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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-10 - Orange Coast Pilot• Court condo· ·ruling 'protects kids'· ROBERT BAJUU~.:R ... °"',... .... A rullna by the atate Supreme ourt tlut condominium r.-odatio1'9 may not ban children • reatdenta mean• that youngatera have become a protected group like minorities. 'Ibat wu the opinion offered 11111111 ClllT today by Harriette Nicholl•, a dlacrimination investigator for the Orange County Fair Houa1ng Cowldl. Nichi>lla said Monaay~a nilihg paves the way in many caaes for young couples to buy condos aa their firat home. aomethlng they had been kept from dolol if they had famWes. She a190 Mid that while the ruling protects the rlghta of youna children, It miaht ai.o aet .off a new spate of rures Almed at ,younptera. "There probably will be new regulatlona against children \Uing the condominium swimming poola and other fadlities," ahe said. But ahe added that such _ Rrohibitiona will be llleaal lf they've been invoked for reaaoo.a other than aafety'a aake. Attemp18 to reach apoketmen for condominium management COUNTY IDITIDN OR ANGE COUN TY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Albert Becker, director ol corporate communicatiqns for • · -~ Am~rican Airlines, was pleased with test results yesterday at John Wayne Airport. American ·Airlines passes tests fly out of John Wayne Airport within noise restrictions if approved JEFF ADLER ... D911J ......... American Airlines -seeking a ~hare of the lucrative Orange ounty market -has 1tu1~•fully proved it can fly out f John Wayne Airport well ·thin county noise restrictions. ~rt Manager Murry Cable Hopp faces trial on kickback Dr. Mark Hopp of Huntington Beach is scheduled to stand trial June 28 on federal charges that he received a $3.000 kickbacl f rom a Fountain Valley laboratory. Hopp, 68, pleaded innocent in U.S . District Court in Los Angeles Monday to two counts in a fede ral indictment issued April 27. Hopp ran a Huntington Beach detoxification clinic. One count alleges that Hopp 80licited an unspecified kickback from Warner Village Laboratory of Fountain Valley in exchange for giving it work from his Medi·Cal patients. The other count alleges he got a $3,000 check on Sept. 11, 1981. Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Pallemon said the charges are not related to the 26 counts filed last week by the Orange County Dlatrlct Attorney against Hopp. said American flew five demonstration flights Monday with new DC-9 Super 80 jetliners. ''They not only met it (the ~ ceiling) on the average, but didn't exceed it on any individual flight." Cable said. The airline, hoping to begin service from John Wayne Airport, was required by the Board of Supervisors to fly tests to demonstrate it cotllti 'meet airport noise restrictions. Amertcan had scheduled service from JW A four times daily beginning June 9, but the airline's hopes were dashed last week when the Board of Supervisors voted to Cree:re the entry of any new airlines until at least July. The freeze was imposed to allow time for airport officials to stud y what impact.S the entrance of new airlines will have on already overburdened airport facilities . '])he ph ysician p l eaded innoce nt to 11 c h a r ges of involuntary manslaughter and oth'r charges in connection with the deaths of patients. A 'tillminary hearing is acheduled . t. 19. h e at,Ue l)oard of Medical (See HOPP, Pa1e At) Irre levant Week founder Paul Salata pokes fun at almost. ever ything, including this year's honoree, Cal running back John Tuggle, inset, last man chosen in the pro football draft. What'• the weather goin1 to be? 01' Sol makes today'• outlook fairly ob•ious, but any dme you ha.e doubts ju1t cheek the Daily Pilot'• , complete weather wrapup on Pa~e A2. Full risging Newport Harbor'• yacht clubs roll out the red carpet for the official opening of the boating aeaaon. Page A4. "' Hi1 name sound• like poi10n, and quite frankly, Sea View League opponent• haven't been able to come up with an antidote for l"ine High pitcher Rodney Poi1Nnt. Page C 1. auoctaUona were unaucceutul thla monUnc· The 3-2 declaion by Justice Otto Kaua aald condo bylaws that llmit residency to people over 18 are illegal. Last year, the court banned such age limitatiooa in apartment complexes. The cue Involves John and Dm'8e O'Connor, who bouaht a two·bedroolb unU in Village Green bl Baldwin Hilla area of Loe Anples ln 1975. When tbdr .an, Gavin. wu born f our yeara later. the uaociation pve written notice that hit preaence violated the rules. R.E. Morseful Bank robber paying gradually By Tbe Aaaoclated Preaa . A remorseful bank robber who aaya he's found Jesus ii trying to repay $3,300 stolen from a Denver bank two years ago by malling cashiers checks under the paeudonym "R.E. Morse," the FBI says. The checks, drawn on Orange County banks, are mailed in envelopes with a bogus Durango, Colo., addre91, aaid Joe Chefalo, head of the FBI's bank robbery detail In Loe Angeles. • "I've heard of people coming forward and admitting 90!PPlicity in criminal activity they committed years before, but 1hi8 is the first time I've seen anything like this," Chefalo said Monday. He said University National Bank in Denver. which was robbed in June 1981, has received four checks totaling $1,730 since last June. A month before the first check was mailed, a man claiming to be an Orange County minister called the bank and said a member of his congregation had robbed the bank, waa IOl'ry and intended to repay the money. The latest check, which arrived two months ago, came with a note sayiiig, "My-faith iii CfuiSt aa my savior has Impelled me •to undertake this reimbursement, and I hope to be able to pay it off within six months." However, Chefalo said the FBI does not intend to drop the case. "He did rob a bank, and I'm sure he put the teller . . . in fear of her life," he said. "Any considerat ion as far as the reimbursement is concerned would have to be made by the courts." Chief to respond to 'ethnic' rap 1 By STEVE MARBLE Of ttle Delly .......... In response to charges that Newport Beach Police Chief C harles Gross made racially offensive remarks in. discussing beach c rime i;.robl ems, a transcript of his comments is being prepared by city officials. Gross, invited last Thursday to meet with city planning commissioners, said "ethnic culture" groups are partially to blame for beach problems. While Grom did not single out any one e thnic group, one planning oom.mi.aioner said she was of!ended by his remarks and bordered on "insensitivity to differences in cultures." City Council members said last A relevant excuse for celebration By STEVE MARBLE Of ttle o.-, .......... In 1976, a young college football player named Kelvin Kirk had trouble finding Newport Beach. A wide receiver from the University of Dayton. Kirk thought Newport Beach was a seaside city in Rhode Island where jazz festivals are held. Waiting patiently in the real Newport Beach was a guy named Paul Salata. a former football player who made it big in the rock·and·gravel business. Salata, you see, had decided to honor the man picked dead last in the annual National Football League draft and Kirk was his man. So when Kirk didn't show, Salata -being the kind of fellow he is -decided on another course of action. He honor ed a 42-year·old meat packer from Huntington Beach. Kirk eventually did arrive and the meat packer was sent home. But -for better or worse - irrelevant Week had been born. (See SALATA, Pal(e A%) .:.Right-·they would wait to .read • the tranacript before commenting · on the matter. Several council m ember s, however , said privately that they were surprised b:v the episode. "l didn't make any racial slurs and none were intended," Gross said today. He declined to discuss 'the matter furthe r and suggested (See 'ETHNIC,' Page AZ) Woillan in Irvine molested By GLENN SCOTT Of .... Delly "°' ..... Irvine police ofUcers searched for clues today to identify a man who followed a University Park woman home from her tennis match and molested her. T h e 36·year·old wife and mother told investigators s he drove home Crom a tennis match about 10:15 a.m. yesterday and pulled her car into the garage using an electronic garage door opener. The man. in his 20s, who she didn't know, apparently followed her home and managed to sneak into the garage and then the house, where he confronted her with a gun. said police Lt. Bob Lennert. He forced her to take off her tennis clothes and stopped just shdrt of raping her, Lennert said. She wasn't beaten. A ~ people playing at the same tennis courts at Michelson Drive and Royce Road. who were questioned later, said they thought they recalled a man mat c hing the suspect's description hanging around the courts earlier. He was slender, about 5·7, with shoulder·length hair and a neatly trimmed beard and in his 20s, the victim said. Lennert said none o~ the neighbors saw or heard anything. The victim told police she didn't watch her attacker leave, so investigators have no clues how (Sft MOLEST, Pase A%) -lllDEI- 84 B2 M 85 84 C8 C4 A8 aa Cl . Shelly Weit wa1 amoog the big wlnnen Monday night when country mu1lc honored it1 own at the 18th Annual Academy of Country Mu1le Award1 in Buena New 'News' news 0 T he MacNeU-Lcihrer New• Ho ur," expanded and renamed, will pr,mlere on public televl1lon Sept. 5. P.,e 83 . OD Propoeed ohancet in 10Hmment replatlon1 would f Ofte more kidney patienll •o UH telf-dlaly•I• at hOft?C ... money•M•l"I mea1ure. • 83 &' .u m~c. Cl-3 • • ., P.,e 81. Al • Park. P•e AS. -~--l SALATA STRIKES AGAIN. • For eiaht ·years, Salata ~ hla helpen nave been brin8ing the barely-made-Its of pro football to Newport Beach and showering them with e qual doses of attention and nonsense. This year It's John Tuggle, a running beck from Berkeley who was pic\(ed No. 336. The athletes are put up at fancy botela, driven around town ln a Rolla Royce and often uked to attend such ritzy affairs as a aewer line dedication or a tuba ooncert. The ball players also are awarded the Lowsman Trol?hy, which depicts a player fumbling a football and is the approximate opposite of the Heisman Trophy. The week -long event - usually held in late June -has gained national recognition and football teams now reportedly bicker and banter over the rights for the last pick. When Pittsburgh and Los Angeles battled over the last pick in 1980, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle asked, "What's going on? The Salata deal?" Although the whole ~g is a joke-a-minute marathon, Salata is serious about it. He feels Irrelevant Week is very relevant. "Football was good to me and I always wanted to give something back,'' says Salata, who played at the University of Southern California and had a brief pro career. "But I wanted to do aomethlng for the ~y like me who just barely made it. I figured he's got to be a nice guy who has just been wiped out by the fact he was picked so low." Irrelevant Week has been likened to walking through Alice's looking glass by past players, who come to Newport Beach for the distinct pleasure of being the brunt of many a joke and attending countless irrelevant festivities. "They're a little surprised at first," Salata admits, "but they usually get into the swlng of it. The truth is, it's pure affection. We're pulling for them. And if we kid them, it's only because you only kid the good guys In this world." Salata puts an equal effort in Newport Beach into charity work and will be honored in July by the 552 Club, a support group of Hoag Memorial Hospital. "Twenty years ago everyone thought I was the village idiot. But I really do have a serious side ff 0 pp • and have concerns about the • • country and this city." Examiners also has obtained a To prove Irrelevant Week is preliminary injunction that bars more than pure nonsense, Salata Hopp from practice until It has kept in touch with each decides whether to revoke his player who has oome to Newport license. Beach. The maximum penalty for He calls them, writes them, each of the two federal charges is goes to their weddings and tracks a $25,000 fine and five years in the careers of the select few that Congr.essmen not up 'to par' ! Badham, Lungren scor e low in League of Women Voient' political rating By UREN E. KLEIN or .. ._,......., Orange Coast congreHmen Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, and Dan Lungren, R- Huntin«Um Beach, aoored at the low ena of a tcale on political aocountability put out this month by the League of Women Voters of the United States. The ratings, compiled by the natio.nal lobbying group for votes recorded in 1981-82, showed Badham and Lungren weFe at odds with the league's goals on about two-thirds of the issues considered. Badham rated 27 percent and Lungren rated 33 percent. The Washington-based group chose 12 issues whic h at consldered urgent. and on which It lobbied strongly, 'to rate the performance of th'e nation'• senators and congr'-men, said Vicky H arlan, 'a league spokeswoman. · SOG'le of the issues included voting rights, social programs spending, busing, food stamps, hazardous waste and education funding. A spokesman for Badham said" yesterday the congressman was "ver y proud that he doesn't follow the liberal agenda" of groups such a. the League of Women Votera. "Generally speak ing, the leaa.ue's positions ~ rig_ht out A drive-in laundromat of lhe liberaJ agenda -for big government and bi& •pendtnc, which he (Badham) does not support," aaid Howard Seelye, Badham's d1atricl repn1entatlve . A Lungren spokesman aaid con1reHmen uke political .rat.Inga, like lhe one the League iasuee, with a grain of aalt. '"They l ook at them, like baseball l>layera look at the box ecores (game summaries), but it doesn't keep them awake at night," ea.Id M ark Gravel, Lu ngren'• adminlatrative assistant. The question is, are voters swayed by t h e rat i ngs? "Some body who waa sympathetic to t.he le.ague or ln the leagu~ .wo~l~. probably be tntereated an at," aald Trlcla Harrl1an. prealdent or the ~ of Women Voters of the <>ranee eo.t U8. L.ocal members would probably be most intereat.ed with e n vironmental 111ue1 in the ratlnl, Harrigan aaid. A vote on clean air .regulations for automobUea..which wiped out Environm ental Protection Agency funda for 1.napection and · · maintenance programs for ca.rs, W M oppoeed by the league. Both L~ and Bedham voted for the amendment. ' Harrtaan said local member:s undentand the representatives' positions on the iasues. "We all recognize that he (Badham) has conservative leanings, but we might have wished he'd voied differently," she said. The League of Women Voters, which does not endorse political candidates, has released nine accountability ratings. Council studies FVh:udget By PBD. SNEIDERMAN o<tMD.-, ........ Fountain Valley Oty Council member• will continue their review of the 1983-84 city budget tonight, adjuating a finance plan that. la now $277,000 out of balance. !fr~~: according to court_ ~~eing~~*c!>::t.ance, ia Nga~Th1-r.e~5-;GICO&ta Mesa told police she a eeidentally bit the- Officials at the Warner Village "They're good people and I accelerator pedal yesterday afternoon. The laundromat wall and The council meeta ln a public 1tudy aeaaion at 6 p.m . at City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. The propoaed ~covers the fiscal year beginning July 1. ----. -Laboratory weren't available for really do ca.re aQC>ut them. By two washing machmes at 1091 ~alcer St. were damaged. No one ~l'.l_t ~ay. SQ~ lab. _staying_in_,!ouch with them the . -offlc:iala 'Cooperattd-tn an-FBr-reattre-dra~e-weTe~ni:;'FJ;:::i:;;u:;;:s~t;r:::t=;=:...-::;;-...-a ~--· --· --· The latest from c..ity ~ptroller Howard Longballa atatm:::dlllt:i'um~atte1V=i:lDW=l expects to 1pend $11.4 million next year but will receive only $11.l million in revenues. - • --...-·--- mvestil{atlon into the allegations. making fun of them." . 'ETHNIC' REMARK DENIED BY NEWPORT POLICE CHIEF. • • Longballa said the council can balance the budget by cutting city expenditures, taking steps to ral1e more money (such as increasing local fees) o.r a combination of the two. In addition, he said, the council can draw from about $2.5 million reserve funds that cannot be re- accumulated because of changes in state law. "anyone who is interested should listen to the tape (of the meeting)." . Local Hispanic leaders, though, reacted with anger to newspaper accounts of Gross' remarks as well as a 1980 report from the chief which stated an influx of Latinos set the stage at beaches for conllict. Gross gave planning commissioners a copy of the 1980 report last week but the reference to Latinos was blacked Huntington Beach A btHk·ln et th• Redlo Shaci. 11ore. 18033 llMd\ Blvd .• Hrly )'Mlerd1y reeu4ted In the teported 1011 of S3,7•0 worth of comput., equipment. Entry •• ~ by • pry toot. potalbly • crowber. • t9tklent 01 the 17 100 btoclc of Harbor 8llllt9 Circle tOl<I POllOe the dltc:OVWecl M .· 000 wortll ol 11e.....are mlatl~ from an up11etr1 clo1e1 The 1llver•are "'" appe1entty taken aometlme dutlng the p111 two mon1111. Vandell did $200 dlmege 10 the tllldlng gtMe Window et• 11ome on trie 200 l>IOCk of Nahv4 .. A- A reeldent of tlM 5900 block Of CNnooll Otl.,. repotl.0 tllel • men hiding ln the bullMe ectoae tlM "'"' ~tty exPotled lllmeelf. out. He said police had "repudiated" the statement. ''He (Gross) should be color blind without making socio- economic statements like this," said F.ciward Morga, chairman of the Concilio of Orange County. "Newport Beach is where John Wayne lived and Wayne was the kind of guy if you said something bad about an Indian, he'd knock the hell out of you. "If people are breaking the law on city beaches they should The b<lrg1ary ot • nome on 1ne 1eeoo blOOk ol IMwlend Strwl )'Mletdey r-.illed In the reported loH of S•oo In 1tereo equipment Entry •H eppe1enlly mede through en open bedtoom -· Fountain Valley Two people etole liquor Y9lued at Me ITOm the Hughe• Meri.et. 9091 Oerllelc:I. T•o 1111peet1 entered tlM atote, one I.it end drove !Macer,_, tlM front doOI. n.. other ren out 10 the ee1 end eecepecl, po11oe Mid. Someone pried open the door to • atalrwell et \II• net1011a1 heedqu1rteta for Mlt111bllll'tl Motor Salee of Amerlc• Inc. end toolc two IBM Sefftclrlc iv-1tet1 valued at $2.000. Newport Beach 8urgler8 toolc l500 wonh Of toOle end • toot boa from a loelled o10<ege room at en apett"*lt comp1u on 111e eoo l>IOCll ot Udo Parle Orfve, be punished. But I don't think you have to go around singling out any groups," Morga said. Eugene Scorio, leader of the Fair Housing Council of Orange County, said he finds the remarks "typical" of Newpm-t Beach . "I'm biased on Newport and I'll admit that up front. But I'm Hispanic and I go to the beaches in Newport and I've never caused any problems." A telephone end • 1elevl1lon Ht we<• lloten from a rt<\tet unit on the 200 l>IOCI< ol 28th Street The -reported IM r~tty t'Yleted trie t-nt ' • Vandall amuhed e wlndlhleld end't>ent the erm ot • wlndlll'tletd ••per on • cer i-t'ed on IM 1800 blOC* of SendalwOOd ~. Oemage WU •llmeted el *300. Irvine Toot• veluecl at $800 were ttolen from Jim Ciiek Ford. •3 Auto Center O<tve, Mondey by two men wllo d1ow Into llM cer delilerlll'tl!> and took the loot• lfom • aervtoe bay. Sia hout .. under con1lruct1on on Herrltburg -•• b<Olctn Into end v1ndlllnd. po41Ce were told Mondey A •·rear-otd alrl w11 trNted at • nearby 11oap11a1 Mondiy alter an• ••Id 111• WH molealed by • 13-YMt-old boy. the '°" Of llet beby alller Police -lnveatlgetlng the eeM Clear sailing Coastal F•lr through Wedn .. d1y with brHIY condition• along the coHt. Traveler• edvlaory In mount•ln 11111 .iue to gully wl11d1. Low• tonight 50 10 !58. HIQht Wedneed1y 74 to 78. (!MwMf•. Point COnotpllon to Mexlcen t>ofd« and out eo mltee. lmtlll cr•ft llClvf.ary In ettea1 lrom Point Conoeptlon to Sen NklolM 111enc1 rw nonhweltefly wtnda 20 to 30 knot• with oueta to 40 knot• end e to 12 toof combined -through WednHdly. South of San Nlootu t11and wHt to ~ wlnda 12 '° ,. knota thf0\l9h w~. O\loar inn..- ....,. .. wtleble ~ nlgtlt end morning hCK.tre. Afternoon wind• ..,... 10 non'-1 12 to 22 knot•. · Extended forecast Fair Thureday through S•turday with late ~I ht anc:I momlnO IOW oloude. lfom ~ IOI at tlM -t o 11PW 10. lftlancl II~. LOWI "'*'Y ... to 51. Tem'peratures .. Le 4'1 M .. to 11 Q .. 41 72 at ,. .. IO 4' 71 ... IO II H I 71 .. .. H IO 40 8r0WT1avt11e eu1111o 8urttngton CH99r Chan.tton, SC Cllallftton, WV Cllarlotte, NC Cheyenne Cnlcego Clnctnnetl Cleveland Cotumbl•. SC Columbu1 Dll·Ft Worth 01ylon Denv.r OM MotllM Detrott Duluth EIPuo ~ Fatrbenll• Fergo ~·'•" QrNt Fall• H1r1lotd ......... Honolulu HOuaton lndlanepolie Jedlton,MS Jeckton'fllle .iur-i Kanaaa City LM Vegea Uttte Rooll t:.=:- Lul>booll MempNI MIMll J MllweukM ' ... 811 78 48 36 311 35 58 30 ea eo eo 31 5g 43 75 35 55 28 80 38 411 28 75 45 15 32 811 58 5e 37 81 3g H 411 55 32 53 311 ~88 llM 42 88 51 83 37 40 30 55 31 40 31 M 71 10 ee ., 3t 71 68 u eo 56 40 70 60 12 68 17 50 ., ... es 4a 14 H 1a 51 10 74 ... " 83 411 88 46 81 e& 511 42 65 48 eo 61 71 62 72 61 17 ... 51 40 ... 65 13 28 S4 33 515 48 151 31 11 311 11 44 "-lnl\11 Reno Richmond St. Louil St Pet• Temp• Slit Lake Sen Antonio San Olago San Frtndeco 81 811 M•rle SMttle 8htevepot'l SIOll• F.n1 Spolt- SyrecuM T09Mt1 TUOIOf1 TUIN w11111noton Wklhlla Stalionlty•• 53 31 88 ·43 &e 43 83 ea 62 34 71 62 70 51 H 50 47 :ze 68 43 73 151 71 51 53 40 ... 31 11 ao 11 67 78 S4 S4 48 72 81 Tides TOOAY eecond tow 2:22 p.m. 0.1 SURF REPDRT hoonCI lllDh 1i3.! p.m. 8.1 MDN .. uAY 111,.t IOw 3! 15 Lm. .0.1 .. •1: lfll'tt lllah l :U a.m. 4.1 ltlr hoond"low 2:JO p.m. t.O lllr .. eeoot'ICI high . l!Oe p.m. I.I 1_., lvn Ml• todey 11 1:44 p.m.1 POOt rtMa w~ '' S:H a.m. -POOt fair Mia 11 714<4 p.m, I poot:falt ,,:::.:::: r..:~~. toOCI .... et UI p.m. , He said he believes Gross is talking for all the "limousine liberals in Newport who don't want minorities in their town." Gross said he is surprised at reaction to his comments and said he went far out of his way not to point a finger at any ethnic group. He said his comments were Driver dies in smashup; another hurt A 40-year-old Westminster motorist died of injuries suffered when his auto went th.rough a stop sign and oollided with a ca.r driven by a Huntington Beach man, police said. The accident occurred at 6:11 p.m. Sunday at Newland Street and Hazard Avenue. The Westminster .man, Anh Nguyen, died while undergoing treatment at Fountain Valley Community Hospital, officer Larry Woessner said. The driver of the other ca.r, Richard Colon, 23, of Huntingtorl Beach, was admitted to Huina.na Hospital Westminster for obaervation. directed at ''recreational cultures" who come to the beach and isolate themselves. Gross said media accounts of his talk have "sensationalized" his remarks and taken them out of context. He said he believes "mixing cultures" is good and would never say anything that could be taken as derogatory. MOLEST. • • From Page A1 he came and left the house.'- Officers wer e to canvass the neighborhood today searching for clues. , - Such residential crimes are relatively rare in Irvine. Laat year, shock waves hit Turtle Rock, a village to the west, when a woman was raped in he.r home. That suspect has not been caught, but police say it im't likely that lt ii the same penon. He said the interest gene.rated by these reserve funds is the city's fifth largest source of income, so t he council has decided not to let these funds fall below $2 million . In the proposed 1983-84 spending plan, more than half of the city's expenditures will go toward public safety services - police, fire and civil defense. City ~lice expenses will total about JJ.9 million, and fire protection will ooat about $2 million. Longballa said next year's budget calla for no expansion of the city workforce. Employees who leave may be replace9, but the position must undergo a review , he said. Storm aid limited Wedneeday is the deadline for filing applications for various disaster assistance programs available to victims of the put winter'• storms. About 15,000 people registered at Diaaster Assistance Centers operated by federal and st.ate coordinators throughout California, and .eve.ral hundred others were registered over a toll-free disaster hotline. Aid la available for people whose property, homes or busineaae8 were damaged by the winter sto rms. The toll-free hotline, 1-800-547-3993, will remain in operation through Wedneeday to assist those with questions about obtaining a-'stance. BUY WHIQI THI JIWILLIQ~ BUY! No need to travel to the Los Angeles Jewelry Mart! Our regular prices are up to 75% lower than other jewelry storesl SHOP AND COMPAREI •flll .... OLIA .... ..... ,AK ..... .... • AlflltAllAU • WATOM llPA19 •.-.T .. A• • 1-.Y1Me • YllA • llAITllOdD • Moft.lat. 10 am - 6 pm • , .. NATION Labor unrest boils over in Las Y egas - ., ,.... A..noetated Preti LAS VDJAS -A week of Saber unrest boiled over on \he JM Vepa Strip Monday, with 101ne 3,000 union memben blodc.lnl ttatfJc for two howl before baickina down ln a tel\le confrontation with dor.ena of helmeted potlCemen near posh Ca.an Palace. The march anarled rwih-hour t.raffic, blocked Strip croa atreeta and left towtat. pplng as a polke helicopter swooped baick and forth aero. the crowcfed artery. The protest wu aimed at the Nevada Reeort Amociation, which has offered the Teamsters and Operating Engineers unions a contract calling tor no rallle the first year and 3 percent ralael the second and third years. The usociaUon a1lo wants a no-strike clause. Tox ic ch emicals lower in humans WASHINGTON -Fewer Americans are carrying high levels of toxic chemicala like PC& and DDT in their bodies than they did six to 12 years ago. The Environmental Protection Agency, besieged for months by critics listing its failures, announced the figures to show one of its sua:est1es -sharply lower levela of several chemicals it banned during the 1970s. R eagan lobbies for MX missile WASHINGTON -President Reagan, lobbying for approval of the MX missile, says rejection of the weapon by Congress would deal "a blow to our national security that no foreign power would ever have been able to accomplish." Speaking at a memorial dinner for the late Rep. John Ashbrook in Ashland, Ohio, the president called on Congress to support the MX progr~ and promised. in tum. to combine. lt with "vigorous arms control.' Po t -gro wing grandma off the hook HOUSTON -An 83-year-old gr~at-grandmother convicted last year of growing marijuana in her back yard thanked a judge for ending her probation, and invited him to .ee her garden. But Laura Ethel Clark told State District Judge MJchael McSpadden that one plant -the marijuana she said she Wied to relieve her arthritia -would not be there. "There won't ever be any more of that," she said. STATE Agent's faD)ily sues o ver accident ., --'i'R!'SNO -Ttr~ family of a Secret Service agent killed m-- an auto crash during Queen Elizabeth's visit to California has filed a "wronaful death" suit againat Mariposa County and Sheriff's ·Sgt. lWderick Slncl81r. The action see.ks $12 million ---~coBiiioiHVWi--~~ George Pat.rick La.Barge. 41, and two other Secret Service agents. Brown to figh t Deukmejian budge t SACRAMENTO -Aaaembly Speaker Willie Brown says he'll delay the state budget unlest1 Gov. George Deukmejian yields on the issues of farm labor. public schools and worker safety. Addressing the state AFL~CIO and the building trades and carpenters' unions Monday, Brown said the voters have "put a man in the governorship . . . who is not a friend of orpniz.ed labor, who is not a friend of the racial minorities, who ia not a friend of the old people," ·Brown said. It waa his responsibility to .ee that Deukmejian'a proposals "do not become law." Ch emical m ix up routs 5 0 people PALO AL TO -About Ml people were evacuated from businesses Monday when two chemicala, accidentally mixed in a waste disposal truck, got "extremely hot" and began to spew vapors; authorities reported. But the chemicala cooled aJ¥i the evacuees returned to their buai.nesees about an hour later. Thie f gets 4 R embrandts, j ewels SAN FRANCISCO -A hotel thlet who stole four Rembrandt etchings and three diamond baubles may have had a room key, say detectives investigating the $100,000 heist. Police said the heavy, burg~roof doon at the St. Francis Hotel ... showed no signs of fo entry. WORLD Thousands said kille d in bombing NEW DELHI, India -Several thousand civilians have been killed and thousands more have fled the ••moat savage" Soviet-Afghan bombing offensive Ln 3 ~ years, Western diplomatic 90uroes said today. The offensive in the Shomall area of Afghanistan apparently was in retaliation for rebel attacb on government positions ln late April in the Khair Khana Valley. on Kabul's northern outaklrta. There waa no independent confinnation of the reports. Hijacking victims back in China . SHANGHAI, China -Ninety-five haggard pueengers and crew from China's ftrat hij8cked airliner returned to their homeland today after a six-day saga that began with a bloody in-flight shooting and ended with a friendly South Korean farewell. Syr ia wants changes in wi thdrawal WASHINGTON -Syria la pressing for radical changes in the plan worked out by Secretary of State George P. Shultz for withdrawal of troops from Lebanon. While details of the plan have not been dl.8cloeed -and eome may never be -two key provisions are known to e9peoelally rankle President Hafez .Aasad. These give Israel the right to keep obeervers in Lebanon after the withdrawal and authoriz.e trade between Lebanon and the Jewish state. ' Orange Coaet OAJLY PILOT/TUMday. May 10, 1983 Al Country music honors Willie Nelson, Ala ba ma take awards at Knott's -ceremony ly nt. ~tM P..... ~ a\.a~ ~ sroup with 2.400 Mellow WUlle Nelson and accepted hit cowboy hat-lhaped votfna members. e-bema -fneh from tr0phiea but took the stage to Alto abaerit waa Ha11erd lrtUmpba -ClOlltliwecJ perfonn,."Why Should I Have to whose "Are the Good Time~ te the country mWllc Choose, a tune from hia new Reelly Over" waa named 90n8 of .cene by winning two award.a album of duets with Waylon the year _ his 15th awatd from each at \.he 18th annual Academy Jenninp. the country music academy. of Country Mualc Awarda. The ever-casual entertainer, Sylvia who had a big hit this Alao honored at the Knott's unshaven and clad In denims, ye a r ~it h a song ca I) e d Berry Farm awards ceremony tfave quiet thanks on camera to • • N o b o d y , • '1 b u b b 1 e d Monday night were Sylvia, 'all the people who rQet me on enthusiastically over her first Ronnie Milaap, David Frluell the highway playing muaic." Academy of Country Music and S.helly West, Merle 11.aJrord. Randy Owen of Alabama. Award in four tries. Karen Brooks, and Micliae l which won entertainer of the "I'm shaking like a leaf .. said Murphey. K k In ' N 1 • "Al M year and bes t vocal group o omo, d., performer. e .~on s ways on , Y awards, credited the group's fans Murphy was named best new Mlnd, a gentle ballad datmg for its success. male vocalist, an ironic award for bnamedack to. the ear:ly 1970s, was ''They're the o nes that asingerwell-knowntomanyfor ainale of the year, and the his 1975 hit "Wildfire." album of tne same name won top determine how people In the LP honors. Academy vote," Owen said. Murphey made waves in "Always on My Mind" had "Alabama is a full-lime job." country circles during the past earned two 90ngwr;ting awards Milsap, something of a dark-year w ith an album called d ma1 ''Michael MartJ·n Murphey." an a country e performing horse winner in the best male award for Nelson at the Grammy vocalist category, was not on "Just think how long it takes awards ln February. band to pick up his first award to get old if it took this long to Nelson, who rarely appears in from the academy, a Los get new." he quipped. Willie Nelson accepted two cou ntry music awards. New cornet visible for two\ nights Tylenol bill gets unaninious backing WASHINGTON (AP) - Looking up at the sky tonight, you may be able to see the ghost of an astronomical ancestor floating by. ' Moving through the heavens is the ethereal image of a newly diacovered comet, faintly visible as a ball of diffuse light as it pa88eS cloee to Earth. Astronomers say the comet, called IRAS-Araki-Alcock, will be visible to -the naked eye tonight and Wednesday night, with this evening presenting the _..most~ideil Conditrona. weath permitting. . 'rhe small, relatively f;tint comet was discovered April 25 by the I n frared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), a U .S .-European orbiting observatory and photographed by two amateur astronomers. Genich! Araki in Japan and George Alcock in England. The unexpected arrival has professional and amateur astronomers scrambling to make observations because the comet will pass closer to Earth -3.1 million miles -than all but one other comet, Lexell in 1770. Or. Mic hael B el ton. an astronomer at the Kitt Peak "'~ Comet's ta il (o llows it faintly from upper left. National Observatory near Tucson, Ariz., said that to the naked eye, the comet a ppears to be the size of a full moon but not nearly as bright. The best viewing should be right after sundown tonight, with observers facing north and turning slightly northwest. The comet should be visible outside the bowl of the Big Dipper star group. Co~puter tracing tax delinquents ST. LOUIS (AP) -Although Uncle Sam has started using a computerized telephone to track down tardy taxpayers, there's some coNOlation for deadbeats: the automatic dialer shuts down at night and on Sundays. The Internal Revenue Service, trying to collect more of the estimated *27 billion owed nationwide in back taxes, launched a pllot program Monday to contact tax delinquenta at home with the aid of a computer capable of making 4 nearly 1,000 phone calla daily. U a computer recelves a busy signal, it will automatically call. back 30 minutes later and, if no one answers, try again later ln the day, said Rob Wilkel"90n, who heads tbe lRS program in St. Louis. When someone answers. an IRS agent goes on the line to di.9cusa payment. The program is being introduced in steps, beginning Monday in St. Louis and Chicago. It Is to expand' to Nashville and Indianapolis in the fall and to other diat.ricts over the next 14 months. "We won't harass anybody. but we do expect a promise to pay." said Wilkerson. "If they comply, we'll never see their case again." Data on about 800 accounts in Missouri and southern lllinols will be fed into the system each week, be said. The phone calls will start at 8 a.m. and continue until 8 p.m. on workdays and will be made between 8 a .m. and noon o n Saturdays. The computers are designed to place about 80 calls an hour. · Under federal law, the agency is prohibited from calling taxpayers after 8 p .m . or on Sundays -the same basic guideline which applies to private bill collectors . WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress has passed legislation making it a federal crime to tamper with consumer products -an action prompted by the seven Tylenol-cyanide deaths last year. The House voted 292-0 for the legislation Monday and the Senate passed it unanimously by voice vote. Now they will try to resolve differences between the two versions. B oth m~asures provide a maximum sentence o f l ife imprisonment and a $100,000 Cine fr serious injury or death results -from-~th;.4!.J~>J-lS~- product. • Under the Senate bill, tampering with ttie intent to damage a business would bring a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and a $20,000 fine . The House bill mandates no federal penalties for persons who tamper with products solely to damage a business' reputation; the tampering must include a significant threat of bodily hann. Last year in Chicago, capsules of the popular painkiller Tylenol were removed from their bottles, treated with cyanide, returned to the shelves and purchased by con::;umers. Seven people died from taking the tainted drug. The crimes remain unsolved. Numerous cop)'Cat incidents --~ - were r e ported around t ne country in the wake of the Chicago poisonings. Fiat disap pearing in Victorville Sportsear subbed VICTORVILLE (AP) -Michael Phipps' troubles were only beginning when h is car sheared off a fire hydrant -the rushing water eroded out a mud hole that swallowed his car. Phipps, 25, a senior airman at George Air Force Base, said he swerved Monday to avoid a car stopped at a corner, made a quick left. turn and hit the hydrant. He parked his Fiat sports car at a corner of a nearby field and went across the street to call police. When he returned, the car was gone. "I thought it had been towed away," said Phipps. It was deep in the growing hole, only the roof showing above the water. · ''When the hydrant broke off, there was a six-inch water main underneath that must have ruptured," said Fire Capt. Mike Tessier, who es1imated damate to pipes at $1 ,200. (~ &EM Wl!iE We're Listening ••• What do you like about t~ Daily Pilot? What don"t you like? Among the many a11ractlon1 of Cleopetra w .. the fact that lhe owned her own Emerald mine. ·She waa one of the first of hl1tory'1 famou1 names to edorn th41n:'Mlvee with the rich, luatroue green gem , wh ich I• th• blrthetooe for May. • El'Mrald 11 one of the oldMt known gem• on Mt'th and w• found In the marit•ll of ancl«tt Bat>ylon. Today It le 11111 OM of the moet admired 1nd cMl'lltled of gematonea. green color and inte r ior ·•garden·· (patterns created by ' Inclusions) remind me of a fresh spring day. These Inclusions ere very cheracter lat lc of thla gemsto ne and a flawleu Emetald ot fine color 11 very rare Indeed .•. 1nd therefore a very valuable Item. Moat of lhe fine Emerald mined tod1y com•• f rom Columbta. Ot h1r 1ourc11 Ire RhodHll, Ruul1, lndl1 and 8<1111. 842•6088 .. ::Er. M-r ''iOIY ' II YOll 00 1101 ..... yo;,• ,,.,,., by a ao P'" ot11 o.to<• r 11 "' atlf yOUI GOPY wlll O• Oliltlrtltd 811111011 t no 811no1y II yOll 00 i101 1~t•t yo.ii c~ er; 7 • m Ge~ befot• 10 • "' ~nci )'OUf cooy #ill Dt o.;;..,.., Clrouletten T1l1,ihenee Mo.I 0!11'9'1 ~1' ,.,... -~ Neil""'"' lj\Ml"'ClfOll ltkll aw"''""" ...... ,.. l....,.~ ...... . l.l_ Call the number at left and your meesage will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answerin1 service may be used to rttord let· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their ime and telephone number for verlflcatlon. No circulation calla. ease. T I us what's on your ml~. OftAHOE COAST 11111 Pilat ThomMP.Hele1 Publlthef 8nd Chltf Eicecutlve Officer Re~MMLMn Cdntroller CIMetftecl ectv~ 7MIMl ... 7' AM ..._., d1,i1rtmen Mt..-1 MAIN OPPICI ~ Wfft 9ev It, Coitlt -CA M<llf oOill•M llo1 IMO, ~I•-· CA t 2Ut In ancient tknel many etOMt --. mi.tllcenly cel6ed El'Mrald Ju•t ~uM they were gr .. n. E:Yen today IOfM ~ tend to ml8IMd the cua10!Mf by utlng mlenomera euch H "•v•f'lng emerald" (peftdot) "' "Orl«ttal emerald" (green Hpphlre), n.. end other quaillfVlnCI tenne refer to different gemetonH entirely. The American Gem 8oct9Cy etrlotly fOfbldS the UM of any audtl term• that mlalead the publlc, 10 you can truet YO\lr A.0 .8 . jeweler to Inform you aocuratety. TM Emerald la • v1ttety of the mineral beryl. It I• • very beeiillful end apt ltOM lof' Ille mont" of ~ay. It• lovely cool Mery Barr. Certtlted GemolOQ1st AKLES H. BARR .. ~ ... Lllll .... , 17th & Irvin•, W"tcltff Ptoaa, Newpwt leach 642-3310 We do have 1 eourc• of E1Mr81d In the United Sta1 .. 100 .•• In North Carolina near Hlddanlte. Thi• d1po1lt was dllCOWled In 1875 end In 1970. rock hound found a 50 carat .,,..id which wu cut to 13.14 car•••· Thi• atone hold• the '900td tor the 11toea1 end "'*' cut Emerald found In North Amer\ol. Th,.. Other e1Cc.tl9nl •JCtmt>lel Of ctomeatlc fmef81d• .,. lnduded In the eollectlon It the 8mlthl0t'llan. White we can't lhow you any dOmeetlo Enwlld• In our etore. .. do. 11 the ,,.....nt time, have • very good Hlectlon of fine lmeralde from othef part• of the world. Come In and ••• our oolleetlon. • ' (' "4 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 10, 1883 Footage fights fires Yachting 'season' openers 'festive By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.-,NollloettfteWltler Cannon blasts, martial airs, Dixieland music, jazz bands and a gala boat parade marked the eeaaon openings at aix Newport Harbor yacht clube. Traditional Opening Day rites were observed at Bafboa, Bahia Corinthian, Shark Island, Lido We, South Shore and Voyagers yacht clubs wher e officers welcomed members and guests. The six clubs have a total membership of more than 3,000. Opening Day Js also marked by yacht l.nJpectioi\S with trophies presented to the best kept yachts followed by an "open house" with signal flags !lying in Bristol fashion. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Junior Singers perform medley. celebrated its 26th year following a flag-raising by the Lakewood High School Junior Naval ROTC. Commodore Jerry Moulton greeted members and guests and presented flag oficers Agnes Doty, vice commodore, and Jim Moffett , r ear commodore. The club was originally chartered as the South Shore Sailing Club of Costa Mesa. Commodore Jim Stegall welcomed visitors to the 56th opening day of Lido Isle Yacht Club, which occupies the Lido Isle Community clubhouse on Via RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. ...... h••···· -~ •••• 1922 HARBOR Bl.VD. COST A MESA -548-11 56 Lido Soud. Staff officers are Bill Palmer, vice commodore, and George Dashiell, rear commodore. Shark laland Yacht Club, the area's only exclusively power boat club, opened its 23rd season at the clubhouse on liayside Drive alongside the Balboa Island bridge. Presiding w ere Commodore Frank Barreras and his staff , Paul King, vice com m od o r e, and Charles Langlois, rear commodore. Fot Balboa Yacht Club, second oldest in the Harbor area, Opening Day marked its 59th year on Bayside Drive, adjacent to the Orange County Harbor Department. Presiding was Commodore Bill Taylor, who Introduced staff commodores dating back to the early days of the club. Highlight of the day-long ceremonies was the inspection of the club's sail and power fleet. many of which were rafted alongside the guest dock for "open house" following the formal ceremonies. During the afternoon several yacht clubs conducted a boating parade around the harbor. Most colorful ceremonies Saturday were at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club on Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar, where tbe nationally known Eagle Rock High School ba nd entertained with music from the "swing era." This was followed by the formal flag raisin& and Introduction of flag officers and staff commodores by Commodore James J . M oore, who also presented the club with an elaborate lectern for its 25th· •--------- anniverury. A patriotic medley was performed by the BCYC Junior Singen, 28 youngsters aged 4 to 16, directed by Karen Bluel. Their precision d1lncing accompanied songs from the Civil War, World War I, the 1920s and current Top lO. Voyagers Yacht Club led off the day's festivi ties with its traditional break fast at the chlbhouae at. 2Bth .and_ Ne.\Y.PQ "mulevaf'd; ronowed by-tta~-- raising by the crew of the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide, under the direction of staff commodore J ohn Blaich. SAVE MONEY ON YOUR INSURANCE • ll.:::~~·-PAYMINT if, ........ · RAB8lTT INSlltANCE 441 Old Newport Blvd. -Ui1IJll'J IUdl_CA.~ 631-7140 Summer Highlights . . . A red and white pin stripe suit for her a nd a glen plaid suit for him. Truly a traditional investment --for-any-spring---- wardrobe. Five percent of Newport Beach's fire department hose is replaced annually. Fire lrian Ron Larson stencils this year's allotment of 3, 700 feet. Old hose is given to the city's water department to use unde r less pressure. Lt (j.g.) J ohn Zantek of the Point Divide congratulated the club o n its cooperation in promoting safe boating. The c lub was declared officially open for the 43rd year by Commodore Carl Last, who introduced his flag officers, Jim Gronsky, vice commodore, and Pat Glazier, rear commodore. South Shore Yacht Club Manage your money more efficiently today. Call 642·4321 to subscribe D1ily Piiat 17th & Irvine Avenue Newport Beach, Ca. 92660 Telephone (714) 645·0792 -------------~- ~ ~------ Look when th• Gas Company Is hlttlng,you with now. Tired of getting hit by btg gas btlls? Here's your chance to get money back from the Gas Company. It's called our Home ~athertzatton Program. And tt offers whopping rebate checks. All you have to do ts Install gas- savtng devices. For example, tf ycu ltve tn a stngle-famlly dwelllng and Insulate yout attic to R-19. you could get a 8302 rebate. \\eatherstnpptng all outside doors and windows and caulking on your bulldtng's extertor could net you a $19 rebate. Water heater blankets on all water heaters. S8. Low-flow showerheads on all showers. 821. And duct wrap on all exposed ducts tn unheated areas.$106. If you Install all these devices. you11 npt only save gas. but you could get a rebate check of up to 8456. These figures are for slngle-famtly ·~ntera mu11t obt•ln • 111gned walw.r from the owntr to ~IYC" n-blltai. dwellings. Rebates for multt-farntly dwelllnfs vary. Both owners and renters ,can apply. And. of course, you have to be a Southern Califo rnia Gas Company customer. Call the Gas Company at 800- 352-4124 for lnfonnatton about rebates. Or tnfonnatton about alter- native 8% financing. ~'re sure our money-savtng Home ~athcrtzatton Program wtll be a btg hit. m -HN CAU~IA~~ ,. j ' . t a O 'Bry on buried at sea Retired Newport broker dea d Priva&e eet"Vice9 for Newport 8-eh redclent and retired lleCUritlet broker William L . O'Bryon, who died May 1, were held at sea late laat week. For 16 years be lec tured on securities and investment& at Crance Cout College in Costa Mesa. Mr. <YBryon recently had retlNdY from hi.I own brokerage firm. William L . O'Bryon & Co., and Wat a fonner atatt commodore of Bah.la Corinthian Yacht Clu~ in Newport Beach. ' He ia au.rvlwd b_l his .wife; two daughters, Lesley CYBryon and Aliaon Malrnatone; and four sons, Kevin, Thomas, Michael and Patrick. He also [eaves three grandchildren. Willi~m O'Bryon Barbara Kennedy las t rites held S ervices were h eld this morning for Barbara Ann K ennedy, 57, a senior secretary at Ford Aerospace in Newport Beach for the last 30 years. Mrs. K ennedy was a member of the American Legion Auxilia,ry and J. Goldbach dead a t 90 Joseph J . Goldbach, a resident of Huntington Beach, died Saturday at the age of 90. He ia survived by his wife, F.dna. Private fun e ral services will be he ld under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary In Costa Mesa. was active at St , Joac h im's Catholic Church. She is survived by her husband, David; and children Carol Ann, Linda Marie and David A. A lso surviving are brothers Jim, George and Tommy, and sister Rosemary. Interment will be held a t the family plot at Calgar y Cemetery in Massillon, Ohio. Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. D. Severns • rites set Funeral services will be held tomorrow for Dwayne Vern Severns of Newport Beach, who died last Wednesday. He is survived by his mother, Loraine Johnson , a nd father, Wayn e Severns. Also s urviving are three brothers, Darryl OBITUARIES Mr. McCracken rites conducted Services were scheduled today for Claude H. McCracken Sr. of Costa Mesa, a retired conductor for the Southern Pacific Railroad Company. who died Friday at the age of 81. Mr. McCracken is survived by his wife, Frances, of Costa Mesa; a daughter, Gwen Christianson, of Alaska, and a son, Claude McCrac k e n 3r. Also surviving are seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Services were to be held at 1 p.m . at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel in C.OSta Mesa with the Rev. Vernon Mikkelsen officiating. Theodore Beliakof f funeral services held Memorial services were held yesterday for Theodore William Belia.koff of Corona del Mar, who died Thursday at the age of 56. He is survived by hia wife, Joyce, and sons Douglas, Wade and Glen Bella.koff. Services were held at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel followed by interment at Pacific View Memorial Park. Memorial contributions may be made to the Theodore W. Beliakoff Memorial Fund, clo Norwich University, Northfield, Vt. 05663. Fast gourmet ._ class slated A four-week cl.ul oflering tipe on how to prepare fast but elegant meals will be presented beginning Thuraday at Saddleback College Nortn CamPui ln Irvine. Suzanne Mltcbell, a Cordon-Bleu-trained ch ef and author of the book, "Thirty Minute Meals," is instructor. Her topics will include fast and fresh fish, poultry, vegetarian stir-fry and egg cookery. The class will meet Thursday and May 19, 26 and June 2 at room 301 at the campus at 6500 Irvine Center Drive. The fee is $35. More information is available by calling the Community Services Office, 559-13 13 or 497-3785. T rack m eet set . in Irvine About 250 developmentally disabled athletes are expected to tum out Saturday in Irvine for a track meet sponsored by the Fluor Community Involvement Team. The fifth annual meet will run from 8 a.m . to 2 p.m. at the UC Irvine track. Volooteers are being sought to help run the meet. Spectators are sought as well. For more information about the event, Ci.11 th e involvement team's office In Irvine at 975-6326. Die t, h ealth program set A free community health program on diets will take place from 7 to 9 p .m . Wednesday in the auditorium at Fountain Valley Community Hospital, 17100 Euclid St. Staff physicians and a dietician will participate. The program will focus on daily nutritional requirements and weight reduction. More Information on the program can be obtained by calling the hospital's education department, 966-8168. Council woman to sp eak • Bus tri p ~f~r play, _s__h p_w . s~t Tickets are still on sale for a bus shuttle trip to see Frank Sinatra and Lynn Redgrave. ~Se..verns,-J e.ff rey <A.- Johnson and Michael K. Johnson , and a grandfather. H iram Ruggler. Volunteers n e eded --· Irvine City Councilwoman-Sarltani-•t-t--- Wlener will be guest speaker Thursday Deadlin e •or reservations is F riday. Price includes tickets and round trip bus transpo rtatio n fro m Newport Beach. Redgrave w i ll be Starring in "Sister Mary lgnatus Explains it All to You" this month at the Los Angeles Stage Co. Cost is $37. Sinatra will be at the Universal Amphitheater June 17. C.OSt is $55. For reservatio ns call 640-1541. Beauties wanted Contestants are being sought for the Miss Costa Mesa -Miss Mermaid con test to be staged June 6 d u ring the Costa Meaa-Newport Harbor Uons Club Fish Fry. D ea dlin e fo r applications Is May 20. Contestants must be single and between 17 and 22 to enter. For more infonnation contact the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce at 979-0536. Mesa youth photo ch a mp A picture of his 3-year-old cousin won John Fulkerson, 16, Costa Mesa a Kodak Club Award. The Newport Harbor High School student was name d Club Photo Champion of the Boys Club of the Harbor Area for his photo entered In the Boys Clubs of America/Kodak Photo Contest. 1 - i., DOING . •. BUSINESS ' ·.·:") UNDER A .. l, FICTITIOUS NAME? -' Ttle DAILY PILOT IHOYldH bottl ftNr19 end publlcetlon ..,~ •. We r.ewe eN tr.. nec:eeNry form• end melntllln • dally HfVIC• t o th• O r enge C oun ty CourthouN. IMr..r eto, b y one of our convenient ottlooa or ,hon e the LIOAL Dll'A .. TMINT iQ.4111, · l•t. Ut for mo re lnformotloft •nd formt. DailyP11id 142-4»1 ,_ IXT. IH I evening at a meeting of the Irvine Republican Services are scheduled for 11 a .m . at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach. Private interment will follow. Volunteers are needed to help serve se.niors meals through the Transportation, Lunch and Counseling project serving Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach. Club. The meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. at Progressive Savings & Loan, 4860 Irvine Blvd. Members of the public are invited. More ·information may be obtained by calling Argyle Nelson at 640-9141. Anyone who would like to volunteer or is in need of tl)e servi~ can call 835-8011. 'lbearn · h money market futerest · check 'With • • Now you know why your neighbor banks at CD HUNTINGTON SAVINGS ~~~~°" Main 8rMdl , t/#J1 Wamer Awnue, Com•r nf Colden Wnt, Huntington lk>llCh Soon to Ntwland Cft'Mr IRfteh op.n1 197S6 Be.ch Boui.var4, tiuntlngton 8"ach '"" .. '" Yallty lrlft(h 17431 Brookhunt, Founualn Vallf1y • • ...... ~avmgs. Super NQ.W Checking Money market interest on every single dollar, as long as your average balance stays at $2,500 or more.• Fully insured. Unlimited check writing . Checking Supreme Funds over $2,000 (backed by Government securities) earn high money market interest. Funds up to $2,000 <fully insured) earn 51/•o/o interest. Unlimited check writing. ' Huntington Investment Fund Maintain an average balance of $2,500 or more, and every dollar eams money market interest.• Fully insured. Limited to six drafts. Full checking, full saviJ\8S, f ull service Whatever kind of checking or savings account you want, whatever type of personof or b"'8iness financial service you need, just stop by and see one of our saving& counselors. •u your •wraMe dally bal•nce falls below $2,500, Jurll\8 your month Ir, Al•ttment period, federal regulatlon1 require th•t your funds earn .tthe 5 ~'Yo r•t. for the p.rlod lNI your .crount 11below12,500. ,...---::--...., . • IS the skv the limit? I You probably think there isn't any- thing you can do about soaring health care costs. But there is. Now you can join the FHP health plan where you work. With most FHP plans, your regular monthly premiums take care of almost everything from a routine checkup to major surgery. There are no big deduct- ibles, no sky-high extra expenses to pay out of your own pocket.• A recent survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Heatth and Human Services reports that plans like FHP have saved from 10% to 40% each year on a family's health care costs when compared to conventional health lns1.1rance plaflS. So ask about joining FHP where you work to bring your health care costs back down to earth. A fE[)(AAll v QUAllFl(O HMO , I• I ...._ .. RB· police earn special praise I\ ·t Although police offieera are on the job and on the line 365 ~ a year, their work rarely gets a great deal of attention ~ eomething -or someone -goes wrong. ' In Huntington Beach last week their regular and special SwAT team olficen faced a potentially disasterous situation. And they faced it admirably . • ,.,.. A 53-year-old man causing a disturbance at a city trailer park began firing at police who came to investigate the situati.on. He then barricaded himself inside a trailer. The city's specially trained SWAT unit, under Sgt. Chuc~ Poe's command, was called to the scen e. ' They evacuated the area, surrounded the trailer, tried ~tiating with the barricaded man, and eventually smoked ~ out with teargas. The SWAT team never fired a shot. According to Sgt. Poe, ~t's the way it ought to be. • . P oe and his men take 10 hours of special training each lll!Dllth to prepare for such situations. Other police agencies also follow similar procedures in train1nc and coordinating SWAT ~ operations. 1be extra efiort pays off. • 1 We're grateful for the expertise developed by the officers at ll.~ntington Bead~ and other area police agen cies . qQngratulations for a JOb well done. • 0.,1n1ons expressed on the space al>Ove are tttose ol ttte Oa11y Ptlot. Otner views u ~ressed on this page are tttose ol ttteir auttton and artists. Reader comment os invol· ~. AOdress The O.ttly Ptlot, P.O. Box t560, Costa Mew, CA 921>21> Phone 1710 61'2·4321. 0 MAlllll Parent protests To the F.ditor: I am a parent of two Laguna Mach high sch ool students, grades 10 and 12. This year my Oldest eon'• -physics cl8arar-one time had 45 atudenta enrolled due to the generosity of a teacher ~ho could legally have shut off ebrollment at 36. Since there are °"1Y 30 desks in the classroom, 15 students had to sit on top of lab benches during class. Eventually there w ere some dropouts leaving 36 in the class or 6 students sitting on benches. Each trimeste r another 6 students rotated to the benches. The physics lab facilities were designed to ~ccommodate 18 stud~nts. So each of 6 lab stations are shared by 3 studenls at one time, and to accommodate all 36 ltUdents, the labs must be rotated on alternate days. All this is taking place at a time when the school board has voted in an Alternative School. Thia will probably take at least one teacher from the high school and one from the lower grades. Each teacher removed from the main echools takes away a person who nonnally teaches 5 periods a day to 25 to 36 students. Until each motivated, serious student hu at least a desk and chair of his/her own in phyak:s and other crowded claales, and until we develop more advanced Placement classes at tlie h igh achool, an Alternative School is a luxury we can't condone nor ·afford. Every society has its children who become bored or who can not function in a structured school system. Before Proposition 13 w e could afford an Alte rna tive School for these students. Now schools must serve the seriously motivated majority if they are to survive. Perhaps the biggest surprise of all a waits the pare nts of Alternative students. One peraon may expect a Montessori-type sch ool while another might expect a completely unstructured environment. The task force proposal d oes not define the structure the school will take, but included something for everyone -an unrealistic approach at best. I am a very disappointed pa.rent of two motivated children who are trying to receive the best education public schools can offer. STEPHEN M. PAULEY, M.D. Laguna Beach l. M. BDJd /Overwritten During the 100 yean after the cte.1h of Napoleon, another book about him was publiahed, on the ~. every 98 hours. Claim is ~ there are more than 10,000 euch booka worthy of inclusion in a FOCI Napoleonic library. But ~ and I probably don't mu.ch want a good Napoleonic library. 'mo bad. If you consider yourself a lflOW!lup, you've lived through b era of more technological advanceme nt than all t he renerat.lons before you put ~h~r Christopher Col- umbus did or did not diacover America h unimportant, some •Y· What's important la the fact that hia tint trip got the traffic fOlnl. Before 1492, neither one ~ plant nor one domesticated fObd animal was common to both the Eastern a nd W eatern hemispheres. .. People who habitually eat burgers differ from people habitually eat hotdoo. Or IO tend teholan who stuCbed thla we11hty mat~r in New York 9uy fut-food atop•. The ~ they •Y· are louder, mbre agal'ftllve and leas well dr1111d.~ The hamburger eaten are alower in their muatad va. Qticbup decbiona. Q. Dkl any one voke ever do tM Tanan yella? A . Yea, after t h e early lliperimenta wherein ~ *'1nonbed with beritonea to pt tlut effect, the atudio found a E cutter who could handle the alone. lfe WM the father·ln· of one of thOM! Tanam, ~ Crabbe. HJa name, Tom In Jane Fonda's Workout Book1 is a chapter on "Advanced Buttocks.' Q. How come people started hanging up honeshoes for good luck? A. Can only surmise. Metal bad value. Men hated to throw away anything of yalue. So they tacked up their u seless horsesh oes un~l they could figure out what io do with them. Tfiey found it neceesary to invent the goodluck supera\ittion to aatlafy all the blithering idiols who asked, "What's that for?" Physical characteriatica of Am.erlcans differ b y national origin. Scholan say claaai.ficationa are set for those o f German extraction, Italian, English, Spanish, so on. But no claaaitlcation distinguishes the Irish . Their physi ca l cha.r8cterl8tks are common to all parts of the country and are exactly at the center of t h e Ame.rlcan averages. Q. How does the expected longeviiy of vegetarians compare to that of meat-eaten? A. Vegetarians live an average of 10 yeen longer. Q. Where doe9 ''Berbara'' rank on that liat of mo•t popular oamee among 30-year-old women? A. lt'a ninth. 'The ninth rno9t popular name among 30-y.ar-old men ilOeorp. Claim 11 piano playlna can burn u many calorlet a1 mo\Orcycle rldina. r ..._, ...... ...:....:..----------------------.._ ______ ...., ______ _, OMHGI COAIT Dilly Pilat ==--~~:1..9't.t.: =-~ ,.,...,,....., ,_ c-..,o.w.-, ..., __ .... - &MtyO ...... _...,.._ ............. ._ ... , ... ._ • Defense turns deaf ear WASHINGT O N -T h e Lilliputians at the Defense Mapping Agency, gom, strictly by the book, have fired a deaf employee for rules violations that were the direct r esult of his handicap. The employee Is Edwin J . Seremeth, a scientific illustrator in the hydrographic-topographic center. He is described by one superior as "a very gifted person." His work ratings have con sistently been "above aatilfactory" and "outstanding.- But as a deaf person, Seremeth relies on a special alarm clock to wake him in time for his ri~ to work.-~t June, the thing broke down and he missed his ride four· days in a row -until a new clock arrived by mail. On two of those days, the neighbors Seremeth usually relies on to make his phone calla weren 't home, so he couldn't notify the office t hat he had oversle pt. Obviously, he can't use a regular telephone. But Seremeth's department chief , J ohn Lyall. would not accept the excµ.se of physical inability for the' failure to phone the office. He slappec:l, a 10-day suapenaion on Seremeth. ~-~ .IKI lllllUI ~ THE DEAF emplo yee appealed for help from his union, the American Federation of Government Employees. The union raised money to ge t S e r e m e th a spe c ia l teletypewriter phone for b is home 80 he ~dJ~~ in touch with the office. But Lyall refuaed to install one at the office. The union filed an equal- e mp! o y men t-opportuni ty grievance on Seremeth's behalf,. accusing Lyall of violating government r egulationt that r eq uire "r e as ona bl e aooommodation" of handicapped personnel. Thi.a did not endear Seremeth to his superiol"8. Then, last D ecembe r , Seremeth. missed five days of work becau.ae of illness, which he confirmed with a doctor's note. But Seremeth drew a two-day suspension because he "failed to follow prescribed procedures for seeking and obtaining leave approval," as Lyall wrote later, 9ddina: "AJ.o, you do not have a balance of sick leave, and leave without pay is not appropriate." On the day Seremeth returned .to work, he left 30 minutes early but signed out for a full day's work. Presumably that alao was "not appropriate." IN MARCH, Seremeth was fired. He claims he has been diacriminated against becaWle of his handicap. "My department chief refuses to believe that I am deal, since I can Up-read 9eVeral of my fellow workers.'' he said The union's local presiden~ Patrick Weed, told my reporter Leslie Adler the bias against Seremeth goes deeper than that. For one thing, Weed aaid, LyalL reeenta the filing of the grievance procedure. The agency director , Capt. Wallace Palmer, was asked why Seremeth drew a suspension for being unable to phone the office last June . "Because," Palmer said, "maybe that's not the whole story.'' . . Palmer refused to elaborate, but Weed offered an explanation. He said that Seremeth is a reformed alcoholic who quit drinking after the union found treatment for him . But Serem et h 's b osses k ee p insinuating that he's still on the sauce and blame this for his absences, Weed said. WELL -REHEARSED WITNESSES: If you were to dro p in on a congreaalonal heartna. you would probably be mightily impreHed with the testimony of gove rnme nt witneaaea. They are rarely caught by surprise whe n a committee member asks even the mart arcane question about their aaency'a operatiom. They 9eeft'I to have total recall of all the pertinent facts and figures. The fact ia that savvy agency officials aometimes spend ,nonths preparing for a budget aesaion or .other appear~.P1J....Capitol HilL One recent example was revealed in an internal memo of the Minority Busine8s Development Agency. The public affairs staff was assigned to pn;pare a summary of the ag e n cy's "past accomplishments." And the ~ngressional affairs office was ordered to "provide profiles on House-Senate Appropriations subcommittee members." The infonnation was to include such details as the members' marital status , religion, ed9c atio n, constituency and eveD-(he names of bis or her children, i1 any. Taking the correct 1view might not have bothered' to correct that o n e except, unfortunate ly, the headline writer had picked the phrue out of the ltol'y to u.e at the top of it. If you 've e v e r had a newspaper story written about you, the chances are you thought there was something i.naocu.rate about It. Even if lt was only a paragraph about your wedding or a bowling trophy you won, there was probably 90mething In the story you wish had been different. Most people have had that. feeling. rve had it, although I've never won &'bowling trophy and the newspapers ignored our wedding. It comes about uaually, not becau.e the story ia inaccurate but because our own esWn&te of ourselves and our activities '- different from the estimate of the people t.he reporter got his information from. Aside from thla though, there are a lot of real miatakes in newapapen and they drive editors c:rary or into aome other line of work. (If they just go crazy they waually stay in the newspaper ~uritteH b ecause It's more tolerant of that kind of thing.) If readers don't understand bow mistakes get Into good new1papen, I can tell them. Aa .omeone who has spent a great deal of time as a rePQrter, ~ am So • • • Th0t4hfll ai Large: -Intelligent people who don't know how to get alon1 eaaily w ith lest intelligent people are Udtly confe91lng that they lack the intelligence to adjust to llmltatlona of mind (for there ia a n obleue oblige of intellect, u well u of birtb and breed.lni). -In the realm of JwUce and lnjuatice, nothina we do la hall • bad u what we 1all to do: we are IO proud of avoldi.na the lint of •t•l~ ... ,_.._ --..-- "You 'd think It wH my fault that everyone wants peace." I~'' -lllY-.-.-n-"""""'§f= conatantly amazed at now difficult it is to get accurate information about anything. No reporter sets out to write an inaccurate atocy but the truth la hard to come by. So often people tell reporten1 what they wi.ah were true or what will do them the rno9t good to have printed about thermelves. THE NEW YORK TIMES runs a short co,lumn ca lled CORRECTION every day of the year. Under that heading it tries to make amends for errors that have allpped into Its oolwnna on previous days. I like It. I find it interesting to read and It doem\'t make me think h o w man y ml1take1 The Times makes. It makes me think how reeponsible they are and how difficult It ii to get all \he f.ac1a and report them without makina any miatakes. Here's a ample of the kind of errors they've ~\ly noted in their COR.lUX:TION oolwnn: -The telephone number to call for tlcketa to a ballet school performance was incorrectly llated. They reprinted the right number. -A story abo u t Yuri Andropov'• health incorrectly ll~8 the namea of foreign of he'd aeen the day before. How would you like to have been the reporter in Moecow trying to get the right names of all the people Andropov saw in the Kremlin that day'? -•• ... The HERS column of the HOME 9eCtion." The Tunes aid ''lncotredly stated the fee paid Judy Stiver . . . for her agreement to bear a child by aiti.f.ldal INemination . . . It WU $10,000." I looked up the story in the paper the day before and it bad said 1he'd been pai d $100,000. -THE PRESIDENT of the Board of :Education in New York City wat quoted a1 uylng newspaper and television stories b ad "a killing effect" on aomethJ.na. The correct1on noted that he had aid the stories had "a chilling effect." The Ttmea -A p lct ure c apti on mi1identlfled a memfler of Pretident Reagan'• Strategic Farces Cccnmlwinn. It waa reelly Jamee SchJ.mlncer. -An article about Rabbi Adln Steintaltz incorrectly de9Cribed hit tranllation of the Babylonian Tahnud. 'That might not matter to many rMden, but if you were Rabbi Stelnultz and you'd spent most ol your life tranalating a Talmud, you wouldn't waste any time getting the paper to make a correction. The trouble newspapen have ls all their rn.i.atakee are ri1ht down there in black and wh'lte where everyone can read them. Mo1t bu1ineaaea make their mbtakea in the privacy of their own offices. There are ten thousand opportunities to make factual erron lh any single edition of any new1paper. We're just lucky newspapen avail them9elvet of thos e o pportun ities as infrequently u they do. no one's ~ Ol-IR-111111--;f'-> perfect ~----------------...... ~.~ commial1on. when it la the alna of oml11lon that perpetuate the unfal.mell of aoc:tety. -Any community that toleratea a venal or vidou9 police force deaervea to become lta vtctima, and eventually Ml men to few tram ita ••prot.ecton'' than . from crtm1nal predaton. -The 1eaeai1 of arUaUc c:rMtivtty hM hardly beer\ better explained than by Auerbach, when be obeerved, '°The Uttle dm.Ulfacdon which ~ artllt 1•11 at the ciomp1.etlon of a wmk fonm the .,-m of a MW work.'' -lt ii one of the lronle9 of the .. _. that too ofi.n the woman wh<m amb&Uon drtv. a man to a1n1u_lar ac:hlevtmt ntl la th• aame one whoe~lty pnwnc. him from the fndta of tu. accam~t. -Th• pbraH .. Platonle friandlhlp'' • ...s anl¥ by them who have never looked Into Plato • -It ii mankind's apoloPa for ltaelf to believe that we are "fallen" crea1Ur9. when It aeern1 far more llkely that we have not yet rilen to the level perceived by our 1reate1t aeera and prophefa; reUaton la more an uplraUoa for tM tuwre than an invocation of the pMt. -Succ.mtul people tend to take too much Penonal credit. whUe diaaPPolnted OMI blame too much on "tatt"; in both~ a comblnatlan ol hack and ability p1a 1arlW rolit than eltt.' ti to iidmlt.. pmtun can nevw bMI pnulrw .,..u&edon, tar the tna llelf mmt be tbaNd In order to experlenaa any joy (and thoee who remain Incapable or ~ .. ~.. trca ~~.-:~ of dlmlnl1hln1 rettrna ln p&ellun. whlle Joy II bcNncDI&) -A blC alt1 IDl.1 be ~" to 1tran1era out gf \l_rban lndlffw---. but • 1IMll town can be c:rueW to DllChbon whlft It I• cold out of parochial rejlction. I -"Originality" does not c.onsiat in •)'ina 90lnethinl new -any m.dman can do that - but in ~ an old thou&ht in such a-way that it can never .,a1n be viewed in ite former di.memlont. (Thia ii pnicUely the areatneu of aucb "orlalnal" thlnken • Freud or l'.inlteln.) -J\mt .. lDlectlddel ~te atroQpl' breedl of 1lmcta, IO do advanced w eapon• 1y1tema lncreue only the vtruience of deatructlon. -· J lllJPlll TUESOA Y, MAY 10, 1983 ERMA 80M8ECK COMICS BUSINESS 82 84 85 r rescrlption drugs. -~~E .... ltLEIN know exactly what the drup are, u well aa when -.. ·~ • _ _ _and bQW they should be taken." aayl Dr. BrUL'e ~e American public iaDeOOffi.lnj more and Woolley. ~ drug-oriented, demandJ.na preecriptlona to Statlatica show that 30 percent of all ~}ta i1Ta and to eue ita conaclence. preecriptiona written out are never filled Of th l to-~ a result, experta aay, a greater portion of that are filled only about 20 percent are. tak oee Ulle,t286 bUlion spent annually on health-care correctly • en cmta la being wasted because people are not using · the' medlcationa properly. A study done in Boaton revealed there la a J ,· ;nie problem is partly the fault of the doctor drug-related death for every 200 people ( ~ partly the fault of the pharmacist, a drug hospitalized. 1expert aaya. Woolley outlined several points to remember,. I ·, .But overall, a greater portion of the when ta.king preecription drugs: .~nsibillty for prescription drugs in health ca.re -Never take a prescription meant for ct.lfa'on the consumer, says a profe.or of someone elae. F.ach pereon'a body chemistry and '~fogy and therape~tics at Brigham Young weight determines the correct dosage for him or 4 Untveraity. her. 4 "Doctors .. phannaciBts and patients need to -Find a pharmacist who ia willing to take I ( . i~idney disease ·.L~r· 1 ~·l.ive by the machine, 'Otherwise you die!' 1 EDITOR'S NOTE -About Doctors "played God," aelecting 70,000 Americans are being kept by committee thoee who would l aJJ~ by kidney dialysis that is receive dialysis and live. pa'fjl for by the fed er a J All the machines became more government. Some bureaucrats common, ooet alone became the believe it is a runaway program major problem. ~t must be cut back. Patients In 1972, Congress paaaed ltNu' ihe proposed changes would Public Law · 92-603 creating -the *1iQusly aflect tbeidives....Man.y__Erui_Sta&.e R.enal ru.u..u •re poor a·nd believe _the program. The law guaranteed government must pay the that 80 percent of the coets of dialysis cost because, as one kidney dialysis and any other woman put it, ''Otherwise, you health care required by kidney ~· ':. patient11 ·would be paid by the fY PAVL RECER · ......... ,,.. ....... HOUSTON -The old woman didn't even wince when the nurse slipped two large needles into her arm and started blood ~ing through the blue metal machine dancing with flickering lJJ.hta and dials. I It' was just a routine "clinic eaday" for the elderly . She would come to the government through suppleJl1ental Medicare funds. Everyone covere~ by Social Security is eligible. Rich, young, old or poor, the govenunent pays. In the first year of the program, about 17,qoo patients benefited at a total coet of $4.5 million. Since then, the coet haa increaaed about 700 percent, to about $2 billion. Beyond inflation, the cos1a are up becau.e people who would likely have died in the past are continuing in the program and new patient.a are being added. at the rate of 7,000 to !,000 a year. l -, .. . .., Tbe fascination widi action, ~xual bijinh aad million-dollar ad!ertisins campaigna were evident 0 I last week with ABC's annowicement of ita I all 0 prime-time schedule. Page BS. .... -- • • Medications not used properly the time to explain what a dn.18 la and how it should.be Wied, "If U>e p~t ipl~t.willing to do that,.the customer should change ptiannades," Woolley said. -Be espec;lally careful if you are takina preecriptiona from more than one doctQr. Ceitain comblnationa of drugs may be danproua. -Make certain you understand the instructions on the preacripUon label of a drug. Pin your doctor or pharmacist down to specifics to cut down on confusion. "If it says 'take !our times daily,• does that mean while the pel'IOn ia awake, or during a 24-hour period?" Woolley asked. "For many drugs, those few hours could make a difference." Beside the money being wasted on prescription drugs, millions are being spent annually on other over-the-<X>unter drugs which are either tneffectiw or O'<lerpiced, •YB a health ~h,.wplnW~ The Public au.en 8-lth R.earch Group, a non-profit oomumer orpnhratioft. published a new book, ''Over the Counter Pilla '!bat Don't Work," which alleaea that of the 467 dnaaa dealt with in the book, one-third contain tn,redienta which have been found 1lcldnc evidence of Mfety or effectivene. by the Food and Drue Adminiatration. For each of eiaht cateaonea of common medical j>roblema, the book u.ta the. caUle of the. problem, other treetmenta available and the beat drup to u.e, if any will help. The book may be obtained by writing: HRG, Department·2, 2000 P Street, N.W., Waabin11on. D.C. 20036. .. Coast Dialysis Center here IPin Friday and the following Monday. Three days a week, week after week, year after year, for the rest of her life, she would be there. The woman is one of about 701000 ·Americans receiving ldaney dialysis· at government By 1995, the Health Care Finance Administration, which runs the kidney diaeue payment program, estimates the coeta will reach $4.5 bUlion. Patients at the Gulf Coast Dialysis Center in Houston undergo kidney dialysis three times a week for l nae under the End Stage t Diaeue program. Uke no federal program in history, ; presents a government 1; rm.ination that no U.S . 1; with kidney dlaeaae will 1 from lack of treatment. la, said one doctor, "as if reaa legislated that no rican shall die of kidney .. vernmental compaaaion, b_,ever, has collided with, economic reality. Coat.a of the y patient care have soared · yond expectation -last Jea , the government spent About $2 billion for kidney treatment. The ESRD program hM ~d bare, in stark, statistical . ..,.., the basic conflict between tne:priceleuneas of human life and the realistic limit of human ~·ey disease is. a cata.trophic illness. The fiat-sized ~dneys filter waa1es from and ~ttol the salt level in the blood. Wbert they fail -due to high blood pressure, infection, trauma 9f genetic disorder -the body bU ,no way to remove certain chemicals through the urine. Patient.a are poisoned by their bWll. wastes. Thirty years ago, such patients .mply died. There was little care to .live. When dialysis machines were developed, it became technically able to filter the blood and kidney patient.a al.Ive. At the machines were acarce. Public Law 92-603, many feel., created a runaway program that la coeting far more than expected, with cost.a likely only to keep climbing. An industry has formed around the steady flow of Medicare dollars. Proprietary clinics, many organized by nephrologiata, or kidney apecialiata, provide dWysia care all over thEfcountry. The arena la dominated 1 by National Medical Care Corp., a Boston-baaed concern that serves more than 10,000 patient.a at 160 clinics. Some experts have proposed changes in the regulations that would force more kidney patient.a to use self-dialysis at home. Under current regulations, the government pays 80 percent of the typical f 138 coat -about $110 -each time a patient receives dialysis in a clinic. Over a year, this amount.a to about $17,160 per patient. The Health Care Finance Administration, looking for a way to control the rising expense, baa proposed regulations designed to encourage the clinics to place more patients on cheaper at. home dialysis. The new plan would cut the HCFA-approved coet of dialyz- ing from $138 to $128. The government would therefore pay dialyaia clinics about $104 a head for patients treated at the cllntcs or supervised by clinics In at- ho~ ~rea~ta of dialyaia at three to four hours at a time. · home are lower, the clinic would keep more of the $104. The government hopes this will encourage clinics to send more patient.a home. A kidney patient receiving dialysis at home would use a machine the family is trained to operate or a technique called ·Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis, in which fluid inserted into the body collects the wastes and ia then drained through a tube In the abdomen. Officials of the Health Care Finance Adminiatration say the E.SRD program would save $120 million in the next fiscal year alone, and more than $190 million the year after. But at the Gulf Coast Dialysis Center, one of the largest in the nation, many patients are frightened that the proposed new rules would cut them off from the supervised dialyaia of the clinic and force them to assume more responsibility for their own care. Many view such a chance as a death sentence. "I'm living by that machine," said Wlllimena Moore, 57, of Houston. "Otherwiae, you die." Moore lives alone, but she tried peritoneal dialysis. With a tube surgically implanted in her aide, she would inject fluid into her abdomen . The special aolution would collect the wastes from her blood stream. Later, she would drain the fluid, removing the wastes. "I didn't like that," said Miss Moore. "It just kept me sick. I got infections and had to go to the hos ital." ~y. the tube was removed, and she went onto the machine at the clinic, three days a week. "I don't know what I'd do if I couldn't come here,'' she said. "I just couldn't make it. That's all." Other patient.a alao view the oroD08al with dread. "I wouldn't like dialyzing at home -in fact, I fear it,'' said E. Arthur Conring, 63. "The· surveillance they give you here gives you a good feelini -it's a comfort. If things happened at home, such as my blood pressure golna down, there's nothing that could be done about it." Larcell E. Persona, 61, has been on dialysis for nine years and has tried home dialysis. The attempt failed. "My wife had to operate the machine,'' recalled Penona. "She would get so frightened when my blood pressure went down and I got sick that she would call an ambulance." Finally, h~ said, ''she couldn't take it any 1.1ore" and he returned to the clinic. Typically. in Texas only about 19 percent of the End Stage Renal Disease patient.a choose at-home care. In some centers, such as Dallaa, the number la 23 percent. Few doctors think the new regulations wlll change these figures. Home dialysis requires a reasonably germ -free environment, friends or family members preeent to aaiat, and a patient free of other serious illnesees. "Thoee who can be sent home are being sent home now,'' said Dr.AuguatR.Remmen,director of the department of nefhrolo&Y at the University o Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Remmen said be believed that forcing patients onto home dialy•. ia through economic coercion la "an evil th1ng." Renunen ia known aa a strong advocate of home dialyaia. but be said the proposed regulationa might force patienta home who should be under proffJISl.onal care -and that some will die aa a result. "It'll be a cue of either you ao home with the machine or you die," he said. "Therefore, patients who are medically unsuitable will be sent home." Kidney patients "are medically fragile,'' he added. "A mnall step in the wrong direcUon can lead to aerioua medical complications." The propoeed cut ln ~ta to the cllnJcs, Mveral doCton aaid, could cause rural or marllnal clinics to cloee. Thia would l«0e some patienta to drive hundreds of miles each week to receive dialysis, and for some, they predicted, the •tnlUle will be too much. "Under the new rates pe0ple will die who would not have died under the old rates," said Dr. Alan Hull, bead of NephroloiY Aaaociatea, a company that operates dialysis clinics in the Dallas area. "No doctor will let IUa current patients die. But in the future, maralnal patient.a will not be accepted. It will make It very difficult on t he diaadvantapd. '' Some argue that "marginal patients" -the elderly, the diabetic, the penona with other critical illneuea -shouldn't: receive dialysia anyway. "Some doctors take a stand, refu.e to give dialyaia and let nature take ita coune," said one, physician at the National Institute of Health who declined to be identified. "Others 1et; intimidated by the family or the 1 threet of a legal action and order dialyala even thouah the patient will never be abfe to function nonnally." Hull and others say that deapite the coeta it is too late now. to pull back on the End Stqe' Renal Disease pd~ram . Government-financed yala - maintaining life at taxpayers'' expense -baa befome an ingrained part of America's medical tradition, the docton ay. It la "horribly expensive," Remmen acknowled&ed. but it wotka. T'hot.mnda of people now live who otherwise would be dead, be aid. "Whether you oomider it rilbt or wrong (that 1overnment pays)," Remmen said, "I don't think there's any way out now." Raving babies. • Nation's birth rate contihues to climb WHIM MOST AMERICANS ""80ft~ ...... ~, .......... ,, ......... . By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID ......... ~"'"" WASHINGTON -America's birthrate la a<>inl up. But not by muoh. And the birth rate la still below what it WU 10 )'Mn 8'0· The Omaua Bureeu ~ 1&.6 per 1,000 people in the lateat naUonal hMdcount. 'lbat'a up from the 14.8 ftcute 1n 197&. But tt'• below 1970'• 1.8 blrtha per 1,000 p!Ople and 1960'• 23.7 bU1hl per 1,000 pec:>ple. "What we have toda¥i la not another baby boom but a plethora of puenta:E' c:t Bryant Robey. editor of Amerbn Demcc8Phkl . The rteent mer.... in la an echo of the baby boom with more children belnc bom becau. there are ., many women of C!hildbeNinl .,. who were themielvel bom dwinl tbe pojt•Wat jump ln blrthl. The CUIT9ftt IW'l9 of bU1hl II taldna place with a btrthraw rwna1nlq qulw low, Robey noted. The oo • ml11lon women of ChOd~ • today are procludna only about • many chOdNn • R mWian wf>inen 1n the··-he laid. U\ah Ml the hilhea\ btrthrat.1 MallaohUMtta tht low• The NorthHli ii the only ,..son with a btrth r•• 'What we have today is not anothe~ baby boom, but a plethora of i parents. • • '_ U~ah has i!ig~~t b!r!.H rate, Mauachu1ett1 the lowest. below the nat1clnal aw....-. "8w'ea f« 1979 - collected in the 1980 Cenlua -ahow 13.2 bU1ha per 1,000 peo_ple. The W•t bad 17.2 blrtha Pll' 1,000 people and the South and North Central rep:n bad 1&.t -. blrtha per 1,000 people. .. Utah tope the nation in blrtha at 29 per 1,000 people, well ahMd of llCOnd place Miika, whM:h bad 22.5 ~-J>er 1!000 people. ftOUndinl out the top five data fOC' blnh rate were Wyornb\I, "2U: ldMo, ll.&,t'Md N.-~ 20.0. At the other end of the IC8le ~*"-Md the low•t bU1h rat.e 1n the nation at 11.a-1*' 1,000 people. The r.t of the bottom ftve wen Khodl &land. 12.4: CormecUcut. 12.6: J'lorida, 12.8, and ""' Jeney, 1a.1. Here la a atate·by·1taw rundown ~ tht birthrate per 1,000 raldenta u rw:orded in Uit 1080 c.en.ua: 1. Utah. 29.0; 2. AIMka. 22.G; 8. Wyomlna. 21.6; 4. 'Idaho, 81.G; &. New Mexico, 20.0; 6. Lootllana, 19.1; 7. South Dakota, 18.8; 8. Hawail, 18.&; 9. Texaa, 18.3; 10. Mimllllppl, 18.8; 11. lfonh Dakota. 18.1; 12. Montana, 17.li· 18. Artmna, 11~1:.H. Nebrllka. 16.8: 1&. Karw. 6.6; 16. CoJondo, 18.6; 17. Oldahoma.18.&; ~ Carobna. 18.4; 18. Oeorlla 18.8; It. , II.I; 21. Alabama, le.21 n. ar.an. 11.ai u.. Km~~ 16.2: 24; M.tnn.Ota. 10.1; •· !f'evada, 1111.2; 18. DUncM. · 16.1; Iowa. 18.0; •. w ........... 11.0; •• Arkanlll. . 18.0: ao. Indiana. 1e.0; at. Wlioamln. 18.T; n. M~ 11.e: u . ~ u.e; M. Ohio. 11.a: aa. wm v...... 18.t : ae. : ~. 11.1; l'r. Dalaw--. 14:1; ... v ....... 14.8; •. llalDI, 14.8; 40. Vlqslnla. It.I; • tl. Marth~ 14.1: a. N9W ~ 14.1; ~ 11.1; "-N9w Yaltl. 11.t; 41. . ti.I; 41. Nn ~ 11.l; fT. no.1da, 11.8; • ~ .. 11.1; ft. iU*i9 lllland. 11.t ; IO. ~12.a. ~ I • 1 .. 1' I t --. -0rMge CoMt DAILY PtLOTfTUMde)'. May 10, 1NS II you care deeply, then let her know DW ANN LANDIRS: I am an atuimey ln cctnl Iowa. A ~ ;.... aao I tell in Jove with a IWIW IDDM MnlML W•~ a fallins-out and wet our llpU'ate ways. LMt fall we aw1ed to date ap1n but on a purely platoolc baalt. Suddenly 1he ~ ... me.. Now I IUlpett the nlMOO for her exit la that she hM contnded" -"tal hers-and doem't want to i-lt akJDc. W'&Ue I can understand her CDhC9l1l. I think enoujb of her IO that I would be wiWna to lbare um atfliction. There 11 aJao the pombllity that she p6cked it up in the ho9pltal. To me lt makes no difference. My life ii not without blemlahea. ttlnce I am not abeolutely certain that my • •went la correct. how do I approeich her? -I REALLY CARE DEAR 1.R.C.: y..,. ~ &o ''Mare IM anueu.." la ... le, IMd my mMlcal eeualmu tell me.._, wt~ proper k7pw ... abldllmee •u1111 ... eedou perledl, JM ~ neape ~ d1aeaae fereYer. U y .. care deeply for $11 womu1 let ker bow It. Make mo meaU. of yMr H1ple1oa1. ne tn~ wUl 1111'face 1ooaer or later. Good lack. Iowa. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I implore you to let it be known that "Crowded Feellnp in Illinois" does llMA IOMIKI AT WIT'S END nu. la • reprint ol t!ie best of Erma Bombeck colwrim while ahe J.s on vac.Uon. Every home hu ita laat butlon . . . that retreat away from the rest of the family where, for a few boun, one may enjoy diplomatic immunity from c:U.dpline. choree and convenadon. l'hey're called bathrooms. Some bome9 have two of them. From the firat day a child i1 introduced to one, he leama bow to uee it to his advantaae. ~ know instinctively that once they are entrenched behind thole doon there ia nothing that can touch them. Nothing that can question them. Nothing that can speed along their re- entrance into_the family atmoBJ>!'!re. · For example, never-in my entire life have r walked into a hOU8e from ~ arocery store and r=· "Will ao~ne help me unlold the groceries the car?" without a ml.lffled 90Wld fhout:l.ng back, ••rm in the bathroom.''. In 20 yan, you would think that just once, I would catch aomeooe in the kitchen or even in flilht. Never, i n my entire life, have I e ver announced, ''Whoee tum ia it to do. diahes?'' that I MUC fl)11C( lllOT1C8 fW by Welte r M ach e tte & LeMl .... "=80:.,. Virginia Nage l In the T.I.. .._ ,..-Superior Court of Orange UMrY COCl9' County r equesting th. at oo<aoN ENTERPRISES.• d4ity Walter Machette & Virginia not apeak for all AA memben when be uka you not to aend drwr abu8era to AA. By de6nition, alcoholic:. ARE drua abuaers. And many akoholicl are ~ by adakUona to other mood-altering1chemlcal1 ln addltlon to aklobol. Molt AA mee.Unea are open. to the public. Here in Cleveland, membera of Narcotic• Anonymous, Gamblers Anonymous, Overeaten Anonymoua and Al-Anon~ often praent at our AA meednp, helping themaelvee to learn a bet1er way to live one day at a time. I know ln my heart that I wu addicted to getUnc high. It didn't matter whether I drank. amoked, •wallowed or anorted. And I did lt all. After nine years of being hooked on everything tmaalnable, I am thankful I wu welcomed irlto AA witn open arm1. Today I am able to give to newcomers the~ strength and loving 1upport that were offered to me. No one cared that drinking waa jul~ ~ of the have not heard a plaintive, "& aoon as I'm out of the bathroom ... It'• po8ltlvely weird how a child can know that the phone la for him and make a hasty retreat just in time to yell out to you, "Can you get the phone and take a number? rm in the you-koow-where." Sometimes It eeema that children grow up in there amQnC the plumbing and the tile. . "Are you In bed?" ("No, I'm in the bathroom.") "Are ~ou doing your homework?" ("I'm in the bathroom. ') "Come in here and meet these nice people." ("I'm in the bathroom.") "Could you let the dog out?" ("I'm in the bathroom.") ''C.ome to dinner!" ('Tm in the bathroom.") 'Throughout the years rve Md great respect for the exclusivity of this room, but reoenUy I couldn't stand it. We were all in the car waiting for Brucie Who WM 8Ue8S where. I ran into the houae, pounded on the bathroom door and yelled, "~ ia this door abut?" "You always · , 'Shut_ the door.'" "What are you doing?" "You always said, 'Go before you leave home.' •• "Why.la this~ locked?" • :... • "You always aaid, 'Lock the door.' " "Now what are you doing?" "You always laid. 'Wash your hands.'" The trouble with mothen is they talk too much! ~·~•:.::ic!~"~ Nage l be a ppo inted as WILL 8lU AT PU8UC AUCTION penional repre.entatives to TO THE HIGHEST llOOE" FOA administer the estate of Lilla CASH ANOJOR THE CA8HIER8 OR H . Glenn of Costa Meaa, ~~~4tl ~allfornla (under the ~ .... *"-ol .... In ...u independent Administration moner of ttle United St•t•) alt of Eltat.es Act). '1iM! petition l'lgflt. lltle end ir....e. OClnW¥ld to ia eet for hearlnlf in Dept. end ,_Mid by" undll' Mid Deed No. 3 at 700 Civic Center NOT1Ca fW SAU ~ Iha property hel..,._ Drive West, Sant.IA Ana, Ca. °' AUTOllOeLI TAuSTOAS: HAROLD A. 92702 on June 1, 1983 at 9:30 ~ft:~~~".:,~{ ..':ci'~1~ STOKES end MANA STOKES A.M. of the CMI Code of lhe State of llENEFICIAAIU: 8HANG. IF YOU OBJECT to the Cellloml• the underllQnecl, EkMr problem. I WM wllllna to ,et sober and \hey were Willina to hel p. Ancf tbat'a the bottom llne. - GRATll'UL DEAR G: Yov lenel' eekoe1 "e 1plrtt of muJ I MH received. 1kaU &o all wtao toM tllle dme t.e wrtt.e. DEAB ANN LANDERS: l am 32 ~ old, have an amDIDt Job and am considered tn~t. SlX monthl llO my huand of three yeara left me. I made the .m.take of 1ellina my perenta a arut many detalla about my husband'• temper and the way he miatreated me. NatW'ally I did not tell them how I provoUd him. M)' .huaband went for counaelin& and hl1 therap61t baa done him a world ot IOO(l.. We. pt. aiona 100 percent better and I·am very happy with this man. The Pl'Ob1em la that my parentl remember all too well the horror stories. They think I am crazy to be livln& with auch a monster and are very cool to him. 'Ibey retu.e to believe that anyone could chanae that much. I could kick mytelf for having told \hem ao much. What can I do about this?-KEYPORT, N.J. DEAR UY: Stop tryta1 &o CODVlace diem. Time la JMr belt ally. For aow, type tlal1 motto ud .Pelle la oa yoar batllroom mirror: NEVER SPIT IN A WELL. ONE DAY YOU MAY HA VE TO DRINI PROM IT. ·1111111 By PHIL INTERLAN ~I of Lagunaaeach· ACM( TELEVISION PRODUCTIONS •.· CHAHGFOHG ct4AHG end FAITH LI-KEN ...... n.1 .... of ... _ peu••-. you Bud Neytor. of 7773 Newman Aw .. --·~.. ....., ....,., .............. "' ~ PICnnGUealll•• -June 11, 1t12•lnllt. Should either appear at the ~.::::':1.''wi~et • Ulm8TA~ ,,__ d ..._._,_, • ......, ~ .............. _, -le ...,.... ~~A!!!,!!!!• No.ll·l00828of0fllclelAeoorileln hearlnlf an atate yo ur euc:t1on. at m 3 ~A,,._, ,,_ ....,_.. ... ....-~· ,._.., _ •• ·-· ~.:--~~=objections or file writum Huntington 8Meh, Celfomle. • 10 Notice I• hef•,_ given to th• ~-OOUCTS 14252 The following perlOfl 11 dolflt cl9ed .,_ objectlona with the ~urt ~~~~1:::::_~ ::".:Z.:.t'; ~. =: ~~c;:."i.;J;.IMM.c..on,.. ~~UDDLE, 741 Baker Lot 4t of Tr11Dl No. t1N. •,.. before the hear Ina. our wtt: TrwllMlcn., ..._ ._ eddr.-11 '27~ ....-21N Str .. t, Coit• Mau. Celltornl• "-~In book .. P..-4 a~ may be in penDll 1171 Ponlleo, Motor No. 3421 ,._,,City of !nine, C0unty ,.,,.,_ ...--v 8oeM. t28M ttvougf17lnlltulheofm• Fr ID*• or your attorney. '2J57NP264t71 of Ofenge.8 .... ofCellfomlethet• I . Balboa Pin•. Anellelm, Aendolph-ll•ll•r Inc .. • mepe, In tttetllMfol'ltoe of '919 ~ I y OU A R E A Seid .... 1a tor the purpoee: =~r~1= ~_e:.,i:_ "':!: c.:-.= 11 _...,by en ~ ~ ~...,_, ~~IN o::lr UNDER A CREDITOR or a contfnaent :='1n1911..: :::noc:-:ei.=.oo. hOme llddr'W" 13811 Eucld. City lndMdull TNI ';;;;... II oonductecl by • DUD Of' TAUIT OATB> 5128/t.2. credla of the decened, you togetller wttt1 ooM9 of ectvertltlng ol Garden Grove. County of T....-W. 'C" wllrl 1he ~. UNLUS YOU TAKE ACTION TO mUlt file your claim with the end...,.,_ of..... Orenge. 9Ulte of cellfornlL TNI ........... -Randolph .... Inc. PftOTtOT YOUlll PA~RTY. IT court or preMnt it to the Dated tllll 9th day of Mey 1NS. The property to be., ...... ,., .. Count'/ Ctertl of ar.,.. Count'/~ Teel A. loltit :r;C:~~A~ personal representative Publl•~=-0-=0~~ .. , Delly ~~.;::,~.:::C: ~"·1•· ......, TNl..="-flledw1tt1the OF THE NATUllll OF THE appointed b y the court Pllot Mey10,1983 Wiii ol lh•t Donut end ••h!Y PublletMd °'ente1Co~'1~ COuntyClertlofC>nnoeCOuntyon ~AGAINST YOU, YOU within four months from the 1871-83 bualneu known a• "MAG S Piiat. Apr. K,...., l. • 1t 1...a Men:ti 11, 1ta. SHOULD ODNTACT A LAWY!ft. date of f lrat laauance of ftllJC N011C( DONUTS" end 1oce1ec1 et 1IOM Pnttl1 f7 MW, IMne. CA 12714 l tiers provided in 8ect1on ~ OfM, Ctly °' !MM, C°"""I "8JC ll)TIC( Publletled Orange Coat Deity d::.·.:::-of-=::o= 700 of~ Probate Code of UI~~ of~u~r:'n~I b• lllOTIC8fW.,.,.. .. ULI Plol,Aor.M.Mll)'S, 1°· 1~-.k~ ebcwe,nowwrw'ltylt~•to• California . The time fo r ~emmcae __..,onor-.IM~ ~.._........., m141ill -• OCMu<IOtl 111t " The filing c:lairna will not expire "' u1•111 DIV98IOM at of .,._, 1N3 • 10:00 e.m. It On ...., 11, 1• • 10:30 Lm. "8JC llJ11C( beMftclery Uftder Mid Deed of ri f tha from NOTICE IS HEAEllY GIVEN by ACTION ~IClllOW INC .• Attn: UPLAND MOlllTGAGE SERVICE __ ,._ya•, -TNeC tty,_ of•~ or P or to our mon th• Depettment of Development Merllyn WHtmorelend, whoH co INC • TNIMe. or•-rvvoo•--· ...;. 1n .. abll.lllOI• ....i the date o f the bear lnlf SeMoea, Qty of Huntington 8MCh. eddrW 11 MO N. Tuetln A-. Trui.e o, ~ T,,.._, of ec:MOO&. •TMCT lfleNby, tMlllOfor• __..... end noUced above. that th• O.per1ment of Publlo Sutt• 101, Sent• Ana, Cellfornle tMt certain Deed of TNllt ~ MOnce fW ,._,.,.. --------..... ---------------------I W.JJ;"'' & I·. ___ .l_ng~g.emenU',J · The DllUy Pl.lot wanta your wedcJin6 ~ t!n/la(le.~n.t news. ':.. -• To help y ou 1&Jbmlt the l'equ!r..V infonmUon, lomv are •vall.abl.e •t Che~ Pilot offloe, 3$0 W . .a.y St., a.ta M-. , ' For weddinga. only a black M>d whlt.e JlholD ~ ~ of the bride la accepc.ble. SnaJ»bofl. Polarolil ·:' and color photoiJ can't be uaed. •: -_! ! The photo mu.t !!_e 1ubmltted no lat« ~ •·· :- three weeb alto the weddJ.ng, othctrwl.te Jt wtq not be publlahed. • Engagement inlonnation la to be .ubmltt«I at leut aeven weeb before the ~· '. _ Forms and phow. can be dropped ofl •t u>A' • oW ce or nWled to the &1/torial ~partmenr, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meiu, c.J.i.L.. 92626. Engagernel)tS Longfie ld-Lespier ... ... I '..• ti, ... Frank and Shirley Longfield of C.O.t.a MtSa announce the engagement of their daughter, Jean Ann Longfield, to Manfredo E. Lespier Jr. of 8!fl Juan, Puerto Rico. - The betrothed couple, graduates of UC lrvi.n4' .. are planning to marry July 23 in the First Uni_. Methodist Church, Costa Mesa. · • • The future bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Manfredo E. Lespier Sr. of San Juan. French-Leavitt .. .. Dana Irene French and Timothy Vance LeaYitt ; are planning an Aug. 19 wedding in the Latter~}' Saints Temple. Loe Angeles. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Les!ie. French of Corona del Mar and Mr. and Mrs. V~. Leavitt of London, England. The couple are students at Brigham YoUft8 University in Provo, Utah. Morgan-Simpson .:• "t l\ar1es and · 'Nrona Morgan of Costa Meea announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlene L. Morgan. to Sterling P. Simpeon, aon of Paul and Gretchen Sin\pson of Irvine. .,• Th e bride-elect attended Mater l>ei HUrJ) School, Santa Ana, and her fiance attended \lie University of Hawaii. They are planning a June.18 wedding in St. John the Baptist Catholic Ch~ Costa Mesa. ---·, I o • .. ., delMred to the ~O:::" __! YOU MAY EXAMINE Wortl1 ln1endl to *8111 • ooMtel 12~ ..... ,__. ...... fof-.. clelml by Aoy E ..... ~ end June_~.; ~ ~..:...,. ..-.----'"'"-' ,_ Or•.,_ County TrAftllt Dlltrlct In the eeorow ,...,_, to ....., II recorded October I , 1180 •• •TNCT MAL l'Wlfln ....._ w"" "---"It "-inc'· .A-2-8 x10s, 3-5 x 7s and 15 ....ellets. ~ D..!!l~a eliol...'..!"-~ the file kept by the court. U permit for the followlnll protect. .. .. , ..... -· _, ·-• lee~ huebeMI end wife ...., -·-· of bNeGtl llMI .._.., to --you are ln\ereat.ed ln the . ..,... -· Mii)' 25, 1MI'· 1n1tr11ment no. 12254, In book • "°' •M """' l:\n'Vluv ""'' ~ 111• und•r:!a::cl to Hll Hid estate, you may file a reqUMt :'.~v:; ~ i::c.:.=:; So f•r u la known to th• 13778 peg• 1111 ol Ofllclel NOTICE 18 HINaY GIVEN tNt fM du>ost1 7! l llfooertY to tllMf atllpllON, w ith the court to receive ,.,.,.,.. TheDfOOOMCI project wll i. Tr..-.. ... buelrW ~end Aeoor'de of Oreno• Oountr Ille FOUNTAIN VAU1Y ICHOOL ilnd tMfMft• tM und9'eitMd 1 p e cl al n 0 tic e 0 f the c:on1tructed In th• er•• along ~ UMd by Ille Tr.-.r '°' Cellfornl• end pureuant to that D18TAICT hu declerecl that the $11.fl t04<ll e<.c~ e1 ~ _... eeld "'*-of..,.... end of ( Pacific CoH1 Highway b•t-n Ille P9lt ttww.,... -S-. certain Notice of Default end fClotMnG ,... Pf'OP9l1Y .. "°' lie ...,._'°.,. ,.....,,.._.,21, inventory o estate aaaeta I.Ilk• Strwt end ~on Street. Thie butc tr...., 11 IUbteG1 to a.caonto ............ ~ nMdedlor 111 oom pur..-: 00 1 fOfeachodcttl ICll Sl.tljecllnportralt i 11a • l!Wtf. No. u.osal1t of and of the petitiona, accounts Dll'9d Mii)' e. 1ea. Cellfornl• Uniform Commercl•I M•'I 27• 1H2 • lnetr\lmwit no. Th• THcher'• lounge •t SI. lltting 98 ~ · Ofldlrl,....,. .. Ollloe of '919 and reports deacrlbed In ci.uctett• aupuy, Code Section 11oe. 12•112"1. 111 °"'*' "9oordl WA"DLOW ICHOOL. looeeed et • ~of Or8l'8e COuntr S l 12 00 a f tb• AlllllMI Plenner DMecl: "'-4, 1M3 ••Id Countr. wlll under end t1t1 Pl-Drive. Hun1lf19ton ~-de • • lald late wtll l>e mecieL but e c t on ·" 0 "' Publllhecl 0renee c oeei oa11., NINO Y. YEN ~ '° Mkl Oiied _,. TN9t ... 9-ltl, Cellfomle. ........,... •--;:-..::,..,...,:! • ~ wltllovt oovenent or warrentr. Californ1a Probale Code. Piiot Mii)' 10 11, 1z. 1eea T,..,..._ 81 publO ~ fof OMfl OlllNer' TM Board of Trutt ... ot tlle . I ...,_ • lnlp8ed. ,...,... .... L ..... m • ". t ll I• I • • • 217$-&3 Publllhed Of•nge Cout D•ll'I °'** Of oMfl equtv...:r.t (wNcfl Fountain v.11.., School Dlatrtot *''"'Z I pc 11 111n. •........,to A*'-n111ft!::.LaNtw By: A.rim Ml.IC N011Cl Piiot. r.tey 10. 1tea 1191tMienllPPfO'MbytheT"*-,_,._to ..... t11e tacMlel 90 THESE DAYS MAY: WED THUR FRI SAT ~ • -........... ......-... aum of D W f Nm:r. 21.....a d ...,.... t .... > ... -... ......... , lnctloeted above under ,,_ teriftll 2 13 t• lli • f; ~ ...,,...'b;; o..i of • • · • •-.,. -.-~ r;,-Clly0 Htlll, •1 •CMc ,_ .,_, end oondltlon• ltlled In th• ONLY-11 l "" ;;i ' 1,.. ............ • 1n ...., ,.... Ce•ter Drive, Seit• I H , ..once 9MT1MO.,. ~ ""'-. ~ • ..,.., c..., ,. ... rlgtlt. ~of tn. eo.d, "9eolullon ... •: ~. ecMnoee. If elf't _.., N=Beael, Ca. tt• NOTICE 18 HEADY GIVEN thel llOnce ~.,. end ~ OOfMW9d to end No.~. DAILY; lOAM • /PM SUNDAY: lOAM . 5PM ... I] tf1e W1M of tllMf 0.... Of Truet, tel . 7H/'fll-t1M. the Boetd of TNlteel of the Coeet NOTICE !l HEIWIY GIVEN that hekl by N under Mid Deed of Tl'Ult The minimum monthly leHe • 1 ...., aMrlM end --: .. O:,.~ Pu 11ahtd Oran1e CN tt O.lly Community Ooll•g• Dletrlct ot Ille Board of Trueteee of Iha Coeet In ttMt ~~pertr ~I~~. aid ~':i::'°' !'!~J.~ BEACH BOULEVARD, Westminster Tr""99 enill OI Ille tnlltl "7 Pilot May lO, ll. 17, 1913 Orang• Countr. Celllornle, wlll Community College Dlltrlct of County -8tate --... iNIY -..i by Ille...,,_,_ RBOR BOULEVARD C t M ... Deed of Tl'\lllt. :U7W reeetve INlecl bide up to bul no Or•nt• County, C•lllornle. wlll Loi 11 Treot 1115, In the Price In .. ennuel ev•r•g• HA • 08 a ... ~ I. leld ul• wlll b• held on: leler Ulen 11•00 •.m. Thundll)', Mey reoeive INlecl bide up to llUt no of CON M.M: a-tty of OtMoe. relec1ed et t11e encl of the ..... MAGNOLIA STREET, Huntington Beach J: 14, 1•.•t:OOp.m. Ml.IC ll)TIC( 21, ttll, •t th• Purcllulng ...., t"9fl M-V 26, tlN. M 11:00 Itel• of Cellfornle, .. P9f m pertoct, A~°"'°"' IM'I lie • A--~to Depert"*'1 of Mid college dllttlo' ........................ ._.._._ ------111 ..__..1--., ,.......,prtorlO~· c•MINO DE ESTRELLA Sao Ctement• • ) .. ........... ~-•-1ooet-.. et t•10 •d·-• ·--. e.m. -~ ..----• -··-.. ,_,_ -.,. .........-.. I I ..... ....., -"' ...,_ -.._ ..., ,. " _,, "'-'"'"" ... __ ..,. ....-dletrtct loce1ed et aa -I 1a.,.e -In the No oomllll 141 -_.. -·• Or--. 1US m1 Ml ~ Cotta Meea. Celllornle, at wfllch "' ---,,_ • -.:·...,....d ot 11oenMC1 Niii ...... lln*• In M ~.A~m• o("t'he lnlllel fWCM....... Um• Hid bid• wlll be publlclr ~ :::'~W: ~ Oountr necor., r .. erd. end there •11•11 I>• no WE CAPTURE THE MOMENTS ! ... ,,, •• a I of ... noclOe. ... '°"' oo.rrt Oil............... opened end reed tor: .. .,. ~opened end reed tor: Th• ·.=-r-•ddrHI or O\h• dedUC110n from .MY Jlfot>OMI In ...,...et .. \lllPINNlllfloeoftlle ntCMeO.-PVf'CHASE °' CONTINUOU8 PAtNT l ltNO ,.ALI. 1-.... oommon dHltnetlon of u1 *"'"lliqthe...-••0 11111 1U91ron w.d a,y ~ ~ .. • FOlllM COMPUTIA PAPllll proA CLAI. aOHIOULI. O"ANGI property. '74* L.MtedOr Dr lltddlr. ••eorll>•• .... of ttu•t •fld .... AM..... JULY ~ ,tl4 W/2 ONI-OOA8TCOUIOI ...... ~ .• ....... PfOllOI* to ......... =II -::~·1'.-r.---eftd ~~I. '°"I Y'f."~~l.Slle In_.,_ ...: .:-.:o:::.e::;: Name a".: =·r~t th r.::md~ ::-~ ..::... "":. :•:..n.e bell'O.: ~_,~.,.. = :-..:send~:::.:': now In flle end IM'/ be ~ In ~ OCMiduOted! Delta "· Valley loflOOI Oletriot lcluoatlOn 11 _ ....... ":l be ~ ..... OAlliiilii .. ... th• 011109 of th• Dlreotor 01 tll• olflae of the Olreotor or =;";7o Uptend Mortteo ~~· ~~......, '::': ---_, -~Mid _ c1t11rtot. PuroNllnG or Mid 00-.. cllllt'IOt. Oo. 1no .. "' N. centr ...._ • / l=============r-==:::;;;;;::;;::;;;:;:;:::=== Hlllnt (114). 7-0Ht' d•Y -·~ ---.... -bdlbllldlfnweeeubmltWltflhll Awe. Upllnd oa.t1ne. -· P·"'·°" • __ .,. llmC( Ml.IC ""111 .....,. .. -. Y•Sl' 1 -•o::.=: l.eotl """' ...,... wilt! ~ bid • cHlller'• clleoll. oettlfted Otieonone 'to .,. ellOlle ..,o,• eooeptlng enr •tUt•n 1-1~,._n;;i&iiiiiiiiiii"--l--;;119~nll!ll .. -.. DMld --~ '!!!:..--... , .. , 51:.=•,..•=..-• 'Z: bid • o .. hler'• cfleoll, oertiftff olleeli, or bidder'• i.onct = "'-lie HtelMd by r..-u ,,_oee11, tfle _.... ... °"'"',. I PICltiiOUI..... iii&iiflMii-OQCION ...,,...,...,__ oheok. or llldder'• bend mad• .,..,..... to .,. Otdlt of 1111 .;;. II\...,."°"' Ille IMlt oetl tor orel McNIM. ny um ITA~ ..,... ITA~ II tllMf ,..,_., ~. ......__ ,_..... to .. .,..., .. ._ ee... Oolftmunltr 0-... Oletftol loerd w1u11n ,. day• fro"' th• flra peteon who llH llerefofor• TM fotllMtl'I ...,... .. dOll'I ly T.O. lllllYIOI CO., 1111iF1 - -.. .........._., ~ C'*ll 0tatrtot loenl ol TruaeMI 11'1 _, ..... not.._ •=1lln of 11111 naaoe. "*'Mid•.,._ lrN ""'llllllftll ~ • TM ................... dOll'I -,,_.......... -°' T~ In M -.m not.._ --c--• of Ille e11111 ,... ......... __._ lft 01W W _,.... W _...... .........._-OOMMUNtOA&Hi .,..,__ ~-__ .. _ --e-·,..,.. tflenttlfle.._,., .... of ...... "*'---.. ~ _.._. ... , .... ,..... .. ~..... _ .... --......,, ......... ,,... bid 11 a ....... tlllll tM lltddlr aid II I...,..,... ..................... 01 ..,.,...,, ~ ...._ l"9 ..... llSll _. ....... TIOHNOLOOY, 0441 ~h= MHt 00., .... 01•1e1• o.. ..... ..., .......-• -.-wlll enter Int• th• pr•P•••d ~t;r.:;~:.=',::•: ~ • '°~:f:.111" IMll M,......;. .. ......,.... HYu•lltoll......, Or.,tu~1..._0a. .... ~CA-...... COntteallfthe_ll ....... 1'11111.ll'IN ............. to ... =:::-... ... '°"" ef .... ._,... ....... .... PAYUM ooi.POlllATION,. end\~....:1=\!i ' ,,..,.. -'*"-11'1 .. _,. .. ,...... • .,_ IMo.,.. .,.,..., .. ..,...... of ...,.. " ... Deed of 'rNtl. ~·.,,t.~ .,,.._. W .. ellfornl• Hrporet1011. HHt O:•• .. Dr.. I~ ~ 0NNe Cl-' Oel1 ...... eE? aim flfl • IMO 9'ldl ....... -~of .......... lie totWd. • 111 .. wtt: .. , .. .00,.... _...r: ......:......-.,,------1111re, 11 Toro. Oelttomla c....... ' ,_.._t,10,'7,1tll -...... .....~-~ ttl9dledlwllllle ...... Olll'I .. -OleMncl ... tllF---.........._ ......... ..--.. •·-_.. ,..___ H '"II• I :.cl -... 8 --of•llOnd '91911111""" ..... -..,...,. __ ...,, • ..,....,...,. .............. .........,.. OMa" l"fef • ----------·•'!§ .._It ..itl lie tortelt9cf to Mid ~ w111 M forfeltM to ... d ooflete .._... • .. ._ of ........... --....... wewn ... C"I fllll ....._II 001'11tded by • On••• Dr .. ...,...., '9JC llJ1ICl ~ dll4l'lat ~ "lllffl1 .... NolOI of-· ....... ,....... "..... 0... ... Mlleltet el No tilddlr "'8r wlllld!'ew 1111 bid No lltdCllr IMIW .._.. hll tlld .,_. ._ "r"Nllrll'*'*'I IO rnfor ellen oon::;.11.:1.-"• :=:. COrp, TNI ... -........ a i • &-eflll .... • -.... tor • D9riM '°' ~-(41) --tor • D9riM tar ~·4:;.4'.; ,... -o...t ....... .. -. --..... .. N0TD OP D&ATB OP !H\I~, ···~· HHle llfter lM 4lllte 11t fof ttle ~ :...~dale_. IOr Tfwet~H end ooete 0 NTAIN VALLIY I .. OOL ..::-~...... ...41M._. • LIU.AB OLSNNANDOI'· •• I II "f'!!! ..... TMloeNOIT,.......,.. a:-............ ,.~ l~-·l~1llm• '{NI! a."a.witec>ountr• o:~=.~~-: I . P8TITION To~• -; ,,_ ... dotT"""91NMMt -~"~.,.. .. o..llT,_... 'l--·-01t91 I.Ma __.. ...... -· ,.~ .. -,--.. -NO. ,_...., llle"'1' .... tow:e~lfld-., _. ... ..,.,,,, • .,._.,.,.., ,_ <7H) ,, ,.......,.: ,.,... . -~1 ~ _,.... ... Of to 9'11 · .,..,,.,..,... "'"" Of "'tM &'....... --~ Ol'eW ~ °"" ,.,. ..... ._ ONll ......: • •11•1• ,, ,,. ,. ~· lflfenMM ... "' ..., °' "' tM ........ , ~;-,.-.,... .. ~ ..... • '· '°• "..:':. ............... "i..!fie-• .. Toll--""--.,--&WA--I.WA,_ im_....,_ 1911' erHlton ud oonua:.: ~ • ., IWIWY1. ~•m 0..4:, E ' ....... ol 16 H. ;.--......_-... 11 1oeN oh..--e:g Mt 1-'°'9 ...,_ f __ .,. vn .. Who .. ., be ......... ,.. _,.. o..11~ • 11l1•n C..lf• -r-. ' ..... -~ N •II ... I ~Dtllrtet ...:!'] ' ,_'1lllhlf OPMl9~ odwlwllt lr.lw •d In the..,....• • ,......... ew.co .. t Delly ""~ ,~ De"1 rJ:.~ :,?,,.U- 1 .. ,...,.,,., • ., .... ..,., ..... ... .... --,.... ._ "· • ,.. ..... -• 1 • , .,,,.. ....., I,.;.-------------... ~--..... A .......... ~ belrt filed,,....,, _.. ,, 111Mt A 1 'I I llLe I: TOCMllWITH CC>..,,.. JOilf»I' ITICTACDOUGH H ''Thi 8el WotvW' (IMO) Ort-.aa,1...-MPOllT gory ..... flollF ..... ... DITICJ'OR _.._ YOU_. l!Oft rr .... WT =MNWM .~ ~· (1NO) Olborlh MOYllDAYIJB8 Htny, o.n. ~ U ''Olli Frllnde" (1178) MM* ...._ ~on.aw~ I &,,_.DOWN -11:00-~. ;~ .. 1~ -.,.!!PN81 I-; tWlf¥ YI THE .&I &aOHI 1i1CW11 ~ HNmMN, MARY *** ''Thi M111 From llt1mil" 1 • ..... MPOflT (1'56) Jlni. Stewlrt, Wiiiet Fotd. 1111 LATIJIQHT I ~MMWM :.CLUI MOVIE ••'4 "The P1nu11 Of o 8 r~· U "~ For Mr. Goodblr" (1981) Treml Wlllllmt ~ ~ im Dllnl l<Mton, Tlllldly Weld, (D) MOYIE ' ' I~ • "The llnlllMCI" (1978) Jt1t Jeck· MOVIE IO!l. **'A ''Thi Storm" (1938) Chlrlll ~~AND Bickford, Birton MICl.1111. C%J MOYIE ~~ .. (lN2) Nicol W1lll-**'A "loulou" (1981) l .. belle Hup-""'°"• Kllut Klnlkl. pen, Gerltd Cltplrdilu. ®mlltlUPMAALOWE: PNVAll 9 ~~1:1/J-. I TOHIGHT i = TAll THEATM ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE *** "North By NorttMlt" (1959) ~All<S>FOAIT Cery Gtllll, ~VI Mlrlt Sllnl. ** * "The Incident" ( 11187) Tony IO t.AvNa:a:-8HREY Muslnte, Mertln Shein. CfWIJl'IANGU • IANFOAO AND 80H LE DETECTOR Cl> A NEW OAY 1H ED9f MOVIE -12.'00-*. "The Sword And The Sorctrer" I ENTBrr ANitENT T<HGHT (1982) lee ~hllln Belllr. ** ~. SWiii And Feer" (1975) e Cl) MOYIE • lee J. Cobb, Frenc:o Gupem. **'A "Help W~led: Mlle" (1982) ~INDEPEHDENTNETWOAK SuzlnM ~ Gerltd. ! LOVE. AMEA1CAH ITYl! I ~ ~COW~ H~'G111 Of Hell" (1953) .. A • H MIClliko l(yo Kuuo Huegawe AMlllCAH PLAYHOUIE Cl) MOYIE ' . =-* "Terun, The Ape M111" (1981) ** t "Oeld Miii Don't Ww Pllkl" ~rlt, Bo Oertk. ~N2)5tweMlrtln, RlchelWerd. ** "= tn love ~lln" (1980) **~Miiiing" (1981) J1eld . .em-Eliott 'Sut111lllh ortt. !!:,"-.=Specek. (aJMOYE -12:16- \6.1 ••'A "T .... ""'·-·''"'" (1979) J~" ***\-\."The Bride Wort BllCll" ,,. ...,.,.,_, ..... 1111en .1e1nne M«..,, ~ Thomplon,ElluDllhAlulnder. 8'llly. -12:1/J-D Ill LATE NIGHT wmt DAVID L..ETTEMWf • l:='ONONE i TCllllt~OIE· - LOW. AMEJICAH STYLE - ®MDVII-~ ••• "Pereonll .... " (lllt) Mll1el Hlmil19Wtr, Pllltoe~. -1• !\~ 8MpMrd Of ni. Hie" (IM~We)M.---. ft .. ~A r; .. H (1171) ;. ~.~·:. "*'· C!)MOYll "~Of The Blndllaw (1874) Gibert A*ild. Al1Qlll GreM . L ICllP9IJINT "'NIT119'WOM .... _ ! =•AINMENf TOHIQKr •U\t "Ocn'1 Plrty'' (t978) Jahn Hltg(IM, Pit Bllhop. --T:IO- l lB NIC Niwa OV9INIGHT ~ OOTTlE: UP Q.OIE **~ "St191 To TllUlldlt Roe*" (11184) Berry Su!HY111, ~ MU· well. -f:a&- (C)MOYIE **lh "HlllOYll' Street" (1879) Hit· r"!>n Ford, Leeley·Anne Down. -1:46- .MOYIE ** "Night School" (11181) llONrd Minn, Rachel W11d. -2:00- 1 ~NEWS NIOHTWATQt MOVIE U "The Woman lnelde" (1979) 'tJj ~· Glorll MlllOll. U "Plfldlte" (1982) Willie A111111, PhoebeC.111. -2:80- D IB NEWS Cl) MCtW.E'8 NAVY GJMOVIE ** "UN With Blondie" (1946) Pen-ny Sinoleton. Arthur like. °'MOe Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueedey, May 10, 1813 .ABC's announcement done in epic fashion 1 L ? ---~ e MDVII 81 '8£D then reeehed a ~ado n eclledu.le that hu belll 0 fla( in recent yean. d ** ...... Of FOfUll'' (1141) RO'J'llENBERO b 'J p .,. •• I I 11 0 n • t e 1 y ;m::-.t:"'~-W. •T....._ ...,-~laimin_a commercial a In 1982-83, ABC won NEW YORK -For TV aa ••the No. 1 eMOV11 -1:11-0 n • a f t • r no o n , advertl1ln_a medium *** "OeldMenOon'tWwPleld" "Gandhi,'' one m•n'1 under 1!'9 sun." p re • t l·1 e a n d 1 viewen few '4The 'n\om Blrdl" and '"The Wl.nda I o! "Nar." but when theet 1 mlnilerte. were factored a out, the network.'• .1 regular series flni1he<f "., ' 1.3 r~tino poil)ts behind (1912l&MtMertln,RlchllW•d. cruiade for ·peace, NBC announce• it• 1plrltuall1m and non-1chedule today. CBS' (C)MCME -1:11-materlall1m, wa1 pre-1chedule it unveiled *** "Venom" 11N2l Nicol wa.-empted by "Gradi01e,'' Thursdav. lmlOn,l<Ut(lnlkl. one l n d u 1 try • s "' _ btcin~i.oo. WU.h_a~_on For J a• t week's =..ao= Cl) 'NTHIO -l:AO- (J) MOYIE •• "The Bitch" (1878) Join eo.ne MidlMI Coby. ' Cl) MOVIE -8:46-* * "The Sword And The Sorwtr" (1982) lee Horlley, Klthleen Beier. -4:00- CI) TOP O' THE MORNltG 8)MCME •• "Blondil'• lueky Dey" (1946) Penny Singleton, Arthur I.Ike. ~-~~WINKLE * * "lldy Chatterley' a lover" (1981) SyMe Krlltll, Nlchol11 Clly. CID MOYIE -4:~ ** "Siient Rlge" (1982) Chuc* Norril, Ron Sliver. -4:46- OMOYIE ** "Phobia" (1880) Peul Mlchlll Giiier, Sullll Hogln. -4:IO- • RAT PATflOl le XU 81 hi j ink I and ocCUfon,-xBiC trotfe<l out m i 1 1 i o n -d o 1 1 a r John Forsythe and Joan advertilina campaigns. Collina from "l)ynuty," ABC dfdn't -acfually Madeline Kahn lrom the call it "Grandloee," but new eenes.: 1'Yes. But rm the network did take Marri~," and Heather monumental measures Thomas frpm "The Fall last Wednesday in Guy," who stole the announcing its fall spotlight -yet, there prime-time schedule to really was a spotlight - Madison Avenue. ABC by wearing what seemed rented the 1;151-seat to be part of her dress. Zie~eld Theatre, home Also on hand were the of 'Gandhi," for its big brass, who took turns glittery presentation. cheerleading ~·s new leaoer ~. -. s . -{ A1 one measure of ABC's appreciation for Spelling. the network : • baa scheduled "Hotel" to :,.. a follow "Dynasty," ABC's ' :ti and Spelling's molt · .>l aucceuful series. When "Dynasty" moves from ·:·JI 10 to 9 on Wedneeday, it ·. lJ should deliver a breathless audience for "Hotel," another bigger-· d than-life saga about the rich and powerful. · -The cost of thfs-show; season. The whole thing and the follow-up bash resembled a pep rally to ,, at a fancy Central Park ~ome to think of it f create excitement for an th t d 1 l"k ' · restaurant was small a .soun s a ot 1 e =-: A BC pr l me -t l me "Grandioee." •· change ·when you ·· consider ABC had over ~--------------------------------------­-~\ $2 blllion in commercial sales for the 1982-83 season, and knows who '· ... butte.rs its bread. Before the new series were unveiled, ABC showed an animated cartoon, done in video- •BARGAIN MATINees • Mond•y tbru l•turd•Y All Performance• before 5:00 PM (Exce,f lpecllt E1111...-.is 1tMI Hllld1YI) • f) 8 tf b 8" complete lletlng In TV Log game motif. The hero r-~~~~~"'!"!'~~--....;;;,_ __ _.:. __ _J had three choices: cable, 'J :C.HANNEL LISTINGS o~r'~ti~n h0~ ~e~r:: 1-------------------...IAdvertiser landed on tJ KNXT (CBS) (Ml KOOC (Ind.) network did he win the U KNB~ CNBCI (Ol On·TV jackpot. e KTLA Ctnd.l 1z1 Z·TV ABC followed this •KABC <ABCI CHl HBO with a TV retros.,ective, G KFMBICBS> :c i (Cinem,u> accompanied by a 0 KHJ·TV (Ind,) m CWORI NY., N,Y, cloying 110ng that praised I!) KCS1 (ABC) 01) (WTBSl t 0 t h e s k y t h e G) KTTV (Ind.) lf J (~SPN) partnership Of client, -ii>KcoP:fV clnd.1--rsr CSOOWtimei agency and netwo.rk, m KCET <PBS> o Spotlighl even though •'our "ROCKY .. "<NI 1:1 ...... -. ..... _ LAKEWOOD CENTER WAlK·IN ·:·ti 1& l& If • .. {f I~ N •'( foc11lty ot Co ndlewooo tl 213/IS1·9HO ti ; II -fl . -12:40- • Cl) MCMIU.AH & WR G KOCEIPBSI • (C_:lble News Nel~rlll ~me may disagree. ft=~=------------...;..;__ ___ -:::::::::::-------.l.--------------_: ___ _J ABC's ode to itself "THE HUNGER" (1111 -.-. ............ -·'1s = news progra01 remieres this fall -... _.1.-. .. MJORY -""" ..... llllW YORK -"The MacNeil-Lehrer News ," expanded and newly renamed, will ere on public TV the evening of Sept. 5. Yter Crystal, a former president of NBC News, tive producer of the nightly program, which n.-.~ ....... a half-hour long since its introduction in Y rk. as the "Robert MacNeil Report" in 10ctdlie1r 1975. The show went national in July 1976 .<.~e MacNeil-Lehrer Report." with Jim Lehrer h.,;f in Washington. liiibuc TV's long-awaited "Vietnam: A Television lftlll:ry,'' will be broadcast this fall in 13 weekly lnlflOlments. Richard Ellt.on is executive producer of~ ~ries, deecrlbed as "the most comprehensive filaQlxploration ever of the background and history of~~ war in Vietnam." ~ * * * UClt IN PRODUCTION ... ·.·Heri\age: Cvru'zation and the Jews" is now ICbed~ for broadcast on public television in the fall of 1984. Abba Eben, the fonner Iaraeli amballador to the United Statee, ia host for the financially troubled 10!.'0IU't eeries, w~ recently resumed producti~ on Ellis laland in New York harbor. John Mortimer baa written 81.x new epiaodes of "jtumpole of the Bailey," and the Mobil Corp. has purchased the package for broadcast on public televillon. Leo McKem will return as Horace · Rwnpole, the feiat)' British barri.lter. The eerles will re1ume with a two-hour 1peclal, "Rumpole's Return.'' IOIDe of which waa shot in Miami. THE DOCTOR WILL SEE YOU NOW! DAN AYKROYD 1s ** CO MINO TO VOUlll OALAX,v waoNalOAY, MAY u ..-.....-.-. TICKETS REnJRN~ Efll.. I ., NOW ON IALEI TICKET MASTER OUTLETS MuJM kJ'I ( LUXURY THEATRES ) ~ .1atr.•t11111Sllewi1111•YS2.181111mltllerwildlll4 'W S lliijJ4ij•X11ll6i~ 25ss1~~y J S * FOR FOOi EXCfTEmEml VllltOur ••• lllow1 et 12110 1 110 4 1,01:10 m 1110 10:10 LAKEWvOD CENTER SOUTH .... ,. IN •IT ACTM• 1m11YL ITllDP "~c:.oec•" (Ill) "MAX DVQAN RETURNS" IN) -.-.u • "LONE WOU McQUADI" (NI .-. ...... ... "POMY'8" (Ill) '1tlGH ROAD TO CH9tA" (NI t:tl,-. -..1:1a. *" ..... ,.1_,. ,.,,,.., ..... ANAHEIM OlllVE IN .... AllT9MAICEr <llll "9AD 90Y8" 11111 .... -"THI WANDEmM" 11111 "THI OUT81DeRI" (l'OI Clltf·A- l" ,, ... ,,.,, BUENA PARK r·~·.1 1N UN•-....... -IJM070 ~ j .i" ..... LINCOLN OlllVE IN l°'lcOlftA .. W•tlOOl- 121-4()70 ! ,... "·. FOUNTAIN VALLEY OlllVE IN .... ~,...,, .. _, ... , M2·1411 "VALi.RY QIRl" (Ill) .... ....V TUTOR" 1111> "CHHCH a CHONG 8T1U. 8MOKIN' " (1111 ...... "C ... CH a CHONG UP .. IMOKf"<lll> ''f'l.AaHDANCE" Oii .... ... Hite." (Ill - lo!Kft-So ol J ~ 0.llMIGf-HHWO\' --191•3693 "ROCK.:"" (N) ~...:---(Ill) "RA_.. MAJ." (Ill) • ...,.. WANDIEMRI" 11111 __ .. _ 1AD80Y8"~1 .... ...,.. OUT~" CNI C:.·11- t.. • .fl"""' A Cllll·'I- "DOCTOR .,.,,_OfT" ~I 1DOll MAC~a ltUN;f' Clllf·Ft-(l'OI LA HABRA m .. 1 '" _"DOCTOR ~OfT" <"l ...__,_._ •-... "9DDll MACON'I ~ .,...... . ..... O ~ANGE [)I/IV• IN . . MISSION 01/•VI IN -. . II It 1 WAPNlR 111'1,1 ,N ---............... ·CITY/WP CODI " .... 1 ................. ........._ ..... , , • ..,., .......... __ _ =.:.::.::=.;,:.:rt:....,..., .. -"'" ...... .JJ .... ' -JJ ... T ··•U 1• ?I .w ~·T ·. 0 . :> 0 q) "' ~· '.)11 .. ,. : 10 ~';b . a • }'! ·to .... . rt.I • >0 "11 m rtr m si 10 ?U 1q M ~I 0 lq !i! tw xe :>q tq "" iT 1q "'' .. , 1T .. vT II m Q ~ "' .jo • •b I '" :le j .. OFlingt Collt DAILY PtlOT/TUllday, May 10, 1113 I f;:\R t'H:l.lt r--. I f ·IO ~ ... ttlll ............... ,, ...... _ ....... THE FAMILY CIRCtS "If she won't come out, let's fire tear gos through her window.'~ by Brad Anderson . \ -- "Marmaduke better get In shape. He let the season's first Ice cream truck get away!" "00!\ "l" LLlNS ~ 8~!,Al<IN(i ... <aoop <jRlfF •• iHE~R~D ISAS HARD AS A Ro«· .. ~.....,,;.-;-~ P&\Nl'TS ON AU6VST 8, 1813, THE VESSB.5 JIAMJL TON AHO SCIJUK6E SANK 10 TME 80TTOM OF LAKE OHTAllO" s -10 Tl'"8LEWEt:'8 E by Jim Davis "Wh1t'f she doing now ·· l11mlng their Latin n1me1f" by Ferd & Tom Johnson ~~Y, BUDDY··! by Charles M. Schulz N.rt.•-8.ut• •UIHrabJe. ....,., dealt. NOl'l'I •IU C:? llU 0 1 •IQtU WEST EAST • Jlot • AQ7 ' 4'?754 ~· 0 85S 0 IQUI •AlOU •JU4 SOUTH •H4Z <;:> AQJ109 0 AJ lt7 •v.w The bidding: Eut s..t• Welt Nertl 1 0 1 4'? t o 4 4'? , ... , ... , ... Opening lead: Eight or o. In the auction , you are cor· ~cl to devalue honors in lhe SHOE 00 '400 ~ ""'£N \i)E. ~o ~ f1t'!l1' Vlt?A ~f~t,ll)tM~'? • WHEN 1 SITON MY WISHING ROCK, I CAN WISH FOR ANYTHING ¥ » SZE G I 5 4 I GOlll 01 lllDll I BY Q4AALE8 H. GOREN ANO OMAR 8HAAtF .... , .... Bil ... , ov.. -~-..... , .. look llie• ia U. p&a,. ruffs I.II .._, &o Wilis W. Wiien &Ma Mad wu ~ &oUJ to a.... In a reeenl pair tGurea•ml. n. wl•mAC II• ii &o lab mott pm. radled a feur the qwn ol dln11• wk' Matt eoa&.nd alt.er H op. llae ate alld ia_..t.11 pOllng opeain; bid. Uolor-return tile jack. ctilt.anliac • tunatel1, mot& dedaren l'ail-1plde '1oal du••1· F.all'a ed to btlar home ten t.rieu. · bnl defeue II to retura • We do nol reeonunend Wiit'• trump. Deelarer wlaa, edllet featherweight raiae to two · the ten of diamoecla lor diamonda, nea.lhougb it. iu -aDOther apade ,JJuJf, then fairly common prattice at rurra a diamoacl on the table duplicate. and exit.a with the king ol The declarera tried to 1padet. bring home the contract via a If West wina the ace of crouruU, or by trying to ruff spade•. Eut mull have the out the ace or clubs, or even ace of clube riw hit opening by leading a apade to the bid and I ruffing fineue CID king. All thoae lines were he taken againal that card. doomed to failure. As the cards lie, Eaat wlaa Declarer baa aix fut lhe ace of spades, and sinee tricks. Ir he can score a • he can't lead another trump, aecond diamond trick and a declarer la able to niff two or 11' ~~ ~ Aef~~ rtt1~'f, ~eu m'" '"' 'f~ r1a-sr 1q90, At 'fU~E. \&IE. 1:\q t.r.\. 'A1£ A t\ttA1 1 KNOW WHAT~ MEAN { LIFE ON lHE ROAD CAN G€T OlD -~E'lW m5T! ~W LONG HAV£ WE BEEN DRIVING t:£> FAR~ ........... ,i.e ... ~.J S..t ev .. 1r £Aat eMlld rrturn a lnmp, ... ~· .. ,... Derianr wl111 I• dummy alld leada tlae kJag of dubt. J d.ilardlar a apade. He will I I a&UI be able to rurr a apade in dummy aacl diacard one on the queen of clubl. Declarer I will loee one trick in each aide auit. .... , ...... ,..... ... - 'te ...... trH .. le7 Let • ~c... .... , ... ,.. .. ,~ ... .... el OOUILE8 fer peMldM ..... teMellt. ,_. eepJ .. W. OOUILE8 '-klet, ... tl.15 te -C..-0..W... • I _.._,tw...,,...,.,, P.O: lea 15t, Nenr•. N.J. ,, ........ ~ .. , .... teNew .. , ...... .. by Jett MacNelly by Lynn Johnston ····ANDlHe. OfHeR IN My'MoUTH. by Tom Battuk AlM051 HALF AN OOLJR ... By Mark Lasky LET'S SEE-- WHA1''LL I WISH FOR TODAV-- l WISH-- I WISH-- I WIS._. I HAD A SOFTER WISHING ROCK F~firm VP WU1iMa }>ow.,. Mil joined Fountain Valley-t...a JWi& O:lmpuw Product. .. vice pnlldent wl ~ =: for owneiin8 all compeny actiYIU. lnclUiCilq man~, ..i., marketma and admln11trafion. He report• to PrHident e.nard Loper. Powert formerly wH vice preaiden\ of marketlnL for Olivetti_ S~ppllea Inc. Pacific C.omputer Prod~ la a ~ manulacturer of computer printer ribbons u well u a muter dlatrlbutor for 16-blt computer 1y1tem1 manufactured by Micro Five Corp. 2 companies eye new CM building A new thrift and loan company is looking at William Powers of Pacific C.Omputer andacomputercompany the aet:ond-1tory Produets are negotiating to move executive suit.es. ----------""'"--------------into a two-story garden oUice under construction TO START A FORECLOSURE , 24 hr. Service RESl>ENTIAL COIMRCIAL ll>OSTRIAL WES PAC RECONVEYANCE ·~~~ (714) 955-0696 at the corner of Bay Street and Newport Boulevard in ea.ta Mesa. David W. Stolte, with Grubb & Ellis, said the 6,880 aquare foot stucco and g)aaa oUice building ahoufd be open by July 15. Stolte said the financial firm is conaidering leasing the ground floor and the A rizona computer ~National MOrtgage Co. Has the program you are foo ing for: ·-----WE SPECIALIZE IN -ALL TYPES OF: Residential Loans Industrial Loans Government Loans Apartment Loans Jumbo Residential WITH OUR EXPERTISE AND QUALIFIED STXFF WE CAN HAVE A FINANCIAL PACKAGE . TO SUIT YOUR .FINANCIAL. NEEDS! ~ ,,..,_ An S.bjkt T• MallablUty Aa4 Qaap) GARY ANDERSON Asst. Vice President /Sales Manager 400 North Tustin Avenue • Suite 101 Santa Ana, California • 92705 (714) 541-2983 annon selects new VP L . Wayne Ollver, president of Fountain Valley-based 'ITT C a.n no n , h a s b e en appointed vice president-ITT and group general manage r - Components Group- North America and Cannon Worldwide. Oliver has served as president of ITT Cannon-North America since Sept. 1980. In his new post, he succeeds Jamee L. von Han, who was appoinied executive representative-ITT. Oliver, 44, has tMten with Cannon for more than 20 years. Find money-sa ving yet tasty recipes in Wednes d<n"s food pages. Daily Pilat SALES lEASllG SERVICE TRA•llG NEW! TRS-80® MCIEL 100 PORTABLE COMPUTER The Flevolutlolwy Micro Executive Workstation,. For Office or On-the-Go • 8ulMn Han111ment .,..__.. • ~ DlreoM:onneot T1l1p.'°"9 Modem wtlh AutH>leler • 1-&Jne br ~ °"'*' • Colllifortmllll "'' , .. KeyboMI •la1end1dUllC~ ........... Tlwl 4 ... • Dlr'9Cll Oii..._ llad1m C-. (ll.M11, ttl.11) '"'" ..... = = = = .. = ... =llft~-~ 0nsi1111 we/nit C...Ulvwe, IM. Dow.-.., ... .,......"'™ Dow ...... a Ce., ll!O • . IEE IT AT YOUR llAllllT RADIO IHACI ITORE, COMPUTll CllTll 01 PMTICIPMllG DEALER Area promotions announced David Smltla, A.I.A., has recently been named an aasoclate of Carl MctaraDd A11oelate1, IDc., an architectural and planning firm located in Coeta Mesa. Smith, a resident of Laguna Beach, jolna Plalllp J. Terborat and Artlaar C. Eclaaer as uaoclates in the firm. • • • WUllam L. Doran of Huntington Beach was among five new vice presidents recently appointed at Weber Aircraft in Burbank. Doran, with 25 years experience in the aerospace industry, will be in charge or marketing. Others 1tppointed to the rank of vice president were R.R. Pecoraro, Robert L . McCarty, R . Victor GreeD1Meld1 and Mlclaael L. Hanks. Weber, a -division of Kidde Inc., has also recently named A.E. "Earl" Williama president. • • • The AMF Corporate Achievement Award has been presented to Jim Harrell, installation and eervice manager of AMF's Tire Equipment Dlvlalon in Santa Ana. Harrell is responsible for the installation and service of AMF/TED's Orbitread and FlexCure retreading systems nationwide and manages a staff of more than 50 field service engineers. The award is given annually to one or more . AMF efD:plo.yees worldwide in recognition of outstanding service to the company. • • • Jefferaon Z. Amacker has joined Leach Corp. of Buena Park as president and chief executive officer. Leach manufactures electro- NASO LISTINGS . mechanical and electronic d.rcult control devices for both the commercial and military aeroapace marketa. • • • Jansen A11oclate1, he., Santa Ana-baaed advertiaing, market reaearch and public relations firm, hu announced two new additions to ita staff. Mary BarstoD hu been retained u a public • relationa conaultant and writer. Bargion, of Newport Beach , was formerly with "The Executive" magazine, where she waa reaponalble for creation and management of special ediUons. Rolf Radeatam has been appointed senior account executive for the public relations division. He waa formerly with Tektronix, Inc., in Beaverton, Ore. • • • Rebecca 0. Macfarlane haa been appoinied vice president and manager at Secvily Pacutc National Bank'• Bristol and Warner office in Santa Ana. Macfarlane, a native of Scotland, wu previously a v ice president with the bank's Anaheim office. • • • Dlaae H. Fruk, senior vice president in charge of Flnt IDtentete Buk of Callfonda'• Personnel Division, will deliver the challenge address to the National As8odation of Banking Affirmative Action Directors at its national conference May 19 in Milwaukee. Frank, who . chairs the American Bankers Association's Personnel Division, will also lead the co.nferen ce's concluding Open. Forum on "Mainstreaming the EID F\mction." I 2 J 4 s • 1 • t 10 " 11 ,, 14 15 " 17 " UP'S LMI ChQ 2\4. + I J'llo + ~ S 1.i. +I 1·1• '"" . '~ S + I """ + 3"1 4'A • 'llo 2"' • "- """ • 1 lh + "" l'-• "" ""' + I~ JY. • .,, 3\lo + ..., I ll. • l\lo s + ~ 4\r. + "" 1 + I l..., • .... »Y. .. ~ '°" + 1\'J 31\'I • ~ 1\<o + I " + "'' 11 + ,.,. OOWtei Pel. Up ID.O Up J7.S Up lS.t Up U.S Up U.O Up 22.2 Up 21.A Up 21.4 Up 20.S Up lt.2 Up 19.2 Up 11.4 Up 11.2 Up 11.2 Up 11.t Up 11.6 Up 11.2 Up i..1 Up 16.1 Up 16.I Up i.,4 Up 1•.1 Up 16.D Up IU Up IU Lnt C"9 Pct. 1"' -I Off 21.6 I~ -1 Ott IS.I t>V. -2V. Oii IU 2\lo -"-Off 14.l 3"' -"' Oii UA "' -"' Off 114 2\'I -~ Oii ll.D 2 15,.,. -M• Off IJ..D ,, -13 Off 11.1 33 -4\lo Off 11.• • -'!lo Off 11.1 '~ -'"' Off 10.4 3"" ~ Off \O.D • .,, -\'J Off 10.0 2 ~I· -"' Off , .. "' -~ Oii , .. s -..., Off '·' 10 -1 Off '·' --···••••··•·· .•..•• 1153" OKllrecl ....•...•••••.••••.• tOS r. '"' -"" Off ... 9\'I -.. Off ... Und\enlllll • • • • •. • • • • • . • • I, tl2 22 Tot• '-...... •• • • • • · • · • · · · · l,6tO 23 -,,..... . '..... . . . . . . • • .. . . . . 31t 24 New 10WS ••.••••••••••••••••.•. 11 U to1e1 Nm . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . .. . . .,,322,400 2"" -v. Off l.l 2+11 -v. " 1.0 ~ -~I· Oii 1.t 1.. "" Oii 1.1 I°" -.. Off , .. -;J I NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS CWOfATIOlel 111c1.uo• 'IAOUCNI , ....... YO••· ......... •ACJPtc.•••. MUOI!. OITIOtl .... <1•<••""" •TOCll I •C•A•OU ANO llP'OIUIO IY Tiii ...... AlllO llHTll•H Congress wants share of Chrysler's profits BJTMAuoda ... Pnu WASHINGTON -Several by~ are w-llna that ottidala rejllct Chrylller Coi'p.'1 request thit tJ.e federal pernrnent-jtYe up• mUch • '200 million in poientlal profJtl lnvolvtn8 mlWom ot eharee of the company'1 lt0ck. A. part of the dee! to l&ln tl.2 billion ln federal loan guarantees ln 1980 and 1981, Chryaler-...,_ 10 give the government 14.4 mDllon warranta -« ril)\ia to purchue -common ttock at t13 per ehare. When the loan l\IUM&ees were approved, the stock waa aelling for only ~ a share. But the et.ock '• price hu men along with the autcmaker'a fort\&ne9 in recent montha and ii now aelling for about t28 per share. The Treasury could realize quick profill by trading in the stock. Mondale urges currency control Former Vice President Walter F. Mondale, a candidate for the Oemocratk pretidentlal nomination, ls calling for a system of fixed exc~ rates to hold the dollar 10 "a more rea1.latic value' In relation to currencies of major F.uropean trading pertnen. Mondale catled for a l)'Jtem that would provide "a tunnel or channel" within which C\U1'fmC)' values would be allowed 10 move. Nine niropeen nationa have operated under a similar ayatem li1k:e 1979, but it does not include the United States. 4 cities compete for firm ATLANTA -Atlanta la among four cities competln8 to be the site of the Microelectronic and Computer Technology Corp., the largest joint reeearcb and development venture ln the electronics industry. Members of the lite lelection team al80 are lookina at San Diego, Austin, Texas, and Triangle Park, N.C. 'l'he group ia expected to make a dedDon m Monday. Phone system suit settled SAN DIEGO -Tellnk Inc., wbicb threatened a 1Ult over a cancefed p one ~agreea to drop 1111 $57 million claim ap1nst San Dleao County followlna the county'• dec:isiCln 10 pay the Anaheim- bued company nearly $2.5 million. 1be dispute aroee last I)ecember. •hen the county voted to...D!:C.nd a c:ontract it had awarded Tellnk for installation of a $33 million m.lcrowave phone ayatem in county office:s. Consumption key to surplus VISALIA -Increaalnl consumption and a decline in the rate of new vine plantinp eventually will end overproduction In California wines. a bank official says. "By the latter part of the 1980., our wine industry should be back on a growth track and aales may climb by as much as 5-6 percent annually,'' said Donald Wescott, vice president of Security Pacllic Bank's agricultural field department. Union Oil to rebuild pier SAN LUIS OBISPO -Union Oil Co. hae announced plans 10 rebuild lta 69-year-old oil pier at Avila Beach, which oollapeed March l In a wtntet storm. The wooden pier, a half mile Jong, will be replaced by a concrete and steel structure of the Mme size. AMERICAN LEADERS f - ' . 11111111111 TUUOAY, MAY 10, 1983 • Juggernaut vs. U.S. tonight Spedal &o ~ Dally Pilot MALIBU -The RUlllana are here. Foraet the fact the Soviet Union ia but one in an eight-nation field here ln m FINA Water Polo Cup competition at Pepperdine University. The 2,000-eeat Pepperdine facility has more than held its· own ln terms of aocommodating this tournament's crowds -but tonight at 9 it's a different story. An overflow crowd is anticipated long before the opening sprint when the United States duels tl)e Ruaaians. It was two years ago that the Reds. dealt C.oach Monte Nitzkowski's American team a 6-5 loa at II FINA Cup ln Long Beach, and tonight the U.S. gets another shot. And surpriaingly, both teams are coming off setbacks yesterda.t_. The Americana fell to West Gennany 7-3 as ~n Stamm acored two goals. The win moved West Germany lnto first place in the FINA Cup standings. And the Soviets were upaet by Spain, 7-6 as Manuel Estiarte acored four goals in an afternoon contest. , C4 Is there an antiOOte for P-oissant? By ROGER CARLSON OflheQellrNotlUlf If you flnd it di!ficult to pronouce Poissant (Poi-aahnt), don't worry about it, just think of poison. That's Rodney Poissant's reputation, anyway, among Sea View League baseball teams. The 6-1, 210-pound se.nior from Irvine High has been nothing short of a dose of arsenic to opposing batters and to this point, not many have foUnd t6e right antidote. A blazing fast ball is Poisaant's major weapon. He ente red last week's championship decider against Saddleback with an 0.91 ERA after sµ-iking out 64 in 54 ~ innings, walking but 26, and proceeded to retire 11 batters, striking out six (five in a row) to gain his seventh victory against one defeat. "He has all the physical tools," says his coach, Bob Flint. "We've limited him somewhat. His curve ball is OK, there's nothing wrong with It, it's a good combination with his fast ball. But we kind of want them to go out and try to hit his fast ball first. If they can do that, then we'll think clbout the curve ball or a change up." the le;tgue's No. 1 entry, host Chino. This was supposed to be a rebuilding year for Irvine. There weren;t that many "names" ret~. But Poissant was one of thoee names that waa lost among last year's junior varsity. "I haven't really changed that much since last year," says Poissant. "I'm constantly working on my curve ball and change up and I've improved my control. Maybe it's just a matter of wanting it more this year. Poissant is also durable. He went the distance in stopping El Toro, 3-2. then two days later relieved and shut Saddleback off in the last four innings. He's not only expected to start Friday, there's a good chance 2-A playoff opponents are going to see no other in tenns of starters for Irvine .. "He's a very thick-bodied kid," says Flint. "He has a big chest, big arms, a very good definition to muscle structure." Poissant says he works with weights throughout the season, mostly in· the lower body area. "He has always thrown hard," continues Flint. "The big improvement is control, he struggled some before. "The best way to deecribe them is just a solid club," says Nitzliowski of the Russians. "The difference from the last time we saw them, and it's a plus for them, ia that it aeems like they have more quality depth. "It seems like they use all of their field players. "It's something we've been working (See RUSS~s. Pa1e C!) Deir ........... .,,.....,.."......, Sea View League hitters can't figure Irvine's Rodney Poissant. An obvious pro prospect with numerous major league teams showing · interest, the 17-year-old Poissant has signed a letter of intent to attend Cal State Fullerton, giving him an option if things aren't to bis liking in the draft. He'll be the starter for Irvine Friday in the first round of the CIF 2-A playoffs at lrvi.ne High when the Vaqueros, Sea View League co--ehampions and "Games that Poissant pitches, we know we're going to be in them. It's the games he doesn't pitch which we really found to be the most important. That's when we had to worry." UClhas strength r • in Mills By JOHN SEV ANO OflheDellJ .......... When you first meet UC Irvine's Ken Mills, the one thing that stands out iB his ai%e -a11 6-4, 245 pounds of him. He's a dead-ringer for your prototype offenaive lineman in the National Football League. He's mU8C\!lar, trim and the kind of guy you want on your side in a bar room brawl. But rather than hassle, or grapple with guys his size or larger, Milla is happier toaing around smaller objects. . A bully? Hardly. Although what Mills does with a di9cua, javelin, hammer or shot put in his hands could be considered criminal. The blond-haired junior currently possesses the top PCAA marks this eeaaon in the di.scua and javelin. In the javelin, his speciality, he is 12 feet ahead of his nearest competitor at 191-9, a distance that has already qualified him for the NCAA Championships later thia month. "He is very mature about his overview of everything," pral.aea Mills' coach, Kevin McNair. "He's very self-analytical. In his event, he's an excellent technician and extremely coachable. He works real hard to do thingB he's not even asked to do. That doesn't mean it'• not neceeaary, he ji.aat does it out of choice and love of the sport." lt was as a freshman ,et 'Thatcher High in Ojai that Milla was first introduced to the track. '"nle track coach asked me lf rd come out and try throwing a shot put, ao I did and the first time I picked one up I threw it Ken Mills farther than anyone else," he says. Since his initial experience, Mills has refined his techniques, added 40 pounds to his frame and constantly goes through a rigorous training program that includes lifting (for two hours), running and throwing (for another two hours). Mills figures to need all that training, too, as he's entered himself in all four throwing events at the PCAA Championships Friday and Saturday in Santa Barbara. , "The only thing hard with doing them aJl is the eneriy level," explains Mills. "When you practice three things in a day, aometomes the workouts are five hours long." And sometimes it takes its toll on the shoulder as well. Currently, Mills is as battered and beat up as any offensive lineman on a given Sunday. A "rotator cuff problem" has restricted his throwiJla. Plus he's abo been hampered by a sore neck and a compression in the lower part of his back. The shoulder, of coune, is the main concern. It's when Mills (See MBU, Pa1e CS) Stanley's 'sinker baits Angels, 8-2 lloelTM&n .threw jult a couple of. ellden." BOSTON (AP) -Bob 8'anley'• knack for keeping the b.n down .. keei>lnll the Bolton Red Sox on top of tile American 1.-.ue !'Mt. Stanley marched out of Bo9ton'• bullpen, defused the ~· threat to b)ow the pme w&ae open and worked 6 % ln:t"£., al two-hit relief In the Bed • 8-2 victory i.t nieht OV9lt the Azaaela. ''IU'• nasty, that's the word. He'• touch to hit off of," aald Boeton catcher Jeff Newman. .. a. bad· five days teat. He had oammand. He had control." Stanley, 3·2, hu had ;.wt one W ouUnc ln 12 thla MMOn. In Im 1Mt nine appMl'UKlll, he NI pitched 21 % f.nn1naa and yielded one unMrMd nan and !4 hU1. Bl.I l.U earned run avera1e JMdethe ...... ''I'm •tint tt up," 8'8Ney Mid ol .. ltl'Oftt ltart. "~lf. when you have a lfx·run IH4 and mottly rt1ht·hander1 up Ulen. I h8d a •ood atnker. I The victory. aided by Reid Nlchola' 4-for-4 performance that included a two-run homer, boosted Bolton's AL l'.alt lead to 1 \oi 1amea over Baltimore. Stanle)' hM won or aaved eeveri of the Red Sox' lut 10 victories. The AnaeJa' AL Wart lead WM cut to one 1ame over Kaiuu Qty. •.• The Red Sox ICOred three l'UN fri the eecond off Tommy John, 2-2, and cl\Ued him in the third, when~ .:ot'ed four n.ana. "I didn t feel comfortable out there at all," aald John. who laat pitched April 30. 0 1 threw a lot on the aide but no matter how much you throw on the aide, it'• not the .. me .. -pltc.hln1 ln a pme eltuatlon ... "Hie control wu mU.in1. lt Wlll\'t rnlllint by much, bUt lt WH mi11ln1." Hld Anl•l•' ~ Jotu\ McNlmU'll. tkMJey ....... the pme aher Bruce Ruret walkeCI ••••'• ( ... ANOBLI. Pap Cl) NCAA berth for UCI For the first time in UC Irvine history, the Anteater men's tennis team is one of 16 teams that will be competing In the NCAA Championships in Athena, Ga., beginning Saturday. "Thanks to the grace of God and Auburn, we're in," said UCI Coach Greg Patton. He was referring to Auburn's championship in the Southeast Conference last weekend which e liminated Georgia from contention for the last berth in the NCAA tourne y -which went to UCI. The Anteaters, ranked 11th nationally with a 31-7 record, will meet eighth-seeded Clemson in the first round Saturday. The tournament is scheduled to continue through Tu~y. Other first-round action finds No. 1-seeded Southern Methodist vs. Utah; No.· 2 Stanford vs. Harvard; No. 3 USC vs. Texas; No. 4 Pepperdine vs. Wichita State; No. 5 UCLA vs. Michigan; No. 6 Trinity, Texas vs. Miami, Fla; and No. 7 Arkansas vs. California. UCI has faced 10 of the other 15 teams in the tournament this season, with victories over SMU (5-4), Utah (5-4) Harvard (6-3) and Mic higan (8-1). The Anteaters lost to Utah also and also droppe d matc hes to Stanford, USC, Pepperdine, UCLA. Trinity and Cal. UCI singles players Jim Snyder and Bruce Man Son Hing have also been accepted to compete in the NCAA individual championships, abo in Athens, which begin May 19. Spring is in the air And prospects at Newport Harbor High are into football as the first day of spring drills began yesterday. Sunset sets up La Quinta for kill Shame, shame on the Sunset League. La Quinta High'• volleyball team ia apparently too much to handle, so the A%teca are being expelled from the Sunaet i..e.,ue after just two years in the league. La Quinta, you see, did something nobody could do anyth1ng about in the back room. The Aztecs went unbeaten in Sumet t.e.,ue volleyball, taking the No. 1 spot from the league into th1a week's CIF 4-A playoff a. The league haa decided to give the Azteca the boot because it keepe a Huntington Beach Unified School Diatrict out of the playoff• and includlnl La Quinta In the league makes it a difficult aeven-team lea1ue, forcln1 one echool into a bye atuaUon on e.ch 1ame nl1ht. My, my, that'• really touch. But lt'• hardly unique. The South Cout Leque la a eeven-team leque and Laguna Beech and San Clemente pve the reet of the 1MQ\.le one ahot at aetunc a playoff berth. 8ut they aren't trying to expel San Clemente or I..aiuna Beach for it. . "Without ftltry into the Sl.lnlet Leq\.ae our volleyball exla&once la ln jeo~rcfy," 11y1 La Quinta Coach Larry JamH. "Before, we \.Md to have to 1ehedUle Nellel (I reformatol'J in Whttder) for ..,._ ... When Jamee and hil A.steal were invited lnto the Surwet Leecue two YMrl l80> tt WU becau. they ~ ln IUCh irtnAihtl (M the only Garden Grove Le.cue to field a t.eem. «My Md no plae. to ao>. It Wll et\her play free 1-nee or try to enw UM South PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON Cout League, at the other end of Orange County. Obvtoualy there wasn't much cau.e for concern then, what harm could a little school like WestmJnater-based La Quin~ ( l ,800) do against the giants of the Sunaet League? . But James and his rascals went 12-0 this: past season, ripping 10 Sunset League foea; 3-0 before taking a pair of 3-1 dedslona in; the last week for an overall leque record: of 36-2, clearly an overwhelming figure. : And the Aztecs dominated the all-1"gue: selections. Their reward? The boot. : Maybe, however. it's a bleealng. ! ~ybe, if they stay, they'll tie for third. (See SUNSET, Pqe CS) : .. . Big night I or Landr._eaux LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Anplee Dodpn' Ken Landre.wc admltJed he WM mad at hinwelf for 1t,nins a Oy ball fall ln front of him in t.he ftfJh lnn1na laat nl&ht. "I was upeet, we were all upset," ~WC Mid of the m.llplay that led to two Cha,o rww. But t..anm.ux, who .... u.r had cncked h1a ftftb home run of the ....,.., atoned b)' drtvinl in the wtftl'.'lnl run wtwn he beat out an mn.ld mo wtt.h two out in the bottom of the nlntl. lnninl .. the Doct.-. nipped the CUbe f..I for \!MU' llxth atnfcht ~ I had two ltriktl on .,,., I waa J\&lt &iytns to pt the bet on th• ball," Landnlaux llkl of hAI filth ...--wtnntna 4 . hit of the aeaaon, second beet in the National i.,ue. "I w• aolJ\8 down the line .. hard .. I could, and .. llOOll .. I MW the ball IO over the mound I knew 1 ba4 it." • The triumph, the 11.daen• U>th ln their 1aat 24 pmee, lmoroved their teed in the Na~ Leque Welt to l \oi pmea oveai Atlanta. Beaklia Lanct.r.wc'1 hemer, ~ Orea Brock hit h.ll lbcth, a two-run lhot bi the Mcond lnnlnc 'followln& a ~ by Pedro Guerrero to llW the DDd9lnl a 2-b IMd. BUl Ru.ell opened the bottom of tM ninth with an lnfleld hit olf Q.abe re1Mw Lee Smfth, 0-1. and mowd ....... '° ~ on. a MCttflce and an tnfteld out befon t..ndnawr'• ....,.wtnnlnl hit . ., l -' ' 0rMge Cout OAILV PtLOT/Tuelday, May 10, 1983 An unprecedenteil sweep for Rustlers Or~~~:1e~efi~ wu Mally the ma1r1 attraction at la.at weekend's state IW1rn championahlp1 at Hartnell College ln Salinas. But while Lavelle aet no lesa than four records, the Golden Weat Col.lep teams did some thing no community college squads have ever done. When the Rustler men and women captured the team championahipa at the SoCal meet;-it marked-the first1ime one CURT SEEDEN ,. qU&Ubed for \he etate meet. In all, 16 Rustler awimmers qualified for the state meet in Sallnu. Whllt: 1ycb a contlncent seemed to give Golden West a ahot at the men's and women's 111ate titles, the men firUahed aecond and the women fourth. The power up north is reeerved by three schools -Diablo Valley, West Valley and Santa Rosa. says Hennatad, alludb\a to the Hornets' contiibutiona to the four quallflen ln - each event. 11U you're not ln the top .four, you're out/' Hennetad admits. Carl Salyer won the champlonahip in the 200 breutAstroke while Frank Jeeter captured the 100 butterfly. Salyer, incidentally, bas been the hole man on Golden West's state champion water polo team the put two yean. ~ college has won both the men's and women's events in the same championship meet. had to battle Fullerton just to win the (South Coast) conference c.hampionship. Then, they both had to turn right arouna and do it agaun n the Southern Cal meet," explains Hermstad. Actually, one of the reasons it has been so difficult for the men's and women's team from the same school to capture a Southern Cal championship is because there have been no Southern California Championships for the past four years. . "rm not taking anything away from Weil Valley, because th.ey'.te a aood. team, but there just aren't that many good teams from northem.echoola," aays Hermstad. '''to my knowledge, there's no other water polo players around who also swim to that level," notes Hermatad, who is allo the Rustler water polo coach. .. "We have a number of good kids who would do well in the state, but because of the rules, they aren't there," Hermstad adds. / Ken Hamdorl'a Rustler men rolled up 347 points to get past S outh Coas t Conference mate Fullerton, while co- coac hes Tom He rmstad and Jim McAdams saw their Rustler women's team win their meet with 306 point.a with OCC in second at 286. "You know, our women really had to fight with Orange Coast and our men Ip the past, the top fovr qualifiers in each event from each conference in Southe rn California h ave simply The rules, simply stated, call for the top four swimmers in each event at last week's SoCal meet to compete ln the state championships. "Some of our kids didn't make it because of Full~rton," One other name, not asaoctated with either Golden West or Orange Cout, figured to at.and out. That's Saddleback'a Vince Vaaaallo, who won three events at the SoCal meet -the 400 individual medley, 200 individual medley and 200 butterfly, then set a national record in the 400 individual medley in 3:59.69. VatSallo al9o won the 200 butterfly. Tom Hermstad F irst title F OrlJ\er Orange Coast College golf-te~m member Paul <V hea ~~ptured -his firs1·-ever title a t the recent 30th annual Club Championship at Irvine Coast Country Club. O'Shea fired a r our-round tota l of 290. RUNNING DENNIS BROSTERHOUS £ • " r" • • W • • Plumer to run in UCLA meet Polly Pl umer, who last year as a 11enior at Univenity High established a high school mile record at 4:35.24, will compete against Mary Decker Tabb ln that event at the UCLA-Pepei Invitational track meet Sunday afternoon at UCLA's Drake Stadium. 'The 18-year-old Plumer la currently attending UCLA aft.er an outatanding career at Univenity. She hu made the transition from the high ediool ranks to collegiate competition as ahe demonstrated ln a recent dual meet apinst Oregon. Plumer won the 1,500-meter event in 4:20 and finiahed tee0nd ln the 800 meters ln a pel'llOnal best of 2:09.7. Polly's sister, Patti Sue, ia currently a junior at Stanford. Patti Sue la ahootina for the United States Olympic team in the 3,000-meter run. • • • A 18K R UN to benefit the U.S . Olympic Committee will be held Sunday, ~y 22, at 8 a.m. at Newport Center in Newport Belich. Olympic hopeful Steve· Scott, a topmller who attended OC Irvine, wW partidplte aa well aa other top athletes includina Steve Orth, Tom Wysocki, Gary Tuffie, Dave Barberacki and Ralph Serna. More than 5,000 runners and 20,000 spectators are expected the day of the race. In addition to the lOk will be Olympic Event demonatratlona, includina such events aa soccer, volleyball, gymnaat:ks, archery, wrestling and judo . Merlin Olien, the former Rama' star, ia the honorary chairman of the event and will pre.ent awards to the runners. The race will be run along Newport Center I)rtve and the outlytnc ueu. Aid 1tadona will be located at the 2~. 5-mile and flniah line with d;llplay Unlel located at every mile. E!'\trance fee for the event ta $10 whlch lncludee an Olympic T...ahlrt. On-site reciatration the moming of the race will be available u well • pre-r911*aUon. Free JIU'klnc will be provided and~ eet up for apectaiors at the .tart and finish line located at 700 N~ Center Drive in front of the P...Ulc Mutual Lite lnlUrence bWld1ni· *** Footbal l or soccer? Thompson sparks P ir a tes Jason Tbompaon cricked a tWo-111 K h run double with two-out in the e m p a s answer bottom of the 14th inning to cap the first five-hit perfonnance of his career From AP dJapatcbea last night as the Pittsburgh Pirates ended a WASHINGTON -Rep. Jack f.'j i§ five-game losing streak with a 5-3 victory over Kemp, R-N.Y., calling himself a .:..•,.:. the San Diego Padres in National League "very, very old" football player, tried •-liiil-•-.bbase ball action . . . In other games, Alan the other day to set the House straight Ashby triggered Houston's five-run fifth-inning • on the difference between football and soccer. rally from a 4-0 deficit with a home run as the It was as the House was discuasing a Astros acored a 6.-4 victory over the New York resolution to support efforts to have the United Mets . -. . -BHftlt-Evus ~he-Jame with a - States host soccer's 1986 World Cup. run-scoring double in the bottom of the ninth Kemp, the former Buffalo Bjl)s quarter~ck. and pinch hitter Dave Bergmu won it with a took issue with the name of bases-loaded single as San Francisco defeated St. the tnter national soccer Louis and relief ace Bruce .6attet 5-4 ... association that o•ereet"JI the Ste'tle R~ra hurled a six-hitter to lead Montreal Worki Cup competition -the to a 5-3 vic tory over Atlanta . . . In the Eederation Internationale de American League, Cliff Jolta1on anappe4 an Paotball Association. • O-for-18 slump with a home run which triggered "They should change a six-run sixth inning, and Lall Leal checlted their name and atop confusing the Chicago White Sox on three hits as Toronto all of those young boys and scored a 6-1 victory . . . Jamie Allen drove in maybe some young girls who three runs to lead Seattle to a 6-4 victory t h i n k .o f f o o t b a I 1 a s over Baltimore -KE• football. . . ." he said. "Football is football; soccer is soccer. Socoer does not have a quarterback; only football has a quarterback," Kemp said. Kemp was told by colleagues that, in other parts o1 the world, soccer was often referred to as "football." Baseba ll today 1934 -Iron man Lou Gherig of the New York Yankees removed himself from a game in the fifth inning because of illness, after making the Chicago White Sox sick with two home runs, two doubles and seven runs batted in. R USSIANS • • • From Page C1 very hard on. "The Soviets have always used a basic philosophy of great defense. It's like UCLA basketball under John Wooden, as opposed to today's UCLA basketball,'' continues Nitzkowski, a Huntington Beach resident. "The other thing about them is that t,hey are very patient. They aren't always spectacular. BUt the key to winning is not to create anything for anyone else. ''They'll wait for a great or percentage shot. U they don't get it they'll dump it off to the comer rather than take a poor shot. (.'They never put them.selves in a difficult position." You might get the idea that this Soviet juggernaut ~der Coach Boris Popov, with goalie Evgueni Sharanov, captain Alexandr Kabanov and a number of experienced standouts, is virtually unbeatable. Not necessarily so. _, ''The o~e ~ about them is that they are predicta e,'.-aaya Nitzkowski. "But ifs going to take a fast-moving, ball-control team to do it. .. "Anyone can win in this tournament," :oontinuee the U.S . coach, "but the U~ plays with. greater consistency." · Tonight's . duel obviously plays a large part toward the United States' potential success. ''The top four ls the minimum we can accept," says Nitzkowski, "as far as rm concerned. At the Olympics it's going to come down to two or three ball clubs, and we have to be there." Among the American squad are Newport Harbor High products Kevin Robertson, Jamie Bergeson and Eric Lindroth, in addition to UC Irvine'~ (by way of University High) P e ter Campbell. Others on the squad include Craig Wilson, Joe Vargas, Greg Boyer, John Siman, Drew McDonald, Schroeder, Jody Campbell, Doug Burke and Steve Hamann. The West Germ.ans have two wins and a tie in the round-robin tournament that continues through Saturday. The U.S. squad is now 1-1-1. The West Germana had six different players score ln the victory over the United States, which was led by Terry Schroeder's two goals. Kemp said he didn't care. "I think It is important that for all of those young people out there, who some day hope to play real football, where you throw it and kick it and run with it and put It in your hands, a distinction should be made that football is democratic, capitalis m, whereas soccer is a European socialist. " Quote of the d ay 1970 -Hoyt Wilhelm became the only pitcher in major league history to appear in 1,000 games as he and the Atlanta Braves lost 6-5 to the St. Louis Cardinals. 1981 -Charlie Lea registered the only no-hitter by a French-born pitcher as the. Expos defeated the San Francisco Giants, 4-0 in the second game of a double-header at Montreal's Olympic Stadium. The Americans trailed 3-1 heading into the third period and pulled tO within a goal when t--tt-..Q,,'hroeder scored for·the second time. But the West Germans pulled away afterward. Doai Moe, coach of the Denver Nuggets, on why he doesn't like to be referred to aa Mr. Moe: "Hey, I don't want to be Mister yet. My body ia aging fast, but I'm staying immature enough to keep my mentality at a low level." Stallions corra l Wa lker_ EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . -[@] Scott Norwood kicked five field aoals . 4. • ahd the Birmingham defense n eld United States Football League rushing leader Henchel Walker to a career-low 28 yards as the Stallions defeated the New Jersey Generals 22-7 last night. Conigliaro has surgery BOSTON -Former American Ill League home run champion Tony Conigliaro, hospitalized since a January 1982 heart attack plunged him into a four-month coma. underwent surgery yesterday to remove part of his left lung. Conigliaro's left lower lung lobe ha.s been collapsing, leading to recurring bouts of pnuemonia, said Martin Bander,,Masaachusetts ~neral Hospital spokesman. "The surgery went well," Bander said, "and Conigliaro is recuperating in the intensive care unit." Today's birthday: Fonner Chicago Cubs and New York Meta outfielder Jim Hickman ia 46. Rogers is UCI-bound J obn Rogen made it official• • yesterday, signing a echolarahip fonn to attend l.fC Irvine. Rogers, who played basketball at Stanford the past two seasons, will be enrolled at UCI ln the fall but will not be eligible until the 1984-85 aeason. The 6-9 forward led the Pac-10 in field goal percentage last seuon, hitting 59 percent of his shots. He is a product of La Quinta High . . . The National Basketball Aaaoclation's Board of Goveroora approved the a.ale of the struggling. franchisea in Cleveland and Incllanapolla t.01oc&l businessmen. Gordo• and Geor1e Gu d were approved as new owners of the Cavaliers, while Melvin and Herbert Simon were given conditional approval to purchaae the Pacers. T elevision, radio TV: San Antonio at Lakera, 11 :30 p.m., (taped), Channel 2. RADIO: AJltela at Boston, 4:30 p.m ., KMPC (710); Chicago at Dodgers, 7:35 p.m ., KABC (790). San Antonio at La.ken. 8:30 p.m., Kl.AC (570). Top seeds advance in Sea View tenllis Top-seeded Chrit Greer of University High and the No. 1 teeded doubles team of John Washer and Jeff Ewing from Corona del Mar High had no trouble in their first matches yeeterday at the se. View League Individual tennis champlonah1p1 at Irvine HJch. Greer had no eroblenw in di.apollng of Irvine's Brent Dteckhoff, 6-1, 6-0 ln tint-round play. He al.lo had an euy victory over Newport Harbor"• Mlke &ya, 6-2, 6·1 in the ..cond round. ~ The leaiue'• No. ~ teed ln ain8lee, Brien Sullivan of Corona del Mar, ICOred a 6-1, 8°2 victory over El Toto's Ken Zanlo In iM MCOnd round after earlier defeaUna Colta Meu'a Jay Richey, In atral1ht Hta In hi• flnt round m.toh. No. 3 IJMd Scou Brownaberpr of CdM acol'9d a t -0, 9·1 victory over Jeff Koo of C.O.te M.... and then def•tedlUeh Brown of •tanda, 1 ·0, e-1. TMnmate David ProoP .-won hit flnt t.wo match". Tf\e fourth· ...... Dlaftl' bl the ~ ~ topped H.Wport Harbor'• Tim Stonn, •. 6-3, 6 -2 and Uni~eraity's John Plnchesa, 6-2, 6-2. . Washer and Ewing, the No. 1 seed µt doubles, defeated their Univeralty opponents, 6-1, 6-2 in the aecon~ round after a first-round bye. Anteater women in NCAA tourney UC Irvine 1entora Cindy Keelln1 and Maria Mym have been invited to comJ*e in the NCAA nadonal tennll ctwnp6orwhl~ in AlbuqUet"que, N.M., which b1pn Satwdey. K.eelin8 and Myers, alternadnl at the number one 1tn1IH apot a ll MUOI\, led th• AntM*9 to. ~1-11 record. Keeu.n,, • Slcnmento native, hu a •l~ 1'9C.'Ord of 2•-e, while Myers of Newport Beech 11 lt-11. 'J'hey are echeduled to bestn flnt rourid play on Thundey, Ma y lt, after *"' oampeUtkln bM lndea. The Antee._ wwnd up Che 1811 ...on lilt ... wtth two Wini and • lOll. Hungary got three goals flvm Istvan Kiss in the tie with Cuba. Spain's unexpected victory over the Soviet Union, winner of the Olympics in 1980 and the world championships in both 1981 and 1982, came on the heels of Sunday's 6-6 tie with the Soviets . Record brown trout caught By JIM NIEMIEC Delfr "9t 0..... Wrttef BRIDGEPORT -A state record for a Gennan Brown trout was set last weekend when John Minami of Carson hooked a 26-pound, 5-ouncer near the inlet of Lower Twin Lake, here. The old record of 25 pounds, 4 ounces stood for over 10 years and was caught at Crowley Lake. Mina.mi officially weighed in his h~ge trout at Twin Lakes Resort. He U8ed a Rapala lure. In addition to Minam1'a record catch there have been other trophy browns weighed in during the first week of the trout aeaaon. Trout weighing 11, _J2,.13 and 14 pounds were hooked last week ~rior to Minaml's record catch. In addltion -to the b{g browns, there are smaller trout being cauaht at the . lake with both shore anglers and boaters doing equally well. 'Y" . " ,. MAJOR LIACMI ITANOINGI Al'IMriNn U..U. WHTDMed WLl'ot. 09 18 12 .571 13 11 .5-42 14 13 .518 14 13 .118 12 14 4U 12 17 .414 11 20 .365 •AIT DIVlllOH ao.ton 1e 10 .815 e.lllmote 15 12 ·™ Toronto 14 12 .!138 Mll'ftuk• 13 12 .520 ~ 14 13 .518 1Mw Yori! 13 14 481 OelrOll 10 14 .417 • v ...... , .• ._.. ao.ton e • ._..2 s.t1 .. 8. 8elltrnof• 4 T0tontO 8, Ollic.Qo I ()Ny g-IC~ I l'h 1~ 3 4'A 8'A 1'A 2 2\4 ll'A 3!1\ 5 T..,'a GMtM Aneeta (Tr•-• 0-0) al 801ton (01.CSI 0-11. n Olkland (l.lt'lllord 0-2) 11 Oelroll (Rucker 0.0). n Kauai CJl)' (81ua 0·11 II C11v111no (BarQr 3·1). n SHUii (Nunez 0-31 II 8alllmor1 (0. Martll'\IZ 2·5). n T1x11 (O-in 1-3) II New YOflc (RI~ 4-1), n MlnnllOll (H1v1n1 3·2) I I MllWIUkll (Hiii 0-01, n Netlonal LNaue WHT DIVl9ION WLl'ot.Ga 21 7 .780 18 •. 704 14 111 .413 13 15 .4e4 13 18 .4-48 13 ,. .418 aAITDMalON 16 " .625 14 10 .663 12 12 .500 10 14 ,417 • 17 .320 • 19 .298 v.....,. ...... DMpfl 4, CNcego 3 MonlrMI S, Atllni. 3 Houlton 6. New York 4 Pil18burgh 6, San DilaO 3, 14 lnnlngl San FrMCitOo 6, 81. Louie 4 Only gM.-~0- l'A 7'i~ I 8'h 9\4 1 3 5 7'A ..... ChlcleO (~ 1·~ 11 ~ (Waleh 1-2). n F'tllllclelON• (Aultivan 1-1) 11 Cincinnati (P-1..0).n • Montrall (Sand1r1on 3· 1) II Alllnll (M<:Murtry 3-1). n IMw Yori! (lynch I· I) II HO\lllon (l(nepper ,_.). n Plt11burgh (Tunnell 0· 11 II Si n Otego (Hawlclne 1· 1), n St. Louie (Martin 1·01 at Si n Francltco (Mc:G1fllgan 2·2), n AMERICAN LUQUE Red lox 1 • ..,..._a CAU'Of!MA llOITON •rltlll llHllbl 8enlquc cf 3 O 1 o Ramy 2b 300 1 Vllenllna rf 4 I 2 I 811ratt 2b 0 0 0 0 Re Jdlan dll 3 O 0 I Ev-rf 4 I 1 0 o.Cit-3b 4000 Ak»lf 41 10 ~-lb 4 0 1 0 Al"lll dll 4 I 2 I Clarll H 4 0 1 0 8oQg1 3b 3 I 2 2 0. OOO N!dl041cl 4 2 42 e.:;.2: ; o I 0 S1_,..1on lb 2 0 0 0 Sconlat9pl'I 1000 ~1nc 4100 Adlllnl .. 3 t O O Holtman SI 4 I 2 1 Totell TOlel9 32 8 12 7 32 2112 ._._.,.,..... Cllll«nla 101 000 000-2 eoa1on 134 000 OOlt-8 G~BI -Honmen (2). E-Hoff n. ga DP-Callfornla 3, aoe1on 2 LOB-alllotnla 8, 8011on 7. 28-Nlct1ol1 2, Hollman 2, Clark. 38-Atmel. HR-Vlllnllnt (1). NIChola (2). S F-Ramy. c....... ., " .. 1: .... 10 Jolln(L,2·21 2 8 7 7 2 0 ~ I II I 1 4 3 HIKlt 2'h 4 2 2 2 1 Stanley(W.3-21 ~ 2 0 0 1 3 JoM ptteflld 10 3 battar1 In 3rd. WP-John. Bt<-Golu. T-2:17. A-18,115, Mettnarl .. Otlolal 4 SMUii 220 010 0 10-11 7 0 Balllmore 000 010 300-4 T 1 Belttll. Thomat 171. 8. Clark 171. C= (II encl M«ceclO, B..-t. MoOragot. w (•~ S1ew1rt (81 ano Nolen. W-9aa1111, 2-1. L-McGragor. 3·2. S -Ceudlll (81 HR-Saa111a, Allan (21. 81111mora, Nolen ( 1). A -9,805. • ..,. Je1• ........ lo& t Toron10 ooo ooe 000-8 8 o· ChlelQO 000 000 010-1 3 I Leal and Marlinai; 8urn1, Lemp (8). Tldrow Cll end f'llk W-LHI, 2·3 L-8urns. O-t HR-Toron10. C. Jollnaon (41 Clllelgo, F19k ( 1) A-ll,14L NATIONAl. UAOUE Dodger9 4. Cube 3 C*CAOO LOI ANCMt.il •rhlll •rlllll Sn<lbr02b 4010$aa2b 5010 &owe• 5120Ulnd<..,llCI 5122 !M*nlf lb 4012811tar11 4020 Ournam cf a o o o Guerrero 3b 4 1 2 o JIMrte cf 1000 lltodl lb 2 12 2 Morelnd rl 4 0 1 0 Monday rl 3 0 0 0 Cay ab 4 13 0 YMgar c 4 0 0 0 Tnwn H 4000 Au1a111 u 4 130 LI.Smith p 0000 ,._ p 2000 JOallts c 3 0 I 0 8aollWfltl p 0 0 0 0 Jen11n1 P-a 1 1 1 l'loellQ P'l t o o o c.nptMll p I 0 0 O Siewert p 0 O 0 O Woode II 1 0 0 0 A~ pll 0 0 0 0 To1• 36 3 10 3 Tolala 3" 4 12 4 .... .., ......... Chic.go 000 021 000-3 Loa AnQelll 020 001 001-4 T'#O oul wn.i winning run .cored. 0-Wlnnlng "81 -LendtHUN 6. DP -CNcaou 2. Loa Angella 1. LOB -~ 8, LOI AnQelll 8, 2"8 -Bak«. HR -8t«k (8). Llndr11Ulf(5J, 8 -A~. ~ Ill Hll•ll•IO '**lnl 5'h 7 3 3 1 2 CernoMll 1,.. 2 0 0 1 1 LA.~~11 1"' 3 t 1 I o llecllwltll 1'-" 0 0 0 0 0 9-.rt (W,2.(1) 2 0 0 0 0 1 Campbell pllctled to I belier In thl Ith ... -Veeoer. T -2:35. A -45.117. ........ .,., ... Mot11rMI 020 010 011-5 13 0 AlllH!le 000 100 101-a 8 2 Roget• IM Caner. c:.rr.i. Cllllb9r (I I Ind 11anac*t W-Aogara, &-1 L-C""P, 3·3 Hll-MonlrHI, C arter (5). Atl1 n11. Ctl.,.bllll (8). A-11,231 .............. .... YOik 210 010 000-4 I 2 Houlton 000 051 OOa-t 12 I Owlllll!¥, Dm (5). TOtl'W C8) llld ~a; """'-• MNOln (4). &..con. (tl flllCI Atllby W-MtdHtl, 2•0. 1.-0WnMy, 0-3. 8- U Oorle 1a1 Hll-Ho111ton. Alllby 1a1 A-7,438. n .. ,,..... Pi1'90wali IOO 000 oa-6 ti 1 a.rt oc.oo oo-ofo ooo oo-3 • o 1.tcw11111m1, Sc11rry (9). Takulva (11), 8armlettto 113! encl P.na, Dnll: Show. Deleon Cl>.~ (12J. COUCflM (14). LllCB (I 4) end Kannad)'. Llflbwa. 11-Swmlal'llO, 1-1. L-eouchea, 2-1. k A-Pltt•burQh. Mu.11111 (3). SM '*00· ~ (61 A -11 .... - SancMz lal'lft JoM Witt FO<ICll 1<'-' Curtla Heaalar GolU TO!• Mor .... Thomel Guetrero Scloacl• Bak• Marahlll 8roell Su ~x RuaMll YMCllF Roanlclc• ~=-.... ... ._... ....... 102 11 41 ' 11 .411 .. 15 25 I I .S"?9 411 12 18 4 13 .358 N 12 32 0 13 .327 108 ,. 34 9 22 .315 28 3 81 1 .307 78 15 21 2 10 .280 80 3 ,. 0 4 .261 90 " 24 2 11 .2tl 82 12 24 7 22 .261 II 1 2 1 1 .222 "' 20 20 2 7 .220 81 13 17 4 14 .210 14 1 2 0 3 .143 21 4 0 0 0 .000 10 1 0 0 1 .000 Ne 15e 289 34 144 .282 Pl'Tctt91Q • H -IO W-L •AA 25 14 9 12 3-1 1.80 48 45 11 28 •2 3.13 .. 41 7 8 2-2 4.87 21Y. 26 8 8 1..a 4.81 aw. 38 9 15 a.-1 4.11 ~ 40 15-30 a.-... -•. 91 ~ 3 2 3 0-0 4.91 ~ 10 0 1 0-1 1.41 ~ ..... 311 21 1~ ~1 5.15 253 Me 12 135 16-12 4.3& Dedeer•~ UTTIMG All II " "" AVQ. 8 3 1 4 .ouo 48 15 0 2 .326 toe 34 7 18 .321 33 10 0 4 ,303 104 30 5 15 .2ae 70 20 2 11 .216 ee 27 8 20 .278 105 28 2 10 ."7 104 21 5 20 .2ao 86 IS 0 5 .248 81 12 a • • 197 30 4 0 1 . t:13 MalcSQnado 9 1 0 0 .111 ,000 Ander.an 4 0 0 0 Totllt 824 235 30 121-:294 8ackwllh Hool on HOW9 Nlldnlr Pena ""* ,_, Vllnda w ... z=. P!Tct9t0 ., llll -IO ., 10.0 5 8 4 0..0 32.2 15 15 17 1-1 18.0 0 4 10 2-0 11.0 2 0 7 2-0 211.2 8 7 22 4-1 49.2 Ill 15 22 +-1 23.1 4 " 18 J.O 47.t 23 17 32 3-2 26.1 14 9 17 f-2 7.1 4 2 2 1-0 2.53.1 K 1M1 152 21·1 .. Top10 ( ................. . AMl:NCAN LUQUS PA 4.ao 4.01 o.oo 2.46 2.70 3.« 1.55 4.37 4.79 4.91 3.38 G Aa II H Pc\. c.... ........ 23 102 11 ... .471 8rel1, Kan ... Chy 18 78 22 35 .4411 Thornton, Clavlllnd 27 90 111 35 .389 .....,....&. ........ 22 ae 15 2& .3711 Boggs, Boaton 2ll N 18 38 .3117 Shilby. Balllmore 11 55 11 20 .3114 McflM. l<an111 Clly 23 811 15 32 .360 Tabler, CltYlland 17 114 11 23 .3511 ................... 18 45 12 111 .358 Yount. MllWIUk• 25 101 20 3e .368 ......... _ DeClnoa9, A ....... t: llt'ell, Kan.au CUy, 8; L,M. A,..... 1; Wlnllekt, New YOfk, 7; B~d. Tcwon10, e: Cutlno, Mlnneaota, 8; Rice, 8ot1on. 9: \kllll-. Toronto, I : Y0\1111, Mil'*-•, I . ,._ llel1ed ... Bran, Kaneu Clly, 28: Kiii ... CNQgo. 21; Rica, 8011on. 25: Ward, Mlnnaaoll, 25: Tt1orn1on. c~. 23; DIC..,_, ......... ta: L.,nn, ..,,...., 12: C..,lno. Mlnnaaota, 21; Hrbe*, M~•. 21; Yount, Mllw-... 21. ......... (3DacW-) AllOflll, eoaton. 34. Fllnlgen. 811tlmore, ~ Mo!lllt, T0t0nto, 3-0, Petry, DeltoU. 3-0, Slalon, Milwlulc•. 4-0: Rawley. New Yori!. 4-1; Rlglle111, New York •. 4-1: Sulclltle, c~. 4-1; Sutton. Mllwaule•. 4-1 IUTIOllAL LUOU. G Aa II H Pct. Scllmldl PhlleOltpNa 23 17 27 28 .364 Oawaon Montr... 24 ~ 14 34 .362 Cromrtlt Monltlal 21 82 7 22 .3$5 Tl(annldy 8111 Diego 29 107 tO 38 .355 Handrick St. Louie 23 M 13 30 .349 Fllllnrt Sin Diego 111 ... 10 18 .348 Mllfl)fty Atlanta 27 92 23 32 .348 8lndl Cincinnati 27 104 14 3e .a.e Cr\11 HOUiton 31 113 14 31 .3341 Pat• PNledalptlll 2A &7 5 29 .333 ............ Murphy, Alllnta. 8; o.nwe, ~ 1; HOrnli' • .J.1111111, 7; Sctwnldt, Ptllled111illll. 7; ...._ ~ II Clllfnbllae. Attent.. t ; Elr-. San rtanC:taoo, II; GIMI)', San DllaO. 8; Hlllclflck. 8C. Loute, 8. ... llettM ... T. l<annacly, San Dlago. 28; Murphy, Attanta. 25; Bandl, ClndnNtl, 23; ~rtdl, St. Loula, 23: 8ctlmlcll, Phlladelpllla, 23; Gernlf, Houlton, 21: T. "-'IZ. Ptllllldllpl'lll, 21; ..... ~· 0.-. Montrlll. 20: .......... 0. .. """"" DMtll9M) 81h1 nn1, Atla n ll, 3-0; Monge. Plllllldelphl•. 3-0; P. Paraz. Alfllltl. M : 1 ...... ~Mil Dn**Y. 8111 Oteoo. 5-1; Aogare, Mon1r111. 5-1: A. P1 111, ~ .. 1; ..._., Dedtln. .. 1; Show, Sin Diego, 4-1. '" F1HA CUD atandlnaa W L TOPGA"9 W•I Germ~ 2 0 t 28 18 5 Italy 1 0 2 20 17 4 United S1a1• I I I 23 24 3 U&aA 11123203 Holllncl 1 1 t 22 2$ 3 Hungary 0 0 3 26 25 3 Spajn 1 2 0 20 27 2 ~bl 02123301 y---·· lc«M WM1Garm8tly 7, Vnlted Siii• 3 Spain 7, USSR 8 ,F.ubl a. Hungary • Holland II. llely fl T..,'1Gamee 1:30 -W•I Garmany va. Spain I) -HOltend VI. C..be 7:30 -HuneaitY YI. Italy 9 -Ua.9R Va. lJnttacl 811111 lee AJlmleH fUf Aft lllllUUe =.;-=re~ ........ , lM ...... ICM••> q.JO 1•.IO 1.40 Monty Trw61" (HM1) t 80 t 40 Mt >e Qllroe ff1._..1 3 20 Al•o rtoect, AmtrU.111, 811111 l1111n. O•nC11111 Doll111, Fat• 11!1tler. 81l1Wllll ..,.....,. .,,_ tO.oe. a IXACtA Ct· ti paid 1207.00, .. COflO "ACL 400 yardL Duck l'Olk (Zu11111 4•.eo 11.00 •.20 Alemftoa 1110111 (P:f\'d~I 1.80 a.40 Mr 8tralgnt Arrow (Tr1U1M1) ~.00 Aleo recad: Un1>lll Honda, Walah1lo1. KIP• Styta, Jonftlt Sunr111 • Time: 2031. THIRD AAC•. 350 yerde, CartarbO (Chevai) 4,00 3.20 2.80 01r1n•1 Diamond (Cr111g111 11,40 a .. oo Tiny Trip (8ardl 2.IO Aleo rlClld' Tiny Cryatal, 0111 Ma Nick, 8ot> Ven Moon. Shra~I• Rocl\e1 Time 18 16 1'00 .. TH "AC•. 350 yaro1 Soll OoHera (T111turaf 10 10 4,40 2.80 Nona Away (ClerlHI) 3 20 2.IO I.lure Poot (Mylll) 4 20 Aleo raced . Nu111no, Don Plunde r. RalnbOw RI-Lueky Glt1111, Sayaa Twltltr T.,... 1130 SZ UACTA (2·5) Pal<! 133 20. l'WTH llACI. 400 vard1. Cllchl Olnctt (Pi1111111on)27 80 10.80 4.llO TNlt 0 TUii (Creager) 5 20 3.40 LuOy Blow CHatll 3 00 Al10 raced Ea Ea Ta, Vlnl•g• Trip, PrllnOnetl" Man Time 20 18 IUrTH llACI. 350 yardl E .. y 1011 (Pilk1111on1 5 ao 5.20 3 20 Juat H11111r1 (Cerdoze1 g •o e.eo For the Fun of 11 (lllavlna) • 5 60 Aleo rlCICf· Wild Azure. !Wied 011, Special Oy11u1y, Softly lnlo Summer, ZIVla FOfluna. To111 Me Time. 18.24 ea UACTA (5·8) paid $57.60. HVUITH "ACI. 360 verd1. Ravmond Nockaya (Crgrl 9.80 5.20 3.40 Sein! Jey Ola (Pautone) 7.40 5.80 Jelly Jeguar (Treuura/ 3.20 Aleo raced: Corporal• Jal. Ja11 O luck, Jolltr Nol, unojo Boy, Mr Tiny Oh, King Hobo Jon, Golen Awful. Ttma· 18 08. u IXACTA C3·8) Paid se2.80, llOHTH llACll. 350 yarda. RliCh'I Fr" (C11mpblll) 10 00 4.IO 3.00 Walch Him TrUck (Craagtrl 5.llO 4.80 Euy Hoofer (Tonka) 5,60 Aleo raceo· Or11111rHm T111. BrHkln Ru+M. Smoolh Hempen, Super Tuned. Time. 11.ae. '21.llACTA (1·2) paid 1811 40 ea l'ICIC llX (7·2·6-5-3-1) paid 13.270.IO wltlt nine winning 1lcto.ll1 CliY9 hOr-~ S2 PICll SI• conaollllton paid $37.40 'Miil 2f.1 wtnntng UCICall (fOllr llOf-1. I ...-rM "ACa, S50 yt11da. MoonrlYar Windy (W11dl 11.20 4.80 a.eo Rag Rl-(Tr11sure) 4.30 3.40 Gays MICllte (Mylll) 5.80 AJao recec:t· Lader• Girl, Prouo Dukey, High DtHtl Ro11, Jungle Play, Rebel• Vll\aqua. Gelltnt Seattet. ~ti Pooctl. Time· 11. II, 91 ftACTA (7·51paidU280, A11andanoa -8,38'. World Cup 1 ...... 1. Auatralll t (et 0-Mlcllrl, W•t O«manJ) ltftOIM JoH Hlguer11 (Spain) dt t. Mark Edmonoaon, 11·2, 11-4: Manual Oran111 (Spain) def Pll Cllh, 11-3, 8·2. Dowll6M Edmondaon-Cllh (Auatrella) dal HlgutlfH·Ang11 Gimenez, 7-5, 4·8, 6-1. (Spain win• s 150.000. Au•tr111e sao.0001 o.rmen Opet1 (al 14-bwa. W•t OefMenJ) "'''""""' ........ Etic Fromll> (Wtlt Garmany) Clef. Bus1ar Mot1rarn (Great 8r111anl. 11-3. 2~. 7~, Pablo Atray1 (PtlN) clal. Aarotd 8domon (U S ). •6-2. 6-1 Men'• tournement ~'==-= Sllfan Slrnonaaon (Swedanl Ott Paolo Blr10IUccl (llelyl. 11-3. 6-4; Flom Seger-~, clal. Frlddll S-(Sou1h Alrb). Men'•'~' , ............. , ...... Anal Jim Brown \U.S.) dat. Corrado 8aruzu111 (llaly). 6-2. 6-1. HA VlaWM~MAMllfT (11 lrtlN ':tel.. ,,,., lilaUllcl Gr-(Uni-ally) oet. OlaclchOft (!Nina). 11-1, 11-(); M. H.-y1 (Nawpoft Harbor) claf. Ma (Coti. M ... I. 6-0, 8-0: MCLtlll (C0tona dal M11) dlf. YI (S~l. 1-t, 6-2; Pham (fl Toro) dal. B•roar (E111nc11), 11·0, l ·t: Margojla (Unlvenltyl dlf. Conkey (Nawporl Hart>ot). 1·8, 8-2, 6-4; P. Plllm (Silddllbld<) def. Tran (El Toro). 8·0 , ~-2: Brown (Ealencle) dat. 81llh11d (Irvine), 11·2, 1-1: Brownablfgar (C«on• dal Mar) Ott. Koga (Cotta M ... ). 8-o, 8-1; PrOC>IJ (COione dal MW) dlf Storm QIWl>Of1 Harbor), 8-3. 11-2: PlnchH cun1var11ty) def. Tuler (lrvlna), dal1ull; S~« (Ettancla) dat. Mueller (El Toro). 11-3, 6-3, My.<• (Newport HarbOf) clal. Rind CIMM). 8-0, 6-1; C«klfY (Un'-111"1 dat. Warnlf (COiia Miii), 2·1, 1-2. 6-4; Robbin• (Eatanc:ll) a.I. Yl ($aoclllC>lek>. 6-t, 11-1, Zanlo (El Toro) dal. LI (Saddllbec:ll). e-1. 11·3: su111van ccorona d•I Mar) oel. Rleflly (Cotta MMe). &-o. 11-<1. .__ ................ Gr-{U) clal. M. Haye (NH). 6-2. l-1; H. Pfllm (ETI Clef. McLean (CdMl. 11-2, e-1, T Pt\11111 (SI dll MarOQlla (Ul, S-7, 8-3. 11-2, 81ownabar~ (COM) dlf Brown IE~ 7-5, 6-1: PfO!lP (CdMI oet. PtncllM (Ul. a-'-6-2) Mywa(NH)dll.ru 0 E).6-4,6,2.Corllaty (U) dll. Robblna ), 8-3, 6-2; Sullivan (CdM). dal llnlo (ET). 1, 6-2, ,.,., """41 0.-... Sml1h·Sc!ammH (U) dll. Wrlghl·Rynn1 (CM). Cl-2, 1-t; Ablt·Ryen (NH) dal. Yong· VllllCO ~11. M . 6-1. e-a: llankaleell-Vogel (U) a.I. Welln-DIYll (ET), 11-2, 6-4; Hlclta-81111 (I) oaf. Qunter-'rong (8). 8·11 1 -1: Al•r.•-5and0vll (El dll. Rlchl)l·Alnll (CM) I · , 8·0: Svanda on-Ha ya (NHI dat. Grllll1befo-Ab1d 181, e-o, 1-0i Marllerl-L• (ET) def. VU·Tomu tn (81. 5·7, 8·3, 1·4; Yang-Co• (I) oet. FltrgerakM.allaloatl (ETI. 11-0, 11·1 '"°'"' ltlllftCI 0.-... Wuhar-Ewlng (COM) <111. S,n11n- Sclamm11 (U), 8-1, l ·ll: 81nnall•Houllft1 (CCIM) def, Abel·Ryan (NHI, 8 1, 8·4; 8exltr·Reed (NH) dll. Vankaleell·Vogal (U~ 8-4, 4~. 11-41 lnaeloml-Fllg9 (El di!. HICke· !lull (I). 5·1, 8·11 P1ul1on•Ollver (U) dat. Alayr1-S1nC1oo;11 (I!), a. t, 6-ll: SVlfld1on- Har (NH) dlf. Sandov•l·Sludlblll« (E). e-. 4-8. •·•: 1<nl9ht·8Hcn1m (I) dat. Mlrllart·L• (IT). 1-1. &-3; H...,_,,.Hoaletltr (CdM) clal. 'fano-Co• (1). w. w . · Unlimi~ed h yd roplane to run a t I rvine Lake Irvine Lake will be the 1CeM of the ftnt-ever appMrance S.turday &lld Sunday of an unlimlted hydrqp~e pttfomlina ln Orana• Col,lnt)' when Chip 'tianauer'• "AtlU Van Linet'' wW ,tve an ahla.tlan run. • I Hanau.r won an unPl'tClden-S five (ou& of nint) unlimited twntl"' hie tint )'tel' u the boet1f driver. The •1.AtlM" ii e11peble of.,... in...-of 110 mAi. per hour on a 2·mi.le OYa1 COUJ'M, In 8ddlUOn. the two-day .wnt wUJ include an "all-blown" cla11 dra1 boat ehow with world ~uarter-mlle record boldtr lddtt HUI end the • Ttxa.n'' try•nc to win a fourth.,1tral1ht blown hydro UU., Aleo, K-Boat, Cracker Box and Pro-Comp ln*rd cU'Gle boet clUMI, a Mod VP outboard mlni·rMrathOn, qmrter-mtle banfoot lkUna lpeed .•ti.mpeit and ...... prtttnlaUon of circle ooww Wltll' lkt ndnC la Oft Clp. Comptdtion b9llna at 9 a.m. Saturdaf and SUnday with ,..._ op.n1na at 7. " Uln ,AQPIC OMetC* W L T ..... ,, '" LAI Me11M I a 0 .IOO 113 111 ~ 4 • .0 ..400 17' .. , o.n.... 4 I 0 ,400 141 173 Oeki.ncl 4 • 0 .400 171 1111 ATLMTIO DMllOtl ,,.,....... • 1 0 .900 ...., 1100 .toO ,_~ a 1 o .aoo Wllhlftgton 1 I 0 . 100 eenu&. DMeeotl Chloego 7 3 0 • 700 Tempe lay 7 3 0 .700 MIONQln 8 4 0 .800 91rmlllg/llm I e 0 .IOO ~·--­Blrmlngham 22, New Jareay 7 .....,.. .... IAI MtMM 11 lllrmlnctNm. n ~··a-. ClllcaCI<> al Phll::;.:,I• ArliOnl 11 Twnpe .._..,, II ·o.nwr II Solton, n New J4lrMy II Mk:l'llg811, n WMNngton al Olktand, n 252 132 114 111 201 186 '" 124 Birmingham 22, fMW JerHy 7 le-by 0-W. 81tmlngllam 1 II 9 3-22 New Jafaay T 0 0 0-7 NJ-Mceonnaughly 37 PIN from Scou (Jacob• kietl) BIR-Wtllte 1 run (N0twood kick) BIR-FG Norwood 39 l!lR-FG Notwoocl 28 81R-FG Norwoocl 31 BIR-FG Notwoocl 37 BIR-FG Horwood 25 A-38,73" l.ndlvtdYll l i.ttdce RUSHING -81rmlngham. Ou111M 11 ... 7. Tallon 20·84, Gani 12-58. Wlllla 15·53, Smtih 1·9. Fradtflci< 1-mlnua 8, Lana 4-21 New Jeraey, Carthon 4-0, Walker 11·28, Scou 2-10 PASSING -8 lrmlngh1m, Lana 13-19-0-182. New Jara.y, Scol1 7-111-o-121. 8r lldley 2-6-4· 1 I. RECEJVING -Birmingham. Smllh &-78, Anderson 2·21, Gan1 1-1. Maton 1-32, Ouar1 .. 1-e. Sl\lbln1kl t-8. Tallon 1·11, Frederick 1-13. New Jereay, McConnauglley 2·53, S-• 4~2. Walker 2· t'2, Ce.rlhOn 1-5. MISSED FIELO GOALS -81rmlng111m, 41. N-JarHy. none. • NHL Dlawoffl ITAM.af C_., PINAL Today -~Y lalan<llrs •I Edmonton. n Thut9CMry -HY llllandlf• al Edmon1on Seturd., -Edmonlon el NY lalanclar• Tulldey, Mef 17 -Edmonton 11 NY i.landlra Tllur101y, May 111 -NY lalendare at EOrnon1on (ff ~ Sal11<clay May 21 -Edmonton 11 NY 1...,.,.(11~1 Tueadey, ~.~ NY lalandara at Edmonlon(H NBA Dtaroffl CONFEUNcl l'IMALI (9aatof.._) WHltrft Confer- Sunday -U111r1 1111. San Anlonto 107 Today -San Anlonlo 11 L..11.,., n Friday -L .. •r• a1 Sen An1on10 Sunday -I.Mier• at Sen Anlonlo Wldnaed•y. Mey 18 -Sen Antonio el Lakara (II ~) Friday, May 20 -I.Mara II Sen Antonio 4llnacesMtYI Sunder. Mey 22 -San An1onlo a1 Uk.,. (ll naca9Uryl l•terft Conlef-SunOay -Plllledetphje 1t1, MllwlUllM 109(01) Tomo,,_ -MllWaulCM II PhlllCMiphl• S.lurday -Ptiiladell)NI 11 MllWeul!M Sunday -PNll<ll4Phll et MllW-• W1dn1101y, May 11 -Mllw1ull11 al Phllad'elpnla I" -..ryl Frldey, M1y 20 -PhllaOalpllla a1 MO!waul\M (" '--'YI Swnday, May 22 -Miiwaukee •I Phila<lalpllla Ctl -VI Y•terdar at lndr , ...... L...-ol the Day Rlclc M1111 Kevin Cogen Mike M091a, 8obby Rahal Howdy HOlmll AIU~, Jr. 203.HO 201.828 201.138 201.207 200.088 1811.8" AltT"I u'=ro '=='Z...1 -37 englare. 32 b-. 43 bonito. 48 meckerll, 14 rock 11t h. 4 yellowlall, 8 lhMOttlHd. 1 eculpln. DAVlrl LOCKllll (Mewper1 9-11) - 52 anglefa. 15 bua. 100 bonito. I madlarll. 20 roell ti.n. DAMA WtcAIU' -32 ang1ara 70 b .... 2 hallbu1. 811 mackerel, 4 rock llah. 114 ~.9acutpln. .. V11e1-i•1 lrMNOtloM ••HAU. ......... L.eaew 80STON AEO SOX -Placed Jullo Valdei. lntleld•r. on tha r11trlc110 1111 RKl!lad Marty Barrell. tlCond b1Mm1n. lrom Pewluekt'I of the 1n1ern1tlollal Leegua. CHICAGO WHITE SOX -ll11cllv11.cs Brin S..rnt, pttci-. ltom Ille dl11btld 1111. \O!>llonad Stava Mu11, pltclllt. to Denver of Illa American Aeaociellon. NltlanelLMtW CINCINNATI REDS -Sen! 8an H~ pllchtlf, to lndtartepoU1 ol Iha Amerll;en Alloelallon. i..c.1tec:t G~ Harrie flllCI lrld Lalley, pllclllra, from "10'-'IPOlll· 'OOTaA.Ll Mltteulfl ..... L ..... ATLANTA ,ALCON& -Slgn1d Rloh Ol•on and David F~. Mneblc:ltt• encl Kfllln Grlmtlt. defenltw encl. NEW ORLE'AN8 S AINU -Signed Oartnll Wlllllon. Rrtlbldlar • ST. LOUIS CAAOINAl.8 -Signed Mlrll Ou61, Cllflnelv9 11Ckla, to I --Of -Y9W oonttactt. SEATTLE SIAHAWKS -8laMlt Oon Dolio. oltanelw llCll ... 10 • ..,. ... cil _,..., contract a. WASHINGTON Af08KIN8 -llgMd 01t~ Qr111t, ........... ._ ... Joi~ Incl locld Klllltrol'll OflllNIW llOlllel • ...,. Murpny, ''" 11lt1y, Ollerl1t Menn, CleflnelYI IM, end ~ Oltbarl. running blCll, IO a ..... Of -l'M' OOMtMlt. UllltM ...... ,..... \.ele9I NIV( J!MEY QfNIAAUJ -llgMd Joi Aoblnlon. oflentl .. llCllla. OrMQe Coat DAILY PILOT /Tu.day, May 10, 1teS Cl Charger s , University; Woollbri dge home • in so l thall play offs F.di.aon High, wrreritJy ranked third ln the CIF 4-A women'• softball poll, wlll host No. ~ Canyon ot Anaheim Friday afternoon (3) tQ highllght ftnt- round CIF playoff action . The Chargers carry a 21 -4 record inro tne· contest , whfle Canyon sports an 18-4 mark. In other 4-A openers, Fountain Valley (1 5-4-1), which shared the Sunset League title with Edison, will travel to Gahr High School where the Gladiators await with a 16-4 mark. And Westminster, 13-6 on the season, will host Torrance (14-7). In the 3-A playoffs, University and EJ Toro will play hosts in first-round action , while Irvine is , on the road. The Vaqueros. ranked fifth, will travel to , Fullerton High. Irvine sports a 13-5-1 record, while Fullerton ls 14-2. Unlvenlty (14-8) entertainl La . Habra (10-4), while El Toro (16-1-1) play• hoet to Bellflower. (12-9). In the 2 -A pla yo ffs . Woodbrid.e, ranked eighth •• await.I wltb an U ·3 record a.a Mary Star (16-4) invades. However, South Coast League mates Miaalon V iejo and San Clemente are on the road, with the Diablos (11·6) traveling to Bi.shop Montgomery (19-4) and Tri tona going to Arlington (16-2-1). The key to Edison 'a suuccess will, no doubt. be pitcher Julie Carpenter. Carpenter carries a 19-2 record Into the contest. Pitcher Tracy V animan figures t o get the starting ood for Fountain Valley; which . tied Edison for the Sunset League championship with a 7-3 record. SUNSET ·LEAGUE e • • From Page C1 place and force the league to vote on who goes to the CIF playoffs. The n, they'd really find out how fair play depends on the angle. Los Alamitos High finished third in football once with Fountain Valle)' in 1975. Identical records and a 14-14 tie with t~ Barons rud little to sway the Huntington Beach District- dominated league. It went to a vote lns1ead of a coin flip -and naturally, with dle majority of stockholde.rs being relatives, the Barons played,-·LM-Al -stayeci home. Maybe if James would promi.lle to only use his first team during odd -num~ered games there would be a change of heart. . . , CHECKING AROUND -&lison High offensive guard Can Jabbar· Jim Painter, a 6-3, 21~-pounder with .4.8 speed in the 40 and considered the Chargers' No. 1 offenalve lineman before he was lost for the 1982 aeaaon with a break in the venebra, has been c l ear e d to play with n o restrictions . . . Edison backers are alao feeling good about their place-kicking. J oe "Marina" Zertac•e has been consistent In the 50-yard ranp ... Fountain Valley football coach Mike MUner and staff were Involved In football cllnica with the Pittsburgh Steelers and the University of Pittsburgh recently .: . .. Edison's Bill Workman · spoke at an Iowa . State clinic- recentJy . . . Woodbridge . High volleyball coach Brtu QalJlD is stepping down, to be replaced by Steve Stratos, a former Torrance High coach. • win battle of the big 111 en again ? INGLEWOOD (AP) -The first round of the battle of the big men clearly belonged to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar . But 7-2 center Artis Gilmore and the San Antonio Spurs get another chance tonight when they Cace Abdul-Jabbar and the Los Angeles Lakers in the second game oI the National Basketball Association Western Conference finals. The defending NBA cluu;npion Lakers jumped out to 1-0 edge in the best-of-seven series with a 119-107 victory SWlday at the Forum, as Abdul-Jabbar, also 7-2. led the way with 30 points .. MILLS • e • From Page Cl throws like a catcher that it hurts th~ most. Whe n t he arm is extended out from his side, the pain ii much lesa. ''I haven't been able to throw much the past three weeks, but I should be able to do more in another two," he says. "It shouldn't affect the discus (because of the arm motion). Actually, I th ink it's just the mental aspect of the bod y holdlng up. "At the moment, I'm a long way from my potential. I just hope I can be more consistent, and I 'm glad I 'm i n the natfonals." Adds McNair: "You know, it's always the great ones who are hurting. because they're the ones who reach down." AN GELS • • • From Page C1 Jacbon with the bases loaded to al.uh Bolton's lead to 4-2 In the third innln8· .... Stanley got the first batter. Doua DeCinces, to end the inning with a double play grounder. The AJlaela sot juat two runners to eecond base the rest of the ·same. "Hunt WU all naht. He had real 11ood stuff," tald Boaton M~r Ralph Houk. "But the way DeCincee le hlttina the ball, I didn't want CO take a chance -.uee Hunt VfU ,ettlna hi• ltchel u ." and eight rebounds. Gilmore scored just seven points and had six rebounds when he fouled out with 5:18 remaining in the cont.eat. Among those who believe Gilmore will fare better In the future, h o wever , is Abdul· Jabber. • "Artis was ln foul trouble and they couldn't afford to go inside to him when they were playing catch-up," the Laker center said.: "But it was only one game, and' rm sure he will be heard from before this teries is over." San Anto nio Coach Stan; Albeck , whose club beat the'- La kers four times in five meetings during the past regular aeuon, said he'll try some.thing new for the aecond playoff game . "We are going to look at the· filma and devise some strategy and hopefully it will work.," aaid Albeck. "I think it will. We are not disillusion e d . I r emain optimi.ltic and so does the team. You will see a better team ... " LEASE A 1983 COUIAR FOR PE~ MONTH* L9Qng Isn't rtght for everyone, but may be the anew.r to your MW cer needs. L .... a brand MW 1883 M«cury couaar tor •1ee.~a per ~ on a otOMd 9nd ,.: ............. .... ,.. ......... ... c ..... , .. ,... ... ... l . Westhead flred as CHICAGO (AP) -Paul Waatbod, wbo lndka1.td IM& ~y that hJa recommendadon afW the ~lebraced blowup by pard Earvin coached the Chlcaao Bulla to the MCOnd-:wont to the '-In'• execuuve committee would be the "Macie" Johmon. Jobman aaid he would not play record 1n the i.m'• National BMkeu.Il Amocladon final word on Westheed11 fate. But he aaid he had under' WmbMd an4 demanded to be traded to the tuatory, Ml been fired after only~ ~ of hia not m made J:&.cthia mind. • ,-1.lllh.Jua. W.ahMd w., tu.ct lnl1ad.. four-yw contract; accoraln8 to a publllbed repan. In ~ t!'-__ -~th~~. JThoma~-madew• Several playen privately complained of a =~~~ .:=a:n. ~ fired In ~ita2v.i't.r 2~ ~ ;;di...,ey commauUcadon PJl with Westbeld u the 1WOn Rod Thorn informed Westheld of 'lhe eo.tel1o wu dumped 58 pmea into the '78-'79 wound down ancJ none indicated they had any clecWOo late last Friday. The announcement wUJ.be wa. ~for him. the lleW9papel" reported. made today, the newsp9per reported. The Bulla record tbil 8eMOI\ WU 28-54. WellhMd, out of town on wcation to celebrate WestheMI came to the Bulla lalt June with the his 20th wedding anniversary, waa unavailable for best winnln& percentap of an act.lve NBA ooach. comment, u wu tUa lawyer, Richie Phillips. He Jed the LOI Anaelea Laken to the 1979-80 Only the aecond year of W.thead'a contract· NBA champlomhlp. 'nle Lakera were 54.-28 in wu g\W'Ulteed, which meana the Bulla will pay 1980-81, but were upset In the playoffs by the him an e.timated $175,000 for next aeuon. HOWlton Rocketa. _ _ -'lborii.woowaaaaia'bythenewapaperloliive_.... Then, 11 gamea into the 1981-82 season, declined comment on the ~eport yeeterday, Westheed wu fired by Laker owner Jerry Buaa Preakness next stop BALTIMO~ (AP) - Kentucky Derby winner Sunny'• Halo will be flown here Wednesday to begin preparation .for the lelath running of the Preakn eaa Stakes, Pimlico Race Course officiala aaid yesterday. Sunny'• Halo will be flown from Loui1ville, Ky., for the May 21 full field of 14 3-)'ear-oloa that are expected to compete in the middle leg of thoroughbred racing'• Triple Crown, Pimlioo officials said. The 1tat-u1 of Slew O'Gold, fourth_. Play Fellow, sixth, Pax in Bello, seventh, and Paris Prince, 10th, ·will be decided by their trainers later thia week. R08EttTB . RENA HOWARD ROBERTS, resident of Laguna Beach, CA for 18 years. Paaed away April 22, 1983. Services were held_in -Meltxsu.rne,1Wlda:--..... KENNEDY t Sailors shape up Bulla players contacted by the newspaper Monday expre1aed 1urpriae at the decision, however. "rm lhocked," aaid forward David Greenwood. "I didn't think they ,were gob:1f to fire him." . Greenwood, at one point in the aeaaon relep&ed to ,....rve duty after being a atarter hi9 fint three yean in Chicago, waa one of the Bulla playen whoee pme auffered_most under Westhead. BARBARA MULLANE KENNEDY, r esident of Costa Mes•, CA. Paned awey May 7, 1983. She was born February 6, 1926 in Canton, Ohio and had been a resident of Newport Beach. CA, Costa Meaa, CA area s ince 1Q59. She was employed more -than 25 Prospective football candidates at Newport Harbor High go through drills yesterday as spring practice began. yearaatFordAeronutronica.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- Newport Beech, and was long-time active member of Charger-the American Legio n Auxillary P oat No. 291, Newport Harbor. Beloved w ife of Jack Kennedy. owner Survived by three brothers, all of Canton, Ohio, George, Jim and Thomas Mullane; lilt.er Roeernary Kabona of a gr Cypress, CA; daugbteta, fl y Linda Hoffmann of Davis, C.fl, and Carole Hengel of SAN DllXX> (AP) _ F)loe Hei&hta, llllnoia; 1 aon Iiavld Kennedy of Culver An angry Gene Klein, Chy, CA; 3 grandchildren; owner of the San Die., aeveral nieoee and nephews Chargers, called the and many friendl. Recitation signing Monday o l of the Rosary Monday 7:30 Arkansas wide receiver PM ~t the Harbor Lawn Gary Anderson an act of Memorial Chapel._ Maas of "sheer ...... v. .. on the part the Resurrection will be held _.U._ d s Tueaday May 10, l98.3, at of the nite tates 9:00 AM at St. Joachim'• Football League. Catholic Church 1964 Anderson, One' of the Qrange Av., Costa' Mesa. Chargers' three No. 1 ~interment services will choices in the National be held at Canton, Ohio. Football League draft Harbor Lewn -Mount Olive laat month, agreed to a Mortuarys~s· tbree-Tyear conBa· tractBandiwi~ D W A Y N E V E R N the ampa Y ts SEVERNS, resident o f of the USFL. Newport Beach, CA. PUied Klein ~d Anderson away May 4, 1983. Survived waa victimized because b y mother Loraine (Bill) he signed "w ithout Johnlon and father Wayne benefit of any serious (Beverly) Severns; 3 negotiations" 'with San brothere, Darryl Severna, Diego and charged Jeffrey A Johmon, Michael Andenon'a agent, Jerry K. Johneon;· grandmother Argovftz, with a breach J u n e W . K a r b e r ; f •L.•- THI BUllEDll BURD .._.tse•d•le Here la a M9t o4 ewnt9 acheduted kif May at A8COt Recewey In Gardena: May 11 -Mot~ CMC Motoc:tOM, 7:30 p.m. May 12 -~. CMC Pro-em Kam and' n*'I ..,mu. 7:30 p.m. May 13 -Stock care, Hodgdon-Curb, NA8CAR Wlnaton Racing SerlH (llmltad ~I) and opef'I Competition mini atoelt•, I p.m. May 14 -8pt1nt ew1, Ktaoo-CRA s.tea. 8 p.m. May 15 -Stock cara, Figure le and oval street atoelta, 7 p.m. May 11 -Motorcyde9. CMC MotoetOM, '7:30 p.m. May 20 -Combination, Midget•. Mini Stock•. Mini Spring• (quarter-ml!•) and oft-f09d apr1"t buoglae (TT ~~ M9Y21 -~. NASCAR Wlnaton Racing Serl•• (llmlted aportamen) and USAC Midget• Waatarn s.taa. 8 p.m. May 22 -MotorcyclH, Dirt Diggers ()Inoa-.,, TT Scramblea, 10 a.m . May 25 -Motorcyde9. CMC Motoc:tOll, 7:30 p.m. May 2t -KarU, CMC Pro-am Karta and Mint 8prlnta, 7:30 p.m. ........ The Trudgera 1-K run la scheduled for Sunday, June 28, begil•illlCI ate a.m. et Point F.mn Pd In Sen P9dro. The ptlttc .. located at the comer of PMaO Del ~ and Ganey. The r.ce la tor women onty. The cout9e le flat and ,_ and n.ine along the ocaen before ftnlahlng beck at the ptlttc. Entry fM la N ~ T·9hlr1) and 14 without a T ..ahlrt-AWW'da w11 be glwrl to tM tint three ftftlaher9 In ..at! • dMalon. For more lnformatton, and en~ka, write Bltl Gtllnt, rece dlr9ct0t, T 8-K run, 4009 Pacific Cout Highway, otTanca, 90505. Te••l•e .. ,, Th• Newport Beach Marriott Hotel and Tennis Club wtll conduct a tennis camp for beginner•. lntarme<llata, high achool and tournament pta~ra, agee 7-18 from June 20-Aug. 15. . IJ8D(ifather Hirlam Rua1er 0 e"'"""· Servlcee will be held 0~ He aaid Argovt-t' f-9-,-·-.. wecme;s.:.r;.!"*Y 11, 1983, at reportedly on the verge May 27 -Stock cara, Hodgdo11·Curb NASCAR Winston a.tea, (lmfted ~) and chelfl rllCe, I p.m. May 28 -Sprint C#I, Ktaoo-CRA ..-. 8etute to Indy, SO t.pe, a p.m. There wttl be flYe two-weak Malone with the cemp directed by Robyn Ray and ualated by Tina Gary Drake, Nita Smith and Matt Rlcherdion. 11:00, View Chapel of being awarded a Friend• may cell at the USFL expansion team, Monuary on Tuelday from w a 1 8 u j 1 t y o f a noon to 9:00 PM. Pnvate "d isgraceful" and interment. Pacific View "aerioua conflict of Mortuary• dlrec:tors. interest." IALTI••._,.. SMrTM. tvrM&L WHTCU..CMA ... 427 e t7th St .Costa Mesa 846-9371 PAC9'CYaW t•9almAlPA8 Cenw*Y Monu.-, Chel)et-Orematory 3500 P.:1hc View Drive Hewpof1 Beech 644·2700 , McCOllMCll WOITU••s legUM Beech 494-fMtS ~Hiiis 1te-o933 Klein queaUoned how Argovltz could be an agent in one league (NFL) and a proepective owner In the usn.. The Chargers made Andenon their second flrat round pick and labeled him aa the eventual rep).l!Celoent for veteran wide receiver Charlie Joiner. K 1 e in 1 Lid the Chargers "were con1htently and conatantly )Jed to" and ~ that Andenon hal "obviouaJ,y not been told the truth. He'• been h~ed." May 21 -Spf1nt C.., Kreoo-<:RA a.tea, Salute to lndY, 40-. I _p.m. May 30 -8toelt C8rl, ~ ... oval atreet 9lodCa and ~· deft.y, 7 p.m. a .. d rallye The GrNt Amertcan Race, a 2,800-mlle r<*I ralY9 for antique and daeek: cerw. wtff beglfl at knott'• Berry Farm In Buena Pane on M9Y 21. The race ta a~ run acroea tn. U.8. to lnd191.-potoa and a ~ of t235.000 In pttle money ...... the event'• top tlnlltlen. TM complltltton _. r.tuN a fWd of up to 100 8fltlque oere. moet drt¥en by tMlf own ownen. • The event le unctlONd by the Spotta Car Ctub o4 Amertoa. The ob)eet of the ,. wtll be for ~ltore to dr"'9 at an avweoe ~~IO mllea pet hoUr for tn. enttre aewn ..:. t 100,000 prtae enlt• the llnt·ptllOe Ray hH bean Involved wllh th• John Ga1dner Tennie Ranch In Scottld•. Artzona both • head pro and director. He haa alao c:oeched the Belgium Oevla Cup .teem and la a former Wimbledon and For.at H• playw. He la currently Director o4 Tennie 9t the Marriott Hotel. There 11 llmlted enrollm••ll thu• thoH Interested .,. aaked to phone the Marriott Hotel (840-4000) u aoon u poulbla. .4¥8081 ... ,,. AYIO ~ YOUlh 8oocer Aaeoeletlon) fleeLon 41 (Le1una Nlguel) wlll hold ,...111on .... and alaO seturday. June 11 hm 10 Lm.-4 p.m. 9t Crown Vllll9>; ~· n Me: 131 fO{ K LMgUe ~ "'°tor .............. 935 .. be;s tor.eny eddltlcM..i member o4 a twnt1y up. ,.,.,. ....... eddftlol..i cNrge kif ... Nglletilllon fn lepeember. Sen Juen C.p11tr~ ...s-1n& Mears leads speed chase at ,Indy Wi&· .,.... .................... '91:1 ...... la&.-...WAY ~' 1109r.o ew eoac. ..... ~IO .. INDIANAPOLIS CAP) -Bobby ftaha1. .Kmn CotM. MDre ....,. md Howdy Holmu all topped 100 mph =r~t.a~ th• chaH for 1pHd dr:I ~..!.~ the "U .. "~'m Indy winner and tb• runner·up to Gordon Johnoock IMt ,_.. afW ,ma1bln1 the Indlanapol11 Motor lpetdway record• ln qntll ...... hid A lap '' IOl.860 mDh Mondlj, more than fa mil• per hour ,...... thin .... top ~an8undaJ. 8aha1 allo Improved hll t.a ..... lap fliCllll UM.888 to 201.207 In hi8 new Co.wOC'th·powered March race car. And Co1an, Meara' former teammate and the eeeond·faatett qualifier IMt year ....... hJa t.t llC'ldlce iap from 186 to IOI .... d~~,~ hour Of pr... . Ind .~-• l4•y.u' '1 wteran, CAl'TNH JOMN'l IOI OMAN railed hia top speed by 8 MLLSY, ,._a.Mr DIM."'- 'mph .. 201.tu: -. • ·1~ ........ ~:::: '• fonMI' Indy rookie°' ..... .. ... ..... ,the year 1Hllln1 hl1 CC: ...... ••••• third atart, ueadllf •••< ·imlll'OWd hJI top lap to "* ,,.. "~ .. 200.0ll. ~~=.. ...... a.n. 21, ••"fled et ........... •204.A2 lut year for • "1 HIUI ~ ~ front-row l\U1 ..xi to ,_'-·a....,., ,.-" .. ~ . ....... I 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A . I L y p I ·L 0 T c L A s s I F I E- D 6 .4 ·2 •• ClASSlf 110 . CLASSIFIED· INDEX .... """ ... For T11Hd8J tt1r•11gt1 Seturday pu~1; 5:30 p.m. tM pr..tow dey. F0t lunctey Hcl Monday pubtlcetlon1: 12:00noon...._. To Place Yu Ad. Cll 642-5678 IW. ESTATE °'"'"'! """""'"' lt1U. llitlbw l•l.nd JS.It.I• y-,'f\U\11oul• <.·.,..,,..~, e.-h l'.run.. dt·I M~' t.·l"'u. M,..., IJ!o"" l'l•nt &I Tut~1 t-..1Mnt...1n v.u. \ Uvnunec:t.itf\ 8.4".h """' 11.ri.. .... \n'H'W1 "-'"" ...... ~ .... 11.1 .. t...cvn..N111"'1 L...\. .. Pi.-•""' M ..... .n v .. , .. H.·•p..n e. .-h S....n c.:"m.-nh S..1n J1.wn l .. •pt••r.in.• S...nw """' s-... 1 I\ ... h s,.,,,.h l-ttuo •• SuHM t O.··• h Tu11uu w.,11111n_,.1t., M·4•k 11,.,~~ '"'''o4Kt' Ap.."mi n&.1. Riiiililh "'1ul)•'f\\ Ekwnt ... ''"''I>'\ t.•1 nw•t.t'f\ l•t\111 l··""'"' ... ,..,)l'f'h l'•iftd.11mnium ... INpl.i ''"' Umu. ttuu...-. kl br MtAtJ lna:111tt't .,,,...,..,.\\ lndu-.1u.1I t'riiipt' L1.1b ,,., S...1.· M1o h· II.-• l'- Mnuni..on °'"""' C>r-.. ntti t.'•• Ou1 ul t.'ounl\ Ou1 of Su.11· t"-rw<tN-. t· .. ~ ~s:::i::'Y R.L~._ RJ. wan...i RENTALS ttuu.,..-.rum .. ..J Huu.e• Unfum1J:tM-<I ,,,..,_,_ t'urm.'h."I ,., Unr~m.Jt.J C..'111ftd.1 t urn l'undo• Uni Tu~ nhi....,.., furn T1t'Ann..u. ... Unf Uupk ~· ... t~um Uupk"'"' Uni Ap.rlmPnL. t'W'N~ A..-r\mrni. Unf Apll f'Urn or Unf Kwn,. tc..wn., 6-wrd •-tot4•I,.. MutA•b Uu.~I th.lml-. Sul"f\n'4'f Mf'1•!.a.t. v ... 1M.io Kt·nlMt. •K.-nbth '" s .... ,... •tlt·nwb. W1Jinhod c;., .. ft'., f0t kf-nl Ofr .... R•·n'--'" O....ni• H.--nt .. b. l'umml ll..'ft&ah. -,,,.,..,.. R...1al. SLllf~ M• M.rnwb ANNOUNCDPTS AnrMtU"''"'""""'-a.. ... a. r ... nd ~.,..,."""''• Vt-n.o....wl Sc" k•~ S. h.i•1t'll & In.tr~ \111'(\ Tr;o1v1I BUSINESS Ir FINANCIAL Bui!wn1 ..... fllf Silk· • OU..nt• ()ppM'11.ltullon ButJ,,,.. w .. .nu<d •fnYt•unrnt Opp.wtun.un '"""'"'"'' w__..&rc1 ' MtlfWIV W UJINl •Moftt.yW•nl<d M1t1~TU .. Efllll.OYME:NT ME:RCHAfl>ISE Anl~Ull-.,. A~w"',..,. A .. u • ..,,.. SI.ti( M .. 11..,wh ''4ftW"f'"• ., t:Atwpmii f\\ l "1111't1pw1•" .,.. .. h • v • .., t u•tt•hi1ft C...··~ s..t. ... Uuuw hi.td (f..11t-- J1·•• In M.-httM"f"'\ M1•• u ... ,. ....... M-. Watm"CI M.,... .1 INtrumi-n.,. Uff••• f'unulW't· & .... u•.,n•'ftl 1-'11010~ lW ()rM~n""' ~~"'~ .. ~t.~~·:~~· 80ATS .,, .. , ... ..,,,,.., ;...,....-.. . .,._,_,, S;.ot Sf>ont Siu ,...,,,... t~u1p M•"'' S.in._, Sit""'~ llt ..... !'\11...-.. lt' S.uvpt., ... ln.trurhurf ~.u.wnh TRANSPORTATION AllH .. h f-""" k .... -..n11.••f' M11h., E\ik,,. 'M11tnn.Y\INS..'t1n1Joon Muluf lliilfN,. ti\'. Tt .. 1t." Tr•""'' T-,.,..~.,.. Uuh•'- AUTOMOTIVE AU\tt t,..,,...."t!C Auw S,.yv-.....,t"ana A\.lt.•W..n\f-d :i;,)t .. ~ K,,.., 11 .. 0:1" 4 Whit"' (lfl'-"'"" T"""" v .... AtUKfU4' t ,...,._.., AUTOS ..aRTm Alli• H•'l'lli"' Au.Ii A~un KMW l 'IH••°" U1tt..v11 I) t.-"''"" h •t.•n ..... , ll1flll.oi 1 ... wu J...t:W' ,,..,..,,. J...mtii"1lf\•f'4 L..ni .. ... ..... t.1.-Kt... ,.. ......... , Mt'f''td•.., Ht "' M1ooht,ht MU ,,..~ .... Hl•'f'• ... . ..,..,~ ............ ttmoult Mt"t-M.w"'"' "'""" 8""" ........... "'"•"-' ,..,.,..., ... v ... -.,.~,... V1M1 ..... '.llOO rM 11&1• 11111111111 Kiii and~ !NY be ,,_.. """ 1:30 p.m. tot IM nst *f• publlo-catlOn. For 14.nday and Monday ~tillcatlon1, 12:00 noon Saturday. PleaN altl fOf I "kill numw" when cencel· ling your ad. -Q'9dl your Id ~ and report arron lmn11 it'111 ly. The DAILY PILOT ... sum•• llablllty for the ftret lneo«aet lneartlon =· THE REAL ES'1Al'E1''S 1K 111111111 Owner wtll urry 11t TO with 20% down lor 1 yaer. Super home. 3 Bdrm 2 beth with gte9t lamlly foom end brick n~ Cottage Park'I llnalt fOt only I 126,000. Cell to ... 5*231' THE :REAL ESTATERS ····---The popular "Carmel" model. Ttne bedrooms. Spacloua patio-Luxu· nant garden. Propatty 1n top condition. You own tt1e tend. S2t1.aoo. llllMll' .. , .... 1111.11 111· .,..._ Wll1IUff ,.._ Tiii• unique property 11 IUfrOUndad by amenitlaa such at park, tennis, shopping end schools. Uve In relaxed luxury In this 3 Bc:lrm home with family room and double llraplaca. Reduced to S225,000. Call todayl ~7171 THE R E AL ESTATERS To Place your "Fast Result" Service Directory ad . . Call Now 642·5671 bt:JJJ lllllU .._ ______ .. !Wltl ~-------. f'Otlt ftjlJ!t mu ltlllt, tlOll lj(/:!ft MO'U "°'"' ll01'1 WIU !IOI) !IG2ll 111115 lllJ;llJ 1111.<5 "'"'° -~ VIII~ »Uli """ Wll~ Wit~ ._p; •II• »nl ~12.1 VI~ ~)lj ... ~ Wl31 tt:J,3 111» .. ~. Wl•I "~" 1110 .... 111•11 llUI 11111.1 Ill)) Ill~~ WUif 11191 111111 VIM 111111 lllW "'' tlT:i 11it6 •in * ~ e I t 00 • ~ Q) ~ • ~ Q) • = • I • Bll.L GRUNDY . REALTOR • ' ' j \II • •. r-' (1' t !) .......... , One level lrvln• condo CIOee to pool, IPll & ten- • 3 Bdrm 2 Ba and unit llllth double garage, workbench, patio, g11 llO. Priced ~ 1 .. t ; flmparable aale at JISl,&00. Call Mary Jank rJr lnformetlon . M-1100 0£.:0ROE ELKINS CO 1111-. ~.s&.2ea model, loeded with ex- trH; flreplace, micro- wave, vaulted calllng, etlcker price S134,S150. 711-3191 THE F<EAL ESTATERS H<+Mt~a.c. - WATI.HrHONT Ull lfFD REAL EST~TE Owner need.a fut sale end wlll take low down to ____ 13_1_·_1400 __ 1 MU this 3 Br, den & huge Wiii trade Lake Arro wtlMd home or lot In the community of HlllTllltalr for Newport Beach home. 714/752-7891 family room Tudor style home. Convefllently lo= cated ,_ "'Oh actiool. $219,000. Aak for Al Weinert. 844--7020 ..... IULUTltl ... .... .... Best location on top street w/ panoramic ocean/ mountain & city light view. Corner lot. Charming Hampton w / 3 BR + family rm in decorator perfect condition. Outstanding financing & price. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 OrMQe 0out DAILY PILOT !Tu.day, M-10, 1Ma fl: 171-1241 lllllTIUMI ..... -·-aa-1:r Ac9demlc Dly ., JCinended Day Care Hot nutrttioul lunct* 8:30un~pm ..DISCOUNT for 2 o~ more ; chOdten per family FREE $30, reclatration first 10 enrollee• with ad before 9/1. ALSO: Actina • Dandni -Gyrnn.utlcs -HOl'Mbeck Ridina LeMona -Arta & Cratta & s~. 20221 c,,,... st. (""'°" llCl Bay) ~~~ ~ 11For Active Chldren" Fall: After School Program 11 :30 a.m. -6:00 p.m. Bowling/Skating/Hiking Cultural Awareness/ Manners TRANSPORTATION FROM SCHOOLS • Ideal f« Working Femlllee • Fr .. Tr911aportet1on :~~~-8 (714) 631-1668 SUllER CARE FOR KIDS Ages 5-11 June 13 tc:>-Aug.--26-· • Weekdys 7:30AM to 6PM Contact Diana Ehle or Bunny Lynes 141-3231 141-2237 Pacific Travel School 610 E. 17th Sr .. Santa Ana, Ca. 92701 r:;tj lliiM ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY PltlV ATE ACCREDrrED TIUVEL AGENCY SCHOOL MORNING, AFTERNOON, EVE,.ING CLASSES Call (714) 543.9495 r "" S1•1111r School Opens June 27th .. . ~ FAIRMONT PRIVATE SCHOOL Orange County's Oldest & Finest REMEDIAL & ACCELERATED CLASSES • Small Classes •Individual Attention •Sound Study Habits SUMMER CAMP GRADES K-9 ----~ Transpertatton-Gefeteria -Extendect-Oay-----• 1557 W. Mable Street •Anaheim. Ca. 92802• 774-1052 ·---------------· 1 · C1rtl11 of 1 I Hunti1po1 l11oh I SMALL '-... ,..... ............. .--............ I • Kildercarten • 6th I WORLD ....... bk *• • Crlfta ... ··-·-ac.....•AMlln .. AIDMI 10Y1 ..... ZJ WJM-Als.JL a.-i '° .. ...._....,a io r-. -• ~., .. per ... IHCt.UOa We '"r9 ~ t.t jolll Ye lor -20TH YEN! ,., ............. llYllE Wiii WIP 11111 ......... ............. ., ... (114) Ul-4111 Piii PRIVATE DAY SCHOOL SUMMER SCHOOL """ 13 to Aucust 31st. Swimming, swimming lessons. Arts & crafts. Mon-Fri 6:00AM to 6PM. (non academic). Now has limited openings for September in Grades l, 2, 4. 211 ..... V11t1 ,,., ,,... .... 141-1111 WORD PROCESSllli SCllJll Learn How to use Wang, IBM OS6 & Oisplaywnter Xerox.860 c .. U14) 556-84 ~ T-Pllmll.l*mi -J Dtryl I fy ..... W..dlf• EHN MOH WOMET Become a Word Processing Specialist Excellent Career Opportunities WORD PROCESSING ANO INFORMATION SY STE.MS . ~232SE,811stol-Su1te106· S.nll Ana. Ca 92701 A 1111100< ol lO..clllO'l lllO l"""°"' ·(-• 14!1- BOYS A CIRLS, 8-14 -Located In San Bernardino Mtns. near Blg Bear Lake June 26-JuJy 16, July 17-Aug 6, Aug 7-Aug 27 -Reasonable rates -3 t.o 9-Week Sealona -Swimming, Hones, Water Skil.ng, Fiahing, Crafta, Archery, Riflery. a.cJcpack:ing. YMCA-Oake1 · Ran1en, 600 Lpng• 1 Beach Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90802. (213) 432-2026. llT llllBIUllD .... ;, ..... .... ] .. , ........ Chlldren-tnna-adulu. Claaaea dellped foq11,~ve art ma.Jon, wiom/artl9ticllly lftt.d .tudenta. Indlv attmUcn, ~ Tewla welcome. ., ............ Noted ans.t of the lmpreeaionbt School. BA Univ of Arjlona/poet and OU. Art lmtttute. . .................. . HAl80I TUITY ! Plt£SCHOOlJDA.!t CM£ COODl ........ " Ages 2'n to 8. ~ & full day. Open year around 7 AM-6PM. Summer Proiram thru Kinder1anen. Now acceptin1 fall applications. Corner Fairview & Baker ~ Costa Mesa .:. _..;. .......... -.1111 ---.. ....... tt1 /pre -/Choo -FOi YOUI CHILDoS IHT ST All CHOOSI Olla DB'IMDAILI DAY CAii C&fTH OPEN 6:30 A.M.-6 P.M. 815 KNOXVILLE STREET (On Beach Blvd. bet-Adame 6 lndianapolls) ............ Forfurther information· reprding advertieing placement in the Schoole 4 lnetructiom Directory -call Leaile Griffith 642-5678 ext 330 ----+----...--I • Stmner School I PRE-SCHOOL tall Val. lawr letal1 2tol I (Public School Students Welcome) I Surrimer Leat I Fnef HM P.....U. 3911 ._....., T.l.'14ftl ltll Wu... 5111 flH ON THE BAND I • Academics-Art-I Loet: ladlM' watch. 30 yr SPIRITUAL READINGS .... umn Babysll1• Wlllled PIT .,. =-..-,--5---.--...-14•7 ... 5 SUMMER RENTAL • Music Fltld Ti;,s School · kHp11ke, w/money & Advice In all matt•ra ~It. .... ternoon1 for 2 1wee1 ~· .::5: :.::;. Poo1: ~:~ ::;_, wet:r:bar, I • Pre Sc.hool I ~kT, sc !1~ dcarou-~o:.•i ~r'°rrtarou· : ... b1un1g1. ---"' 1et a 2nd kld•;..:iY.!'.,01"!~·1 Nc111 ~h but No pet9 • • I . I ..... ~ . .,...er • no . . TD' 1SMI mornn..,I """" -on-491-4277 . . lncld. Summer. enc Id I • F .. or Part-Time JIN 13-Aupst 31 q u .. t I 0 n. .. k. d . 1115 So. El~ RMI, Aobt, s!tt.. NH/CM lmkr. ~ I A 2 3 & 4 557-4250 San etern. 412 72H R.E. •<*• Bd Reelt0fl•-...,._,.----.-Mh4-- luta Au 1711 TSL Mg!1~::~1eoo I • A1es 2 to aradt I I 1" I • FOUND: A~Blk Cock-ClllU IF 1142..t171 54&-0et t Reep. adult• Temp/Full Lg 2Br .... ~monr.so. Cit. H-· .. o-ri·· .. ln CdM I ENROLL NOW! Summer-Fall I er Span., · Cell to WIDOW HAS UI for CHARLOTTE SITTERS. Plaza ....,., Svv .. :.:. """ g I Identify, 1794217 11•••&IE T.D'1, 110,000 up. No 845-37441 54s..53e8 t•t• ....... dec:tt 1n "°"t 121 u lea 1>-blk I .... ---~ .._-.. •----------------• yd, tleept 8. 212 Mar-I t , n . I Open 6:30AM to &:OOPM. (nmi icadlmlc) 719 NO. HARBOA BLVD. ,.....,, ... -. no..--·•· a.Mina 1111.... flM guerlte. UOO/wk. I w. Beach Blvd., H.B. $ WIE $ FULLERTON Call Denl1on A11oc. GROWING NEW INDE- PremlUm 2 BR.~ b11 to 875-3130 131 ,_111 I 2950 McClntod 141-1411 873-7311 PENDENT BAN K 11 bch, ......... remod, ttove 2 bdrm ap11: N.8. nr I •• I Costa u..... • IEWln's .__ 1• ......... 2nd TD'•"°"' 16,000 to ..icing to M the follow-........ , I ...... ..... ....... -sso.ooo high yield ... Ing ~· LOAN 00-& refrlg, gar, 1700. No ocean, furn. or unlUrn. COupon Explr• Aug. 31 I 645_5171 . l•l-llll • ........ , lale4 l IAYI I WED cured by llntle temlly CUMENTATION SECRE-'*9. Joe 551-1452 Alto untum. C.M. Reu. I Open 6:30 a.m.-e p.m. a For return of AKC Dobe ATIRACTIVE homea In Sen Bernat· TARY, ~.Call .... ltlt ,..,,,,. 1142-enl ~--•••••••••••••_.. F tn heel, blade 6 tan, MASSUSSES dlno. Prln only. Call Debbi or Barbara for -1 Br mobile home. El 2ttt & Santa Ana. C.M. TO SERVE YOU Dennie (714) 118-11121 IPPI 714/1141-1500. NA-.... 9ITll Morro trlller park, Lag lntalt te Aue IHI lnt&b Wu... 2ttl Oftitt ltatak' ltl4 ... ut. lnt&la ltll Owner llwtbfoken. · Moo-Fri M . TtoNAL BANK OF sou. Wkly rent• now 1Y9ll. Bch. Sip• 4, right on s 38r CM T h Prol-'onal fem ... -ntl 11117 w ell.. N 8 21• -.~ .au *"" '"' . THERM CA. 3951 So. 1105 & up Color TV und MOO/wk &40-5788 hr new wn M eh h I c M "' "• ..... •1n 5 up. 22t5 " lndu-.. .. LARGEST l MOST 2ndl50TD,ooo• '!°"', h 16..:.C?OOd .. 10_ Plan Of. Sant• Ana Phone• In 'room 227 · · w/p<of m.,. & 111"1 clllld. to wt"teh om• n · · to 3800 1q. ft. 2,435 1q. atria! omc.. t8t01 Re-,. g y.., · CORONA DEL MAR Meny amenhlM Incl pool arM NIM. ft. Suheble f« medical or dondo C1tc1e IT H.int-RELIABLE cured by 1lngle ramlly Blin4clng Ne.wp.ort Blvd. CM. NHt 2 br furnt•hed & )le.. 1 c:hlld OK.*'°<> Shlrt.y 1142-1207 dental. Agent Mt-5032 . lngton BMc:tl'. 1142.2834. Found: big black rabbit, 1000·1 ot mbrs 1tnce homea In San a.rn.,.. .. lllTI nu.a 848-744s. home 1orry no p1t1 mo 75"'·""'20 ..._ Gary Paularlno tchool, C.M. 1964 dlno Prln only Call F II/ I I 1 t • ... F v -"'"" ~ a June i&th to .,_ t5th'. •13-41is':._ wr•· · luat" In .... ltl2 llWNIT mTll' 1200-2500 eq.tt. WMt tr-Mt-6245, 556-~2 972 1000 24 hou · · u 1 ma poi 1 on n '" .... · • '"""':' ...,., ... ..,.,.. .~':...... " ··---F .,_......_Sutt vine arM lnctda omc.. • • ,.. Dennie (714) 1118-9121 Dana Point for S1Ylng1 ellopplng. Kit pr v . ..--. Aol." ............. N/tmkr. 3 brcondo, Hunt. Eutlld• llngle $70. Stor-u11 ....... ..,. • from 15.40 mo, Tom: SCRIU.L£TS leU.11 A Mon-Fri M . Teller with new account• 1240/mo. H4-3M4 Yte1dla ltaltla ltlf Bch. S200tmo + \.\ utlle, 199 only. 182 C.Cll, C.M. .. llT 11111 .. 151_1921 NII , __ ....,._ _11 ex.perlenoe. Cell Maure- l rm In 4 Bdrm, 2 bl --bdrm f\.wi. 1150 dep. Nr 1173•7644 1575. Fum/unfUrn ..... __ -•-al f '"Thompton It houee. waeMr/dryer, Palm Springe. 1350/wk, occ. l84-385'4 Off•~ In I _14 All YOU need lor one 2000 1q It with office ANSWERS THE tRVINE CHILDREN'S .. !Ill!• PROVIDENT FEDERAL kitchen eto 1240/mo lllto r«wttnd. 3 Br, 2 Ba an _I! I H Monthly FMI 1605. CHORUS SUMMER ... ,..,,. 119 SAVINGS $20 dep. C.M. 848-8318. WvetY1 kptvto poolSmok. eSleeptTrM 11,. Room25, ~t~. ~t6'bmouot. Office apace for IMH: 747 8-40-5470 2500 tq ft with olllce ~~'!t: = WOAt<SHOP It ~· 1111=11 ._.._ • 4""81E330E MtF/H Well ........ ,... C-It 1805/ mo ut1111d Airport &rM·Exec. 1745. Pleoentla l 17th. HUMANS l~Gllbert 6 Sulllvan • -··-·• ,,..,_ Room and p'lt bath In lux. ~pht. 875-7520 St• v e or r I ck• t • · • COlta Mele. 1146-t 1114 (T Mtk• ... .,) "'-'nnlng Full time 1mmedl1te .......... ..,. __ rnot>lle home, 'A blk to 831-128-4 A/C, ground !Ir. 106 El Sult• from 225-450 ti Oldja ever wonder de-M .....,t .._. 1 -·-· OOMn Furn or unlurn ~ Cemlno Ot .. CO.II M.... S1 per eq ft/Many xtru ..... 19t1b Ull p1rtment: Cllk*en• quit ay 17th; UHdal =~M~hr~ LICENSED ASSISTANT UHimo 1100 dep' ...... It IH!! 2!11 Sen Clemente Apt. 3 bike E. ol F1lrvlew l catl 557-7010 Auditorium, IHll 250. ergulng wtlen they dll· Thured1y, 4-5:30 M. 1:30 to 11. 1107 Jimbo-1111T.-""' AYlll M9Y fo AefWencei Aoommete Coord'• ... .-. 1tt/tacurlty $300/mo. Adlmt. m--· cover there' a enough 552-94441. _ ..... ..___ ..___.. S1l1ry, Commlulon, plHM. C11i evH end All~~ Non emoker. 4911-7t4'4 754-1040 Mr. Trec:y • _ .... -•• • Full A.V. WHtmln1ter lood to~ #ound. W"Y ·-""· ._..,...., __.,. Ed1H1atlon. C0<ona d•I weekend&. 9I0-5144 we do tN ....en ror you Pl'lvlte entrance a ea. 1n co11a Meaa 250.500 ''· Wit~ ~o~r~r:~~... Mall. etl.()C)21 12...epm. ~·1 " ~71,,. aeme hlla• A AkJel Mttl Mir"'--Cell omo. ror Wrkng Fem 25-40, non-\hrioe wtttt ad cteen ep9Cloua usr. Apt. eult• rrorn 1171/mo. Utll lull wvtoe .,._, Keep With H\JMA,_ flamlal PIT, at realdentlal cete Apt>t, 171-9061 lmkr, kltoh prlv. gar, 161-7'on, 2' houfl Cotta M ... : S250 felut lnold. 178 W. 19th. 81. your overhHd tow l !ert ..... •b Found: KealhoUnd mtx, 2 --rec.y. N.l . l3l46SS Bodyworker needed for w/d, piy bdl, pool, epe. WE I.Ill 1250 =:f· 848-88" 1514928 P'aM9onai 1fM09 hW!. a --..z-11 _ to 3 Yl'9 okl. Vic Elli• 6 hllt• Ambltlou• coll•oe 1tu-auto body, own tool1. tennll, 'Nwpt et.et. N.8. ~~"'8:80 ~. Av1ll. May 1250/up, catpet•. drepee, 811 OOY9r Of. lkMe 14. ......... -· Magnolia. 911-2800 ............ .... --E.-n 1150 to '300 Cell for ippt. btwn 9AM asso. 18().1708"" •• Fii YMI . 1/c, re11room1. 17301 New p 0 rt I e·a ch . ~ Lm ---per .... Aft. 12 noon l 1PM •. 0.V.'• Auto MallKe non-1mkr, Fem., 8eactl Blvd. Huntington 131.-1. Through Hypnoelt '9111111 1111 ATTENTION~ All tor Doft.146-17IO lody, 4H·IH1. San 'i,C:;:·~o~ = ... /IHWS!fll prof., 2&+ pref., to ltlr 8eactl. 8.f2•2134, ..U ... ..... t.eoney ti-* guaran• TION CONTAACTORI -~------- home. Ml-2117 • ..... =·~o0/;::.n::tr1~'1::r~ IAY FRONT OP:FICE. layfYont bldg. 700.1,007 JOIU3:21, 173-4UM -:r~· ~ : .. ~ = All '• Bootlk~t. c::::, t-:: .. ~=-~~: ..:~= l n-1747 1v'1'9Q. ~.5:,:::0.i:l'-~~·1• :i:='NVT,.~·:. ft. ~~~l~~i 20UQUAIL ~•=d:.":i::~: ~~--: ..... ~, :z;::.-:. Call Bo: 11tnv111aoe. A¥all Ill. Pttotoe tetcan/ I oNld "'1. '°,~12 aclty 308rd3 ~I •CdM dlx I UltH AC 2500 lq " c.a: ~ff! WU. FUN-~ & Tr~ N!W-~ MACH fOf' ,.,~ ~ ~ 00 "-... ~ wM ...... --• Mo cau.r1ld a.rw. ovn ..,.. o n o n 1 k .1. • M phlH Call C~AALll! -ITll p#90n _,.. .. ,.... 1 enJoy '"'"lG clont .. t. 11•1111 Room tor rent. rrt Medi l • eredete • ~ WftMel CdM wt yng b1n11 •m; p g, from •321. . IM2_...... &46-1111 ITAATI 1118 10AM-11AM Yl'9 ..-. Eld1e1n9 eorp, Muat ti• .. oe.r ... ._ •••-••-~ Huntington lofl, ....,. Time Maeaalne prof'1 .... 25. lut, 1100 21 9 I!· 0 1,1 H w Y · vtGAI optional 1 ... ,, a -11 furty ln1ur•d and Dtione .... I to 1 .,_. .. .llWll.IY ~&'200.U1-MOI taGC~· ' Op. Welk to boll. 17l-llOO I ........ 11 · ~ ...... ·......... ~. 114"4tt-ll01 ""11 Pri • ....,. .... Op-M•n...,i•-'-l•pe ur .. room w/IM bath. N9wport oio W-4114 7 .... 1211 lllleoutlW Offloal ... 19• lrt!t I 'nd Wt .,.... __,. '*' 1l IN ~ flun ......_.. ..._.II -· • lmDIOYeel \41Ofr1o.. -== W ... ntl 8outtl OOMI •ro.,.. 'ront of rice w1111op -To Serve You • p.,t 11me IMOIM. ,., WM~..._ ~~~ u111mo. ., .. r900tllnQ. ~ ....!!_ _ ""'..,_, ..-. aoo eq. n. ,... 111'111•1•1 -1 'm MM Inter~'" e11111 "•" •• ~~:•: :"~9!.r •1 T"9tln Oto lti:t134 PrOf. mat. Mlle llrot. non The Heedquarterl Co. aon1t11e. Coi l• MHa, fNm\ IM .....,,....,...,... a~o toH00,000 141-1111 'Hhlon 11tand. ';';;d ... 11 to,,. 1 .,. 1 .., "'*'· ""· eounct. ioo.1ng M1-1t11 aoned 111o1. 1u1 uunu nu.J Otftoe & ~-~ lft , ... "''._. & A w.. '° ,..... ...._ a !l*t v.rdea. boetttnt ... .. "' 1. 011~l'1eaa. ~plo to •hare 11raer ~lew 1f1at ~ • ...., "-' IMIU •11 IK FR£E 'Ill Ult -• •1-1111. De-._.. =•· ,.,_._... ......... 8lld --ror ~ -HOf, Jao, U41 + •11d llOme °'condo w/tennll, l'lret Olail luOlllM Of· --· -----~ TM.. Ml •• :.;,:_ ~ CdM, ~ ,.. : a,...., ..... ad•• no• men t . ... • • ..... 1... • pool, J80UUI, 910. With "°' 1200 IQ" Alr'*1 '°°"~'.l.pvt tMltfl..... =:=!!-' ................. Oii :=•t-1141. AU for prof ... ,,, non '"'"'· NM .... with.....,. a 1191 pu, alo &VIII.'"°'· c.1· •ANGIL.A IPiNTU'AL• ·-' .. a • .r. ,, ... JH·CJOI .,,_....,..,,........,,.. ____ ,....,..... WlllY , ... , .... ,01 up,.,.,, lady ...... OOl'ft· IMle.Hal'llOurlo~ ...... ~ ...... 1IOO ., ft of fenced -•• ~ -· --:!·•--... &Ji1NT1f''IHILPER ~TV, "r ffffM, ~cc::~~ II' lellh. Qell W~ 11 n"d '11et •flply C•lh =·ii 'olutte~IO I. 1a•t1 ,.. ,_.._ _. _._,_. •tail& &•t:Wlol ....,, =· : 10 110-tia' ··r· 'It c·n:t,~r,':i 111·1111 •rter '• ftM .:O.r. .... Imo. ...... 11t' IM TD'a. -......... ..... fl~_llllkr ,IT · taiNO.:..Hwll Urt.41•~· 1 ..... .,. !!F,1•• Attn""'" ... "*'' Attr \,."1.,1_1t••,· 111r . '"'•"£ irr. f•t•H o.,11',~on1y ~ a.M, tM11M HIM •=ii,._, ...e 1 OMoe IPW· ~1111il11J1 rn1 ta41y •Ill 111edel. 1 .,..., ovem ·~· 111·1111 • • .. ...,.... The,... ... dr•w In tfte Q41M.c.tn Mt'ftM 111/tfllM ?llll'IO. Poun•: Lr1 tan/wflt M .... ,.,.......,. H;il"'lil,.,._. .... ..,~ \1IM '!e. ~ rou wont Ill 0_,.~11 I 111 NOW, W"l ••• a Delly ltllot I ~e 11 . I O I m e 141•'1H , I 1•11 11 ~· ttru ooller, .. ..., __ _....... M ---Dall) -r.--.Olll....._ .._.,.. Qt' hdM.Ml .... 1 .. 714-1 W/Wtlndl. 111. at.OM WentMI Cell......,. ..... N. ............ Ml"'8 ,_ Ma. Sl.14 per day Thet11 ALL you p.y I«. 30 dt\Y ed _In the DALY PlOT - --~---~~ ·~ .. CT - MAN< A. NEL.80N Chlld o... In my home. rw 11.ecTfUC«AN Aelptt CM:rttvc & lone Home ~ IRIOKWOAK; 81MM joDe. PA!tfttA NEEOe WORK Huber Aooln04 ~ TWllnalWonl Pro c 1 ' 11 DUIONER • IUILDER Placenua & Vlctorl• Lie. 213108. J...~ Compt. malnt comm/ ~Plumblna ~. CQeU,....., NI •1 .._ r*'CMF-dedla • Ouilc, ._ IWWllDnl ~..na. -r; ticsowotlc~ --..C.M..Ml-llH • jOM....... ,.., Trw ~ '.... ~ DOH e-.414' ............. 11um u.. #4'1e02. l4M734 Pm..... NM041 mlta. 1n-.....tno l pr.o-C.trldlla, ~ I ···---J· moval1 ~. Fr• *~ .. woooi fWlll/ 'enfr iii ~Ill '* NMOY'• TYPtno e.rw. t'A 1 1 ..... -L •t _ . _ • -·-.... W ·••• ell. 4:ao. 11•11• rwpa1c..A11 ~. OullttY_. ~....._._.. = ....._... , ......... a ~till .bUrln1n11· .".:~ .. ~1 . ow r ... ...__ ......... ,~ •• -. -~= --··-·--"5 --...... -. --.. • _..._.... ..,.__ ._....... ......... !xpert prd ~.. DUMP J098 ~· prtoe. e:u........ /811UPPI 142.1 •• N7.t1IO • & rNld. Uc d, bondN. !Nin~_..,.. 6 Smell MOYlna Jobe BRICKWORK: Small Ot VIM-MC Scott 145-~25 lerfM""r EJco'd tYOM1t ewll • .,.. + CU1att...... IM. FOi' eet, 562·11'42 ' u...-Jim 6U WI aft. lpm Cell MIKE ~1311 latge Jobe l repeltl. Bledlwelder p _ _ 8UOGfT RATE·LO MIN Mon. & Set. Vldd ; •New cablnetl, catltnet LI.. •M M I ... .-AA:&ala I JM'ANES& GARDENER HAUL:M0VE·REMOVE Loc:al r11fe. 145-8612 1no & R•mov~ AMI* ,.com1~ lt1r. Uo. l40-71M4 t7e-eote tacln9, bare l formlca Uc. 30elll. "-"odll, -~-.--Melnt, cleen•up. F.rM Furniture, Truh, T,_. CUelom Bnc*-8tOM WOftt only. "944118 •at Ii C 0 O ...... h-'• • countertoPI. 842..otlt Add'ne a~ oue__._ 1 .... eet-t57a att. lpm. M3·M15 NORM Blodl-conoret..Stucco M1·7N1 __ Cabinet.I 6 c.rpentry ~ ~~ JUGGLING TIGHT ROPE ........ UI-HA NG W Fre01 . 549=9492" ...... , ..,._ --wt! WA8H'WINDOW8 : ---SERVICE- DIEC TORY Small Jobi .. repeirl c ... -~L.t--WAU<~RS. Unique perty ~~ytird/t(ea IVC. -Pt.ASTER PATCHING Falt. Ptohn'c ... Free •tlmate 845-2003 U ,........, entertainment. Part.... l3f..5036 RANDY, 64~·7841 !rriM Re1tucc:oa. Int/ext. 30 8ecntettal 18Mcae: IYPo OuatltY wortc ~· DO IT NOWI 111 • Sohool A•HmbllH, Ambltlou1 J get· --I ·ABC MOVING· yre, NMt. Paul 645-2177 ~&-.°S' *' F~ Free....,,_. ..... 7att" l All fer IM*1 Cupatn Hloh quallty Interior Oompan~lc1. Call den«, • MQlnO ..... Cle•.• Quick, Careful s.vio.. "Let the 9uMNM In" • YrNr Dally PllOt ~-Alteratlonl bHutlflc•tlon. French MlchMI 11· ~tl~Q ,., iiTfi'::· A081N'8 Cl.EANING Uc. 1138<Me 552..()4101 v fn ' . We ~=E W~~ ~.!:.:'i:v ~~.~w:.=t• !!f~n.f.:=.~rualtanW9ltM!t 114-2081 ' ' ~-.thOl'~1 *A-1--* . ~= m'JWUll Ml 1111. 112 Jerry 546--« 13 For eieO & ""*' Antique Aeetor/Repalr JohMon & Son: Do own Belt quality. 25 yr exp. W/o<L llalw.m lm I ~ • •It ance ca1f: experte at Fr .. •t. Pickup & del. work. 15 yr•· m•lnt. & EJCpertlall ~~ Competitive rat•. 141 ~ · A quiet fact or life II ttlet llelt &.. I••*-: Repair/em Jobe. Fencee, P.R.l'.D.E. 645-3305 146-1434;.,,. 131·1113 lancllcaplng. 754-1199 Vee l Uc T-118,428 730-1353 I your energy bllll may,.... That all COfttrector9 wttO AIMalt 1helvH, p•rtlllon1. Lo FURNITURE T"'' "'H·UP Kitty 1-4170 STARVING COLLEGE ........ up 2 to 3 tlmel u hloh u perform WOftt a. l200 =""""-------1 r•t•. 8trl9 752-95156 Broderlck'I CU.tom , """' JAPANESE GARDENER QUALITY CLEANING STUDENTS MOVING ...,..t rat• In the I I di I b ~ Drlveway-Part<lno Lot CUSTOM CARPENTRY Quallty W~ A~ furn. r•tored, rw Malnt, CIHn·up, tr.. 'with a l)el'IOnal touch CO J.Jc T124-436 H llr 8 ~ 141-1121 = ':.v.rat re Are ::t~r1.f! m~arr~~li Repalra-Sealcoetlno All fVR". 20 )'!'$.Lie. You name It, -a_ rate1. Your Pl•c• or trlmmlno, -.mall l•nd· BETH 850-4933 lnaUred: 841•8421 • WATER HEATER Special you OOlno to :9 eiiti for cenalld. Unllelf!Md con- S&S All)hlt 831-4199Uc PelOmbo 982•8314 ln1talt ltl Xlnt refs. mine. St!19. 536-8183 ecapinO. Jack ~2·&e65 WATCH US GR0)''9 Pool heat.,.*Fumecee U.?lf not & "you would tractor9 ehollfd '° llalC Den Hlllberg Grading 5~2~ 839-14~7 larM• DMr l!e,lr Garc1en1::, wted, mow-B~,t::lor~nl.(!~ Draine clearecl from H . Ilk• Information on IOler :;.=. ~ t:.~· ~2~~ CUI!! lenlct Przwall SPRINGS-HINGES-NEW Ing, • olng, r•klng, ~2'l18, bef I, aft 4 Palatlat Maine from 115. Repllrl eneroy. call Don Inman tact M Grondle --------Shampoo & 11eam clean. DRYWALL TAPING OPENERS All repairs IWHplng.' FrH eitl· .. ,..,.. guar. Ev/wknd ume $. et con ~ llt 1Unlttla1 Color brl9htener1, wht All Texturee & Acou111c LowMt ratMI 1~ . mat• "45-7541 L~ ::.!f!:i',:o':.'8' b~hard Sinor. Lie. 851-~:2-9033 (114) NJ-1111 ~~1~n1. eon::!.~ BA.BYSITTING crpt1 • 10 min. bleach. Free •1. Kevin 873-1503 C.M. Uc. Tom 1-4480 IJna I llhnr FV arH . Exp'd, 'rall. 2 . 14 yr1 of heppy lp!Ul!n State L.1cen1e ao.td, 29 My Cceta Meea home nr Hiil, llS'dln. rms$15;.8'1 DRYWAllLIACOUS~L Gar-oe Door Oper•tor1. Cu1tom bat mirrors. war· Stephanie &42·2117 .v. ~omer~114 •Ml hnlct/ l!eln AM Spflnklar/~ Clvlp Center Plan, Victoria 642-8482 ::"'ss.1:~r~O:~ . .!.i All pf\ .... & Repalr1 1prln9a, hardware. For drobe doon, tub & ......... 1fn1M1 you, .... l&J.'S Repalre, lie #282813. ~1~~· Sant• Ana; lall odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs BUD 562-9682 demonatatlon. Seacoalt 1hower enel. GIHa re--tlAL.R'f PlllRIS e:xp.rlenced & profH-14$-8174, 842-8007 =9 exp_ Qo work myHlf. 11........_. •• , ~~ea .. ~ Blvd. C.M. piecement. 520.0201 IRONING JOBS WANTED. Prompt, neat prole11· lloMI. Very reaeon•ble T"-l.111111.l Ila A9fs. 554.0123 -u--2-........ .... · my homa. Excellent loMls/IO raf•."31-7141 rat• for 811 of your poo1j!l!!!!!..-------I·------•• 30 Helium 9a11oona dal. ELECTRICIAN. Priced .,...... J!!! ~ "!h'9!!!.~2~ .. re-10 INT/EXT. CALL JIM, need1. For expert Mr· *Tile & Muonry: New/ an""lme. Perlect. for all Ctant/ Ceaatlt rl9ht, trM Htlmate on -JACK OF ALL TRADES q....... '" .,._ '" '" vice call evenlngl 5 pm repair All ........., Que11t:y occ' .. 1on1. Lovely tor eement:Muonry-Block lari1c94!.!!..~ ~ """ TIEU Call Jact anytime, anytime. •• ... I to 9 p.m. " no -w.: Free .... uc'.63'1.2345 . Brtdeel 873-4411 Waifs.CUit. work. Uc. L . -1· e,......,_9 Topped/removed. Clean Day or night. 97s.3014 Palntlng-OC 18 yre-llc. PLEASE keep trying... TILE INSTALLED ....... , ...... #381057 Rob 547-2883 RESID/COMM'LllND. up, new lawna. 7~1-3418 a.,pentry·Muonry le1H llttla1 14. Pl. llt-1• (114) 4tM111 All kinda. Guaranteed Balloon Prod. 4j.4_;7550 Concrete: 1mall or lge ~~~.:,'"li°M&.~ Tll lml.. ~a1?8~~ .. l.tnr,..... JackaOn'• Pool Service Refs. John 893-0481 Jobe. Remove old, re-· · Lawn-~ 1nit111 l more. J'" 846-"90 HOUM .mtno dellred by UC. 425iii.4 -i75-3n6 20 YFI exp. Early com· C.emlc Tiie et Ccet More tamllM .,.. gettino place w/nwt. 645-8512 •Electrlclan: new/repair. Tree trlm/Remcwal .. young, reaponalble pro-. pletlon, malnt, repair & w/lnltall. Work guar. the camping "buO'' thll -.iu ,. __ 1 All type1. Low prlcH. Lawn m111nt/Rotot1u1no PAPA CLIFF fH1lonal for 1ummer ..... 111111111 .-.mod. Free •t. 24 hr9. George 861-1308 - Year. It v-ou h•v• • _ .. __ .... ___________ Llb'd. Fr ...... 831-2345 Free aetlmat• 548-6065 Fenctno. ttle, pfwnblno. mJ•~thl ~~~e~ .. INTER. RHI. rat••· UC. 283800. 84M280 ' Lovt & Relponllble odd JobL 846-8820 -..... --· '"' ,...._ Th• fut .. t draw In tha For Ad Action Cal a Daly Plot AD-VIS(I 642-5678 ... • . ~that'• not Qettlno Free~. Fenced yd ELECTRICIAN ISMAEL'S GARDENING and. 'pay utmu ... Call Free .... Strl9 547-"281 Sett wl1t\ EASEi WHt ...• D•lly Ptlo_t ,.._~~now wtt1I • C.M. 831•8625 wkdye Gd ra .... FrM •t. UC. CiealH!pe, tr .. trim 6 Clualfled Adi your one-875-4476 after e-pm. Find what you went In "''a BREEZE CIUaltled Ad. Call Todlly 1~~~~~~~~ ____ .-.. __ .____ 418441W'YM831-1630 malnt. Nf'vloe 846-2502 etop ~center. -Olly Piiot CIMll!ledl. CIUllfted Adi 142·5878 642·N71. 1: ltlt Wut.. 9100 •t Wul.. . HM 8111 Waat.. Slot •11 Wu... HM B• Wut.. SIM lel1 WUtl!f llM Belt Wu... Slot CHIROPRACTIC Driver, route dellverl••· IDIUL 1ff111 Lanclacaper with Irritation ..,./lml nll 1-1 IH~tll .. ~ aJ ..... A8818TANT, PIT ~ounty. Own car. R E ofc 1 N port experience. Mllelon Vie-Wanted adult• over 22 ....._.. ,,_.__W Ex-l•Ac-.. pref. FIT, 8S1·17t1 and mileage paid. • n ew Jo area. Call I· 12, Who .,. ..... WOftclno ... th ._ ""'"' ll'fl" ,._, ...... 950-2213 Beach nd1 mature per-1 JY7 .. , needed PIT, etiarp per-Enot11h 1peaklng pref., U WllTll eon w/gen. ore lkllla. Will 855-3191 • · youth. Mu•t be well aon with oood manner C.C.A., 711 Welt 17th, Thurs., Frt. a Sat. nlghta. •m ~•In 'f po511t1on. Call UUL IHUTllY =:i~~ and ptMNnt pertonallty, ,_e_-1_. _eo._1a_•_,...._-_. __ Resume nec:euary. Ex· MUil have 111'1811 car or 8301?~~42 9. wkday1 llWNIT llAll at 175 per WMk. Call Must type 55 WPM. Non l•Mll WllTD pertence required. Apply motorcyde. Full or part w0t1c1no for partner and 2-5pm, 846-1021 (alk for M!Oker pr...,,.. Weddlnoa. brundlea and lrfpenon, Thurs. May 12, time. For lmmedl•te llLf-• a11ocl•t•. Excellent Sharron). 714-833-9071 b . .-"'"5 3005 _ bet. 3 & 5: New~ort work . -•"Hll 1 ed _._ · --------• anq-,,. ~ ~ • or bvlew NlgtfrCfU6, ~ -ca11: ~ -lflllll ..,.. ~ r~ r 'l".-99'-Pert~tlme~ 0 help AMblut• I .. _1~ __ 1_1~-----Wedneld~ May 11 • W ,.. __ H 2nd .,, .. I k t ~te ex.,....ence pref. --" b..,._ 4 5 ' ·-• · • ..,._., 'W'f, ............... /.....___ _, .. re w • perminen • S•lary commen1ura1e "-• ~5 d___. • ..: Nloht cook, experience -· wm 1tAP•-· ARI S (March 21-April 19): Money comes Floor, Newport BMdl. .,....,... .,_,, .. , full time, weekda'fl &/or It"' 1 ExA-• hr•• "7• 8YI • ..... only continental cook-•-Mu11 have experience, wk.nd1. 511-9100. Jim or :ni' ~xper .:!:it, ~ 1tartlng S3.50 hr. CM. 1n9. 'p.,,,,... Blltro, La-Antm.i Cracker• from surprise aource -plan ahead for investments OLUI valld ca11td0rtver'1 Lie. Mary. Judy .m._851 • ...oc, 64&-97.t'1 oun• Beaoh, cont•ct EntertlliMlent which enhance security. Major breakthrough i.s due :~_: w:,rH':::,'i. ~. ~~v:~.DJ!~=t Hop Sing'• laundry now LEGAL SECRETARY Part-time work.,. wwited ::4~· mom1noa · ~~1r;:l~~~ -1ou are on brink of significant discovery. What Tu.. Ulrouoh Sat. Tvn.a Co. benaflt1. Quallll•d •cceptlno appllcatlon1 POlltlon tor exper '-al ~~uExr~~.Nec1,;f,'~on'-. . Singer•. comedl-. ce-'. ha been elusive~ become available, including ,,._ 11 t 1 for pre11er1 for h•nd ...,, ._, day1. .,.., ,_.. •-•-a-........, 1 al'" le f ~ 50WPM, 119Pntude. For ~ P can • 0 n Y • Ir 1 Appfy 1 eecret:Tt, preeent eecre-1tr•t1no food In mnet1 -·-· ....,. .. 7 <><*· ...... •xot un · detail• and follow up. 9-IMl71 EOE M/F/H ~,;, a-10 AnM~ tary r• ocatlno. S•latY n •a r y 0 u r h 0 me Immediate openlnoa for dancer• l belty-dancen. T UR US (April 20-May 20): You '11 have Minimum 2 yMr9 genefal Orivert N. coa11 Hwy. Laouna bull on lllllls. Contact 114·918-ean · reeponelble, enthu91Mllc Averllde comm $500 to reason to celebrate. Cycle high, judf:!hent i.s on office exper. S5 per hr. Full Time, Mon-Fri, Beach Tracy. 714/840-8900 oeoole: undwlctl prep & 11200 per wil. Send ll APPLY IN PERSON Tuel 13.75/hr. OMV read-.oul Loan Proceealno P•rttlme ae1l1tant tor lead food prep. Houre pfloto l reeume to: Anl· target, intuitive inte. ect aervee as re le guide. ttvouoh Fri. 8-11 AM and mand•tory. 234 Fliher. HOSTESS Prutloloui Bank In Newport Beach Faclal M6n.-Frl. '8:30·2:30. mal Cracker• 2.t5 PO You'll be in contact With exciting, restless, creative 1-4 .PM DANA POINT Coeta Meea. 540-4114 s~ta Ana/Cott• M... Salon. 842-4111 Meyerhot1, 11121 Sky Box 3207, Newport Bch, individuals who encourage you to develop your own MARINA co. 247015 .,. .. II loolclno tor VAi ··--Parle Clrde. Suite A. Ir· Ca. 12883 talents o.na Dr., Dana Point. Experienced Renl•I C•r B~t ambltloua penon _, •-~ne 551-e232 l--S-O_LA_R_NS____ . ---------~ nwded to write t • market FHA and Conventional na1wu11• . . I TALLER GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Opposition melts; ·-.,""' contract•. 7•11 Rent a 0 very••· Lo•n Proce11or1 with ...... Illes n .. d•d lor exp•ndlno 'll be " k' ., y . ask pen 11 v • ho m • 1 to 1•2 yr experience. Full Mak• ••tr• SS helplno co. Min. 1 yr banda-on you given coo a tour. ou might be ed to ~o experlen~e nee•• a.,. 650:1180 mllllonal.-..clua cllent1. Time Poaltlon. Xlnt Sa· youth carrier• promote CHhler, Permenent, exper nec:euary. Mull appear betore media ,to plead special cause. Be ~~t·~ltlng car-op-Eye M.D. need• ualstant, Mu• t be • u Pe rb I Y lary and Bonu1. Imme-their own ••t•bll•h•d =·H4~ Laguna h•ve own hand tool1. aware of details, .have factual material available and F .. t0r Directory. experience preferred. oroomed, IOpfllatlcated, dllte ()penlnol-Call f« routH. Mature, outoo-Colleo• credit• helpful. be d f last min l.D...... ..:-i---1-312-888-4341 Call Mon-Fri 8 -5. etyllatl, and have an ex· Appointment. AMER· Ing, •ttr•ctlve parent•I llTllL•tl•m Call 842-7358/evN for rea y or -ute c._..es, rev&1NU1111. Ex ""'"' 831-4780 f<ltlng pereonallty. -ICAl'f TEMPORARY type penon, ptaaae call for ladl•• reiort -••r *'t. CANCE& (June 21-July 22): 'Member of t. e-1....... F---·--H-a-u, lhl--'no Po.itlon II part time & s ER v I c Es • 2-5PM. M·F. 846-1021. •"'op In CdM. R• .. t•ll __ ..... .... D k t hi --· _.7 .,,,. ~::,:U well. RE llc•nH 71 ...... 1 ........ .. ..... , opposite sex confides ~eelinp. requests that you do •r room ac runner, & receMno, exp'd only 1 but not required. ......,. ..... ...., lll-1100 Pll llY momt exper. required. _. •~----" same. Moon poeition highlights desires, aspirations, ~=l~ll~:.. r:: Mu1t work with many Pteue phone lmmedle-LIT ..... .... Petition Clrculaton ::r~:t:e ~.::: THE ;O~ORT II romance, ability to win friends and influence Mon-Fri. Must be cteari ~11}11 w. t7tt1. St tely, 131-4444 for 1-11 Rent A Car. Paytwtcawkty,woncown se~d rHum• to Ad 1oot11ngforl0phlatlca.1ed, people. Recent decision results in marked businels cut 6 dependable. Sult• B · I I .. ....._ Wuh & detail car.. Only hri, ltart lmmedletely. 1012, Dally Piiot, Box up ••le• people who or --gam· ' 495-4100 '*FASHION COUNSELORIMH Hlkl _., exp. people •pply. 831-8338 831-7861 1•"", Colt• M .... CA would en)""' :="'R with -......~ • Wanted part time help ...,,. 1180 """' -1 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); Busineaa 8S80Ciates aid ....... ltUI !!~'au' ~~~lea Ap· mult be honeat and re11: •_.,. · PtumbJno 92828. ownere of Rollt oyce in . des ..----• b I• G 0 0 d pa v • --Dlepatcher wanted lor INTERVIEWING Mot« cws. yachts, air· pro,ect which inclu remodeling, redecorating, - ...... 731-4347 ....._..1300· ' ' ._ I .. -L--i ... n f h h ld i Wh -•-·-....,... SALESMAN. Part time loc•I plumblno 1hop. the week of May 23rd. pl•ne•. ar11, ant q·ue1 pw.1"' ..... -e o necessary ou.e o tems. at PIT, FIT, XLNT Commi.., li:F7LO.I G;;"H;;TT"'jD;;'ilii:R>i:E;;:C~T;-;O:;;A;;S;;l-=~~-----1 ..... only. Work In Knowledge of plumblno - -and pr.-nlum propertlal. starts as an ardtaOUa task can be transformed UUo a Wortt In OC. r= have needed must be wlllina HouMkeeper needed for ywd.eome,acper Pf9f'd Inventory a mu1t. Fun _.,., ~ 20%comm. paid weatty. celebration. Emphasis on domestic adjU.tment, ftalr fOf color be a Mtf to fly Mecsect to market Mb\19Y prbof In Nwpt/Bc,tl. CALL: BRUCE 4ie.5785. !!'!'-1·"'f~,._;.~me. PINN mGoodu1t. Sd~~!'. vr~~trldon•, Mlt ~~orctoeeT,...;.,.~ fonor .,.,..;b~ ... l.D•u• .. of -•.t---. 1tarter. Wiii treln. ,_Plane club. Tralnlno u1t • re1p w own .._. .,.......,.... --, -......... 7 ........ 7 r-.... ._..... n::iNuca•~ 840-5249 bV prol HIGH PAY uk tran1. 5 hrt a dy, 5 dyl a ......... TNllMt alck lee¥.t. lnlufance be-• P ~ o I n t m • n t . VI GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Define terms, avoid --•• ·--·-for M. r . FI em 1' no , wopke. nA.m,•of•'. P8m4•0~!la .. ry Leading Net'I Co tn r .. · Prlltlntlngh .__ neflti. 17835 Skypark 714 4"'"4584 self-deception, be ,ready for travel and poeaible -·--•-• 114-ef2 2003 vwd2 ......., ,,..-.... aai1.. ln-lllH ....,., Cir, Irv. -bll•h•~,. . Streamline i..-• d f 2yearuxperleoce. X-ray • dye. du'ifry .. M;k':' motl¥ated Experienced only need Salee • Computer/ Soft· pu uew.a .. project. . tecruuques, get ri o llcenH. non-1mokln9, R.lltL ·-_..... . enthuilHtlc man and apply. (811) 513-2110 ware, part tl!M, exper. TD..E.-. ULD superfluous material and leir.e opportunity to trim gen'I clentlltry *·::J. Muit be experienced. tor elderly eduttl t>oatd & women wllllna to follow a PrHHtlll ~ wl PC. No programmerL 111111111 (1•1111•, expenses. Pisces and another Vfrgo figure W.,~·•worklngtlA..t F · C•ll Fitth Avenue Flor-c•re, 6 dr.• :er w::!f IUCCIMful'ulea pr09ram .. ...-1 t 1 I 1141918 5800. I 11 I It•) 'e e •I• prominentl7 . ... ....nu1 pa-·'· .. 1 t H t B h W/11,200 mo ...... , In· -.mm .... • e open no• n,________ LIBR ltllon 191and. wrtte ci... • •, u n · c · mu1t live n be .-Loan Brokerage Co. tor SALES Ht••• l••HllhlJ (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Individual who llfled Ad 1088, Dally.,._ 642--0896. ~d· Salaryc-" .. ~21room24 & ~~~~ 0•;? nf:~ec'~Tl entry level pr~111no NL IAY·l-i ltY fer •r•••tl•HI ••· broke prombe regarding money will now make lol, P.O. Box 1560, Coeta NL Tm PAY ooar · -.,...... 842-2009 clerk. Acc14rat• typlnft Good paylll Work on amends. Your position grows stronger, you'll have M .... 92826. PllT-19 ... .... .... 1 and atlentlon to deta I phOn• In our pl•H•nt ~ 1M1 ... chance to execute plans in rrofeeaional, creative Dental :111 opportunlll•• avellable T11H1I.. ltltllll.... required • .,~ to 11100 office by the .... Morn ·r:. ltw•, ltl 111• F l•" ... " dU 1 tion B 0 t C t -·-Earn S450 to SIOO ,_. per mo ..... .., rwume to aft 6 1119 wort t<W -manner. OCWI on reso ..... o emma, ao u to u1y •cewp r en er with th• Lo• An9el11 tor electronlc garao• week""""'' have • ita. Je•nne, NEWPORT lni perlodlcal Mrvlc• mv.~and location of lost articles. Group needl pit penon. TlmN Clrculatlon De· doore. Mu1t have oood ,~ HOME LOAN INC. PO ' wm -J-. Ptant ccndltlona. Call for partment 1n 04Jr door-to-drtvtno record and Pl'• waoon or van and enJoy Box IOIO 'Newport H. · ,_._ RPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll complete Interview. 840-1122 door n-•P•P•r .. 1.. vlou• ref.,encee. Send ~':Jr ~~~t B••ch 92880, or oell tAU. •W IM-2141 ...,_ important task -.you'll alao be rid of burden whJch IHtll... ....... prooram. G11arentaed PMt exper. to Claaelfled 541-1068 btWn HAM a. 114-640-9350. Mk for KAlt'*1M waa not your own in first place. Accent on ~ .. orft·"'-W/bkk ..... _ & hourly w-oe plU9 com-Ad No 1058, P.O. Box 3PM __ ... _ PIT wm-., SalN Peraon tor 0r ... W• need good oeoole to aft-·-....... .-. ... --... ~·ro-D1•, marital ata.,.·-. -·~ "'W mllalOn. Houra: I AM·2 1·-,.._At• M ... c• _ _,_ -••t up eppolntment1 &Ult _. -•CllNU .,._...... ., .... In~ da wk. Pd VK PM. or 4 PM'. 9 PM . .2627.,... • "' Manufacturer Order delk, Mover/Driver . 24+ yr1. ehop. LB. 411•5122• IV from our Ccet• Mesa of• slow, lie low, re --time i.s on yollr aide. ~ & · 546-3000 Trlllnlna 19 ~· Po-..... WM 8uh Manufactu,_, Clean cut • Hard WM· ~ =· and name ffce In the evenlno tor waiting same. •t'I• 1111111'. tentlal fo earn .-v p1vt FIT,ptentphonemanner. lno ·Good Drlvlno r• HolldA'/ Inn'• new trawt SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take Peraon to work durlno per week. For an Inter· ~accounting. Mutt Twlna, 55 wpm. General cord. Pref. &per, bUt wlll Sal1191reona needed tor club. Salary + commie-lnitiati k ICbedule ...a.. ........ h. the hours or lO..S, Wed. v I• w , C •I I I 7 1 4) have ••perlence with Office procedurH a conalder tr.tnln\ rloht orowlno advertl•lno 1lon + bonu•. Call ve in revlaing wor -, in ..... .......... thru Fri. Mli•t be hares 961-2381, ext 1204 AR c Auto m • t e d muat. Salery to 1tart. pereon. Stert, 15/hr. compan~oallent be-151-4222 after 1 PM. diets, in making new starts and encouraging woncer. Apply In'*'°"· Gardener needed. Full Sy1tem1, Good tel•· I 2 o o I we• k . Ca II STARVING ACTORS nem., & Dental. Telephone ulet, top contact. with creative people w1lling to piooeet a ~,.ay .. ~ sN&1 hst: Time poe1Bt1on hat H1uxtury ~=t~~S..~ 642-1112 ~~~co. 650-1* 1r.,..· •a....... LN. comm. or .... to •t•rt. project. Leo, Aquari~nona figure prornineptly. ......... ....7'-.. g L•ounln• ~ Mondo ~ open. Call ~Stt••P h•nle, MARKETING & TRAINING ,._ .,.t•ta Wod( from IMda. Greet Let go of l<lllina.rr: tion Club, 3333 w . CoHt AlttPt'I ...---.. ~ 833-04: co. needa • penon with H•llllAL U, Advert11lno Mgmt l Io c . 2 1hIft1 . Ci LICO · Hwy,2nd floor, Nftport • -Prld•y~ SH Roy 845-ll30, 21. expetlence In either Two_..., oriented 11_ M.atllet!oQ,M2-1388 714/__H0,.7004 _APRIC N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19); Gather a.cti. VanKanten. SURF AND Interior DHlgn Show tMChfnO, trllnlno, lf'IW· cenlMI needed to IMm Salelpetaon, f\111 or ..,IT, 'T..~"' information. 1ynthellze data. You'll have ability to DomHtlc: Govern•HI SAND HOTEL. 1555 So Room need• part time talnment or MIM. Muat t"" 111111a of brOkerage & direct ...... man or wo-piece tbt(ether blta of infonnation and CQme up with HouHkHper live 1,,, Cit Hwy, Lag. Bctl. P•reol) Friday w / have ew'• lrM. manaoement or com· man. Sal•ry, commie· ;r~story. Cancer and ~ther Caprlcom play bead! community In~ -U. Ulllll ex~erlence . N .B . (714) 111·0028 •fter merol•I R.E1 Income 1lon, p•ld veortlon. H ....... l g-.1 ... guna NIOUel to ewe for Wll -1rllln. ,Pay 11 baMd 842 2265 12pm. durina training. Exoellent oraup 1n1urenoe. we --a.. t ro ea. ..--tive venture becomes more ohlldren whll• mother on entry level. NEED EXTRA OASH? benefit• • lite & health tr•n you. Permenent ,:;;.. 10 d, can show profit. - wonce. Salary + room + 539-e2A3 Dl19Ct ~ Company need• people ln1ur•nce plu• dentel Polltlon In arowttl ·l>Uel· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Long-rOge boatd. Prefer Europeen, 10248 Weetmlnst., UMfw to wotk from home. Stan plan. Call RMlonomlca, n.... 11ll5M aw.ark tftertlllll ...... ~on proves fruitful. you coulcl gain property 2 _poaalble c>pen1noa. Call Garden Grove Fork Nn d~. '**!no lmmed. S300 per wtt. + e7u 7oo. Cir, Irv. ayn• ater M-t11,...... aa result of :ft:ial neootlation. Don't beCome 493-4133 evea/wk.ndl, and a... I lie. paaatble. o.11 t« t16.H RMI Eltete 9e1e1 & Rent· 8'f9l*M fll • Pllt .... • SELL ldl• Item• With • 539-8243 Direct Agency dloett. 1·312·931·1tl4 •I•. Well loceted, very ...,.... .......... .. involved in 0 poll~. Individual you trusted Hlave eomethlno to •I? Dally PMot Ct•alfled Ad. 10248 WNtmlntt« eld. H2230. l:IUIY Newport ~· of11oe 4 dt\Y wor1C weat making __. could fall victim to ",reen-eyed momter." Check Clmelflad Ilda do It well. 842·5818. Garden Grove Now hlrlno Line Cooke, needa ., eKS**ICed .. Miia. Newport IWtt. f• 1•••••11 ""' With Saaittat\ua. f\111 & P/tlme, 1xper1enc~ o•n11d •o•nt. Apply 11W180 lal ...... 1, PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Relative in tranait ed pref Waoee Heaot-Pl.AVA R~L HTATI!\ -mak --" ~·'d in·-'.--· in Aa.-....... _._ lbl•. The Grind« AM-173-1900 s.or.tary: leDrow CO. le .,...,_ el ....u, \N\oU vw ..... ,,__ .... ..,..._. .... _you t111tent. 1400 wwt PCH. Aeceptlonltt/ Clerk TYP-Neklno "'k:aca::..~ ....,ml•U a.re careful. Avoid 1Catterinl forcee, don't make N.8.641-1811 let: Mature, attr•:~ ~· IO~H w m: NMdtld at onoe. bper'la promiaea which drain time, eneray. Cbeck IMea ..._ non«nolcw, twe mature.~ ence °' wlll train. Full ina\rUctlona, detalll "" connection with P'C*lble With itro~aooOu~tln" ~.n~~·'!~~ !rllpo(1ant. t 10 time. 2 O'olook 'tll t errand involvina abort trip. ...... • ·-""' "" Mon."""'"· c:.11.-1, ___________________ ~---- ....... lnglnMr,-port .,...10 ~llT/UIT PM • .....0161 ~vl=4.n~~ Rl!C~l'TIONl8f/ OIN· For lluey RE O.V.lop-frM __. lli-~~·~-~ ... ~=-=~11:•~,:~~":""'.~:"':~~JllmB•lll---: ---~·· v•• ....... __ .. IAAL 0,,101, -. mem. Co. One per1on .. , .. ..,... ( ..._... v.i.t ooo1t drlV* ..... •-/ ...... ........ -· .,._ _.,. ...... ~. oft;"'°""'*' tnullhlW 2 yra min. exper. w '"~'& ~i..t:, ._ lel"•ll Mil. Alea ... 11eo1 c.r-•* w/p!M91no • em-~-.. a ocim-e.aw. ttalnlna. Or. CtY ed ........_ .w-~if&---t mo. old m,1e. Al ..... -·••-----.J ~Rcl.ntnetl114 otent..,.,,..qurllttea.. of ..,,.,. lll'poft--.1"41-IOIM troni'ii .. pvt hOM Known••lbonyand°'*'Y~C,,..__ HllTll•lr• =.::-'..:.-:-=: aGe eblfty, oompoee Wlllll/I..._ 141·H11lxHlli 100.i =Y· Loveb~1':. E.f:.,n&J fr-.eo lpreylna •Ptr•hH•· mtart1rmtnn.Mr9.wm b .. ln•••doorreapond· Mlltotltot•erbe. ,........ 111"9"1P'IP9 .,,,:/&.~.' oOndOa. ,-rr 17t-IOIO •n•• In opendently. '* IUndl ...._ t:ao ... <t. -1--...... .. ....... °'*' ~ 11ront ofllol PllPW••· · AIOI: 0011fld.rMe. OOflCIUot F Al<O ~ ,._ mlllt/Gon °" ..._ ..........,...., • AM. Mon·'''· lun ot atralre 0.,.,1, ot YOfkle. •· • •·•a·..;. ....... _;.._;..llO.--t .... --.-a--D! '"::-~ • ' ••• -:o"" •••• •• ,, .. ,.;., .•. ,,,...,,,...,._,. ••... ..,... •••'• ~ .... u o. -·--·-, •~-----~--14 t Kn~ of M ._, ""'· pereoneble, en-tftWll !rlal• 1Mf.Ot17 •= ITS. -......, NIT nm .. ~ -,,,.,, ._. 1te :r:· l1M14? .. 10 ~ ,__1 .._.. .....,... ...,_ Ir. -Ito -ro· 9-lrmtnt ~ inoon. MIU 121•11 to ..n, 11ow to tar.~ Nfa. MfMJf Ad... •_...,!II». AKC'. ' 1tr -401n1 1nter1111n1 ......_ .._. Mri P1aa111or ~ Ml aoo 14 rn. ,,..,.,....... ••'*" .... ..-on wenfo-ti:lmmedtat• ..... , • ~ App1y '"°'"'n••= ,.,. lllhlll of .....,. Com-°"'*"' tn IM AftMelftl • ery oommen1"r•1• 1ontf'1, 141 w. 1tttl, MIMI• plftlll, Ma.tr ""1t• to Afea. irart 11nw M ~ •I...-. C91117 .. 1t11 C.M. -.. -.--h-----·I otlOOll "°"'·~"" tw. • .... far........... '°' ....... ·--••-L----1 ..,.,...._,, tuor•• ,rent °""' ••••,.._, ..,.... .....,. ........., .... II .... -' !!!" O•• 11enu1 ~sr•m. ~ ,.,_...,.,.. .,1111..., ...;illli a:o~~ ~!li-!!!J!!ll!ll"!!"'!"!'!""!!!'~• =-~ ,.,· S:! ::ll!·~ ·:u..~~ ~·Ion, 11th., lMftl, . =~..,....... ~. ,~~.:... . :;. ': :V:-Celli S:::~~ N. ~· fii ·1ppe111::en1 ttlt•t• lfi .\U-u•>-•••~• 1i.m.-..;_.... ....... _..._ .... nl Mlfl*l~t.. •HO MOIMll!"&: -~ tri!!iiA l'ANiWfflill!!~~~"B"!!I I LL._ =~l!!tll a ... '*"'"" """ -Htweo hv.rt of tftt'-U-1. I LIYlftt .... '° lill "°' ~119d M . Not Wint Mii. 10-11111, ltlf W .IO ... ,_, r- HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA .. , ·' Newtpeper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! ,. ' ' .. .. ~ DOWN 1 Cut 2 SOOC« atar 3 Shower 4 Expunge- ment1 6 &.ipport &Heel 7 Bedooln 8 Avofd 9 Of various kind• 10 Try herd 11 Domicile 12 Orenge type 13 R.iment 21 CMet 23 Servant 6 ' ")N,..fl, t 1 f ' " r~ I t " J 4 1~1)":,; 25 Van 43 Card geme 27 Ache 44 Elite 28 Glint 46 Container 29 Mountain: 47 Rancx>t pref. 48 Platforms 30 Laments 49 lrtltat• 34 Muuge 50 Love poetry 35 Heckled muse 3e Eu.nee: Var 53 Lead actor 37 Can. Con-55 Missive MrVatlve 56 Paint thinner: 39 Magnlftc.nt abbr. 40 Got back 57 Photocopy 42 Bueball ploy 60 Pronoun 1 12 1 .. -. Court condo · .:ruling 'protects kids' av ROBERT BARKt;R ¥ ................ A rulina by the 1tate Sup~ Court tnat condominium ~tlom ma_y not ban child.nm •• re11dent1 means that youngsters have become a protected group like minonUes. That was the oplnton offered Tll IUllil CDIBT today by Harriette Nlcholla, a discrimination inve1Ugator for the Orange C.Ounty Fait Housing Council. Nicholla ufd Monday's rullnl paves the way in many caaetJ for youna couples to buy condos as their tint home, something they had been kept from doina lf they had familiee. She at.o •ld that while the ruling protect• the right• of ~ children, it miaht allo eet off a new 1pate of rules almed at • younptera. "There probably wW be new regulation• against children using the condo m ini um 1wirnmin1 pooh and other facilities," 1be said. But 1he added that 1uch prohibitions will be Uleaal if they've been invoked for reUonl other than aafety'a sake. Attempts to reach spokesmen for condominium manaaement CUil 1111101 , .... i\"4 .~ r .1UNIY CALIFOHNIA 25 CENTS Albert Becker, director of corporate communi!ftions for American Airlines, was pleased with test results yesterday at John Wayne Airport. ~merican Airlines passes tests :· ··n fly out of John Wayne Airport within noise restrictions ii approved By JEFF ADLER or,.. o.-r ,... • ..,, American Airlines -seeking a share of the lucrative Orange Cc)unty market -ha s auccessfu.lly proved it can fly oul of John Wayne Airport well within county noise restrictions. ~port Manager Murry Cable Lagunans to fight school cuts Laguna Beach parents and community members will meet Thursday night to co~sider forming a local chapter of a fledgling coalition to lobby Sacramento for education funds. Called the Citiums' Action to Save Education (CASE), the L.guna Beach chapte r w ould join with Saddleback Valley Unified School District p_arents in pushing for state legislation 'designed to provide "immediate and adequate funding for edllcation." : L ocal organizer Charl en e ,R.agatz said efforts by professional education uaociations to lobby for funds have "for the most part fallen on tleaf ears" in Sacramento. ''We have been told that 'the people' must s p eak before meaningful legislative action will occur," Ragatz said. "We are determined that 'the people' will do just that .. said American fl ew fi ve demonstration flights Monday w ith n ew DC-9 Super 80 jetliners. "They not only met it (the noise ceiling) on the average, but didn't exceed it on any individual Oight," Cable aald. __ The airline, hoping to begin service from John Wayne Airpqrt, was required by the Boa.rd of Supervisors to fly tests to demonstrate it could meet airport not.. restrictiOftl, •ti I American had sche duled service from JWA fouc_\jmes dally beginning June 9, but the airline's hopes were dashed last week when the Board of Supervisors voted to freeze the entry of any new airlines until at least July. The freeze was imposed to allow time for airport officials to study what impacts the entrance .of n ew airlines will have on already overburdened airport facilities. Thursday's meeting will be ~ld at 7:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Unified School District bOerd room. 550 Blwnont St. For information, call Ragatz at 414-9542 or Linda Pack at .,i-1507. Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata pokes fun at almost. everything, including this year's honoree, Cal running back John Tuggle, inset, last man chosen in the pro football draft. , What's the weather goin1 to be? 01' Sol makes today'• outlook fairly ob•iou1, but any time you have doubta ju1t cheek the Daily Pilot'• complete weathe.r wrapup on P .. e A2. Full rigging Newport Harbor"• yacht club. roll out the red carpet for the oflieial opening of the boating le&IOn. Page A4. His name sounds like poison, and quite frankly, Sea View League opponent• ha.en 't been able to come up with an antidote for Irvine Hi1h pitcher Rodney Poi11ant. Page Cl. ueoclaUona were uruucceMlul th1a mornin&· The ~-2 dectalon by JuaUce Otto Kau. Mid condo bylaw. that Umlt residency to people over 18 are Ulegal. LMt year, the court banned aucb ap limitations 1n apariment complexes. The cue involves John and Deni8e O'<:oonoc-, who bouaht a two-bedroom unit In ViTJaae OIWft in 8-ldwln Hilla area of Loa Anae1-ln 1975. When their aon, Gavin, waa born four years later, the a.odation pve written notice that h1a presence violated the ruJ-. R.E. Morseful Bank robber paying gradually -By Tbe Auoctated Prea1 A remorseful bank robber who aaya he's found Jesus la trying to repay $3,300 atolet\ from a Denver bank two years ago by mailing cashiers checks under the J)9eudonym "R.E. Morse," the FBI says. The checks, drawn on Orange County bank.a, are mailed in envelopes with a bogus Durango, C.Olo., address, said Joe Chefalo, head of the FBI's bank robbery detail in Loa Angelea. "I've heard of people coming forward and admitting ~!fplicity in criminal activity they committed years before, but lhiS is the first time I've seen anything U~e this," Chefalo said Monday. He said University National Bank in Denver, which was robbed in June 1981, haa received four checka totaling $1,730 since last June. A month before the first check was mailed, a man claiming to be an Orange County minister called the bank and said a member of his ·congregation had robbed the bank, was aorry and intended to repay the money. The latest check, which arrived two months ago, came With a note saying, "My faith in Christ as my savior haa impelled me ·to undertake this reimbursement, and I hope to be able to pay it off within six months." However, Chefalo said the FBI does not intend to drop the case. "He did. rob a bank, and I'm sure he put the teller . . . in fear of her life," he said. "Any con1ideration aa far as the reimbursement is concerned would have to be made by the courts." Chief to respond to 'ethnic' rap By STEVE MARBLE of tM Daltr Piiot ,..,, . . In response to charges that Newpo rt Beach Police Chief Charles Gross made racially offensive remarks in discussing b e ach c rime problems , a transcript of his comme nts is being prepare;ct by city officials. Gross, invited last Thursday to meet with ci t y planning commissioners, said "ethnic culture" groups are partially to blame for beach problems. While Gross did not single out a n y one ethnic group, one planning comm.is&oner said she was offended by his remarks and bordered on "insensitivity to differences in cultures." City Council members said last -A relevant excuse for celebration By STEVE MARBLE Of lheO.., ......... In 1976, a young college football player named Kelvin Ki r k had trouble finding Newport Beach. A wide receiver from the University or Dayton, Kirk thought Newport Beach was a seaside city In Rhode Island where jazz festivals are held. Waiting patiently in the real Newport Beach was a guy named Paul; Salata, a former football player who made it big in the rock-and-gravel business. Salata, you see, had decided to honor the man picked dead last in the annual National Football League draft and Kirk was hjs man. So when Kirk didn't s how, Salata -being the kind .of fellow he Is -decided on another course of action. He honored a 42-year -old meat packer from Huntington Beach. KJrk eventually did arrive and the meat packer was sent home. But -for better or worse - Irrelevant Week had been born. (See SALATA, Pa11e AZ) rught they would wait to read the transcript before conunenting on the matter. Several council m em bers, howeve r , said privatel y that the y were surprised by the e pisode. "I didn't make any racial slurs and none were intended," Gross said today. He declined to discuss 'the matter further and suggested (See 'ETHNIC,' Page AZ> Theater • opening delayed By JODI CADENHEAD or ... o.-r ,... ,..,. Bad weather will delay the o pening of th e Pacif ic Amphitheater at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa until after the July fair is over, officials say. The long-awaited, 15,000-seat amphitheater, operated by Nederlander West Inc., had been 9Cheduled to open with top-name entertainment before the annual summer fair July 8-17. But General Manager Gene Felling said yesterday h eavy rains have h a mp e r ed construction efforts to turn the 35-foot hole into a new open-air theater by the original July l deadline. He said the theater will open July 29 and tickets for the still- unannounced shows will go on sale June 5. Fair board member Clinton Hooee aaid Nederlander's state contract binds it to foot the bill anyway for the summer (air's entertainment acts. Construction costs or iginally estimated at $10 million have increased to $11 million, Felling said. Most of the 15,000 truckloads of dirt needed to build the 5()-foot hillside for seating have already been hauled to the Costa Mesa site, he said. So far, workers have dug the 35-foot hole and built the staae (See THEATER, Page AZ) -INDEX- Shelly West wa1 among the big winnen Monday ni1ht when country mutfo honored itt own at the 18da Annual Academy of Country Mu1fo Awardt in Buena ,Park. Pa"e A3. New 'News' news "The MacNeil-Lehrer Newa Hour," expanded and renamed, wJll ao Propoeed cha .... la p•enmeat replaUoat would lorce more k&daey patlea .. to UM telf•dJalJ"I al Hme M 8 money•MYilll measure. premiere on public tele.•l•lon Sept. S. Pa1~ 83. P .. e 81. SALATA STRIKES AGAIN . • For elaht yeen, &.i.ta and hla helpers nave been brln&lna the barely-made-lta of pro football to Newport BMch and ahowering them with eq u a l doaea o1 attention and nonseMe. This year lt'a John TuuJ.e, a. running back from Berkeley who was picked No. 335. The athletes are put up at fancy hotels, driven around town in a Rolla Royce and often asked to attend such ritzy affairs as a sewer line dedication or a tuba concert. The ball player s also are awarded tbe Lowsman Trophy, which depicts a player fwnblini a football and is the approximate opposite of the Heisman Trophy. The w eek -long event - usually h eld in late June -has gained national recognition and football teams now reportedly bicker ind banter over the rights for the last pick. Whe n Pitts burgh and Los Angeles battled over the last pick in 1980, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle asked, ''What's going on? The Salata deal?" Although the whole thing Is a joke-a-minute marathon, salata is serious about it. He Je_els Irrelevant Week ls very relevant. THEATER. • ~ basement. Later this month I CO~te will be poured to install the 8,450 permanent seats, said Felling. ~ Nederlander plans to book only musical acts during the first season, said Felling. Next year, Pacific Amphitheater will stage ball.e \, opera and Broadway shows. "Football WU aood to me and 1 always wanted to give 10mething back," aays Salata, who played at the University of Sou the rn California and had a brief pro career. "But I wanted to do IOIDething for the guy like me who just barel)'.made it. I figured he'a got to be a nice guy who has just been wiped out by the fact he was picked ao low." Irrelevant Wee k baa been likened to walking through Alice's looking glass by past players, who come to Newport Beach for the distinct pleasure of being the brunt of many a joke and attending countl ess irrelevant festivities. "They're a little surprised at first," Salata admits, "but they usually get into the swing of it. The truth is, it's pure affection. We're pulling for them. And if we kid them, it's only because you only kid the good guys in this world." Salata puts an equal effort in Newport Beach into charity work and will be honored in July by the 552 Club, a support group of Hoag Memorial Hospital. "Twenty years ago everyone thought I was the village idiot. But I really do have a serious side and have concerns about the country and this city.'' To prove Irrelevant Week Is more than pure nonsense, Salata has ke pt in touch with each player who has come to Newport Beach. He calls them, writes them, goes to their weddings and tracks the careers of the select few that have one. Kirk, for instance, Is playing ball in C.anada. "They're good people and I really do care about them. By staying in touch with them they realize that we w~ren 't just making fuh of tttem." Congressmen , 'not up to par' Ba dham, Lungr en sco re low in League of Wom en Vo ters' political rating By KAREN E. KLEIN or-.o.-, ......... Orange Coast congreasmen Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, and Dan Lungre n , R- Huntington Beach tcored at the low ena of a acaie on political accountability put out this month br the League of Women Voters o the United Stat.es. The ratings, compiled by the national lobbying group for votes r ecorded In 1981-82, showed Badham a nd Lungre n were at odds wt th the league's goaTu on about two-thirds of the issues considered. Badham rated 27 percent and Lungre n rated 33 percent. The Washington-based ~o~p c hoae 12 issues which 1 t considered urgent, and on which lt lobbted strongly, to rate the performance ol the nation's aenaton and congressmen, aald Vicky Harian, a league spoke.woman. Some of the issues included voting rights, social programs spending. busing, Cood st.amps, hazardous waste a nd education funding. A spokesman for Badham said ?:eaterday the congremnan was 'very proud tha t he doea.n't follow the liberal agenda" of groups auch aa the Leaaue of Women Votera. "Generally •peaking .• , the lea(Ue'1 poeitlona ~ rig,ht out A drive-in laundromat of the liberal -aencta -for bla government and big apenc:Una. which he (Badham) does not support," said Howard Seelye, Badham'a diatrict repreeentative . A Lungren spokesman aaid congressmen take political ratings, like the one the Le-aue Lsaues, with a graln of salt. "They look at them, like b aseball players look at the box scores (game summaries)~ but it doesn't keep them awake at night,'' aaid M ark G rave l , Lungre o 's admtntscrative 8l1Sistant. The queatlon la, are voters s waye d by tbe rat1nga? "Som e b o dy who wa s sympathetic to the league or in the 1eagu~ _wo~~-probably be Nga T hi Le, 25, of Costa Mesa to'd police she acciden tally hit the accelerator pedal yeste rday a fternoon . T he. la undromat wa ll and two washing mach ines a t 109 1 Baker St . were damaged . No o ne .·. was injured. . • lnter eated an 1t," aaid Tricia Harrig an , president of the Leacue of Women V <>tent of the Or.nae Coaat area. Local m embers would• probably be moet interested with environmental iaauea in t he rating, Harrigan aaid. A vote on clean air regulations for automobiles, which wiped out Environme ntal Pro tection Agency funds for inspection and maintenance programs for cars, was opposed by the league. Both Lungren and e.dham voted for" the amendment. Rites set for victim of accident Funeral services will be held tomorrow for Dwayne Vern Severns, a 29-year-old Newport Beach man who was killed in a freak auto accident Saturday outside of Ensenada. ::>everns, tanuly members said, was returning with a friend from a surfing trip that took them to the Up of Baja ~ifon:li8. He was killed when his vehicle apparen tly slipped out of gear and crushed him as he waa u nlocking a gate leading to property owned by a friend .Farnlly members said Severns' surfing companion also wu struck by the vehicle and tried in -vain to save the Newport man. They said the companion ran for help but passed out from-bis own injuries before reaching the main road to Ensenada. ETHNIC ' REMARK DENIED BY NEWPORT POLICE CHIEF. • • A 1970 graduate ol Newport Harbor High School, Severns was employed in the construction business and was know.:n a.s an - outdoors type who loved surfing, skiing ~"'d scuba diving. ~ervices wLU be conducted at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Chapel in Corona del Mar (see obituary. Page A5). "anyone who is interested should list e n to the t a p e (of the meeting).". . L ocal His p a n ic lead ers, though, reacted with anger to newspaper accounts of Gross' remarks as well as a 1980 report from the chief which staled an influx of Latinos set the stage a t beaches for conflict. Gross gave pl an n i n g commissioners a copy of the 1980 r eport last w eek but the reference to Latinos was blacked . ~ Huntington Beach A brHk-ln 1t the Radio 8huk atore. 18033 BMdl &MS .. Ntly rtetwdey ..utted In the r1pof19'1 loll ol $3.740 worth ol oompulet 9QU!pment. Entry WN mecll by I pry loot. P<>Nlbl)' • Ctowbet A r911dent or tne 11100 blOdt of HIM't>or Blufl1 Circle told pollol lhe ~ 18,· 000 worth ol 11Mrwar1 misting lrom an upstelrt c lotet. The 1llv1rware was apparenily talcen _...,., durlnO the p.,t {"O monttol. Vandals did 1200 demage to the tlkllng glMa window 11 • t1ome on the 200 blocll of NathvltteA-- A ..eldent OI the 5900 blocll ol Cfllnook O.lve reporl.ct that • man hiding In the bu"-ecroee the ttrMI ~tty all$>OMd NrnMI!. out. H e said p olic e had "repudiated" the statement. "He (Gross) should be color blind without making socio- economic statem en ts like this," said lliward Morga, chairman of the Concilio of Orange County. "Newport Beach is where John Wayne lived and Wayne was the kind of guy if you said something bad about an Indian, he'd knock the hell out_of you . .. If people are breaking the law on city beaches they should The burglary of e llome on tlltl l&e<>O bioctc of Newland StrMI ,...iwd•r, rMUlled In tlle reported tou ot $400 n 1terao equipme nt. Entry ••• apparently mid• tllrougll an _, t>eOroom Window Fountain Valley Two P90Ptl llote liquor v-at 548' rrom tlle Huglltle Market. 9091 Gerlt.id. Two 1u•P9Ct• ..,,.,eo tlltl at0<•, one 1911 11\d drcwe his car near the front door The other ran out to the Cit Ind ~. pollol telcl Someone pried open the door to 1 1111rwei1 11 the netlonel heldquert.,1 lor Mllaubh1lll Mot0< Selel of Ame<lca Incl. and tOOk two IBM s.t.clrlc: t~rlf9(1 velued at $2,000. A car wu b<Ol<en Into wtllle II wu pwk.O 11 Lot Amlgot Hlgll School and burg11r1 tOOk e gold cl\lln nec•tece and car 11erao veluec:t at $80. Newport Beach Bu•gleft tOOk '500 wortll or 1oo11 end a tool bo• from 1 IOd<ed 1toraoe room •I en epar1ment compl9x on lhe 900 blocll ol Udo P1111 OfWe be punished. But l don't think you have to go around singling out any groups," Morga said. Eugene Scorio, leader of the Fair Housing Council of Orange Cou nt y, said he f inds the re marks "typical" of Newport Beach . "I'm biased on Newport and I'll admit that up front. But I'm Hispanic a nd I go to the beaches in Newport and I've never caused any problems." A letephon• and • tele•lllon 111 were sto!ln lrom 1 rentll unit on Ille 200 block of 28th Str .. t Tiii -teportecl he ,_,,1y 4'YIC1ed lhe ,.,,.,,, Vendela~ I ~ end bent 1111 erm ot • wfnd•llteld wiper on • c11 patked on the 1800 block of Sandalwood L-Darn9gl WU •llmeted al '300. l Irvin e Tailt •atued It $800 -• tlo!ln lrom Jim Ciiek F0td, 43 Auto C.Oter OfWe, Monday by IWO "*' who drcwe lnlo 1119 Cit deelerahlp end tOOk the toota lrom • _.,lee bey. Six houaea unde r con1tructlon on He1rl1burg -• bf Oken Into end vandallHd, poltc;e -· IOld Mondly Clear sailing Coastal Fair lhro~h W9dn•ld•y with br•IZY condition• •tong th• 00111. Tr1111l•ra 1C111t1ory In moun111n •reH uue to gutty wind•. Lowa lonl,hl 50 lo 58. H'C:.::::-'ev 4 to 78. • Point Corlo9pllon to Me•lcan t>orw enc1 011t eo mllM, em111 oren ~ In lllteot trom Point Clonotptlon to Sin NloolM lllMd tor nortriw.lerly wlndl 20 10 30 ltnot• wtttl ~· to 40 knou end 8 to t 2 foot corilb!Md - throug h W•dn••d•Y· Soulh of 8 1 n NloolH l1l1nd WH t to ~ wll"'8 12 IO It knot• thrOUIJfl w~. o-1nn« Wit-llght ~ wlndl nlgllt end morning houri. Aft9fnoon wind• ..i 10 nort"-1 12 to 22 II not I. Extended forecast Fair Thured•y through Stturdly with let• ."~' •nd rnornlllO low olol.lc». "°"' upper IOI Ill the OOMI to upper 70. lnlMd II...,... L-rnotCly 41 10M. Temperatures. .. a.. AIMny 41 ,. AllMIQU«QW sa eo AIMltllo 17 " AllGllOteQ9 6' ~ ~ 12 .. AllMtl 11 II Alllltlo Olly 90 At ~ 1' ... ~ ION ~ HI ~ "'4 ..... ... .. ..... '° .. ' Brown1111tte Buffalo &urlinglon CUI* Ch1r ... ton. SC cn.r ... 1on. wv CllM1otte. NC Clley9"M c n1c-oo Clnclnnetl Clewlancl COiumbia. SC COlumbu1 O.l·fl Wortll Oeyton o.n-OM Molnw O.trol1 Duluth El PHO Fllrbanka Fergo Aeg1talt OrNI fllltl HartfOfd Hel9nl Honolulu HouetOll lndllNICIQlle J9cQOrl,MI J9Clti0Mlle ~ ~City LM V .... Ltttt. Aodt t:.=- Lutlbodl ...... Miami Mllwtlull .. 89 76 48 38 39 35 58 30 68 60 60 31 S9 43 75 35 65 28 eo 36 411 28 76 45 55 32 89 68 156 37 81 311 116 411 55 32 53 39 116 ae 64 42 ea 51 S3 37 ~ 53 31 Alcllmoncl ae 43 St. LOUii ee 43 St. P.ie-T9mpe 83 ee Seit Lllk• 52 34 8lln Atllonlo 78 12 891'1 oi.oo 70 59 Sin F renc:l9co ee 50 SI Ste Mn 41 2e s..ua. 58 43 811r:1.: 13 511 Sioux alla 71 51 8polc-53 40 8YTKUM 48 38 Topeill 711 llO TllCIOll 111 57 Tuite 711 54 Waehlllgton 54 43 Wlclllt1 72 51 40 30 55 37 Mpa..81. Peul S3 411 40 31 NllhYlla. .. 45 " 71 NewOl'INnl 81 65 70 ee New Yor11 511 42 " • Not1olll 86 48 18 58 Hanh Plet19 80 51 83 eo Ollllltlome Olly 71 52 66 40 OlNM 72 51 70 llO OMlldo 17 64 12 61 Pll••··~ 58 '° a7 llO "-'Ill 14 .. 78 ee ~~ &3 21 13 42 84 33 ... N ~.~ .. 48 72 51 "Owtdtllo. M 39 eo 74 =r~ S1 3g ... 211 17 44 Tides TOOAY a.cono iow 2:22 p.m. 0,1 SURF RIPIRT hoond Nall . 1:311 p.m, U WIDMIDAY ""' IOw 3: 15 A.m, .Q,I ~ ",... hlol\ 11:24 a,m, 4.1 ftlr a.oond'IOw 2:50 p.m. t,O ftlf ... e.ooncl lllOft 11!09 p,m. U ftlf tun Mt• locley 11 1:44 p.m.1 poor rlMI Weclneeday el 1:56 e.m . .., PC>Ot•llllr ... , II 1:44 p.m, · , "°°' ,.., Moon eetl 1ooey 11 I:« p,m,1 ~ tlM Wldneld9v II 5" 1.m. -MllMl:.Atp.11(. He said he believes Gross lS talking for all the "limousine liberals in Newport who don't want minorities in their town.'' (;ross said he is surprised at reaction to his comme nts and said he went far out of his way not to point a finger at any ethnic group. He said his comments were directed at "r ecreatio n a l cultures" who come to the beach a nd isolate themselves. G ross said media accounts of his talk have "sensationalized" his remarks and taken them out of context. He said he believes "mixing cultures" is good and would never say anything that could be taken as derogatory. M esa houses lose power Police seek clues Abo ut 2 ,0 00 Southern California &Uson Co. customers in Costa Mesa were without power for nearly an hour this morning when an underground electrical cable was accidentally cut at the O r a n ge County Fairgrounds. • Ill Irvine molesting Edison s pokesman Jim Kennedy said the 9 a.m . outage affected 2,065 residents Uving in an area bounded by Wilson Street, Bristol Street. Irvine Avenue and Fairview Road. Power was restored to all but the fairgrounds in 45 minutes. By GLENN SCOTT Of tM OM!y Not Bi.ft Irvine police officers se.arehed for clues today to identify a man who followed a University Park woman home from her tennis match and molested her. The 36-year-old wife ,and moth er told lnvestiaators sh e drove home from a tennis match about 10:15 a.m . yesterday and pulled her car into the garage usi.ng an electronic garage door opener. The man, in his 20s, who she didn't know, apparently followed her home and managed to sneak Into the garage and then the house, where he confronted her with a gun, said police Lt. Bob Lennert. He forced her to take off her tennis clothes and stopped just short of raping her , Lennert said. She wasn't beaten. A few people playing at the same tennis courts at Michelson Drive and Royce Road, who were questioned later, said they thought they recalled a ma n match in g th e s u s p ect's description hanging around the courts earlier. Kennedy said the lights were expected t-0 be back on at the fairgrounds by early afternoon. StorHJ aid liHJited Wednesday is the deadline for filing applications for various disaster assistance programs available to victims of the past winter'• stonns. About 15,000 people registered at Disaster Assistance Centers operated by federal and state coo rdinators throughout California, and several hundred -others were registered over a toll-free disaster hotline. Aid is available for people w hose property, homes or businesses were damaged by the winter storms. The toll-free hotline, 1-800-547-3993, will remain in operation through Wednesday to ~ those with questions about obtaining assistance. BUY WHEQE THf Jt:WlLLfQS BUY! No need to t ravel to the Los Angeles Jewelry Marti Our regular pricas are up to 75% lower than other jewelry storesl SHOP AND COMPAREI ••111 ... 0LIA .... •MH'AB ... llAI • AllllllAllAU • WATOM ..... ............. •IMelAY*e • llOUllTWlel • AIOVI AVAii.AiU .......... • VllA • llAITllOAH OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Mon-lat. 10 am -"'6 pm • ' • r O'Bryon buried at sea Retired Newp~rt broker. dead Private aervices for Newport Beach resident and retired securities broker William L. O'Bryon, who died May 1, were held at sea late last week. Mr. O 'Bryon recently had .~tired from his own brokerage firm, vvilllam L. O'Bryon & Co., and was a fonner staff commodore of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club in N<'wpor1 Bearh. · For 15 years ha-lectured on eecurities and inveetmenta at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. He-ia survived b1 hts' wife; two daugnters, Lesley O'Bryon and Alison Malmatone; and four sons, Kevin , Thomas, Michael and Patrick. He also leaves three grandchildren. William O'Bryon Mesa officer to he feted _Barbar~ Kennedy last rites held o·e1TU~R I ES Costa Mesa police officer Thomas Pipe• .will receive_the. 7.:Eleven.Law Enforcement Community Service Award during a noon luncheon Monday at the Newport Sheraton. Pipes was a reserve officer prior to joining the department three years ago. He is one of 10 patrolmen in Orange County honored for his community involvement. Services were held this morning for Barbara Ann Kennedy , 57, a senior secretary at Ford Aerospace in Newport Beach for the last 30 years. Mrs. Kennedy was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary and J. Goldbach dead at 90 Joseph J . Goldbach, a resident of Huntington Beach, died Saturday at the age of 90. He is survived by· his wife, Edna. Private funeral services will be held under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary"th Costa Mesa. Bus trip for play, show set Tickets are still on sale for a bus shuttle trip to see Frank Sinatra and Lynn Redgrave. Deadlin e for reservations is Friday. Price includes tickets and round trip bus transportation from Newport Beach. Redgrave will be starring in "Sister Mary Ignatus Explains it All to You" this month at the Los Angeles Stage Co. Cost is $37. Sinatra will be at the Universal Amphitheater June 17. Cost is $55. For reservations call 640-1541. Beauties wanted Contestants are being sought for the Miss Costa Mesa-Miss Mermaid contest to be staged June 5 during the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry. Deadlin e for applications is May 20. Contestants must be single and between 17 and 22 to enter. For more information contact the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce at 979-0536. Mesa youth photo champ A picture of his 3-year-old cousin won J ohn Fulkerson, 15, Costa Mesa a Kodak Club Award. The Newport Harbor High School student was name d Club Photo Champion of the Boys Club of the Harbor Area for his photo entered in the' Boys Clubs of America/Kodak Photo Contest. I.: DOING .... BUSINESS '.':':i UNDER A • '1 • FICTITIOUS •1 NAME? The DAILY PILOT provide• both tlllng and publlcetlOn Mrvlcea. Wa have ell the nec••Hry form• and melnteln • delly .. rvloe to the Orenge County Courthouee: Either etop by one Of our convenient otflc•• or • I phone th• LEQAL DIPARTMeNT 942-4321 , ••t. 332 tor more lltform•don llnd'torma. " . ·-l11ly Pilat /, - 142.U21 !XT. 332 was active at St. Joachim's Catholic Church. She is survived by her husband, David, and children Carol Ann. Linda Marie and David A . Also surviving are brothers Jim, George and Tommy, and sister Rosemary. [ntennent will be held at the family plot at Calgary Cemetery in Massillon, Ohio. Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary is in charge of arrangements. D. Severns • rites set Funeral services will be held tomorrow for Dwayne Vern Severns of N ewport Beach , wlio died last Wednesday. He is survived by his mother, Lorain e J ohnson, and father, Wayne Severns. Also surviving are three brothers, Darryl Severn s, Jeffrey A . Johnson and Michael K. Johnson , ·and a grandfather, Hiram Ruggler. . Services are scheduled for 11 a .m . at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach. Private interment will follow. Mr. McCracken rites conducted Services were scheduled today for Claude H. McCracken Sr. of Costa Mesa, a retired conductor for the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, who died Friday at the age of 81. Mr. McCracken is survived by his wife, Frances, of Costa Mesa; a daughter, Gwen Christianson, of Alaska, and a son, Claude McCracken Jr. Also surviving are seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, Services were to be held at 1 p.m. at the Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel in C.OSta Mesa with the Rev. Vernon Mikkelsen officiating. . •' Theodore Beliakof f funeral services held Memorial services were held yesterday for . Theodore Willtain Beiiakoff of Corona del Mar, who died Thursday at the age of 55. . He is survived by his wife, Joyce, and sons Douglas, Wade and Glen Beliakoff. Services were held at Pacific View Mortuary Chapel followed by interment at Pacific View Memorial Park. Memorial contributions may be made to the Theodore W. Beliakoff Memorial Fund, clo Norwich Unive~ty, Northfield, Vt. 05663. Volunteers ·needed Volunteers are needed to help serve seniors meals through the Transportation, Lunch and Counseling project serving Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach. Anyone who would like to volunteer or is in need of the service can call 835-8011. Bike meet set for Mesa Free licenses and three bikes will be given away at 9 a.m. Saturday during the Costa Mesa police department's Championship Bicycle Safety Competition at Presidio School, 1001 Presidio Square. All Costa Mesa residents are eligible for the free licenses. Students from local elementary schools will be competing for the prizes donated by local merchants in cooperation with the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. Holistic talk slated Dr. William R. "Cberry" Parker, founder of the Parker Holistic Center in Costa Mesa will speak at 9:30 a.m. Saturday during a seminar on holistic health in Orange. Dr. Brugb Joy, author of "Joy's Way" will also speak during the all day seminar at the Unity Center for Successful Living, 710 S. Cambridge: C.OSt is $50. For more information call 645-0971. Fire demonstration due The public is inVited to watch a building burn, a car explosion and a high rise rescue at 1 p.m. Sunday during the Colita Mesa Fire Department's Annual 8ervice ~y Show .• The free demonstration will be staged at Fire Station No. 4, 2300 Placentia Ave., across from Estanc~a High School. Rabies clinic at .f a!rground Dog owners can bring their pets to a low cost anti rabies vaccination clinic from 7 to 8:30 p.m . May 16 at the Orange County ·Fairgrounds. The cost is $3. ·'lbearn · h money market interest just check with Hunti avings. Super Now Checking Money market interest on every single dollar, as long as your average balance stays at $2,500 or more.• Fully insured. Unlimited check writing . Checking Supreme Funds over $2,000 (backed by Government securities) earn high money market interest: Funds up to $2,000 (fully insured) earn 51/4% interest. Unlimited check writing. Huntington Investment Fund Now you know why your neighbor banks at Maintain an average balance of $2,500 or more, and every dollar earns money market interest.• Fully insured. Limited to six drafts. Full checking, full savinas, full service Whatever kind of checking or &avings account you want, whatever type o( personaf or business financial service you need, 1ust stop by and see one of our savings counselors. CD HUNTINGTON SAVINGS ~~~r'toN M•ln llranch fH67 W•m\!r A\.'f'nut. Comer of Coldtn Wf81, I lunllnKllln 84.'ach Sooti lo Ntwland C.nter Branch openi 197!6 °"'1th l'oul4lv•rd, t luntthgton U..ach fo1111t•ln Valley llranch 17~1 8rvokhur&t, Pountoln Vnllt•y . .. •If yvur owr.ag\' daily lxalQnC\' f,11111 bdow S2,500, during your monthly sl•tl!in~nt pt'rlod, (\ldCr<ll l'\'8UlaUon11 f\'qulrti lhat your funds earn •I thv 5W¥o rate for Uw p<>rlud that your a<'ttlunt I~ below S2,'°°. bBJ. I .,,. .. ---··- lstheskv the limit1 You probably think there isn't any· thing you can do about soaring health care costs. But there is. Now you can join the FHP health plan where you work. With most FHP plans, your regular monthly premiums take care of almost everything from a routine checkup to major surgery. There are no big deduct- ibles, no sky-high extra expenses to pay out of your own pocket.• A recent survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports that plans like FHP have saved from 10% to 40% each year on a family's health care costs when COl'flpared to conventional health insurance plans. So ask about joining FHP where you work to bring your health care costs back down to earth. A r l Ofl?All V QlJAl IHEO HNIO •subJt<t to llmllttloru, ••du1ionl tnd co·ptymtn\1 -"t' I i I -r I I l I r I I \ 1 ) i i . . mn 1111i1 mm lllJPllll TUESDAY, MAY tO, 1983 ERMA BOMBECK COMICS BUSINESS 82 84 85 ~rescrlptlon drugs. ~ENE. KLEIN know exactly what the drup are, u well u when i('• Deir ,... •...r and how they ahould be taken," UYf f>r, Bruce , ·-·~e American public la becoming more and Woolley. ~ drug-oriented, demandi.nc preecriptions to Statiltlca show that 30 percent of all cure ita ua and to eaae lta conlclence. ~ ·~a result, experta aay, a greater portion of preecription.a written out are never filled. Of thoee the $286 billion spent annually on health-care that are filled, only about 20 percent are taken ~la being wasted becau.e people are not using correctly. their medications properly. A study done in Beeton revealed there ia a 1he problem ia partly the fault of the doctor ~-related death for every 200 people y the fault of the pharmacist, a drug hoapitaliz.ed. ys. Woolley outlined 11eVeral points tO remember \, overall, a great.er portion of the when taking preecription drugs: ~nsibility for prescription drugs in health care -Never take a preteription meant for fNIS ... on the consumer, saya a profeaor of someone elBe. F.ach person's body chemistry and ~logy and therapeutics at Brigham Young weight determines the correct dosage for him or fuiiveniiy. her. "Doctol"S. pharmacists and patients need to -Find a phannacist who is willing to take Kidney disease ... - 1-ive by the machine, ~otherwise you die!' EDITOR'S NOTE -About Doctors "played God," aelecting 70,000 Americans are being kept by committee those who would alive by kidney dialysis that is receive dialysis and live. paid for by the federal AB the machines became more Rdvernment. Some bureaucrats common, cost alone became the believe it is a runaway program major problem. that must be cut back. Patients In 1972, Congresa pa11ed fear the proposed changes would Public Law 92-603 creating the aerlocJsly at-feet their lives. Many End Stage Renal Disease are poor and b e lieve the program. The law guaranteed government must pay the that 80 percent of the co.ta of dialysis cost because, as one kidney dialysis and any other woman put it, "Otherwise, you health care required by kidney ~ ---_pa.tiema ~oul~paid by the. government throu.1h supplemental Medicare funds. Everyone covered by Social Security is eligible. Rich, young, old or poor, the government pays. By PAUL RECER Al111llled ,,_ Wrtter HOUSTON -The old woman didn't even wince when the nW'9e slipped two large needles · into her arm and started blood '&wing through the blue metal machine dancing with flickering lights and dial.a. ~-. 'Fhe fascination with aclloa, sexual bijinh and O million-dollar ad!er1i1ing cam-pai1JD8 were evidt1nl last week with ABC's announcement of ita lall 0 prime-time schedule. Pase B3. I ....... _ _,,,, I • • Medications not used properly the ti.me to u:f.lain what a dn.lg ta and how It should be . "If the phannacilt lan't willing to do ffiat, the customer-shoUJd cnanp phannades," Woolley said. -Be.especially careful lf you are taking prescriptions from more than one doctor. Certain combinations of drugs may be dangerous. -Make certain you understand the instructions on the preecription label of a drug. Pin your doctor or pharmadat down to specifics to cut down on confusion. "If It aaya 'take four times daily,' does that mean while the per90n ia awake, o.r during a 24 -hour period?" Woolley asked. "For many drugs, those few hours could make a differe.nce." Beside the money being wasted on prescription drugs, milllona are being spent annually on other over-the--count.er drugs which are either ineffective or OVe1 priced, •ya a health .reeearch ~___p In WMhlnpln. The Publlc at&Den u.tth R.-earch Group, a _ non-profit comwner orpnlladon, publiahed a new ' book, "Over the Counter Plu. 11\.at Don't Work,'' which allepl that of the 487 ct,,. deelt with in the book, one-third contain lnendienta whk:h have been found lllck1na evidence of lafety or effectivenaa by the Food and Drue Administration. For each of eiaht cateaoriea of common medical problema, the book lista the cau.e of the. problem, other treetments available and the best drugs to UR, if any will help. The book may be obtained by writina: HRG, Department 2, 2000 P Street, N.W., Waahington, D.C. 20036. • t,Itot waa just a routine "clinic wednesday" for the elderly t.rorQ&n. She would come to the Gulf Coast Dialysis Center here apin Friday and the following Monday. Three days a week, week after week, year aft.er year, for the rest of her life, ahe would be~re. In the first year of the program, about 1'1 ,000 patient.a benefited at a total C08t of $4.5 million. Since then, the coat has increased about 700 percent, to about $2 billion. Beyond inflation, the costs are up becau.e people who would likely have died in the past are continuing in the program and new patient& are being added at the rate of 7,000 to 81000 a year. By 19"5, the Health Care Finance Admfuistration, which run.a the kidney diaeaae payment program. estimates the costs will reach $4.5 billion. . ~ The woman is one of about 70,000 Americana r eceiving kidney dialysis at government ••penae under the End Stage ROI Dileue program. Like no odliik' federal program in hiatory, h. ~presents a government Cle~rmination that no U .S. etteltn with kidney dileaae wW Nfar from lack of treatment. , ls, said one doctor, "a• lf Follflreas legislated that no ~ri~~n shall die of kidney ft~rnmental compassion, however, has collided with economic reality. Coat.J of the ~y patient care have soared 1.r· J>eyond expectation -last 1eat, the government spent about $2 billion for kidney treatment. The ESRD program hM laid bare, in stark, statiatical $81U8. the basic conflict between pie }>riceleaaneu of human life and the realistic limit of hwnan . reeources. Kidne y dlaease l a a catMtrophic illness. The fiat-sized kidrieys filter wast.es from and eotltrol the salt level in the blood. WMn they fall -due to high bloOd pressure, infection, trauma or ~tic diaorder -the body haa no way to remove certain chemicals through the urine. Patients are poisoned by their own wast.es. ~y years ago, such patienta Mmp)y died. There was little care t.0=£tve. When dialysis machines were developed, lt became technically able to filter the blood and kidney patients alive. At the machinea were scarce. . Public Law 92-603, many feel, created a runaway program that is coating far more than expected, with coats likely only to keep climbing. An industry bas formed around the steady flow of ~edicare dollars. Proprietary clinics, many organized by nephrologi1t1, or kidney spec:laliats, provide dialyaia care all over the country. The arena ia dominated by National Medical Care Corp., a Boston-based concern that serves more than 10,000 patients at 160 clinics. Some experts have proposed changes in the regulation.a that would force more kidney patienta to u.ae aelf-dialyais at home. Under current regulations, the govenunent pays 80 percent of the typical $138 coat -about $110 -each time a patient receives dialysis in a clinic. Over a year, this amounts to about $17,160 per patient. The Health Care Finance Adrniniatratlon, looking for a way to control the rising expense, has proposed r e gulations designed. to encourage the clinics to place more patients on cheaper at- home dialyala. The new plan would cut the HCF A-approved cost of dlalyz- ing from $138 to $128. The govenunent would therefore pay dialysis clinics about $104 a head for patients treated at the cllnlca or supervised h.y clinics in at- home dJalyala. Since the coet.s of dialyala at Patients at the GuH Coast Dialysis Center in Houston undergo kidney dialysis three times a week for three to four hours at a time. home are lower, the clinic would keep more of the $104. The government hopes this will encourage clinics to send more patients home. A kidney patient receiving dialysis at home would uae a machine the family ia trained to operate or a technique called Continuoua Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis, in which fluid Inserted into the body collects the wast.es and is then drained through a tube in the abdomen. Officlala of the Health Care Finance Admi.niatration say the ESRD program would save $120 million in the next fUcal year alone, and more than $190 million the year aft.er. But at the Gulf Coast Dialyais Center, one of the largest in the nation, many patients are frightened that the proposed new rules would cut them off from the auperviaed dialyaia of the clinic and force them to asawne more retpon.sibWty for their own care. Many view such a chance aa a death aentence. "I'm living by that machine," said Wlllimena Moore. 57. of Houston. "Otherwiae, you die." Moore lives alone, but she tried peritoneal dialysis. With a tube aurgically implanted in her side, ahe would inject fluid into her abdomen . The special aolution would collect the wast.es from her blood stream. Later, she would drain the fluid, remoying the wast.es. ' "I didn't like that," said Mias Moore. "It just kept me sick. I got infection.a and had to go to the hospital." Finally, the tube waa removed, and she went onto the machine at the clinic, three daya a week. "I don't know what I'd do if I couldn't come here," she said. ''I just couldn't make it. That's all." Other patients also view the orooosal with dread. "I wouldn't like dialr,zing at home -in fact, I fear it, • said E. Arthur Conring, 63. "The surveillance they give you here gives you a good feeling -it's a comfort. If things happened at home, such as my blood pressure going down, there's nothing that Could be done about it." Larcell E. Persons, 61, has been on 'dialyaia for nine years and has tried home dJalyala. The attempt failed. "My wife had to operate the machine,'' recalled Penona. "She would get so friKhtened when my blood pressure went down and I got sick that she would call an ambulance.'' ·Finally, he said, "she couldn't take it any 1.1ore " and he returned to the clinic. Typically, in Texas only about 19 percent of the End Stage Renal Disease patients choose at-t}ome care. In some centers, such as Da.llaa, the number ia 23 percent. Few doctors think the new regulations will change these figures. Home dialysis requires a reasonably germ -free environment, friends or family members pre.ent to usiat, and a patient free of other serious i.llneeees. ''Tho9e who can be .ent home are being .ent home now," said Dr. August R. Remmen, director of the department of nerhrology at t}le University o Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Remmen said he believed that forcing patients onto home dialysis through economic coercion iB "an evil thing." Remmen la known as a ltrolli advocate of borne dialyaia, but he said the propoHd regulatlona mi8ht force patienta home who should be under profe.ional care -and that tome will die aa a resul\. "It'll be a c..e of either you go home with the m.-chine or you die," he aaid. "Therefore, patients who are medically un.au.itable will be tent home." Kidney patients ''are medJcally frqile," he added. "A small step in tlle wronc direction can lead to aerioua medical compllcationa.'' The propmed cut in paymenta to the cllnica, teVerel docton aeid, could cauae rural or mar.Onal clinics to cloee. ThW would lorce 10me patients to drive hundreds of milea each week to receive dialyais, and for some, they predicted, the struggle will be too much. "Under the new rat.es people will dJe who would not have dJed under the old rates," said Dr. Alan Hull, head of Nephrol<>I)' Aaaociat~. a company that operates dialyaia clinics in the DallM area. "No doctor will let hia CWTellt patients dle. But in the future, mariiina1 patients will not be aa:eirte<T •• 1 1tt will make it very di ficult on the diudvant-cect .•. Some argue that "marginal patients" -the elderly, the diabetic, the penona with other 1 critical illneuea -ahouldn't 1 receive dialyata anyway. ~ "Some docton take a atand, refu.e to give dialyala and let nature take ita ooune,'' uld one phyaician at the National INtitute of Health who declined to be Identified. "Others 1et . Intimidated by the family or tbe threat of a lepl .ciion and ~ " dialysia even thouah the patie¢ will never be abfe to functkdl nonnally.•• Hull and others say that delplt.e the c:mta It la too late now to pull t>.ck on the End Si.cit 1 Renal Dheaae program. • Govenunent-finanoed dialysla ~ • malntainlni life at taxpayen.' ' expenae -haa become an ' ingrained part of America'.:9 medical tradition. the docton -~ It ia "horribly expenalve, ' Remmers aclmowledpd, but .It work.a. Thouaanda of people ~ ' live who otherwlae would be deed, he Mid. ·· I "Whether you conlider it right ' or wron1 (that government paya)," Remmen aaid, "I don't think there'• any way out now." Raving babies. • • Nation's birth rate continues to climb By RA.NDOLPB E. SCBMJD .......... ,,.. ...... WASHINGTON -America'• birthraie la 10in8 up. But not by much. And the birth rate la atil1 belOw what It WM 10 yeen .,o. The Cemua Bureau recorded 15.6 per l,OUO people in the lat.eet national heeckount. That'• up from the- 14.6 filW'e in 1975. But It's below 1970'1 1.8 bft1hl per 1,000 ~pie and 1980'• 23.7 btrtha per 1,000 peopJe. "What we haw today la not another btaby boom but a plethora of puents,11 lald Bryant Robey, editor of American Demolraph.kil muuan.. The recent men-1ri aiU1hl la an echo of the btaby boom with more chlldNn beJna born becaUll ther. AN ao many women of ch.UdbMltnl .,. who w.... themlelvte born durlna the polt-war jump In bt.rtha. The CNl'N!lt 1\11'89 of bU'tllil II &aJclni ~ with a blr1hrate rtmaln1n8 Quite low, Robey not.Cl. The~ mllUon women of Ch.Odbeuina • tOday are produdJ\a only about u many c.hOdren 11 II mDlJon Wom1n tn the 1 toOI; he Mkt. U\ah hM the ~ bU\brate, M...ctu.111t• the iow..t. The 'Nort.Mllt .. the only ,.son wtt.h • btr\h ,.. .. 'What we have today i1 not another baby boom, but a \,lethora of parents: • • ' Utah ha1 bighett birth ra-te, Ma988chusetu the loweat. - below the national av.rap. "8ur-for 1979 :__ collected In the 1980 Cenaua -lhow 13.2 bUtha I* 1,000 people. The Weat had 17.2 b&rthl I* 1,000 Dt001e and the South and North Central re1iona had 15.D . birtha per 1,000 people. Utah topa the nation In bltthl at 29 per 1,000 people, well aheed of llCOfMi place Alalka, which had 22.~ ~.rr 1,000 people. ~ out the top ftve 1tatte fQC' btrth rate wera WYominl, 21.8; ldahb, 2l.&, and New Matoo. 20.0. I At th• other end of the tcale M...ahwent Md the lowtlt birth rate In the nadcn at 12.I J1W 1,000 ..,.,... The rwt of the bonom tlve wwe Rhode r.nd, 11.(: Connec:Ucut, 12.e: noncsa. 12.a. and New Jsw:J, lS.l. H... la a aiace-by-etate rundown lhowtnl the u_, _____ _ blrthrate per 1,000 relidenta -rtlCOl'CMd in the 1980 Cerwua: 1. Utah, 28.0; 2. AlMb. 22.0; 3. Wyomin& 21.8; f , 'Idaho, 21.0; 5. New Mex:lco. 20.0; 8. ln•"'ena, 19.1; ?. South Dakota. 18.t; I . Hawaii, 18.0; t . Tall, 11.3: 10. MlllllllP'6. 11.1; . 11. lfortb DalaJta. 11.1; 12. Moo ..... 17.8; 13. Artaona. 17.'1;.H . Nebnlb. 18.1; 16. X-, 18.8; US. Cokndo, 18.8; 17. Oklahome, 18.0; 11 .... earoun.. 18.•; 1t. Qeorsla 18.3; n . CdMllla. It.la 21. AJaa.m.. 18.1; n . o...on. 18.ai u. K.tuck1. 18.2; 24. Mlnlmota, ll:~i_~~~ le.2; 18. DllnoM. 18.1; Iowa. 18.0; 21. WMD111P11o 18.0; 29 . .VU.-. 18.o: ao. Indiana. 18.0; 11. ~ l&.'1; II. MllloW'l. 10.8; U. ~ 10.8; M . Obao. 11.I; 38. Wiil VlrDda. 10.t; 18. . -r.nr-. 10.1; rr. Dllawve. 1('.t; •· v.-.-. 1•.e;· •. Mmm. 14.1; 40. \'lrtlnlA. 14.1; 41. Nal1h c.rauna. 14.t; ... New ~ lf.l; ta. MM71md. lU; 44. New Yarts. 11.4: 41. ·· Penn1YMn1a. ta.I; 4e. N.w ~ 11.l; ft. 1'artda. · 12,1; 4l. Coil»~ II.I; ... ~NeM, 11.t; 00. • Mr :t.imeua.11.1. NB Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tu.day. May 10, 1N3 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS QUOUTIOltl IMCUIOI '84011 Otl , ....... , ...... , .... , f'AC.,IC ...... l<OtTOlil. OlflOIT ••O t l•Cl•Ufl noc• ••cM••ou ••o 11110•Te o ,., '"' •u• 41110111n1111t • Congress wants share of Chrysler's prof its By Tiie A110daced Pr"' WASffl1.JG1QN -Several key conare-nen are urgtna that otfldall reject Cbryaler Corp.'1 req_uNt th.At the federal pemmeni live up u much u $200 mlWon ln po1enUal pc"Ofita lnvolvtna millJona of tharet of the company's 1tock. AJa part ot the deal to pin $1.2 bUllon ln federal loan guaraniees ln 1980 and 1981, Chrysler aaree<f to give the govemment 14.4 million warrant. -or ri&hta to purchase -common 1tock at $13 per thare. When the loan guarantHS were approved, the stock waa selling for only $5 a ahare. But the 1tock'1 price has risen along with the automaker'• fortunes In r«t'nt month& and is now aeWna for about $28 per 1hare. The Treasury could reallu quJck profiia by trading in the 1tock. Mondale urges currency control Fonner Vice President Walter J'. Mondale, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, is calling for a system of fixed e~ rates to hold the dollar to "a more realiatic value' ln relation to currencie1 of :'~European trading partnen. Mondale ' for a system that would provide "a tunnel or channel" within which currency values would be allowed to move, Nine European nations have operated under a similar 1yst.em alnce 1979, but it does not include the United Sia~. 4 cities compete for firm ATLANTA -Atlanta 11 among four cities competing to be the lite of the Microelectronics and Computer Technol0£Y Corp., the largest jolnt reeearch and development venture In the el~ industry. Members of the aite .election team al8o are looking at San Diego, Austin, Texas, and Triangle Park, N .C. The group la expected to make a dedaion on Monday. Union Oil to rebuild pier SAN LUIS OBISPO -Union Oil Co . baa announced plans to rebuild ltll 69·year-old oil pier at Avila Beach, which collapeed ~ 1 in a winter storm. The wooden pier, a half mile long, will be replaced by a concrete and steel structure of the aame __ 1-_ aiz.e. METALS 8pCM non,__ ,,,..., pncee today. Ce111111er 14·88 nnl1 e poul'd, U S ~. C...., 71.1$ c.ttl per pound, NY Come• IP°' monltl c:IOMCI Mon. UM 20-23 cer1'al e pound. JIM 40 ~i• • pound. delt-ed. l1lll M.IOel Mlilela W-~II ID. ~ 78 c.111 8 pourld, N.Y ......, 1316.()0.1335.00 per 78 lb, llUlc. New YCN11, 1111•111111• 1435.00· ... 38.00 domH tlc ,,_c:Nnt trc'% -· N.Y. GOLD QUOTATIONS ., n. " I t "'-Seiec:Md worid gold ~ IOCley. ~ momlnQ fixing "31.25. up '5 25 ..,..... eft9moon fl•lng '40 75, up •• u . ...... tlllwnoon ltlllno 1431.29, up I f.66. ~bing .... f.50, 141 .... 61. z.tllll .... ~ ftJtlng '443.50 bid, up •. 76; "'4.llO .. ed. N .. Q a Net••tt (only d•lly quot•I 1443.11, 141 •.1• I ..... (C>Ny Gtllly QUOI•) 1443.76, up ... 7f • .. .....,, falHbtecl (only dllly quot•) ........ 141 I 10.24. WYC-gold 8'!01 month Mon 84.41.eo . ..., .... 40. SILVER NeMJ a Ner••n (only d•lly quotel, 113. t llO I* "°' ounce. .. y C-•· tpOI montl'I C:IOH d Mon., 112.1111* troy ounce. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT n·~ ,._ t•O.Clateel Ot PIHi In preced"" 12 "'°'""' pi.,. llOCll 01-. ..... Ir ttoc:• ort pr-61n9 ta -M. HIHMtec CUii vllue 1111 ••~ Ot .. ·dllltlbvtlor 011• •·b •O-Ot ••·ttOl'llt Y·b ·flvlden< t l'\CI Ulel itl lllA •·I.,.. fn Ml GJO·Cellecl Wd·WMll fltttlDuteCI w;.w .... 1u ueo. ••·Wll11 ••"•"'' ••·Wllllou• •et••nl1 adle-b-0...rllMlllOtl " I ,.llO: Tfle l>fiOI 114 1 tlOCll 11 t mulllpte Of per•tl'lere .. ,MIDt•Getl\1841 D\ d1..0l119 ti.. l•t"t 12•montn .. '"'"'' llQUt• onto , .. , Mlt Oftee