional es- cape artist and a one-man publidty show. His schedu- led Aug. 16 stunt in Newport Harbor ii only the latest in a career of taking on all mak• and ahapea of handcuffs, lltra!~htjacketa and irona. He claim• be first got wrapped up ln the profellion when he Wat 6. He tays hit brother would tle him up in rope and then watch in amazement at Griffin un- wound h1nwtlf. He aaya he had hlmaelf wrapped in barlMd wire, padlocked lntkle mall t.CJ (See ESCAPE, P ... .U) Dodgen prove real BravN ltille,n The Dodprs did it aaatn to Atlan'8 and are within 1 ~ games of the divilion-leidlna .. vw. Paa- Cl. When Parker aaked lf Hinckley understood precltely tM meaning of the waiver he ,.._ ""1lna. he answered, "Yet, l do.'' · But Hlnckley quickly added, "I want to aay for the record by :!f;.ln1 thl• waiver I'm not tt1ns to agreeing to what'• in the report." Momenta later, he told the Sehmltz ease judp, "I don't MC! 1uily ~ with their <ii1j'A docton') opinion.' The St. betha Nport tald Hinckle)' auffen from four major penonaJJty dltordera and major deprealon which the docton Mid ii in partial rem.lllion. Parker concluded that ''becau.e of thia mental dtaorder, the defendant John W. Hlnckley (SefJ HINCKLEY, Pap A!) Child returned ·to his .mother By DAVID KUTZMANN Of"• Deir Hot It.ff A Superior Court judge today ordered the release of a 15-month old child -believed to be the illegitimate son of State Sen. John G. Schmitz -to the custody of his mother. The infant was taken from his mother, Carla Verne Stuckle, 43, of Tustin, several weeks ago after he suffered serious injuries to his ge.nitals. "I am delighted. My son is coming home," Mrs. Stuckle said this morning after appearing in juvenile court in Orange. Judge Byron Mc Mill an authorized the release of \he child after hearing the results of a county Social Services Department investigation which concluded that the child would be safe in the care of the mother. Today's proceeding is separate from criminal proceedings pending against Mrs. Stuckle for alleged felony child neglect in connection with injuries the child suffered. His penis was nearly severed by having a strand of hair wound tightly around it. Reconstructive surgery was performed and county officials Said today the child is doing well. The baby has been in county custody at Albert Sitton Home ir. Orange. Attorney Michael McDonnell. · who represents Mrs. Stuckle, said his client would be able to k eep custody of the child pending the out.come Qf further dependency hearings in juvenile court. Judge McMillan scheduled further proceedings Sept. 10. Attorney Harold LaFlamme, the court-appointed lawyer who (See CHILD, Page AZ) DelJ Net ..... "r ....... O'DJ F rt' ESCAPER -Mike Griffith demon.stra.tes how he'll t>e chained for his underwater escape attempt when he ~ frorq the Balboa Island Ferry. INDEX A4 C2 A7 IM-IS A7 C4..S B7 87 C4 A8 B8 A7 Hon.ope Ann Lenden M~tz Movi.• National Newa Public Noticet Spor18 Stock Markei. TelevWon Thee-. Weather WOl'ld News A7 A7 A4 Be A3 84,C4 Cl-4 B6 B8 • 88 A2 A3 N •• Dow Jones Final Off 3.98 Clo•lne 1IOM Mortgage firm offers buy hack; By Tbe Altoelated Presa In what la believed to be the tint such ~ment ln Call!om.t.a. a mortpge investment company under lnvertigation by atate-offidala bu offered to buy t.ck almoet ll2 miWon worth of second-trust deeds from fta . investors. T he state Department of Corporations hes approved a plan under wh1ch Sierra Realty and 1 Investments Inc. of Orange will attempt to aecwe a . J.ar.ce loan and uae the proceeds to repay 841 lnveston who are owed about $11.8 million. Sferra said It plans to obtain a loan from Sun Savings & Loan of San Diego aecured by the finn'a real estate holdings in Orange, Riverside, San .. Bernardino and Los Angeles counties. Phone bills decision due SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -T he California Supreme Court will decide whether more than $5.9 million in undeliverable refunds from Pacific Telephone will go to current customers or be turned over to the atate as unclaimed property. J ustices Stanley Moek, Frank Newman, Otto Kraus and Allan Brouaaard voted to grant the heerhl4J sought by state Controller Kenneth Cory. Chief Justice &se Bird and Justice Frank Rlcharcbon did not part.id pate. Gasoline prices .drop LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gasoline prices, which tisually go up during the peak summer driving aeaaon, have dropped almost a half cent a gallon nationwide the past two weeks, an oil industry analyst says. Dan Lundberg said Sunday the average price of ,all grades of gasoline, taxes included, dropped from $1.295 a gallon to $1.29 a gallon in the two-week period ended Sunday. Credit cards discounted LOS ANGELES (AP) -Several more major ~ companies are moving to discourage the use of credit cards. "The oil industry appears to have embraced the idea that cash customers should not subsidize credit customers by paying the same price for gasoline," petroleum industry analyst Dan Lundberg said. . Lundberg said a number of companies are moving in the same direction as Atlantic Richfield, w~!ch recently dropped its credit cards. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT NEW vbRI( <AP>-s.'"· i P:.;;: e>rlc• -... dle<>ge Of Ille 1111 .. 11 Moll ktlw ,.._ Yott< Stocll l!•<hen9e 11-1, ~,ft'~'&."r~"" •l =.'Jo'" ... u. -.... £non UJ,IOO u..._ -"' war11rCom 1146,600 • _ "' Tuaco 11'1< U S.lOO ,,..._ -11. 18M Sl2,500 U -..._ a.11 Motors .UUOO ~ -"' TeftCfY .Ql,000 U lt. + \lo G.ftlnsl I Jtl.)00 lJ.. -\lo 1ot1Rkftf1c1 m.ooo JJl'I -"' AlftlH T & T JH.100 SO-. -'°' Sa•~ 331.tOO 11..., -II. ~~~ m:: mz _ ... ...,..,eo m .eoo ,..,. -1 ... C.ontrO.ta • Jt4,700 t t\li -1 GOLD COINS Pel. Up IS.I Up 15.0 Uo 11.1 Vo t.7 UP 1.7 Uo 6.7 Up 5.1 Uo M uo 5.4 uo S.l Up S.O Up S,0 uo s.o Uo 4.1 Up 4,4 VP ·U Up 4,1 Up 4.1 Uo 4.0 Up l.t Up U Up U Up l.I Up U UP J.1 Pel. OH 11.t OH IJ.t Off IU OH 12.t OH 12.1 Off 11.I Off ""' OH 10.0 OH t.6 Off t.J Ori '·' OH l.f OH U OH 1.7 OH U OH u OH 1,1 OH 1.2 E ,,, 7.1 , ... OH 1A OH u NIW YON< (Aft) -""-llM ,,..._ of gold COIN. ---.-i ~· pnoe. Kt ......... 1 troy oa.. tM0.00, Off 11.71. ~ ...,, 1 troY oa .. tHO.fS. off "-.... ...... 1.tweyoa.,IUt.d, Oft to.11. ---.............. .-.. ...,-., .... ,., ... ,.00. MOALS NEW YORI< (AP) -Spol nonferroua mete! prloN lod•y: C.,.., 7~75 oenta a pound. U.S. _,ln8tlona. &Aed 29--29 C*tl&. pound, ~ed. Zlno 37-40 centa. pound,~. Tift M. 1520 ,.,._ w.-compoette II>. MMlll-1s.n oenta • pol.Wld. N.Y . ..._, 1345.00 per lluk. ,..._ 1284.oo.an.oo troy ounoe. N.Y. SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS ., ,,.. ............ ..._ Selected lllOfid gold plf°'9 tocs.y. Leftdofl momlfto tllono: ~7.76,. on ST.00. lAlftdofl ~ ftldtv: PM.00. on 18.76. ft.te •nernoon vt91nO: "3.S4.eo. off 18.M. ,,..,., ftldna; ~ .... off .. .()2. Z•tlefl late •ftemoon; UH.SO, off $7.00 l>ld; *337.2S 111111«1. HaMJ • ~ only dlllty quot• 'r".75. only de#y quote 9331.00. off .75. I:~--· only,.., quote~ '352,)0, off ... 1•. . •